Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 June 1938 — Page 19
FRIDAY, JUNE 10, 1938
‘Kidnapped’ Offers Tale Of Scotland
Rare Photography Features Film of Stevenson's Famed Story.
By JAMES THRASHER
The appearance of the picture, “Kidnapped,” at the Circie today proably will arouse some vehement protests from those who take their Stevenson and their bonnie Scotland seriously. These enthusiasts may be the same ones who raised a cry of protest when Tommy Dorsey and his swing band encamped on Loch Lomond’s banks. For, in a sense, the makers of “Kidnapped” have decidtd to “swing the classics,” even as did Mr. Dorsey. Of course, this isn’t the first time a famous story has found a strange bedfellow in Hollywood's inflexible formula of boy-meets-girl. But the reasonable excuse for story changes is that they make for a better motion picture. “Kidnapped,” to me, is not impressive as action entertainment, whether you read the Stevenson original or not.
Excellent Photography
The film's great virtues are its handsoms, sepia-toned photography and the performances of several players below the star bracket. Warner Baxter, Freddie Bartholomew and Arleen Whelan are featured. But Reginald Owen, C. Aubrey Smith, Nigel Bruce and Miles Mander (Britishers all) command more attention. Mr. Owen turns from comedy and his suave gentleman's gentleman roles to villainy in a wholehearted manner. Mr. Bruce's Highland burr is delightful, and Mr. Smith is his able self as the Duke | of Argyle, though the part itself | isn’t so much. If you read “Kidnapped” vou will | recall that, while it is not another | “Treasure Isiand” it is the straight- | forward story of young David Bal- | four's advertures with the High- | land patriot Alan Breck. The film | contains the original episodes of | the boy's visit to his cruel, penuri- | ous old uncle his kidnaping and his | eventual elevation to his rightful | place of laird o’ the manor. |
Recounts Loyalty Tt also recounts the boy's loyalty | to the brave and reckless Alan, a | loyalty which made him forget his | early royalist teachings and join the | | Jacobite ranks in the days of | George II. Beyond this, however, |
there are numerous side trips. Miss Whelan, elevated suddenly from manicuring in a Hollywood barber shop to a featured part, is the reason for much of the rewriting. So we find Alan Breck lugging | the heroine over braes and moors through a good part of the picture. He is taking her to her sweetheart, who did the murder of which Alan is accused and who won't go to | America without her. He does, of | course, and she goes into exile with | Alan. But not until a rewritten | scene in which Alan is condemned | of treason then pardoned at the | last minute by the Duke of Argyle through David's kind efforts.
Legitimate Objection
[ | |
Perhaps discrepancies between book and picture do not deserve such close scrutiny. There is a | legitimate objection, however, in the character of David. Made a bit more youthful for young Mr. Bartholomew’'s benefit, it loses much that Stevenson gave David. The final scene between David and the Duke is the sort of fixing-upping that one finds in every Shirley Temple or Jane Withers film. The | dialog here, needless to say, is] scarcely Stevensenian. | Freddie, however, does his best. | There are some moments of excit- | ing action, and Miss Whelan lends | her attractive presence to most of them. Mr. Baxter, with his wisp mustache and gleaming smile, contrives to remain Mr. Baxter through it all.
SCHIPA'S FAMILY FIGHTS IN COURT
HOLLYWOOD, June 10 (U. P.) — The wife and daughter of Tito Schipa, operatic tenor now in Italy making a movie, denied in court today that the family damaged a rented mansion in Beverly Hills to the extent of $2590. The landlady, Mrs. Anna Hughes, charged that furnishings and rugs were spotted and stained and upholstery torn during the year the Schipa family lived there. Mrs. Antoinette Schipa and Elena Schipa, 19, are defending the suit,
TALENTED DIRECTOR
Director John Farrow is entitled to write his name like this: John | N. B. Villiers-Farrow, R.N.A., K.C., PRGS, FBES, KS.K.R., K.F. In zadition there are a few cellege degrees from Newington in| Australia and Winchester and the Royal Naval Academy in England.
