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Show TRSlFwOVO HERALD WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 10,; 1921. SHE EXXXZXXJEXXXZXI II - ITS- liniia - . ' INSIDE . 111(1 - TONIGHT BUCK JONES Some Good Ones ftt KOTED MOVIE &TAR TALKS STRAIGHT FROM THE SHOULDER" OF THURSDAY AND FRIDAY lATESLflfiTlRE vtf t PLAYS Tbe-ol- d bain41ghtningectlon istnfl of the pioneer period of motion pic tures Is now entirely out of date, ac cording to Constance Talmadge, whose latest - Associated First National least, Lessons in Love." will be the piece de resMance at the Columbia theater Thursday and Friday? In th early days of motion- - pic tures the best comedies were built around the device of m chase -- with situation after situation of fast action, and the greatest actors were those who could run, ride, climb and are Jump thr beet But nowadays-we- . approaching a stage where comedies are "founded on a character or an idea. V1M - SWT I W i VI G? m-- . -- world's, prettiest housemaid. And he was a fast icirner. But when Friend Cupid swung the lasso at last well you ought to see what was dragged in. I.iatinecs Moil, ThursL, 4 P. M.; Holidays and Sat 2:30 r-- the ROSCOE FATTY AROUCKLE - in "THE ROUND UP" . ' ( riences doesn't belong to the intimate take the audi once into my confidence ana tell them a story. I don't aim to dazzle or be wilder them. That belongs to the big :.. spectacle. ''I don't like to play an African i a tene ment .house slavey in the next. If can lust make the people in the audi' ence think of their sisters, or the girl next door, or someone they noticed in the subway yesterday,: I'll be satis fled that I'm making my characters seem real.;.-- : 7 . FRIDAY AND SATURDAY James Oliver Curwood Story "NOMADS OF THE NORTH" , vis nd B W - X Read and Use Herald Want-Ad- s LdDllMUMgl Theatre Monday, August 15th PRICES 50c 73c, $1.00 Plus Tax RUSCO AND HOCKWALD'S .... y 4., I . maious SCEDBCIA r I I "r7' . s rTTA .v. FRIDAY AND SATURDAY 5- - 4 -J "RICH GIRLrPOOR GiRLw ..v sk Sg Jin raill.3i tsm llli' ii m V y and L'JTi: r I l-- s . - to-fin- A :" ,. - I -- -- .- j !.'' J : 1 I"'".'! fvA (a) ! - ti - CONSULT DR.PETERSON, OPTOMETRIST m JJeckstead's JewelryJore - - , ' wA ; SB MRS. WW. pc BCUXXnZKKEZIIIIZSKXCSSISSSZZSZXZZHHXa Srrapped to the - Ankle! : . which will be seen Jn ber support-a- t ,'the Strand theater on Friday and Saturday, Scene from EUGENE COLORED WALTER'S "FINE FEATHERS." At the Strand tonight and Friday -- ; MINSTRELS ARE BEST NE J LEATHERS",, The modern minstrelsy envolved from the colored race. The negro if he can be restrained from becoming self conscious makes the best minstrel man. Any person is sure" of a good laugh if they can but be around a groupi of negroes thirty minutes without the latter knowing they are near becau se then lhjecoiored manJf perfectly natural. There have been many colored min trel ahowa which were unsatisfactory in their entertainment because tbe colored performers were self conscious and did not act natural. The Famous Georgia Minstrels have always been fortunate in having as a manager one who waa familiar .with the peculiarities of the negro and knew iiiet how to get the performer to exhibit that peculiar numor so well known among the southern darkies. Mr. Arthur Hockwald, the nresenf comoanv manager, tea na and-h- aa assembled. tive brthr-BOUtt- f a company of performer that are flot posers, but real entertainers; Tbey wiu be at tne voiumoia meater Monday, August lo. hnsbBjidJoniu'honeymocsW. were both taken In to see the little asked If be boy to bt crtb. T rte remembered me. Be looked up shyly and sr.ld: 1 reraemher Rla, but I don't know the man of her,"Chlcago " Tribune. tai v - - f- -. HE j'---I- niy :t Ads . .: - - , its climax story-t- o Harry Harris, the director, packs" the concluding scenes with furiously fast action, and shows, flash by flash, one of the most terrific gang fights, ever ' " staged. The story of "RicTi Girl," Poor Girl" was written for Mary Pickford by J. G. Hawks and was purchased by Vnl versal when Miss Pickford when to Europe, altering her production sched ule. Gladys Walton's artistry is Strange Second Party. V - thatJieJlsfiiorejvaluable to , SMC the. world about him and to himself if he but try to do Satis one tmncrand do u well.1 If an optometrest is to be thoroughly competent, his study and work must be centered, on the care of thej ; ..." human eye only. A bricklayer is npt likely to be a good carpenter, too; H he may be handy at either, but he must pick out just one Job and keep at it to become a successful, specialist. Hoars. 