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Home of “100% Pictures ‘ Home of the Pathe News in his novel story . ofa - lumberjack Tonight and Tuesday—Last Times (BIG BILL HART which Bill learns to dance, wears a dress suit, shocks society and wins a girl! WALLACE on the WURLITZER _ Playing “Sometime, Somewhere,” by Gerald Arthur ‘ PLEASED - QUICK RESULTS witehhagel,| ville, the w as mixed in| don homestead, man’s eyes the ground, th notorious we . a = |“GHOST” HOUSE BURNS|BRUNTON STUDIOS ARE SAYVILLE DEPOT, L. L, Nov. with the|!7—The oldest landmark in Say- historic Gor- been burned to It belonged jointly to could not| the estate of the Inte banker, Jamesiang a sow which played in “The plications | T. Wood, who was associated with | defaulting banker, | DESTROYED BY FIRE LOS ANGELES, Cal, No, 11-— “Seotty,” Airedale dog. who appeared Dahayad Mary Pickford tn “Pollyanna,” World Loves the Irish,” were burned greatly helped by | Robin, when Wood placed the prop- | eath yesterday In @ $15,000 fire to help ANY /an, ers of an incendiary nature, ITS LAST. DAYS ARE HERE George Loane Tyee heompessite Motion ‘Miracle Man’ } Will stay until Friday Night, so that the multi- | tudes thus far unable to get in may have a ) chance to see it. NIGHTS, AFTER.6 Lower Floor and Lower Balcony ...... Upper Balcony . Children All Prices Plus War Tax STRAND AUGMENTED ORCHESTRA under Wineland, accompanying the picture ND tee a small|erty in the name of a strange wom-|at the Frunton movie studios. | whose whereabouts are un- | The sow was suffocated after she or rier on feral This ghostly dwelling was eserves te anewer te Many OTST" lene about Half of bet Sitter of pies had carried from the burning build GIRLS! DRAW A MOIST CLOTH THROUGH HAIR Let “Danderine” save you: hair and doufle its beauty Ob, girls, such an abundance of thick, heavy, invigorated hair; a per. | fect mass of wavy, silky hair, glor jously fluffy, bright and so easy to manage. | Just moieten-a cloth with a Ifttle “Dandertne” and carefully draw it through your hair, taking one «mall |strand at a time. This magically re- moves all dirt, excess oi] and grease, but your hair is not left brittle, dry, stringy or faded, but charmingly soft, with glossy, golden gleams and ten |der lights. The youthul glints, tints | and color are dgain in your hair. “Danderine” is a tonic-beautifier. | Besides doubling the beauty of the | hair at once, it checks dandruff and | stops falling hair, Get delightful Danderine for a few cents at any drug or tollet counter and use it as ja dressing and invigorator as told on bottle. HEARTBURN or heaviness after meals are most af noying manifestations of acid-dyspepsia. KI-MOIDS pleasant to take, neutralize acidity and help restore normal digestion. MADE BY SCOTT & BOWKE MAKERS OF SCOTT'S EMULSION 19-3 As Proprietor of Modiste Shop | ¥ | Bill Hart looks just like this is “John Petticoats,” an! amusing comedy-drama, in which he is playing at the Liberty until Tuesday night. | * * *% * 8 & *- * & | 8 the proprietor of an ultra-fast) %——_—_—_—— ca jonable modiste shop in the Fifth] | TODAY'S rRocRaMs ave. of New Orleans, Hill Hart proves! | COLISEUM — Derethy Daiten ta | | himself an excellent logger in “John| | Apache”; Coliseum News fer. | Petticoats,” playing until Wednesday | | ¢," at the Liberty theatre. ‘The story of “John Petticoats” ts full of humor, with a touch of senth ment Just to make the right com bination. Bill Hart does not play his conventoinal role in “John Pettt fedats,” and only at the very begin ning of the play do we see him in anything but latest style clothes. | The story deals with the fortune jof a logger in the state of Washing ton, who is called South to become the owner of a modinte shop on the) death of his granduncle. Of course) there's a girl in it, too, and shortly | lafter he has reached the Sowth he is |not only proprietor of a “petticoat) | jshop,” but of a beautiful Southern | orn, 7 | er hgcare™ @irty | Other attractions on the bill are! &@ long jump from @ dirty} a Mutt and Jeff cartoon comedy, a|*treet in New York's Chinatown to) Burton Hotmes travelogue, entitled, | the sun-kissed little village of Fair “Rolling Down the File" & Pathe re-|nope—a long jump in ideale—but| view, and one reel on “Bear Trap-| sag” with Magee Aten Tent four persons whom that Chinatown ee street bad twisted and degenerated | CLEMMER into little more than animals, made | Avery Hopwood's clever Ittie far-/the Jump. It was a miracle wrought cleal comedy, “Fair and Warmer,” ts'!py “The Miracle Man.” . being shown on the Clemmer screen be thin week with vivacious May Aili- shiep-osgn one peat eae son in the leading role. deosive the unwary, to 1 } ‘The play which the Selwyns of-| 4i6° to lie, to pred dad a ae fered on stage is produced exception | life they were lifted up and net down | ally well on the screen. The cocktail /in « ittle village by the sea. where| scene, of course, will stand out ANY|ein and trickery were unknown. | where. It is one of the funniest! There, thru the influence % an old) scones ever written Into a play But | patriarch, deaf, dumb and’ almost the rest of the picture is fully a8) blind, the quartet of crooks became funny |*trangely transformed into useful The action concerns two young / and lawabiding citizens. married couples. In one instance the) ‘This ts the wonderfully appealing husband is too perfect; and in the! story told in George Loane Tucker's other the husband ts also loyal and| production, “The Miracle Man,” devoted, but he considers it better| which is playing in its third week at policy to continue to make his wife|the Strand. think he is not. Jack Wheelers pht *R—May Allison in “rate | Warmer"; “Sereen Stare as | | | They Are LIBERTY—O0) Mart tn “Joba Pet- | * News, theoata”"; Liberty STHAND—Geerge Loane Tucker's “The Miracle Man,” third week; Moen Seente. 