Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 October 1938 — Page 8
LO EATER
PAGE 8
Marxes Go Straight in Circle's ‘Room Service: Ozzie Nelson at Lyric
But They Still Manage to Pack Some Mighty Funny Wallops.
Harriet Hilliard Teams With Husband for Enjoyable Bill.
By JAMES THRASHER
Reducing the town's current movie bill to mathematics, we find that Broadway goes into Hollywood twice. The quotient may be found Loew's, which has the George S. Kaufman-Moss Hart comedy, “You Cant Take It With You,” and the Circle, where “Room Service,” the farce by John Murray and Allen Boretz, is playing this week “You Can't Take It With You” was reviewed here yesterday. So NOW We may pass on to “Room Service,” for which the authors and George the play's producer,
at
Abbott, are said to have received the biggest price Hollywood ever paid for a stage The big news, of course, that is the film in which the Marx Brothers have gone straight—at least. straight for them. They have abandoned the Marxian practices of ifetime. Pinned down to the age play's plot and lines. they do remarkably good job. Their great advantage lies in the fact that (Dam, Servus® was and is a terribly funny show. The disadvantage is that “Haren, with nary a blond to chase or a harp to play, and Chico, deprived of his piano. sometimes seem a little uncomfortable Bul the disadvantage doesn’t heavily. Especially since as usual, never is at a
is
this LIS
A n a
wel gh Gro ucho, loss Runs Up $1200 Bill oom Service” might be Four Men on a Shoestring the play at Englast season will recall that tne f and trouble starts when Joe Gribble, ho manager. lets his brother-in- Gordon Miller, run for himself and cast for a backer for his
subtit led
‘hose who saw
Fram
} tel
law, up a $1200 bill while waiting show The hotel supervisor arrives 0 does voung Leo Davis, the play's author, fresh out of Oswego. Harn li and Faker Englund, Miller's are qispossessed an move into his hotel room. “A backer, or rather, a backers: representative, discovered. Th problem is to get the irate superlet them stay in the hotel ! the check, cashed in New York. California and puts the Ss feet off the wolves, Leo contract get a tapeworm and finally suicide, when things get really desperate. Eventually, every one comes to life and the show is a <1 UCCess., ‘Room Service” another of those farces whose fun is lost whan an attempt is made to describe it. The pace is swift and the lines clever. As in the stage version, the eating scene, when the imprisoned theatrical fraternity bribes a waiter to give them their first food in days, uproarious. So is the suicide scene But the excruciating moment where nausea brings the plavwright back to life is missing. That's a blow They're Still the Marxes
The Marxes of Groucho cigar
S
o
assistants
1s
to
show on To makes then
1t
stave Miller
the measles,
18
ie FN
manage to
their
retain many st
his frock coa
and Chico rehis and his diaHarpo hasn't lost his red wig regained his voice Most of the supporting plavers. EXC cept Frank Albertson, as the playight, are drawn from the original ros York cast. They add a heavIng measure of enjoyment. Lucille Ball and Ann Miller also are present, but in such small 1elr contribution need
In us.
lI has loping walk
at ial
ams conical lect
or
not
i “Don't t expect a r iot comparable to
ny of the first six Marx pictures in hoon Service.” But prepare your- > self for an hour and a quarter of chuckles, with a fair share of midriff laughs. The Circle bill also contains a “March of Time” issue and Hollywoods latest edition of cops-and-robbers. It's called “Smashing the Rackets.” with Chester Morris and Bruce Cabot featured.
MRS. GRANVILLE ILL IN HOSPITAL
HOLLYWOOD. Oci. 8 The mother of Bonita Granville irl] movie actress. was recovering i e Hospital today after an appendicitis attack The Mrs. Rosina Granville of also is an actress
IN HARDY FAMILY'
(U. P) le
Nana Bryant has been selected for |
the role of Dora Northcote, an old sweetheart of Judge Hardy. in “Out West With the Hardy's”
WHAT, WHEN, WHERE APOLLO
You Sinners,’ with Bi Crosby, Fred MacMurray, at 11, i: 4:40. 7:30 and 10:20. “Campus Contessions,” with Betty Grable, Eleanor Whitney. William Henry, at 12:30, 3:20, 6:10 and 9.
