Evening Star Newspaper, May 18, 1940, Page 36

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B-18 » ‘Typhoon’ a Joking Satire By, Or On, Paramount - Earle’s Picture with Dorothy Lamour. Isa Jibe dt Its Jungle Type; ! Skelton, Feeling Better, Is Better By JAY CARMODY. At ane point in the course of “Typhoon,” sarong clad Dorothy Lamour is taking a slesta. Seated nearby in the anug jungle penthouse are Robert Preston and Lynn Overman, the former being berated for not rahlrpln( her love. * “Why, she’s only & baby.” protests Preston. . “I never saw anything like that in a nursery,” says Overman. - . The Earle's audience fairly laughs its head off at that point, for — | neither did it ever see anything like that in a nursery. Farcical inflections of this kind are - sufficiently common in the course of Paramount's technicolor spectacle, in which Miss Lamour plays a kind of co-ed Tarzan, to convince one that the studio in this one is kidding the whole family of South Sea island magic films. (Any one who does not know what kind of magic such a picture is Supposed to exercise may call' his life clois- THEATER PARKING 6 P.M. TO 25° 12 P.M. CAPITAL GARAGE 1320 N. Y. Ave., Bet. 13th & 14th 1 Comnecticut Ave. . Phome NAt. 4141 You're sure to find the size and style suited to your need in our complete _stock. Phone for Free Delivery! E. Morrison Paper Co 1009 Po. Ave. N.W $1.25 DINNER Marlboro Pike Gor ATURDAY SUPPER Broiled Mcine Tender, Giant LOBSTER FROGS LEGS (drawn butter) Platter. IMPERIAL sHAD ROE CRAB \ “and Bacon En Casserole Platter SEA FOOD j & FCo, . soup F it Kushners 3815 GEORGIA A £ NW UNRESTRICTED ' ARKING Cp De Luxe SUNDAY DINNER 5-Course - ROAST OR FRIED CHICKEN 65° Fresh Shrimp Cocktail Variety Crisp Salads Fresh Asparagus Parsley Buttered Potatoes Hot Homemade Rolls Beverage Fresh Strawberry Short Cake with Whipped Cream RESS 'CRAFETERIA AT’L PRESS BLDG. 's l4th AND F N.W. 1 §MART PLACE TO EAUVILLE FOOD SHOP. 1620 3 BT dianeranhcorns, Tahoy driaks: Bea fo0ds our specialty. Served In home atmosphere. Open 7 to 3 am. THE FAT BOY—New York Ave. at Balti- ‘mere ine, dance, drink. 7- urge dinners. 65¢ io $1. Dance - to 'nie Carroll's Orchestra. s 41 N RESTAURANT, Washingten ork Ave. The vorita place to dine, the %fii ROOM, Hamilion Hotel, 14th e B K T aine. Baturdsy onlse 81, DL 2680, CLUB GARDENS ‘Maribero g Nadine rnd"her ‘cozed ner, 25, __Dancing G Shone miside: 000" ROOM, Wardman Park Don Bélt%r’l re. Min. Mo 81 gmm. _llt.. 2. tered. Paramount, whose life is not cloistered, coes know). “Typhoon,” which must be rated as a fairly good joke if not by, then on, Paramount is a jibe at Miss Lamour’s - traditional form-fitting sarong, at the Tarzan pictures with their superhuman animals and treetop houses, and suspiciously ir- reverent toward such elemental classics as “Hurricane” and some other colossal H'wood spectacies. It has conspicuous touches of all these, Moreover, each one is enchanced by the presence of Dotty, the Dusky, in such a state of jungle naivete that her reaction to love's first kiss is that “it isn’t lke kissing daddy.” If that doesn’t kill you, you are a pretty sturdy specimen. And, if Paramount didn’t have its tongue in its cheek, well eat the excellent typhoon and fire sequences which make the photography dramatic as well as very handsome. Some of the gaily incredible elements which have gone into “Typhoon” include: First, Miss Lamous as a lovely waif, who has lived since childhood on an otherwise uninhabited Pacific island. Her only companion is a chimpanzee whom he apparently has taugh to understand English in return for his devotion and protec- tion. Making it the more remark- able that she has survived is the fact that the island yearly is swept by a typhoon which brings with it a wall of water 99 feet high, or one foot below the floor of the tree penthouse (with elevator) in which the oddly assorted pair live. Second, Mr. Preston as the young ne’er-do-well, whose torso has sur- vived astonishingly well a tre- mendous wash of alcohol, and who is landed on the island by a tramp submarine. The submarine, manned by a jungle crew, has to land be- cause that's where it runs out of oil. The dumb native crew simply passed up the last filling station without