rlTB OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL, PORTL AND, SUNDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 26, 1920. :HI "",7 'A r r -.or 'lli U .See' - i Sr, ! -Vr-J Hi J&bercp. ; lvii -T'iwe ii Til r-s "A Splendid HaiarcT relates the ro- f?1 ill U'lnVS Imanco of Karl Breltman, who Is ob- Vafv i T Jx - Ml JL 1 V- f semed with an overwhelming; ambition. ( "-rJVi"XH1 i I I all huge. Neither care nor expenae baa . been spared In the maklnr of thia pro duction. It It to thesa elements that "The In ner Voice" owea the phenomenal mo- cew which it ia haa enjoyed since lta first showing at the Strand and Broad way theatre. New Tork. ... Mutt and Jeff corned ob the mame blU. , COLUMBIA "Don't Erer Marry" to the title of the matrimonial satire which Edgar Franklin wrote and which Marshall Neilan has produced for the screen w4th a cast that Includes Matt Moore. Marjorie Daw, Wesler Barry, Tom Gaise. Adele Farr irton. Thomas Jefferson . Herbert Standlnr, Betty Bouton and others. Thia is quite a de partment frr Mr. Neilan, but it shows his versatility In the fact that he is as easily at home In comedy as In stories of a more serious nature. "Don't Ever Marry" is the tale of the happeninin whlcth take place within 24 hours after a secret marriage, when for reasons best known to themselves, two other women claim the young arroom as their lawfully wedded husband. This 1 an uproarious comedy from the opening scene to the closing episode. The humorous points come from situa tions in which everyday people find themselves and they are not dependent upon the gTotesqueness of any charac ter. Mr. Neflan has transferred all of the high lights of the story and has kept the picture spontaneous with humor throughout. The cast may be called genuine all-star, since it carries names which, are familiar to every plcturepoer. And these players take advantage of the highly amusting complications in a man ner which stamps them as artists of the first order. H ff AJESTIC "Goinc Some." the new 1U Rex Beach picture, featured at the Majestic this week, is a story full of ac tionem) up to the usual Beach standards n every respect. The cast cnosen tor this production is an all-star one, and includes such popular plavers as Cullen Landls. Lillian Hall, Willard iouis. Lillian Ingdon. Maurice B. Flynn, the well known football player. Helen Ferguson, Kenneth Harlan and a host of others popular m-lth the lovers of the screen. Wagerinr a btr cattle ranch against sheep ranch upon the outcome of a foot race is one of the excitement pro ducing elements nVQorag Some." The picture is all that Harry Beaumont direction with the assistance of the an ther can make It. Moat of the action centers around thji two runners and the owners of the ranches. The runners rhold the destiny of many people in their power to win or lose- the event ful race. Before the time arrive ror the athletes to try out their physical powess, oil Is discovered on one of the wagered ranches, thereby enhancing its value a great deal. The possibility of such- a discovery was not taken Into oonsiderstion when the wager was made ; hence arises the question of whether It would be fair to carry out the original terms on which the bet was based. Ob viating the necessity of legal assist ance, nature allows things to take their normal course. The solving of this in tricate pntxla makes a story of absorb ing interest. "Going Some gives all the thrills and excitement to be derived from a picture. A Carter de Haven comedy and Paths I Weekly are Included on the. same pro gram. Photo LIBERTY One of the most unusual romances ever conceived by an au . thor la presented, in Allan, Dwgn's pro duction of "A Splendid Haxanl," Harold MaeOrath's -.vigorous narrative of love and buried treasure, showing at the Lib erty for the. new week. It presents In true perspective the transitory influence of Infatuation as opposed to the solidity and performance of love that springs from sympathy, understanding and sin cere affection. "A Splendid Hazard" relates the ro mance of Karl