"W.T,,,- . . ' r JSW V' IV v ' EVEM 3' l921' f Id FOR YOUR SCRAPBOQK OF STARS Hew I Became A Mevie Star As Told te INEZ KLUMPH TXe Daily Mevie Magazine v '''-jrf M- fe W CLOSE-UPS of By HENRY jTjc Wailing Takes the Remance Out of Studies r"8 often .1 pathetic thing te see n building movie actress nt n certain Mope in her career. We'll take Mnrr Wank, for Instance. That isn't her name but .it will de. , . ' I met Mary several months age en her very first day as nn extra in a studio, It wudewn ntthe f.asky plant en Leur Island when they were mnktne "Asatha's Aunt," with Justine Jolinsteno as the btar. Mary had come te New Yerk from a little town in the Middle West and she Ttbs fclmply bubbling ever with enthusiasm. She lind simply lived en the fan magazines and en the mental pictures that she and lur fan friends had formed of the (slitter and fascination of studio life. They pictured It as you yourself probably picture it Jut bright limits and happy, beautifully dressed women and handsome, fascinating men nnd a censtaut succession of cxeltinR incidents nnd Hrrlnp emotional scenes. Then- "ere no dull moments in Mary's ntentnl studies. There couldn't lie. 'Xhe first day 1 s.xw her she had hcen railed for ' o'clock in 'he mernlns 'nnd bad reported with her little brnln in perfect whirl. She wa actunllv m last In Fairyland! Sha wni geme te uiinnle wiiJi I'rince.r and maybe be wooed by Princes. They epent the mernlnj: making close-ups. nnd .Mary watched Miss .Tohn .Tehn .Tohn Ptene, fascinated by tha golden visions of the dnv when she herself would he sitting lictwecn these ftreat tnks of blue oeper llmvltr lights with u baby pet Klcntii inft white en one slde nnd the director ceitme Iit worked up te thrilling emotional climaxes while the camera ground out the tilm that millions of fans later should weep ever. Mary enjoyed if. She couldn't undeistnnd me bored expression en the fncs of the ether extras. She noticed some of them unlklng up and down en a distant Bet, talking languidly and paiug no attention te what was going en. And ethers we sitting placidly knitting or reading. Tbe only reason that T remembered Mniy .i ihnt, when Mm found I had time, te talk with her. she simply bubbled M'v with the excitement and enthusi asm of it nil. Sha pointed te the ether girls ami snid they must be tetully Incklng in artistic tempernment te he able te go nbeut the ordinary gossiping, knitting affairs of llfe with such romance right here in fient of them. And Mary's pretty lips looked ipiite Hire of themselves nnd her brown eyes were very confident when she assured me that she, would never lei herself forget the romance and beauty of it that she would alwnvs he watching and studying and working. HAD te smile at her, but it wain't u smite of amusement. She was se beautifully in earnest and se genuinely enthusiastic. Ami I hml fern ethers that way nnd knew the pathatie disillusionment that airailed ner. j. I SAW Mary again about two months later in tha Fex studio. I found her sitting Just off the set whre they were working. She was talking with another jclrl, nnd every new nnd then, when the fiction en the set began te get swift, slip glanced nt it nnd watched in a sort of half-detached way. It wns se different from her first enthusiasm. But she wouldn't ndmit te me that she was disillusioned. '.'Se," she declared, in a brave little fib, "I still think it'i wonderful and romantic and full of eh, nil sorts of thrills." "Especially thec constant long waits until yen nrs called?" T suggested. "Well," she admitted, "the wnits de get tiresome. I don't see- why they can't call you when you are needed, have ,uu work nnd then let you go." Last week I ran Inte Mary again, quite by nccidenf. 