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Show STAGE - SCREEN AT THE THEATRES and Vilma Hanky in Magic PARAMOUNT Sutmlay, Ronald and Marco's Stage prerianu!' ; Sunday, Monday and Tuesday, Pam-husentations and Ksthei Ralston in Figures Don't Ue. LGY 111 AN Today t:ni Saturday, "The Great Mail Robbery"; Sunday, Monday am! 'luesdny, l aic to Ixve"; Starting Wednesday, Clancy's Rusher Wcdmng." uRl'HKl'M Beginning Sunday, Norma Talmadge in Camille." LYCEUM Saturday, Jack Hoxie in Grinning Guns"; Sunday, Richard Fix in Man 1'oAtr; Monday, Lionel Barrymore in Lucky latdy"; ednerday, iotn Moran and 'iuesday, Norman Kerry in "The Cluw"; Jack Mulhall in God Gnve Me Twenty !eiits"; Thursday, Mary Aator and IJnyd Hughe in Forever After"; Friday, Taman and the Golden Lion. COLONIAL Saturday, The Climbers" and Dead I'Jusy"; Sunday and Monday, Chang" mat Dont Tell Everything;" Tuesday and Wednesday, ihe Letter Way;" Thursday and Friday, The Galloping Gobs. OGDKN Today uno Saturday, Buzz Harton in The Roy Rider"; Sunday and Monday, Ruddy Roosevelt in Ride Em High. IMilTE CITY GARDENS Tuesday, Thursday, Saturday, Dancing to Jack Passe) ' Greater Rand. AMUSEMENTS - Norma Talmadge in Modern Version of Camille Opens at Orpheum Sunday HB DIRECTION L. MARCUS ENTERPRISE NOW SHOWING REGULAR PRICES SAMUEL, COLDWYR Pruamta RONALD COLMAN and VILMA BANKY I Noted Editor Has Paramount Features Praise for Chang Pretty Esther Ralston Jealousy may be a powerful weapbut it's also a dangerous one, Janet Wells finds in her eventful career as a private secretary. Janet is private secretary to Howdy" Jonea in the Paramount picture, Figures Dont Lie," which comes to the Paramount theatre Sunday, and however beautiful she may have been in the mind of R. F. Ziedmun, creator of the original story, the ousting director went him one better when he gave the starring role to Esther Ralston. on As a private secretary Esther Ralston is a riot. She is beautiful and is not dumb. In fuct shes the brains of the organization for which she works. In spite of that brain power, however, she will play with jealousy and in' so doing almost gets hersplf shot. She almost gets drowned when the jealousy game acts as a boomerang and she has her share of suffering from it. An absent minded business man, who has a wife with a long memory and n sharp tongue, a dashing young snles manager, and a stenographer who is more of a vampire than a typist, figure in the incidents that It is not often that metropolitan editors stop to praisu a motion picture. Thnrefore, the following editorial which appeared in The New York World a few days after Merian C. Cooper and Ernest B. Sehoedsncks Paramount production Chang' (which, by tho way, reaches the Colonial theatre Sunday and Monday) had opened, should bo of interest to film fans. To ninny of us the new moving picture Chang will be worth more than a dozen superproductions which cost $1,000,000. For this picture has one quality which most pictures locit, and that is reality. The trouble with the average movie, more than the relatively trivial question of art, is the irritating artificiality that hangs over it: no matter how ingenious the story or how beautiful the photography, an intelligent person finds It hard to believe the events which transpire on the screen. But no such weakness inheres in this picture. You ran no more doubt it than you can doubt your eyes. And this is because those who made it went straight to .nature for their materials. Like the picture 'Grass in which Mr. Merinn C. Cooper also had a hand, it deals with the struggle of primitive people against elemental things. In 'Grass it was the laborious Journey of Asiatic nomads to follow the grass which fed their herds. In 'Chang' it is the dangerous battle of Siamese savages against the jungle. And this jungle, with the keep the private secretary, and incidentally the audience, in a constant state of excitement! Richard Arlcn takes the part of the young sales manager who quite naturally falls in love with the secretary. Ford Sterling in the business man who cant remember whether its Tuesday or Wednesday except for the nnmbcr of strings on his fingr. Norris Hill is the sympathetic friend of Miss Ralston, Blanche Fayson, the business man's jealous wife and Natalie Kingston the beautiful but flighty vampire. BEGINING ORPHEUM SUNDAY The One Big Picture You Have Been Waiting For Her Loves Were the Sensation of Paris. Her Greatest Love Will Thrill the World. MAGIC VC HRNRY KINC production. Mrma TtJmadft td CiUrt Norma Talmadge in the