Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 August 1941 — Page 5
Hla FRINS
PAGE 5! BOB BAKER GETS ROLE.
Bob Baker, Universal's former
Western star, has been signed for a featured role, with Abbott & Cose
This Is Lamour in a Pareu
MONDAY, AUG. 11, 1981
At City Hall
SEEK TO SLASH |
Photography—
f BEWARE ORTHO
WHEN DOES IT START?
CIRCLE
“The Reluctant Dragon.” the Walt ctor-cartoon comedy with
Disney Crew
Block That Run
PRINTING COST
City’s Advertising Fund Is|
Exhausted by Passing Many Ordinances.
By RICHARD LEWIS
One of the main reasons the City Clerk's $4000 printing and advertising fund has been exhausted in eight months is the heavy volume of traffic ordinances the Safety Board has heaped on City Council. Every time the Board has decided to regulate parking somewhere, create a safety or loading zone, or
!
FOR EVENINGS
Example of Beginners’ Misunderstanding of Film Types.
The photography industry has| worked long and often without | praise to develop a variety of films| to aid in taking pictures under al-| most any circumstances and for the] most part has achieved confusion) for the beginner. Not that the industry is at fault. Perhaps it is just the unwillingness; of the beginner to learn or perhaps;
i
Goes South
Make Latin American Study For Cartoons.
HOLLYWOOD, Aug. 11 (U. P).— | Walt Disney and 16 members of his (studio staff left last week-end for two months in South America to | produce a series of animated pictures incorporating Latin-American literature, legend, humor, music and
{ customs. Although much of the work will ‘he done by Latin-American ‘talent, | Disney said the pictures are® de‘signed primarily for the North American market. | Disney said he might eventually {establish a permanent South Amer-
Ethel Merman Is
Digney a Robert Penchiev. at 12:05. 2:35. 5:10. “Tight Shoes.” with John Howard Binnie Barnes and Brod Crawford. at 11, 1:30. 4. 6:35 and 9:05. INDIANA
That Ghost,” with Abbott nd Costello. Ted Lewis. the Anws Sisters and Mischa Auer, at 3:33. 6:33 and 9: t the Road.”
End Kids. Gl d Barton
adys George an McLane, at 11:32 2:32. 5:32 and 8:30. LOEW'S “Ringside Maisie,” with Ann Sothern, George Sterling, “Tha
Burgess
Meredith, at 11:05. 2:10. 5:20 and 8:30.
Sued for Divorce HOLLYWOOD, Aug. 11 (U. P).—
tello, in “Ride "Em Cowboy.”
IT'S COOL and COMFORTABLE
ROBERT I Taal At
PLANE TECHNICOLOR Je \
lican unit of his Studie, i 4 | The group was to fly to o de It KX Wrapyed tound Doiy {adiolr, | Janeiro po continue by air to | Buenos Aires to establish temporary | headquarters. After a month there [they will return by plane along the | west coast of South America. “We have long wanted first-hand acquaintance with work of the cultural and entertainment leaders of
William J. Smith, film agent, has had a divorce suit on file for two months against Ethel Zimmerman Smith, known professionally as Ethel Merman, New York stage and screen star. The suit was filed in Santa Monica, Cak, June 3 and was revealed recently in an order for publication
set a speed limit, it has submitted] @ an ordinance which had to be ad-| 3 vertised and approved separately. This practice has been expensive] » according to City Controller James| gy E. Deery. I. To cut the expense, the Controller has suggested that instead of send-|
ing an ordinance to Council for
the lack of easily understood information of the various films. | An example of this is the fan] This, students, is a pareu X | who, when the shadows are long,| The Cinema City press agents claim a pareu is even more sarongy /in early morning or late afternoon. gp... 5 sarong. Dotty wears it in “Aloma of the South Seas” a tech-
is accustomed to say ‘“Ter-r-r-r-rific> and start shooting the a. nicolor picture with Jon Hall torials. { The shutterbug is right, of course, | but often he has his camera loaded
>
a Ee E
|
every minor regulation, the Board work out a program of restrictions in advance and submit it to Council in a single ordinance. The Board of Zoning Appeals, he said, might adopt a similar practice, in lieu of submitting zoning restrictions individually. The Controller gave assurances that he can find enough money to pay for the advertisement of the 1942 City Budget and hinted that there may be a few pennies around for necessary traffic measures. But the printing of those little pamphlets containing a resume of Council proceedings may cease abruptly and the proceedings may be typed to save money. = =
