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14 NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, MAY 10, '1918. INTIMATE NEWS OF MEN AND WOMEN IN M OTION PICTURE WORLD | Today and FOX’ S Tomorrow SHOULD A WOMAN BE DOWNED FOR ONE GLADYS BROCKWELL 5 ‘HER ONE MISTAKE” 538 Story of the Unwritten Law FOX'S§ SEF § MISSTEP? A Dramatic New Sunshine Comedy—HIS YNEIGHBOR'S KEYHOLE Episode No. 3 THE WOMAN IN THE WEB MUTT and JEFF PATHE NEWS SUNDAY NIGHT WITHOUT A COUNTRY "THE MAN Based on Edward EverettHale's Famous Stol of Lieutenant Philip Nolan, U. S. A.,, Who “Damned the United States T Hope I Never Hear of Tt Again’—He Lived 40 Years and He Never Did. COMING—THURS.—FRIL—SAT. INTOLERANCE Grifiith’s Wonder of the Age. ly, are consumed by jealou In the latest comedy a whole den of lions n the Paramount-Mack Sennett|takes part. The lions almost took edy, ‘“Those Athletic Girls,” a/part of the leading man, too. Glen le gymnasium full of beautiful| Cavender had a narrow escape when Mens will be seen. And they are|one of the beasts went bad, but the young—every one under 21. Anditwo familiar animal actors only h is a hcalthy, out-of-door girl: all | sniffed disdainfully. m and nearly all ride well. They | e an entire building at the Sennett fo as their dressing room. It is like the dormitary at a girls’ sem- ¥. Mostly Ouija boards, chewing gum. Speaking of Teddy, the ¢ |in “Those Athletic Girls,” a mount-Mac Sennett comedy, Vera Stedman rides him cowboy fashion m pursuit of a heroine in distre: It was no small feat to keep the saddle, | as Teddy went downstairs at a gallop, romance AVES WOMEN | but Vera, who can ride a bucki { broncho and is an all-round athlete, | never uttered a complaint. Tt is a FROM TORTURE | genuinely funny burlesque scene. | = = | 1In the same picture there is a gym b touchy i |=cene and an indoor hasehall game. On a Tew drops on a touchy i the nine were five girls who had played on teams at college. One was { from Vassar, one from Wellesley and thres from Middle-Western colleges corn, then lift corn out with fingers 1 | MOVIE OPERATORS WANTEDBY Y. M.C.A. Willing Bu{”lrné;(i);rienced Me—1 e clianics o Little Value | one of the mast 1t activities which | s undertaken at the vernment. The vol- ators in the | administration of and impor anization he of the motion picture ope the or reque unteer various camps and cantonments just | | cannot help thrawing screw drivers | into the projection mach It re- | quires exactly 48 supervisors, travel- | {ing from camp fo camp, to prevent these small articles from interfering reatly with the unreeling of more than 7,000,000 feet of film a week. 5 miles of film a week sxactly I, | at the last computation—arve flashed | jupon the Y. M. C. A. screens of the ! United States for soldiers. On the average there is one movic theater for lonc-h unit of 000 or 5,000 fighting ! {men. In the great majority of these | | iheaters the operator is an enlisted | | man who may have been an operator, | | but more likely is equipped with train- ing in the handling of electrical ap- pliances and has been assigned to the task of being a ationary engineer ou | projection machine | One of the first things he wants to | R TR _ do, apparently, is to get acquainted % with his apparatus. He finds screw l / wants to know what will happen if he | | takes it out and generally sends a | . i hurry call for the supervisor to come and restore the machine to its narma condition. | There’s a great demand at the Y. M C. A. for experienced operators—men | who know every part of the machines, | how to adjust and repair them and | how to cut and assemble film. The government's military establishment growing so fast that even such a flex- | ible arganization as the Y. M. C. A. | having difficulty in meeting the de- | mands which the War department has | placed unon it. The experienced op- erators and mechanics are wanted for overseas, the o at in where the fighting ! men are rips with the enemy. The requirements there are more ! camps | | | i | exacting than those which any motion | | { service just | back of picture