' r PORTRAIT OT A MAM VfflO v. DIDN'T THINK HECOUIJ) WRITE ABETTER MOVIE .SCENARIO THENTnE LtoT 0UEHE5fWl AMUSEMENT SECTION Ituetimg tfmh i&tbatt ,, ;, PHOTOP1LAY T.HEATREJS DANCING MUSIC PHILADELPHIA, SATURDAY EVENING, JUNE 3, 1916. -t&V Beginning the Evening Ledger Lessons in Scenario Writing A Course of Practical Instruction by Harry O. Hoyt Lesson Number 1 How to Find the "Plot for Your First Moving Picture IN -WRITING a series of articles dealing with eoenarlo construction, or more properly speaking, photoplay construction, It Is necessary t'oMJeflno Bomo of tho tech nlcal terms employed. This will bo done from time to tlma as tho series progresses. Before getting Into an actual discussion of tho scenario or photoplay, wo must go back and get at the origin of our screen productions. Where do they come from? Who supplies the Jdeoa? This can bo answered In a'gencral way, by sowing that outside contributors and start writers supply rrjost of tho plots for the program companies, and staff writers make book and play adaptations for tho majority of the feature 'productions. By program companies, wo refer to thoso com panles producing subjects of short length for rclcaso on certain dayB of each week. Tho Held for tho outsldo writer Is, there fore, better at tho present time with tho companies making shorter subjects. Tho old order Is changing, however. , Tho day n,n hnrfc.wrltcr is past, .and tho day ot ihn nwmnrlo writer has arrived. It is tori ,tho bcncllt of those who would seek to supply tho photoplays of tho futuro, who 'artf"oarnostly endeavoring to croate screen productions that ara both vlrllo and dramatic, that Uicbo articles aro Intended. How many people, going to a theatro and ' witnessing a picture show, como away bo lievlng that they nro capable of writing something better than tho screen produc tions thoy havo Just witnessod? Porhapo In your own llfo you havo remarked: "Well, - If I couldn't do better than that I wouldn't wrlto at all." Perhaps you've had somo experience, which you and your friends have thought extraordinary, and you or they iavo said: "It would make a lino plcturo 'play; cer tainly bettor than somo we've seen." Unfortunately this Is rarely true. What Is vital to you Is many times of no Inter est to the outsldo world. Your experiences, while odd and queer, It produced would bo "drivel" to persons who had no lntorcst In tho Incidents. "Tho baby did tho cutest thing today I" Is your wlfa's greeting, as you como homo In tho evening. Or, "I had a funny expe rience yesterday," you .remark to Jones, as you como down In tho street car with him. It's your baby or your exporleneo, and It comes close to home, but a first-class scenario writer could sit down and Imag ine something for your baby to do that would bo very much moro out of tho or dinary, or an experlonco that befell you, which would bo far moro Interesting to the multitude who visit the moving plcturo chows. A test that you might apply Is this: Wit ness a. motlon-plcturo show, and centra your attention upon some one plcturo. When you havo come out'analyzo tho situations, the hairbreadth escapes, the villainy, tho sacri fice. Imagine such things happening In real llfo. Tho newspapers would bo full rf It. Would the Incident of your baby or the experienco that befell you occupy an Inch of epaco In any newspaper, if It got hold of It? The chances are not ; This points to ono moral: Beware of the story that Is true to life, particularly If It comes close to you. Your perspective Is almost certain to be ruined and you are , quite unable to Judge the dramatic values. In the old days, most ot tho photoplays we're highly Improbable. Ab the natural consequence of improvement In the busi ness, the standard Is much higher today. That brings us to ono of tho basic prin ciples of photoplay writing. Make your Ideas probable. Your subject may be Im possible, but your treatment of It must bo bucIi as to glvo It an air of probability that will carry It over. It Is best, of course, to make It not only possible, but 14ghly probable. Mr. Sargent, who has written a very ad mirable book on photoplay writing, cites the case ot a missionary In Africa, who per formed an operation in major surgery on himself, without an anesthetic, and recov ered. If wo were to picture that on the Bcreen, everybody would laugh. It Is seem ingly quite impossible and absurd yet It actually happened. There Is a very fine distinction here, which every photoplay writer must learn: you must convince your audience of one fact: that what they see actually could HOW EVENING LEDGER WILL TEACH . NEW AND DEMOCRATIC SCREEN ART TODAY tho Evening Ledger prints the first two les sons of its course in scenario writing. There are 20 to follow. Thoso presented herowith take up How to Find a Plot and tho Synopsis. Immediately following