Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
ND WOMEN IN MOTION PICTURE WORL D | _J # | $300,000. that his company spends each <l Mil‘ficle! “THE GARD ALLAH® Morc. Sensationally Stupendous Than the World-Famous Stage Version A Daring Drama of the Sahara Desert. Produced With Untold Lavishness and Extravagant Splendor NO INCREASE IN ADMISS NEW DIVORCE DRAMA illiam bree dram of those stories| shows the havoc wrought on hu- affairs by the failure to speak s though This picture will also | w how divorce affects the husband | the wife in the eyes of the warld. f s a powerful story, starting high | in the social scale and going down | p into misery, rising again to a ‘e sober level. ank Lloyd, who made “Les Miser- * “The Heart of a Lion,” “‘A Tale | one wo Cities,” and other big William ; productions, is directing the new prece picture. Two Actors. | [Pittsburgh Chronicle-Telegraph) | hortly after Raymond Hitchcock | He his first big hit in New York, hie Foy, who was also playing in | like gl happened to be passing Daly’s | sed to look at the pic- | hter, and p B2t Co . il ad Whai rather Lynch Said' recent attack of pleurisy Teft | in a rundown condition. My | ength did not return as fast as T | kired, nor did my general health | prove as it should, and a bronchial gh distressed me greatly. I con- ted my physician who recom- nded Linonine. Before I had fshed the first bottle I began to im- bve, the cough disappeared entirely i T commenced to gain in flesh and ength. Linonine has my hearty en- rsement. I recommend it to all who b in need of a builder, or who suffer m bronchial or lung troubles. REV. H. J. LYNCH, Peter's Church, Danbury, 1886-1905. Jinonine has been remedy for all forms of colds, bronchitis and wasting for many, many years. It in Father Lynch’s time, it is If coughs or colds threaten you low, or have already it will bring about a rapid hrovement, and you will be yourself Mn in a very sort time, 200k for this familiar trade-mark. stor St s best t now bring e 50, ! best | Take a Glass of Salts to I"lush | rheumatic | often get irri the most ef-! { man, cheerfully ION! " tures of Hitchcock and his that adorned the entrance. Near the pictures was a billboard covered with laudatory extracts from newspaper Fax is soon to produce a | criticisms of the show. When Foy had moodily read to the bottom of the list he turned to an un- obtrusive young man who had eye. “Say, have you seen th: asked. ‘“‘Sure,” replied the young man. “Any good? How is this guy Hitch- cock, anyhow 2" “Any good?” repeated the young man, pityingly. “Why, say, he's the in the busines; He' ot these other would-be side-ticklers lashed to the mast. He's a scream. Never laughed so much at any one in all my life.” “Is he as good as Fov?" Toy, hopefully. “As good as Foy?" The young man’s scorn was superb. ““Why, this Hitch~ show ?”” he ventured | cock has got that Foy person looking oom. The class. Hitchcock’s feelings can’t compare them. I'm sorry you asked me, I feel so strongly about it.” Iddie looked at him very sternly, and then, in the hollow tones @ ho said: ‘re not in the of “I know you id the young “I'm Hitchcock!” MEAT CAUSE OF LAME BACK AND KIDNEY TROUBLE Kid- neys If Your Back Is Aching. Noted Authority Says Uric From Meat Irritates the Bladder. Meat forms uric acid which excites and overworks the kidneys in their ef- forts to filter it from the system. 1 ular caters of meat must flush the kid- neys occasionally. You must relieve them like you relieve your bowels; re- moving all the acids waste and poison, else you feel a dull misery in the kidney regic arp pains in the back or sick dizziness, your stomach couted and when the weather bad you have twinges. The urine is cloudy, full of sediment; the channels ated, abliging you to get three times during the headache, sours, tongue is up two or night. To neutralize these irritating acids and flush off the body’s urinous waste get about four ounces of Jad Salts from any pharmac; take a table- spoonful in a glass of water before breakfast for a few days and yvour kidneys will then act fine and bladder disorders disappear This famous salts is made from the acid of grape and lemon juice combinc and has been used for genc clean and stimulate sluggish and stop bladder irritation. is inexpensive, harmless and delightful effervescent lithia w drink which millions of men and women take now and then thus avoid- ing serious kidney and bladder diseases. a ith lithia, ations to § ance. | picture, § | the Paramount picture company | been | watching him out of the corner of his | all | s funny. A man with | Acid | | CALIFORNIA CITIES WANT FATTY BADLY Roscoe “Fatty” Arbuckle is a popu- lar resident. Santa Ana and Anaheim are already competing in senting studio propositions to the comedian who is now producing the Paramount- Arbuckle comedies at the Balboa studios, Long Beach. Both cities are in Orange county in the hcart of the Southern