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The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 21

The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 21

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Brooklyn, New York
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21
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2t 'Never No More' Has Broadway Premiere- Stage and Screen News- Rian James1 BROOKLYN DAILY EAGLE, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, JANUARY 8, 1932 'ARROW SMITH IS 'THE CAT A1D THE FIDDLE New York for the last year and a half; tootles off with the idea that The Theaters the Rhumba is a pretty tiresome dance, and we aren fooling. By ARTHUR POLLOCK In quick succession, then, your scribe nits out to Havana Mont 'Sever No More, a Thrilling Segro Drama Picturing marte; to the Sans Soucl both of the Terror of Negroes at the Mercy of Lynchers, Opens at the Hudson Theater which are simply nice night clubs; to the Paris, which isn't even slightly nice and is. consequently, a neap more fun. At the Paris he sees his eleven-hundreth version of the Another drama of the Negro, "Never No More." Most of the play Rhumba, and likes it almost as well as the Rhumbas staged by N. T.

O. in Manhattan's Hollywood Restaurant, wonders why all Cuban Beauties are short and wide, and overfed, and arrives at no conclusion. Giving it up, he collects his about Negroes are simple and sincere, and this one is no exception. James Knox MUlen wrote it and Robert Sparks presents it at the Hudson Theater. It shows how Negroes are lynched.

This one is burned to death. That marks Mr. Millen bold dramatist. We do not see the culprit burned, not actually, but we watch' with his mother and his sisters and his brothers from the inside of their little cabin while the flames glow through the cracks in the walls and the boy screams in terror. The play party and tootles out to Havana's cught to be done down South where it would, no doubt, do no good whatever.

''''l is- i jf V- j- 4.awar....:-t-----I---. Mr. Millen tells his story in the simplest terms. In fact, he has chosen to be so simple and so sincere that he reveals himself not quite A equal to a task so difficult, grow on trees, but do grow on bush es; bananas, Ouava, oranges, cocoa nut, castor beans (they build castor oil out of these), sugar cane, tobaccoall set out, for exhibition purposes, within the space of a singl acre. Here, too, he sees his first cock-fight, in a genuine little cock-fighting arena, and learns things about these too.

For instance, good fighting cocks are valued at anywhere from $20 up; wear artificial steel spurs, kill each other, or ons another, within about four minutes after the spurs are fastened on, although they don't know wha they're fighting for. Here, too, sees a native climb a Royal Palm; sees another native make clay pottery; has, In all, a swell, albeit instructive afternoon. And then, for dinner, he goes to a typical nativs restaurant, has Huevos Malagueno, Arroz con Polio, and a swell headache for the balance of the evening as a result. And then, with a newfound flock of congenials, he goes places and sees the things that tourists shouldn't see, but want to anyway, and concludes with a lovely, moonlit drive through Mlramar and Havana's suburbs. A lovely place, Havana, with broiling, days and cool nights, end rainstorms every eleven minutes, and a new revolution every Wednesday, and no traffic police but when it comes to New Year's Eve, we'll have Laka Placid.

And so, weary, your scribe flits back to the boat. He's enjoyed every second of the adventureand now it's nearly over and if you say anything about Life being like that, we'll scream I Copyright, 1933, Brooklyn Detljr Eatle Ald for Aged Actors An extra matinee of "The Band Wagon" will be given for the Actors Fund on Tuesday, Jan. 12, at ths New Amsterdam Theater. The enr tire receipts will be turned over ta the fund to help take care of aged and destitute players. There will bt no advance in prices.

and a double-deck sandwich that can hold it's own with anything back home: has his picture taken by a nit-wit who goes around exploding flash-light powder in your car and leaves shortly to go places. 0 Aboard ship, he gets all dinner-coated up, swelters in the same kind of weather he spends money to get away from in July, and then, with his starched shirt growing soggier every second, he sets out upon the business of giving 1932 a proper reception. the Plaza Roof, when the torrenial rains permit, he dances to the strains of a rhythmic Rhumba Orchestra, dines on his very first roast pig au Jus, which is Just too elrgant; samples his first Spanish Sauteme and wears the same kind of a New Year's Eve cranial decoration that he'd have worn at home. And between dances he looks around and learns things. Nine out of ten Cuban ladies carry lorgnettes, and use them as though they were hunting needles in haystacks; ten Cuban Ladies out of ten the unmarried ones go places escorted by their mothers, eight or nine near relatives and their boyfriends, and never go places alone; eleven out of ten young Cuban ladies wear sheer veils across their faces, but no hats and not one Cuban lady out of ten wears either a Spanish shawl or a Spanish comb, which is pretty disconcerting, we can tell yr.u.

