MAORILAND THEATRE.
"THE BRASS BOWL." It has been established by investigators that most every numan being uas a counterpart in ine form of another numan nemg, whoi hears marks of such close resemolance as to be <:usiiy mistaken for me other. Explicitly, the would is filled wiui pans of people who look enough alike to be •aetims of mistaken identity. Frequently the newspapers feature events til which odd nnx.-ups of people occur 'is a result ol their similarity ui physical appearances. Evidently Louis Joseph Vance had some of tlie more interesting angles of (his "peculiar fact" in mind when he wrote his successful novel, "The Brass Bowl," which William Fox has made into a photodrama and which will oome to the Shannon Theatre on Saturday, The whole basis of this thrilling story has to. do with a coincidence wherein a respectable bachelor is mistaken for a notorious international criminal because he looks so much like him.
A.s might be expected, complications accumulate with rapidity when this mix.-up starts to become complex and when the respectable man finds himself in Joye with the same girl the criminal courts, the situations intensify magically. "THE CLEAN UP."
Herbert Rawhnson is tlie featured actor in Monday's, big picture, "The Clean Up." .There was just one man who had nerve enough to try to enforce the law in a town run by crooks. Did he get away with it? See this thrilling and spectacular love story with Herbert Rawliils'On in the most exciting and fascinating role of his career! What would happen in your town if every man, woman and child woke up in the morning "with fifty thousand in cold cash? That's what happened in TEtawlinson's town, hi "The Clean Up," and it took an attempt at assassination ajnd \a lew other thrills to make the place recover. He expected a fortune, but was cut off with a dollar. Never did a day's work in his We. But everybody else in town stopped working. He had to work to eat—and to save the town! Did he move fast? Just watch Rawlinson in "The Clean Up."
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Shannon News, 3 April 1925, Page 3
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351MAORILAND THEATRE. Shannon News, 3 April 1925, Page 3
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