Sv? t? c n, WW V i 'VT.7VTWW? S. i7v'W;?r V r j -. !.$: . ,, vvf i-.t.' '." r ""w. . v- 4i ..-';;,. Ty: "r:.:r 7Av-' i,W',,w' Ti!u , v - :i'':k . Ill I r' J EVENING PUBLIC LEDGEEr-PHJLABELPHIA, WEDNESDAY SEPTE1VIBER 1921 4f KIT.T.V"" r ?-.''' 4"', "i ; , rjw ;, t ' M, KK VJ I m Ri V are ,(rC(ie D aily Movie Magazine CLOSE-UPS of the MOVIE GAME fly IIEXKY M. NEELY The W ondcr Story of a Little Berlin Shop Girl WE IJOAPT a lot of tlie romanc of our business worlil over here In the United Stnte. Our now Buoy become industrial lictntore, our hootblneka blossom Into kings of finance. We tell nhout it nml hold It up na proof thnt the whole world Is the ojf.ter oj nny kidlct lucky enough to get his start In life over here. We've come to think that these wonder talcs of success do not exist In the old world. I!ut the) do. I heard one the other day while I wan tn New York. It was told by a man who has Just come from Germany. It was about n little girl who, only a few cars ago. stood all day long behind a counter In n depart ment store In Herlin and sold dilTctrnt thlngumjiKs and gadgets to the female of the liochc species and found her more deadly than the male. Xobody knew the little shop girl then; ou all know her now she Is known all over the world. She Is Tola Negri. There has boon n good deal of controversy here n.(r the real name and nationality of this t iiipcramontal star of "Iasion" and "fljpsy Wood" and "One Arabian Night" ithe last of which jou still hae in store). Some said she was a Polish (oimtess. Others declared her name was really Pauline Schwartz and that Pola Negri was nu Italian translation. This man tells me that she Is really Polish, though not a countess by any means. The "Pola" in her name represents her nationality. And, he says, the "Negri" reallj is an Italianized version of her surname Schwartz, which Is German for Ulack Pola's story isn't the usual one of sudden rise from poverty to riches, with the steady happlnes that sijeh a career would bring. She got n U(l(lcn start, had a taste of success and then slumped hack Into her job In the department store again. It wasn't her fault that she slumped: It was the war. t 7HKSK wonder stories of the screen aliayi seem almost unbttievable to me. can't conceive of nny one staying sane nml normal after $ueh dizzying transition from poverty to immense wealth and world wide fame; I'd hate to think what tt would do to me (but I'd love to try tt.) CIIAItMR CHAPLIN had an uphil' struggle In his early days, playing small parts in cheap London vaudeillr Today lie hires several assistants, to each of whom he pajs just about the salary of the President of the United States. Marshall Nei'an was a chauffeur not a decade ago. Now he Is one of the. biggest of producers and directors. Norma and Constance Tnlmadge were glad once to get jobs as extras around the Btudlos. And now look at 'em Just look at 'em ! Anita Stewart thught -he Was lucky when they let her play a tiny bit as a maid, and Charlie Kay used to carry a spear in a stock company that went broke and left him Hat And before the war this temperamental Pola Negri was making fifteen marks a week in Wertheim's department store on the Leipziger Platz In Herlin. Fifteen marks then was worth nearly $4 In regular monev. Now it might be worth forty cents. Pola was born In Posen in Poland. As a youngster, she learned to dance and play the violin not at the same time, of course that is. she didn't do both of 'em at the same time If she had, she could hate got a vaudeville engage ment and the department store episode would be out of the picture. Hut she must have been fairly good on the fiddle bocauxe friends who heard her play In the evenings after she had