Evening Star Newspaper, April 17, 1940, Page 42

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AMUSEMENTS. ONLY AT ARBAUGH’S 2606 Conn. Ave. Can You Get Real BAR-B-Q SPARERIBS d Ared Charcoal Broiled Steaks AN SR hrsiled, Bte Choose from an un. limited s i and styies Fi 2045 for E. Morrison Paper Co. 1009 PA AVE NW . THEATER PARKING SEM.TO o 5 b 12 P.M. CAPITAL GARAGE _1320 N. Y. Ave., Bet. 13th & 14th_ Baldwin. . Tll Il’!'fl!lu of lI win Erand iveness e r's toueh and Plane. ‘More LOW SPRING PRICES Highest Qualitv—Lowest Price 240 Pounds te the Ton ILUE RIDGE VA. HARD ILUE RIDGE SMOKELESS No Smoke, I.ot or Gas Egg --$8.50 809 $7.95 Nut__$8.95 Nu}&Shck 51 00 Stove (Oil Treated) .75 POCAHONTAS OIL-TIEATED Egg, $10.25; Stove, $10.00 Pea, Delivered In ba harge, Due to some bi {han others, you wil reeeive from e Buigees b = extra ite. Call us for our I 5 E DELIVER b, Ton and Up Over 20.000 New Cus 3 years In” Batiimore snd Washington. Money-Back Guarantee We_ Sell All Kinds World's Largest Ref Anthracite BLUE RIDGE COAL CO. Miners of Virginia Anthracite Hard Cogl. * Alexandria R4 8g Wash. Va. 5, Orders Taken Day snd Nisht awaits you at Hogate's . . . ton's Largest Sea Food Restaur Famous for their deep-sea delicac: prepared in visible kitchens. Located on the banks of the Potomac. & mar- velous view is afforded of motable points of interest. - LUNCHEONS from 50c DINNER Entrees from 60c Phone REpublic 3013 for party reservations. . HOGATE’S Sea Food Restaurant Ave. A, 1011 Connecticut Sat. $2. Danc- THE TROIK, Dinner or supper. $1.50; 7 to 3. Continental Revues twice -tghuy and Sundass. No cover. Luncheon, ly;_dancing. THE mGnnNGAI.E. Richmond Hrwy., 3% mi. south of Alex. Dancing. 9:30 to nightly, including Sun. Eseet l'lnl by B‘fl vner's_Orchestra. Temple 4640. Ill FLAGSHIP, 3135 K N.W. D\ to $1.50. No cover. Min., H l 50. “No min. for dinner guest: Sainment by Brooke Johns. _Resv. ) ROOM at WESLEY HALI 17 3 fi'nk{fi‘kl.n here. ‘BC(SL tf,gnd‘ “’l‘illul rvice: ., most fastidion Luncheon, 76c; dinner, $1:50. o RIVIE] Hotel 240" 16th_St. dancing _to PE(e Mlcilb Orchestra, telluran Adele Van, N eover ncenz Bnt eve., mm "ROOM, Hoicl, - Lon Brown s Orcher thru Thurs.. $1.00; Fri, *l 5 Dancing 9:30_to 1:30._CO. 20t ON “STAUMNT Wi BAPRILLON | RESTAYRANT. Washingion hv%me place to dine, the pop ance. BHAR-ZAD. Carlton Hofel Dancing to e Dufty’s Orchesira, featuring Claire Marin, Bat0 7, Min.. $1.50 aft 10 pm., Sat. s flo glounu BLUE_ROOM, Connecticut at Dining and dancing. =Two fi 1:30. Dinner, 82 AD. 0700. ND CLUB GARDI eRuie Nadme - a De luxe dinner. $1 aney- 1 ucxack Phom Hlllslde mmo ROOM. Hotel, R CCockta Mad dimner dancing, per dancing to Milt Daviss Orcl Min., Saturday onl: verlookini and H Sts. Dining in an here of charm. dignity and_gen- TLuncheon. 8hc: dinner from $1.2 Organ music nightly during dinner. 3-DAY SPECIAL!! Thursday, Friday, Sdurday Men’s or Ladies’ Our regu- lar 79c half sole job at a great savings. Workmanship and materials guaran- teed. ONE-DAY DRY CLEANING Suits Sponged and Pressed A & A VALET SERVICE NA. 1059 2 doors from G 710 14th St. N.W. | appears daily in her column. | ing?” | Laughton’s at the Royal Academy | of Dramatic Art in London and re- |a place as she dreamed, however, |in this country was conducting an THE EVENING. Film Columnist Discussed In Report on a Reporter Sheilah Graham, Who Is That