Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 45, Number 142, 24 April 1920 — Page 8
PAGE TEN
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND UN-TELEGRAM. SATURDAY, APRIL 24, 1920.
TNEXT WEEK AT THE S HEATERS
WASHINGTON. Norma Talmadge productions are always unusual. They must be, for Norma, herself, is unusual. Her quaint nnd widely varied characterizations nre at once the surprise and the delight of her thousands of admirers. , Many have asked why she never was given the opportunity of demonstrating her very evident ability aa a comedienne. .The answer is elm pie. Until of late a suitable vehicle of that type has never been found. At last, however, she is to be presented in a comedy photoplay as dainty and piquant as her own sweet self. : "She Loves and Lies," a sew Select Special, is the play and It will be presented at the Washington theatre for three days, beginning Sunday. MURRAY VAUDEVILLE .Rives and Arnold In their comedy Ringing and talking sketch, "A Big Sale," will headline the bill opening Monday matinee at The Murray for the first half. This act Is full of surprises and comedy, and comes here direct from the larger city circuits. Also on the same bill comes Rover and Nelson, two young men with their
scenic comedy act entitled "Wanted,
a Jockey," and the Gabberts. a man and, woman who term themselves
"America's Ingenious Athletes." The
screen this half wlll reveal Corinne Griffith supported by that old-time
favorite Maurice Costello, In "Human
vvtuwi iuu d j v& gill nuu was given as a bond for a huge loan of money. This Is a five-reel Vita-
graph' production. "Ship Ahol Heave to, my hearties." Here they come Thursday and the en
tire last half, the biggest feature act ever booked at the Murray. President
Wilson's own sailor show "Every Sail
or" with the same cast of U. S. sailors who produced this musical comedy at
sea aboard - the good ship George
Washington, for the entertainment of President Wilson and party. This big production is billed as "A Jazzy, Shimmying Musical Comedy with a Chorus of Oirlie Gobs," featuring Harry Down
ing and Al Van Zandt. Since their
discharge from service these boys pre
sented this production at the Palace Theatre, New York City, where it met with such favor that it was booked for
the entire Keith circuit, and has prov-
en one of the sensations of the vaudeville season. They come direct from
the Palace Theatre, Fort Wayne, to the Murray, and we would suggest coming earlier than usual while these
sailor boys are in the city, for they
are breaking house records every place where they are booked. No advance in the price, although it is costing the management a small fortune to bring them here. Two other very good acts will also be on the same bill. These are Jennings and O'Brien, a man and woman comedy team, who will hold their own on any bill, and Ben Linn (Big Ben), a singing and talking monologuist. This will positively be the biggeBt bill of the season. Harry T. Morey In his latest fivereel Vltagraph production, "The Birth of a Soul," will be the screen attraction. PALACE. The first Jewel Production featuring Dorothy Phillips since that memorable photodrama, "Destiny," will be seen at the Palace Theatre, Sunday and Mon
day. The new picture has been entitled "Paid in Advance," and is a story of the fur region of Canada and the Klondike, during the mad goldrush to the Yukon. Allen J. Holubar, who was also director during the production, adapted to screen purposes a notable story by James Oliver Curwood, which tells of the struggle of Joan Gray, depicted by Miss Phillips, to stay straight after she has been lured to Dawson City, in the Yukon, by Gold Dust Barker, keeper of a Klondike saloon and gambling hell. Upon Joan is forced the bitter alternative of choosing between Barker and the wicked crowd of men who infest the place. The picture is replete in scenery of the northwest, and the spectator will be the richer in a knowl
edge of people and customs during the old-rush days after he has seen "Paid in Advance." MURRAY. Miss Shirkey Mason, the Fox star who Is known as "95 pounds of pep, personality and prettiness" made a decided hit at the Murray Theatre,
where she is presented by William Fox in the screen version of Frank j R. Adams' storv "Molly and I and j the Silver Ring." In the screen ver-J sinn the tiil has been shortened to I
I "Molly and I"; but there is no need I
of shortening her slogan "3o pounas oi pep, personality and prettiness." Her company is an excellent one. Albert Roscoe, as leading man, gives his usual finished performance and the direction by Howard M. Mitchell leaves nothing to be desired. MURRETTE Girls, if you were married for three weary years to a perfectly good man, who never came home a little "tipsy," who never ate onions, who never looked at another woman, who never snored in his sleep, who never smoked
nor Bwore If you were marriea 10 this sort of a saint, what sort of a husband would you look around for after the demise of this noble one? It's a ten to one bet that you would do just as Georgiana Charbourne did step out and search for the wickedest man In New York. And if you couldn't find one what then? "In Search of a Sinner," starring
Constance Talmadge and distributed by First National Exhibitors' Circuit, which is showing at the Murrette Theatre, will explain the whole thing better than you could dope it out for yourself. Miss Talmadge is the virtueweary wife and Radcliffe Fellows is the "good little devil." The screen version was adapted by John Emerson and Anita Loos.
