Evening Star Newspaper, October 12, 1936, Page 32

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! B—16 = AMUSEMENTS. Comdr. L.B. Green Paves Way for Samoan Movie Retired Navy Officer to Head Expedition to Islands to Film “Hurricane” for Go BY E. de S. GENTLEMAN well most every one in assist Samuel Goldwyn with This would be Lieut. Gretchen Smith Green, a retired naval to be chosen by Mr. Goldwyn to to leave for this island to see that allsg is in order for the subsequent “shoot- ing” of this important story. Comdr. Green came to Washington | Jast week. Flew back to Hollywood yesterday. He was here to confer With the Navy Department about per- mission to film “Hurricane” in the American Samoan Islands and to use local facilities there. According m‘ reliable information, approval has| been given by the Secretary of the| Navy and the Governor General of the islands, something that is more important than Hollywood is likely to realize. This is due to the fact that | the policy of “Samoa for the Samo- | ans” is rigidly adhered to out there, d this is the first time that the| go” signal has been given for a project of this nature. Comdr. Green, in other words, has | done a good job. He can go to Samoa | tomorrow with his crew and his tech- | nical yes men and feel assured that all will be clear sailing. With him | goes Richard Day, excellent art di- rector, whose work on this week’s “Dodsworth” is something to crow about. * kK X POSTCARD—Dear Mr. M: Am playing in London at the Pallad- fum Theater in “O Kay for Sound.” It's & big hit. Mother and I are en- Joying London very much. Hope you are well. All the best to you. Cheerio. (Signed). PATRICIA BOWMAN. * X X ¥ IRE: Suggest that you catch cur- : rent Paramount News at Earle, Metropolitan or Rialto stop Unusual shots by Paramount Cameraman Ar- thur Menken packed with stark real- ism, drama and pathos of the cap- ture of historic Alcazar and the re- turn to light of its survivors. Best regard. (Signed). BOB DENTON. (Mr. Denton is quite right about this. And remember that Mr. Men- ken—not Baltimore's—has been very much in the news these days.) * x K * ETTER: . .. “All the kids from Washington are here — Helen Shields, Theodore Tiller, Harry Shon- rank, Ann Garret, Florence Morin, ldwyn. MELCHER. known to Washington and to the Navy and to general, is about to go to the island of Samoa to his production of “The Hurricane.” Comdr. Lucien B. Green, husband of Fictionist officer, who has had the good fortune be in charge of an expedition which is about the Stevens wonder, the Rodons and a few I've missed. But their enthus- iasm is grand and they are all ready for the great American play and contracts from Max Gordon.” o s . “Frank Baer.” (“Here” is New York.) * ok ok X ANY thanks to able artist M. H. Herrin for his excellent portrait of Lewis Stone, which' arrived at this desk a day or so ago. * koK % 'YNARA,” with Ronald Colman and Kay Francis comes to the Belasco at a special preview this eve- ning. Remember to pronounce this correctly or the lady at the door may not let you in. The thing to do is not to linger over any one syllable, but to go get through with it all in a jiffy and you won't have any trouble. * X ¥ % HE Great Ziegfeld” will play the Columbia this Friday. The Phil Lamkin Revue is going great guns at the Capitol. Those Elida Ballet Girls deserve plenty of congratulations. They dance as though they liked it. There's no “dying swan” applausauce in any of them. Phil Hayden's back from a hard- work trip in Europe and his school on Dupont Circle has everybody en- rolled but that Dupont Circle foun- tain. So's Ben Greet's School of the Drama. “Anthony Adverse” is now playing at both the Tivoli and the Penn. And in case you forget it, Margaret Sullavan is in Baltimore this week starring in the new Kauffman (re- member)—Ferber play called “Stage Door.” Tonight's “End of Summer” pre- miere at the National is practically a sellout, due not only to the play, the Theater Guild and to the stars, but because Ina Claire is a native