Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
AMUSEMENTS. THEATER PARKING 6 P.M. TO zsc 12 P.M. CAPITAL GARAGE 1320 N. Y. Ave., Bet. 13th & 14th_ 350 Per Dinner Fried Chicken Every Monday * Roast Turkey Bvery Tuesday, Thursday, Sunday Dinner_Includes SOUP_OR TOMATO JUICE VEGETABLES. SALAD. ROLLS, DESSERT AND BEVERAGE Week Davs, Sundays, 4 to » P.M. Noon o 9 JAY CAFE 1365 Kennedy St. N.W. Sat. Luncheon 65¢ to 85¢ Dinner, 1.00 to 1.75 DANCING Music by Sam Korman Cocktall Howr, 2 10 6. Resorvations, NA. 0069 $1.25 DINNER scnu trom 5 to 9 r and Soup Club stnk (Chef’s Speclal) Smothered Chicken—iaryland Broiled French Lamb Chops Broiled Spanish Mackerel Sea Food Platter—Hot or Cold Three Fresh Vegetables Salad Dessert Marlboro Pike Hillside 0600 % CLAIRE MARTIN i DANCING 5.7, 10-2 AND HIS ORCHESTRA Feataring WM AFTER 10 AL $150; 1. 82, 5 Courses=55¢ Your Choice for ROAST PRIME RINS OF NERP NREADED VEAL CUTLET MINCED) CHICKEN with Musrooms BAKED VIROINIA HA PRESI QARDRN VROR AL r :u’;l !lm\wnlflnv CHIPPON GaraTARLS FNW, HOREHAM Ilr)- I" M, Uk l! flfnlvlr ining et duncing Two (0w 3. _Diner Batirduys incliding cover. Biper cover, $1. pis (ax. AD. (1700 EAUVILLE FOOD SHOP, uu’: Oonn. A wcallent dinners, lynchedns, Thiicy ks, foods our speciuliy ed In home sphere. Open 7 a.m. ln <| AUGH'S REST. 2606 Conn. Only at Arbauj can you gel real b-q spareribs an charcoal broiled ixed drinks. wine, beer. RLINGTON HOTEL, Vermant ot Thomss Ci 4 bquaies rom White Hoise \ebens Room Cotkialls b 10 8 B 266 inner, A to 8 p.m.. 65c, 7hc and $1 [ETRONOME ROOM, W an Park otel. Don Bestor's Orchestra. Min. Mon. thru Thurs. $1.00; Frl, § Bai., $2 Dancing 9:30 to 1:30. €0. 2 UNGE_RIVIERA, Hotel 2100 16th 8t ining, dancing to Pete Maclas” Orchestra eaturing Adele Van, 10 'til 2. No min, of except Sat. eve., $1 50 min, CO. 7400, ILLON RESTAURANT. Washington 5th and New York Ave. The the popular place oV more Boule: course_dinners. 65¢ 10 Toll's Orchestra. THE NIGHTINGALE, Rich: Hew, mi. south of Alex.’ Danci nightly .including Sun, Sweet “Gwing by Bil Downer's_Orchestra. _Temvle_4640. LUB_GARDENS en Marlboro "fi!‘“‘#.’!‘?m e oNadine cang hep coed luxe dinner, ncing Phone Hmnde 0000, DAMS HOUSE—Overlooking ~Wh gule at lglh ard H Sts. Dining in osphere, of charm, dignity and_gen e PN iseneon, 8bc; dmner from $1.35. orun mullc mdmy during_dinner. milton Hotel, 14 Eockt-l] lnd dll\ner dancing, 6-f I tieday oniy. S1._ DI 2580 Hl! 3135 K “N.W. _Dinners, -rnm sx?s(!) No cover. Min. $1; Sat. 1.50. No min. fo! dmner xnuu Music Korman. Resv. 0069 e e T chicken. unm _o'clock. Trojans’ (!m%_' o | blondish prairie | tamer by the hour, Miss Trevor is ‘The movies’ method of teaching always darkest just before dawn, and Republic, which specializes in that sort of thing, is too honest about it to justify any mockery. Some larger studios could learn a few things about Westerns, one of them the value of unpretentious- ness, from Republic. By way of making this week’s program a sort of merger of Kansas and El Morocco, retaining the best features of each, the stage show this week brings vocalist Hilde- garde to the Earle. Even higher in the billing, it offers Tommy Riggs and his imcomparable Betty Lou, the little girl who escapes growing up by being merely an alter voice for T. R. Dealing with the brigandage of Willlam Cantrell, a wolf in school- master’s clothing, “Dark Command” is a lusty item with a little, though not much, historical basis. Suave Mr. Cantrell is a Jeykli-Hyde type. ‘While one part of him administers the three R's to the tots of Lawrence, Kan, the other administers lead to their fathers who seek to in- terfere