== WILMETTE LIFE, FRIDAY, MAY 23, 1924 IS. HERE AND THERE. ON STAGE AND Reviews of the Week BOYS TO CHUM Wim BIG·· INJUN wives will enjoy "Cytherea." At the same time I think I know some husb a.n~,s who will say, "0, its pretty fa1r, and let it go at that. ------------------~--------------~--------~------------~J Nawakwa and will have associated Real Counteaa Hu Part with him other men of sterling charIn New Americao Pictunw acter and specialized experience in "SHERLOCK, JR." With Buster Keaton athletics, aquatics, nature study, canoe trips and woodcraft. Two camps for boys will be conducted at Hastings lake, near Lake Villa, Ill., where the association owns th e whole lake. Good roads make this camp of easy access by automobile. Other camps conducted by t'he Chica&o association are Camp Pinewood near Muskegon, Mich.; Camp D~;~nc:-n on Fish lake, near Volo, I1lmo1s; Camp Channing on the Kan~ak e e river. The Y. M. C. A. also carnes on the recreational and religious activities at Camp Roosevelt. Mlle. Countess Marie Anne de T'iesenhausen, daughter of the tate CoL. Count Paul de Tiesenhausen, who for fifteen years held the office of RussiaD vice-counsel in New York City, wiJI make her debut before the camera iD the Cosmopolitan's picturization of Paul Leicester Ford's story of the American revolution, "Janice Mere-. dith," in which Marion Davies will ·star following her appearance in "Yolanda." MUe. de Tiesenhausen, although born in this country, is a member o{ the old- time Russian nobility. Her father, Count de Tiesenhausen, waa well-known in diplomatic circles ia· this country and Russia and a tru!ted representative of the late Czar Nacholas. He also served as a colonel witla the Russian army during the Turko-" Russian war. : STAGE On Saturday, May 17, the final curtain was rung down on the Colonial t heater and on May 26 it will be turned over to the wreckers who will demolish it to make way for the new United Masonic Temple. Its passing marks the second bit qf theatrica.l housing history in the past few weeks, coming as it does shortly after the closing of Powers, which made way for th e addition to the Sherman house. The Colonial was twenty-two years old, havin~r opened its doors in November, 1902. a s the Iroquois. Less than a month later the terrible Iroquois fire took p)ace in which nearly six hundred persons lost th eir lives, including several well known Winnetka people. My inability to obtain a ticket of admiss ion wa s the only thing that preve nted me from being in the theater that fateful day. The th eatre was later rebuilt and named the Colonial. It has been used largely for musical comedy production and always housed the various issues of the Follies. Its going redures the number of legitimate loop theaters to sixteen. Illinois boys will have a chance to play with genuine American Indians this summer. Two hundred acres , with nine miles of shore line on Crooked lake, in the heart of the Lac du Flambeau Indian reservation "Follies" Performance "Captain Blood" to be in northern Wisconsin, will be opened Enhances Lt"brary fund up as two boys' camps this summer Pictured thia Seaaon by the Chicago Y. M. C. A. The " Follies" appeared for a "one Preparations for the production of Here a boy can give vent to his in "Captain Blood," from the novel by herent, God-given savagery without night stand" on the north shore, Rafael Sabatini, have been completed getting into jail, according to A. E . Thursday of last week, sponsored by at Vitagraph studios in Hollywood and Cross, chairman of the camp commit- the sixth grade of the Joseph Sears Albert E. Smith, president, and David tee. He can run, climb, swim, fish , school at Kenilworth. The sixth gradSmith, who will direct the picture, or yell like a wild Indian on the war- ers put on the whole show for the are turning their attention to casting. path, if he feels like it. No zones of balance of the school and scored a LOSE INDOOR GAME This picture will be one of the most silence, no traffic policeman, no decided hit. notable efforts of the 1924-25 season, nervous old ladies, no white stiff colThe Kenilworth gymnasium indoc:w Thirty dollars was realized by the it is