punched the Wcrtheim time efbek urged her to trj It profe.iuniillj and itilt the ribbon counter. Finally she decided she would. And she did. She managed to get booked t'or a modest concert tour and then worked into the Imnerlal Russian Mallet where she danced before the once well-prcs-agcntcd Czar Nicholas. Nick prob ably didn't know she was there, but It was a better job than Wcrthelm's nt that OHK teas daneinq in llerlxn when the tear broke out. .ind thnt tern- -f porarily ended her artistic rmecr. Came the time (as the magazine writers my) irhcn they uerrn't doing any mote daneinq in Herlin -or anywhere che tn Germany. So 1'oln went back to her job nt U'crtheim'i And by that time fifteen marks was worth one car ticket. "V TATT. lt. T.T.Y Iwmbnnnmiy i.Mililn. en.icf. n .! n.l. I.a.1 l.J . 4 . .' 1X1 '" - !" '." i..-t. ,i t,ti i ..in. nun uau a lllMP oi i-N public life. There s no thrill soiling tMnKifmjigs nnd gadgets to the adipose fchoppers of Herlin at lea-t, I shou'dn t think there was. Pola heard about moving picture- Mic sot a job as an cttra working as iVlviBI9BIBHBnflNrwPtis&v JinlWiBTTsllHiliwHti ' '" mi-:imFBy lePs ja&Mmsmmaifem v..i BBEmL BBaH ffes V R ,y mf i . ' ' DOUGLAS IS IN HIS ELEMENT AS D'ARTAGNAN IN "THE THREE MUSKETEERS" . mtk FtF&KWS M fCEaBaaSlBVvBBBBHMU '(" -iL'V.hjyJ: ' 'flaaaVilUBBBW. mKtL'm'4--ftm'W I BBBBBlBBBBMBVLfinBBBBBBBBaBBBBlB M MBaa9l,t:teaBBBVsBVWiA X": $& TSMmL- J? (MHNGBBBaal v? zwZ'-X' iTAwmuFlWKilimmm M M$&tiz&Zm1aatml MbbbbbIbbbbbbI H f!IISianHKK3CWV9lHBVDIauBaB BBBBaBBBBBBilll lr7: j & WtSTTfimUawKKmKKMMMIBnaiFtUisSSKK MrwwlirZ?BllIKR mmLMWm. bbbbbVbbbbw M KTiai&UJmPifWiiSifKSimBfBSBtKBmXTUKSBtKrjtAW BBBBBBBBBBBBBr 4alBBBnBBBBBBBBBT BBBaVBaltt BBBBVr-BBBBBBBT1 fl te SmmMm imSmmd . x&g&iu yofl . K&VMSM JSV ? 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I It J f LUCILLE RIOKSON Tt.l ..1...1.A..l-.t ... suiij-iiuiucii person U d. pictures but'ac I "I "3 with that honor. Now-. 7 nee of olowm i. i. " '..at ffe 8t. ..'.. m a .M? inn-, mm win make her !nri. debut at the Ambaawrto, "J ,' Los Angeles. She tlavc,i , f1 Tarklngton. E1L J!?'?..tt "- -yuif(HCSt HEME are sume scenes from the latest nnd most nmbitious film creation of Douglas Fairbanks, "The Three .Musketeers." Above are Athos. Portlios and Aramis holding Doug back from n Cardinal's guard. In the circle D'Artngnnn bids ins fathr good-by and starts on Ms nd ventuus. Between these pictures Doug is seen struggling to recover the Queen's jwels from Barbara LaMurr, the Mi lady of the ciiBt. POLA XEt.Rl atmosphere with LuLif i the fJrlmth of Europe' And Lubitseh "dis covered" her. That was six .ars ug.i Today the little shop girl is wildly worshiped in two or three inntlueiits. Majle four. Het early dandn,: expeiiemc gives her her principal opportunities in "One Arabian Night." She takes the part of a wild, whirling dan. -r of the desert and when win see her perform b. fore the old sheik in the picture you will get 1 chance to make a new estimate of her temperament nnd her ersatllit , i . wo"",,r,"B ",w '"" " "' " befou- some astute American man- ' ager will bring oer the timpestuoiis Pola in person and tiir her In a show that will give her a .