California farming districts. It has been reported that other cities were seeking to interest Mr. Arbuckle, but up ta date the Santa Ana prop- osition has been the best. Nothing definite has been upon by either party, but it is under- stood that if Santa-Ana erects a mod- ern studio for the Comique Film cor- poration, of which Joseph M. Schenck is president and Roscoe Arbuckle, vice-president, it will cost in the neighborhood of $100,000. Fatty Arbuckle is thoroughly satis Med with studio facilities at Long | Beach, but he is not averse to con- | idering the construction of a studio | of his' own in return for the estimated is ar in the production of eight com- | The Comique Film corporation | i York controls other companies | | which, na doubt, would be sent to Cal- ifornia for big productions. Fatty Arbuckle spent his boyhood | s in Santa Ana and it was therc ade his first stage appear- There is a touch of sentiment | " the Santa Ana offer, which wa | made after the comedian made two | | personal appearances at theaters there, da t decided | reviving memor| among his old | friends and boyhaod chums. | A final proposition will be mitted to Mr. Arbuckle this week Meanwhile, it expected that A { heim will have made a definite o PARAMOUNT NEWS NOTES sub- | is Beban’s next Paramount “One More American,” lays bare the pathetic side of political rot- { and graft practiced upon eorge | | Ruth St. Denis and Ted Shawn have contributed r beautiful effects to “Wild Youth,” ar ment of a by reason of their ecial sequence of dances in which of the Denishawn artists depict vith rare skill the allegorical scenes of the play. & “Missing,” by Mrs. Humphrey Ward, is to be translated for thc en and produced for Paramount by Stuart | | Blackton. i | s | | Pauline Frederick is finishing work on “The Resurrection,” which has been adapted for the screen for Para- maunt from the story by Count & | Tolstol. i i advertising manager of the Paramount Pictures corporation, has been ap- pointed assistant general manager of I'the distribution department of the | | Famous Plavers-Lasky corporation. | Mr. Burr was formerly with the Times and the MeCall company, but for three ve S een connected with motion | pictures. i | Charles C. Burr, for the i | Fred Niblo, the well-known actor, { is soon to be married to Enid Bennett, { the delightful motion picture star in | Paramount pictures. Miss Bennett came to this country from Australia | at the suggestion of Mr. Niblo while > was touring the world. Mr. Niblo vas the husband of the late Josephine | Cohan, of the famous Cohan family. | " GOLDWYN I ANTIPODES E With the return of H: | from a special commi | Antipodes, Goldwyn Pictures | ation makes announcement of | try into an important contract for all | Goldwyn productions in Australia, | Willlamson Films, which | cinema branch of the world . C. Williamson, Ltd., theatri- tion, the most powerful enterprise of the con- | Bolster | in the corpor- | its en- rold on with lis the [ known | cal 2 { amusement tinent. This contract was effected on behalf | | of Goldwyn by Mr. Bolster with Mr. | | 1. W. Thwing, managing director of | | J. €. Williamson Films, and means | i | that Goldwyn productions at once | in entry into the Paramount. the Ltest house in Melbourne, and the Star and Victoria theaters, the | Theater Royal, the biggest amuse- ment institution of Sydney Mr. Bolster on this same trip closed | a contract of equal importance for its territory for the distribution of Gold- | wyn productions in New Zealand with | the New Zealand Picture Suplies, Ltd., | through Mr. Harry Hayward, chair- | man of the board of directors of that organization. This contract is in- clusive, besides New Zealand, of the Samoan Islands, 1%ji Islands and the WM, the William which had theater in LNID MARKEY IN “Cheating the Public,” Fox 1918 cine melodrar its premicre at the Lyric New York City and now is being shown throughout the country, is founded on one of the latest develop- ments of American life. The authors went straight to the life of the min- ute or their material. A greedy food | profitcer shown in the picture is a| {ypical figure of the class which seeks | {o turn war-time conditions to his own ends. The scenc is laid in a American factory town. The heroine Mary Garvin factory girl. Enid Markey s th part. Metro- politan critics were loud in praise of her acting they were of the pic- ture as a whole selfish typical .of this remarkable osculato: | Lawrence | and DIRECTION~ Have you yourself? That is walked right up to vourself and planted a good smack upon vour own lips Gladys Brockwell ha And she has proof because a photograph act was taken and will soon be seen in mo- tion picture theaters throughout tho countr, part of Miss Brockwell's AR MARSH'S ever kissed Stars of the screen enj terial rewards which come to stage players only after a lifetime of achievement, and then not frequently. space of time—at