Galveston Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 166, Ed. 1 Friday, June 8, 1923 Page: 2 of 22
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FRIDAY, JUNE 8, 1923.
GALVESTON TRIBUNE
2
AMUSEMENTS
AMUSEMENTS
AMUSEMENTS
AMUSEMENTS
OZZIE
88
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PICTURES
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TODAY AND SATURDAY
An All-Star Cast with
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GALVESTON’S BATHING GIRL REVUE
Rodolph Valentino.
4 DAYS STARTS
SUNDAY AND MONDAY
GOSSIPY BITS.
bought a hilltop
SUN
overlooking Beverly Hills near Holly-
was
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PERSONAL AND SOCIAL
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AND DAN MASON IN POP TURTLE’S “POLEOAT PLO’T
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UNEVEN HEM USED
ON THIS NEW COAT
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TODAY AND TOMORROW
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WITH NORMA SHEARER, JAMES GLADDEN, YVONNE LOGAN
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SUNDAY AND MONDAY
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Grace Darmond
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make you feel at home.
3 DAYS STARTING SUNDAY
WILLIAM S. HART,
One of Hart’s Greatest Characterizations.
E
MOVIE SECRETS
7
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IS
WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY
4
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And many other useful inexpensive gifts.
MOTTEXAS RESORT
THE GIFT SHOP
DOWN THE ISLAND
4
One Stop West of the Elks Club
2110 Ave. E
Phone your order to 9002J before
you leave town.
China
Bronzes
Glassware
Table Lamps
Floor Lamps
won
the
A Theater
for the
Whole
Family.
Mr. and Mrs. John Woods Harris and
little daughters. Misses Eugenia and
Anne Harris left on Tuesday for Char-
lottesville, Va., to spend the summer at
their summer home near Mrs. Harris
parents, Dr. and Mrs. John Stage Davis
of the University of Virginia. Mr. Har-
ris will join his family in the Old Dom-
inion the latter part of the month.
Tanlao Vegetable Pills are nature’s
own remedy for constipation. For sale
everywhere.
Only the
Best
Pictures
Shown.
u
Mr. and Mrs. Walter J. Herzog and
family are now at home to their friends
at 1704, Twenty-fifth St.
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A.—In “The Girl I Loved” she takes
the part of the sympathetic mother.
In what picture is the famous Sar-
gasso Sea, where, tradition has it, is
an isle of lost ships, used in a photo-,
play to tell the story? Answer tomor-
row.
1
MONDAY NIGHT
ALL LADIES ADMITTED FREE.
Don’t Let Anything Keep You Away Today
and Tomorrow—A Very Inter-
esting Program.
■
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for the Bride and June Graduate made
easy at the Gift Shop.
Suggestions:
Wrought Iron Lamps
Art Articles
Acquariums
1 Incense Burners
Vanity Cases
Kool
Klean
Komfortnble
Today
and
Tomorrow.
McKinney lady
GAINS 18 POUNDS
(X
NOA
IIIEIIIIMIIIIEIIIIIIIIIIIIEIIIIEIIIIIIIIIIIIISIIIEIIIIIIIIEIIIEIIIHIIIEIIIEIIIEIIIEIIIIIIIIIIIISIIIEIIIEIIIEIIIIFM
IN A FOX NEWS.
Taken on Our Own Beach Front—Come and See It.
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“THE MIDNIGHT GUEST”
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E Go where the crowd goes—to the Crystal Dance Palace, where they
Heard Them. E
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Movieland News Notes
By Daisy Dean
Candle Sticks
Book Ends
Door Stops
Pictures
Mirrors
Leather Goods
Fans
Stationery .
Beaded Bags
Kodak Albums
MILTON SILLS, ANNA Q. NILSSON, FRANK CAM-
PEAU AND WALTER LONG IN
Lucky Foot Dance
SUNDAY NIGHT—DANCING STARTS AT 7:30 P. M.
n
presents ~
A Demon in Human Shape is Transformed Into a Noble Man by the
Irresistible power of a Woman’s Love.
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The story teems with the suppressed hate and emotion of one of the
deadliest men of the West.
THE MOST SENSATIONAL ACTION WESTERN
PHOTOPLAY EVER CREATED!
Always
an
Interesting
Program.
And Buster Keaton in
“MY WIFE’S RELATIONS”
$
— • #=
A Fox Screen Masterpiece From the Famous Novel by
James B. Hendryx
Featuring
CHARLES JONES in “SNOWDRIFT”
A Glorious Tale of a Fight for Life in the Yukon Gold Fields.
