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Maker of Stars. VW HAT obscure player or strugglin: | heim's direction extra will arise to the he o | tray rusc stardom by the medium of *“The Wed- Qg March,” Von Stroheim’s initial | = After years production for Celebrity Pictures? anatic stage, ( The questlon ix being asked | “discovered wherever plavers congregate in Holly- | heim. wood. Who will the talented Vien- | nese 1ift from obscurity to fame this exch of Von Stroheim'’s | had its individ been the development of imknown t: far in ow, reed.” | be hix gre but % Fuller, 3lind Hus- | 1oheim’s maiden ven torial world. which | her Austrlan fanu Gowland his which he Philbin was ture in 1 star made woth ot and then wr at | that she later 1 | Round.” | Zasu Pitts played v sout decided to | until Von Stroheim when Von Stro- | d tie actr an 1o play i(rl rina in “Greed. e Devil ass azed he leading roles | i Wives, his next picture y Wives.” one er ely followed Prince in “The Merr - | too. dorn “Fooli Miss cinematically is first work was as the “Mer the Like Miss Fuller, Gr al dis. | Work in the latter picture was Fuller's por- maid, Ma- one of the screen’s greatest per also was by Von ¢y Go Round,” junkman, in vina's d to also like Miss vas sacrificed to footage. littie Chicago girl when Von Strbheim saw in e induced Uni fc played A is now well on his way Is to put her under con- »r her the 1 in “Merry rt Go ious light roles ve her the role Roy D'Arcy had never been in & mo- and her | tion picture studio when Von Stroheim chose him for the part of the Ci wn Widow.” Ile, to star Who will be the next fortunate one? lish ed from ks to one Wiy t Dale | Will it be some nedy | plodding fruitl test [bit plaver who has n Stro- | opportur one rever had who an extra or u a real Filmograms. West cano.” “Border "he d from Third Page) | {Uie' Cruras, based on | Trail of 98, Konrad Rercovici, )f interest | elist, termed a as | lite eritics, Klondike sh. i eatergoers of every nationality has rers and gold-seekers from | JUice us il etal obe were attracted | Volga Bo | 11is othe the Lawle adventu all corners of the 1o the famous gold fields his val in Los_Angele visit to New York > stated that he | ingements with Samuel Goldwyn. whereby next Henry King production, Win ning of Barbara Worth,” will be pro- duced at the De Mille studio. This picture is for United Artists release. Upon after an exter ‘airbanks’ more recently on trice Joy's newest finished _the Ducrow,” nolds. script of Elmer Bespeaking 1 ity | Be T William K. Howard's directing of Rod La Roce \ “Red Dice,” De Mille o Howard the direction Erides,” La Rocque's These hangings times a year. Emil Offe Legior 6 program of the studio calls for a production of R “master of n e us an established screen of Bercovici ju .. “The 1so laid in Russ * ma ck ive's Leave picture, has continuity which is to star Vera Rey- He wrote continuity from the Harris Donald Crisp is to direct. Crandall’'s Metropolitan its Spring garb with a can: Baronet proscenium and e: eman of As: and “Vol De Mille a- umanian nov alism” by taken his ter, The st been filmed. Law of ow an on Dy Pirat iglas and 3 just on_ “Sunny and Beulah as donned colored lobbies. changed four ociated Exhib- th ntracts have been signed with John rman for the production of four { special features, the first picture being a heart interest drama entitled “Home, Sweet Home,” suggested by Paine's immortal song. One of the largest and most pl turesque ranches in Southern Califc nia is serving as a location for the pro- duction of “The Galloping Cowboy, the first of the Bill Cody features to be presented by Western Star Produc- tions anda Hawl Anne Cornwall, :th Hughes, Tom Santschi ar n Mason have been engaged to re- port at the Tacoma studio of the H. C. Weu Productions to start filming b 2 Totem Pole Begg: * under the direction of W. §. Van Dyke. Since the consolidation of the Cran- dall theaters with the Stanley Com- | pany of America, with Harry M. Cran {dall as executive vice president and | divector here, the newly formed com- { pany is expanding. The new Colony, on Geory avenue, will soon be ready