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- THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. €, FEBRUARY 28, 1926—PART e MARY PHILBIN ~ Riskto e CoLLEEN VIS ‘ Filmograms & MOODL » K E Government, in a communica- | for Ufa nf":ermwn\: It is one of the Me 11( "o . tion from President Coolidge to | pictures to be released here as a result t{opo 13 the House of Representatives, officially | of the recent commercial alliance of rates the motion picture industry as |} mount and Metro-Geldwyn with N Ews and Comment - - oo ; , rates the motion ture Industry”ax | Ko o t s of capital inves h This is - - ¢ L his 5| john F. Carlson, landscape painter said to be the first authentic and offi K 3 of Woodstock, N. Y., is quoted as say- ' y cfal statement rating the industry. X 2 o ing, “I believe pictures to be the most By W. H Landvmgt. | E: _ :: / 4 A 9 Fred Niblo's next will be a huge)convenient, comforting. entertaining, b 3 spectacle dealing with anclent Bagdad, | educating thing on earth ASHINGTON has been having an “educational week,” with fa- : : if reports from the Pacific Coast he | genius, enterprise and capita mous educators irom all corners of the land to tell us how chil- 5 S : Fres Lo bl S el kA Hal Roach, in imitation of English The famous Judge Ben Lindsay dren should be taught what is to make them the future men and £ . ¢ : el 5 : O : royalty, recently fell from a horse and | the Juvenile Court of Denver, Colo., women of a great Nation. Strange to say, there hasn’t been a 8 i o broke his collarbone. says, “Thousands of children have A : been elevated, inspired and made hap- single denunciation of the Movie. O," the contrary, in private f not in p_nb- ; . ; i 't o 3 . o It the critics are rellable authori- | ie"pocause of the movies.” He says tic, conversation much has been said of the screen as an aid to education. | : ( - ; : ? | ties, thelr reports to Will H. Hays on | it 'Leaps them off the streets, out o Lda . v 5 . the general upward trend of the | n, gjjoys, the vulgar story telling of Prankly the teacher of long standing doesn’t favor it overmuch. This is | : | F % { | tiBflgenee i uunai i irenaiot Sile due not so much to any possible shortcoming on the part of the screen as | i % \ | ¢ 1 E : asked specific questions regarding the | :I:\:‘xf::’;!.\nfm;’i.":::.':;:‘:"'&"“:3:{-" Gl | A , but it is to the iact that personal pride and personal accomplishment in one moral and artlstic equations as well |}y uhout the other fellow who says as the tone of newspaper publicity everything evil of the movie? v line is reluctant to relinquish the cause of either in favor of another.. And : o g s % ? ¢ : i A yet Washington has a substantial argument in favor of the screen as an ; ; : e ; Y e Lardner s e & e keru| Douglas Fairbanks' fantastic fe educator and points with pride to what it has accomplished in the Ameri- - _ dozen of his “You Know Me. Al {ture, “The Thief of Bagdad,” after a [ v P @ i : » | : : X stories by Universal g four-week engagement at Berlin's nization classes that are conducted here. But it has been said “it is hard % | . - ' best theater, was shown simultane- | i 1o teach an old dog new tricks,” and doctors will be doctors, as is, in spite | Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer has signed |ously in 50 picture houses in Berlin | I} b Mae Busch to a long-term contract. | requiring prints to be rushed from on of the new discoveries daily in the science of medicine. ; ; e o otk on hand o b e . Ronald Colman i have the lead | ;" enough on hand to mebt the |in “Beau Geste." demand ¥ takes a svcat deal of courage as well s a large stock of new material WARNER BMR . ® s | H - 4 o 2 | More serials are promised for the ¥ i ; ; Gertrude Olmsted is to play opposite to start in the business of reforming things and people. That means. of X i . : Spring and Summer than at any time 1d course, if one starts on a carcer as a sincere and genuine betterer of things, wcoln » | in several seasons, in addition to the | Milton Sills in hix next pleture, “Puj : - . - ORPE Edal’ e 'd by | Pets,” which is to be directed by Al in particular of general. e wi already kn at ther consistent hedule maintained by | Pet w 1 either in particular or in general. The world already knows that there v onsistent sched : pete. which ia to be directed by Al who made “Abraham Lincoln.” ,e more reformers of morals than of manners, more would-be reformer . '\ | The Moving Picture . 