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Show I "THE RAMBLIV KID." ' Life in the west, not the wild and woolly west of dime novel fume, hut the real west of today, is pictured pic-tured in Hoot Hibson's latest Universal Uni-versal special, "The Itiunblin' Kid," ' which comes to the Star theater ; next Friday. Star of innumerable film plays of western outdoor adventure, (Jibson faces entirely new situations in "The Kainblin' Kid." It is a remarkably re-markably human novel, written by Karl Wayland Kownian and adapted adapt-ed to the screen by K. Kichanl ' Srhnyer and directed by Edward Sedgwick. limit (iihson has not been what is generally called "a western star'' ! for some time. His stories have too much .-rood drama and human interest in-terest in them to lie called typical western pictures. "The Kamblin' Kid" is a yonnu; cowboy wiMi a perchant for playing drunk and shooting up saloons. He dues it so often and so artistically that most people believe it's all real. 1 which is a bad thimr, especially when the ''most people" includes a certain beautiful yonnir fjirl whom he'd rather have think well of him. |