Abolish Golf Tickets
The Park Board has decided to eliminate the season tickets for City Goli Courses next year as a means of increasing revenues. The tickets sell for $1750 and entitle the holder to an uniimited number of games on City courses. The cost of a single game without the season ticket is 30 cents The Board also decided to abandon the courtesy of allowing the public to make telephone reservations next vear, to save the cost of the telephones. Hereafier., the Board decided, the courses will revert to the old theory of first come, first served. 3 = =
=
There will be no attempt to enforce the City's new boating ordinance which applies to boats using White River between the Emrichsville Dam and 33th St. The Park Department wil. rely on the co-op-eration of boat owners to report infractions and take license numvers of boaters who violate the new regulations
JUNIOR REBEKAHS TO HOLD REUNION
The Indiana Association of Theta Rho Clubs, a junior branch of Re-! bekahs, will hold its first annual re-| union Wednesday at the Harris I}
i 1 }
Silk stocking repair business booms in New York as women | facing silk shortage take hosiery to fix-it girls such as this one to stop snags, runs and tears.
i
AMERICA FIRST
CHEFS NAMED
Merle H. Miller, Local Lawyer, Chosen as Co-Chairman.
Merle H. Miller, Indianapolis attorney, and Mrs. O. C. Baron, Elkhart, were elected co-chairmen of the tee at a meeting of state delegates yesterday in the Canary Cottage. Workers at the meeting reported rapid progress in organizing county chapters along the line of congressional districts and their subdivisions. E. W. Ward and J. P. Finnernan, delegates from Elwood. extended an invitation to the delegates to a meeting planned at Elwood as a demonstration of local anti-foreign-war sentiment. This meeting is planned to take place shortly after a state rally of the organization in Indianapolis in September. Among out of town delegates attending the meeting were: H. W. Voges. Mr. and Mrs. E. Jorgenson and Mrs. Baron, Elkhart: Paul Sallee and Philip Long, Columbus; A. Halleck. C. O. Tullis and Frank Felder, Rensselaer: J. Paul Bassett and Henry Ward, Kokomo: Miss Vera Sessler. Ft. Wayne; Prof. Lester B. Sands, Greencastle; George Bradley. Marion, and Ed-
‘ward and Harvey Rutenbeck. Fair
Oaks. Others were Mrs. Harry W. Hel-
iman, South Bend; H. J. Link, La
i
Porte; Clarence and Kenenth Raub, Gilbert Lane, Rex B. Wood, Mr. and Mrs. Otto Reising and Mrs. Victor
America First State Commit- |
up with orthochromatic film and gets terribly stung with this light.
Ortho Is Easier
He is probably using ortho so he ‘can load his developing tank in red light, which is much easier than doing the trick in total darkness.
VOICE from the Balcony { by FREMONT POWER
That is a good idea, for most shots ortho works ‘ust as well as pan; in fact, you can hardly tell the difference. But it isn't the same emul-| sion. Ortho is not sensitive to red light. That is why you can load the tank with a red safelight shining on the film. That is why it makes ruby lips photograph black and freckles show up and turn a rosy face dark and make goldfish invisible in a pool. But the average landscape or) istreet scene, which contains only a! {small proportion of red objects, will {photograph just as well with ortho] with pan—until the evening
shadows fall. 1 | peeping glasses on, we will now But Light Is Redder | take a slight peek into the life of
{ | Then the light gets redder long! { before the eye or the mind is much] aware of it. Pictures that you shoot jin this light on ortho films are very| likely to be underexposed, to have E; little or no shadow detail. | First Of If you use a heavy filter, such as] an orange, and shoot ortho, thus! filtering the reddish light, you get’ almost no image at all. Only a! yellow filter is usable on ortho late] in the day, and it is safer not to} use a filter i | Ortho is also slowed up by arti-| | ficial light much more than pan, because that light is usually yellowish| or reddish. The eve does pot notice {it. But get a Weston film rating; ‘chart and study the difference in| ‘ratings for pan and ortho flims in, | artificial light. | Incidentally, you can tell an ortho {film by the fact that the syllable] |“chrome” appears in the name— i verichrome, plenachrome, etc.
| information that
acquired the M-G-M,
Garbo prefers solitude. however,
mysterious one is not
alone.