1 ran up te the old Metre studio en Sixty-first street In New Yerk, where the It-C people tire putting en anew production with William Chriitie Cahanne as director. I was told they would start sheeting nbeut 1 :ItO in the afternoon, se was there promptly and joined the little group of people behind the camera off the set. It was n big dinner scene with quite a number of peeple in It, and the action was rather difficult. They rehenrsed It two or three times. Then they all e.i' around and waited nnd I learned that one of the principal actors hud riot yet arrived. They couldn't go en without him. Oabanne and the cameraman put in the time shifting the lights for n better effect and photographed n few feet of film for a test. And they had te wait until that was developed. About 5 o'clock the missing actor turned up and they rehearsed the scene again nnd then something went wrong with the lights. It was chilly and draughty in the big bam of a place nnd a girl I was talking te said: "I'm glad I'm net one of the dancers. There are twenty-four of them and tbey haven't get much en. They're been waiting nreund here all day " j. wanncrea nreuna in deck or tne set and found tbe dancers sitting huddled up In dejected little groups, -very evidently chilled te the bone. . And na I passed I u iiui' u unto rum, uu, uciuj . i was iituc .unry uiank. She wasn't the Eame Mary who had fairly bubbled ever with romance and enthusiasm at the Laeky studio. She wasn't even the eame Mary I bad wen later in the Fex plant. She was just plain Mary Blank, extra girl, hard working tlrtfl,, disillusioned, net caring enough about the romance of the atudle even te re around in front of the set and watch tie action of a big scene. CHE teas Mary Blank, oeld. hungry, bored te death with the (ntrr J minoble waits that are an inovltable part of movie lifewearied with the drab monotony that she had enee refused te Micve existed in this rairyland of hers. She was Mary Blank, se typical of thousands of enthusiasts wha think te find Princes and Princesses and discover tnstead, only hard-working, matter-of-fact mm and women, just like you and me. Answers te Questions by Mevie Fans J?rcV" "R ?h" ! If! liii, i) j i ;V ,' .f"" 'it"1"" VU.B nuciK, jiuuepu ajentine; naeui de Knint Hubert, Adelph Menjen ; Omnlr, Walter Leng; Gasten, Luclan Little field. rAUT BAC Yeu were mistaken nbeut Wallace Rcid. It is Ju "I'eter Ibbetson" and net "The Affairs of Anatel" In which be had his hair mar celled. It will be shown here under the title of "Forever." Addresi Rcid.- at the Famous Players-Lasky studio, Hol lywood. Calif., and Kenneth narlan. at the Talmadge studies, .T18 Enst Forty -eighth street. New Yerk. Rebert Har Har ren was accidentally shot while hand ling a gun according te the corner's re. pert. Yes, Wally tries te answer his mail, I believe. Whew! .TEATs' Yas, Indeed. I agree with you en the subject of Bebe Daniels. Ad ilrcf.s her, Uealnrt Studies. Les Angeles, Calif. I think Miss Daniels will answer your letter. Better try and see. C- It. A. The Geldwjn company la) net producing many pictures at present anu im companies nave ueen cur. te n minimum. They are engaging casts for Individual pluyers rather than holding en te stars. Among the players asso ciated with the company at present are Tem Moere. Richard Dlv, Helene Cbadwick. Rosemary Thebr, Colleen Moero, Bryant Washburn, Wallacu THIS WOULD FOOL FATHER KNICKERBOCKER HIMSELF wl UlEf -p;te i of tie New Yerk h "Jtfrltliaa'B plcturt, the MOVIE GAME M. NEELT ! z? . ." iw son. Seme of ""'" liucatreienses nrn Hnen.ni.ni,i' ,.V.rT0 Ahead.' "Deubling for Uomee." trmn the Ground t'p." "Tim In vulble Power" nnd "Theodora." KATHEKIN'K An-Hr,... Tw.i,'mint he "a snowstorm tlmt covers th Gish. care of D. W. Griffith htudie, ! K" llmJ ""'' """'" ""d thai at least Mamaroneck, L I """ "our n' ,'"1 M'"r' fhe'l be during ' 1 daylight." THANK YOU May McAvev muv be' I' is imperative that Mr. Griffith have addressed at the Realurt studio,' fis An- ' a sneusturm In wliiuli te take important geles, Calif. Th.