Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 September 1938 — Page 9
EE a
-
SATURDAY, SEPT. yj, 1088
‘Hold That Coed’ Funny And Bars No Holds at All.
Loew's Has Action Plus
Gov. Gabby Reminiscent 'Too Hot to Handle' Has Of Huey in Farce Gable and Loy in At Apollo. | Exciting Roles.
By JAMES THRASHER It's fourth down and the U, 8.] At Loew's this week you can have Eorave Wl iy TT nities Clark Gable and Myrna Loy, all the world’s only feminine halfback. And action of a Western plus the goohagrabbing the ball, she battles 800n2 atmosphere of “Tarzan” and through a tornado and the opposing | “Trader Horn.” And all for the team to win for State and Governor pr ice of one admission ticket.
Gabby Harrigan. No bargain-hunting movie fan can That's the windup of the Apollo's afford to miss it. “Too Hot to Hancurrent feature, “Hold That Coed.” | gle” is the title. Crazy?—sure. But also funny— |
quite the funniest farce to come our | “ Hat variati g way in some time. It starts out as | the Test Pilot” variety, but with
| » of its tragedy or psychological the usual college football and tap- no : dancing grind movie, but after Joan °° ertones. Where that picture's Barrvmore (as Gabby) and Joan POWer arose as much from the test Davis (as Lizzie) put in their ap- pilot's inevitable wait for death as pearance, the fun begins. [from the thrilling photography, “Too {Hot to Handle” is about as subtle There's no denying the fact that
This is another exciting picture of |
4 ARR ny ———
“THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
[IT'S 'ARTIST' GRACIE ALLEN NOW! SHE DRAWS SARDINES AND THINGS
Lyric Finds Swingtime's | Bedlam Time
Gene Krupa and His Band Are Boom-Booming
and Bush-Bushing.
As the curtain rises on Gene Krupa and his band at the Lyric this week, Drummer-boy Krupa is as sleek as Adolph Menjou. But when it goes down again, Mr. Krupa has the light of swingomania in his eye and hair like Paderewski. Gene (Ignatius) Krupa, formerly of Benny Goodman's band, makes music with drums. At least if it isn't musie, it gives the impression of music, the boom-boom Congo kind, and it's all the same thing. The program opens at a compara= tive frost (about 350 degrees F.) with “What Goes On Here?” and works up to Leo Watson.
Bush 'Em Up Leo Leo Watson, a colored lad who
[first night, John Golden has just brought °
After 20 Years, ‘Lightnin” Reappears on Broadway
NEW YORK, Sept. 24. —Twenty years and 20 days after its original ‘Lightnin’ ” back to Broadway with Fred Stone in the endearing role that won the late Frank Bacon a million warm friends toward the end of his life. The sentimental old-timers were present. Fred Stone, whose 65th birthday has come and gone, did a merry jig at the end, and Mr. Golden murmured to a stagehand in the wings that it was the happy occasion of a lifetime. And cynical youngsters who were there that evening said that it all struck them as slightly old-fashioned, Twenty years make a lot of difference on the stage. And yet the world didn’t seem to have changed much when “Lightnin’” came back | to Broadway the other night. For back in the summer of 1918, the first nighters who drew up in fuming autos and horse-drawn gigs to see the new comedy had just come away from front pages that were alive with news from the European fronts—the advance of the Allies, the gradual retreat of the German war machine, the collapse of the Crzarist regime and the casualty | lists from Over There,
Much the Same Now
ting and with bovish enthusiasm picked up the phone and called Ambassador Kennedy. "I guess (you're right, Joe,” he said, and hung up. Then rose the problem of casting a likely successor to Frank Bacon as Lightnin’ Bill. Of course, Fred Stone came readily to Mr. Golden's mind, but Fred was in Hollywood where, the producer understood, he was intrenched bevond recall. But a few days later, Mr. Stone walked unexpectedly into Mr. Golden's ofe fice. Anyway, the long-truant Mr, Stone was in Mr. Golden's office and casually remarked that he wouldn't mind going back on the stage. And thus the show that wrote theatrical history two score years ago came back to Broadway, as the theatrical season sentimentally {opened the ‘other evening.
