Casper Daily Tribune Newspaper, December 11, 1923, Page 6

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SBS sPan «sera sun nan sae sURACHRR Sa ev 2 meetin te regular semiannual dividend of 3% pected by. fru! PAGE SIX “FLAMING YOUTH” 1S PICTURE AT AMERICA Does marriage shatter romance? The age old question rises anew in the First National screen version of Warner Fabisn’s “Flaming Youth.” playing at the America theater today, Wednesday ani Thuraday. Patricia Fentriss, the naive flap- per heroine, portrayed by Colleen Moore, along with many other mem- bers of her jazz-mad luxury-loving set, believes that it does. ‘That |s, she refuses to marry the man she loves, telling him that mat- rimony would destroy their happ!- ness, But Patricia, playing with fire tn ' | AT RIALTO. TONIGHT her insatiable desire for adventure, | company. Press they have received from different cities where they have played indi | cate that the minstrels possess con siderable talent and that they will be @ real attraction when they come here next week. how which is now playti at the Columbia is “My Cindere! omedy staged by | Bille Ireland's Follles of 1923. Mr. | Ireland himself has a leading roie |in the program. It is a humorous Production that can not fai! to draw laughs from the members of the | audtence A comedy pleture program is | being shewn also. “JAVA HEAD” CLOSES undergoes a change of mind when she is nearly singed. { She comes to the conclusion that | marriage is only the beginning of | true romance. “Flaming Youth" was directed by | John Francis Dillon. Milton Sills] has the leading male role opposite Miss Moore. Others in the all-star | east are Myrtle Stedman, Sylvia Breamer, Elliott Dexter, Walter Me- Grail, Betty Francisco and Ben Lyon. py piers aaa “MIAN FROM GLENGARRY” AT WYOMING THURSDAY Anders Randolph, who plays the role of Big MacDonald tn the Ern- production, “The Man arry,” @ picturlzation ef Ralph Connor's famous novel, which comes to the Wyoming Thea- ter on Thursday, is a man of con- siderahle physical prowess, as is ev!- Genced {n the picture. In the role of Big MacDona’d he {s character- ized as a man who loves to fight, and from the energy which he tnjects, into the role one can imagine that he thoroughly enjoys it. The role of Big MacDona'd re- qu'res a man of considerable strength and physical attainments, end Mr. Randolph measures fully up to the standard, Picking up sev- eral men bodily and hurling them over one’s head, and then with one hand snatching a man clear over the top of a bar no mean feats of strength. The ease with which Mr Randolph ac hes this marks him as an y. Al though he ts e & a natur- aly strong and powerful physique, Mr. Randolph avers that he is strong and enthusiastic advocate of outdoor sports and physica! training, and it is due to his love of the outdoors and his hard work in the open that he was able to go through with the etrenuovs part which was assigned him by Director McRae. “WHEN DESERT GALLS” [9 UNUSUAL ROMANCE “When the Desert Calls,” the Pyramid picture at the Iris theater for the last times today, is unlike all other photoplays with a desert 4. by Ray C. Smallwood t successes are “Queen Rouge” and “My Ohl iome," the adaptation is by a Milne and Georgette Duchesne from The Ladies’ Home Journal story by Donald McGibeny. The cast features Violet Hemins, @istingyished Broadway actress who 4s seen on the screen all too seldom; Robert Frazer, Sheldon Lewis, Huntley Gordon, J. Barney Sherry. David Wall, Julla Swayne Gordon, Nicholas Thompson and Tammany Young, besides troops of Arabs, horses, camels. GOLORED MINSTRELS TG | PERFORM AT COLUMI Busby’s colored ministrels will be featured at the Columbia theater Monday and Tuesday of next week with two shows each evening There nre 20 performers in this YOMING Continuous 1 to 11 LAST TIMES TODAY JACK HOLT | “WHERE IS THIS} WEST” —also— ANDY, MIN AND CHESTER GUMP —and— NEWS REEL | TOMORROW ONLY Special Return “HUNTING BIG GAME IN AFRICA” George Melford's latest Para- mount production of “Java Head,” a story of the later forties in old Salem town and of the Orient, de lighted a packed house at the Rialto theater again last night. Chari in every respect, admirably dir and interpreted by a featured cast including Leatrice Joy, Jacqueline Logan, Raymond Hatton, George Fawcett and Albert Roscoe, “Java Head” is a