Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, September 30, 1917, AMUSEMENTS, Image 58

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    THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: SEPTEMBER 30, 19! 7.
, Mrs- Castle Takes Ride in
" Cahos Ovsr Rapids; Ducked
Mrs. Vernon Castle has again given j
' proof of her willingness to lake a'
chance. While Director Crane ot '
i Ju sta8;"K 1'cr latest picture i
in the Adirondack.- a scene that sncci-'
tied the heroine ami hero must k
over a waterfall in a canoe, Mr.
rane ! his worries to Mrs. Caitle.
'How perfectly delightful!" was her
remark. "I've always wanted to slide
down . hill of water in a canoe and
now I'll ge my wis.'. It links so
exciting!''
Mr. Crane von,ui:te! a time table for
trains to the Ausahle Chasm country.
On arriving there it wasn't difficult
to find rapids and watjria'Is there
were, if anything, too many. Mr.
Crane embarked Mrs. Castle and Eliot
Dexter, the leading man, in a canoe
a short istance above a particularly
rambunctious s.-ries of rapids ending
in a fall ton o twelve feet high. The
stunt was over in a twinkling. Th
two plucky paddlers navigated th
rapids all right, but came to grief atj
he falls. The canoe shot from the!
:op, buried its nose in the whirlpool!
at the bottom and then turned over.!
A few r inutes later two very wet but'
otherwise undamaged individuals
pulled themselves out of the water
Five Fronts that Challenge Public Attention and
Invite Amusement Seekers to Comfort on Inside
1 1 i 111 - lAi fS I Prrrinira
Starting Sunday, Octobe
MARTIN BECK,
" . sT a a a '
special Arrangement, Has Secured the Exclusive Rights To
Pictures For the Orpheum Circuit and Presents Them As the
Official
UNPRECEDENTED
EXTRA ADDED
ATTRACTION
THE
ALL
PROCEEDS
GO TO
WAR
RELIEF '
Greatest fighting pictures ever
made. All the daring, danger,
and delirium of War.
rm AC
THE
At the Battle of Arras
These Films Were Made in the Midst of Death and Destruction for the Official
' Government Pictures, Inc., W. K. Vander&It, President.
IN ADDITION TO
THE USUAL SUPREME
VAUDEVILLE
RETREA
GERMAMS
$300,000 has been paid for Orpheum circuit rights to these government pictures.
ORPHEUM
STARTING
SUNDAY
OCTOBER
14TH
jj
The Rush Over the Top.
The Tanks in Gory Action.
The Big Guns Spitting Death. '
The Grenades Explode and Kill.
How Billions Are Spent.
SEE
The Aeroplane Combats.
Machine Guns Spurting Steel.
The Shells Dig Craters.
The Mountains of Ammunition.
How Magnificently Men Die.
Here's life's greatest game played by millions of men. One mighty army pushes another vast
army in sullen retreat. There is terror,, and blood, and flame, and tears, and wounds, and death,
and there is heroism and courage, and exaltation, and hope, and love, and patriotism.
(THESE. PICTURES MAKE YOU THRILL AS THOUGH YOU WERE FACING
THE HUN WITH RIFLE IN HAND FOR GOD AND NATIVE LAND!
NO INCREASE IN PRICES!
some distance below, while the camera
men, very much on the job, kept
grinding away. "Better than shoot
ing the chutes," said Mrs. Castle as
she wrung out her skirt.
Doug Fairbanks Finds a Pal
While Waiting, for Train
Douglas Fairbanks taken for a bum.
This might sound strange, but here's
how it happened.
Being very fond of outdoor life,
Fairbanks, accompanied by Henry
Malstead, motored across the Mojave
desert to Victorville, Cal., and they
parked their automobile and awaited
the train for Cheyenne, where Fair
banks was the recent guest of honor
of the Golden Jubilee Frontier days
celebration.
On the plaiform he met Charlie.
What a remarkable chap Charlie is!
Charlie a bum. But that's his busi
ness. He is a success at his profes
sion, too. Charlie thought Douglas
was a bum.
"Which way?" Charlie asked.
"East to Cheyenne," Douglas an
swered. "Traveling on the cushions or up
above or under?" Charlie came again.
"Don't know," said Douglas.
"I'll tip you off to a good freight
that is due here in half an hour," in
formed the generous Charlie. "The
conductor is a pal of mine. It will
be all to the velvetl"
Douglas kind of took to Charlie. He
grabbed the boy in tow, put him in a
drawing room and brought him to
Cheyenne. Here he bought him a
fine suit of clothes, a shave and set
of good resolutions. Charlie's last
name is King. He feels just like his
cognomen now. . You see, Charlie
hadn't been used to such opulence.
time table, thin dime and a watch,
borrowed permanently from a care
less friend, has been his store of
wealth for many a long day.
i When some one told Charlie that
Douglas Fairbanks was a moving
picture actor, the dear boy didn't
grasp the idea. When a man travels
for so many years beneath the rum
bling cars, from sheriff to sheriff and
BEE CARTOONS TO SHOW ON
LAEMMLE SCREENS
Uzr
frSi yy'
The Omaha Bee has arranged to
have its cartoons which are of gen
eral interest shown in 10,000 motion
picture theaters. This notable achieve
ment links the press and the screen
in a union possessing illimitable pos-
sibilities. Above is the president of
the largest and oldest motion picture
enterprise, whose letter to the editor
of the Bee announcing that fact will
be found elsewhere in today's paper.
