Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 July 1938 — Page 8

PAGE 8

Audience Takes Part in

Eddy Duchin’

s New Show;

Burns and Bulls at Circle

‘Stormy Weather' Still Gets Great Ovation; Stanwyck Suffers.

By was evident day morning, that Eddy Duchin was back in town. Some 40 minutes before the first feature began, a queue of anxious patrons, mostly from the distaff side, were lined up for half a block before the Lyric box-office Apparently Mr. Duchin’s recordbreaking week at the Lyric last summer was no accident. For he started out his second engagement with a capacity house the first performance. Wisely enough, the handsome piano-playing band leader is doing about the same things he did before. Eschewing strident swing, he ooes in for audience participation which was an old and sure trick even before radio picked it up. So Mr. Duchin’s audience sings and whistles popular medleys as he plays them. And they sit enthralled as he gives his Lisztian interpretations of current hits. The biggest applause is reserved for "Stormy Weather,” the perennial Duchin favorite which also closed last year's bill

at

Performers Are Adept

Appearing with the band and its leader is an adept and entertaining vaudeville performers billing to Gene Shelamusing bashful banjo He's made several previous appearances at the Lyric Mr. Sheldon’'s humor is the Harry Langdon type—if you remasmber your old movie comedians. His banjo plaving is good, and his pantomime mirth-provoking. And ne has a hilarious “encore” which probably is the envy of his coljeagues. It's the trick of threading the imaginary needle with an imaginary hair. then sewing his fingers together. It doesn’t sound funnyv— but try seeing it Also on the hill are t girls who call themselves the Three Sophisticated Ladies. A bit sly the titl~ 1s, too. For the girls expend of their energy in knocking another flat The excellent dance team of Wally and Ver'Dyn Stapleton, and Durelle Alexander and Stanley Worth, singers with the Duchin band. complete In an hour's prove to your

troupe of

3

Second goes

don

the

player

of

hree energetic

he entertainers list

should

3

program which hh King Stanwyck on Screen On Barbara Stanwyck new studio In her appearance since the

famous ‘box-office poi-

ine screen,

with a 1st screen and charges Miss charged at

Stanwyck was

time with

sal

drawing an exorfor appearances in unpictures.

larv worthy and unpopular Well, the present vehicle. "Always Goodbve 1s much like a great many others in which the auburnhaired star has been seen. And somehow, the material seems to {it her well as any could Once again Miss Stanwyck is called upon to suffer, and suffer plenty She 1s seen as a girl who attempts suicide when her fiance is killed before her eves on the way to their wedding. A brilliant, ne'er-do-well doctor takes care of her until nameless born, then job and departs

Boy

later

as

her son

1s 1

find. her a

Finds on Liner

Five prosper ‘Ou ocean

the girl, now a finds her son on liner. She discovers the boy's foster mother is dead. and her maternal instinct asserts itself. Though she loves the doctor, she prevents the remarriage of the man who adopted her son, shakes off a of her own, and marries the father her child knows. The ng doctor sails off on another tramp steamer. Sidney Lanfield’s direction has avoided the pitfalls of oversentiand the film emerges as tolerable entertainment. Herbert Marshall. Ian Hunter, Cesar Romero Lynn 1 Bari and Binnie Barnes the other principals.

years

an

suitor only IyiFes arin

mentality,

ale

Lite Is Happier, Langdon Asserts

HOLLYWOOD, July 2 (U Harm

comedian

Py highly paid who recently reported t t $15. told ngs are on the

start pay-

Langdon. once a

he was down to his las the todav that thi upgrade again and he can alimony Mr. Langdon's former wife, Helen Walton Langdon, wanted him cited for contempt of court for failure to her $25 a week. Mr. Langdon formed the judge that he was celling a number of comedy scenarios and would resume payvm The action was dismissed.

HINT JOE E. BROWN WILL TAKE STAND

HOLLYWOOD, July 9 (U. P).— Joe E. Brown, the comedian, will make a court appearance as as witness against a youth accused of attempting to fob him, it was indicated today when a complaint was issued against Harry Duke, 26 Mr. Brown gave the vouth $3, talked him out of the holdu he was approached in front of a Hollywood cafe. A spectator folJowed Duke and had him arrested.

