V ' pw f.,3 rr v vii . " -v r ', . v Mat EVENING PUBLIC LEDaRBHILAOELHkl TTe Daily: Movie Magazine t - -3 31BJI m m sT. I !&5 Ifflt r. to , Wt IS i-i rai n Frs Beauty Contest Winners Are Announced; More to Follow Three Girls Chosen Represent High Type of Philadelphia's Famed Beauty Had to Pass Severe Test by Board of Five Judges TOt) 1 1 it ate able It, announce the firU three of the fifteen jt'Wi to be chosen in our Mnnc llcnuty Content, Front thee fifteen trill be selected the three trho trill he given minor por tion by the Hetiironil film Co. hi the next Tooneivtllc Trolley comedy, and from that thirr trill he rioim the one ti ho is to inr. TjlAril dn.v we will print tlucc mnrr of i ,.hpiWl "''T ,eU'" ..?", ,l.,Py ,n,e ,0l,r tliontii.alx nn.l 1ms .lone consider fleeted hv Hip iuilpe.. I oln h mMcc- ablo fancy ilnncuiR. twits are. ,,..-.. She Is ttteiit.t -one years old, five feet Mary hliMlictli Anmld. IIO.i Spi lire for ,.u., , l,oiKhl. tveichs 110 Ti-i' m n o... x- .i i i Viiii'ls niul is n derided blonde with Helm 51. Cnrr. 827 North ltrn.nl Kat i,uo 0J,,S aiiiti. i Natalie Sli.ixer, lit t Pine sheet. Till' clrls who mici cftillt nme through anions the fifteen in this contest, will hnve the ntifnrtim of J.nnwinc thnt the) have i.issed n vexeie n test ns rould have been devised The five judges, eai li nn expeit in all that goes to miiki ni feminine henilty, first went intndli over the gieat ina of photograph submitted. One ole of "hi" meant ihnt the picture vvns vet iiside for further con sideration In this win. the gut a general view of the average of photo graph and. nt the same tune, elimm.ited thoe ninth vvtic olivioulj Imnosmbli The nhotogianhs thus si.i-rt?il were then gone over a second time. On this1 survey, two totes of "111 vveie neces. sary to hate the picture .set aside as ftill in the running. Still again the pictllles weie e nmined. three votes of "in" being ncessary to have a subject survive. It is a remarkable ttibnte to the gen trnl beauty of our contestants that, even after this, tlieie were so many pictures lemuining. When thiee nmoni; Mirh a jury agree that a girl is suf ficient l attractive to deserve considera tion for a contest nf this kind, it means that she is n mighty pretty gill and lias not merely physical beauty but intelli fenee and t lint mystic attribute thnt we rail charm. THEN came the tett where only one vote of "out" excluded a photo graph You would think thnt this would easily hnre reduced the number to fifteen and ttc expected t lie same thing But it didn't. Kven with the neces sity of gnining four votes of npptovnl from these severe crities. there n a large pile of pictures left and it is from this pile that the fifteen nre being seleetcd. THE CIKI.S WHO AUK IN- CLVDED IN THIS FIFTEEN .Ml'ST; WIN THE PNANIMOUS Ari'UOVAl. OF THE FIVE .IL'DGES The three whose pictures we publish today hare successfully passed this ordeal. The judges will choose three eai h day for the remainder of this week. Who's Who Among Winners in Movie Beauty Contest Mary Elizabeth Arnold Mary Arnold is n bride Further more, she has had her own romaiu e and should be well able to act romauecs for the screen. She eloped last Februarv to New York and was married to Marion Arnold, who lived at 440.1 Spruce street Mr Arnold is connected with the Na tional Surety Co. The elopement was