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Show their holsters with almost lightning light-ning speed by the forefingers and spun upward into shooting position. The main advantage of the technique, as Boyd explains it. is that single action guns may be cocked with the thumbs as the pistols spin. Tile involved procedure saves the spit-second so important to the Westerner in getting' a head start on his adversary, or "beating "beat-ing him to the draw," in the parlance of the range. Although under ordinary cir-custances cir-custances it take a man weeks to master the "Mormon Roll," Boyd an ace with pistols - got it in less than two days. "Renegade "Rene-gade Trail," a story of "Hoppy's single-handed war to save a woman wo-man from being blackmailed by iter own rustler-'husband, gives the actor plenty of opportunity to demonstrate his new technique. techni-que. In addition to his stalwart six-shooter, six-shooter, "Hopalong" has with him in the new picture his two saddle-mates "Windy" and "Lucky," played by George Hayes and Russell Hayden. 5 (, Attractions At The Theaters "I'm From Missouri," a hilarious hilari-ous story about a Missouri mule magnate on the loose in London, continues the trend started in I the recent "The Arkansas Traveler," Trav-eler," which marked Boh Burns' switch from musical comedy roles to the portrayal of clown-to-earth American types. It was such a sensational success that Bob is now rated as the screen's A-l player of native characters and has stellar rating for the second time in the picture which opens Friday at the Rivoli theater. thea-ter. The sixth of the Hardy Family Fam-ily pictures, titled "The Hardys Hide High," opens at the Rivoli theater next Sunday for a two-day two-day engagement. The new story takes the familiar group to De-i De-i troit in response to the startling news that they have inherited a fortune. The same cast which has scored scor-ed in previous pictures of the series appears again, with several sev-eral additions. Lewis Stone portrays por-trays Judge Hardy; Mickey Rooney is again the irrepressible son, Andy; Fay Holden appears as Mrs. Hardy; Cecilia Parker is the daughter, Marian; Sara Haden is the maiden Aunt Milly; and Ann Rutherford enacts the role of Mickey's Carvel girl friend, Polly Benedict. Don Castle Cas-tle is the admirer of Cecilia. New in the cast are Virginia Grey, appearing as a cabaret glamour girl who attracts Mickey; Mick-ey; Minor Watson as an admir-rer admir-rer of Aunt Milly; William Orr, as Mickey's rival for Ann Rutherford; Ruth-erford; Halliwell Hobbas as the Hardy butler, and John King as a young millionaire. The family encounters legal difficulties over the expected fortune in Detroit. Judge Hardy, facing an opportunity to win the money by a bit of dishonesty, iy . faces the issues squarely and they return to Carvel, as poor as ever but equally as honest. The timeliness of its theme -teath and heroism in the skies brings back to the screen of the Ritz theater one of the most powerful dramas of wartime aviation, avi-ation, "The Eagle and the Hawk." With an all star cast headed by Frederic March, Carole Car-ole Lombard, Cary Grant and Jack Oakie, it begins its engagement engage-ment on Friday. March and Grant are cast as a pilot and observer in the Royal Roy-al Flying Corps March, a skilled, skill-ed, reckless flier; Grant, a ruthless ruth-less killer. Together in the air, they are an unbeatable team, and one enemy after another falls victim to their combined prowess. prow-ess. But on the ground they are the deadliest of enemies. March, repelled by Grant's savagery; Grant, scornful of March's softness. soft-ness. For March there is a brief escape in the intensity of his love for Carole Lombard. But as the drama of death begins to pierce his shell a new realization of their friendship comes to these two men. United now, they be-.come be-.come the scourge of the skies. The drama mounts with fast-paced fast-paced intensity, following this pair through their exploits to a startling climax. Comedy relief is afforded by the excellent playing of a third member of the flying force, Jack Oakie. The story of "The Eagle and the Hawk," is by John Monk Saunders, author of "Wings." "Hopalong Cassidy" is doin' the "Mormon Roll"! No, it's not a new dance designed de-signed for Salt Lake jitterbugs, but a superior way of drawing a brace of guns from their holsters, hol-sters, which' William Boyd, playing play-ing "Hopalong," demonstrates for the first time in the range romance, "Renegade Trail," opening open-ing locally next Tuesday at the Rivoli theater. According to the "M o r m o n Roll," the guns are jerked from |