-y have n staff efls('f,n'i in "Tlie Twe Orphans," which scenario experts there. Better address i "ew nearly cempletfd. your script te Elmer Harris, super- Contracts of several of his principal vising director. j players in "The Twe Orphans'' expire r n n tjii, v-i.-- v ' Xoveiiilicr '20. nnd unless the snow n i!t;n ur 1"R Hntln 7" ,bP s,"n" "',p ,llljpn llp'nrn that time, it a dressed at Hie I-ameus l-layers-La-ky ,viU u. nM.PBknry , ,mlkc rpnevnls of .,, . , r .i . i , , ithar iie plays the part of Armnnd with -i,uuni. iiuii t wiiii i. i nn i . ii i rrnn .. u.ttil", it ill ..iiuiiiiu. tu IIIlllUIIII'.i' - ment has been made aa te that pictures firit showing in this city. v nv.mri n in "i ...... ;i I.. ' s .. ........ "SUNNY .TIM" Yeu ate right : these Seuth Sru Island and Chinese Scenes in "The Cun of Life" wen. nm taken there, bur at n California studio, In regard te Hen Turpln. lie liad had urniij fi-urs ei smue iruming Wlien lie went into picture, but it In true tJiat he was working as an "extra" and a tort of "handy man around the place" nt the Essanay studio in Chicago when he made his start, in plctuics. Yeu ran see him in "hlis" In some of Chaplin's early comedies. elevated, doesn't lt7 But it Is just "A PriticoThcre.1'a0." Seaifyeu a you can, I ! WHAT WILL THAT FAMOUS PONY DO? 1 1 MitWkimmm9MkmfXfiBmmmmmm'.mmamVmmmmmukF( JTiflHPMIMHIfeV f i YvUmmK3tt&d? u:mrVmw C ' 1 IkKmTmmi SSsmJ JRmmV ' lirnTIBlnnBnn TPn iiHii 0 HlM nun ' I mm IsmmF' -' :LWmm3m& mar BKllSJir - . , JflBilSKi3 s - ":i -yj mHKTJT M sal "' x KHttl''v HBSleMMi :&W mmmmmft ;i mmjmm i animal trainer : HH ' HAS A CLOSE WmsWBM ' SHAVE WITH LION j mmMti'Vy&mb3ii$t3HmW& VB iiiilill vmwmims(itfnti4smxA MM mwHas I ssSruW Slit ifcL'35aa!a , vc hunurnl rounds of meat and : nHni ; wwmum , - - - - from its place he met the fanning Ian- . ?, sV!$SKZ' A I GRIFFITH INSURES FOR SNOWFALL BY NOVEMBER 20 D. W. GRIFFITH has taken eul a S-."i.0fifl nellr.v liisunnir hU next preduci.nii for a nnowterm befere Xe veniher 'Jt. It is nreirfd in the pnliry that It i '' i .. . i i I'eniniem which ' einenditui-e will invelvu a heavv :.. Te protect himself ncaliiit this eest. Mr. liriltitli seMclir ,lie Insurance policy Se far as tbe insiirniwe records report it Is tin' tir-t ever taken for n storm te eicur. Man hate been iMtied iiKnliiht storms. Coast Colony lias Addition Vernen Slci-lf who h plajing the leading male, role in lvlicl t.'laj ten's picture, "Pur the licfer.M'" is Hie newest addition te I loll) weed's tilm colony. Steele jeiwnejed all tlie wav from New Yerk te California just te play Hie part of Christopher Armstrong il. the picluie. "Bf ' built way out In California tav find any. onachrenlsmg ! William S. Hart li te join the ranks of these who have nnimala in the casts of their pictures. This time it's n monkey "Charlie" by name -and judging by the picture, "Charlie" is something of a UeauBnim mell amenj; simians. Abeva Is a scene In the same picture. Reading from left te right nre Hart, little Mary Jane nnd Ethel Grey Terry SEVEN tawny liens sat en their ped estals in the training arena nt the t'nivcrsnl City zee nnd licked their hops. A scorching sun filtered through the bars. The liens looked like big yel low cats. The trainer turned instant. Five hundred rounds