most but a few years—we find youngsters with in- comes formerly enjoyed only by com- manding figurs in the drama. It is not probable that Idwyn Booth, Ameri greatest actor, ever reaped the harvest of dollars which some of our screen favorites receive to4; And the achievement of Henry Irving, Barrett, Salvini, Ristori Adclaide Neilson were fraught with great financial hazards. Such conditions, however, do not trouble these film favorites of today. They receive a salary which does not fluctuate, except, perhaps, when it is increased. Winsome Mae Marsh, ar of the new Goldwyn picture, is a case in point. A slip of a girl just past twen- ty, she has an income hardly less than a bank president’s or a traction magnate's. If you will believe it, the nation’s chief executive himself is not in receipt of a salary much greater than this slim girl who enjoys the favor of the tremendous photoplay public. A4 LOVES BEAUTY % l;iv r beautiful With Jewel an who r under the question she CARMEN Tt's nd a question of looking the part. Carmen, the voung wor become a full-fledged st William Fox banne this an ever-present omne, and many hours each day harmonizing her beauty wi roundings. Dress is the fi and those who know her and those who have seen her Tale of Two Cities,” ‘“Americ: Meth- ods,” “The Conqueror,” and “When Sees Red,” in all of which Will- m Farnum starred, will testify to cxquisite taste. After dress comes her home. The color scheme is one of rare beauty in her home in Los Angeles. She has seven canaries, not because of their song so much, but becau their delicate color fitted in with Mis Carmen’s scheme of things. “I must have pretty g clared the star at her home recently “To get them requires hard work and much thought, but you can realize what happiness comes fram alwa) thinking of things beautiful. It Te flects in all one’s work, at home, abroad and on the screen. T think that we all love the beautiful, though some of us do not give it enough per- sonal consideration.” gives h her sur- t essential personall in “A KATHERINE LEE LITTLE MOTHER Katherine Lee, one of William Fox's ‘“Baby Grand” stars (her sister Jane is the other) has many lovable traits, but the dominating one is the solicitude she evinces for and the care she takes of Jane. If there ever wag a “little mother,” it is Katherine. With her Jane comes first at all times, | | ana frequently she purposely cffaces herself so Jane may get the full bene- fit of the public spotlight. She never refers to herself as a film star, but never neglects to impress upon others that Jane is a star of the firdt mag- nitude. * GLADY S BROCKWEL SANILLIAM SALARY | ARTCRAFT NEWS TIPS In a short | has | is | to the task or | | children who 35 FOX latest pl for William Fox Moral Law. In this photoplay that w under the direction of Rertram Br , Miss Brockwell appears | double in many scenes and the beauty | of it all is that the art of photography | has been advanced so far that there is no way of telling that Miss Brock- well has not a perfect doubl i produced ' en | i Elsie Ferguson is the next Artcraft star who will go to the West coas make motion pictures. ] — When Fred Stone {akes the for this season in “Jack O he will be shipped to Cali malke his first motion picture. Henry Arthur Jones’ play, “The! Lie,” has been done over for the pic- tures with Elsie Ferguson in the title role. | Hart's famous hat, | which he has given to the Red Cross| after he has worn it for thirteen years { on the stage and in Artcraft pictures, is in Washington this week. The pres- | ident will autograph the hat and then it will be on its way across the waters to get the signatures of the allied notables. When it is returned, it will be auctioned off, the money to go to the Red Cross. Thomas H. Ince has | already bid $1,000 for the hat. count ntern,” ornia to Wiliiam “The Tiger Man,” in which William S. Hart is now playving, is his fifth pic- | ture for Artcraft. He is directing the | picture himself. DeMille, who was responsible for “Joan the \Woman,” has just fin- | ished “The Whispering Choru for | | Artcraft. It's said to be a wonderful | piece of art wor Cecil Pickfor newest Arteraft | picture, “‘Amarilly of Clothes-Line Alley,” has just been finished. She will begin in a few days on the next, to be called “M’liss i DOUG FAIRBANKS' RODED | Mar Douglas Fairbanks and his cowboy | kings and cowgirl queens | Wild West of yesterday in | cisco last week for the b National ~War Camp Recreation Iund. The sun San JFrancisco smiled, and Fairbanks smiled, and the greatest of | these smiles was “Doug’s.” r when | he smiled the sun grinned, Lone Moun- tain laughed and San Francisco stood up and cheered. It was Doug San Fran- | t of the Community | Fairbanks' own Rodeq, With the cowboys and the cow- | girls, the Indians, the lariat twirlers and the ponies themselves, coming straight from his Los Angele: to help San incisco in this ‘war cause. Riding a