not due to any parental opposition on cither side, but simplj . ns the bride expresses it, be cause "I didn't want any fuss; 1 hate iuses Mis Arnold, as Miss Mnry Slack. , formerlv lived with her mother nt Jll!." South Thirteenth sticet. She intended the South Philadelphia High Si hool ' and studied fnncv dancing, appearing i in a number of the school entei tain- I ments and other aruiteur aflairs Later I she and her mother moved to tiiClii 1 Wharton street. During the war she took up stenog raph and was emploved first bv the Emergency Fleet Corporation and later by the Federal Board for Vocational Training Mr5. Arnold Is not yet eighteen years old. She is five feet sx inches tall, xvolghs about IHll pounds and has bmvtii hair and eves. Oh. ves and dimples. Decldedlr dimples. Helen 5l.ii ie (hit. .ills I airs plioiogi.iph Dave hern clll h episode seen in mnuj exhibitions She i, not a After mhuirsing a m ene the actors profession!. I model, but she is M) adapt- go through the action with the cninern nhle to camera iniuircments iimt artls rinnking Then it is retnken anil Bug of the lniN lnve ti make picture-, uf ties hn the two "shots" fpr compaii B"" son Often the second "shot" is taken Miss Can- lives at s.1'7 Noith Broad I fiom a varying nngle Street. Her father is n member of the! Bv the Huggles method tho same firm of one of the leading tlnng ' uouses in tne 1 ity. he uh burn in Sloorestown, N .1 , but the fauulv moved heie when she wns a h 1 Id She attended St. Joseph's Amdemt at Han over, Va. Miiw t'arr has appealed heie in ninn- SCREEN STAR OF Ruth Rcnick Plans to I 'isit City of Her Great-Great- Grcal-Grand-Unclc pETITn" Iluth Ilenuk. pop player, plans soon to ienl ipular screen lenlizp n np cnerinicd ambition by visiting Philadel phia, home of her nncestors for many generations. Back of Miss Renick's desiie to i.pe this old city Is a icnson of which she in justly proud, for the tnung lndv i the great great gicar-giniid-nn e of Benjamin rrnnklln her grnndniother having been n Mis Franklin of Phila delphia Miss Itcniok's scieen enieec has been ftn Inteiesttng one, and the fnct tnnt it was MiperlmpoRed upon a stage nam Ins of several years may account for her rapid rise On the legitimate stage Mils Ilenlck has filled leading roles In nuch well-known plays as "Shenan doah," "Secret Service," "The Hose imd the ning." "The Marriage of Kitty" and "Help Wanted " Enterlnr the realm of "FUckerland" two yeara ago, tha young actress has npoeared with Donglas Fairbanks In Oeorga Jfelfotd'a "The JncVlln's" WIN1 Natalie Sliat er lleieditj omits At least Natalie Shiner seenu to think so. Her fnther wis n thrntrieal inannger in the West, tvheie "lie was born. The iegitrar at (treat Tails, Mont., can show that ie i eighteen .terns old now She w is i.nsed at the Academy of the Moh Nn ne and has been in this city for the last seien eai. Her mother it a. Mniiiiiste nf tin. professional singe and Natalie gets lwr artistic tallies from I w Mis Shaver not onlv wants to he a movie ii'ties. but idle has ambitions to he n writer Seveial of h( r poeins have hi en iiulliled Not only has. this little ladv been sue- cessful in our mutest. I ul she was se- eiteu by a picti.ie magaine in New Votk a one of their beauties and has hnd n iir.vie test aiade in their Inborn tones. She is a daik tvpe mill is not unlike the Cniol Dempster style of girl. Like .Miss Dempster, Miss Sharer likes dancing. WHY FILM FOOTAGE IS WASTED 0y BIG PRODUCTIONS rpHE popular impression that a mo - tinn picture Is completed with the "shooting" of the last scenes is less than hnlf coircct. While the photo graphic nctitities mat- end with the re cording of "the clutch" the studio vernacular for the heroine in the lover's aims as the eternal symbol of the happy ending the phture is far from being rady for the f-creen. 