Miss Sally Allen Hawley a student at
Miss Scudder’s School, Riverside Drive,
N. Y., will arrive home on Saturday to
spend the summer with her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Hawley. Miss Haw-
ley will be one of the charming mem-
You’ll Thrill at the Wonderful Spectacle,
While Wou Smile in Sympathy With the
Appealing Romance of This Unusual Screen
Story and Remarkable Drama.
LON CHANEY
—And—
I
VIRGINIA VALLI
—In—
1
We
recommend
This
Picture
Very
Highly.
late polo coat, and a p-.-, e---- ------- .
polo coat streaked with makeup wor- ! goan, is playing the role of Hairpin An-
tied our housewifely heart. He was in nie in “Lights Out” at the Robertson
t
bers of the debutante circle of season
1923-24.
9
22
GU
PARAMOUNT
EXCITERS'
C ^anamount picture
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PARAMOUNT PICTURES^
A Tale of Adventure, Love and Romance on an Island of Wrecked
Ships in the Weird Sargasso Sea.
“The Isle of Lost Ships
Mr. Wheelock Boehne, who has been
attending A. and M., has returned home
to spend the summer with his parents,
Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Boehne.
Continued on Page Five.
68
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“The Soul of Hate”
“Railroaded”
at the
Crystal Dance Palace
- q Numbers Will Be Called and $5 Cash Will Be Given
IU To Each Couple Having Foot on Lucky Number.
BRING YOUR LUCKY FOOT TO THE
CRYSTAL DANCE PALACE SUNDAY NIGHT
MATINEE DANCE
Sunday—2:30 to 5:30
Ladies’ Night
I Straube was awarded the consolation ’
| and Mrs. C. H. Cassel the club prize. ;
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2
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DouglasCMacLeajt'4
Chicken Dinners are our boast.1
Mrs. James Edwin Thompson who
has been visiting at Fort Totten Long
Island, the guest of her son-in-law and
l
Fhe Shock”
The Consolation club enjoyed the
hospitality of Mrs. P. Johnson and Mrs.
L. Schultz on Thursday afternoon. Five
hundred and hearts were the games
enjoyed, about thirty-five of the mem'
bers being present.
Mrs. C. A. Kalbey won the high score
| prize, Mrs. F. E. Cooper the low score
, for five hundred, while Mrs. E. Wichlep
I
THE CONSOLIDATED SUPER-SPECIAL
All-Star Cast. A Mile-a-Minute Adventure and Romance,
his private car where he made up for Cole Studios.
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Mae Murray has
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Miss Madge Suddath of Whitesboro
will arrive this week-end to be the
guest of Miss Frances Kilpatrick. Miss
Kilpatrick and Miss Suddath were
roommates while attending Crescent
college, Eureka Springs, Ark.
.Miss Florence Settle’s dancing class-
es will hold zhe closing exhibition of
physical education and aesthetic danc-
ing classes on Saturday evening at the
municipal auditorium which will be the
big event of the evening.
All former patrons and friends desir-
ing tickets may receive them at the
box office on their arrival.
Miss Settle’s Galveston and Houston
classes will feature a beautiful pro-
gram, exquisitely costumed and those
attending will enjoy an unusual treat
in terpischorean art.
Miss Settle will entertain a house
party of twenty Houston guests for
the performance.
We have interviewed Rodolph Valen-
tino. Yes, we did it. We saw the in-
comparable Rodolph, the most popular
of matinee idols (according to actual
figures) in all the glory of his vase-
The Pleasure ©IF Buying
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Mrs. A. Ritzlee. An outing to John’s
will also be enjoyed June 21.
Music by Harris Bros.
Classic Jazz Orchestra, the Best in the South. Ask Anyone Who Has
floral asset, are due to her influence
in the vigorous campaign in tree plant- ]
ing and beautification of her home city. I
She also was the first to establish the ‘
Free Milk Fund. During the world war f
she organized the first Red Cross Unit
in Galveston, which did valuable ser- 1
vice prior to the United States entering :
the conflict, the supplies going direct
to France. She was a member of
George Washington Chapter, Daugh- 1
ters of the American Revolution, the -
Sidney Sherman Chapter, Daughters of ,
the Republic of Texas, also of the Col- '
onial Dames Chapter Society in Gal-
veston, and was a member of the board
of managers of the Galveston Orphan s
Home, and the Letitia Rosenberg
Women’s home for aged women and
was very active in the interest of all
civic and charitable institutions of the
city.
Mrs. League has made her home with
her grandchildren since the family
residence east.
Mr. Gray is a graduate of Columbia
University.
qPEED was her god—this
• mile-a-minute girl who
whizzed through life seeking
thrills and excitement—and
finding them with every
flicker of the film!