D. C—ite. Steve Cochran is back in the fold after a_mean old cold. And Ethel Waters is at the Howard. “End of Summer” Opens at National Tonight INA CLAIRE and Osgood Per- kins come to the National Theater tonight for a week’s en- gagement of S. N. Behrman's “End of Summer.” The play, which ran all last season in New York, is brought here as the sec- ond play of the American Thea- ter Society's subscription season. The cast provided by the Thea- ter Guild includes Stiano Brag- giotti, Susan Fox, Shepperd Strudwick, Jean Adair, Nicholas Joy, Van Heflin and Clifford Brooke. Philip Moeller, respon- sible for a number of other guild hits, directed “End of Summer.” GAYETY SHOW FEATURES; BLOND AND BRUNETTE| Dorothy Dee and Joan Delee Con- tribute Greatly to Bur- lesque Bill. BLOND DOROTHY DEE, fresh from the Texas Centennial Exposit‘xon., we are told, headlines the current | attraction at Col. Lake's emporium | d displays her wares to considerable | advantage. For brunette fans, thei Independent Burlesque Association | bffers Joan Delee as the other spe- cialty artiste. Irma Bogelie takes Marion Mason's spot of last week as featured dancer. The blond Miss Bogelie contributes toe and solo num- bers, together with a novelty tap effort that scores. Joe De Rita, number one comic, is | present as the happy combination of inhegent talent and good material. Joe packs & laughable punch in his b feet and reverts to the original connotation of “burlesque” in present- ing “Major Bowlegged's Amateur Hour,” ranking close to the top in the circuit's scenes to date. Harry Meyers also delivers his full quota of laughs, and when he teams with De Rita, the result is “tops’ as the saying goes. Harry Jackson and | Bobby Burns are excellent “feeders.” Although it entails clambering out | on the proverbial limb, the male member of the team of Wade and ‘Wade, sepia steppers, must be ac- corded the ranking of finest tap dancer in burlesque as it is served up by the I. B. A. While detracting not one whit from the tapping of the combination's other dancer, it should be recorded that Bill Robinson has at least one worthy rival. To Dorothy Sevier and Max De Vol are entrusted the singing chores, and they de- liver appreciated efforts, —C. A. M, TATTOO TELLS FATE Words on Burglar's Neck Dedicate Head to Hangman. BERLIN, October 12 (#).—A bit of sardonic humor was revealed when police captured a gang of burglars after long chase. The leader of the band had these words tattooed around his neck: “This head belongs to the hangman.” e It will pay you to see SHERWOOD before you SHERWOOD 0IL BURNER Visit Showroom 1723 CONNECTICUT AVENUE, N. W, Open Uniil 9 p. m. PHONE Decatur 4181 “THIN MAN” RETURNS FOR REVIVAL AT RIALTO Myrna Loy and William Powell Are Starred in Gayest of Cinema Mysteries. 'HERE was some discussion in cer- tain quarters when Abe Tolkins brought “The Thin Man” into the Rialto for a revival engagement. It was such a top-notch film that every | one who could run, walk or crawl made haste to get to the theater | when it was shown as a first-run at- | traction and some people wanted to known where the customers for the revival would be found. But then it was decided that every one who had seen “The Thin Man” once would go again, so, what with the seven other people who passed the picture up the first time, the Rialto ought to do pretty well by itself this week. This gayest and brightest cinema mystery of all time, this film, which started a new manner in the making of “whodunits,” still has something that hasn't been attained by the photoplays which have attempted to follow in its blithe footsteps. Princi- pally, it has the No. 1 hausfrau of all filmdom, Miss Myrna Loy, and the suavest and most engaging of the motion picture sleuths, Mr. Wil- liam Powell. These two people, of course, could be attained by a given photoplay attempting to follow in the footsteps of “The Thin Man,” but the rub would come in attaining the spirit with which they romp jauntily through the bright intri- cacies of “The Thin