{
i
i i
work on a comedy that still is untitled as well as unreleased. = = =
ARRIVING AT the studio to size things up. as they say, Garbo immediately ordered that her dressing room be redone. It was : instead of gray and red. (But you can forget this if you wish, for it | in this piece.) Quite unlike herself, though, Garbo was available at all times.
the telephone would scurrying to the office of Producer Gottfried Reinhardt. Or maybe Adrian, the dress man, would drop in to see her about that bathing suit she's going to wear in picture. Then perhaps she would be off to the hair dresser’s. And on the
® » »
OFFICIAL FIGURES ARE UNAVAILABLE at this time, but it appears that more words have been, or will be, written about Greta Garbo than about Abraham Lincoln. And now that we think of it, Greta and Honest Abe were alike in several respects. For one thing, neither has been known for after-dinner palaver. But what brought up this subject in the first place is a slight memorandum from M-G-M, the gist of which is that Garbo is a mysterious person, which you may already have known if you've been around in this part of the world for the last decade or so. Even the most common of babies, a few days after birth, has
is out with this afore- | mentioned memorandum that the always |
And so, if everyone has their |
| ter, the slight contacts on which
| Swedish Sphinx works, no outside so carried out and now is blue |
will not be referred to any more |
No more than a small tingle of | send her |
{ er.
the | | Constance Bennett,
Contest Announced Popular Photography has an-
| | | |
way—and you'll like this—Garbo | was seen to stop and chat with the common help, inquiring, one assumes, what attitude they had
| the republics. because we have felt
that many aspects of these particular cultural and entertainment fields could be unusually well adapted to the animation medium,” Disney
of summons.
arm while taking a still picture.
He charged cruelty.
BROKE ARM IN STILL
Mary Martin once broke her left
said.
Leaves Wall 5t.; Returns to Stage
HOLLYWOOD, Aug. 11 (U. P).— George E. Price, former stage and radio star, and now a member of the New York Stock Exchange, is making arrangements to return to the
alls? Just a regular back-fence person, you see, or do you? But once work on the picture started, we are told, Greta, or Garbo as she is commonly known by the one-name boys, leaves off | with all this foolish chatter. As |
i i
| the M-G-M historian recorded it, Garbo shortly before she went to |
“when Garbo works she concentrates only on her role. Idle chatpeople thrive have no place in | Garbo's life when she is before the cameras. “She is again as the public imagines her, the mysterious, introverted Garbo. For when the influence touches her. Then she is, indeed, a Sphinx.”
= 2
School's Out
THIS IS the end of our look-in upon the life of Garbo and so everyone will now kindly put their peeping glasses back in the drawIt need only be reported in addition that George Cukor directed the comedy. in the cast will be such as Melvyn Douglas, Ruth Gordon, Robert Sterling and Roland Young, and the management of Loew's here said they didn’t know when the picture will get to town. We'll just have to wait. Meantime, please let's have no idle chatter which would bother Gar-
2
|
footlights. Mr. Price, who gave up a theat-| rical career for a seat on the Ex- | change in 1935, has signed a con- | tract under which the Music Corp. of America will serve as his theatrical agent. He will retain his membership on the Exchange, however. He started his stage career back in 1909 at the age of 6, appearing in Gus Edwards’ revues along with Walter Winchell and George Jessel. He appeared in the Ziegfeld “Follies,” several Shubert productions, and produced some of his own shows before turning to Wall Street.
The Brooklyn Bombshell 1s in the fight N racket now! She s terrific in the clinches!
AN
-s 000. Robt.