COMEDIAN SERIOUS
Franklin Pangborn, film comedian, began his stage career in the most serious of plays. Once he appeared as Messala in “Ben Hur” for Klaw and Erlanger.
ARMORY =
Gigantic Stage Show of Radio Stars
UNCLE EZRA HOOSIER HOT SHOTS (In Person)
50—PEOPLE—50 At 2-4-7 and 8 P. M.
Res. Seats 83c, s5e rey po Now on Sale at Haag's Claypool Hotel Drug Store. Send Mail Orders to Treasurer Radio Ntars, care above address.
| band, Billy
| plans to marry
{ after the swimmer and Mr.
habe Sm A A 1
THEY'LL BE
|
it seems |
raising scene from their powerful “Kentucky Moonshine.”
WHAT, WHEN, WHERE
ATOLLO
Moonshine,” with Ritz Brothers, Marjorie Weaver, 11, 1:48, 4:38, 7:27 and 10:16 “One Wild Night, ” with Dick Baldwin, June Lang, at 12:38, 3:27, 6:18 and 9:05.
the
“Kentucky at
CIRCLE
with Warner Baxter, Freqaie, Bariiclomew. Arleen Whelan, at 1:55 40, 7:20 and 10:05. tii Alibi, " with Richard Dix. Te Bourne, at 12:40, 3.25, 6:10
and LOEW'S “Toy Wife,” with Louise Rainer, Melvyn Douglas. Robert Young, at 2:35, 3:40, 6:50 and 10. “The Lone Wolf In Paris,” with Francis Lederer, Frances Drake, at 11:20, 2:25, 5:35 and 8:40.
LYRIC
with Henry Busse and on stage at 1:14, 3:56,
“Kidnapped,”
Vaudeville, his orchestra, 6:48 and 9:30. “Little Miss Thoroughbred,” with John Litel, Ann Sheridan, Janet Chapman, on screen at 11:53, 2:35, 5:27, 8:08 and 10:20.
OHIO
Wedding” “Little
with Miss
Bing
“Waikiki Rough-
Crosbv. Also neck.”
ArtDivorces Eleanor t Hol
Fanny ion oon. on Reported | Billy Rose Romance.
| HOLLYWOOD, June 10 (U. P).|
—Fanny Brice left the receiver off | the hook today, so many
into divorce court and free her husRose, to marry Jarreft’'s former wife, Eleanor Holm. Mr. Jarrett, orchestra leader, divorced Miss Holm yesterday. He said he was embarrassed when his wife was dismissed from the Olympic swimming team for champagne parties, and even more embarrassed when she and Mr. Rose announced if and when they could obtain divorces. He waved before the judge a sheaf of newspaper clippings of Miss Holm displaying her curves in skin-tight bathing suits, and posing with Billy Rose. He said the constant publicity kept his face
| red.
With Miss Holm free of Mr. Jarrett, the fate of the Holm-Rose romance today appeared to be up to Miss Brice, the comedienne who made the ‘My Man” song famous. Miss Brice's last public statement on the matter was “no comment.” Mr. Jarrett’s divorce complaint did not cite Mr. Rose by name, but one of his witnesses did. George Tobin, theatrical agent, who told of meeting Miss Holm in Reverly Hills Rose announced last November that they hoped to get divorces shortly. “Miss Holm told me she was going to marry Billy Rose,” Mr. Tobin | testified. “She said that Mr. Rose | had proposed a “tremendous’ career for her, and that she was interested in him, and that she pro- | posed to marry him. “It was a constant source of em- | barrassment to me,” Mr. Jarrett testified. He said he read of the romance in the newspapers.
DISCARDS NICKNAME
Jeffrey Lynn's nickname at Bates College was “Rags,” derived from his real name, Ragnar Godfrey | Lind. During his varsity athletic days at the Maine college, Jeffrev | was always known as Ragnar Lind,
ibut that name didn't sound | euphonious enough for stage and screen.
