KVSgjj.i W " ,'-p'y, a'v '.T.! vwVf- ff?" ;V . vv .fie, w EVENING PUBLIC LEDGER- PHILADELPHIA, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 1 1921,. HER&S HOW THEY BEGAN RIGHT , HERE JNPHitL? ' . -'RlJ Te Daily Movie Magazine mr -wl r i 7f?rlPffil W J'S ft -jet vf ISes2S,-- rtt - St) ' '- MSN: 'Ale AflH& " I if Km y I I .hv 8 II. to- MM wi ; w if' tWBca": CLOSE-UPS of the MOVIE GAME By HENRY t Was a Great Night for YOU'VE nil rrnd In the papers nboiit the great demonstration thry staffed in Now York Inst Sunday nljtlit for DourIus Fairbanks mid Mnry Plrkforri and Chnrlle Chnplln. The news dlM'ntehes carried descriptions of the scenes outside the Lyric Trcntre after the flist showing of Doug's new picture, "The Three Muskejcers," but somehow they did not tell nuirh of what went on Inside the house. Mabc the reporters couldn't get In. Mot penp'e couldn't. Kven if you had tickets, you had to do a D'Artngnan stunt yourself to get through the mob that jammed Forty-second street. I doubt If there would have been n greater demonstration if they had been staging n thrco-round bout between the President of the United States and' the King of Great Britain and a part of Ireland. A' friend of mine tried to buy tickets on Friday and couldn't. Everything was taken. Of course, at least hnlf the house wns Invitation: the first showing was Intended to gather nn audience that would set a record for brilliancy in fllindom. And It did. The plnce looked like a moving-picture production of "Vho' Who on the Screen." Forty-second street was literally jammed from curb to curb. They had to call out the police reserves to let the truflio thtough. People who had tickets fought their way through the crowds nnd then stood outside the theatre, waiting to sec the triumphant arrival of the three stars. And the police couldn't move them. There wasn't any plnce to move them to, for the lobby was crowded by the earliest arrivals a.vl they blocked the entrance. Fifteen minutes before the time for the show n begin they had to station n couple of ballyhoo artists outside to jell. "No more tickets sold." And the people who hud come, intending to buy tickets, cushmI a bit and then stood lirmlj Just where they were, determined not to be (heated out of a glimpse of the three stars anyway (I hate to write that "three stars": It brings back such happy memories.) THEY had to send men out to pell "The picture starts in five minutes; no one seated after it starts." That got them. They began to eome in and hunt their chairs, but thnj didn't sit down. They just stood and craned their necks in nrry duection to get glimpses of the famous film folk who dotted the home. NORMA TALMADGE was unquestionably the center of Interest in these last minutes. And she deserved to be. If you who loe her on the screen could see her in the flesh, you would almost wMi she had chosen the spenkins stage Norma Is personality plus. She looks so sane nnd o unpoiled and so human that it Is almost impossible to think of her ns one of the most famous persons In the world. She walked down the aisle with her husband and her mother, speaking to people, as she passed with n wonderful little genuine smile that seems to come right from the heart. There isn't anything up-stage about Norma. She didn't Rits It half as much as two lesser oh, much lesser lights of the screen who acted all over the place as long as there wns a chauce to attract attention. And they bad a chance until Norma came In. There were several hundred people who had bought general admissions because they couldn't get seats. I saw two famous directors standing up in back. It was the bet they could do. And when this standing crowd began to spread out and filter down the sides, the management sent men to get them back. There wns no time for argument. The one nnswer was. "I'm sorrj . sir. but if jou are not satisfied. you can get your money back at the box office." Polite, eh? Rut uobodj wanted his money back. There were a lot of celebrities of the speaking stage there, too. I noticed dozens of people pointing to an