Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 October 1938 — Page 8
PAGE 8
Miss Stanwyck Toms Comedienne at Circle; Epic Suez’ at Indiana
Debutante Detectives Delight in 'Mad Miss Manton.’
a m—" T———
By JAMES Quick, Watson, the needle! For
the Junior League is muscling in on
the sleuthing racket in the neatest film surprise of the week. It’s called “The Mad Miss Manton” and may be found.at the Circle,
The stars are Barbara Stanwyck and Henry Fonda. Remember Miss Stanwyck in “The Plough and the
Stars,” “Always Goodbye,” “Stella
Dallas”? Well, you can forget her, for Miss Stanwyck has managed to become a comedienne. Not once does she go tremulous and teary. And Mr. Fonda—well, he’s not the familiar Henry of “You Only Live Once” or “Blockade.” The film provides a novel treatment of the familiar whodunit theme. Miss Manton, taking her four dogs for an airing after a costume ball, sees an acquaintance running out of a deserted brown‘stone house. He doesn’t speak. So Miss Manton investigates, finds a Mindsied man, and turns in a police ca The law arrives at the corner call box to find Miss Manton garbed like one of the Sunbonnet Twins. They investigate; no corpus delecti. Hav- - ing had some previous dealings with Miss Manton and her practical jokes in the matter of treasure hunts, they are inclined to be a little skeptical, if not bitter.
Sam Levine Earns Bouquet
Then Peter Ames bursts forth with a scathing editorial in his paper. From there on in, it’s a matter of Miss Manton and her debutante friends outsmarting both the police and the young editor. Assisting her are about a dozen of the comeliest young ladies who ever tracked a murderer in ermine and sable. Needless to say, Miss Manton and her girls win out in the end. There is a swell climax, after which editor goes socialite, on the condition that she pay the honeymoon expenses to South America. Not the least of the film’s attractions is the presence of Sam Levine, who plays the distracted and dyspeptic police lieutenant. But the greatest surprise is in Miss Stanwyck’s performance. . For the moment, at least, she has escaped from the pall of well-dressed suffering which put her in the Kay Francis class. Despite her present elegant trappings, she gives a smart and amusing performance.
Dionnes Turn Singers
Maybe the real heroes, though, are Director Leigh Jason and Philip G. Epstein, who wrote the screen play. They have dressed up an old plot with clever lines and clever business, and turned out a grand little homicidal comedy. Also on the Circle bill is “Five of a Kind,” the latest Dionne Quintuplet picture. The Dionne series - manages to maintain about the same entertainment level. The Quintuplets keep getting cuter and the picture plots keep getting duller. This time the strikingly similar sisters do a little singing, a bit of five-piano cacophony, and wind up with a version of the minuet which you’ll have to see to appreciate. As for the rest, Claire Trevor, Cesar Romero and Jean Hersholt struggle hopelessly with a routine assignment about the rivalry between the madcap girl reporter and the daredevil boy reporter who'd rather be killed than scooped. Slim Summerville and Jonn Qualen have their accustomed assignments as the village constable and the quins’ papa.
Lasker Married To Doris Kenyon
NEW YORK, Oct. 29 (U. P)., — Mrs. Doris Kenyon Sills, former film star and Albert D. Lasker, former chairman of the U. S. Shipping Board, were married yesterday at the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel. Justice Irwin Untermyer of the New York State Supreme Court performed the - ceremony before members of the immediate families. Mrs. Lasker's first husband was the late Miljon Sills, also a flim star. She is a poetess and concert singer. The couple will go to Europe on a brief honeymoon trip and on their return will spend the winter in California. They will live at Lake Forest, Ill.
USHER'S IN FAME
The world premiere of “Four Daughters” was held a Radio City Music Hall where Jeffrey Lynn, one of its stars, was once an usher.
