Evening Star Newspaper, September 24, 1935, Page 36

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‘B—16 = AMUS EMENTS. Cecil De Mille Organizes Some Magnificent Fights “The Crusades” Presents Several Hot Scraps Between Saladin and Richard the Lion-Hearted. BY ROBERT B. URN loose a couple of hundred M: 1 pitching hot rivets down each other’s move the whole business onto cne settin, get an idea of the rumpus stirred uj in Cecil B. DcMille’s “The Crusades.” At a preview yesterday afternoon, the local drama cricks had their first | glimpse of Mr. De Mille's latest home- | made war. They gasped appreciative- ly at the right times, and a handsome little controversy developed on the spot. Some held that Saladin the Saracen was a more personable gent than Richard Couer de Lion. Others insisted the idea was plain heresy. None disputed the power and sweep of the De Mille battle scenes. Between the Crusades and our own Revolution there were only one or two organized wars in which the fighters really burned with zeal and righteous conviction. That kind of a scrap makes for more fun and far better drama. Even the most spectac- ular butchery can be poetically justi- fied if the winning side has a sympa- | thetic cause to fight for. Mr. De Mflle.j one of the shrewdest gentlemen iny show business, has practiced that principle levishly in his latest ex- travaganza. We now trust that he| will assemble Henry Wilcoxon, Loretta | ‘Young and others who appear in “The Crusades” and launch upon a talkie | dramatization of “The Birth of a Na- | tion.” There was a war for you, with | everybody hot under the collar and | one side campaigning mostly on fervor. | “The Crusades.” by the way, makes a formal debut Sunday night at the National. S SPEAKU\G of the private showings, a film called “Preview” will soon be released in Hollywood. It is a murder mystery and the crime takes’ place at an advance screening of a picture. The advance publicity does not state who gets done in, but prob- ebly it will turn out to be the critic who always came late and kept every- | body waiting. LR IN THE original version of “The Frisco Kid.” the climax came when Jimmy Cagney was about to be hanged by the Vigilantes and Mar- garet Lindsay stepped in, made nw big speech and saved him. The other | day the producers decided that was | too much even for the movie public, | trained to accept almost anything in | the way of stories. They made re- takes of the finish and now Cagney | gets shot to death in a courtroom | scene. * ook % THE collapse of vaudeville continues in New York, with the Palace, once the goal of every variety actor, reverting to a film policy. Locally stage entertainment shows exactly the opposite trend. Loew's Fox has | booked a $10,000 vaudeville unit for | next week, with Lou Holtz, Block and Sully, Belle Baker and others in the cast. And both the presentation houses hLave top shows under their roofs during the current week. * ok ok X JITHER William Randolph Hearst ~ is going to take his Cosmopolitan | producing units from Warners and | join RKO, with Winfield Sheehan cutting in on the deal, or some bright boys in New York are promoting a | great stock scheme by circulating the rumor. A certain ballyhoo service in that city sends in another item to- day anent Mr. Sheehan's activities, | and claims the recent upswing ol\ RKO shares was due to the fact the Hearst-Sheehan-RKO reorganization | deal had reached the certainty stage. No confirmation has been given from the RKO offices. % iy ACK ALICOATE, writing in the Film Daily, says he recently talked with some of the London censors, who pride themselves on their strictness, and was told they are really severe only