ANNE STILL STARS

Shirley erstwhile star, made her screen but in “The Miracle Child” William Farnum Current heads the east In “Mother

“SWIM WESTLAKE

court

me iis

pay

nts nis

and p when

child dewith she

Carey's

Anne movie

Iv

| Plots

|

as early as yester- |

Don't Jibe Love Affairs,

Film Proves.

Real

JAMES THRASHER

Following the stock market's lead, the Circle this week is exhibiting definitely bullish tendencies in its current film. The picture is called “Tropic Holiday.” And beside a couple of ferocious bulls, it has Dorothv Lamour. Martha Raye, Bob Burns. Ray Milland and two examples of good burlesque—In the word's original meaning : One of these is the bull fight in which Miss Raye, Mr. Burns and the more ferocious of the said bulls participate. It's the funniest takeoff on the popular Latin sport since Stan Laurel followed up a famous Valentino epic with a two-reeler called “Mud and Sand.” That was years ago, before Mr. Laurel met up with Mr. Hardy and his multifarious matrimonial mixups. The other comes at the moment that Scenarist Milland tries to help out Bashful-Swain Burns Mr Burns is having trouble convincing | Miss Raye of his burning ardor So Mr. Milland suggests that he swim out to sea, just as Fredric March did in “A Star Is Born.” He promises that Miss Raye will be there to call him back. He Goes On and On almost exactly the same. There 1s the moonlit beach and the foaming surf. Mr. Burns heads for the watery horizon, just as did Mr. March. But the lady far doesn’t show up. So he keeps swim-

ming In the next shot,

The scene Is

we see Mr. Burns being dragged aboard a Mexican fishing boat. He 1s In a net, In company with several hundred fish. Shucks,” says Robin. “I started in ‘A Star Is Born’ and end up Captains Couragecus’.” Aside from that there's very little to say. Unless it would be to remark that Miss Raye already Is undergoing her process of ‘“‘glamorization She is given a subdued role, nor is her outsized oral orifice stretched to full and imposing dimensions. Here's the Story

out in

+ 1tS

mainly about a who thinks he knows all about love, since he knows ail the movie plots But when love comes to him, in the person of Miss Dorothy (Toujours) Lamour, he's tongue-tied. His engagement to a screen star (Binnie Barnes) turns out to be only a momentary cloud, thanks to the astute Mr. Burns. There are the usual number of romantic duets, dance sequences, choral numbers. In fact, if it weren't for the swimming and the oull fight, “Tropic Holiday” wouldn't even hit the movie musical par. But the comedy is amusing. And you may like the songs by the ace Mexican tunesmith, Augustin Lara On the same bill is a picture called "The Gangs of New York.” The title 1s from Herbert Asoury’s book about the prodigious Bowery hoodlums of a century, and less, ago. But the film story isn't concerned with them, which probably is fortunate for the more squeamish movie-goer It's a conventional gangster-plot picture which features Charles Bickford, Ann Dvorak, Alan Baxter and Wynne Gibson

The screen writer

story is

I-Punch Rogers Floors Heckler

HOLLYWOOD, July 9 (U. P.).— Buddy Rogers, orchestra-lead-ing husband of Mary Pickford, confirmed today that he floored a heckler w a right punch during an engagement of his dance band at San Luis Obispo, Cal, last Saturday night. The heckier had squirted a siphon bottle into Mr. Rogers’ face. After being laid out by a single blow from Buddy, he begged off from further battle ‘here had been some Mr. Rogers said. “An tossed at us while we I ducked it and note “Then this

tne

1th iui

heckling.” orange was were plaving We didn’t miss a fellow squirted the bottle during the interinission while I was signing autographs I was pretty peeved by that time, I guess.’ Mary Pickford. who sometimes attends a dance with some film not to waich her husband lead his was not present

able band

TWO COLLAPSE AT FILM SURGERY

HOLLYWOOD. July 2 (U. P).— Two Chicago residents who found a film scene too realistic felt a bit abashed today as an order was posted barring visitors henceforth from the set of the picture, “Devils Island.” Mrs. Eva Raymond and Mrs. Myrtle Fleischer, Chicago tourists. collapsed yesterday while Boris Karloff, in the role of a surgeon, performing a movie operation. They were given first aid treatment in the Warner Bros. studio hospital.