Man's” plot. The rub would come also in getting an interesting mystery yarn, mount- ing it upon dialogue that is in exactly the proper humor, to speed it on its way, and then in treating it with the deft touch that has poured deep mystery, high comedy, a clever detec- tive, a happy marriage and a widely varied assortment of characters into a melting pot and brought forth a motion _picture that is nothing short of splendid entertainment every moment. Being all these things, “The Thin Man” certainly is worth a second does, before. B LANK BOOK —H. M. THE EVENING STAR, ' WASHINGTON, D. C., MONDAY, O “Steek ’Em Opp!” Thees wan bad caballero, on left, ees Leo Carrillo; gringo girl in the middle, she ees Ida Lupino, and on right ees wan fine singer, name Nino Martini. They're aiming to entertain you in “The Gay Desperado,” which comes to R-K-0 Keith’s following “My Man Godfrey.” Capital’s Drama Groups HIS week local wooers of the muse of the drama set out to woo the old girl with minds set upon substantial rewards, such as glory and cash | prizes for the winners, The pre- liminaries in this season's repetition of the Capital's annual one-act play | contest, sponsored by the Community | Center Department, gets under way | tomorrow night at Roosevelt High School auditorium, with cash prizes donated by The Star, the Post and the News offering added incentive to The best individual performance will be especially rewarded, too, by the Maud Howell Smith Medal. The first preliminary at Roosevelt tomorrow will offer opportunity for the Players’ Club of Central Commu- nity Center to display its abilities with “A Merry Death,” the George- town Odeon Players, with J. M. ton Wilder's “Queens of France.” Following preliminaries will present and Theatrical Guild of the Depart- ment of Agriculture (that name is even though you've seen it/ and the Eckington Players this Thurs- | day night, and Thespian Society, the | Troupers of East Washington Commu- | nity Center and the Southeast Com- | munity Piayers, Saturday night. Next week the Theater Group of the | Federal Bureau of Investigation, the | Buchanan Parent-Teacher Dramatic Club, the Little Theater of Takoma Park, the Jewish Community Center Theater and the Capital Players will have their innings. Finals will be | held at Roosevelt Saturday, Octo- | ber 24. | . | The secret of the sphinx is bother- | ing the Washington Civic Theater no | no end these days. Not the secret | of what's on the sphinx's mind be- | | hind that expression, but the secret |of how a sphinx is, or should be, | constructed. So if you happen to | know how the Egyptians built the one they stuck up out in the desert, you might let .the Civic Theater's techi- cal director, William Girvan, in on the know. He has to do a sphinx for PAUL TREMAINE and His Orchestra M. A. LEESE Optical Co. You get variety and vaiue here. See our big stock. E. Morrison Paper Co. 9 Pa, Ave. Phone 2945 614 9th St. N.W, married Bob was sur- prised at all the new stockings I bought. Mine wentinto runsso because it preserves stocking elasticity. Why risk cake-soap rubbing or soaps with harmful al- kali? They weaken elasticity—threads break easily, runs start! Safe in water, safe in Lux. 2 One-Act Play Contest Gets Under Way Tomorrow Night at Roosevelt High. BY HARRY MacARTHUR. get out and fight for dear old Siwash. | Synge’s “Riders to the Sea,” and the | ‘Wesley Heights Players with Thorn- | | the dramatic division of the Musical | still startling when you come upon it | suddenly), the Langley Lambs Club | the group’s production of “Caesar and Cleopatra,” at the Wardman Park | Theater October 21, 22, 23 and 24, | but at latest reports he was getting nowhere fast. He has planned big ones and little ones, impressionistic ones and realistic ones, but so far nothing happens in the sphinx depart- ment. Got a little sphinx around the house you'd like to loan & har- rassed technical director? Any aid in technical details of Egyptian sphinx construction prob- ably will be appreciated, for Girvan has other things on