Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 December 1938 — Page 27
‘Blossom Time' Presented
In Acceptable Fashion At English's.
By JAMES THRASHER
~ Fashion seems to change even more quickly in entertainment than ~ it does in gowns. And both these . fashions take on a certain quaint . charm and humor only at proper ~ distance. So today the crinoline ~ posdesses a certain nostalgic glamour, while the hobble skirt is
only awkward and ugly. Whether “Blossom Time,” which has returned to English’s, is put in the hoop-skirt or hobble era depends upon individual taste. Those who retain a taste for sentimental
. overetta still may find it the caviar
of the early 1920s. To others it simply will be 1938 turkey. But certainly there is little point in detailed discussion of the show’s merits at this late date. Tradition, if nothing else, has made this apocryphal and lavender-scented tale of Frahz Schubert accepted. That it has done little to popular~ ize Schubert’s greatest music or to make known more widely the real and utterly tragic story of his life is beside the point.
Hero Missed Fortune
The fact is, “Blossom Time” remains with us, still able to move ~ and amuse its listeners (as witness last night’s audience) and send them forth whistling a portion of the “Unfinished” Symphony in waltz - time. It has been doing so for nearly 20 years, and in that time its hearers have paid out a fortune that would have staggered its hero. The sum total of Schubert’s possessions at his death would not have bought five orchestra seats at English’s. Though the assurance comes from * older “Blossom Timers” than myself, apparently not a line nor a piece of stage business has been changed through the years. The same archaic sentiments, the same humor of a “Charley Over the River” vintage, prevail. So our concern ‘is mainly in how the cast performs its duties. The present company is very satisfying. Mary McCoy and Charlotte Lansing, the Mitzi and Bellabruna, have youth and beauty and pleasant voices to recommend them.
Marshall's Voice Stirring
Everett Marshall, in the principal role, sings uncommonly well. His voice is rich, well produced and of a stirring timbre. But his acting is less like Franz Schubert than like Walter Hampden playing Ethan Frome. Douglas Leavitt finds a rich field for his vaudeville tricks—and he knows them all—in Kranz’ part. Roy Cropper still does nicely as the Baron Schober, and Wheeler Dryden and Zella Russell give good performances of Count Sharntoff and Mrs. Kranz. The costumes look fresh and colorful and the scenery is acceptable, but the orchestra, under Pierre De Reeder’s direction, frequently overbalances the soloists.
“Blossom Time’s” engagement is|
for tonight and tomorrow afternoon and evening.
BOB BURNS NOW HONORARY MAYOR
HOLLYWOOD, Dec. 2 (U. P.).— Bob Burns, the Arkansas comedian, became honorary mayor of Canoga Park today. He thus joined their honors, Al Jolson of -Encino, Glenda Farrell of Van Nuys, and Hugh Herbert of . Universal City in the circle of suburban mayors whose sole duties are to preside at banquets and lend their noted names to otherwise unknown communities, Mr. Burns was sworn in by Judge Benton Worley on the set where he was working. The comedian owns a 195-acre ranch in Canoga Park in the San Fernando Valley north of Hollywood. Among his celebrated constitutents are Barbara Stanwyck, Robert Taylor, Paul Kelly, Pinky Tomlin, Wallace Beery, Richard Arlen, Francis Lederer, Joe E. Brown and Irene 1 C. 4
14 SPIRITUALS ON CONCERT PROGRAM
Fourteen familiar spirituals comprise the program which the Malleable Glee Club of Cleveland will present at 2:30 p. m. Sunday in the . War Memorial auditorium. The
- concert is sponsored by the Marion
County Chapters, Mothers. Roosevelt Squires is director of the 42-voice chorus of Negro women, made up of workers in the National Malleable and Steel Castings Co.
