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All Week, Beginning Monday, “‘DIXIELAND TO BROADWAY” Arthur Alexander and Company of Eleven Plantation Days brought up to date. A unique cycle of songs, dances and tunes that span the Mason-Dixon Line JAS. BRADBURY, JR., & CO. | DOBBS, CLARK & DARE In a clever comedy of husiness life In nui mefry mefange deville Remnants” “PHYSIC JIM” “Vau Popular Singer, Composer and Performer BOBBY HEATH assisted by Adele Sperling In a merry revue of Bobby’s own songs and persiflage WYATT & WYNNE PICKARD’S SEALS “Jyst Youth, Personality and Pep” [Clever, Intelligent and Humorous FIRST Universal Offers— SHOWN RUN “DAINTY” MARIE PREVOST | AT FEATURE 2 In n New Comedy Drama MATIN! FILMS DON'T GET PERSONAL”| ony “A Rural Cinderella” with Louise Fazenda A New Punch Comedy Shown at afl Performances INTERNATIONAL NEW. 215 Daily 3 | Sunday 33 | Holidays “& s | Prices &z . SOUSA WEEK—ZSth Anmvenary “Shn and : Stripes Forever” Beginning Tomorrow ) ee, Ending hnt Sunday NiGht Two Co-Stars Head the Brilliant Array “The Blue Streak of Vaudeville” Prima Donna-of the “Follies” RAE nnd <“Midnight Frolie” Ansisted by Lyries by Bf EDWARD TIERNEY & JOSEPH DONNELLY ol Misx B. Walker at the Plano ADDED ATTRACTION EXTRA ADDED ATTRACTION MAUDE POWERS & B. A. ROLFE & COMPANY VERNON WALLACE Assisted by Georyy Wiest and June Le Vauy, In “‘Georgia on Broadway' A Breezs of Laughter from the South in a Spectacular 'I\u(ul Hall. Handers and Millis ~A Night on Broadwa: *‘The Eocentric Pair' - A Bt o om Eomsa’? Sheldon. Thoms & Bab—Aocsop's Fablos—Pathe News Piotorial. TODAY Singer's Hidgets WILLIAM ROCK And All Last Week’s Stupendous Bill RIALTQ === Today, 2:38 . M—ALL WEEK—1A M, 11P.M." HISTRIONIC GENIUS DISPLAYED —AT ITS BEST— PARAMOUNT PRESENTS LIONEL BARRYMORE ; MOORE’S IN JACK BOYLE’S POPULAR STORY OF THE SAME TITLE IVERTISSEMENT MERMAID COMEDY LAUGH PRODUCER “THP RAINMAKER,” FEATURING 'R"’; HAMILTON BRUCE SCENIC BEAUTIFUL “UNENOWN BSWITEZERLAND” WORLD EVENTS PICTURIZED EXCLUSIVELY IN FOX NEWS FAMOUS RIALTO ORCHBEA , EXCERPTS FROM DE EKOVEN’S *] CYEETUER. T Bond Gotta Conductiay . .Muste by Lou Hirsch, Book awd Lyric Sfll Below F ALL WEEK - 2;15 asd 8:15 GAYET MAX -rnioll. HIS MASTERPIECE OF BURLESQUE ABE REYNOLDS'’ Witk The Inimitable ABE In Persom THE MOST GORGEOUS PRODUCTION EVER STAGED ALL ATIONAL TONIGHT week Tho Only Thester ' Washingtve Offermg Exvivaivety Amoricsn and Foraign Stars o° the First Raok POPULAR MATINEE SATURDAY—80c TO $2.00 2 Car Loads of Seenery WITH BLANCHE RING CHAS. WINNINGER WINONA WINTER STARTING NEXT SUNDAY—SEATS THURSDAY GEORGE M. COMAN’S COMEDIANS IN THE WHOLESOME MUSICAL COMEDY HIT THE"O’BRIEN GIRL (MARY’S BIG SISTER) Otto Harbaeh and Framk 'u.n-e M. Coban A RATIBML IHSI"IT\I'HON CINCINNATI EUGENE YSAYE Conductor SYMPHONY B e ORCHESTRA T Axfiu ’-%n”fihm'rs LISZNIEWSKA, Planist Soloist ron ' BURKE Friday, March 17, 4:30 Famous Tenor Tickets, $2.50, $1.50, $1.00 zfi*fi*fi*fi*******fi*fi**g Mandel. !lu‘el hy .v Entice Predustion Under the P Prices $l,$1.50&$2 Plus Tax. We M tht faroff Wo thfl 1n our Ok, mv- the way ‘we' always feel Mail Orders Now. Seat Sale « Wednesday. T. Arthur Smith, Inc.. 1306 G Se. Lun Em..s‘..‘sgg}g_ { IREATRE wm* GREATEST ARRAY OF HEADLINERS - %|_EVER BILLED IN WASHINGTON | R4 C_,.aning < .... Afterr.von at 3 P. M. 'k Triumphant American Tour ALICE * e e O »* America’s Daintiest 2} WAREE™ LLOYD INORDSTROM America’s Favorite English In Tick_Tock,” By Franc (kmlne, . S Nordsf rd m.y i TAFLAN & NEWELL | ARTHUR TERRY BILLY McDERMOTT Sole Survivor of Coxey's Army « FRED ALLEN YVETTE-:wi: i Music and Snul SHUBERT NEWB WEEKLY—PITHY PARAGRAPHS. x EMILY ANN WfllMAN & Co: in “The Actor's Wife,” by Miss Wel.lmnn‘ WITH RICHARD GORDON MATS AT THESE BARGAIN PRICES NIGHTS 3> 5-50c=25-$1: COMING NEXT WEEK rst Washington Appearance of the Third Great 3 'lmter Garden Cameo Revue x p % »* g COORE 3¢ 2 80 678 28 018 ¢" 0°6 o4 } 3% »* l» hxg "! =, 58 ‘!