CIRCLE
“Sing 5
Marx ller, at
“Room Service wi
th the Brothers. Lucille Ban (Ann Mil 12:43, 3°33. 7 and 10:1 Smashing the Rackets,” er Morris, Bruce Cabot, 5 15 and 8:20.
LOEW'S
“Yon Can't Take It With You,” with Lionel Barrymore, Jean Arthuy, James Stewart, Edward Arnold, at 1I, 1:25, 4:10, 7 and 9:50.
LYRIC
Vaudeville, with Ozzie Nelson and his orchestra, Harrist illiard, on stage at 12:58, 3:52. 6:48 and 9:40. “Mysterious Mr. Mato.” with Peter Ler on Sa at 11:34 2:28 §:
= with Che at 1 2:05,
> offerings is a song that begins
characteristics. | t. Devil's
parts that; de- |
| Orga Pas ! “Pas “Thou
re, §:16 and 10:4 KH Y Rated s Da vy v ‘Sunda? Orchestra
REPEAT ENGAGEMENT Tomorrow Night BATTLE OF SWING
Rathskeiler Brown Bombers vs. Harold Cork’s Orch.
No increase in price!
One Block South Municipal Airport
The Lunts of vaudeville. the Mr. and Mrs. Thin Man of the dance | halls, otherwise Ozzie Nelson and | Harriet Hilliard, are the main go on the Lyrics card this week. Maybe the public taste is turning to domesticity. At any rate, the | Nelsons are able to capitalize on a happy wedded existence and. in so!
doing, give the customers an inti- | mate and enjoyable hour of music! and variety. The couple ought to be well] known to all of you by this time. | | Mr. Nelson and his orchestra have been radio favorites for quite some | time. Miss Hilliard graduated from | the band stand to motion pictures. You've seen and heard her in “Follow the Fleet,” “New Faces of 1937.” ! “Life of the Party” and “Cocoanut Grove.” For her current engagement. however, she doesnt try to | be a glamour girl.
Very Agreeable
Miss Hilliard is introduced by her husband with a couple choruses ol “Remember Me?” She pays a songful tribute to her son, sings “Says | My Heart,” from her latest picture, ! and finally goes “torchy” on “Music, | Maestro, Please.” It's all very agreeable. Another agreeable feature is Mr. Nelson's wit. At least it's apparently the maestros wit that is discernible in seme clever song parodies and rhymed patter between numbers. One of his more clever “I've got those gosh-what-an-easy-job nothing - to - do - but - wave-a-stick blues.” Maybe I liked it, more Devsons! reason. You could substitute “see shows all day” for “wave a ® stick” and find the envious impeachment thrown at a movie reviewer at least once a week. So when Mr. Nelson sings the blues, he strikes a responsive chord In the light of usual dance band performances, you might almost call the Nelson offering “sophisticated.” whatever precisely that means. There is a smooth, casual air about the whole bill; no bubbling master of ceremonies tc explode with enthusiasm and wring applause from the crowd A fortunate addition to the bill is found in Benny Baker, the chubby comedian from the Hollywood film factories. He is blessed with! a certain originality and doesn't wear out himself or his audience trying to be funny. He is assist- | ed by a singer and a very talented tap dancer. Freda Sullivan presents some agile acrobatic dancing. And Marc Ballero rounds out the bill with impersonations which include fog horns, tug boats, sirens and screeching brakes as well as the usual celebrities. The audience seemed delighted. Mr. Moto, doubtless the most popular Japanese character in the! Western Hemisphere today, is impersonated again by Peter Lorre in the Lyrics movie. The current adventures of the Oriental sleuth are titled simply “Mysterious Mr. Moto.” This time Mr. Moto gets put on Island, escapes and winds up as a member of London's League of Assassins for some hair-raising entertainment. He also goes in for several disguises, in one of which he looks like Jean Hersholt looking like a Tyrolean grandpa in “Heidi.”
