Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 April 1939 — Page 9
MOVIES
By JAMES THRASHER
LOEW'S—"“Fast and Loose,
Rosalind Russell, Reginald
Etienne Girardot.
“Four Girls in White,”
Merkel, Ann Rutherford, and Buddy Ebsen.
»
with Robert Montgomery, Owen, Ralph Morgan and
Mary Howard,
CIRCLE—Vaudeville, featuring John Boles, singing screen star; Joe Rines and his orchestra; Ross Wyse Jr. and |
June Mann, Deane Janis,
Rollo and Verna Pickert.
with Florence Rice, Una Alan Marshal
- -
a sb So oS i erm a LT Lc <r ATR
|
“Winner Take All" with Tony Martin, Gloria Stars
Slim Summerville, Henry
Armetta.
INDIANA —“Midnight,” with Don Ameche, Claudette Col. bert, John Barrymore, Francis Lederer and Mary Astor.
“King of Chinatown,”
Tamiroff and J. Carrol Naish.
APOLLO—"Three Smart Girls Grow Up,”
with Deanna
Durbin, Nan Grey, Helen Parrish and Charles Winninger. |
“Beauty for the Asking,” Knowles and Frieda Inescourt.
LOEW'S
of the missing librarian turns up in a suit of armor in the Torrent hall. | Sloane lands and takes over with |
Until “Fast Company’ came to the screen some time ago. one had been led to believe that such bookish pursuits as first-edition collecting soothed. rather than stimulated, mankind's more hot-headed passions. If any doubt to the contrary remained after that film, it is dispelled in the sequel, “Fast and Loose.” which is at Loew's this week. Rcbert Montgomery and Rosalind Russell have replaced Melvyn Douglas and Florence Rice as the liter-| arv and detecting Joel and Garda | Sloane, but otherwise life among | the bookworms is as hectic as ever. There seems to be a credible ex- | cuse for the goings-on in “Fast and | Loose.” S rare-book collectors would give their | eve teeth for one of the Shakespeare Folios, it is reasonable to assume that the chance of getting hold of a piece of the Bard's original manuscript would call forth even greater | effort. Ah! Real Villains Spottea
So two pages of Shakespearean | handwriting become the real villains of a piece which includes murder, forgery, gangster reprisals and a lot more action of something less than | academic flavor. The Sloanes are commissioned to go after the Shakespeare manuscript by meek little Christopher Cates. The owner is Nicholas Torrent, who is hard up for money, the father of a wastrel son and the emplover of a forger-turned librarian. It develops that the manuscript is stolen and a false one put in its place. Torrent’s son is discovered to be in a desperate situation because of gambling debts. Then Torrent is | found murdered and, later, the body’
INDIANA
A storybook tale comes to life n a modern version of Cinderella billed | as “Midnight,” this week's feature |
attraction at the Indiana, starring]
Claudette Colbert. It's definitely Miss Colbert's show
and the glass slipper act is well in| Just like Cin-|
hand at all times.
derella, her coach turns into a
pumpkin except that the pumpkin
is a Paris taxicab and the prince] charming is a hard boiled “‘cabby” played by Don Ameche. Simmered down, the plot is wellworn (society impostor hoodwinking | the “400°). But 1t is treated so entertainingly that the show is quite devoid of dul: moments. John Barrymore, who plays Cinderella’s backer and bill-footer, adds | much to the show and Mr. Ameche is his usual handsome self in a regular he-man role Miss Colbert, as Eve Peabody. an American girl, comes to Paris one rainy night in an evening gown, cuite broke but mm search of a rich husband. Mr. Ameche, the “cabby.” drives her to all the night spots in Paris in search of a job but loses her when she crashes a cafe society party armed only with a pawn ticket. Assuming the name of the cab driver, she poses as a Hungarian baroness, but her disguise is fathomed by a Puckish French businessman, played by Mr. Barrymore, who suggests she engage the attentions of his wife's boy friend. Mr. Barrymore provides the background and the game gets under way with the wife's boy Francis Lederer, and all capitulat-
| { i
APOLLO
This week the Apollo is holding over last week's Indiana bill, with Deanna Durbins new picture, “Three Smart Girls Grow Up,” as the headline attraction. This is a sprightly and amusing
CIRCLE
John Boles is a movie actor who doesnt do a dramatic scene from his latest picture. crack moth-eaten jokes or tell his personal-appearance
audiences what a wonderful place Hollywood is. He just sings Consequently Mr. Boles’ contribution to the Circle stage bill this week is unusual, if not of arresting distinction : Such are the ways of the moviemakers that the singing star scarcely has opened his mouth in cinematic song for several seasons. was evident from Mr, Boles’ warm
Since it is known that most |
| White.”