upper box and found that they were spotting out Kyrn, the dancer, who is making such a sensational hit at the Winter (tardea And Kyrn Is a good deal like Norma ; there isn't the slightest suggestion of the stage about ber when she is out among people. She's human and eminently '' sensible and she doesn't talk shop. - pHEX there came a commotion at the door cheering and clapping and the crowd surged in. The house was on its colltctive feet in an instant. And the Big Three of Filmdom entered. T3EY yelled for Doug and he came out and bowed. They yelled for Mary and she smiled her thanks. They let .Turk Demnsey como forward to nut a minch i'd, - In the affair. And then, when Charlie ' J wild. What is there about this wonderful little man that carries his human appeal all over the globe among all peoples and all conditions? Some day I'm going to spin you n jam about the odd corners of the world where I have run across Chaplin fans. I've come to believe that Volapuk and Esperanto arc not needed; all you have to do Is acquire a good imitation of the Chaplin walk and the world is your brother. I never saw any human being look Ies flesh and blood than Mnry Pickford does. As she sat in the box Sunday night, she looked for all the world ns if omfbody had taken a highly colored and verj shiny lithograph portrait of her aad tut It out and snt it down there for us to gaze at. ti bne gives an unbelievable impression of unreality. Her hair is tho yellowest "oliTeUow gold ; it glitters and shines ns though she hnd varnished it. She wore it jiii iu waes oi curia jou Know; tnc Kinu ot DaDy curls tnnt mother used to make U6 hate before church on Sunday morning when she wet our hair and brushed it tight around her finger and left it that way for all the other fellows to hoot at. Mary's head was just n mass of these curls. I don't know any other woman of twenty-eight who would dare to go out in public that way and who could get away with it. But we've known her for so long as a little girl of the curly. Pollvanna kind that it isn't so conspicuous with her. We've come to think of her in just that way. The house wouldn't let the show go on until Doug had jumped up on the railing of the box and stretched out his hands to silence them. 'Friends," he aald with that inimitable smile of his, "I can't make a speech now. I'm too nervoushonestly. But I'll tell you that this reception is wonderful simply wonderful. If jou want me to, I'll say something after we've seen the picture But not now. Come on ; let's go." So they saw the picture and thej laughed and cheered at evervthlng that Doug did in it, and every time he pinked some one through the midriff with his sword they gloried in the gore and a good (daylight saving) time was had by all. And then, at the end, they made Doug come out and say the usual stage nothings and they clapped. After that nothing was left but to begin the fight to get out. , U IT IS ichen I see things like this jiil '"' "t yuuny jam. an xne icorK ana all the worry and all the privation of years are nothing if they only bring at the , end one such supreme moment of popular idolatry. That's why the fans are anxious to get into the game. There is no other way in the world by which such wealth and fame ca be won by people scatccly out of their teens. Daily Tabloid Talts to Fans, on Breaking Into the Movies By JOHN EMERSON and ANITA LOOS Does the Movie Actress Tht authors nl thin tprlrm nr thm famous Emerson and Loos, who have teritten some of the most successful photoplays. They now have full charge of all scenarios for Constance Talmadge. "TDUT they have no brains!" some - one is sure to say. .That sort of thing Ik rnther cheap cynicism. As a matter of fact, they have plenty of brains, but of their own peculiar sort. A motion picture nctor, like any other typo of artist, is nn emotional, temperamental creature; but the prob lem which worries him the most is one of Intellect rather than emotion in short, the problem of just how to con trol the reartlons inside that discredited Cray matter of his. Every film actor and