mechanical expert ever has been called to meet. He may be far | from any divisional headguarters and ! of supplies. He may be re- DIRECTIO | source quired #o reconstruct a machine that S - i 5 s GLADYS BROCKWELIL - WILLIAM FROX » SRR A\ \ L shown at Fox's tion, next Thursday, Friday this capacity in having appeared in ur high heels have put corns on | “Ma” La Varnic, a comedienne 1t | has been dismantied by shell shock. o ’ TOMORR toes and calluses on the bottom | 64, is the “fixer” at the Paramount- | A. G. Knebel, of 124 Fast Twenty- S ST OO RO ur feet, but why care now? | Mack Sennett comedy studios. She ar- | cighth street, New York City, execu- | — = i - r a few cents you can get a quar- | bitrates all the little tiffs between the | tive seeret of the War Per | unce of the magic drug freezone | tails of costuming and hair dressing. i Board of the Y. M. (. A., is re [ “INTOLERANCE” —— ! IVIETRO STUDH’ SNAPS ntly discovered by a Cincinnati | She is first aid to the injured, physi- | large force of experts for ser | | i us. {cally and mentally. overseas. Men of draft age who can- | i ; ¥ AR AN ply a few drops upon a tender, | AR ! not sty their desire to enter tha| DUMAS PLUS GRIFFITH | : ; , Ing corn and instantly, yes im- | ~ 3 . { combat sections of the natien’s service | Lo N | o e I ol il ately, all soreness disappears and | UEADING MAN INJUREI: | because of pronounced disability will | | Bastravitsieyusyinrincensdn e new Iy you will find the corn so loose | An example of the unforescen difii- | be considered by the Y. M. C. A for! 1t s no hald and unconvincin ‘juj::_”’w"]‘1“‘\'“"‘;;'E ‘m‘l‘]"’; '({“""‘"}"\“‘_ you lift it out, root and all, with | culties which always confront a film- | service not far from where the shells| gtatement of facts that David Grif-: xomadic rac Sl B fingers. | maker is afforded in the mews that |are exploding and the shrapnel fith shows one in “Intolerance”. What thoroughness she studied them s st think! Not one bit of pain be- | Bertram Grassby, well-known leading | shrieking. Any man over the draft| ' puy donc is to commingle truth | me ieforness She studied them and in applying freezone or afterwards. | man, was injured while a picture in [age will be accepted on proof of his|ijin poetry. o RREASOn "{i\'f T ',1 oo esn’t even ate the surround- | Which he w s in the | qualificatio f 3 Whether he takes onc to the 11,111.:1:”“,“,,‘“(“ ‘,‘.r“(h, :\, ‘L',.,,H fe Xin, making. Gr ying oppo- | A million feet of film is being used | ;¢ ‘ancient Babylon, to the highways| . o o SIS rd corns, soft corns or corns be- | Site Gladys Brockwell in “The Scar- | every week in France. Most of 1t 15 | 2ng Lyways ot Jerusalem, or 10 the | Emmy Yehlen the Metro star. who n the toes, also hardened calluses | let Road,” a William Fox feature. The | new stuff. too, and the expert needn't | prench scenes of other davs and | g mow aphearine in a pictoriostion of ttom of feet just seem to shrivel | accident that befell him necessitated | be afraid of getting out of touch with| pogern town in our United Stat Ll e Sl e z | ey ; ; i i Sl Kenneth L. Roberts’ Saturday Evening nd fall off without hurting a |the substitution of Charles Clary in | his profession while serving hisipis methods have the same beguiling Pog stor Ko Shell A cle. Tt is almost magical. It is a | his role and the re-photographing | country | charm. b et I ound made from ether, says a | (With Clary in the part) of all scenes | = And everywhere they teach the self- e : Tal Sieeh 2 s i which{Gr: : JANE WAS AFRAID, ; : g self- | quisite }mmy amply upholds her es known druggist here. |in which Grassby had been same lesson, showing the evil of cruel- | tablished reputation by appearing in — R - — While in Jacksonville, Florida, not, ty, the beauty of charit e ot Ny 15teat modele niiFashion long ago, completing the final scenes Though he has not allowed 100!y her forthcoming Metro screen play. o in “American Buds,” Jane Lee heard; prominent a place in his great spec- | = C. | of the fuel shortage in New York, | tacle for his French story as for his | A % | where she