WHAT, WHEN, WHERE
APOLLO
Sisters,” with Bette Davis,
LL The Anita Louise, at 12:35,
Errol Flynn. 3:45. 7 and 10: : “The Affairs i! Annabelle,” with . Jack Oakie. ducille Ball, at 11:25 2:40, 5:55 and 9
rocLE
Mad Miss Manton,” with
& oe Fonda, at
Rar Stanwyck, Hen os pra 7 na 10:30," a Kind,” with the Dionne
Claire Trevor, Jean t 11:25, 2:35, 5:45 and
INDIANA
“Suez,” with Tyrone Power, Loret Young. Annabella, at 11, 1:14, 3:28, 5:42, 156 An 10:10.
“March f me at 12:55, 3:10,
5:25, 1:33 and LOEW'S
‘ tades,” with Robert Donat, Rosina Fussell, at 12:15, 3:30, 6:50
and an Girls’ School.” with Anne Shirley, Nan Grey Ralph Bellamy, at 11, 2:15, 5:30 and 8: 0 LYRIC oy ll ey ne orris nnie vis, Screen at 1 11:11 1:57, 4:53, 7:39 and
Vaudeville 2 stage at 1:02, 3:48, 6:44 and 9
eo gh
Sahara Simoon Sweeps Canal - Building Film To Climax.
THRASHER If “Suez,” now at the Indiana, doesn’t turn out to be the “epic” that was intended, it’s through no lack of effort. Its makers have thrown in many impressive ingredients—so many, in fact, that very
likely you'll salvage a good bit of me ent. he title indicates, the film is ont the Suez Canal, and all the trouble it caused Ferdinand de Lesseps, its builder. The story-telling contains a colossal dose of sand and sentiment, ditches and diplomacy, crinolines and craftiness. Particularly impresive is the Sahara simoon, which swoops down upon the canal diggers. Great fare ricks topple over, a huge water tank is split asunder, a wooden beam comes hurtling through a door, another strikes de Lesseps to the ground. It’s all as overwhelming and - exhausting as the Goldwyn “Hurricane.” Almost as exciting is the scene where Turkish soldiers blow up the excavation with dynamite. And there are spectacles of a minor nature—a ball at Louis Napoleon's court, a banquet at the Viceroy’s palace in Alexandria, a debate in the English Parliament, a fast game of 90-year-old tennis in Paris.
Love Rival Sent Away
It’s here that we meet the hero at the picture’s opening, fighting it out with his friend, Rene de Latour, for the French championship. Here also we meet the President, Louis Napoleon (later Emperor Napoleon III), and the lovely Countess
who, posthumously, started that hat fad. De Lesseps loves Eugenie, but so does Louis. So the President sends the young man to Egypt to join his father. Eugenie eventually marries President Bonaparte while the younger de Lesseps is making a man out of the Viceroy’s gluttonous son and dreaming of a canal across the isthmus. Louis Napoleon first refuses to support the canal, then tricks the trusting de Lessups (through Eugenie) into helping him in his climb to the throne by promising help. Young de Lesseps is branded as a traitor by his friends. The shock kills his father. But little Toni, a devoted but bothersome Frencn tomboy, urges him to go on. Toni fastened herself on the canalbuilder in Egypt, and finally he falls in love with her in self-defense. | Eventually, when all sorts of troubles beset the canal builders, Disraeli promises England’s help. Meanwhile de Lesseps and the new Viceroy are bankrupt. Then comes the big wind. It ruins the equipment and kills Toni.
Loretta Young Stunning
De Lesseps is ready to give up, But the next thing we see he is sitting on horseback gazing at the ships in the finished canal—and, as played by Tyrone Power, mugging into the camera, I'm sorry to state. : Mr. Power tries. again to be a character actor, but without much success. In his short screen career he’s played almost as many semihistorical parts as George Arliss, and with about as little variety. It’s too bad he hasn’t the chance to be what he really is—an able and handsome young juvenile. The charming Annabella can do nothing with the ridiculous part of Toni, but Loretta Young is stunning in Eugenie’s gowns and little feathered hats. Acting honors go to J. Edward Bromberg as the young Viceroy, Joseph Schildkraut as de Latour, and Henry Stephenson as the elder de Lesseps. Other excellent performances are by Miles Mander as Disraeli, Leon Ames, who plays Louis Napoleon, and Nigel Bruce. All efforts, however, fail to make the diffuse story hang together. It gets bogged down in the Suez sand too early, and spends too long in getting out.