of meat muse e nasned ttireugu tlie nir. itn a iiumenng rear the beast described a larabela Irera tile pedeslal wnere he lad lolled in the sunshine n second hefore te the spot where the truim r, A. C. Stecker. had steed. With wide-planted fct Stecker caught the fnarling jungle-rat in mid eir with his whip and lashed him te the fleer. Without moving one feet J.i 11 from its place he met the fanning lan-ret-like paws, blew for blew, until the !i.n-TT wliln frnrn.l nil erirr,Ar1 'Fl.nii ....... .....i ....,, L, u.u ...ut,i.vu. ii. . ! using the butt for a club, he beat the ! beast until It turned away. The lien i looked at Stei.ker and opened its mouth without a growl. I lie trainer, still in his place, looked back nt him directly. Then the lien crawled back en hi. pedestal. Stecker will never again have trouble with that lien. If he bed mnvd from place he would hac hen tern te i pieces. .Many well-meaning per-ens wen d have been indignant had tticy seen tha' light," snid Sleeker ns he came out of the training cage without tlie slightes" apparent nervousness, "but tlie man who relaxes discipline for tlie fraction (f a second with n wild beast is n feel r.nd a menace te the community. "Animal men are fatalists," he con tinued. "Seener or later all of us will he killed, but the event cm be postponed indefinitely by tlie use of erJir.ary com mon sense." STECKER knows whereof he speaks. Although fitlll in his early thirties he lias bier in the arena hinte he wus a lit'le child hi? stepfather is Rex de lleselll. dean of American animal train- dpi n.irl QtiiM.'m. Iftiirnml llm (inn tMilnle , - - . IKl . -I' . ... i- U, .. .. .... ..... '"H. ' iif fl-.n nnfcsetiifi In ectnnt fcrtrvicn i-itli i he bii; eircusc. In his experience he I .is fen many famous trainers killed in i.rtlnn, and of them he said: "Every truincr who was ever killed died through carelessness. He turned his back en wild animals. All of us de it in the foolish helief that we will be able te turn nreund quickly cniugb; r-nr the trainer who turns hi back f,i one-half second is taking a 100-te-l shot en death. "An animal sei.ses fi-.ir in a human being ern before the human realizes ii himself. Fear is an involuntary (motion vbicli may :'eme te nnv one at any time. "If ever I step mie the aiena and (ear oeines ever me I will back iny way te the deer. st"p out and rnr return a" long ns 1 live. I miKl" tr) te deny tear; 1 inifht even persuade mjself that my old mrve had retimed; but I could i'et feel nnimal instinct., and the dianccs are that. I would be killed while I was thinking about it," lie concluded. Sterker's narrow escape, narrated ahove. occurred while he vm ubii,g tin nens In "Tirrer Trull." Eileen Sedg wick's fTtlveming serial, which is be ing dlrcctul by Edward Kull Bessie Leve "Cur Scheel te Become Screen Star BESSIE LOVE, who appears in "The Swamp" with Sessue Hayakawa, had te play hoekey from school te get her first job in pictures. She "cut'1 school obe duv te visit the Griffith studies. D. W. Griffith aw her and decided shn was a screen npe That was five year? age and to te ilav Besir is a serpen star in her own right Vijtli Itarrie I'ilm Dene When 1'cni'ii.in Stanlaws finishes "The Little Minister" with Betty Compson ns star, five of Sir .lames M, Barrie's stories will have been filmed, The four ethers were "The Admirable Crichton" (Cecil B. fleMille'u "Male and Female"), "Half an Heur," "What.Erery woman Knows," a Wil lam DeMMe picture, and "Sentlmentnl Temmy," t 'jVQ WEDDING BELLS for me; SAYS JACQUELINE LOGAN ESS than a year soft blue eye r hair tang and danced her way into the hearts of Broadway playgoers with the i famous "Oh, Tell Me Tretty Mniden" song, during the revival of "Florodora." She had been chosen as one of the six famous beauties in the musical comedy because of her work in tlie Ziegfcld lellies, mat about sums un the the- .;,,,- " "V ,7f .im ; ."i .;" Vl... ..i.