with English products. “If the Americans want to make fools of themselves in films,” said the censor, “we seldom interfere with them unless the process involves some veflection on John Bull.” e ey CHIC SALE is being starred as Abra- ham Lincoln in a new M-G-M two-reeler entitled “The Perfect Trib- ute.” Considering Mr. Sale's past | associations, that may be put down ' in the books as one of the most re- | markable reversals of form ever seen away from a race track. * ok ok % RAY DOOLEY has changed from a baby impersonator into a tumbler with a troupe of Arabian acrobats for the Eddie Dowling show “Thumbs Up,” which comes to the National on October 7. Paul Draper, who ap- peared at the Earle last Spring, is the dancing star and Clark and Mc- Cullough the comedians. * Xk kX ¥ *I'HE Arthur Godfrey-Arch McDon- ald stage review plotted by Gene Ford will open at Loew's Fox on LANK BOOK A Complete Selection in Stock See Us for Your Blank Books E. Morrison Paper Co. 1009 Pa. Ave. Phone NA. 2945 COAL 2,240 Pounds to the Ton Blue Ridge Va. Hard Stove Coal, $10.00 Special Furnace_Size. 48.35 Special Stove Size, $9.00 Nut, $9.75; Pea, $8.00; Ess. $10.00 Buckwheat, $6.75 Smokeless Egg, $9.00 Bituminous Coal Without Smoke or Soot 80% Lump. $8.00 Blue Egg, $8.00 Hard-Structure Pa. Bituminous Makes Only Thin White Smoke 759 Lump Coal, $7.15 509, Lump Coal, $6.75 Lump delivered in s ment from the nne—i owing vou_ zet correct amount of lum Coal carried fl;;m trucl to your coal There Is a Reason Wlly World's Largest Retailers of Va. ‘Anthracite BLUE RIDGE COAL CO. Mlnen of Virginia Anthi ulle al, Alexandria shingt Opposite "Texaco Ol Wal. Distributing Plant 8475 Me. 3545 PHILLIPS, JR. ax Baers and Joe Louises and let them pitch fists, spears, boiling oil and everything but the family cat at each other. Mount them on horses and send them charging across the plains at one another, head-on. Start the workmen on a skyscraper necks in deadly earnest. If you can g, a cinema screen, for example, you'll October 11. Several name acts from | New York will be imported to fill out | the show. * X X x Official anncuncement was made to- day confirming the rumors that the Community Players’ production of Gil- bert and Sullivan’s “Patience” had been canceled. The operetta will not be presented in October as originally planned. * % k% ESULTS of the Baer-Louis fight in New York tonight will be an- nounced from the stages of the three downtown Leew theaters, the Fox, Palace and Columbia. Special ar- rangements have been made to get complete coverage, 50 you may attend the movies this evening without fear of missing out on today's “battle of the century.” THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, Warner Bros. New Child Star politar. this Friday. for kindergarten Bernhardts started | Sybil Jason has the principal role in “Little Big Shot,” a Warner Bros. melodrama which comes to the Metro= She is considered one of the mor e important infant discoveries unearthed during the craze by and with Shirl ey Temple. Washington Wayside Random Observations of Interesting Events and Things. INGENUITY. WO urchins wanted to attend a show the other day. Their total assets consisted of one puppy. On a scrap of paper they scrawled a sign: SALE 25¢ Seating themselves in a niche be- tween two F street stores, with the | dog between them, they waited (or business. A crowd gathered. i /[10l 10 minutes they closed up shop, hav- ing netted 65 cents. The puppy had not changed hands. * k kX% BELONG TO THEE. S. R. A? The Agriculture Exchange. the mimeographed tabloid of the Wel- fare Association which keeps de- partmental employes posted on the ertra-governmental activities within their