Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 February 1941 — Page 6

"PAGE 6

MOVIES

Maxine Sullivan Avoids Swing—and Pleases;

"Virginia'

Revives

Antebellum Period

CIRCLE—*“Virginia,”

with Madeleine Carroll, Fred MacMurray,

Stirling Hayden, Helen Broderick, Also “Let's Make Music,” with Bob | |

Crosby.

INDIANA—“Strawberry- Blond,” with James Cagney, Olivia de Havil-

land, Rita Hayworth. Also “Convoy,” with Clive Brook.

LOEW’S—“The Philadelphia Story,” with Katharine Hepburn, Cary Grant, James Stewart. Also “Gallant Sons,” with Jackie Cooper, Bonita

Granville. (Holdover).

LYRIC—Vaudeville, with Maxine Sullivan, John Kirby and his or-

chestra. Hubbard. »

Lyric

Once after hearing Maxine Sulivan and John Kirby's orchestra, Virgil Thompson, music critic of the

New York Herald-Tribune, wrote:

“Miss Sullivan’s natural voice, like her vocal style, is slender, fragile, She employs it with firmness and restraint, though not with the Her

amall.

usage of the school routines. whole equipment is a gift. Her performance was careful, sincere, musically refined.” I agree without yeservation but with some amplification. Tiny Miss Sullivan sings with the game effortless and unaffected but impressive manner so characteristic of Lily Pons. :

“Sylvia” Opens Program

She opens her Lyric program with “Sylvia” and tops this off with “Mollie Malone,” but not in the socalled swing style of many a current singer who shouts a semi-clas-sical number to a boogie beat. Miss Sullivan isn’t a’ swing singer. The musical background swings while she sings straight with a faraway plaintiveness and just a shade of unreality. Of course her appearance would have seemed a bit empty had she not sung her justly famous “Loch Lomond.” And then she offers something which after all these years is pretty hard to find—an excellent and fresh arrangement of «st. Louis Blues.” Until you've heard her do it you can hardly appreciate the amount of indigo with which Mr. Handy has infused it. The orchestra has earned the accolade as “the best small band in the country” and only the captious would quibble with that.

Just Like Their Records

Mr. Kirby's band is a shining example of the antithesis of today’s most popular swing bands. Although some current trends gindicate that they're beginning a decline, big bands that play loud and swing it out with driving finishes are all the rage. An advantage for Mr. Kirby is that his boys (six of them) sound on the stage just as they do on the air and their records. Mr. Kirby’s music blends nicely and the volume of each instrument is so well balanced that only by seeing them could you know the group was only a ‘sextet. Each man is a superb instrumentalist. Only in a couple of numbers is any one of them given a long solo passage, so that their virtuosity isn’t so apparent unless you listen closely. Clarinet Featured

There’s Billy Kyle at the piano; Charlie Shavers, who plays a scalding trumpet and also arranges; Buster Bailey, clarinet; Russell Procope, saxophone, and O'Neill Spencer, who beats it out on the drums. Mr. Kirby plays the bull fiddle. After their “Blue Fantasy” theme the band sort of warms up with an unidentified boogie-woogie number. Then Mr. Bailey’s mellow clarinet is featured in the haunting “Dawn on the Desert’ which, too, has a fine trumpet-sax-clarinet trio. Occasionally the boys all sit around together and the first thing you know they’ve whipped up a new tune. One which they include here is “Rehearsing for a Nervous Breakdown.” This was the result of a long, hot night at the Onyx Club and has drummer Spencer riding out for a long passage. Unique Experience I won’t need to urge those of you who are familiar with the SullivanKirby recordings or their “Flow Gently, Sweet Rhythm” broadcasts to see them in person. For the rest of you, to see them will be a unique musical experience, for the organization has come a long way since its inception three years ago and seems destined to become increasingly popular.—D. M.

wre GAGNEY D:HAVILLAND

. RITA HAYWORTH

ALAM HALE . JAC E HW /CONVOY ° CLIVE BROOK

§ CIRC LE

2] 22 aX ts

TIT

starring WLS Madeleine Carroll

Fred MacMu:ray

ELL

§ BOB CROSBY “LET'S MAKE MUSIC" ves rovers srcveama

she ran out of money that she came

sell it.

some and wealthy New Yorker, not only loves Miss Charlie, but he wants to buy her place. But just as} the deal is about to be closed, her!

