Evening Star Newspaper, April 6, 1924, Page 59

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WASHINGTO D. €, SUNPAY MORNING, APRIL 6, MURRAY President : . v S A Wilson Normal Play. £t t- e — L\ T *Dorory NS S T i, e s Attractions The OId Novel and the <A\ RLAISS-Comor ™ | TR ‘ . — i it LE. H. Sothern and Julia|onss ein orgeous costume [ing talent in lighter as well as | and smart s. The teatured ‘ urren t pl a y " . ! Ancestor Wors}up. more serious lines Marlowe | players wi reourt and " The Wilson Normal Players are| - Al Hilli Hazard |Fl'~“~“ the banks of the Missour! to|sald to be keeping pace with the best Julia Marlowe and E. H. Sothern, Spellma Jessie Resc | the Pacific coast was the journey | in amateur production in the United |after two years' absence, will appear | 2nd Babe Healy among States. Only first-class plays are put ;¢ poli's Theater next week, begin- | CLRET favorites in the cast, Twent P . ] | of the pioneers of 1848, which s pic- | Cr¥ P, R b ona have hue v horus girls and Valecita's leopar 3 P! n By Pk ) 7 5 [ ning Monday, April 14. o tured in “The Covered Wagon, commendable. In the two ye HILE ecxerting itself vigor-]Two Citie Dickens was not | Here was a trip of 2,000 miles at- | the company was organiz “Twelfth Night” will be acted on “The Lawbreakers." ously in ecriticism of the |limited to comedy in his finest capa- | urren rac lons tended by every known menace—fire, | have give " Stave With 1 Monaaysniglic. Hianfletion e Jet. headsd b preses generation, the | biliti Joseph Jefferson pm,ml‘ flood, sickness, Indian attacks, inter- | g, Capo” and “Sup- | P& gien @ad Auliett o W Weds i ag,y L hevy eater properly sugh | Cabel Plummer in “The Cricket on | nal dissension and food shortage— |pressed Desires.” Jerome K.dJerome's |nesday night and Saturday matines, | ;' e 5 > ildly, points its mora the Hearth” to delighted audiences; % {and that all obstacles wera ercomn Fanny and the Serva oblem The Taming of the Shrew"” on Thurs- . E oS 1 as presented o C 0 and won attraction Theater th us references to glories of the|W. J. Florence was hailed with un- At the Theaters This Week jand the wagon train, with its more | WS Presented a month ago and won .y and Saturday nights and “The | weoe og aoci s sy ast. Perhaps they are not inten ‘~‘n; ted u\l‘nph!]»\ as Cap'n Cuttle; POLI'S—Bertha Kalich, in “The Kreutzer Sonata,” drama. Opens. than 1,900 men, women and children, oS, Merchant of Venice' on Friday night. | g0 © ° 2 T B hich nal allusions to standards sct|the breath of living identity was iis evenin finally reached the goal set out for 5 s| Playgoers are urged to mnote that|, S hen the stage was more closely |given to Tom Pinc hy E. S, s ey 5 . - . - L < one of the hest arguments for an- h ] & 2 . pointin hen_the stage was more closely |given to Tom Pinch by E. S. Wil-| | NATIONAL—“The Covered Wagon.” photoplay. Opens this cvening. | | Lne °F the best arguments for an- ) ho plays begin sharply at 8 o'clo A4 s lentified with literary expression; (lard. With these and other prece- o e SSHEl el peaar at Am Mewid A Tehtann s coTods ot the Satis > a w t these reversions to villainy | dents within memory of traditional A e Cat and the Canary,” mystery play. Opens this day matinee. After the curtain rises te and the right triumphant |splendor, it i¥ quite possible to ex- evening. . ] i 10 one will be seated until the fnter- : rough processes of poetic justice |pect too much from a dramatization KEITH'S—Singer's Migets, vaudeville. New show opens tomorrow A d o EaRTO0. T | ievitably invite comparison |founded on “Bleak House” by so | aiternoon. e ctors an udiences. Ville of the X % % % {accomplished a craftsman as Mr.