And then, as the old year vanes, the lights go out and the populace makes the same kind of a noise they make at 42d St. and Broadway, and the New Year is officially in. And so, calling for his check, your scribe pays with a hundred-dollar bill and gets a mean seventy-six dollars change ALL IN SILVER which is more dead weight than you'd ask a horse to lug around; learns that there is no paper money here in Cuba and learns it all too late. a a a And then, we're off again. At the Cabaret Verbena, which has been recommended as pretty hot stuff, your scribe watches the populace get shocked by young ladies who, in a series of "living pictures," wear about seven times as many clothes as any chorus girl In any Manhattan night club floor show; sees his eighty-ninth interpretation of La Rhumba, gets slightly sick and tired of hearing the same old Rhumba tunes that he's been hearing back in Ronald Colman in the talkie hit at the Gaiety Theater.

Never No More' A play by James Knox Millen. Presented at the Theater by Robert 8parks. Settings by Jo Mielzlner. THaT CAST Mammy Rofe MeClendon Tom Morns McKenney Joe William L. Andrews Mllly Enid Raphael ke James Dunmore Laura Viola Dean Holomon.

Rudolph Toombs Huie Paul Deacon Lew Payton Netgnbor Whipper famed Casino. And what a place that is! In a martile room that is hardly any larger than Central Park, he watches tourists from Walla Walla and Butte play roulette, and "bird-cage," and in a smaller gaming room, off the main one, he takes a whirl at Chemln de Fer, chuckles as he pulls five straight winning hands out of the shoe; quits some eighty dollars the richer, and looks around. a a a In the Casino Restaurant, which is plenty swanky, he meets Brooklyn's V. O. Gus Van, who is entertaining here; meets Lou Holtz and Earl Carroll, who are merely looking on; chats with the Daily News' ex-Evelyn Kelly, who is now "Agent of Propaganda" (Press agent to you) for the Casino and has elghty-or-ninety Tropical beers, en route.

The Casino is Jammed, and both Bars are as crowded as a Department Store's bargain Basement on the last Saturday before Christmas! But then, it's New Year's Eve. And then, with the first rays of dawn, your scribe flits back to Sloppy Joe's for a breakfast sandwich and a cup of something that looks like ink, tastes like gall and answers to the name of coffee! And his sisters and his mother, shocked, hope he has escaped because they love him, though they along beautiful Malecon Drive and the Prado; lunches at the Nacional Hotel; Morro Castle and shudders appropriately when they show him the slit in the floor through which they used to toss prisoners to the sharks. Nice people! At the Tropical Gardens he is amazed when they serve him a whole flock of free tropical beer, and at the more-than-lnteresting Algibe Farm, he learns more about the tropics in ten minutes than he has learned in the last ten days, a a a Here he sees every sort of tropical fruit growing mangos, bread fruit, coffee, cocoa, pineapples learns, incidentally, that pineapples DON'T particularly, demanding great skill in the dramatist. There are times during the act in which the boy is being burned outside the cabin that, in spite of the terror of it, the interest flags a trifle. These are good people, this family of Negroes.

They live honestly, inoffensively, working on a plantation. The youngest boy, his mother's favorite, likes to be with the white folks and his brothers twit him about One evening he comes home seeming slightly uneasy and asks for the loan of four or five dollars. His eldest brother will not give it to him. All he has is needed, he says, for the family's clothes and for Christmas. A few moments later bloodhounds are heard.

The whites are looking for some one, some Negro. Who? What has he done that he should be hunted? To the surprise of the family the sounds of the pursuit approach nearer and nearer. At last there is no doubt they are coming here, to this little cabin, all of whose occupants are innocent boys and girls with their pious old mother In their midst. That mother asks each boy now what he has been doing. They haven't done anything.

But at last the youngest admits that he met a white girl in the woods. She ran away. He followed to tell her not to be frightened. He took hold of her. He put his hands to her left her dead.