Breltman, who Is ob sessed with an overwhelming ambition, and Hedda Gobert, beautiful prima donna. With the. deliberate Intention of securing a treasure map in Hedda's pes tiesslon,. Breltman woos the dlv al though he has no feeling for her. She falls madly in love with him. Having secured the map, he Ignores the pleas of the woman and sails for America. Her great love having blind ed her, she abandons her career and follows him. Arthur Cathewe, her man ager, who has proposed . to the singer many times and been rejected, Insists IP on accompanying her to America, thus complicating the love story. This interesting situation cornea to a head in a powerful climax in far-away Corsica, where Fate untangles the twisted skoins of the romance. Brelt man Is played in "A Splendid Hazard" by Henry B. Walthall, while the char acter of Hedda Iolert Is enacted by Rosemary Thetiy. and that of Cathewe by riiilo McPulloutrh. Motion pictures of "Bsbe" Ruth, the "Czar of Swat." in action in a real game are alfo featured. These nurtures; in slow mot inn. will also show just how ''Babe" manage to hit the ball on the nose so regularly. RIVOLI E. K. Lincoln, the romantic fMTreen ptar. will b seen in the American Cinema Super Special. 'The Inner Voice." at the Rlroll for the new week. "The Inner Voice." like the majority of the other dramatic successes of the present day and of the past ages, has ss Its main motive the eternal struggle between rtght and wrong ; vice and virtue. This photo drama in many respects as a piece of dramatic writing ap proaches the technical perfection and human interest of the great .dramatic masterpieces) in-the history of tHerntare, It Is said -by great literary critics that the outstanding feature In the works of all writers who have been accepted as the greatest of their age. has been the fact that in their works they have touched 'ith an unerring hand the re sponsive human cord in the hearts of their readers. The scenic settings of thia picture are 1 TODAY 13 AND i -f ALL NEXT - I j i V o ft WFFK ?ite'&j: M v v n. n. iv a F ' sn riV; ' B rT yf ' 'V-vO ' 1 js5 V - S v . , -0 vT v . ,v r ' 9 ivv- . -s-vr.'? i : -' -X' , .tf , t ; I tfg . I Sk, v-Vs - A; '" ,i J vr!; '''T'V; W :s -. l FMPLES Elsie, Ferguson, well known actress of state and screea. Is fea tured on the new bill at the People's this week in "Lady Rose's Daughter," a dramatic offering in which Miss Fer guson is seen to advantage. The photo play Is beautifully mounted, and Miss Ferguson's supporting east ia quite in keeping with the high standards de manded by such a star. STAR "Shipwrecked Among Savages." the latest Universal special feature, is showing this week at the Star. Edward Laemmle and William F. Ad ler. a member of the Southern California Academy of Sciences, have been a lit tle over a year In producing -this pic ture, the scenes for which were taken in the South Sea Islands, many of which were taken on the Island of New Ouinea among the head hunters. And It was much difficulty and danger to their own heads that the adventurous pair took upon themselves before they filmed the natives, who are said to be members of one of the wildest tribes in existence today. The natrve dances, in which they show a knowledge of the "shimmy," the vsri ous ways of hunting, eating and sleep ing, several families living together Jn the one house and other moat amusing facts are all recorded In the picture. There la also a rood thrill injected la the form of a tiger hunt in Java, in which a score of natives drive a beast up to the camera. And all the. time the cameraman, Mr. Adler. Is grinding away until the beast springs. The ani mal ia killed, however, before any dam age ia done. If you care for a real good picture. one which will Interest, amuse and In struct at the same time, here's one for you., iIBCLE Scenes of gay Parisian life, Vi produced with unusual realism, are features of jfrlch von Stroheim's latest Unlversey-Jf el production. 