'rhn m ,i 1 1 ... f, "'"' 'Cf"N aml repU o( " m,,st so tlirough the cutting, titling and cdit- mg pioeesses to reduce it to normal footage and gliding continuitt. So after the actors have remo . , L "nTP rcmo veil the crease pnmt and begun to center Interest en their next picture, the director and his assistants in the cutting room get oovtn to the renl work of whipping the picture Into shape. The average fire-reel picture, in its completed form, is r.000 feet in length. To get this, probably 75.000 feet of film has been "shot." This means the elim ination in the cutting room of fifteen feet to everj foot used. This amazingly high footage that the director has to reduce is the result of various factors. The conventional plan Is to use two cameras throughout, so there is a duplication in film or, ns it U known, the first and second negative. In big scenes the number of cameras often' is increased to a half dozen In the making of Oliver .Morosco's "The Half Breed" for Assoeinte.l F.rct V. I tonal. Director Charles A. Taylor had six cameras cranking on (lie cattle stam 1 pede scene, nil placed at different nngic '" 'ke hotel scene four fameras were u"1''. because the making of such large sienes j s expensive that directors do "ot ttMi to run the risk of having to "lake n "retake. The total film footage of ' The Half Breed" was nearlv WO.OOO feet which , i.iis meant a gigantic task for Director lav lor in bringing it to the necessnrv lootnge. In "'l hn Half Breed" he hns uitrudtiied several new ideas in cutting and keeping two and three scenes run ning ns nearlv simultaneously ns is possible on otic screen. Weslev Buggies, who is directing the ' nd -Morosco picture. "Slippy .Me tier" with nn ill-star cast, used a dif ferent method of photographing his i cues Instead of using two cameras tur the onliuirv smaller set. Buggies. PinnnVh ..r, i .ti... nn.l "iT.,iiI.-m- Llim.t.' onlv one anil double niiioiint of footage is obtained us though 1 two inmerns were used, nut tic con tends that it gives htm a wider range of i-elei tion when ihe film comes to the tlnal Hitting t'f course lu the big scenes n tune uses two or more cameras ut into fijktins and soldiering, theie was nothing for him to do but to go to - .noil, in the mills. At that tune, how - FRA1KLI BLOOD , HI Til RKNICK 1 Ham D. Taylor's "The Witching Hour," William de Male's "Conrad In Quest of His lonth, lnd most recently In Darid M. Hartford's Ussoclated First National nroductlon James Ollrer Ourwpod'a story, "The jQlden Snare." iiiiiiiiiiiUk yftgAsjQ0 1 JaH f"?ssrsi B ' t'samit&ggEJiKr r Jz mmm',irmmm'' KisaV3iV!HI' fire 'l - ''UMMMumB szzz -. smMMimmrSflKMKF I fe" lira HU fcsJ Pittsburgh Girl in 'Peter Ibbetson" Film Barbara Denn, who plays the role of Madame Pasquier in Oeorre Fitz maurice's pioduction of "Peter Ibbet son," makes her screen debut in thW picture. She