South Bend News-Times, Volume 36, Number 236, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 24 August 1919 — Page 19
;rnv, AXT.rsT 2. re. PLAYBILLS OF THE WEEK IN SOUTH BEND
THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES
! " Stage
Screen
WITH THE STARS
HY WILL GaMIenne, who, when seen 7he Off Chine -" T'i .vi T. i rrrm lire ir.
,'rc3-"l I'.iU Olrctt for an impornr.t part In "Lumtr," an lrLh rl'iy Mr?. Okott pinna produ ring at the Henry Miller theater in Nm- YorkFpt- 1- !L5" lA Galli-nn attracted ;'?ieraJ attention In the ot of "Mr. ll-iz-ins"' and in supper: of MLss Barrymore In "Relimia acd "The Off Chance-" . . Vrlr.rrr A: IIvath ar collaborating on a r.s of comedy scenea Tor ivVodüction in "Hello Alexander," a rr.'irfcal comedy. Th;r?', a magVian. continues to fill hl encashments in 5pite of -.,Mbs involving the The.atrir.il Managers Producing association, the r"-H r.'iui-y nsociation, the Allied Theatrical Trade Unions and kindred organization..
innf r. not v. ;y the Actors Equity ;isis ,-r.r.du' ting its ftrik-. v. Uli th '. ;.t! ;: !,.is tri r.i ph d ,1 from Lf-tes 1'arw, that h h.i.s resigned fro m the. body-u-hin the Actors Equity associawhich has launched the big stiik.. .MV.- a performance at the 1 .xinKton opera fiouse, New York. p:-.rure funds for th organization treasury. Mario Dressier. Ivy IIa nt ley, Harney l:,.:r.:i!d. Cinrl.s J. WinninKcr. Eddie Foy and th- Foy family. Fthel I ii rymorc, Lionel I'.urrymore, Conw.y T-arle. Doris Hankin. Florine Arnold, Charley o,;h.lan. Iuise Mackintosh. Van and Schick, John Charbs I'rince, Eddie Can- ' t I Tl. I 'I'homa: t'.r. Krank Tinney. l'eari nue. I'.r.indon Tynan and na-s.-ru ..,,.. red. Writing of the performi;,,,;,. in the N-.' Vork Tribune, ji.vwood Broun .says: "'Lach actor put everything he had Into his performance from soul t shoulder td.de.. Mario Dressier, p.-rhai-. did the best with the ..jmulder l lad. s. .while Ethel Rarry- , ,,re attended to tin soul. CamiHo" uld enough and sngy enough in ;(lds truth, but with Miss Barrymore and Lionel Darrymore playlnß 11,,. s-cond act last nißht it seemed almost inspirr.l. Theirs was a orPeom performance and we thought we watched them that it is quite futile for anybody to talk about -l...-in the theaters for any place xvher- actors of Mirit gather, bea theater. You can bulbV a i , it, hrit k.-. but it takes a Jiowr'- i.v. ike a theater. .x--.r- w think we would al-o put in a Cantor. "I can't understand.he said, -why I'm playinf? with so much r?V tonight. I'm not Petting Paid a nirkel." Utit later he remarked on how honored he felt to be receiving the same salary' as Kthel Darn-more." The career f Dessin McCoy Davis is xceptiona More than 10 years L!k-o Miss Mc'oV scored tri'mctUlOUS1 v with her Yama Yama. dance m Thrc Twins." Then, ird Harding Davis. marryinK she went into retirement. Mr. Davis die,1 and IVsie McCoy Davis reappeared, first of an i i usmmiiu '' A.', lining
Government Asks to Keep
Fallen American Heroes Buried in French Fields
Lons; Ll'I'LOW. J trenches without embalming. There .,,,v..'rrv PiJwere no coffins at lirst and most of WASIILMiTON. Aug. la .-.tin.