‘ _Caroll and a company of 50 people, not to * Priul- ‘The show which has shattered all vaude- DNIGHT ROUNDERS : Sam Hearn, Harry Hines, Green and Blyler, )1» the chorus. -Buy Seats Early. No Adum in b+ 3 W4¥¥¥¥¥4¥¥¥¥¥¥-¥¥¥¥* *fi*‘k*‘k*‘k‘k*** *‘k*fi***fi *'A'*{r *Lorna Doone™ £ AStudant Favotlte Lom DOON'B'.” which Mnllrlcc Tourneur. ‘{s -adapting to the .ereen. Ras long been the favorite | novel, of Yale and: Princeton nniver- sity students, according to informa- tion compiled by the producer. 'he Yale graducting classes.nf 1917 ‘and 1920, it s claimed, expressed D\ervlhelminx preferences for “Lorna Doone” ' "as their favorite mnovel Princeton graduating classes for the past seveén years, it is stated, have ranked - “Lorna. Doone” high in the| 1ists of popular -novels, two classes having: given it first choice. Special Film Features RAPHAEL 9th at O Street N.W. WALLACE REID. in “RENT ERE BUSTER KEATON, in ‘-THE BOA’ < Coming Tomorrow and Tuesday, RICHARD BARTHEL OL’ABLE DAVID. CRANDALL'S ™ nur,n & K St TODAY AND TOMOK ROW—GASBTON GLASS. In MERO ()'[ THE ROYAL MOUNTED. And MA sAvov Y T CRANDALL' Tk and o R MATS. 2 P DAILY: 3 P, SUNDAY. AY TOMOROW—WESLEY 'HOOL "DAYS.' cmfi LL” AVENUE, GRAND 845 Pa. Ave. WE. P.M. DAILY UNDAY. Tnb.ur A\'l) TOMORROW-— CHOOL DAY! MATINER SATURDAY, AND TOMORROW—A THAT HAD 1340 Wisconsin Ave, DUMBARTON AI.I'TTF:}’R CAST, in 911 _H Street N.E. _LOUISE GLAUM and MAH- LON_HAMILTO: LOV! Also HAROLD LLOYD “LURE OF N i s GREATER THA fl‘m!k_m 8th St. S.E.| HARRY CAREY, in “THE FOX” COMEDY AND | CIRCLE | | i | 8 H. A PRINCE THERE WAB." POI.I’S Matinee Thurs., Sat. 2:20 MARGARET NGLI “An Actress Without a Peer in America” In Her Sensational Success " THE WoMAN OF BRONZE @ (Direction of Lee Shubert) BEGINING SUNDA RS. SHUI A AMUSEMENTS. ‘A Photoplay Wonder. ;POPULAR impression exists that|and criminality of a Mexican border *’,“'“‘ nearly every foot of the il niina the thousht of far-off Siam, rth's surface in providing locales| wivy its ‘mysterious. haif-forgotten iy their cinema conceptions. Cecil|pylaces and temples, its fower girls, B. De Mille, however, whom they are | jis Juscious fruits and its dark, un- ngw ealling the producer of “silken” | fathomed Jungles. Siam, thought Do Photodrama, is out with a_statement | yfjlle, was the last word in contrast, to the effect that the exotic beauties|so Siam represents the antipode. of sud mysteries of Siam are pmcucauy Mexican squalor and degradation. &R" “undiscovered protopiay . Aeld The climate of southern Californ which surpasses all otners in its at-| he thought, would afford him all the aROsDNore of color'andibeanty. elements for reproducing Siam right When De Mille was seeking for|a¢ home, so he constructed a little 8 Paradise” the atmospheric|corner of Siam on the Paramount lot contrast- to the sordid degradation|at Hollywood. On one side of a California street American culture, with its electric cars, its finc residences, its telephones and the like, held sway. On the other side temple bells tolled, jewel. flower and fruit merchants plied their trade, and not far off the great temple of Wat Chang, glorious architectural ornament of the orient, reared its stately edifice. On the temple steps could be seen the priests and acolytes passing up from the water-edge with their offer- ings to Buddha. Just beyond the broad entrance one caught a glimpse of the Cambodean dancers, the strangest followers of terpsichore on earth. Everything was there to the last detail.” with dignified, jeweled nobles stroiling