lives, and was told that|tale of Babylon, Mr. Grifith has| Babby Connelly, who mak his : < | their apartment had been closed be- | treated it with the most loving care. | Metro debut in “Gas Logic,” 5 Metro- Footwear AN cause of no heat. i Dumas, old Dum: might have ' Drew comedy, is again suppofting M 4 SO Nl | “Gee!” said the William Fox i guided the American producer as he and Mrs, ew in a new comedy, FOR \) “Baby Grand,” “T left my doll home | planned his pitiful romance of Brown- | Youthful i aphicni SOl (Lo § and I just know she’ll have pneu- | s, and framed her innocence in the ' duction bhy's xh‘r» best kid in LGS 232 5 monia. Why didn't I think to bring | great tragedy of the Huguenots. As | tur enthusiastically exclaimed Mr Fastidious FolKs AN s e S e e L b 3 T e ticipated the creator of “Intolerance” ! year old ‘m»\m- left. the T»:l “Tt s @ i o o he most thri n of his | Pleasure to work with tha oy ne $ 50 : BREAKFAST GOWN IN I:mk':e “Lfa, &]}k\“mo“m;:‘r‘1!| wish we had a part for him in every The scenes shown in the French | comedy we produce. COTTON GEORGETTE | chapters of “Intolerance” are as com- | e 4 | pelling as Dumas’ narrative. and, of | T Fha 5 i - = <o | Now that Viola Dana has thorough- 7 | Sonrag e more Nivio. s ANlat U el vl dtetan iftive Wby Wbronicho 1 only in the mind's eve Folrea |y e ol S e R ey You will find YOUR b mevel yeu mow aciially behiold ‘v“)o‘:t‘r: whe "tvn‘lr Jon be seen in Met- Shoes here-All Styles | S A el | l‘fl'\’ : 3]1“‘\ l”/ V\ll()YI of Myrtle H;f‘(( s [l carried—Conserva- o | You almost live with the unfor-|ge" L \“ e e poc tive, In-Between ! I'funate Hisuenats thronght the iinol- | AMoMs Stany, s Seayen CLEDESEIS, s and Extreme. o | | dents of the historic massacre of St. | ®hjoving horseback riding. —As soon | Bartholomew. You hear the bell that A48 her mount '](,\.“L“'\‘,” 1“”;' o ¢ g T {‘Bavai thetsignal for the trazedy; as)it || “pesd, NMiolajdediaes thati ahe Swill e H | Sways to and fro in the belfry of st. | challenge her friend Edith Store = | Germain VAuxerrois. You watch | e & | the awakening of the victims and their | {strn:;’los as they are butchered hv | Beverly Bayne, co- ith Franc their enemies. The first to go is Ad- | X. Bushman in Metro pictures, is miral Coligny. the great statesman, | popular heroine iwith many hoys of Newark Shoes | | who aroused Queen Catherine's j ' Uncle n's Army and Navy be for B | ousy! kg | of the mauy worsted sweaters, wrist- or boys, | The Duc d’Anjou. though no less | lets and helmets she distributed $2.50—8$3.50 i { responsible than King Charles IX | among the defenders of the nation. Would $8 buy a more beauti- | and the Queen for Coligny's death, | All these articles were made by patri- ful style than this anywhere? ! Mosher tells us in his memoirs thal | otic peaple with' wool supplied by Miss Handsome gun metal combination % he and Catherine were so terrified | Bayne. When the articles are made “English” and Custom last; broad | when they heard the first shot fired 'they are sent to the Metro star and flat heels, invisible eyelets. “Classy” is 1 | in the street that they sent a gentle- she in turn sends them to government the word! A wonderful value. C1 man at once, with all haste, to M. de | gistribution stations. Teiothe shoae | Guise, to bid and command him ex- E enabl < us > offer you in NEWARK Shoes at $3.50 the greatest i | be very careful to take no steps: pray Allison is now a star in her value : t .1 ir price in AMERICA. | [eealangifnogadmizal; own right, and will be started in Met- Why pay $1 to $2.50 more per pair for shoes not one iota (i U TN G, i I- Series picture This better in quality, not one whit more beautiful in style ? i 1 :‘;“‘;‘f‘l:'\“";““"? 