The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, September 11, 1938, Page 9, Image 9

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    At
Sale
Astaire, Rogers
In "Carefree"
Latest Dance-Song, Hit of
Couple Opens Run at
Elsinore JToday
" Bubbling with, romance and
comedy and Irving Berlin's catch
iest songs, R K O Radio's new
f 'Carefree" reunites Fred Astaire
and Ginger Rogers in what Is
hailed as the most delightful
screen vehicle of their brilliant
earners and is now playing at
the Elsinore theatre. -
Brightly modern In theme and
treatment, the picture deals
with the triangular romance be
tween a popular actress, a dis
tinguished psychiatrist and a suc
cessful lawyer. Astaire portrays
the. medical man and Ralph Bel
lamy is the attorney, whose un
certain love affair with Miss
Rogers leads him to call en As
taire for help.
! Plot ComplicaJol
stems the joyous complications
f the story. Fred gives Ginger
a course of treatment which leads
her to fall In love with him in
stead of with Bellamy, and which
involves her in a series of wild
escapades that hit new highs in
the; annals of Astaire-Rogers hi
larity. And after Fred has firm
ly planted In her mind the notion
that he is a monster, he suddenly
discovers that he is in love with
her1 himself.
Three Ritz Boys
llll U 11 A, 1X111. 13 a
'Kentucky Moonshine"
Makes Fun of . Talent
Quests, at State
The three ' R1U brothers, tak
ing a hilarious, tongue-in-the-cheek
poke at the radio broad
casting studio's penchant for tal
ent quests, are scheduled to open
today at the State theatre in
their latest starring comedy,
"Kentucky Moonshine."
interpolated through the plot
of ! "Kentucky Moonshine" is a
romance netween tony Aiartin,
he popular radio (and more re
cently ) screen crooner, and the
delightful Marjorie Weaver.
The romance In turn 'is accom
panied by three hit parade des
tined songs by the prolific song
writing team of Lew Pollack and
Sidney D. Mitchell, who provided
three of the tunes for "In Old
Chicago" among nearly two doz
en i other hits during the past
year. -
Dr. Lee Departs;
Gives Many Talks
SILVERTON Dr' Oliver J.
Lee, hea'd of the astronomy de
partment at Northwestern uni
versity at Evenston. Ill:, who has
ben spending three weeks here
a.3 the guest of his brother, Os
car i Lee, will leave Saturday
morning" for the east
During his. stay here. Dr. Lee
has been generous with his time,
giving a number of talks when
requested.
Accompanying Dr. Lee east
will be his niece, Miss Una. Lee,
Oscar Lees. She will enter North
who has been spending the sum
,meri here with her parents, the
western university to work for
her master's degree.
Grass r ires b ought
' SILVERTON Grass fires In
Geiser addition and McClaine
ei reeis caiiea out lae oiivvriuu
fire department twice Thursday
afternoon. The one fire was near
the Sam Lorenzen home and the
other back of the Keene and
Eastman homes.
Zane Grey's Son
Lorrn Grey, son of the fatned au
thor and sportsman, Zane Grey,
wfntW showed how to
rna m sacccssfnl fishing erpetli-
- . . AY
pound xnarlin sword-fi&h. The
brought to Raff after an boar's
thrilling battle. . Mirea, capniu
i-wm m his -rixrienee' caiaed
through f 1 h 1 n g expeditions
with his father, by operating a
quest of big fish off Santa Cata
tina island.-. !
. . " '
.. , , . y . . ,
i v 1 : " . J.
i :- :-:-i:-:::-'-is''i 'V f r
4 . I
r -v . : m . ... a
1
in Theatres , This
Fred Astaire's "Carefree" Formula
l A -
mf
r
Pictured above are. Ginger Roger as an actress patient, Walter Kings
ford. Astaire's colleague and Fred Astaire, psychiatrist, in a scene
from "Carefree" which opened yesterday at the Elsinore theatre
ana piays tnrougn Wednesday;
IV
H.
They look hillbilly, they talk hillbilly, bat don't let the whiskers fool
you! It's the Ritz brothers ias mountaineers with a Brooklyn accent
in "Kentucky Moonshine, featured at the State theatre today.
" ' it
Hailed as her happiest, her funniest, her heart-taggingest surprise
bit "Keep Smiling finds-Jane Withers starring in the first of her
1038-39 pictures showing today at the Grand theatre. " .
A riv time is had by Cleorge lirent.