The folk who returned 20 vears| Ameassaoor TET Ly
as a Pearl White serial. t there the late Huey Long was the inspira- : he oH
tion for all this nonsense. It’s bur-
is high excitement, a good bit of amusement and some capable act-
| Gertrude Stein of Swing.
| sings and plays the trombone, is the later to the Golden to see the play's |
reincarnation had just departed |
DEAD END Ro LITTLE TOUGH GUY"”—"Torchy Blane in Panama”
R. Benchley Hit—News
| from ominous radio bulletins of a heightening war scare, from front pages that were smeared with the ehlrlenh NOW 15¢ diplomatic maneuvers of the Euro- | 3 Mesquiteers “RIDERS OF {pean nations on the brink of a Fy Re LTR | second World War, * > Nor did the old-timers forget CR i (day when “Lightnin’'” left New| York for Chicago and they watched | Frank Bacon, with tear-filled wi at the head of a procession that | numbered 7500 actors, friends and | well-wishers on a farewell march | a down Broadway that took him to| the railroad station. New York hasn't seen a demonstration for an actor like it. And now the older generation of players turned out to salute Fred Stone as Lightnin’ Bill; Fred] Stone who, in his 65th year ves
Sunk halfway to his knees, his
oy d ! lifted heavenward, FROM AN EXHIBITION OF SURREALIST PASTELS BY GRACIE ALLEN oe re}
“Man Builds Better Mousetrap and Buys Mohair | Go "Round the Mulberry Bush” goes | Toupee.” | sore like this: Heah we go ‘round the mulberry bush, bush bush bushie bush! Look out, look, look out for the bush! See, | see, see, bushie bush! 'Round, bush, | | YAH!” Featured in several orchestra | numbers is “Sad Sam” Donahue, a | saxophonist from Detroit, who plays |with a doleful face, squinting eyes
lesqued to the last inch, but the
" ‘ ing in this saga of the newsreel cutline still can be recognized. en g i ?
|cameramen, Newsreeler Chris Hunter is like the movies’ idea of a reporter, hale, hardy and heartless, quick in talk and action. Chris has his colleagues in Shanghai beside themselves after | repeated scoops.
An Editor's Nightmare
Governor on Grid “Gravity Gels Body Scissors on Virtue as Night
Governor Gabby has let the State Falls Upside Down.”
University practically fall to the ground in order to use the funds for more profitable purposes. When the new football coach and most of the students storm his office to de-| mand money for equipment, Gab-| bys secretary (Marjorie Weaver) | tells him that a winning football team will make him famous throughout the land. Gabby goes to work. places the buildings. 1200-seat stands give way to a stadium seating 100,000. Through political connections, games are
Cll Lic Hansts Four Daughters
PRISCILLA LANE-ROSEMARY LANE LOLA LANE . GALE PAGE
CLAUDE RAINS « JOHN GARFIELD
By GEORGE ROSE Times Special Writer NEW YORK, Sept. 24. -— Gracie He Chinese artillery to Allen has turned artist—surrealist ‘a &F artist to be exact. arae fit: Jie Jo sek . It will take more than a New [Louehing scene with a little Chinese York columnist to rate Gracie as girl and a toy airplane. It's just one ap artist. The first impulse of the big picnic. with Chris getting all the amateur observer, confronted with olives and none of the ants. jone of her paintings, is to wince. A Rill Dennis, rival cameraman, connoisseur such as Lord Duveen fakes a serum flight by Alma Har- might reach for his pocketbook. But ding, who flies from Manila into a! most others would prefer an aspirin,
shoots the enemy
land true feeling for his chosen pro- | fession. ‘and clarinet are unusually good.