Virgin Nataiie
SOT
MURPHY STERLIN
a O'BRIEN THOMPSON IE ROSENBLOOM
MER MELYyY DeERON « UGLag
“LIFE BEGINS FOR ANDY HARDY” PLUS “ELLERY QUEEN AND THE PERFECT CRIME”
DISNEY ARTISTS
| tee, instrumental in settling the
GET PAY BOOST |
HOLLYWOOD, Aug. 11 (U. P).— } {A Government mediation commit-| }
(two-month strike of Screen Cartoon | | {Guild members at the Walt Disney : Studio, today had granted a 10 per| : cent increase to Disney artists who!
{have been making $50 a ‘week or less. The board also approved a wage! (scale agreed upon earlier, setting! lan $85 a week minimum for top| (artists and a $35 minimum for reg- | [ular artists. Wage increases will |be retroactive to July 29. These {wage provisions, along with a 40- | hour week and other clauses, will be incorporated in a contract to be signed by the guild and the studio. ee
|
SPENCER
INGRID BERGMAN : LANA TURNEK
®The disappearing elephant is no trick af all... Wait 'til &N you see the performances of
TRACY
nounced the 1941 picture contest.| toward the weather and where did
bo’s brain when at work.
O. O. F. Hall at Addison and W. Conrad, Gary: E. W, Ward and J. |
Washington Sts. {P. Finneran, Elwood; Nathan M.
Activities will begin at 2 p. m.|Ely, Terre Haute; Clem Williams, | Members of Olive Branch Theta Bluffton; A. F. Nagel and Homer |
Rho Club 6 will be hostesses for Dresbach, Chalmers; Fred Rauer, dinner which will be served at 6:30) Wolcott, and Thomas S. Cowger, p. m. Degrees will be conferred at Monticello.
ers of the Theta Rho Board SMITH AGAIN HEADS EMPLOYMENT OFFICE
of Control will be present. They, are: Miss Anna M. Raess, chair-| man, Mrs. Jessie W. Robson and) Mrs. Lela B. Shugert.
i
| to his duties as manager of the In-
ra —————mEaar Bo 4 2 AVON PICNIC TOMORROW { dianapolis office of the Indiana Em
George J. Smith today returned]
{Deadline is Sept. 2. There are 228 prizes totaling over $6000. Heading the list of prizes jin the black-and-white class is a 11942 Packard four door touring | sedan. Human interest as well as pho- | tographic quality will determine {the awarding of prizes so while iyoure out shooting keep an eye open for that good shot.
Slide Cleaner Offered
they get that lovely pair of over-
By A MOVIE SECRETARY |
Times Special Writer HOLLYWOOD, Aug. 11 —Folks| say I'm blase, that nothing less than
an earthquake gets a rise out of me.|
A Movie Secretary Has To Be a Little (Bit) Crazy
|Margaret Tallichet graduated from
have married their bosses, Mrs.
secretaries. Dorothy Wilson and
typing to acting. A few secretaries Bob | Burns and Mrs. Richard Dix, for| example.
ACTORS WHO DREW | NAZI FIRE IN U. S.
HOLLYWOOD, Aug. 11 (U. P.).—
M-G-M's HIT
a A SR RD
DR. JEKYLL ano MR. HYDE
COMING SOON : r
“V. and W.,” ‘he European comedy team whose brand of humor at the free Czechoslovakian theater in Prague drew protests from: the German Government before the Munich agreement, have arrived here | to fulfill motion picture commitments. The comedians
F
whose names,
TO NIGHT | «+ YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD
ALITA
NORTH SIDE
Voskovec so
representatives of Avon
ric at Riverside Park tomorrow. 1 J. A. Ewald, vice president. as Mrs. Sue Sherman, be in
ployment Security Division, 148 E.
Market St. after completing a two-! If you've had as much trouble as
month assignment in the division's the average person in getting your |
administrative office. glass slides clean so that vou can
E. F. Kixmiller.who has been act- cover vour projecting negatives for!
ing manager of the employment protection. here's good news. office, returned to his former post. Now on the market is the Leitz °S placement manager. Slide Cleaner which cleans slides /prints with a minimum of effort. The product is put up in two-
{ounce bottles and a special appli-|
lcator is supplied with each bottle. = = =
‘How About Competition?