IS
IT'S FUN 0°CLOCK, MOORTAIN Timer...
Here are the Ritz Brothers again,
The boys seem genuinely
surprised to be playing a return engagement at the Apollo after having appeared on the Circle screen a mere two weeks ago.
in a hairmountain drama,
Archery Scenes Not Faked In '/Robin Hood’ Battles
By PAUL HARRISON
HOLLYWOOD, June 10.—Behind the screen: The subject of truth-versus-illusion arose during a chat with Basil Rathbone on the set of “If T Were King.” It all began because the scene being filmed before us involved a battle between soldiers and bandits, and the bowmen were equipped with rubber-tipped arrows which still were dangerous at such close quarters. “
people | | were telephoning to ask whether | | she was going to follow Art Jarrett |
Anyway, Rathbone is one who objects to revealing tricks of the movie trade. He would like to preserve, as far as possible, the glamour and mystery of make-believe. And he cited as an example of destructive writing a recent story by another correspondent who cried “Fake!” at the archery scenes in “Robin Hood.”
“He said,” related thé actor indignantly, “that the closeups showing men being struck by arrows were trick shots, and that the arrows actually were sewed to the costumes. Now that just isn't true. Those men wore small steel breast[pian next their skin, and over the | plates were jackets of cork in which | the arrows would stick. Those par- | ticular arrows were steel-tipped. | Shot, by Howard Hill. who's mar-
the victims had no trouble falling | realistically. I know how hard thev hit because Hill shot a mace out of | my hand.”
Facts Should Be Explained
I agree with Rathbone that the | | accusation of fake was unfair, but I do not agree that the real facts of | the trick should not be explained to movie fans. No member of any audience will believe for an instant
|
tually were killed. then, to give full credit to movie-magicians who made
scenes possible, and credit to
shielded from sudden death? Talking with Richard Greene on the set of “My Lucky Star,” I complimented his American which he has been trying hard to perfect. The English actor is an] American college man in this flicker, and he'll make a better one than the first time he attempted such a role. “It was on the stage in England,” he recalled, “and I was cast as an American student. I didn't know how to talk, so I spent a couple of weeks seeing American movies— gangster films, all of them. I practiced talking from a corner of my mouth, and I'd even hook a finger in my mouth and pull down my left cheek. I got by all right, too, hard nasal twang anc all. Audiences seemed to agree that that was | how all Americans speak. “There's only one thing worse than a Britisher’s imitation of an American, and that's an American | trying to go veddy Briddish.”
Garbo Saves Stubbs
Smoke-Notes: John Litel. the character player, rolls his own cigarets and then places them long holder. . . only a few quick puffs, back in her pocket. She may smoke
Dick Teren, me tough and rugged |
SRI and tenderness
MELVYN
BARBAR.
that the men killed by arrows ac- | Is it not better, | the | such | the | skill of Hill, and a bow to the nerve | of stunt men who were so scantily |
in a | . Greta Garbo takes | thriftily | snuffs out a cigaret and puts it |
the same one two or three times. ... |
ALLURING clashing in exciting conflict
cowhoy from Princeton, nothing stronger than English breakfast tea and smokes the mildest of all cigarets, . , . Bette Davis is a chain-smoker and a violent
to be her last on earth. Miss Garbo, by the way, voiced Hollywood's most, phrase: “Ay tank Ay go home.” least, Director Robert Leonard says she didn't, and he was on the set when the original incident occurred. | The actress was very jittery one | day, and she said a few words in Swedish to Mauritz Stiller and then | | left hurriedly. Leonard asked what | | she had said and Stiller interpreted: “I'm terribly nervous. I think | {I must go home.” The story got
never famous
| velously accurate, they hit hard and | | around and soon was being told in
| dialect. Recollections of two late, great showmen: Will Rogers had a sign | in his bungalow dressing room:
{ | “Temperament, in an ordinary guy is jest plain cussedness” Irving Thalberg, who never permitted his name to be used on the “Credit, is valuable |
|
| screen, told me: | only when somebody gives it to vou. | If you are in a position to give | | yourself credit, then you don't need it.”