Also “Road Show,” with Adolph Menjou, Carole Landis, John

»

Circle

It must have been in the nature of a pilgrimage when Edward H. Griffith took his corps of actors and technicians into the rolling country around Charlottesville, Va., to film “Virginia.” For the Old South has been living bravely on behind

years—and making money. From “The Birth of a Nation” to “Gone With the Wind,” a nostalgic feeling for the Confederacy has been a basic Hollywood emotion. And so, to players in this tradition, the Old Dominion must have looked like Mecca.

Mr. Griffith did right handsomely by the Old Dominion, too. He. photographed its hills and dales in|” gorgeous technicolor. His portraits of its native sons and daughters are flattering. His damyankees, on the contrary, are outfitted with some pretty boorish characteristics.

Contemporary Setting

The story (which Mr. Griffith helped Virginia Van Upp to write) has a contemporary setting. But its native Virginians are still of an antebellum damyankees start buying up some of the old mansions and behaving in an untraditional fashion. Their more grievous sins seem to be repairing tottering houses and mending broken fences, but the Virginians resent it.

One of the most resentful is Stonewall Elliott, a young man with a small daughter and a wife mysteriously absent. And the chief object of his resentment is Charlotte Dunterry. She was born a Dunterry of Dunterry, but she went up North to New York and becamé an actress.

Hollywood's studio gates these many|

at the Blackstone Theater. Serlin are shown at the left.

notables in the audience was the former movie star Coleen Moore. the right-hand picture, between Mr. and Mrs. Charles Younggreen,

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

‘Life With Father’ Has a Birthday

“Life With Father” celebrated a first birthday in ‘Chicago the other night after the performance Two noted guests who were on hand to congratulate. Producer Oscar They are Gypsy Rose Lee and Bert Lahr (right).

Among the 600 Miss Moore is in the center of

NEIGHBORHOODS

'Night Train' Sets Record for Esquire: = Strand's Double Bill Sets Mark, . Too

days any feature has played. It’s

turn of mind. The]

And it was only when |

back to the old plantation to try tc The ‘next farm belongs to one |

Norman Williams, a young, hand: | He

Virginia blood comes to the surface. !

The transformation is helped by. a blind, centenarian ex-slave who comes home to die, and who remembers a hidden fortune buried in the family vault. Ole Massa put it there before he went off to war.

Love Walks In Of course it’s Confederate money,

but Miss Charlie is touched. And then love walks in, and she and Stonewall see their resentment vanishing.

Of course the sailing remains

rough, because Miss Charlie still needs money and Stonewall is still married. farming, venient suicide (with apologies to “Rebecca”) and Mr, Williams’ gallant renunciation at the last minute makes all things right.

But a little industrious the missing wife's con-

The picture has many virtues.

The visual treat of the photography, mentioned before; Madeleine Carroll for the Carroll fans; MaeMurray for his admirers; handsome and capable newcomer named Stirling Hayden; Marie Wilson looking like three million dollars, and an irresistibly charming

Fred a

tot named Carolyn Lee. My enjoyment of “Virginia,” how-

ever, stopped a short way beyond

these assets. Probably the trouble was that my sympathies kept veering toward the damyankees. I found Stonewall, the typical Vir-

ginian, to be a pretty stubborn and

snobbish sort of guy. And Mr. Griffith applied stock sentimentalities as if he were pouring sorghum on the breakfast pancakes.—J, T.

