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Show m flRMAGEJHEATRE Friday and Saturday "Lawless Valley" with Gdorge O'Brien, Kay Sutton, Walter Miller, Mil-ler, Fred Kohler and others in the cast, will be shown at the Finnage theatre iFriday and Saturday as one of the pictures of a double feature. fea-ture. In this western melodrama George O'Brien is paroled from prison and sets about to find the real culprits who engineered his imprisonment. . "A Man to Remember" is the other picture of the double feature to be shown Friday and Saturday. The cast includes Anne Shirley, Edward Ellis, Lee Bowniian and others. This is the story of a country doctor wljo made many sacrifices for his patients and for the good of the community in a long life of service. Chapter 2 of the serial "Boy Scouts to the Rescue" Res-cue" also will be shown. Sunday and Monday A dramatic story of two men whose lifelong friendship is broken by an Arctic feud but who are finally reunited through the terrific ter-rific sacrifice of one of them is told in "Spawn of the North", a I tale of romance, war and heroism J in frontier Alaska, which comes to the Firmage theatre Sunday and Monday. George Raft, plays the role of a ne'er-do-well , but captivating capti-vating adventurer of the North- lands, who flaunts every law of I Alaska, but gives up everything - for his life-long friend and the girl he loves. Henry Fonda plays ' Raft's devoted friend and Dorothy Lamour plays the girl. The latest news also will be shown. Tuesday and Wednesday Teaming two of the screen's most popular players in a unique comedy-mystery romance, R K O Radio's "The Mad Miss Manton" stars Barbara Stanwyck and Henry Fonda in a unique murder mystery with rich comedy and romantic elements. Fonda portrays a serious seri-ous young newspaperman who editorially edi-torially lashes Miss Stanwyck, a spoiled society girl, and a group of her friends for their thoughtless pranks and spendthrift habits. What happens thereafter makes a thrilling and unusual picture. A comedy "Patio Serenade" and tjie latest news also will be shown. Thursday Read by millions for nearly a hundred years, played on the stage ! and dramatized over the radio j innumerable times, "A Christmas Carol", Charles Dickens' immortal 'story of Yuletide, has at last come to the audiences of the screen. Taken directly from the pages of Dickens, the new picture, which comes to the Firmage theatre Thursday only, brings Scrooge1 Tiny Tim, the Cratchits and the' rest of the beloved characters to life in an authentic reproduction of old London of Dickens' day. Reginald Owen, Terry Kilburn and Gene and Kathleen Lockhart are in the wonderful ca t. Selected short subjects also will be shown. I v I |