a thought of what it too! to drive a submarine. ¥ As if that were not enough to prove, and delightfully at times, that script writer Allen Rivkin was playing a joke, there’s an island chief who has a yacht as big as Vincent Astor’s, but more warlike since the chief likes to pretend it’s & navy and is always shooting at people and things. Running. through the strange goings-on of these strange people, E|is a love story, the effort of Miss Lamour to land her man, Preston. | Before he succumbs, it takes a ter- rific jungle fire and a more terrific | storm to convince him that, if she | is a baby, she handles herself re- markably well in conflict with the elements in -some of their most violent manifestations. o5 “Thé pioture fades out in the inti- | mation that they are going to navi- gate 400 miles of open sea to the nearest minister, then return to the island to live, no doubt creating a new elyilization based upon peace and understanding. It is entertaining ‘enough if you take it in the right spirit, which is to say, not. seriously. * X %X X The opportunity Lo praise a jug- gling act, which is news like a man biting a dog, is the major blessing of Harry Anger’s stage production this week. Sufficient “major” to subordinate the fact that Red Skel- ton, in better health, also is in much more comic form than during his first week's engagement. The - juggling act is that of the Hoffman’s, of whom there are six. Their variations on the usual jug- gling theme are altogether ad- mirables The effervescent Skelton and his pretty Edna offer two comedy sequences that are tull of zest, and Low, Hite and Stanley, a giant, middleman, and dwarf are incongru- ously funny. Gower and Jean, clever young team, share dancing honors with the Roxyettes, whose routine is varied this week with a fashion show. Crawford-Gable Back at Columbia “Strange Cargo,” with Joan Craw- ford and Clark Gable as compensa- tion for the confusioh and arti- ficiality of its plot, returned to the Columbia yesterday for a third downtown week. Based upon the popular novel “Not Too Narrow, Not Too Deep,” it recounts the fate of a group of tough, disillusioned people making their escape from Devils. Island. Among the odd lot, which includes Miss Crawford as a dance hall girl who made a misstep, but not while dancing, is a spectral sort,of fellow whose job it is. to regenerate his associates. As fast as he gets them they croak, the only exceptions to the rule being Gable and Miss THE EVENING. STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, | 4 & TAKE THAT, YOU PESKY VARMINTS—Wallace Beery, accom= panied by a friend, blazes away at the redskins or whoever is harassing him, in this scene from “20-Mule Team.” Technical ezperts please be advised that he is aiming with the left eye because he has lost the use of the right one, cinematically speaking. For the effect of this on his aim you will have to see the picture, which will be at Loew’s Capitol starting Friday. TURDAY, MAT 18, 1846, Crime Does Pay After All In ‘1 Was an Adventuress ' Zorina and Two Pleasant Thieves In New Picture at the Capitol; Giovanni Is Stage Star By HARRY MacARTHUR. Some one is going to have to speak rather or maybe rap it briskly across the knuckles. Before seems to have descended upon the guardians of our complacent in the assurance that no motion picture down the rather generally held belief that well &t times, it still that 1t also seems to engaging people (Zorins, Erich von Stroheim and Peter Lorre) are involved in this triviality, ¢ | him. are off on & boat to start their lives anew—in the same old business. Retribution, thou ‘art fled to the hills. Do not, please, think this a com- plaint. The presence of these two sincere, conscientious and capable larcenists and their charming a complice, who seems to have no r grets at all so long as her husband loves her in spite of her past, really makes for considerable jole de vivre in “I 'Was an Adventuress.” One never would want Mr. Von Stroheim to be goody-goody, or even anything remotely resembling law-abiding. And there is no one we would rather Concert Ends |Buck Benny Rides Screen . Just as He Does the Air And His New Picture at the Palace Benefits Greatly by Keeping Its 'Cast in Radio Groove ‘The