| | PRESIDENT—"The Holy City . e A o i (o ok R e e Rt The shade of Dickens still hovers | Kester. COSMOS—"Bohemian Liie,” vaudeville. New show opens tomorrow the first to bring to Shakerpears tho 1 Greene and Katherine about the mimic scene. And so does L K * . ernoon 5 g 3 NOTHING shows so strikingly the|for instance, the Tubal speech in ‘The Ehey have combined “;’fe ety of | Eill be Jack Kennedy gnd comp: that of T for no true and | is a lengthy one, and it In and Out oi the Movies,” vaudeville. Opens this | | iange in audiences in the theater | Merchant of Venice,” Portia's ‘Merc: Rabethan) stage Wi el | e B o e 1 : = & <hoi et 00 2 ionces 2 nlgss t zabel stage with mox | ute” dealing with matrimonial dif 4 of Mrs. Fiske can |l is' st that there should not AYETY “Brevities of 1923 burles T, s the manner in which the plays of | address, the recorders’ scene and the | methods of imgressionism. Their en- | Culties: Franlk Reckiess and compan 1ink of T mbering | k »een, even in a haphazard way G4 > revities of 1923,” burlesque. Opens this afternoon. I William Shakespeare are reckived, ac- | Polonius' baiting episode—were high | g, has X in a uniqu fTe ng 4 Becky Sharp, even while she follows | more instances of genuine Dickens rdine o e e | lithta whatein e Voung, wapisine | oo nasbeen to create the mood |irs the trend of the times into gropings | delineation. The character of [p 1. Beb - Kalich i | tha . nal Theater | julia Marlowe, wil lappear in Shake- | Spoh nield upto: the ckreat omesl| 27 2 PAE The 0S8 A Lo per e e o among cynical philosophies Harold Skimpole might easily have b Olt s—Dertha Kalich in York Sy fnvibars]| 0 Batlone Smess us who had gone before him. The danger » sustain this illusion, but not to | 57 * claimed touch of minute subtlety, g he K S "|s LIl i e spearean drarn at Poll's eater | was that a classical interpretation |lct scemery stand between the poet ' = : 0, a= € Kreutzer Donata |(jary verdera, Florence Huntington, |next week Wwas apt to become, not @ well-round- | ;1 pig gudicnce | It has always been usual to repre- | sociated as it is with a poet of such | - . ° . folrs Vanlers, Riorence Hundl ; | nex k. v presentation of & character, but|and his audience. the stage as having deterio- |lovable graced as those of Leigh| Bertha Kalich s reviving “Thef s C00tCe omuoe B nkiyn |, hen in I was preparing t0l3" sort of a string of pearls, each| FOr many years Sothern and Mar-| | - s e Liser inen Hunt. In this play his attire alone | KTeutser Sonata” Ly Jac ordin, | Fron: and Bty aes toaty Y lact Hamlet for the t time,” says ! prized for itself. lowe have maintained a nucleus of Cherry Blossom Time. e is necentnated. Tn-a Dickens drams |8dapted by Langdon Mitchel [\Mr. Sothern, “our stage director ir Audiences of today, in this respect, | aple plavers which made their com-| +Cperrs 5 1 5 3 P | Potrs ater " this week, opening | K eith's—Si o Mid fed that When T read certain linas are a better criterion of a play or a A¥Ers W he C Blossom T the ne 1 0 N Iy P exact sympatnetic reiationship mus s P11 in s nger s 1 ets. “bu > he 7 rerfo c or they ge by pan is ¢ med, the only pe a- ~ 3 = npressing this ide t sympathet tionship t|this evening. eitl gt get ' “hutiness S the trag: | Derformance, for they, judge by the ! 4, 1 American com oA 4 2 inke i xmare of v Kcalicl's neais Midrets takc e spot B the nudienes. T recall | wholo effect rather thin by the bril- | nent* organizatio : American ' : exist between author and inter-| The summary of Mme. Kalic's| Singer's Midgets take the spot sl b torh o heusioner, § Solil Sanes Of the rendition of Gertain | theater. -In the any are Freds | N Sues | preter. h“‘. \x\urk for the {\’pxczl’"‘;"’"‘f’ is threaded with the names ter the cur- |, ¥ . 1. threatening to imake a|&peeches or scenes. However, one|erick Lewlis, Lenorc pendale, | Pear at the National Theater for A6 viemed] sctor. but the Bbs st i meapicall o distuguished (ranatiste. s Soton 2 | his sword ening make A P S Hows o SR S S 4 phenomer apart from |{all short. N o UndorseRlibe dramle e lt St e here are forty-two tiny | Mhost of hia friends If thes prevent | must not forget that playgoers of the | France Bendtsen, Albert S, Howson, premier Easter week, beginning Mor ctablished system. And so they | X Therese Raquin: e 2|2 Sliovine s mpger,of hig fehon | mrevions period, had A oa Nt oo | nd three e ‘ S > e R il 2 %k 3 : appho and Phaon.” id_ threc point whero audiences W3S “ape | ihere were drawbacks in ih L SO T . ve , for they are usually made pos-| I Say She Is" advertised the T e e ol | present « production in twelve scenes. | piyuded; that 1 