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-THE EVENING STAR. - WASHINGTONXN. 'OVEMBER 21, 'Photo_plays at Washington "I,‘heaters Next Week Apollo Ave. Grand Cameo Mt Rainier. M Central Chevy Cha. Circle Colony Dumbarton Elite Empire Hip’odrome Home Tuesday Billie Dove in “The Night Wa Madge B. John Barrymore ) in Paihe News. Myrna Loy 2 d Rollins in Circus.” Camen comads. “Ei Subsidiary reel 1 “The Night Walch.” ___Comedy Daugh __ Comedy. Hods Wednesday Thursday Saturday avles Rogers in Busier Keaton in Red Lips.” “Steamboat . Bill, Jr.” Paramew Para it odtty C g2 Billie Doy News. medy Bebe Daalels in Take Me Home. Paramomit N Serial ohn Barrymore David_Rolll i u e Tempest.” Cartaon fariorie Beebe in “The Paiie Pofre.____ Snectal reel Behe Daniels n Georee Sidney “Hoi News.” “Flying Romeos ~ Jurie Marlow in “Grip of the Yukon med:. e Podge. r Keaton in “The Cameraman.” _Tusedo_com ___Techatcolar el Tich von Stroheim's Brich von Stroheim's “The Wedding “The Wedding March.” Marc Rod La Rocaue Conrad Nagel and in Myrna Loy _in te Street Sadie.” ed. "~ Duncan_Sisters n “Topsy and Eva." Comedy. Richard Dix in “Warming Up.” Paramount News. “The Model From Montmartre " “Charies Rogers and Marion Nixon in News. Comedy. Clive Brooke in “Forgotten Faces.” adity . Eadt iy Comedy. ch in Trene Ri “Women They Talk Myrna L » News, Dalares Costel “Oid San F Abon “State Street Comed " Richard Dix M in Comedy “Warming Up." Jomedies. Emil Jannings Shrhe Patriot.” artoon. David Roilins iy e erfr Comedy Ken News May MeAvov in Jack Holt in Slightly Used.” Water Hole." Pauline Garon in “Reilly of the Rain- om Tyler n error Mountain.” Comedy. Serial ~"John Gilbert Conrad Nagel and | Loy _in Comedv. ¢ Dressler in “Til- Wil Rogers red in “The Wa _Serl News. _Cartoon clle Bennelt and clor McLagien Mother Machree. silver Seco sSprine. s Takoma Tivoli York Tene Rich They Talk About” Comeds Cameo comeay. " Francis X. Bushman “Say It With Sables.” 5 Comedy. Jack Mulha “The Poor Nu Ne Gang comedy. Comedy. Golor_classic Bryant Washbu! Marion Nixon in “Silks and Saddles.” Fox News. Mermaid c: Lon Chuney in “While the City ookums comedy. Sleeps.” Comedy. William Hatnes i “The Wright Idea ‘omedy. The Chorvs Kid.” Serial. News. e Cir News. _Sportlight. ‘0ddity. in “Women John Barrymore in “The Tempest" ynchronized Comed: synchronized) Phyllis Haver and Joseph Schildkraut in “Tenth Avenue.” hristie comedy. [ NATIONAL—"Whoopee.” evening, Florer Whoopee” will play a we ent at ihe Nationsl Theaier. o | by those interested in before it reaches New York. “Whoopee.” rring Eddie Cantor, has been musicalized from Owen Dav! farce, “The Nervous Wreck.” by Wil- liam Antheny MacGuire. who did th same work for Mr. 2 1d in his pro- ductions of Edna Ferber's “Show Beat” d 5" “The Three Muskeleers.” follows hington engagemen: itisburgh the premier performance in s engagement in Cleveland. | goes from here directly to in New Manager Cochran announces tha | his theater is starting something new tomorrow morning, when the seats for the Eddie Cantor show. “Whoopee,” go | This innovation is | on sale at 6 am. expected to prove especially acceptable 10 office workers. the “Bow- . featuring Semon. comedian of sur or and Marty Sem S are unfailingly effective. The supporting cast includes Evelyn Ramsey, he soubretie; Violet Hilson, ingenue; Hilson, prima donna; Tom Mo Kenna. Irish tenor and leading man, and Tim Benson, Italian character co- median Special scenery. attraciive lighting ef- ery Burl Billy Foster fects and a melange of color and style | in costuming will_be lights in the comedy situation will be a subw. cene of 1Bughable entangle- ments and a fishing expedition that makes the ocean disgorge entrancing mermaids. All is burlesque, good fu fast and furious. tured. High BURTON HOLMES—Tomorrow. A revealing story of a 4.000-mile motor tour from Gibraltar to the Pyrenees, in which many out-of-the-way places in Spain will receive their first unfolding on an American screen. is 1o be the topic of Burton Holmes' at the National Theater tomorrow aft- ernoon at 4:30. A striking feature of this revue will be the traveler's vivid pictures of a most amazing _five-day fiesta, took place at Pamplona, in the Prov- ince of Navarre, last Summer. Whole populations will be seen dancing the nalive fa his and nighily fireworks filmed, and in one spectacular epi- sode over 400 amateur bullfighters are to , be seen racing through the barricaded s cd by a great herd of in- subject will be iang,” Thursday Holmes’ next “Siam, the Land of afternoon, December 6. JOHN CHARL old M. Dudley at Mr. who has jusi been re- ceived with tremendous enthusiasm at his opening American coneert. in baritone alwa; demand a but als Garden inglon and ba j directed the production N ar group of ceticut ave iewsstand and the DRAMA GUILD nee of John Ma r of the Th ley | * - | il e of th ers travel revue { which | ngo, fantastic processions, | THOMAS — Tomor- ' "Lon Chaney in Sleeps. Paramount’ News. David Rollins in “The Air Cireus™ (synchronized). Cartoon._Variety reel. Buster, Keaton in John Barrymore in “The Tempest” (synchronized) While the Cliy 2 ““Che Cameraman.” ‘Technicolor reel. - Tom ““Terror Mountaio Cameo comedy. Gauchos Serial. Cartoon. Serial. _ d La Rocaue in pt. Swagger.’” News. m MeCoy Circus. Sportiight. Oddity. s of the Dark.’ David Roilins “The Air Girc (synchronized Cartoon. Variets reel Belle Benneit and ctor M |3nlv emphasizes the hilarity of the story, \’ in a bottle while ington, direcled by Caroline McKinley, | | wou will give a program of dramatic | dances, and by the McKinley High Or- | chestra, directed by Dore Walton. Adinission to this initial program is| by invitation, which may be obtained | ihe amateur | drama in the city on application in writ- {ing at the present offices of the drama | guild, in Franklin Administration Build- | ing, Thirteenth and K streets. ROLAND HAY ‘Tuesday. ! The artists’ course of afternoon con- | certs presented by Mrs. Wilson-Greene | at Poli’'s Theater will be opened next | Tuesday afternoon at 4:30 o'clock, | when Roland Hayes, celebrated colored | tenor, will b heard in a program that | ranges from the negro spirituals of his native Georgia to the classicisms of Scarlatli, Franz Schubert and Rach- | maninaof. . | 1t will be recalled that Roland Hayes made his Washington debut two seasons ago and his reappearance in the Capital | is a direct result of the enthusiasm | | engendered at that time. During the | | past year Hayes has made his first con- | cerl appearances in Holland, Italy and Russia, where he repeated the triumphs he had previously scored in England, France, Germany and Ausria. | Hayes is now on his fifth concert four | | of the United States and it s said that | never before has his singing approached | the power and beauty it Teveals at pres- | ent. He will be accompanied at the | piano by Percival Parham. Single seals for the Roland Hayes | concert as well as season tickets for | the artisis’ course. which includes con- | certs by Kreisler, Onegin, Rachmaninoft | | and the Boston Symphony Orchestra, are obtainable at the concert bureau in | Droup’s, 1300 G street northwest, i | | RRENT | Miss Clara W, McQuown at her reg- ular weekly talk .on “National and In- | ternational Affairs” will speak of the | | growing power of the Green Interna- | tionale, and will give a brief survey of | matters of ouistanding importance in | various European _countries—especially | Rumania, Jugoslivia and Hungary. Matters of the moment in home af- fairs will also be discussed. ‘These talks are open to the public. “They are given every Friday morning at 11 o'clock in the ballroom of the Washington Club, 1010 Seventeenth | street. j HISTORY—Friday. | COLUMBIA—“The Woman Disputed.” Norma Talmadge opens at Loew's | Columbia in her latesi, sound picture for United Arlists, “The Woman Disputed.” | | Saturday. The supporting cast inciudes Gilbert Roll Michael_ Vavitch, Gustav Von Seyffertits and Gladys Brockwell. he story opens in a gay Austrian | town before the war. ‘Two young offi- cers in the Ausirian and Russian armi form an aitachment for a girl whos | ltfe up unitl the time she meets them | | has been a sordid one. She ha: been treets, but under her ation there burns a light of reformation. : “The trio is happy until both men realize they love the girl, then w L of the war comes se ance of one of th - shaltering of friendships. hatreds d the defcated lover's opportunily for | cevenge. Added attractions will include Metro- | Movietone acts, the M.-G.-M. News, the | Fox Movietone News, sel short sub- | jects and the Columbia Orchestra, under | Claude Burrows. 1| FOX—“4 Ron week are Mary A ad Robert k ‘The story is that of & speakeasy host- who breaks awayv from her did and through courage and fs as a wife and mother. Th: on is said to follow the oris; aithtully. Irving Cumming The principal * players Ben Bard, John Boles | The stage crtainment program a new array of stars and also ture Mary Read’s 16 Fox Til- , lerciles in new routines of precis dances. e orchestra, under Teon Brus offcr a selected overture, while ti vs will round out (h Kay.” Colleen Moore's new farce y. will be seen on the Earle screen r | beginning with the Friday midnight | | pre | Colleen apepars in the title role ” an independent young E: and others in the cast are Al %ale ps the detective; Lawrence ) who p! opposite the star, a alth: Ford Sterling, wk ent @s an inebriated gen- a rum-runner, is> as a butler: Claude Gil- whose dignified appearance {long chium. How his meddle: | the screen and Vitaphone purposes by | . i the secret |and Julanne Johnston, who appears as 1 her a snobbish society girl. | “Oh Kay!” was adapted from the pop- | ular musical comedy. ! Vitaphone short attractions will in- | ciude Jack North in “The Ban-Jokestes” | and Harry Defl, Broadway comedian, in | “Giving In.” PALACE—“The Masks of the Dev John Gilbert comes 1o Loew’s Palace Saturday in his latest Metro-Goldwyn- | Mayer sound production, “The Masks of | the Devil.” He is supported by a strong | cast, which fucludes Alna Rubens, | Theodore Roberts, Eva Von Berne and | Raiph Forbe: { The picture shows Gilbert as a young aristocrat _irresistible to women. He sis aside a lovely countess to gain | the love of his best friend's sweetheart. | He finances an expedition to take his | friend away from his sweethearj. The | countess spurned by Gilbert comumits suicide, and in & fight with her hus- band Gilbert kills him. From this point on Gilbert siruggles with his better and evil nature, and the outcome form: an_unexpected climax. | On the stage there will be the premier | presentation of Boris Petroff’s produc- tion, “Crinoline vs. Jazz.” Wesley Eddy and the Palace Syncopators will be fea- t tured as well as Bayes and Speck, John Quinlan, Champan and Snyder, Carl | Dobbs & Co., Nell Jewell and the Felicia | Sorel Gitls. | Added atiractions will include the | M.-G.-M. News, the Fox Movietone News, short subjects, sound novelti and the Palace Orchestra, under Harry Borjes. | METROPOLITAN—-"The Home Towners. | Warner Bros. all-tal version of | George M. Cohaw’s play. “The Home | Towners,” will be the atiraction for the | second week at Crandall’s Metropolitan. | The story deals with a small-town citi- zen who comes to New York to act as best man at_the wedding of his life- me di position and narrow-minded ideas ups: the lives of a whole circle of people | creates the development of a plot which brings with it many amusing situations. The cast is headed by the stage star, | Richard Bennett, who makes his first appearance in a talking picture in_this | production. Opposite him is seen Doris | Kenyon, and others include Robert Mc- Wade, who played the interfering home towner in the original stage version: Gladys Brockwell, Robert Edeson, Vera Lewis, John Miljan, Stanley Taylor and Pafricia Caron. “The Home ‘Towners” was adapted to | | Murray Roth and Addison Burkhart, and was directed by Bryan Foy. LITTLE THEATER—“At the Edge of the World.” At the Little Theater, beginning next Sunday, the Motion Picture Guild will present “At the Edge of the World,” a new U. F. A. production and, it is de- clared, an entirely new type of screen. . ‘The story concerns what, it is claimed, will be a typical young couple several centuries from now, and their yomance when thrown together by the fortunes of war. Brigitle Helm, last seen here as the heroine of “Metropolis,” ilar role dn the current picture, appear- ing_a vhose lover deserts her | when “accused of being a spy by rvice of her counliry. Rady, who playcd the title role in “The ‘Trial of Donaid Westhof,” appears op- posite Miss Helm, artd other players are Albert Steinrueck, Vietor Janson and Caumiilla Vcw Holly. “At Lhe Edge of ithe World” was di- recied, by Karl Grune, who made “Jealousy” and “Two Brothers,” and is | sald to be one of the most novel and { interesting films yet imported from the U. F. A. Studios. It will be accom- i panied by a program of unusual short - reel subjects, Killed Over Last Drink. \ PHOENIX, Ariz., November 21 (#) ! An Indian and a white man fought to | the death over the last drink of liquor $3.50 Philadelphia $3.25 Chester | $3.00 Wilmington AND RETURN i | re— | | Next Sunday, Nov. 2§ ] Lv. Wadl 7:35 AM. ||| Ar.Philadelphia . . 10:47 A.M. ‘ RETURNING L. Philadelphia . . Lv. Chester . . . TEOPM. Lv. Wilmington . . &10PM. (Standard Time) Same Day Consait Ticket Agents 7:30 P.M. and | it w d the Indian, admitled the killing to police. He said he killed F. M. Martine, the white man, with & rock after a quarrel over the | liquor. terday. Martine’s body was found y - . Nearly 40,000 in Northern-Ireland are out _of work._ Stubborn Cough Quickly Ended by Famous Recipe Here is the famous old recipe which millions of housewives Lave found to be the most depend- able means of breaking up a stub- || born, lingering cough. It takes but || 8 moment to prepare and costs little, but it give those dreaded “fly From any druggist, ounces of Pinex, pour if in t bottle and fill the botile with plain gran- ulated sugar syrup or strained honey. Thus you make a full pint of hetter remedy than you could buy ready-made for three times the cost. It never spoils and tastes so good that even children like it. Not only does this simple mixture soothe and heal the lamed throat membranes with surprising ease, but also it is absorbed into the blood, and acts directly upon the bronchial tubes, thus aiding the whole system in throwing off the cough. It loosens the germ-laden phlegm and eases chest soreness i 2 way that is really astonishin Pinex is a highly concentrated compound of genuine N i containing the ac sote, in a refined, more helpful in cases of distre sing hs, ehest cold, and troubles, Do not accept a substitute, for Pinex. 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Buying this huge quan- tity, we obtained them at a great- Iy lowered price, and we are, in this extraordinary selling, passing every bit of the discount on to you. ‘We consider this one of the greatest sellings in the history of our store, a real achievement in value-giving. Custom—Made—All—Hair Filled Every one is carefully webbed; the filling is all-curled hair. The chairs have feather spring seats and backs; the ottoman’s feathet spring tops. Tailored first in mus- lin, then covered with “Milan” Velvet in a variety of beautiful de- signs and colors. The picture at the top shows the chair facing front; the next picture shows a side view; the next another side view and the ottoman. None of these pic- tures do justice to these beau- tiful chairs. No picture or words can express the comfort they give. Only inspection— seeing them—sitting in them— examining them, will reveal what extraordinary values they are. Sizth Floor