Newspapers / The Roxboro Courier (Roxboro, … / Nov. 26, 1936, edition 1 / Page 9
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FRANK M’HUGH IS HOLLYWOOD'S NEW FILM FORECASTER N«n Thtatre Monday and Tues day, November SMh and Frank McHugh, whose predic tions on winning ponies never fail in the First National production, “Three Men on a Horse,” to show at the Palace theatre, thinks he is also pkogndsticMpr on other feub jects. So he has made some predic tions on what you are going to see in the movies before lnog. “Predictions come natural in the McHugh family,” said Frank. “Uncle Horace McHugh was the gent who predicted that the World War would last about three weeks, while Grandfather Sweeney McHugh pre dicted the rapid decline of the auto mobile as a means of transporta tion. “My own last prediction was on the Louis-Schmeling fight. We’ll Palace Theatre Mon.-Tues., Nov. 30-Dec. 1 ; _ I It happened today! Qtwin hot on mt! Picked little me mt of all the other hones in the race! And of course l won! How could I lose with ohum’s dough on my nose? I’m just to excited l can’t touch my oats, thinking of thts beauti ful thing that’s come into my life! MEN ON 5 AHORSE' Warner Bros.' fun-filled filming of Broad way's biggest hone-lougfi in 10 years, with FRANK McHUGH JOAN BLONDELL GUY KIBBEE CAROL HUGHES ( ALLEN JENKINS Sam lav#na*Taddy Hart Xv a MERVYN LEROY r..d-. A first Huttenel Picture Morning matinee Monday 10:30, afternoons 3:15-3:45, evenings 7:15-9. Admission 10-26 c. DO THIS when you wake up with a Headache ENJOY RELIEF BEFORE YOU’VE FINISHED DRESSING Boyer Tablets ® Dissolve Almost Instantly &(ff\ la I mwli br atop watch, a geanine rn BAYER AcpMn tablet f~w R—f ataita to dialategrate LA: ”;>-J and ga ta waefc. Drag a Iff Bayer Aagtita tablet la- 111 to a glaaa a t water. By II I the tine It blta the bat- 111. tear as the glaaa It la II | i' IS dlaiatagratlag. What If I* (I happeaa la thin glaaa I I * I . . . happens la year I ■■ ■ j etoMach. ljy--=-aJp When you wake up with a head ache, do this: Take two quick-act ing, quick-dissolving BAYER ASPI RIN tablets with a little water. By the time you’ve finished dress ing, nine chances in ten, you’ll feel relief coining. Genuine Bayer Aspirin provides this quick relief because it is rated among the quickest methods for re lief science has yet discovered. Try it this way. But ask for it by its full name, BAYER ASPIRIN; not by the name “aspirin” alone. 1-MINUTE SAFETY TALKS By Don Harold in if '' I &k , And voa a traffic + rJl yourself ticket, Y\J ptitlic- minded but I dtfeen 1 SAFETY SLACKERS I know a man who violated a t raffia ordinance —who got a ticket —and who got it "fixed". In my opinion, that man is worse than any Grover, Bergdoil who ever lived. Under certain circumstances there may be such a thing as conscientious objection to war. There may be peo ple who have such deep-seated fervor for peace that they will die for their pacifist ic ideals. They may be silly sentimentalists, but they are not cowards. There is, however, no such thing as justifiable conscientious objection to the war on automobile accidents. There is no excuse for sympathy with our common national enemy, Carelessness, which kills and maims more of our people than War. (From 1922 through 1935, deaths from auto mobile accidents have, according to The Travelers Insurance Company, skip that. And here’s what I predict you’re going to see on the screen this year: “Ten pictures in which a come dian puts a nickle into a telephone box and gets a jackpot in return. “Twelve pictures in which the leading man takes a course in mem ory-training, and then forgets to wear a pair of pants to his own wed ding. “At least two pictures in which the leading lady will go through seven reels in an old dress and a pair of horn-rimmed gasses. In the eighth reel she will change her dress, take of the cheaters, and emerge as a ravishing beauty. “Four of five ‘G-men’ pictures in which the guy whom you suspect ed all along turns out to be Inspec tor Wainwright