Incidentally, the saxophone
He resections of the band
The school's
T'he Singer is Miss Irene Daye, fling at a
booked with Louisiana, Yale, Princeton, Illinois and other big teams. Finally the dignified RBreckenridge, Gabby's political opponent, joins in line, gets a political football team of his own. Clayton and State are booked for the season's last game, with the senate seat at stake
Really on Mat
On the eve of the game. two wrestlers on the State team strike for money and are exposed as professionals State crippled But Lizzie, the demon placekicker, goes in to kick a field goal, remains because there is no one else to play, and wins the game Of course there is some mooning between Miss Weaver and George Murphy, who plays the coach and still seems to be regarded by Holly- | wood as a male Eleanor Powell. However. Gabby and Lizzie get most of the footage Mr. Barrvmore revels in his part mavbe wallows is a better word He struts and schemes, poses and pontificates, and gives us the really artistic sort farce comedy that usuatly reserved for the legitimate stage
Well-Rounded Cast
more
is
of
is
than usual. especially Jack contrib-
Miss Davis is better he rest the cast, Halev and George Barbier, ute ably to the merriment There are some excellent comedy sequences, especially the outrageously funny one in which the wrestlers negotiate their football contract in the midst of a match Queeriy enough, “Hola That Coed” ic a rather bitter satire Doubtless it didn't mean to be, but its slapstick hi hard and true in a great many places, Rut let's hope that no well meaning soul will protest that the picture is making a hero out of a political dictator It's much ton good fun for that,
ol
t=
Book Rehegredls For Symphonians
The Svymphonians, an orchestra organized “for all amateur cians who like to play good music under fine directors,” will begin rehearsals at 8 p. m. next Friday on the fourth floor of 22 N.) Pennsvivania St ‘Theodore Leutz director, and Herman assistant Both men of the Indianapolis Symphony chestra violin section My. Leutz came to last vear from Boston, where he had been a member Fabien Sevitzkyv's Boston People's Orchestra for five vears. Before this he was concertmaster of the Boston fonietta and was a member of several Roston theater orchestras Afr. Arndt was director of Fnglich 't orchestra for 33 vears, and onduected City Park band concerts from 1908 until a few seasons ago
musi-
the group's Arndt will are members Or
iS
Indianapolis
of
Sin
Few Remain In Veterans’ Ranks
et Special HOLLYWOOD, Sept. The ranks of the ola- timers are thinning fast. Of all the people who took part in the acting, writing, and direction of “The Birth of a Nation in 1012-13. Donald Crisp is the only one still active on the screen Myr, Crisp now is one of the featured members of the British cast af “Dawn Patrol” at Warners. His part rounds out 25 years of prominence. He was one of the highestsalaried men in “Birth of a Nation,” too—got $90 a week as actor and assistant director. The late Henry B. Walthall, featured player in that movie, received only $75 a week Without Mr. Crisp. the famous film might never have been released, for he helped negotiate a $70,000 loan for its completion. Then, course, “Birth of a Nation” went ahead and grossed more than $13. 000.000
of
{ her
anonymously,
to parboil shows some old
projecting
chloroform, lighter,
of Alma and Bill, pictures,
back to eivilization.
» ful
mess at Shanghai. Chris gets the picture anyway. He exposes the} fake in sound-track instructions to boss. Rill steals the film. His| firm sighs Alma up. Chris pretends) to burn his exelusive film of Alma's landing and ecrackup, wins her thanks by saving her life, and takes back to New York to work for]
his
hie company Rack in Manhattan the double-| Enough to say
that Chris. Bill and Alma are ex-
posed. Then the boys are sorry, and|
sell all their equipment to finance, Alma’s flight to the | {South American jungles to find her lost brother |
Enter Magie
There is more skullduggery in the jungles, whence all arrive by devious routes. Chris and his helper get to] the native tribe where the brother is at the point of death. And from there on in the action is Grade A] voodoo Just as the tribesmen are about Alma's brother, Chiis newsreel shots he (quite thoughtfully) brought along. them on the side of a He does more big magie¢ with ammonia and a cigaret
cliff
Then he and the assistants dress up as medicine men for the arrival and get exclusive Of course, Chris’ white show from beneath the cose but the white visitors never
arms fume,
suspect he isn't a native
So Bill and Alma take the brother and Chris beats them home with the pictures. Then Alma. who has been peeved at Chris for ever so long, seeks him out ac he IS covering a gangster-police battle, and confesses her love midst a hail of bullets,
Travelog and Renchley
Of course, the jungle scenes have been done in countless pictures, but it's still grand hokum. Even though you khow exactly what's coming next, just try to sit back and relax!