DePauw Teachers To Give Recital
though, for a
Three members of the : DePauw] University Music School faculty will | be guest artists in a program at! 7:45 p. m. tomorrow in the North] Methodist Church. They are Dr.| Van Denman Thompson, organist, | composer and dean of the Music| School: Miss Edna Tyne Bowles, contralto, and Herman Berg, violinist. The program also will include numbers by the North Church Choir, J. Ruscell Paxton. director,
‘and an organ prelude by Mrs. Pax-
ton. The program is as foilows: Organ Procession au St. _Sacrement” Mrs. Paxton Anthems— Show Me Thy Wav. O Lord Van Denman Thompson “Irt Us Love One Another . “en
St ..Chauvet
Nn Thompson diers of th \ rise | Van Denman Thompson ! North Ch urch Choir Chorale BR Minor...
Organ Y r. Thompson
.. Franck Solos Agnu Oo Dy
¢ Del ! i izet ine Redeemer” “is Gounod Miss Bowles | Violin obbligato. Sr Rerg
nt mime
Art
he Rock
: 5 Mulet Pr Thompson
$600 NO JOKE TO
| EX-MRS. LAUREL |
HOLLYWOOD, Oct. 8 (U. P).— {Charges made by Comedian Stan Laurel's former wife, Mrs. Virginia Ruth Laurel, that she was paid $600 in worthless checks for rent of a house today caused officers to hold Irwin Jones, 48, druggist, on suspicion of forgery.
pol CL LL 55s
Randel BA Aa ploan Bennett Plus Lew Ayres R. Yor T TEXANS MAN, . POOR
Leo Carrillo “CITY STREETS
(all over the country.
‘satisfactory fall and winter. The 97th season of the New York |MOstly spent singing in Italy. | Philharmonic-Symphony opens Oct. 120 at
- Kare: Bert |
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
CIVIC PLAYERS REHEARSE FOR OPENER
These Civic Theater players,
Jayne Sumner and Fanchon Fattig. are in the throes | Miracle,”
Closing the first half of a two-weeks engagement,
Maurie Sherman and his orchestra to provide music for patrons.
the Indiana Roofs week-end |
Myles Sweeney, | of rehearsal for
will be on hand
In the Wor
ID-October will see the music] season getting into its stride Most artists, | orchestras and operatic organizations have announced enough of | their plans to assure a full and |
Carnegie Hall under John Barbirolli. Seven empty chairs be-| cause of deaths or retirement for! long service will be filled. Of the feven newcomers—three viola play-! ers, one ‘cellist, two doublebass players and one oboist—five are American-born The orchestra will give its cus-| tomary Thursday evening. Friday | afternoon and Sunday regular concerts. The Sunday concerts will be broadcast. First guest soloist of the season Guiomar Novaes, pianist. ‘ : & = HE Philadelphia Orchestra’s| 39th season finds the personnel | of 101 musicians virtually intact! from last year. There will be three! inewcomers in the horn section, one in the basses and one viola. The season is now in progress, having opened Oct. 7 with Bugene| Ormandy conducting. The first
is
soloist of the season will be Sergei|
| Rachmaninoff, who will play a pro-| gram of his own compositions. October will close with an All-Wag-ner concert. » Bruno Walter, whose home now is in Paris, has just received his French citizenship papers. The Government has made him an officer of the Legion of Honor. | Mr. Walter, impelled to leave Austria by the Nazi annexation. still is considering the idea of a major annual music festival, probably mn France, to rival the Salzburg festival. Arturo Toscanini has expressed | interest in the idea. | Mr. Walter will direct a cyvele of
» 4
By United Press
Id of Music
Mozart operas at the Opera Comique
in Paris this season.