promised. Mr. Smith purchased lars, no creased trou sers. Just a performance for the school library team played a practice game with one the world rights to the novel while chance to really live and give expres- fund and enabled the class to com- of the New Trier advisory room teama in London and there conferred with sion to the pioneer and explorer in plete the purchase of it~ 9uota o f Tuesday and lost by a score of 1-10Mr. Sabatini concerning the produc- every normal boy. books assigned at the begmntng of the The Kenilworth team will meet E·tion plans. anston teams in the near future. school year. Bia Chief· Entertain One of the mo st difficult problems Camping in these northern woods in valved in picturi zing this brilliant romance of the Spanish Main was the will give a boy fir t hand contact with reproduction of the fighting ships of nature, along with a chance to inSCREEN the buccan eers of the seventeenth vestigate beaver ponds, travel by canoe century. Mr. Smith engaged a ship- over trackle ss wastes with an exper"THE BREAKING POINT" wright expert of London to do the ienced guide. discover deer. porcupines. Paramotmt Pict1tre research work and prepare plans for grouse and many other wild creatures, McVICKERS THEATER replicas of the ca stellated · ve ssels of who are at homt: to those who know how to make friend s with them. The picture is made from Mary Rob- that time . The se plans were brought Rug ;:-ed outdoor Jife, invigorating t> rts Rinehart' s "best sc.ller" of the to America by George H. Smith , man- athleti -. and aquatic sports and comaging director of Vitagraph's foreign ~a rne name and is said to follow the radeship with strong, clean men are Be organization. original story quite faithfully David Smith ha s been seeking loca- the things that Camp Nawakwa ("in t hat as it may, it is one story requirthe midst of the forest") has for red ing a vivid imagination to believe and tions on the we st coast for the last blooded boys. In the cool evenings, a most extraordinary ca st to present. ix months and ha s found a site with campers will sit like woodsmen around The central 'figure in the proceed- a hay ictentical with that of the town camp fires, while Chippewa Indian ings is a 6man who is subject to am- of Port Royal wh ere Sabatini laid his chiefs tell some of the old legends of nesia. Amne sia, you know, is the ail- romance. An island off southern Cali- the tribe or entertain with their war ment which causes one to lose his fornia will be used for the episodes dances. Then as the camp dies down, memory and to forget all that has dealing with Tortugas, the rendezvous there is that wonderful stillness exhappened in the past. In this picture of the pirates. cept for the mysterious .forest sounds they are careful to explain that amand the chance to look up at the great SCOUTS ON HIKE nesia takes place at times of great carpet of stars above and commune Several of the Kenilworth Boy stress-when the afflicted one has with the Great Spirit, who made both r eached "The Breaking Point,"-hence Scouts of Troop I left thi s afternoon the wild flower s and the galaxy of on an overnight hike, and will not the title. until Sunday morning. Twenty- worlds. Tlte trouble with the picture is that return Other "Y" Camp· ve or more boys made the' trip. our hero loses his memory too many fi Fenner E. King, who serves as Scoutmaster Townley announces that times, in fact he must if the story is scout games and tests will be featured camp secretary of the Chicago Y. M. to come ou t right. Consequently, al- as contests between C. A., will be the chief guide at Camp the patrols. though there is some excellent acting, good photography and direction, you are more or less unconvinced. Matt Moore, as the hero, first loses his memory when he flees from the scene of a murder of which he thinks he is guilty. Falling into the hands of an old doctor, the latter endeavors to build him up as an entirely new character. About to marry a nice 7074 North Clark St. young lady, he hear~ hints that his N. W. "'L" Station at Howanl for~otten past may not be entirely 0. K. Friday and Saturday Back to the scenes of his former Friday and Satunlay