FRED MACMURRAY SUES AS LANDLORD |
| HOLLYWOOD, June 10 (U. P).— | Fred MacMurray, movie actor and
| in court today about an automobile parking lot that he said was driv|ing tenants from his swanky Beverly Hills apartment house. He asked a court order putting the parking lot out of business, and $250 a month damages from May 1, when his tenants began moving oui. Saks-Fifth Avenue Store is the defendant.
EXPECTS GOOD NOTICE
When Dr. Lloyd C. Douglas’ “White Banners” has its world premiere as a motion picture at the author's birth- | place, Columbia City, Ind. one of the newspaper commentators covering the event will be Mrs. Jenny | Douglas, of the Monroeville, Ind., | Weekly Breeze. Mrs. Douglas is 90
| years of age, and she is a regular |
She also
| columnist on the “Breeze.” Douglas’
| happens to be Author mother.
KEN & GLEN
Entertaining Nightly
TU RTLE BACK
701 MASS. AVE,
IP
TLS I FT he)
IT
"THE TOV WIFE’
ROBERT
DOUGLAS - YOUNG
AO NEIL -
H. B. WARNER
Plus—A Swell Mystery! Francis LEDERER Frances DRAKE ma LONE WOLF in PARIS
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
COMING 'ROUND THE MOUNTAIN
drinks | Pinkerton.
PAGE 19
Loo Opera Saved When Mayor Helps,
"ll Trovatore' to Open
Season: James Melton To Sing in "Butterfly.
taurant. If you don't believe when you get over that way. Hitchcock's fastidious tastes ar Thanks to the efforts of Cincin-| well known in that renowned resnati’s Mayor James Garfield Stew- |taurant by the side of the Thames. art, that City’s annual summer | }f Henry VIII had not knighted &
particularly choice cut of cow—and Ups SUMSON. WIL Proceed =v usual) | out of a full heart and full stomach
this year. The opening bill, Verdi's| __oenerously dubbed it “Sir Loin,”
| IN NEW YORK —8y ctoret ross
This Gastronomic Buddha Is Awaited With Open Arms || By Every New York Restaurateur.
NEW YORK, June 10.—That sound of sizzling steaks at “21"—52d St. swank-spot—means that Alfred Hitchcock is in town. The famous movie director is the world’s greatest authority on the broiling and consumption of Texas steer; the equivalent of a prize bestowed? upon the fortunate chef and resit, ask anyone at Simpson's in London » | the cops by his
| ney,
“Il Trovatore,” has been set for
June 26. In the opera management's last dispatch to The Times, slim hopes were held out for the group's financial recovery. But in the past week a crisis was reached and passed. Mayor Stewart took charge of the campaign when the guarantee fund was $2500 short of its goal. Within 24 hours the fund was oversubscribed by $2000. Repertory and artist arrangements are not complete at present.
| Rose Bampton, Metropolitan Opera | | soprano, in the principal part. Other | featured singers will be Harold | Lindi (who is Aroldo Lindi [the San Carlo Opera's winter son), Carlo Morelli and John Guralso of the Metropolitan, and | Maru Castagna, sister York opera company’s Bruna. This will be Miss Bampton’s first Zoo | Opera appearance, but the others have sung there previously.
Melton as Pinkerton
Puccini's “Madame Butterfly,” booked for June 28, will serve as the vehicle for James Melton's operatic debut. The radio and screen tenor will satisfy a long-standing ambition to try his hand—and voice—at opera when he appears as Lieut.
But the first production will have’
during | sea- | | he weights 272 pounds and is ap- | proximately as broad as he is tall | of the New |
Hitchcock would be the only man | | in London with authority to do so.