2 = »
ENIAMINO GIGLI, Italian tenor, is back in the United
[States after an absence of six years,
He left the Mew York Metropolitan in 1932 after a disagreement with | Giuilio Gatti-Casazza, then general manager, over “depression” pay cuts lof the stars. Mr. Gigli wil! sing over the radio and with the San Francisco Opera. It is quite likely that he will’ make some appearances at the New York Metropolitan.
On the same boat with Mr. Gigli |
afternoon from Italy were Ezio Pinza, basso of
the Metropolitan; Elizabeth Reth- | berg, soprano, and a newcomer,|
(Mafalda Fabvro, Italian lyric so-|
{prano, who will make her American | {debut at the Metropolitan this year. |
{She was discovered by Arturo Tosca |
nini and apveared first at La Scala in Milan. Before her New York ap|pearance, she will sing in Chicago and San Francisco. ” »
Opera will be revived this month at the old Manhattan Opera House in New York, where in the “golden
GRAND OPENING
TONIGHT
DOORS OPEN 6 P. M. Show Starts 6:30
Joan Bennett-Randolph Scott “THE TEXAN"
Kav Francis in
“MY BILL"
AOL EC AT
Fe OZZIE N ELSON and Nis HR I! HARRIET LARD
Hollywood's
Sha.
@ NEXT FRI
PLUS
Sings ARLE 1s
LL BAKE
Comedian
»+PHIL SPITALNY'S
It.
im TORRE
as the Seturday Evening Post's master sleuth in
MYSTERIOUS MR.MOTO
MARY MAGUIRE! HENRY WILCOXON
y
“Hour of TTT ON STAGE @
Bob Baker “THE LAST STAND” “LONE RANGER” — News
STARTING AT SATURD
Featuring ET
Matinee 2:15—Two Shows CONTINUOUS
Is rw a se ra
a
T7\
AY MIDNIGHT SHOW!
JAZZTIME BABIES
HEL RIPLEY
and CHORUS of Singing and Dancing GIRLS
at Night, 7 and 9 P. M. ON SUNDAY
on Friday night.
Louise Bernat Bomar Cramer, has been awarded a Juilliard Graduate School fellowship for study with Olga Samaroff Stokowski during the current vear.
"here by Sheriff Vaughn Treber.
rehabilitated,
A | Typothetae; AN | Rochester,
the Civic season's opener, “Small
of Evansville, piano student of
2
'age” Hammerstein threw his challenge to the operatic world. This | ‘time it will be the New York Grand| Opera Co. under the general direc- | tion of Amedeo Passeri. The company will be making its first venture | into New York, although it has ap-| peared in most of the largest cities of the Eastern seaboard.
The historic old Manhattan, which, except for sporadic intervals, has been dark for years, has been modernized and renamed The Manhattan Center.
DIRECTOR PAINTS
Speedway
George Fitzmaurice, an artist as well as a director, has been proached by officials of the San Francisco Fair for an exhibition of ' his work.
Typothetae
United Typothetae president, will
|be “Three-Foot Knives and Forks.”
i (tion executives will meet Monday t (afternoon and Tuesday with Don t |H. Taylor, New York,
* laddresses by Clark R. Long, Wash-
| Ramsey, (Monday from the State Farm, was
ap-|
Dinner Scheduled Tonight For Ex-Members of Printing School.
