WINNETKA TALK Uctober £9, 1927 Teatro del Lago Sheridan Road in "No Man's Land" Between Wilmette and Kenilworth I | Ph. Kenilworth 3980-3981 MATINEES SATURDAY, SUNDAY | SATURDAY 8 SUNDAY il | Doors Open 1:30 Show Starts 2 p. m., Continuous Evenings During Week | Doors Open 6:30 Show Starts 7 p. m. PROGRAM FOR WEEK || ENDING NOVEMBER 4 Saturday, October 29 il Tom Mix "SILVER VALLEY" "Love's Languid Lure," | Ben Turpin Comedy "Oswald Cartoon" "Assorted Babies," Specialty Hl i | Sunday, October 30 Thomas Meighan I "WE'RE ALL GAMBLERS" | "Crazy to Fly," Bobby i Vernon Comedy i il "Loeal Talent," Life Cartoon Fox News, Daily News | Florence Vidor | 1 | "ONE WOMAN TO ANOTHER" | "Dempsey-Tunney Fight" i Song i Cartoon i "At Ease," Hamilton Comedy th Paramount News \ J Mon., Tues, Oet, 31-Nov, 1 | "Old Kentucky Home," i Wednesday November 2 ! Lois Moran Hl "PUBLICITY | MADNESS" it "Love and Kisses," Hal Roach Comedy "Ko-Ko Hops, Off," Inkwell Cartoon | Fox News I Jaek Mulhall | "SMILE BROTHER | SMILE" | "Dazzling Co-Eds," Collegians | No. 8 U | o. "The Kick," Chick Meehan | I I Thurs., Fri, Nov. 3-4 Football Series | I Paramount News | COMING ATTRACTIONS | Next Week | ! "The Big Parade" | John Gilbert and Renee Adoree | | © "Swim, Girl, Swim!" | i Bebe Daniels "Out All Night" | ! Reginald Denny Ii "Hula" Clara Bow "East Side, West Side" George O'Brien "The Dron-Kick" i Richard Barthelmess == Reviews OO --- -- le oe Oo --- At the North GLENCOE MOVIES "Bardely's the Magnificent," Gilbert picture taken from novel by the same name, will be pre- a John Sabatine's sented next Friday afternoon at the Glencoe Union church. While the film story doesn't follow the plot of the original as closely as it might, it is nevertheless an interesting drama based on early French history. Wesley Barry, who left pictures some time ago for vaudeville and mar- riage, will play a jockey in "In Old Kentucky." BALABANGKAT 7] ORFHOR HOWARD AVE. neg, CLARK ----Now Playing-- AL KVALE and his Jazz Doughboys in "ROOKIES" with a cast_of favorites ----on the screen-- The World's Most Famous Photoplay "THE BIG PARADE" with JOHN GILBERT Starting Sunday-- AL KVALE and his Jazz Collegians in "HELLO NORTHWESTERN" | with PEGGY BERNIER JACK NORTH and the N. U. campus stars THE WISNAR SISTERS --on the screen-- BEBE DANIELS "Swim, Girl, Swim" GERTRUDE EDERLE Al Greets N. U. Students in Stage Program Next Week "Hello Northwestern." Al Kvale officially welcomes the stu- dent body of Northwestern university next week in his stage show to be called "Hello Northwestern." The spirit of the great Evanston school is to be embodied in the pro- duction. The purple banners will flut- ter over the theater and on the stage Al and his collegian orchestra will offer a mad melange of college songs and a speedy brand of entertainment that exemplifies the school spirit. The Wisnar Sisters, popular North- western co-eds who recently made their debut at the Oriental theater, will be featured in the show. The girls are attending school at present, spending their evenings in theater work. Young, vivacious talent will abound in the show. Peggy Bernier, Chi- cago's®favorite comedy singer, Jack North and his palpitating banjo, The Dean Brothers, dance start and and harmony duo, Meighan and Newman will complete the list of stage talent. Added to the program will be the newest film novelty in sport events. "The Forward Pass," a complete screen lesson in the art of perform- ing the popular football plays as super- vised by Grantland Rice, will be shown. Aspiring football stars and fans of the game will find the film exceptionally interesting. In the spirit of the college week, the feature will be the hilarious com- edy of co-éd campus life, "Swim, Girl, Swim," in which Bebe Daniels performs at her funniest. Gertrude Ederle is in the cast. Douglas Fairbanks is considering doing Dumas' adventure