these como Terms Employed, Construction, Continuity, Heart Interest, Atmosphero, Plot Development, "Punch," Three Kinds of Cohiedy, Short Reel Subjects and a dozen similar topics. Tho final lessons will take up, tho practical side of selling a photoplay scenario. Tho Photoplay Department of tho Evening Ledger is under no delusion that every reader is a'born photoplay wright. But it does know that thousands of Philadol phians aro writing or want to write for tho Bcreen. It knows that tho story-telling, power behind the successful photoplay lies dormant in thousands more. And it knows that all these people can be helped a great step on their way by practical instruction from an authority. In Henry 0. Hoyt it thinks it has found tho authority. Though scenario .writing demands tho dramatic in stinct upon which almost all forms of literary work are based, it .makes ono unique concession to tho novice. It throws its doors otfen to all comers, to tho irtan or woman with only a grammar school education as much as to the university graduate, for it requires no extensive training in the use of words. It calls for a certain quality of mind which not every one has, but it is a quality independent of the ability to use tho English language as the 'novelist, the essayist, even the dramatist, uses it. If the photo playwright has dramatic sense, if he can arrange an in terestingnarrative in a succession of effective scenes, it' matters very little whether he can pick the most effective words to describe the actions of his characters. If he can supply a real idea in a. well-thought-out scenario, the film companies' experts will do the rest. nks. H?ifHBk til MPP 'lyHPSi' fl X ? t-' ' , '''! ' ,:vM"lfl is $ &5? . . ,1 aS HARRY O. HOYT Html ot the Metro Scenario Staff The Author HOYT, HARRY 0., scenario cd. and writer, Metro; b. Minneapolis, Minn.; cduc. Minneapolis, Univ. of Minn., Columbia nnd Yalo (LL. B.) ; early exper., prac ticed law; screen careor, first owned and operated the atres, then nsst. dir., then frco lance writer, over 400 prod, scripts; staff of Kalem ("Ten Commandments," 10 ihree reel subjects) ; cd. Fox ("Parisian Romance," "Fourth Estate," etc.) ; at present Metro ("The Tur moil," "Rose of tho Alley," "Man and His Soul," "Dim ples," "Big Tremaine," etc.) Ad. Ynlo Club, N. Y. C. Studio Directory of the Motion Picture News. WHAT THE EVENING LEDGER WILL DO TO TEST ITS SCENARIO STUDENTS THE Evening Ledgor believes that its readers will derivo a very real profit from its course of scenario ' lessons. It is so siiro of this that it purposes testing that profit by a novel sort of examination. It will not bo a set of dry written questions. The examination will take just tho form in which it can be most useful to the stu dent the writing of a scenario for production. When the student has finished the course of lessons he will have the knowledge necessary to put his ideas in marketable shape. Tho Evening Ledger will then give him both a test and an incentive to further work. Upon the cftJso of tho lessons it will conduct a Scenario Contest, for which thero will bo not only a cash prize but a far more valuable, desirable and practical reward produc tion. In addition, the Photoplay Department will see that promising scripts aro returned to their authors with a letter recommending these scenarios to producers likely to be interested. To make the test more concrete, the Evening Ledger will require the contestants to locate the scenes of their scripts in Philadelphia. It will specify certain public places, such as the ball parks, the railroad stations and tho postoffice, which must be used in the action, and certain types of city-dwellers from whom certain char acters must be drawn. These conditions will stimulate the faculties of the contestants and arouse the interest of their friends in the finished product. They will not prevent the acceptance of any of the scripts by producing companies in New York or tho West, for the elements chosen will be common to all city life. The prize-winning scenario will bo produced in Phila delphia, by a Philadelphia cast, under the direction of one of the big film companies. Watch for further an nouncements of the Scenario Prize contest and the filming of the successful script. Meanwhile, cut out each day's lesson and save the complete series for reference in the writing of your scenario. have happened, otherwise your drama de generates into farce. In order to write plcturo ploys for fea ture companies, It becomes nejry to delvo deeper In the search for IdeaB. You must have something human-something natural; but It must havo dramatic, possi bilities, otherwise your story is lost In on exposition, or In sermonizing. Nothing Is morB tiresome on tho screen than a ser mon: an'd nothing Is more Impossible, Judg ing from modern standards, than