would be watched to | thers ilso” was the ripe advantage it - sible by some enthusiast whose faith | stunning girl as its chief attraction; *ora,” Dickinson's “The |1t 15 announced as a show in itself | gee if I drew my sword with the same | acting before people who had a back- | Eugenie in self is strong, whose abilities are {and many spectators agreed unre-|Lnknown Road Jensen's The | embracing features from the circus, | full effect that Booth or Keenc or |ground in which to estimate the new ton Stiefel, Al | vedi I ber e s A atttic | Witew.” Samue o he W extravaganza, musical comedy, th slough had achieved. things that came into the ue CAS EXCE 2 heater. Fishman, Ch ressior great and whose luck is exceptiona | | B Ma o bootlegge * £ % B ) of Today,” pon's “The Victim,” | COneert stage, wild west, the prize wrotested that 1 could not act| *“We find that applause toda lins, Mauri nstantine | tion that paraded feminine beauty | Machaprrr's L Al L jpros Lithat Ll6ould ot 2 . 5 Gray motoreycle coy i T e ring and t ashion forum. A display | Hamlet in shion: that if scene ir 8 Zazzali, Loret BlantGray; e er ror The theater reflects the world as its dominant inducement was for- P Mrs. Fiske's “The | § itary maneuvers closes the act. | upplause ¢ it n a result of cted in such a as to h)\.\‘lnure Wood n Walker. | A ‘i”‘.!:u‘ :g’r"‘. e 1‘ Jut it, and as it leaves behind one | merly regarded as novel audacity, St Agnes,” dacoby's “The |Joseph Urban designed the settings. | tha action of the d ataver and moving moment. Anc . making, a “lo the press ag andard of excellence, asserts a new |but it has come to be accepted Bigdter dVoman s and Gesrgo Bare | [ MANISESIIOEUInE will aurprise the imurcosss T uughthane n I8 e p et o ¢ stould be ar in Almas Temple Fashion |7 7 Btast e. Never was a theater more rich | entertainment of the conservative [ Atonement: Thise represent her |morrow. Monday. with a souve anaer ot an Italian opera singer | how Macready drew hi the Revue. chars, & double mechanical resources than the|school If beauty oi idea w repertoire on the English-speaking ectio h the midgets, for approval was something |tent scens iu Hich i how i r % a resent one d in their absence, |abundant as be )i sta | 7 rice is featuted i G it Booth raised his han e svoritesiior ihs stage andssreen nt one. And in their absence, | abund eauty ¢ . we | i the stage of ¢ Burbs, {2 eville Iloeson and Al- | This 18 not exaggerated. A gene n speeches in “Hamlet'; he does | are announced to lend additional in- $ be doubted whether all the |would seasons ago have been joy- | whrre her Sl Durops, Von Tiizer, “On t Tt en T i <now how Mod, pt down ine adonac s [nlasen Alexander G ¢ fervor matory graces |ously initiated into an era that re-|op E nd later as the particu- feville.” Miss Bri o B0 ere were standards by | the staircase in the s Pomd terest to the Almas Temple .\»‘r— Helen Marie Koontz, Evelyn € tradition wo! find an audience | vived Grecian classicism. An idea |1ar star of the Jewish stage in Pola tion to Keith fa S which all actors re judged. Play-|‘Macbeth.! or how P! ved h xposition and Fashion Re- |coloratura sopr: Juliette t. Yet th 1 of time- | has appreciation. A 1t Hungary, Russi s 2 rollicking group of songs del rs waited for ¢ “moments and | Mercut s tion Hall May 2 to 1 ank Duggan, J. Lawren sontent. el e O e i i s e by, S| meac il Titariol N s Dpresented. 5 ctor i g satisfied their [meo and Juliet’; but he d e e e e Everett Sterns =~ Har honoring art survives. Player and |that rings true is elevated to event- | Side, Kalich has sung Following Miss Brice will come a tions, applause would follow. | the actor now 'before him succeeds d_Werburn, New Yor producer, | josiph Caran: A public will not_cease to love their | ful importance. All the town is re-|than 100 roles, in five differsnt lan- [new comedy act, Jack McLallen and | any’ such periods in the | in bringing Shakespeare's people to I8 to stage a revue in miniaturc, for Dick their Thackeray and their | peating the reference in Mrs. Fiske’s | fuages, ranging the light, frivo~ | “Sarah,” who in the past have been vs. The soliloquies— life on the stage before him | fst 4 Tand SZieq . I | lous heroin: { Offenbach’s oper: known as expert rol k F R i i ————— e A Box Revue” and eg Ted'Ls Shakespeare. cach appear- i) it e feld Follies.” | ile EWI1S. play to the man who made his life | in which she first appeared in Bucha- | have n this At with th e e o Jana Midrea Bsan| men T i nee of Mrs. Fiske comes the gentle {one long “alcoholiday. rest, to the somber tragedy of “Ham- | comedy abilit sl > . . i [ g ! 