as the natives grow more menacing |
and the crucial hour draws nearer. It's the sort of excitement which! the movies do best, especially w hen | you have a Loy and Gable, and a’ competent director like Jack Conway to keep things moving. Loew's bill also includes an excel lent color travelog on Praha and Czechoslovakia, as well as a delight: and illuminating short subject wherein Mr. Robert Benchley tells
vou how to read, |
‘Four Daughters’ : In Another Film
Timer Kp { HOLL x, v Ww O0On. tional success of
Sept Four
24--The naDaughters”
since its general release a few davs|
ago has led Warner Rros. to an-
{nounce production of a sequel en-
titled "Four Daughters Come Home.’ 1 which the east of the original will appear Players in the first story who will resume their characterizations include Priscilla,
frey Lynn, MeHugh Fannie Hurst, on which “Four based, sequel. ed the original screen play, rect
May Robson and Frank
Daughters” . was |
Four Daughters ( Come Home.”
AUTHENTIC TRAPPINGS |
The Hollywood Post of the Amer- | jean Legion furnished all the flags. |
caps, uniforms and other equipment used in filming “Sons of the lLegion,”
entice in every detail.
LAST DAV-MIDNITE SHE v Joan Blondel! ot NEE, ‘DAREDEVIL DRIVERS!
Announcing!
ANTIQUE SHOW
INDIANAPOLIS ATHLETIC CLUB Whirl-E-Gig Room
OPENS SEPT. 27—7 P. M. TO 11 P. M,
daily Thereafter 11 a
25¢ Admission 25¢
Wateh Your Radle Program
Indianapolis’ Third
m, to ne mo —Sunday 11am to kp -
* Wa Thotonming. MEE «inn Aresdeast
lover
‘have | have—-frames.
[inte a library
i
Rosemary and Lola | ——— Lane. Gale Page. Claude Rains, Jef. | who wrote the novel | hag been asked to write the |
Michael Curtiz, who direct. | will gi-
making the production auth-|
we think, Anyway, Gracie i& on her way back from Honolulu to preside at the opening of the exhibit at ihe Julian Levy Galleries here. But we've previewed it and so can dis‘close that Gracie has painted such oddly named works as: Dogs Gather on Street to Wateh
(Mh Fight.
Gravity Gets Body Seissors on
crosses flv thicker than Joe Louis’ Virtue as Night Falls Upside Down punches in the ring
Keg Lined Can Sinking a Couple ‘of Hard Putts in No Trump. Eves Adrift as Sardines Wrench at Your Heart Strings. Taothless Mouth Munching on a [Tuneless Melody Man With Mike Fright Manieurist Behind the Before, Yet Under the
Moons
Vast Above, the World Is in Tears
and Tomorrow Is Tuesday. In any event, Gracie's paintings what lots of old masters
Cornell Back at Work
The stage's First Lady, Katharine Cornell. has come back to work. And s0 a welcoming committee from the Fourth Estate called at her house on Reekman Place the other day. She met us at the head of the staircase in the quietly elegant
ried 17 years ago She has spent the hest part of the last year at her seaside home in Martha's Vineyard and has been leisurely paving the ground for her next show, which a German dramas tist drew from the Biblical persons alities of "Herod and Mariamne.” “Herod and Mariamne’ requires a knowledge of Riblical background and Miss Cornell has been browsing of books, in order to brush up on the subject. She plays Mariamne and she's excited about it. Lauds Director Husband The MeClintics mix both their domestic and theatrical lives in a happy accord, because Mr. MeCintic directs all the plays in which Miss Cornell appears. So one of the more precocious n= terviewers popped the question: “Is he as considerate a director as he {is a husband?” A benign smile from the renowned actess. “Wonderful,” she summed up her stage mentor and spouse at home, he brings out the best in you. I don’t believe that I actress to say
And am the only
have watched at work “Temperamental? Of course he is temperamental. Who around stage isn't, But he reserves hig are gumentative moods for discussions! about the day's work at home. When | Guthrie and 1 are rehearsing for a play, we usually live it 24 hours a day. That's the advantage of being married to a director-hushand There are no lulls between rehearsal hours.”