» #

Indiana

“Strawberry Blond” starts out with a gallery of amusing characters and the promise of being a mild burlesque of New York in the late Nineties and a pleasant little comedy as well. Rita Hayworth is Virginia, the captivating strawberry blond. Wien she walks by Nick’s barber shop the boys all whistle at her. And she goes out of her way to pass NiZk’s, even though her flirtation is coated with Victorian decorum. Olivia de Havilland is Amy, the nurse with “advanced” ideas. ©nly when she screams at her first hug does it develop that her mother was not one of the original Bloomer Girls, her aunt’s theatrical géreer has been limited to one stage play, she hasn't ever really smoked a cig-

»

-taret, and her devotion to the insti-

tution of marriage jis quite intact. Tough Fists, Soft Heart

James Cagney is Biff Grimes, a nice little guy with tough fists and a soft heart who is always being pushed around by his pal, Hugo (Jack Carson). The boys say “she’s the fudge” and “23 skidoo,” wear high collars, high shoes and flat straw sailors, and generally behave as the nostalgic Twentieth Century likes to think its fathers did some 40 years ago. Then the pace slackens and comedy gives way to melodrama. Hugo prospers, and Biff gets-.a job with him at Virginia's insistence. £11 he

has to do is read newspapers and

put his signature on specifications. And when Hugo’s buildings collapse and Biff’s father is killed, Biff takes the rap and spends five years in prison studying correspondence school dentistry. Bi harbors no particular pcsente ment. In fact, he gets all the revenge when Hugo shows up :t his

Purdue University CONCERT CHOIR

Albert P. Stewart, Director

Thurs., 8:30 P. M., Feb. 27

GENERAL ADMISSION--30c Tickets on Sale at L. 8. Ares

| at 7:45 p. m. and 10:30 p. m.”

| last night.

may have Hugo with -a—gas anesthetic. instead pulls) the aching tooth, listens and realizes that, after all, he is a happy man,

{she’s getting steadily better.

By DAVID MARSHALL

DON'T SAY WE DIDN'T TELL YOU. Today “Night Train” equals the Esquire house record for the most

definitely set for tomorrow which

‘will make the 19th day and from the way things are going the British thriller looks good for another week. Tomorrow’s Showing also

makes the 15th consecutive day, another new record.

According to Harold (Doc) Arlington, the Esquire’s manager, the crowds have been coming from all over town. One way he can tell is by the doctors and nurses. It's customary for persons in the medical profession to leave their names just in case of emergency calls. Many persons have been coming in from outside the county, . too. One couple (not youngsters), drove 35 miles. So many people have been calling about starting times the management has inaugurated a special way for Cashier Elaine Crawford to answer the phone. Now she says: “‘Night Train’ leaves Or, “Night Train’ left the station 20 minutes ago. It leaves again at 10:30 p. m.” Cute?: ” EJ o MAYBE IT’S THE cold weather, or more likely it’s just what many a good theater manager will tell you: “You'll get the crowds when you show good pictures.” Anyway, the billing of “SantaFe Trail” and “Comrade X” set a new house record at the Strand Instead of leaving tomorrow night it’ll stay for the full week ending next Wednesday. w ” o o

WHEN “Gone With the Wind” moves into the Granada on Thursday, March 6, it will be shown just as it was downtown. Nothing cut. On Thursday and Friday there will be but two complete shows, one at 12:45 p. m. the other at 7:45 p. m. On Saturday and Sunday the matinees will be continuous from 12:30 p. m. ” » ”

YOU FOLKS who like your movies single featured will be interested in programs of two Cantor Theaters next week. The Rivoli opens Monday with “Comrade X” and two short subjects for three days. On Thursday, the Emerson will show “Strike Up the Band” by itself. : 3 ” ” ALTHOUGH SHOWN singly downtown, “Santa Fe Trail” will be featured today through Tues-

office one Sunday with an emer-|- o gency toothache. Biff sees that Vir- : ginia has become a nagger and Hugo an unhappy hypochondriac.

Olivia Adept at Comedy

It is faintly suggested that Biff contemplated killing But

elightedly to Hugo’s howls,

The picture’s chief charm is in Miss de Havilland’s rather adept comedy performance. She has played comedy before, but for the most part she has beea assigned as the costumed heroine of countless Errol Flynn swashbucklers, whaleboned but spineless. Evidently Miss de Havilland welcomes comedy. And though she isn’t .one of the best,

Mr. Cagney behaves in a somewhat dispirited manner, and Miss Hayworth is charming. Mr. Carson is heartily unpleasant, as he should be, and the lesser parts are acted by such competent . persons as Alan Hale and George Tobias. There are moments of good fun, certainly. But along toward the end of “Strawberry Blond” I began wishing devoutly that I had taken vanilla. J. T.