and a new 2,000-seat house is to be erected in Frederick, Md., while in Baltimore the Academy and the Boule- d theaters have been acquired at a st of §2,000,000, and in Martinsburg, Vi, the Apollo and the Strand ve been acquired. A new group in oanoke, Va., also is in contempla- | tion, and all will be conducted and di- | rected from the executive offices in Washington W special children’s programs at . conducted by Mrs. Harriet Locher of the Crandall service ional department _close morning with Jackie Coo he Rag Man,” but will be re- sumed October 3 Taking a fall down flight of 14 step times before the d is Bebe Daniels’ | morning’s work in lad it for one scene in M ster's Millions.” leisurely the movies. She . Brew- Some wonderful photoplay of the Yale-Princeton game at W t Fall are pictured in “The y.” " And Gloria is shown “‘shots™ razzin the Princeton stand and rooting for Yale. ‘s character of Kathe- 'he Taming of the Shrew" el, the spoiled who is imper- sonated by Gloria Swanson in “The Untamed Lady.” When her flance ob- jects to her mode of appearance at a dinner party she throws his engage- t ring in his face and‘nearly runs r him in her roadster leaving the ughter THE SUNDAY STAR, 'W;\SHINGT N, D. €, MARCH 28, 1926—PART 3.. Eastertide Programs (Continued from Fifth Page.) Friday there will be 20 minutes of or- gan music. The list includes composi- tions by Guilmant, Ferrata, Tschal- Kow Dethier, Biggs, Harker, @'Evry, Youferoff, Dubois and Bossl. The quartet choir of Calvary Methodist Church under the direction of Julla Culbreth Gray, will present special programs today, Good Friday and Easter, The program of music today at the Georgetown Presbyterian Church will include: Morning, Netta Craig, so- prano; Helen McLeod Cliff, contralto; William Fowler, organist. Organ pre- 3 mant); “The (Faure), soprano; “He Was 4" * (Handel), the contralto; “Sortie” (Guilmant), organ. Evening, same soloists with, additionally, Wal- ter Frick, tenor, and Horace Lake, baritone. *“Andantino,” organ prelude; “Berceuse,” organ offertory; cantata, “Olivet to Calyary™ (Maunder), by the quartet, and “Grand Choeur,” organ vosgtlude. At 11 am. today at Ryland M. Church, the cholr, sted by Dr. G. Harris White, baritone, will sing selections from tk “The King of Glo The soprano_ solo, 3 Parker, will be sung by Mrs. Smith Lankford. Faure's “Palms” will be sung by Dr. White. The others par- ticipating include: Grace Biddle, telle Belt, Silby Coope < s, Berkeley T , Ada Spenc rnow and Vernon Ruppert. Mrs. Lankford will sing “From the Garden to the Cross Alone” by L. Z. Phillips; the soprano and alto duet will be_*Alone in Ge- thsemane,” sung by Mrs. Odell and Mrs. Thompson. ; C. Brewer is the organist and Mrs. Milton L. Odell is the cholir director. 30 o'clock, the rine -of the Sacred Rossini’'s “Stabat se Sullivan at This evening quartet of the Heart will sing Mater” with Mary I the organ and as director. The solo- ists are Mabel Latimer, soprano; Hazel Arth, contralto; Robert O'Lone, tenor, and William Cross, bass, Good Friday at the three-hour serv- ice “The Seven Last Words" by Dubois will be sung The choir of St. ) pal Church will sing Maunder’s - tata, “Olivet to Calvary,” this after. noon at 4:30, with organ and instru- mental accompaniment. The solofs on this o on will be el rgaret's Donnell, soprano; W. W. Gantz, tenor; Richard N. McCarteney, baritone; D. B. MacLeod, organist and choirmaster, and Dore Walten, cellist, ‘The choir will sing “The Palms” at the morning service. Departing from the custom of the past several years in singing “The Atonement” at Eastertime, the Mount Vernon Chorus, under the direction of R. Deane Shure, will sing Dubois’ “Seven Last .Words of Christ” this year. This difficult work is sung rather less frequently than the ma- Jority of the Kaster cantatas and re- Qquires a large chorus for the proper development. of its climaxes. The assisting soloists will be Loulse Charlton, soprano; Bernhard Spille, tenor: John L. Mitchell, tenor; Howard P. Baliley, baritone, and James P. Schick, basso; Mrs. Frank A. Frost will be at the organ. The cantata will be sung twice, first on