Beebe Is Signed As Rail Expert
HOLLYWOOD, Oct. 29 (U. P.).— Lucius Beebe, the blue-blooded New York columnist and bon vivant, was signed today as movie technical director—not on cafe society, but on railroads. Mr. Beebe is a distinguished member of the Railway and Locomotive Historical Society He crossed the country three times, rode to Texas seven times, and went to the Midwest frequently in preparing his latest book on trains. In Hollywood he will be an expert on the scenes of the building of the overland railway in the picture “Union Pacific.”
Eugenie, who became the Empress |:
Freddie Maar and his atichedia will provide the dance music at the Plantation’s reopening tonight.
Harold Clark, as I1 Duce, gives some pretty peasants an earful in this satirical moment of “Pins and Needles,” the Labor stage revue that opens English’s theatrical season Tuesday night.
swing. It seems that there is actually no competition, and a great many persons find room for both. There are purists who gdbhor swing, others who cannot tolerate classical music, and a midclass which delights in either form of musical expression.
Thus there were many nonsubscribers at the opening of the New York Philharmonic Symphony’s 97th season at Carnegie Hall, under John Barbirolli. It was a capacity audience, and an enthusiastic one. Barbirolli concluded with the immortal Fifth Symphony of Beethoven, giving it a reading which inspired one commentator to remark that although he had heard it a hundred and more times, it seemed to have been written only yesterday. The Fifth Symphony, incidentally, had a good workout to start the season. Two nights after the Philharmonic opening, Toscanini conducted it with the National Broadcasting Company’s Smphony. The next afternoon—Sunday—Barbirolli repeated it with the Philharmonic. Only 1400 of the 40,000 who sought tickets for the Toscanini performance could be accommodated in the studio, but the country heard it over the air. Similarly, the Sunday afternoon rendition under Barbirolli was available to all who cared to listen.
2 ” #
EVERAL new works are to be heard in this country during the season. One is a violin fantaisia written by the late Eugene Ysaye, the great master of the violin. The manuscript was given by Nadine Ysaye, granddaughter of the composer, to Jose Iturbi, pianist and conductor. 3 Iturbi entrusted Stephan Hero, Polish-American violinist, with the task of presenting it to the world in a forthcoming recitel.
tra of Washington announces “seven important symphonic premieres,
posers and first American performances of three works” for its 193839 season. Of the American works, four will have world premieres, it
NOW 5c ¢
to Robert Montgomery—Janet Gaynor “THREE LOVES HAS NANCY” Sonja Henie—“MY LUCKY STAR”
NOW 15¢ © ALAMO 3
hree Me uiteers «CALL THE Ralph EL BOR “LONE BANGER" —Nows
—Admigsion 49° SIONDAY NIGHT ARTY and DANCE AETY | PRIZES "ons x 9 P.M.
BOMAR CRAMER
ENGLISH THEATER, Sunday, Nov. 6, 3:30 P. M.
Seats mow selling: Gladys Alwes Music Shoppe, 33 Monument Circle
ENGLISH =u
aT «Now:
TUES. & WED. NITES NOV. 1-2 MATINEE
WEDNESDAY AMERICA'S SMASH HITI
ROLLICKING MUSICAL REVUE
ORIGINAL N. Y.
NITES—$2.20, $1.85, $1.10 CAS nt me. Matinee Wednesday—$1.65, $1.10, ‘55c.
