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Show THE CITIZEN With the First Nighters iik...':. iv: WVllr Kj) PICTURE US AT PANTAGES. fee ntertaining bill of and Buster Keaton .. the feature film, ,U the Pantages the- "ipdbT worlds greatest ,.f the famous tango te? feature of v, late finite .mdals inanda Spanish assisted Spain, Senorita Albertini, s itierrikiisongstress, all revue of song, isational dancing, is atdr?cf she bill and makes a : Jti" . ap-tou- - ei-aa- tries hard te get ii any him and take the dollars to which he falls ibut bll lack is against him and 'turned down on every side. The (ng Incidents leading up to all cperlenccs furnish humor enough dozen shows, but then you know & Zelda II; others, one of whom to have no bones and can bend sorts of shapes are winders serial Ir acrobatic stunts and j Leeder are rls that can sing and they mix 4hy Dodd and Rae enough comedy with their singing which is pleasing. Bobby and Stark, two boys who sing tell stories of their wrecked life and sing their way to popularity. They meet, both looking for the river, and fall in love. You know the rest. Virginia Norton and company present Love in the Suburbs, which is a playlet of married life in which a good woman must contend with a white mule husband, and aided by a policeman they furnish enough comedy to keep the audience laughing all the time. Harry Alder and Rose Dunbar offer Laughing as You Like It in a comedy act in which stories, hypnotism and the mimmicing of animals and birds is great and well received by the audience. This special bill will continue all week and closes next Tuesday night. FAMOUS OUTWARD BOUND1 FOR THE WILKES PATRONS Outward Bound, a most unusual play which kept staid old London gasping for a year and stirred blase New York for an entire season during its run at the Ritz, will be next weeks stellar offering of Ralph Clon-ingand his players at the Wilkes theatre, starting tomorrow night. Here is a play which jarred the er play wise critics loose from the most fulsome praise ever bestowed on a production. As Alexander Wollcott commented in the New York Herald: The nicked and d little yardsticks which we all carry to the theatre with us are pitifully little use when it comes to measuring the impalpable things which make this new so Stirling play, Outward Bound, and quickening an adventure for the houseful of startled sinners who saw it last evening. And other critics have universally agreed with him. Here is an adventure created with an extraordinary flare of the imagination. The characters are all aboard a small liner why and whither bound they do not know. They wear ordinary clothes, drink, eat and act as they ordinarily do, but before long they discover they are dead and their reactions to this knowledge provide an absorbing action. Romance and comedy are intermingled with tense drama. Miss Anne Berryman, Ralph Clonin-ge- r and other members of the company, will be excellently cast in this extraordinary play which also will mark the return of Victor Jory to the cast following his recovery from an appendicitis operation. Miss Berryman and Mr. Cloninger will be seen as the young lovers who loved well but not too wisely. George ink-staine- Cleveland will be seen as the Great Examiner, Victor Jory as Duke, the minister, Miss May Roberts as Mrs. Midget, Harry Jordan as Prior, the young blood, Ray Clifford as Scrubby, the steward, Victor Gillard as Ling-lethe business czar, while others will be seen in equally important y, roles. The play has caused more comment than any other presentation twentieth century. of the POPULAR CAST IN THE ' AIR MAIL AT VICTORY The Irwin producAir The tion, Mail, adapted for the screen by James Shelley Hamilton from an original story by Byron Morgan, comes to the Victory Theatre today for a weeks run. Warner Baxter, Billie Dove, Mary Brian and Douglas Willat-Paramou- nt Fairbanks, Jr., are featured in the leading roles of the picture. Baxter portrays the part- of Russ Kane, clever crook and daring aviator, who join the air service solely for the purpose of robing the mails and is regenerated by the spirit of the service, the love of a beautiful girl and the companionship of an orphaned boy. Billie Dove plays the girl, Alice Rendon, who lives in the deserted city with her father, played by George Irving. Young Fairbanks is Sandy, - 'A Orpheum MLLE. DELIRIO Late Feature of GEORGE WHITES SCANDALS In a Spanish Fantasy DREAMY SPAIN Assisted by K Jrf 7 ... ENROUTE TO SALT LAKE Original Argentine Players M OOO WE PROMISED IIARUY ADLER AND ROSE DUNBAR I THE VIRGINIA NORTON AND LAUGH BARRAGE COMPANY 0 0 0 BETTER HOBBE AND STARK The Famous Character Actor MOURICE SAMUELS and Company IN THE FLOWER SHOP 0 0 0 DODD AND t ft; St J i LEEDER 0 0 0 ZELDA 0 0 0 Ccmedy SEVEN CHANGES r n VAUDEVILLE BROTHERS BUSTER KEATON In Another Great THE JANSLEYS A BIG SURPRISE BILLY BROAD 0 0 0 L a Presentation And the t 21 Ralph Pollock and His Orchestra in a Special Fidel Irazabal Senorita Albertini irr i WEEK STARTING SATURDAY, MARCH Always With You Always Open Always Good HOLLIDAY AND WILLETTE HERE IT IS JACQUELINE LOGAN in the HOUSE OF YOUTH NEXT WEEK CHARLEY'S AUNT 1 j; f i |