THF. N/Tt(""1'( ;AN t*)AT1 V aa___________aiY VL!Hl ITHUtRSDAY1 OCToBI FR 27, 192' DI TUi -txTo I War Veteran Is New PRESIDENT MAKES Chaplain For Legion DETROIT ADDRESS IP'resident Clarence Cook Little went to Detroit Tuesday, where he ad- dressed the Detroit Junior league. He will also speak to a Detroit audience when he goes to Birmingham tomor- row to deliver an address at the dedication of the Cranbrook school }'r there. ... ........ .. ' n ;fl t 't 'Jr ,t, r (\ , F. L. /' t Y SELLI'NG,; Rent a Typew riter By the Month or for the Semester - Your Choice Underwood, Royal, L. C. Smith, Remington, and Others We Keep Them in Order Rider's Pen Shop I t ^ x I :: f4 i. . I: o 4-Performances Daily -4 J rEAIRI G L PRAISE--PRAISE FROM EVERYWHERE! Ann Arbor Has This to Say Review clipped fim Monday Times-News. Be sure to read if you already have not done so o y if. n. . Arcade "Wlat Price GQlory." 'What a picture? If you liked the play, you're go- ing to more than like the film ver- sion of the two hard boiled marines taking their fun and women as they comr in between halves of the greatest fight on record, the World war. But whether or not you liked the play, you'll have to admit that "What Price Glory" in cinema form is entertainment par excel- lence. In only one instance did the film fail to impress me as much as the play. The scene in the dark cellar, where the wounded and dying are brought off the b~jttle field, when one soldier nearly crazy with the horror of the sights he has just seen, goes wild, moaning, "What Price Glory now?" and is forced down on a pallet and given a hypodermic to - help erase the picture of the atroci- ties he has witnessed. The memory of the sound of that pathetic voice groining over and over again, "what price glory now," fading and fading until it sinks into oblivion, can never be replaced by any pantomining no matter how well done it may be. Most war pictures, hitherto, have been a mere excuse for some direc- tor to attempt to awe the public with a lot of big spectacular battle scenes that fog the vision with a lot of smoke, while the orchestra pounds out noise to resemble the booming of guns in a terrific battle. These scenes were sung together somehow with a make-shift plot, a love. story, of course, and then it was called finished and released to a waiting public. As a result, we have learned to shy of war pictures ,for they all have been more or less alikd and have failed to meet this acid test of any production-sincerity. All this N until "The Big Parade" came along This a and now "What Price Glory." - Thi t : O T E ttraction holds no appeal to the adolescent mind. Caildren unaccompa- nied by adults will not be admitted. IR immmmml 1s 14, OT ' Y , 41- ^ , + I STARTING TODAY Beauty Incomparable! Romance Irresistablev Sbreezy, brisy, roimunce of a be.. i Agirl who mistook plider for gold in her search for a usbam. She dressed like a million doliars-looked like a iiillon dollars-and 'earned for a nwilioii-dollar husband. - - AL/ 1 t t 1- s ,rt (1 '~lo, I I t~ - ' , y?'l q r n { az 7 rhi Act" in 1 m7 !r l ywmr+ . cf ^ web i Some are going to concede all hon- ors to "What Price Glory," particu- larly those who like their picture generously sprinkled with impish humor, while others still will reserve first place for "The Big Parade," which gave over greater portions to the serious side of the war. Toa me, they were about on a par, although entirely different in treatment. "What Price Glory" depicts the' late war humorously humanized; with just enough pathos to balance it. There is the spectacular, too, but it rings true, as does everything about the big picture. Throughout, how- ever, the war serves merely as a back ground for the humorous ad- ventures of the two marines, Capt. Flagg, and Sgt. Quirt, and tie pretty French lass, Charmaine. Rivals in drinking and in love, they are united in the really important issue, the big fight. There is a trinity of' players carry- ing the lead parts that leaves noth- ing to be desired-Victor McLaglen as Capt. Flagg, Edmund Lowe as Sgt. Quirt, and last, but not least, the pretty barmaid, whose favor they seek, Delores Del Rio as Char- maine. These three are the principal reasons why the soreen adaption of "What Price Glory'" is better than the stage play. Especially Dolores Del Rio, who is irresistible. As one per- son says, "longed to take a safety pin and fasten her dress that was always slipping off one shoulder, but the revelations were nevertheless tempting." In spite of the shortened time for screening "What Price' Glory," two performances being shown in an eve- ning at Arcade theater, in place of the usual one, the picture has not been cut. It has just been speeded up, the intermissions omitted, and added features cut to require only about 15 minutes. 31 m Mlionaire kisses made her feel short e a ged after the million-dollar kis'es of her only sweetie! With Lloyd Hughes ON THE STAGE- FOUR VOICES "Some Quartette" I AIDED BILL A D)orothy 1we ore Majestic Orchestra I U _ .a ,nno.v.. s _1h6-. 9 I,, 1fI4t U If 11 - !\ /"1 TL Jr T% T /"y !1 T T A T T'°. A T