In the World of Music
By United Press
1 musical season in New York has opened with a wide diversity of attractions, and the size of the audiences indicates that appreciation of serious music is far from being affected by the craze for
-| Spier, of Washington.
the Spanish]
The National Symphony Orches-|:
seven American works by six com-|
INS NEEDLES
was announced by Dr. Hans Kindler, conductor. They are a symphony by Roy Harris, a piano concerto by Paul Nordhoff, a suite of “miniatures” by Isidore Freed and “Seven | Visions,” a tone poem by La Salle
» ” »
HE Kansas City Philharmonic Orchestra, conducted by Karl Krueger, is giving 20 subscription concerts, in addition to extra ‘“popular” and children’s concerts. The orchestra will make a midwinter tour of Iowa, Illinois and Kansas.
king and Gaspar Cassado. Rose Pauly, Enid Szantho, Chase BaroPeo and Paul Althouse will sing in concert version of Richard Ere “Elektra.” 8 ” ” 3 The New York Metropolitan Opera has announced its repertoire for the season, lasting from Nov. 21 to March 12. Wagner again predominates with 10 operas. The other composers represented are Beethoven, Bizet, Charpentier, Damrosch, Delibes, Donizetti, Gluck, Gounod, Humperdinck, Leoncavallo, Mascagni, Massenet, Menotiti, Moussorgsky, Mozart, Ponchielli,
CIRCLE
Jack Ockie and Lucille Ball eo “THE AFFAIRS OF A
” TYRONE POWER : LORETTA YOUNS BE HORBELLY
FOLLIES
‘GAY CHORUS
MUTUAL
STARTING. AT SATURDAY MIDNIGHT SHOW!
BETTIE NOVAK, featured with
BERGERE |
GIRLS
A Great Laughing Show With
of ‘Singing and Dancing
Soloists will include Walter Giese-
|Sanders
Avalon
The supper club, 12 miles northeast of the city on Road 67, is under new management.
Puccini, Rimsky-Korsakoff, Rossini, |.
Saint-Saens, Strauss, Thomas an Verdi. In composers, singers, orchestra and ballet it is devised to be a truly international conglomeration welded into a harmonious whole. : Earle R. Lewis, assistant general manager, announces that the advance subscription has been unusually heavy. 2 2 ” - Ethel Bartlett and Rae Robertson, British duo-pianists, are making their 10th anniversary tour of America this season. This being a prolific year for “first performances in America,” they will include in their programs the Fantasy of Scriabin and Milhaud’s “Scaramouche” suite. 2 n 2
ERE'S another “first:” The Schola Cantorum of New York will give a motet by Arnold Bax, “This Worldes Joie” and a cantata by Bozidar Sirola, “The Deeds of the Holy Brothers Cyril and Emthodius.”
2 2 2 And yet another: Franco Ghione,
: |musical director of the Detroit- Sym-
phony, will present the following works new to America; Concerto Grosso by Gemeniani; Allegro Sinfonica by Marcel Poot; Kolo Sinfonica by Gotovac, and a Toccato by Barbara Giuranna, a teacher at
||the St. Cecelia Academy in Rome,
2 2 ” An organization new to New York, despite its name, is’the New York Opera Company. It has appeared for several seasons in eastern cities, but not until now in the metropolis. Establishing itself in the refurbished Manhattan Opera House, of historic memory, it offers a distinct novelty in music, which may come as a shock to some. After a regular evening of opera, the audience, or such part of it which may be so minded, moves to the
_|ballroom at the top of the theater
and dances until 2 a. m. to “hot” swing. The undertaking is advertised as “two attractions for the price of one.”
"BETTE SCORES EAGLE
The horse Bette Davis will ride in “Dark Victory” is George Brent's Kentucky thoroughbred Eagle.”
At Your Neighborhood Theater
“Golden |
‘Brother Rat’
Slides Out of Movie Traps
IFilm at Lyric Has No
Villain as Its Name Might Imply.
Som am————
Take one adult dose of “Tom Brown at Culver” and a teaspoon of «The Bicycle Girls at Boarding School” and you have “Brother Rat” (They Cry for It) opening at the Lyric this week.