..,. to -i ti.l ril'ltifS of I Mlt
v,.., tivna'ary forces
.Ii, rs ana sai.ois
j. jfmv as Well 111 . - . jfiir, aa .11 uui iiauuiia. im - is. li--t 'that the warln:itur(v ihp ho(lic in a reat many teries, differing only in the inscripn.bs to discourage all ! instance, would now be decomposed j tions and symbols of religious faith.
d rst.md. first as i i . tl'! tS i,, mMa ........ u . r A meriean.-i who were killed or dteu the war and wtre buried m i 'ranee. The senators and representatives -ui Indiana art receiving many .. i. oüimunications trcm parents of sol-( !;it the bodies of their i-on- I v, nt home for final interi:i l-.t. In many instances T. rs air written in a very theso letinsistent ' n. . Pathetic recitals of mothers who are gri' ::r' their livrs out be- - ,i;f the remain of their sons are r away art contain, d in some t f the letters. Not long after the Fnitcd States ens-red th late war the war derart ment announced that it would l... it- Kolicv to brin,- back to tho Fnlted S'att s the bodies of American soldi rj which were buried abroad. provided, the nf.trtst relatives re-! , their return. ! NiimiNt t !Nrtviu It is explainer. d now that at that ' thr department could not fore - f.r. '. r; i e .... the large numb, r that would i killed nor realize the conditions that would rourro.ind their has'y l urial on or ne.r tho rvM of b.ittlf i. or the ft-stacl. s in the way of bringing horn.- the rem i;n. To be entirely plain about it. the war department Is now exceedingly ,,T,j,0..d to bringing th.e bodies home , tin iew s v Mared t v tne mi ll r v leaders. from Gen ivrshing d..wn th. line. It is r.aii.'.e.i tnai t:e . remise of th-1 d parünent is o ;t and probably will have to 1 e complied with, but the department w c.i as far as i c.i: 1 diss uade p .rents from maKin the re.juet for the t turn of the remains ef the:r ",o ones. Piict N No riic-ru. i :: d' j a rtmnt fel- i .at it .- frank as it w o ild :u epl tin::: -r wliv it w;h to to Its m 1 .... V,i v u n re. i . bas.-d at a!l on ti-.-iltho.iirh th eI ! r" 1 . r.v. oal-l .e Th" co ml i-
t.. ef r e t - ' r. . when f. many
th- !.. 1 In the s i t!i irir.cip ll I'.atur.- o' t Ii in k it:es wt-r o.-nim- s. fast, i
f the bodies were buried in
V. riNK.
hero last spring in support played with rare beiuty, haa been ?
Jfomo sort and then regularly. Now
sn IS in oiusuin Will's in x i-r-Greenwich Villau Dollies. " current in New York and one of th very few attractions that poes merrily on despite the biff strike that has darkened most the playhouses in Gotham. In the follies Dcssie McCoy Davis features her Marionette fiance, which is proclaimed to be a wonder. Alexander "Woollcott, writing In the New York Times, directs attention to his conviction that as Bert In "The Better '01eM ns beln? played by Mr- and Mrs. Cohurn at the Dooth theater. New York. Charles McNaushton Is one hundred percent perfect. Iiis characterization. Mr. Woollcott insists, is flawless. The same writer says that the playing of a Ilhrrymore (either Lionel or Jack in "The Jest" "Is superb" and that in 'Trjr o My Heart" Daurette Taylor was "enclwinting." The strike has wrought many changes of a peculiar nature, but none more puzzling than this newspaper advertisement for "The Royal Vagabond" at the Cohan & Harris in New York; "George M. Cohan. Robinson Newbold (in the same size type as is used for Mr. Cohan) and a great east" etc., etc. No explanatory note is offered as to the identity of Robinson Newbold. "Chu Chin Chow" has finished Its Xow York engagement at the Century. New York reviev.-ers seem to agree that "John Ferguson" is a Kreat play, but the charge is made in some quarters that In certain respects its is badly miscast. "Th Doctor" is the name of a play to be produced by David Relasco. A farce by Avry I Top wood known ns "I'll Say She Does" is being played in Washington. It is hinted it is "Our Little Wife," originally produced a few seasons ago and in which Margaret Illington acted. In Oakland. Calif., Grace I-aRue and Hale Hamilton acted in "The AVonderful Workshop." written by Mr. Hamilton and Luther A. ReedThe piece is New York bound. were buried as they fell. In thn nnrntIon of the laws of ,inii iinrfirrirm7:i hip It is the unmne hPll,f r.t armv ntdcera and " ' 4 ...v ...... 