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Show TIIK OGDEN POST STAGE SCREEN - - Friday, February 17, AMUSEMENTS which she will go to Hollywood. This of Agnes Franey, seventeen-- j became known yesterday when Al- actress, now a member of the last g Rita." bert Warner announced the selection CHICAGO AFTER MIDNIGHT AT THE THEATRES Now playing, Tom Mix in The Arizona Wilcat and Collegians Comedy Dazzling Coeds"; Starting Sunday, Ralph lnce in Chicago After Midnight." PARAMOUNT Today and Saturday, IT. Tl. Warner. Alice Joyce and others & Marco Idea "Harin Sorrell and Son; Sunday and Monday, Pant-linvest Time" with the Famous Welsh G Icemen, on the screen, Zane Grey's "Under the Tonto Itim." URPIIEUM Today and tomorrow, Iantages Vaudeville; Keginning Sunday, Dolores Costello in The College Widow." OGDEN Now playing, Tom Tyler in "The Texas Tornado"; Starting SunMaloney in "The Apache Raider. day, LYCEUM Saturduy, Dynamite, the wonder dog in "Fangs of Destiny"; Sunday, Buck Jones in "Black Jack"; Monday, Virginia Valll in "Judgment of the Hills; Tuesday, J. Farr el MacDonald in "Lovo Makes 'Em Wild"; Wednesday, "The Horse Trader" and Marie Prevost in "Getting Gerties Garter"; Thursday, George Sidney and ('has. Murray in The Life of Riley; Friday, "The Scrappin Fool and Raymond Griffith in "Youd be Surprised." COLON I A L Saturday, "Shootin' Irons" and "Grandpa's Boy"; Sunday and Monday, Clara Bow in "Get Your Man and a Mack Sennett comedy "Should Sleepwalkers Marry": Tuesday and Wednesday, Riehard Dix in "Gay Defender" and "Dads Choice" comedy; Thursday and Friday, Bebe Daniels in She's A Sheik" and Alice Day in "A Dozen Socks." WHITE CITY GARDENS Dancing every Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday and special big holiday dance next Wednesday, Washingtons birthday. BERTH AN A Wednesday, Washingtons Birthday grand carnival dance. Prize Cherry Race, duncing till 1:00 a. m.; Saturday, Dancing. Music by Olive Reeve and his orchestra. Ft 19'), EGYPTIAN J - ' DIRECTION L. MARCUS ENTERPRISES - TONIGHT AND SATURDAY Io DOLORES COSTELLO SUPERB AS GAY COLLEGE WIDOW AT THE ORPIIEUM JCfESM M.KHLMCK HERBERT BRENONS p Id Scene from CHICAGO , AFTtK MIDNIGHT11 H ANNA Q NILSSON Is Chicago the modern Babylonia? Docs its shrill, discordant noises, the mighty conflicts of its gangsters, the thundering challenges d of its guardians, the twinkling toes of its midnight goddesses of g Romeos of its cabarets herald the downfall of a mighty love, the civilization- - or the rebirth of a new? SEE CHICAGO AFTER MIDNIGHT tremendous melodrama of a city's fight for its soul. At the Egyptian theatre Sunday. blue-coate- plot. Buck is one of the most daring First in his actors in the picture. list of adventures was his service in the United States Calvary during the rebellion of Moros in tho Philippines. Then he entered the aviation corps. When the war was over lie he started on his real career. knew that his calling was riding. He was the stellar horseman in Millers Wild West show and was billed as the champion trick rider of the world. Besides mastering the stunts of the cowboys, he learned those of the Russian Cossacks and ad- thrillers of his own. It was in Europe that William Fox ded run in "The College Widow, the brilliant Warner Bros, revival of George Ades tremendous stage hit of several years ago. Miss Costello is cast as the daughter of a college president, who is about to lose his job because of his inability to interest athletes in coming to the institution. A promised gift is also to be forfeited for the same reason. The pretty and wilful lady decides to make things move, and by her personal charm wins a football team which sweeps her fathers college to victory and his job to security. Each man in the team jinks follow. "The College Widow is without doubt the most thoroughly delightful college play ever written, and the film is even better than the stage version. In the cast are William Collier, Jr Anders Randolf, and others. Sorrell and Son Actor Met Barrie . An American child actor, Mickey Kit Sorrell" as a boy in Herbert Brensons producMcBan, who plays - SnSS ORPHEUM You Will Like This Fine Picture! WARNER BROS. present 0ost3l Dolores It Widow 'College tH William Collier all-st- jjideis Archie i..fayo. d w, Take care! She's fooling thee 1 1 col- lege to victory-r-a-ll for her sake then they found out her secret 1 Ohy boy I n. jgfc A' k 2 -- cv NEWS REEL ORPHEUM ORCHESTRA ar Flo-bel- le They swept the Beware! saw him and brought him home to give him a chance to act in Western pictures. The picture will have a showing at the Lyceum theatre Sunday. tion of Sorrell and Son," current at the Paramount theatre, experienced the proverbial thrill . that comes once in a lifetime," when he went to England' with the Brenon company to appear in exterior scenes. Mickey first burst into farno whin Brenon discovered him and cast him for an important role in the screen version of "Peter Pan." Ever since then, the lad hid the ambition to meet Sir James Barrie, author of lie realized tho immortal story. that