1} | | REX—D. W. Grittith’s “Mother and | Gre Law." | 1 | MISSION — Universal prodection, | “Loot: International News, lonopiry is that if you keep ‘em guen ing, you keep ‘em in love with you. And from the misfortune of the tm peceahie other husband, Filly Bart lett, whose wife, driven nearly fran- tie by his thoughtfulness and free dom, geeks divorce, Jack would seem to have the right idea. May Allison is at once charming and deft in her portrayal of the in genuous young Blanny Wheeler, whone husband isn't half the gay dog he wants her to think he is; and others in the cast—Pell Trenton, Bu gene Palette, Christine Mayo and William Buckley—lend splendid sup- Guterson’s orchestra plays “William Tell” overture. eee the is. two Dorothy Daltons that screen lovers see in “L’Apache.” at the Coliseum this week. At*the be ginning, she appears as Natalie Bour get, an Apache dancing girl, which is the type of role Mise Dalton made famous in “THe Flame of the Yukon As the action develops, the dancer [meets @n American ¢irl, rich and |handsomely attired, who has thrown jher life and her good name away on a millionaire profligate. Mine Dalton plays this part also, the sub sequent developments in the picture |depending upon the clone resem blance between the two girls, The Apache girl, eruely treated by her dancihg partner, seizes an oppor tunity to escape from him. Fy chance she encounters a young American girl who, for reasons of her own, has left home. The girls change places. From here on follows a chain of ex citing incidents in the Hves of both girls, The Amertean girl, finding it impossible to go on with the dance hall life, flings herself into the Seine, The little Apache finds happl ness in a villa near Paris. The Coliseum News pictures and the playing of the “Anvil Chorus” from “Il Trovatore,” by the big or. |cheata, completes the program, ‘ MISSION “Loot,” the photoplay at the Mis. sion, is a cliver crook play. Wade Hildreth, the leading character, is ar Englishman who is sent over t Ameriea to receive the famous dis mond necklace from Arabin, a New York jeweler, He is followed by “The Shadow,” a notorious crook, who plans to do away with Hildreth and steal the jewels. In New York Hildreth meeta Morn Light, a pretty little musical comedy queen. It is Morn Light who later saves Hildreth Trom the trap set by “The Shadow” Hesides the feature picture the Mis- sion bill includes a lively comedy titled “Order in Court.” 6 Dean is back at work in the Universal studios after a Spell of pneumonia, Bill Hart Is a Fine Lumberjack | now showing at the Rex. They might There is a strike at the mil}, wherein NOW A DRAMATIC = THUNDERBOLT D. W. GRIFFITH PERSONALLY OFFERS HIS GREATEST PICTURE “MOTHER AND THE W” Laughs—T hrills—Suspense a { to say it Brilliant Scenes of Paris REX D. W. GriMth uses the characters of the Boy and the Girl to represent universal types in his photoplay pro- duction, “The Mother and the Law,” munity. forced. be any boy or girl of today, just as his characters of the boy and the girl In “Hearts of the World” represented all the hearts of the world then torn the struggles of what we are pleased to call the common people against a set of social conditions as false as they are unfair. An industrial mag- nate, bent upon impressing the world “Dont you dare + A picture of the “spenders” in garish cafes, of the strange . half-world of the fierce Apaches. There is a contrast between two women—one a pleasure lover of the boulevards; the other an unfortunate seeking to escape the Apache “king.” It’s absorbing and “different.” Symphony Orchestra, 31 Artists, Playing the “Anvil Chorus” and “Bye-Lo” | young wife is robbed of their baby by the charity workers of the com-| ‘Then begins a fight on the Part of the little wife against the cir cumstances into which she has been | go. In the end love and truth conquer |all who have kidney trouble” Rhue and the unhappy family ts united in| matic pains, aching joints, sore and Peace and happiness. Among the players whe stand out |neys are not property filtering and bleeding thru the havoc of war,| Prominently are Mae Marsh, Robert |Purities from the blood. Foley Kid- | Harron, Miriam Cooper, Ralph Lewis | As to the story, it has to do with | .4 warter Long. | Peart White mys sho likes most of afl to dig clams. Next to that, play tennis, STRAIGHTENED Solomon Bequette, ie Mo., writes: “Two years ago I was down on my back till I could hardly me right up. I recommend swollen muscles in@icate that the kid: with his socalled false charities. } @ man fs killed. The son of the mur-| i dered man leaves the mill town for/ a the cocktail the big city, where he falls tn with | at peps things up evil companionsh tps. |] One taste—and you think Later, for a crime he did not com- A giraffe isa pup! mit, the boy ts sent to prison. His Problem Any Woman Ever Faced! FAIR WARMER Sereen version of the stage success by Avery Hopwood It Will Make You Shriek With Laughter MORAL— Guterson's Orchestra TR a CTHRATE @) hw The Greatest ‘ —— a | FLORENCE “THE WOMAN DON'T BE TOO PERFECT, ELSE YOUR WIFE OR YOUR HUSBAND MAY LOSE INTEREST IN - YoU Don’t tell your friends how she solved -her problem— Just tell "em to come today and see this great picture themselves— REED NOW STARRING UNDER OATH”