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ENTERTAINMENTS -— ♦ [ , : ' MAJESTIC THEATRE. "Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde," Spencer Tracy. Ingrid Bergman. Lana Turner. \ . REGENT THEATRE. "Skylark," Claudette Colbert, Brian Aherne, Ray Milland. DE LUXE THEATRE. "Down in San Diego," an American response on land, sea, and in the air; "Riders of the Timberline." OPERA HOUSE. "The Great Waltz," Fernand Gravet, Miliza Korjus, Louise Rainer. ROXY THEATRE. "The Farmer's Wife," Bob Crosby, Ruth Terry; "Rookies on Parade." PARAMOUNT THEATRE. "Old Mother Ri'ley in Business," Arthur Lucan, Kttty McShane; "A Dangerous Lady." PRINCESS THEATRE. "Night Train to Munich," Paul Hernreid, • Basil Radford, • Naunton Wayne; "Tight Shoes." • TIME THEATRE. "Raffles," David Niven, Olivia de Havilland; "The House Across the Bay," |George Raft, Joan Bennett. TUDOR THEATRE. "Suspicion," Joan Fontaine, Carey Grant; "Fobtlight Fever,". Alan Mowbray, Donald Mcßride. ST. JAMES THEATRE. "Unholy Partners," Edward G. Robinson, Edward Arnold, Laraine Day. STATE THEATRE. "The Gay Falcon," George Sanders, Wendy Barrie, Anne Hunter, Gladys Cooper. KING'S THEATRE. "Wild Geese Calling," Henry Fonda, Joan . Bennett, Warren William, Ona Munson. n TIVOL! THEATRE. "Western Union," Robert Young, Randolph Scott, Virginia Gilmore; "Lydia," Merle Oberon. SUBURBAN THEATRES. Grand (Petone).—"Cracked Nuts," Mischa Aver, Una Merkel; "Youth Will Be Served." " Palace (Petone).—"Bulldog Drummond's Secret Police," John Howard, Heather Angel; "Spawn of the North." Prince Edward (Woburn).—"Tall, Dark, and Handsome," Cesar Romero, Virginia Gilmore, Charlotte Greenwood; 'Mutiny in the Arctic." Empire (Island Bay).—"The Ghost of St. Michael's," Claude Hulbert, Will Hay; "Sailors Three." Regal (Karori).—"Target for Tonight"; "Love Crazy," William Powell, Myrna Loy. • Vogue (Brooklyn).—"Pot o' Gold," James Stewart, Paulette Goddard; "Dr. Kildare Goes Home," Lew Ayres, Laraine Day. De Luxe (Lower Hutt). —"Santa Fe Marshal," William Boyd; "Captain Cautious," Leo Carillo, Bruce Cabot. King George (Lower Hutt). —"Hold Back the Dawn," Charles Boyer, Olivia de Havilland, Paulette Goddard. Capitol (Miramar).—"Flight Command," Robert Taylor, Ruth Hussey, Walter Pidgeon; "The Great Swindle." Kinema (Kilbirnie)'.—"l Wanted Wings," Ray Milland, William Holden. Ascot (New.town). —"Bitter Sweet," Jeanette Mac Donald, Nelson Eddy; "Girls on Probation." Rivoli (Newtown).—"This Thing •Called Love," Rosalind Russell, Melvyn Douglas; "Badlands of Dakota," Ann Rutherford. ', State (Petone) .—"The Thief of. Bagdad." HELP KIDNEYS PASS 3 LBS. A DAY Doctors say your fcldneya contain 15 felled of tiny tube 3or filters which help to purify the blood and keep you healthy. Most people pass about 3 pints a day or about 3 pounds of waste. An excess of acids or poisons In your mood are the cause of frequent or scanty passages with smarting and burning, nagging backache, rheumatic pains, leg pains, loss of pep and energy, getting up nights, swollen feet and ankles, pufflness under the eyes, headaches and dizziness. If kidneys don't empty 3 plnta a day _n_ Bet rid of more than 3 pounds of waste matter, your body will take up these poisons causing serious trouble. Don't waitl Ask your chemist or store for DOAN'S BACKACHE KIDNEY PILLS . . . used successfully the world over by millions of people. They give quick relief and will help to flush out the 15 MILES of kidney tubes. Get" DOAN'S. BACKACHE KIDNEY PILLS at your chemljt or store, For The Blood, Veina.Arteriet Take It: and Stop Limping DON'T let Leg Troubles cripple you. Take 'Elasto,* the Great New Biomedical Remedy that acts through the blood, and. have done with enforced rest, worry, suffering and expense. Leg aches and pains soon vanish when ' Elasto * is taken. Painful swollen (varicose) veins are restored to a healthy condition, skin troubles clear up, leg wounds become clean and healthy and quickly heal, the : heart becomes steady, the arteries supple, piles disappear, rheumatism simply fades away, and the whole system is braced and strengthened. This is not magic, although the relief does seem magical; it is the natural result of revitalised blood and improved circulation brought about by "Elasto,* the tiny tablet with wonderful healing powers. What Is 'Elasto'? This question is fully answered In an interesting booklet, which axplains in simple language this amazing new method of revitalizing the blood. Your copy is Free, together with a generous Free Sample, see Offer below. Suffice it to say here that ' Elasto 'is not a drug but a vital cell-food.' It restores to the blood the vital .elements' which combine with the blood albumin to form organic elastic tissue and thus enables Nature to restore elasticity to the broken-down and devitalised fabric of veins, arteries and heart, and so to re-establish , normal, healthy circulation, without which there can be no true healing I NINE TIMES OUT OF TEN THE REAL TROUBLB IP BAD CIRCULATION. Send for FREE Sample! Write NOW to address below tor generous Free Sample of'Elasto' and interesting booklet explaining this new science of Natural Healing, and make the discovery oi a lifetime. 'Elasto' is obtainable from ChemistSj price 7/6 for one month's supply; oi postage paid for 7/9 from 'Elasto,' (DepL w py 117, Armagh St., Christchurch, N.Z. \ v______ s 1 MP^ For e_«y Ironing mnd perfeet«reoult«, HT always use Gregg** Eagla Starch, in B Mb. or 1-tb. packets. Being manufaotured from pure Rice, it has much H^ greater stiffening power v Better for W. GREGG * CO. ITTO H Dunediib

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/EP19420220.2.12.5

Bibliographic details

Evening Post, Volume CXXXIII, Issue 43, 20 February 1942, Page 3

Word Count
844

Page 3 Advertisements Column 5 Evening Post, Volume CXXXIII, Issue 43, 20 February 1942, Page 3

Page 3 Advertisements Column 5 Evening Post, Volume CXXXIII, Issue 43, 20 February 1942, Page 3

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