ranks, reports that a new—and popular — alphabetical agency has sprung up in the Weather Bureau—E. S. R. A. Translated East, Sleep, Rest Ad- ministration e NEW LEGAL SUMMONS. OUT in Kankakee County, Ill., when Prosecuting Attorney V. A. Parish wants a man against whom infor- mation or complaint has been filed he uses the unique method of mailed post card to summon the per- son into his office. doesn’'t fetch him he sends out a second. Only as a last resort in minor com- | plaints and to fetch in law violators | of the more serious class does he re- sort to arrest. The novel method has saved the county tidy sums of money as well | as those summoned the humiliation of arrest. Mr. Parish, recently in Washington, explained his procedure to a Washington Wayside reporter, ey BUCKET STILL BUSY. The old odken bucket is still busy in Maryland. The State Extension Service has discovered that 65 per pent of the farm families in Mary= land have to carry water to be used in the home from a weil, spring or pump on the outside, the average “haul” being 50 feet. A recent investigation by the Extension Service also disclosed that only about one-i CENTURIES IN TRADITION JAVASMOCHA 38, COFFEE g :Our Graduate £ Optometrist —if your eves have been giving you = even “the slightest worry. An e = amination of your eves may save ¥ & time and money. Stop in today. “M A.LEESE Optical Co.: H 614 9th St. N.W. T s Ws Hew! “CREAMED”’ RUBBING ALCOHOL Doesn’t dry out the skin Good news for people with dry, ten- der skins! Spry, the rubbing alcohol in cream form, soothes softens the skin. Economical; can’t spill. Use it for the sick room, tired feet, irritations, after shaving. Contains full 709, absolute alcohel —U. S. Government Standard for rubbing alcohol compounds. LARGE 29& > JAR ~ DOUBLE SIZE 49 [ Sh N On Sale at all Drug Stores e e i After | If the first card | ; farm homes have the convenience of kitchen sink and drain, less than 25 per cent have improved toilets and only 12 per cent have bathrooms. * ok ok K AIRPLANES GET MUMPS, OM: of the favorite worries of naval | aviation personnel for a longl time has been about what to do in| case the automatic flotation gear should function while a plane is in | flight. After several hair-raising ex- | periences on the part of pilots who have had the big bags snap out, Lieut. A. C. Olney has muna the answer— ! “Do nothing about it." ; The flotation gear consists of two | rubberized fabric bags normally held under retaining plates but equipped | for instant inflation to large size when | the plates are released. It was long | believed that if the bags inflated ac- cidentally in the air they would create so much drag as to throw the airplane out of control and prevent a safe landing. Pulling off the bags in a screaming power dive generally was accepted as | the proper solution, as the bags are | 1 | | too far out on the wings to be reached | easily with & knife. One pilot, how- | | ever did succeed in puncturing ac-| cidentally inflated bags with a metal | pencil. | Lieut. Olney, who has just left the | U. S. S. Ranger, found the answer a few days ago, the Navy Department | has been informed, when the flotation gear of his plane functioned acci- dentally during a test flight at 2,000 feet. After recovering from the initial shock of having his airplane develop a sudden case of the mumps, the Navy Department was told, Lieut. Olney discovered that, aside from his some- what ludicrous appearance, he had no particular worries. The plane did not | function normally, of course, but it did handle well enough for him to undertake a little experimental flying, as a result of which he returned to the | field and made a normal landing with