his mind—such things as seven sets to build for the play, including minor items like Caesar’s ship and a lighthouse. The Costume Committee, under Mary Woodward Davis, and the Prop Committee, under Virginia Rand Beers, are not exactly sitting back | on their heels laughing at Mr. Girvan and his Problem of the Sphinx, while | all this goes on, either. Such details as robes for Cleopatra, armor for Roman soldiers, “24 spears,” red pop- pies, large gods, small gods and other assorted necessities, manage to keep them pretty busy, Constance Haug, Robert Dillon and Stephen Trodden will play the lead- ing roles in the Blackfriars Guild's first play of the season, “The Risen Generation,” written by the Black- friars’ founder, Rev. Urban Nagle, O. P. Others in the cast are Margaret M. Myers, Gordon Potter, Edgar M. Ford, Mary Black, Jerry Gregg, Jud Black, Jack Kelly, Leo Brady, Julian Zier and Kathleen Crowley. The play already is in rehearsal, under Angela Keir's direction. Shakespearean soliloques will oc- cupy the Shakespeare Society of | Washington when it opens its twen- tieth season tonight at Perkins Hall of the Universalist Church, Sixteenth and S streets. Prof. Marvin T. Herrick of George Washington University will discuss the use of soliloquies in Eliz- | abethan dramas, and his lecture will | AL 2.210_Pounds to the Tom Blue Ridge, Va., Hard H fl. 15 Smokeless Egg, $9.50 Bituminous Coal Witheut Sm t, 80% Lump, $8.50 Blue Egg, $8. Har Structure Pa. Bituminous Makes Only in, White Smeke 759%, Lump Coal, $7.50 Lump Coal, $6.75 s of Virsh in R Opposite Fexace il Distributing Plant be followed by readings of a dozen or more of Shakespeare’s soliloquies by Maurice Jarvis, Ada Townsend, W. E. Bryant, Esther Marshman and Joseph Haltigan. You can try but you can't lose that name. The DraMAtic DiVIsion of the MUsical and TheATrical GUILD of the DePARTment of AGriculture . There's no getting around it; it would have much better rhythm if that last word were longer or shorter. The Government probably wouldn’t change the name of the Department of Agri- culture, though. Even for rhythm. Where and When Current Theater Attractions and Time of Showing. National—“End of Summer,” 8:30 p.m. Earle—"Craig’s Wife,” at 11:10 a.m., 1:40, 4:20, 7:15 and 9:55 p.m. Stage | shows at 12:45, 3:25, 6:20 and 9 p.m. Capitol—"His Brother'’s Wife,” at 11,1 shows at 12:35, 3:30, 6:25 and 9 p.m. Palace—"Dodsworth,” at 11:50 a.m., 2:20, 4:40, 7 and 9:25 p.m. Columbia—"The General Died at| Dawn,” at 11:10 a.m,, 1:15, 3:20, 5:25, | at | 7:30 and 9:35 pm. R-K-O Keith's—"My Man God- | frey,” at 11:35 am, 1:37, 3:39, 5:41, | 7:43 and 9:45 p.m. Metropolitan—"Texas Rangers,” at 11:10 a.m, 1:10, 3:15, 5:20, 7:25 and | 9:30 p.m. Belasco—“Dinner at Eight" at| 11:3¢ am,, 1:43, 3:52, 6:01 and 8:10 p.m. “Cynara” at 9:59 p.m. | Rialto—"Thin Man,” at 2:25, 4:40, | 7:15 and 9:40 p.m. | Little—"Naughty Marietta,” at 11 | am, 1:30, 3:20, 5:27, 6:34 and 9:47 | | pm. Ambassador — “Craig’s 6:15, 8 and 9:50 p.m. Tiveli—“Anthony Adverse,” at 2:05, [ 4:35, 7:05 and 9:30 p.m. Howard—“Final Hour,” at 12:15,, 2:45, 5:15,7:45 and 10:15 p.m. Stage shows, with Ethel Waters, at 1:45, 4:15, 6:45 and 9:15 pm. Wife,” at WHERE TO DI Tuesday Dinner Special Cafeteria Only soe Baked r- Cured Ham New peas and carrots Glazed Apples LOTOS LANTERN 13th St of Every Type LAUNDERED So They Hang Perfectly LACE CURTAINS 50°¢- Ruffled, Scrim, Etc. 35¢- Your curtains are carefully washed, starched and stretched to original size. Ruffles are accordion pleated. Your curtains will be beau- tifully finished and returned new-like. Dupont’'s Dry C 4:30. 7:20 and 10 p.m. Stage | CTOBER 12, 1936. AMUSEMENTS. Jooss Ballet Outdistances All Major Dance Group Wins Productions Distinction in Pres- entation of ‘“The Green Table” at the National. BY ALICE dramatic contrast was again EVERSMAN. proven last evening, at their return appearance at the National Theater, in the arrangement of the THA‘!