1‘”“ late to stop the \rming plaver, who is adored by the 257 Stores in 97 Cities—the World's Biggest Shoe Business. | | " The whole spectacle of “Intoler- hetosn Do sl | oY | ance” is a romance, of the most! S sl T | fascinating kind: now grave and; .. I Albert Capellani will 'eo | tender, as in the story of the Nazarene | 5050 (PG O \ A . ! and the woman taken in adultery now | i3 S i | tragic as in the cpisodes which deal | e et } Men's and Women's Swore in New Britain | with the Huguenots, now melodrama- | Tanny Cosan Rad becq CHSSER 1o 24 MAIN ST, Opposite K. R. Crossing. | tic as in the Babvlonian narrative and | PIaY T8¢ FOr0 O Ao, M Metro's Open Monday and Saturday — Nights. \ 14k e el "M”"tp("';‘\:‘mn of Kenneth L. Roberts' 257 Stores in 97 Citice Hletia 1A Al AL i anil pratiy Dron) “Intolerance” is more thrilling than j Ricturization o= -= P, T o : P ¥ S twenty romances, and as instructive Saturday Evening Post stor e AL ] fast gown in cotton georgette. But- | [T 5 (o o0 lihrary. and will be | Shell Game” Mrs. Cogan is a well- D) i i 9 l tons and cord supply the ornamenta- | o5 & - W P known portraver of “society mothers,” and Saturday. | | | VAUDEVILLE “DREAMLAND”—Napoleon and Kitchener Back to Life ALEXANDER and FIELDS GEORGIA EMMETT Two Aristocratic Hoboes Classy Singing and Dancing CLEAN PICTURES ONLY ! ! BE SURE YOUR CHILDREN GO TO THIS THEATER VIVIAN MARTIN IN A Story of a Little News Girl Who Achieved Fame by Modeling You'll Like Tt. a New Style Giocom Chaser. “THE TROUBLE BUSTER” BURTON HOLMES TRAVELS YUM! PINEAPPLE TO THE YUM! HOME OF THE YUM! COMING! “THE RE] SUN DAY ONLY! TAKING OF A NATION” COMING! T WAR ACTIVITIES OF THE D. A. R. (Organization Busy in Many Fields of Patriotic Endeavor “The establishment of mending bu- reaus, started by the Daughters of the American Revolution, is a growing work,” said Mrs. W. H. Wait, chair- man of publicity, at a recent meeting of the organization in Washington, I, . “Masgsachusetts was the first to establish such bureaus, and Michi- gan followed with a headquarters at | Camp Custer. Their work has been recogn the commanding officers of the army. i | i | | | [ | 1 | | | & i chapter sup “All articles are brought to the bu- reau tagged and are not called for b: the men personally, the idea being to spare . them any embarrassment. attention, and the only requirement is that undergarments be freshly laun- dered. The work is financed by all the The Battle Creek the work, the nea by chapters taking charge on certain American chapter d The Daughters have been asked by the military authorities to estab- Jish two other bureaus in different parts of Camp Custer.” Cure For Howmesickness. “A homesick soldier is not a brave soldier,” averred Maj. Gen. Glenn, in an address before the Ohio State char ter of the Daughters of the American Revolution. “This organization,” said Mrs. E. E Harris, State regent, “offered its ser ices to Camp Sherman and asked to be used where it was most needed. Tt was recommended to the committee on Training Camp Activities, and very soon the word came: ‘A lodge for the boys and their visitors at Camp Sher= man is needed. Can you undertake it? We did. We not only put up a lodge, it at the disposal of the men. “The lodge was always busy. One day a family party of 18 came to us with their baskets of sandwiches, and said: ‘May we use a room to camp in? We gave them a room with an open fire, and after supplying coffee left them to themselves. When we re- turned few hours later we learned that two of the boys had been called while they were at luncheon to sail. It was, a§ Maj. Gen. Glenn had said, ‘GGood for the men to have a home to remember’ when they sailed.” Have Shopping Committee. The soldiers and sailors from the camps around Norfolk find fast friends in the Daughters of the American Revolution. Miss Alethea Serpell, in telling of the work, said “We have sailors as well as soldiers, and we do every: thing to make them both welcomc sts in our homes. The convalescing soldiers are taken for motor trips. A group of the Daughters have consti. tuted , themselves a shopping com- mittee for the boy Of course, bes sides this we have dances and Sun- day ‘sings’ and make garments. Our idea to adapt ourselves to leisure time of the men and them feel our interest in them.” make Conserving the Yarn Supply. To do away with the manufacture of colored yarn by increasing the de- mand for gray and khaki is the aim of the campaign to conserve yarn re cently