ARTENS CONCERT, Inc.

America's Own Singing Star of Metropolitan Opera and Radio

Gladys Swarthout

English Theater Thursday Eve., Feb. 27th $1.10, $2.20, $2.75, $3.30. Seats Now! Martens Ticket Office Rm. 201—33 Monument Circle—LI. 8921

day at the Fountain Square with “Sandy Gets Her Man,” starring Baby Sandy, Una Merkel and Stuart Erwin. n » ” ROBERT MONTGOMERY and Rosalind Russell's “Fast and Loose” is the extra last show picture tonight at the Rivoli. With it are “Santa Fe Trail” and “Jennie.”

#- THE WEEK-END CALENDAR:

BELMONT — Tonight: “Comrade X and shorts. Tomorrow through Tuesday: ‘“‘Chad Hanna.” : “The Letter’ and Served.’ Tomorrow through Wednesday : “Long Voyage Home” and ‘‘Margie. DAISY—Tonight: “South of Suez’ “Murder Over New York.” Tomorrow and Monday: Little Nellie Kelly” and “Chad Hanna EMERSON Toni ht: “Blondie Plays Cupid’ and ‘Meet the Wildcat.” Tomorrow through Wednesday: ‘Devil's ol Sr and ‘‘Chad Hanna.” VIBE ~Tonignt Ni i) Train” and °* UNTAIN SQUARE. Tonight Yirough iii, “Santa Fe Trail” and ‘‘Sandy Gets Her Man GRANADA Tonight, and tomorrow: "cofuade X" an ‘Golden Te HA ILTON—Tonight through Tuesd and “Little Nelile

“Santa Fe Trail” Tomorrow through Wednesday: “Comrade X"” and ‘Meet the Wildcat.”

MECCA—Tonight: “East of the River” and ‘‘Allegheny Uprising.” Tomorrow through Tuesday: “Dreaming Out Loud” and “The A ORIENTAL— Tonight: ‘South of Suez” and Dr. Kildare Goes Home.” Tomoronday: * ‘Arise My Love” and ’ youth will Be Served.” P MOUN T — Tonight: ‘Charter Pilot.” ay: ‘Mark of Zorro” "hin Finger, Left Han d.” RKER—Tonight: Submarine D-1"

“Duley ead ‘Shootin’ Hig Tomorrow En Tuesday: “South of Suez” and “Esca ara of ® he Vigi-_ Tomorrow’ through a “Tin Pan Alley” ang A Jittie Bit of Heaven.” Tonight and YE as

tomorrow:

“Chrisimas in July”

TRVING—Tonight: and ‘Jenni

“Durango Tomorrow and

0 — SD Fe Trail” and “Jennie.’ show tonight only: ‘Fast and Loose.’ ST. CLAIR Tonight and tomorrow: “Love Thy eighbor’’ and “Golden Fleec-

n, § ANDERS Tonight: . Gambling on the High Seas” and “Prair ie Law. Tomorrow and, Monday: ‘Here Some. the Navy” and “No Time for Com 3” SHERIDAN —Toni ht: ‘Trail = the. vigilantes” and “A Little Bit of Jeayen | Tomorrow through Wednesday io ‘Tin Pan ale and ‘‘Money a. pd the oman.’ EEDWAY—Ton yal of ‘the vigilantes: and * Hulls '* Tomorrow through Tuesd “Love ve Thy y Neighbor’ and ‘A Ni ht at Earl Carroll's. STATS Tonight: South of Suez” and “Cowboy From Su »

ndow. Tomorrow juroush h Taesday oo “Yow 1 "Find Out” and e y: R

and tomorrow: nd * id

’ and “Ragtime Cowboy Joe.’ omorrow through Tuesday: Noch. West Mounted Police’’ and “I'm Nobody's Sweetheart Now.” ALBOTT — Toni ht: “Angels Over BoaLEoL and “Hullabaloo.” Tomor=row throu h Tuesday: “Long Voyage Home’ and ‘Trail 2 the reg! antes.” TUXEDO — Toni ghy Third Finger, Left Hand” and ‘‘Youth Will Be Served.’ 9 Tomorrow ihroug , 'Esca ape’ and ‘A Little Bi UPTOWN—Toni fei aye Wednesday: “Love Thy Neighbor” and Trail of

the Lonesome Pin VOGUE Tonight: “Trail of the Vigilantes”’ and ‘‘Angels Over Broadway.’ Tomorrow throu Fe Trail” and “ ZARING—To night 1 Friday” and “Tradewinds.” Tomorrow through Saturday: “Santa Fe Trail” and “Merrie