-nonce to run all through her list of accomplishments in one evening. I il almost bu a ticket to that show raj self Answers to Questions by Movie Fans Jni'ADY At last it is niinored that William S. Hart and .lane Nuuk are to be married m O. tober It is in terestia to know that Chailes Itaj was never on Broadwo Not that it was Ills fault. He packed up seeral times for the trip, but something alwajs in tervened. Poor Charlie! Some time lie'il get there. COp-COO-Mai Allison hails from the South. So does Hope Hamilton. Islles Welsh Is at pieuit working with J'.laine Hammerstein n "Tlie Waj of a Maid," This picture thrtntuis to he the last appearance of the joiuig man en the scn-en for some time to come, as lie is to pla the lending role i I'hu Hot Heads." This plaj is to open on Broadway early lu the new season. Mrs. II. N. W. .Mnlveen Polo, Ed die daughter, has bobbed hair. Irene Castle a eyes are blue, not brown Her lialr Is light brown And. bj the win. Kpeaking of Irene, her new picture Which was called "The Broadwnj ilrlde ." Is nn iv ...,!.,. i..,.n ... V.. . V. . .. '. i uii- inline of "FlTlnit Colors." Titles, j.m know are mibject touchonge nt a moment's feotlct. J" t.ikcn from Hfllph ( onner's well know, ,ook by that title It was pro due eel , the Cathrine ("urtls Produc Mon Company and features Colleen Moore and John Bowers Yes Gloria ,- ""' """ les lilorl Swanson .was once n bathing beauty " has been married twice. She i Tliey have now Mrs Sjnhnrn j small daughter. Gloria is one VICTOR Doris M r. VjUM.ftrIteaid, "Tbe . r i '& ; 'h marrlpfl to Skrllof CLITA Anltn Stewart wll send vou her pliotograph if .vou write and'nsk'h-r for it. It Is miml tn inclose twenn live .enis She has two pictures to be re!.nr.l In the fall. "Her Mad Bar gam' and "A Question of Honor." MA WON The cast you ak for Is ns o lows: Jane .Tennlngs, Mvrtle Morse, jlclmrd Cnrljlc. William Humphrev I dword Boulden nnd Chnrles P'nne The temporary title of the picture s "Hal- ticiiie in in., secret service , CLARENCE Inn Claire f, n l.urope jn-t now. I do not knou that she In making a picture ocr there Mv fills, wmilil In- that she Is not "The , Gold Diggers" has not been adapted for iiiu nuil'cil. .1. A. D. Address your letter to Jul'nn Eltlnge, Eltlnge Theatre, New, u.n vl . ;irTn7Cr,(A,'TCi7T I -iu, vno .nu x VjrlX I USED TO DEMAND By CONST NCE PALMAR Hollywood. Calif. TOMMY MEIGIIAN lias commuted back again from New York. Dear me, how that man does trnvel ! His present obleetive is the making of George C ihnn's stage success, "A rrince There Was." lie is again di i lei tn I mi, in ipi'i mil that nice Guy Oliver Is in the cast. Lois Wi's. ji who a .iijs loeiks so nice opposite Mr. Meighnn, is his hero ine. Nisei Barrie, a jear past the most leading of leading men, is playing a secondary part. Anent this It's happening more often than jou would think. Actors who hne held out for months for their exorbitant salaries of dns gone by have capitulated, and are now onlj too glad to t.ike whnt they can get. Which is sensible Rupert Hughes, whom we have rforn Innted for it niche in tho Hnll of En ergy, is co-directing, with Mason Hop per, his own story, the continuity of which he wrote himself. The title of it is "The Wall Flower" and Colleen Moore is It. I watched her work yesterday, and I say frankl I didn't think she had it in her. In the first part of the story she Is a cry down-trodden, unpopular, homespun sort of person nnd by the way, Fanny Stockridge, who played the old maid in "Way Down Eabt," pla)s Colleen's mother. The girl seems to be in her part even between scenes. She looks neither to the right nor to the left ; her toes are just (is turned in when the camera is not grinding as when it is. Although I hnve been fnrmallv nnd definitely introduced to Miss Moore five distinct and separate times, and prnhabl) will be as ninny more, I'll say frankly I alwajs enjoy meeting her. and she has my admiration for being n good actress. Gus Edwards, with his little tioupe of proteges, is touring the studios be. tween acts at the Orphcum. He visited Wallle Iteid the other day and after ward Beft Compson. Back again to "The Wall Flower." I forgot to tell ou thnt Hush Hughes, verj good-looking son of Rupert