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Show THE PROVO HERALD WEDNESDAY, APRIL 5, 1822. Screen ( WW THE HERALD'S THEATRICAL PAGE By LUE F. VERNON Who The Only Properly Venti-late- d Theater in Provo. LAST TIME TONIGHT 8:15 "Playi tht at thf Plcturtt PrlnceM. I first saw her dancing In a dirty little cafe in the heart of Barbary Coast. A little roKe I called ber, to myself, as I watched her skipping and prancing on the apology for a stage Fairbanks in "the three musketeers" 1 WET TONIGHT AND THURSDAY NORMA TALMADGE ' IF " " ,. , iliiillllli In "POPPY" From the Play by Ben Teal and John P. Ritter. Based on the novel by Cynthia Stockley. Directed by Edward Jose. erected at the end of the stuffy rorii, full of the odor of stale tobacco and lit with many flaring lights. An audacious pink gown she wore, with frilly skirts like a froth of rose petals, displaying a generous THE CAST view of plump stockinged legs. She Poppy Destln.. Norma Tatmadge had a quaintly, pretty face, pearl Sir Evelyn Carson whlti beneath the heavy mask of , .,, .. powdr, out of which peered elfishly Eugene O'Brien two darkened eyes and smiled Luce Ablnger... Frederick Perry roguishly two geranium lips. Tawdry Dr. Bramhan:....Jack Meredith she wa maybe, but pretty Indeed, too Mrs. Capron.... Dorothy Rogers a veritable rose. When she had finished her dance Sophie Cornell... Edna Whistler and came cantering carelessly down Mrs. Kennedy.... Marie Haines the room, chance willed she should next to the table sit down at choose to mine. I saw her painted lips pout LARRY SEMON in and she shrugged her plump shoulders "THE BELLHOP" contemptuously. Our eyes met, we both smiled and she chatted to me with an amazing frankness. We be-- , FRIDAY AND I liked to watch j came good friends. SATURDAY wooaen ner arm auoui me piauurm I like an animated rose leaf. Often wondered what would become of her. ' I left San Francisco and forgot all about her. On my return, I found that she no longer danced in the cafe. He shrug I asked the fat proprietor. ged his shoulders. She had gone RfliflnKi'iiiiiitiliHHIHff HHilu yes. They an go sooner or later. Not very long afterward I saw ner driving an automobile in Golden Gate park. I saw her twice again after that once at the opera, when she passed me on the stairs, laughing' shrilly, with diamonds around her: thro't and agai.. three years later. I visited the morgue and in one of .... .t.W -- V1 il. mi long hair covering ber, ber bands' folded demurely, her pale lips curved. as though amused, I recognized my! little rose. d Douglas She Collects Daggers 9wsm A ROSE" TODAY AND THURSDAY William Christy Cabanne's j winners of the WEST" No. 9 THURSDAY Matinee 4 P. M. Regular Prices i j SHIRLEY MASON i I turn & CUUJUl than 1tirrtnA-7 , "JACKIE" Mayhew Robincon ; -- 1 Y. I 1 urcnest a li 7 If ' f ELIZABETH 'i NORTH AT THE STRAND. Three hundred daggers, swords and knives have been collected by Eliza beth North, who is appearing In the cast of "At the Stage Door." Miss North was born In Old Mexico and It may have been the revolution ary trend, or mat country wnicn started eer on the collection path of daggers. To date she baa three hundred of the most vicious weapons possible in her apartment in New York City. 'My hobby eeems very queer to a lot of 'people," smiles Elizabeth, "but daggers have always been fascinating to me. However, I expect to collect old ukuleles in the near future." "AT. THE STAGE BOOR And MONTE BANKS In "SQUIRREL FOOD I Latest music I "Z. I DORIS KEANE Gdwwd.Sfieldorts FRIDAY AND SATURDAY TO COLUMBIA S. B. ROBINSON "The return of the real story of love to the screen," is the way in Teacher of Cornet s everywhere which have unanimously been describing Doris Keane's wonderful success in E. P. MAYHEW "Romance," the United Artists Corporation's production which was written especially for Miss Keane by Ed 1 ward Sheldon. of Cello and Teacher It is said to be full of poetic imagination and charming sentiment, while Saxaphone. the love romance of the prima donna and the clergyman Is as novel and Telephones 619-- J, 444. unusual as its very mention suggests. Miss Keane as the sparkling Grand Opera star, Mme. Cavalllni, is credited with an absolutely new success, one that puts her in the front rank of screen artists and which has won for her the enviable reputation of STAR IN "JACKIE" being the greatest emotional actress on the cten, as well as on the stage. It is pleasure to know that this As a child, Shirley Mason, star in really beautiful story with its fascin "Jackie," a William Fox photoplay ating actress, is to be the leading at which oDens at the Princess theater traction at the Columbia theater next Friday and Saturday, was attracted by the folk dances performed Thursday. by some French schoolmates, and she, a talented dancer aireaoy, quicsiy mastered them. Some three years POPPY AT PRINCESS later ,after her screen career had al ready begun, there came an oppor A picture that is acclaimed as one tunity to study Russian folk dances of the finest things ever done by the Both because of her love of dancing, popular Norma Talmadge will be pre- and the knowledge that almost any sented at the Princess theater to- accomulishment may come to be of night and Thursday when tho Selz-nic- advantage in pictures, she grasped it. revival of "Poppy" opens tor a and learned the Russian dances.