! NEXT WEEK — AT THE IMPERIAL I r __ Evelyn Knapp is “Playing Hostess” at the Imperial next Monday Tuesday. She is shown above with Arthur Pierson and James Murray in a scene from the picture, “Air Hostess.” The Nemars will appear in per son at the stage of the Peoples theatre with no advance in prices. Your money refunded if you are not satisfied. The W. C. Williams Ambulance Service will take care of Nemar after the drive when he collapse. See Nernars on the stage at the Peoples theatre. No advance in prices. By far the best show of its kind on the road. Don’t miss it. Nemar says H. G. Hodges has been repairing watches for twenty years and he certainly knows his business. Remember expert work at moderate prices. IMPERIAL PROGRAM “Air Hostess,” which True Story Magazine readers will remember as the intimate revelations of a modern Venus of the giant pas senger planes which ply the Air ways of America, has been brought to the screen andl offers Evalyn Knapp, James Murray and Thelma Todd in leading roles. It is the Monday-Tuesday attraction at the Imperial. George Brent does a daring feat in the picture, “The Key Hole,” at the Imperial next Wednesday Thursday. To escape the irate hus band of Kay Francis, with whom he is co-featured, he climbs across a vine from one balcony to another six stories above the ground. He makes it without slip. With no stage attractions an nounced late Thursday afternoon, “Obey The Law” is the Friday only attraction next week, starring Leo. Carrillo, while Tom Mix is offered in “The Fourth Horseman” for the Saturday attraction. Nemar says: Why send your money out of town? Trade at Home Owned Stores. You will al ways find the finest of fancy gro ceries, vegetables and fruits at the “M” System. You are always sure of the best, and the prices are no higher. I .'. ffis home is on. highest peak, in the SantaMomca. mountains. Is. an ardent— flghtfan.. I P/ays tennis like a champion*. Canjtandlea. team of wild Horses ora sgualfau <"Sbory of— RICHARD DIX by Irene. Mmm \ T-IAVE you ever taken yourself into a corner and given yourself a good talking-to? It’s a pretty smart thing to do, every once in a while. It sweeps the cobwebs out of your brain and clears it for plans and problems of the fu ture. .. at least chat is what Richard Dix believes. He’s been holding conferences with himself for a great many years now ... and out of these talks with himself have come the resolutions and achievements which have carried him to stardom1 in motion pictures. He’s written himself letters, too... three of them marked milestones in his career! One of them was about work... one about wine... and one about women. You’d have to be a nastier snooper than the most callous columnist to divulge the contents of those three letters... they arc like a diary... and, like a diary, sacred. But Dix will tell you this much... .that the first letter he wrote himself he signed Ernest Carlton Brimmer, Jr.... for Richard Dix is a pseu donym he took when he first went on the stage against the wishes of his family. But he wanted to be an actor, so he went out for the dramatic club... and there began another theatrical career that was destined to end in star billing in Holly- ' wood. It’s a funny thing about grease paint... even when it's applied by amateur hands... it sort of seeps into the I soul. Once you’ve acted, you want to do it again. Dix did ... he acted all over the lot... all over the country... in stock companies from St Paul to Norfolk, Virginia, and back to Broadway, by way of Texas. ) There’s a lot more to tcH about this man Richard Dix... we’d like to repeat some phrases from those letters, too. But briefly: He saves his money and spends his energy generously on every job he’s assigned. He plays a fast game of tennis and a deliberate game of bridge. He likes blonde women... hlind men... youngsters who ask questions... old drivers of horse drawn cabs... who sit on the plaza of Central Park in New York and recount the glory that was Gotham’s years ago. He can handle a team of wild ^ horses or a squalling baby... he’s that strong and tender. jQHc’s the sort you know would write his own obituary mod BnV «sdy • • • but you hope not for many, many years. Copyright 1952 by I & W Syndicate-1 - Gwt Bfimn Righo fccswcd ~ j NEXT WEEK — AT THE IMPERIAL Kay Francis and George Brent form a new star team, cast as a dazzling love cheat, and a notorious love spy respectively in the new picture, “The Keyhole,” at the Imperial Wlednesday-Thursday. PERIAL “Roanoke Rapids House of Hits” PROGRAM FOR WEEK OF APR. 24th Monday — Tuesday SKY ROMANCE IN THE HIGH f ALTITUDES , , Young Love Soaring Thru SPACE r She Lost Her Heart Above the Clouds _ _ SWED. — THUR. Kay Francis Geo. Brent - 1IN - aa THE KEYHOLE ■ FRIDAY ONLY: LEO CARRILLO - LOIS WILSON OBEY THE LAW SATURDAY: TOM MIX in THE FOURTH HORSEMAN

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