| gets a fake wire from “Francie,”
| Budapest.
friend, |
It |
all the efficiency of the marines.
with Anna May Wong, Akim
LOEW'S
with Lucille Ball, Patric
There are the usual number of sus-| pects. including Sloane himself. But, |
by superior brains and strength, the bookish amateur detective beats the | | police at their own game and ap-|
prehends the culprit who, as you |
might have guessed, is not the an you suspected.
Whodunit Fan May Protest
“Fast and Loose” is a more apt title than one might think. The ac- | tion is swift, and there are a few {loose ends which might not please | the ultrafastidious whodunit fan. | But all things are forgiven in the | sparkling performance by the two principals. Whether they are doing a chiller l like “Night Must Fall” or slapstick like “Live, Love and Learn,” Mr. | Montgomery and Miss Russell are a
| rare and enjoyable team. Both are | splendid, adaptable performers, and {their job in this case is made doubly pleasant by some pea lines and situations Reginald Owen, Etienne Girardot | and the other supporting players) add excellent contributions to 8 diverting little picture The second film, “Four Girls in| (what a rash of movies! about daughters, sisters and assorted girls, we've had lately) pays tribute to the nursing profession, though | not in a way Florence Nightingale might have imagined. In essence, it is the story of 8 selfish, fortunehunting stu dent nurse who is brought to her senses | and achieves distinction only after! a classmate has died because of her| own self-interest. The currently - honevmooning Florence Rice is featured.
ing to her charms. Mr. Barrymore's wife (Mary Astor) gets suspicious, and the “baroness” nearly reaches her “midnight” when her luggage is | redeemed by the pawn ticket she {used as an admission card.’ Mr. Ameche saves day when he arrives at a country week-end party ‘in a rented dress suit as the “baron,” determined to take Eve back to Paris with him. One of. the best scenes in the show is the Sunday morning breakfast when the a
fictitious little daughter who he
| the measles. Mr. Barrymore wl
into the role of “Francie,” via a house phone, in a supposed call to]
More and More Complicated When the butler reveals that the | telephone is out of order, Miss Colbert slips out of the situation by saving her “husband” has “eccen-| tric” spells. Her story stands her | in good stead when Don roars up| the drive in his cab. uniform and | all. The whole group sympathizes with the “baroness’” plight and | Ameche is batted over the head] with a chafing dish for his pains. | To make things even more com- | plicated, the “aristocratic” couple goes through divorce proceedings, | but the “baron” thwarts the case by | pretending to be mentally deficient | and the divorce is refused. That's enough for Cinderella, who goes out with her ‘“cabby” in search | of a marriage license. “King of Chinatown” is the second attraction, with Anna May Wong. Akim Tamiroff and J. Carrol Naish. (E. J)
treatment of the “Little Miss Fixit” theme, and the familiar plot seldom has been treated with so much originality and charm. It's a delightful little trifle, and splendidly ‘acted.