Still Movie Holdout
Then someone proffered evitable question. How about Cornell and the movies? Well, the Stage's First Lady still it a cinematic holdout
the inMiss
to take a chance. The new tech.
| completed, WIBC, |station,
home where | her husband, Guthrie MeClintie, and’ ‘she have lived ever since they mars-
|officiale in educational and promises local talent as a fea-!
“he doesn't frighten you. And |
it about Guthrie, He is one of the most quiet directors 1!
She be- | lieves that it is too late to venture | into the movies, even if she wanted
| { | A Barclay Gal |
* | who looks like a McClelland Bar-
| To MY i | combination of several, : | You Under My Skin,” > land
“Eyes Adrift as Sardines Wrench at Your Heart Strings”
WIBC Opens
Next Month
‘Operation of New Studio
Is Delayed.
Although construction of studios]
and offices on the ninth floor of the Indianapolis Athletic Club has been | new local will be unable to hegin operations tomorrow as previously planned. Delay in work on transmitter facilities will delay the open-
ing until sometime next month, aegens |
cording to €C. A. McLaughlin, eral manager, WIBC will use the Road radio tower and adjoining property, which was purchased recently from WIRE. A new 1000-watt transmitter is being installed New staff members Longwell, program director, Otis Roush, continuity chief announcer, A native
and
of Indianapolis, Mr
Longwell has heen associated for the
past eight vears with stations in Flint and Detroit, Mich, Gary and the Curtis Indiana Network. Mr, Rough has been on station staffs in
Jackson, ‘Tenn, Jonesboro and
Blytheville, Ark, and for the last 16 {months has been production mans
ager at WLRC, Muncie
tion with local sehools and
leges and Federal,
ture.
sigue would require “pletity of time | in Miss Cors | achieve | lany degree of perfection, until they or She hasn't the time to
to learn and actresses, nell's opinion, don’t really
have appeared in their fourth fifth talkie. wait until then. But over all her objections, because she prefers audiences
Klieg lights and a sound track.
the
TONIGHT
CHARLIE AGNEW
ADMISSION 40¢
MRE Be RR
froor
‘BALLROOM | -" - _- A" _ ame
Bob King © 6 Antaleks Smith, Rogers & Lo
Two Pretty Stowaways on oN Loose!
® NEXT FRIDAY © NUGH HERBERT on Stage
CHORUS OF SINGING
Matinee
STARTING AT SATURDAY MIDNIGHT wn
BETTY NOVAK DANCING AROUND
A GREAT LAUGHING SHOW
2:18=Twa Shows at Night ¥ and © PW,
CONTINUOUS ON SUNDAY
Cis
Juste LANG * a a BAN
Featured With
AND DANCING GIRLS
radio
i
WHAT, WHEN, WHERE
APOLLO
Hold ‘That Ceed.” with BArTONOre Marjorie Weaver Jurphy, Joan Davis, at 135, 3:4 5.8 58, 8:08 and 10:10,
CIRCLE
“Four Daughters,” with Priscilla, Rosemary and Lola Lane, Jeffrey Lynn, John Garfield, Gale Page, 11, 1:50, 4.40, 7.30, and 10:20, “The Missing Guest,” with Paul Kelly, Constance Moore, at 12:40, 3:30, 6:25 and 9:15,
LOEW'S “Tos Hot te Handle,” with Clark
3abie, Myrna Lev, Walter Pidgeon, at 11. 1:10, 3:20, 5:35, 7:43 and 10.
LYRIC
with Gene Krupa on stage at 1:04,
John George 1:42,
at
and 3.586,
Vaudeville, hig orehestra 8 48 and 9:40 “Meet the Girls” with June Lang, Lynn Bari, on sereen at 11:36, 2:28, 5:20, 8:12 and 10:35
Millersville
include Bab! and! Negro tap dancer, lege football plaver, hefore
sity
head said Mr.