Melody Jamboree.” DOWNTOWN

ALAMO—Tonight jhionsh Monday: “Law and Order,” “Girl From Havana” and * pays tio s Dr. Sa atan AMBASS ADOR—Tonight ‘and tomor-

row: “Comrade X"” and ‘‘Golden Fleecng.”

Purdue Club To Sing Here Appear Thursday in Caleb Mills Hall

The Purdue University Glee Club will give a concert at 8:30 p. m. Thursday at Caleb Mills Hall, under sponsorship of the Immanuel Evangelical and Reformed Church. Albert P. Stewart is the club’s® director. Indianapolis members of the glee club are Helen Billeter, 5869 Washington Blvd., soprano; J. Henry Amt II, 824 E. Raymond St., and John Mingle, 3720 N. Pennsylvania St., tenors, and Robert N. Merrill, 713 N. Linwood Ave., lighting and sound technician.

EJ ” u The new Music Appreciation League expects a full house at its initial announcement meeting at 3 p. m. tomorrow in the World War Memorial auditorium. The group mailed announcements to 3000 music lovers, and the response to this first notice is encouraging, says Ernst Heberlein, chairman of the membership committee. The membershyp committee includes, besides Mr, Heberlein, Bomar Cramer, Elmer A. Steffen, Clarence Elbert, Franklin Miner, Albert O. Deluse, Sherwood Blue and Blanche Mitchell.

# 8 8 The Jordan Conservatory Woodwind Ensemble, made up of 15 students under James Hosmer’s direction, will give its first public performance at 8:30 p. m. Wednesday at the Odeon. Mr. Hosmer has been assisted in

Fitzgerald, Harry Michels, Harvey McGuire, Ernst Michelis and Herman Beilfus. Ensemble members are Lorene Markel, Nellie Jones and Sidney Flack, flutes; Dick Foster, Paul Harder and Pat Reinhardt, oboes; Eleanor Ellenberger, Vincent Studer and Beth Ann Brown, clarinets; Paul McDowell and Paul Mueller, bassoons; Gail Weimer, Jean Graham, Martha Hardaway and Carol Niedma, horns.

” ” ” . Three “first performances in Indianapolis” will be included on the piano program which Helen Sommers will play at the World War Memorial on March 2. They are a group of “Fairy Tales” by Prokofiev, and the “Poeme Satanique” and the last five Preludes of Scriabine. Miss Sommers is a student of Bomar Cramer and formerly was on the teaching staff of the Indiana College of Music and Fine Arts. This recital will be the first of five programs to be presented later in the spring by the Bomar Cramer Piano Studios. :

Open1Ga.m

+ LI:

20c * 6

C. Gable—Hedy ver CT ade X’ Lew Ayres “GOLDEN FLEECING” Disney's. ‘“Donald’s Vacation”’—News

tm ilan. ALAMO

de os Indianapolis is Showing EE

kr Mack Brown Denar 0’Keefe ‘GIR I FROM HAVANA’

- “Mysterious Dr. RA Ry News

SATURDAY, FEB. 22, 1941

arranging the program by Francis!