COMEDY TO FRANCE

France will be the first foreign | country to see a print of Harold | Lloyd's newest Paramount comedy, “Professor, Beware!” In order that the picture might get under the French quota for this year, Llovd is rushing a composite print of the

film. SWIM in Our Spacious Concrete Pool

THE IDEAL PLACE FOR YOUR SUNDAY OUTING Picnie Ovens in Our Shady Grave Pony Track, Boating, Dancing

LONGACRE

4700 ¥ladison Av.. Road 31 (

-/

With |

watching |

THE INDIANAPOLIS

TIMES

HERE IS WHERE THE FUN STARTS

Here is the starting point of most of the fun in the Apollo. Moore

“Three Blind Mice,” jorie Weaver (left)

now and

at

Pauline

As look on

Marm

N

sisterly disapproval, Loretta Young stuffs their $5000 inheritance check leave Kansas for

in her California and

overalls and prepares to a fling.

Verdi Work

ls Scheduled!

| | |

James Melton to Sing for

Cincinnati Opera.

With tenor, of his career, mer Opera will offer Verdi's “La Traviata” as its attractions tomorrow and Thursday nights. Rosa Tentoni, who appeared last week with Mr. Melton in his debut performance in “Madame Butterfly,” will be tomorrow night's Violetta. Others in the cast are Carlo Morelli, Norman Cordon and John Gurney of the Metropolitan Opera Co., Lodovico Oliviero. Daniel Harris and Mildred Ippoiito The week's other operas will be Rossinl’s “The Barber of Seville,” on Tuesday and Friday, and Verdi's “Alda” at the Wednesday and Saturday performances. Fausto Cleva is to be the conductor on each occasion Two Others to Make Debut

Two more Cincinnati debuts will mark the Rossini production. The new singers are Josephine Antoine and Giuseppe Barsotti. Angelo Pilloto will sing Figaro, and Pompilio Malatesta, the Don Bartolo. Rose Bampton will return to display her newly found soprano voice in the title part of *“Aida.” Until last season Miss Bampton had been included on the Metropolitan Opera’s contralto roster. The Rhadames will be Harold Lindi of the San Carlo Opera. Other singers are Miss Ippolito and Messrs. Royer, Pilotto Cordon. Gurney, Oliviero and Harris The Cincinnati opera performances begin at 7:15 p. m. (Indianapolis Time) each night but Monday at the Zoological Gardens. Until 6:15 p. m.. admission to the zoo 1s not included in the opera ticket price. Out-of-town patrons may

James Melton,

noted radio | singing the second opera iole | the Cincinnati Sum- |

| moguls.

make ticket reservations at any Big |

Four Railroad ticket office.

Cast as Lincoln For 3183d Time

HOLLYWOOD. July 9. —For 3183d time, Frank McGlynn Sr. enfeing Abraham Lincoln. The veteran actor portrayer of the Sens Emancipator more times than any other actor has played any one character, was this week cast in “Strange Glory.” McGlynn first played Lincoln in a Thomas Edison two-reeler in 1914. Following that, he played the name role in John Drinkwater’s “Abraham Lincoln” for three and a half years. A 19-month vaudeville engagement followed with McGlynn as Lincoln. Since, he has done the role in many pictures. In the latest, he is again the Civil War President.

Nneeciat

the 1s

WHAT, WHEN, WHERE

APOLLO

“Three Blind Mice.” with Loretta ng Joel McCrea D2 1d Niven, ie Weaver, at 12 2:33. 3.03 nd 10:03 Moto Takes a Chance” r Rochelle Hudson and 2

CIRCLE Holiday :

artha Rav land. at 11. 1

Marior

“Tronic with amour M

“The Gangs of New York,” w= Charles Bi ckford. Ann Dvorak 2:15, 2:05 i B:45

2 3:03, 5:53 and 8

LOEW'S 'S

' Shonw orn Angel.’