picture one cannot soon forget, The story has to do with a sea man of old Salem who rescues @ high born Chinese girl from ruf- flans in China and although he loves a girl in his home town, he marries her. He takes his bride home with him and then follow many incidents of great dramatic Interest, all calculated to hold one's attention as by a spell. ELECTRICITY PROTECTS ACTORS FROM ANIMALS Ts it posstble for @ man and wo- man to walk between two Unes of savage tigers without being mangled or meeting death? Yes, but only with the aid of carpets of steel elec trically charged, which prevent the animals from reaching thelr vict!ms, as is shown in “Above All Law,” a morrow. himself by entombing her alive. sends to France for an architect flancee. Stomach Misery, Gas, Indigestion “Pape’s Diapepsin” Cor- rects Sour, Upset Stom- achs at Once “Pape's Diapepsin” ts the quick- est, surest relief for indigestion, gases, flatulence, heartburn, sour- ness, fermentation or stomach dis. tress caused by acidity. A few tablets give almost immediate stom ach r Correct your stomach and digestion now for a few cents Druggists sell milligns of packages. —Aadvertisemen notices which tremendous Paramount picture pro- duction, which comes to the Rialto Theater for two days beginning to- The story of the picture deals with a Hindu prince who becomes jealous of his wife and purposes to revenge He who {s followed to India by his The prince falls in love with this young woman and in at- ae NS Se SRT 12s id uit Blown down ternal fs © SUVS UE tempting to escape his embraces she stumbles into a tiger's den. A Yogi who possesses supernatural powers comes to her ald and escorts her in safety from the den, the fierce ani- mais vainly making attempts to stop thelr progress. When the filming of tia dramatic scene was under eonsideratio vector Joe May decided that the only way to insure the safety of Bernard Goetzke whe plays the part of the Yost, May, the heroine, was to place carpets of stee] plates six feet apart leading across the den and to them with high volt, age electricity. Whenever ers stepped on the plates they were hurled back violently and retired and M this precaution the action might not hay been photographed as it was without tragic result: patent ne Woman Deputy Is Given New Job KINSTON, N. C., (United Press}— North Carolina's smallest deputy erift is to be transferred from the eriff's office here to the head of & county bookkeeping department, Miss Kate W. Cobb, who ordinarily weighs less than 100 pounds, was the first woman to be appointed deputy part of the country, §he igned to duty in the sheriff's id has never made an arrest. ‘obb Gec'ined to carry @ gun. pi Annals sth Lett, BLOOD ON MARKET. PHILADELPHIA. (United Frees) —Twenty-five stuflents at the Je ferson Medical college pay'ng thelr way through schpo! by selling & transfusion. The students have submitted to blood tests and are clas-| sified according to types, While it is said that blood donners can give a pint of “life fluid" once a week the stufents are rarely called on ths often. Rarely does a patient pay more than $50 for pint of blood. Many Business Folk know that SCOTTS EMULSION creases Enerpy Would You Believe that two men could stand on a floating log and fight like wildcats? The Man From Glengarry” STARTING THURSDAY | Instead of Tomorrow WYOMING LEATRICE JOY and ‘JAVA Imagine the gorgeous f' this story! Imagine th At 2:45, FABLES Shows: 1, 2:40, —jin— author of ‘“‘Tol’able David” has lavished upon ducer of ‘The Sheik” has picturized them! SPECIAL ADDED ATTRACTION THE SINGING USHER COLUMBIA Next Monday, Tuesday BUSBY’S All-Star Colored MINSTRELS with Band and Orchestra SINGERS — DANCERS COMEDIANS A Two-Hour Show 7 o’Clock 9 o'Clock All Seats $1.10 Children 55c TT res | [ALTO THEATRE LAST TIMES TODAY JACQUELINE LOGAN HEAD’ hrills and heart-tugs the e luxurious way the pro- 7:45, 9:30 NEWS 4:20, 6, 7:40, 9:20 UA nm Di-! thelr blood at the rate of $25 to $50) Ah) DECEMBER 11, 1923 Auction sales after 6 p. m. aro prohibited by law in Louisiana. eee SEND IT TO THE PEARL WHITE LAUNDRY PHONE 11702 Coughing TUESDAY, with brilliant lunes, The bumor ts of @ quality that keeps you roaring with a comfortable feeling that !t !