There are scores of small camera
i
of dirt. grease, smudges and finger-|
|
Maybe theyre right. If so, there's] I've no complaints about my sala reason. For the last 10 years i} TT Started 3 gh Seu. Now ! ’ i tre I collect $47.50 from the studio and! {been a secretary at ¥atien picture iy boss pays me $15 a Week. | Studios. In Hollywood anything can Many secretaries earn less; a few happen. and usualiy does. I'm used get more. Louis B. Mayer's executo it now. tive secretary, Ida Koverman, prob- |
But 1 wasn't blase at 20, when I ably gets a three figure salary | {came here from a small Ohio town Darryl Zanuck’s secretary (who has ‘and got a job in a studio's steno- | two secretaries of her own) probgraphic department. I used to stare | ably does, too. But a $75 weekly wide-eyed at movie stars—the way check is considered extremely good. tourists do. People often ask me if movie One day I dropped my purse and |bosses make passes at secretaries. Gary Cooper picked it up for me. I|Some do. But a girl doesn’t have was awed. I could hardly say,|to take this. One girl complained “Thank you.” When I had to de-|to the head of the studio's legal
and Werich, were difficult to pronounce that they took V. and W.” as their stage names. were leading actors in Prague’s most successful playhouse. Largely | because of their innuendoes the Nazis demanded closing of the theater as one of the Munich] stipulations.
DISPATCH CARRIER
~ George Brent, who plays an Amerlcan G-man in “International Lady,” took part in the prelude to the Irish Revolution of 1924 by acting in the dangerous capacity of dispatch carrier between Eamon de Valera and
Stratford
Cool REX Ll,
a Distinguished Sethice
There !s a reason why more and more families choose Peace Ch .
We believe it is because here service is distin
by thoughtful,
guished personal attention . . . a service which most families still prefer to the impersonal hurried service rendered by establishments on a
routine basis.
ARRY-L
MOOR
PEACE CHAPEL
CREMORNE
A Stupendons Array
MIRE
NY
i Men's Suits
We are featuring a mammoth sefcetion of men’s latest style swmils mn every size and &=scription. These armentr have Been dry cleaned and sterilized and are in perfeet condition Manv earre the abe of. .} ecounatry's lcading
to miss.
53°
e clothiers, and are features at prices sou can't afford
clubs in Indianapolis and we were wondering why there aren't more inter-club contests and exhibits. Swapping of knowledge, negatives and equipment is one way to build interest in your clubs and improve your “shots.”
liver a script to Marlene Dietrich’s dressing room my heart pounded like thunder. I didn’t take long to lose my illusions. Few movie stars are as personable off-screen as on. They have bald spots and poor complexions, just like the rest of us. Some-
2 LABOR ELECTIONS SET FOR NEXT WEEK
An election to determine a baragency will be held among employees of the Park Furniture {Co, Rushville, Ind, Tuesday, the ‘National Labor Relations Board here announced today. Workers will vote whether or not chey want to be represented by the Upholsterers’ International Union of North America, Local 280, affiliated with A. F. of L. On Monday an election will be held at the Portland Forge & Foundry Co., Portland, Ind. ployees may Workers Organizing Committee, C. I. O, or the American Federation of Labor, or neither.
RENTS ARE SOARING IN DEFENSE AREAS
WASHINGTON, Aug. 11 (U. P). —Higher rents and fewer vacancies in defense areas were reported today by the WPA. More than half of the 58 communities surveyed showed rent increases for more than 30 per cent of their dwellings, and in half the localities the increases averaged more than 20 per cent above those paid in March, 1940. In 90 per cent of the areas, the vacancy rates in recent months were well below the five per cent considered normal.