"Ie sg he, Yietor.) ' with Wi at 3 25, 6:13 and 9-10.

LYRIC Eddy Duchin ST his orchestra on stage at 12:45 5:15. 7:30 and 3:45

“Alwavs Goodbye. with Barbara kK Herbert Marshall, 3:50. 6:05 8:20 and 1

IN NEW YORK —:» ctor

ce 3

GE ROS

Creator Needed for 'Sally Swing’; Women Are

Revealed as

EW YORK,

portant in New York as in Hollywood is

the most influential maker of them

July 9.—One phase of the film industry

Business Leaders.

that is as imthe animated cartoon, and

here is Max Fleischer, who puts out

Betty Boop and several other features.

Well,

we learn from Mr. Fleischer

that the animated cartoon world

conducts as desperate a talent hunt for new stars as do the Hollywood

Because, as In the case of Hollywood films, the cartoon films

can’t get along with a narrow

coterie of stars like Mickey Mouse, !

Betty Boop and Donald Duck. So every now and then Mr. Fleischer sends his ferrets out for new material. ing artists and ask for a new pen creation who will rock the box office records around the world. For exampie, Mr. Fleischer now

is seeking a personality to go by the |

name of “Sally Swing.” She must be a charming “jitterbug” who will amuse the film-goers who know all about hot trumpets and 52d St. Pretty soon “Sally Swing” will be the sensational discovery of the season! And 10 talent scouts will claim to have discovered her on as many drawing boards.

un =

Wt wrote a piece about some representative members of the distaff side who are in unusual lines of work. And the ladies, bless them, wrote In to say that we could go on with the same subject. So, our dossier replenished, we can tell you about Mrs. Marie Kramer who, a short while back, bought the 28story Hotel Lincoln for seven million doliars, which seems a figure that belongs in a man's world.

It 1s said to

be the largest hotel in the world to come under the single domination of a feminine financial titan. As a matter of fact, Mrs. Kramer is not new to the ho-! tel game. She is the wife of the Max Kramer whe owns the Hotel Edison, a vast Manhattan hostelry that is a brief distance from her new acquisition. It seems she liked | helping her husband to run his place and decided that she would like to toy with one of her own. Seven millions didn’t seem expensive for a joyful diversion And Mrs. Kramer likes the work. It’s domestic. Soon after her marriage to Boniface Kramer, she did nothing but arrange the flowers in the hundreds of hotel rooms “Then,” she says, *'I started to do a little more each day

was doing much more than. I should

have done. Now I know all about it. | ——

It’s like running a big home, “I'm not the kind of woman who can stand around with a lorgnette or sit and enjoy having a manicure hour after hour. everything I wanted—Rolls-Royces, yachts, palaces, everything. I like to work.”

Mrs. Kramer is a native of Sonora,

Mexico, is of Spanish-French school in

Aztec-Mexican-origin, went to Arizona, California and Europe, speaks English, Spanish. French and German, once with aspirations toward a grand operatic “Carmen” (no dice), plays the guitar and slide trombone. She was a nurse in the front lines of France during the war, turns

GOOD SHOW GEORGE RAFT

AY FOV THE BOWERY"

Wm. Bovd “Partners of the Plains”

SWIM—DANCE

WESTLAKE

Chuck Haug Orchestra

MARY BETH-—Soloist

Dancing Every Night Except Menday

25¢ to 6

Balcony 30c¢ After 6

THE SWEETHEART OF “3 COMRADES"

is Daisy Heath, hard-as-nails Broadway glamour girl of Dana Burnet's smashing dramatic Saturday Evening Post love story!

MARGARET SULLAVAN

ALAN CURTIS

Added!

+ SAM LEVENE

(Read What the Critica Say)

TO THE VICTOR

They go around to the lead- |

and soon I

I've always had |

studied voice

and |

’ | down a bed neatly, is a capable cook

and an astute businesswoman. Now, what more can a hotel guest expect of the proprietress? o HAT brings us around Gertrude Brandwein,

n oN

to Mrs. who 1s

Three Take

Music Posts

ment Head to Teach Theory.