is n Montana girl, but has spent much of her time In Pitts burgh, where she attended Pittsburgh Technology Institute. Her first dra matic experience wni obtained in nmn teur theatricals in Pittsburgh. Beforo trying the screen ihe played tho part of Dolores in "Sally," Zicjrfeld's mu weal comedy, for six weeks. She has blue eyes and golden hnlr. LOVE STORY of a MOVIE STAR Can ? Who You Guess JVrote It? rHAPTEtt II Anril nOth. ' I must begin, I nm nfraid. by telling you of the great shock thnt came to me when I wns about fifteen years old; frr my whole future wns determined bv it It made mo wnat I am today, for good or evil. You see, we lived in Pittsburgh, the city of smoke and Uamc. And now comes my first confession. I rhotild like, of course, to say that 1 came of a wealthy, nristoeiatic family, and de jianlly chose acting because of my ovei -whelming passion for it. The reverse is true Mv father was n Meclwoi ker , , and nil through mv childhood I lived in a dirty little mill house, dinging to the bnre hill, opposite the blast furnaces, nun i was brought up in squalor ni.-l i gliness. Yet 1 nin proud, in a war, for mv father came of thnt wonderful Presbyteiian, Scotch-Irish stock, the Ajneiiean pioneers that setthd in Western I'enn.syltnnin, bad; b"foie tin Bevoiotioii -in,! that mode Pittshmgh ul.ut ,1 . ..!.... pi,. .1 ...i.... ,' "' ' .' , "; ""' ..,. down, .mi wonder that later the nnk .ever ,,d things half n; thev pro-, ,,. was applied to me thnt will dueed eithe, millu.naii es or pnupei. Links. Kven then, I tvns "The I.itt'e Amestois of mine fought In the Win 1 I'atither." of 'TIS mv father himself. .1 n,e,e bov. t had more or less of n pnmarv edu went ,, iril ,1Pl and v is n.ulh , ,n IlllWlllble ,,,, '." ' llnillll Dl nt ill II.Lhll.l. V IA1I in ,.nnin . . . ' ' r-.U.I.M, knek he found Pittsburgh ........ 1.. I.- ,1, tl I h. n l,,.ll,Mlri. I ...,!.. I .. .... ..,.' .. ,". -....w .... , ,' nn iu- iiinnuiei-'lili u ul iiuii :iuii si', And. as he had put the ycjrs when he should have been gaining nn edmatiou 'v.i. this wns consideieil -in excellent tiling. Bi nioner w is being made, and the vvork'eis vveie nristocnts well off. -tiong. with happy homes and a plena ant future. Change) ennui rnpidlv. Machinery took the plnie of irn and wave's diopped stendih "The mill ouneis be 'nn iinportiiiz cheap finign lal'01 . until the Slavs overran the city ; and ro. nt about the time I was horn, my father wns becoming a miserably poor labor ing man. I think if lie hnd lived lie would have risen in wine way, for ho had lust been appointed foiemnu in Ins do pnrtment, and he had ambition. lie hod mnnicil n French -Canadian girl. Tlnee chlldien were bonj. and all died. I n- the foiiilh, I it-fused to (lie .as I h'iv. innnv times sime. But. befoie I wns born, mv fathei hnd nlr"ndv siiccinubed to an nttnrk of pneumonin . nnd when I was little more than three mon'hs old. mv mother fol lowed h 1 111 Mt father' best friend adopted me, nnd I gievv up 111 spite of everything Mv enrlirst recollect.ons nre of playing over heaps of pig iron, and vv allowing In iron filings; and of dodging the dinky engines in the rail road yards; and of seeing at night, just before I was put to bed, the rolling flames and illuminated Rmnke against the sky, when the furnaces were "tapped." In one of the great strikes I remem ber