meter ibuenmn PHOTOPLAY DANCING THEATRES and MUSIC AMUSEMENT SECTION PHILADELPHIA, SATURDAY EVENING, DECEMBER 18, 1915 ... i In "The Girl of the Barracks." STATISTICS NOW A MOVIE FEATURE Animated Illustrations of Con ditions a New Use of the Motion Picture By Roger W. Babson Mr. Uopcr 11. Babson, the well known statistician and economist, has Joined the Paramount Corporation as associate editor of its Xeicspictures. His animated statistics Kill be run in conjunction Kith these. Trobably there is nothing so uninter esting to the average man as do" sta tistics. He cannot get very excited when ho reads on tho printed page that 5C6, 009,009 cans of beans are sold in the United States and Canada; or that In New Jersey there are JO. I per cent, more mosquitoes to the square mile than in any other State in the Union, but by the free use of illustrations I have been able to circulate my books quite largely, and I am informed by public libraries that they are in considerable demand. Let us take the European War as an example. First, we will take the popu lation per square mile of the larger countries at war. We will see that Aus tria has MM persons for each square mile of its area, more than three times tne population of any country; Germany comet) next with 62; the United Kingdom of Ungland with 3J; Itussia with 13. and Continued on race- Seven Poujal of "Julie Bon Bon." wVHKrtfA .sI1111111111111111111111HeL INCE, MOVIE MAGICIAN Intimate and Interesting Details of the Prominent Director of Triangle Films by One Who Knows Him Well By ROBERT GRAU amazingly meteoric , idolized, too. by the millions who flocJc AF ALL the J careers in Movln; Picturedora. the one most widely discussed on the theatrical rtialto is that of Thomas H. Ince, a man who less than six years ago nas wont to congregate with theatre folk on upper Broadway; content if he could secure an engagement at a two ligure weekly salary, for while Ince's stage career was not unworthy, there was nothing about it to indicate that a few years later he would become one of the greatest arm3 of a new industry which has been the biggest boon to stage folk in the history of the theatre. The last time Tom Ince came to Broad nay, about a year ago. he was hailed by the Thespians as the King of Ince- CHARACTER ACTOR PAR EXCELLENCE On this page appear eight varied and well-defined character imper sonations by Louis Mann. Of the four immediately above, the one on the upper right shows Oom Piet, the Boer of "The Red Cloof : on the upper left Leopold of "The Second Fiddle"; on the lower right Hochstuhe of "All on Account of Eliza," and on the the lower left Hans of "The Girl From Paris." villc. Actors and managers, who would not give him an audience live years be fore paid him homage, for the Ince of 101 1 ' as known the world over as the SU.O.0GO a year director of photoplays. The man vho put the move in 'movies." who began at a. daily wage of three dollars in sheer desperation to find a place of shelter for his wife and baby. It was thus that Ince entered Movieland. Before two years 1-ad passed. Ince was a magnate. First of all he insisted on having full authority. The company he ( started with had everything but money. but the output lor tne screen was still or 1 that kind calculated to drive people out ot tne meaires. At me outset oeing denied real actors. Ince undertook to teach cowboys vand Indians the art of acting. Not a few of these possessed the divine spark, and two at least who began with him in a primitive environment are today permanently intrenched at Inceville to the neighborhood theatres all ovei the country. It was Ince who flr3t saw tho need of experienced players for picture plays. While he was able to obtain good results from the amateurs who fell under his magnetic spell. hi3 insistent telegrams to New York headquarters for the best actors was followed by a veritable stam pede of stage folk bent on conquest of the new art. Ince's associates, now multimillionaires, by name Kessel and Baumann, granted his every wish, for ihey knew he would make good in every new move- A11 road3 lead to Inceville' became the actors" slogan. But Ince wanted cer tain actors only. Ho knew the peculiar requisites for screen conquest, and in his precarious stage career had played with the best :is well as the worst. Ince be lieved that about one out of ten of aver age players could make their impress In the new field and he set about securing the one in ten. Itisht here Ince revealed his most con structive policy. While other feature producers were Insisting on new faces for each feature picture, engaging1 no one for more than one production, Inca be gan to assemble an all-star stock, com pany, the only organrtwiVjn. In all filmdom where the famous a jie was paid for on a baste of prolonged service. With others It was the shorter tho engagement the more the star was paid. With. Inca it was just the other way. Ince engaged W. S. Hart two years ago at a salary a grand opera diva, would, envy. Hart is still with Ince. His pay envelope contains double now what it Continued on Fage Klgat Mueller of "The Bubble," A MANN OF MANY PARTS For More Years Than One Should Count, Louis Has Been With Us No character actor upon the American stage today has created a more versatile and unique galaxy of footligrht portrayals than has Louis Mann, of "The Bubble." Few playgoers realize, despite their fa miliarity with Mr. Mann's more famous characterizations, that he' has been upon the stage nearly half a century, bavins' begun as a little Thespian at the tender age of threo years. During his boyhood days he played many parts. Indeed, rang ing throughout the classical and standard drama and Shakespeare, and was asso ciated with such illustrious stars as Ed win Booth, Lawrence Barrett, John Mc Cullough. Daniel Bandman. Louis Morri son, James O'Neill. Maria Prescott and that herculean Italian tragedian. To masso SalvlnL A young Lambs" Club actor, lust sprouting- his first feathers, in a recent Shake spearean production, once asked Mr. Mann why he didn't desert his character work: for a while and attempt Shake speare. "Attempt Shakespeare?" ex claimed the astonished Mann, "why, I played Shakespeare when you were In the cradle yes. and played. Shakespeare from Contained on l'aze Elsht la "The Man Who Stood Still.