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Show in FIRMAGEJTffiATRE Friday and Saturday With the coming of the latest Republican western, "Cowboys From Texas", patrons of the Fir-mage Fir-mage theatre will be taken back to .the lusty vigorous days of President Teddy Roosevelt. He was a pioneer in the cause of soil reclamation and was the sponsor of a great deal of legislation which developed arid western lands and opened them up for colonization. One of his irrigation projects in Texas provides the thesis for this picture which comes to this theatre as one of the pictures pic-tures of a double feature show. A gripping and unforgettable melodrama comes to this theatre j Friday and Saturday as the other picture of a double feature show, when Republican's "Forgotten Girls" will be shown. The screenplay screen-play deals, with telling honesty and f orthrightness, with the plight of an underprivileged factory girl, how she rises to become a useful and respected citizen in spite fi the odds against her. Sunday and Monday The man, woman or child who cannot thoroughly enjoy every minute of "Young Tom Edison", which comes to the Firmage theatre thea-tre Sunday and Monday, is not human and never was young. It is a beautifully human story of a boy of any generation and any walk of life who triumphs against the stigma of being considered con-sidered ,strange. It has everything every-thing comedy, adventure, thrills, tears, human interest and family love. Mickey Rooney will be seen as Tom Edison, Virginia Weidler as his sister and Fay Bainter and iGeorgie Bancroft as Young Etfi-son's Etfi-son's parents. A Movietone news and an "Our Gang" comedy also will be shown. Tuesday and Wednesday Highly emotional drama and honest-to-goodnjess thrills are in srtore for filmgoers when they witness Walter Wanger's new film production, "The House Across the Bay", which comes to the Firmage theatre Tuesday and Wednesday, with George Raft and Joan Bennett heading an imposing cast. A news reel and a short subject also will be shown Thursday A thundering cavalcade of world turmoil and the collapse of an empire, em-pire, against wjhlich is traced a tender romance, will be shown Thursday night only at the Firmage theatre in "Florian", long-heralded adaption of Felix Salten's famous novel of the fall of the Hapsburgs follovJng thie World war. Filled with spectacu- lar sequences showing the pomp of Imperial Austria before the war, the picture follows the nation's na-tion's fate through the World war. revolution, and collapse of the empire, tracing their effects on a pair of lovers and a magnificent stallion, once the steed of thi Emperor. Robert Young and Helen Gilbert are starred in this picture. pic-ture. 'Selected! short subjects also will be shown. |