THE BEST OF VAUDEVILLE
' Matinee Daily, 2:15 Every Night, 8:15
Week Starting Sun., Sept. 30
AN M-SAR-BEN WEEK
SPECIAL - ;
MISS
KATHLEEN
CLIFFORD
America's Favorite Boy
BERT BAKER
& CO.
In a One-Act Farce
, "Prevarication"
(By Bert Baker)
HWA FOUR
Chink' Only Quartet of Harmony
Tho. Ruby
PATRICOUA & MEYER
In
"Tha Gill and tha Dancing Fool"
from jail to jail, he loses sight of
things.
"I don't know wno the guy ,is,"
Charlie said, "but he must be from
that there joint they call heaven."
Fairbanks brought Happy Charlie,
so named because he seemed to have
gotten right into the happiness spirit.
4
NIGHTS
BEGINNING
MATINEE
TODAY
HAROLD DO KANE
with
JUNE EDWARDS and
OLGA MARWIG
In Their New Futuristic
'-. Dancing Spectacle .
GEORSE & DICK RATA
America's Athletes ,
A Study in Endurance
DAILY MATINEE--25c
NIGHTS--25C, 35c, 50c, 75c
NOTE- To introduce this attraction, a special popular
price matinee will be given Monday All seats, 25c
NOT A MOVING PICTURE
TP
(3I3E)(IHi3i
!d)
3
NIGHTS
BEGINNING
THURSDAY
OCT. 4
MATINEE SATURDAY
MATINEE 50c, 75c, $1.00 and $1.50
NIGHTS-50c, 75c, Ji.OO, $1.50 and $2.00
fmnjiilWiiH
fTM OWESTIOM jON CVIrTI 10
' f I OF THI now MTOWAM WHIP. .
X' froiTfwiov OP A I (TTrf the woma7
1 CHIlJim rIABRUOt I I WHOPAVrM r
ftvtitYOHi ovEvi liioraM iwwyowI ll
I tlCIITttW ADIllTnD I CBOWMUP iwUOHTEBVj , ff
m& mmm mm
THE DRAMATIC SENSATION
OF THE PRESENT QEHTBRY
i:
If 'WILLlANf
HARRIS, Jr.;)
Frettntty
A
MYSTIC
MELODRAMA)
The
BILL1E BURKE'S
"R20TOR BOATING"
with -; -"J '
TOM M'RAE
Hazel Clark, Ada Brown and James Carney
ORPHEUM TRAVEL
WEEKLY
Around the world with the
Orpheum Circuit's Motion
Picture Photographers.
PRICES: Matinee, Gallery,
10c Best Seats (Except
Saturday and Sunday),
25c. Nights, 10c, 25c, 50c
and 75c.
DAILY HAT. sS FOR WOKEN ONLY!
Positively No Men or Children Admitted
Because of the sacredness of motherhood
and out of courtesy to the ladies, daily matinee
performances, except Sunday, will be reserved
exclusively for the ladies. Gentlemen, as well
r ladies, are admitted to all other perform
unces.-NOT A PICTURE.
BAYARD
VEILLER
j ) Author of
"WITHIN.
THE
LAW
DIRECT FRO
A YEAR'S,
RUN AT
THE 48th ST.
THEATRE,,
NEW YORK.
Tht
Truth
About '
aiRTH CONTROL
Th
Naked
Truth
THE QUESTION OF THE OX EVERY WOMAN'S MIND
; , ' A WONDERFUL PLAY NOT A PICTURE
By Howard McKent Barne
"Merv-Unborii Child
' 1 '
MRS. CLARA BENNETT Will Deliver An Address On
"MOTHERHOOD" At All Th
i jj j
"Twalva and a half
1 timet at good aa
Within the Law.' "
t-Neitt York Tribune.-
t - 1
"A fatcinatinC
, 'myitery- it will
givt you chilli
and thrilla."
'tf.Y.,Ev. World.
"Stuffed with tur
prUei, tentationa,
tcntiment, aut
penta and myi-,
ticitm."
N. Y. Evt. Post.
th.
CHAIR
A thriller from .
(ttart to 6nih."
N. Y. Amerkan.
An Excellent Company Includes
KATHERINE grey
Kathleen Comegys
Louise Brownell
Beatrice James
Florence Thornton
Marta Spears
Marion Little
DAILY MATINEES
PERFORMANCE STARTS AFTER PARADE WEDNESDAY NIGHT
Brinsley Shaw -John
T. Dwyer
Bruce Elmore
John Delson
Sidney Dudley
Irving Herbert
Edwin E. Vickery and Others
A Masterful Play That Runs the
Gamut of All Human Emotions
J
back to Los Angeles and has placed
him on the reRular pay roll. Look
for Happy Charlie in forthcoming
Artcraft plays.
