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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 25, 1921)
THE BEE: OMAHA. SUNDAY. SEPTEMBER 25. 1921. Program for The Week Stnnd "The Affair of Anatol" t.lgalal V win aacr....i ! k alia Ulona ka Mat Kuuyan f ilii.it Malta ann l.i.i.ii Kmlha Mian ., Vaa.l 'l, (iordua Hr..H Tb" N"" AiMU riH ..Ana Arr.. Na.tar amah r""m,. "Jl,.. nrtkaalra U4ar r"f ' Tiara The fitvlUr ct In "The Affair of Auatol." which open tcduy , "e Tirana theater for a two week en t.Jrt, PV for the picture iltrtt. When a man U kept wailing hour for breakfast while hi iie u ' i.- u Tr, than ant to cet c, 1 hat it why Anatol DcWitt Spencer a peeved ana wnen. vivian, . wife, fought to mollify him with Li..t hi aneer grew. But Vivian li4 not reflect that there might be loo much "honey in the - honey moon," or perhapt the might have acted differently. At the famous Green Room cafe, where Anatol, Vivian and Max Run J;n. family friend, were dining. 0atol recognize in limilie Dixon, a thouahtle! voung woman and -.,.,,. a( Cordon Bronson, a u.xiihv rnnc. a comoaiiion of his school dav. When he learnt the truth he tries to reform her by pro viding her with a richly-appointed apartment. When she kisses him he obtains from her a promise to throw the gems given her by Bronson into the river. She hides the jewelry and together they east the empty cue into the river, and Einiltc pro teed to make merry with her friends, at which champagne flows freely. , . . . . Anatol interrupts the festivities, orders the guests out and wrecks Emilic't apartment. As Emilie re turns to Bronton Anatot takes Viv ian into the eountry, wncr i.., might be free from hypocrisy and frail men and women. Sun "For Those We Love." Cast f Ckaract.rs. H.ranlc. Arn14 BH Common iimm)f Arnold jnirimru Jlrnmy Arnold Camilla Aator Vlda Tir. Ball" C.aarca Arnold . ''.lotinur Fletcher Bart Frank Trlx Ulnar Bert wooitruii ....Harrr Puffleld ...Walter lloroaio ,.,..aore Cooper ...Frank Campean ton Chaney Betty Compson is the featured star in "For Those We Love," which opens today at the Sun theater. In this picture Miss Compson will be seen as a simple country girl, too unsophisticated to know the dangers she runs in befriending one of the evil characters of the town. How ever, her unguarded faith is justified by the change that her friendship ef frt in his life. The unprincipled gambler realizes that everyone is not spurred by the same motives of gain that have lea mm ana ms wya" !.. nn theW nrccirious waVS. Of course, he falls in love with the girl, who has never ten otner xnan friendly towards him. With the re alization that the is beyond him, the real test of hit character ,1? . With Lon Chancy as the gambler and Betty Compson as the girl in love with another, the story of tor Those We Love" develops through a - .rise nt mridfnis to a wk- l ills . " 7 ical conclusion. . Additional entertainment is offered by Buster Keaton in "Hard Luck, said to be a knockout of a comedy. Moon "The Night Horsemen." WHISTUNO DAN : Kate Cumberland J.-M,5r ,"p5i? Old Joa Cumberland "arryuL" , it. Dm. . . . . . . . . .Joseph, Bennett Back Danleli i'"I""f" M.a Btrann Bert Sprotte ' A horse, a dog, and a man whose nature is like the wolf when corn ered, are again the big attractions in the latest Tom Mix story, The Night Horsemen," which opens to day at the Moon theater. This storv is based on the novel, "Wild Geese, bv Max Brand, and is a sequel to "The Untamed," in which ,Mix gave such sterling entertainment not many months ago. Mix again enacts the role of Whistling Dan, a character so wild that the "honk, honk" of, the geese flving northward cause him to for get even his wedding day in his de s;rc to plav in the wilderness. Love timet Whistling Dan after many stirring adventures in "The JSight Horsemen," and when he again hears the "honk, honk" of the northward bound geese he turus away, for the first time in his life, and goes home with Kate Cumberland, the. girl who has loved him and waited for him. May Hopkmt plays ft-ate. Rialto-"One . Wild Week" and "Wealth." ;.. ' ; " . Has a pretty girl the right to wear pretty clothes and have a good time? Or should girls be kept stnctly at home at their great grandmothers were, and dressed in plain clothes to prevent their becoming vain? , It is a pretty generally accepted psychological fact that suppressed desires tre the roost dangerous. The boy who Is forbidden to play cards is just twice at eager to learn to play poker as the boy whose parents join him in a cheerful game in the family sitting room.; ' The story of a girl who never had any fun or pretty clothes and who breaks away from stern discipline the very morning she attains her 18th birthday has been amusingly told in "One Wild Week," featuring Bebe Daniels, St the Rialto theater for four davt, beginning today. As the girl who tries to make up for lost time and have a little whole tome, natural fun, M Daniels has a delightful role, well tuited to her temperament and ttyie. - , In "Wealth," which opens Thm-s-ay at the Rialto theater, Ethel Liavton 11 featured in a nram. u carefree life of New York's Green wich Village and of the mad, futile life of New York's millionaires.- Muse "For Those Who Love;" "Lore of Youth;" "Buried Trees " ore,-" Tfce Witching Hour." Betty Compon takes the screen at the Muse theater today in "For Those Who Love," a drama of a love sacrifice. "The Lure of Youth," featuring Geo Madison at the Muse tomorrow and Tuesday, portrays the struggles of a young playwright, unskilled in the ways of sophisticated society, who in a fury tears up his first manu script and returns to his home town to try to forget the wound in his neart. , . . k role in "Euried Treasure." which plays Wednesday and Thursday. Miss Davics plays the daughter of a Wall street capitalist, who is about to marry a ma of her father's choice when the spirits of another world lead her back to the life of a Cas talian maid of the sixteenth century, and she experiences many adventures strange and romantic. Elliott Dexter takes the leading part in The Witching Hour, which plays Friday and Saturday at the Muse. Its theme is the power of a mesmeric or hypnotic force and the mental will to overcome its hold. The story deals with a young man who, under the belief that he cannot resist the evil influence of a cat's- eye jewel, murders a drunken man who taunts him with one. Empress "The Mountain Woman" and "Live Wires." Those hairbreadth escapes from falling trees which arc mere inci dents in the lives of lumberjacks never have been more thrillingly de picted than in the opening scenes of "The Mountain Woman," featuring Pearl White at the Empress theater the first four davs of this week. The story of "The Mountain Wo man," as " those who have read Charles Neville Buck's popular novel. "A Pagan of the Hills" oti which it is based recall, is laid in the timbered heights of the Ken tucky Cumberland range. . The felling of giant trees and the mad scramble for safety as the for est monarchs totter and crash to earth are cnty a prelude to the real "business" of the story; but it is all very excitirg. Floating the log rafts down the dangerous mountain river is another , interesting phase of the picture, though incidental. Several thrills are found in "Live Wires, starring Johnnie Walker and Edna Murphy at the Empress the last three days of this week; but the biggest thrill is in a leap from a mov ing train to the dangling ladder of an airship. This leap is made by Johnnie while Edna watches him from a seat in the speeding airship. Johnnie and Edna are now stars and give first-class entertainment. Success -William Nigh, the author-director, is to have the novel sensation of seeing four productions that he wrote and directed produced on Broadway this fall. The first of these. "The Soul of Mati, features little Maurine Powers, a "find" of Director Nigh's; the second, "Why Girls Leave Home," in which Anna Q. Nilsson and Maurine Powers are co-starred; the third. Schooldays, in wh.'ch lit tle Wesley Barry will be seen, and the fourth. Her