1 and relatives of soldiers could not ! be restrained from opening the cof fins when they are sent home and I . I- e . .... . V, n . . - I. .-.flirt Va Hie V I'll, US HIV .1, nuuiu 111 in an c-nici.ii aimuum-tinMu o,. th subject tne war department says: Many families may not be fully J aware of the present situation or of I the conditions w hich will attend the return of the bodies conditions which. If they were better known, would have a deciding influence on the question in the minds of relatives ;is to whether or not it would be be.vt for the bodies. to remain permanently interred in France, Couldn't Kmbalm Deatl. "It should be remembered during the continuance of host that it was nearly always impossible to , embalm our dead, or even to pro-k ;lde . -.vi.-fo for their burial. In ev-1 case of reinterment, however, a, ' - . v . - ...... i ; v coifin was provided. Fvery effort! has been made in removal operations j to secure definite and positive identilaation and. to a large extent this fat" ort has been successful. There still remain, of course, some who! suffered from destructlveness of i modern rnsines cf war too much to make this possible. The 1. t.se 1 ef time. too. has affected the Ituation by rendering it undesirable that caskets on their arrival in this conn-' try should be opened. "For the bodies that are to remain permanently in France the United States government will undoubtedly! provide cemeteries of 'American ' 1 Fields of Honor.' They will be i maintained and cr.red for always by
the American government. Thej sequent ranerais anu renew pa French government has considerate- mourning, would enly add to the !y oifered to cede several tracts of i long period of national depression laud for thN purpose. One of them' and sorrow at a time when the opat Romagn-sous-Montfaucon. is inj posite should prevail in order to unthe heart of the M use-Argonne bat-!dertake the tremendous work of re-
tie tiehl. .notn r is near m nt) f Paris, upe-n the slopes of Mont ; Valerien, overlooking the prettyl town of Suresnes. the valley of tne Seine, and the Robs de Boulogne.
AT THE OLIVER
i , Ii AI W ROBSON IN" "TISH." j ; There i.s possibly no actress of the tago today more firmly established 1 ! in the affections of American play goers than May Robson. She will come to the Oliver theater soon for an engagement In her new comedy "Tish." After a short preliminary tour Mi?s Robson will return to New York in "Tish." "Tish" i.s an adaption of the Letltia Carberry Etorie3 recently appearing in a popular magazine and written by Mary Roberts Rinehart. The adaption of the stories for tho stage was made by Edward K. Roso whose "Cappy Ricks" and "Penrod" are two of the present season's successes. Augustus I'itou, Inc.. the producers of "Tish" have provided an adequate company In support of Miss Robson in thi3 new comedy, it is said. SCAVDAL." Cosmo Hamilton's comedy. "Scandal." which Is scheduled for an early presentation nt the Oliver theater, went into Chicago unheralded, and without blaring trumpets. It scored a quick success and enJoyed a six months' run. "Scandal" is in three acts, and is conceded to be an example of fine writing. Walter Hast, producer nnd manager of "Scandal," has engaged a company featuring Miss Retty Murray and Herbert Ranson. "iu:it man or tiik nc-i." "Her Man of tho NC-4." a romance of the Yreneh Canadian north will be the attraction at the Oliver theater this evening. Prominent in the cast are Cecelia Jaques and Will Springer, the former in the character of a little wild girl of the woods and the later an" aviator who falls to the earth, figuratively "at her feet." Naturally they fall in love and the daring aviator, lifts her into his aeroplane and flies away with her. "PECK'S HAD nOY." "Peck's Rad Roy" will be the attraction at the Oliver theater Thursday afternoon and night of this week. Interspersed throughout the comedy are a number of sonprs and the piece is eaid to have been brought up-to-date. AUDITORIUM Theda Bara is coming to the Auditorium Monday and Tuesday in a new production, "A Woman There Was." a drama with a South Sea