3 agedy of * | con ability, ma an Gnusual il represent the movies, - whila nor that she is again to portray | * * 3 | let,” which she played in New York. offering. P! ¢ e 1€ | popular jazz ba is t e o Vaniy Fairr! { : . — R bradiey and May Henne £ atrick S ayers. I TERSeent (e, MOTISY, L oiie | pupuiar jezs La the heroine of an air,” a story | Another fine actress v s the ci v . " both clev ay ADessy e Opera Company will have & pi announced for the w c me whose accuracy of human analysis|this week, Bertha Kalich. And | National—"The Covered |both clever Elsutsdsniiug; | position on the musical program April 14 at B. F. Keith's Theater renders it perpetually modern. | another great story, “The = Dance.”” Their ave, " VAT N & Svbil the Weleh prima donn e |another great story, “The Kreutzer Wagon. Ring IS e e ) -St. Patrick's Players, founded |[with the presentation of “The Slopes | Runnin” Wild. P Other cte include Tar [ Sonata,” will be shown in adaptation. | 1nis evening at the National “The | wxred: asermireritng Sypec € VEF 2R ¢ Putrick's Players, founded | o R ardr & Yaenten drama. OftE:| 4 new attraction_comes to the | dsterman, . Fortunello HEE Every week brings assuranee that | The adapter’s task is one of delicate | ¢overeq swagen® will open its see. | Following is George Lyons, former- in 1820 by Rev. Francis J. Hurnes, |inals hooked for three Rights at the | Gayety' next Wock. . The. tiile is de- | Fern and Marie, O Loor there is fme acting in abundance, | self-subordination, jor it needs a| a5 open its sec- |, Following ix George Lyons, former- |aasistant of Mgr. Thomas at St. Pat- | president ‘Theater, it remained for| ciired o be an index of it st¥le—| Moore, Gienn ana s and ind Mrs. Fiske always does her [second poet to render the first in—1 & whont poribas bo" nEnatment Within lac least, this popular téam has sepa- |Fick’s Church, are now in their fourth four more longer. More than 30,00 | “Runnin’ Wild,” with speedy dancing. ! Four Adlonas ; . ¥ X : 2 EReie _in<] 2 ghort period, emain one week, | 45 hotSt lar team ha ! o 7o £ e mission churches share of it. She is a delightful | timately intelligible. Considerations |with daily matiness, commencing to- | fae mog "éffl&.fl“'}‘f\ is presenting |season of Marvland and Virginia. They fol- J i T et . € 3 uses his harp| A group of the plavers appeared for ed this la ith “A B revelation of spontaneous intel- |of poetic interpretation will not | morrow. both for sofon and. to play t G atoun O fo D e o feks : 2 s i > 5 & 4 e — v & -l " @ 0 o play the ac- three weeks in vaudeville, and onl Prince,” which was taken i t lectualism, and no play can be so|assert themselves in connection with |, Since its notably successful visit|companiments for his liting lays. |few wecks axo they gave an enter- | Batimore and presented at the Audi- ele ration o . . . Iee is announ feature 1 | 1 1 1) f « s -, . to this “city e latte: part of ) = 1 ght that she will not find a way |“The Cat and the Canary,” whose | x-ar'h.m’fim‘v‘.'r» e Claude Anderson and leona Yvel of-|tainment at the Casino Theater, New | torium Theater in that city for the ) e it, by her own efforfs, sig-|mysteries and thrills have been so | various other important cities and it | siating tean Iy ""‘“_‘d "’\"h'* roller | York one of the players are sal- |Gibbons Day Nurser: iificance and charm. 1f Mrs. Fiske | thoroughly indorsed as to warrant | is said, “invariably to full houses” |g s received the stamp of faried. Their first performanc | ““The Holy C wiich the players . oy o Tt T | h e micsing hivh Ll hie may: ho aceoantsd for by fts val everywhere. _ |given in November, 1920, in th will present this week under ”“.