secretly following my foster-father, FIRST THREE OF MOVIE 4405 ' V ;MWM&Mm- 2r Read This First and Then You Can Follow the Story fJF.U.A MOHELAXn, mom " fnmotir of movie stars, iron Ihnt on untfitoim girl. Annette U'iAiii. Ant nru in fore tciA Rotund IIVe. on idol of the screen. Flrporti tn;y ihnt W'cllei ts ooina In tint li B'i7;iiM tiifo the niovtei and itatid iponsor for her mirci. Ui Moteland. to tiirr Anmttr the iiiffmiia that she hem If hm punr ihuiiigh hratise of her late nf Weill 1. drridri to put her tihnlr rr pcucncr down on paper in thai nnrttr tan see tehat kind of man II rc really m, A'iowi day to day. as time pcimiti, iic nf down and lays hare her veiy soul for the benefit of the unhnotni an I. and getting into the riot, where, not uiidei standing nt nil what was oxpeiird of me, I jot lagid find shrieked like all the lest, until n constable snatihed me up 111 his arms, growling, "What i the Kid doing here?" I bit and tore at him in so wild a lllll' th'if l,n ..In. ......I , . .. .,;. ";. '" -"I'l"" ""' "o er me moie or ess. I unv luxn,.... li'ither I , if. 1 . ,,, .in.. I.,. ..... ..I. 1 1 '.""" " "" ""' .'""""" "'"Ill '10 juiitining with me. .tlv sweet, in. 1 v., in. - nurhi-u lusier-inoiner 1 1 called hei "Moms") finally stopped (rung t(, di,. cipline me. ami rather let me rule hei , foi iiiinLshmeiit mndo a housebicakei' out of me. The ienl reason that they fcaied mo, hovtetcr, was because of mv towering courage. I was not nfinid to do any thing then, nor nm I now. But 1 was not vicious nil the time A good part of the time I was du.nn ing. acting, little ideals of mt own; playing that I was rich and beautiful How J longed to ho beautiful! Even today I do not really know whether 1 am or not, though they nil say I am. But beaut fill or not, tho bovs ran after me fiom the time I was six Literally ran, too. Half a dozen of them would start from school on theii skates, nnd I before them, running like the wind. Nevertheless, although I alwnvs at tracted bo.vw and was nttraeted tnttnid tlirni, I did not have any tarly, serious love affair. These episodes were ically d'lightful, exciting games, li-'i i nsr no I tiacp behind them Besides. ' Moms" was the sou of woman who mi;ht have become a nun If she had not mm tied. I believe now that sue was mm hid ion lerning love nnd mnrringe. nnd man aged to bring me up in too great an ignnranre of whnt life meant So at fifteen I was utterly Innocent, with rainbow idenls of what men and women were. I was In tho second year nf high school and quite unhappy I recall my foster-father at that time as n big, powerful man, dark, with a great shock of hair, many creasea In his gloomy faco, mighty arms slttlpg at ttble, BEAUTY CONTEST WINNERS CHOSEN JBY JUDGES Do You Know ? The Actors In It? perhaps in his woolen shitt. nil soiled 1 from the mills, eating linm and eggs i rather noisily. I respected him and. I ' think, really loved him But a storm was brooding over our home. I felt It. It made me hnte to be theie. "Moms" seemed nltva.tR busy somewhere In the shadows, tlitting nbout, like n hurt and fnghtened phantom, her pnle face hag giud mid drawn, her eves filled with a diendfiil accusation It wns hitler, win ter time; day by day I felt moie lonely and forsaken, niul nvt Minictimes mv foster-fnther was absent. ".Moms" wept n good deal and treated me al