Wyse Jr. and June Mann: in a patter and comedy dance turn, and an| ‘uncommonly adept dancé team who| do acrobatics and jitterbugging on| stilts with more agility than many persons with both feet on the) ground. A prize fighter and a ladv. played by Tony Martin and Gloria Stuart. ! are the principal characters in the Circle movie, “Winner Take All."
RIVOLI TO REVIVE RECENT CARTOONS
reception yesterday that his admir-|
ers have missed his musical efforts. |
So he sang, among other things, “Rio Rita” and “One Alone, we all remember from his musical movie Says. He likewise put on a} funny coat and a brown derby and | gave his listeners ‘Waiting at the Gate for Katy.” He even got the paying guests to sing with him, something every performer can’t do. Joe Rines is acting as master of ceremonies this week, and his band | (familiar to radio listeners) takes care of interludes, background and some feature assignments in good! style. The orchestra’s Contr IU HON | includes “Little Sir Echo” and “The | Umbrella Man,” which Mr. Rines | started on their way to popularity. The bill also features Deane Janis, | radio and night club singer;
4 which | {Pluto and Pinky Penguin, will bel
Ross |
A revival of recently shown car- | toons, featuring Donald Duck, Mickey Mouse, Popeye, Olive, Oyle,
an added attraction starting to{morrow and showing © through | Wednesday at the Rivoli. | A special feature of the “Cartoon Side Show” will be a trip through Walt Disney's studios, via movie, showing how the cartoons are made rom beginning to end. The feature | Dichter are “Trade Winds,” with | Fredric March a Joan Bennett, {and “The Three sketeers” with Don Ameche and the Ritz Brothers.
|
om — {
Frederic a Bennett “TRADE WINDS” “Strange Case of Dr. Meade”
FIRST MIDWEST SHOWING Gene Autry @ Smiley Burnette STEXICALY ROSE
| registers
CIRCLE
HOLLYWOOD
By PAUL HARRISON
OLLYWOOD, April 1.—John Ford, directing Henry Fonda in a
scene for
“Young Mr. Lincoln,” was having trouble with a cow.
The cow was supposed to be just atmosphere, standing there chewing
Fonda's dialog.
“That cow has got to be quieted or replaced,”
prop man. “Call the man who owns her and see if he can suggest anything.” The prop man returned from the telephone laughing. “What did he say?’ asked Ford. “He said, ‘Milk Her!’ ” replied the prop man. They did. It: worked.
» = ”
On the crowded stage where |
“The Magnificent Fraud” is being filmed, an assistant howled for silence, then said: “Breathe deeply, everybody.
set.” "= 2 0
HE title song of “East Side of Heaven” is warbled as a lullaby by Bing Crosby on a tenement rooftop in Manhattan. In a setting of twinkling lights and laden ciothes lines, Crosby holds a baby and sings while Joan Blondell sits quietly by and tender devotion. It’s a swell scene, but it nearly drove everyone crazy. The scheme was for the child's mother to put her to sleep. then hand her to Crosby and hope that his crooning wouldn't awaken her again.
But young babies are hard to |
manage. The law says thev can be kept in a studio only four hours a day and before the camera a total of only 20 minutes. But Sandra Henville—who incidentally is supposed to be a boy in this picture—just wouldn't go to sleep. Afraid she'd miss something, apparently. For four colid hours the company and crew waited nervously. Everything had to be in readiness for immediate action, so they dared not go on to any other scene. “Sandy” remained as wide awake as a chipmunk and finally had to be taken home. Same thing happened 1rext morning, while players grew jittery and costs mounted staggeringly. Finally Crosby (who has a financial stake in the picture) persuaded Mrs. Henville to et him try it. He picked up the baby and began to sing. She relaxed, dozed, slept soundly. She was still snoozing after a couple of perfect takes.
