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Show POPULAR FILM BOOKED HERE NEXTJUNDAY With the coming of "Tess of 1 Storm Country" to the Rivoli theater the-ater next Sunday, the army of Gaynor-Farrcll fans will see their favorites in what is said to be the most exciting and dramatic otlci-lng otlci-lng they hnve yet made and a picture pic-ture very different from any of their previous vehicles. The story deals with the hectic adventures of a sea-captain s daughter who comes to live ashore for the first time in her life. With its opening sequences aboard the captain's schooner and the picturesque settings of the shore scenes, the production adds a scrnic realism to its swift-moving story. Miss Gaynor's work as the fiery and independent fisher-girl and Farrell's performance as the carefree youngster who encounters love for the first time, are roported to rank among the stars' finest portrayals. Dudley Digges, Miss Gaynor's , uncle in "The First Year," enacU i the role of her nautical father in "Toys." Claude Gillingwater, June Clyde and Edward Pawley have the other principal parts, with Oeoi-fcc Meeker, Matty Kemp and DcWitt Jennings also prominent in the cast. Fur lawlessness that was lawlessness law-lessness one must hark back to the days of "The Last Frontierr," according to Courtney Ryley Cooper, Coo-per, famous author of the talkie, serial now showing at the Rivoli theater Wednesday and Thursday. "The Last Frontier," serialized in twelve dramatic, action-packed i chapters, depicts conditions during ! the most lawless period in Amer- j irn history. The locale is that patt of the old west where open 'aw-k'ssncss 'aw-k'ssncss made its last stand; the time when desperadoes were fight-ll)g fight-ll)g to settle all disputes with Colt ind Winchester. Cooper's story, realistically and thriliingty produced for RKO-Radio RKO-Radio Pictures by the Van Buren corporation with Creighton Chaney son of the late Lon Chaney, in the lending i-rdc, is an accurate mirror of those colorful times, according to Critics |