- two-darun. While boasting Norma Talmadge for its star, "Poppy" in reality has in stellar its cast two THE WISE KID oelebrites. the smiling and debonair noue than other Eugene O'Brien being the leading man playing opposite "What a clever motion picture that Miss Talmadge. The efficient man- would make" was the gist of many ner in which these two artists work letters the Metropolitan magazine retogether on the screen has earned ceived after the publication of "The of being the Wise Kid," a William Slavens Mc them the reputation silent drama's - greatest "team" of Nutt story originally called "Kind players. Iu this production they are Deed." Many writers expressed the said to do some of their most bril opinion that Gladys Walton, flapper liant work. impersonator par excellence, was the one who could make the role of Bessie Cooper lovable on the screen And that Is just what happened, and "The Wise Kid" appears as a comedy drama at the Strand theater next Fri day and Saturday, with Miss Walton starring. picture-reviewer- xs is 'Whatsa mafter.are uou in a transom? Paris beat us to it Not only has the famous hansom cab been motorized, but the French did it w.th our own "Henry." This motor hansom cab recently made its appearance on the streets of Paris, and immedi-Jatel- y came into popular favor. 6ee,ifgloomwas adisease.ijou'd bean epidemic!' cl m hi -- A, ITS' Man-size- BROUGHT FRffiAY AND SATURDAY , Regular Prices fights, action that thrills you and yet doesn't scare you are in Ralph Connor's full GREATE8? LOVE STORV And Now Henry is a Hansom Cab Tunefully Played by Artists r d of "THE SKY PILOT" Note Saturday Matinee Only, Chapter 3 of "BREAKING THROUGH" Wild horses, in bands of 200 or more, may be found In southern Idaho, especially along the Snake river in the more arid and isolated sections. These animals are as wild as deer and have ho owners. It is said they have a habit of enticing domesticated horses from ranches. k EASY FOR CHORUS KEAN& 50 Tottni arlhit f Bangkok, the capital of Siam, con- tains 70.000 houses, a large portion of which float on bamboo rafts as a pre-caution against inundations, which are of frequent occurrence owing to the low .urface of the region. one of St. London's most famous churches in Trafalgar Square, turns its pews into ouches for London's homeless each night. Martin's-in-the-Klelds- At the Columbia, Thursday, with matinee at 4 p. m. i . lbs lbs tathomorru cohradu af a fane do; flapper who knowji LO-- lb 0-- lb at the ,,aA"'"5je Armory. Ruar vant flalf-Sallo I IP-l- b Eft 1 lbs. Ifc-lb- From the Metropolitan Mag. c -- Storu QlCIgdBmrtiemdnwho Wk Slavens MNutt made,''Outside the Law' lb c Eweel Parsr BFresh 'ancj yGreer ma iu Da DANCING 8 Organize in Mozart Hall O'clock Thursday Night, 12-less- j ance With th Best April 6th. course of thorand complete profes- ough sional instruction. Owing to other business for the summer this will be your last chance this season. Twelve lio-holesson- sGentlemen .$4.00 Ladies .$2.00 the ur Ol..J.i. ciuuenis eny of G . . irom previous classes who bring in one new student may enter this class for $1.00. Cant Private Students Peas, Glad; will be booked for this week only Call at Mozart hall for 1 B.GMAHC6- - WITH Last Class of the Season Will Mjil-nig- TWM? v vl GIRLS It's a mighty easy matter for chorus girls to get into the movies. Witness Ports Katon and Lillian "Billie" Dove, "Follies" girls who are playing in" "At the Stage Door," at the Strand. The girls have danced their way through the popular musical comfor the past few edies on Broadw. Miss Dove is playing in years. "Sally" at night and working before the camera in the day. Miss Eaton danced in "The Frolic" and was one of the popular Ziegfcld attractions for several . seasons. In the picture above Charles Craiir, who is the laugh getter in "At the Stage Door," is seen at a fashionable automobile show, with the chorus ir!s. VbV.vwO 0 j Tickets 50c - Ladies Free - further particulars. Tuition Payable at Time of YC booking PROF. F. L. LORRELL Master of Modern Dancing. 33; n |