Indianapolis seems to like its military academy films; for “Brother Rat,’ a story of Virginia Military ry follows closely upon the heels of a West Point picture last week. Plots of the modern school pictures are decidedly more sophisticated than they were in earlier days when the height of daring was a jelly sandwich party after hours. Today we have the commandant’s daughter smuggled into the domitory to help with chemistry as her father bounces in and out of the room at unexpected intervals,
‘Rat’ Not a Villain
It is refreshing to find a college picture without the song and dance routines, the stock absent-minded professors, a football game in which Our Hero saves the day in the final three seconds of play, or even a burst of barracks room harmony. A “Brother Rat” is not a villain as you may have suspected, but a V. M. I. senior who has gone through four years of training with the same close pals. The “Brother Rats” involved are Wayne Morris, who plays the part of Billy Randolph; Johnnie Davis as ‘A. Furman Townsend Jr., and Eddie Albert as Bing Edwards. The story opens with Bing, who has broken academy rules and secretly married, learning that he is to become a father. Billy bets
‘| Bing’s tuition money on a base-
ball game, and the boys then hock their proverbial shirts, plus a saber belonging to the Government, to make up the loss, wondering meanwhile “if there is a ball team at Alcatraz.” Girl Saves Boy
The commandant’s daughter, who wears glasses, is too good in chemistry, and she is the type of girl who always gets the blind dates. But she saves the boys from suspension after a series of scrapes and crams enough knowledge into Bing’s head to pull him through an exam. The story ends with Bing pressing a cigar with “It’s a boy” written on it into the commandant’s hand as he is handed his diploma. The leading feminine role of Joyce Winfree is played by Priscilla Lane; Jane Wyman hides behind the spectacles of the commandant’s daughter and Jane Bryan plays the part of Kate Rice, Bing’s wife. Some commendable impersonations are presented by Frank Payne in the stage show. The impression of the Speedway races as heard over the radio with Graham Crackers announcing will be of interest to Indianapolis people. The three Swifts do some skillful juggling with apparent ease. June Turner ends the show with a song.
MASK DANCES SAT. and SUN. NITE Adm. 25c All Eve.
‘BAND WAGON
Southeastern and Emerson
EW YORK, Oct. 29.—Any week
mentioned Mr. Anderson, then it is Many first-nighters didn’t like “Knickerbocker Holiday,” which is the title of this unusual production. While you can’t help feeling warm toward a show in which Huston (as Peter Stuyvesant) hobbles about on a peg-leg that he borrowed from John Barrymore, who wore it in “The Sea Beast,” you still can’t help feeling cool toward a show which acts like a professorial talk on colonial history. For this hot and cold “Knickerbocker Holiday” is an excursion back to the days when the Dutch were settling New York and Governor Stuyvesant came along to set up a one-man dictatorship, when the Indians were menacing the Hollanders with a war dance which white men do at places like the Onyx Club. Then, the Battery was the hub of the town and Brooklyn had not yet been discovered. ” ” ®
OROTHY BAKER has told the story of the erratic swingster, Bix Beiderbecke, dramatically in her prize-winning book, “Young Man With a Horn,” and soon Jed Harris will convert the book into a movie with Burgess Meredith in the role of the dynamic jitterbug. Biederbecke is becoming a growing legend in the swing world and tales about him, true or apocryphal, are wholesale these days. But Paul Whiteman knew the immortal “Bix” as well as any man because the eccentric trumpeter played with the band. Whiteman relates that once he put $25 and $50 fines into effect against any musicians who missed a show while the Jan was barnstorming around the
One Ye ghi, as the Whiteman contingent was moving to another town, Bix went to a jam session and awoke in time to miss the train. He hired a cab and chased a train 40 miles, only to discover that it was the wrong train and that he had been traveling in the wrong direction. So he wired Whiteman to meet him at Danes Harold
E55. S KY J. HARBOR
‘Two Halloween Dances—Tonite & Sun. Admission—Tonite, 10c—Sunday, 25¢ Come Out and See the i Dany Cash Prizes for Costu One Block South Municipal mort
BIG MIDNIGHT SHOW Fay Wray—Bruce Cabot
"KING KONG"
“WE’RE_GOING TO BE RICH”
-_
IN NEW YORK — GEORGE ROSS
Huston obblas on Corso Barrymore Limb
In Epochal New Song and Dance Show.