Three new faculty members have been signed by the Jordan Conserv- | atory of Music for the school year | beginning in September. Miss Ada | Bicking, director, said today. They are Lois Wilson Lautner, Albert J. Ruppel and Katherine Murphy. Mrs. eph Lautner, recently signed to head the conservatory’s new opera de- | partment. She is a violinist and pi-

| anist, and has served as accompanist |

for her husband in his concert appearances. She is to teach in the conservatory’s theory department, | and will accept a limited number of piano and violin students. Mrs. Lautner studied music at Bethany College, Lindsborg, Kas., the Cincinnati Conservatory and

| the Institute of Musical Art in New

York. She is a former winner of the Seligman composition prize and was awarded® instruction with the noted composer, Arnold Schoenberg, in a national scholarship Besides Mr. ner's teachers have included Dr. | Frank Damrosch, Waldo Pratt, W. J. Henderson and Thomas Tapper in theoretical subjects, and Hans Letz, Hugo Kortschak and Frank Kneisel in violin. Mr. Ruppel comes from the Curtis Institute of Music in Philadelphia | to join the organ and piano faculty. Miss Murphy is to teach in the preparatory piano department: She is a graduate of the Louisville Conservatory, and has taught at that | school, the Sue Bennett Memorial

School at London, Ky., and at Berea

College.

Band's Concert Set at Garfield

considered the best insurance sales-

woman in Greater New York. (And, by the way, it curred to us until we were that there are 750 women life insurance in this town that they earn from $5000 to $30,000 a year ay it.) Mrs. Brandwein is the mother of a 6-vear-old daughter and looks forward to the day when her offspring can enter the same line of work. It is an occuupation she loves so much that at a recent dinner she extravagantly remarked: “We wouldn't trade jobs with any woman in the world.” Apparently

told,

not, because this remarkable lady paid income tax on $33,000 In a depression year, and earns much more when business picks up. Though it invites competition for her, she wishes that all girls out of college would take up selling life insurance n o NATIVE New Yorker, argues Buddy Clark, doesn’t have to look at corner sign posts to read the names of the streets. All he has to do is listen to the conversa- | tion of the people on these corners | and he’ll know exactly where he is. | For instance, if he walks through | a crowd of men discussing sharps | and flats, swing and sweet, and | other musical terms, the probability | 1s that he is at 50th St. and Sixth | Ave. If the

conversation runs to

never oc-

selling | and |

The second in the Indianapolis Concert Band's series of summer concerts is to be held at 8 p. m. tomorrow in the open-air theater at Garfield Park. William Schumacher will conduct the following program: March, “Chicago Tribune” , Waltz “The Queen of Sheba’. ‘““The Tov Trumpet “Piccolo Pic” (Piccolo Solo) He: ‘man Tressel Finale, Symphony No. 4 ..Tschaikowsky Intermission

‘Hungarian Comedy’ Selections from “No. No.

wa old Apple Tree” Valtz Artist's Life Nal ‘The Stars Cand’ Stripes Forever’

Chambers

Keler-Bela Nanette’ Youmans Jerome ... Strauss

.. Sousa

dresses and styles, $3.95 models and $10.75 numbers, he is in the center of the garment trade. Should the talk take a turn to stocks, bonds, debentures and indentures, he is at Wall and Nassau If soapbox an al fresco 1s that he is Union Square.

orators are conducting babel, the probability

And so forth. Open Air or averes

SKY i HARBOR

sat, Soe couple before 9:30: 80c couple 9:30 2:00: 50c couple after 12.

Dance Saturday Sundav

Sen! 35¢ couple before 9 | 500 couple after 9:15

One block South Municipal Airport

With Jordan

Wife of Opera Depart-|

Lautner is the wife of Jos- |

competition. | Schoenberg, Mrs. Laut- |

Selden |

.. Gounod |

at Columbus Circle or

SATURDAY, JULY 9, 1938

LOVE AND PI

OF 'SHOPWORN ANGEL

E THEME

Appearing on Loew's screen for Margaret Sullavan is lending

| “Shopworn Angel.” With her

her is the

the second time within the month, effulgent presence this week to increasingly able actor, James

| Stewart, who gives, in this moviegoer's opinion, his best performance to

date. The picture's title sounds like one | | of the string of Joan Crawford ve- | hicles. Actually, however, it is an | | off-the-beaten-track fable resurrected from a 1918 magazine story by Dana Burnet, called Pettigrew’s Girl.” Private Bill Pettigrew is a lanky | | Texan, clearthinking unaffected and unspoiled. He knows what he! wants in life, and when he can't find the best, relies on memory or a fertile imagination |