of the F. B. I. “Too many pictures in which Frank McHugh will have to fall out of a third-story window or jump from the top of a boxcar to get a laungh.” “Three Men on a Horse” is a rollicking comedy based on the fa mous stage play by John Cecil Holm and George Abbott. Besides McHugh, the cast includes Joan Blondell, Guy Kibbee, Carol Hughes, Allen Jenkins, Sam Levene and Teddy Hart. The picture was directed by Mervyn Leßoy from the stage play Larid Doyle. - o Let us do your Job Printing Prompt Service, Reasonable Prices, Good Work. PERSON COUNTY TIMES Phone 250 Paiace Theatre ADVANCE PROGRAM From Thursday, Nov. 26th Through Wednesday, Dec 2nd Thursday, November 26th—Thanksgiving Day Jane Wyatt—Louis Hayward—Nat Pendleton—Eugene Paulettte —Philip Reed, THE LUCKIEST GIRL IN THE WORLD “March of Time” (No. 3 showing Behind tUe Scenes in the White House and the rapid change in schools since the days of the “Little Red Schoolhonse.” Afternoon 2:30-4:00; evening 7-9:00. Admission 10-26 c Friday, November 27th Katherine Hepburn—Herbert Marshall with Elizabeth Allan— Donald Crisp “A WOMAN REBELS” Scrappy Cartoon: “Playing Politics.” Sports: “Hunter’s Paradise” Morning matinee 10:30; afternoon 3:15-3:45; evening 7:15-9:00. Admission 10-26 c. Kiddies’ Jack Pot Matinee Saturday morning 10:30 Special show Saturday night 11:30 Philip Huston—James Gleason—June Travis—Bruce Cabot— Andy Devine and a Supporting cast of Famous Football Stars such as Jay Berwanger—William Shakespeare— King Kong Klein—Bobby Wilson. “THE BIG GAME” Broadway Brevity: “Shake Mr. Shakespeare” Box office opens Saturday morning 10:15. Admission 10-26 c Box office opens Saturday night 11:15. All seats 26c. Saturday, November 28th George O’Brien with Heather Angel—Ralph Forbes “DANIEL BOONE” Episode No. 12 “Flash Gordon” with Larry Crabbe—Jean Rogers Terrytoon: “The Runt” Continuous shows starting 2:30. Admission 10-26 c Monday-Tuesday, November 30th-December Ist Frank McHugh—Joan Blondell—Guy Kibbee —Carol Hughes— Allen Jenkins—Edgar Kennedy—Paul Harvey “THREE MEN Oft A HORSE” Popeye the Sailor: “Bridge Ahoy” Fox Movietone News Morning matinee Monday 10:30; afternoons 3:15-3:45; evening 7:15-9:00. Admission 10-26 c. Wednesday, December 2nd Jack Pot Day Ralph Bellamy with Mae Clark© In Harold Bell Wright’s “WILD BRIAN KENT” Song Hit: “Seeing Nellie Home” “Vltephene Entertainers” Morning matinee 10:39; afternoon 3:15-3:45; evening 7:15-9:00. Admission 19-Me. HMBON COUNTY TIMES MXBOROLK.C. aggregated 380,000, which exceeds by 55per cent the record of those killed in action, or who died of wounds in all the wars in which this country partici pated.) A man who regards a traffic ticket as a scrap of paper is a modern Bene dict Arnold. Even if there may be a slight measure of injustice in bis ticket (and we alwayt feel that there is, don’t we?) he should be glad to lean over backwards TC TAKE HIS MEDICINE. Traffic discipline may not always be fair, but traffic discipline has been established for your own good, and for the safety of your children. Submit to this discipline graciously. Take what’s coming to you. Don’t tn to beat the traffic game. (It’s youi game.) Don’t cheat or fudge. Don't try to get your ticket “fixed’’ In short, don’t be a Safety Slacker. Hepburn Plays Girl Battling Social Law in ‘A Woman Rebels* Playing at Palace Theatre Friday, November 27 tit. Close to the heart of all woman hood is the role Katherine Hepburn plays in her new film, “A Woman Rebels,” in which she co-stars with Herbert Marshall. Taking one back to the days when young ladies were accustomed to accepting the decrees of their fath ers, Miss Hepburn plays Pamela, a young English girl. Warm and vital, eager to taste a full life, Pamela rebels against her father’s unwrit ting tyranny. A youthful romance culminates tragically and she turns to the task of reshaping her mode of living. Herbert Marshall plays a British diplomat, her sympathetic friend and loyal admirer, with (S) R. A. WHITFIELD, Distributor whom she ultimately