American War
WHAT, WHEN, WHERE
- APOLLO
“Breaking the Ice,” with Breen, Chatlie Ruggles, Dolores” bby tello, Irene Dare,. at 12:56, 4, 7:04 nr o odle Kicks Off,” with J oodle cks ” w Be ner, one Travis, at 11:38, 3: 4a,
5:46 an ENGLISH’S
“Blossom Time,” with Everet Marshall, Mary McCoy, Charsite Lansing. Curtain at 8:30. Matinee tomorrow, 2:30. ’
INDIANA
Eo wood 4 1s y Proadway Revue,” on tages al 133 = 3 RL 4. £.3; an and b:3¢; Jack’ ¢ Be, Lust Ball, Ruth Don lly. on 13550en at 11:20, 2:09, 4: 58,
1 7:57 and J LOEW'S _ “Qut West With the Hardys,” Jawis Stone, Mickey Rooney, ar p 4: 35, 0 ‘15 and 10, t Laven pg Sab ars - with 12:40, 16 y rdon, at
and raising. the Bull,” Walt Puney color cartoon, at 12:30, 3:15, and
BO LYRIC
’ r Pryor and his orchest tor si and, ® Re Hod in
with G
STRIP-TEASE QUEEN DETESTS IT
8 8 =
“Someone ought to investigate get their money?”
Times Photo.
Beethoven, and not Benny Goodman, gets Gypsy Rose Lee’s vote when the mood for music strikes her. A fan of Serge Koussevitzky and the Boston Symphony, Miss Lee carries two portable phonographs on tcur—one for her hotel room and one for the theater.
" 8 =»
Idea Is Stupid, Says Gypsy Rose Lee, Who Wants To Do 'Good Play,’ Suggests Dies Probers Enter Movie Quiz.
Gypsy Rose Lee sat in her hotel room, clicked her Fu Manchu fingernails, and spoke her mind on the Dies invesfigation.
them,” she said. “Where do they
Miss Lee said a member of the Dies Committee had- telephoned her
children. She said she had been asked to testify in an investigation of un-American activities. Chairman Martin Dies said the whole thing was a “press agent's dream.” “It is they (the committee) who gave the story to the press,” the burlesque-and-movie star countered. “They want the publicity to raise some money for further investigations. I suggest they enter the Movie Quiz contest.”
Back to Broadway
Miss Lee, who, in a trailing black satin house coat looked like one of Mr. Petty’s drawings in Esquire, Joes feel much like a glamour girl. “I'm a very, very tired person.” Hedy La Marr is her real idea of a glamour girl. The only others are Dietrich and Garbo, and possibly Lynn Fontanne, thinks this erstwhile spoke in the broken burlesque wheel. Miss Lee, who was born Rose Louise Hovick in Seattle, is heading east from Hollywood, where she spent a year and a half on the 20th Century-Fox lot. Her current week's engagement at the Indiana is her last appearance before she goes back to Broadway. A languid admission that “Hollywood is a grand place” was the best thing Miss Lee could say for the film capital. “I was very dissatisfied with my work there. ‘Lucky Star’ was terrible. I saw it one day and left town the next.”
No Books This Time
Miss Lee played the phonograph while she had her picture taken. (She doesn’t carry a case of books with her as she did the last time she was in town. She’s afraid the Dies Committee would consider them “subversive literature.”) Indicating her upswept coiffure,
after she had appeared in a benefit performance for Spanish Loyalist
rapher:, “Please don’t photograph my head where there isn’t any hair. I left my switch -at the theater.” Then she, prowled around the room, murmuring that . the predominating floral designs made her feel even worse than when she got off the train, which was bad enough. ~ Jerking at the net curtains, she said: “Fanny Brice would have these down in no time. She detests mosquito-netting curtains. We used to room together in ‘The Follies,’ you know.” When she gets to New York, Miss Lee hopes to fulfill her one great ambition, “to do a really good play.” No strip-tease in it, either.
Just One Phone Call
So far, she hasn’t been bothered much in Indianapolis by telephone calls. “There has just been one, and he gasped and hung up when my husband answered the phone.” Her husband, identified only as “Dahling,” called twice during the interview. Miss Lee- identified him only as a New York manufacturer. They were married 25 miles out at sea, then later in Santa Ana, because the bride’s studio thought the nautical knot undignified. As regards the strip-tease which made her famous, Miss Lee hasn't many good words. “It’s pretty stupid walking around the stage taking off your clothes,” she declared. “The sooner it’s out of the theater, the better for the theater.” She was with Minsky for 12 weeks, she said, and got there by the “starvation route.” “No one goes into burlesque for fun,” she remarked sagely. She didn’t mention the customers.