“Private |

Hot Apple Pie and Love

So, says Bill, after the death of { his mother, who made the best hot apple pies in the world, he just | stopped eating anyone else's hot apple pies. And when, in New York en route to France and war, he meets the beautiful showgirl, Daisy Heath, he knows he has found the | | hot apple pie of love. So he will | have no other. What happens when lusioned Daisy comes into this refreshing presence makes up story. At first she is repelled by his uncultured frankness. then puzzled, and finally quite enchanted. But she has a lover, Sam Bailey, rich and casually attentive, First Sam and Daisy discover warm glow of the first love is infectious. himself first jealous, Daisy, | marry him. The same day, Bill rushes to the theater | her he is to leave for night. So Daisy marries Bill, with Sam's consent. They know that to do anything else would all but kill the boy Bill, completely happy, sails away Hir bride's memory blunts the reality of war Then one night brings a letter from partment to Sam at the night club where Daisy works. From the floor { she sees Sam open the letter. and Bill's identification disc drop to the table, And that, of course. is the logical solution and the real “happy ending”; Bill has died with every illusion intact. “Shopworn

|

Jealous

that the

then in love. however, and tells France that

Daisy's the War De-

maid

Angel” is an exceptionally good picture and, with the highly commendable “To the Victor,” makes Loew's current bill one of the movie season's choicest offerings. Jd. T.

THRICE NAPOLEON

Sergei Arabelof has appeared as Napoleon three times in one year. | He is currently enacting the Little Corporal in “The Bravest of the Brave.” |

the disil- | hual

the |

| York, Penn.

young soldier's | Sam finds |

similarly elated, promises to |

Circus Week Set ‘At Riverside Park

It's going to be “circus week’ at Riverside Park, beginning Monday night—with peanuts, popcorn, red lemonade and all the trimmings.

The La Pearl Clowns, who appeared

lon the Independence Day week-end | programs,

have been re-engaged for the coming week and will lend a bigtop atmosphere to the Showboat's floor show. Major Joe, ceremonies, is

the midget master of appearing at the Showboat each night except Monday, between the dance groups by Hal Bailey and his orchestra Today, Riverside's week-end crowds are augmented by the an=outing of Armour & Co. em=ployees.

VETS PAY HONOR

Lewis Stone has been made an honorary life member of the Span-ish-American War Veterans of for his performance as Maj. Walter Reed in “Yellow Jack.”

CHARLES

ET BICKFORD jm DVORAK

e« ON THE STAGE » Magic Fingers of RADIO

SLT

ORCHESTR

11 4] * STANLEY WORTH a RHE EE VRS 8 1]; CN EE A

Swing an

| Fridey SAMMY KA

s

) WAT

His ALL-NEW Revue

A

GREAT WITH INSPIRED DRAMATIC PERFORMANCES

HERBERT

MARSHALL=

BARRARA

STANWYCK,

At Your Neigh

borhood

Theater

SOUTH SIDE

New Garfield

2203 Shelby St. Gary Cooper “Adventures of Marco Polo” “GIRL WITH IDEAR” Double Feature—Victor McLaglen

“BATTLE OF BROADWAY” "FOOLS FOR SCANDAL”

Sun.

Fountain Square

Double Feature Ginger Rogers "VIVACIOUS LADY” “CONDEMNED WOMEN"

Sun

“ADVE!

Double Feature—Errol Flvnn

“BELOV ED BRAT"

—— At Fountam Sauare Donhle Feature

Sanders Wallace Beery

“BILLY THE KID” “ACCIDENTS WILL HAPPEN’ Double Feature—Alice “SALLY, IRENE AND MARY” “SLIGHT CASE OF MURDER” Double Feature

GROVE it ig.