Directors and local unit presidents of the United Typothetae of America met today to plan for the three-day annual convention of the organization opening Monday at the Hotel Lincoln. A dinner will be held tonight for former staff members of the U. T. A. School of Printing. George H. Cornelius, Indianapolis,
preside at convention sessions. Speakers on Monday's program are to include C. Kenneth Miller, Indianapolis unit president; Arthur D. Pratt, president of the Indiana Frank J. Smith, N. Y., and James L. Cockrell, Tulsa, who will deliver the principal address. His subject will
Briton to Be Speaker
Sir Jameés Croxton-Pearse of Leeds, England, will speak at the annual banquet Monday night, preceding a talk by Arthur F. Briese, Chicago humorist. The Graphic Arts Trade Associa-
presiding. The program for Tuesday includes
ington, assistant director, U. S. Bureau of Printing; Frank S. Wagner
of America And Trade Composition Meetings Open Monday
|dianapolis Typothetae, will discuss
and Watson N. Gordon, Boston, and Harry L. Miller, Washington. Committee meetings will follow a luncheon of the Clic-Clics. The Indianapolis and Indiana State Typothetaes will be hosts at a dinner-dance
‘Tuesday night.
Wind Up Wednesday
The final session Wednesday is to include addresses by John C. Henly | Jr., Birmingham, Ala.; George L.| Willman, Chicago; John A. Bresnahan, Washington, and Harry L. Gage, Indianapolis. The board of directors and the executive committee will meet. Entertainment for visiting wives is being arranged by Mrs. Dennis A. Sweeney, Mrs. Miller and Mrs. Pratt. Among separate meetings to be held will be the accounting and cost-finding conferences Monday afternoon in charge of Oscar T. Wright, U. T. A. treasurer. Speakers will include E. T. Engle, Cleveland; George A. Vogel, New York; Mrs. Mabel Dwyer, Detroit; R. M. Nash, Washington, and C. A. Hall, Chicago.
FUGITIVE CAUGHT AFTER NIGHT CHASE
MARION, Oct. 8
20, Vincennes, who escaped captured today in a cornfield near
State Police Sergt. George Daugh-
erty saw Ramsey last night in an |
| Indianapolis car which had been re- | ported stolen. When officers started after him, Ramsey abandcned the
|car and ran. A posse of 50 persons
|spent most of the night looking for | him. Sheriff Treber said that Ramsey had been paroled from the state reformatory, where he was serving a sentence for auto theft.
TONIGHT
Maurie Sherman 4
and his Hotel Sherman Orchestra
ADMISSION 40e LJ ro (od DP. N, | Q
| tempting to develop a national air |
(U. P.).—Paul|
400 Executives Expected To Attend Convention Of1.T. C A.
|
More than 400 printing executives will attend the 19th annual Inter-| national Trade Composition Asso-| ciation convention Monday and] Tuesday at the Hotel Lincoln. Arthur S. Overbay, Indianapolis, a past president, will open the ses-| sions with an address of welcome. Sol M. Cantor, New York, association president, will respond. Also | included on the program will be am) address by Prof. Felix E. Held, Ohio! State University, on “The Nature! of Sales Appeal” Fred W. Hoch, New York, will preside at a forum | on costs, estimating and pricing] methods. Monday afternoon's program will | open with a reproduction program | directed by Frank M. Sherman. Philadelphia. O. C. Geffken, Chi-| cago, will speak on “Rreproduction | Proofs by Direct Printing” and C.| Kenneth Miller, president of the In-|
“Types Best Suited for Photographic Reproductions.” Merchandising Topic “Advertising and Merchandising Trade Plant Service” will be the topic of Howard C. Caldwell, local advertising executive, Tuesday morning. Other speakers on the program include Bernard Snyder, Chicago, and Laurance B. Siegfried, New York, editor of the “American Printer.’ who will analyze the advertising ex-| hibit and announce the winners. Following a luncheon Tuesday, | Kenneth G. McKiernan, Chicago, will discuss “Suggestions From Your | Customers.” Presentation of adver-| tising awards, reports of committees | and election of officers will conclude | the convention.
CLAIMS AIR MAIL LINES INCOMPLETE
KANSAS CITY, Mo., Oct. 8 (U. P).—Clinton M. Hester, administrator of the newly created Civil Aeronautics Authority, told the National Air Mail Feeder conference today that much work remained to be done on existing trunk lines be- | fore Government aid could be given | to expansion of a feeder system. Charles F. Craddick, superintendent of the Federal Air Mail Service, joined Mr. Hester in warning the delegates to proceed slowly in at-
mail feeder system.
