Evening Star Newspaper, October 27, 1924, Page 13

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Poli's—"The Washit e Potters.” Tt is ve rell had h nt to the home the umer.” and Co T short story of | det good and ipping h nts. The good sharing A_half-dozen Miss Brady with the of h -ompanied on . the concert maite an un- nation. 1 Florrie er sk which udience fr and then come f Miss Le a: Le Vi t entitled they.s fust hox on the ard as the Vere is an cer and Mr. ian. Mr. ire back with the applause t the same. Guiran have a fine dancing eceived, and John > & good sleight- Holmes and Mr: the Lrry but get Strand——’?/;udeville. Jack Wilson and his lively troupe were headliners and worthy of the big hand received at the Strand vesterday. Hector, “man’s best friend at his best,” w presented in “A Study Animal Intelligence,” and with his canine following hit. When Hector got out amon, peo- ple and hid, the little folks in the big house had the time of their lives With Jack Wilson in a non-sensical rovue are Charles Fors Wheeler and Willie Ward. the juven the troupe, r ful of wit and action, made man friends, and Jack, himself, is not a bad com, Rich Favorites,” dialozue Twang Banjo, and traction Adle cal Comedy song and nes Tinklingly volution of a act, by Howard 1y “added at- with Charles ning Episodes,” Al Scnenck sting_at the piano, ere other features. The banjo jug- £lin t of Howard and Ross is a thriller and rec d more than the usua use. 1ty Hearts in which a woman struggles successtully to win the love husband inst his devotion to his lamented first wife. The comic, lightsome 5 Tu a society " FOR RENT $4.00 MONTHLY ANSELL, BISHOP and TURNER, Inc. 1221 F Street Open Evenings Until 10 P.M. NO TAST to mauseate you when you take LULY'S HI-TEST EPSOM SALTS TABLETS zsc Drug Co., and ail other ng the past winter thou- of people have used Joint-| | th such remarkable success | in the treatment of the most severe cases of lumbago that we are but doing our duty when we say to| “When Joint-Ease goes | in—lumbago goes ou A penetrating external remedy for painful, vollen and stiff joints | 260 cents a tube—at Peoples Drug | Stores and all pharmacists.—Ad- Vertisement. i THE EVENING STAR, WASHID) doubtable a Hawk,” in a charac- terization that without a doubt is his best, a captivating best. Bennett, as the sweet English Rosamund Godolphin, con- the picture her wistful a stirring deep sea : o i Fox News complete however, goes the paln : Hawk” i simply great— spirited, intense, magnificent. It is hard to peer through the surface of 3 | this vengeance-bent terror of the Story: | seas, in the Elizabethean era, and see | the American motion pictur thpgacty andy past perforn ces. Mary Roberts Rhinchart, the author. | oo pictorial effects are well-nigh have e der Love Story,” which | ,peljevable. one after another Is,pictured this week at Loew’s CO-|he great argosi of the past engage Tumbia a thing of beauty and appeal. | yach oth in mortal combat—the Althoush Gloria appears onee or | galleys and their slaves of history in gorgeous clothex, the like of | ind imagination become vivid, fight- she has lavishly brandished | ing r upward surge to fame and for. it is not the splendor of her that makes this pleture, As princess of a little B prin- ipality, in_love w hing cap- | of the Iy foreed | his ¢ Arry the eigh- | Tak, principality, Miss anson | had a portr al of true ve to | mand T art’s *dcsire that refine until freedom comes autifies her work beyond any capture by a Moorish gal and the yet done. Christian gentleman becomes a Moor- the right-hand man of high asha of Algiers. His br 4 is had, through thrilling of - |ndve . which comes near ending G disastrously. There is a happy end- the | brought about, though, by no + her ventional Ways. whom | Metropolitan Orches w niet £yDsy sskin provides a beacon Hiht with the loaths som, thron ot the boy is Columbia—"Her Love Gloria Swanso re red story sir the the tleman, with with biood of ltells of an English Oliver \ Tressillian, in Ze love half-brother. Spaniards, whom he his queen’s com- slaves at the long vith their ward the under er young pressively les loom ous guards ind fret staged. | love of t means o captain of is wedded at hines like he er e und spirited, “ 5 LA Palace—"Married Flirts. 