MUSIC

Variety

.all-Brahms concert at the Murat

Fabien Sevitzky and the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra are ‘presenting. And for the occasion Mr. Sevitzky had chosen the Variations on a Theme by Haydn, six of the Hungarian Dances and the Symphony No. 1 in C Minor. The concert began rather inauspiciously with a playing of the Variations which was flaccid in performance, wayward as to tempi and generally on the dull side. But both conductor and orchestra perked up noticeably in the Dances, and by the time the Symphony was reached, they were ready with an account of the familiar music that put the evening decidedly to the good. 8 ” 8 LISTENING to the Hungarian Dances as Mr. Sevitzky set them forth, ‘it was easy to understand how these Gypsy and Magyar melodies have fascinated some of the greatest composers for more than a:century. This is folk music far removed from the naive simplicity which marks the corresponding music in Germany, France and England. It has the passion and abandon of fiery natures. But it also has a sophistication and complexity of rhythm and a suavity in its traditional interpretation which lend themselves admirably to schooled and skillful handling. . Mr. Sevitzky injected some tasteful and welcome variety to the Brahms orchestration in places by adding the woodwinds in repeated sections of the dances. And his conducting of them had a full measure of rubato (which never slopped over, incidentally), and an insistent spirit which infused the music with a sensuous warmth. It was particularly interesting to hear the First Symphony again, for it has not been performed here since both the orchestra and Mr. Sevitzky were very new to the city. It was, in fact, the major item on the opening subscription concert of Mr. Sevitzky’s first year. ” o 2 MEMORY, of course, can play tricks as far as musical performances go. But if comparative details are lacking, there is certainly no question about the way in which both conductor and players have grown eloser to this music in the past four and a .half years. If anyone wanted proof of the orchestra’s progress, he had only to compare mental notes on these two performances. Generally speaking, a conductor can do one of the following things with music as familiar as the

BALLROOM DANCING

Ni Clas 0 Mon., Feb % $30 PF. M n.

Compe Course 10 ons $7.50—Term

RL STOCKMAN DANCE STUDIOS

Indiana's Largest ard Finest

16th and Illinois Sts.

in Brahms Orchestration

Adds Delight to Symphony Concert

By JAMES THRASHER

THE NAME and music of Johannes Brahms don’t’ seem to have much magnetic power so far as Indianapolis is concerned. At least the

last night found the theater only

sparcely settled. That was a pity, for there are few composers from whom one can derive so solidly satisfying an evening of or8hestral music. Last evening's program was the fourth in the special series which

Brahms First: He can lull you to sleep with lifeless unfolding of the well remembered measures; he can afford you with uncalledfor liberties taken in a zeal for originality; he can legitimately unfold new beauties by shifts of emphasis; or he can rekindle your appreciation of the beauties already there. For this listener at least Mr. Sevitzky did the last, which is perhaps the most difficult and most satisfying. I was moved again by the symphony’s magnificence without being particularly conscious of any special “interpretation.” And I presume that is as sincere a compliment as a listener can bestow.

# ” o

THE APPLAUSE at the symphony’s conclusion unmistakably proclaimed the general enjoyment of an earnest, informed and.selfeffacing reading and a performance kindled with enthusiasm. Earlier in the program some of the playing had been less than exemplary. But with the arrival of the symphony the orchestra achieved the level of fire and: sumptuous tone reached a week ago in the Strauss “Don Juan” under Mr. Schaefer. In both instances it was playing for which no apologies need be offered to anyone, After four recalls to the stage, Mr. Sevitzky repeated the fourth of the Hungarian Dances on the program.

'COBINA GETS MOVIE

“Duchess by Appointment,” a novel by Lady Mary Cameron, has been purchased by 20th Century Fox as a vehicle for Cobina Wright Jr, young New York socialite, regently signed to a long-térm conract.

ORANGE GROVE

46th & Keystone Modern Dancing—Sat. Nit Final Jitterbug Contest—Sun. “Nite Heinie Howard’s Orchestra Doc Grayson 5-Piece Union Band With {ubrey Wright, Vocalist. Talent nner last ok at Jie. Rhum Nights Open rch 2 Arthur Murray Students in oy “this.

WHEN DOES IT START?

CIRCLE “Virginia,” with tr Haydon Carroll, Fred acMurray, S Stirli Hayden 11:20, 2:4 45. © “Let's ake - Mie.” Crosby and his va

iB 10, 4:36 and 8:05. if

INDIANA

“Strawberry Blond,” with James Cagney Olivia, de Havilland, Rita Hawor th, 2:36, 3:47, 6:58 and

with Clive Brook, at 39 and 8:50. LOEW'S | Philadelphia Story,” With Hepbur Cary Gran a "1:10, "3:40. 86

A Gailant Sons,” with Jackie Cooper Bonita Granville, at 1:15, 4:45 and

LYRIC

with Maxine Sullivan, and his prehestra, on

Convo TE 5:

“The Katharine James’ Stewart,

Vaudeville, John Kirby

4, ad dolphe. Men. fou Carole Landis, A Hubbard, 18, 2:08, 4:58, 7:48 and 10:28.