you, too, if you enter this field is at one Mm or another confronted with the nernlexlmr it prob'em of just how much thought h S? fttliillrl .illlnu tA ifr intn lilu U'rtpl tVint W..WM.M .w .. ,w (,1. .,. ,1,0 iw.Ck , iiihi is, whether his nctlng should be emo tional or intellectual, The question re solves itself into this: Doe's an nctor feel? Should he feel? ' "-There aro two schools of thought on this seemingly academic, but iu reality most important subject. ..First are those who say that an actor Bust feel the part he is playing. The greatest actors, they say, hare always been those who wore themselves out in an 'hour's time, because they felt the emotions they portrajed. They tell one story such as that of J by one t&A, Mrs. Kendall, who, having lost her , mann & ovn ch"('' electrified an English audi- e Uomr Vi, W1W Dtr portrayal 01 wie Dereaveu Cir 0"icr asi lij-nne to sucu an ex- 3P.) ?"J3t tnat women leaped to tneir tcet e nit. sboutlnx "No inoro, no i r noint to. tin fiet that tho creat M. NKELY Doug and Mary and Charlie Chaplin appeared, they simply went that I begin to understand t) the lure Really "Feel" Her Part? are able to simulate the three reaction which nre quite beyond the control of the will pn'lor, blushing and the sud den perspiration which comes with grtat terror or puin. This, they say, is proof positive that these actors are feeling every emotion as they enact it. rplIE second group declares that all J- this is nonsense and that If an actor really felt his part, he would lose con trol of himself, nnd perhaps actually murder some other actor in a fight scene. Acting, they sn. Is an art wherein the artist, by the use of his intelect, it nble to simulate that which he does not feel using his fnre men-U ns the painter uses his canvas. The moment an actor begins to enter into his pnrt. his acting lb either overdone or underdone and the stnno la n,,no.i The who'e trick of It. they add. is to keep perfectly cool and know exaeth wunt you nre doing, no matter bow spectacular or emotional the scene Still n third school declares thnt both these views nre wrong, nnd that acting is neither a matter of thought nor of I cuiuuuji, oui is purely imitative. An actor observes his own emotions ns he experiences them in each crisis of his real life, they say, nnd remembers them so well that ho is afterward able to reproduce them before the camera. The great stars of the motion pic tures today, when one is able to draw them out on the subject, any that when they are acting they are thinking not about ono tiling, but about several things. The brain is divided Into dif ferent strntn, and while one section is thinking about the part, nnother Bcctlon is entering Into It. while still a third stratum Is busying itself with idle specu lation about the cameraman and tho director. (These "Tabloid Talks" are con ouc(f from th material for a book by Mr. Emerson and Miss Loot to 6 puaitsnea oy the James J.. Mcvonn Company, New Vork.) r. TALMADGE FAMILY AS ,. f fP ',;'V Vja&c&tMM THE man who writes our "C!oe 1'ps" column saw Norma Tnlmadgc and her mother nt the opening per formance of Douglas Fairbanks' nic tare, "The Three Musketeers," in New York on Sunday night. "My!" he snld, ""how well you're looking " "Yes," said Norma. "We nil looked so well after our vacation that we went to n photographer and hud some new pictures taken." THEDA WANTS YOU TO WRITE PLAY JUST FOR HER fNCE ur J "vamp" pon a time there wasn t a mp in the whole world except Thcda Bnra. You youngsters won't re member when she cau'ed the censors to measure the proper number of feet that were allowable for a screen kiss. She nnd Olga Nethersole were the original, dyed-in-the-wool kissers. Of course. we've all kissed. But not as Theda did. All question of ki'slng and "vamp ing" iifide. Theda is now anxious to make a hit on the speaking stage in some bort of plnj that will allow her to live down the reputation she made as tho genuine sting-of-u-wasp kisser. SI?., still loves the movies, but she wants the more personal contact of the speakies. So, while