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The La Crosse Tribune from La Crosse, Wisconsin • Page 19

Location:
La Crosse, Wisconsin
Issue Date:
Page:
19
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Sunday, February .4, T951 HM IA CROSSE TRIBUNE, la Install Pastor Of City Church fe Installatioa of the "Rev. Thomas' E. Mullen'-as pastor 'of the St Thomas More church at 20th and Weston streets, will be held Sunday at The Rev. Gille, -vicar, Cresset m. Msgr.

C. for the W. La come from Wisconsin Rapids to officiate at services. The; Rev. LeRoy B.

Keegan of Sparta give the A parish reception, sponsored by the altar society, will be held after the installation services. Dinner for visiting clergymen is scheduled at 5:30 p. m. Before to 'La CrOSSe, Father MnUen was pastor at St Alexander's parish at Port Edwards. He established the parish there after -being transferret from Eau Claire.

A native of Wausan, Father Mullen succeeds the Rev. Joseph Thomas who More started the St parish and who now is pastor at Camp Douglas. Cheetahs have been used for racing purposes in England They can give a greyhound a start of 40 yards and win in a quarter-mile race. LA 0 YOUR FAVORITE THEATRES NOW RIVOLi NOW Delightful Colorful Thrilling Rich Entertainment for the whole ONLY THE MOVIE THEATRE SCREEN CAN DO III Rudyard Kipling's Story! Technicolor Thrills! PAUL BOBERT im-mm Worb. THOMAS GOMEZ CECIL KEMMRNOLO MOSS UDRETTEIBEZ Plus CARTOON and LATEST NEWS A ENDS TODAY TWO FIRST LA CROSSE SHOWINGS WISCONSIN AND Plus: Last Chapt.

"ATOM MAN vs. SUPERMAN' STARTING MONDAY 2 SMASH ACTION HITS OF THE U. S. MARINES THE INK PAUL KELLY JUNE TRAVIS PUBELL PRATT REGMUD DENNY WARREN OTHER RICHARD MARSHA HUNT tas MRS KOPIT Mwctoi fcjp. ill- RIVIERA STRAND ENDS TODAY IATMIUAND wtlAMARR LATEST NEWS COLOR CARTOON ENDS TODAY Matinee 2 O'clock BARBARA Second Feature VttUM HUOTT.AMT DEVK MOC MOW KMBST TOOOt "Pretty Baby" and "The Next Voice You Hear" Hollywood Sunday through Tuesday: IT1 Get By, with June Haver, William Lundigan, Gloria DeHaven, Dennis Day and Harry James.

Starting Wednesday: Harriet Craig, with Joan Crawford, Wendell Corey, Lucille Watson, Allyn Joslyn and William Bishop. Saturday midnight show: Branded, with Alan Ladd, Mona Freeman, Charles Bickford, Robert Keith, Joseph Calleia and Peter Hanson. 5th Avenue Sunday through Tuesday: Nagana, with Melvyn Douglas, Tala Birell and Onslow Stevens; The Big Cage, with Clyde Beatty. Anita Page and Andy Devine. Starting Wednesday: Unfinished Business, with Irene Dunne, Robert Montgomery and Preston Foster; Gaiety.

Starting Saturday: Gasoline Alley, with Scotty Beckett and Jimmy Lydon; Raids of Tomahawks Creek, with Smiley Burnette and Charles Starrett Rivoli Sunday through Tuesday: Kim, with Errol Flynn, Dean Stockwell, Paul Lukas, Robert Douglas, Thomas Gomez and Lurette Luez. Wednesday and Thursday: The Glass Menagerie, with Jane Wyman, Kirk Douglas, Gertrude Lawrence and Arthur Kennedy. Starting Friday and Saturday midnight: The West Point Story, with James Cagney, Virginia Mayo, Doris Day, Gordon MacRae, Gene Nelson and Alan Hale, Jr. Wisconsin Sunday only: North of the Great Divide, with Roy Rogers and Penny Edwards; Arctic Fury, with Del Cambre and Eve Miller. Monday through Thursday: Come On Leathernecks, with Richard Comwell, Marsha Hunt and Leon Ames; Join the Marines, with Paul Kelly, June Traves and Purnell Pratt Friday through Sunday: Young Daniel Boone, with David Bruce, Kristine Miller and Damian O'Flynn; West of Wyoming, with Johnny Mack Brown and Gail Davis.

Riviera Sunday only: Copper Canyon, with Hedy Lamarr and Ray Milland; One Night in the Tropics, with Abbott and Costello. Monday through Thursday: Petty Girl, with Joan Caulfield and Robert Cummings; Three Secrets, with Eleanor Parker, Ruth Roman and Pat NeaL Friday and Saturday: The Milkman, with Donald O'Connor and Jimmy Durante; Right Cross, with Dick Powell, June Allyson and Ricardo Montalban. Strand Sunday only: To Please A Lady, with Clark Gable, Barbara Stanwyck and Adolph Menjou; Lost Bandit, with Bill Elliott Monday through Thursday: Pretty Baby, with Dennis Morgan, Betsy Drake and Edmund Gwenn; The Next Voice You Hear, with James Whitmore and Nancy Davis. Friday and Saturday: Keep "Em Flying, with Abbott and Costello; In A Lonely Place, with Humphrey Bogart and Gloria Grahame. Red-Bearded Flynn Teams With Stockwell In'Kim'At Rivoli "Kim," Rudyard Kipling's immortal story of romance, adventure and intrigue, is the Sunday offering of the Rivoli theater for la Crosse movie-goers.