+ all genuine fun. And Mary Boland as this modern faddy mother, cap tain of her soul, whose home is named Liberty Hall, reveals new and delicious veins of comedy. The play develops about her plans for| Tires the old, lowers thelr vital. marrying off her daughter, and her The best ity. ir, cough house guett. “atect the wit” | CHAMBERLAIN’ one Of those playa which makes! COUGH REMEDY member of the family he Casper Daily Cribune The December Theater By (wytten for The United Press.) NEW YORK, Dec, 11,—(United | Press.}-We hear a lot about the experimental theater. Often it has of her perfect art to the delighted audience. This Shubert show its full of gorgeous numbers, beautiful girls and much entertainment and novelty. eee And now we have Sancho Panza added to our list of dramatized. per- sonalities——shouldering advertising space with Casanova, Queen Vicr toria and Robert E. Lee. Otis Skin- ner has called him into stage life from the pages of Cervantes’ Don Quixote. The play is built ypon the episode of Sancho’s governing the city of Baratria. And speaking of the experimental theater here ts, if not an experiment, an entirely new form of show. It is part play | and part ballet and it is entirely | imaginative, fantastic and colorful, ee actress filled with hopes and am- bitions. They marry and we see them beaten by-life until the ulti- mate tragedy. The drama in the besinning drags @ bit, which may to do with something as unrelated | be the reason that it just misses to the life of the a theater @ really great play. | Soer as a cubist statue to Greek} But it is a splendid and artintle classical art. But the Theater Guild | production. It is so finely acted, it in its second offering of tle season | !s-so convincing, and so poignant, has produced an experimental drama | that no one can afford to miss it. #0 convincing, so photographic in eee | tts realism as to grip the emotions ; 88 wel) as the mind in breath. taking hold. It is called e Fall- ures’ and is a play in fourteen » by H. R, Lenormand. interest {s, of course, added by the presence of Jacob Ben-Am!, who for the first time since transplanted you realize that laughter is its own ice RIALT uptown than the Theater show of quite different char- turning ‘em away at the + Alice Delysia in “Topics be ain leaves nothing to the imagination. From a satyr- peep Rosy a Arcady to an wart and French present | from the Jewish Art apache-throt lower seller in! at the Klaw theater. This bright | one of those really greet norte, | Paris. Delysia reveals the contoure farce, it Tealiy ine fairig’ emmetics ances which made his genius shine hard from the East Side to upper Broad- Tastes Be F 1 tter--Goes ‘arther—A! ways Sects | Pigeon’ Fresh Roasted Coffee realizes ut last nm a “Broadway” show—all of-those fine shadings ‘228 East Second St. TOMORROW to laug' might well te | advertisement for Lyan comedy “Meet the Wife,” | of genius which seemed, for a time, lost in the less subtle productions of the commarcia! stage. ures” {s, briefly, th young _ playwright | ‘he Fajl- story a of a young | “SOUTH OF SUEZ’—the romance-land of the East—that’s the scene of this flaming drama of forbidden love and thrilling re- venge. —also— “DOWN TO THE SEA IN SHOES” A Mack Sennett Comedy Fun From the Press Shows: 1, 3, 5,°7, 9 o’Clock COLUMBI BILLIE IRELAND’S FOLLIES —in— “My Cinderella Girl” A Musical Comedy FULL OF SPICE—PEP—SONGS AND SPECIALTIES —and— Bud Brownee and His Bashful Babies ls is A Great Comedy Picture Program LLOYD HAMUFON LYMAN _HOWES “EXTRA, EXTRA” “HODGE PODGE” Christie Comedy, “IN DUTCH” A Bishop Cags Theater TODAY, WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY “Warner Fabian’s” Famous Story “Flaming Youth” “T’ll Drain Life of Love to the Last TONIGHT 7 and 9 o’Clock “Wig “And you will pay,” he warned her, ‘for so will your daughter!” se N ft Ladies’ Matinee Tomorrow—Two Admitted for 40c and a Chance on a 42-piece Dinner Set to Be Given Away Dec. 22, Saturday Matinee NEW SHOW TOMORROW “TOOT, TOOT, TOOTSIE” RIALTO NEXT SUNDAY A picture to set the town ablaze with its flaming breath of many loves, Featuring COLLEEN MOORE A First MILTON SILLS, National ELLIOT DEXTER, Picture SYLVIA BREAMER, BEN LYON, MYRTLE STEDMAN XT TUESDAY freee. user Cecil PATHE NEWS Shows at 1—3—5—7 and 9 OPICS OF THE DA 10c and 40c outverrs B.DeMilles PRODUCTION ” “When the Desert Calls” Also Comedy Bishop-Cass “THE TAILOR” LAST TIMES —with— TODAY AL ST. JOHN

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