the big bubbles intact. * ok Xk REAL RELIEF PROJECT A citizen, maybe he was a sales- man, just made a rather difficult request of the F. E. R. A. His let= ter simply asked if the administra= tion headed by Harry Hopkins “would mind sending me the names of those on relief.” Administra= tion employes thought of the 18, 000,000 people getting handouts and considered what a work-relicf project fulfillment of their corre= spondent’s request would make, * x x x POTPOURRI. IF MAIL sometimes goes astray, is it strange, what with Alameda. Calif, and Almaden in the same State; Or- lando in California and Florida; Holly- | wood, ditto; La Fayette, Ga, and La- | fayette, La.; Chicago, Ill, and Chi- cago Heights, the same: Jacksonvilie in Florida—again—and Illinois; Wen- ham, Wareham and Wrentham Mass Huguenot and Huguenot Park. N. Y Westport, Weedsport and West Point, N. Y, and Westport, Conn; Hcr Springs, S. Dak., and Hot Springs Na- tional Park, Ark. Scramble these names with poor handwriting—and 1% | is no wonder that certain postal em- | ployes are allowed to retire at the age of 62—eight years sooner than the average Government worker. * ox * x GOLDFISH FAN. ;FHXENDS of Mrs, Wade Shurtleff | of this city are boosting her fcr champion No. 1 goldfish “fan’ of the | United States. When she went away for the Sum- mer she did the following things for the care and continued comfort of | her nine goldfishes: Bought them a 40-gallon tank. Got sand from Atlantic City. Plants from Florida. Turned tank, fish, plants and sand over to “Teddy” Schmid at his popu- lar fish emporium. Had running water installed. Purchased two air pumps for their comfort on cloudy days. Wired from New York City as to their health. Flew down from the big metropolis to see how they were getting along Took a trip across country, sending “Teddy” a necktie from each smppmg point On the way back sent a box of candy to Mrs, “Teddy” from each place visited.. If there is any city in the country with a goldfish “fan” to equal Mre. Shurtleff let them come forward. —and NOW ... for the man who pref ers the xsoft fabric Mottled ringbone with the MEN’S dividual, SUITS A rugged fabric! Rich her- patterns in grey and brown and models to fit in fabric type. You'll like them for their large; in- mottled effects. % Soft, pliable fabrics with a 35 of 1325 hard wear-resisting quality, that makés them ideal for bus- iness and sports. F Street Ask About Our 10-Pay Charge Plan D Where and When Current Theater Attractions and Time of Showing. Earle—“She Married Her Boss,” at | \1035 am, 1:35, 4:25, 7:10 and 10 p.m. Stage shows at 12:35, 3:25, 6:10 | land 9 p.m. Loew's Fox—“Here Comes the Band.” at 10:50 am., 1:30, 4:20, 7:10 TUESDAY, 'SEPTEMBER 24, 1935. Shakespeare’ Provokes Movie Debate! Reinhardt Puts Much of His Own Genius Into “Midsummer Night's Dream”—Film Studded With Stars. BY MOLLIE OLLYWOOD, September 24 Dream,” Hollywood's second adyenture into Shakespeare and Max Reinhardt’s debut in the American cinema, is about to be released. It is bound to be one of the a few weeks, Here in Hollywood, in permitted to see it, the “dream” is a subject of violent argument. question of presenting Shakespeare ones the screen is argument material. The | public, for whose entertainment it was made, will be the final arbiter of this picture’s financial fate. There is no question as to its ar- | tistic merit, in those fields in which Max Reinhardt is absolute. Some seven years ago Max Reinhardt sat at La Quinta, in the desert, and told me what he would do if the moguis of Hollywood would entrust a picture to his making. He was at La Quinta—instead of United Artists’ studio—because of a difficulty he had had with