Wilmette Life (Wilmette, Illinois), 16 Nov 1933, p. 46

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Elissa Landi says that the kilss Ron- ald Colman gaves ber in "Tbe Mas- querder" is ber first experience of thhticind with a mustache. >Wftb al -due respect to Mr. Colman, Miss Landi doesn't ke it-the'mustache, that is. COMMUNITY flOUSE FRIDAY - SATURDAY ~VNIOSONILYr, NOV. 17-18 JAM9S CAGNMEY MADGE EVANS "TEMATà« or Admta 2. ChiMies UMe $AT. MATINEE ONLY «RENO THE MAGICIAN 10Shomm.-Pome Uni. 3444 15 M. te S&L t. 6:30 Mec EVENINGS and a te 2:30 on Sudys Lest. Times. T.dy-Nov. le K.y Fra.*ci-]Ly T.Ib.et GleumdmFamili "'MARlY STEVES, MKD." Ais. Mm-aiu & MeIE %o,.y * Reno, the magician, will perforni at. Saturday's, matinée, the second of tbe series of children's progranis sponsored by tbe junior 'auxiliaey of 'tbe Win- netka Wornan's club. James, Cagney and Madge Evans take the leads in "Tbe Mayor. of Hell," a story filled with thrilling drama and pathos. Cagney, hîmseif a gangster, is made superviser of a teform scbôoi.. A. ward héeler, lie bas little interest in tbe schol-but when lie learns of the. cruelties practiced on the boys, Cagney goes about, reforming thé place. He. uses strong aim metbods,, finaly throwing ouf the graffing ring i con- f roi and seffing up self-government ini the scbooi. "The M4ayor of. Hell" ranks witb sucb, pictuires as "Little Caesar," "The, Public Enerny" and "*I>Arn a Fugitive Frorn aChain -Gang." «Sea Fever Frequently> rDisturbs Ronaki Colman rRonald Colman bas a sailor's feel- ing for tbe sea. The eventlessness if offers f0 rnost 'people is excifing ad- venfure fo bim. He has sailed into every nook of the California and Mexican Coast. After he finished "The Masquerader" for Samuiel Goidwyn iasf spring, Col- man left with a few f riends t0 spend dreaxned of home. "HFome,"t in the case of Colmian, won'f be Hollywood, for f riends report that the Inglîsh star doesn't expect to re- turn f0 the motion picture colony for at ieéasf two years. GUIDE-LECTURE TOURS "Indians of Plains and Deserts" at 3 o'clock on Mondav. November 20, Ronald Colman and Eliçsu Lundi are surPrised-and so is the audi- cnce-at he suddenPlot develop- met:s in "The Masque roder,> drame of contrasting personalities, to be show,, ut the Wilmette thea- ter Sunday and Monday, Noveit- ber 19 and 20. Co'ao plays a dual 701e. Valencia Presents Cinema Triumphs .A talented cast,~ able .directîon and a powerfully dramatic story feature "Mary Stevens, M. 1).," starring Kay Francis and Lyle Talbot at the Val; the thrier, -J1efore Liaw ni". story of a detective wbo employs supernafural aid in tracing a crime. Gifted wjfh psychic powers, a girl sleuth is estab- ished in a bouse where several mur- ders have been comrnitted, and she, meets the iurnan demon hirnself in the clinmax. Stuart Erwin and Dorothy Wilson have f eatured i-oIes 'in this story by the late Edgar Wallace. Katharine Hepburn is at her superb. best in "Morning Glory." the drana~ %PA ILAL £ 11109K "Laugbing at Life," now showing at the WVihette theater, packs enough dash and action to inspire its star, Victor McLaglen, te> what. many con- sider bis finest performance. Ford Beebe, the director, wrote hic own story and, thrust' al bis verve and in-, genuity. into turning out a production unexcelleed for sheer action and thrills. The picture moves se fast that.it's, time to go te the theater now before it is to0 late.. A detective, who employs super- natural powers in tracking down a clever killer, cornes -te the Wiltnette theater for the first tirne Saturday, November 18.. Tbe film-guaranteed 'te f0 make everybody jitter-conscious. -is "Before.Dawni." Dorotby Wilson, Stuart Erwin and Warner Oland1 play the leads. *Cobsan uM*et&s Himelf" Sunday and Monday, Novernber 19 and 20, Ronald. Colman stumbles througb the. London -f og and into the living' image of himself. Thus starts the. story .of "Tii. Masquerader," in which Colman brilliantly plays a dual i-oie. Elissa Landi and Juliette Comp- ton cross the lives of tbe two charac- ters wbom Colman portrays. "The Masquerader" teems witb mys- tery and thi-ilîs that remind one of "BtulldoK Drummond." OId Chicago Reviv.d Packingtown - the name given to the ai-ca: of ilth, squaior and misery in which thousands of workers in the Chicago meat-packing plants of the mette theater T1uesday, Wednesday, Thursday and' Friday, Noveniber 21- 24. Weeks of résearcb and the careful sfudy by experts, of scores of photo-. graphs, newspaper andrnagazine pic- tures - and verbald,àescripitions 'of old Packingtown were necessarybefore the long-vanisbed siurn district could be flawlessiy re-created on tbe studio lot. "Flawlessness," in fact, is the word' for this great picture in its vr E LfTLE PIGSS" 'T1. Bis, B" Wolf- ~ * U Ai »M aud the red-baired Star to be'a. prof essional .............

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