" ”
Hitchcock cabled his order for | the steaks well in advance—for he is no man to take chances where so important an issue is involved. | He likes his sirloins medium rare, | incidentally, and insists, great deal of vehemence, that the | plate be large enough to contain the cut without overlapping. He | feels about steaks much the same way he does about films—robust food, honest cooking and no loose edges. Next to steaks, his fancy | | runs to ice cream, which he is | [ willing to eat before or after the main course. The amplv-girthed Hitchcock-
perhaps the best imaginable | walking advertisement for When he seats himself before a steak, he looks pleased and so does the steak. And restaurateurs in general prick up their ears when they hear he is in town. They would like him to sample all their wares, simple and exotic, from beef-
—is
cock has promised to sample on this | side of the Atlantic (although he is skeptical), to lamb pilaf with kasha, an Armenian luxury.
with al
food. |
and-kidney pudding, which Hitch- |
This Alfred Hitchcock is a sort of | He attains |
'U. S. Board Rules On FilmWtriters
June 10 (U.P) | The . National Labor Relations | Board ruled today that movie | writers are employees under the | Wagner Act, It ordered an election before June and his O. K. on a steak 15 (20 at 18 of Hollywood's major studios to determine whether the
which to see and which to avoid. | writers want the Screen Writers’ He visited, on his last trip here, | Guild, Inc, or the Screen Playrights, Police Headquarters and astonished | Inc. independent organizations, or familiarity with [ neither group to represent them in | the Manhattan police system. He |collective bargaining. The Board ore was as excited as a kid, however, | dered the election despite the fact { when he heard his first police-car | that seven companies had signed | siren. | contracts April 19, 1937, with play« | wrights, to run for five years.
WINS BEAUTY HONOR
Artist Francis Amundsen, visiting
WASHINGTON,
» ” »
Probably the most tragic of all | | New York's royal residents is the | | former Crown Prince of Spain— | | Count Covadonga. The Count, des- | fined by birth to become King of | Hollywood for the third time in six Spain one day, has ceased being a | onc colocted for the third succes
mere visitor to this locale, and of | sive time Margaret Lindsay as the
{late has made it his permanent | | home. | most beautiful brunet in films, and the absent Garbo (his friend and
He lives in a countrv-w ) th t | where the trade | mntry-woman) as the most beauti= ful blond.
of the Broadway and bookie vari- | ety, exists on a moderate stipend [and is badly broken in health. His particular illness forces him to use ia cane when walking, his shoulders | | are bent, his figure gaunt and his [| complexion pallid. There was a time when his entrance into anv of the clubs immediately provoked a wave of eager anticipation among the help and clientele, but those days seem to have ‘Geparted.
George W. Lipps Pupils to Dance
midtown hotel, is predominantly
ONLY TWO MORE _DA BING CROSBY -BOB BU RNS
“WAIKIKI WEDDING”
Plus “LITTLE MISS ROUGHNECK"
Never a Cover Charge
The 14th annual revue by students [of the George W. Lipps School of the Dance is to take place at 8:15 | o'clock tonight in Caleb Mills Hall Approximately 85 young dancers | are to take part. The program will | consist of two production numbers, | “Milady’s Masquerade” and “Way |
HIS BAND
Featuring Virginia Llyn
| | {
one; takes each drag as though it’s | Royer, also will be present.
| !