Uauglitcr-in-Law, starring Vera Gordon. George Hackathorne has been cast by Lanky to play the minister opposite Betty Compson in the pic turization1 of Barrie's "The Little Minister." May McAvoy, Realart star, will soon appear in a Lorna Doone pic ture stoiy wh'ch will be known as "Too Much Wife." Holder of World's Altitude Record Georges Kirsch lias just -landed. To say he ha been "up in the air" is putting it miidly. Georges has just smashed the world's altitude rec ord by rising six and a half miles above the aerodrome at F.ourget, F ranee. The previous world' rec ord was held by Maj. Rudolph Schrecdcr. U. S. A., who rose 36.202 r" rA" """TO - Si ' ' 4 i ill.. V . TV WVHV i ! v-4 ' 11 III Vt-v-fitf Program Summary Rialte Today until Thursday, "One Wild Week"; latter half of week, "Wealth." Sun Betty Compson in "For Those Who Love." Moon Tom Mix in "The Night Horsemen." Strand "The Affairs of Anatol." Empress Today until Thursday, "The Mountain Woman"; latter half of week, "Live Wires." Brandcis "The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse." Muse Today, "For Those We Love"; tomorrow and Tuesday, "Lure of Youth"; Wednesday, and Thursday, "Buried Treas ure"; Friday and Saturday, "The Witching Hour." Suburban Programs Grand. Today, Tomorrow and Tuesday Jackie Cooean in "Peck's Bad Boy." Wednesday Edith Roberts in "Open Center" and 14th episode of "Avenging Arrow." Thursday and Friday Lionel Barrymore in "Jim the Penman." Saturday Douglas MacLean in "Chickens." WE tit &rJi4& 7ajy fy V u DotttTHin - MOOH - Gloria Swaiison Stars In Second Elinor Glyn Play F.linor Glyn, author of "Three Weeks," who wrote "The Great Ifoment," Gloria Swanson't first Starring picMe, lias written another cricinal for Aliss Swanson. "Bc- yond the Rocks," is the title. Sam Wood, who directed Miss Swanson in "The Great Moment," tlso will have charge of the direc tion. "Beyond the Rocks" wi'l follow in production "The Husband's Trademark," the Clara Bcrangcr story which Miss Swanson will start as soon as she returns to California from her visit in New York. Low ell Sherman has been engaged as the leading man for the last named pic ture. According to the bureau of public roads of the Department of Agri culture, approximately $622,000,000 .'$ available for road and bridge con- ctructfon and maintenance this year. quires an annual income of $'j,640 in the city, $9,064 in the suburbs, $8,430 in the country and $7,720 at home. If a chauffeur is employed, an ad ditional income is needed of $8,960 In towns, ?7,760 in suburbs, $6,240 in the country and the same sum at pome. tyM- .wot 0mMi3T aVBT! ," t aKnMBWK .M. attlMa. & Cinema Chatter t A pUy ia'd on the tyranny of iiioiliir-luve a opposed to the ten tiuientulity of ariou "mother" '(!rtiu seen lately on the screni i I being v ruti-n hy John (iriiiith Wrav, 'feted producer. "The moral of all the mother-love drama. thu far," ; .uil .Mr. H'ray, "teaches that a worn- I.. ..I.I ..... I... .....I... I. ...... .j. the tliil'lri-ti do nothing but make her !ificr." tiloitu Davenport, daughter of the late cartoonist, Homer Davenport, who ha a role in Hex Ingram' pro. ilmtion. "Turn to the Right." I K year old id weif-h nearly 250 lioiiii'K SIk ho appeared in a number of comedy scene in the pic ture with Harry Myers who play the chirf male comedy character of uilly, the cook. . Rii'li lliisliff, 19-year-oW on of Rupert llttfthc. the novelist, ba be come a photoplayer. He i work ing in a Goldwyn production. On it completion he is to enter Prince ton university. , "Saturday Xifjlit" is the title of the new story by Jfanie MaoPher- son. which Cecil U. Dc Millc is oon to start filming. Leatrice Joy will have a principal role. Already a burlesque on Douglas Fairbank's "The Three Musketeers" has appeared. It is tilled "The Three and a Half Musketeers." Doroihy Dalton i again being featured by Paramount. Hot new vehicle is ' the late Frank Norris' story, "Moran of the Lady Lctty." While taking a dancing lesson from Theodore Koslofi. Bessie Love experienced the first tribulation of a