melo drama for melodrama's sako alone. . Ono scenario writer within our experi ence chooses a rather novel way of writing Photoplays. He thinks ot various charac ters totally unrelated to each other, taking, for example, a carpenter, a society man. a Salvation Army lassie, a daughter of the rich and-so-on. He sets all these characters before him and Juggles them about. He w 11 make tho society man, perhaps, engaged to tho daughter of the rich, and finding her frivolous, he will meet the Salvation Army lass and conceive an Interest In her. Perhaps this Is too. trite. Ho may next try having a carpenter, who Is In love with the Salvation Army lassie, repair the house of the rich girl, and tho girl, tired of the society man and ot society, perhaps In pique, centre her affections on a real man, and pck the carpenter. Perhaps he win Introduce other charac ters, giving a reason for ,oaoh and every situation, nnd soon he has a drama. It Is something ho has Imagined, but at least it could havo happened It Is possible, and ho' will now attempt to mako lt probable. This method cannot always be recom mended, because the human mind is bo con structed that trite situations aro generally the first to come to the mind. Long-forgotten photoplays, seen, on the screen, will fur nish further Ideas, arid soon we have some thing that Is not at all original. Personally, I think tho best way to get Continued on Face Three LOVE JN THE ARMY i m? -r $. !S lK& -?'' iPM m .jPPPtK v. "' psar ? S K0Itfm& ' : Mvir wR MMfK - i '. Si3ijH!!ii9v w3 m 5liL-,- "ahp1 ,, v--k J mtSm&frt S7 g'BB -. 'J- -Jf,,4K r i BnF viiT -4 Vs5-;" St4Bi , RjHBSjE' k" 2yP pF- "Hr - KHf LA r ll1 ' vGi: HF 'J'M,I jjEg. Vi BPv-f -nfii.Afcu - .. L-vtlHHK ! S "B 1 1 !, fi Pflt- , .JbP- ! x R k k8V j'j iftj 4B X ll I ' ?; - '? ' "BB MBh tl ji ' ,jr fl8i : BBBHB(S. " jW TCfc .BbH - This is whaf Bernard Shaw says of thla scene from his trenchant comedy, "Major Barbara," vhich Grace George will act at the Adelphia Monday: Cuslna Yes, my dear, lf rr wearuig to be In love with you, If It lt, J quite think I shall, die young. S Barbara Should you mind? . , . , . ,. ., J Clo Vo't at aU. (He Is suddenly wfteued, nd Wsea h over the, 4 evidently not for the Snrtibiw, a pel "cannot M over big drua -without practice.) Sliaws Alter Ego Betrays tke Autkor of "Major Barbara TMa a an account of hoio "Major Barbara," the Bernard Bhaw comedy to be presented by Qrace George and her New York Playhouse Company at the Adelphl next week, camo to bo written. The aeoount is furnished by a playwripht whose works are well known in this country, In England and In Germany. Be prefers to keep this identity a secret, but It may be said without betrayal of confidence that he knows Intimately and admires aernara Bhaw. Is the hlrd of a Bhaw. rAJOR BARBARA1 "II IT- 1YJL group of threo plays or exceptional weight and magnitude, on which the reputa tion of tho author as a serious dramatist was first established and still mainly rests. Tho first of the three, completed In 1908, tho author's 7th year, was "Man and Su perman," which has never been performed In Its prodigious entirety In America, nor In England, until tho present year. The second, "John Bull's Other Island," fol lowed In 1904, and was an Immediate suc cess. Tho third 'of the series was "Major Barbara," which arrived In 1906. It made demands on tho audience, but tho demands were conceded. The audience left the theatro exhausted, but felt the better for It and came again. ' The second act, the Sal vation, Army Ret, waB a play In Itself. Re garded In that way, It may be said to be the most successful of all tho author's plays. Tho possibility of using the wooing of a man's soul for his salvation as a substitute for the hackneyed wooing of'a handsome young gentleman for the sake of marrying him had ocourred to Bernard Bhaw many years before, when, In the course of his campaign for Socialism, ho had often found himself on Sunday mornings addressing a Socialist meeting In the open air In London or In tho provinces, while the Salvation Army was at work on the same ground. He had frequenUy, at (Jie conclusion of hie own meeting, Joined the crowd around the Salvation lassies and watched their work and studied their methods sympathetically. Many of them sang, with great effect, songs In which the drama of salvation was pre sented In the form of a series ot scenes between a brutal and drunken husband and a saved wife, with a thrilling happy end ing. In which the audience, having been persuaded by the unconscious art of the singer to expect with horror a murderous attack on the woman as her husband'a steps were heard on the stairs, were re- Hint's- on Scenarjo-Writing HERE are few things Fred erick Palmer, assistant to Hampton Pel Ruth, managing edi tor and assistant manager of pro duction of the