South Bend News-Times, Volume 39, Number 15, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 15 January 1922 — Page 24
SUNDAY. JANUARY 15, 9T. THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES i n i . Z Ü V Li cnJ Lfei Li V Li ib 'f ' ! Vi-'. 1 , i t f v ! i 7
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Inter- -stc 1. It tool: rr.or thxn. a rar f ma': tho rror:-.:ct!-r. "Th's .; n cf V.'al'.ir.for.1. 1 ut a!; v.ho havfj v'.f.vc 1 iIim I'ictur mj)hutlr.i!!y Ifcl-.ro that It vas a y ir v. .-!l : "r.t Tho hTO Jimmy V,l!infor.I. who Ins tho rsourr-fu!rs"s-. t!io l!'.;cah!' n--H, pr.d at tlnvi ovn rh t ri ri.-.-:. rf h!a t I'ri --'ii ot!i f.i'!ir. hut !t i!n thl3 ciM' ! :-:;M u; hy th I.t.e?ty and s!rc rity of h! rnotlir, and in tho cn.l v. ir. h'.-u r : ' in a n manner. CLAC1CST0NE ".ATohy ." v.-li! h n bn !.ra!id A3 th' rroa-tf ?-t r.t.ract!on of the i or.iln? yrar. hns f.rially r arlKd Jiero. anil or or.-? a flvo dr.y enirayo'folly (" l.i th o-tory of ho-.v on-? rf th ht kr.ovn r'r.hircrf of mo-
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Sje; NonnanJ vi Mack Senneit'j "Molk 0.M )j ens a fie-l.iy crirnrrinont nt
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r.O'.v api'fsrir.i; In Nov; York In "Th Cliw," an intfns study cf th decay nf a prrat man. an 1 all critics arref that h iz at tho h'izht of h!n art. mu:h prrc-atr even than In "Th: Copiirrhea h" Th.'.'j ?rorr.n to Lo true, a'.so, so far rs tho screen koos. The rilea of tho picture came a a rempk-to Furpri: for It was dona without hera'.Sir.sr or advance notlcc.?. Cor:r.opo-itan rr.aflr tho picture ar.d Paramount Is releasing it. In it i3 rc!atd the story of a Chicago crook, hltrrnatlrg' in New Ycrk anrl rulllng his "laßt trick" hi3 urfortunato cne for the sak of a new love affair. Marguerite !ash plays oipo5ite him. Toflay the TiSall9 1 ehowinj a triumvirate of tho very greatest sar of romantic comedy In a brilliant revival of ono of the .croon's notrv.-orthy triumphs. "A Pair of Silk Stocking." Constance Talmadrro, Wanda Hawley, and Harrison Ford take the principal parts in this madcap farce of errors, boudoin. ex-hubbles. burglars, lace, lov and Unper!?. The- pace is fast and furious and. at tirns. more than ..... . . . V . . A 1 . . V-.
' it in ordfr to rain the continuity of
hon-lin? Indications of rlee which await th fTX'Ctator at tho show. "After The Show," a colorful, vivid tale of back-stasre cf chorus rirl-V live?, of the drab shadows that await prudery and tho hectic brliUanro that Is offered thos of tho morry-mrrry who are not too scmpulous, is on th weeks .schedule. This la a new "William dMiIle DToduction. niado for Paramount
from Itita Wpiman'a stor' in tlv i Saturday nvening Post, "Tho stare theaters by storm. From tho opera Toor." I,i.a Ieo, the demure j liou.e to the cheapest vaudeville.
newcomer into tne unaresaen ranKs of tho chorus. Jack licit, ni? the millionalro barker a bit fed up on t.o oiep. "rold-dirprin," and Charl s Otrlo aa the door-keeper
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visualisation cf that country and it i. a favorable oti.Tho pictures. Koine 12 ret-l?. depict "industrial America." Tlaey were designed for wE.r-moralo stimulation. Thy are r roving to be a fine free nd fcr America lu'r, lor.r after the war ha. r.ded. Kaku 1 on tie trail of another
grinds echoes cf the trrrmpla cf marchlnar feet and clamcn nnd phouts for ictoriotis rencrals. Before 1917 th openlr.r of an Important cff.ee of the German em
pire would have b"en the ccc.ion the Vatriand. rcr for oFtentntious ceremony, and tho j now fly the A:r.f.:world, and Broadway, would have.flir.