Hughes, makes his ilclxit in this pic ture Iln has only a small part, but the fun he gets out of putting on his make-up nnd others watching and lis tening to him while lie does it is worth the price of admission, Richard W. phylng the lead, is ( Daily Tabloid Talks to Fam on Breaking Into the Movies By JOHN E.MERSON and ANITA LOOS L Film Actress Born Here Alida V. .lones, who appears with Gladys Walton in "Tlie Rowdy," was born in Philadelphia In a house on tlie corner of Thirteenth and Walnut streets. She attended the Catholic School at Sharon Hill nnd was grad uated from there. THE STORY nEGINS vith the early days in, tho old Fine Art) studio in California, when Col letn Moore, the Qiih gtrli, Deisie Love and a hot of other were not tnueh more than extra jirfa. IJiana Cheyne relates tho tale; she begins with the day in the studio iciten.she and Isabel Heath, not stars then as they are note, icere sitting on the stairs when a strange man came tnto the studio and looked at them. Tho cameraman- called them down to meet him, and it proved the turn ing point in liabcVs life. He was Phil Oraney, a famous director from the eastern studios, and he taught Isabel to bo the first of the screen's "baby vamps," and engaged her ar stieh, a part in a photoplay he teas producing. NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY CHAPTER XIV 'D BEEN married several times In pictures, once In a beautiful gown nnd veil, and six awfully pretty extras ns maids of honor, nnd n set built from parts of n real church. I'd thought then that, when I wns really mnrricd I'd have a wedding somewhat like thnt. When I dressed to be married to Keith Gorhnm I remembered that. I'd thought I'd be adjusting n floating, gauzy veil to my head on my ivcddlng day, Instead of running n wet comb through my hnir, pulling out tlie little tendrils that curled down nrotind my face, and putting on n soft white hat that wouldn't blow off in the wind on the way to Snn Juan Cnplstrano. I did remember all the little supersti tions, though; my "something new" was tho white 8crge"ftult I put on; Ijd had It made for n picture, nnd then At the last minute they changed the story and I didn't hnve to wear it. "Some thing old" wns the rest of my clothes. "Something borrowed" was the little pcnrl crescent pin which Colleen Moore had lent me n few days before, when the top button came off mv blouse, and "something blue" was the georgette scarf thnt wns wound nbout the crown of my lint. We hnd decided not to sny anything to anybody nbout it till it wns over, becnuse we were perfectly ccrtnin thnt his aunt nnd mine would object. Keith was still in college, nnd my aunt hnd never renlized thnt I was grown up. So we thought It would be better just to go nhead nnd be married, nnd then tell them nfterwnrd. house nnd be married "in the fT1"'1 It was n Klorlous morning, clear, , lor. even If ft ,ns wnx flower. sparKiing, goiuen. e siippcu tnrougn the town's truffle without seeing nny one we knew, nnd before long were out on the road to Capistrnno thnt road that follows where the' monks' feet trod so long ngo. It was heavenly, skim ming nlong through the country, through the hills so covered with yellow poppies that they looked ns if some giant god had tippled a great cornucopin and spilled them out. Keith laid one nrm ncross the back of the seat, nnd I Hlippcel down low and leaned my bend back against it. Glancing up nt him, a sudden thrill of happiness went through me. Even when he looked down nt me nnd I met his eyes, I hnd no longer felt the old. disturbing sensation, ns if my heart were a bird that was trying to fly nwny. I had always loved the old missiem nt Snn Juan Cnplstrano, nnd wanted to be married there. We were to get our license in the town, and get a Justice ctf the Peace there to go with us up to the mission. There wns n grassy space, outside the crumbling gray walls, where the ceremony would be said. And then we would go skimming on along the white highway, past more great hills with their golden poppies eagerly, running abend of hm ..W,... here, where the slmoows---" i,h And then I stopped. For o , clear, peremptory, enmo across ik. ?'