Miss Lee pleaded with the photog-
Preferably the
amidst the throngs. advance. :
maestro’s supreme place in the music world. The other day, a damsel at a Broadway cabaret took a request over the phone for a table to be reserved. - “What’s the name?” she mechanically inquired. “Toscanini,” was the reply. “Arturo Toscanini.” The young lady reflected over this a while. “Oh, that’s the band leadler!” she concluded. “Don’t worry, there’ll be a nice table.” » 2 2” ILLY, but . . . anyway, a Tin Pan Alley acquaintance called Western Union and asked the girl to take down a telegram. “The message,” he said, “is ‘Trala, trala, trala,
|trala, trala, trala, trala, trala, tra-
la’” Western Union obediently took it down, read the message back and asked if it was right. “That’s Neat, the denizen of song alley said. The girl at W. U. then said that the message had nine words and the same rate would be applied if a tenth were added. The man said he couldn’t think of anything else. “Why not add another ‘Trala’?” suggested W. U. “Oh, no,” said the man, “that would make it sound silly.” : 2 8 8 HIS is the time of year when i the soapbox Demosthenes of Columbus Circle clothe themselves in warmer garb and their nondescript hearers huddle in their topcoats. For the evenings have grown colder and the Circle is an open playground for the Four Winds. But the little White Fathers of
uy OF THE Lay dear)
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Edward & Bo "UKID GALAN Ape
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| HOME COOKED MEALS
IN NEW YORI Gast
Arturo Toscan Relates in Night Clubs,
K. WwW.
od
GEORGE ROSS
Noisiest Ones.
EW YORK, Dec. 2—With little fanfare, Maestro Arturo Toscanini has found relaxation at several night clubs. noisy places on Broadway where he is less likely to be conspicuous Reservations for the maestro are made hours in
He prefers the large,
Of course, menials at the racy Rialto cafes are vague about the
this metropolis don’t trust the citizenry against the elements. For on a gate that fences in the fountain below the statue of Christopher Columbus is a conspicuous notice reading: “BATHING FORBIDDEN!” : : Apparently, one never knows when a New Yorker, fortified by the winter cold, will strip off his clothing, dive in and take a dip on Columbus Circle
HELLO, GOOD-BYE
Phyllis Brooks’ father is an efficiency engineer whose work necessitates his making. frequent changes in residence. As a child the 20th Century-Fox actress attended 17 schools. Still she graduated from high school at 16.
DEANNA DURBIN:
Eddie Cantor in New York. After the show some of us would go out and have spaghetti—miles of if!—
salad or a big thick steak. Oh, boy! . .. salad, dry toast and some buttermilk?” ISA MIRANDA: “I am funny emotionally. Sometimes looking at a flower makes me cry, but I do not cry about cruel things, or if luck is bad or if somebody is mean. No—I just get mad. Sometimes I am very happy for no reason and sometimes I am sad for no reason. Usually, though, when I am especially said I find that it is because I have forgotten to have my lunch.”
JACK OAKIE: “Naw, I'm not superstitious except about one thing—sleeping 13 in a bed!”
AKIM TAMIROFF: “We actors are the poorest judges of scripts. No matter how honest we try to be, we can see nothing but our own parts and whether we have lots of good lines to speak. If we have not much to do, we say, ‘It will be an unsuccessful picture’!”
FRANCES FARMER:
“The people I feel sorry for are the poor abused players who “go around saying, ‘I can’t afford to do another picture this year because it would pay me so much that I would go into a higher income-tax bracket and would lose money on the deal.’ My heart fairly bleeds for people like that! Sometimes I wonder that they don’t quit Hollywood and go work in little theaters where they won’t have to worry about income taxes.”
DIRECTOR TAY GARNETT: “The worst thing about this town is that it’s still full of that old ‘yes’ poison. The virus is so strong that De can look you right in the eye and say ‘ves’ when they're thinking ‘no,’ which is pretty bad.”
BASIL RATHBONE:
“I used to listen to everyone, but now I think I know as much about my particular job as anybody else. I have come to the point where I am going to make my own decisions, and perhaps my own mistakes.”
By PAUL HARRISON : Tiines Special Writer HOLLYWOOD, Dec. 2—One-minute interviews:
Waitress, will you bring the fruit].
Food Deanna’s First Love: Bad Taste Worries Anita
y
«I love to eat and I break all the diet rules for singers. Just before I have to sing I like to bolster myself with a nice big dinner. And the most fun I ever had, I think, was the week I spent appearing with
MARGARET SULLAVAN: “1 don’t like interviews because I never know what to say. At first
I'm frightened at all the questions, :
because it’s hard when you know you're going to be quoted in black and white. After the fright wears off I begin to get mad, and then I'm absolutely sunk because when 1 get mad I talk my head off and the interviewer leaves me with material for lots of stories—but maybe none of them is he kind 1.ought io be giving out.”