Francis in a party scrnc irum trm-is ui ixvi.ma, "
drama starting today at the Capitol theatre. 1 j - : . i
Catholic School
, Opens 36th Year
WOODBURI ' St. Benedlcfa
Catholic- school ,will open- its
thirty-sixth year on Monday,
cnfamwlt. The music depart
ment will again offer the course
in " music to graae acnooi pupiis
and the standard course for high
school students for) hign-scnooi
credit. Sister M. Clementine will
ho the instructor.
Teachers in the school thlj
year will be Sister VL Clement-ie,
superior; Sister m. uernice, ur
and , second i grades; Sister M.
Louise, third and fourth grades;
Sister M. Justine, fifth and sixth
grades; Sister M.Lloba, seventh
and eighth grades, u . .
5
Mart
Quia rtetmra
irFfgsiifc.iini
1 " . r T -V
(The
'6-
si r-
Ian Hunter, Isabel Jeans and Kay
r
T
MO
; STARTS TODAY I f
Continuous Today 1 to 1 1 P. f. ,
, 3Iatinee Each Day 2 P. M. ;
Special Prices This Picture j
Adults 23c - Children 10c
A MIRACLE
OF MOTION ;
AMD Et:0TI0M...D1ii.r
tint full-length production!
ALSO . VKWS AXD ACT
..,i;-y...... 4
)
. f - ----- ,
OREGON STATESMAN, Safem
eeM:
Glamor Explained
I At Capitol Today
Kay Francis Has Plenty
; of It in new" Film
i ! 'Secret "of Actress' !
If there Is anyone who is still
uncertain as to precisely what
Hollywood means when it applies
the adjectlre "glamorous" to; an
actress, he can gain a complete
understanding of the term by go
ing to-the Capitol theatre to see
Kay Francis in her latest War
ner Bros, picture,' "Secrets of , an
Actress,, which opens there l to
day. There are two men In her life,
George Brent, an architect, and
Ian Hunter his employer. j
j Loves: Married Man j
Kay likes the producer and Is
grateful to him for backing her
show and, as he lores her. it
seems for a time as it they will
be married. But Kay heart
really belongs to Brent, and ! he
guardedly reciprocates her af
fection, although he is married.
His marriage, however, is more
legal than actual, and his thor
oughly heartless, mercenary wife,
played by Gloria Dickson,) is
about to dlTorce him when she
learns of his lore for Kay.
The wife proceeds to try to ex
ploit the situation for her pecun
iary advantage. Then, unknown
to Kay and - Brent, Hunter gal
lantly withdraws from the field
to clear"the way for the event
ual marriage of Kay to the man
he loves, and .then actually
clears the way by tricking Glo
ria into a solution - which makes
everyone happy except himself.
Orchard Heights
1 Residents Stage
Three Charivaris
ORCHARD HEIGHTS The
Orchard Heights neighborhood
sustained Its reputation for orig
inality and neighborly good will
Monday night when 79 of Its re
sidents staged a triple charivari.
The first call was made, on Mr.
and Mrs. Glenn Southwick (Mrs.
May Wolfley) who were married
September 1 at Vancouver.
The second couple honored was
Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Lepley, guests
at the home of Mrs. Mary Lepley.
The Lepleys were married two
years ago but '. left Immediately
to make their home at Puyallup:
The third couple visited was
Mr. and- Mrs. Roscoe Clarke,
newlyweds of several months'
standing. - Mrs. Clarke, a Port
land office worker has but re
cently come to make her perman
ent home here.
i
f Johns Services Held
SATTMSVILLE Burial services
for Paul Johns, who passed away
In Salem, were held here at the
Butler cemetery Monday.
The Call Board
GRAND j
Today Jane Withers In
"Keep Smiling," a movie
quiz picture. j
KLSIXORE I
Today Fred Astaire and
Ginger Rogers In "Care
free," a movie quia pic
ture, plus latest March of
Time. i
Thursday Double bill. Bob-
by Breen in "Breaking the
Ice," a movie qulj picture,
with Charlie Ruggles and
"the Higglns Family" with
Jimmy Gleason. ;. "
CAPITOL !
Today - Double bill, Kay
Francis in "Secrets of an
Actress" with Ian Hunter
and "Blazing ; Barriers"
with an all star; cast plus
chapter 9 "The Lone Ran-
ger" serial. , ,
Wednesday Double bill,
"Rich Man, Poor Girl"
with Robert Ypung and
Guy Kibbee and "The
Three . Mesqulteers" In
"Pals the Saddle.",
-
This is the con
sarndest mess o
fun weVe had
since Gran' paw
shot the gall uses
of f n the rev-
enooer.
fflMOT 11 5 n rt g . t it : i a : hjigg
I i . IT
-'-- f V MAT.
r JhAM m
1 aV-I- JfVm-A EVE.
