OCR Text |
Show At the Alhambra Wallace Reid. the handsome movie actor, has an excellent opportunity to demonstrate his versatility in "The Squaw-man's Son," being shown at the Alhambra. It is a picture of the west and Indians, voicing an appeal in the Interests of the Indian, and showing how an unscrupulous Indian agent fay easily exercise all kinds of crook- edness if he so desires. Supported by Anita King as Wah- Na-Gi, an Indian maiden who tried to. throw off the shackles of savagery, Reid displays all of .the emotions and trials a man would naturally encounter encoun-ter In trying to outwit another who coveted the girl he loves. It is a fine production and the settings are a credit cred-it to the photoplay art. A comedy of a dream through which a would-be detective goes, furnishes the laughs. Hearst-Pathe News shows some remarkable pictures of war actlv-' ities. To handle their own releases, the Ogden Pictures corporation has established es-tablished an office in New York. This was the gist of a telegram received from Lester Park by W. Fred Boss-ner Boss-ner yesterday. The contract with the Louis J. Selz-nick Selz-nick interests has been cancelled. They were to handle all releases of the local firm. By being their own distributors and exhibitors, the Ogden men gain exclusive rights to show their pictures in any state or group of states they desire. It will mean that all films made here will go out to be shown under the caption "Manufactured and Released Re-leased by the Ogden Pictures Corporation, Corpo-ration, Ogden, Utah." It will be a few weeks more until all arrangements for the branch office of-fice in New York are completed. While waiting to return to Ogden for the next picture, Miss Lillian Walker, star of the "Lust of the Ages," and leading lady for the Ogden Pictures corporation, is resting at her summer home in Saratoga, N. Y. |