4 After fintshing “The Tavern Knignt.” | " priiid it is sald John Barrymore will produ ‘o keep them away from Flori >f people thau of things. Many have been born into the world with *he 4 belief that they were divinely sent to upliit things in general. Some are o o . LLOYD HUGHE.S\ e e anquestionably sincere: others are mere mountcbanks, engaged in a pro- By Robert E. Sherwood 1 P 8 ¥ | — ! and othe the cast of “The uestionably ¢ ! i ¢ o d Immediate productions at the Fox " will spend their time on i iession for what it will bring. Opinions will differ upe» -ery conceivable . W 2 mbassador plant include “What Price Glory?” | yacht off the coast while flming the oroposition, which is a strong arguinent ti all folks do not think alike. | THERE have been swarms of extra F 3 % — PRGN “The Music Ma “The Return of [ picture. But who says realtors cat i 3 i | Peter ¢ mm," s Zat'So?" und “One | not swim n faie s g © estivate the possibilities of | ., Superspecial pictures this season, ‘ ¢ 2 lut it rea would pay our educators to investigate the po \\nhpc OF Ve eSO LN BTERE. : 4 Tndovsed by Boy Seouts. Ticrensitia Puitioee e — ‘he screen as an aid in educating grown-ups as well as children. Pictures [ On top of “Don Q.” “Stella Dallas,” L e ! Bt A L e ot A b N sk e St e gt eshnd, oo b o 3 e dauicily k6 4hevaielligence wha s. and for this | “The Big Parade.” “The Merry Wi HOSE who rail against the influ- | Patsy Ruth Miller is no OEmle Mo L Tl B tional's big appeal much more quickly to the intelligence than do words, and for this | [Xhe I3 PRIUIR IR SENS, O O : ‘T ot et on it rETODIwHHE thio Wdtnes | picture. savs drinking “prop” lauor teason those who have tricd them in teaching geography and other studies | “The Gold Rush,” “The 1+ Beast,” . {vouth of America will find food for| Graduation exercises of the Para ,l';“H" movi lfnr three davs will cure oi the common school have found telling results, quickly attained. “The Vanishing American” and “Mare uction it ardcent sotion| ofia) BOV [mouat PIerslsohool will betnelt at |- o of e AL of duinking) | Nostrum” will come before long “The Scout council. A the Ritz, New York, March 2, with a [ May MecAvoy, wt made Some Hiram Abrams, president of the |reception and a dinnel d_by | imprescion on the screen, i« but 4 fee # k Pirate,” “Don Juan,” “What A HERE was never a time in the history-of America when the need of | Price 2" “0ld Ironsides,” “La KATHRYN H L ~ Lolumbm United Artists Corporation, been | the presentdtion of the school's first | 10 inches in height. To this she at Boheme™” and “The Volga Boatmen.' advised that the story of “Don Q— |plicture, * inating Youth tributes her screen suceess rood wnners was greater. And it is confidently believed that a < : good man 4> gro o Pictures of this magnitude are not Son of Zorro,” which was made into i material improvement in the manners of the day would soon make it ap- | released directly through the regular Ethel Shannon, who now is ear- | The handsome heroes of the scree: tng in “Charley's Niece.” an Al Licht. | it is said, do not smoke clgarettes & eve. People very apt. as a rule, to asty s eaters usually devoted to the spoken T e the Boy Seouts of Amorien | man production, will he starred in | cept when compelled by their roles many close observers of the times are reluctant to admit for an instant | drama. and are allowed to run as long | Otop a§7 S 1S (== Chosen by the By Scoute f Ameriea | “The ‘Golden Web,” by E. Phillips [ Conrad