ANITA LOOS:
the stage, in books or anywhere, nothing is offensive except bad taste. Many things which are censored as being antimoral could be
shown purposely and poignantly and tastefully. The screen is so hedged about with censorship that almost the only true emotion it dares to show is the emotion of anger—battles and quarrels. Some pictures lately have contained double-mean-ing remarks, and people whooped when they recognized them. Also a good many situations which couldn’t be treated seriously are put across just as forcefully, and maybe not quite so tastefully, through comedy episodes.”
MAXIE ROSENBLOOM: “Actin’ is the best racket, but I make money fightin’, too. There are a lot of angles in fightin’, just like in actin’. Why, I have spent so much time lyin’ on the. canvas that I could sell advertisin® space on the soles of my shoes.”
A CHORUS GIRL:
“You can have this town, because I don’t want it. There’s no use kidding myself about being an actress and getting anywhere in pictures. Some may, but I can’t; I had a test once. Hollywood isn’t any fun for a chorus girl who doesn’t believe that she’ll be a star tomorrow. Stars are glamorous here, but pretty kids are a dime a dozen. The only place a chorus girl has any glamor is back on Broadway, where the businessmen sit out front and think she’s
marvelous. And, mister, that’s where I'm going!”
Times Special
the carpet was his brother, Teddy,
Lorenz came to that part where twin brother. “What yer laughin’ about?” asked Teddy. “Listen,” said Lorenz, “if there were another guy like you, this show would make a great musical.” The other Hart snickered. “Me?” Shakespeare? You're off your nut. But they say me and Jimmy Savo are dead doubles, if that’s all that is bothering you.”
An Idea Is Born
. Hart leaped out of bed. Literally. A little fellow of vast nervous energy, he doesn’t do things by slow degrees. “Sure,” he exclaimed, “I'd forgotten that you and Savo are ringers. Control yourself, Teddy, you're about to become a Shakespearean actor.”
At noon the next day, this boudoir project had been transmitted to that other ace comedian, Jimmy Savo, who felt the same way about it as Teddy did. Then Lorenz Hart met Producer Gedrge Abbott on the street. “I've got a great idea,” he said. They stopped at the Astor Bar, where Hart told him about it. Abbott said it was a great idea.
Then they both went over to Richard Rodgers’ house and mentioned it to the music-wriking ‘half of the Rodgers & Hart te By the next nightfall, Shakespeare already had begun to turn over in his Stratford crypt; for his “Comedy of Errors”: was about to be converted into a song and dance show, with.a couple of vaudeville comics, smart tunes, plenty .of girls and with a new title—"The Boys from Syracuse.”
Critics Like It
Skip the months of writing, com= posing, rewriting, ' recomposing, casting, rehearsing, trying-out . . . and we get to the other night when “The Boys from Syracuse” had its Grand Opening at the Alvin. Here is how the critics felt about the whole idea the next morning: “Kiss ‘The Boys from Syracuse’ Hello for me,” said the academic
Lor
greatest musical comedy of its
HELD OVER TONIGHT
PHIL EMERTON 4
And His Diamonds
sALLROOM
STARTING TODAY!
Magic in his voice and in yy swirling. skates saucy smile!
Shakespeare Set to Music And Even Critics Enjoy It
Mr. Atkinson of the Times. “I be=| lieve it will be regarded as the}
NEW YORK, Dec. 2—One night last year, the lyric-writing Lorenz Hart lay abed, reading Shakespeare’s “Comedy of Errors.” Flung across
the diminutive comedian of “Three
Men on a Horse” and “Room Service” fame.
the Bard mixed up Dromio and his
time,” said Mr. Whipple of the World Telegram. “Among the town’s indispensable amusements,” said Mr. Anderson of the JournalAmerican. “Something to see and hear,” said Mr. Brown of the Post. “One of the season’s gayest,” said Mr. Lockridge of the Sun. And all the way down the line the critics lavished more praise upon this show than upon any other revue that has come to town in years. We think old Will would have hummed the songs Rodgers & Hart wrote on his way out of the theater and that he wouldn't have minded the liberties Mn Abbott has taken with his original seript. For the fact is that though the plot of “The Comedy of Errors” is
all there, the dialogue is Mr. Abbott’s. Nobody minds.
