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Show uu GREAT PICTURE AT tHMTHnOW The sweat, the grime, the heartaches, heart-aches, the stifled ambitions, the never-ending woes of Labor, these are the dominant notes of "Destruction," a William Fox photoplay production starring Theda Bara. Of all the sermons preached by clergjmien, of all the triades launched by agitators, none more graphically sets forth the evil of the nderpayment of labor, and none suggests saner re-heial re-heial measures therefor, than "Destruction." This photoplay, which was written writ-ten by Nixola Daniels and directed direct-ed by W. S. Davis, deals with the soul-consuming miseries of the workers exploited by a certain capitalist class. And yet the production pro-duction is not depressing or anti-capital anti-capital in its tone, for it is lightened lighten-ed by subtle comedy touches and it heralds the dawn of a greater spirit of conscienciousuess between be-tween employer and employee. Theda Bara takes her original role in Destruction she is seen as the real vampire woman and does some remarkable acting. This big picture runs three days at the Orpheum Sunday, Monday and Wednesday leaving Tuesday for the University Dramatic Play "Her Husband's Wife." |