Nagel and Ramon Novarro fire that the young womanhood of the present day is all that it is frequently 4= they can continue to be profitahle devotlon ever screened. Oppenheim, by Sam Sax rionsThoketa: Joh CIIDEt, At oREe 3T Ss5iienl dCavciece anahners are dheusErEsTirspicationiitor Wwuspition wand:| e SoEle OEMEICE SiRlen, and there | They asked permission to show the | y = reno and Ricardo Cortez smoke clgar ; 14 4re usually only two performances Ly he Stale Conservation Commission tany of the ugly things that are said of our girls have taken risc in |gay """ only S0 Lerobmem cesi e % film at the annual father and son | of New York has completed an cduca while Lew Cody clings to the pipe. saginations intlamed by bad manners. If the screen be a fine means of | Some of these super-productions At the p[.,ompla) Houses This Week. Andted o Alwais ebruary 11. | tional picture showing the work of | Irving Cummings, fog comiiiod cducating our young people in their mental studies, why may it not prove have developed an enormous earning | | yrewpObOI ITAN_“Irenc.” St : i fish planting from the time the Young | what i claimed to be a masterpiece 4n invaluable aid to helping them to better manners. This is a field that | capacity, and will continue to run on | METK 2 rene.” Shown this afternoon and evening. A Cariens i Mot iaay. | hleave the hatchory Uil they: are | for Fox Fifink under: ! HUSEThe 1as escaped censor's cloquence, and perhaps the picture maker's at- |the present High-priced basis for| | COLUMBIA—"The Wanderer.” Shown this aiternoon and evenin L ovies |deposited in the streams | Johnstown Flood,” is now directin: I q P the p | & = ot : tion. But it is a most profitable field in credit for him who first under- | Rustling for Cupid a Peter 1t b ool B H';,‘,‘;,"j}l’:: It is predicted that “The Biit| | RIALTO—“Stella Maris.” Shown this aftcrnoon and evening [SCENES of the United States Army | An ordinance of Highland Purk.|i¢ne story, with Ceorge O'Brien takes to cultivatc Our average photoplay is not a teacher of good |, e onters tor ey i LR . Show i = A in athletic training and mass | Mich., makes it unlawful for children | S ieorge and manners and deportuent, and though it may jar our, film luminaries a bit | e r:n\h T year PALACE - Behind the Front! hown this afternoon and evening games ol e geaning and mass | o atiend motion picture exhibitions|ANita Stewart in the ieading role. to be told so, it migh clever idea to have an etiquette editor lend an | TIVOLI—"Lady Windermere’s Fay Shown this afternoon and eve- screen in the famous Grantland Rice |during school hours, unless accom-| Janet Gaynor, a beautiful Philade The latest addition to this list, ning. Sportlights. | panied by their parer whia girl, represented the Fox studic wlvisory voice to ceneral uplift now well under way. ) : d par e Mare Nostrum,” opened at the Crite- | | AMBASSADOR—"Irenc.” Shown this afternoon and cvening. Al dere. exhititon in Kanads City, |25 % 19 v stac at the Wamp: p ! : y . | rion Theater in New York last week. £, FE et whose: theat e burned. down. hae | frolic in Los Angeles recently T cloauent 1 i in his address before the educators | This is the production which for the | | CENTRAL—"The Man Upstair hose theater was burned down. h been given the use of a local church - Eiiraiton.: resdnliv i pleture by Douglas Fairbanks and Pathe tells us that John L. Hawk- @ inson, producer of these pictures, has ; Shown this afternoon and eve- made arrangements to photograph ning. these interesting phases of Arm at Contine mor lust Sunday, one of the best of its kind, | past year has engaged the attention for « = ekt 5 The Government officials are 108 hisishows Untik the theatet can ke iom by Fox, has finishe 1 1 : 1 \~hington audience, emphatically de- g : cbuilt it s 'Y €€ [ vonng Irishman who jumped to fame 5 i 2 5 ¥ 5 be thoroughly in accord with the idea | "©PUH | role ir in this day and generation that re- | \i® urpe Four' Horsomen