'The Devil's Pass Key." at the Circle today and to morrow. Von Strohelm was the author and director of "Blind Husbands.' the recent Universal success, said to be one of the beet photoplays "Of several seasons. - The reproduction In The Devil's Pass Key" of life In Paria. where the story is laid, is genuine In every detail. Von Strohelm has spent a good deal of time there himself and much of the local color of the scenes ia the French capital is the result of his own experience. The Story concerns an American au thor living in Paris with his extrava gant wife, who becomes hopelessly In debt at the shop of an unscrupulous mo diste. Expecting the woman to follow the Parisian method of getting a rich lover to pay her bills, the modiste in troduces l.er to an American army offi cer, mis turns out to oe me mosi, fortunate thing that could have hap pened to the young wife. Vaudeville OR.PHEUM Arrangements have been made by ' the Orpt.eum management with the HelUg Theatre company to hold the show opening today over for an extra performance next Wednesday night Tickets for the Wednesday night shpw were racked early by Mlllroy A. Anderson, boxoffice treasurer, for the accommodation of all Orphaum patrons who have been unable to make satis factory reservations for other nights. Sheila Terry, sprightly danseuse. who headlined an Orpheum show before. Is the stellar artist of the new show. M"lsV Terry, supported by Harry Peterson end Morris Lloyd, is , offering fThree'a a . Crowd." an operetta whJrb has lively music and dancing aid wftch Is staged . magnificently. , Th, "music, ""lyric " staging of th ..$, Friedlanderj. , V ai by William Bv Tba eitra" attraction of -the nsw show Is the ,aci ij J, RosamondiiJestnsoR and his Inimitable five, at, assemblage of . colored artists, who, have, been; winning sensational success' all slong the Orphe um circuit with a new act celled "8yn copatloh Johnson formerly ,wss half of the celebrated pair, Cole and'Johnson. -snd his Orphan m ssslstants Include . Peggy Holland. Eddie Ransom. Pete Zabriakle, Taylor Gordon and William Butles. Jack Clifford and Miriam Wllla, a big success In a former Orpheum tour, are the third feature In "At Jasper Junc tion" Mr. Clifford Is expert In the, por trayal of an old man character and Mlat Wills Is a very capable songstress. ' Bright comedy prevails In this aot and tn its former visit It waa one of the big hits of a notable show. ' Remaining acta are, "Scream" Welch. Slg Mealy and Johnny Montrose. "Those Surprise Boys" : Harry Adler and Rose Dunbsr In "A Study From Life": "La Oracloea," a beautiful woman. In an electro-scenic production called "Visions from Fairyland." and Osakl and Takl, unique physical artists from the land of the mikado. Klnograms and Topics of the Day accompanied by the Orpheum's exclusive views In color or Oregon scen ery and the concert orchestra under direction of George K. Jeffery complete the show. ' In the extra performance next Wed nesday night the entire Orpheum show will be presented. K' PtNT AGES Six sterling vaudsvills attractions are promised at Pantagas for the woek commencing with tomor row's matinee, the foremost being the Revue de IjUxe, a brilliant musical cre ation which brings Harry Slgman. Peggy Mcintosh and a large cast of clever principals and real beauty chorus from Broadway. The latest songs and sayings, the lat est dances and the newest gowns all play prominent parts in the production rContinncd on ! SI. Ttifci sentinel Pi-Uard Comedy "DOING TIME 'Trailed by Three Chapter Nina And a Scenic THE BIG COMEDY-DRAMA KICK OF THE SEASON! MARSHALL NEILAN'S TH&f?E SHE IS NOW Jv EWOOCH The Columbia presents "Don't 4 Ever Marry" as he season's best and funniest example of screen comedy-drama. It is straight amusement no "problems" or "lessons" just laugh. :: .it. The Cast Includes Matt Moore, Marjorie Daw, Wesley Barrjr and Others THE NEW COLUMBIA WURLITZER ORGAN ERNEST NORDSTROM RALPH OSBORNE MASTER ORGANISTS . irat time, the new Wurlitzer, xinder the magic fingers of two isicians Ralph Osborne and Ernest .Nordstrom r You will hear, for the first master music i NOT A "SIJ-CK" COMEDY I i . ii I, ' a t