r.tvr from th mrt" rf ir.rr:: llr.ers nr.d frr'cV.tor. Tr- "! of th sir.o ?hi;- msy 1 -' there Is no Or mm f'.-r-. h
rev.- th
f r y
stopped and taken notice. in the cM ,4..iyn th n r r . - r.
flock of fAvr.a showingr other 7ho?s i After-the-war openintr of the cflce j n-' t') of life and activity in the United j was modest. Chairs, desks, fdine Germania in frc
State?. Through his cffort.s the for-; cabinets and typewriters were drasr-
h. oi
ei?m oflice will also furnish free to theaters throughout
these , pod across th hall from the Swiss , lcr J ca.sci, r.
as a mean. cf promoting frind.hlp and understanding between the two countries.
In their places. Broadway paid no ' ehtaJc n r.
r r. '.
'. r r 1 t ' - . of l 7: '. r:
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IllcluirdiS HKiirlcian, at the Oliver for ono werk Martin today.
KAISER'S PICTURE GONE AT EMBASSY
i j -
notice. Broadway had applauded i P11'
when the Imperial German fiac was hauled from the flag pole at tho top of thw bulldlr.gr on tho opening cf hostilities.
1 n.ad I rch. r r.r.'. I- ! allied urir.li1:, r I - I...-.M I wav an 1 w?. s p. - r '. to :
One decoration of th old German !
Germar.v'H
Broadway DiJ Not Even Pause to Notice Consul Karl Lang's Entry. NEW YORK, Jan. 14. Busy, bustling Lower Broadway paid ro heed
offices was missing after the rooms;
had been prepared for occupancy. It was an oil portrait of "William Ho-
henollern. stored with tho fumlturo
in tho Swiis offices. It was "gone, workmen said.
i with America v. i;:-.h
unncti.'od.
Outside tho building there ware j
Ivr.'sM 'Hi' mclit
"VThen knight:. o i v. , 5'
you know.
' s ' v u r r a
Tie "x c r . 1
changes from The pre-war order
things. i At No. 4 5 Broadway, a few doors' north of the newly opened offices, ;
if , And sword c!
cr 1 I ". r: ' r For maid rf . r
m.
the former Hamburg-American ; In kr.hThthoM'.-i 1
Steamship Co. had headquarters. To-!
to the reopening of German Consular day all floors of that nuildtr.tr are
headquarters here. Iho street re-.occupied by United States Shipping
sounded with or ly the u?ual workaday din as Karl Ltnp took over his office at No. 11 Broadway.
Ju.st a few short monthp before.
board offices. Members of the German consular staff formerly looked out of their of
fice windows, across North river to
skyscrapers had thrown to tho four ' llobokcn piers, where German flags' Iry Ahl IMt. M ant .id
I.ove f-uff-Th'-ir way of
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V."a3 dtith to 1 :rA.c Blanche Bli:: th V.'a " e;d T.i:.N.
a ".r -
tion pi'
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v. I : o his
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arc.-pt th'
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made th.e
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t:o.vi ih-.-jnia nn I I v'i r f du v : rr- in th- r... try ihari ar- th
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I-odr.cinr' tei:?-.-.y
1 t' is any : :h I' r.i o re in duq-
rf !