Tp. Commencement Dates Announced; Williams Is To A ttend Each One County Superintendent C. O. Williams will attend each one of the county school commencement exercises and award diplomas to approximately 250 common school graduates and 90 high school graduates during
the coming few weeks. He announced
the dates and speakers for the vari- i ous townships Friday morning as fol-j
lows:
WOMAN HELD AS THIEF (By Associated Press CLEVELAND, O., April 2i Laura Wayne, alias McDonald, said by the police to be the leader of a gang of housebreakers, was in the East Cleve-
in high Kelley,
Oscar
New Garden township, at Fountain! City, Friday night, April 24; A. M. ; Hall, of Indianapolis, a member of the state board of education, will de- i liver the commencement address. ! Webster township, Friday evening, April 23; the Rev. Charles Whitman,, of Seymour, speaker. j Franklin township, April 26; A. M.
Hall, speaker. , Clay township, April 27; A. M. Hall, speaker. Washington township, April 29; Albert Stump, Indianapolis attorney, speaker. Green township, April 30; Oscar E. Kelley, minister, of Terre Haute,
speaker. Boston township, May 1; A. M. Hall, speaker.
Wayne township, May 4, school auditorium; Oscar speaker.
Jefferson May 7. Jefferson township; May 7; Kelley, speaker.
Jackson township, May 8; Oscar j Kelley, speaker. Abington, May 6; George W. Win-' frey, clerk of the circuit court at Anderson, speaker. .. , Harrison township, May 14; OscarKelley, speaker. Dalton township, May 26; George: Winfrey, speaker. j Town school commencement exer-i
clses will take place at Hagerstown and Centerville on April 29. Mr. Winfrey will speak at the former place and Mr. Kelley at the latter. Exercises will bo held in Perry and Center townships, but the dates and
IqiiiI loll tnrlav in default of S3.000
bail. She was arrested yesterday and j speakers have not been announced
bound over to the grand jury on a charge of house-breaking.
PALACE
SUNDAY
DOROTHY PHILLIPS iSJasSX PAID IN ADVANCE A wonderful epic of the gold mining country by James Oliver Curwood
Theatre Beautiful
MURRETTE "WHERE THE STARS TWINKLE FIRST"
Hear Our Pipe Organ, Jazz Orchestra
Sunday, Monday and Tuesday
UJilliawfJox
jnresents
l) Jivt .MtsoAj ereiiina life I H . ftSJ
? '-rr-'V,:'
JinvthfTeauu exciting me
witii this romantic adventure
Money back without queitioo if HUNT'S Salve fail in tha treatment of I TCH, ECZEMA. RINGWORM, TETTER or other itching akin disease. Try 75 cent bos at our risk
' O. & S. Drug Co.. Cor. 9th and Main
C. J. Mendenhall (Dentist)
Have your teeth pain by an expert.
extracted without Over forty years I
experience, (re
Next to Richmond Thea-
(3
60 Thrills in "The Daredevil" 60 Including: the most daring deed In the history of motion pictures. Mix's death-defying leap from a moving train to the tell tale cords. It's Tom Mix's Best Western "DO" For It is the absolute apex of sensational pictures. It will make your blood leap wildly. Thrills will play '"Yankee Doodle" on your spine. It starts with a sensation. It ends with a bigger one. A fight opens the kctlon. A victory ends it. Men and horses defy death and cheat the undertaker. There are bad men but no cowards in it. Every man will think he's a riproaring, two-fisted fighter and every woman will feel that she, too, is worth fighting for when the spell of the picture grips them with the first scene. It's literally crammed with hair-raising, daring, hazardous action. It's Tom Mix at his best in his own conception of a Western thriller.