Triangle-Keystone Film Company, has learned about writing Keystone comedies in the year and more he has been a mem ber of the scenario staff. TSiey are worth passing along to those studying the development of the script, so here they are; and if you have Keystone aspirations, paste the list where you can see. it often. , Don't Invent excusee Invent stories. Don't fprset we pay you to think, but think along our lines. Don't use cut-backs; go on with your story. Don't forget that dialogue does not jShotograph. Don t make fun of any society or labor organization, Don't despise suggestions: even an elevator boy gives .you a lift. Don't have any of your characters dream anything do all the dreaming yourself. Don't borrow any stories from the magazines -wevjead twice as much as you do. Don't rewrite old moving-picture stories It you see a picture with a steamboat, swim out to dry land. Don't wme your siory so a sucuue will be necessary to explain a situation. Don't torgei in situation i try .to the valud of a thrilling la rut tha .ltm.nl rtf suspense into It. The thrill la never io good as when It follows suspense. Don't write etorlea Involving brutal ity. The Ktyetona pictures often ex aggerate.' but aa a rulo they1 are -ylthln the range of positibaity. The Armorer's Faith IT LOOKS very much as if Amer ica owed Grace George's produc tion of Bernard Shaw's remarkable comedy, "Major Barbara" after 10 years of lying fallow on tho book shelvesto the Great War. For the portions that American audi ences havo found most interesting aro undoubtedly the remarks of Androw Undershaft, munition maker. Hero is the faith of tho armorer ns Undershaft explains it: To give arms to all men who offer an honest price for them, without respect of persona or prin ciples; to aristocrat and republi can, to Nihilist and Czar, to cap italist and Socialist, to Protestant and Catholic, to burglar and police- man, to black man, white man nnd yellow man, to all sorts and condi tions, all nationalities, all faiths, all follies, all causes and all crimes. The first Undershaft wrote up In his shop: "If God gave tho hand, let no man withhold, the Bword." The second wrote up: "AU havo the right to light: none have the right to Judge." The third wrote up: "To man the weapon; to heaven the victory." The fourth had no literary turn, so ho did not wrlto up anything : but ho sold can nons to Napoleon under the nose of George the Third. The fifth wrote up: "Peace shall not prevail ave with a sword in her hand." The sixth, my master, was the best ot all. He wrote up: "Nothing Is ever done In this world until men are prepared to kill one another If it Is not done." After that, there wbb nothing more to say. So he wrote up, simply: "Unashamed." lleved and delighted to hear that when the villain entered the room, and all seemed lost, his face was lighted with the Light of Heaven, for ho, too, had been saved. Ber nard Shaw was not at that time a play wrlght; but such scenes were not lost on hlra; the future dramatist was collecting his material everywhere. Many years afterward, when he had acquired a considerable reputation aa a crltlo of music, Bernard Shaw saw In a dally paper a silly remark describing soma horrible noise as being almost as bad as a Salvation Army band. He Immediately wrote to the paper, pointing out. that the Salvntton Army bands were mostly good, and that some of them were of very con spicuous excellence. This compliment from an unexpected quarter made quite a com motion at the Army headquarters In Lon don. The General quoted It again and again In public, and the author was Invited to attend ono of the musical festivals ot the Army. He did so, and wrote an elaborate critical report of the bands, besides declar ing that the performance ot the "Dead .Match," from Handel's Saul, at the great 0-TC ') T 'if wslMK6m P' lipiy IKi". ' ipfJill & . JK! i!S, r J w-P 3M HAZEL DAWN Who will be seen at the Stanley the first half of next week in "The Feud Girl,' a Faraa&s Playew- I'araaount proaucnon. meeting at the Albert Halt, In commemora tion of Mrs. Booth, by tho combined bands of the Army, headed by the International Staff Band, was Incomparably the finest ho had over heard, and tho only one which showed any understanding of the magnifi cent triumphal character of tho closing sec tion. Shaw took advantage of the relations thus established to ask tho Army staff why they did not develop the dramatlo side of their ritual by performing plays. He even offered to write n short play as a model of what might be done. The leaders of the Army, though Interested and not themselves hostile to the proposal, could not venture to offend the deep prejudices against the theatre that still form part of English evangelism? They could only say rather doubtfully that If the author of a play could guarantee thrft everything In It had actually happened, that "It was all true," It might be possible to reconcile the stricter Salvationists to It Shaw put for ward the defense made by Bunyan that parables were allowable, but he was met with assurance that the Salvationists be-a lleved the parables to be records of fact as well as vehicles of Instruction. Finally, Mrs. Bramwell Booth told the author frank ly that a subscription would be more useful to the Bocial work of the Army than a model play; and so the matter dropped. But It boro fruit In "Major Barbara," and during Its run th4-spectacle was seen for the first time of a box filled with Salvation Army officials In uniform, sitting In a theatre and witnessing a play. Their tes timony was useful. Some of the critics, In an inept attempt to be piously shocked, tried to present the play as a Jibe at the Army, on the ground that the Salvationists were represented as being full of fun, and that they took money from the distiller. The Army received this with the scorn It deserved, declaring that Barbara's fun was perfectly corect and characteristic, and that the only Incident that seemed Incredi ble to them was her refusal to accept the money. Any good Salvationist, they said, would, like the Commissioner In the play, take money from the devil himself, and makf so good use of It that he would per haps be converted, as there Is hope for everybody. The play, however, raises larger issues than those of popular oalvatlontom. Under shaft, with his terrible trade, so grimly flourishing just now, and with his creed that When Zeps Come to Town JUST as managers and theatre pa trons are warned by our fire commissioner how to act in case of fire, so Scotland Yard is cautioning London managers regarding their conduct in the event of a Zeppelin raid. One of the circulars issued by the London police department has just reached this country, "The following features should re ceive special attention," states the notification, "in the event of a hostile raid taking place while the perform ance is in progress; "The staff should be schooled in its duties so as to be prepared to deal with any emergency which may arise. "Arrangements should be made be forehand for selected members of the staff to be at exjts where their pres ence would reassure the audience. An address from the stage may be ex pected to have a reassuring and tran quillizing effect upon the audience nnd Indirectly be effective in pre venting panic. "Whether the audience should or should not be asked to leave the building must depend upon circum stances of the moment. In view of the danger from falling fragments of shells and from the explosive ef fects of bombs dropped there can be little doubt that persons in the street would be exposed to more danger than thow oader cover." money comes first, nnd that poverty Is the worst of crimes and the only unbearable crime, strikes tho deepest note In the play as Barbara sounds tho highest It was tho allusions to Nietzsche which he provoked that elicited from the author the well known preface In which he protested against the habit of the English critics of referring every trace of Intellect In the English drama to Norwegian and German writers, when nil the doctrines which so surprised them were to be found in the literature of tho English language. His reference to Samuel Butler as tho greatest English exponent of Undershaffs doctrino of ,the Importance of money was the begin ning of tho vogue of that remarkable writer, which has persisted and 'spread ever since. It is an open secret that' the part of Adolphus CuBlns, the very unusual jfeune premier at the play, owes Its originality to the fact that Mr. Gilbert Murray, the Regius Prpfessor of Greek at Oxford Uni versity, served the author as a very In teresting model. He quotes his own famous translation of Euripides; and ho Is not the only portrait In the play. Undershaft Is perhaps tho most exacting pnrt that has fallen to the lot of nn actor since Shake speare's big parts; It needs the greatest versatility and flexibility on tho part of the actor, and the most nlert vigilance on the part of the audience to avoid confusing them. It Is curious that ten years should havo elapsed between the production of "Major Barbara" In London and Its first appear ance on the American stage. It has been the subject of many proposals; but until to day (the artistic conditions have never seemed to the author favorable enough to warrant him In venturing on an authoriza tion. Miss Grace George's appearances In London have doubtless had their weight in his decision. But Shaw has always said that for plays of this class the great ques tion Is whether the audience will be a success or a failure. Lesson Number TwoTji Synopsis, the Pladc to Put Your Story's Punch THE synopsis Is a very Important adjunct to photoplay