?' tcrcd stillness. Th u,.i5S8!h.h. too familiar, anttVntffegiS; "Camera 1" R ordered. And nrrnaa thn ...,.. ley crow, iw- nS X'S1"? n ntT&':.,B: SlKftft. I nmilfl IiotA ...A to the oar. No- chce" noTto'M ceremony performed there- thWi! working nil nfternoon. tJd h Nctcr mind, dearest," Keith ,f..i ns he iitnrtci ,t, ..i:!-110 orisi nnothcr nlnco tlmC e..'f ...... ...ran s And " J " "B i"i'wii ir. even it it i,ns wnx flowers S"..")' ' it," I XCl n-,.'ii :...i .. "I", .",,u l"? rarest mlnliM 'ront pat. 'wers u( tucking my skirts -in and i Inn K hat on more firmly, "That'-sK I....LU i Know or where there's eerui; not to be a motion -picture company . So we turned toward tho onen .v.. tumbling down to the sen, to Coronado. From there we could send ilm neces sary telegrams bnck to Los Angeles; there we could pour over steamship companies' booklets, planning the joy ous wanderings that would be our honeymoon. We came to the mission nt Inst, pnrked the car and picked our wnv across the gross to the place where I ball expected to be innrrleil. "Here it is, Keith," I exclaimed ...... u.i inure nrimy. --That's thd ".il fe. j .?.' "here tW.S -. ..:.. ...i " '.. i,,v v.pvu conn ". uKtiiii. iiriii Tirn.nnti ..... .. anut.M.nn'.ljplS "It couldn't hnve hnppened to ini .in wno wnsn t in pictures," mfc Keith, g ving the car m9re gas n, . mi!'P X. Te, "'""" r," to the crest of a hill. "But of course " And then suddenly It happened. Tin sudden realization thnt another ear ttu plunging around the turn of the hill toward us, the sickening swerve to tit . i me roan, i up crnsn that seemd to still my heart with fear. . Aml f,'.icn tllc lrrlble aftermath. Tht hills still tumbled their golden poppla to the sea ; the blue water still hurtled up to meet them. Far out a gray plan of smoke marked the pnssage of a lino outward bound. But there nt ray fVt lay a crumpled, broken thing, wltl tortured face nnd staring ees nil tilt hub ieii oi jveitn uoriiam. CONTINUED TOMORROW How They Named One Play . i'What shnll we call the picture whn u is completed.'' was n eiuestlon citing Selznli-k's staff, as Elaine Ham merstein worked on one of her mi photoplays. But the need of an air plnne to use tn some of the scenei drove the name problem to the rut ivuii'iiitiiiiy. .or nuving nn airplane u stock, it became necessary to borrow one nnd then the picture wos namrf Jiorrowecl v ings." 1'iioTnrr.AYs PIIOTOI'I.AYS ritOTOI'LAYS Cost of Production Doesn't Guarantee Success The oifVioM of this series ate the In mon s Km, mon and Loos, who have written some of tin most successful photoplay. They 7101) have full rliatat of all set itanos for Constance I almadge. And the high cost of n picture by no means guarantees Its sueceds. A N 100.000 picture mnv eentually make naif 11 million dollars for its hackers, hut certninlv they have u long wait for their liicim-i. On the other lmi.il Mm rl.b lu Arm in 1 . . . , . . -tiipemlous, for the picture may be n '"(ID Ine-ieel feature picture to- tlttt failure, day eosrs about sixty thousand dol- One of the most successful nictures of e!noln0JrH"re ," ,",1 Htar h &' Past' Hennor " 000 to p od.ee , ironnn nM f,n ePn1ot"r?.?.0,',, T'1,' ,llr,,,,t"r f t''ih Iicture-an Ameri IJown Fns"rf.,'nt10?'