‘Tm: artists associated on the pro- | the B. I nds little in the character for her |the audience in dismissing highbrow | Thls may be accounted, for by its > usual house features, Aesop's | ter Revue: This Mmet with such e s ot Chlvmbun, saimdoann il et b the Famous to play, the matte casily adjust- | scruples and settling down to a state | that tend to popularize the film are s, . Tor of the Day and the |cess it was followed in the spring of |is said to be their most ambitious ef- v g Z | Players ] tion, Edgar Al d; the character will have to play comiortable cxpectanc “The found_in it News Pictorial, frame the bill. [1921 by the “Spring Revue,” 2 mi fort. drome held a meeting last Tuesday |jen of the iit, the Interstat \rs, Fiske. “Helena’s Boys” tells |Covered Wagon” brings the films erson Hough's stor: cal comedy. The following autumn, Since organizing mora than 300 |for the purpose of formulating plans | Amuse through Ka he Cov- .o 5 s € A BRI Y Chioh the picrurs | e 5 s£." |they followed with “Leave It to]|yo e a4 women. have taken SRaste ndevill | Hob Imer and V new the sad story, which in a few |once more,fo the front as a vehicle | red Wagon,” upon which the picture Cosmos Bohemian Life™|iiey, followed with ‘Leate It to|voung men and women have taken|for the observance of vaudeville's i lle; Wilmer and v vears has become so old, of parents |for genuine American romance. ‘Its | piace among ihe few masternieces | tho e froe and roaming life of inights and brought into prominence |more than a score have graduated to| nual carnival week Pat Roone, Ma- who refuse to obey their children. | vitality of-interest increases as it |of fiction dealing with the develop- | of yd in a carnival |Miss Margaret Gorman. Who after-|positions in the profession. They have | rion Bent, Victor Moore, Emma Li Bijon " ko* # becomes more familiar, and it is|me ".} ""(.\\V.uflrl'u a. Th o screen version | g ¢ talented players in an act :\“-}r‘;i::‘-“.;‘ "“;fi‘?’j\“",‘,"’r: .‘r".»:»(;r:"-d“:f Siyenmore mm‘::\; f{}“’m'l”f(,”,\r"w; tlefield. Arthur Deagon, Marga W e e it \Many is the time Dickens has heen | ¢stablished as one of the permanen- | LIPITES SRC 0 an 0oet T - | o mian Life.” the stellar | Atlantic City e M divion to presenting the |dron. Andrew Downie, Billy Bouncer. is § scenes that were in the a ttraction of this week’s bill at the |~ Their first attempt at Lenten drama |receipts of @ number of performances | Charles Sargent, John Marvin, the adapte! t footlight His | cies in the world of entertainment. | thor's imagination, but that lay be-| Cosmos Theater. which opens : _ R . > of n e iographers*credit him with a per- . * y0na the Drovince of the pen €0 DOT- | o watinbe 1t 1 aanme ed’ SOF- {was i the spring of 1922, when they |to the Welfare Assoclation of tho Dis- | four Camerons, Albertina Rasch a ral interest in the theater wndy The public is loyal to jts favorites,] Ifa¥: It was this legitimate wmpli_| picturesque and colortul offering. The |for ten performances: The " Ciilow B reandis J. Hurney picks ose endly cipcle. s dra-{be happily v en | caused M ch to express his en- | gronrentpse P S EYUE O 3 - his | writes many of the & es i1 ch | gan and othiers participatec y o close and frlendly. cip le. His dra-|be happily presented even when caused Mr. Hough to express his en-| stopped for the night. _{revue played three weeks here as an | the thespians appear. He has an en-1Most of those assembled will be wide- N. V. -A © matic sense is profound, eveniconditions do not provide them |Lre and enthusiasic A ea Wag. | nother act that promises unusuai jattraction in vaudeville thusiastie assistant in Dennis E. Con- | 1y scattered during N. V. A. week, but | v artists are a engaged though his pen did not hold itself to{with three or four act vehicles. | g Yersion of "ihe €0 P e Rty Siofented by | The players began their 1923 season | nell. agreed on plans for ap. fo & plans for special obsery t i s i atic forn i S v " P’ 1 on a 3y B, —_— s, natte r y may Y of annua L f festiv! he restrictions of dramatic form. |Blanche Ring and Blossom Seely got | ““rhe musical score arransed for this | tits {itte, “The Book of Vadeviie - | S % once procesded fo Adyise man. | Secretary’ Cheste chub 1 Margaret .’