island setting. The thread of the theme winds around the beautiful daughter of the majah of the island, who falls in love with an American missionary. Her love is not reciprocated, as the missionary remains true to his fiancee back home. Notwithstanding this. the princess thrice faces death to save her sweetheart, and finally dies by vio1 e, that he may live. Among the No more beautiful site could be lm agined. The municipality of Paris has already constructed a splendid highway called Boulevard Washington, connecting tho latter cemetery with tho French capital. "If we follow the example of our allies, no private monuments will be permitted to be erected over the graves and thus all discrimination will be avoided. Where every one did so well in life, there should be no distinction in death. On the contrary, standard or uniform headstones will be provided at the pub lic expense, as In our national cerae and possible grouped in accordance therewith. Perhaps national monuments may be erected, as well as state memorials, after being passed upon by an art commission and with the approval of the yroper authorities, thus making one or more enduring testimonials to the courage of the American soldier and to the decisive part piayea uy me unuea States in the grat war, "The British government does not contemplato the return of its dead, What can be a better testimonial to the valor and devotion of her dead sons and the respect and love in which their memories are held than that the nation should secure and maintain in perpetuity vast cemeteries in France cemeteries which in themselves, with their thousands of graves, will arouse, sentiments and emotions in the pilgrims of future generations which monuments can never do?" me unwimna un mi iu rAm that betöre the actual return of the bodies to the Untied States can be undertaken the consent of the French government must be obtain ed. The department says: "There are approximately 4,500,, 000 interred in France as a result of the war The attitude of the French government is against the removal of any of thee. The French government feels that It cannot coneminent greater privileges in this respect than it accords to its owu people. The following are some of the reasons which may have entered Into the consideration of the matter: "1 France was a nation in mourning for the four years of the war. To permit the removal of the French dead by relatives, with conuiiauiiiuii. 2 The removal and transfer of large numbers or bodies migni re productive o epiuernics anu ycMJlence.
1 1 rfii; iiion-i i fcoiK'S is one snowing a j ' tropical typhoon.
I Ä I . 1 1 I "Th Amateur Li ir," a twn-rl comedy with Mr. and Mrs. Sidnev Irew, and "Topics of th lay" will also be on for Monday ana Tuesday. ! Upflr.rsflav hrinci Mildred Har ris, Mrs. Charlie Chaplin, in Ixds Weber's drama, "Home." with a Harold Llod comedy, the Pathe News and Mutt and Jeff on the bill. "The Profiteer," a six-reel drama dealing with the unprecedented profits piled up by certain men during the war. and starring Fannie Ward, is the leading attraction for Thursday. Other pictures will be Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Drew in a two-reel drama called "Squared," and the Gaumont Weekly. Friday sees the starting of a new serial entitled "Elmo the Mighty." starring tho well known player who was Feen as Tarzan in "Tarzan of the Apes" and "Tho Romance of Tarzan." Albert Ray and Klinor Fair will also be seen In a six-reel comedy drama, "Be a Little Sport." Saturday's bill Includes Frank Keenan In "Tho Midnight Sage," a five-reel drama; "No One to Guide Him," a two-reel Mack Sennett comedy, and the Pathe News, while today's bookings are "Fatty" Arbuckle in "The Desert Hero;" "The Last Outlaw," the third episode of "The Tiger's Trail;" Mutt and Jeff and the Pathe News. LASALLE Reauty, romance. drama all of these are promised in Eugene O'Brien's first starring vehicle under the Select banner. Entitled "The Perfect Lover," and presented at the LaSulle theater today and to- j morrow, it olfers the strange dilemma of a handsomo young man who is madly loved by four beautiful women. The story is from tho pen of Leils. Burton Wells- The