The Technicolor feature is through Tuesday and stars Srrol Flynn as red-bearded Mah- Ali and Dean Stockwell as the boy, "King." Lovely Laurette Luez adds a feminine touch to the picture, the part of Laluli, i harem beauty who falls for The story centers around the Afghan horse-dealer, Flynn, secretly a member of the British espionage and the little ragmuf- 3n, Stockwell, who aids the government in quelling an uprising. There are many well known Hollywood stars in are handling lesser roles. Paul Liukas portrays Lama and Robert Douglas enacts the part of Col. Creighton. Cecil Kellaway plays Hurree Chunder and Reginald Owen is cast as Father Victor.

Wednesday and Thursday the Rivoli will show "The Glass Menagerie." Jane Wyman and Kirk Douglas have the leading roles in this film and are ably supported by Gertrude Lawrence and Arthur Kennedy. James Cagney will be back on the Rivoli screen starting Friday and this time not in the role of a tough gangster. He'll be playing the leading part in "The West Point Story," a musical that will have Cagney staging again for the first time since "Yankee Doodle Dandy." Virginia Mayo, Doris Day, Gordon MacRae and Gene Nelson are also featured in the star- studded cast. The feature will also show Saturday at midnight. AUTOMOTIVE HINT The noise made by a loose connecting rod is sharp and clear, and is most noticeable when the engine is running fast while the car is moving down hOL ANNUAL PRE-LENTEN DANCE Sponsored by the ZOR ORIENTAL BAND Tuesday Night, February 6th AVALON BALLROOM "SI 10 HAL WHITE POLKATEERS Lavish Color Get By' Stars 'Sister' Duo At Hollywood Sparkling with stars and scin- tfflating with songs, "I'll Get By," a lavish Technicolor picture, shows Sunday through Tuesday at the Hollywood theater.

Peopled with bright, young talents- and scored with dozens of perennially favorite tunes, "I'll Women's Fraf Honors Phy Eds Delta Psi Kappa, national honorary fraternity for women in physical education, is holding an annual tea for all physical education women in the La Crosse State Teachers college room Sunday Feb. 4 from p. m. Faculty women will also be present. Committees for the tea are: General chairman, Marge Gottshalk; food, Jane Graf, Audrey Stanek, Audrey Jasiorkowski, Mary Weinand, Annastia Batik- us; invitations, Charlotte Coth, Annette Doehnert, Audrey Herbrand, Doris Gauger, Helen Brotz.

Program, Barbara Burroughs, Virginia Pauley; serving, Virginia Gratz, Susan J. Day; publicity, Sheryl Larsen, Audrey Blank; table decorations, Lois Olson, Donna Bast and Elinor Fenn. Seasonal Plans Slated By Club Sketch club which meets Mondays at 7:30 p. m. at the studio, Main street, is planning its winter and spring program.

Men and women may join the club. Previous experience in drawing is unnecessary. Live models are posed at every meeting for portrait study. Criticism and help are given at each meeting to those who request it. It is admitted that portrait drawing and painting are most difficult.

It is by continuous drawing each week during the whiter that your technique will improve, officials claim. It will make summer landscape work much more enjoyable and the winter will increase his speed and judgment by drawing or painting portraits during the winter, the critics report. "LIVING" SCULPTURE A "Living" stone monument is one carved from rock which is in the place it has occupied from time immemorial. The Rushmore Memorial, in the Black Hills of South Dakota, is such a piece of sculpture. IA Crosse Tribune carriers collect on Fridays and Saturdays.

Prompt payment to the boys saves them- making extra trips to make collections. Get By" has the kind of surefire values that are always welcome in movie entertainment. Stars of the picture are June Haver and Gloria DeHaven who portray a sister song and dance team; William Lundigan, singer Dennis Day and Harry Dealing with the trials and successes of up-and-coming song writers and thetir- talented girlfriends, "I'll Get By" goes behind the scenes of virtually every phase of show business. There are some surprises in "I'll Get By," too, including the appearances of several- top-flight Hollywood stars as guests artists. Besides, the film has no less than 15 songs which have been popular at one time or another during the past five years.

Thelma Hitter and Steven Allen are the top supporting cast players of the film. Joan Crawford returns to the Hollywood screen starting Wednesday as the featured star of "Harriet Craig," an intense drama about a dangerous and ambitious woman. Wendell Corey and Lucille Watson have important parts in the picture, too. Sh6wing Saturday midnight will be a rough-and-ready cowboy film, "Branded," starring Alan Ladd, Mona Freeman and Charles Bickford. T.

ffl nil- JUIt HAVER MY DeHAYEN WIUUH Ta Add to Your Enjoyment at the Hollywood, Life Magazine's Favorite Cartoon "Gerald McBoing-Bofag" plus Candid Mike and Latest News! aHI A Accordion Band MAYO CIVIC AUDITORIUM ROCHESTER April 2 through Erenints: 8:15 P. M. Matinee: Sunday, April 8,2:31 Spring Is Juit around the earner, and are'all the fallowing swell you will soon be seeing at the Hollywood Theatre! DEAN MARTIN, JERRY LEWIS in AT WAR WITH THE ARMY BORN YESTERDAY JUDY HOLLIDAY WILLIAM HOIDEN COiTEN IOAN FONFAINE in SEPTEMBER AEFAIR' ALAN LADD in "BRANDED" Technicolor 'HALLS OF MONTEZUMA'' with RICHARO WIDMARK DIAL 2-3462! To the todies! Beautiful, Luxurious Early American DINNERWARE Starting Wednesday, Feb. 7th and every WEDNESDAY thereafter with parchaMi of evenmr BdmhttiMi at STB AVENUE THEATRE:.

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About The La Crosse Tribune Archive

Pages Available:
1,223,025
Years Available:
1905-2024