| NEXT WEEK —AT THE PEOPLES
ftarr----. .T ■■'—
Louise Glosser Hale, Clark Gable and Helen Hayes, as they appear
in “The White Sister,” feature attraction at the Peoples next Monday
and Tuesday.
PEOPLES
PROGRAM
Two of the greatest personali
ties of the American screen are co
starred for the first time in the
classic love story, “The White Sis
ter,” feature attraction of next
week’s Peoples program which
opens Monday for a two-day run.
They are Helen Hayes, winner of
the recent Motion Picture Academy
award, and Clark Gable, univer
sally conceded to be the talkies’
outstanding matinee idol.
Miss Hayes, last seen as the
nurse in “A Farewell to Arms,”
this time plays the role of an aris
tocratic Italian girl who on the
eve of her wedding to a man of
her father’s choice, falls in love
with a young officer in the Italian
air force. A clandestine romance
results and the father, in a des
perate attempt to call a halt to the
proceedings, is involved in an auto
mobile smashup and dies. When
the young officer subsequently is
called to the front and is reported
killed, the girl determines to aban
don the world and to shut herself
up in a convent as a White Sister.
Death by freezing is the latest
murder method to come to the
screen in “Terror Abroad” which
is shown Wednesday only next
week, featuring John Halliday,
Charlie Ruggles, Neil Hamilton
and Shirley Grey. The doctor de
clares that a beautiful woman has
been frozen to death—although the
boat is in the tropics, in the mid
dle of July, with the temperature
at 90 degrees above.
Russian stoves that smoke,
hotels that boast but a single bath
room, imposing vistas of Moscow
and the dungeons of the Russian
secret police, French plumbing and
intricacies of the Ballet Russe fig
ured in the research which went
into the filming of “Clear All
Wires,” talkie version of the
Broadway comedy hit, which brings
Lee Tracey, Benita Hume, Una
Merkel, James Bleason and others
to the Peoples screen Thursday and
Friday. “Flaming Passion” is an
added feature for Thursday-Fri
days’ program with special shows
for men and women.
Based on actual occurence in the
history of the Southwest when a
PEOPLES
THEATRE
Friday and Saturday
APRIL 21st - 22nd.
THE MIGHTY
NEMARS
IN PERSON ON THE STAGE
And Their
TEMPLE of MYSTERY
9
As An Added Attraction
THE GREATEST ACT
OF ITS KIND.
BE SURE TO SEE THEM!
NO ADVANCE IN PRICES
crooked foreman absconded with
his employer’s entire herd, “Rob
bers’ Roost” will provide realism
along with thrills for the Saturday
show next >veek. George O’Brien
and Maureen O’Sullivan are co
featured in the film, which is a j
high-class” western, action drama.
Miss Annie Belle Daughtrey,
who is teaching school in Burling- j
ton, N. C., spent the Easter holi
dayes with here parents, Mr. and
Mrs. R. P. Daughtrey.
Mrs. Lloyd Allen, of Graham, is
visiting her grand-mother, Mrs. i
Charlie Shell. )
TOWN
TALK
Misses Mcrill Bell, Annie Belle
Daughtrey and Mrs. Auburn Dau
ghtrey spent Saturday in Norfolk.
I
Mr. and Mrs. Hunter Fowler and ,
Miss Iva Mae Williams spent Sun
day at Newsome, Va.
Richard Reaves, a freshman at
Carolina, visited his parents here
his week-end.
I
Miss Pauline Kendrick has re
turned from an extended visit to
Concord.
Miss Bernice Decker, of Ralegh,
spent the holidays with Miss Eliza
Gay.
Miss Virginia Ogletree, of Mer
edith College, spent the Easter
holidays with her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. C. F. Ogletree.
Misses Ruby Lee, Dorothy and
Beatrice Taylor, of Seaboard, were
the week-end guests of Miss Edith
Davis.
PROGRAM The PICK
for Week of of the
APRIL 24th PICTURES
WEDNESDAY ONLY
CHARLIE RUGGLES
NEIL HAMILTON
SHIRLEY GREY in
TERROR
ABROAD
■■I 1 i
THUR. _ FRI.
Jy^ LEE TRACY and ^
ft BENITAHUMEin
' “CLEAR ALL WIRES”
Added:
l FLAMING
V PASSION y
Daring In Its jflk
Exposures
SATURDAY ONLY-|
GEORGE O’BRIEN in
“ROBBERS ROOST”