with his sidelines. The latter start with slave-running, work up to gun-running when the Civil 'War is imminent, and end with Cantrell, disguised as a Confederate Major, plundering and pillaging the countryside for his private profit. That is a lot of action, but whole of Cantrell's enterprises, for running concurrently with the others is his pursuit of Mary McLeod (Miss Trevor). No dumb blond is Mary for being taken in by Cantrell. The kind of plausible dog he is is indicated in the speech of his fine old mother toward the end of the film: “I thought I'd borned a man, Will, when I first a-heerd you squalin’ in the night, but now I know I borned a varmint.” Opposed to everything Cantrell stands for—and officially, too, as United States Marshal—is Wayne. As such stories go, they even clash in love for the cowboy is the kind of chap who can fall for Mary at first sight and keeps falling at all subsequent sights. ‘The conflict is nicely developed by Raoul Walsh's direction of “Dark Command.” In building his story to its various violent high points, he pauses at all the well marked psychologic moments to let the aud- ience laugh off its tenseness at some quip of one of those homespun com- edians with which the prairie must have teemed. Even the villianous Cantrell (Walter Pidgeon) partici- pates in the humor of “Dark Com- mand,” in a bitter, sardonic fashion, of course, So does Wayne, in his quiet, droll way, but the main bur- den of comedy rests upon the shoul- ders of Raymond Waldron, a judge ‘who believes might makes right, and George Davis, as a jack-of-all- trades who will pull a tooth, give you a shave, or turn a delicate bit of surgery as the occasion demands. Characters such as those can cut some pretty entertaining antics, and Messrs. Waldron and Davis see that they do. Of impressive aid to “Dark Com- mand” in being a straight-forward frontier number is the quality of its acting. Both Wayne and Pidgeon give excellent performances by the ls\mple procedure of not trying to create the notion the parts are hardly worthy of them. As the flower, growing | adequate, as indeed she should be Where and When Current Theater Attractions and Time of Showing National—"The Return of the Vagabond,” George M. Cohan in his sequel to “The Tavern”: 2:30 and 8:30 pm. Keith's—<"Primrose Path,” up to the straight and narrow with Gin« ger Rogers: 11:40 am, 1:40, 3:40, 5:40, 7:40 and 9:40 pm, Earle—"“Dark Command,” lawless days in the Kansas of old: 11 am,, 1:45, 4:30, 7118 and 10:08 p.m. Blage shows: 12:45, 3:30, 6:20 and 9:06 pm, Capltol—"Dr, Kildare's Btrange Onse," Intest ndventure of tnterne Lew Ayrea: 11 am, 1:48, 4:30, 7:98 and 10:10 pm. Biage shows: 19:46, B:80, 685 And 910 pm, Columbin- "Rebseen” the Hitehs ooek-direcied Nim veralon of the noveli 1180 A, 8100, 4188, 708, CUGRCH LTS Metrapalitan—"Ton Mty Huk: Bns denn AFERUF RAPHIIY 1R iR predieamentc 1110 A, 1100, BiUD, A0, Ti8R and 8140 P, Palace—"Birange Oargn" With Olark Gable and Joan Grawlordi 1 Bb R0, 306, 4180, Ti00 and 0iBH " N“lr "Harvest! the leading French Alm of 1080: 11:10 am., 1, 9:45, 4:35, A:10, T:8h and Itflpm Relasen—"Lights Out in BEurope," the darkness hefore the deem! 11:36 am, 1:30, §, 4:45, 6:80, 8110 and 8:50 p.m. Trans-Lux — News and shorts; continuous from 10 3 MONTMARTRE NOCTAMBULE Open only a few more Baturdays. French atmosphere. unusual enters tainment. Pelian Garsia. C 1011 _Connecticut Ave. Res. Phone NAL. 4141 even it does not encompass the; THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON D G., : SATURDAY, MAY 4, 1940, Dr. Kildare’s Llfe Goes On In Capitol’s New Film ‘Strange Case’ Has Him Involved With Insulin and Betrothal; ‘Funzafire’ a Zany Stage Show By HARRY MacARTHUR. 