T-.i'n c;'. pal"
tlramati.
n't that Ma,--:- J busy r. work
.:ntt 1:.'!-? that tho
storip s, n kept
ahl:.; do-
rrvand -d of htm. that it tikes th
put rn tho screen and it ts a melodra rn i In which the villains are confounded. In which tho hero licks a villain barehanded, and which con-lr.d-s with a thrillins aeroplane chase. Tkf.----- aro all combined Into the fnturo of the pn gram, '-Molly O," 1.. cau.so the action runs from broad onr.'y to the- deepest pathos, and from a rupprr In a tenement to a rrand ball In tho most fashionable hof l in the city, and becauso Fomo of the characters are wholly angels, it Li th most human story that has found its way to tho screen in many months. Mi -as Normand e-CFily carrier away tho star's share of commendations, '.it it i chiefly because sho ha.s the at'-t of variety to do, for even player, and there- are many of them, r-;aM;:-!is a hitfh mark for hUtrionic ability. There i.s only ono way to appreciate thLs master production, and that Is by seein? it. other pleture-a to be seen on the same program lncludo the Pat ho povlew and tho latent International NoW.s.
who thought he should havo been an Talwin Booth, aro the principal character-! In tho story. Be-rt Lytell. Thomas Jefferson and Virginia ValU will b i-een at the close of the week In "The Idle Rich," an adaptation of Kennett Harris Saturday Evening Tost story, ".lunk."
SPAIN .ENRAPTURES PARISIANS BY FADS
Spain holds sway. A new ono act operetto entitled "Spanish Time" has been given at tho opera house where it has "been acclaimed as one of the most successful modern productions of recent yeara. The- famous novel of Blasco Ibanez "In the Shadow of the Cathedcral" has been dramatized and is being played to a crowded hou5o at the Opera Comic
CREEL'S FILMS IN JAPAN MAKE 'HIT
BOOST THE BOYS! BUY A TICKET FOR THE EX-SOLDIER BENEFIT STUDEBAKER ADMINISTRATION BUILDING, JAN. 16th
Spanish numbers
M -."5
uro in almost
I.-pi-o th.e ftct .U'1" sincrro, earn-
( .t application t. prt'ke a lauh ns it doe to r.ai:jrt a t-'ir, t h e re has ri.t,n a b h-'f th.a ci-m-'Iy and
Iat!i. ar.' f ir .parat- d in tiicir j In; fundam-ntah. Molly " is a pi. ture j th
cf a I'M e rtorv. .. : v. e-t. and ruro a.s a
any thin:: that h'u a r be n written. It Ii an emotion U drarr iti cf-
t'erlr-.-: that in
1
tran.-bc-n
LASALLE Idonel Birryiuore's arrival Monday on the IaS.alle screen In "Uoomvan? Bill"' overyhadov. .? every other film announcement matle so far this ?' a .-an, for the over-powcr-Inu' rratncss cf the- Barry'niores in
Iramatic art. their infrequent
iranrts in photoplays, and the
enthu.iiartic rhapsodies with which thL feature, was greeted in New
Spanish IMusic, Plays, and Even Dress Has Fascinated French Capital. PA BIS, Jan. 14. This is thSpanish sr.von in Paris, everything Spanish is in vogue. Theaters aro Riving- Spanish plays, vaudevillo dancers are performing to the sound of castanettes, orchestras aro playing Spanish melodies, .ro.vds are swaying in dance halls i? Spanish tunes, art exhibits are favoring Spanish artists, people aro reading PpanLsh novels, and women are affecting Spanish wear. Thero seems to be no other reaFon for the Spanish vogue than that life In Paris- roes by fad, and this is the latest and most startling fad Paris has produced since the war. The Spanish crazo has taken tho
every variety show and three review houses; tho Follies Bergere-s, the Alhambra and the Olympia are now featuring Spanish numbers. Itaquel Meiler, tho famous Spanish beauty who sang at tho Coliseum in Iondon last season, la the dominating figure of tho program at the Olympia, where crowds flock every night to hear her Eing her famous folk ongs and watch her graceful 15 minute act. Tho public i devouring the novels of Blasco Ibaner, which aro prominently displayed in the windows of all the book stores along the boulevards, while Paris society is filing through the art galleries before the canvasses of the well known Spanish artist Bertrand Masses, an exhibition of whoso works was recently held in tho rooms of the fashionable Interallied Club. But the Spanish craze Is not alone revolutionizing the activities of Parisians; it is about to decry what "ParLsienncs" shall wear, and according: to an advance hint fiven the United Press by a well known dre.enaaker of the rue Royale, bright yellow Is to be the popular color for spring gowns, with bright red for evening wear, with black Spanish lace overdress.