-i "'.i""..V. . '.. ",' "".V , 4JV1I I iUIWUUUI inutui UllL n rewn .miss i.egan decidcu te remain. Like nil the Florodora girls of the past, she has received many proposals of tnamnge. Hut. somehow. Miss Legan believed that t lie star of her destiny had "". v -, rv elher plans for lier te pursue, se fihe sweetly said "Ne" te all tlie ambitious swains. It happens that Miss Legan's wagon of ambition was hiuhed te a star; or, as one might say. between friends, she had n hunch tlmt came true. Fer, no sooner was it learned that Jacqueline Legan was free and unmiirrinU in New Yerk, than an offer canie le her te play the lending role in "The Perfect Crime." WITH her success in this photoplay, motion-picture producers realized thai a new star war. rising in the film hriiiainent. ami her next offer was te play th" hading w-einnn's role opposite Tem Mcigliau in "White and Unmnr rird." Since her appearamc with Mr. Meig han, Jacqueline Logen has taken nn nn ether htcp up i lie ladder of fame via the Goldwyn -t mlies. She is new in Culver City, Calif., (routing the lead ing role In i he new feature picture, "The Octave of Claudius," by Barry Pain. Despite Mit,s Legan's decision te fol fel fol lew her star te its zenith, she Is still bombarded with letters from her host of ndmlre.rH. Whn asked if she ever ex pected te relent, Miss Legan smiled and replied : "Ne wedding bells for me just new. Later, perhaps, ami then again, per-.'nip-, net " Se there you are. Queer Antique Knives Are Used in "The bheik" "lyrANY valuable antiques, some of which mutely bespeak the ancient feud between Mohammedan and Chris tian, were searched out by Rudelph Byluk. technical director for the filming of "The Shelk," the picture version of F. M. Hull's novel in which Rudelph nientine nnd Agnes Ayres take the leading parts. tin the handle of n queer, le-hladed Knife whhli figures pieminently In some "' tlie dramatic seems was the Arabic inscription. Mine It le Mini Twiep " wiie nix, inline 01 sin, and em broidered in geld characters, was de clnred te he a prayer rug, originally secured from a Persian mosque. When Interpreted by n technical expert assist ing in the picture, these characters proved te be a prayer te Allah reading like tin: "Oh great Allah, clve unto tin tie power te swallow all the Curl. t!ttnSra?'1"d1,?er t.he weril bk onto the tyohammedanV' t VIiat Has Already Happened Dorethy Lane, a alrl from a small town, shares her hippest ambition with thousands of ether American pfrls that of becoming a moving' picture star. (She thinks her chance has come when Pcrtis, a friend of hers working in Wcte Yerk, tells of meeting some people connected with motion pictures and asks her te visit her. On her first day in the metrop olis, the pirl starts en a visit te the studies and pains admittance te one of them. Dorethy is given the chance te play in a mob scene, and makes the most of it. She meets Lawrence French, press agent for the company, who becomes interested in her. Then comes her big chance when, because of her resemblance te a well-known star, she is asked te double for her. When she tells Pcrsis the happy news, I'ersis in turn tells of a de lightful surprise for the evening a party planned by her motten-pioture friends. AS ND then, all nt once, I knew what up Lawrence French. I didn't think I was in leve with him exactly. But I'd missed Iilm a let since I left New Yerk. He hadn't, written me at all. nnd neither had Sylvia. And 