ladles in the cast are Marguerite Courtot, Lucile Stewart, Martha Mansfield and Mav Roland. Tho settings are of high-society, and In the story the young man remains unspoiled amid a'l this hero worship. In "Men, Women and Money," the heroine learns to distrust them all. But in the end the splendor of her true self redeemed a man's life and brought lasting love to both. Ethel Clayton is the star of this Cosmo Hamilton story, which is shown at the LaSalle on Tuesday. She is supported by a cast which includes Lew Cody, Irving Cummings and Mayme Kelso. Irene Castle, beautifully gowned and In a promising part, returns to the screen after a long absence and is tho LaSalle's featured player Wednesday in "The Firing Line," which will be remembertd as Robert W. Chamber's great novel. It is not a war theme, as the title might lead one to believe, but a story of life na lived at gay, colored Palm Beach and of a woman who finds out her marriage mistake too late. 'The Road Called Straight" is the IN GOITRES IP THE CARIBBEAN Growers of Luscious Fruit Must Be Adepts if Business Is Profitable. Gros Michel, king of the Caribbees, sits on his throne at Porto LImon, Costa Rica, or at Boca del Toro, Panama, without causing talk of enforcing the Monroe doctrine. Across the blue Caribbean waters he watches the pretender, sugar cane, busily plotting In Cuba and Porto Rico to regain his throne. But the throne seems safely In the keeping of Gros Mich-1 "Big Mike," the big. luscious, yellow banana. Cuba. Porto Rico and Hispaniola he has abandoned to sugar cane, but tho rest of the Caribbean is safely his.The banana's Importance in these days of universal consideration of the food question is shown by tigures: Yearly there are imported
BANANA IS IG
m(.reJinto the United States more than
50,000,000 bunches of bananas, each having from six to twelve "hands" or clusters of seven to ten "fingers" or bananas. Some good multiplier can estimate the number of bananas. They are transported in artificially cooled boats to American ports and then distributed through this country at low prices. In spite of its popularity, the banana's history is not known widelv. It was not originally an Ameri can fruit but was brought over by i from the Spanish conquistadores the Canary Islands in 1516. Probably it had been introduced in the Canaries from Guinea. Whether It originated it Africa or India is shrouded in the mists of hlstory5 While there are the Canary islands or dwarf Chinese banana and the claret or red banana, the species best known and liked is the large yellow one known in the tropics as Gros Michel and to botanists as musa caplentum or masa paradisiaca. Although tho banana had been known and eaten In the American tropics for four centuries, it was not until about 30 ears aco that it was Introduced commercially into the United States. The actual inception of the banffna trade dates back to IS 66 when Carl R- Franc entered
I . .
t;ue o shown i. a western melodrama Thursday at the LaSalle. ! Louis IJennlson, the cowboy actor. who jumped to fame almost over night on the Broadway stajre in the leading role of "Johnny Get Your Gun " Is featured as a rugged westerner who wins the polished eastern girl for his bride. Rill Hart is Fri day star at the LaSalle in "Riddle tiawne, another romance of the great plains. "The Love Call." a story of youthful impulse, features pretty Billy Rhodes on Saturday. AT THE CASTLE. Readers of Earl Derr Riggers' no of mystery and romance, entitled "Love Insurance" will be enterested In the plcturization which is shown at the Castle today, with Bryant nasnimrn in the role or trie young
mnn ,tio w -wu v ui1IJ icianu, ieuiuring mil -Mastm