writing, more Important than many scenario writers seem to under stand! A prominent scenario wrlWr re marked a short time ago that a synopsis makes or spoils nlno out of ten photoplays. Unfortunately, thla la only too true. A photoplay, like Caesar'a Gaul, Is divided Into three parts; the synopsis, the cast and tho action. There are sometimes other elements entering into the properly prepared mnnUscrlpt Some photdplay wrlghts mako a scepo plot, a. cast plot, a property plot and even a musical plot, but of alt this moro anoij. Tho principal parts aro enumerated above nnd they ara all essential, although of late thero has been an Increasing tendency nmong authors to submit scripts minus the synopsis. Tho editor has found hundred of BUch scripts coming In lately and has sought In yaln for a single good reason why the synopsis should be omitted. Tho othor day a playwright Unversed In photoplay construction refused ever to mnko a synopsis, claiming that It was not done on the stage. Others will say that tho editor runs through the synopsis and discards tho script, when perhaps' thero Is n big ldoa dovelopcd In a big way in the script. They try to force tho editor to wado through their scenes, usually put to gether In b. looso manner, thus- compelling; him to grope In the dark for signs to tell him what it la all about. A clever man can tell his big Idea simply In tho synopsis or even refer to certain scenes If ho chooses to do so .by giving tho number of each for reference. , Give tho editor credit for knowing a big Idea when ho sees It The cluuioes are that . ho will realize moro possibilities In it than tho author will. Ho Is editor for that pur pose, and his experienco enables him to grasp Its possibilities at once without read ing tho script-through. When ho reads your synopsis and finds tho Idea, ho will be only too glad to read your script carefully. Ono thing Is certain you never make friends Kvlth an editor by assuming that he hasn't the brains to seo your Idea in syn opsis form. That Is the natural assumption, wmch any editor has the right to make If this attitude Is assumed. There Is another reason why you should submit a synopsis. Tho editor Is forced to read a mass of worthless material and waste his time, and this, pbvlously, does not conduce to making him feel more favorably disposed toward the would-te author. If he finds that you have a spark of dra matic ability he may write you and offer suggestions, but If you presume upon hla tlmo he is quite apt to reject your script without n word. - Editors aro extremely busy men and anything which helps them economize time Is a point In Its favor. In other words, tho lack of a synopsis works to tho author's disadvantage. Vou can be sure of one thing, that If you ore capable of writing a good, clear synopsis, you havo Immediately attracted the favor ablo attention ot tho editor, and he will read your script. Unless he sees that It contains some Impossible situation vhlch. the camera cannot show convincingly. A synopsis should be as brief as possible. Try to stato the Idea clearly and con cisely. Sometimes 25 words, if tho Idea la extraordinary or something that the com pany is seeking will give tho editor the meat of the story and your script will, do the rest When It comes to feature stories there Is quite a difference ot opinion. Brev ity counts here aB In he shorter scenarios, and by that we mean that you should not run Into long descriptions and take up space with Irrelevant matter. It follows also that you cannot be expected to de scribe a complex situation In 200 words and omit many of the Interesting points for tho mere Bake of brevity. Do you realize that the average fire reel photoplay Is adapted fronv a book length novel or a full play and that the original photoplay for Ave reels could be novelized Into a book-length novel? Tott. could not .bo expected to tell the story ot the average novel In a few"words without omitting many Important points, particu larly In the counter-plot Give details that havo an Important re lation tothe action of the story at the ex pense of brevity. In order to give an idea ot what would be considered a full or do- Contlnord on Fate XhrM LOVE IN THE MOVIES TSw?iifi II 1 aSaaS-i --fetfe K K EyRflt' 3 I9 R RkV i am fKo'B' S?aE i 'x. MiiH&HK?i 1 W$ K i Hb BliE feP i sB S' rEfffs l L 9r v H Pf9ggys&SSSrfe K V kMHuMft Hw3Kfi7?S? ?KfcPH "fTTrayr18 fiy.'ap WH-!w!lggg.JS-?t'i..rgJKg?Sff nLBMWWMW Geraldine Farrar and Lou Tellegen, who met among the raoviflJfr fornia and married under the shadow of tne wetronoman ? in New York. Hiss Farrar will be seen at ttw palace t nt i next week in "Marja itosa," a tuqr.raraw; proaucumi, m Hiss Farrar was working w Mr, Ttllegww vmkmmj nlnroi-" Mlu Firrat-Vt husband fttl ViMUtt ttl Jng the profr Spanish titjpfewg (m ""it&m 1MI7 if fa. i J