Lunch at the THE KANDY SHOP 919 Main Sodas and Candies
Try Fleur de Venice Cigars GEO. H. SHOFER Distributor Richmond, Ind., Phone 3240 or 3127. For sale by all dealers
DR. LEE C. HOOVER Veterinarian Phone 1399 20 S. 12th St.
3 j ) ' m , ,,-,-jlr
"It was that beast or you!" she cried to the crowd in the Klondike bar room, "so I've made my choice. I'll marry the highest bidder! If there is a decent soul among you bid bid." The bidding began $10,000 $25,000 $50,000. The one greatest picture of its kind since the "Spoilers." See the greatest fight ever put on the movie screen. A love story thit will thrill every man and woman. Staged in the country and about the day's that Rex Beach and Curwood made famous. And With iUa Whooping Laugh-Maker, "A RED HOT FINISH" PIPE ORGAN FOR MUSIC TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY The Star Supreme in Her Greatest Screen Success 'THE COMMON LA W FROM THE FAMOUS NOVEL
THURSDAY FRIDAYVIVIAN MARTIN MARY PICKFORD in "THE SUNSET TRAIL" in "THE PRIDE OF THE CLAN"
TONIGHT ONLY DOUBLE FEATURE PROGRAM ROY STEWART
The Screen Favorite in a De- pnrfnc Cm n A o 1 1 ightful Western Comedy Drama V4 dtLUa VrallLld.11 and Fatty Arbucklc in the Paramount Laugh-Maker, "A DESERT HERO"
55
I.
Added Feature Gharlie Chaplin in "The Rink
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Admission Adults 25c; Children 15c, Including Tax LAST TIMES TODAY Constance Talmadge in the Snappy Spicy, Full-of-Fun Production "In Search of a Sinner"
and
2-Reel Comedy entitled "Good Night Judge"
3 J2i
COMING WEDNESDAY THURSDAY AND FRIDAY The -greatest picture of the North Woods that broke attendance records by thousands at the Circle Theatre at Indianapolis "THE RIVER'S END"
SELECT VAUDEVILLE
MURRAY
HEAR Our Pipe Organ Our Concert Orchestra
1
'BETTER COME EARLY"
Mon., Tues., Wed. Corinne Griffith
in
"Human Collateral" Story of a Girl given as collateral for a huge loan of money. Fivereel Vitagraph production.
(it
'WMWJm
Last Times Sunday Shirley Mason
in-
"MOLLY AND V Five-rele Fox Production
Supreme Vaudeville Monday Tuesday Wednesday Shirley Billv RIVES and ARNOLD A clever man and woman team direct from the Big-Time circuits in their comedy singing and talking skit, "A BIG SALE" ROVER and NELSON Two young men who are real comedians in their laughing absurdity, "JOCKEY WANTED." Special scenery THE GABBERTS A man and woman act who are billed "America's Ingenious Athletes! A novel athletic exhibition Thursday and Last-Half EVERY SAILOR GIRLS? GIRLS? PRESIDENT WILSON'S OWN SAILOR SHOW A SALTY MUSICAL REVUE Composed of all Ex-U. S. Navy Sailor3 featuring Harry Downing and Al Van Zandt and A Jazzy, Shimmying Chorus of Girlie Gobs. As produced at sea aboard the U. S. S. "George Washington" for President Wilson and party. Season's biggest hit on tho Keith Circuit. JENNINGS and O'B.mN Man and woman com-dy team in "A Bit of Airy Parsiflage con-" sisting of original song3 and sayings" BEN LINN Big Ben (himself) Comedy singing and talking monologuist
Thurs., Fri., Sat., Sun. Harry T. Morey
-in
"The Birth of a Soul" Ever hear of a man going to the gallows to save the life of his rival for the girl both love? See this picture.
8
HARDY T. MOREY
in scene trcm , VlTAGQAPrl'S TKebirHiofoSour
n
NOTE: The Murray will remain open all summer, present ing the same high class quality vaudeville and pictures as during the regular season. Have you noticed same acts at Keith's Dayton and Indianapolis you saw first at the Murray.
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