Em-| vote for the Steel]
times I didn’t recognize my favor|ites. But I wasn’t always disappointed. ‘Loretta Young, Barbara Stanwyck, [Claudette Colbert and Carole Lom- | bard, to mention a few, were just as |attractive as their screen shadows. Working for movie directors, writers, producers and executives, I | learned, entailed work not in the usual secretarial routine. When I worked for an English writer I used to make tea every lafternoon at 4:30. | One producer expected me to spend my lunch hour walking his Dalmation coach fog. | I had to keep three kinds of] candy—and three kinds of medi-| cine—in one director's desk. In! the middle of the afternoon I al-| ways brought him a chocolate] ice cream soda. He said it was | doctor's orders. When one of my bosses couldn't get an appointment for a scalp massage, he asked me to rub tonic on his thinning hair. I did. A few executives prefer male secretaries. One reason is because there's no gossip when they travel together. Very often men secretaries get much better jobs. The late Irving Thalberg, one of the most important men in the industry, once was Carl Gaemmlie’s secretary. Some of the girls have done all right, too. Screen writers Doris Anderson, Virginia Van Upp and Marguerite Roberts once were
HOT WEATHER SPECIALS!
Beautiful Oil, PERMANENT h 0 ¢
WAVES
G nteed Till ¥ Hil Grows Out
TITO SCHIPA
The Sieat lyric tenor, says of the aldwin:
“Glorious for ils beaunti-
ful tones.” —Tito Schipa.
department. to work for someone else.
studio. It seemed depressingly com- | mercial.
become commercial, too. Last year I got a $100 bonus, $35 in purchase orders, six months’ supply of hose} and enough perfume and cologne] to submerge a submarine.
He arranged for her
I used to hate Christmas at the
I don’t mind Christmas now. I've]
I earned it. For two weeks the | only work I did was my boss’ Christmas shopping—178 presents. | And I wrapped about 50 myself | I even helped him select a fur coat for his wife. Working in a studio gets you. It spoils you for other jobs. never work anywhere else . Maybe it's because I'm a little
ri
bit crazy.
20 GIRLS WANTED
To Learn Beauty Culture
We loan up to 907% of the tuition fee to qualified girls. Cail or write.
International Beauty School 229 N. PENN. ST OP POST OFFICE
TT
a LY URE Ry
Al th
i Skies Blaz RN er
WW
BALDWIN ca f#8R00m 4% S. Penn. St. Open Fves. MA-1181.
Michael Collins.
EE ————— rt eS Soon IIT: TX TOI]
Robt. Taylor “BILLY THE KID” “ o Gorcey ANGELS WITH BROKEN WINGS
COOL 1Scto 6
** First Indianapolis Showings * * Tex Ritter—Slim Andrews “PIONEERS”
i“ Gorcey “Bowery Blitzkrieg"
Leo JUNGLE GIRL" Chapt. 11—NEWS
UZ Yr 7a IH) 7 Afuits NATIONAL ROAD 40 SEG 72)
7%) TNL. WEST OF BER DAVIS “
Rosalind Russell Brian Aherne “HIRED WIFE” CARTOON—NEWS
ARTURO 22s o
Beautiful CELIA VILLA, Vocalist
McDONALD & ROSS
Musical Comedy Dance Team
THE NARTZELLS
Variations in Song
hows Nitely—8 and 12 P. M. ws Excellent Cuisine NEVER A COVER CHARGE
BEST
Sn STEAK DINNERS
IN TOWN
Xana
Jack Oakie
BELMONT
SPEEDWAY
HAMILTON
Priscilla Lane ‘MILLION DOLLAR BABY”
Joan Pe “RIDERS OF
Sheridan ® Cool
TU XED 0 ) *
19th and
College 20¢ Jas. Stewart “POT 0O' GOLD" Dennis Morgan “Affectionately Yours” 30th & III,
Laurence Olivier-Vivien Leigh “THAT HAMILTON WOMAN" Rex Harrison, Star of “Night Train” “MISSING TEN DAYS”
“BILLY THE KID” “LAS VEGAS NIGHT”
Gary Grant “PENNY SERENADE" “Ellery Queen's Penthouse Mystery” = Y 1 0 College at 03d Free Parking Lot
John Crawford “A WOMAN'S FACE” “Great American Broadcast’
WEST
Belmont and Wash. Robt. Taylor Brian Donlevy “BILLY THE KID” Tyrone Power “BLOOD AND SAND” Westinghouse Air-Conditioned = Speedway City Mary Howard
Brian Donlevy Robert Taylor “BILLY THE KID” Jas. Stewart “POT O’ GOLD” PLEASANTLY COOL!