of the | _METROPOLITAN—irenc. Dexter. Gladye Eirockwell, Jason Ro- | ind the scenes will be ready for screen- | Anfta Stewart and ‘Georgo 0'Brien | [indred” Juby Grifih ined e ome S 1e State to | An elaborately staged comedy hit | bards and Phillips Smalley. ing in the Spring. Wit Lave the' leadn it Rustiing for |iNS: with Hirrison I nedy. Tmmediately suspec t the Movie was running amuck e Jle predecessor, | which comes to Crandall's Metropoli-| The —presentation features are s ik | Cpler & vox proatction 8 1T | MeDonald in the cast sain, the writcr of this colnmn made a sort of Haroun al Raschid tour | strum” is based on a novel | tan Theater this week. bezinning this | Chappy and Libby Kay, world cham 5 L b hisidnint ¥ — Fdowntown 1o discover that the distinguished prelate probably is right. | by Ibanez. and is concerned with the |afternoon, will present Cofleen Moore, | bion Charleston team, who recently How Serials Grow. Betty Compson has heen signed for |, Il?lin Mis s now at inly this time it is not the Movie which is to blame, but the public. espe- | Great Wi It tells of the activities | whose latest achievement is a delight- | € tablished record in New York b i {“The Wise Guy,"” which Frank Lloyd S G stone directing. AN NE etk o1 of that vague and uncertain entity, which by | of the U-hoats in the Mediterranean |ful impersonation of the title role in | City for continuous Charleston danc- HE Bar-C Mystery,” feature ver-|will direct for First National. Frank ‘Borbage's new production >atronage dire + kind ‘of entertainmentithe Movie shall futnish, | and of a gallant Spanish captain who | “Irene,” First National's film version | ing, having held the floor for over sion of the Western Pathe serial, n N = 4 x Fi “was adapted fi s patronag kin rtainmen Movie shall futnish. | SRS (LT, feave wia anial comeort \toi]lof the tarois musical comedy 20 hours, it is claimed. Hazel Bow-|in which Dorothy Phillips is starred, | Garrett Fort is collaborating with |l o, o000 a apted frov e phot jon were respectable to a degree; indeed, quite | the enemy. To make this picture Mr. | The bill also will embrace the cus- | man, formerly of “Artists and Models | to be released March 14, will be 4 mod- Jeanie MacPherson In an original for | Sphirge” o magazine story by Eve <o. But they di t least some of them, because—well, it is hard- | Ingram took his cameramen. to the |tomary short-reel features and a mu- | company, will be heard in a selection |ern Western. with more than the Jetta Goudal's first starring picture, | yn Campbe Umair to tell tales out of school. Bt there is a strange and inexplicable | south coast of France, and the scenes | sical program of note of popular ballads. usual quota of hard riding, rough-and. | Which is to be mude under the suver-| yigwin Carewe will produce and mand from the younger i hat it calls “zip” and “pep.” And it |of “Mare Nostrum® were photo- [ “Irene" concerns a youngster of the | The Rialto Concert Orchestra, under | tumble fist fights. and spectacular vision of Cecll B. De Mille. ditéct: “Pals FIVE™ as his next Fiest Las been th cate i lare makers to meet this very | Eraphed there. All of these scenes | poorer stratum of New Vork soclety | Mischa Guterson. will play ‘“The | thrills. j «The Crown of Lies” is to he the| National film attraction. Frane demand that has i 1 \fcture makers to moct this, YerY | ure beautiful: some of them. notably |who finally gets her chance to wear | Jolly Robbers” (Suppe) for overture, | The mystery starts in the opering { uio of Pola Negri's new picture which | Perry Tilliott 1s the author of “Pal y.8 ki Sweet | thoge showing the submarine warfare vaga , : ind a1 1 scene, in which a rider is s e | Llo of EOIA Negit s new pleturo wilelh | o ; those s s .| extravagant finery and make her bid |and a Harry igdon comedy en. | Scene, a rider is seen to hur- |t Of € G O Dimitri Bucho: | First” and production will be made nder xquisite 1t, even stirring adventure, now no |ure genuinely thrilling. The cast.