she is touring the country in a "personal appear ance" act, she is looking for some sort of play thnt will give her that contact. The man who runs this page met her in New York not long ago. DOES SHE LOOK LIKE T" t His x il S v Tfti ft v m& f'i $!Jx THEY LOOK TODAY Above Constance Talmadge and her mother. Below Norma as she is today "Why not give me copies to show the fnns in Philadelphia?" he asked. "Well," smiled Norma, "I'll give you copies not that anybody cares anything about you but we all enre about the fnns around Philadelphia." So the next day he called and got conies of the new nhotoerunhs. They show Norma nnd Constance nnd Mother Talmadge. They look as though the vacation had done them all a lot of good don't jou think so? "I notice," she suid, "that you have been running a series of articles by Dorothy Farnum on how to write the synopsis for a moving picture." The aforesaid man plended guilty. "Well." snid the divine Theda, "you can tell jour budding scenario writers that I will give them a better chance than most scenario writers can get. I want nn idea for a good play for the speaking stage. I don't want the whole plnj. I simply want the synopsis in ordinary story form. "I nm willing to pay ?."00 In cash to anybody who will give mo this iden. I will be in Philadelphia soon and. If tlicj will send me their synopses cither to me or to you I will Kvc $.V)0 for one thnt is nvnllable, and I will have it nut in slmne for the stnee. AnH. If " , "J-"' ?"'" :','.' . ,v ieB ""! . Vb"al rfnJra '. !h?mJ ?i22 the 5u J Wr the theme alone, i .And so all you budding ecenarloists if is acceptable, I will givo them the i w" "HVe "I writing to Dorothy Far num hero is your chance. There's live hundred cold dollais In it just for a bare idea. And royalties besides. Como on aB Doug Fairbanks savs let's go. A "VAMP" TO YOU? o Here is Theda Bara as she loolcs today. She toants some one to give her an idea for a play. She offers $500 for it CONFESSIONS OF A STAR As Told to . INEZ KLUMPH THE STORY BEGINS tfiA the early days in the old Fine Arts studio in California, when Col leen Moore, the Uish girls, Bessie Love and a host of others were not much more than extra girls. Diana Cheync relates the tale; she begins with the day in the studio when she nnd Isabel Heath, not stars then as fAcj are now, were sitting on the stairs when a strange man came into the studio and looked at them. The cameraman called them down to meet him, and it proved the turn ing point in Isabel's life. He was Phil Craney, a famous director from the eastern studios, and he taught Isabel to be the first of the screen's "baby vamps," and engaged her for such a part n a photoplay he was producing. NOW (50 ON WITH THE STORY CHAPTER IX FDR a while the trndc journals dcnl lng with the motion-picture industry were full of announcements about Isabel nnd her new company. She was to be gin work right -iway on n wonderful story written by a big scenario writer, whose name would be made public inter. Then she wns looking for studio spnee at Fort I.ee. Then she wns choosing n director. But nothing definite was ever told. Always this picture was going to be the most wonderful one ever made, but that wan all that was said nbout it. "Looks queer to me," ono of the men nt the studio said, ono night w'icn a lot of us were anting some sandwiches that bud been sent In ; wo were working lnt, nnd hndn't time to co out to dinner. "The latest is thnt she's reading stories, the one that was written opccinlly for l.cr belnj no good "not suited to her talents,' it says in the Review. Thnt always means that something's fnllcn through, when they're Just reading sto ries. I know the signs." Later I saw that Derry had gone to France with tho nvl.itiou corps gone without "ending me oxen a line. I tore ur the li'tlc souvcniis I'd been keening of the times we'd jono out together, nnd thr?w away the four-leaf clover he'd found and given mo once when we were out on location together. I felt awfully unhappy, and sick of pictures, and tired of everything. And then I met Keith