Fiske 0'Hara Tells About
Wild Beauty of Irish Drama
"It is remarkable how the Celtic in
the literature and the drama is forg
ing its way to the center place of in
terest. It makes one think that the
pendulum has swung too far in the
world of realism, and is now swing
ing back to that world wherein lies
imagination, and the more sweet and
tender emotions of life," says Fiske
O'Hara. A few sentences of an ar
ticle he recently read, under the title
"The Soul of the Celtic Race," lingers
with him:
"The wild, tender and poignant ele
ments that enter in(o the makeup of
the human heart are written large in
the Celtic race. Around their islands
is the everlasting murmur of the sea,
and on their hil'3 the wind forever
calls. And when they tell us tales, it
is as though we listen to the sighing
of the waves or the tumult of the
storm. They are like people who have
stepped within the fairy ring and been
enchanted. They still keep an altar
and a fire, and when the world is
weary of its workshops and its ashes,
it may be glad to turn to these
strange, sad guardians of the sacred
flame for a spark whereby to light its
torch once more.
"For who shall measure the value
of a dream, an enthusiasm, a convic
tion? Most of us nowadays are
afraid to believe anything utterly, to
care for anything desperately, to
loosen entirely our grasp of the ma
terial. Not so with these Celts and
Gaels. It is easy not to fear another,
they don't fear themselves. They
speak a flaming word which has its
place in the world's language."
Battle of Arras in Film Is
Coming to Omaha Orpheum
"The Retreat of the Germans at
the Battle of Afras," the British offi
cial war mofion pictures, will be ex
hibited as a part of the regular vau
deville program at the Orpheum, be
pinniing the week of October 14,
These pictures were taken under the
supervision and direction of the Brit
ish War office and show actual fight
ing in the first line trenches. The big
guns of the allied forces are seen at
close range. The pictures show actual
hand-to-hand engagements between
the allies and the Teutons, and
British Tommy and French poilu are
seen climbing out of their trenches
and fllowing barrage fire right up
to the German trenches and routing
frightened Fritz. Bridges are shown
being blown up by the whipped en
emy, and the use of small holes as
points of vantage in open attacks, a
and following a stratagem, can be
seen for the first time.
Airplanes darting about in the
air, automobile trucks laden with sup
plies speeding to the first line
trenches, reinforcements coming up
on the double quick, light and heavy
artillery reducing the German fortifi
cations, Red Cross and hospital units
tinder fire all the horror of losing
and the glory of winning are shown
in these pictures.
, These films also show the utter de
vastation wrought by the rctreatilifr
, Germans in France. Cities and vil
: lages by the score are shown reduced
j to nothing, and the smoking ruins
j testify to the speed with which the
allied troops followed the foe. Fields
i and. farms and vineyards once produc
I tive, can be seen viciously destroyed
to the last blade of grass by the flee
I ,ing Germans. Stately trees that have
.naaea me roaas oi rrance tor nun
drHs of years are seen cut down to
the ground for no military necessity
tt all, merely for the sake of destroy
ing. United Moves to New and
Better Appointed Quarters
The United Theater Equipment
corporation has moved from its for
mer location in he National Printing
jui'ding to the ground floor location
A Thirteenth and Harney. Manager
f . A. Van Husan. in speaking of the
move, says: "This step was neces
sary owing to the large volume of
business we have been enjoying. We
were forced to look for a location,
that would give us more space, and we
have better light and air, and what
I firmly believe to be the best ao-
pointed supply house in this section
of the country."
A Cnrloui Stone.
Johnny came home from school KtverA
times within a month with various bruises
on his face ana body, received In tights
with Ms schoolmates, and on the last occa
sion his mother threatened him with severe
punishment If he ever engaced In a fight
again. Only a few day after the lad ap
peared with a black eye. and. scared hv ih
stern, mm-rnul greeting, "Well, sir?" he 'de
parted from his usual truthful wars and
stammered :
"I fell down and hit my head on a stone."
w. J"11?11 t worst of It?" asked
his big brother.
"Oh. the other fellow," answered Johnny,
briskly. "He's gone home with two black
eyes." Pearson's Weekly.
Slang.
Slang and Its possibilities Were vividly ex
pressed in the conversation of two youths
J" Back Bay home one nigftt recently.
The boys got into a discussion, and when
all legitimate arguments had been exhaust
ed the following repartee was heard:
"Snow again I don't catch the drift"
"Keep on spouting, kid you're a whale."
"Tie your shoe your tongue's hangin'
out."
"Hang crepe on yer ear, you muttj ytr
brain la dead."
"Ah, sand yer tracks yer slippln!"
"Sneeie, little one yer bean la dusty."
Boston Traveler.