virtually universal notion that Jack Benny pictures would be much funnier if they were more like his radio shows finally got as far in this world as Jack Benny and Paramount. The tangible result is “Buck Whittall Series Today By ALICE EVERSMAN. The first of the two concerts which will close the winter series of the Gertrude Clarke Whittall Foundation at the Library of Con- gress took place last evening, offer- ing a program of lyric character played by the Roth String Quartet. and noting the Tschaikowsky cen- tennial by the inclusion of his famous “Quartet in D Major, Op. 11.” Preceding the Tschaikowsky number were the Haydn “Quartet in D Major, Op. 76, No. 5” and Boccherini’'s “Quartet in G Minor, Op. 33, No. 5, thus illustrating the afinity that linked these three composers. Haydn and Boccherini were con- temporaries and mutual admirers and while Tschaikowsky was sepa- rated from them by a century, his kinship with them was established through his reverence for Mozart, who often declared, “From Haydn I first learned how to compose a quartet.” The program last eve- ning, in placing the works of these three men side by side, gave ap opportunity for comparison of their manrner of treating the same musical form. : Particularly was this in evidence in the writing of the second and third movements of the quartets, the sections which allow of some- thing more personal of the com- poser to be revealed. As beautiful and skillful as was Boccherini's writ- ing, it is dryer in color and less ex- pansive in sentiment. In the sec- ond movement Haydn discovered an exquisitely pure and lovely warmth of almost 6thereal quality while in the famous Andante, Tschaikow- sky has incorporated the national color and his own responsiveness to it. In the lighter moods of the third movement the difference of approach is no less strongly marked. Although Boccherini is famed for his compositions for the cello, it was in the Haydn Quartet that the cello was given the most promi- nence. The second movement, and for some moments in the first, the cello has the responsibility of leading the strings although the interweaving of the theme in the tonal color of viola and violin is achieved with superb skill. The ef- fect is almost as poignant as that of theé Andante Cantabile of the Tschaikowsky work which once moved Tolstoi to tears. The facile and poetic writing of Haydn, the dignified and polished technique of Boccherini and the richly emotional feeling of Tschaikowsky presented a gamut of effects in the works played yesterday. The interpretations of the Roth artists were highly sympathetic in spirit and polished in technical per- formance. They are masters of varied nuances of the most delicate type while the tonal coloring of their instruments is blended into the richest hues. Th:urrtormlnce was a crescendo of artistic playing cul- minating in the tender reading of the Tschatkowsky work. The fina]l concert will be given this afternoon when the program will consist en- tirely of American compositions. Crawford, who are left behind with the hint that they have been spared for another fate. We were bored. J. C. FIRST IN OUR PARADE OF BIG NAME BANDS on the S.S. POTOMAC EME IN SPACE SPEED AND SYNCOPATION' (IO -y ISHAM JONES The Nationw’s Swing-sation AND HIS ORCHESTRA TONIGHT! FREE DANCING Beer, Soft Drinks, Sandwiches 3 New Decorations—More Space QONLITES “.'\1:\.1,93“ 2 MEEKER'S TWN AND SWING 820, I LI I 77T rrry POTOMAC MORE FUN— MORE ENTERTAINMENT 8:45 P.M. ond 12:30 Midnite e RIVER LINE 7th G WATER STS Benny Rides Again” at the Palace. transcription of the radio show which keeps people home on Sunday nights. The supporting cast includes Rochester, Phil Harris, Dennis Day, — Carmichael, Andy Devine, and the: voices, no more, of Fred Allen, Mary Livingstone and Don Wilson. ‘With each member of the cast play- ing his radio character under his own name, and with the script fol- lowing the radio technique, “Buck Benny Rides Again” is its star’s best picture, good for as many and the same kind of laughs expected of the air's No. 1 comedian. ‘Wisely, Benny's latest utilizes the script writing services of his radio team, William Morrow and Edmund Beloin, a pair of lads not above broad hokum when they feel it will