Good Friday night at 8 o'clock and again on Easter Sunday night at 8 o'clock. The vested cholr of Gunton Temple Presbyterian Church, under the direc. tion of John George Klein, with Mrs. Klein at the o n, will sing the open- ing chorus of “Olivet to Calvary" to- day &t the morning service. Florence sindell, soprano, will sing “The Palms.” Special music by the quartet will be a feature of the afternoon service be- ginming at 4:30. The personnel of the quartet is: Florence Sindell, soprano; Edna Darnell Shacklett, contralto; John George Klein, tenor, and Fred East, baritone. The cholr will render Maunder’ “Olivet to Calvary” on Thursday evening at 8 o'clock. Good Friday, at St. Peter's Church, the three-hour service will be held, beginning at noon. The’ meditations and discourses will be given by Rev. George Gi. Murdock, a United States Navy chaplain. The junior choir of 50 mixed voices, Christopher Tenley. organist and director, will sing ““The Seven Last Words” by Dubois, with Ruth Peter, soprano; Mary Apple, con- tralto; Thomas A. Cantwell, tenor, and Herman Fakler, baritone, as sololsts. The choir will also give a special pro- gram on Easter morning at the 7 o'clock service. The Palm Sunday program of Ver- mont Avenue Christian Church choir today will be: MORNING. Chorus, “Ride On". Soprano solo. “The EVED Jerusaleny .. Reeso aquartet. “List to co”. .. . Hi Braithwaite is the director, . C. Grimes, organist, and the olo octet is composed of: Mrs. B. D. Shreve, soprano; Mrs. Henry Little- field, soprano; Mrs. F. M. Shore, ce! Miss Mabel McCalip, contralto; B ‘Thomas P. Chorus, Ladie W, Russell, tenor; R. I. Harmon, bari- tone; Marion Kiess, bass. The choir of Epworth Methodist Church, under the leadership of Her- bert I. Aldridge, will sing Stainer's “Crucifixion” this evening at 8§ o'clock. The solo parts-will be sus- tained by Artie Faye Guilford, so- prano; C. Marbury Seaman, bass; W. Carmeron Burton, bass, and Mr. Al- dridge, tenor. Edwin Moore is the organist. The choir of Emmanuel Church, Thirteenth and V streets southeast, Anacostia, will sing the cantata “Olivet to Calvary,” by Maunder, Wed- nesday in Holy week, at 8 o'clock. The guest soloists will be A. Harlen Castle, Raymond Fillius, in the tenor solos, and Charles ¥. Roberts, bari- tone. At the offertory Alice Elsie Edwards, contralto, who is also a guest solofst, will sing “When I Sur- vey the Wondrous Cross,” the setting by Sidney Bishop. Music today at tl urch will include o First Baptist 11 a.m.—Organ, (Verdi); anthem, " (Faure); tenor solo, Mr. C. Williams, “Repent Ye' (Scott); anthem, “Jerusalem” (Parker); postlude, “Gloria” (Mozart.) 8 p.m. —Organ, “March Funebre” (Cho’ pin); cantata ‘“Crucifixion” (Stain- er), tenor solos by Floyd Williams, bass solos by Charies W. Moor®; prgan postlude, “March From Olivet to Calvary” (Maunder). The cholr is composed of Myra Marks, soprano; Mabel Flehr, con- tralto; Floyd Williams, tenor; Charles W. Moore, bass. Special Easter music in morning. In evening the cantata, “Light Out of Darkness” (Geikl), under direction of Mabel Linton Wiiliams, organist. daiiio g One Way to Treat VTlrmn. From the Pittsburgh Chronicle-Telegraph. ““The way to treat cubism and dada- ism and super-realism and all the other catch-penny fads is to laugh at them,” sald Pene du Bois, the art critic, at a dinner in New York “A super-realistic painter was an exhibtion. He buttonholed dressed chap—a good prospect, as they say in the business world—and led him up to a picture and began: ““This will show you, old man, the thing I'm after. We super-realists, you see, strive for the purgation of the superfluous; we paint esoterically and not exotically, portraying nothing but the aura or inner urge. Do you follow me?" ““Follow you?" said the prospect, ‘Gosh, I'm ahead of you. I came out of the bughouse last Monday.” Musigraphs. (Continued from Fifth Page.) bert Huybrechts of Brus for his string quartet submitted to the jury, the members of which were Frederick Jacobi, Alfred Hertz and Louis Persin- ger. This prize-winning quartet will have its original performance by mem- bers of the Chamber Music Soclety of San