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> Seepage: TODAY'S PROGRAMS DeMille’. “Mid- | Lytett tm “The Mis-| | Moore tn “Hold | 0 hy Gish in “Fiy- Wm. Fermam in “The Normand im “What to Rowe.” “GARDEN—Cortame Grit- “A Broad Hubble, MOUSE —Manrice Tournear's | | Mast of } STRAND ~ Mab MADNESS” (Paramount) Jack Molt Conrad Nagle Wilson tim Lee MER MADNESS.” the Wm, DeMille production which today at the Strand, ts the the infatuation of Julian Os. the wife of his best friend, dith. Osborn ix married to ng girl, who loves him de , but he takes advantage of that Margaret Meredith, not Teason, considers herself a wife, ) this unusual situation brings @ramatic event which causes ‘and Mrs. Meredith to awaken | great wrong they are the story highly interesting eee EMMER ) “THE MISLEADING LADY" 4 (Metro) ‘ Stephen Gr Lyte! in “The Misle ." now at the Clemmer, is ly cast as Jack Craigen. engineer, who retu from a big construction job in Africa only to find that his ting spirit has been broken Meeting « lovely society girl, | Steele. He proposes, but dis-; that he has been made a fool) ‘Helen has made him get down) knees and propose to prove! ghe has stage ability and de. & place as leading lady at the theatre” run as a hobby by a) Uses caveman tactics and car. | Helen off to his bunting lodge) Adirondacks. Then be proceeds | ‘give her a lesson in primitive woo | And soon wins ber love | LIBERTY in D YOUR HORSES” (Goldwyn) . Tom Moare | Sytvia Ashton ‘goml Childers | s “Bertram Grassby | Moore rises from a street) 20.New York's chief political | in “Hold Your Horses.” his) Photoplay, which is the pres-| “attraction at the Liberty. | plays Daniel Canavan, a/ om Trish immigrant, employed as | -r sweeper in New York city.) ‘auto accident results in Tom be-| Jaid up in the hospital, and when enough to return to his) ing the temptations and the dangers | ™0"t 1 Childers, with To Jormand and Hugh Th for Extravagance, Declares Actor 222%. a | motion picture business has 4 too much easy prosperity. | A sense, nagn't earned what ft] got. This the s ness, gout and myopia that « | from o much rich living. The patient has been suffering from auto-intoxieation, and heroic meas | ure# are necessary restore sound health.” | Thus Hobart Bosworth answers the question, “What's with the movies? velopment of the tr glittering career to the hour of sober stock-taking and reconstruction now | has created thful upon it Bosworth is one of the pioneers and veteran ot In the following diagnoals he xpeaks from his larity with | every phas “Easy money,” be chronic over confidence. ns v ing to the vul » fa alize that on part of the; public inded—« | two things hing ent day picture the pains of | readjustment. | “The firxt stage of the be made the producers drunk with gold. ‘Speed’ was the slogan, There was no time for truth, fidelity, research. | Everyone was trying to ma ° onereel pictures a week. Everythin went—why make better pictures? movies were a splendid toy “But even im those days, when vision was blinded by the avalanche of nickels, th stare the busines. ter ure to re is » were some who, see ED ompson, Rex. 6—William Fa Hobart Bosworth ope, opened the ey and started the five school, SCRAMBLE DR PLAYS “A wild scramble for plays from the best authors ensued, initiating in tx turn the kless compet! tion and shocking extravagance, in salatiew and expenses. Cost of pletures skyrocketed be Directors boasted they expended ing. Pie and six-reel era of re yond ali reason of the huge sums without an accou he finds he hasn't got the! ahead, worked to keep the filme | ‘UT? Making was not yet a business, to go back to the crowded gets 2 job in a blasting gang ‘then Fate steps in and in a most way Tom is given opportu. to prove his worth as a po- leader. COLISEUM | “FLYING PAT” (Paramount) «Samer Pu Dorothy Morgan Wal % ; Harold Vizard “Flying Pat” is the designation of | Van Nuys when she takes a from her husband and starts out @ career of her own, that of ” She survives the test of a ma- which determines whether she aspire to sail in the air, and. , she goes up with a skilled », Endicott, and does stunts un she brings the machine to earth) using the wrong throttle in an at nose dive. Endicott and Patricia escape un- ‘but they are taken to a nearby} When friend husband} ‘Mrs. Pat and Endicott at the the trouble begins. James Rennie, the popular young Stage actor to whom Dorothy Gish ‘was recently married, plays opposite | | 1 COLONIAL =rie SCUTTLERS” m Farnum's mew photoplay at the Colonial, has| Ban Francisco harbor, Catalina island esiiheng for his locations. Aj 250 feet in length was char-| ered for the ship scenes, as was also! Bprivate yacht which takes the ship-| Wrecked persons from a desert island Many of these scenes are in the galley and the hold of the boat. Far-|™ } pum has the role of a detective for! Lloyds, who, disguised as a com mon sailor, is commissioned to run | Gown suspicions that the captain is 1 @euttling his ship for the insurance. | } _ Jackie Saunders appears opposite | Farnum. REX ——_—_—_—__—-% “WHAT HAPPENED TO ROSA” (Golaw Nittie shopsiri, Mayme Ladd, in “What Happened to Kowa,” her rutest | eomedy drama which is now showing at the Rex. Maymo's visit to a fake geerens is enough