1 was anxious te get back and talk things ever with him, nnd have bim take me te the movies again, nnd for bus ride.s nnd nil that sort of thing. I knew, nil nt once, that I cared n geed deal mero for him thnu I'd supposed I did. "And you will marry me, won't you, dear, just ns seen as we get back te town?" urged Jehn Sewnrd. "I don't believe I cnn." T told him. wondering even ns I did se bow I dared refuse a man like him. "Somehow I can't be qulte sure I don't just knew " "Is it because of my having been married beferu that you hesitate?" he asked. 'Tlmt was n shock te me: 1 hadn't even known that be had been married, nnd told him ae. "Yes, I was," he told me then, nnd named the girl one of the most promi nent stars en the screen today. "We were married five years age, nnd sepa rated a year later. We'rn still geed friends we just didn't get along to gether. In fnct, 1 dined with her and her husband the last time I was in Les Angeles. "Yeu see. in the moving-picture world marriage Isn't always looked upon ns it Is among ether people; re many things have te be considered the different wnv of livine nnd all Hint that divorce seems mere natural than it does te people who arcn t familiar with theso conditions." He told me a let of ether things, but T hardly knew what be was saying. Somehow, te marry a man who had been married before I cbuldn't just see doing that. I cared a geed deal for him, of course; 1 realized that, tee. I liked having him kiss the pnlin of my hand and then I:Irs nil the finger tips. I thought of nil the girls who would hnve given anything in tlie world te have him fall in leve with them. I really wanted te care enough te say "Ych," but It just wouldn't come. And se at I a sj; I get up and straightened ray sweater sash and gathered up all my courage. - "I can t say what you want me le new," I told him, nnd you can't imag ine hew hard it was, with these won derful eyes of bis looking into mine. "I de care for you truly I de but I don't ecem te care enough te marry yen." He seemed awfully disappointed ; his shoulders drooped, and he threw out his hands in n little gesture that I re membered having seen him use en the screen mero than once. Maybe that was what made it seem unreal. I couldn't be really sorry for him; I couldn't get ever the feeling that, even though he did enre se much for me and feel bad because I didn't leve him. he remembered bow he looked, tee, all the time. AVe walked back te the hotel together, nnd he was awfully nice; laughed and talked about nil kinds of things, and told me all sorts of fuiujy stories about his llfe en the stage. But when we I'llOTOI'IAVS prMnTO-PlT, & All L. liih th, Merris tc Pasayunk Me nillcllliuia Milt iiRiivatS Kvgs. 0:43 A BERT LYTELL In A MKSHAf!!', FUOM MAIIS" ALLEGHENY frankterd All-hnv V t Dallv 2:16: Rvtii. R ltl'l'KHT IHfillKS' Dangerous Curve Ahead APOLLO i'.'D & THOMPSON STS. MT1VK!H DAILY WALLACE REID In TOO Ml til SI'KKII ARCADIA tf''K u t, I1 EUGENE O'BRIEN in "Tin: i.AHT neon" ASTO'R 'UANKlilN & (IIIIAUI) AVK. MATiNi:r. nAn.Y DOUGLAS MacLEAN In "l'.V.SNINl THItl"" DAI TTdrDI7 01 ST 4 u.uri.MenB U-M-. 1 liYivyixtj !.,. 11 no. s'p Mat. 'rim 1:111. 11WVV iiniikiim:a DKAMA "WET GOLD' DblNIN rTiN'i:t: ijaii.v .IAMI.S lilllUAVOOl) In "The Great Impersonation" BLUEBIRD llreuij i. Susquehanna I'nntin WW '.' Until 1 1 BETTY COMPSON in " t Tim i:n nK'rm". vein.i" breadway "TVinvxr CLARA KIMBALL YOUNG In 'TIIAItOK IT" rAPITOI 7" MAIHsiri' KT " vri 1 KJU, 111 M tn 1 1 .in r. M CONSTANCE TALMADGE in vtnniHNn nr.i.rs" colon! al"e,i. ttr? ,";? I.I,-STAIX ( ST In "Weman in His Heuse" DARBY 'THEATRE MAY MacAVOY in " l,IMV.TKM,A0.l." U.1V1I IInJsJ MATINi:l! I II.V ANITA STEWART n'HARRIKT ANnTHi:IMl'KK FAIRMOUNT i($AX Gleria Swaruen, The Great Moment nnAju.iK. niAi'i.iN in 'tiii: jiii,k( iss I.'AMIl" Y ''Ji:Ar"m: Tiiir.Mirket si MVIIL-. I s !,, M,,v li(T i,.' "" " '" Miu.irs "TIjc Affairs of Anatel" 36TI- ST. 111. v 1 111: no - 1.' 