2
Welles
2 =
Orson wants a
pearance. He won't get it. 2 » 5 HE Burbank Fire Department lent a battalion chief's car
to Warner Brothers for a sequence in “Battle of City Hall.” and the
| chief himself went along to see | how pictures are made. Standing behind the camera, he | | was horrified when a studio work=- | man went over and began slosh- | ing paint over the Burbank in- | | signia of his shiny automobile. But an assistant director shushed his protests because a scene was |
about to be shot. A few workman took a spray gun ang deliberately dulled the high polished finish so that the glare of lights wouldn't be reflected. By this time the fire chief was so outraged he couldn't talk. : They shot the scene with the car then, and got it in a couple of takes.
ENGLISH "5.
ALSO TONIGHT AT 8:30
’ . Eves. $1.10 to $3.50 Lo Sat. Mat. $2. 5. dnc. Tax
We | gotta clear the smoke off this
: cool | $100,000 for his first screen ap- |
minutes later another |
Immediately afterward
| her cud. But every time the scene got under wav she'd moo and spoil
snapped Ford to the
a third workman took a damp | cloth and wiped off the paint, | which was merely watercolor. Then he polished the surfaces { which had been dulled with liquid | wax. “You're car's ready, chief.” said the assistant director. “Much | obliged.” “You're welcome,” said the wide- | evéd chief. “Very interesting . , . { call me anytime n
= = =
Marion Martin, who used to be a Broadway nudie, now refuses to pose for revealing publicity stills lest they hinder her dramatic ‘ca- | Teer.
Choir to Present Requiem Monday
i The Tabernacle Presbyterian | Church Choir will sing Verdi's] “Manzoni” Requiem at 8 p. m. Mon{day at the church in observance of Holy Week. The choir will be un-
der the direction of Paul R. Matthews. Frances Wallace Strickland will {be soprano soloist and other solo parts will be sung by Patra Kennedy, contralto: Alfred Halliday, baritone, and Perry M. Rush, tenor. | The public is invited to attend. {| The choir presented the Requiem | \in a concert three years ago.
Music Students Plan Operetta
Gilbert and Sullivan’s operetta, ~The Pirates of Penzance,” will be presented at Keith's April 19 by the
Concert Choir and Light Opera {Club of the Burroughs School of | Music. | Rehearsals are under the direction of Jane Johnson Burroughs. Lead- | ing roles will be taken by Alan] | Hamblin, Margaret Cornell, Jack Horner, James Gilbreath, Ben Con- | stable, G. L. Gartleman, Maxine | Schraeder, Betty Starr, Helen Ken-| dall and Julia Delks.
Season's End
The season's concluding concerts by the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra, tonight and tomorrow afternoon, partakes of the nature of Holy Week. Fabien Savitzky is devoting the program’s first half to Mozart’s Requiem. Soloists will be Jeanette Vreeland, soprano; Louise Bernhardt, alto; Howard Harrington, tenor, and David Blair McClosky, bass. Also on the program are the “Good Friday Spell” from Wagner's “Parsifal”’; MeKay’s Fantasy on a Western Folk Song and Rimsky-Korsakov’s “Russian Easter’ Overture. Friday subscription-series tickets will be honored at the Sunday performance.
i IZ
APOLLO
WPA Players Will Perform
"Prologue to to Glory’ Set for «Tech Gym April 19. ..
The Federal WPA Players will) present ‘Prologue to Glory,” by E. P. Conkle on April 19 in the Tech gymnasium, under the auspices of the Tech Alumni Association. An| evening and afternoon performance will be given. The play portrays Abraham Lin- | coln’s early romance with Ann Rut- | ledge. Lyle Hagan, former boxer | and semipro baseball player who | plays the part of Lincoln, is a di-| rect descendant of Sarah Lincoln, sister of the former President. He | is 6 feet 3 inches tall—Lincoln’s| exact height. Ann Rutledge will be! played by Judith Gaines, an 18-| | vear-old girl who gained experience, | with stock companies. |
rm) TT |
ACTOR NEW MATE | ~~ OF LIBBY HOLMAN
NEW YORK, Ar April 1 (UP). — Libby Holman. the torch singer land widow of Smith Reynolds, to-| bacco heir, was married in Washington last Monday to Ralph] | dolmes, an actor, it became known | today. The marriage was performed by a minister, according to the singea’s | attorney, Bennett Polikoff. Miss] Holman went to Washington from | Florida where she had a night club engagement and Mr. Holmes left New York to meet her in the capital. | They are now living at her country estate near Greenwich, Conn. Mr. Reynolds, Miss Holman’s first | husband, was mysteriously shot dead lat his Winston-Salem, N. C.,, home a few years ago. Miss Holman intherited a fortune from him and her young son, when he reaches his majority, will come into more | millions.
