! tlt;P .,1-11%.*/113 (Continued from 'age 9) . and her mother is a gen r who would rather do the elf than ask Cora to spn tle old dishes il her nanicure. Sam, the brother-In-law, eases being a plumber when Cora hinks up the title "Sanitary Engin- er," and Hedrick (Buddy Messenger) s the little pest, a composite of every baby brother." "The Power of a Lie," the attraction >r Friday and Saturday, is a picture ith an all-star cast which includes lable Julienne Scott, June Elvidge, avid Torrence and Earl Metcalfe. Orphenil A return engagement of Mary Pick- >rd in "Little Lord Fauntleroy," pen,s today at the Orpheum theater. Our Mary" takes a duel role as the ttle boy of Frances Hodgson Bur- ett's story and also the mother, Dearesl." She depicts a Fauntleroy rho is all 'boy despite his curls, spot- ess collars and handsome velvet suits. Ter fall over the handlebars of a bi- ycle, six feet high, into a muddy treet and her fistic combat with a ival claimant are 'examples of the iany athletic feats which contribute lirills and suspense to the picture. "Top o' the Morhing," s t a r r i ng rladys Walton, "the flapper's idol,". will be shown Wednesday and Thurs- ay. Miss Walton is seen in the role f "Jerry" O'Donnell, a little Irish olleen who journeys from the old ountry to visit -her father in Am- rica. Harry Myers, who played the ead in "The Connecticut Yankee," as the part of a young American anker who intends to send Jerry's irotber up for a long term in the enitentiary. Earl Williams has the part of an ?nglish government official in his atest production, "The Man From )owning Street," which will be shown iere Friday and Saturday.. Wuerth "The Real Adventure," a satire on he romance of mariage, will open a 'our-day run here Sunday.Florence Vidor plays the leading role, that of college girl who meets a man under omantic -c iicumstanccs and, after a whirl-wind courtship, marries him. The is a keen-thinking young woman ut her husband refuses to recognize er as an intellectual equal. So she akes matters into her own hands and eaves her husband td make her own areer and thereby-gain his friendship and confidence. "The Glorious Adventure," the first photoplay in which Lady Diana Man- ners appears in the leading feminine role and also 'the first Prizma color' feature picture ever made, will be the attraction the latter half of the week The supporting cast in this spectacular romantic drama of the seventeenth century includes t h e names of many of Englands best known and most popular dramatic artist,~. There , are more than one hundred and thirty parts, the 'prin' cipal roles of which are played by Gerald Lawrence, Alice Crawford, Cecil Humphrey, and Flora Le Breton. farce of clever situations and brilliant given at 10:30 o'clock by the Rev. dialogue. Their latest comedy is "We William Spofford, secretary of the Girls" which Miss Monstelle and her Church League for Industrial Demo- players will offer here this week. cracy. The Rev. Spofford will also The central figure is a flirtatious conduct the evening service at 7:30j IIETIIITU fIfTU woman whose daughter remarks. o'clock. On Friday, February 23, the "There must be, some way to ,make a Rev. C. T. WVbb will deliver an even- woman out of a baby of forty-six". ing prayer and address at 4:00 o'clock (Continued from Page 9) Mrs. Durand, the mother, does not in th chapel of Harris hall. ners." In the spring of the same year like the idea of growing old and does "Christ and Character" is the sub- one Asa L. Smith with his wife and everything to remain young, but is ject of the. sermon to be given this one small child, came to Ann Arbor on worried over the fact that her daugh- morning at the First Presbyterian foot through the woods, the man bring- ter insists on growing up. She lnsits ichurch. Two student classes will ing on his back all their property, and that Harriet, the daughter, pose as a meet at noon. One is conducted by having one shilling in his pocket U1o01 I Prf. . D Henersn wo wil seakarrivral. >A short distance fromn Allen's friend but soon finds in this friend a prof. W.D.Henderson whoswill-speak tt on HmnNtr n h il, h hotel, Smith, being a carpenter, erect- dangerous rival, who threatens to rob on, Human Nature and the Bible, the ed a house. Later he built a brick build- her of a few admirers and annex them other by Dr. E. K. Kirkpatrick who for her own purposes . will speak on "The Social Application ing which became Lodholz Bakery and of Christianity." The Young People's !residence, on the corner of Broadway meetinsgat 6:30 o'lock will dsuss and Canal streets, in the Fifth Ward. eei'ngatm0o'clo. w na.atrng "A A " b t ni Mfl )TJI)I(7{IIUJf)IIfIWI( rl BouvplTqDuo7 00nO7] .0noA v~.LD0g ufaYjj 107 '0) ~O~a'LILiSN1I03I auotjdala4 3sairou zt tnetp nod. uiO;J Ak xa14J-Cpj oU s~ . t ; C xnoA 'noA 11trz Amu ssauisnq jnoA aI3XAJa ~UrX O The TStage IGarrick (Detract) The musical comedy, "Tangerine," starring Julia Sanderson, will be pre-, sented here this week. Miss Sander- son is supported by the same company which broke every Broadway receipt record for two seasons at the Casino Theatre, Nets York. This play is a successor to Carle Carlton's first pro- duction, "Irene," which by its extra- ordinary success set a new mark in the realm of musical plays. "Tangerine," begins in the drab at- mosphere of a jail. Three young hus- bands (Hobart Cavanaugh, Harry Puck and John Kane) are in Ludlow street jail for failing to pay the aliio- ny awarded their respective wiveo (Rebekah Cauble, Gloria Dawn and Elsie Youj.) A friend (Frank Cru- mit) imprsoned with them because "since prohibition the alcoholic wards are too overcrowded," agrees to pay their -dues in this alimony club, take then to the island of Tangerine, where the women do all the 'work, induce their wives to tgo there on