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Show VICTORY THEATRE Some were damned some were blessed,! Stung by greed, fired by lust, they 'gambled hell against heaven heav-en in a desperate whirl of human passions! Such is the great picture "From Hell To Heaven," which is showing at the Victory theatre this Thursday, Friday and Saturday. Carole Car-ole Lombard, Jack Oakie, David Manners Man-ners and Adrienne Ames are all seen and heard to excellent advantage in the screen version of this great stage play by Lawrence Hazard. The first gripping, utterly bewildering bewild-ering football mystery drama of the sci-een is "70,000 Witnesses," starring Phillips Holmes, Dorothy Jordan, Charlie Ruggles and Johnny Mack Brown, which will show Sunday, Monday Mon-day and Tuesday. At the height of the thrilling football game the faces of 70,000 cheering, raving football fans become terrified as they see the star player topple and fall dead the victim of an assasin! Clark was not shot; he was not stabbed; he was not poisoned. How did death strike? The offering for Wednesday night of next week newly inaugurated family night at which performance-the performance-the entire family is admitted for less than the price of two adult tickets will be Ernst Lubitsch's "Trouble In Paradise," with Miriam Hopkins, Kay Francis, Herbert Marshall, Charles Ruggles and Edward Everett Horton. One Adam one apple and two Eves is about the situation in this picture and if this does not hold out a promise of rare entertainment, you don't know your pictures or your picture stars! o |