Gorham, and my life took on a queer twist that has never been quite straightened out. I don't kuow that I can mako you understand his fascination for me. lib looks would have hern enough for nny girl, even for one who'd been associntcd with as many good-looking men ns I had. Ho hnd blnck hair, nnd long, stffl blue eyes thnt were heavy lidded, much ns Rudolph Valentino's nre. Jn fact, there's ono close-up In "The Four Horsemen" whero the heroine nsks Val entino if he'll behave if she goes to his studio, where Valentino makes me think of Keith. They liurc the same inexpli cable chirm. Wc met at his aunt's home. Mrs. Gorham was nn old friend of my aunt's, nnd hnd asked me to a dance which she was giving. Sho motored to town to get me, nnd we drove In her wonderful c-nr to the most beautiful home I'd ever seen a lonj, low house, cream-colored, with a red tilo roof, with the blue sea lj ing below it. 1 enme out into the terrnce when I bnd dreswd for dlnmr. and there stood Keith, one arm resting on the top of a great terra-cotta urn, his big figure, in stunning white flannels, silhouetted jigninst the flaming gardens that swept down to the sea. Hearing my footsteps on the tiled floor, ho turned, nnd my eyes met his long, henvv-liddcd ones. For an instant my heart fluttered and I had a curious, shlvcn feeling .Tust one other time In my life have I felt thut wav : both times the sensation has warned me that tho man to whom I was being intro duced was to play an important part in my life. Laugh if you want to; this snino thing hns happened to other girls, I know nnd I hope nnd prnv thnt it will never again happen to me! Mrs. Gorham introduced us. nnd then snuntercd down to the rose gardens, the heavy lace of her gown making a soft, swishing sound. I found myself listen ing to it intently, knowing that I was trying to postpone the moment when I would find that Keith Gorham's eyes bad drawn mine to bis again. We talked only n moment, nbout little, commonplace things, before dinner was announced. Then I found myself seated across from him at the round table that was laid on another terrace, from which we could look up at the hills, dork ngulnst tho wonderful blue of Cnllfor nia's night sky. Across from me sat Mr. Gorham, a genial, sandy-haired man, who wns frankly curious nbout the world I moved in: between him und Keith sat his beautiful wife, her yel low hair and the emeralds that gleamed nbout her throat made doubly effective by tho rose-shaded light of the candles. Out of sight, but reminding us of its presence by the salty tang it laid on the evening air, the sea murmured con tentedly. And the flowers that bloomed everywhere all seemed to be embodied in the sunset-hued roses that were massed on tho tabic between Keith Gorham aud me. My tulle frock wns orchid color, with cloth of bilver shimmering bencnth its flufflness. I knew that I looked well; that the deep wares of my bronze hair were lovclj, thnt my eyes hnd never been a deeper, clearer gray. And I knew, too, wheu I looked at Keith liorliam for n long, breathless second, when my heart seemed to ham mer In my thront. that that flower- scented evening was going to bring me happiness. CONTINUED TOMORROW Huge Set Built for Lytell The reorganization of the motlon-pic-cure industry now being effected hns not interfered with costly and elaborate scene "sets." This Is Illtratcd In the production of "Lady Fingers," from .Innkson Gregory's tory, with Ilert LyteU as star. The largcit setting ever constructed at Metro studios in Holly wood. Calif., is used in this picture. It shows a patio, Including a large garden In the center of which is a pool. The patio Is surrounded by n elolstcr walk with vlned archways. All of tho rooms are completely furnished, so that scenes may be "shot" from any angle. Got His "Bad Men" All Right Mnxwell Kargcr, directing "The Golden Gift," In which Alice Lnke is to star, sent to the Mexican border last week for "bnd men" types. The "had men" scouts were so successful that the horde of cvll-looklng strangers who ap peared at Metro Studios in