?00' "y " Production nt that -had previously ;,n,;. Gtiffith's latest produc- ln,le, nt n cost of $150,000. another , t'oT J" ' m"lcr " m,,1,on doll,lr8 t0 1'1'otoilranm. which proved a financial ino.llice, lemon. Tho 1 nun nt fliooo f ,,.,!,, The profits of the picture come out of 1 tions ls evccllent proof thnt the best its 1 mi, wlil. I, id iv Inst rcvcn or eijht eors, and eve 11 longer in Europe. Churl! Chaplin's pictures are prac tically without eteepton long-run pro ductions. His eC first comedies have In hi ieissin.1 time and again and given return engagements all over the country. 'Should, r Arms, pictures are not necessarily those which ' usi rue most He thnt ns it may. one eheering fact, attested liy ninny motion-picture mag nates. Is that, whatever mn, be the case in other industries, salnries are not going to droll in elm motion nlcti.rcs nt least not to anv appreciable extent for rcienseu miring tlie i"e majority or workers ere reee Jli5 l "U ",".', KW- n ,h" 'ntrnry. the motion pictures 5Zri.Ti the public, andnie growing bigger nnd the demand is nro llil, .iw' ,h,"new l'''t"'. "-ill 1 greater than over before. There Is Wil ten ,n' V (",ll ""VC f Pnu' I n,on' " "wtlon Pictures r.ow. and Utlt ten jears hence. ' t here will i,n nn ..,... i .1 '. '.. I r i .1,,.,.. .I..'- t ...! un.Li t Y,Miii'i" s iiiiiiioruii uuiria. 'jears. ......11 .i.-auu h siusaiioii wnen it was 1 introcluce.l in this countiy In the spring of 11)11, Ik about to make the rounds of American pictuie theatres again this jear. Of course, all pictures are by no menus in the same long-run cIiirh. there will be even more in the next few (There "Tabloid Talks" are ran densal from the material for a book hy Mr. Kmrisnn and Mia Loos to be puhhihtd by the James A. McCann Company, Yn Voifr.; his guide anil ifientor, and the hounds that issue from their dressing rooms, coupled with lemarks about grease paint, show they both have their hearts in their nrt. Tom Gnllery is in the picture, too. I found him over in u corner buck of n lot of deeper), sounil asleep. He hiijh the iik-tim- he inndi with Ills wife. Zasu Pitts, will soon be released for all the world to see. Znsu plujs the part of 11 toinboj , mid Tom falls in love witli another girl. I'd say that Is the height of altru ism or something for they are new ly weds, jou know. Built Complete House for Bert LytelVs New Picture BELIEF that the construction of costly nml elnbornte "sets" has been abandoned by picture producers during the present reorganization of the industry Is belied by one glimpse of a complete home that has been erected within oce of Metro's big Inclosed stages nt Hollywood for Bert Lytcll's new picture, "Lady Fingers." Not only tins the structure been com pleteel for photographing from without, but tlie interior has been completed down to the last piece of tiling. This setting is one of the largest and most complete ever built nt the Califor nia studios. It consists of n pntio in eluding a large got den, in the center of which Is a pool where pond lilies and either water plants are grown. A clois ter walk runs uround Hie entire patio, from which nie entrances to the many rooms of the structure. The archwajs on the walk are covered with growing Unes. All of the rooms are completely fur nished, cien to tho smallest detuils, so that the camern can be set to "shoot" scenes looking from tin gniden into tho interior, as well ns from the interior into the garden. Another feature of the setting Is the fuct that a balcony runs around the en tire building nnd many scenes are to be photographed on this portion of the patio. More than 8000 rfmncrsaCwere niilir. to llhibt tote eluboratiia Utl,,Md MjrtrPlAYT 1SirfA COMPtNr r fcUfAMcwc 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. . tmhu