|for the affection of a rich voung man | titled “Lucky Stars” and the Int | of Rex Ingram. the temperamental el tle from a cliff and land, apparently |\atsks for Paramount | on « lavish scale. Lloyd Hughes and 1ger appeal ¥ lack the “zip” .i:ul “pep,” which one bright-eyed | headed by Antonio Moreno and Alice |hile posing as a mannequin for | national News will round out the hill. |dead, in a tree. This man is Law- e Dolores del Rio will have leading bit of eloquence guite frankly and audibly declared is the spirit of the lifc| Terry, Is a good one, all the support- | “\Mme. Lucy,” & male modiste. Her | P il {rence Trenal, owner of the Bar.C Richard Talmadge has started in|roles. Dolores is the beautiful Me 2 oday. And this view of the spirit of the life of today, which seems to | ing players having been recruited LY | mother becomes intensely —aroused COLUMBIA—"The Wanderer, ranch, on which has been discovered | “The Gallant Fool,” by Frank Howard | jcan 1 whom Carewe found fr general—and the declaration is made advisedly—if properly coped with | Mr- Ingram abroad. | when she learns of the nmew occupi- | .y wanderer.” Raoul W . | @ rich mineral mine, to possess which | Clark, with Mason Noel divecting. for| Mexico City last Summer and o the home, the church and the school of today, may be directed to beau R tion of her daughte nd hastens to | o g 0, ot for :,-‘” taou / sh's | & pair of ml»lx.(—r crooks stand ready to [F. B. O. release | of the Wampas stars of 192 ful rather thau to ugly and deplorable ideals “Mare Nostrum’ has not been well |@ fashionable soclal event where the | aramount of the o to any desperate lengths. _— gly ¢ ‘ e Mare Nostrum(: has not been well | p, S0 Cve (i heinie held, and 1t is Broadway stage spectacle by Maurice | But with Trenal disposed of, their | Alberto Le Vino is writing a scena- | The fashion episode of “Irene 1 i 4 L : e wise | e that the peture takes on its | V. Samucls, which was presented in troubles are only commencing, for he | rio of his own story, “Mademoiselle | siid o he the finest of {ts kind eve HE Il L : c shions that used to delight the heart of | ficres of Broadway ave precitting o | greatest effectiveness. The fashion | New York ai $2 prices, with t | left his property to a_sweetheart in|From Armentierres,” for Richard | photographe ixty of Mollvwood's her 1 1 _them ridiculous, and by the strength of this argu- | reer. In spite of this gloomy verdict, | Parade is exquisitely exccuted in nat |including Greta Nissen, William Col- | the Eaxt, who comes West to investi- | Thom Productions. most beantiful girls take part aml ment she ha bued with the notion that her mother’s ideas of | T must confess that I enjoyed it im. | ural colc lier, jr. Iirnest Torrence, Wallace |gate her dnheritance, with the as “ENaSl EOUIAT & Tiaver- by dozens of individually designed right and propricty & ta ashioned and ridiculous. She doesn’t ely. To me it Is the best of Re: Others In the cast include Lloyd |Beery. Tyrone Power. Kathryn Hill, |ance of a handsome cowhoy ke s, a movel by Adela | gowng and costumes in all their co | a v E . She doesn't | mensely. To me it Is the best of Rex Kathlyn Williams, Holmes Herbert | Thus do serials grow. { Rogers St. Johns, has been bought by | jri ynq brilliance will be seer Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer for screen | = e n to imagine that perhaps mother, before her, laughed at grandma’s | Ingra roductio ce “The Four |Hughes, George K. Arthur, Kate| V57, Bawards g ¥ 7 refore laughed at grandma’ gram production since ‘“The Four | B8He%, FEG oy “1da Darling, [and Snitz Bdwards, will be shown at = g . 