Them mad mountaineers run q
riot in the Ozarks. V TODAY I
This is the con-' "f f ) ,,..,..,.- V 0 1
sarndest mess o y 1 1 1 1 v " I
v inn we ve naa i v vv-n. i"" j n
O
MARCH'
: -
tijme -
i- o -4".
Oregon, Sanda Morning
i0 ;mL
t " - -j
Singing their "Hi, Ho" song, Walt Disney's lnimit able dwarfs, who share the starring honors with the
heroine in his full-length feature production. "S now White and the Seven Dwarfs' opens today for a
five-day engagement at the Hollywood theatre. II
BROADWAY NIGHTS
Copyright. X9S9, Kimff Feature Syndicate, tnc
By AXEL.
NEW YORK We're not going
to turn this column into a trav
elogue, but even the most en
thusiastic theatergoer swaps his
opera glasses for a tine case of
lassitude about this time of year.
And the best-cure we've found
for those jaw-dislocating yawns
which leave you with deaf spots
In even the best second acts Is a
drive around New York.
For instance starting with
the early morning there's no
place like Battery park for see
ing the sun come up. River and
bay traffic1 begin picking up
about four o'clock, and the tine
mist thins out about I five. So
If you' can manage to get up that
early in the morning or If
you'll stay awake an hour or so
longer than usual drive down
the west side elevated highway
to Canal street, then down to
the Battery, s at the southernmost
tip of Manhattan Island. Don't
make the mistake of trying to
drive straight down West street,
because you'll bog down in crates
of lettuce, bushels of cucumbers
and barrels of peaches In the
produce markets which face the
Hudson. Turn reft at Canal
street, drive over to Broadway,
then down Broadway to the Bat
tery. The sun comes up in such
a flag-waving blaze of glory that
youH wonder why you hadn't
thought of It before.
Metropolitan Panorama
If you want to see midtown
New York stretched before your
eyes like a stage set, drive over
to Brooklyn on the Brooklyn
bridee. turn left at the postof-
fice, go through to Flatbush ave
nue extension, then back to Man
hattan on, the upper rNorth road
way of tn Aiannaiiau onaso.
Somewhere about balfway across.'
the whole midtown panorama
grows before you into one of the
most beautiful vistas any city In
the world affords. As you drive,
the section's spires widen out.
And in the peculiar clarity that
New York sunshine has in the
early morning, the buildings
stand out with the force and
beauty of Pennell's etchings.
Toward sunset there's one spot
in New York that stands out in
ever-changing beauty. That's
th view of Fifty-ninth street
' (Central Park south) from the
.neai ui.,? v i - " - - " - w
dusk deepens, a million lights
are turned on in the buildings
facing the park from the south.
And such is New York's unpre
dictable pall of smoke and dust,
that the view is never twice the
same, the colors never- remain
unchanged for more than a mom
ent or two. There are more
shifting tones, in the subtlest of
pastel shades, than in a sunset
at sea.
Across the Hudson
But the most thrilling of all
evening drives in New York is
along -he newly-opened section
of the west side express high
way from Westchester into New
York. As you cross the Henrik
Hudson bridge you drop to a few
feet above water level. The dark
and veKety Hudson reflects the
somber shadow of the Palisades
on the Jersey side, silent ferries
and an occasional freighter glide
on as ghostly a river as ever Jo
seph Urban painted for ghostly
1
1
I i J v m - m -II
WITH
TON- Y MARTIN
Marjorie WEAVER
- A 20tlt Ceaitiry.rVM Pkfatre
September 11, 1938
The Seven Dwarfs Sing as
tp.i My-
STORM-
drama. As you near the George
Washington bridge a fairyland of
lights shifts and dances before
you, charting the curves of clover-leaf
and side roads, and far
ther south,! the contour of River
side drive, j
Speaking of Urban, there's one
romantic shade of blue he's nev
er been able to capture for his
scenery. That's the color of the
sky as you look south from a
midtown root on a hot and
breathless summer night. Late in
the daylight saving time day the
grays vanish from a g r a y-blue
sky, leaving It the most delicate
blue of all. In an hour, provid
ing the day has been hot enough,
and the sky clear enough, . it
tuns the full gamut of blues to
an Incredibly romantic, brilliant
cerulean shade which no self
respecting artist would ever put
on a' backdrop. It's too darned
blue. Then suddenly, almost as
in ' the tropics, the blue turns
black, the kind of black a great
lithographer achieves at his best
soft and: deep and very black
Indeed. By that time It's far too
late to go; to the theater, even
It you wanted to.