title role of her unique modern version of Camille," the famous romance of Alexandre Dumas the younger, ia the treat in store fur the patrons of the Orpheum theatre, beginning next Sun-dav. The story of the screen Camille," while following closely the theme and spirit uf the classical romance, is visualized in settings of the present duy. The I.ady of the Camellias, most celebrated of all tho Parisian is interpreted by Miss Talmadge as a captivating, brilliantly gowned, bobbed haired demi-niondain- heart-break- er Roland. U,mCamIUa 1 m of the present generation. Desiring to make Camille one of the outstanding triumphs in Normas Etta Lee. Fred dc Gresac wrote the 1927 career, Joseph M. Schenck, who produced the picture for First National adaptation of Camille. leopards, monkeys, constrictors, bears, end a meal eaten on the Man Crazy" tigers and elephants which inhabit it, set at First National studios this could . not be faked. It had to be week, where John Francis Dillon was stalked honestly, patiently, and often directing Dorothy Mackaill, Edythe at great hazard; and the result Is Chapman, Phillips Smalley and othone of the greatest photographic doc- er members of the cast of this picuments that has ever been made. Per- ture, from the Saturday Evening Post haps the greatest thrill of all is story, Clarissa of the Post Road." where a herd of elephants, numbering Around a beautiful banquet table, many score, stampede right into the glittering with expensive silver and cameras eye. What a feeling when costly glassware, the company gaththe field goes dark and those great ered early one day, and at the close of the following day the last of the legs pound right over you." scenes had been taken. TWO-DAUAXQI?I?r During the two days real food and All good things must come to an real soft" drinks were served. The end, even a batinueb. scene at least made it possible to omit Rut it required fully two days to the usual lunch hour at noon. MACK SENNETT COMEDY PARAMOUNT NEWS E release, recruited a notable cast for the modern picturization of the Dumas classic, and assigned Fred.Niblo as director. Gilbert Roland, a young Spanish actor who recently was placed uncontract by the der a long-terSchenck organization, appears as Armand," the impetuous young lover of Camille." Lilyan Tashman and Rose Dione have important roles as Olympe and "Prudence respectively. Portraying the various wealthy and titled admirers of theLady of the Camellias, Harvey Clark is cast as The Baron" and Alec Francis as The Duke." Other supporting players are Helen Jerome Eddy, Albert Conti, Michael Viseroff, Evelyn Selbie and SUNDAY, MONDAY TUESDAY ON THE STAGE n WEST COAST THEATRES, INC. PRESENTS A FANCHON & MARCO K IDEA" MASKS THE SUNKIST BEAUTIES I FANCHON & MARCOS GREATEST SELECTION OF GIRLS EACH ONE A SPECIALTIES PERFORMER. ALBERT MACGILLIVRAY gg CARUSO OF THE AIR" ZII.LA SIMPSON m LYRIC SOPRANO DON ROSE & PEGGY MALOY Y SOMETHING n Youll Be Proud Youre American NEW IN ADAGIO TIBBS and His BAND R ON THE SCREEN- - See The Fighting Leathernecks in Their Thrilling Peace Time Activities THE " MAIL HAL ROACH COMEDY PARAMOUNT NEWS s CAMILLK Greatest of Lovers since the world began! Dumas classic drama has made her world-famoNew Norma Talmadge's suus FLAME ..... perb performance in this sumptuous screen production will make her I PRICES MATINEES Children 10c 30c Adulta EVENING lawn Floor 50e 33c Balcony Children 15c Matinee prices will prevail until 6:30 p. m. on Monday and Tuesday to give store clerks advantage of matinee Prices. To Avoid Parking Inconvenience Ride the Streetcars! TIME OF SHOWS SUNDAY 3 1:137 p. m. 9:10 TUES. MON. 7 2 4:1a p. m. 9:10 Screen Story by Fred de Gresnc JOSEPH M. SCHENCK Grand Opening Soon! presents VIRGINIA Dancing Palace Nothing Like It in the West A stirring drama spiced with mystery and adventure centered around the crushing of a desperate gang of Train Bandits by the U. S. Marines. Your Last Chance to See This Great Show! Today and Tomorrow! NEWS REEL SPECIAL MUSICAL SCORE ORPHEUM ORCHESTRA Prices: Matinee, 10c and 30c; Night, 15c and 40c ipeeRYsi GGYPcmn A Ogden Institution for Ogden Boosters Hundreds of workmen are busily engaged renovating both, in and outside cf this marvelous edifice. New cement walks, driveways and steps are being laid; 14.000 feet of new maple floor will be soon ready for the dancers. It Will be One of Ogdens Most Marvelous Show Places! Armistice Day has been decided upon for the Opening Event 1 Make Arrangements Now for Your Fall ar.d Winter Parties! We Thank You! |