1 . 1 1 1 "What Women Will De" riilldren'g.Miil "I.IIIIp nr, ,,lu Uena C, ORF lm MAIUihT HT " HOPE HAMPfb0 " U in "WYK'R PKNAfjriM P,R ANT " qmAnD"AVM: r The Daughter of the Law" , xi m l?-'m$'' $mZ?& ?H H H I . ; iMfttii if ' H H ,ftk',, ' -"3WW. hhVhVhVhh'W'MIhVhVMb H H hVhVhVhVhVv hhhVhVhw ' I VHHVHVHHiHHVHVHVHVHV'tH ' HLZJilHHHHHr Mii''''l'HiHHKMl w VhhhVhVhVHvI VhIhVhhJhh HHJHHHHHHMi Ji HhVhvhYMi HARRY One Weman Is Cured of Reading Titles Aloud AT A moving-picture theatre a woman wns reading aloud the announcements that accompanied the pictures, oblivious of the annoyance of these in her vicinity. Suddenly her voice slowly died nway, and the crowd nbeut her wns convulsed with laughter as she read this nleud from "Topics of the Day" films en the screen: "We hate te put nshes In nnybodyVlce crenm, but deliver us from the woman who rends the moving-picture titles nleud." get te the little clump of trees en tlie hill just nbeve the hotel he stepped and put his hands en my shoulders, turn ing me nreund te face him. I felt all xhivcry nnd eJtcd when lie touched me. "I'm willing te wnit, little girl,"' he told me, "since it' the only thing te de. But remember that I leve you se much th.nt, sooner or later, you'll have te say 'Yes.' " 1 stumbled down the hill then, leav ing him there watching me, nnd ran te my room. I felt like crying, nnd yet I wns happy, tee. And I was glad that I was going back le New Yerk and would see Lawrence French again seen. We get back te New Yerk early the next morning in n rainstorm. Somo Semo Some Iiow that was the last straw. I hadn't slept well, nnd my head ached, and everything seemed te go wrong. Mr. Phlpps and the two men had net yet awakened when 1 get up, se I slipped out into the station alone, thinking I'd hurry home and get into some fresh clefhes nnd call Lawrence up right nway te tell hlin I was back. My linen 6iiit felt damp and sticky, nnd I'd lest one of my hatpins, se that my hat kept sliding down ever my eyes. My suitcase was heavy, tee, ns 1 walked across Forty-second street te get the elevated. And then, nt the corner of Fifth avenue, a taxi flashed by me and turned down Forty-second street, toward the Grnnd Central Station, from which I'd just come. It slewed up the least bit ns it turned the corner and I get a glimpse of the people in It. And they were Sylvia Stearns nnd Lawrence I I couldn't think for a moment. In a taxi se enrly in the morning, bound for the railway station It could mean only one thing. They must have get rnnTeri.Ais Tlie 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. '9 1 GREAT NORTHERN ZTZVl t IllTPKiiT firm it iru Erle . M, , "Dangerous Curve Ahead" I M PRE? t AT wtu & walnut sts CONSTANCE TALMADGE ' iTAT&r- iwmL-iu eInTM ilul .,'r.TM BERT LYTELL l1lLAJJGi,U' J' MIAIHSB" I pllirrli P-ilar-ra Geimantewn Ave anrl gUJl.?i?.Ce ""I"' Avenue I tlritLCLAYTON I L"."ivveni" I IRFRTY u"OAD ft COI.UM'niA v. in .T i- , , 'AT'NEi: DAILY ; Lenst ce Talmadge, Mamma's Affair filMM.1' L1'''- i 'Tin: mi.i; cuhs- OVERRRnOkT 3U-HAVBIU'0rib iiniVsTiisiT. Ani.lvfrsnrv Week "NO WOMAN KNOWS" irAltOI.I) l.l,mil InJ-NOW OltNi:VKK" PA1 ACF "12U MAHKKT HfllBKf ' 'l-.V-l-. 10 A. M. In 11 15 . M WILLIAM S. HART - - '5 "lilu5ib"I,K'Lliiy SJ1" PRINCFSS :e18 MAISKKt STHKKT 1 iinvUjj mn a m I.. 11 ir. ii i sprriAT. i'aut 1.. "HEARTS ARE TRUMP' REGENT "!.?' llelew te 1 1 liTII r m Ml) ITtANKI.l.V In "COURAGE" RIAI TO UKHMANTOWN AVKNI'K IMriLilW AT Tt'l.l'KIIOf'KKN ST lll('MKI IIAUTIini.MlUs III "RXPFRIPlMrpW RURY X'AIIMT 8T."nEtiOW 7TH " , x ., I() n 1n v M siUIVltiUY JJAY Aliirnifiilfil mil of SH., .