“DANGEROUS TO KNOW” Bob Steele "COLORADO KID” Sun. Double Feature—Clark Gable Myrna Loy “TEST PILOT” Sally Eilers * ‘LADY BEHAVE”

Sun Fave

Beech Grove

& Churchman "Double Feature John Wayne

“BORN TO THE WEST” “BRINGING UP BABY” Double Feature—Walter Huston “OF HUMAN HEARTS" pNIGHT INTRUDER"

O t | 5, Neri rien a Joe E. Brown “WIDE OPEN FACES” “LITTLE MISS ROUGHNECK” Sun. Double Feature—Claudette Colbert “BLUEBEARD’'S EIGHTH WIFE” “THE OLD BARN DANCE” Double Feature

Lincoln Gene Autry “BOOTS AND SADDLES” Ricardo Cortez “CITY GIRL" Sun. Double Feature—Don Ameche “IN OLD CHICAGO” “SH! THE OCTOPUS”

NORTH SIDE Admission 10e-15¢

U DELL Anna May Wong

“DANGEROUS TO KNOW”

Sun,

East at Lincoln

Udell at Clifton

Kipling’s “ELEPHANT BOY” Sun. Double Feature—Carole Lombard “NOTHING SACRED” Sylvia Sidney “DEAD END”

NORTH SIDE

30th at Northwester Double Feature Walter Huston

“OF HUMAN HEARTS” 3 Stooges “START CHEERING” Double Feature—Gary Cooper “MARCO POLO” “BELOVED BRAT” Lewis Stone

VOGUE mar

“JUDGE HARDY'S CHILDREN"

Vogue Variety Hour

Sun. College at 63d,

Sundav’'s Feature—Bing Croshy

“DR. RHYTHM”

Vogue Variety Hour Double Feature

DREAM Ken Maynard

“WHIRLWIND HORSEMAN" Clark Gable "HELL DIVERS” Ellis

2351 Station St,

Double Feature—Patricia

“THE GAIETY GIRLS" Gary i “MARCO POLO”

Sun

Minnis and 34th Double Feature

| R | TZ Joan Blondell

“THERE'S ALWAYS A WOMAN" Bobby Breen “HAWAII CALLS" Sun. Double Feature—Robht. Montgomery “YELLOW JACK” “HOLD THAT KISS”

1500 Roosevelt Double Feature

| Hol lywoo Eric Linden

“MIDNIGHT INTRUDER" Shirley Temple “HEIDI” Sun. Double Feature—Gary Cooper “Adventures of Marco Polo” Jane Withers “CHECKERS”

Central at Fall Crk. Double Feature

Z a r n g Victor McLaglen “BATTLE OF BROADWAY”

Gene Raymond “Stolen Heaven” All Next Week—Ginger Rogers “VIVACIOUS LADY” OF THE UNDERWORLD”

16 Double Feature

Ci | nema Shirley Temnle

“Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm” |

“LAW

th & Delaware

“DANGEROUS TO KNOW” Sun. Double Feature—Gary Cooper “MARCO POLO” “MAID'S NIGHT OUT”

St gc a I r Sn ohen Vase . 135¢ Till 6 | Patricia Elis "GAIETY GIRLS” Jane Withers “RASCALS” Sun. Double Feature—Jloe Penner “GO CHASE YOURSELF” Clark Gable “TEST PILOT”

- mr Sy

NORTH SIDE

| U t Dahiy oer | Pp own Pat O’Brien “SUBMARINE D-1” Jane Withers “RASCALS” : Sun. Double Feature—Errol Flynn “ADVENTURES OF ROBIN HOOD” “TRIP TO PARIS”

Talbott

Spencer Tracy—Myrna

| “TEST PILOT” | | i | |

Fathott & 22nd Special Feature Clark Gable

Loy

Sun. Double Feature—Joe Penner “GO CHASE YOURSELF” “HER JUNGLE LOVE"

EAST SIDE 111 BE. Wash.