said | would
|W ther The new station plans co-opera- | heth
col= State and City | programs, |
{should be
‘GRAND JURY GETS ROBINSON PROBE
LOS ANGELES, Sept. 24. (U A terrific squabble that led blows between Bill Robinson,
the County Grand next Tuesday, police said today. Paul Moffat. 21, of of Southern California, Robinson heat him over with a gun, Mr, Moffat hit him Prosecutor of the fight jury to eriminal
Mr
first, Deputy that in view ask the any issued
P). to the | and a voung colwill be placed Jury
the Universaid the Robinson
Edwin Myers | he | decide | charges |
girl, and who sings ‘Haid'.” She follows with a “I've Got
"So Help Me,” “If I Could Be With You.” If you can imagine Charlie MeCarthy without a cowlick and In curls, vou have Jewel, the bread and [butter and caviar of Bob King, ven- | triloquist | His other dummy is a diminutiv. | sailor boy who opens and shuts his | eyes and says “Mama, -pardon us | who sings “The Kid in the ThreeCornered Pants” and who spends {some time blowing his nose effi(ciently. Also on the program are Smith, | Rogers and Eddy, the International | Nitwits. Smith and Rogers are comie | dancers distinguished by their per- | fectly expressionless faces even | when they are upside down. Eddie, | who wears interesting accordion- | pleated chiffon tights, is a tap-dan- | cer of ability,
clay
Facts and Fancies
| The six Antaleks, who, by the way, really look like each other, do several { balanced precariously on feet and shoulders. The program ig climaxed “Blue Rhythm Fancies,” a strange vet pleasing combination of discord and harmony featuring in one passage nothing but drums with Krupa
| obligato On the sereen this week is the Girls” | Bari,
“Meet with June Lang and Lynn Haro! Satur Cork .
i SKY iE. H ARBOR
Sa ty gh connie before 9:30: ROe coule 100: Ahe couple after an couples hefors 0: ~
50 Black South Manitinal
By .
One Airport
willing to take his first
“You Go|
remarkable acts on tall poles
by
playing what might be termed the
non-musical part that his old friend, Frank Bacon, had made imHow did John Golden and | he come to revive “Lightnin’” at all? Well, about the Rialto, this is the story they tell: : A couple of years ago, Joseph Kennedy, who now is America’s amsbassador to the Court of St. James, was on an automobile ride through Long Island with Mr. Golden. Casually he mentioned "“Lightnin’" and suggested that it deserved to be seen again on Broadway. Mr. Golden scouted the idea because he thought the play was dated. The ambassador begged him to read it again. Mr, Golden started to, but with no hope of enthusing over it once more. Instead, he finished it at one sit-
| mortal.
Flues! THE MISSING GUEST
JOHN BARRYMORE GEORGE MURPHY pwnd MARJORIE WEAVER 2 b\ JOAN DAVIS JACK HALEY 8.7
Now! 25¢c to 6
BALCONY 30c AFTER 6
(S22 1
3 a
oo RS : WEA,
ro
WALTER
WALTER
PIDGEON CONNOLLY CARRILLO
ADDED | CZECHS on PARADE]
SHORTS Benchley, “How to “How to Read” [f
(Ll GABLE: Wyuna Ti) TOO HOT TO HANDLE
LEO
—————————"
At Your Neighborhood Theater
Talbott
Miss Cornell rejects a Hollywood career 10]
REX
VOGUE
DREAM
Sun Wallace Beery,
| Melv, Douglas
RITZ
Sunday-—Shirler Temple,
Cinema
NORTH SIDE
Talbott & 2nd Dick Powell Pat O'Rrien “COWBOY FROM BROOKLYN” Melv. Douglas “FAST COMPANY” Sundav--Wallace Beery, Frank Morgan “PORT OF SEVEN SEAS” Bob Burns “TROPIC HOLIDAY"
30th at Northwestern Spencer Tracey Loretta Young
“MAN'S CASTLE" John King “STATE POLICE” fun Jas, Stewart, Margaret Sullavan “SHOPWORN ANGEL” “COWBOY FROM BROOKLYN"
College at 634 Harold Lloyd Phyllis Weleh “PROFESSOR BEWARE" Don Ameche "RAMONA" Sundave. Gary Cooper, Franchat Tane “LIVES “Adventures of Tom Sawyer”
2/31 Station St, Barbara Stanwyek an fever
“ALWAYS GOODBYE “RANGER’'S ROUNDUP"
“PORT OF SEVEN SEAS”
IMlinois and 34th Judy Garland Mickey Rooney
“LOVE FINDS ANDY HARDY" “MAKING THE HEADLINES"
“LITTLE MISS BROADWAY" “I'LL GIVE A MILLION” Lloyd Nolan
Za ri ng Shirley Ross
“PRISON FARM" Bette Davis “JEZEBEL" Sunday—Joan Rennetl, Randolph Scott “THE TEXANS" “SLIGHT CASE OF MURDER”
Starts 1:30--13¢ 10a Till &
Fat O'Brien Dick Powell
“COWBOY FROM BROOKLYN" “CRIME OF DR. HALLET"
Sun. Ginger Rogers, Doug.
