Green Light (Warner Bros.) (1937)

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(3rd Day Contest) Picture Editor’s Mistake Scores Entering Results in Movie Contest Paige too seeks Dean Harcourt’s advice, and meets Phyllis for the second time, having previously met her at Francis Ogilvie’s apartment under an assumed name. The Dean wishing to distract Phyllis from her path of revenge and knowing the truth about Paige, contrives to bring the two together and suggests they lunch together. Paige’s dog “‘Sylvia’”’ accompanying them, is recognized by Phyllis as the dog her mother mentioned in her letters. Knowing his true identity she angrily leaves him. Paige joins a classmate, Dr. Spofford, at the Rocky Mountain Federal Laboratory, where he joins in the work to develop a vaccine for the deadly fever which has claimed many lives. It’s loads of fun to make something but sometimes it can be even more fun breaking things up and then putting them together again—and that’s just the situation the Contest Editor, unwittingly, has set up for your amusement. When he received a set of pictures from the Cosmopolitan production, “Green Light” which told the film’s story, he promptly scrambled them all up, put them in the wrong order, and he’s asking you to put them together so that they do tell a continuous story. As prizes, besides the fun, he is offering two tickets to “Green Light” which comes to es (gn lS SS: anne (day) to the first 25 readers who send in the best answers. This is the third day of this five day contest but before you start unscrambling the pictures Fourth Day. Fifth Day____. to match the story as told in the captions, it will be necessary for you to wait until the last set has appeared. Perhaps you have already spotted the first scene among the three sets which have already been published. But the surest way to make a perfect score is to read the story very carefully each day as it appears. Starred in “Green Light” are Errol Flynn, who thrilled you in “The Charge of the Light Brigade” and Anita Louise who performed so brilliantly in “Anthony Adverse.” (4th Day Publicity) Unusual Contest To Win Prizes It’s not too late to enter the “Green Light” Contest. If you have not begun clipping illustrations and the captions which tell the story of “Green Light,” the film which comes to the........ Theatre 68... (date), you still have just as much chance to Witt in the... (newspaper) contest as anybody. All you need do is get the three sets already published and the final one to appear tomorrow, elip them out and rearrange the pictures in their proper continuity so that they tell the story of the film. To be more specific, the two above scenes do not illustrate the chapter of “Green Light” as told in the caption underneath. The pictures which fit in with this chapter either have appeared already or will appear in tomorrow’s issue. Read the story carefully and don’t do your final choosing until tomorrow’s set has appeared. The twenty-five contestants submitting the most correct answers will each receive two ticketh tothe. oe ec Theatre for any performance of “Green Light.” Based on the best-selling Lloyd Douglas novel, the film costars Errol Flynn and Anita Louise, and is a thrilling romantie drama which nobody should miss. Still Time To Win Prize Paige, impatient with Spofford’s more purely scientific ap proach allows himself to be bitten by a tick in order to deter mine immediately whether a vaccine he has developed has immunized him against spotted fever. Meanwhile, Phyllis has begun to suspect that Paige has taken the blame for her mother’s death to protect another person. She follows him and is met at the station by a fever-ridden Paige. COMBINATION CONTEST & SERIALIZATION ADAPTABLE AS SERIALIZATION (Last Day Contest) Last Opportunity To Win Scrambled Scenes Contest Meanwhile, Francis Ogilvie, having been informed of Paige’s reckless action tells Dr. Endicott, and the two board a plane for Montana. Paige is near death, and the broken-hearted Endicott confesses the truth, pleading with Paige to live. After an all night vigil, the fever breaks, and the experiment is a success. Paige and Phyllis return to the city, while Ogilvie remains with Spofford, injecting the vaccine discovered in the farmers. Endicott too finds a new life there. This is the last day of the five day contest which we are conducting, and the winners of which will be awarded two tickets to “Green Light,” the film which comes to the Theatre: 00.5 =. (day). Every day, for five days, the...+.. (newspaper) has published two scenes from “Green Light.” Underneath the pictures has appeared the story of the film. Using the story as a basis, we have asked contestants to put the scenes in their right order, so that they match the continuity of the film. The scenes are numbered for your convenience and all you need do is send in the numbers to the Contest Editor of the (newspaper) arranged as you think they should be. The first twenty-five correct answers (or most nearly correct) will each be awarded two tickets for any performance of “Green Light.” The ones with best judgment and the most speed will be declared the winners. Get busy immediately — look over the clippings you have been saving, read the story carefully, and then make your final selections. Those who win a pair of tickets have a great treat in store for them, for “Green Light,” a Cosmopolitan-First National production, and co-starring Errol Flynn and Anita Louise is said to be one of the finest productions ‘turned out of Hollywood in many-a-moon. Page Nine