-,,lre, SAVOY '" MA"'""!' STFtKUT u.uktV.-W,.m,''''t "PASSION FRUIT" SHERWOOD ""r fp'vVe xt . il? JJiaMmpersonatien" STANLEY "AnKjcf-ATf-xefir- A vnuW i?M ..U' Bi' "' "AFTER THF SHhwi- STAN TON .iW'1;, "Aj?ieTii ii.i.im rov'iies- rn'pi'u' M "OVER THE HILL" 333MARKET1,Wi;,:il',l,lhA1?,M' "VOMAN IN HIS HOUSE" "1 HE INVISIBLE POWER" ftiALTO WEST CHESTER LIONEL BARRYMORE in "TltU OBEAT PVENTTJIUJ" CAREY married ! I knew they liked each ether awfully well, of course. And new that I thought of it. even when Lawrence took me and some ether man took Syl via when we went en our little parlies he divided his time pretty evenly be tween us. Fer a moment I was perfectly furi ous nt both of them. Then, en second thought, I was furious at my'sclf. Why should I hnve thought that Lawrence cared for me, tinywny? He'd been nwfully nice, of course, nbeut hclnlnr who (I de that for any girl. And he'd ' taken me out n geed deal but then he d probably have done that for any girl from out of town who was lone some. He'd told me once that he didn't knew many girls in New Yerk ; prob preb ably that wns the reason he'd been nice And Sylvia was awfully prcttv and r.wfully nice no wonder that he bad fallen in love with her. That was all perfectly reasonable, of course. But it made me feel just des perate. I only had a llttle money, but I signaled a taxi nnd dreve up Fifth nvenue in it and then home. And en the way I declded that I might as well marry Jehn Seward. t,l cWa'tMP crying. And I couldn't help thinking at the time hew unbelievable I'd have thought that situation net ee very many months be fore. Why, I couldn't have imagined myself having money enough that I'd earned te ride in a taxlcab and then think of crying because I was coin te marry one of the biggest motion, picture stars In the country. Yet that's just what I was doing! Te Be Continued Tomorrow They Had a Dinner ' Prepared by Many Stars en the Coast Recently TTOW would you like te eit down te ' J--1- dinner that had been cooked ever a pit fire by the following cast? Claai chowder prepared by Snowy Baker, the Australian athlete; steak broiled by, I aullne Frederick ; candied Rwcct pota peta pota tees cut nnd fried by Beb Vlgneln, di 'rrwr: c"Jn, golfed with red peppers by Themas Helding; beans n la Mexican by Lugcnc Pallette; Japanese tabid by Mrs. Scssue Haynkawa : ice cream blended ami churned by Sessuc Havn Dnv? chocelato cake by Marien . The fortunate mortals wlm ,m 'J"",1" "il. down te this "feed" the ether day en the Pacific Coast pre- STives'. !he "b,UC r,bben" " .nioTerxviYH irrefOB' erAMimCA The NIXON-NIRDLINCERfT I IHliATRES li BELMONT B ,TO I MADGE KENNEDY in "MARY. BE rARFnir" CEDAR 00 C'EDAU AVTSUB 1 SO nnil 87 nnilO V Jt CONWAY TEARLE in "BUCKING THE TIGER" COLISEUM .JIarlt fe" muj fc ,, , , . "1':;' nnl 3 rnn.lll ! M. .1.M1-1 ii.unn nnil Ujiirthnn mil Standlnr In "THE JOURNEY'S END" JUMBO riWNT ST A RU1ARO AVE. Junihe June mi I'rankfenl "IV MA NOVAK In "THE SMART SEX ft LEADER 41ST I'ANCASTErt AVH. RCPKRT IUT.IIES' "THE OLD NEST" LOCUST Mfi2,D ??P LOCUST STTIKETS W,J1 Mats. 1:30, a.3(). Ev. l.30 tell CONWAY TEARLE in "THE FIGHTER" NIXON U AND MAIHiKT STP 2il5, 7 anil l nnil At.USTAH TAST In lVAI.IiACi: IIKKUV "STRAIGHT IS THE WAY" RIVOLI "D AN'D SANSOM ST.". AI.I,STAK CAST lu "HEARTS ARE TRUMP" STRAND CKHMNTOW A i: AT ns V(ii) aTnr.KT MILDRED HARRIS CHAPLIN in "The Weman in His Heuse AT OTHER THEATRES MEMBERS OF M. P. T. O. A. tit Ui ... MAT1NKH DAI1.T "Dangerous, Curve Ahead" .?.'! ;-a I