Joseph Schenck. “Talkies” had arrived in Hollywood and Max Reinhardt was here to make a picture on a contract that had been signed when the cinema ‘was still strictly pantomimic. Makes Prophecy. The genius of Salzburg and the president of U. A. couldn't get to- gether. But Reinhardt sald to me| then: | “If T ever made a picture, I shall| do the thing for which the camera was made. I shall go beyond reality— 1 shall penetrate the realms of fantasy | and rip the veils which shroud the world beyond. I will take the audience up to the stars—out to the uttermost realms of imagining—I shall blend the real and the unreal; for this the | camera was made.” And when I saw “A Midsummer | Night's Dream,” I realized how fully | Max Reinhardt had lived up to this| prophecy. Here is a magic world, gone | mad beneath the moon. Here is a land | and 10:05 p.m. Stage shows at 12:25, 1 3:20, 6:10 and 9 pm. Columbia—"“Anna Karenina,” at 11:15 am, 1:20, 3:25, 5:30, 7:35 and 9:40 p.m. Palace—"Steamboat Bend,” at 11:40 am,, 7:40 and 9:40 pm. Belasco—"Red Head,” at 11:55 am., 1:54, 3:53, 5:52, 7:51 and 9:50 p.m. Metropolitan—"Accent of Youth,” at 11 am,, 12:45, 2:30, 4:20, 6:10, 7:55 and 9:40 pm. R-K-O-Keith's—“Top Hat.” at 11:58 am,, 2:22, 4:46, 7:10 and 9:35 pm. “March of Time” at 11:32 am,, 1:56, 4:20, 6:44 and 9:08 pm. . Ambassador—"She Married Her Boss,” at 6:15, 8 and 9:45 pm. i Tivoli—"China Seas,” at 2:20, 4:05. | 5:55, 7:40 and 9:30 p.m. Round the 1:40, 3:40, 5:40, Roscoe Ates to Be Divorced. LOS ANGELES, September 24 (#). | —A property settlement having been effected, Roscoe Ates, stuttering screen comedian, and his wife expect to be | divorced today. Mrs. Ates charged | cesertion in her complaint. They were married December 1, 1931, ORDERS. English, Lieut. Robert A. J. de- tached Hydrographic Office, Navy Department, to U. S. S. Nevada. Chambers, Comdr. John H., Medical Corps, detached Naval Medical School, Washington, about October 1, to U. 8. 8. Texas. Crumpscker, Lieut. John Supply Corps, detached U. S. 8. Evans in September, to instruction Naval Finance and Supply School, Philadelphia. Naumiiket, Lieut. Charles J. (J. G), | Supply Corps, detached command U. S. S. Sagamore, to instruction Naval NAVY w. (J.G), Finance and Supply School, Phila- | delphia. FOR THE FINEST IN SEA FOOD —come to SCHNEIDER’S. Famous for finest Sea Food since 1886, WEDNESDAY SPECIAL 50¢c Choice of Clam Shrimp Cocktail Coleslaw. or "Beer. Butter. Now Serving Oysters in Any Style CHNEIDER ® CAFE o Since 1886 W.W. Rolls' and “Everything to drink. with anything teo eat.” 7 42 WHERE TO DINE. TOBY TAVERN 509 H_St. N.W. “The Food' That Docj Not-Depend on Its Marveious Atmosphere.” Every Night Dinners, 85c & $1 Sunday De Luxe __$1.00 Luncheon 50c & Up 3 Metropolitan 9128 b Toll House Tavern 1C01e"lllt Pike) Sprin GOOD THINGS TO EAT “Quaint Old Dining Room: Country Sunday Breakfast Phone SHepherd 3500 JOPEN DAILY AND SUNDAY Famous for Food hort and pleasant drive to this footuore “Merstand ~estate” on ‘the Marlboro Pike. three miles from the District Line. Regular Dinners from 11 a.m. Seafood @ A la Carte Meals Daneing Nightly — Hawailan Or- o A $-bc. Band Wednesdsy of elves and goblius—of fairy hordes * | dancing madly up highways of mist | that wreath the pines. Here is| | camera magic as you've never seen it | | before. Here is rhythm and composi- tion whose divine beauty has never | been equaled in gelatin before. And | here is a musical score by Korngold, |a modern, who has woven the Men- | delssohn music into a superb back- ground for such imaginings. Cast Is Practical. This venture into the fourth dimen- sion has been achieved perfectly by Reinhardt and his co-director, the