4 the lace this week, is the conventional urization of the unconventional o of life of several persons of d position in the socicty column “The story starts with line Fred- s (he frumpy looking, novel- 1 wife of a successful man who would at home and write ihle to keep b other reveal 1 of the King, convent. © O triumphs in the convent..as the gric How the banished c love, finds way little boy, had b for the snatch illness, death, and revealed fathcr, moving and engaging stor lan | Keith as the cavtain lover ranks ! second to Gloria in excellence of the 3 t, while the ¢haracter | George Faweett, is seen in the of the father of the princess. roue king could have been better portrayed There is also a_Van Bibber com- | edy. with Earle Fox: Topics of the “|Day and an international News reel. | | Kuc not the is banished of her artistic sarden of ing mother ptain, her first ck: how the groomed from finally swift to a Eay Al who Kingship, Sibly o his'r clubs. The husband W, finally induces | his w 1y him to a club. | whe the evening prove | that she hasn't been so suc | protector of Jusbands 4 | novelist—and she never has had thing published at that. The wirl, cuught in the act of let- ting the husband embrace her, cx- plains to the wife that she doesn't deserve her husband because rhe doesn’t know how to hold him. She enunciates the not unique philoso- phy that men like ‘em beautiful and dumb. The wife let it be said, might be excused for thinking the girl had the latter qualification, while some- what lacking the former. However, there's a divorce. The divorcee's novel is a success. As a devorcee, the wife loses her frumpy appearance. The girl marries another The novelist meets him and makes him fall in love with her. She turns the tables completely, humbles | the haughty miss who stole her hus- There | pand. This ti however, there is lare too frequent occasions when the |no divorce. The divorcee refuses to |onlooker's mind has to work over-|carry her revenge to the point of time to hold to the thread of the story | breaking up her former rival's home. as exploited in the Rialto featurc | She sends the husband back to his | It is a story of love's triumph over|wife, and sits down and writes uchery. The outcast of a|summons to the man she divorced millionaire and a roadhouse dancing|He comes. Otherwise, it wouldn't be girl, thrown together by fate in San|a good movie. rancisco. wander to Shanghai and| Conrad Nagel, as the young hus- sink to such depths that even the|band of the former salamander, does low-caste natives detest them. The|good work. Mae Busch acts the part man becomes a craven drunkard and | of the salamander much better than the girl a drugeddict. Love rede she looks it. Huntley Gordon is well them, however, although not without | cast as the husband that Miss Fred- actd rolé The much au Rialto—"The Man Who Gamie Bacl | A splendid moral may from “The Man Who Canie sicture of the week at the the presentation would be tertaining had a better been arranged when the | from which the picture is | was transferred to the screen, a son The Sea Metropolitan—' Hawk. Three rousing cheers for Wallace Beery As “The Sea Hawk,” Frank Lloy. turization of Rafael Sabatini's washbuckling romance of the seven s, goes into its second week of crowded houses at Crandall's Metro- politan, the work of Beery stands out as second to. nome but the “truly grgat” Milton Sills himself, who plays the title Tole as a master of his art. “The Sea Hawk" could not have risen to such heights of piratical vor and imaginative genius without the combination of other elements which have contributed to make it one of the most gorgeous and vividly dramatic pictures ever seen here. And one of these elements, without a doubt, is Beery. This chap, who has plaved villain with a vengeance ever since he entered motion pictures, be- comes a lovable rogue, rascal, sea captain and first lieutenant to the re- a great struggle. erick didn’t deserve to keep. orge O'Brien. a newcomer to the| A Mack Sennett comedy, “Gallop- well cast as Henry Potter,|ing Bungalows;” a new issue of the lute son of the millionaire | Screen Almanac, a news reel and His work is highly dramatic. Dor- excellent muslc by the orches- othy Mackaill does a little ton much | tra, complete the program. “mug ]ng.' as the screen folk desig- —_ nate close-up pos but is effective . e . in the scenes demanding action. The Tivoli—"The Cxty That 'r;‘:x‘rfm” of thede two principals is Never Sleeps. Will Rogers, in a comedy reel, dis- i presents as its feature closes what may Appen when prac this w the film story, “The C i ly every one has an automobile.