The mother drives him away, the eldest son gives him all the money he has. The boy races off. Inside the cabin his brothers and Oirttm Myrtil, oit of principals in tfw popular muital romance at thm Globm Theater that over, being wearier than that even, he flits back to th ship and falls into bed! So THAT was New Reverting to Type Year's Eve, in Havana. a a a By RIAN JAMES BROOKLYN AMUSEMENTS BROOKLYN know he has done wrong. There comes a knocking at the front door.

It is his pursuers. There comes a knocking at the side door. It is he, come back. They cannot let him in. He is caught.

And as his family suffers agonies Inside he is burned to death outside. That is harrowing stuff for drama. No dramatist has ever before made an audience feel so keenly the terror felt by the Negro as he faces the brutish injustice of lynchers. In that respect "Never No More" is remarkable. It Is not a perfect piece of dramatic writing, but it is an almost perfect picture of fear.

The serene and moving Rose McClendon heads the cast, playing the mother. She gets her effects quietly. All the players go about their work with the utmost directness and honesty. Morris McKenney is especially shading strength with tenderness. "Never No More" is an unusual drama.

Early next, morning all right, then, early next afternoon, your column-chauffeur grabs himself a On Board Ship, Havana, Cuba. An Itinerant scribe, who knows what's expected him, stands on deck and appropriately "oohs" and "aahs" as his ship glides gently by far-famed Morro Castle; "oohs" and "aahs" some more as the ship car and sees a little of what Havana's all about in the daytime. WHAT A SHOW! THE 4 MARX BROTHERS on the singe and one of th onl standing pictures of the year on the screen is just about the REST show Brooklyn ever saw! sidles up the narrow neck that is the gateway to Havana's harbor. Morro Castle towers spectacularly high up on a bank to the left; Havana Flitting ouf through the country, he plays around with a flock of flamingoes lovely pink ones, on the estate of a wealthy Senator; drives AMUSEMENTS BROOKLYN AMUSEMENTS BROOKLYN itself sprawls out languidly to the right no riot of color nothing typically tropical except the heat. So this is and tonight is New Year's Eve I a Ashore, your scribe picks his way along narrow, one-man sidewalks and streets that are simply overgrown lanes; through mobs of natives, every one of whom has something to sell.

Native youngsters ask for 4IM 11 The Screen -By MARTIN DICKSTEIN ai TanwawawawiT -MnTRnT I pennies, native oldsters want to show you the town, and any native who doesn't happen to own a taxicab himself has at least eleven relatives Onth cftaqe who do. Burgeoning through, your column-chauffeur eventually finds the Plaza, and in the Plaza a flock 'Under Eighteen Comes to the Brooklyn Strand CROUCHO HARPO (HKO ZEPPO III PflKODuo ANN GREENWAY HUNTER PERCIVAL DENNIS WHITt ness to his brothers, who carry on of congenials. With the congenials he makes his way across the street to world-famed Sloppy Joe's; learns tne oia traaiuon. "UNDER EIGHTEEN." a Warner Brothers production directed by Archie Mayo and presented at the Brooklyn 8trand villain, who turns out to be not such a bad fellow after all, is adequately impersonated by Warren William, last seen hereabouts in "The Honor of the Family." And Mr. Toomey, as we've already told you, plays the part of the upright young admirer from the tenement district.

There is the usual surrounding program of Vitaphone shorts at the Strand, starting today. E. M. Newman takes you on a camera jaunt along "The Road to Fanny Watson and Thelma White are at their funniest in a two-reel comedy called "Her Wedding Night-Mare," and there is an amusing sound cartoon entitled "Bosco at the Zoo." A new edition of the Strand News and John Hammond's organ songfest complete an entertaining bill. that Sloppy, who can't write any At SIoppv Joe's your scribe has a couple of Joe's famous Specials thing but his name, -has retired to On tkeScieen a villa in Spain, has left the busi-1 pineapple juice, brandy and sherry AMUSEMENTS MANHATTAN AMUSEMENTS MANHATTAN CHAHCE Opens Tomorrow at 2 P.M.

