Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 45, Number 208, 10 July 1920 — Page 8

U11ILU1 i I. i'lJl I

TTTTTTrn 1. I .. . w. ,u miei.i uuaiiie uitiel-i bbnuet uo to redeem my six -, SS; lnS f th6 Youns People'3 Union ofIbiS acd four little sins." if!!i office here.

PAGE TEN

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND. IND.. SATURDAY, JULY 10, 1920.

TNEXT WEEK AT THE HEATER

j WASHINGTON Motion picture directors are human. They don't like people who are forever giving them extra work to do. Frail feminine stars who demand "double" every time the smallest "stunt" is to be attempted aren't exactly favorites with the megaphone men. On the other hand, they'll tell you that a "regular" girl like Dorothy Dalton is a pleasure to make pictures with. When the 'script requires the heroine to swim from a yacht In distress ir shore, Miss Dalton dives off the .' torn like a Kellerman and makes the journey before the clicking cameras with perfect ease. In "L'Apache" she played a Parisian dancer of the underworld. and you didn't blame the "extras" for applauding when she danced on the screen. The sub-titles called her "the Carmen of the Apaches." She was exactly that. Dorothy Dalton rides horseback like a cavalryman, can beat most of the men on the Ince lot at tennis, and Is the leading golfer of the screen colony. In addition. Bhe is thoroughly a woman's woman. In "Elack la White," her new Thomas II. Ince production, coming to the Washington theatre next Wednesday and Thursday, she shows her versatility by enacting three distinct roles. The story is from George Barr McCutcheon's novel of the same name. It is a Paramount Artcraft picture. MURRAY VAUDEVILLE. "Mammy's Birthday" with one man and six girls In an original revue of Southern days before the war, la to headline the new bill which will open at The Murray next Monday, matinee for the first half. The stage is set to represent an old colonial Southern home, where the young folks have gathered to celebrate 'Mammy's" 50th birthday. The act is replete with songs, dances, Imitations and Introduces a "typical old-time Southern Mammy." Characteristic stage setting with electrical effects are carried, while elaborate colonial and modern costumes are shown. The following is taken from a recent New York review of the act: "Mammy's Birthday" is the title of a musical girl act that caught on from the very start. There are six girls and one man in the act, and almost all of them, especially the girl that imitated Francis White, rendered some individual bits, that helped put over the act. To say that this act, which is meritorious, won out beyond any of the others on the bill would be putting the fact mildly. It just about cleaned up. Amedio, "The Wizard Of The PianoAccordeon", and The Thornton Sisters in "Bits of Harmony," conclude the vaudeville bill, while June Caprice in a five-reel Pathe feature "In Walked Mary" will be the screen attraction. MURRETTE. "The Be6t of Luck" is the feature photoplay attraction at the Murrette Theater, Saturday night. The action of the play revolves about a chest of jewels, once the property of a Spanish Queen, which lies at the bottom of the sea in a wrecked ship. The efforts of Leslie Macleod, a courageous Scottish girl, and General Lanzana. an unscrupulous Spaniard, to regain possession of the rich treasure result in vivid action. Lanzana contrives to get Leslie in his apartment, where he attempts to take advantage of her. By a clever ruse she escapes with a chart of the ocean bed where the Spanish wreck, fne "Santa Oinevra," dies five fathoms deep. With her sweetheart. Lord Glenayr, Ieslle boards a submarine in nust of the jewels. They find Lanzana ahead of them and two men in diving apparel wage a fight to the death in the deep.

offered and refused by Trevor, more p.tringent measures were, found necessary. The jealous husband was commissioned to safeguard Trevor, but believing the ex-soldier to be his wife's lover, Solari threatened to kill Trevor after he had saved him from the spies. What happened on that night of mystery at Trevor's Long Island home? What was the blood barrier? Who raised it? Thrilling and mysterious is "The Blood. Barrier." the J. Stuart Blackton-Pathe feature coming to the Murrette Theatre Sunday with Sylvia Breamer and Robert Gordon starred in the principal roles. MURRAY. June Caprice, starring all by herself in an Albert Capellanl production for Pathe, Is a feature attraction at the Murray Theatre . next Monday in a romantic drama titled, "In Walked Mary." Mary Ann Hubbard, the heroine of the story, is a 'pretty little Southerner whose sole possessions are a faithful and devoted colored mammy and a down-at-the-heels cabin on the outskirts of the torwn. To save her precious charge from becoming a "charity child," Mammy uses ell her savings for a railroad ticket to New York. Dick Allison was in the midst of a gay bachelor party prior to his marriage to a pretty widow, when in walked Mary, and reminded him of his promise to help her if she were ever in trouble. Seeking new worlds to conquer, Harry T. Morey has taken to the sea for the location of "The Sea Rider," which closes its run at the Murray theater on Sunday. The Vitagraph star, with his stalwart, rojbust physique, is especially fond of Outdoor life and, so far as possible, rruakes his pictures in the open air. Recently he completed one picture In the mountains of New Hampshire and two more in the mountains of Tennessee and North Carolina. He decided that he had had enough of the mountains for the nonce, so now comes his isea story.