5 duction. The Wise Guy started hions and ideas, nor that a generation hence, perhaps. her daughters |Horsemen.” That. however, i I i g o3 I : as, nor t s. | Horsemen.” Th e I Y enmans Titus and | Loew’s Columbia this week, beginning | . - 1_‘\,{;_} at present-day fas! o motions. " The great obicct. to be |my own fallible opinion, whic Eva Novak, Lvdia Yeamans THUs A0 | s afternoon, at the regular Colum Peggy in Song Films. It 1s announceT At Gloria Swan. | First National. is full of novel tw ittained is to prevent the coming daughters from regarding their mothers beautiful girls. ) th Fine Manners|and turs. - The story reflects t fashions and ideas with scorn. This discussion may seem out of place | ey . — “The Wanderer,” aptly designated is the “girl” in several of the |Frank Tuttle directing, for Paramount liere, but the justitication is that the facts set forth do have a substantial | There is another picture now con- RIALTO—"Stella Maris." a4 the stocy of the first. black sheep, | «Tamous Melo: fes” of song films, | Immediately ) e e bearing upon the public entertainn by Wi e i g tHel ic which may ; R e . .. |is essentially a mammoth presenta- | TLas i ed Enrope to - Sobbae o bt ol pearing upon the public entertainments and pleasures of the day. They "Ofll’_"fi”'"A’;“'X’“"f“mhhl“'{";‘ ormay | n “Stella Marls,” the photopla¥ at| iy op the sereen of the bibliea] story | o &25t Summer Peggy visited Europe to | [ o150 Fazenda has been added to|ment cures. Itxcombines powerful do affect both the theater and thegscreen, and that is why the play and | D9t ring the bell of popular approva s week, Mary Philbin | of Story |act in scenes staged in Ireland, Scot- = “ihe Ol S = ld with e v. I ERotablay prbiicer: il nho N ok Adhes hier i That 18 “Moana,” Robert J. Flaherty's | the Rialto this week, Mary PLilbin|of the prodigal son. backgrounded fland and England. Under direction of | the cast of “The Old Soak.” in which ol ith genuine comedy. The play | er, j ike the dreSsmaker and the jazzmaker, is tempted | | ortrayal of life in the South Seas. plays a dual role, one a fragile, dainty |against rich and lavish Oriental set- | ;. s FitzPatrick, Miss Sha on of | jean Hersholt will star for Universal, | $10ry has a decidedly novel endine. o by to thier becadss e RAAEEhE R . : EyS R sl ; ames FitzPatrick, Miss Shaw essayed | 4 t ¢ ecause he is conducting his business primarily for the | Mr. Flaherty, having achieved appre- [ Invalid; the other a scrubwoman— | ting, and marked throughout by a |leadi: roles S = iceath profit to be gained from it icass SAHh N coarse and poverty-stricken—but with |series of telling episodes, includi ading roles in “Songs of Ireland,” | Tom Mix is on record as believing | An inmovation in sereen settinzs k. e ciablo success with “Nanook of the | coarse and poverty stricken but with | series of telling episodes, including | ‘Songs of Scotland” and “Songs of EN. | that the young men of today are soft, | Will be tried in “Fila Cinders.” Col- . North.” was sent bv Famous Players s y e - | the bacchanalian orgy that preceded |land.” Fach of these Pathe screen |do not know how to fix & door, mend | leen Moore’s next starring vehicl IFE can be lived jovously, happily. One doesn’t have to be mi to Samoa to produce a picture of the Stella Maris Is the beautiful in-|the destruction of Babylon | gen based el (P 5 bEiond) anl Ahise! yho . neditne ceneiiment \,m:c;‘"‘?::a‘l:: Polynesian natives In their lair. He | valid and Unity Blake the little scrub | The story reveals how the prodigal st milde g, T e B Holal At i sagen ot e P s % g . | S N monthe on the job, | woman who in the screen version of [ is saved from the fate of Rabylon| Dr i A artaiized g |1 > pa > hewhinhy ol act that it is infinitely more delightful to be nice than to be daring, f el v ‘s story sacr f i i OE usg kel Dl S i iaeh = [l padfietd eninihe e 0n i o aring, for |and the results of his activities are | William J. Locke’s story sacrif through his refusal, despite the rev- |spec R 0 " = " o bl olav. & = 3 overdaring somctimes leads to depravity. Every age has had its eccen- | now visible. e b T wpintsk of {he SHIY |loh o o Dorshin Daias o RO B | T e G i Lo ol e L £ pNCHOT s IOy At Delpih s i S Gtics and hé world's Eilication b = L ! le i : L5 v & A ry, E . 