TWO-PIANO TEAM IS AT I. U. MONDAY
| A two-piano recital by Nadia | Boulanger and Jean Francaix at! Bloomington Monday night will in-| |clude, among other things, compo-| sitions by M. Francaix, by Mlle. Boulanger’s sister Lili, and by one of her pupils, the Englishman Len-| Inox Berkeley. | | The Indiana University School of | Music is sponsoring the program, | | which will be given at 8:30 p. m. [in the music school's recital hall. | | The complete program follows: | Sonata for Two Pianos..........._ Mozart [Ca riceio-Nocturne-Polka " Berle |
eiderstehs doch ger Sunde” | variations in B Min Schubert Stravinsky
| Nocturne . “us Dun matin de > printemps’ itn Boulanger os ie _Francaix
Contes" :
|
Midge Every. ‘Sat. a
Se S ¥ Y PR 50¢c Couple Before 9:30; Couple at 9:30. educed he 20e “*Atter os Couple Before 9:00: 50e Coule io 9:00. Fai ag 5¢ 3400 15 Min. t 20¢ After
8 Jang 15 Min. to One Block. South Municipal Airport!
25¢ TILL 8 o BALCONY 30e AFTER .
“FAST AND L LOOSE"
with Taginald OWEN + Rated MOROAN s = i E - 3. -
| 4 GIRLS IN WHITE
NCE : ME a
WHAT, WHEN, WHERE
APOLLO
“Three Smart Girls Grow Us” with Deanna Durbin, Heleh Parrish and Noo Grev. at 12:49, 3:54, 6:59 an “Beauty for the Asking,’ with Luelle Ball and Patric Knowles, at 1:41, 2:46, 5:51 and 8:56.
CIRCLE
John Boles, Joe Rines and orchestra, Mii and June ann, dance team, and others on stage at 12:50, 3: 20. 6:35 and 9 “Winner Take AIL” with Tony Martin, Gloria Stuart. Henrv Armetta and Slim Summeryille. screen at 11:20, 2:10, 5, 7:9
10:40. ENGLISH'S
“No Time for Comedy.’ a new play S. N. Behrman starring Katherine Cornell, with Lawrence SE Yaer and Margalo Gillmore. Engagement through Saturday. Carain at 8:30; Saturday matinee, 2:3
INDIANA
“Midnight,” with Claudette Colbert, Don Ameche. John Barrymore, Francis J2agrer and Mary Astor, at 12:41. 3:46, 6:51 and 9:56. “Kine of Chinatown,” with An and Akim 2 Spore,
and
by
May Wong —
11:44, 2:49, 5:5¢ and LOEW'S
“Fast and Loose.” with Rosaline Russell, Robert Montgomery, Reginald Owen and Ralph Morgan, at 11: 00. 1:45. 4:30. 17:15 and 10.00. “Four Girls in White,” with Florence Rice. Una Merkel. Ann Rutherford. Marv Howard. Alan Marechal and Buddy Ebsen, at 12:25, 3:15, 6:00 and 8:45,
ANN DOLLS UP Ann Sheridan has dolls dressed in copies of every costume she has ever worn on the screen. v
HARRISON TAPROOM
. . . AFTER THE SHOW!