ambition during his visit to London, for director Brenon. kept his promise and brought about the meeting. Mickey, after he returned to America with his mother, Mrs. Fred McBan, who always accompanies the child player on location,' described his visit with Barrie: "Sir James lives in a big apartment house; its like this," and young McBan drew a plan. "I know he is a real English gentleman because he didn't talk about himself. He showed me a message that Robert Ixiuis Stevenson, the man who wrote Treasure Island had been given by the natives. It was written on a kind of bark. "Then he took me on to the veranda, and showed me the Thames, St. Pauls Westminster Abbey, and the Tower. You can see them all from his window. All the time he smoked a big pipe. I think it must be a dream pipe. What do I mean? Well, you know it must bring him those wonderful stories .that get themselves rinted. He wrote his name on two ks I bought, 'Peter Pan, and duality Street; I played in the films of both." In "Sorrell and Son," Mickey is a member of an cast which includes II. B. Warner, Anna Q. Nilsson, Alice Joyce, Nils Asther, Curmel Myers, Mary Nolan, Norman Trevor, Louis Wolhcim, Lionel Belmore, Fairbanks, Paul McAllister and Betsy Ann Hisle. COMEDY Admission: Matinees, 10c, 25c; Nights, 10c, 35c White City to Give Souvenirs at Dance Reviving an ancient superstition handed down from the lovely ladies of George Washington day, yellow garters will be given as souvenirs to girl dancers at the big Washington's birthday celebration to be held at White City Gardens next Wednesday evening. The flapper of 76 and thereabouts. had to pin her faith to "charms" and maidenly rrayers in her search for romance, and the old Colonial tradition said that a yellow garter if worn over the left knee for a year would insure that tho wearer would meet her "fate" within that time. The IMS flapper hardly needs such artificial aids, but the. combination of yellow garter, leap year and the merry entertainment at White City should start many a romance to budding. Other souvenirs will include red, whtie and blue horns, siren whistles, balloons, and n great variety cf gay novelties and funmakers. The men will be given cocked hats in the colors of blue and gold, und there will also be an assortment of appropriate favors for the ladies. Con-tinent- al Rosie, "Rough "Mantrap is one motion picture celebrity who will never see a collection of baby, childhood and school girl pictures of herself in a magazine.' For Clara has id her possession only one photograph made before she had grotvn to girlhood. The picture was taken when she was 2ft years old and shows Clara wearing a flaring lace bonnet, sitting in a baby buggy holding a large woolly bear. Miss Bows parents are one family which did not think that their daughter would some day become a great actress. ' So Clara, who comes to the Colonial next Sunday and Monday in "Get Your Man" had but one baby picture taken. She doesnt even have any other pictures of herself until after she had ceased wearing hair ribbons. Clara did not entertain a thought of being an actress until she was seventeen years old. She wanted to be a stenographer until she heard of a beauty contest and entered it. The little screen flapper won the contest and a motion picture contract. I was the most surprised person in the world, she says. Warner Bros., who developed Dolores Costello from a stage dancer to a star in the course of a few months, has signed another musical comedy player to a long term contract under intil ON THE STAGE' I i; FANCHON & MARCO IDEA Pars irod a 3H GLEEMAN Monday presents Thui ious PRICES jwhic lore. ASSISTED BY 1 jo 15c il 30c Evening ON THE SCREEN the Matineea 35c not intre 50c lly tare, srd Thrills, as You Like Them! ny P! Ipiucti 7if Rifi Attt Ricluxd Allen boy, Brian Para uWii k hi tali Man ..APow.moa-msai.u- Q Qaramount Qicture -- -- iw STAN LAUREL IN PARAMOUNT 1 NEWS THE BATTLE OF THE CENTURY FANCHON & MARCO STAGE ATTRACTIONS AND FEATURE PICTURE EVERY SUNDAY AND MONDAY COMING JOHN GILBERT GRETA GARBO m LOVE Use today GY PCI (F3 D SATURDAY WILLIAM with form in fi 2:004:15 7:099:15 14 VOICES YOU TIBBS and His BAND III! Ealike 2:454:15 7:009:15 THE FAMOUS JELLY BEAN JOHNSON HU & Sunday WITH CANT AFFORD TO MISS HEARING WITH J the SHOWS HARVEST TIME peeRY sipwwa I alive MONDAY SUNDAY HU gat-swingi- ng red-hair- ed ay to writ Clara Bow has stepped into another Fast action and thrilling fights cen- class by herself. ter about Buck Jones in "Black Jack, The Paramount ' star, his latest production for Fox Films. who to fame in "It," skyrocketed Barbara Bennett is the girl in the House "Hula" and 7ho Collect Widow" Ut Wmr firo.faodoctiom Dolores Costello1 comes to the Or- - thinks he is the girls favorite, and when her duplicity is discovered high pheum theatre next Sunday for a i NEWS COMEDY Buck Jones Surpassed You Cant Keep a Good Girl Down Past Exploits in Black Thinks Clara Bow Jack at the Lyceum i PARAMOUNT HAL ROACH ' Cos iUo ALICE JOYCE NILS ASTHER CARMEL MYERS jazz-pipin- Color rttrnn 1 |