Hollywood had the whole cast nervous until they were shipped back again. G ARRULOI'S GARRY In her article tndnr tells how she stumbled ncross nn old photograph from the Lubln stu dio days in this city. Below you see, in woman s costume, unrry .Myers, now famous ns the hero of Fox's "Con necticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court." The stout ish chap facing the enmern Is no less n personnllty thnn Enill .Tnnnings. who hns since nchieved fame ns King Henry VIII in Lubltsch's production of "Deception." Above nre Myers nnd Jannlngs In their new roles. GARRY RECALLS EMIL JANNINGS DAYS AT LUBIN'S By HELEN KLUMPH rnHOSE were the good old days," J- Gnrry wns murmuring over a slip of paper when I came upon her unex pectedly. I couldn't tell nt first glance whether It was Lew Cody's first marriage cer tificate or a picture of Wallace Reid ns a baby, so I had to admit my curiosity In "What were the good old days?" "These," she declared, pushing a snapshot toward me, the one you see on this nnep todnv. "The fat and kindly looking man at the bottom of the stnirn is Emll ,'nnnings, wno pinyeu me sing In both 'Pnssion' and 'Deception. It was taken ten years ago before he went to Germany to live, when he was in the stock company at the old Lubln studio. The man dressed up in woman's clothes is Harry Mvers. 'The Connec ticut Yankee.' I thought I recognized both of them the minute I found this in nn old scrapbook, but to make sure I went up to the Fox studio and nsked Mnrv Cnrr. nnd she snld she could re member well when they both looked like thnt. "She wnsn't acting in pictures then, vou know. Her husband wns in the business end of milking pictures nnd she just used to visit the studio. She hnd been nn actress, but she retired when she got mnrricd. And then, when her husband became very ill and she had to support the family, she just stepped into pictures, and she knew so much about them thnt directors found her wonderfully easy to handle. They said she was much more plastic and expres sive thnn most experienced young play ers." "But about Emll Jiinnings," I re minded her. Garry Is so apt to wander from the subject. "How on earth did you happen to havo bis picture? Did you know him?" "Of course not." Gurry declared, her eyes flashing. "How old do you think I nm? Do you think I hold my years like a second Mnry Miles Mlntcr?" But when she had calmed down a rilOTOPLAYH APOLLO MDVSBT WILLIAM S. HART . "0'MAM.Kv nr TUB MOUNTED" -AD rAnlA CUK3TNUT M 10TH ARCADIA to A. M, " '' E. M. WANDA HAWLEY In "TUB SNOB" -;CTAR TONKL1N t OIHAUU Av7 AS 1 UK MATINKE DAII-J drnrude Alirton und Special f.t In "Don't Neglect Your Wife BALTIMORE SttffiSK. WESLEY BAWnY In Myrta" -''" ..mM.T UTfl. v-,fc,Kf UT1t A-n WOODLAND AVB. oi-f nut.Y bblNIN MATINTF OJ1IJ ELLIOTT DEXTER In "THE WITCHING HOLU" BLUEBIRD nrll?..i.u,s,uuen"n EUGENE O'BRIEN In "WOKI.DS ArAKT" - A DITTM T22 SIAHKET BT. CArllUL io a sr tnii.wr. m. TOM MOORE In "MADE IN HEAVEN" Otn. A MAplewood Aval. I l 1 A. J1N1ML. 7 .nrt It P M ROSCOE (Fatty) ARBUCKLE In "CRA7.Y TO MAHBY" DARBY THEATRE JUSTINE JOHNSTONE In "TIIE PIJMTIIINO OF BROADWAY" CMDDCQQ MAIN ST.. MANAYUNK bMrKCJa MATINEE DAILT Btwflsl Cnt In Mory Robert! Rlnfbart'it "IT'S A GREAT LIFE" FAIRMOUNT -jln&r JAf'K HOLT In DE MILI.K'S "THE LOST ROMANCE" 17 A Mil V THEATRE 1811 Markot Bt. rMlVlllI ha M '.'O MIDNIOHT ALL-RTAH f'ART In "THE FOURTH FACE" CtTU CT THLATRE Dlow Hpruc. JOin Ul, MAT'NKK rAII.T J. L. FROTHINnilAM'S rRODl'CTKIV "THE TEN-DOLLAR RAISE" FRANKFORD in K'lWiti5 HAZEL DAWN' In "DEVOTION" W J THRU k COMWWY r J CM ORF C001 MARKET HT." "THE V0IC IN THE DRK" MB IOLHPM - QHnHMKii' f ? J uWiSsKssssssssW'f r' little bit, sho told mo that she had been just as much of a motion-picture fan in the pioneer days as she was now. "TflMIL JANNINGS deserves all the J-J praise he's getting now, because of his early struggles," she told me. "Just because he was fat he had to be cither the funny man or the villain in every picture, and oh ! how he longed to play a real dramatic part! One of the old Lubin directors