nonchalantly through crowds of burden coolies and_gro- tesque beggars, while huge elephants 1230 C Street N.E. HOME JA “THE CALL OF THS NOHI LYRIC &= Irving Sts. n‘w. TODAY BART BOKWIIHTH 'WHITE HA! Am!r'h‘&flflv 8] J B lumbered by with howdah loads of gayly attired orient: And only forty feet away—just across the street—stood Hollywood, the last word in American initiative and modernit . REPUBLIC 20 5% America’s Finest Colored Theater Ergagement Extended Today and Tomorrow LAST TWO DAYS Way Down East Today at 4:00, 6:25 and Tomorrow at 4:25, 6:50 and 9:15 NO ADVANCE IN PRICES ||PAVLOWA And her Ballet Russe, with full Symphony Orchestra National Theater, Friday March 10, Seats on male at Mrs. Greeme's Concert Bureau, Droop's, 13th and G. . Main 6493. - NEW STANTON, S 255 BESSUE HAYAKAWA, in : WHERE LIGHTS ARF TOW " THE NEW. GREAT RUNKHINE 00MPDY. 'B_PERFECT VILLIAN." uu. Street and R. L Ave. 'Al D:ldtr Theater today will be preseated with full-sized Eskimo pie, “‘Carry’s.”” The good kind. TRUXTON, Y- Cavitol & Q Sts. N.W. UHR WEBRE! PROI‘I! CTI \ “WHAT DO WA AlLNGar Cage. "Siutinee wt 8 pom child attending the Truxton Thenter i be presented with 8 fullsized Eskimo ple made by ‘“‘Carry’s.”* _The good kind. 2105 Pa. Ave. Ph. W.935 TODAY AND TOMORROW— HAROLD _ LLOYD. - | MA! “THE PHANTOM TERRO! ) TURE! Aoz "ehlia “sitending the made by Open 3 PM. Today SPECIAL ATTRA( ALLAN BOLUBAR and nmmrm’ Pl LIPS, fn “MAN. WOMAN. MA G WAYS A GOOD BHOW, CRANDALL'S Tnm?l | H AT E=—— 27 TODAY—MON ~TUES. X1 Tomorrow Night 8:20 CAMERON OF THE RCYAL MOUNTED A Magnificent Picturization of the Stirring Novel wbv» Ralph Comnor it GASTON GLASS VIVIENNE OSBORNE Mall Order Now. Seat Sale Thursday. | “Outlaw Thomas Meighan's Hardest Task S*PHE hardest task I ever had to perform in pictures?” declares Thomas Meighan, still nervous from the ordeal. And what do you suppose it was? Not jumping off a hundrad-foot cliff, carrying a leopard on his shoulder or struggling with a mob of infuri- ated ruffians. Not a bit of it. All he had to do was to make & speech before a woman’s club. It wasn't even a real women’s club either, but just a movie gathering in one of the scenes for “Our Leading the “members” being extra { People hired for the occasion. “I was nervous,” admitted the star, “and when Alfred Green, the direc- tor, told me to start in. I felt tongue- tied. But finally I launched forth into a diatribe concerning a subject that is pretty close to my heart. Th speech was supposed to be an Argu ment for a public playground in the town, and 1 stated that charity to children was one of the most wor- derful forms of charity. So 1 got through with it, but I'm stfll shaky'” Cannibal Love-making. WHI‘\' an African cannibal falls in love, who loses his head—the lover or the beloved? Does the head hunter act in the cave- manish manner of his dJark-skinn-d cousin of “The Sheik,” or is he as docile as a white-trousered adolescent whis- pering sweet nothings to a flapper on a country club veranda? The answer is provided in “The Mis- tress of the World,” a series of four Paramount pictures. The ladies will probably be pleased to learn that there is much in common ¥ tween the cannibal lover and the co try club swain. He does not go af the maiden of his choice with a clul but with a_cub—the cutest little lior cub which he can possibly pick up in the jungle. This he o to his lady night to her thatched lodge and leavin, it just outside the door, so that she w be sure 1o stumble upon the little beast in the morning as she goes to bring in the milk and newspaper. The lion cub is a love token, and, as « sign that the cannibal’s love returned, the lady takes in her present and fecds it. During his love-making the head hunting Lothario is most