| prime favorites,
|
At |
| | total
| of these are under cover | past,
ago | showing
| on the radio,
| a landlord on the side, complained accent, | d p q |
| peat the role in this production. Her | young colleague, Lucille Browning,
gastronomic Buddha. Nirvana on a full maintains an unruffled calm even between meals. Food pleases rath- | er than excites him. And Broad- | way, on the whole, is content that | he has timed his visit for
Rosa Tentoni, who has sung Butterfly at the Metropolitan, will re-
and the Cincinnati singer, Joseph
sleeps
To complete an opening week of | ings. Because he a
the management | snores) throughout many has scheduled Gounod's “Faust” | performance. which broke the one-night attend- | matter of fact,
ance record last year. This bill also | Of his own, world-famous “The 39
will boast a pair of well- known | Steps” —one of the most exciting |
names from the fountainhead of | films ever made. | American opera: Sidney Rayner, » { who will have the title part, and | Muriel Dickson, who will sing Mar- | | guerite. To accomodate expected crowds,
»
Mrs. Hitchcock—who is in private | life, Alma Reville—is accompanying | { him on this visit, but she won't in-
500 seats have been added to the | terest the cafe crowd. For Mrs,
| Zoo Opera auditorium, bringing the | Hitchcock is diminutive and birdto about 2500. At least half | like, eats sparingly and is tolerant | As in the | Of rather than interested in her
seat prices for Cinzinnati’s | 17th season of al fresco opera will | the scales at a hundredweight.
remain in the “ popular” Rela.
Boy Quits Films For Graduation
than the average New Yorker—although this is onlv their second visit to this side. Their knowledge comes from much reading on the subject, from discussions with friends who are familiar with this city, and from the movies. They are at home on Broadwav. Hitchcock knew in advance and marched with unerring aim to the hotels which serve the best steaks. He knew every show on IBYYRUWAY,
SWIM—DANCE
WESTLAKE
Chuck Haug Orchestra
MARY BETH-—Soloist EVERY NIGHT EXCEPT MONDAY
| HOLL YWOOD. June 10 (U. P.) — | Billy Cook, 11, interrupted a prom- | ising movie nm today to go back | to grammer school near Palo Alto, | Cal., to be graduated. | Billy forsook his studies a year | to come to Hollywood after | unusual ability in school | He became a success | then was chosen for | a high-salaried role in the picture | | “Men With Wings.” He will return to the movies, and | continue his studies under a special | studio teacher,
theatricals.
stomach, but |
the | summer, when there are few open- | (and | stage | He fell asleep, as a | during a showing |
hus- | band’s major hobby—food. She tips |
Both know more about New York |
COOL OZONIZED AIR
LY REC
HOME OWNED-—-HOME OPERATED
STR
First
Jime Here THE TRUMPET KING with HOT LIPS
BUSSE
~s 52 ORCHES TRA
LR om From
NR
JOHN & EDNA TORRENCE
Extraordinary Bal!room Team
3 TROJANS * VAL SETZ
Athletic Stars s_ Comedy Juggler
CAROL GABLE
Personality Songstress
J
urrie miss JANET CHAPMAN
‘Miss THOROUGHBRED 22
Miss wvitn JOHN LITEL « ANN SHERIDAN FRANK MCHUGH » MvARweR Bros.
Race-Track Riot=
25¢ til 5, 30c-40c¢ After § Juhi
as well as numerous A variety of dancranging from bal-
| Down South,” | divertissements. | ing is scheduled,
| let to tap and soft shoe, and includ- |
| ing several folk and other char-
acteristic’ dances.
Starts TODAY!
Fiercely she fought Jor the unruly heart ® of a man branded “traitor”!
Hd
FREDDIE
MONTAGU LOVE Plus
RICHARD DIX in ‘““BLIND ALIBI’
CIRCLEF
Dine & Dance Every Week Nite Except Monday
TAT
Fearlessly be faced WW death on land and sea ¥ for the rebel who was bis idol!
A 20th Century-Fox Picture with
WARNER BAXTER
BARTHOLOMEW ARLEEN WHELAN
The yeor's emotional discovery in her star-role debut!
C. AUBREY SMITH
REGINALD OWEN JOHN CARRADINE « NIGEL BRUCE MILES MANDER - RALPH FORBES H. B. WARNER - ARTHUR HOBL E E CLIVE - ALLIWELL HOBBES
On the screen for the first time. . spectacularly produced]... the story the author of “Treasure Island” always considered his best!