'nunnnnureernfbr Kildare continues apace in'“Dr. Kildare’s Earle’s Ptcture Teéches Lusty History Lesson - ‘Dark Command’ Makes the Frontier Blossom As Claire Trevor in Love; Tommy Riggs Tops Stage Bill By JAY CARMODY. history at the point of a gun brings the class through the shady chapter of Cantrell’s guerillas in “Dark Com- mand,” new attraction at the Earle. Trevor, who by this time must be frontier’s mixed doubles champions, “Dark Command” completely keeps the faith with the formula of its unres Its action is terrific, its comedy is homespun, the best man wins, it is — Starring John Wayne and Claire at this point in her experience with the role. For those who would like an es- cape from the chaos of the machine age, “Dark Command” represents & good honest version of the chaos of the period when men were men. * % kX ‘Tommy Riggs’ Betty Lou who has been away from the local stage for a couple of years is the sa = cute trick she always has been. Happily, however, Mr. Riggs has provided her with some new mate: new at least to Betty Lou who hnndlel it with her old glibness. ‘Wisconsin’s Hildegarde who be- came the pet of cafe society, dem- onstrates her right to her high standing on the air and in the bet- ter night clubs with a revelation of her two skills, vocal and planistic. Both should be too well known to need amplification here. Also on Producer Harry Anger’s program this week is an acrobatic dancing group, six talented males and females whose mastery of their art is sufficient (or almost) to con- done the fact that they are billed as “The Honeys.” Subordinate comedy task is left to the team of Shaw and Lee, a grave mistake on somebody’s part. The Roxyettes are their usual talented selves in three routines that are pleasant if not spectacular. Sinclair Lewis LIKE SON, LIKE FATHER—Brian Aherne is the elder member of the family of Howard Spring’. fJorm and Madeleine Carroll is the lass in Me pivotal corner of the triangle. The picture opens Friday at Loew’s Palace. Realizes He Wants to Be an Actor Novelist Considers a Screen Offer; Shirley Temple Has an Agent, May Leave Zanuck’s Care By SHEILAH GRAHAM. HOLLYWOOD. Dick Powell and Joan Blondell finished “I Want a Divorce” on the anniversary of their engagement! . . . Robert Montgomery is having himself quite a time. Reports from London are that With “Busman’s Honeymoon” completed, Bob is devoting himself to opening charity bazaars, kissing the hand of this and that duchess, and other such exciting pastimes. Hey, come back to Hollywood, Bob! Talk- % good an actor as you are ... ing about actors, Sinclair Lewis tells | me, “It was only when I reached | the age of 53 I realized that * what I wanted to do most in life was to act.” Author Lewis is currently con- sidering an offer to act in the movies,. Now that Shirley Temple has an agent— which means that for the first time in her movie career, 10 ” per cent of the Sheilah Graham. Temple earnings go outside the family—she is being offered to other studios. Does this mean that Boss Darryl Zanuck is acceding to! Mrs. Temple's desire to terminate| his contract with Shirley, which in | the ordinary course of events still | has one year and one month to go? Elsa Maxwell is having trouble try- ing to remember her lines for “Elsa Maxwell's Public Debutante Number One.” When Elsa gets stuck—and she does frequently—she looks flercely at the floor. And some- one has suggested that her dialogue be written on the floor, in the same way that John Barrymore's was chalked on a blackboard . The most agonized young man ln Holly- wood