SATURDAY, OCT. 8, 1938
BROWN COUNTY PARK RECEIVES CCC AID
‘State Gets 28 Camps for
New Enrollment Period.
Times Special WASHINGTON, Oct. 8. —Twentyeight CCC camps will be operated in Indiana for the 12th enrollment | period, Oct. 1 to March 31, 1939, Die
\rector Robert Fechner of the Civile
ian Conservation Corps announced | today. This is the same number operated {throughout the summer, but one location change has been made, Mr. Fechner said. A camp to carry out the Brown County State Park development program has been re-es= | tablished, and one in Morgan Couns (ty near Martinsville ordered closed. The present schedule calls for two camps in national forests, five
{in state forests, six drainage camps, eight on Soil Conservation Service
projects and seven in state parks. They are located near Tell City, Kurtz, Henryville, Brownstown, Me= daryville, Bluffton, Lagro, Monon, Ft. Wayne, South Bend, Valparaiso, | Frankton, Lebanon, . Princeton, Lafayette. Waveland, Brookville, Lexington, Wadesville, Washington, Worthington, Mitchell, Jasonville, Angola, Marshall, Nashville and Versailles.
A HEAPING PLATE OF FRIED CHICKEN
Served Country Style 65 M AC’S Road 25—South
Ir. 8926 STAGE DANCING
% GARLILE
BALL ROOM ETIQUETTE 221; N LI-2612
French Fried Potatoes, Combination Salad, Bread and Butter
. Penn,
aint 1
a TH
pa LL “wD IiNG YO a ''s INNERS a LI th Ls AW Bn Pn A TR
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[ILI 9
S a oY
ya N WITH YOU
Sri 1
At Your, Neighborhood Theater
7
WEST SIDE
T2702 W. 10th St. STATE Double Feature Bob Steele “TRAIL OF VENGEANCE” “SATURDAY'S HEROES" Sunday—Mickey Rooney—Lewis Stone
“LOVE FINDS ANDY HARDY" “ESCAPE BY NIGHT”
Belmont W. Wash. & Belmont |
Anne Shirley Ruby Keeler “MOTHER CAREY'S CHICKENS" Dennis O'Keefe “THE CHASER" Sunfay—Charlie McCarthy—Adolph Men jou “LETTER OF INTRODUCTION" “RICH MAN, POOR GIRL"
| Only West Side Theater Participating in | MOVIE QUIZ CONTEST {
Speedway City Geo, O'Brien Loraine Johnson
“PAINTED DESERT" “LADY IN THE MORGUE"
Stuart
Sunday—Jane Withers—Gloria “KEEP SMILING” “"SHOPWORN ANGEL’ Re ~~ SOUTH SIDE ;
New Garfield
2203 Shelby St.—Chester Morris “LAW OF THE UNDERWORLD" “GO CHASE YOURSELF” Sunday—Geo. O’Brien—Dick Powell “COWBOY FROM BROOKLYN" “PORT OF SEVEN SEAS”
Sanders At Fountain Square
Wallace Beery Jackie Cooper “TREASURE ISLAND” “MAKING THE HEADLINES” Sunday—Shirley Temple—Geo. Murphy “LITTLE MISS BROADWAY” “MEN ARE SUCH FOOLS” JI Beech Grove GROVE Wayne Morris Priscilla Lane “MEN ARE SUCH FOOLS” “HEART OF ARIZONA” Sunday—Mickey Rooney—Lewiz Stone “LOVE FINDS ANDY HARDY” “PROFESSOR BEWARE” Avoion ui ws n Rochelle Hudson “MR. MOTO TAKES A CHANCE” “WOMAN AGAINST WOMAN” Sunday—Martha Raye—Burns & Allen “COLLEGE SWING” Richard Dix “BLIND ALIBI” is 1105 S. Meridian
Orien ta Ann Dvorak
Chas. Bickford “GANGS OF NEW YORK” “FURY AND THE WOMAN" Sunday-—Ginger Rogers—D. Fairbanks Jr.