ceait thjtob diama with MARY ASTOR An Diriaao (astit 32ND NATIONAL JANUARY 9-16 H1 John HAiiiaay mm akoaasaMMsasoa STARTS I VI ON 6 SCR.EEN I If I flff I bertlahrUIIM ALBEE SQ.BKLYN. TfU.SlOOO 333 tSUNOAV UlCEPTgO) A New Motor Ca Ea A hives I Never before so many improvements Never before such remarkable price values. Forty-three exhibitors of cars end commercial vchiclet 300 Models Modish Bodies Modern Accessories. Shop tquipmnt feeton open to the public after 5 P.M.' aoMistiOM Tea TOMORROW A Welcome Home Stars of the (stage and screen and a notable gatherng of first-nighters will welcome Mary Ellis and Basil Sydney back to the Broadway stage, after a year's absence, next Wednesday evening at the Times Square Theater, when Paul Streger presents them in "Jewel Robbery," a comedy adapted by Bertram Bloch from the Hungarian of Laszlo Fodor. SHOW 1 i aanwaar, a as.

le.sa a. M. She Knew Everything Except to "KNOW GRAND CENTRAL PALACE loelntt.il Avenii. one! 46th Stref, Now Yorfc Chy AMUSEMENTS MANHATTAN MARIAN MARSH -under IS" 1-uoL, Theater with the following cast: Marce Evans Marian Marsh Jimmie Regis Toomey Warren William Biphie Anita Page M. Evans Dunn Sybil Joyce Comnton Poo Evans J.

Parrell MacDonald Ml-i Judith Vosselli Alt. Norman Foster Dorothv Appleby Mrs. Ged Maude Eburne Babsy Claire Dodd Francois Paul Porcasl Should you drop into the Brooklyn Strand Theater one day this week, you would come across pretty little Marian Marsh in a not so very pretty photodrama entitled "Under Eighteen." A not so very pretty drama because, at first, it has to do with life in a tenement and even such a charming little lady as Miss Marsh can appear amazingly unhappy 'midst the squalor of a Hollywood movie tenement. But "Under Eighteen" isn't the kind of a movie which confines itself for long to plain desires under the Soon enough, it hies itself, along with pretty nearly the entire cast, to a luxuriously furnished pent-house apartment in a snootier part of town. And it is there that the poor little woiklng goll (Miss Marsh) meets the "rich playboy," who is immediately identified as Warren William.

You probably have guessed by now that "Under Eighteen" follows a pretty familiar formula, that it is, in fact, all about the neat but never gaudy little heroine who grows tired of being poor and who decides to accept the affectionate attentions of the wolf-in-a-silk-dressing-gown in his skyscraper apartment. Well, anyway, we can assure you that it all comes' out happily in the end, when Margie Evans decides that she's had enough of the luxurious life and goes back to the poor but honest boy friend, who happens to be Regis Toomey. You've seen it all a hundred times before if you've seen it once. But in "Under Eighteen" it happens to be done fairly well. Miss Marsh, who is now a Warner star in her own right, gives a nice, if never brilliant, performance in the role of the harassed Marge.

The CHAHLOTTE GREENWOOD Jit Times Torlar JORMA SHEARER Rnbi. Montgnmrrv in "Private WILLIAM i KtQtft TOOMCY ik JVenw B'klvn STRAND WMITR FANNY WATSON in llr WwMina Niohtiosrf-K. NKWMAN irsveltalk "Road to Msndslav" "BOSCO AT TIIKZOO" saT JOHN HAMMOND st th. Oigsn It a.m. wm tv.

I 1 II Ubl "MANHATTAN PARADE'S "Lota of run nicMela. tai't. Irresistibly funny!" A'eas. "Beautifully played cleverly gagged It's first rata fun!" Jfirror. WINTER GARDEN Broadway 50th Cont.

Pop. Pricei TRIPLE SHOW? FEATURE FILMS SHOWING TODAY ur ifacJuc LA UK EL in, JMsAICA I CAPITOL ATRS Jiiot Rijtu, COOPER TOMORROW Sam Sam BAY RIDGE SECTION Fort way. fl8th-Ft. Hamilton Ovrr the Hill; ala (porting' Chant Park Theatre. 4th St.

(fe 5th Av Richard Arlen. Touchdown cQma- Camuki, TUill UllaJk'cW STEPPING HIGI-n 1 JM. MolrwCelaasa ti Mayer's Giaatt A BEDFORD SECTION A poll a. Pulton 8t. A Throop At 2 Features Girl A hoot Town: ala DeeHver National 720 Washmeton Guardsman: alao Shanrhaled Love Jean Harlow Recent.