Pa ra mou N t Double Feature

* Frank McHugh “HE COULDN'T SAY NO” | “CASSIDY OF BAR 20” Double Feature—Alice Faye { “IN OLD CHICAGO" { “WIDE OPEN FACES” Double Feature

B J ou Wheeler & Woolsey

“HIGH FLYERS" “WHERE THE WEST BEGINS” Sun. Double Feature—Lee Tracy “CRASHING HOLLYWOOD” “BEHIND THE MIKE”

Parker fk i “A YANK AT OXFORD” “PORT OF MISSING GIRLS” Starts Tomorrow—Jeanette MacDonald Nelson Eddv—Buddv Ebson—Leo Carille “GIRL OF THE GOLDEN WEST”

March of Time—Our Gang Comedy nfo tani Cool

R VOL Cont. Matinee Today

Adults 15¢ Till 6 Montgomery Virginia Bruce | “YELLOW JACK" Dick Purcell—Beverly Roberts “DARE DEVIL RIDERS” EXTRA! Last Show Tonight Oniy! Box Office Open Until 11 p. m. Spencer Tracy—Mickey Rooney Freddie Bartholomew-—Lionel Barrymore

“CAPTAINS COURAGEOUS” Starts Tomorrow Errol Flynn “ROBIN HOOD” Mickey Rooney "Hold That Kiss”

- 2 E. 1 Tacoma “Hi Fh “Adventures of Marco Polo” “MAID’'S NIGHT OUT” Sun. Double Feature—Carole Lombard “FOOLS FOR SCANDAL" Bobby Breen "HAWAII CALLS” Double Feature

Tuxedo Walter Huston “OF HUMAN HEARTS" “ISLAND IN THE SKY” Sun. Double Feature—Joe Penner “GO CHASE YOURSELF" “FOUR MEN AND A PRAYER”

Sun

i E Ww ashington

2030 E, 10th St.

| | | | | |

3155 10th St,

| Robert

12 ‘Wash st.

4020 E, New York

Strand.

STATE

SIDE

E AST § 5507 E. Wash. St Double Feature

RVI NG June Travis “THE KID COMES BACK” “ROMANCE IN THE DARK”

Sun. Double Feature—Carole Lombard

“FOOLS FOR SCANDAL” Burns & Allen "COLLEGE SW ING

16

Hamil toni:

10th st. 15¢ Till #8 y Francis

“WOMEN ARE LIKE THAT” “OF HUMAN HEARTS" Sun. Double Feature—Loretta Young “FOUR MEN AND A PRAYER” “STOLEN HEAVEN” Double Features

GOLDEN Ronald Colman

“LOST HORIZON” “IF YOU COULD ONLY COOK” Sun. Double Feature—~Wallace Beery “BILLY THE KID" "Manhattan Merry-Go-Round” Comfortably Cool

Eme rson Cont. Matines

15¢ Until § First East Side Showings

“WHEN G-MEN STEP IN” “MYSTERY HOUSE" LOUIS-SCHMELING FIGHT BING CROSBY FEATURETTE Starts Tomorrow-—Adults 15¢ Till 2 “FOUR MEN AND A PRAYER” “GO CHASE YOURSELF”

nee

116 £. Wash,

1630 E I th

CT ———— 1332 E. Wash. St. Sat, Sun,, Mon. Two Rig Hits Olivia DeHavilland “ROBIN HOOD” Jane Withers—Harmonica Rascals “RASCALS” Color Cartoon and News Matinees Sat. & Sun.—135¢ Till 1 EXTRA! Late Showings Tonight Box Office Open Until 10:30

- —

Errol Flynn

WEST SIDE

Belmont " Wash, & ‘Belmont

Double Feature Maureen O'Sullivan “HOLD THAT KISS” Bing Crosby “DR. RHYTHM” Sun. Double Feature—Ginger Rogers “VIVACIOUS LADY” Virginia Bruce “Y ELLOW JACK”

Speedway HFT “WHEN G-MEN STEP IN” “SING, BABY, SING” Sun. Double Feature—Clark Gable Myrna Loy “TEST PILOT” Robt. Paige “MAIN EVENT”

Speedway C ity

- —— 2702 WW, 10th St. Double Feature Edw. G. Robinson

“A SLIGHT CASE OF MURDER” “PHANTOM RANGER" Double Feature—Walter Huston “OF HUMAN HEARTS” Jane Withers “RASCALS”

Sun

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