‘ the innate power of the Jooss Ballet lies in a keen feeling for program presented. The line between comdy and drama was sharply dfined between the numbers preceding the intermission and “The Green Table,” which formed the concluding number, led the comedy theme with other | ballet, which won for its creator his. first fame four years ago in Paris, was_enhanced and the character of the art of this dance group more clearly accentuated by the clever bal- ance of the program planning. At the same time one gained a more comprehensive idea of the funda- mentals which form the appeal of this distinctly unique ballet group. The mere technique of the dance takes a secondary place or is so closely inter- woven with the art of pantomime, facial expression and interpretive feel- | ing that it becomes, in fact, the last point to be considered in a judgment of the whole. Yet in analyzing the bodily movements, suppleness, grace and strength flow together in so perfect accord as to keep the rhythm of mo- tion one of superb elasticity. Every movement of feet, body, hands or head is full of meaning, the details of which are absorbing to watch. It is the concentration on the ideas to be developed, however, which dom- inates the entire evening's perform- ance. Through a highly cultivated histronic sense the story is unfolded with cargfully chosen action in which | powerful eflect. By this art, which | conceals art, simplicity, the final goal of great drama, is reached. A unity of spirit prevades the group so that | one passes on from a momentary ad- miration for a single dancer to a | greater appreciation of the entire | presentation. All but one number on the program was seen at last Winter's appearance of the ballet. This was the delightful “Johann Strauss, Tonight,” an amus- sipy atmosphere of the time. Struller and Elsa Kahl in the, roles of the devil and his grandmother, e e e o UPHOLSTERY CLEANERS Let the original uphelstery cleapers clean || your furniture. done in {he home. '—NO ODO! work is dome. TIRALLA PROCESS CLEANING CO. 1440 R St. NW. PO. 3234 HUFNAGEL COAL CO. & ALASKA COAL CO. DES_OF D COALS. leaning Service Expert cleaning of ladies’ suits, coats, dresses, men’s suits, topcoats, o'coats, hats, etc. The finest dry cleaning possible to offer at reasonable charges. Send us your cleaning now. Cal IMRS. HUNT COL. 7020 Now, up to 8 P.M. tonight or any time’ tomorrow. Let Mrs. Hunt tell superior features of Du Phone her now—Col DUPONT LAU ou the nt Cleaning. NDRY 2535 Sherman Ave.—Col. 7020 slight but telling touches register with | The forcefulness of this < leading roles excellently portrayed by Hans Zuellig, Noelle de Mosa, Rudolf Pescht and Atty van den Berg. “Ballade,” with its story based on an old Prench song, to music by John Colman was the opening number, the four characters of the king, queen, the marquis and the marquise, sketched as beautifully as in some old painting by Rudolf Pescht, Louise Solberg, Hans Zuellig and Noelle de Mosa. “The Big City,” also seen here last season, was another exhibition | of expert stagecraft allied to the dance, with its clever changing of | scene, its splendid detail and char- | acter study. The final number, “The Green Table,” was not only the climax of the program but the climax of the creative art of Kurt Jooss. The mag- nificent audacity of placing in juxta- position the heartlessness of those who plan war and the toll in suffer- ing of such wide ramifications, of those who must obey, is one of the greatest ideas to be produced in the | name of the dance. From the first part of the program, the Jooss Ballet | could be considered a very skillful and | artistic group, but with its interpreta- tion of “The Green Table” it out- distances all major productions before the public today. . A new golf census in Great Britain Tonlzht at 8:30 \ Mats. Wed. and \ The Theatre Guild Prese; Second Play of the American Soclety “END OF SUMMER" 8 N, .!