is John Shelton, who, with little acting experience to his credit, was suddenly picked to play the lead opposite Lana Turner in “To Own the World,” the honor is almost too much for the lad, and the ten- slon shows on his face when emot- ing. Take it easy, John. Relax. You must be good, or they wouldn't have picked you for the eplc that was originally bought for Jimmy Btewart and Lew Ayres, LR Willlam Powell had a bad attack of Indigestion on the set, and work wan held up temporarlly, By the way, Mra, Powell in tio longer (o be aeei walchitg her husband emote 1 underatand her presence was con= nidured too distraeting to BIll—tot 16 mention his lending Indy Myria 1oy, 1 ANGUId ARy 10 wollld be ex= tremely dimeult (o piny & 1ove aéerie while your lending man 18 looking AR GOREERLFRIIGE 6f the youRN wife hie ndores! Mumm Olivier and Vivien nh may And themselves ek 1n ollywood quicker than they exs anl According to veport here, the onuplu'n 1our in "Remen and Jullet has been less suecessful—artistically —than anticipated. They had | & lanned on 10 weeks in New York, ub Warner Bros, whe have & fAnancial finger in the produes tion, would like Olivier ta return within & few weeks for the lead in “Oaptain Horatio Hornblow." Miss Leighs' net Alm commitment is with Alexander Korda, % ¥ ¥ John Carroll and his ex-wife, Stef Duna, are appearing in Metro's “Phantom Raiders.” And in one scene SteM has to throw a bottle at John's head, Just before the camera turned, John pleaded, “Now, SteMm darling, we've been separated for 18 months and please watch your aim!” I'd be nervous, too . . . Gene Raymond, working in pictures for the first time in two years, says, “It's like beginning a new life. I had to get used to the camera again.” Gene's army of fans have been faithful during his absence from the screen—to judge by the huge stack of letters delivered to him at the R-K-O studio. Greta Garbo was supposed to do “Madame Curie” as her next pic- ture, but because of the current phobia against biographies, she is for another comedy on the lines of “Ninotchka.” A word of advise to Greta and her studio. If she does another comedy, ge} her another Lubitsch to direct her. A large percentage of Garbo’s success in “Ninotchka” belongs to the di- rector. Did you know that Ann Sheridan 'was once upon a time dropped from ¢ We can't afford to lose as | Love Winner In Hot Race At Palace Decision in Doubt Until Final Feet Of ‘Strange Cargo’ It is a long, torturous road love must travel before it becomes’ its | familiar purifying regenernnve self in “Strange Cargo.” Throughout | most of the picture, now in its second week at the Palace, the burden of getting it to that point seems likely to prove too much for Clark Gable and Joan Crawford. He is a convict, she a dance hall gal. Naturally, such environments have not equipped them to act like Tristram and Isolt in the presence of their mutual | emotion. What they do act like is made none the more entertaining by a story which is as artificial as a one club bid. Based upon the popular novel, “Not Too Narrow, Not Too Deep,” the flim introduces into the passion of the troubled Romeo and his troublesome Juliet, that most con- fusing of screen presehces, the Mysterious Stranger. This character, called Cambreau and played by Ian Hunter, brings to all the bad people of “Strange Cargo” the good word. One by one, he regenerates them., With somewhat resome regularity, the regeneration occurs always on the brink of death until the original party of eight is reduced to Qable and Miss Crawford. What life has done to them, individually and together, makes them look like impossible converts