Educational Movies Made During War by U. S. Are Popular in Nippon. TOKYO (By mail). Georg Creel is still going good In Japan. His committee on public Informa
tion American propaganda pictures 1
are playing to crowded houses throughout the empire. Every important moving picture house in Nipoon 13 getting a whirl at some of the war-time films that were made to ehow the world what America was doing. Michio ICaku, of the Japanese foreign office, who was stationed at Washington for somo time, in an important post in tho Japanese embassy, secured the pictures from government officials in Washington and brought them to Japan. Kaku, who is indefatigable in his efforts for the promotion of better
understanding of the conditions in J America and Japan by tho peoples of each country is highly pleased
with tho hit these pictures are making here. "Theso pictures," he paid, "are
getting out into the remoto rural towns of Japan, Into the little places into what you would call cross-roads j
burgs. They are also being shown i in every great city. Many thousands fj
been a vague thing, unknown or misunderstood, are getting through theso pictures their first concrete
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TODAY
The red-blooded hero of romance in a vibrant screen story of a deadly peril, entitled
"Blue Blood and Reü
55
A story in which speedy action, humor and tender romance crowd each other for first place. SPIUB POLLARD Comedy PATHE NEWS EDDIE POLO in "DO OR DIE"
F'.iii'i'yM".i"iiiiji.....j i.iiiiii I,, iiiiii ,ppii,iiii.iiii,.i I... .ii.i,
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wlion it was shown for tho t
tir.u : l r,' :
1" day.- ago make this :!,: out h"aJ and rhov:!-
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A. E. F. "SIS RITA" Will Be With Us Three Davs
Make Every Week "GO TO ORPHEUM WEE!
THSATRgi j
A. E. F. "SIS RITA" Will Be With Us Three Days
ALL COMEDY SHOW TODAY 3:00, 7:45 and 9:00 P. M.
J. C. NUGENT BOB LA SALLE RUSS LEDD Y & Co, Vaudeville's Most Talked of Songs, Stories and ;n Line of Talle P "Surgeon Louder, U. S. A." HARRY G HAW & HANAKO JAPS SISTER WARD & DOOLEY Novelty Entertainers 'The Celestial Impressionist' "What We Can Do"
TMu, IMV;L Vv.THiN
ti nt th Ar-!ltortum 3fonday frrr two elavs.
TODAY ONLY
T 1 T7...t
:k ii art
HOXIE
in
fcotin', tootin', sms-shin' nicturo of
the Glorious Vc2t, c Irons rnen and beautiful vcmen
OUBLE O
J9
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A4-
MONDAY, TUESDAY & WEDNESDAY Special Engagement
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Knovvm to the A. E. F. as "SIS RITA" in a Song Cycle by Frances Nordstrom, Jene Cass at the Piano
Blanche & Jimmie Creighton Offer "Mudtown Vaudeville" Mcllyar & Hamilton Eccentric Comedy Acrobats
Hanson and the Burton Sisters The Magical Man and His Magical Maids Engle & Marshall "Two Girls From Song-land"
Pinto & Boyle The Overnight Comedy Sensation With the Mysterious Musical Trunk
16625
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M -hi
i
By George
England
A thrilling and dramatic tale of the Southern Seas, in which a sea captain awakens to the enormity of his folly and brutality and pays in full, findinr peace in the end.
ri
It i it-'- I- ' .-vi - ,r- - A
WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY TheS eason's Masterpiece
I
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COMING THURSDAYBYRON BROS. MOANALUA SEXTETTE Harmony, Melody and Syncopation
1
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No War i ;
BOB HALL The Extemporaneous Chap
ti
LAFRANCE DEVOY Sc BUD & JACK BROS. DAYTON PEARSON
SEALO
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A ' rl I
Ti Tl i7t 0
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Greatest Love Story
Wal wfey bSBasri s
'3
What the NEW YORK POST rays: 'Without Benefit of Clergy" is the best example of the purely lyrical film that has come out of an American studio. All of it has distinct pictorial quality'
O
1 , i K O t I f ; 1 I ti f . t 1 0 i: v o 1 1 t ' o t '
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