romance, "Twenty Years Later," a sequel to "The Three Musketeers." COMMUNITY HOUSE Next Tuesday Next Friday by request KEN "THE i D ; MAYNARD | ~vERED "THE RED WAGON" RAIDERS" J. Warren Also Kerrigan "Blake of Lois Wilson Scotland Yard" | Ernest Torrence BROADWAY AT TRINZ CHATE AU THEATRE GRACE STREET MINTURN Next Week-- All this week with HARRY MINTURN in T he Prize Ring Comedy Success "IS ZAT SO" "THE FALL oF EVE" PLAYERS PHONE LAKEVIEW 7170 Evenings 25¢, 50¢ and 75¢ Every Evening at 8:15--Mats. Sun., Thurs., Sat. at 2:30 PRICES--AIll Matinees 25¢ and s50¢ Except Saturday, Sunday and Holidays The Spoken Drama at Less Than Movie Prices. Presenting All the Latest Metropolitan Successes Mix, Meighan and Mulhall in Lead Roles at Teatro "Tom Mix ascends to new heights in 'Silver Valley,'" remarks an unknown humorist in a release review of this Fox production which is to be featured by Teatro del Lago this Saturday. And "Sir Funnysides" quotes truly, whether he was speaking of the physical, literal or of plain screen ac- complishment. Tom has been broken to the air and in "Silver Valley" be- strides one of Lindy's "cast-iron swal- lows." Be the kid brother might re- mark, I'om gets tired of a horse, gets im a ki sees the fair lady in dis- tress and gets the 'drop' on the ban- dits." Which is to explain in very few words the action of this westerner and not omit that it is a nice film. "We're All Gamblers" is not the big- gest picture that Thomas Meighan has produced but it's one that you will like. To tip you off, it starts with the star as a waif on a dock on New York City's East river. A policeman picks him up to keep him from freezing and takes him to an Irish lady who follows Bible instructions and "takes the stranger in." He reaches manhood and becomes a contender for the heavyweight cham- pionship. An automobile accident prevents him from trying for the title and he eventually becomes the propri- etor of a night club. And that is enough for you to know now. It's for Sunday. "One Woman to Another," the bill on Monday and Tuesday, is good com- edy pure and simple. Florence Vidor plays the lead which, added to the plot, makes the picture a nice production. It deals with a girl's blasted love affair and her plot to force the man to marry her. Plenty of laughs and fast ac- tion. Edmund Lowe and Lois Moran team together to produce "Publicity Mad; ness" which will be shown no Wednes- day. The picture is a comedy-drama and is a clever, swift moving produc- tion. Lowe plays the role of Pete King. a salesman whose ideas are exceeded only by his egotism and "crust." Lois Moran steps out of her dainty old fashioned roles and has her hair bobbed right in the picture to become a mod- ern stenographer. She turns out to be the boss' daughter and adds a few twists to Lowe's affairs. "Smile, Brother Smile," with which Teatro will close the menu on Thurs- dav and Friday, is another film you will like. It is a delightful light com- edy, splendidly played by Jack Mulhall and Dorothy Mackaill and the support- ing cast, without a dull moment be- tween the opening, when Jack is dis- covered as a shipping clerk and the final fadeout, when all of the various problems are ironed out. Dorothy is a pert little telephone operator. COMMUNITY HOUSE The "Red Raiders," a Ken Maynard picture, will be presented at Com- munity House, Winnetka, next Tues- day as the feature picture for the afternoon program. The picture is a typical Maynard film and a splendid western picture. In addition, the first installment of "Blake of Scotland Yard" will also be presented. On Friday afternoon, November 4, "The Covered Wagon" will be the attraction. This production is being shown at the special request of a num- ber of patrons and is undoubtedly one of the most outstanding of the his- torical or semi-historical pictures pro- duced in the past few years.