Francisco at the last concert of the Ojai Valley Festival of Chamber Music, April 16, 17 and 18. Edith Miller Haring, soprano, re- cently returned from New York, where she has been studying. Martin Richardson, noted operatic tenor, will be the visiting artist this evening at the dinner concert at the Mayflower. As leading tenor at the Royal Opera at Florence, Italy. and in a concert tour of the Continent Mr. Richard- son won an enviable European repu- tatlon. He has also appeared on concert tour with Schumann-Heink, Calve, Amato,’ Morgana, Jordan and other noted artists. Mr. Richardson is the pupil of Commendatore Vincenzo Lombardi, who was also the teacher of Caruso, Calve and Scotti. The Spencer Tupman Symphony Orchestrawill present a program of carefully selected music in con- Junction with Mr. Richardson’s ap- pearance. Included in this excep- tionally interesting program are “Scheherezade” (Rimsky-Korsakoff), selections from “Manon” (Massenet), “Hungarian Dance No. 1" (Brahms), from “Gollescas” (Gran- ados), and “Where My Caravan Has Rested” (Lohr). The Kimball Quartet, composed of Fannie Shreve Heartsill, soprano; Helen Marie Koontz, contralto; Charles E. Myers, tenor, and Francis P. Heartsill, bass, has been engaged to sing the mass Easter Sunday morning at 9 o'clock at the services to be held in the Knights of Columbus Hut, at the Walter Reed Hospital. They will be assisted by an orchestra of six pleces and by Mrs. Albert J. Gerrer at the organ. » The Imperial Male Quartet (W. Ar- thur McCoy, first tenor; George E. Anderson, second tenor; J. Benton Webb, baritone, and Francis P. Heart- sill, bass and director) has been en- gaged to sing every Sunday morning at the A. B. Pugh men's Bible class of the Sunday school of the Mount Ver- non Place M. E. Church South. This 13 - [anartet, which atngs regulasty at botss morning and evening services at the Metropolitan Memorial M. E. Church, has given a number of concerts and entertalnment programs in the last tew weeks and is becoming more and more widely known as one of the city's most popular male quartets, The regular soloists of the Mount Pleasant M. k. Church South (Fannie hreve Heartsill, soprano, and Helen Marie Koontz, contralto) will be assist- ed at both morning and evening serv- ices Easter Sunday by John W. Mar- tyn, tenor, and Edwin Callow, bass, Nancy Alice Lowe will be at the or- gan. The students’ Tecital at the George- town Visitation Convent presented last Sunday featured solos by the fol- lowing: Margaret Carey, contralto; Maribelle Wallick and Eleanor Borg- meier, harplsi Joley Crawford, Sarah s, Mary Hayden, Elise lyn Carlston and Farlan, planists. The chorus sang Irish airs, under the direction of Theresa K. Hubner, with Miss Borgmeier at the harp and Mary Ahern at the piano. Later Victor Herbert's “Italian Street Song" was sung by the Philharmonic G. Club in chorus, with Mary Stewart Allan, violinist, and Miss, Borgmeler at the harp. The personnel of; the Glee Club, of which Mrs. Hubner is director and Miss Ahern is accompanist, includes Mary ~Ahern, Mary Stewart Allan, Margaret Bennett, Eleanor Borgmeler, Margaret = Carey, Mary Catherine Corgan, Isabel Carbajal, Helen Dapray, Anne Duffy Alice Marfe Dohany, Virginla Harley, Kath- Norma McNair, Mary n, Helen O'Connor, Dorothy O'Donnell, Helena O'Neill, Helen Scott Reilly, Angela Sullivan, ‘Theresa Sosnows Nanclanna Wal- lick, Maribelle Wallick, Katherine ‘Whitfield and Rosemary Whitfield. Sriatenid i et Navy Band Orchestra. HE program Wednesday at 7:30 o'clock at the Band Auditorium, Marine Barrac Eighth and I streets southeast, by the United States Navy Band Orchestra, Charles Benter, lead- er, will be ch, ‘Slaver chaikowsky Flotow Lake om the “Strin Joachim Ro! of Love." ( he s Sweetheart.” Excerpts_from— “The . -Offenbach-Funneke .Fetras Secreis he Star Spangled Hanner. Chrysler “70” Roadster, $1625, f.0. b. 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Eetablished 1912 : 1727 Connecticut Avenue North 9860 DEALERS Motor Co. Barton Motor Company Agnew Clarendon, Va. Roe H. B. LEARY, JR 1612 You St. Branch Sales Room—Connecticut Ave. and Q St. ockvills, Md.