"ALWAYS GOODBYE”
Ch & Ft
. . 8¢ CL . Wayne St. C Qa | r Deely ose Jus Melv. Douglas “FAST COMPANY" “HIGH, WIDE AND HANDSOME"
Maureen O'Sullivan
Sun. Wallace Reery,
“PORT OF SEVEN SEAS”
“AMAZING DR. CLITTERHOUSE"
OF A BENGAL LANCER” |
Maureen O'Sullivan
“FAST COMPANY"
George Murphy
Central at Fall Crk.
16th & Delaware
Fairbanks Jr |
| “HAVING A WONDERFUL TIME"
_ NORTH SIDE
Upt t LL ptown Yor Fen “WE'RE GOING TO BE RICH” “FLIGHT INTO NOWHERE" Sun, ~Constance Bennett, Brian Aherne “MERRILY WE LIVE” “HOLD THAT KISS”
EAST SIDE
Paramount arnt withers Jack Mulhall “HELD FOR RANSOM” lou Gehrig "RAWHIDE" Sundav—=Rudy Valles, Rosemary Lane “GOLD DIGGERS IN PARIS” Geo. O'Brien "BORDER G-MAN" Hamilton ses tems Wallace Beery “PORT OF SEVEN SEAS” “LADY IN THE MORGUE" Sun.—-D, Fairbanks Jr, Dannielle Darrieux “RAGE OF PARIS” Mary Carlile “PRISON FARM"
GOLDEN 6116 E. Wash.
Don't Miss It! W. C. Fields “DAVID COPPERFIELD" Mary Carlile “HUNTED MEN" Sundav—Wallace Beery, All-Star Cast “TREASURE ISLAND” “Romance of the Limberlost”
Strand 1332 E. Wash. St,
Sat, Sun. Mon, Two Bir Hits Fdw. G. Robinson Humphrey Bogart “AMAZING DR. CLITTERHOUSE"” Dead End Kids—Robert Wilenx “LITTLE TOUGH GUY” Niner Sat, & Sun, «-13¢ Till 1 EXTRA!
Late Showings Tonight Box Office ane Until 10:30
BIJOU imme
Last Times Tonight Loretta Young “FOUR MEN AND A PRAYER” “SIX SHOOTIN' SHERIFF” Sunday—<Wendy Barrie “A GIRL WITH IDEAS" “TRAPPED BY G-MEN” Mickey Rooney
Pa rke r Maureen O'Sullivan
“HOLD THAT KISS” Luise Rainer “TOY WIFE”
20930 E. 10th st.
“MAD ABOUT MUSIC” “PORTIA ON TRIAL" 1630 E. 10th 5:45 to 6-136
Emerson All-Star Cast
“KING KONG” Scott Colton “EXTORTION” SoIauIy Sing Plus Novelty
Sunday Thru Wednesd “PORT OF SEVEN SEAS”
Plus “RAGE OF PARIS”
Sanday—Herhert Marshall, Deanna Durbin
emmeaa—
RIVOLI Cont. Mat.