that offers the spectacle of a serious | ¢ actor like Walter Huston doing a tap-dance on a silver peg-leg in a song and dance show is a memorable time on Broadway. What's more, when the author of this musical show happens to be the pedantic Max« well Anderson, and the composer, Kurt Weil—and the producers Robert E. Sherwood, Elmer Rice, Sidney Howard, S. N. Behrman and the afore-
an important stage event.
the airport and a few hours later he descended in a crate shabbier than Corrigan’s. He was all tuckered out, so he thought he would nap. a while. He didn’t wake until the next morning, and in addition to, his $150 plane expense, he paid his $50 fine—with an eloquent curse,
SHOWBOAT BOOKS ‘HALLOWEEN BALL
‘A Halloween costume ball will enliven tonight’s proceedings at the Showboat, where Lou ‘Spencer and his swing band and Thelma Jones, singer, are the musical attraction. Prizes are being offered for the best costume.
As long as we can call each other names, politically, and get away with it, the country is safe from dictatorship. We are open tonight until 9 p. m. and Sund2y until 1:30 p. m. Stop in for complete one-stop service. Restaurants reported that even teachers with a thirst for knowledge require something more substantial and satisfying than food for thought.
An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure. Let us fill your car with anti-freeze now. Prestone is $2.95 a gallon ine: stalled, It doesn’t boil out. Politics or world affairs don’t have a chance on Saturdays. They might as well go on the 40-hour week during the Football season.
GREAT NOVEL—NOW rOWERS UL BpANA !
HAL BAILEY’S BAND
A Swell 2nd Hit!
"GIRLS' SCHOOL"
Ann Shirley Nan Grey Ralph Bellamy
GREAT WALTZ’
H THURSDAY Loy Rainer—Fernand Gravet
SOUTH SIDE Virginia Ave. Granada =
Tonite—=Tomorrow Janet Gaynor
Cont. Mat. Sunday “THREE LOVES HAS NANCY”
Franchot Tone Gene Autry
«SPRINGTIME IN THE ROCKIES” Serial Tonight & Sunday Matinee
. ast at Lincoln Lincoln em
Wayne Morris Priscilla Lane “LOVE, HONOR AND BEHAVE” Lou Gehrig “RAWHIDE” Sunday—Bob Burns—Dorothy Lamour “TROPIC HOLIDAY” Jean Parker “PENITENTIARY”
Fountain Square
Joe E. Brown Man Mountain Dean “THE GLADIATOR” Robt. Paige “HIGHWAY PATROL” Sunday—Sonja Henie—Richard Greene “MY LUCKY STAR” “SAFETY IN NUMBERS”
New Garfield
2203 Shelby Victor McLaglen
“WE'RE GOING TO BE RICH” “BORDER G-MAN” Sunday—Robt. Taylor—Maureen O’Sullivan “THE CROWD ROARS” “GOODBYE, BROADWAY”
At Fountain Square - ‘Tonight's Features Pinky Tomlin
“SWING IT, PROFESSOR” Donald Woods “BLACK DOLL” ~ Sunday—Pat O’Brien—Dick Powell
“COWBOY FROM BROOKLYN” “TOMBSTONE CANYON” :
GROVE: jie ime
June Lang Dick Baldwin “ONE WILD NIGHT” - “RENEGADE RANGER” Sunday—James Cagney—Pat O’Brien : “BOY MEETS GIRL” Melv. Douglas “FAST COMPANY”
Pros. & Churchman Merle Oberon Laurence Oliver
“DIVORCE OF LADY X” “MURDER ON DIAMOND ROW” Sunday—Sally Eilers—Paul Kelly . “NURSE FROM BROOKLYN” Melv. Douglas eam POMPANY.