HYPNOTIC ANIMAL TRAINER IN FILMS
: HOLLYWOOD, Dec. 2 (U. P.)— The movies today signed up Blacaman, the hypnotic animal trainer. The fuzzy-haired circus performer hypnotizes. his beasts in the W. C. Fields picture, “You Can’t Cheat an Honest Man.”
\
“I believe that in movies or on|
The great stagecoach stickup scene from “Breaking the Ice,” wherein Desperate Charlie Ruggles menaces our hero, Bobby Breen, with a Missouri meerschaum. All this and more may be seen at the Apollo
for the current week.
Perseverance
Has Its Reward
HOLLYWOOD, Dec. 2 (U. P)— Frankie Burke, who rode the rods here from Brooklyn four years ago, rode back on a streamliner today,
i the hero of a vrags-to-riches story.
Mask and Wig In City Dec. 27
The University of Pennsylvania Mask and Wig Club is coming back
to Indianapolis this year in ‘the’
course of its Christmas tour, bringing. 43 actors, two acts, 21 scenes and a trunkful of the country’s song hits. The engagement is for one night only, Dec. 27. Such popular tunes as “When I Go a-Dreamin’,” “Ya Got Me,” and “There’s No Place Like Your Arms” are all included in the shows score. Their composer is Clay A. Boland, 26, who also did the songs for last year’s show and wrote the swing nursery rhyme, “Stop Beating Around the Mulberry Bush,” with Bickley Reichner, lyric writer. The university’s Indiana alumni, sponsoring the revue, have opened a ticket office in the Chamber of Commerce Building.
FILM COMPANIES WILL OMIT ITALY
Times Special NEW YORK, Dec.2—Major film companies maintaining their own distribution offices in Italy will withdraw from that country Dec. 31, it
{was announced today.
Companies with their own exchanges are Loew's, 20th CenturyFox, Paramount and Warner Brothers. Film executives said that the Italian decree establishing an importation and distribution monopoly renders null and void all present American distribution contracts there.
MULE CRASHES MOVIES Hollywood sent a camera crew back to the famous livestock show at Kansas City to obtain shots of “the world’s most beautiful mule” for the next Bob Burns film, “I'm From Missouri.”
LIFTED OUT OF JOB Eddie “Brother Rat” Albert was once assistant to a professional strong man. He lost the job when he picked up a “500-pound” dumb-
bell of balso wood in view of the|
audience.
a T.& N. TAVERN 1627-29 Howard Street KEN and GLEN Entertaining Nightly
SE oo n * oa BRE]
Hi The Lane Sisters—Gale Page * Claude Rains—John Garfie! a
“Four Daughters” CHARLES ff ALGIERS”
GIGI
EYES “CALL YY: NEN ROCKIES”
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‘Doors Open, B. 45. First ZnS
Added: “Spider’s Web”—News.
GRACIE FIELDS SEES HOLLYWOOD
HOLLYWOOD, Dec. 2 (U. P)— Gracie Fields, one of the highest paid entertainers in the world, was in Hollywood today for a five-weeks visit and to confer with studio officials about future film assignments. g The famous comedienne, one of the few women ever. to be made a
commander of the British Empire, was met by Monty Banks, her director, who preceded her from London a few weeks ago. Miss fields will visit with her sister, Mrs. Betty Perru. She is under contract to 20th Century-Fox Studio, and is to talk with Executives Joseph M. Schenck and Darryl Za-
Frankie was 14 when he arrived, broke and hungry, but determined to erash into the movies. He sold papers, washed dishes and worked as a bell hop, meanwhile doing impersonations of James Cagney whenever anybody would look at him,
Then an actor was needed to play the role of James Cagney as a youth .in the recent picture, “Angels With Dirty Faces.” Frankie got the job. His work won him a seven-year contract.
BRING OWN STOVE
Glenda Farrell has started a new fad. She invites people to dinner, supplies them with raw food and lets them cook their own meal.
NOW PAYING SHAT, SAT. ; ETT ENGLISH marsha BLOSSOM TIME
with CHARLOTTE LANSING-MARY MecOOY]| Schubert's Melodies—Romberg’s Music
Eves., 56c to $2.20; Mat. Sat., 56c to - $1.65
3 Days, Beg. Mon., Dec. 5; Mat. Wed.
E000 B10, $1.65, For $2.7
1.10, $1.65, $2.2
excell
SEATS MON.