5 synchronize with the song films. orsemen of the Apocaly % in the ending change to brilliant and cit and yet the wor ivilization has progressed in spite of them. Here again I venture to express a | man who has ever been kind to h he is forced to flee to the desert, beautiful at times and its direction on | ornamental e present day has many, but the general spirit of humanity is too bright | personal opinion. to the effect that In this dual role Mary Philbin’s | where he eats the husks that the = | occastons rises to real heights—this | ® —— ud virile and worthwhile to imagine that it is going to sink the ship in- |, Moana” ranks among the finest, most | make-up is sald to be a striking|swine did eat. A romantic touch is| Wiley's story, “The Spoils of War," |is how Danny of Film Daily sums up | rd Barthelmess is to appear in i 0f mercly rock the hoat O conree, we por G o i S iopip 1° | beautitul, most _creditable ~ achieve- | achlevement in the art of disguise. |given the climax through the reunion |and affords motion-picture enthusinsis | Rex Tngram’s new picture, “Mare tion of Richard Harding onia and sages who stilliteead theifire andibrifitsoneiofihell, -Mentlive | PLoais 00 she scrsen, Wik Nuook | e evipertink coou dniliies = 2 [of the mradisaliand'bls Dovhood epect o cntlinln nai CLa 0 oir e [Yonune | nson's Folly.” Rarthelmess i learn. Our little wiseacres of today are no wiser nor, for that matter, [ orous truth: there s nothing phon! e T o it o e [ e e o e e | mibee National_has. bought [y hoerare o DicturoinaRvHy Mool 'Ick}wh:r han those who have preceded them. They have not yet learned for artificlal or cheanly theatrical | moro will probably sign up with Jo JORt comeity, "HUIR,Vour Hak - tHe |l teseie: ae @ ‘,,,{:.k';r,f;:,‘m;",':fl_i“l‘meh”‘_’ screen rights to “The Sheik of Flor by g, £ ‘v:u "“I\v n '.." lite. h\',)' in a few more years they will wake up. When |about it. A seph M. Schenck of United Artists. | Tnternational News Reel and a musi- | arious adventures of two ex-civilians, ida” by George F. Worts and to Leatrice Joy's next picture will L the sparkle fades from their eves and the roses, even the artificial roses, 2 ¥ .. . Buster Keaton strained sev-|cyl embellishment by the Columbia |a detective and a crook, who were |L¥Ing Truth” by Ralph Spence. screen adaptation of “The Clinging from their chesks, they will realize that after a'l age and experience js com- | It i8 Mr. Flaherty's intention, if he | eral ligaments while making a prize- | Orchestra, under Leon Brusilof. Vaianod-dnto! the s A TS hiE (i e 3 el " 4 musical comedy, hy Velda P, e B " S 3 The Warners have planned to spend | g, petent to suide vouth along a highway that will reflect joy and happi- [ 2R Bain adequate support, to make fight scene in “Battling Butler.” . . . cutie on the same day and who be- | $12 500,000 in 19257 for 34 pictures. | o' ness, and that one doesn't have to be miscrab'e to b d i |some true biographical portraits of | Comedians, as a class, are poor insur PALACE—“Behind the Front.” | come fast friends and buddies without | {ncjuding. elght specis ool B i > 1 o be good. nor sancti- | smerican life which will reflect our |ance risks. . . . Syd Chaplin’s next i g including elght specials to be made| Stan Laurel, formerly a popular nious to be nice. People today are iust as much in the making as 2 T Y BES L 0€XU | .Behind the Front.” a screen com- | a Knowledge each of the other's peace- |y Ernst Lubitsch, John Barrymore | Pathe star in two-reel comed i . . G < native existence as it is really lived, | production will be “The Better 'Ole, 3 (e CaTifi the star in two-reel comedies, has ;"“‘“"’ “‘?;‘?.““ there's a Divinity that shapes our ends, rough-hew them |not as some literary hackwriter in |thereby adding one more war picture Ed»‘t;\r tlm A ,:1" .1!.