be handled well. In this case, they had not only the proper cast for that kind of treatment but also the singular good fortune of Mark Séndrich’s direction. A movie man by training and inclination, Sand- rich recognized he had a radio show to photograph, a script built for laughs, studded with gags, and requiring a fast pace to get the desired effects. The Benny fol- lowing can be grateful to Mr. Sand- rich for being that wise. A lot of directors might not have béen. The script plunges Benny into the middle of girl trouble, the kind caused by & girl who thinks he's & stuffy dope even if he is a big shot and she only a little girl trying to get on the radio. By way of prov- ing that he’s a he-man, a son of the West quite as much as she is its daughter, he goes to a ranch in the Rockies. Life, with the girl looking on in disdainful unbelief, becomes a series of antics of ex- treme dizziness. There's one, for instance, in which a miracle makes Benny a hero during a runaway instead of the heel he really is. In another, thinking he is staging a mock scrap with a couple of tough cowhands whopn he has paid to take a beating, he actially meets and makes a creditable showing against & pair of bad men. The wild climax comes when the outlaw pair really are captured and end up in the custody of Carmichael. ‘With the wisdom of the good busi- nessman, which is to say without the pettiness of some comic artistes, Benny allows his picture to turn over a goodly share of its humor to the artful Rochester. As a servant who recognizes his master’s bark- is sharper than his bite, Rochester gives the boss many an uncomforta- ble, laughable moment. One such is that in which, sent with candy and a sweetsome note to the object of the latter’s love, Rochester starts a romance of his own with the lady’s colored maid. While the courtship is going on, Benny is waiting below in the rain; a pretty steady rain, but kept from becoming unendurably long by virtue of the fact that Rochester stages one of his inimitable dances and tosses off one of the show's four songs, “My, My - Allen’s contribution to the suc- cess of “Buck Benny Rides Again” are a few sections of soundtrack, which represent his usual ironic comments on Benny, this time Ben- ny as a four-flushing cowboy. For his part.in the turnings of the story, Harris is strictly in character as the mocking band leader who clev- erly maneuvers the boss into any position which happens to be con- venient for Harris. i In going outside of the Sunday troupe’ for romantic interest, the Benny picture settled” upon pretty Ellen Drew, who not only fits in quite nicely in that conrection, but As the title implies, it is a visual Mad Doctor Runs Amok At the Met Karloff Freezing People to Death In New Film Mr. Boris Karloff, a sort of Dr. Kildare with variations, is experi- menting now in: frozen sleep, using human beings as guinea pigs and on several occasions none - too successfully at that. The result, in “The Man With Nine Lives” the new film at the Metropolitan, is just chilling (there’s so much ice around) and thrilling, but only slightly horrifying. ‘A half dozen deaths in the course of & pseudo- scientific cinematic hour is, after all, only fetail business in horror when your front pages can get it for you wholesale, When the ambling preamble of the pieture finally arrives at some actfon Mr. Karloff is discovered encased in ice in a vault in his laboratory deep in the earth below his house on an island in the middle of a lake up near the Canadian border. (That's the whole truth in what a nutshell.—Ed.) He has been here since 1930, along with several citizens who were about to arrest him for experimenting on another citizen when their plans went astray. The discoverer being ' doctor who has been carrying on frozen sleep investigation in 1940, in mere normal surreundings, all the people are chopped out of the ice and revived. Events then lead to the destruc- tion of the formula which has been responsible for keeping them alive during their cold storage decade and Dr. Kravaal (that’s Karloff)- is very angry indeed. One by one people die as “experiments to rediscover the valuable formula fail, until only the hero and heroine (Roger Pryor and Jo Ahn Sayers) are left. And