inaugurated by the Daughter of the American Revolution. Mrs. Henry W. Wait, telling of the support of Ithel Barrymore and Mmec. Petrova under the Metro banner. Anita. Snell, the “Montessori baby.” who made her screen debut with Francis X. Bushman and Beverly Bayne in “Man and His Soul,” is play- ing Jeanette opposite Bobby Connelly, in support of Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Drew in a new Metro-Drew comedy. This picture, entitled “A Youthful Af- fair,” was suggested by Arthur Irving Rothapfel. v kind and type of article receives | but we furnished it and placed | the ! decision reached by the organization, gaid: “Every woman is asked not to use knitted or crocheted flowers or | woel embroideries; not to own mogre than one sweater, nor to knit one for another woman who already has one; to conserve yarn in knitting children’s toques and to kéep it for the use of i the army and nav, | “This conservation,” Mrs. Walt continued, “will in no way curtail the | business of merchants, as calls for | gray and khaki will take the place | of the demand for brilliant-colorea yarn, - | i | i | i i Service Flag For Women. A flag for women in war service af home and abroad is desired by thé Daughters of the American Revolus tion. At their recent annual assembly in Washington a resolution was passed to petition congress for such a flag, its distribution to be put in the hands ot the proper authorities and not to be controlled by a private agency. The flag is to be white with a coloyy- nial-blue border, bearing a Ted star for a woman serving abroad and a blue star for a woman serving In the United States. This flag is designed for women giving their whole time to | government service. It includes Red Cross nurses, canteen workers, Y. W. C. A, ¥. M C A, Y. M IHEAS { Knights of Columbus, and all other | recognized organization workers; as well as yeomen and members of Tospital corps FOR SALE with city water, Suburban Home the electric lights, hardwood finish, ‘all in best repair; two lots, each 50x150. H. N. LOCKWOOD, Real Estate and Insurance Cit: © | i | | Hall IF YOU DESIRE A | ROSY COMPLEXION IT [l — ‘ || says We Can’t Help But Look | Better and Feel Better ‘ H After an Tnside Bath I | | | - To look one's best and feel one’s best is to enjoy an inside bath each morn- ing to flush from the system the pre- vious day’s waste, sour fermentations and poisonous toxins before it is ab- sorbed into the blood. Just as coal, when it burns, leaves behind a cer- tain amount of incombustible material in the form of ashes, so the food and drink taken each day leave in the ali-= mentary organs a certain amount of indigestible material, which if not eliminated, form toxins and pofsons which are then sucked into the blood through the very ducts which are in- tended to suck in only nourishment to sustain the body. If yvou want to see the glow of healthy lloom in your cheeks, to see your skin get clearer and clearer, you are told to drink every morning upon, arising, a glass of hot water with a teaspoonful of limestone phosphate in it, which is a harmless means of wash- ing the waste material and toxins from the stomach, liver, kidneys and , thus cleansing, sweetening and ng the entire alimentary tract, , before putting more food into ! stomach. | Men and women with sallow skins, liver spots, pimples or pallid com- plexion also those who wake up with a coated tongue, bad taste, nasty | breath, others who are bothered with headaches, bilious spells, acid stomach ipation should begin this phos- hot water drinking and are assured of very pronounced results in one or two weeks. | " A quarter pound of limestone phos- | phate costs very little at the drug | store but is sufficient to demonstrate that just as soap and hot water cleanses, purifies and freshens the skin on the outside, so hot water and limestone phosphate act on the inside organs. We must alw consider that internal sanitation is vastly more im- portant than outside cleanliness, be< { cause the skin pores do not absorb impurities into the blood, while the bowel pores do. | or cons phated the _