COMPANY r- orAUtWCA A 11 1 i'ih .HinaiTiDra jrn'. niiiynt j.kw t.ir&u MorrU A rtsunk Ave. DOROTHY DALTON In "Iir.lIIM MASKS" Al I PPUCMV l-'innkfori! t Allegheny rtL.LL.unC.lN I Mat. Hillv-.' I I-vsb ut i GLORIA SWANSON In "Till', (IKKAT MOMKNT" GLORF W01 MAHKET ST ,7 "" JSENJNTAL I TOMMY" , LW THEATRES l A POT 1 O 0-D & THO.Ml-SON 8TS. ttrULLU MAI LSI. U II MIA DOROTHY DALTON In "Till: II10I. OI- TIIK hOUTU" CIIUbTNLT Uol 10T11 III 1 I I11 1 I l.'i 1' M ELSIE FERGUSON In M'OOI'l.KilITS" ORAMT -' uniAiiD Avn. t,Z. . MATINUs, DAILY ETHEL CLAYTON -'! "SAM" GPFAT N0"RTHERN,,T7Fr? CLARA KIMBALL YOUNG 1.. lulu ... " vj1-111''' n ARCADIA IMPERIAL oom walnut sts: ROSCOE (Fatty) ARBUCKLE II. iitf.t' i... .. . l.Mi " 'IAIIHY1 AQTOD J'KANKLIN 4 UIUAUU AVE 1 i l l MATI.N'I i: 1 1 1 V DOROTHY DALTON In "I1ICIIIM) .MAsKS" BALTIMORE SIHT i ;v,LTlM01 DOItls MAY unci COl'HTr.NAY POTK In "THE BRONZE BELL' RPMM "TH AND WOODLAND AVE ULlllX iii. ni v rm.sT mi-.st puii.Anr.M'iiiA NiinwiNn "THE WILD GOOSE" Lehigh Palace t,,,r,m-,nl'n avp. una AI.I-si-Mt ut ,.. ,!;!'"'',1 A-nu ll-Tijrj iin'-n. !liL''" ITAN'H iflC YV1L.U UUUbt" BLUEBIRD Ilroad A KtisquelmnnK. 1 mi clniio h j unlll 11 WILLIAM I)K MILLIVS "THE LOST ROMANCE" BROADWAY nrmzaffir ' THOMAS MEIGHAN ' In "Till: CONDI i:ST Of CANAAN" CAPITOL 7-i-i MARKET 8T III M n it IS 11 GLORIA SWANSON III "l Hi: (IKKAT MOMKNT" colonial atn. a, ?p.ta,w,r?. A,r- GLORIA SWANSON ' In "Till: OUKAT MOMKNT" DARBY THEATRE THOMAS MEIGHAN In "TIIK CITY 01' SII.KNT MKN FMPRFS S'A,N flT- MANAYL'NK pOROTHY DALTON In "IIKIIINII MANKH" FAIRMOUNT-TrY WALLACE REID In "TOO MITII SI'KKK" FAM1I Y .IKATHK-13U .MAiTkkt 1 r-iviii. 1 n i m to vidnioiit "THE BRONZE BELL" LIBERTY uOAp i OOIAMl-AV" OVERBROOKu,,ir4vr:Iono WILLIAM S. HART l'U PALACE VoHa M,Ar"'-TrM:I1ET:-r BETTY COMPSON" Pl " PRINCESS, W MAitKHnBTHirKT "II.MAM iik ,' A.,.'-. .!." l IS V M TWIS ID PI H fly'NK 1T- KOf A I1-HII1 II t IlL'IMI Vr. i. unci 11 11. 1 11 - -wi iq I "THE GREAT MOMENT7 CEDAR C0T CEDAU AVKNT1 iriiX.1'"1 4 3 '"" n 4r' ,0 P,U 1 nurafli iVltlUMAIN In "WIHXJ5 ANU UNMAKltim)" COLISF.i IM .M."" "? th . u,,.;T.77 ' T' 10 "V II 4 . to 11 r, m.dAJL' SAHT In 1011 MrilKB'S "TOO WISE WIVES" MU P.lt REGENT A"K CT3sz-mn " A M in 11 p .. ENRICO CARUSO ill 1I! "I SIN IUMBO raNT ST A niltAKD AVI J '-"-' Jumlin Inno nn ),V., L. 'nrrl ' L" WILLIAM b. HARI In "TIIK TKHTINO lll.OCK" RIALTO uvrTf,,-iji,-AV'UNJK" J35Pgw RUBY MAUKt777rF'w-TTir DOUGLAS MacLEAN "' jm w.K A IINI TIC" 5AVUY "" Ki?r-5TiiiJEp WILLIAM S. HARt"NU,"T jj "TIIK Wjllhli.!;.. SHERWOOD & .""'iv" STANLEY ."'(""AT-iiru- LEADER ustvtaa7Stavi "ISOBEL" LOCUST :,2D AND r.OOI'ST STnEETI "THE GREAT MOMENT" RIVOLI B"D AND PAN.SOM STS - MTIM.I 1 'AKAJIOI'XT SI'ITlV-SPKlilAL "UtLtr'TIOW" ILT STRANH l-I.MATOWN An. 111 lit.. . U A r I. v I M (1 STREET lTIji?VtNHON' '"" ''TOVMM.Jh t. n i 1vnJiv1c.11 1 AT OTHER THEATRES MEMBERS, OF M.P.T.O.A. I prmnntnum "'I" ilrin iri'u "' vjermantown matin r: dailt .-..TI,0MXH " INff." "THE CUP OF LIFE" M XPERiENCE,"'"','uAe'" JEFFERSON -Sful? 333 MARKET wni:,"TiirATinjROSCOE Fn"y) ARBUCKLE ITr,oi.iTA.N i'iAni!i 'jVmJ,5 ' M ' ,n."TI,,! TAV,:,,IN" f,AI'hsMA51- 56TH ST. TJIKATHK IIpIiiw Sprue a t 4 fv t mi ..- UTnr w vi w. '... J'AIIA Adile.1 "Till". SKY II ivririm FRANKFORD "".J'JftJjiJssB "Whaff.Your Wife Worth?" AdJd SUBrBISU VABDEyiU.K. yr".l -hnnged" IpARkr hkii: ak. a dai win 1 II II 11V A SIAIIKI" k.1. .... .T . " - Jim .111 .. 1113 ."' AI.I..MTIII I'AUT In "LIFE" VICTORIA ""'? "t b irrii i'briilN" i'uimuon CONSTANCEfeMAbGr UT. toll WEST ALLEGHENY sSj Atl" D'. f ..-h"JawWiu5rSUGE 1 .TH.9MAS MEIGHAN -s ----- c -W- .''JVUTIf INII JU3IAnM" lv. JV'' M -, 1 ., ,'i, . ,; ,,1J ...