For the Fines of Cocktails and Miyed Drinks t Popular Prices
ENTERTAINMENT NIGHTLY Capitol Ave. at Market
HOTEL
Tin 6 » 30c-10e
After 6
0 /f
ry; vir] {43 pA: COW |
MUTUAL
STARTING MIDNIGHT SHOW TONIGHT
NANCY, KELLY
SWING GIRLS
‘ORNS
Chorus. zacers Girls
LAWYER FOR LITA
TO GET $1125 FEE
| HOLLYWOOD, April
1— The
lawyer uncle of Lita Grey Chaplin
(will receive only $1125 instead of the $4500 he asked for arranging al $200,000 settlement by Charles | Chaplin upon the comedian’s sons, | Charles Jr., 14, and Sidney, 13. The boys’ mother divorced the
uncle, Edwin T. McMurray, arranged the property settlement.
the smaller fee.
comedian some years ago, and her | later |
Judge Jess E. Stephens ippaved,
SATURDAY, APRIL 1, 1939
Dodge City Reels Under Movie Lure
Mayor Says 'Yippee'—
Girl 'Buys' Flynn for $25—Film Set Laid.
DODGE CITY, Kas., April 1 (U. P.) —This one-time capital of the cow country forgot its quiet ways today and with the aid of Hollywood turned back the pages to the roaring days of the Seventies.
The stage was set to provide a proper sendoff for Warner Bros.’ technicolor picture which dramatizes the town's early history and is called “Dodge City.” Press agents say it cost $1,500,000.
Miss June Brody, 22-year-old brunet waitress, was as excited as a schoolgirl about the whole affair, for she was Errol Flynn's hostess, She obtained local rights on Mr, Flynn in a straight cash deal with Mary Agnes Butterfield, Miss Butterfield was prevented from exercising her option when her brother Joe got the measles. Miss Brody used the $25 she was saving for a spring outfit to buy Miss But= terfield's claim. Mayor Arthur Nevins, a bearded type, spoke for Dodge City's 10.000. when he said the town would stay up all night celebrating. “We're going to show Hollywood how an old cow town celebrates.” he said. “If we catch anyone asleep before daybreak Sunday we'll dump him in the water trough. ‘Yippee!”
DANCE 'TIL TWO
Except Monday. Adm., 259
BANDWAGON
Southeastern and Emerson HAL BAILEY’S ORCHESTRA
DANCE TONIGHT
Amos Otstot Orchestra 400 All Evening
gaat
INDIANAPOLIS
SY
MPHONY
ORCHESTRA FABIEN SEVITZKY, Conducter
LAST CONCERTS Tonight, 8:30 Tomorrow, 3:00
MURAT THEATER MOZART’S REQUIEM
With INDIANAPOLIS SYMPHONIC CHOIR
And Four Famous Soloists
Prices: $1, $1.50, $2, $2.50, $3 Box Office Open 9 A. M. Sunday
RILEY 9597
EAST SIDE
~ | r 71 [3155 E. Tenth St. 1 | RIVOLI i a'e15¢ | Jane Withers—T.en Carillo
“ARIZONA WILDCAT" Paul Lukas “LADY VANISHES” Indianapolis Times: "Has the Pace of a Sov Relltavopnin mrad by Alfred Hitcheoek DDED! The Three Stooges EXTRA} Added to Last Show Tonight! at O’Brien—Adolph Menjou oa MecHugh=-Slim Summerville Mary Brian—Edw. E. Horton “THE FRONT PAGE” Sunday. Ye Tuesday, Wednesday Fredric March—Joan Bennett Ralph an Sothern “TRADE WINDS” Don Ameche—Ritz Bros. “THE THREE MUSKETEERS”