1 Specialists accomplish the big things in this world-staki- ng S Hi Ar the law pf averages as a basis to calculate from. Anybody would not sro to a druo: store for mftdwine- - ' --fffkfitj 1 ', for hunian 'ailment without first consulting a doctor." . - . JNhy take, chances with your eyes or with "the eyes" S SHOP S of your children without consulting a specialist. I otEiclusi' About 60 per cent of the school children I impor " have defective eyes! - School, will soon be open! Must S I s: your boys and girls suffer a disadvantage in mental J lasting eriea. efficiency and good .health when Provo-- has an EYE winter 1 8 CDfPTATTOT wiiu can jfive mem expert, auenuon ana iuviAuWi ...U oa these JJ proper corrections t ionw; yoi nlnety-thrlll-pow- I visited an aunt, who had small boy. and a year later west there with W - 1Man1lias-eo- me snTJt - ' i .i j .a. ::. v: k oa. ..v v.v jt v "fr firm. il "Rich Oirl, Toor Girl," 'in which Gladys Walton will hold the screen theater on Friday and at JUier Sttand Saturday ' is a ibetween drama of nnending-Btragg- le riches and poverty. The ataf nlaya a dual role in which she characterizes a. child of tbe slums and aa "heiress to millions. In the story the" two girls, who look exactly alike, change Identities, The. ric girl goesohe-alumiMHid-the-plittle waif of the gutter arrays herself the palace. in fiheaolhes and goet-tAccording to aa agreement oeiween the girls the deception is to last for an hour but a strange fate overtakes tS? licti girl lnjthe "sordid poverty belt of the great" city in which "they - alters- 'irs-a- nd the - course- - of two 4 lives. In bringing the 'j. i t7tttg . i,i7rr . Kaon niiirkmr "rtrr rpetna mc mcn-- PDnnimTinM G RQ.UU Js PARaAMQVKE ElCT.U.rl At the Princess Tonight and Thursday. erAe,MT jl.jjl-atx- .r.... ft nMBMSHIkMM. jsHsh. m. o : . THE HIGH SIGN" :vr Constance raJmade uii And BUSTER KEATON in r - oor - Mrvrinkw9f I -- At the Columbia Thursday and Friday Riches and Poverty in Thrill Drama TONlGnt AND THURSDAY , . ii In stories that are like "their own lives, or at least what they Uvould like their lives to be, Actios that is remote from their own expe He needed those Lessons in Love, did the simple cowboy, who found he had to marryJaJreak orbecut off w ith the usual dime. Butjwe'U say he had a good tutor ' v I . today - vi J) Eugene Walter's Greatest Sucress K points to stories where the action grows naturally" out of the thoughts flObemain characters as in any literature. We .are working graduailyf rem - theel4fwm broad, sweeping and rattier; meaning less movement to an intimate type of play where the story is developed eimply and naturally by nve or s actors. You see, we used to have in almost every picture a mishap or dis aster, thing that really happen few per sonsLlJv only-- -Lililak people are more interested L- - TONIGHT AND: THURSDAY tf' jJliL - & a lf'"17i and-emotl- ona , v - ",.stv trrThe-bangiBgendiceB- f A JX"' S?f f ' ' : RUUp" -- hy so many married people are Roscoe Arbuckle, long a favorite in unhappy, is jpne of the Sphinx-lik- e short comedies, makes b.is bow as ihe questions that never will be answered star' in feature pictures as "'Slim to the complete satisfaction of every Hoover," the fat sheriff, in That many are Melford'B production of "The George body - concerned. Round straining and fretting under the more Up" for Paramount, which will be or less blissful yoke, cannot be shown at the Princess theater doubted. tonight In it he has a role erslhlm every op- and Thursday. Fine Feathers," the Metro produc which ff tion of the successful stage play by portunity for Jhe expression of his inEugene Walter, which will be shown dividual type of humor, but presents at the Strand theater tonight and him as aa actor of varied talents not-only-o- Thursday, does not attempt to solve the question, but it hses the fact as a foundation for aa fascinating a picture as has ever been seen here. . . The plot" revolves mainly around Bob Reynolds, a young construction engineer who is living with hia wife. Bob real bungalow. Jane, In ises that he must struggle hard to succeed, but the sight of his pretty, uncomplaining- wife, whom he feels he should be providing with finery makes hte0BeasyTv Mfl30Uchsj20ra that gives him wealth. Ml-'-"- m i i - -- k VJ --3J f-- x : " - f- f - 'A I, . hitherto unsuspected by his admirers. "The Round Up, written iby Edmund Day, was produced in - New York to August, 1907. A highly Indians and rough and ready plainsmen, the big scene of tbe stage play was a battle In a narrow Arizona canyon, - in the screen version, this scene, staged in natural surroundinga-wri- th hundreds of Indians, frontiersmen 'and "soldiers, gains tremendously - In ' its melo -- rf Jramatic-appe- low act al. -- -- - , ' National Ceuncll ef Women. NaUooal Council ,ot Womea coaslsta In the United States of thirty-on- e Not lashed: to the mast but.with Oat heels, tan' kid with 3i0(?lf?!j . yon organizations, with approximate- strapped to the ankle. That's the French heels round, toes, . P the tot why she said tfcat "Oh, if ' ly 10,000.000 members. ultimate and inviolable edict in shoe toes take your"cholc ?n Try;,1 yen bad , a man to loo anerr jvm straps-- . se oom fashions. ; Yott .may; .wear evening except you must wear acti wouldn't, kave taif the shorter, show smart shoea Named MMMntalnB "to Indian for ya'' aEe." Tribe. W good T"7 shoesjwlthhigh French heels, patent even though they do not aU 8 to . The : Appalachian mountain system leather; with Cubanheels,buckskin Frenchjy; received Its namr from the Appalachee : . Unsatlaftad. .. or Apalachi Indians. IU highest point Man Is made of dust and Is generally Is Mount Mitchell, in North Carolina, out for more. Boston Transcript. which is 6.711 feet high. fnm a Selfish Vtewpeint. . said MarJorU, Tm glad never mamea." ansae asset Auntie," Thk- - ratreme--of-ahj5Lroun- d Read and Use Herald Want Ads GSf 1 |