Pretty, Believes Her Readers Are Her Best Friends After All By JAY CARMODY. It takes a large, and to some extent lustrous, group of columnists to cover the day to day doings in Hollywood. There are a lot of widely separated studios, private lives, etc., to be invaded daily in quest of those tidbits of news and gossip in which the public has indicated a glowing curiosity. The exact number of the invading force is some- thing no one apparently ever has counted on his fingers. The roundest — number among the guesses one hears would appear to be 200. That includes syndicated columnists, spe- cial correspond- ents for news- papers and mag- azines, repre- sentatives of the trade press and simple notebook carriers who go around with the haunted look of people who would like to be writers. Bumping into these scurrying scribes at cor- . ners, stages, c commissaries, it Jay Carmedy. eventually dawns upon the visting columnist that he might do a casual portrait of some one in this busy, dizzy branch of the industry. ‘The subject naturally would be Sheilah Graham, no matter how much it looks like rolling a log. Miss Graham’s face and talent are too well known on this page that they should not be supplemented by further details, a Boswellian bit of how she got, and stays, that way. Because Hollywood columnists, regular and visiting, are busy, the good offices of Paramount are invoked to bring Miss Graham and us together., We both happened to be going there at the same time and Rufus Blair thought it would be fine if we had luncheon together. We did and that’s how we learned about Sheilah Graham, whom we had met before, but more or less in passing. In the first place, blond, blue- eyed Miss Graham is quite as pretty as that half-column picture whifih n fact, she is prettier, which we hope finally answers all those questions: “Is Sheilah Graham that good look- Miss Graham, English born, ar- rived at columning via the stage. She was a fellow student of Charles calls having played a very bad (that's the critic in her) Queen to Laughton’s King Claudius in “Ham- let.” That was not the end of her stage career, for she learned to sing and dance, which with that face and figure earned her a place on the musical stage. Never was it such and when the chance came to do newspaper work in America, which she does not pronounce “Ameddica,” she leaped atvit. * kK % Although to this day she is un- certain of what she knows about love—as who is not—her first job advice to the lovelorn column in New York. Every day she expected to be fired, first because she worked for a capricious publisher and second because she was unhappy always about how much good or harm she might be doing to the lovelorn. The two survived some- how as good companions for more than two years. Then came the Hollywood opening. Miss Gruhnm\ seized it. That was four years ago. Miss. Graham still is working for the same boss, the North American Newspaper Alliance, as you should have noticed, reading that daily parenthetical tag on her column. Four years as a top-notch Holly- wgod columnist means durability. PIANOS for RENT Good salection of new el peighe and spinee for ront o rom 38 montbly - Al low retee oo ‘baby graads cad conscies Mosey you pey as rewtal it be deducted Hrom oo youbuy later. Call ‘NAtional 3223 JORDAN'S Corner 13th & 6 S ALASKA- HUFNAGEL ] Better grade coals—no higher price 8 Yards for Quick Delivery Bass Bin_at No Exira Charse BLACK DIAMOND—Bituminous Hard Structare, Licht Smoke, Ees Size, $7.95; 75% Lump. $3.15: 50% 5. Larap and Fine Ooal rately. MABYLAND SMOKELESS—A Lamp, 87,05, Nat oine. 885 VIRGINIA HARD COA.I-S 8 75! Slove. .00;_ Nut Pes ”lu Stove PA IIARD COALS Alaska Nusget, Anthraite — Stove, $1 Pes, $10.10; roughly screened _and inteed. We Deliver 1;-Ton Orders. DIAL NA. 5885 or Jackson 2000 ORDERS TAKEN DAY OR NIGHT Seasoned Oak, Firesl 813 ull , l!