most ns if I were not there. TO BK CONTINTKD T05IOHUOW FAKE BILL HART PICTURES BEING PUT ON MARKET TF YOU saw somebody appropriating J- something belonging to a friend of yours would you let him get away with it V Not if j 011 react the way Bill Hart's fiiinds do. tMlliniu S. Ilnrt probably has mtre fi lends than nny mnn nppear - mg on the Kcreen today. Scattered mound the ttoild they nie continually on the lookout for tliiive who nre not playing fair with Bill, for Bill has nl tvn.tR been nn exponent of fir pluy. And it isn't fair plnv, Mr. Hurt in sit8. to tnl;e an old lilm. diess it un with a new title, patch nn pnit-s of 11h carded two-ieelers, and show the re sulting hodgepodge to the public ns a William S. Hart production. Over in Knglnnd lives n Unit fan named Eric .Motley, who wtote to his hero an follows : "Tonight I went to see 'Tho Bad Man' ns advertised in the posters. It won n two-reel picture and rather ancient, nbout a milliner whose uncle left her n saloon out West. When the last pnrt of the picture was shown on the screen it wiid, 'William H. Ilnrt in the Marked Deck.' In the coiner of the substitute was W. II. -p. Co., which looks like the W. Hart Production Co. you mentioned lu your niticlo in the 'Boy's Cinema.' Of course, it may he nil tight; you will know bent, but 1 thought I would let you know," ... ( MK IIABT wns very glad to lenm ' about conditions in England, nnd I he wrote nnd told Ene Moiley of his' appreciation. ' , Two ohl pictures, one called "The Bad Mnn of Sanla Inc,s" nnd the other "Mr Silent Unships" had been com bined nnd shown under fraudulent titles. This Is not n condition confined to England. In the United States, usu ally in the smaller cities, old Hart pie tures are being shown In violation of orders of the Federal Tade Coramls lon forblddn unfair competition. NATALIE SHAVER., 4- PiJi&St. I'HOTOPrVYH pMOT&PlAYr couiixy r OTAtlUOCA M-inmkvT ,:ih. Xrorrls A. Tmeyunk Ave. idinuraMM DHlly Bt a. Kv(C,it 0.45 0 ALLAN DtVAN'S ritODLTTION "THE HEART OF A FOOL" APOI 1 O s:n TiiostrsoN sts. ArvyJiV MATINKR DAILY IEN Tt'KPIN In MACK SENNKTT'S "A SMALL-TOWN IDOL" ;ARPAniA CHESTNUT Del. IOTH 1 AtAUIA 10 a tt. 10 ii:ir. p. m ni:oiu,E meli'okd i-hodlction "THE WISE FOOL" AslTOR 1TIANKLIN A OinAItD AVeT ! tJ 1 UI MATINKR DAILY I WILLIAM FARNJUM I In "HIS (JKKATEST sTACIUFICE" tRAI TIMOR F" B1ST HALTIMOHR BEBE DANIELS In "DUCKS AND DItAKES" RFNJNI 04TH ANU woodland ave. DH1NIN MATIN'KE Daii.V ALIbTAK CAST In T.EOUdE MEHOItDS "THE FAITH HEALER" BLUEBIRD Ilroad Sunij'iehanna r.-Unuou, to U Cor KATHERINE MacDONALD In "fASHIOVS 1I.AV(1K0L'MI" RRH AHW A V Bf0'l Snjder Av. it iw s,wu 8 a w . u ! M AI.USTAK CAST In "STRAIGHT IS THE WAY" , Broad St. Caamo0. GLADYS WALTON III "ALL DOLLED UP" CAPITOL 7!io-MAlrKVTT; v1 s-"- 10 A T tn 11 J5 p, jj I). W. CRIKFITHS 'M'i "DREAM STREET' POI ONIAI atn Staplevvool Avea. twWX-.VIlll- "30, 7 nn.l n p xi HIR JAMES M. IIAItItlF."S "What Every Woman Knows" DARBY THEATRE D. W. nillFFITII'H "DREAM STREET" FMPRFSS BA".K.'