to Oambreau's Inspiration, He gets them, however| hether it was worth It depends upon whether “Btrange Onrgn needs more than the beat efforta of Miss Orawford and Gable to vitalise Ita feeble dinmn, 40 Blllrkrieg flcenen At the Trans.Lux Arrived now (and featiired at the Trana=Lik) are the Nrse Ama of neton 1 Nerway=the German Ships (FANAPOFHNE tFO6pA - 10 llw biitakrieg o the narm, mm% an Attack by hOmbIng plane, landing m mm that long ealumn goose=stepping inte Osle On other fronts & British eruiser refuels in Oalifornia, the e de France sails for Buroj planes, Wellesley celebrates May day, Lew Lehr celebrates the per- fect baby, New York soclety cele- brates the glamour girl of 1840, the patent office celebrates its apni- versary, the Bronx Zoo celsbrates the arrival of spring. The week's travelogue, weary no doubt of what we are using for civilization today, visits another day and age, looking back on the life which flourished about Palmyra and Baalbek in the heart of the Syrian Desert. Alfalfa has & double in the Our Gang comedy, wrestlers clown in “Roughouse Fiesta” cartoon is “100 Pygmies and Andy Pandy.” H M ‘Peter Pan’ Again The production of 8ir James Bar- full of aive | Fr and the L rie’s “Peter Pan,” which was staged last night at the Wardmah Park Theater by students of Rose Robison Cohen’s Children’s Studio of Speech and Dramatic Art, was scheduled for repeat perf: this afternoon and evening at the same place. The tation of the play is a bene- fit for the Christ Child Society. the Paramount contract list because, it was averred, she didn't have Some one needs a pair (Released By the North American ‘Newssaper Alilanse. Ims.) s “My Son, My Son!” in its film ‘Rebecca’ Returns At the Columbia Local readers and staunch ad- mirers of Daphne du Maurier’s “Rebecca” have learned by now that Producer David O. Selznick and | Director Alfred Hitchcock are at least two of the people in whom a novelist can have implicit faith.| At least many of them have nndw the rest can make the discovery, u‘ it is that, at the Columbia, to where the film version of “Rebecca” now | has come for its third week on F | street. And those who have nelther‘ read the book nor seen the picture | have one more chance to see one of the great photoplays of a full| season. The story of the second Mrs. Max de Winter, who battled what she thought was the memory of | a consuming love only to discover it was the ghost of a burning hatred, has become spellbinding drama on the screen under the guidance of | Mr. Hitchcock and his players. Mr. \ Hitchcock has maintained the mood and even retained the first persoml | viewpoint in his film and the result is something with the power to move you deeply. Miss Joan Fon- | taine as the second wife and Laur- ence Ofivier as her Maxim are’ ex- | cellent, but no less so are some of | the others—Judith Anderson, Ralph Forbes and George Sanders, for in- | stance. H. M. ‘Husbands’ Comedy At Metropolitan ‘Too many husbands do not spoil the froth for Jean Arthur in the picture of that name (“Too Many Husbands™), which is now at the | Metropolitar. for a second downtown \ week. Too many husbands, in fact, | provide a situation very much to| Miss Arthur's liking here, for that | woman is rare, she ltels‘ who has two mates wooing her affections So Miss Arthur enjoys it thorough- ly when her first husband, pal and business partner of her second hus- band, suddenly turns out to have been living on a desert island for | a year and not to have been drown- ed at all. Melvyn Douglas and Fred | MacMurray, the husbands in the | case, do not enjoy this strange state of their lives very much, to