capable Wilhelm Dieterle, one of his | former students. So far [ have been speaking only of camera, of treatment, of rhythm and fantasy. | When it came to choosing a cast for ‘A Midsummer Night's Dream,” Rein- hardt did not have absolute power. The producer who was furnishirg some million and a half dollars to make this spectacle naturally had some ideas on the subject. So into the Shakespeakean cast have been | introduced some cinema names— names that have tremendous follow- ings. If these motion picture actors seem | incapable of giving the lines the fall- ness of beauty and meaning which the performers who have had Shake- spearean training bring to them, it is well to remember this: Those cinema | actors have large fan followings, and | their enthusiasts will come to see \Sheakflpesre in order to see them, | | when nothing else in the world wouk | bring them into the theater. On | there, it would take a singularly un- feeling clod to remain insensate to the beauty of eye and ear which | awaits him. Victor Jory, the Oberon of the cast, | is outstanding. He has had Shake- w WEARLEY’S SEA FOOD GRILL 418 12th St. N.W. WEDNESDAY SPECIAL _ 5 oc 11:30 AM. Until Midnight Pried oysters. shrimp. scallops. clams. crab cake, soft clams. filet of sole. tar- tar sauce. French-fried potatoes. cole- slaw, rolls and butter. coftee, tea. ice tea or beer. PEARL SCALLOP PLATTER ding fried pearl scal- ssc artar sauce, French- tatoes. coleslaw. frcte RS Warner Bros COLBERT SHE lllll!l HER BOSS i YAVIER CUGAT | COMING FRIDAY BING CROSBY LAST 3 DAYS SYLVIA HERBERT SIDNEY-MARSHALL Giccent o tjouth COMING FRIDAY Sybil Jason 'NEW KIDDIE STAR IN “LITTLE BIG SHOT” Al Vitaphonet “KEYSTONE HOTEL" $ 25 5P EVES: 25¢ 40c &¥ AMUSEME s Fantasy MERRICK. (NAANA)—“A Midsummer Night's most widely discussed themes within the very small group that has been The very spearean training and he gives the lines their full beauty. Ian Hunter, as | the Duke of Athens, is excellent. Max Reinhardt sald during the making of this picture that the Puck | NTS. 16 MURALS APPROVED FOR POSTAL BUILDING * New York Artist Expected to Start Work Soon on Big Paintings. The Fine Arts Commission has ap= proved preliminary sketches for two of the 16 big mural paintings to dece orate the Fost Office Department ine terior, it was learned today. The artist, Reginald Marsh of New York City, 300n may begin painting the murals in the building. The two designs approved will be painted directly on the plaster on the fourth floor north elevator lobby. Each will be 13 feet long and 6 feet high. One depicts transfer of mail from a train and the other transfer of mail from an ocean liner. Seven other artists are planning sketches for the other 14 designs Lo be used throughout the building. These of Mickey Rooney had never been | equalled to his knowledge—the per- | formance of this youngster is almost beyond belief. Anita Louise as the fairy queecn, Titania, is exquisitely beautiful. | Grant Mitchell, as Hermia's father is excellent. And the grace and beautv of Nini Theilande, the fairy attendant of Titania, is all part of the aagic of | this unbelievable camera. (conmlm 1935 by the North American Newspaper Alliance. Inc.) IOWANS TO SEE PLAY Members of the lowa Society of Washington will attend a performance of “East Lynn” in the club ball room | of the Press Building Priday evening, | to be followed by an informal after- | theater party. Reservations may be made through Miss Gertrude M. Louis at the Hotel Roosevelt. Claire Trevor Seriously Il HOLLYWOOD, September 24 (4).