40-Minute Revival
* SIDE SHOW” With Donald Duck—Popeye—Olive Oyle Mickey Mouse—Pluto—Pinky Penguin and a Trip thru the Disney Studios
“SEE HOW THEY ARE MADE”
Emerson 15¢
Pat O’Brien—Joan Blondel “OFF THE RECORD”
4630 E. Tenth 5:45 to 8
Sun. thru Wed.— Claudette Colbert "Pann" amd “Duke: of West Point”
Jeanette MacDonald—Nelson Rady “SWEETHEARTS’ Also Chas. Quigley “CONVICTED”
Sunda y—Gary Cooper—Merle Oberon
Ker Murray-Johnnie Downs
“SWING, SISTER, SWING”
4026 E. New York Tonite, Tomorrow Geo. Raft Henry Fonda-—Derothy Lamour “SPAWN OF THE NORTH” Fadmund we “NEWSBOYS ROME"
IRVING ™
Dennis O0'Keefe—Cecelia Parker “BURN 'EM UP O'CONNOR” “WHILE NEW YORK SLEEPS” Sund Robert Taylor—Wallace Beery ” “STAND UP AND FIGHT” : Lew Ayres “SPRING MADNESS”
Paramount «5 Seve «MAN FROM MUSIC MOUNTAIN" Glenda Farrell "EXPOSED" Sun,, Mon.—Jack Beany-Joan Bennett “ARTISTS & MODELS ABROAD Sabu “DRUMS” in Technicolor”
FE. Wash. St. 10e and 20¢
1 E. Wash.
~ WEST SIDE
S peedway Speedway City
Jack Benny Joan Bennett psec & MODELS ABROAD” “KING OF THE ARENA”
Sunday IrSS E TAM A Fonda
“Torchy Blane in Chinatown”
New| Daisy
“SMASHING THE
Brien ' “LAWLESS Sandaye Power-
W. Michigan St Ralph Bellamy Faye Wray SPY RING” VALLEY" enry Fonda
“MR. MOTO’S LAST WARNING” |
“COWBOY & THE LADY"
Extra! In Mdiuon to rerular 2 Features
[
Senhnpuny
{ 7 U0] TL er 20: |
|
SOUTH SIDE a — 2203 Shelby St.
New Garfield Nelson Eddy
J. MacDonal “SWEETHEARTS” in Technicolor .
Alse “YOUNG FUGITIVES”
fF Today-Sun.-Mon. & Tues, 3
BARGAIN MATINEE TODAY—TILL 6 P. M. 15¢
Fredric March—Joan Bennet}
Extra Hit—Jack Holt in “Strange Case of Dr. Meade”
TONIGHT & SUNDAY
we as oe a
Goue WITHERS THE ARIZONA YTS
UDELL
Sanders
At Fountain Square Tonight's Features Tom Brown
“SWING THAT CHEER" Chas. Bickford “THE STORM”
Sunday, Monday™ Tuesday, Wednesday Richard Greene—Loretta Young
“KENTUCKY” “DOWN ON THE FARM” NORTH SIDE Central at Fal] Crk. Bing Croshy Martha Raye “WAIKIKI WEDDING” Frank Jenks “STRANGE FACES” Aff Next Week—Fredric March Joan Bennett “TRADE WINDS” Anne Shirley “BOY SLAVES”
~ College_at 63d Free Parking
ayward-Joan Fontaine “DUKE OF WEST POINT” . Claudette Colbert “ZAZA” unday-—Robt. Taylor-FI Ri “STAND UP AND FIGHT" “DOWN IN ARKANSAS” = 16th & ohclaware ™ Pat O’Bri Joan Blondell “OFF THE RECORD” “Peck’s Bad Boy With the Circus” Sunday—Wallace Beery—Robert Taylor “STAND UP AND FIGHT” Lew Ayres “SPRING MADNESS”
Udell at Clifton’ Adults 13¢ Children 1fe Sunday, Monday, Tuesday Rav Milland-Fred wager “MEN WITH WIN GS"
LIVING ON LOVE"