Pulton 8t. Se Bedford Av The Gaardtman: ihn Too Man Cooks Jartie Hall Bedford At. A Lincoln PI Vaudeville; Secret Witneni, H. Collier I na MerkeJ BOROUGH HALL AND DOWNTOWN SECTION Oaf field, Duffleld A Pulton Sta rutinom Blonde: aU Guilty Generation W. BaTtea vlomart, SPO Pulton Bt 2 Feature oh Sister: also Rider of Purple Sag St.

Geone Playhoaoc. 100 Pineappla. Feature -One a aluo The Bargain Terminal, 4th Av. St Dean 8t Glrla About Town; alao Ruling Voice Sam BRIGHTON BEACH SECTION rime Hal TODAY WITH LOEWS "ACE" VAl'DEVILLE TODAY I.OEW'S PITKIN. Pitkin St Saratoga.

Crawford, Oaole. POSSESSED: FARINA In Person I.OEW'S BAV RIDGE. 72d 3d CORSAIR, Chester Morris; Vo a Walters LOEW'S 46TH 46 A N. Utrecht. Chester Morris: BOB Ml RPHY LOEW'S GATES.

Oatea At Broadway. CORSAIR. Chester Morris; Eddie Hanley 4s Ca. TODAY ON LOEW'S PERFECT TALKING SCREEN'S TODAY LOEW'S KINGS. Mattmsh A Tilden.

CRAWFORD. Clara OaMe. POSSESSED LOEW'S BROADWAY. Features CORSAIR 4k DANGEROUS AFFAIR LOEW'S HILLSIDE. Jamaica I.OEW'S MELBA.

Livingston-Hanover I 'aPlflOfc 1" heater LOEWS WII. LARD. Woodhaven IliX 1 II Morris LOEW'S BEDFORD. Bedford-Bergen. LOEW'S KAMEO.

K. Pkwav-Nostrand. Mint Siimmerville Comedy Lea Car tilt) Mlaaa aUatV Clark OASU Tuxedo, Ocean Pity. nr. Brighton Bill Bovd, Sulfide Fleet BISHWKK SECTION B'T nt.

Helot 1 Kn. ieefotf AVINUf RESTA CR ANTS- BROOKLYN STRUT Color.lal.Broadwar also Bad Company CROWN HEIGHTS SECTION rongresi.St. John'sPI. -Buffalo At, Ruling Voice; aln I'nbolT Garden Sam Bivera.St.Joho sPl.atKingsLon At. the Hill; also Range Feud Sam FLATBUSH SECTION flatbuh.

Church fe Plathuh star Final: also Penrod and Sam. Damlt airnwaod, 1475 FlatbUfth At Misbehaving Ladies: also Caught firanada. Church At Nostrand Avs. Jamea Dunn, Over the Hill Same Leader. Conev 1I.

Arlen, Touchdown Sam Newkirk E. 6. nr. New Irk. Lenox: alio Road to Singapore.

Carrlll Parkslde, Flatbush ttc Parkulde Reaton, Sidewalks, of New York. Watkln PARK SLOPE SECTION Carlton. Platbmh A- 7th Avk Ruling Voice: also Morale for Women Jne E. Brow Sanders. Proapect Pic.

of Madeion Claudet; Fighting Marshall Sam ters" I l.nlie Dresier. Loaise Dresaer. Minna FRANCINE LARRIMORE theatbi glii.d RRIEF MOMENT REUNION IN VIENNA Fl Aaro The. ui A BOBEBT E. SHERWOOD MaV.

2 Et' i4 SU' Av. PEa. VBr ELMER RICE. wit. PAUL MUNI iTrIf.lEm.

8:20 SAVAGE RHYTHM Dun ID UCDIlAIIT held by the play." Mnnttr. rtllLlr mxruVALC joh.n den w. ss st. cir. YNAR A a Mln from aoarl Malinees WEO.

SAT. allinivn Lower." Morose. j.Eys.S:43.Mat. CFNG HIGH SING Wed. Mat.

Best Seats it: Sat. Mat. a.UIT monthi FARL CARROLL VANITIES har.is w. with WILL WII I MM MITCHFl.t. eaa J.