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Your gift represents you. Let it be one of sincerity,
usefulness and personality—such gifts can be found here
6301
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Friday and Saturday
WILLIAM DUNCAN AND
EDITH JOHNSON IN
“Playing It Wild”
A Story of the West, of Hard-
Riding Men, Where a Six-Gun
Speaks the Only Language They
Know.
his appearance in a dance act in the
public auditorium at Cleveland, Ohio.
We were anxious to meet his most at-
! tractive wife, Winifred Hudnut, who is
also his dancing partner, but she had
been detained elsewhere by illness.
Possibly the public generally does
not know that Mr. Valentino is re-
strained by court injunction from ap-
pearing in any theater whatever unless
he puts on a public dance. This is the
result of his alleged breaking of his
contract with the motion picture com-
pany. He says he may never go ’into
pictures again, and expects to go to
Europe within a short time.
Of all his pictures in which he has
appeared his favorites are “The Four
Horsemen” and "Blood and Sand.”
■
of the Women’s Health Protective As-
sociation, the present beauty and glor-
ious display of Oleander blossoms
which are Galvest on’s greatest
07
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g8s
daughter, Major and Mrs. Wilmer Stan-
ley Phillips and family, is in Bryn
Mawr, Penn., today to attend the grad-
uating exercises of the Baldwin school,
her daughter Miss Rhoda Thompson
being a member of class 1928. Mrs.
Phillips accompanied her mother to
Pennsylvania for the event, for a visit
to her Alma Mater. They will return
to Fort Totten for a visit, and on re-
turning to Galveston Mrs. Thompson
will also be accompanied by her sons
Messrs. Frederick and Edward Randall
Thompson, students of Upper Canada
school. Mr. James Edwin Thompson Jr.,
a junior at the University of Texas,
finishing his pre-medic course has ar-
rived from Austin. Mr. John Thompson
visited his brother prior to his return
home.
3*"
lined hair, etc. The "etc.” refers to his
soft brown eyes and his polo coat and - .----- _ -
riding boots and makeup. The latter i wood and will soon start building a
daubed on his otherwise immacu- 1 permanent home there.
perfectly good | Ruth Stonehouse, a former chica-
Further evidence of both the imme-
diate and the lasting results one gets
from the Tanlac treatment is given in
the following statement of Mrs. Maud
Belcher, highly esteemed resident of
706 Louisiana St., McKinney, Texas:
"Tanlac restored my health and built
me up eighteen pounds three years ago
and I have kept my weight and felt
well ever since. At the time I got Tan-
lac everything I ate caused sharp pains
in my stomach and bloated me with
gas until my heart palpitated so fright-
fully it brought on an awful nervous
state.
“Well, Tanlac restored my appetite
almost at the start, and in a little while
I was eating just anything I wanted,
and I gained weight and strength until
I was soon doing all my housework
with ease. I gladly recommend Tan-
lac because I believe it will help others
the same as it did me.”
Tanlac is for sale by all good drug-
gists. Accept no substitute. Over 37
million bottles sold.
Tuesday and Wednesday
COLLEEN MOORE AND
ANTONIO MORENO IN
“Look Your Best”
3
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A delicious luncheon was served at the •
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JANE THOMAS WITH PARAMOUNT.
Jane. Thomas, who eight years ago
entered the movies via the Essanay
Company, is now casting her lot with
the Paramount players at the Long
Island studio.
Miss Thomas will make her debut as
a Paramount player in “The Exciters.”
with Bebe Daniels arid Antonio Moreno.
Her role will be that of a crook maid.
Before joining "The Exciters” Miss
Thomas finished a part in D. W. Grif-
fith’s latest production, “The White
Rose” and “Blue Water,” a story of the
sea.
Miss Thomas appeared recently in
"The Town That Forgot God.” Some
of her earlier successes were, "The
Queen of the Moulin Rouge” and “The
North Wind’s Malice.”
conclusion of the games.
The next meeting will be held July
5 at the home of Mrs. L. Smith, 1910
Avenue. M%. She will be assisted in
entertaining by Mrs. B. Nelson and
This is the season when we clean
and brush out winter clothes careful-
ly and put them away in moth-proof
packages until the coming of cold
weather, and then try to forget that
such things as blizzards and zero
weather ever made us shiver. While
putting away our winter things how-
ever it is as well to regard them with
an eye to their usefulness next sea-
son—“Safety First,, as it were. If we
know what is to be the prevailing
fashion for the next season, possibly
we can, by the addition of a bit of
fur, a tie instead of a belt, a taking
in here and a letting out there, make
our last winter’s coat or suit look
up-to-date and can save the outlay in
that direction to be used elsewhere.
Nowadays one season dovetails into
the last with the arbiters of fashion.