‘1‘:‘}:; F‘:g:‘x’;}de time callings. and Syd Chaplin. now hecome a director of the screen, ow we wi'l. Hollywood imagines that it is lived. | to the swelling list. of the late war in Europe, featuring | ppyoLI—“Lady Windermere's Fai = and is collaborating in the direction . “allg ; . tton 2 . Murray is to be starred by i He would like, for instance, to make | Cecil B. De Mille arrives in New | Wallace Beery, Raymond Haiton and | =, o 3 . Mae Y |of Hal Roach comedies for Pathe re- 3 3 3 4 ke 4 Saturday Lady Windermere's Fan,” Ernst | Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. s o athe r 5 % a real picture of the cowboy (a van.|York to talk business. . . . Warner | Mary Brian, and based on a Saturday L5 s 2, lease. A Rider With a Record. |[Plonship and the title of world’s best | ishing type), of the traffic policeman, | Brothers, in collaboration with the Hvening Post short story by Hugh ";g"‘g““ s P‘f‘&“‘““{'g for the War- 1. ¢ mous PN-9, historic flag plane bronco.buster” in Pendleton, Ores. | of the Kentucky mountaineer or of the | American Telephone & Telegraph Co., | Wiley. will be shown at Loew's Palace | A¢F [rog, of Th0 Be ebrated Dlay 7 | of Comdr. Rogers in the Navy's fight| That thé public likes seeing down AKIMA CANUTT, world-famous | Aat the age of 17, the American all- | Gloucester fisherman. have been conducting various mysteri- | this week, beginning this afternoon d:fi:“ Tiv ;' T;] e shown at Cran- | Sy s last Summer, was nearly | © €arth stories projected on the mov- horseman. many {imes winner of | Jround chambionship and the Cana-| It is through pictures like this that | ous experiments in a Brocklyn studio, h_orches‘ral accompani sl DAL ‘f"““‘ the first two | . "er the second time during the|iN8 picture screen is the belief of Mar- 4 LLdy dian title in his nineteenth vear, the | the movie can attain an encuring | the results of which will be announced | ment, the direction of Thomas ‘m;)s of this week, beginning this| g or'loney tor Emory Johnson's | Shall Neflan, the screen director. “Pic- national and international cowboy |same title at Pendleton, the next year, | value as a record of its time. It is|soon. . . . It is rumored that|J. Gannon: the Our Gang comedy, @ ternoon, with Irene Rich, Ronald .y "non stop Flight,” recently. % tures made of froth perhaps may be tournaments on the rodeo fields, is |and in 1921 he duplicated with speciai | being done by the news reel and by | Adelphe Menjou and David ‘Wark | “Greatcr Movies”; the Palace Maga- |Colman, May McAvoy and Bert ¥ i : | pleasing to the eye,” says Neilan. the leading man of the human cast |honors for bulldogging, and won the | the two-reel scenic film. It should be | Griffith have had somé "serious differ- | zine, including a Lyman Howe Hodge- | Lytell in the cast, sumvlen;unwd by | America, it is said, will ses Lya de | “One may easily be carried away b; e hen” the "wild horse star. in |riding championship in a big rodeo in | done also on a larger scale in the | ences of opinion during the filming of | Podge and the Pathe News reel, a new Aesop Fable, the Pathe Re- | pytij, ‘famous Hungarian screen ac-|beauty and temporarily dazzied by pi- ‘The Devil Horse,” Hal Roach’s |Chicago and the saddle champlonship | manner that Mr. Flaherty suggests. “Sorrows of Satan” at the Famous| “Behind the Front” was directed by | View and Topics of the Day, With | trees who has heen imported by Para. |gentry, but only the strain of realness fortheomi Pathe feature. lof the Southwest at F’?:'t Worth, Tex., At ttu; conclusion of lvu? mp(r‘ct Players studio here E:Iw:r-!)_lex’\;\rls;x\:i(\ f?\‘x{-. 1' : s;‘{er;; DiDO’-?lI:II Dl;ol’remlr by Ot(;) F. Beck | mount. for the firet time fn “Varietv.” | is carried away from a theater and vith Warner B e, Johne Barr (Copy L. 204G, play by Eti oherty, hased on Hugh | Continued on Fourth Page.) la picture oduced by T A, Dupont |lives be taken or left, in the order named. bia_scale of admission prices. lpr:r,m' SHAW, ‘late of the Follies, |son will start in “Fine Manners | 100 SU0 - B SO e ot |