you know well there is no point in worrying over ‘the hero and heroine in one of these affairs for they are sharply to the this ‘woul have pick our pockets than Peter Lorre’s Polo (unless it would be Dr. Giovanni, who is picking pockets in the Capitol’s stage show). Polo is such an kleptomaniac when' he is sadly admitting he guesses he must be a psychopsthic case and nothing can be done about This is, all in all, rather a pedestrian comedy, Director Gregory Ratoff apparently having told it to walk, not run. But its unreforming thieves do make it amusing. And it i1s almost enough just to look at Zorina’s image on the screen, with- out asking much more of the film. Her presence, of course, calls for 8 ‘ballet number, for such dancing grace as Zorina’s never was meant to be hidden under a bushel .of drawing room-and boudoir repartee. The ballet is a version of Tschaikow- sky’s “Swan Lake,” which must have emerged as much a surprise to Zorina as it would be to Petipa, its chore- ographer in 1894. Confused by the camers and diffused by a smoke screen someone saw fit to cast before it, this probably will make no film fans of balletomanes or balletomanes of film fans, thouga Zorina has a few airy moments. % *x xx The “Spring Swing” revue on the Capitol stage looks like nothing has happened to vaudeville at all and it s right here with ys. Everyone invélved in this is- talented, from the deft-fingered Giovanni down to the last Rhythm Rocket on the right, reading from .left to right. One might go so far as to say there is never a dull moment. Giovanni’s doings are the most novel, even the people he calls from the audience having a gay time as he “lifts” watches, wallets and even a pair of suspenders. Dancing in the show involves Jean * AMUSEMENTS. always sure of something warmer than frozen sleep. Furthermore we did not miss one of these people Dr. Kravaal disposed of and Mr. Kar- loff will have to be a lot more hor- rendous than this if he wants to scare us. H M White Goat Wanted Billy, the white goat of the Welsh battalion - billited in North Wales, has died from eating poisonous leaves, and the battalion is anxious to obtain arother as soon as pos- sible. . In Cardiff a member said they want it-to march with them, especially on. 8t. David’s Day in sc- cordance with their traditien. Where and When Current Theater Attractions and Time of Showing Palace — “Buck Benny Rides Again,” a comic makes the Wild West wilder: 11:15 am., 1:20, 3:35, 5:30, 7:35 and 9:45 p.m. Earle-—"Typhoon,” the elements vs..D. Lamour: 11 s, 1:45, 4:35. 7:20 and 10:10 pm. Stage shows: 12:45, 3:35, 6:35 and 9:15 p.m. Capitol—“I Was an Adventuress,” the law vs. Zorina: 11 a.m., 1:45, 4:30, 7:20 and 10:05 p.m. Stage shows: 12:45, 3:30, 6:20 and 9:05 pm. Metropolitan—“The Man With Nine Lives,” Mr. Karloff dabbles in “frozen sleep:” 11:20 am, 1:35, 3:30, 5:35, 7:40 and 9:45 pm. jor 11:40 amm., 2:10, 4:40, 7:10 and 9:40 pm. Keith's—“If I Had My Way,” with Bing Crosby and Gloria Jean: 12:05, | 2:30, 4:55, 7:15 and $:40 p.m. “March of Time'k 11:45 a.m., 2:10, 4:30, 6:35 and 9:20 pm. . L COLUMBIA - “STRANGE CARGO” TRANS-LUX 25000 B! G OF NAMSOS AND FIRST FILMS OTHER BATTLES : CAN- 215tani C Sts. N. E. Aft'n & Night [IMES TOD/ RINGLIN B&%“R us BARNUM:-BAILEY ENTIRELY NEW anD GREATER ' THAN EVER! el g ALY Bt foris 8 FIRSY TIME IN AMERICA! 4 -hn-bli P zolztglfilofl'fi TICRETS st A.A.A.. 17th $t. & Ponna. Ave. A.W. |GREENBELT rans-Lux Shows Namsos in Flames ‘The news reels are not pretty this week. They are just dramatic and more than a little frightening. The new Trans-Lux program has a full complement of them, Movietone and Paramount especially contribut- ing much to our enlightenment and nothing to our peace of mind. From Norway come terrifying shots’ of the flight of Norwegians from Oslo, the evacuation of Namsos, fts flaming destruction and finally the leveled, charred chasos that once was & quiet town, where people lived and died, once even of natural causes. There is the prelude to the horror of the Western Front; too—French tanks and guns mass- ing in preparation for action, Bel- glans “leaving wives, loved ones, homes in Paris to throw themselves in the face of the Nazi onslaught. And lest you still be thinking the