ine while trying to further plans for her marriage with another chap. It'a his Job or the girl, and the manner in which love triumphs over money, forms the basis of this romantic story. 'The rMnilded Name" tnmnrrnw'1 picture at the Castle, is a drama of the snow-covered northern timber lands, with a plot said to be as gripping as it is unusual. It is the tale of romance and adventure that befalls a man with a cloud obscuring his name. The settings are picturesque and beautiful, having snow storms and blizzards as a cooling effect for these hot pummer days. It Is tho Fort of picture people of all ages and classes will enjoy. Its splendid cast is headed by John Lowell, an actor who will win many frineds through hla clever characterization. to "Tho Perfect Lover," starring Eugene O'Brien, will be at the Castle Tuesday. The story by Leila Burton Wells, concerns the romantic affairs of a handsome young man whose head is unturned by the ad - miration of four fascinating mem bers of the fair sex. A story that concerns Itself with the part money plays in the lives of men and women, has been written by Cosmo Hamilton and Is shown at the Castle theater on Wednesday. Ethel Clayton has the heroine role, that of a sma!l-toA i who i.s suddenly transplated with all her youth and Innocence to the city. The plot) or "Men. Women and Money" concerns itself with keeping the girl unspoiled. "The Firing Line," a story of the eternal triangle written by Robert W. Chambers, is Thursday's attraction at the Castle. It furnishes Irene Ga-stle with her first starring role since her return to the silent drama. On Friday Louis Bennison is featured in "The Road Colled Straight," while "Riddle Gawne" on Saturday stars Rill Hart. ORPHEUM Starting today the Orpheum offers into an arrangement with a steamship company, to carry bananas from Colombia to New York. In 1570 Capt. Lorenzo D. Baker carried a .small consignment from Jamaica to Roston. In 1SS5 Andrew W. Preston started the Roston Fruit Co. for the purpose of stimulating tho production and transportation of bananas from Jamaica, Hispaniola and Cuba. Minor C. Keith of Brooklyn in 1571 joined a brother in building a railroad 100 miles long through the Costa Rican wilderness, a 19-year task. To provide freight assuring of some sort of income to the railroad while being built, Mr. Keith started and developed three great banana properties at Bocas del Toro. Porto Limon and Santa Marta, the latter !n Colombia. The product was shipped to Xew Orleans. In 18 99 Mr. Keith and Mr. Preston organized the United Fruit Co., whose Great White Fleet now plies through all Caribbean waters. This company employs 60,000 men and imports slightly more than half of the bananas brought into this country and also carries to several European countries. When the first missionaries of the Episcopal church went to the West Indies they learned that the wild banana is not edible. Nor is the banana picked ripe from the stem a much more delectable fruit than the artificially ripened banana of commerceRipening on the stem disintegrates the pulp and destroys the flavor of the banana. The new workers whom the Episcopal church will send to the tropica as a result of its nation-wide campalcn now In progress here to awaken the church to the need of nun, women and funds to increase and expand Its schools, hospitals, orphanages and missions at hom and abroad are due to have their notions of the banana further shattered. In the islands of the Wert Indies where the Episcopal church has undertakings, the cultivation of the banana has been almos: entirei lv abandoned in xavor or sugar, ine new missionaries, physicians and teachers will not find the fruit growing abundantly. The average gross yield for one acre planted to bananas Is between $60 and $70. Th growers must know Just the right time to cut the fruit, guided in this by exact knowledge of the day the steamship calls and the time required to reach Its destination where the banana must be ripened within 4S hours for consumption. From "rejects." ba nanas imperfect or too near ripe toj make the trip, science makes banana flour, a coffee substitute, banana inrgar. banana marmalade, etc. Try NEWS-TIMES Want Ads
a new bill of vaudeville with George j Kalaluhi's musical Hawaiians featur-j ed. This is a native act from the, Pacific islands. Prominent in the act is Mignon, the tropical beach' dancer, and the native dances com-! prise the act. j On the same bill will be seen