Anita Louise Kay Francis “MY BILL" Leo Carillo—Edith Fellows “CITY STREETS” Added! Our Gang Comedy EXTRA! Last Show Tonight Only! Box Office Open Till 11 p. m. Nelson Eddy—Jeanette MeDonald John Barrymore—Tom Brown
“MAYTIME"
Sun., Mon, Tues, Wed. Mickey Roaneyv—Judy Garland “LOVE FINDS ANDY HARDY” Dead End Kids—Robhert Wilcox “LITTLE TOUGH GUY”
Tacoma Herhert Marshall
“ALWAYS GOODBYE” “GUN LAW”
Sundav-=Margaret Sullavan—Jas,
“SHOPWORN ANGEL" | “MEN ARE SUCH FOOLS”
| Wallace Beery
Tuxedo Maureen O'Sullavan
“PORT OF SEVEN SEAS” Patricia Ellis “GATETY GIRLS”
Sun.—Dannielle Darrieux, D. Fairbanks Jr. “RAGE OF PARIS” Melv. Douglas “FAST COMPANY"
E. Wash. St. | RVI NG Alice Brady Chas. Winninger “GOODBYE, BROADWAY" Selected Shorts
Sun.—Barbara Stanwyck, Herbert Marshall
“ALWAYS GOODBYE"
3155 E. 10th St.
442 FE. Barhara
Wash. St.
Stewart
4020 E. New York
5507
~ WEST SIDE
Louis Hayward
Speedway
“A SAINT IN NEW YORK” “OFF TO THE RACES”
Sunday—Pat O'Brien, Priscilla Lane
“COWBOY FROM BROOKLYN" “WE'RE GOING TO BE RICH”
STATE 2102 W. 10th St.
Double Feature Boh Steele “ARIZONA GUN FIGHTER” “WOMAN AGAINST WOMAN" Double Feature—Warner Baxter
“I'LL GIVE A MILLION” “SHOPWORN ANGEL” Shirley Ross
Be mon t Lloyd Nolan
“PRISON FARM” Leo Carillo “CITY STREETS” Sun.—Robert Wilcox, Dead End Kids “LITTLE TOUGH GUY” Kay Francis “MY BILL"
Speedway City
Sun.
EAST SIDE
15¢ Till 6
Beech Grove
____sgurH SIDE Jack Holt
GROVE Jacqueline Wells
“FLIGHT INTO NOWHERE” “TRIGGER TRIO” Sunday—Deanna Durbin, Herbert Marshall “MAD ABOUT MUSIC” “PORT OF SEVEN SEAS” Chester Morris
Ava lon Anne Shirley
“LAW OF THE UNDERWORLD” Phyllis Brooks “CITY GIRL” Sun.—Fred MacMurray, Harriet Hilliard
Pros. & Churchman
Stanwyek |
Granada
| Serial Tonight & Sunday Matinee
Melv. Douglas “FAST COMPANY” |
W. Wash. & Belmont |
“COCOANUT GROVE” Mickey Rooney “LORD JEFF” Alice Brady
Oriental Tom Brown
“GOODBYE, BROADWAY” “LADY IN THE MORGUE” Sun.—Fred MacMurray, Harriet Hilliard “COCOANUT GROVE” Mickey Rooney “LORD JEFF”
ad 1045 Virginia Ave, Tonite—~Tomorrow Cont. Mat. Sunday Edw. G. Robinson Humphrey Bogart
“AMAZING DR. CLITTERHOUSE" Frank McHugh—Janet Chapman “Little Miss Thoroughbred” Color Cartoon
FRA, 1105 S. Meridian
- East at “Lineoln Warner Baxter
Li NCco | n Freddie Bartholomew “KIDNAPPED” “OUTLAWS OF THE PRAIRIE” Sundav—Robert Taylor, Robert Young “THREE COMRADES” “BELOVED BRAT”
Fountain Square
Randolph Scott Joan Bennett “THE TEXANS” “NURSE FROM BROOKLYN" Sunday—Dead End Kids, Robt. Wilcox “LITTLE TOUGH GUY” “PASSPORT HUSBANDS”
r—
New Garfield
2203 Shelby St, Barbara Stanwyck “ALWAYS GOODBYE" Lou Gehrig “RAWHIDE” Sundav—Shirley Temple, George Murnhy “LITTLE MISS BROADWAY” “SHOPWORN ANGEL" Mickey Rooney
Sanders Freddie Bartholomew
“LORD JEFF” “FLIGHT INTO NOWHERE” Sunday~—Ritz Bros., Tony Martin “KENTUCKY MOONSHINE"
At Fountain Square
“DAREDEVIL DRIVERS”