‘l lel“'Mo. HATS Cleaned and Blocked While-You-Wait Service HOLLYWOOD. * Unless, of course, one is & punch puller, succumbs to the pressure of well-acted charm, is a victim of glamouritis or, in other words, for- gets that cinema columning is sup- to be an objective business. Miss Graham has done none of these things. She went to Hollywood with instructions that popularity there was one thing, popularity with read- ers in Washington and elsewhere quite another. She has remembered them, regardless of temptations. She knows a great many persons in the cinema do not like her. We know it, too, for some of our mutual acquaintances (we almost said “com- mon”) have not minded saying so. From the standpoint of a depart- duental editor, it is very nice of Miss Graham to have put them in the spot where she gets no vote of theirs. That gives her our vote and, we hope, that of her readers. Hollywood stars and Hollywood press agents recognize Miss Graham as possessing one of the most pa- trician noses that ever smelled a rat. She can detect one at a distance of several miles, an art developed by listening to, or reading, a dozen phoney stories a day. Indeed, amidst all those tales of romance between this star and that, Miss Graham has learned enough of truth and falsity in love that she thinks she could conduct a better lovelorn column today than when she was paid for it. * k% % Unlike a great many columnists, Miss Graham is a reporter instead of some one to whom studio press agents report. She gathers her own material, via visits to the studios in a popular-priced car which is famous for its ownership, its age and its blue color. She brings to her studio tours, whether they involve friendly or enemy country, the qualities of observation and skepticism. She makes the fullest possible use of both and does not mind whether the report, her column, is something etched in acid or concocted of spun sugar. Like any normal human STAR, WASHINGTO! D. C; PRETTY AS A PICTURE—And this is to prove that Miss Sheilah Graham, the Hollywood columnist, is as pretty, or prettier than that half-column likeness of her which appears on these pages with considerable regularity. Miss Graham is the subject of Mr. Carmody’s Hollywood report today. being, but prettier, Miss Graham could hope for the latter, but she does not feel it is her fault when it happens to be the former. Intelligently, she admits to prefer- ences and prejudices among the players whose names dot her column. She tries, however, to separate the personal from the professiomal atti- tude and she definitely does not agree with the idea that such a thing is impossible in the case of a woman columnist. Makes her angry even to hear it mentioned. To be the kind of columnist she Movies That Really Move Now Are in the Making Producers Are Turning Attention Toward Action in Many of the Coming Photoplays By HARRY MacARTHUR. Movement