terpsichorean. She sprained some foot muscles and was invalided for a time. Miss Love will appear in vaudeville, including in her act a dance number especially created for her by Koslofi. Tom Gallery, Zasu Pitts' husband, is now with Goldwyn. Hope Hampton's "Star Dust" will be released in the east and the west simultaneously. Ann Forrest and David Powell will be featured in the Famous-Players-Lasky London production of "Perpctua." Annette Kellerman's "What Wo men Love," is said to be making a hit in Australia. Bebe an Athlete Bebe Daniels will come to be known as an unusually athletic star if she doesn't watch out. In "Two Weeks With Pay" she did a 40-foot dive; in the "March Hare" she played base ball, slid for home, and drove an exciting motor race with an ex press tram; in "One Wild Week, now at the Rialto theater, she doe some breath-taking "steeplejacking. Some Photography! Pauline Stark, co-starred with H, B. Walthall in the forthcoming pro duction, "Flower of the North," was ohotosrraohed at ditterent points on canoe trip which she recently took! through the rapids ot a Deautitui California stream. It is said that these "shots" form one of the most attractive and impressive sequences of the entire picture. lSMBnat4 aaatBaUsM Bebe Certainly Can Be Wild If She Likes A a high spirited orphan who is to inherit money hut has been so kept down by the strict maiden aunt who brings her up that the "busts loose" the very day she is IS and gets herself into hectic adventures. Bebe Daniels has another role well suited to her talents in "One Wild Week," which opens a four days' run at the Rial to theater beginning today. Noted Play i Forrest Halscy, who adapted "Dis raeli" for the screen, has just com pleted his second George Arliss script, tentatively titled "Idle Hands." The original story was written by Earl Berr Biggers, author of "Seven Keys to Baldpate." nvn'if'jri'TT' irm S5ABSS Gbnibination Peatui,e,ri,o$j!am. l J avnJCaV JrA 1 Vi Al 111 I :! rVi JJ I V A I? rVA - Jul's supreme ST 1 : Juseutstn v , .. - and makes you.. j VlMr H f &. - feel like streixll lf 1 SM J1- 35 s v -dted . AtiractioiC- ' - Z rn i ttt n 0 'I iiBLJn SntfivudAs. P Matt Wanlt Some Credit Anyway , For Ills Acting Milt Moore, one of the brother Moore, all of whom arc tamou on llio tcreen, dilikr to be referred to continually a "the brother of Owen Moore ami Tom Moore," jut a hi brother dislike being referred to at "the brother of Matt Moore." Ksch of the brother believe tbiit lie etn aland on hi own, Matt Moore hit proven hi jut claim to independence of the fame of the rct of the family by hi excellent work in "The l'a Mon.it e Pilorim," "Straight it the Way" and "The Dark Star." recent productions. l(i latest picture i "Back Pay," in which he playj with Seen Owen, in the I'annie Jltirt story which is now playing on Broad way a a play. . Mix's Ncv Head May Hopkins, blonde and brown eyed, i Tom Mix' leading woman in hi latest production, "The Night Horaemcii," which will be shown at the Moon theater this week. "The Night Horsemen i a sequel to "The L'numed," in which" Mix starred re cently and is based on Max Brand's novel, "Wild Geese." Hex Beach Story R. William Ncill has completed ( the cutting and titling of "The Iron Trail," the celebrated Rex Beach storv. The story i said to be one I of the famous author's best sellers and the picture is reported to be i bigger than the story. Mary F. Cooper School of Dancing BLACKSTONE HOTEL For Information Call HA rney 0945 'n,w,n,n,n,iT,H"rt,,ri,,jr'a,iT,jr,r TODAY 50DAY OJSIiY Hard Luci' Quit of t&Llls that GRAND r.:;4 TOOAV JACKIE COOCAN "PECKS""BAD BOY" Caaliauaua (daw lliiaal a J p, M, DANGER LOOK OUT! On the Highway of Love RUPERT HUGHES WROTE THE STORY Coming Soon to Omaha RKCITAL Killth Kllrklngrvr. Knpriina Halan Barillok kylil at ha Plana FIRST PRKKHYTKRtAN CHI'RCII Council llluffa TUESDAY EVENING. SEPT. CT Tlck.U. tl.lt Pattern Muiie 8hop, 16th mni Farnam M if'iiiiSO 3 L'AA A A AAA AJi A n ii Jt Jt K A K JbJMfofl VUrifa la Davie has the leading! feet over Dayton, O.