Current Attractions
Wilbur--"What Price Glory" at 8.10: Purposely placed at the top of this list.
Hollis--"The Carolinian" at 8.15: Reviewed in this issue.
Shubert--"The Student Prince" at 8.10: The contagious appeal of stein-songs, well sung.
New Park--"The Show-Off" at 8.15: A big league comedy uncovering the social go-getter.
Tremont--"Seventh Heaven" at 8.15: Good and pure.
Plymouth--"The Gorilla" at 8.20: Unreasonable melodrama reasonably burlesqued.
Castle Square--"Abie's Irish Rose" at 8.15: You've heard the joke about the Irishman and the Jew. Well, it seems--
Colonial--"Ziegfeld Follies" at 8.00: Not up to the Ziegfeld standard.
Majestic--"Rose-marie" at 8.15: When a musical comedy is as successful as this one has been, there's always a good reason for it.
Copley--"The Creaking Chair" at 8.20: Reviewed in this issue.
Coming Plays
Colonial--"Puzzles of 1925" with Elsie Janis on October 26.
Tremont--"The Cocoanuts" with the Marx Brothers on October 26.
Boston Opera House--"The Miracle" on October 28.
Majestic--"The Daughter of Rosie O'Grady" on November 2.
Wilbur--"June Days" on November 2.
The Week's Movies
Metropolitan--"The King on Main Street", continuous: Reviewed in this issue.
Tremont Temple -- "The Iron Horse" at 8.15: In spite of all the silly things that William Fox has said about this thing, it remains a very fair picture of Western expansion.
Loew's State -- "Exchange of Wives", continuous: Eleanor Boardman and Lew Cody in light domestic troubles.
Keith-Albee--"Lorraine of the Lions", continuous: We didn't get around to seeing this one.
The Fenway--"The Pony Express", continuous: The glorious days of the great West before it became inhabited by big butter-and-egg men.
Loew's Orpheum--"The Tower of Lies", continuous: The old, old story, but told by Norma Shearer and Lon Chaney so vividly and tragically that it scarcely needs sub-titles.
Gordon's Olympia -- "The Lost World", continuous: Some of the cleverest trick photography that has ever been perpetrated, and a picture that is more important scientifically than dramatically.
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