is the one thing & motion picture must not be without. That is a dangerous admission upon the part of one who has snarled and been driven into a pettish state for several days at the mere sight | of a picture which has been just a fast retelling of a story told too many, many times before. Seldes, authoritative critics; that the motion picture owes its strange lure to the | fact that it is what its name implies, that the people and objects photo- | graphed are not stationary but in action. ‘You know yourself that you have | been happier than you otherwise would have been with some ordinary | boy-meets-girl, boy-loses-girl, boy- gets-girl just because he has met her, lost her and got her at a fast| clip. And some of those adventures of the “Lone Ranger” have been a lot more exciting than many more expensive photoplays, just because the Lone Ranger kept moving. This is no desertion of the psycho- logical drama or the comedy of brit- | tle dialogue for an espousal of the cause of physical action. “Rebecca,” for instance, is psychological dram: but Director Alfred Hitchcock saw to it that it is a motion picture which moves. Rather this sudden attention to movement in the cine- ma has been inspired by a sudden at- tention on thé part of the film pro- | ducers to movement—to films roar- ing with action. ‘Warner * Bros, of course, have never been without action so long as there has been room on the lot to erect a prison set and a street for a game of cops-and-robbers. But the more expensive films are turning back to those old days of | actior: and more action, too. Those same Warners gave us just recently “Virginia City” and about the same time Spencer Tracy and the Indians were battling furiously in M-G-M'’s “Northwest Passage.” Metro has another important affair in the process of shooting which is going to be in the fast-and- furious category when it emerges. This is “Boom Town,” which prom- ises: Five fights involving Spencer Tracy and Clark Gable, a scrap be- tween two dance hall girls, & blazing oil fire, shooting in the streets, and sundry other moments devoted to deeds, not talk. Mr. Cecil B. De Mille is readying “North West Mounted Police,” Errol Flynn is swashbuckling again in “The Sea Hawk,” Columbia is ex- amining the Wild West in a picture called “Arizona.” And there are more, so it appears as though any number of our future fiims are going to move, whatever else remains to be said of them. * ok k% Outdoor action dramas require an outdoor setting and that brings us around to Gov. Bob Jones of Arizona, Arizona being one of the cinema's favorite outdoor settings. Gov. Jones is protesting, according to the Associated Press, at Secretary Ickes’ imposition of special fees on studios filming motion pictures in territories under the jurisdiction of the De- partment of Interior. The fee schedule announced by Secretary Ickes calls for payment of $50 a day for a cast of less than 5 persons, $250 a day for a cast of 5 to 25 persons, and $500 for a cast of more than 25 persons. Gov. Jones plans to protest to Washing- ton. He fears the special fee busi- ness will drive the movie makers to other locales and that Arizons will lose at least part of $2,000,000 he estimates the studios would spend there in the next two years. * koK % Bhootlnx from the Cuff . arry Anger is planning lnother edmon of “Gentlemen Be Seal the Earle's second