«PRICES
25¢c
™ § *
Balcony
Oc a."
AT YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD THEATER
NORTH SIDE
NORTH SIDE H Il d 1300 Roosevelt ouble Yeature © ywoo Fuzzy Knight “COUNTY FAIR” John Wayne “ADVENTURE'S END” | “Crk.
Central at Fall ZARING Double Feature Gary Cooper “ADVENTURES OF MARCO POLO” TIP OFF GIRLS”
16th & Delaware Double Feature ae Henburn “BRINGING v Fred “Stone “QUICK MONEY"
ST. cL AIR “ati oft Te
Allen Lane “NIGHT SPOT” __"THE SQUADRON OF HONOR” Doors Onen 5:4
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“NON STOP NEW ¥ “ISLAND IN THE SKY”
TA LBOTT ckie Cooper
\ ‘BOY OF THE STREETS UNDER SUSPICION. ’
a
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WYER" _MOTO’S GAMBLE”
EAST SIDE ~ 1070 E. New York
TUXEDO Double Reatues
Jeanette MacDon “THE GIRL OF THE GOLDEN wrod Mickey Mouse Cartoon
DA\ZINIZS 507 KE. Wash, St. Double Feature Ann
IRVING a Mav Wong
“DANGEROUS TO KNOW” Bette Davis “JEZEBEL"
: 2116 E. 10th St. Hamilton Double Feature “MAD AB
De eanna Durbin “FIRST 00 YEARS
GOLDEN 6116 E. Wash.
Dhue Feature eorge Brent “GoLp 18 WHERE YOU IND Anne Nagel “SALESLADY
EMERSON Nichadl Wonare
Whalen “ISLAND IN THE Bobby Breen “HAWAII SEALLS”
Ss TRA N D Bar se, bot
Adutts Toe "rin ‘s Carol Lombar FOOLS
RITZ
_“MR.
42d & College
Talbott & 22nd Boduie Feature 4630 5:45
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DREAM Do able Feature
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“CASSIDY OF BAR 20” Sun. Adults 15¢ till 1
Merry Melody Cartoon in Color Matinees Sat. & Sun
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EAST SIDE 411 Sh, Pinky ae
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LOV 2 Tim MeCoy * ‘WEST OF RAINBOWS END”
PARKER 2030 E. 10th St,
Double Feature en “HE LOVED AN ACTRESS Clark Gable "HELL DIVERS"
R155 E. 10th St, ‘RIVOLI 15¢=5:15 to 6 W Pat_0O'’ Brien ‘WOMEN ARE LIKE THAT" Victor McLaglen—Brian Donlevy “BATT
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{ "WEST SIDE ee Speedway City
Double Feature adeline Carroll
WAS A SPY" | “THIS MARRIAGY BUSINESS”
A 2702 W. 10th St. 1S T A T E ~ Double Feature e THE KID” -—R VEBEARD'S EIGHTH WIFE”
BELMONT W. Wash. & Belmont
Double Feature Ji Huston “OF HUMAN ny “WOMEN IN
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WEST SIDE
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D A | S Y Chas. Starrett IRIE"
[ { 2540 | “OUTLAWS OF THE PRA
Mich St, Dhubie Feature
Will Rogers “JUDGE PRIEST" SOUTH SIDE
(ORIENTAL ‘hol ¥eiter
Double Feature | “BRINGING UP BABY" “MIDNIGHT INTRUDER"
LINCOLN East at Lincoln
Double Feature w, G, Robinson | “A SLIGHT CASE OF MURD “ARIZONA GU NFIGHTER 2203 Shelby go Feature New Garfield peubie Fear
“LOVE ON A BU DGET” Clark Gable “HELL DIVERS”
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“BEHIND PRISON WALLS" “SALESLADY"”
Beech Grove or Gene Feature »
Anne Nagel ene Autry LES"
(GROVE AVALON Pros. & Cea"
Bob Pi S Bi Sti ER
