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I'llOIOI'l AY M U.l/IM 1 OR Alkll .1 ]
The Shadow Stage ONLY A
"BIRD"
133
OF THE
1
DOCTORS' \\l\t.s l,,x
TP\o("i ORS' wives are supposed to be ■ jc.d^'»i> let, l>ut we have oevei really believed
ili.it they li.nl |).utii ul.ir < ause t" b< v
only half lonvinitd now, but Warner li;i\t< 1 docs li.ivc .1 way with worm 11 and Juan Hen nctt makes us feel her suspicions arc justified
We are glad tc varconi again as well
foho Sainpolis, U»th lini actors. Mild enter!.mum nt
THE SINGLE SIN Tiffany Productions
XJO I'll I N't I new in the story of a girl who ••^ COmeS liaek, bul tlie fight IDC makes is well worth seeim: K.i\ Johnson handles tliis char
acta beautifully and Beit LyteO i good ■>
the drunken lover. Mathew Uct/. is a convim ing heavy and I'aul Hurst, as liert"s dumb friend, gets the laughs An excellent picture with drama, lomedy, pathos oi anything you want.
THE CONQUERING HORDE—
Paramount
/TVE Dick Arlen a riding outfit and a ^-^horsc and a big pistol, and chances are good that he'll rive you back a swell Western picture. Hi's done it again, with the entertaining assistance of adorable Fay Wray, angry Indians, villainous-looking heavies, and a great lot of cattle that swim rivers and do things like that. Nice entertainment and what more ask you?
THE GIRL FROM THE REEPERBAHN— DAS MAEDEL VOX DER REEPERBAHN
Sonor Production
A CAIN" the Germans crash through with a •Malkie that's out of the ordinary. This is the unusual combination of grim melodrama with a few songs, and good ones. The story tells of a girl from the bright light district of Hamburg thrown into the dull surroundings of a lighthouse. It has action, and is well made, if a little dour.
HELL BOUXD— Cruse-Tiffany Productions
HERE'S another bootleg-racketeering, machine-gunning gang picture — and a good one, if you're not getting too tired of them. Leo Carrillo plays a typical Carrillo role — the broken-Englished speakeasy operator and rum baron — and manages to invest it with a sympathetic quality that leaves you feeling pretty badly when he's finally bumped off. As the girl in the case, Lola Lane is completely charming.
CRACKED MT5Radio Pictures
YWTTEELER AND WOOLSEY suffer from W a rush of dialogue to the screen. These nut comedians, funny when they're in action, aren't quite so amusing when they take it out in talk— and too much of "Cracked Nuts" is just that. However, you'll laugh, anyway, particularly in the later sequences where motion replaces gabble. Edna May Oliver is funny, as usual, and Dorothy Lee is pretty.
GIRLS DEMASD EXCITEMEST—Fox
V\7E don't believe that either girls or boys W demand the kind of excitement that is offered in this picture. Its appeal, presumably, is to the younger element, but we don't think it will satisfy, as neither the dialogue nor the acting rings true. A line cast. Marguerite Churchill, John Wayne, Virginia Cherrill, Wil
GILDED AGE . . . yet he has
^ATIII.ETirS FOOT-'
IT takes a lot to worry this boy. He has everything. Position, the finest of friends and plenty of time to enjoy the life of leisure. When he follows the hounds he docs it with a field-glass. His friends ride his polo ponies and while he's kept pretty busy entertaining, his check book does most of the work.
Yes, he has every thing — including " \thIete's Foot." Even while taking his tub this immaculate and gilded youth wonders where he got that red rash between the toes of his un-athletic feet, He'6 almost ashamed to admit that it i-t-c-h-e-s and, while Perkin9 raises sympathetic eyebrows, neither of them even knows that it's the ringworm infection which attacks people in all walks of life — now commonly called "Athlete's Foot."
Are YOU guarding against this stealthy infection, so easily tracked into homes?
"Athlete's Foot" may attack any of us because, unlike most diseases, it persists in the cleanest places. A tiny vegetable parasite, tinea trichophyton, generally cans.-, tins ringworm infection and it thrives on the edges of showers and BWnHBHBg ponli. on locker and dressing -room floors; in gymnasiums. And from all these places it
Absorbine
fO« YiAIS MAS RELIEVED
SOKE MUSCLES MUSCULAR
ACHES. OUISES. 1U1NS CUTS. SPRAINS AIRASIONS
is continually tracked into countless liomrn. It may live and thrive for months in sour own spick-and-span bathroom: and it causes infection and re-infection with great persistence. The U. S. Public Health Service has even reported that "probably half of all adults suffer from it at SOSM tun, ■."
It has been found that Absorbine Jr. KILLS this rintiicorm germ
"Athlete's Foot" may start in a number of different ways. Sometime the danger -i_-. nal is redness between the tin-s; sometimes tiny, itching bli-ter-. Vg.iin. the skin may turn white, thick ami moi-t: or it m.iv develop dryness, with little scales or skincracks. All of these conditions, it i~ agreed, are generalW caused by the ringw orm germ. And exhaustive lal>oratory tests have shown that Absorbine Jr. penetrate (1. -! . like tissues deeply and wherever it penetrates, it kills this germ. Remits in actual cases confirm these laboratory testa.
It might not be a bad idea to examine vonr feet tonight for symptoms of " Vthlete's Foot." At the first si^n of any one s\ mptoin. begin the free use of \b-orbine Jr. — douse it on morning and night and after errrv exposure of your bare fert on damp floors. If the case does n,,t readily yield to this treatment you should see your doctor without delay.
\bsorbine Jr. has been so effecti\e that substitutes are sometimes offered. Don t expect relief from a "ju-t a good." There is nothiim e|s, hke Lbeorbine Jr. Ton can get it at all drug stores — fL2S a Inittle. For a free sample, write \\ . I'. \ onng. Inc., 176 Lyman Street, Springfield, Mass.