annual stream- lined minstrel show. It is scheduled for the week of April 26, with Gus. Van and Charles “Sim” Timblin a8 1. But this has long been the opmion or Mr. Giloert one of the cinema's most % headliners. . . . There won't be any tickets to the Glenn Miller Broad- | It took just two and a half hours to dispose of the 1500 ducats for last night's, tonight's and tomorrow night's shows. The tickets are given out “on demand.” and the demand, |the boys at WJSV say, has been | something awe- mspmng to see. . . . ‘ucest booking of “Gone With the | Wind” is by Sidney Lust's Bethesda | Theater, which is, of course, in Bethesda. It starts a four-day run there, with matinee and evening performances, May 5. . Universal | Studios would like us to remind Yyou that it was New Universal which comedy role in “It's a Date,” * | instead of R-K-O as we said. So it is at R-K-O Keith's, which is close. . . . “Ferdinand the Bull,” Ferdinand the Immortal, as brought to the screen by Walt Disney, is the running mate of “It Happened One Night” at the Little. . . . From Hollywood Columnist Harold Heffer- nan: “Forewarned and Forearmed Department: Maureen O'Hara sub- scribes to a clipping service and reads all the reviews of her pictures. And she's an expert at jiu-jitsu.” Can’t scare us. This department’s fondness for Maureen, jiu-jitsu or no, is on record. Jumper Jumps To get a shot of what a ski-jumper sees as he whizzes down a mountain side for a secen in “The Mortal Storm,” cameramen rigged up a sled on a cable and a photographer got on wit. his camera. En route down the hill, the cahle broke and the sled sailed unhampered. As it ap- proached a precipice, the camera- man took a chance and jumped. s Pupils in Program La Vergne Fairchild will give a {full pupil recital in the lounge at the ‘Washington Sanitarium in Takoma Park, tomorrow evening at 7:15, for the guests of the institution and their friends. ANCIN ot nt 0 \ m"‘"‘mm& 9“': the P‘ Dfl“".dg 0 O ond under ¥ strt vision © e esson est 18 dios %on ‘55 M. | casts over WISV from the Wardman | | Park Theater until next Monday. | |made Walter Pidgeon happy with | ‘93!(30 wants to be, Miss Graham lives pretty much alone and likes it. The one aspect of it that she does not like is that which comes from hging spinsterish in her fears. She ad- mits she goes almost as far as looking under the bed for any casual menace which might be lurking there. Don't, however, get the idea that Miss Graham is an old maid from that. She was mar- ried. It did not work, but Miss Graham would try again, with a not illogical preference for a rich man. Being faintly and frankly scatter- brained about some subjects, she needs a secretary. The secretary not only keeps household and busi- ness affairs in hand, but is handy for typing purposes. Miss Graham types atrociously; is certain no edi- tor would bother reading her column if he saw the original. (She's never seen a Harry MacArthur original) Her favorite pastimes are reading, at which she is voracious, and ten- nis, at which she is so skilled she challenges males who fancy their games. If she ever stops writing a column, she will write a book. She will | write the book anyhow if she ever Whatever else its sins, they are minor ones so long as the fillm moves. | 7 finds the time. She ought to have a lot of good material. i AMUSEMENTS QUEEN OF THE AMAZONS SEATS {100 ANN_CORIO Stadium _Twice Daily_ 3&8PM._ CHILDREN'S HOSPITAL PRESENTS wwws CIRCUS WIRTH'S Mightiest Array of Arenic end Clnu: Snn TICKET! &_PENN) NE Reratode Auts Livm sEALD: INGS, AS WELL AS AT THE STADIUM. AMUSEMENTS 1 TO 12 P.M. NEW THRILLING RIDE “FLYING SCOOTER” ADDED TO THE MORE THAN 50 OTHER AMUSE- MENTS. PAUL KAIN ORCH. OF 12 AT THE BALLROOM FROM 9 TO 12 DANCING. na nce ‘Tues.