Before we have quite decided what we
shall wear this summer the designers
and manufacturers are showing the
next season’s styles. The National
Cloak, Suit and Skirt Manufacturers’
association approved this coat at a re-
cent style show at Cleveland Ohio. It
is made of fashona cloth in kit fox
color—a new shade of gray. Notice
the high, uneven collar of viatka squir-
rel, deep cuffs and unusual banding of
the same fur. The uneven hem and
side tie of self material are the dis-
tinctive touches of this year’s styles.
she hides him in her cabin, plays for
his life with the gambler-sheriff who
loves her, too, and finally wins her
man. The man is J. Warren Kerrigan.
Q.—What is the theme of “Quick-
sands?”
A.—It is a story concerning narcotic
smuggling along the Mexican border.
Q.—What three famous villians of
the movies are in “Quicksands?”
A.—Noah Beery, Walter Long and
Frank Campeau.
Q.—Who plays opposite Walter Hlers
in "Sixty Cents an Hour?”
A.—Jaqueline Logan.
Q.—In what current Ray film does
Edyth Chapman appear?
Mr. Waters S. Davis of Galveston and
New York announces the engagement
and approaching marriage of his
daughter, Catherine to Mr. Charles
Louis Gray^of New York, the marriage
to be solemnized in the early autumn
on the return of Mr. Davis and Miss
Davis and Mr. Waters S. Davis Jr.,
from Europe.
Miss Davis was born and reared in
Galveston, and is one of the loveliest
members of the younger set. She pos-
sesses an unaffected charm and grac-
ious personality that has won many
warm friends in college and social cir-
cles during the family residence east,
while she and her brother were attend-
ing school. She is a junior at Vassar,
prior to which she graduated at “West-
over,” Millbury, Mass.
The bride-elect is a grand-daughter
of the late John Charles League and
Mr. and Mrs. Waters S. Davis Sr., of
Galveston. .
Her grandparents. the late Mr. and
Mrs. John Charles League, and Mr. and
Mrs Waters S. Davis Sr., were among
the prominent Galvestonians, whom
were instrumental in the upbuilding of
Treasure Isle. Her great grandfather,
the late George Ball, senior member of
the banking firm of Hutchings Sealy
& Co., was among Galveston’s greatest
philanthropists. Her mother Mrs. Daisv
League Davis, who died last fall, was
one of the most active in the interest
States Tanlac Restored Her
Years Ago and She Has Felt
Fine Ever Since.
CONSTIPATION
Kp goes, and energy, pep and
vim return when taking
CHAMBERLAIN’S
TABLETS
Keep stomach sweet—liver active—
bowels regular—only 25c.
the films and who plays the leading
the high score and Mrs. M. Coombs i masculine role?
low score in hearts. Mrs. L i A.—The theme is about a girl who
owned a saloon in a mining town in
the west. The girl loves a bandit, and
Q.—What actor is being groomed to
succeed the late Wallace Reid on the
screen?
A.—Alfred Lunt is being groomed to
take the place of the late film star.
Lunt is regarded as one of the hand-
somest men on the stage and is likened
to Wallace Reid by the critics. He is
now appearing in “Backbone” by Clar-
ence Duddington Kelland.
Q.—What motion picture star is un-
der contract for one company which
provides that he can make his own pic-
tures when he wants to.
A.—Hobart Bosworth is under a
Goldwyn contract but can make his
own pictures when he wants to.
Q.—What Swedish actress has been
assigned the leading part in “A Gen-
tleman of Leisure” starring Jack Holt?
A.—Sigrid Holmquist.
Q.—What movie actress who got her
start in the old Essanay company now
has an important part in the coming
production of “The Exciters.”
A.—Jane Thomas. She plays the part
of Della, the crook maid.
Q.—In what coming picture is there
a prologue showing Nita Naldi as Cle-
opatra in her court on the Nile?
A.—In “Lawful Larceny” a Para-
mount production.
Q.—What is the theme of “The Girl
of the Golden West” which is now in
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“FULL SPEED AHEAD!”
That’s the Cry of this Speed-Loving Heroine.
ADDLDH ZUKOR “74}4
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Mr. Willard Markle, son of Mr. and
Mrs F. B. Markle who spent the past
year at the University of Texas will
depart today for New Orleans, where
he will sail for France to continue his
studies in architecture and art.
Mr. Robert Williams, a student at
the University of Texas, has returned
to spend the summer with his parents.
Mr. and Mrs. R. F. Williams.
5a*
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Galveston Tribune. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 166, Ed. 1 Friday, June 8, 1923, newspaper, June 8, 1923; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1597079/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Rosenberg Library.