achieves hap piness after years of sacrifice. This is the first time Miss Hep burn and Marshall have appeared together on the screen. In featured support are Donald Crisp, Elizabeth Allan, Doris Dudley and David Man ners. The story is powerfully adapted by Anthony Veiller and Ernest Va jda In an adaption from the novel, “Portarit of a Rebel,” by Netta Sy rett (Mark Ssfcidrich directed this Pandro S. Berman Production for RKO Radio. “DANIEL BOONE” TO PLAY AT PALACE George O’Brien With Heather Angel Playing For One Day Saturday. Intensive research was required before many of the scenes of “Daniel Boone,” at the Palace the atre Saturday, could be produced with historical accuracy. This was particularly true of the episodes which were filmed in the market square of the old colonial town of Yadkin, North Carolina, whence Boone set out with the settlers to establish a new home in the wilds of Kentucky. This scene represents a market place in the year 1775. It is bound- PROFESSIONAL CARDS *•* • * • * * • DR. ROBERT E. LONG * • Dentist * • Wilburn & Satterfield Bldg. * • Main St. Roxboro, N. C. * *•*•*•** • *•**•* • S. F. NICKS, JR. • Attomey-at-Law • • Thomas and Carver Bldg. * • Main St. Roxboro, N. C. * • *••••• Dr. R. J. Pearce OPTOMETRIST EYES EXAMINED— —GLASSES FITTED Roxboro Hotel Bldg. Roxboro, N. C. MONDAYS ONLY 10 A M. To 5 P. M. Happy Thanksgiving To All JM The Fruits of the Soil are ' the Fruits of Man's Own He who sows his seed in fertile soil.. . who is up at dawn to till it. .. and who vwL If at dusk lovingly eyes each lush furrow " ... it is he who reaps in plenty, and llap^rV| has a table all men praise. But though |o||y. *TJ?| mM jhis seed be the choicest ... his land ify" • fejfcpjS most rich . . and his tools most modern, they are of but little avail if, with every /KSbSB effort expended he does not think to himself, "I love this earth, because it (Jiw is the heart of my country- My sons and my sons’ sons after me will have it and l^^^pnnn prosper from it. I am planting not only for myself, but for the heritage of my nf jLlm/. II descendents.” For America was found- IL'yL^SsK ed on the principles of love and sacri fice, and all who perpetuated it shall Listen in over Radi<Tstation*WPTF every Tuesday, Thursday and Friday. S The Peoples Bank Roxboro, N. C. ed on four aides by scattered log structures, including a church, gen eral store, a tavern, smithy and com missioner’s office. None of the origi nal structures are standing, so it was necessary to inspect hundreds* of woodcuts and engravings, and study a multitude of diaries and ancient records pertaining to that locality. The same difficulty applied to covered wagons of the period, as well as to the harness worn by horses, glasses and dishes used in the tavern, and all the various equipment carried by the settlers. George O’Brien, star of the pro duction, received much help and many historical documents from residents of Yadkin, which helped to solve some of the most knotty points. o Let us do your Job Printing Prompt Service, Reasonable Prices, Good Work. PERSON COUNTY TIMES Phone 250 Pay Your 1935 Taxes Now If you have not paid your real estate taxes for 1935, it will be advertised December Ist. Please pay now and save advertising costs. You are also requested to pay your personal property taxes for 1935. PAY AND SAVE COSTS. M. T. CLAYTON Sheriff and Tax Collector THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 26TH, 1936 PRESIDENT SENDS NOTE TO SICK-BED SUPPORTER Greenvile, S. C., Nov. 22—Presi dent Roosevelt was touched by the loyalty of J. R. Holliday of near here who voted from his sick bed for the Democratic nominee. Holliday prizes a letter from the President thanking him for his in terest. His son wrote and told the President of his father's sick-bed vote. BUCIUONES FOR Transfer Service O R Public Hauling
The Roxboro Courier (Roxboro, N.C.)
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Nov. 26, 1936, edition 1
9
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