Mat. T.ai. MAHONET DEMAREST a Dl BANT Company of 20060 Oltttennit Scenes I PCI IF RANIfC i. 75 of the World's Most Beautiful Girls WrZ? SPRINGTIME FOR HENRY Wed. Mat.

Mtt 1. Sal. Mat. t. t'1" s'' Frieda EAB1.

CABKOM. 7 Aye. aV Mt St. CHANDI.EB BRI CK INFStORT nOl'Ol AW MONTGOMERY In B'T i' Mi fATA MORGANA "A hrtlliant ei eomdv." Hrrald Trihvf KATHARINE CORNELL 10 ig'ee. I' Of Win.po!StT..t GEORGE WHITE'S SCANDALS empire or.

with Bade V.lle.. Willie 4 E.een. Haward. Etkel Meraiaa. Everett Marshall.

Ray Bolter. Gale Qasdraplets. ll" Repertory r.ay C.asedy Tfce Bnde the Sun Shine, On CONSTANCE COLLIER r. i.tosVS'X nUum In N'OE. COWARD'S COMEDY Hi MAX OOKDOS presenla with ERIC TOWI.ET THE CAT AND THE FIDDLE AVON W.

4.1 St. Mats. Thar. Jr Sat. h' JEROME KERN and OTTO HARBACH CIVIC LIGHT OPERA CO.

la GLOBE B'wav. 4 St. Eves. GILBERT SULLIVAN'S w'd- ,:3 UUAilinC r.U BERTIANCAOT ccrc THRIFT PRICES: Even. Mt to I Ht DLVIL PASSES Wed.

Mis. la. Sat. Mts. SOe to 1 Erlanrer W.

44. PEi. FJJ No, Po.MAr'y": LOST fl DIANA WYNYARD. CECILIA I.OFTI S. 1 a 1 ERNEST THESIGFR.

ERNEST COSSART "A terrlfvinr plav: (reasrndoaslj SEI.WYN W. 4: St. Mts. Thar. Sat.

dramatic; splendidly acted." Eva. :Se.tl ta SS. Mata. St t. J.

Bmokm A1kion. Ttmet MANSFIELD W. of B'way GILBERT MILLER presents Eves. Matinees Thars. Sat.

IIET II A VPS THE THEATRE Gl'ILD presents tltLtiN HAILS '''ws' Triiory hi MOLNAR'S New CeBeJy Moarnint Becomes Electra JHE GOOD FAIRY Composed of 3 Plays presented on 1 day few trlplr-etarred, ha ased lately reeoas- HemeeoaBlnf. The Hanted. The Haanted asesidaole entertainment. In town." Commencing at 5:30 sharp. Dinner inter llilhrrt Unhrirl, Y.

Amerlmn mission of one hour at 7. No matinees. HENRY MILLER'S W. 4.1d St. THEATRE, Bd W.

B'way Matinees Than, and Sat. fT TUFT I clwr' ELMER RICE'S COMEDY SUCCESS A New M.slesl Corned. Will. Ht Lt' BANK WEER Wm. GaTtnn.

Ivls Moran Vlrtor Moore A Plav of l.tfe ia Paris Mt'SIC BOX W. AS St. Evas. IITTLE W. 44 at.

Tel. LA. 4-an Malinees Tharsday 4s Satarday 1 Bvas. 50. Matinees Wed, and Bat.

2 30 I 4 Gomkell and Wm. Calller Sr. 1 1 On the llners-1 of Stage. Htaa-tbe Sure and Radio MAJESTIC Nuin, Shatter, present Ql'EEME SMITH Ik ft acw coedr "A Little Racketeer" NEXT WEEK SEATS NOW Sir James M. Barrto't Faaaas CamH A Kiss for Cinderella with CONSTANCE BINNF.Y Eraest Lawford John Williams and Company of 40 FRFD WARING A Bis osy Tneatro Orra.

i na Week GARBO N0VARR0 in "MATA HARI" LIONEL BARRYMORB Revae Jinny Ravo B.nchak Orchestra CONEY ISLAND FELTMANS' "FISHEREE" GRILL ON BOARDWALK OPEN AM. YEAR "Mod emit Charge" Fish. Seafood, Steaks, Shore Dinner AND NOT FOROETTINO TOT Famous Feltman Frankfurters "Sun bath yourself on Boardwalk: we furnish steamer chairs and robes" BROOKLYN INSTITUTE of Arts and Sciences Know Your World Today! Lefturfu and DaiTy bv Lfad-frig American and EuTonan Scholar; Publicists, Scientist, including Wm. T.vnn PhHpt 8. K.