busy little “Doug” led the grand brought the riders and “bronc bust- ers” upon the field. He wore a som- brero in his right hand and he wore the right hand in the air, where it waved back greetings ta San Francis- co’s cheer: | At “Doug’s” heels rode Dustin Far- num, “The Virginian,” and Trampus was therc, too—the original villain of I'arnum’s greatest play, Frank Cam- | peau, camouflaged as a cowboy. | Bringing up the parade were 1 boys in all the fantastic glory of the range of screen and storybook. Real range riders, some of these men were, | too-—lean, bowlegged, sunbit and more certain on horseback than on their | teet. There were cowgirls, fanta tically garbed. white pony, parade that cow- | ductions. are Georgie Stone, Virginia Lee Cor- | bin, Vialet Radcliffe, | results received. | revived the | 3 BIGGER AND BETTER VAUDEVILLE MURPHY — VAN — KENYON 1,000 Mazuma Japs CHAS. RA Is Better Than COMING ! ! ounds of Melody | Y in “The Hired Man” HALLS COMEDY PLAYERS ! ! HAUNTED ! ! On the Same Program “Way Down East,” COMING ! ! We Have Never Exaggerated in our ads.—So Now— WE TELL YOU THAT THE DMANXNMAN By Hall Caine is One of the Most Stirring Pictures Ever Filmed. JUVENILE STARS HELP MIX. Tom Mix’s next starring vehicle for William Fox is “Six Shooter Andy. It will be one of the March release: The large cast includes several of the had roles in “Jack and the Beanstalk” and similar Fox pro- Among the juvenile stars Buddie Messin- ger, Lewis Sargent, Raymond Lee, | Beulah Burns and Vivian Plank. HHELPS JEWED CARMEN. Gertrude Messinger, who will be remembered for her splendid perform- ance in ‘““Aladdin and His Wonderful Lamp,” plays one of the children of the dead miner in “The Girl With the Champagne Eyes,” in which Jewel Carmen is starred. Gertie is the lit- tlest girl in the William Fox forces and is proud of it. THEDA WANTS 9-CENT PIECE Theda Bara, the William Fox star, who has portrayed ‘Cleopatra,” “Du Barry,” ‘“Carmen,” and other well- known vampish women, has written to the secretary of the treasury in an ef- fort to hurry the re-minting of the two-cent pieces. Says Miss Bara: “Now that all newspapers are charging two cents or more, I believe the minting of two-cent pieces would greatly aid us during these busy days, especially when so many thousands of workers must hurry for trains every | @aay. A two-cent piece would be easily distinguished in our pocket money, and this, no doubt, would save mil- lians of minutes a day throughout the | country. In New York especially éo | our minutes count, there are so many | thousands of workers who are always | rushing.” HERE IS ANOTHER Miss Frances Kroeger Well Again Read What Quaker Herb Extract Did For Her If you have mot yet called on the Quaker Man at the BEconomy drug store, No. 365 Main St., you should do so at once, especially if you are suffering from rheumatism, catarrh or stomach disorders. He is here to prove to the people what Quaker Herb Extract will really do for such complaints. Already any number of | people here will certify to wonderful They have even allowed their testimonials to be pub- lished. Here is another: Miss Frances Kroeger, a young lady, was extremely nervous. The slightest noise would make her jump; she was so despos- dent that she felt like crying at all time: she/ always felt tired, in fact, she said she felt as tired when she got up In the morning as she did the night before; her hands and feet were cold; she had no desire to en- tertain or be entertained. She was told all her complaints were due to poor blood eirculation and irregu- larities to which women alone are subject. It seems the more medicine she took the worse she became and that naturally made her more ner- vous and discouraged. She finally called on the Quaker Man and ob- tained a treatment of Quaker Herb Extract. This remedy purified her blood, caused proper circulation and made ner former complaints all dis- appear. During the past week she claims to have gained 2 1-2 pounds which is remarkable for a pérson who was so completely run down she had been. She mnow praises Quaker Herb BExtract and recom- ) mends it to all. If you suffer from rheumatism, lca.mrrh or stomach troubles be surc ito call on the Quaker Man at once and learn about the Quaker He can be seen daily from 10 a. to p. m. at the Kconomy drug store, No. 365 Main street. On Saturday night he remains at the store until 9 o’clock. Call at once as crowds are growing larger daily. Quaker Herb Extract is still given free to any person afflicted with a tapeworm. This remedy will expel the worm in a few hours. This rem- edy cannot be obtained elsewhere in this city, so call at the Economy drug store, agk for the Quaker Man and get the genuine direct from the lab« oratory. ) rém- edies. m. LAST smiled, | Douglas | [d Held in Our WEEK Of the Greatest Sale Ever Line. Each and Every Article Sold at 30 Per Cent Discount. Reed Jewelry Co. 164 Main Street. - [§