Granada |
SOUTH SIDE
1045 Virginia Ave. Tonite—Tomorrow Cont, Mat. Sunday Jane Withers Henry Wilcoxen “KEEP SMILING” Robert Young—Guy Kibbhee “RICH MAN, POOR GIRL"
Serial Tonight & Sunday Matinee |
Li Eat ov Sirol HE oy olan INCO n Mary Carlisle “HUNTED MEN” Bob Baker “BORDER WOLVES” Sunday—Rudy Vallee—Rosemary Lane
“GOLD DIGGERS IN PARIS” “SHE MARRIED HER BOSS”
‘Fountain Square
Ameche Arlene Whelan “GATEWAY” “WHEN G-MEN STEP IN" Sun. Robt. “THE CROWD ROARS” Scott Colton "EXTORTION"
NORTH SIDE er
St. Clai St. Cl. & Ft. Wayne
I Doors Open 6:45 Jane Withers “KEEP SMILING” Edith Fellows “CITY STREETS” Sunday—Mickey Rooney-—Lewis Stone “LOVE FINDS ANDY HARDY” Don Ameche “GATEWAY”
U ptown Clark” Gable
Clark Gable Colbert “IT HAPPENED ONE NIGHT” “WHO KILLED GAIL PRESTON?” Sunday—Jane Withers—Henry Wilcoxen “KEEP SMILING" Dead End Kids “CRIME scioor”
— ~ , ., Talbott & 22nd Harold Lloyd
Ta bot t Phyllis Welch “PROFESSOR BEWARE" Kay Francis “MY BILL” Sunday—Lewis Stone—Mickey Rooney “LOVE FINDS ANDY HARDY”
Edith Fellows “CITY STREETS” Only North Side Theater Participating in MOVIE QUIZ CONTEST
30th at Northwestern Edw. G. Robinson Claire Trevor
“AMAZING DR. CLITTERHOUSE” Gene Autry “BIG SHOW” funday—Mickey Rooney—Lewis Stone “LOVE FINDS ANDY HARDY” “MAKING THE HEADLINES”
\ /7/7N\7~1 I College at 63d VOGU F Shirley Temple Geo. Murphy “LITTLE MISS BROADWAY" “COWBOY FROM BROOKLYN” Sunday—Warner Baxter—-Marjorie Weaver
“ILL GIVE A MILLION”
Don
“HAVING A WONDERFUL TIME” Geo. O'Brien “BORDER G-MEN”
Carole Lombard “True
Tavlor—Maureen O'Sullivan |
Cinema
EAST SIDE
GOLDEN ime.
td Amtache ng “RAMONA”
Dolores Del Rio “LANCER SPY” Sun. Double Feature—Jones Family
“TRIP TO PARIS” Shirley Temple "HEIDY?
Stra nd Two Big Hits
Edgar Bergen Charlie McCarthy “LETTER OF INTRODUCTION"
Jane Withers—Gloria Stuart
“KEEP SMILING” Lew Lehr’s First Hit “EVERY BOY" Lowell Thomas—Ed Thorgerson—News
Matinee Sat. & Sun.—15¢ Till 1 EXTRA! Late Showings Tonights Box Office Open Until 10:30 Times Tonigh$
B | J O U i Taylor
Last “THE JURY'S SECRET” Geo. O'Brien “GUN LAW” Sunday—Peter Lorre—Rochelle Hudson
“MR. MOTO TAKES A CHANCE”
1332 E. Wash. Pr Sat & Sun.
i Washington
“p AID TO DANCE”
re 2930 E E. 10th St. Robert Taylor
Par rke r Franchot Tone
“THREE COMRADES” Laurel & Hardy “SWISS MISS” i Sunday—Bob Burns—Martha Raye | “TROPIC HOLIDAY” i Lloyd Nolan “HUNTED MEN”
RIVOLI ,
3155 E. 10th St. Jane Withers
Cont. Mat. 15¢ Till @ Henry Wilcoxen “KEEP SMILING” Dennis O'Keefe “THE CHASER” EXTRA! Last Show Tonight Only! Box Office Open Till 11 p. m.