Oriental ° NESTOR I Pon Ameche “GATEWAY” = ‘Sunday—~Mickey Rooney—Judy Garland “LOVE FINDS ANDY HARDY” “PANAMINTS BAD MAN”
NORTH SIDE -
Zaring Central at. Fall Crk.
‘Geo. Ratt “Fonds “SPAWN OF THE NORTH” “PM FROM THE CITY” Bundus-rMickey Rooney—Ann 2
8. Meridian “scott Colton y Russell
Cinema
NORTH SIDE
16th & Delaware Starts 1:30—150 10¢ Till 6 Preston Foster Patricia Ellis
“THE LADY IN THE MORGUE” Spencer. Tracy “MAN’S CASTLE” Sunday—Robt. Taylor—Maureen O'Sullivan “THE CROWD ROARS” Robt. Paige “HIGHWAY PATROL”
1500 Roosevelt Hollywood deers “LAW OF THE UNDERWORLD” Don Ameche “GATEWAY” Sunday—Robt. Taylor, Maureen O'Sullivan «THE CROWD ROARS” “TELEPHONE OPERATOR”
St. Clair St. Cl. & Ft. Wayne
Doors Open 6:45 Victor McLaglen “7THE DEVIL'S PARTY”. Dennis O'Keefe “THE CHASER” Sunday—Sonja Henie—Richard Greene
“MY LUCKY STAR” “BOY MEETS GIRL”
U p town 42nd & College
Edgar Bergen Charlie McCarthy “LETTER OF INTRODUCTION” “THE GLADIATOR” _Sunday—Janet’ Gaynor—Franchot Tone “THREE LOVES HAS NANCY” “MOTHER CAREY’S CHICKENS” Talbott & 22nd Talbott ms gue “MOTHER CAREY’S CHICKENS” Victor McLaglen “DEVIL'S PARTY” Sunday—Robt. Young—Lew Ayres . “RICH MAN. POOR GIRL” Dennis O’Keefe “THE CHASER” Only Nor S Sue Theater Participating in VIE QUIZ CONTEST 30th at Northwestern REX Dead End Kids Robert Wilcox “LITTLE TOUGH GUY” Geo. O’Brien “GUN LAW” Sunday—Robt. Taylor—Maureen O'Sullivan : “THE CROWD ROARS” Dick Purcell “MYSTERY HOUSE” College at 68d VOGU E Mickey Rooney Wallace Beery “SLAVE SHIP” ; “LADIES IN DISTRESS” Sunday Charlie McCarthy—Adolph Menjou “LETTER OF INTRODUCTION” “PRISON NURSE” 2351 Station St. DREAM ows Lola Lane “TORCHY BLANE IN PANAMA” Shirley Ross Ross “PRISON FARM” Sunday—Edgar Bergen—Charlie McCarthy “LETTER OF INTRODUCTION” - Jane Withers “KEEP SMILING” 3 Illinois and 34th R ITZ James Cagney Pat O’Brien “BOY MEETS GIRL" : Richard Dix “B! ALIBI” Sunday—Sotia Henie—Richard Greene “MY LUCKY STARS ¥
GOLDEN
EAST SIDE
R VOL | 3155 E. 10th St.
