KING'S THEATRE.
Western and Comedy.
The ominous threat of drought and the .villainy of unscrupulous. beef dealers who plan to use it to.enrich themselves by forcing up the price of beef, is the story. -of Paramount's \ Trail Dust," the latest addition to the "Hopalong" Cassidy . series, which begins on Saturday at the King's Theatre William Boyd as "Hoppy," Jimmy Ellison' as Johnny, and George Hayes as "Windy" make up the threesome who are assigned to get a cattle herd through .the drought belt to the railhead. . They ,do, but no£ without, .the exercise of considerable gun play, hard riding, and plenty of action of the type that has made this'series of Clarence E. Mulford westerns so popular. The funniest husband and wife in pictures, Charlie Ruggles and Mary Boland, are together again for the eleventh time in a delightful comedy of a .great love which almost . goes wrong in Paramount's "Wives Never Know," which will be the second feature. Aiding and abetting in the general merriment is suave Adqlphe Menjou, cast as the serpent who .comes into a Topeka, Kansas, Garden of Eden with some , novel ideas .on married happiness which, he induces gullible Ruggles to try. Charlie does, with results that are almost disastrous to his happy marriage.
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Bibliographic details
Evening Post, Volume CXXIII, Issue 71, 25 March 1937, Page 6
Word Count
209KING'S THEATRE. Evening Post, Volume CXXIII, Issue 71, 25 March 1937, Page 6
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