“.'Al“ Comedy Wit INA CLAIRE 0SGOOD PERKINS And a Distinguished Theatre Gulld Cast NEXT MON. SEATS THURS, SAM H. HARARAIS Presents JANE , FIRST COWL" LADy The New Yori Comedy Success By Katherine Dayfon & George . Kaufman DIRECT FROM AN ENTIRE SEASON AT THE MUSIC BOX THEATRE ON BROADWAY Washington CIVIC THEATER Season of Eight Grand Plavs At Wardman Park Theater First Play—October 21-24 Shaw’s ‘Caesar & Cleopatra’ N_TICK! Now R Hotel 'A'CADEMY Of Pe @ Photoniay 8th at G S.E. E. Lawrence Phillips’ Theatre Beautiful Continuous From 4:30 P.M. “LITTLE MISS NOBODY." with JANE WITHERS. “THE LITTLE RED SCHOOL __HOUSE.”_with FRANK COGHLAN. JR. CLAIE.\‘?DN C. Ave SE_ FROM = e ] == , Ave. A CIRCLE = peee' Parkine." Y000 X 1. GENE RAYMOND and ANN SOTHERN in “WALKING ON AIR" News DUMBARTON c'itier it Eondiniomea ROBERT MONTGOMERY, MADGE EVANS in_“PICCADILLY JIM." News_Come FATRMWNA OSTIA, [ RO T‘anTNW GIRLS" DORMITORY ' ERTON A | ing creation inspired by the famous | Strauss waltzes and which revisualized, | in parody, the light-hearted and gos- | oOtto | Robert TAYLOR Barbara STANWYCK “HIS BROTHER'S WIFE” with Jean Hersholt .S'l(,- PHIL LAMPKIN'S VARIETIES Coming Friday . . . *’RAMONA "' —in eoler! LORETTA YOUNG — DON AMECHE AL TRAHAN on the soge A VZ SINCLAIR LEWIS' “DODSWORTH"' ik WALTER HUSTON RUTH CHATTERTON MARY ASTOR — PAUL LUKAS Wext Hit—SHIRLEY TEMPLE w “Dimples” GARY COOPER MADELEINE CARROLL “The Ceneral Died at Dawn™ ROSALIND JONN RUSSELL _ BOLES “CRAIG'S WIFE" On Stagr | METROPOLITAN NOW 2.4 WEEK DOWNTOWN “TEXAS A Paramount Picture With FRED MacMURRAY & JACK OAKIE Now THEY'RE HERE AGAIN! In That Grand Mystery Comedy THE AN - WITH WILLIAM POWELL MYRNA LOY SMOKING IN MEZZANINE 25¢ to 5:30; 30c-40c after 5:30 Reserved Box Seats, 55¢ KEITH S .¢ A WASHINGTON INSTITUTION €)no- WEEK.... for POWELL LOMBARD W THE NEW UNIVEASAL PICTURE "MY MAN GODFREY" with ALICE BRADY axo ondd. . - . “THE MARCH OF TIME" : - v BELAST See Two Features For- One Admission RONALD COLMAN KAY FRANCIS YNARA ‘Today. “Dinner at 0 vow 110 P. tht™ | NELSON. “NA Direction of Sidney Lust WARNER BROS. THEATERS 9th Between F and G Aconsticon Held Over Second Week EDDY. JEANETTE MACDONALD, UGHTY MARIETTA.” With Frank Morgan. March of Time. LITTLE 7R a o Ing. “i\‘ Continuous PFrom 6:00 P.) “POOR LITTLE RICH GIRL" SHIRLEY TEMPLE Patsy Kelly Comedy 6th and C Finest Son: Eavioment Prom 5:3( M. W in _“THE BRIDE FORGE O'BRIEN in PATROLMAN " 6910 Wis Ave. Bethesds. Md. WILL ROGERS in “STATE FAIR.” MARCH OF TIME, No. 18. News and Mickey Mouse. FALLS CHURCH, VA. N ORRIES LEE N OMA W Farvine Tr ROBERT MO! JOMERY “PICCADILLY JIM. And_Selected _Sho Nea Peature mand 1d Colman. Myrna Loy Arrow: Jimmy_Allen. “Sks_Parade. CAMEQ " ™2 Richard Dix in ARCADF Todav-Tomor WARNER BAXTER and MYRNA LOY in “To Mary—With Love.” RICHMOND ALEEARPRA MM PAT O'BRIEN in “CHINA CLIPPER” _ MILO O N ANNIVERSARY WEEK. Randolph Scott in _ | “Last of the Mohicans. 'AMBASSADOR DO! MENJ( G. BABY, SING." Mickey AVALON % &% * 35me SIMONE SIMON in “GIRLS' DORMI- B R RN AVENUE GRAND ¥ Matinee. RANDOLP;I BCOTT and FRANCES DRAKE in “AND SUDDEN DEATH." o3 e AR TR _ 3 LY ROBERTS. 3 O'BRIEN. BEVERLY ROBI HOME, . N B RRENHDEE X ANDER and BEVERLY RO » A ue “ANTHONY 'ADVERS with Fredric March and Olivia De Havilland. Peatures shown e 4:40, 7 :d‘u‘:u PM Matinee: 15¢c. Nights ZCAduit, hi o SAVOY ", St. & Phone “THE CASE OF THE VEL CLAWS.” with WARREN WILLIAM and CLAIRE DODD. Silly Syme phony N.W. TIVOLL 4 558 Taf* Bea™ " “ANTHONY ADVERSE,” with Fredric March and Olivia De Havilland. Feature shown #:25 P.M dren. 15¢ Children. YORK 5,887 Toie MYRNA LOY and? WARNER BAXTER in TO MARY—WITH LOVE." 20¢;_ Carrier Air Conditioned. “PEPPER,” E WITHERS and IRVIN S. COBB. Cartoon. 3 ‘omedy. nd K. I Ave. N.W. SYLVAN her A ‘Gonatisanes “GIRLS’ DORMITORY,” SIMONE SIMON. HERBERT MAR- SHA medy. _ N PALM THEATER """ “PICCADILLY JIM,” ROBERT MONTGOMER' EVANS. Comedy = ik BERNHEIMER’S Y. Noveity. DANCING. (Over 40.000 Pupils in U. DON MARTIN “America’s Noted Instructor” Studios in Pittsburgh—Cincinnati—Louisville Waltz—Fox Trot—Tango Talented Teachers Private Lessons ttention to ners bept e Edward F. Miller Studlo TR Sl W el i

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