LORETT TAYLOR life he goes, has another change of In Lewi· Stone and Mary Carr memory, visits his doctor friend again "HAPPINESS" and recoveres memory number two. in al1o Just there something develooes which "WHY MEN LEAVE "TELEPHONE GIRL, No. 5" wouldn'~ occur to you in a long time, nor will you feel that it could posHOME" Sunday sibly occur after seeing the picture. POLA NEGRI Outside of watching Matt Moore Save all the usual Sunday dinner In Sunday and Patsy Ruth Miller do some rather work by dining at THE LIBRARY clever work, I was frankly bored by "MONMARTE" PLAZA CAFETERIA. "GALLOPING FISH" the proceedings. Monday and Tue1day The pure, wholesome, "home-cookJACQUELIN LOGAN Monday and Tue.day ed" food, the clean, bright surround"CYTHEREA" in ings and convenient Location all appeal First National Picture "THE GREAT WHITE "DAWN OF A to people who warit Sunday to be a CHICAGO THEATER TOMORROW" WAY" The sober faced Buster has sueceeded rather well with this two-reel comedy and it is good for a number of loud laughs. The story is all about a moving picture machine operator who, watching the screen picture, falls asleep and dreams he is a detect ive who recovers the pearls lost by the heroine of the film. His experiences make up the comedy. Altogether a good diversion. "Y" PIana Summer Camp m · Home of Red,kina NEWELL & RETCHIN HOW'AraRD ADE'I~ftePHI Sunday Dinner at The Plaza Cytherea , a title for the goddess of love, has much to do with that much discussed subject and makes some points that have set a few peop.le to thinking, so I am told. Taken from the story by Joseph Hergesheimer, it fails to fotlow through to the end as the author wrote, but for moving picture purposes it probably couldn't be done. Altogether, Cytherea is a cross section of the lives of some married couples. It deals with what appears to be a perfectly nomal pair, she a home-maker with set ideas and he a man who suddenly wonders what life would he like with a facinating woman who thinks in terms which are not of as practical a nature as those of his wife. An so, yieldin~ to his desire, he finds out, ~oing farther with his experiment than is the usual custom. How the bubble bursts and how his feelings change toward life giYes opportunity for some rather clever screen work. Perhaps the thing that will impress you most will be the fact that you will find yourself saying that you know people ju ~ t like thi s married couple. And you mav add that you wouldn't have to go far to ooint out a woman such as "Savina Grove" of this picture. They are not enti~ely creatures of some writer's imagmation . hut are to be found in most any society. Lewis Stone. as the hn ·ha nd. Irene Rich, as the wife and Alma Rubens as "Salina" do s~me very excetlent Constance Bennett, also acting. makes a very natural "flapper." I think I am safe in saying that most W edn·day and Tbur.day "THE UNINVITED GUEST" W edn ..day and Thursday Lewi· Stone and Mary Carr in day of real rest. "WHY MEN LEAVE HOME" Many folks come right after church and enjoy particularly our Sunday poultry specials. Come tomorrow. The goodness of everything will invite you back again and again. The North Shore's Most Representative Theaten lftltt~ 1lhtla When All Others Have Failed Come To Us When a property owner wishes 'to sell his real estate! he wa~ts quick action as a rule. The best way to get ~esults IS fo: h1m co list his property with a reputable and energetiC realtor w1th an exclusive contract. . We, knowing that we are ~rotected m our effo.rts to sell property, will devote every l?~ss1ble energy for m~kmg a sale. We will spend money adverhsmg the property wh1ch we would flot do if other brokers had the property fo~ sale. The chances for a satisfactory and prompt sale are obv1ously much greater under an exclusive contract. . . This system gives quick results Without costmg; t~e property owner one cent more than the regular sales comm1ss1on. CAFETERIA OllRI~G'I'ON I~ AVENUE AT CHURCH TREET THE LIDJ\ .UtY PLAZA HOTEL Suadaya '1 ·· Ill. to '1·43 P· - . U a. m. to Ta4G p. m. Open DaiiJ' Why Not Try It? Quinlan & Tyso11, Inc. Fountain Sq-re, ETanllon Prouty Buildin·, Winnetka E~aneton Zlll Wannetka Ziti