|That Never Slee featuring Louise He travels all about the country wesi | Dresser, athlyn Williams and Vir- of the Mississippi looking for a place | ginia Lee Corbin. to park his car. There is nothing very new or very plausible about the plot. It is an- er blow at the world modern uth. To bring out the climax, the »ry deals with the widow of a sa- |1oonkeeper, who, upon her husband's death, finds herself left with a 2-year- old daughter and a profitable saloon. Although unwilling to bring up her P daughter in the atmosphere of a bar- room, the mother is reluctantto part with her means of income, and selects the alternative of paying a broken- down society woman to rear her child in the more rarified atmosphere of Fifth avenue, The daughier grows to young wom- anhood under the care of her “aunt,” and then prohibition comes, with its drawing room orgies, promiscuous im- bibing among the younger s general disregard of the law. girl discovers her origin when her mother’s saloon, now grown into a flashy cabaret, is raided. Larry Semon appears in an excel- lent comedy and the Tivoli Wander- ings are attractive, as usual, dealing this week with Detroit, the city of automobiles. Mme. Chantal furnishes her husband to vari- | ctor of | Rosa- | 1und, who is sold inte captivity by a plano selection that is quite merita- ble, and the news flim cémpletes the bill. The symphony orchestra, for which so much was hoped and sented such promising musi Tivo past final preceding the regular program, under | the direction of Daniel Breeskin. Massenet's opened the recital in a br! ner. dreamy horn given quisite Night' This ented James GTON, D. €., MO DAY, OCTOBER 27, 1924. ch pre-|ing attraction at at the|Theater the first in_the early afternoons the ae two Sundays, gave its third and |* recital yesterday at 2 o'glock | ire {liam Fairbanks Wilfred Lucas, R | dia Knott ana Fr mood, with he comedy pe solo by Armand 3 | furnished by Hal excellent e 3 v Haw,' Midsumme isoner also Mendelssoh tter work, in elfin mood, wa with delightful flute’ solo Arcaro. 2s popular “Hungarian Rhapsodie, was a Atting finale “Phedre” overture liant man- Mendelssohn's Zebr Dre The women of the world Ambassador—"The Price “The Price timeworn theme of the variety— The of youth prov allo under su Alma idential di She Paid.” She Pa which opened | day e B t Crandall's | afternoon is r lampoon or a rather melodramatic | is just a picture. centers about the union old age—a young gi sactifice that ve in comfor A ter at sea, however happy ending customary ch conditions. Rubens s the or plot and s the girl, ¥ Mayo, the man of her choice that alive by A bod ninute 1o new round out profes William Welsh; is the on, who deplo; ministrations wealthy hushand the fact | keeping | portrayed | his the mothe: comed ST for on its weekl Pathe hedule, review and travelogue by the prog: Central—"Racing for Life. “Racing for Life, automobile racing played by comedy reputation of being the o drama of the tracks, is the lead- o I's Central | t of th s turns to United States. NEW YORK, tlock, former United § October the leading i a Naovak, Wil- Philo MeCuliough, Iph De Palma, Ly- nkie Darrow tion of the Roach's is of s months with his returned yvesterday slendam from upert of | Also on the Volendam sequel to the | Pabst, Ambassador from the 1" lands to | fow d post, enos Afres have the New Orl best dressed in | Catholic | Rome eral mother, bill s | liner were re w. ans dioces Chureh, who B t tastcs mighty good along about four o’cleck. proceeding B. 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