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THE HONGKONG TELEGRAPH. WEDNESDAY, JULY 5, 1933.
To get new Strength and Vitality-take
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NOTES SUPPLIED BY THE THEATRES
Gainsborough laugh-hit; "Marry Mo" is now showing at the King's Theatre starring Renate Mul- lor, the "Sunshine Susic" girl. It tells how the lovely Ann Linden, recordist in a gramophone factory, "gets her
men
By setting. her cap at an elderly charmer, she enables the man ahu adores to realise what he is about to lose. He realises it just before is too late, and thus brings to a happy conclusion a most engaging
melodious story.
and
18
When it la realised also that three Krent comedians, Georgo Robey, Harry Green and Billy Caryll, have notable parts In "Marry Me", It should be evident that laughter finds no email place in the picture.
70,000 Witnesses."
An unusual kin of a mystery melodrama, under the title of **70,000 Witnesses"
ca" showing from to-morrow at the Queen's Theatre will keep the audience in breathless exeitament from the moment Walter Clark, star half- back for the State eleven, drops dend run in the State.
during aional 211, several recls.
University
later, his murderer was ound.
the man
For Clark, whose role is ably play- ed by Johnny Mack Brown, is found to have been murdered, although both of bin the killer and
manner death are unknown.
shots are fired, his body beats been in perfect no marks of violence and
It
physical condition before the game. takes A re-enactment of the crime-- re-creating the fatal game, play by play to bring about the solution of the mystery.
n
The film has been most ably direct- cd, for the action is unlagging and the suspense is sustained until the final monient. The performances, too, are the of a high calibre, particularly work of Phillips
Holmes as
as the team's quarterback, who is suspected of Clark's
Dorothy
Jordan as murder: Clark's sister; Charlie Ruggles as n gin-drinking reporter; David Landau as the detective in charge of the case; Kenneth Thomson as the team doctor; Low Cody as the gambler-bro- ther of Holmes, and J. Farrell Mas- Donald as the' canch.
It's a first-rate thriller, well worth seeing!
"Half Naked Truth"
The stage play, "Broadway" gave Lee Tracy his first big opportunity, after six years of shinl parts and constant striving. He appeared in 800 performances of the play, and performed as Hildy subsequently Johnson in "The Front Page" at ap proximately 300 presentations. His m successes include "Washington Merry-Go-Round "The Night Ma-
Event"
His Intest Alm
Um is "Half Naked Truth" now showing at the Central Theatre, with Lupe Velez co-featured and Eugene Palette, Frank Morgan and Shirley Chambers in the support- ing cast. Tracy's role parallels the real life of the late Harry Reichbach, La the ballyhoo master. Gregory Cava directed this RKO-Radio Picture, "The Painted Woman" Most Southerners are superstitious, and naturally Peggy Shannon who plays the featured feminine role in the Fox picture, "The Painted Wom- un", which opens on Thursday at the King's Theatre, is no exception. Her beliefs lean toward the efficacy of rubbit's feet-especially the left hind foot of a big buck cottontall-and she has a collection of these articles now
nearly a hundred.
numbed here's
they work!
the point of it."
"When I was a little girl down in Arkansas,
the actress says, "I had the customary number of bumps and bruises and stubbed toes and twisted ankles. Later, while going to school, started to collect good luck charms and tried all of them in turn. As Bron as I began on rabbits" feet, may troubles stopped, and I haven't and any since.
"I innded in Ziegfeld's chacun, the dreain of every show girl and kept within a week of reaching New York right on going up without the vaul disappointments and difficulties. I love motoring, and drive everywhere and have
accident. nover had an Miss Shannon's role in "The Paint- ed Woman" was given to her reward for her scintillating work in the title role of the recent Fox picture, "Society Girl". It shows her an a flory South Seas alren whose inclic romance brings about the many thrills of the production, and she gives what many critics declare is one of the ances of the year. Spen- performances of Tracy has the male lead opponite her, and the cost Includes William (Stage) Boyd, Irving Pichel and Raul Houllen, John Blystone directed the production. Leon Gordon wrote the continuity and dialogue of this screen play by Guy Bolton which is based on A. C. Kennedy's original story.
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There is a fine Kodak to suit your purse or an inexpensive Brownie anyone can afford and the Hawk-Eye which costs even icas-all Eastman made and of famed Eastman quality
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THE HONGKONG TELEGRAPH
AMATEUR PHOTOGRAPHIC
COMPETITION
$250
Cash Prizes
Section 1. Bathing and Picnic Photographs. 1st $50, 2nd $20, 3rd $10
Section 2.
Section 3.
Section 4.
"
3
Views, including Architecture 1st $50, 2nd $20, 3rd $10
and Street Scones.
Chinese Studies
(Figures and Faces!:
:
1st $50, 2nd $20, 3rd $10
For the BEST STORY-TELLING PICTURE.
New Kodak 616 with K.A. £.4.5
1st Lens (Pictures 2/2 X 44-Roll 2nd New Kodak 620 with f.6.3 Lons
Film).
(Pictures 22 X 3%-Roll Film).
Presented by the Eastman Kodak Company
Section 5
Snapshots taken by Children under the age of 14 years.
Five Consolation Prizes of No. 2 Eastman Hawk-Eye
1st $10
Box Cameras (Pictures
2 X 31⁄4--Roll Film) Presented by the Eastman Kodak Company.
The following Rules will govern the Competition:--
1.-The Competition is confined exclusively to
amateur photographers.
2. The Prizes will be awarded to the competitors sending in what are adjudged to be the best. photographe in each Section (Section entered to be marked on the back of each picture), and which reach this Omce not inter than 31st August, 1938. The decision of the Jadges shall be final.
3The right to publish any or all of the entries
in the Telegraph in zezervóð, KAKAUT 4-Photographs which have been already entered
in local competitions are ineligible
B. At the conclusion of the Competition, entries will be returned to competitors on application at this Office within seven days.
6-No responsibility will be accepted for non-
delivery, lots of damage.
-Photographs, which must not be less than 24" x 8" (excepting in the Children's Section) should be printed in black and white, with the name of the competitor in ink on the back.
8-No correspondence will be entered into iti con-
nexion with the Competition.
Entries in the Children's Bection must bear the name, age and address on the back in ink, countoralned by a parent. -
101.-Hémbers of the Staff are not permitted to.
compete. /
READ THE RULES CAREFULLY.
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