Cont. Mat. 15¢ Till 6 The Jones Family “SAFETY IN NUMBERS” “GANGS OF NEW YORK” EXTRA! Last Show Tonight Only! Box Office Open Until 11 p. m,
Alice Faye—Ben Bernie Walter Winchell—Jack Haley
“WAKE UP AND LIVE” Sun. thru Wed.—Richard Greene Sonja Henie “MY LUCKY STAR”
Joe E Brown “THE GLADIATOR”
E 30 Eu me rson Randolph Scott - Joan Bennett “THE TEXANS” Robt. Young “Rich Man, Poor Girl” Terrytoon Cartoon plus Novelty : Sun. thru Wed.—Norma Shearer Tyrone Power “Marie Antoinette” Wallace Beery
Tacoma Jackie Cooper “TREASURE ISLAND” “WOMEN IN PRISON” Sunday—Robt. Taylor—Maureen O'Sullivan “THE CROWD RCARS” «CRIME OF DR. HALLET”
4020 E. Sev Fork Tuxedo coixugy “LETTER OF INTRODUCTION” “SQUADRON OF HONOR” Sunday—Edw. G..Robinson—Barbara O’Neil
“I AM THE LAW” “RICH MAN, POOR GIRL”
5507 E. Wash. St. IRVING “ug Bape Charile McCarthy “LETTER OF INTRODUCTION” “BREATHLESS MOMENTS” Sunday—Randolph Scott—Joan Bennett May Robson “THE TEXANS” Lewis Stone “THE CHASER”
Paramount, tee Fie «THE MAIN EVENT” Geo. O’Brien “PAINTED DESERT” Sunday—Shirley Temple—Jimmie Durante
“LITTLE MISS BROADWAY” “PLL GIVE A MILLION”
2442 E. Wash. St.
. 2116 E. 10th St. Hamil toNuieee 150 ns Robert MAN “POO! Kibbee “RICH POOR GIRL” Robt. Taylor CROWD ROARS”
SE oe fl Kok
Mary Carlisle “TIP-OFF GIRLS”
8116 E. Wash. Warner Baxier Loretta Young
“WIFE, DOCTOR AND NURSE” Melv. Douglas “FAST COMPANY”
Sunday—Tyrone Power—Alice Faye
[Belmonts
EAST SIDE
1332 E. Wash. St. Strand Luis. Sonja \Henie Richard Greene “MY LUCKY STAR” Janet Gaynor—Robt. Monigomery “THREE LOVES HAS NANCY” Color Cartoon “SNOWTIME”
Lowell Thomas, Lew Lehr News
Matinee Sat. & Sun.—15¢ Till 1 EXTRA! Late Showings Aonient Box Office Open Until 10:30
L J ou 114 E. Washington
Last Times Tonight Ges. O’Brien “BORDER G-MAN” Jane Withers “RASCALS” Sunday’s Features—Victor McLaglen “BATTLE OF BROADWAY” ‘Nan Grey “BLACK DOLL”
Porter. Epmer a ar er Maureen O'Sullivan “PORT OF SEVEN SEAS” Melv. Douglas “FAST COMPANY” Sunday—Lew Ayres—Helen Mack
“KING OF THE NEWSBOYS” Jean Parker “LITTLE WOMEN”
WEST or Bjced "Howard
Speedway Heather Angel
“Bulldog Drummond in Africa” John King "STATE POLICE” Sunday—Mickey Rooney—Judy Garland “LOVE FINDS ANDY HARDY” Robt. Taylor “CROWD ROARS” - Neat Time Tonite
New Daisy Blois
“BATTLE OF BROADWAY” “WEST OF RAINBOW’S Sunday—Geo. Raft—Dorothy Lames “SPAWN OF THE NORTH” -“NURSE FROM BROOKLYN” . Fairbanks Jr, Howard ve, rairieais “HAVING A WONDERFUL TIME” “WE'RE GOING TO BE RICH" “LONE RANGER” No. § Sunday—Robt. Taylor—Msureen O'Sullivan’ “THE CROWD ROARS” . “BELOVED BRAT” . 10th. STATE Spade
“CRIME ap “LIGHTNING CRAND. Sundsy’s Featyres—Victor M “THE DEVIL'S PARTY" Laurel & Hardy
y City
We Nalinoe Bo ‘Jackie Ce
“IN OLD CHICAGO”
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Michigan 86 ©
Bh
Howard St. at Blaine .
~ ad ours 7 aL re ET TRE RRO LTDA SSA RL Sr
1
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