Ckas. J. Orbison to Speak at Oxford Pioneer Picnic; New Water Plan Proposed OXFORD, O.. July 10. The village council is considering a novel proposition to relieve the water shortage problem at the water plant. Since it will cost the prohibitive price of $75,000 to move the water plant one mile farther up Four Mile creek, engineers have cuggested that pipes be laid in an old mill race, and the water piped down to a reservoir near the water plant. By using the filteration system it s claimed that a reserve of water will always be in readiness for the pumps. Arrangements are being made with C. C. Sullenberger, owner of the abandoned race, to utilize it for municipal water purposes. Arrangements are already being made for the holding of the thirtyninth annual reunion and picnic of the

Pioneer association of Union and Franklin counties, Ir.d., and Butler County, O., to be held in Arpleton's Grove, nine miles west of this village, on Saturday, July 29. Tho president of the association, Hon. Thomas B. Barkley, today announced that Hon. Charles J. Orbison. of Indianapolis, Ind., will be the principal speaker. There will be sevral other prominent speakers, whose names will be announced later. The committees in charge of the reunion expect to make this year's affair the most notable of recent years. Appointed Student Auditor. Miss Edith M. Auch, of Chillicothe, a graduate of Miami university, class of 1919, has been appointed auditor of students' organizations funds at the university. She succeeds Miss Chloe Edgar, of Wauseon, who resigned to get married. Set Transportation Contracts. The township board of education yesterday closed five contracts for the

! transportation of district school chil- ! eren from their homes to the Oxford

public schools during the fall and winter sessions. .Those receiving contracts were Bruce Stinger, Isaac Woodruff, David Ross, Charles L. Marshall and Ralph Ross. Auto trucks are to be used, and the men will be paid from $5.75 to $12.00 a day according to the number of pupils carried, and the dis

tance traveled. Two additional contracts are yet to be made, and if there are no bidders for these districts, the school board probably will purchase trucks and employ drivers.

SPANISH WARSHIPS IN CUBA. HAVANA. July 10. The dreadnought Alfonso XIII., first Spanish

warship to visit Cuba since the formal tion of the republic, arrived in Havana harbor at 10:30 o'clock this morning. Craft of very kind containing officials and thousands of civilians met the warship outside the harbor, while countless other thousands lined the chores and mounted the housetops at every vantage point, shouting their "vivas" as the dreadnaught passed in.

! N

VACATION T

II

DAYS

Leaving Cleveland on the Great Ship "SEEANDBEE," the largest and Most Costly Steamer on Inland Waters of the World

Eastern Standards

J

Wednesdav, Julv 14th, 9 p. m. (

NIAGARA FALLS AND R ETUR N t (From Cleveland) Ticket Good Twelve Days for Return

Time

SIDE TRIPS

AT NIAGARA FALLS THE FOLLOWING SIDE TKIPS CAN BE OBTAINED:

Toronto and Return ... $ 3.2S I Montreal and Return . . $20.00 22 Mil Q"bdR-h" ' With Return Limit Equal to Niagara Falls Excursion Tickets

510 COOL STATEROOMS : : SECURE YOURS NOW

S "PASSION PLAY" at Buffalo Program on Request The Cleveland & Buffalo Transit Company Wharves: Cleveland. O. City Office: Foot of E. &th St 2033 E. 9th Street Daily Steamers to Buffalo, 9 p. rru, Faro $4.63

Knid Solari was bound for life to a man whose jealousy was so great that

it amounted to an infirmity. His brutality turned her love to hate and she was driven to another man for protection. The other man was Major Robert Trevor, whom she has known all her life and who was an executor of her father's estate. Major Trevor had served valiantly in the war and had obtained certain dye formulas that had been the exclusive property of the German Gov-

. rument. These Germany wanted to i rc cover. When n fnlwlmis sum was ;

TRACY'S

PEANUT BUTTER is so Rood, they all come bark for more. So will you. try it.

PAPER BALERS Make You Money $17.50 Bartel & Rohe

V

acation

and And Hot Weather SPECIALS Coronas Flashlights Dad's Lanterns Picycle3 Velocipedes Canes Rain-Shine Umbrellas Electric Washers Electric Irons Electric Sweepers

Sunday, Monday and Tuesday

WALLAC

f

FOOL fcP

13

Used

n

Several FirstClass Slightly

We have just the car that you want from $250 up TWO GOOD ROADSTERS FIVE LIGHT TOURING CARS TWO CHUMMY ROADSTERS These Cars Are Priced to Sell : : Terms to Suit Lexington, Overland and Reo Autos Davis-Overland Sales Co.

1029 MAIN

C. M. DAVIS

PHONE 2411

1

PICTURES DE LUXE

MURRETTE "WHERE THE STARS TWINKLE FIRST" Sunday Monday Tuesday Wednesday

Pipe Organ Chas. Pascoe, Organist

The Tale of a Jigger Who Put the Jay in Jazz

.Tass In his feet at night for a cool two hundred a week. Jugs in his h'-ail by day for six dollars per and Uncle Enoch's ''cus

ses . Joy in his heart a

the time through Juniu Budd. of Broadway's "Garden of Roses". Until 1

The Wife

She hated her husband for his insane jealousy and brutality.

The Husband

A fiend crazed with envy because his wife went to see her childhood sweetheart. The Other Man The soul of chivalry who loved the girl unselfishly.

The Spies

Tracked, trailed and plotted to recover the priceless dye formula, and involve the girl and other man.

See All the Latest Steps and Fads in Dancing And Then Some! With Witching Bebe Daniels and Wallie Reid's Own Jazz Band

The Blood Barrier

How Was It Overcome? How Did It Arise? A vivid play of strong emotions written by Cyrus Townsend Brady Abo

Also Big V Comedy NYMPHS and NUISANCES

Adults Children Matinee Night

ADMISSION:

o r

yjo, 15c WEEK DAYS - - 10cand25c - - 1 5c and 35c

Showing Last Times Today LEROV SCOTT'S Famous Novel "PARTNERS OF THE NIGHT"

T T

X

A

R

O

LD LLOYD

-in-

"E

asterner Westerner"

The Best Comedy he Has Ever Produced. Admission: Adults, 35c; Children, 15c

LAST TIMES TODAY

"BEST OF LUCK" , Drury Lane Thriller and Gth Episode of "THE LOST CITY" DUNING'S 43 North 8th St. r