\nglny)s new .romantic{on nicely in the same bill at B. F. |)Iru(‘lur‘tioxE by Ilurhn ]“i“(,"r{c(]e'ewx‘\ The stage setting includes a large |cast in the leading feminine role, the | Washington a new passion play, “The | agers along their itineraries as entisted @ 8 ‘correspondents t melodrama by Paul Kester, takenKeith’s, which enjoys the advantage Snau!.'rd u‘"‘ - grflv‘cgl{m" f2. Ham | book. the turning of the pages of |leading male role being in the hands | yy,1u City,” at the President Theater. | their schemes for enhancing the value |aid hin in advising the theaters of al from incidents in the novel “Bleak |of a consistent policy. under the direction of H. B H&m | which is the signal for the perform- | of Dustin Farnum. Niles Welch, Mar- S o e | and importance of the N. V. A. week | circuits what the fouring artists hay e Chories Diskens, s rather S A on is a feature ers to exemplify the dances and the |garet Landis, George Webb, ¥dith |It will be presented throughout the|performances to offer by way of adted and specia ISC DYSIANES N R 5 : . ment. story, which they do “in a different | Yorke, Violet Palmer and Willlam | week. It is presented under the aus-i{ General Manager J Murdock of attractions for the week rre Kester than Dickens. It is ai Jane Cowl is to play Juliet for way. | Norris also appear in important roles. | pices of the Knights of Columbus of Jldy for the sake- of story-telling! SR € > - nd the| Other vaudeville numbers are Dan | Subsidiary film features and or- | o 4 ¥ ari entire week. Her succéss in this | Belasco—"The Cat a Croon ol P e e | ey Teatures and Or:|Washington, with the sanction of the s v . . . rather than character study, and the | role should soothe her for any lack Canary. Smash You"; Grace Aver and Billy in |by Director Arthur J. Manvell, in- | Archbishop of Baltimore and the co- l estllnony O{ Authorlty Dickens types, despite the abundant 'of enthusiasm over Melisande o - & song and patter act: Sim Moore e as ov . 2 & drolicries of dialect and wardrobe, | Cleopatra, both thankless roles. To Cat and the Canary the| Frank Mitchell in a new’ Ruraber of | Midin? My, Busines® ant ax®on? | operation of the Catholic “d"“"'.’f‘s ;’" are Jeft inconspicuous, save in the pe recognized as a great Juliet is & melodrama that has Leen bhe| comeds, song chatter and acrobatic | march “Chill-Bom-Bom." by the same the dlocese. The procseds will be Single admirable instance of Tulking-{an attaimment which of itself con > dramatic sensations [of two| feate, and Gecrge Kirby and Dorothy composer, will round out the bill. | given to the mission churches of Vir- liorn, played by Mr. Ivan. “The!stitutes a career. Belasco Theater this week, commenc- | senge. i pne “Breviti ,|ginia and Maryland. Great LadyDedionic) Js ca yiolent i N B B OF ths SHIBIERE 8] o o by CorMan & S, Weod Gagety— Brevitica of 1923 i e panele Y Hun: haking of the skeleton in a family| And there will be still more |semblage o & small group of peoplo | Port Pitura. A ‘tworreel comeds | A Promise of fun, melody, fair closet, a procedure so common injShakespeare, under the auspices|in a lonely ion that has thelg f & t 2 St 5 spices a y mansion tha s and other short picture subjects will : e C nuine event that it may be doubt-[of the Sothern-Marlowe company.|TePutation “of being haunted, the| round out the bnll‘.) e | and costumes is the attraction at the | Georgetown College, Trinity College well I remembar nding out letters - " all managers to unite and co- the |her corps de balict, the sixteen Hippo- | W celebration of National . i he [0t wd ever heard. Bu of California, who went to th ; axer tiexed, B ! west tn a covered wagon in 1852 and was bec s ney is supervising director of the pro- | who was the friend of Bret Harte p as the on | womanhood, attractive stage settings|duction. The ~ Aloysius D1 .\"r?