—Fri.—Saf Instruction Belore the Dance Private Lessons—Moderate Rates Special Rates to Couvles and Grouss anelis Dance Studios 724 11th St. N.W. District 1673 * 9-13 n mfl"“’:" jios O i “Trover S aritys AL in ol su° Presic Wucuofl ‘( \_e\‘OY MD“"S o N’-‘“ todoY \\90' merico: ?w\h 0 da‘\\l ooPM WEDNESDAY, APRIL 17, 1940. Where and When Current Theater Attractions and Time of Showing National—Dark. Palace — “Rebecca,” with Lau- rence Olivier and Joan Fontaine in the leading roles: 10:45 am., 1:25, 4:10, 6:50 and 9:35 pm. Keith’'s—“It's & Date,” the new Deanna Durbin adventure: 11:30 am., 1:30, 3:30, 5:30, 7:30 and 9:30 —“Too Many Husbands,” with Jean Arthur in that irregular but exciting predicament: 11 am., 1:40, 4:30, 7:15 and 10 pm. Stage shows: 12:50, 3:35, 6:20 and 9:10 pm, Capitol —“Dr. Cyclops,” a mad scientist tries a new reducing cure: 11 am., 1:45, 4:40, 7:25 and 10 pm. Stage shows: 12:55, 3:50, 6:35 and 9:15 pm. Metropolitan—“Road to Singa- pore,” laughs with Bing Crosby and Bob Hope: 11:35 am., 1:40, 3:40, 5:40, 7:45 and 9:45 pm. Columbia—*“The House Across the Bay,” in which Joan Bennett awaits an imprisoned husband: 11:45 am., 1:45, 3:45, 5:45, 7:50 and 9:50 p.m. Belasco — “Louise,” with Grace Moore singing the leading role: 4:25, 6:15, 7:55 and 9:40 pm. Trans-Lux —News and shorts, continuous from 10 a.m. Little—"It Happened One Night,” —_— AMUSEMENTS. Jean ARTHUR FRED & MELVYN MacMURRAY “T”‘W“ Laugh Hit % — Al New Personalities. ““Hew Faces of 1940” MARY AL — NE MEISH, R RIYETES & 6mES Coming Friday Sth Sprieg Parade it THEY HID FROM TOMORROW «<IN EACH OTHER'S ARMS! MERLE Usmu AWARNER BROS. Pictwre PAT 0'BRIEN BINNIE BARNES FRANK McHUGH plus on stage 'SPRINGTIME FROLIC Warner Bros METROPOLITAN LAST 2 DAYS m-h-- Eorle s--m- I TECRNICOLOR IN PERSON AMUSEMENTS, return of the Capra prize-winner: 11 am, 1:15, 3:25, 5:30, 7:40 and | ———= 9:50 p.m, Open-Air — “Secret Agent.” with Peter Lorre and Madeleine Carroll: 7:55 and 10:05 p.m. . Dance Recital Vytautas Beliajus, authority on the folklore of many lands, and his talented Lithuanian group, will pre- sent a dance recital Thursday, April 25 at 8:00 pm. in the Garden Tea House of the Dodge Hotel. The accompanist for the group will be Helen Pechukaitis, graduate of the Chicago Conservatory of Music, who will sing also a series of Lithuanian folk songs. The program is under the spon- sorship of the Lithuanian section of the Baltic American Society of ‘Washington. AMUSEMENTS. v REITH'S ™ A WASHINGTON INSTITUTION' Her 7th Successive Hit! msrrruTion AT U mmvm' R '-mh DONALD DUCK .. GINGER ROGERS JOEL McCl EA in The PRIMROSE PATH BELASCO * One Week Only! HOLLYWOOD'S NEWEST GLAMOUR STAR . Theaire ‘Beautiful. From 5 P.M. ADOLPHE MENJOU in "I'hat’s nght You re Wrong.’ “MIRACLES FOR SALE,” With ROBERT YOUNG. FLORENCE RICE AT 1331 B St. NE _ Al 8300 Matinee. 