Ralrllffa John Df? YWerv Hallrr Nnrman Angell Lavi K. Anaparhar Shaw DamanJ Baraneai HHtne van Hlndenbnrg Rut a Hi. Denla ft tiff mtjnf nthtm. AJi Jtertttll, Heading. tack monik.

Mcmbtrfthip Blanks on Application. RMr. Pe(IirtyearoDlyi 15. Annual Due, 10. Brooklyn Academy of Music 30 Lafayette Avenue Tel.

STtrllnc 3-6700 WAT li ST. APITOL doors opf today id a.m. ALRFP Alnee Squire Paul I ukaa DISHONORABLE Meraff KEN MORS Church-P'atbuh Ben I. -on COMPROMISED Tastveant Gloom rhoari MAIMSON Mvrlle-Wyckotf Pen Lyon COMPROMISED Beo All BEN LVON AND ROSE HOBAIT a out at. 111 tiiii ntc, I ORPHFI'M PilltnnRnckrll I BI SHHIIK B'wav-Haward KEITH' Richmond Hill I 25 Manh Ave.

I Bwav A- 53nd St. "COMPIOXIirD" odd BtrcDlKhasa miaaiioo TII.Ynil Her llf wii bed of rain! SAFE in HELL Brooklyn Academv of Music Sat. Jan. at Clare Tree Major Co. in BEAUTY yBEAST A ffolden afternoon for the ehlldren.

Tiraete Now. Box Olfiee. Tel. STerllnf 3-870 Pssltlrely NO Children Admitted I PROSPKCT 9th Ave. COMPROMISEO TOITHDOWV I SHORE ROAD 86th Ave.

HII.L KOI. I KS AMBASSADOR BILL CENTURY CIRCUIT THEATRES 20th CENTURY ENTERTAINMENT FLATBl'SH SECTION 04 On the stage at each performance BAROLD NOICE In person In "Jangle Adventures" TWICE DAILY 2:458:43 XPLORERS of the WORLD JawaW I IIIIM West 12th St. SROONLVN aiotbutll Avonu. m4 Nevmt Strl Held Overt Snaf YVra Patio. Platbu-h Mid wood Sherlock Hoi men peek led Band.

Ravmond Maey Kinctwav, Kings Hcy -Coney 1st. At. .2 Feature Compromised and The Gat Bnrkaraa Albemarle. Flat bush At Albemarle arret Wltnem, Wm. Collier Jr.

and Ina MrrkH Rialta.PlatbushAv.ArCortelvouRd.. Bill Bovd, Sulfide Fleet, Armstrong, Gleaon, Roger Marine. Platbush At. At Klngn Hgy. Bill Bovd.

Suiride Fleet, Armstrong, Ciieaivon. Roger Mid wood. Ave. JAB. 13th 8t A Dangerou-j Affair, Jaek Holt and Ralph Grave Farragnt.

Flithi)h At Rogers 2 Feature Tnurhdnwn and Honor of the Family a Ion, King" Hgy. Ai E. JBth St. I -oral By Makea Oood, Joe E. Brown Mn-r, Conev In, Av.

ft Ave. 2 FeU, Suiride Fleet and FIo Star Final Mavfllr. Cnnev At. Ar Ave. TJ.

Feata. Sin of Madeion Clandet, Danrorou Affat Hheepwhead.Rheen. Bav A-Voor FeatI.oeal Bo Makea Gord and The Deeeivna and Bowery "THIS KKCKLBSS AOS CRITERION. B'way a 44th St. Seats Reserved TOWN BALL, TOMORROW EVE.

at Kedroff Quartet! ONLY NEW YORK RECITAL with Biz3taf Caat Ob hr Ststr RUSS COLOMBO and BC SWELL SISTERS "DELICIOUS" wHlanatCYMOf ChaHaaFARRCLL SI.SC raNCNON MARCO HIVUC CONEY ISLAND ALL YEAR, uA Eaapreii.ImpireBlvd.ot kljn Av. Feat. Phtntem Pari ftnd Boa 4 Eej.

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