-‘\,\mrk Twain, Joaquin Miller, Am- dersani [ A COOLBRITH. the poet laureate, F - yuiswear an | | T i X 3 e University, : { brose Bierce and Prentice Mulford, | i citedly when-it cd whether an audience can be|The popularit; he Bard of A uperstitions and predictions of a S iR e of Catholic University; the Catholic X hen y of the Bard of Avon | west Indian voodoo woman, and the S " Gayety this week, the title being|$iiuchters of America and the Play- ' went last week in New York to see | z ' trand—"In and Out of the st woek in 2 o . A H st 2 g 3 crossing of the Platte man roused to its, gravity in a purely | has become so great that Shake- | strange, unsolvable happenings of the {“Brevities of 1923.” In the cast are|ers’ Club are represented in the cast| ;o picture “The Covered Wagon. lost th ves. The oxen became fictional situation. speare instead of “spelling ruin” is|night lend an indescribable, creepy Movies.” Miss Lena Daly, Jack “Smoke” Gray, | Of 150 persons, and Walter Reed sol- = " the | PARIC stricken and ran sideways, just x X % % now recognized as the life-saver of | Atmosphere to the story that John g ovies. \Harry Peter: Thel Carl *| diers will appear in the ensemble| The reaction experienced by the |, {hey are doing now. The wome 8! Willard has embodied in “The Cat| A triple bill is announced for the y Peterson, Thelma Carlton and| gcenes. Those in roles of prominence aged poetess to the stirring scenes |prayed and wept in zoing over. Wher The dual role _Erha :]e\vcrc (}est of ja theatrical season. and the Canary.” The plot mwl‘vu, Slra?d xTh“(er' beginning today and |Alma Arliss, ed Reeb, Milton invdwludn Estelle ,;(‘urr'l-. Alle;n 13“5:5' which she knew as a girl she found [We crossed the Truckee iL was ver acting powers. e player devotes — around a young girl, heiress of a |continuing throughout the week. 3 aurice Jarvis, Mrs. James A. Hart- ew as a girl she found |, 3" e dangerous, as the river g p play young & Frankford and Charles and Georgo| Maurice Jarvis, Mre femes B Hart-| o)y interesting and indicative | Wie™ WS, dAnEerous, a5 e o) ery 5 : o large fortune left by a misanthropic | Arthur Ashley will appear as head- 5 ¢ “‘f"f' _cnc;-gy }“’ 2 ;;rog@n;{ °ft self To Play in “Cytherea old man, whe hated all his relatives |liner number one on the vaudeville | Southern. Specialties will be intro-|McGrath, James Chamberlain, ‘John|of the marvelous accuracy Wwith|(orrent that they took the women ';“" ;“- I" “fd "‘il‘i 0'4 (;_" c?]‘se' X and when dying left a will t;\az w por:{onhn! Lhn‘ program, his offering, |duced by a number of the principals Mprganl; fl:m»z“uu’{lnlny‘.l .-\llice‘(iush, which James Cruze has pu-l:rndl llly‘ and children over by rope and wire the French maid, Miss Anglin dis- : 28V, %o be read twentysyears after /is|with the assistance of Miss Helen and there will be chorus numbers to|Denis k. Comnell, Alfred La Forest:pioneer life of an earlier and a half- | the men crossing along with the Maved more art and closer expres. | MBS JAMES VAIL CONVERSE. | ootk of mianight in the room where | Clement, being a series of artistic tm- | e i tn® WL 06 © 0008 PUTCERE (0 | and Arthur White: “Arline Alcine will | forgotten period horses, <ion of detail than the part of Lady wealthy New York soclety lead- | he died. pressions presented under the title | IN(SITUPL the buricsque bits and show ' girect, assisted by Denis 1. Connell, | As scene after scenet passed she | “And when night came we were Dedlock itted \-" Al or and daughter of Henry Hays| In pursuance of his request the six |“In and Out of the Movies.” |iho’girls in bright array of costumes. | Marie'Jones, Jean Lally and Madeline | could nof resist wondering at their | wet and worn out, and often spen edlock permitted. Yet it was to Motsan, former American egamil mn|POIVIVILE Telstives gatiier at the ap-| As feature number two Eddie Day Ll Fanm witzerland, ‘wq, €| Baker. - reality. The little girl in the picture | hours fighting the Indians. Mothe 1the heroine of grief that sympathy | Morgan, s . pointed hour and the executor reads |supported by a quartet of feminine |Birch Forest” are scenes with “snow’ There will be matinees Thursday | brought back a like tragedy of her [tacked the feather beds all around turned most naturally and strongly. | Brussels, will play a small role in|the will which glves the estate to a|assistants, will present a “song and and ‘rlln falling to lend realism to|and Saturday, with special prices for | own. the inside the wagon as 2 shieli BN “Cytherea, Goddess of Love,” directed | YOUNg artist, Annabelle West. No |dance revue,” while the third head- the picture. “The Dentists” will be, ckildren. The play will be given for! My doll had lost her head, too,” jagainst the arrows and bullets o .