1 P.M. Double Peature—_HEDY LAMARK. SPENCER TRACY in *1 TAKE THIS E. Lawrence Phi Cnnlln Also DITH. LON CH __BICKPORD in_* ur MICE AND MEX CAROLINA 't & N. C. Ave. SE. = ED] ANNA NEAGLE in d_“SCAND! BFOADWAY MELODY OF 1940 wm'ro" 1343 Wlmlfln Ave, JOEL_MCCREA and NANCY KELLY in O e MARRIED His WIFE." News and 8hort Subje FAIRLAWN o ‘LITTLE OLD NEW YORK." with ALICE __PAYE. FRED MacMURRAY, R. GREENE. GREENBELT 28wzt 23 FREE PARKING. No_ Movies—-Greenbelt Plazers in Stage ALLEY. Admission, 25c. _Curtain—8:15. LIDQ 3= » u N.W. NELSON EDDY HIDDEN l‘N’ll(Y 25 IITTLE = S wnn i “It Happened One _Night.” with WELL. “NEW SEATS l.lml MEW. Ftickey TREBONEY 1n " mnn JEFF." Also on the 8sme Program. PRESTON FOSTER in "THE LAST MILE." BETHESD BN e T el BEROS. TPACK LIG! UP_YOUR TROUB! K near 9th. HIPPODROME , 552t KAY _FRANCIS, “COMET R BROADW. “BLONDIE BRINGS MT. RAINIER, MD. At 6:50. 9 Baltime Hvattaville. AYATTS POWELL, or 1940." THE "WIND" Starts Reserved Seats on Sale lomvm.:. MD. Sontinuous 711 \MILY ROBIN! Direction of SIDNEY LUST ‘WIND' AOHI 52, Reserved Seats on Sale &t omce ; WILSON 7,8~ RONALD CO!)‘AN FAILED.” 3166 Wilsen Bivd. ASHTON o ons. g, 1158 CAROLE LOMBARD. THE NIGHT.” chmGHAMGmM nm Dr. ANN SOTHERN and RITA IORNBON 1 AI.EXANfiRlA. VA FREE Foone Alex. 3485 Showing ANl This Week. WITH THE “GONE WIND.” Matinee m%nmn Daily from 10 AM. Nights at 8 P rved. $1.10. M lxce]lem Seats Avllllhle hr All Perf ances. Telephone reservations wccepted. RICHMOND fosis, Sovet, Phone Alex. 226. SHIRLEY TEMPLE in_“THE BLUEBIRD.” HISERBETHESDA 8.7 &7 Doihrads.” 1. At s lnd R0 B PRveTOn r CAFE HOSTESS.” At 7. 945 PM_ROBT MONTGO! “THE EARL OF CHICAGO.” FALLS CHURCH. VA. ,, R %as STATE FREE rnln« Now, Thru Saturdav “GONE WITH THE WIND.” Seats Avulllbl! lor lvtnl Performa atin aily af A . and 2 720 Wilson Bive Colonial Village. ‘LIGHT THAT LEE %“qnm @ -EIS orL N \ DON'T MISS IT NOW! ALWAYS WANTED TO SEE!, Last Public Showmgl HEDY LAMARR = WAkNm BROS. THEATERS Wlll lll. NEXT MON. EVE Web. and Sat. SEATS O SALE (I Am'lfinm KOUTH ONE HICHMOND HICHwa v TRANS-LUX z5aci PGB MDA U!UAI. OCCUPATIONII DIS- :flfé‘.‘.‘: SHORT SUBJECTS In Piano Recital TONIGHT AT 8:30 Hall of Nations, Washington Hotel Tickets—81 an, (hetuding Govt. Tax) ¢ Jordan's Box Office 1239 G N.W. Re. 4433 Ne. 3223 11 A.M. Continuous Every Day! 25¢ UNTIL 1 P.M.—35¢c UNTIL 5 P.M.—55¢ TO CLOSING THE PICTURE YOU JEAN ARTHUS: FRED’ MILVYNDSDOUGLAS in Mat. 1 P. LE BRIAN AERNE “VIGIL T HE x:mhn" At 1 3 Wi n_ “THE }: RLICH'S I(AGl(s.‘m!RUYT.L L 8he For Additional Information Phone Theaters Direct LI zl.n Mat, oL1V; QUIYIA De HAVILLAND E CHICKADEE." At 1" ve. Performances. TPOIIO o B 8 NE EDWARD _G._ROBINSO] “THE STORY DR. mucfls MAGIC AVE, GRAND *» PiAve BE. BURGESS MEREDITH. Lo NEL Jr R ALto Short COLONY ID’lB CHANEY, .vr N Fine SR EREDI | oF chz AND Call REpublic 0800 C St In the Event of Busy Signal an:u Jon 8t NW. 4968, MARGARET | !ULLAVAN AME! STEWART i) ob AHObNS THE conm TR SECO ot & dri s s INEY. IN| mncx HARDY AND BON." A1 6 £ Short_Subject. AKE WO 7:45, 9:50. Newsreel. NEWTON == “INTERME Q— A LOVE STORY,” !m HOWAH.D INGRID ‘-fl ‘I TAKE THIS WOMAN.’ SPENCER _TRACY. HEDY vaN 1st IL II‘ ik “Invisible Man Retums VINCENT PRICE. NAN { GREY. PALM THEATER °= 2% “BROADWAY MELODY OF 1940 FRED ¢STAIRE and ELEANORE [ WI’!.L STA!"bN l'lnm snul lnh-l BETTE DAVIS and ERROL, FLENN 1n “THE PRIVATE LIVES OF ELIZABETH AND ESSEX,” ‘Wish OLIVIA De HAVILLAND. o Also “MARRIED AND IN LOVE,” gt T g WltaAMN M.

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