KAY
IAN HUNTES.GIjOUA DKXSON.tSASfiL
WaBNEX SSOS.-Q , ILuiH
Plus 2nd Hit
Thrills and Action
With the CCC Boys in
the Big Woods!
"BLAZING
BARRIERS'
with Frankie Conghlan
i unmMiiHtTCR fetp wit. ttmmnjmmv i
FRANCIS VGEORGE BRENT
sified Columns can
the right
want to
They Go
Jane Withers Has
Keep Smiling Lead
.In what Is by j all odds the
grandest picture she ! has ever
made the happiest,, the funniest,
the heart-tugglng-esti Jane Wi
thers came to the Grand theatre
yesterday in "Keep Smiling."
first of 20th Century-Fox's 1938
39 pictures for the popular young
star, with Gloria; ! Stuart and
Henry Wilcoxon heading a splen
did cast which includes 1 Helen
Westley, Jed - Pruty. . Douglas
Fovley and Robert Allen.
The story opens! with Jane In
a fashionable gfrls' boarding
school, hocking her. clothes to
raise the . fare to ) Hollywood,
where she plans to- visit her
movie-director .unclej whom sha
has never seen. Upon her arriv
al in the . film colony,' Jane dis
covers that her aqcle has. taken
rto drink, has been deserted by
ms rair-weather rrieaas, ana can
no longer get a job.) In her ef
forts to rehabilitate him she
.crashes a big studio and lands
a Job In the movies herself.
When the hot-headed director on
the set where she is being coach
ed for stardom suddenly "blows
up." Jane's uncle. now working
as an extra, is given the chance
to take over, with hU old crew
cheerinr his come-back and the
girl he loves right by his side. -
JEANS
m i itywnxiAM ianciajrt iy' j
j EXTRA ADDKIT -
I 1 JSv U Jlr I
r . - i - . - . . i
It's time to think about where you. are:
heading for fall ! Will you need a job?
Want a sound opportunity? The Clas
help you head in
direction J
.'that's
see them daily.
PHONE 9101
i
i
PAGE NINE
"Snow White"
Returns Here
Lovable Tale of Princess
and Dwarfs Lives in
Color, Hollywood
Movie fans are about to hare
their hopes realized, for some
thing new and enchanting. In
Snow White and the Seven
Dwarfs,, the first Walt Disney
animated film to be made In full
feature length. In Technicolor
opens today at the Hollywood
theatre.
Meeting "Snow White," the.
dainty, lovable little princess, on
the 'screen Is the same as greet
ing an old friend . one has not
seen for years. Her adventures
begin when the wicked queen.
Jealous, of "Snow White's" bud
ding beauty, first degrades her
to the level of a scullery maid.
Even then the queen'a magic mir
ror informs the sovereign that
"Snow White," though attired in
rags. Is still the fairest in the
land. i
Huntsman's Deed Undone j
The palace huntsman is order-:
ed to take the "princess to the
forest and kill her.; But he per
mits her to escape. She Is be
friended by the pitying birds
and animals and finds refuge
with the Seven Dwarfs in their
woodland home. Thither comes
the wicked-queen in the guise
of a witch. "Snow White eats
a bewitched apple given her by
her rival, and falls into a death
like slumber. i
So lovely ls she that the
dwarfs, instead of burying their
beloved little housekeeper, place
her in a coffin of glass and gold
by which they keep watch. The
tiny chaps have already wreaked
vengeance on the witch, who has
fallen to destruction over a pre
cipice. Then came the handsome
prince, who loved "Snow White":
when she was only a . scullery
maid, awakens her with a kiss,
and the sweethearts leave to
gether for their castle home.
Today VMon. - .Tues.
TOGETHER MA IN!
in tkw tkow flat
tops tk Light of U ""t
their pmrioms tits...
TvtMuale t &hZca bw y
fJT IRVING
BERLIN
iS Kilk, Fraiklii Pailin
I i
-EXTRA-
Alarch of Time
Cartoon - News
why vou
ri
I
pinners
Fh. 7111
,BUSH
tivelltLsic
RED1TED
.' 12th
. "Xhoae S2SZ
a