LVe B0e, $1.10, $1.65, $2.20. Sat. Mat, B80¢c,| o $1.10, $1.65.
nuck about her forthcoming pictures.
LL pe
LEW MICKEY
STAY
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FERDINAND 5 ABULL
HARDYS
ADDED! 1at/D prs ’
Tonight's Presentation at Your
Neighborhood Theater
NORTH SIDE
At Fountain Sauare
SOUTH SIDE Tonight’s Features arey Grant
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SANDERS Rin-Tin TR SkoLL RAD crOWN” | 3 Heatley yagel., “GOLD MINE IN Par Nery” AVALON Front 8. Chgrohman aca: Sells EE IC HW HWAY DATROL” 1105 8. Meridian Ann Nagel Leslie = - : J/East at Lincoln LINCOLN Dennis o'Bocte “BAR Bo JUSTICE” FOUNTAIN SQUARE Gene Autry APRAIRIE NOON” aes Shelby st. New Garfield That “Great Hit Tyrone Power—Norma Sheare “MARIE ANTOINETTE” Bela Lugosi I NORTH SIDE © 80th at Northwestern Tonite-Tomorrow YOGUE a date ur “THREE LOVES HAS NANCY” Geom RI T Z Doors 6:45 Joe . EK, Bro Travis «MYSTERIO ous DA OMOTO” Coming Sundav—By ‘SNOW “FUGITIVES FOR A NIGHT” CINEMA i Bane Mickey Roo rs
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“10 THE VICTOR” ; Roosevelt Allan Lane RIaEnses Mercer
NUMBERS”
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“SAFETY Ft. Wi 8 es onn 6:45 Ginger Rogers
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cMur! urray “can ‘SING you SINNERS”
PUS CONFESSIONS” Only North ide Theater Tarticipating in MOVIE Quiz CONTEST EAST SIDE
HAMILTON SHEFohi
Don’t Miss bu ’ Tyrone Power—Norma Shearer “MARIE ANTOINETTE”
GOLDEN A116 E. ah
“LITTLE TOUGH SOY “LLOYD'S OF LONDON”
B I J oO U 114 Washin ol
Open Daily 10 “ALWAYS
bara Stanwyck. GOOD-BYE” “BREED OF THE BORDER”
STRAND 1332 E. oh, st.
Doors n 5:48 Now: Thru Wed, “vot "CANT TAKE IT _& “THAT CERTAIN AGE”
PARKER "7
“LIFE BEGINS IN Dennis O’Keefe “THE CHASER”
EAST SIDE
RIVOLI R155 E. 10th St
Doors 3,00en 5 5:45 Deanna Durbip-Melvis: Dougias “THAT CE IN AGE” : Johnny “Scat” Davis “Mr. Chump” AND New Lehr Comedy Pius Novi y Starts S niavc James St Stemat “You NTT KE IT W ou” PENKOD'S ‘DOUBLE TROUBL, "A
4630 E. 10th EMERSON «ffi ih Peter Lorre MOTO” § ING (1st EAST SIDE SHOWING Last Ch pier “WILD BILL SH OK” 2442 E, Wash. St. TACOM A Norma er Tyrone Power “MARIE ANTOINETTE” Comedy—Popular Science—Cartoon 4020 -BE. New York TUXEDO Hold Your Breath! , Do ble Horror Show Boris Bacio “FRANK NSTEIN" Lugost DRACULA
IRVING
“ALEXANDER’S RA E “SQUADRON OF HONOR
5507 E. Wash. St.
411 EB. a h Tonight’s Features
Paramount Richara” Cremmed KS”
THE Seles Short. F Sablects
WEST SIDE 2/40 W, Yang NEW DAISY 8
THE G — ree O'Brien GUN EH id
HOWARD ™"a%et sit” |
Bing Crosby | “DR. RHYTHM! George Brien “PAINTED DESERT” ______ “LONE RANGE No. 10
STATE 2702 W. 10th St.
George Raft “SPAWN
———
" Doroth Lamour “MAN FROM M USIC MOUNTAIN”
BELMONT Jitole Your Breath”
Rola Yo! Bela 1 x
Only West Bid Sha, wit Sen An MOVIE QUIZ QUIZ CONTE :
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[SPEEDWAY