James H. Cullen, a well known en- . u-rtainer. who has played eve ry ' vaudeville circuit in the country! many times. Burke and English of-, fer "A Western Union Flirtation,"! a bit of romantic nonsense with the modern telegraph message playing a prominent pa.it in the plot. Alice Nelson, as a monologist with' , topical songs; Samaroff and Sonia.J 1 Russian peasants, in native songs and dances and the news of the' world in the- Kinograws will complete the bill. j j Beginning Thursday "A Holiday i . -v. .. . : u-iiiA ufcii iULiiarus ana a company of 12 colored entertainers will be the headline act. Plenty of syncopation and popular Jazz is promised. Te-d McLean, who once conducted. ja stock company in South Bend at! j the Indiana theater with Nana! Br'ant- returns in a romantic sketch. "Love Will Find a Way." Jeanette Childs in comedy character eongs; Claytcn and Lennie, English: chappies and one other act will com-j pleto the bill. THE BEST MUSIC RECORDS Victor Koconls. "Out of tho East" and "Rainv Day Blues." "When the Bees Make Honev Down in Sunny Alabama" and "Lullaby Blues." "Girl of My Heart" from "Some body's Sweetheart" and "A Rose, a Kiss and You." Columbia Record. . "Jazz Baby" and "I Ain't Got No Time to Have the Blues." Nomandle" and "Little Old Jry - "Yama-Yama Blues" and "Tears of Love." Fillson Records. "Little Whistler," Sibyl Sanderson j Fagan with "Simplicity," intermez zo. "Everybody Calls Mo Honey," Helen Clark with waltz "Alabam" George Wiiton Ballard. "Jazz Deluxe," Earl Fuller's Jazz band with "Sensation Jazz," All Star trio. Sheet Music. "Cleo." "Gates of Gladness." "Heartsickness Blues." Player-llano Music. "Como On Papa." "Chong." "Baby." CRUMB RROWX RRI:AI. Put 12 cups dried sifted crumbs into a mixing dish and add 1 cup boiling water and let stand 10 minutes. Add Vz cup molasses and one cup milk, sajs a contributor to Gas Logic. Sift together '2 cup corn meal and 1 cup graham flour, ?4 teaspoon salt and 1 '2 teaspoon soda. Stir all together thoroughly and pour! into greased one-pound baking pow-j der boxes, and steam for 1 Vi hours.! Trading Mth adrcrtlscrs mean more for less cash. ü if i! y,
101
SEATS NOW PRICES 25c to $1.00
I---""' k . I.1 - - - ,. .-;.'., . . i. .1.11 . i . - : m , i d ) m v 7 i ;! ;- (ol rr Irin
of THE CANADIAIV3 NORTHWEST THE SENSATION OF THE SEASON
a mem, mr m a mm way
TOUCHING THE HUMAN S!DE OF THINGS
Try NEWS-TIMES Want Ads
Vw-sa fü '7 : '
SUNDAY, MONDAY, TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY
THE KINO GRAM World's Latest News in Pictures. JAMES H. CULLEN The Man From the West. ALICE NELSON The Advertiser. Coming Thursday "A And Four
Performances Daily Matinee 2:30; Evening. 7:30 and 9 Sunday Matinees 3:00 o'clock.
TODAY AND TOMORROW Tlie- Screen's Most Handsome Actor EUGENE O'BRIEN in THE PERFECT LOVER' Four women loved this man four women for wlioc smiles many men would have given half their lives and nil their wealth. This man was joor, yet through it all he remained the perfeet lover. COMING TUESDAY Tito Reautiful Emotional Star ETHEL CLAYTON in MEN, WOMEN AND MONEY" She tried them nil, nnd they all failed her; it was then only that she began to tlml out what life really meant. TODAY BRYANT WASIinUILV In IX) VE LVSURANCE' TOMORROW JOHN LOWELL In "Tili: CLOI'DED NAME" fr nv g u
X
VICTOR EMMANUEL LAMBERT
4
' ..MJC J .... GEORGE KALALUHI'S MUSICAL HAWAIIANS and Mignon Tropical Beach Dancer. BURKE & ENGLISH A Western Union Flirtation SAMAROFF & SONIA Russian Dancers. HOLIDAY IN DIXIELAND Other Acts. f! IH A CLASPS BY ITSELF' .i'nrcoiici M 11 A distinguished art or, a remarkable story those two things are offered patrons of the I-iSnli' today and tomorrow in Uugene )'F.Heii lirst big starring At hi le,c'l he 1 Vrftvt Ixver." You've all seen him tin support of such favorite as Norma Talma. Igv and Aliee Brady, nixl ym'vc nil Joined In nerlalmlng 1dm the lust looking- man on the mtcvji. Noav you are given an opixutunitr of Atewing Ids ?est picture in.-wlikh lie is made the idol of fo-urj,!enutIf ul women. "Men, women nnd money" fcho learned to distrust them all in a bitter lesson that almost tost lier a life's happiness. But In the end the splendor of her true s-lf redeemed a man's life and brought lasting !ov to them both. See Ethel Clayton in this drnmntle story of a girl's light for hnppinoss. Tuesday. CT3 ÜJüVit! 11 ! for Best Results
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