told me. "And speaking of reminiscences do you know who the first really prominent nctor from the stage was who acted In pictures? It was none other than Lionel Barrymore. Other actors scorned mov ies their reputations ns actors were so precarious that they didn't dare do as they pleased but when Lionel Barry inoro heard of something new in the way of acting he just went right down to the old Blograph studio on East Fourteenth street in New York City nnd got a part iji one not such a big pnrt, either. "There wns none of this high-handed 'give me my own company, n million dollnrs a week nnd supervision over every detail of my productions' attitude that sonic stage stnrs have now. And that's nrobabiy one good renson why Lionel Barrymore is still u popular nctor while some of those others who were upstago about going into movies have long been forgotten. And that reminds riioTorr.AiH 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 40" GIRAKD AVE. i.ciri... SIATINEE DAILY JiViJi Ni)Vil!L ""d SPECIAL CAST In "THE OTHER WOMAN" GREAT NORTHERN rWra LIONEL BARRYMORE ' In 'THE 0KI1VT ADVENTUItE" IMPFRIA1 00T WALNUT BT3. WHITMAN IIENNETT 'nnd SpeTlrfl Cm Tin "NOT GUILTY" Lehich Palnrp Grmantown Ave. and DOUGLAS FAIRBANKS In "HE COMES Ul' SMILING" OVERBROOKc3D&Ijft$ HLOlfc. rfcKUUJSUN SACUEI) AND MtOFANE LOVE" In PALACF 1IU MARKET 8TOEBT CLARA KIMBALL YOUNG In "CIIAKOU IT" PRINCESS i018 mahket htueet DONALD dtIS!"S r-KOIH'CTION "APPEARANCES" REGENT MAIf ',? ,STM mow imi JUSTINE JOHNSTONE ' In "SIIELTE1IED DAL (, HI Kith" RIALTO apTmv7vBNUE "The Woman God Changed" RUBY SIAKET ST BELOwItiI WANDA HAWLEY n "HER bTlIIDY OAK- SAVOY 12U SIAKBT hTnEET v u I 8 A M TO .HDNiaHT LIONEL BARRYMORE III "THE DEVIL'S GARDEN" SHERWOOD "mat Tifa. ""'wlse'foB1"" STANLEY ?. T ,nT"' 333 MARKET OTVT TV55 WILLIAMS. HART15 l'H- In "THE WIIlHTi.tM VICTORIA Ti"-"i' ",!! i' me when do you suppose his 'Boom erang Bill' will be released?" "Along with all the other good things the producers have betn holding; np for cooler weather, I eupposo," I re marked. "Well, there's only one consolation for the dreary pictures they're putting out now," Garry offered. "Come with me to 'The Hell Diggers' and see Wally Held nt his worst, then when 'Anatol' comes out we'll appreciate him all the more." Director Used Airplane for Speed Hugh Wiley was in the midst of a new Saturday Evening Post story the other day in San Francisco when bis phone bell rang. "Mickey" Nellan, in Los Angeles, was at the other end of tho wire. "Got to see yon today on thnt new story," said Nellan. "I'll bo in your office this after noon," replied Wiley. True to his word, the author step ped into Neilnn's office five hours later. In these dnys of airplanes and perfect flying weather, such things as these are easily possible. Mr. Wiley is working on a new story to be presented on the screen by "Mickey," following "Bits of Life." in which the first Wiley story ever screened will be presented. rnOTOPI.AY8 'wfarwuSr . ' COMMNV V .OTAMJWOk. I ho NIXON-NlRDLINGERfTS THEATRES (Jj BELMONT B2D ABOVE MARKET tWLT.MM nCSSELL and 8peell,Cf.t U Children of the Nightft CEDAR C0T" CEDAIl AVEMJl "THE KILLER" COLISEUM Market tL 60tb A OOtt V, 3'30 an,l 6:30 t0 NORMA TALMADGE a "0II0BT8 OF YESTEKDAY" JUMBO ONT ST. A QirtAHD AVB. MAE MARSH In "NOIIODY'S KID" LEADFR lST LANCAaTER AV 7!.2 MATINEE DAILT U0,,,S SIAV nntl rpi'RTENAY FOOTE U "THE BRONZE BELL" LOCUST B2D AND LOCUST STREET W,J1 Mam. 1 80, 8 30 Eva. 0 30 to II THOMAS MEIGHAN '" "THE CONQUEST OF CANAAN" RIVDI I 02D AND SANSOM 6TS. J .y.. ... MATINEE IMlLf MAI Mr.VOV Pn,i SI'ITIAL PAST In "A PRIVATE SCANDAL" STRAND QERMANTOWN AVE. ROSCOE (Fatty) ARBUCKLE AT VENvon PTn-r- in "UllAZY TO MARRY" AT OTHER THEATRES MEMBERS OF M. P. T. O. A Germantown "VUtYneb! BERT LYTELL In "THE I'RICE Or REDEMrTION" JEFFERSON an'it.t" MARY MnrLAKKN A NORMAN KERRY l "THE WILD GOOSE" PARkT RIDOE AVE. i DAUPHIN 8J I AIMS. MMi 3!lB K,. fli to II HKKNA OMEN nnd K. K. LINCOLN' " Tho Woman God Changed WESTALLEGHENY SB,&.,,i! ( "sMWromr 1 .. .M .f M v. """kiifaii imsIii iirf V