.,?.a1,K '- - - fttAllftKK )lV l.OIH WEnER'S PRODUCTION "WHAT'S WORTH WHILE" FAIRMOUNT i,-' y.. ' JACK HOLT xnil HEDDA NOVA lu "THE MASK" i ;.;...""" FAMU Y T"KATRE fll Mrne, s, I -MVlILi I i l T(l Mllis,,.,,., US"""!. nn: " ' HTUFIDMI1TIIAI nun nn taui ...w.wi t,niL,U' 56TH ST. maA !:..rVr.lnw K',ru-" iiscaiIe A"'v BESSIE BARRISCALE In "THE BREAKINC POINT FRANKFORD 4T'5 AF"A"rD n. W. nnirriTiiiu "DREAM STREET GLOBE e001 MAnET bt. ' AT.T.AN nWAN'R PROnuCTinV t0 " . THE BROKEN Doll7' Movie Aspirants Write to Balzac rOY, page Balzac!" -D Some people think he is still alive, so it would appear from the letters addressed to him nt the Jletro Hollywood Htudios. When it was learned that Bex Ingram wns work ing upon n picture. "The Conquer ing Potter," from a story by Bal zac, many scieen aspirants wrote to Mr. Bnlzac asking him to use his In fluence in getting them a part in the pictuie. IMIOTOl'LAYS The following theatres obtain their pictures through the STANLEY Company of America, which is a guarantee of early showing of the finest productions. Ask for the theatre in your locality obtaining pictures through the Stanley Company of America. GRANT 4022 GirtAnD AVE MATINKR DAILY WILLIAM S. HART O'.tlALLKY Of Till; MOUNTED" In GREAT NORTHERN S"? WM MAIISIIALL NEILAN'S "DINTY" I IMPERIAI 0I & WALNUT 6T3. ' I-IX1J jrat.. 2 .to: r.vcs.. -to ne. 111 LUMraun In "PHIbOMSKS OF I.OVK" I phiart Paltro Cermantown Ave and THOMAS MEIGHAN In "THE EASY KOAD" I IRFRTY BHOAD . COLUMUIA AV. L1DI- t l MATINEE DAILY CI.EO MADISON A (iARETII HirilllES In "LURE OF YOUTH" OVFRRROnicro:iD4,IAVnnFORD V .fyTJT' AVENUE ... .mIiA,'kSns!jlli'AS',5 ...... "UNCLE TOM'S CABIN" PAI APF 12H 5IAHKBT STIIEET Tilt- u.TT.Vr,, ...i. A- ' tn " '1 ' M. "UtUtPTION" PRINCESS 1018 MARKET STREET N 30 A tt to 11.15 P. .r. MAE MURRAY In "THE CILDED LILV ! REGENT "Xn$ fZ v.. ALICE LAKE In "UNCHARTED SEAS" RIALTO EIMANTOW.V AVENUE l-i 1 S A.p Tlll.liinini.vpu or MAP MllDOAV'KfcN 8r' In "THE (IILDED MIA" RUBY MA"KUT 8T. HELOtV 7TH ' C AIJL.tflttA,fn,l,8P- "Some One in the House" I SAVOY 1BU MARKET STREET j "THE BRANDING IRON" SHERWnnn '" Haltlmor. Av. . & . MAT EVE. 0i30 "THE GREAT DAY" S TANLEY,, , tiuti,. tiiAi ."iii.: " " WALLACE REID In "TOO til CII SPEED" STANTON. XAKET Abov inril" " V.l(ln IS A M. loll IS p M CHARI.FS R AV Io ' M' . . .. -"l.l-j i i in "IIIK Ol.l) httlVIVIIN HOI.r." 333 MARKET..si'',.,;KT'r,1EA'K Mli&.MA,.i .... nutyniHii HUUK VICTORIA SIAAnKJ:Tl ",";' "" DOROTHY DALTON1 In TIIK IDOL OF THE NORTH- AT WEST CHESTER RIALTO ."KORC.B MKI.FOniVH IDLE HOUR" Votf, c'ffe HO-HA-HUMH l'DULL LIFE, THIS, m muyiu tAME Hr CONSTANCR PAiAic. Hollytvoo.1. Calif" j.. . YTKSTJ5IIDA1' C U. I)c M le,1fl f- about ten allISatorS the 1 the templo tvecnes of his pfct ,reP Unl Laurels and the I.nrlv '.. Y.rV ",1 nornrllv enlleil. " '" u " ttm.1 One of them. Ancoitnfi i. .. young, and proud of It. The ml,''. 5''?r,i were her children. olhcr !" Conrad Nagel tells me he . il nmiyig cm, mid it I, the sorrof1 J?i hip time i wasn't there to see hin, T Mild I supposed they gave (he rentlW dope to make them safe. "oni. . ,! snorted Conrad. "Thev stnra "?' -for two days to make 'eiii viclou, fra Now, what has the enmnnni Mllle was more than pleased Uh h Dorothy Dnlton, resplendent In ? .... uiiuiiiH. iiiRn romo and a , dM ' dance In tho local saloon for the Vn.st of n lot of wonderful coimopnl " tZS Theodore KoslofT the, famous dS whom she has plctorlally ensnared, m also working. ' w They say ho's about the busiest mi? on the lot. He not only design, and costumes and nrranges dance, h,3 nets n biff nnrt n .. n . r. '. "" nnrr. Ktirslan. He re II. l.l '". ."