Bumsteads
CINEMA
ZARIN
TALBOTT
STATE
AAT FT. WAYNE & ST. CpAIR 2
BLONDIE GOES LATIN’ “THE BIG BOSS”
wr ¢ COOL
Open Daily at 1:30 P. M. Adults 20¢, Children 100 Till 6.
Abhott & “IN THE NAVY"
Costello
Also! “Penthouse Mystery” #4 Central at Fall Crk, Eddie Albert Joan Leslie “THIEVES FALL OUT” Anna Neagle “SUNNY” Talbott at 22nd Joan Crawford Melvyn Douglas “A WOMAN'S YACE” Abbott & Costello “IN THE NAVY” Westinghouse Air-Conditioned
SIDE
LN 5
The §
Otto Krueger Gloria Dickson 46th &
2702 Adults W. 10th Any Time 20C
Errol Flynn “DODGE CITY” Jas. Stewart “POT O’ GOLD”
DAISY 3°" COOL
Michigan I
Tyrone Power “BLOOD AND SAND” Ruth Hussey “FREE AND EASY”
SOUTH SIDE
FOUNTAIN SQUARE “BILLY THE KID”
“BROADWAY LTD.”
Robert Taylor Dennis O’Keefe
= i"
Lo
ENTAL
MERIDIAN ST
Pe
S
(Rie):
oO
M. Dietrich “FLAME OF NEW ORLEANS"
For Entertainment! READ THIS DIRECTORY EVERY DAY
EAST 2116 E. 10th
Mon. & Tue, Abbott & 6
tonietio. IN THE NAVY”
Madeleine Carrol-Fred MacMurray
"ONE NIGHT IN LISBON”
Jas, Stewart “POT O°’ GOL
BARA SA olin \ la AA Fa 8) ER TR Ea IGE SR A.B IL IRN] (a EEE 1 RETURNED BY REQUEST Bing Crosby, Mary Martin hy ON THE RIVER” rry “STRANGE ALIBI” DEATH VALLEY” at 6 P. M. |
6116 E. Wash,
| "Hitler, Beast of Berlin"
2—“BROADWAY LIMITED" Vic. McLaglen
IRVING
Gene Autry “BACK IN THE SADDLE" 11068 Prospect
SANDERS Bob Croshy
Judy Canova “SIS HOPKINS" Phil Regan “LAS VEGAS NIGHT”
SIDE
5507 COOL 5:45 Wash. to 6 200 Eddie - Albert-Joan Leslie “THIEVES FALL ouUT” Allan Jones-Susanna Foster “THERE'S MAGIC IN MUSIC”
4630 It’s Cool 10th °'Til 6-209 L. Olivier “THAT HAMILTON WOMAN" Geo. Montgomery “Cowboy and Blonde"
Tonite Tues. & Wed. 5:45 to 6 BEAST OF
f —"“HITLER BERLIN”
No War, No Hate, No Propaganda A Story of a Nation in Chains
Tonite,
3—E. R. Burroughs' “Jungle Girl” 7 P.M. Ra Avy 20¢c Time Priscilla Lane “MILLION DOLLAR RARY" Lew Ayres "PEOPLE ve. DR. KILDARE"
PARKER 0°50
Doors Open 6:45 HORROW SHOW! CAN YOU TAKE IT? Bela Luge
2—“B'WAY LTD” ieee 3—BOB HOPE "0,952" MECCA . J. 20C on, H. Bogart “WAGONS ROLL AT NIGHT" Joan Blondell “MODEL WIFE"
PARAMOUNT PENNY SERENADE’
Ln
G OF THE ZOMBIES"
si “INVISIBLE GHOST” And! “THE SPIDER RETURNS” €
Lionel Barrymore § Edward Arneld
Irene Dunne § THE PERALTY’
Cary Grant