ACTRESS DIVORCED FOR SECOND TIME

HOLLYWOOD, Feb. 22 (U, P.).— Rita La Roy, movie actress, has been divorced by Ben G. Hershfield, theatrical agent, for the second time. ? Mr. Hershfield divorced her in 1933 but they became reconciled. Yesterday he obtained a second decree, after telling Superior Judge Harry Archbald that the actress “didn’t want to be tied down by marriage” and desired to be single again.

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Mat. 2:15. Two Night Shows, 7 and 9. Continuous on Sunday. Get up a party and attend our late show tonight at 11:15 p. m.

One block south of Municipal Airport J}

INDIANA

AUDITORIUM

presents

The Dedication Program

e Sat., Mar. 22, 7:30 p. m.—Official Dedicatio

SCHRICKE

Metropolitan Opera.

® Wed. Mar. 26, 8:00 p. m.—INDIANAPOLIS SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA, Fabien Sevitz-

ky conducting, Zino Francescatti,

I ERNOR HENRY 7. ORA WILDERMUTH—DR. WALTER A. JESSUP—Concert, A Band. e Sun, Mar. 23, 7:30 p. m.—Address by JAMES E. FREEMAN, Bishop, Washington Cathedral—Concert by University Symphony and Glee Clubs. ® Mon., Mar. 24, 8:00 p. m.—LUNT and FONTAINE in “There Shall Be No Night.” ® Tues., Mar. 25, 8:00 p. m.—Recital-LAURITZ MELCHOIR,

UNIVERSITY

LOTTE LEHMANN of the

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Lew AYRES - Rita JOHNSOI

Stratford Toth and ~20¢

Geo. Brent “SOUTH OF SUEZ” “RAGTIME. COWBOY JOE” SUNDAY—Gary Cooper-Paulette Goddard

“NORTHWEST MOUNTED LICE” “I'M NOBOLY’'S NS OETEARY. NOW” | College at 63d Free Parking Lot

“TRAIL OF THE VIGILANTES” “ANGELS OVER BROADWAY”

Central at Fall Crk. ZARING °7 6 crim 3 G Joan Bennett “TRADEWINDS"

FE TRAIL” SUN. «yzrnie MELODY JAMBOREE" SOUTH SIDE

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Tonite a

Franchot Tone Peggy Moran’

“TRAIL OF THE VIGILANTES” |

Frank Morgan

SUN. TITLE B

AN ALLEY" “LITTLE BT OF HEAVEN"

NING

Adults 1 IAA R] | SILLA Doors Open 5 P. M. Chas. Starrett & Sons eof Pioneers “THE DURANGO KID” Lloyd Nolan “CHARTER PILOT”

COUNTRY STORE TONIGHT Complete Show Late as 9 o’Clock

. 738 N. Wed.-Thurs. Mecca Tie 1 Fri.-Sat.

John Garfield “EAST OF THE RIVER” John Wayne. “ALLEGHENY UPRISING”

SUNDAY—Lum ’'N Abner-Frances Langford “DREAMING OUT LOUD” Boris Karloff “THE APE”

2116 E. 10th

TONITE THRU TUESDAY Dick Powell—Ellen Drew

“CHRISTMAS IN JULY” Juay “Little Nellie Kelly”

Garland “GONE WITH THE WIND” Mare 6 4020 E.

TUXEDO ven

Myrna Loy “3rd FINGER, LEFT HAND”

| 3. Withers “YOUTH WILL BE SERVED”

30th & MI "TA-7400

ESQUIRE HELD OVER “ia% row

Mat. Today 2 to 6 P. M.—200

“NIGHT TRAIN"

ing. ”

SUNDAY—Nor ESCAPE"

“1s Sustained Action Is Agonis- 1 Time Magasine. |

Plus Virginia mors EE hd |