be sure, but you will, H.M. Don't Quote Boyer On Women or War Thete are two things which Chatles Boyer won't discusa for pub- lleation, One is women. The other is the Buropean war, He han persiatenily dodged the firat queation ever alhve he eamme to the United Btatea from France alx YOArS Ao, The query hae several yariations, bt the weneral lden In the e "Whot do you Nnd more ehatin: N, Preneh women of Amerlénn worren?' Bometimes the word "eharmine” | | heeomen "mere heautiful "betier dresned” oF "deairable But they AL BEIRg the same leok of anguish 6 the OF GOURIBHANEE, ‘The vékaon foF his retieence I ob= vieus. He's & sereen Aiar of the mmanm type whose Business 16 s please afl wemen, offend nene. Nal. Only that, he s married to Pat Pulmg‘m. Wi s Bnglish, net ench, Privately, as & patriotic French- man and A reserve soldier, Boyer will diseuss European affairs at &"h.“ length. During !\llatn!' of "All is, and Heaven, Too," his new icture for Warner Bros, he has ad manay talks on the subject with his fellow cast mambcrp-hut not for lication. AMUSEMENTS, + oo adds new riches to dramas of romance rlative ectin SO THEATRE -LU e nn. RYRNAT, %, 57 RS, “RUINS OF P, “OUR G/ " 1 CAR Intruction 184 I‘NI 8t. N.W. Strange Case” In this latest chapter his life, the new photoplay at Loew’s Capitol, he encounters two new and enriching experiences, becoming engaged to that pretty nurse and ad- ministering the insulin shock treatment in the dead of night to restore a patient’s sanity. It will be no surprise to any of has decided to ask the cute little nurse to wait until he is making more than $20 a month, for this has always been merely a matter of time. The popularity of the series has outlasted Dr. Kildare's reserve and we now can expect him happily married if the series out- lasts his engagement, which seems quite likely. And shame on every one of you who has completely for- gotten and forsaken that fluffy trick Dr. K. left yearning back in his hometown, when his cinematic adventures began. But while the trend of the in- terne’s romance comes as no sur- prise, his administration of the insulin shock treatment may startle some of you. The use of insulin in the cure of insanity, we always thought, was something delicate, calling for, if not perfect .condi- tion, at least its use by experts. Here the treatment is given by an interne and a nurse and what’s more the patient is recovering from a fractured skull and a brain opera- tion at the time, so perhaps he owes his life as much to cinématic license as to insulin. 8till it is a dramatic climax and we should allow some latitude to the script writers of the series for they keep bringing us the latest medical news in their efforts to enliven the Dr. Kildare formula, they fill our vocabularies with scientific terms and they give us a fine faith in the ideals of the medical profession. ‘The people are the same—Lionel Barrymore as the gruff, kindly old AMUSEMENTS. - (APITOL - B Another Capitol Trear!? LEW AYRES - LIONEL SARRYMORE - LARAINE DAY “Dr.KILDARE’'S Strange CASE” e ONSTRGE The CRAZIEST shou: ever! *EUNZAFIRE" with BENNY MEROFF'S Orch. nd 45 screwballs on the losse F-AT 17t Powerful Stuff CLARK GABLE Joan CRAWFORD “Strange Cargo” “HY SON! MY SON™ 330 G- (OLUMBIA -~ GRIUE is the word for it! REBECEA S8 JEAN FONTAME G- PALAC () Dr. Kildare’s friends that he finally e e i e e b e Dr. Gillespie; Lew Ayers as Holly- wood’s most popular interne, and Laraine Day as the Mary Lamont :ho has chased him until he caught er. % xx There is an ancient Sanskrit proverb to the effect that “fun’s fun, but you can't die laughing,” and that is the way it is with this “FPun- zafire.” You won't die laughing at the Capitol’s stage show, even if it does go all out in its effort to be the complete zany. Still there are some very funny moments in “Punzafire” and its greatest fault is merely that it is such an obvious attempt at a copy of the Olsen and Johnson daffiness. And it does not have Olsen and Johnson. Benny Meroff and his orchestra are on the stage and the place is full AMUSEMENTS. w KEITH'S ™ GINGER ROGERS JOEL McCREA "PRIMROSE PATH" “INFORMATION PLEASE” WALT DISNEY'S “TUG BOAT MICKEY” o . BING CROSBY Gloria Jean in'1f I Had My Way” E @ at G lawrence Phillipy ‘Theater luutmn Continuous From 1 P.M. OF DR. X,” Starrige, WAYNE MORRIS ~ROSEMARY HUMPHREY BOGAR ALz JOHNNY. MACK PROWN. o | “CHIP OF THE F FLYING u.” Kfm'mal H TATL 8300 Continueu: 1L AM. “Selentifleally AlrCo Double _Feature. A ARET L INDEAY and VINCENT PRICE in “THE HOUSE SEVEN = GABLES. Ml-Bllr Cast_in CAROLINA 1™ & N. G- avwe. s “BLONDIE BRINGS UP BABY" and “THE __MAN FROM r “BLONDIE ON_ A ARTHUR LAKE. DUMBARTON 263 Yissemts VLN BTo b R oF B Lot TO WORK.” 1 “Kit Carson,” Also_Comedy. ANACOSTIA, FAIRLAWN “OH, JOHNNY. HOW | TOM _BROWN in LOVE." ADULTS, 25¢ No. ‘wn n}qf " H.m» Bell, Pt STARTS TOMORROW T ROSE LA ROSE YOU_CAN | FREE PARKING GREENBELT ERROL_FLYNN and TAM HOPKINS in_“VIRGINIA C! l]DO 322TM S | MICKEY l}fi_t')w A8 T New Seats Al] Frenc 2 ¢ ‘HARVEST - GAITHERSBURG, MD. Ilbl P!lture BN TissiNG « TEAE, Al l_.Y"RlC ER PRINCFSS "lelflllll Dolfii’@ 8 AT, Wil ;tul'lm WM. BOYD ||| STANTON "mi St Nl Conll»-c . ! ‘\"'-’" "MEXICAN BPI’?FIRE g N ERROL and WDOD- With lilo 7Y "Ou pos of the thegfifounfien . BETHESDA ° "" " WL 2600 o l‘l“ sf e gfl‘cuw " the Wind." 1!:;1.:(““ No‘ %n Aale, "?‘1'1'0 (TR ‘g‘%?;y.nwflw&.&m crmosfimflgwh £ (e %fiw Mm’ h (L ;"l"‘;"’v?fi&fcfixé"' e 0l u‘ur P e SHTRLEY TEMPLE Tn” “THE BLUEBIRD" MKRLIORO e progtFilh (¥ time com | O %fimfin:fi-""'i“fi&" Rk "o "'MW& ll‘li ingapore.” N N Em;fl- Peatitre el ms?Y llh' o R, ni¥h 'Efifi-;’: HAYDEN. lflhl '-n.uu Dflrbkfl e fllh&c‘ll' STLVAN ™= ::::.‘..t i Doul re. “HOUSE O] IABI VINCENT, BAY. ¢ Agfi “‘.’Z’!‘?E BON._Matinee at 1 ).nm M PALM 'I'DEEA'I'ER s PANAMA,” - SHOOTNG RIGH i of M-G-M’s running account of | WARNER BROS, fuam-:ks ' 7 B De Event of Busy Sienel abandon. Confining their antics to the stage are a number of athletic girls, Ken and Roy Paige in & knock- about turn, Rex Weber, who sings, though that is about as inadequate as any other word would be in de- scribing his mad doings, and some more athletic girls. Sometimes you will laugh and laugh. But still you will not die 5. AMUSEMENTS. ATORNL LAST 2 TIMES MATINEE 2:30 NIGHT 8:30 George M. Cohan in “THE RETURN OF THE VAGABOND"”’ NI8 SECOND TO THE TAVERN Ilmfin by Sam Forrest 856 1o Sest Sal Now Deg. noxt Mon. Eve. 8. 6. DesTLY, m WILLIAM ” IAXTON ZOIINA lm Comeor ENE AND A S R IOIDIHII Music and Lyrics by ®, P IIVIIG IElI.IN D1 MORRIE RYSK lv-. $1.10-83.30. Mats. §! 81 THE MORE THAN 50 FUN- GIVING ATTRACTIONS ARE Open Daily from 1 p.m. DANCING from 9 to 12 WEEK NIGHTS. PAUL KAIN MUSIC [FREE ADMISSION ] GLENECH() PICNIC GROVES OPEN 10 A.M. INE W( 750 15 B!:VERI.Y 2 .-u’." 0} For Additional Inform: Phone Theaters Direct. o cHiMp AR - At 11:20. 2, 435, 748, 7080 14ih 8. N.W. SEC Nhitidia B 16 Fiky L i sm:,ngn AN ,".'. ‘1.';“ !;N;‘: .Afi'fu’* Py ! "'""f}'.;':’"{.a..é. TAKOM, ; [ s a:m HISER l!'l’HBDA e . oo 51:' (e O 'fl;flounud" londie ® on a Budget ALB(AN'DRIA, VA, [ A PARKING. BING CROSBY, “ROAD UR and SINGAPORE " I'onut lunl ""‘xfi'Sdéaf‘o“'" ARLINGTON, VA, h"?fl'.'m. ERROL, -:.% -M HorRs 3108 Wiken Bive. Fhene Ox_ 1130. FALLS CHURCH, VA, 7o STATE ....n;m‘“ ,’ B