Atlantic Ocean & moat making our castle unassailable, there is Presi- dent Roosevelt’s message to Con- gress. . On our defense front the Army tests new automatic rifies, and the Curtiss-Wright people test AMUSEMENTS. ~KEITH'S™ BING CROS : GLORIA JEAN “IF 1 HAD MY WAY” CHARLES WDININGER © EL BRENDEL -‘““"-un.cl of TIME “TME WEST WALL” * Can Nozi Smash Maginot Line? Can Allies Pierce West Wall? Today's Battle Front described by Maj. George Fielding Eliot L] 84, WALT DISNEY'S CARTOON “THE BILL POSTERS" Starting Friday "My Sweet Little Alice Blue Gown ANNA NEAGLE RAY MILLAXD in “IRENE” % ANNA NEAGLE will appear in PERSON (Friday, May 24th only) & new pursuit plane, which looks like a tricky job and would look sweet indeed if it could be counted in none too mournful numbers. Short subjects for resting up be- tween soberer actualities pictured are “Pleasurebound in Canada,” “Not So Dumb,” the new “Screen Snapshots” and “Home on the Range,” the color cartoon. H. M. T ——— e Francis and Jerry Grey in a novelty in which Miss Francis demonstrates some amazing muscular control, and the Rockets in three varied numbers. Their best is a mirror effect in which not one of them missed a cue at yesterday's matinee, the clever girls. Songs are the contribution of Gloria WORLD'S FASTEST GROWING SPORT ROLLER Blake, a lass with a warm voice which seems to go all the way from contralto to soprano. Dean Murphy is this week's impersonator of famous people, at his best impersonating Charlie McCarthy. AMUSEMENTS. UR HICKS and SALLY GRAY. Y ROGERS and MARY HART in “IN OLD CALIENTE.” 1331 H St. NE. ATLAS Contint 11 AM. From “Selentifically Air-Conditiened.” Double PFeature. SIDNEY TOLER. ROGERS in _“CHAN TN PANAMA." Also “PAROLE FIXER" and Selected Peaturettes. moLINA IT‘I & N. C. Ave. SE. WILLIAM BOYD in “RANGE WAR” and RICHARD DIX in “RENO." CIRCLE Pemes. Ave. at [ WALT DISNEY'S “PINOCCHIO.” Comedy. News. CAONGRBST 2931 Nlll-:: Ave. SE ‘@P.A SERPORD aih STAN BILL BAKFR in “PIONEERS "O“l‘;‘ THE INTIER." DON; IN FRO! 2 00D “THE CITY OP CHANCE." “Kit Car- 3. Also_Comedy. ‘With SEYMO! Also RO son.” No. 13. o FAIRLAWN ANacosTiA. b. C. EOGAR. ssNOEN: HORTINEL SRams ADULTS, 25¢ o R in_ “SWISS PAl J'lfi)‘n"&"wu." M Bt N.W. New Seats LIDO® am7 38 uble Festure. “HUMAN MONSTER” and * AND oF s1x For Additional Information THOMAS MITC] 08 oun 8t N . F and AW French Cast. o VEST » A oned. DIt BARTHOLL in “MAN FROM MONTREAL~ _=VINE “FLIGHT AT MIDNIGHT.” Also JOHN WAYNE in - “THE BIG STAMPEDE.” BETHESDA "% Tz o s, WL 2650 or Brad. 336. Completely Mr-co-lflhlod.r““ BOY ROGERS i -YOURG suPFALO 1 AMHA s Sun.-Mon.-Tues. Big Days. “VIRGINIA CITY.” WARNEk BROS. THEATERS AMBASSADOR 1% 5t & co. Matinee, 1 F.M, LAMOUR, ROBERT PRES- At1:45. 3 CHA! At 2:55. 5:45, § AVALON 5612 co Walt Diner's ¢ &ioanve: 7:40. 9:30. ‘G Shown at Matinee Only. AVE.GRAND s Fr iz sc Matinee, P. - v FRANK MORGAN. in_“GHOST CO! 3:55. 6:50, 9:50. “FIVE T in HOM! At 1P BILLIE BURKE HOME." %, 5, 5:50. 7:55, 9:45. Also 2324 Wis. Ave. N.W. Wi CALVER Phone Theaters Direct. NALD COLMAN. IDA LUPINO in “Light That Failed.” CAROLE lDM!ARD BRIAN AHERNE, __“Vigil in the Night.” £ Double, Feature, Also “SAINT'S DOUBLE TROU! Completely Air-Conditioned. &m.-*m.-mn.—? Big Days. BOB HOPE, BING CROSBY in “Road to Singapore.” HYATTSVI Evatiesiie, Md. e . SADDLE."” JO%&";MY in ‘85 * Sun.-Mon.-Tues.—3 Big Days. In Event of Busy Signal » Direction of SIDNEY LUST Call Republic 0800. LANE, THOMAN 30, 3:35. 5:38, CISCO_KI TIVOLI Jits & Park Ra. N.W. COlL 1800, Mat. 1 P. ANN_SHERIDAN in ALL C, TRUE”_At 1. Conn. Ave. & Newsrk o . 4100, Doo; PENNY SINGLETON. in, BLONDIE ON & TOX.DOGERS 1n ‘DAYS oF sEsex R, wnd. HARD HISER-BETHESDA MERLE OBFRON. RALPH “THE LION HAS WINGS.” 6970 Wis. Ave. Bethesda. Md. 8—Brad. 108 e Lady. RICHARDSON in e - % ION- . _with JOE PEN. ALEXAND) o ru!ueh-Yno. Last Time: Today, 445 “REBECCA.” CHARLIE "McC, fil%?onm" Matinee at SYLVAN =~ iniwt Ph. Ox. 1720 Wilen Bivd. WILSON HENR: 1480. l?!fi:mc.lsilfl Villls; PO (TONDA 10 IX, 4t 1 pm DEL RAY, VA. PALM THEA Double Feature. TR SVNGREN “The Bluebird,” BOYD, RUSSEL HAYDEN. War.” 1PM WALLACE BEERY “Ma} Doul Peature. » with N FOS- CHEbTRR MORAE. " iatines e M DAKOTA."

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