Clark Gable—Jean Harlow Walter Pidgeon—Lionel Barrymore
Cliff Edwards “SARATOGA” Sun., Mon., Tues., Wed. Charlie McCarthy—Adolph Menjou ! “LETTER OF INTRODUCTION” Robert Young—Ruth Hussey “RICH 1 MAN, POOR GIRL” TAREE
Emerson oy
Katherine Hepburn “LITTLE WOMEN" Harold Lloyd “Professor Beware” Community Sing Plus Novelty Sunday Through Wednesday “AMAZING DR. CLITTERHOUSE” Plus op LL “GIVE A MILLION”
2442 E. Wash. St, Ta COMIC. Dice Fowel “COWBOY FROM BROOKLYN" “PORT OF SEVEN SEAS” Sunday—Shirley Temple—Geo. Murphy “LITTLE MISS BROADWAY”
NORTH SIDE | 2351 Station St. Gracie Fields “WE'RE GOING TO BE RICH” Sunday—Shirley Temple—Geo, Murphy “LITTLE MISS BROADWAY” Illinois and 34th R | TZ Don Ameche “GATEWAY” “NO TIME TO MARRY” “RICH MAN, POOR GIRL” Lewis Stone “THE CHASER” Last Times Tonight | Charlie McCarthy “LETTER OF INTRODUCTION" “DISNEY'S CARTOON CIRCUS” “MOTHER CAREY'S CHICKENS” “I'LL GIVE A MILLION” Starts 1:30—150 10¢ Till 6 “TREASURE ISLAND” “INTERNATIONAL CRIME” “RAGE OF PARIS “PROFESSOR BEWARE” Hollywood ssa “HIGHWAY PATROL” Sunday—Pat O’'Brien—Patricia Lane “SAINT IN NEW YORK” © 4020 E. New York Wallace Beery “TREASURE ISLAND” “TORCHY BLANE IN PANAMA” “AMAZING DR. CLITTERHOUSE” “I'LL GIVE A MILLION” atlases Beery Maureen O'Sullivan “PORT OF SEVEN SEAS” “Little Miss Thoroughbred” “COWBOY FROM BROOKLYN” “AMAZING DR. CLITTERHOUSE” D Terr) Pa ra mou Nn {, Dom Terry “RIDIN’ THE LONE TRAIL” Sunday—Bob Burns—Joel McCrea “TORCHY BLANE IN PANAMA” 11. or 2116 E. 10th St. Warner Baxter “I'LL GIVE A MILLION” Sunday—Edw. G. Robinson—Claire Trevor “AMAZING DR. CLITTERHOUSE” | v hay ow ew o
Vietor McLaglen “TO THE VICTOR” Bob Burns “TROPIC HOLIDAY” Arlene Whelan Sunday—Robert Young—Guy Kibhee - Central at Fall Crk. Zaring Sunday—Ruby Keeler—Anne Shirley 16th & Delaware Mickey Rooney Wallace Beery Sun.—Danielle Darrieux—D. Fairbanks Jr. | | 1500 Roosevelt ye COMPANY” “COWBOY FROM BROOKLYN” EAST SIDE Tuxedo “Jabs du Sunday—Edw. G. Robinson—Claire Trevor IRVI NG 5507 E. Wash. St. Sunday—Pat O'Brien—Dick Powell = “411 E. Wash. “WHEN G-MEN STEP IN” “WELLS FARGO” Hamilton Matinee 150 Till 6 “MEN ARE SUCH FOOLS” Melv. Douglas “FAST COMBANY”
Dick Purcell “AIR DEVILS”
»
A Tr RR
