COSY THEATRE
"RUSTLERS' VALLEY" AND "BLONDE TROUBLE." "Lucky " Jenkins, inseparable sad-dle-mate of "Hopalong Cassidy" is accused of murder in a frame-up, and it is np to "Hoppy" to prove him innocent and to rid the community of a band of desperadoes, all within forty-' eight hours, in Paramount's "Rustlers' Valley," latest of the popular Clarence E. Mulford outdoor action stories, which screens to-night at the Cosy Theatre. William Boyd is in his accustomed place as "Hoppy," with George Hayes, as "Windy," riding by his side Cassidy finds himself tangled with Cal Howard, a crooked lawyer, who is after a ranch owned by Randall Glenn, which the lawyer knows is being sought as the key to a watershed in an irrigation project in which he is financially interested. Howard is also attentive to Glenn 's daughter, Agnes, whom ho means to marry in order to get the land if other means fail. Cassidy learns that Howard is the power behind the bank robbery. The heartaches and headaches of a young songwriter in love are vividly brought to the screen in Paramount's new comedy, "Blonde Trouble," which is the second feature at the Cosy Theatre, with a cast headed by Eleanore Whitney and Johnny Downs. En route to New York City, where he hopes to succeed as a songwriter, Fred Stevens, played by Johnny Downs, meets and falls in love with beautiful Edna Baker. In New York, he meets Paul Sears, a broken-down song-writer, his sophisticated wife and her gold-digging sister. All three treat him with indifference until they discover that he has his life's savings with him, but then, everything changes.
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Bibliographic details
Hawke's Bay Herald-Tribune, Volume 81, Issue 67, 11 December 1937, Page 14
Word Count
270COSY THEATRE Hawke's Bay Herald-Tribune, Volume 81, Issue 67, 11 December 1937, Page 14
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