— Claire Trevor, blonde screen actress, is threatened with pneumonia as her | fever shot up to 104 degrees. She has been fighting the inroads of influenza since last Saturday, when she had to quit work in a picture. Her physician said her condition was serious. TANG O’ THE SEA” FOOD Sea Food Platter Wednesday 11:30 A.M. to Fried oysters. shrimp, clams, M l scallops. crab eake. fillet of haddock, tartar sauce. French fried potatoes. colesiat, home- made rum buns bread and butter. coffee. tea c l 8iass of beer. * O'Donnells ~ SEA GRILL Never closed, 1207 E St. N.W. CAROLINA will be submitted to the Pine Arts Commission as they come into the @ | Treasury Department. The Section | of Painting and Sculpture of the Pub- ‘hc Works Branch, Procurement Divi- sion of the Treasury, has charge of this part of the decorative work for public buildings. AMUSEMENTS. BAER-LOUIS FIGHT RESULTS At All LOEWS THEATERS YONIGHT o (ASA LOMA HIS AMD onmu Acts/ gl I 'HERE COMES % BAND" TED LEWIS 2 2% LOU HOLTZ + ggt1e .AMR., Pelay L ock sud SO Ceetu addiR EL g naRby & SCOTLAND * ' STEAMBOAT ROUND A BEND IRVIN §. CO ey FETCHIT o covom Friday..CLARK GABLE-LORETTA YOUNO in “CALL OF THE WiLD" mll‘ 2t /2t [GAYETY BURLESK NOW PLAYING “ANN CORIO” And Her “GIRLS IN BLU ADDEN'S NDLER smm_m (‘,CREY n ASHTON JomN’ MUIR _in RENDON. VA BOLES and, JEAN _“ORCHIDS TO YOU " i1tha N C Baev-Lewis Fight Results Tonfghi WOMEN MUST SEE— “Poil de Carotte” It is a Tender and Beaw tiful story of Child Life, MEN MUST SEE— “Poil de Carotte” They will see the story of their own youth unfold be- fore them. EVERYONE MUST SEE “Poil de Carotte” Because it is one of the greatest films that has ever been made. FRENCH TALKIE—ENGLISH TITLES Coming! CLAUDE RAINS N KEITH/SU"-C A Washington Institution 4 WEEK! FRED GINGER ASTAIRE » ROGERS MUSIC AND tecsw IRVING BERLI ND...Exira Added Attraction The Sixth Issue of “The MARCH of TIME” Coming... EDWARD ARNOLD in"DIAMOND JIM” THE (RUSADES N iconsin Ave ND LOW DUMBARTON £D hna ESTHER RALSTON in ' MISTER H¥NA< MITE. Comed It MISIE DXRA FAIRLAWN ~CURLY_TOP 9th Between F and G LITTLE Adousticon Equip MARION DAVIES ‘and GARY COOBER 1 “OPER TOR 13.” cted News. 10 AM.-6 P T0e 15 Eve. PRINCESS Lew 1110 B 5L N E AYRES in “SPRING NIC HEATHER HE‘DL"E — ROGERS in “TI ANACOSTIA D. HIRLEY TEMPLE " tn ._15¢c-25e Georgia Ave. Ma. FRANCHOT T "ONE NEW YORK N Comedy. Param STANTON | MIRIAN IGHT & T aTON CALLING_ALL CARS STATF The Modern Theater” |STATE 8970 Wise Open_at NOFL. CoWARD S “THE SCOU\IDREL A TAK MA dlh nd Butternut Sts, No_Parking Troubles MIRIAM HOPKINS in “BECKY SHARP.” NANCY CARROLL in __“AFTER THE DANCE HlPPODROME Dfel Fertte Rova Blelbeam. - Littte Friend * ‘\lVIYI- MD. Peonle’ Wi Talk.* HYA'I'TS\TILI.! M MARION DAVIES in “PAGE MISS GLORY.” __Feature_Apuro 030 P M R'CHM"ND ALrx ANDRIA. ay & Tome ‘rmw SIR GUY STANDING in “Annapolis Farewell.” \ N mh Stace " |AMBAS SADOR CLAUDETTE COLBERT ! __MARRIED HER BOSS." APOLLO &, Phnnp Ll LORETTA YOUNG, SHANG AVAION Conn Ave, & MeKintes SHIRLFY TEMPLE. “CURLY TOP." __Cartoon. AVENUE GRAN 615 Pa. Ave. S.E. Li. 2408 Matinee. 2:00 AMES CAGNEY. PAT, O'BRIEN 1a __“THE IRISH IN US N.W. CENTRAL ‘R.0T 507 . @A | CLARK GARLE. JEAN HARLOW WALLACE BE} FFER\ CHIN. Direction SIDNEY Sporireel 1230 C St. N.E. Phone Li. 10206, JOAN BLONDELL GLENDA “WERE IN THE Mo ath Fhone cul IAN HUNTER Comedy. TIVOL CLARK G N H. “ALLACL': !E!RY ¥ YORK [ELDS MAN _ Ve rRapEe = | JESSE. THEATER 'sii2iry=s “THE IRISH IN US JAMES CAGHEY. cnso“o'smzm SYLVAN shke e mmfi.mc‘}:m TREVOR. PALM THEATER o™ BERNHEIMER’S ~ DANCING. CATHERINE BALLE STUDIO—‘IIY y‘%l want to learn to dance well 38-J. 1441 Conn. Acher’s St u. 112 The Edw E 'Vllller “Studiv 814 17th St I lr- Dllte‘ We_Tes R “Phil Hayden Descriptive Catalogue on Reguest le No. 8. 6 Dupont Cirel 594

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