} Sooner has the document been read |line offering will bring Emergon and |recognized —as realistic “horrors”|two performances at the Auditorium|shé said. “Only we buried her on our foes weer good times There is a domestic sketch that cre- | Theater, Baltimore, next Sunday for | the plains, and I used often to won- | too. We sometimes had buffalo Dickens characterization has been ; by George Fitzmaurice. than the diabolic occurrences begin. |Baldwin, laughmakers, in "a skit, . f ates comedy out of the simple ingre- | the benefit of the Gibbons Day Nurs- | der if the Indians had dug her up [sieaks for breakfast, and how gocc 2 congenial enterprise for many| Mrs. Converse, who was Thelma|Men vanish into apparently solid|*“What Fools These Mortals Be.” .,mng In the mu[,], Jacky Coogar’\" Morgan beforc her ifarriage, is a|Walls, a maniac of homicidal tend-| Others listed include Ben Nernard |dients °fls~ modest meal. “Sunny | ery. again.” And her voice shook a little. { they were! N oeeded dicting tradits twin sister of Mrs. Reginald Vander- | €ncies and-with catlike claws prowls |and Noah Ferris, in a character |Spain” brings Into view some bur-: ‘Again she whispered: “Oh, these | “See how gray the wagons are now succeeded in contradicting tradition ) ;W™ W< Morgan recently cgused a|3bout, a hand with fingers like condor | sketch, "I Wanna® Sing,” and Alex- |lesque on the pastime of bull-fight- ¢ Arcade. scenes are so real, so llke my own |that the journey is ended. Some da: by making the title role of “Oliver] Pos iion in New York circles when | t3lons reaches out of the air and |ander Patti, announced as the world's|ing. “Brevities of 1923" is said to . experience, that it isn’'t like seeing |I want to meet the man who mad T'wist” the star role. In the many|she wrote and published what pur- |393iches a necklace from the neck of | greatest “upside down juggler.” make a special appeal to the fair sex,| A quaint “grab-bag” party, with|a picture. It is like waking up in|the picture—James Cruze.: He must tage versions thc honors have | ported to be & revelation of inner|%,5leePlng girl, a murder is commit-| George Randolph Chester, short|as well as the men, by its dazaling |memories of when “grandma was a|the morning and seeing old familiar |be a very real man himself to por ¥ S s jhe Y e o v Yors rane ted and various other ghostly epi-|story, “A Tale of Red Roses” which |array of the latest feminine fashions. | zirl,” will be the special attraction | places. . 1TRy, 85 SUCOARRTUILY the Trees oF those Litherto gone elsewhere. Martin T has ‘Deen saidl that besiqes pos- sodes follow each other in rapid suc- [has been picturized by Vitagraph & i . s |fOor dancers at the Arcade next| “We had just such a man as that” |people. It is the greatest picturs ! Iarvey played Sydney Carton inl ,esing a dark type of beauty, Mrs Sfi"’.‘.‘.‘”.",, There is fun also, for every | under lr:e Ml:‘n&fq My Man,” will be | President— The Holy Cxty Thursday evening, while the regularshe said, pointing to Ernest Tor-lhave ever seen. There is nothing “The Only Way™ with a stccess | s & o e ortine oy, Mr=. | thrill that the play gives s matched |the main photodramatie, attraction dancing_ program will be in effect |rence. -“He used to drive the mules. | false about it. It has taken mo baci e A s e ot an’s ! with a hearty laugh. for thé week. Patsy Miller of “The| The St. Patrick Players this oven- |from 3:30 to 13 the other nights of | Ho sworc terribly. My mother was imany years and awaleacd memosies which proved, as did the “Tale of seerct of knowing how to dress well.© The company, practically>the same Hunchback of Notre Dame” fame 15 [ng will stage for the Grst time {n the week. afraid he would bring down the chol- 1 thought-were dead”

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