- 1 It spring tightly wound. ..c H.11H11US me of a sttrti T ABRr SBMOX has been taken fJ "ine msp tn . where lie has been 8ic',t his nccidcnt during the filming of tSi Inst pnrt of his latest comedy. "TMfJ Fall flllt-." to his Immn I. -I . il'M next door to Mr. and Mrs 'p.iii. vr5i shnll's (5Iarion Fairfax). For the" pici i I, v i "',V'V" l" u,"'i a cotnv Iiiulu uii-iueiui piaue. The Mercurr At.tnflnn Cn m.H 1.....1 !J ..UI.'l lend 'em one because when Larry W,!J '"",'" "" ,""" ""' pnue. wouwiltS' la It 'Ain nn o linAniinn. ...l.. T . Vi iiiiuugu me iiiunc proDauiy would too. THE title of William Duncan's plctui' 'I has been elm need from "Th. n.!..''! cess of the Desert Dream" to "Wlw I Men Are Men" To tell the lion truth. I can t hand it much. ri. a. ,'t exteriors the entire company h (toinj ' J to British Columbia. W Mr. Duncan's next picture 1im Hj M working title of "The Supermon." snl -1 was put into coniinunv ny .lames Brd lev, who isn't really James Bradlpr it all, but Bradley Smollcn, who ue!l t4 he on the Chicngo Herald and Enm Iner. But he says they spell his nim so many funny ways that he hasa't the courage tn uso it. Earjp Willinms Is such a smart man he thinks he doesn't need a director, So ho directs himself while netinic, mi bus a co-director yclept Itobert En- Singer. Iritzi llidgctvny is his leadini woman and has what might he colled I lively part. Well, if Bill Duncan can direct him self. I guess Enrle Williams can, too. Marie Prcrost, glancing over th scrint for her new nictiire. "The Ttiiti.rl 'J I tiy tyes. stnM sometimes read their ' stories before they play them), in order to get nn Idea of the wardrobe required (you see, there's n reason) after coming ncross the twenty-fourth chanje, turned to her director, King Ilaggott, and snid indignantly: "Say, who wrote this story Lu cille?" ritOTOIT.AXS j . .THOU company r A .orjiMimc. The NlXON-NlRDLlNGERfn THEA I KbS Ul net MinMT 62D ABOtr. MARKET UllilVll1 1 t 30 & il 3D lu 11 r. V. D. W. (iniFFITII'. "DREAM STREET" PCn AD OOTII ft CEDAR AVESBi VILLyArV j 30 ,1 end II 10 to II JUSTINE JOHNSTONE In "IILACKIIIIIDS" COLISEUMxl,W.n'Sbrnr?2 ALISTAIl I'AST In "WHEN DAWN CAME" JUMBO rno.NT ht, i. r.in.tnD vt Jumbo June, on Krankroro u ELAINE HAMMERSTEIN In "THE PLEASURE fiKKKIIBS" I rAnCD 1ST & LANCASTER AVfc LtAUtK MATINEE DAII.T DOUGLAS MacLEAN III "THE IIOMi: hTRETtll" I rC 1CT BSD AND I.OC I ST STREET LULUOl Mnli, 1-30 3 30 Eve" fl HO to 11 AI.L-STAK CAST In "AI.tC'R , "IF WOMEN ONLY KNEW" NIXON 62D and market sts. " i.i - tm I DOLORES CASSINELLI'S "THE HIDDEN LIGHT" RIVOLI "D AND AAT1B war GEORGE BEBAN In "ONE MAN IV A .tlll.lldN" STRAND GEEMANTOVt S AVE AT t Ev WW tTnt.1" LOIS WILSON nnil CONRAD J nW' ft "What tvery Woman ivnorTi iTALLEGHENY iS,h W& WILLIAM S. HART In "O'MALLEY OK THE MOU.NTW" AT OTHER THEATRES MEMBERS OF M.P.T.O.Ac- AURORA s TTn.SMM-?' TT At Hen Turpln, th IIndnmft I esalnf. """ "A SMALL-TOWN IDOL" i ... i G. :..-iI0 flrmatili ermantown ma-i im:e vmii A. HOBART BOSWORIH In "II IM IIHN LAH" i IEFFERSON tnh UaupMn S MATLNIWJ !'. I CORINNE GRIFFITH in "It ln't Ilflnn Done Thl f-e PARK ,,ID051 " nlllW St ui ul. F.vxt t AVE 4 J'"' li I nnnoTHY PHILLIPS In "MAN WOMAN MAnnMOK" SPRUCE 6a?.W i PEARL WHITE ta."8EV0ND TKICE" i U. "LOVE" . ll' ir. i2ll ' $b xm V' .A c... t tArfM.-il y t ' i '1
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers