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Show tr sense the real liisness of it. J. Wiirren Kerrigan returns to the j si-iveii to play Hiiinerrez. the bandit, 1 and j;ives good reason fnr his jireat I popularity, while Sylvia Kreamer i has hern east (if "the jrirl" and de- J ilvers n reinarkal'le crfnrn)Mme. I Hussell Simpson, the sheriff, is re- i cieaiinir he imli he inane famous on ; lie siau'e admiralily and Wilfred-Li Wilfred-Li leas as Aslihy. li.iseniary Thehy j as Nina, and the various support- . inir eliaraeiers are well played. The (;irl i the Cnhirn West" is a ixn niblinir story w ith the ininiui: diiims and miners of the M!t yold rush as a background. It's all i lea ii, lively, si irrinjx drama. It travels fast and leaves one thoroughly thor-oughly entertained and satisfied. Indeed, a western play that may rank with the best epies of the screen. j "THE GIKL OF THE I I GOLDEN WEST." Motion picture fans who have been clamoring for real entertainment entertain-ment will do well to attend the showings of Edwin Carewe's pictur-izatiou pictur-izatiou of "The Girl of the Golden West," a First National production showing at the Star theater Wednesday Wednes-day and Thursday. In reality the original Western drama of the stage, "The Girl of the Golden West" has many interesting episodes all other western dramas have lacked and fortunately lacks the many uninteresting melodrama-lie melodrama-lie sequences used as padding for inferior stories. Prior to its adaptation adapta-tion to the screen, "The Girl of the Golden: West" was David Belisco's most successful stage, play, a best seller among novels and the first American grand opera aria. Now, on the screen with a superb cast and splendid direction, it seems even more fascinating because the scenery scen-ery is real and one has opportunity |