subdued and anxious to please, but he becomes very temperamentzl if his lion cub is d dainfully thrown out into the cold—in other words, if he *“gets the kitte: which is African for “getting the mit- te What happens when the prince of a nnibalistic tribe fastens his affections D he Mistress of the World May, the beautiful continental star, has the role of the heroine. Scenario May Win Release LO! IS VICTOR EYTINGE may gain his freedom as a result of his writing of the story “Peterman.” which was filmed as a starring ve- hicle for Herbert Rawlinson. The famous prisoner in the Ari- zona state penitentiary, whose life has been the topic of many a speech and the inspiration of many an arti- cle, is believed to be at the thresh- old of a new day. He was one of the “Men Who Came Back,” in a book of Peter Clark MacFarlane, of several years ago, and Jjust recently he won first award in a contest conducted by a magazine. ! Time and time again writers have made his life the individual illustra- tion of their arguments that men may go down to the lower Strata of life and come up again with flying colors. “Peterman,” a crook story, with a knockout plot, was Eytinge's contri- bution to the screen's literature. It had in it all that the author had gained of knowledge about criminals and their motives, and it represented the lower life as it really is. Tod Browning, who guided the filming of the Law,” directed “Peter- man. Now comes word that the life sen- tence of Eytinge may be cut short because of his remarkable achieve- ments, which prove that he has in him the stuff that makes a worthy citizen. He has, during the fourteen years he has been in the Florence institution, accumulated some money and acquired high standing amon; the ad clubs of the world through impressive advertising copy. . If he is released, he probably will go in exclusively for literary work and prison reform—the latter his hobby for ten years. "SPECIAL_NOTICE FRITZ IRVING CUMMINGS The Play of Your Home Town Wi ALMA TELL and McKAY MORRIS YOU READ THE BOOK—NOW SEE THE PLAY. Seat Sale Thursday—Evenings, $2, §! Special Thursday Matinee, 50c and $1.00. £ WED.—THUR.—FRL—SAT. W - WESLEY (Freckles) BARRY n the Delight/ul Drama of Youth “SCHOOL DAYS” Saturday Mat. $1.50, $1, 50c. mrum il I.OEW’S GOI.llMBIA PRESENTING THE WORLD'3 PARAMOUNT PRESENTS CECIL B. DEMILLES latest and most thrilling screen pro- duction—a lavish, opulent. dvama of beauty, love, daring and ddventure! “FOOL’S PARADISE" WITH AN ALL-STAR CAST INCLUDING DOROTHY DALTON-—MILBRED HARRIS CONRAD NAGEL-—JULIA FAYE - AND THEODORE KOSLOFF See the sensational, startling Dance Parisiénne! See a glorious dream of captivating film beauty! See the gorgeous ice ballet and skating dancers: See the lawless underworld of the Texas border! Bee the breathless rescue from the crocodile den! See one of greatest photoplays ever screened! 'VIOLIN: Last Concert in Artistic Course KEITH’S THEATER Tuesday Morning, March 11 1 & eBhous Mein Al Tickets W oo Narionn good o conoert. CAPITOL THEATER “Smoke if You Like” All This Week MISS NEW YORK JR. Two Shows Today, 3:00 P.M. and 8:15 Mrs. Rogers in Monologues w Willard Ballroom. » March Sth, at 4130 omen’s Overseas Service oo e "‘rlk S Disabled Vetarans S sals ar the, New: Willasd. DANCING WEDNESDAY EVENING DANCING CLASS. Latest steps. ‘;]'llnn 1226 Cons. ave. DANCING CLASS. ung ladies to join the special liet 'Ciass. ' Information, exll Dupont_Studio. & Dupont cir. TOK ‘Wanted: 10 Toe Dancing B Praok. 1435 “LERO NEW STUDIO OF DANCE. HOTEL GORDON BALLROOM 16th AND I STREETS. Telepbone Mauin_8530. MISS CHAPPELEAR rivate Jessons by &) Phone North S152. Monday an 1127 10th st. n.w. nmm‘_ hav“rpolnln Learn to DANCE The Famous ‘‘Washington,” 431 1lth l'