to convince the girl | that she is the reincarnation of a dashing Spanish dancer, Ko Al-| ¥iro, and with this as a foundation + ghe builds a romantic air castle, finds} hero, and after some difficulty suc ceeds in making part of her dream @ome truc. u | Success of this picture, » | standard | London, | the West coast to work | for the first time in nearly clean and progressive, representative | of the best in America, and to elim inate degrading influences | “We were often banal and clumsy often lugubrious but never prurient. | We stuck pretty clase to wholesome | outdoor adventure, trying to show that the film was more than a mere money making plaything. “Then came the epoch-making dramatization of London's Wolf,” which I produced under his personal supervision. T maxing ing a new| and GARETH HUGHES PLAYS ROLE OF OLD MAN that talented} In artistry, purpose | Gareth Hughes, young Welsh actor who has had the small sum birthdays, has an astonishing repertoire of old man ‘oles in stage productions to his cred. | it, enacted since he was in hig early teens, In the John 8. Robertson pro- duction of “Sentimental Tommy,” for Paramount, in whfch he pl: title role, he adds a 90-year-c to his list—his first old man role on the screen. It is a vision showing Tommy old and withered in # rose garden, thinking of an old sweetheart. His stage impersona tions of old men began when he was 14, when he ed Cadwalader Jones, an 85-year-old fisherman, in “The Joneses,” at the Strand theatre, | He did Lord Mount Severn, in “East Lynne,” at 15; Brabanti, in “Othello,” at 16, and Shylock at 17 the 1 man | DOROTHY DALTON IN | “THE MONEY MASTER” | Dorothy Dalton has returned to in pictures two years She will be starred in a Georg ford special for Paramount, ad | from Sir Gilbert Parker's at ’ ' Money ed b Master,” | James K 4 in the chief e role and a notable cast | It was on the West coast that Mis Dalton first achieved her su then being a Thomas H. Ince star with pictures released by Paramount Among her notable productions were “The Flame of the “Flare-Up Sal,” “Viva La and “Quicksand.” nd will be support then Yukor France” RALPH INCE PICTURE READY FOR RELEASE, Ralph Ince has completed his Lin prototype im, “The Highest in which the director 4 the Great Emancipator, ‘The photoplay will be released thruout the country as @ Lincoin’s birthday incident, | author VERA GORDON IN “THE GREATEST LOVE” use of its pecullar fitness puentations, “The Gre * which was shown te at Sing Sing by the star, don, will be screened J Selznick in every penal inastitution where there are facilities for photo: play exhibitions. for itout inmates a Gor eft | | under the direction o} and there was little business aystem. simply stuck pulled out a plum, faba tribute by an public brought table the danger to th film was gre r than the legitimate stage, because of the for mer's wider scope. ry one In his thumb “This amtusemer inev result It ushered in what may be desig nated lamaged good plays lem pla sex » nudity and rotten an the ‘The over strens era of pr ru ness. “And the public, still merely cur. % a | TOM MIX WAS ONCE PROHIBITION OF Tom Mix, Fox cowboy star, whose latest sereen work is “Prairie Trails," was, in the early days of Oklahoma's state hood, a real prohibition officer. After Mix had served his term as town marshal of Dew ey, Okla, he was made federal enforcement officer, with au thort y which incladed search of incoming trains for con cealed liquor—Oklahoma being a “dry” state even in those days. Mix says that the first train he searched yielded five cases of whisky and one of gin. SEENA WORKING IN COSMOPOLITAN FILM Life is simple n the Bahama { Seena Owen he leading role in “The Woman God Changed being filmed by pert Vignola for Coxmopolitan. A large number of nes are bi shot in the tropes. There wutomobiles to had, Miss fo she is dis sipating by ridi yele. Shopping f 1CER placid and pleasant lands, who according to are no be Owen writes, somewhat the only rchase being Pana ind cocoanut rs are “about one can ma hat ACTRESS FOND OF WINTER OUTINGS Catherine Calvert vy York last f famous in that week for Quebec sporta held She is par toboggan er misses at least t at Qu winter enthusiast ing and ne da the at each year while She re star part winter carnival finished playi Vitagraph Tom Terris FKARLE WILLIAMS H NEW LEADING LADY Elinor Fair will be leading woman for Earle Williams in his fortheom ing Vitagraph pr “Loot of the Night,” b: Jackson Other memt cast are Wil Nam MeCall, dridge, Jack Carlisle and Matheis. wt w luction, Frederick J 4 of the Alfred wey TER GARDEN G 1 OWEN MOORE Nita ty, he th, Naldi been er a to Owen Moore in hig new Selznick plc ture, “A Divorce of Convenience.” Robert Hilis is directing the tion at Fort Lee, N, J. amp” produc ses,” Liberty. 2 Vitagraph star, | a Winter Garden beau- | THE ITED BY rnum, starring at Colonial. * Motion Pictures Are Paying Price }lous, rather than discriminating, con. tinued to in that flood of | richer j In due time, pour the public per however alert dangers, as well advantages of this medium, and the y eliminated by blood. Better © bu nd. EE: the mor producers Jeroticiam was partia | the tion of new brains ax well as b to take comm injec men began | MANY VULGARITIES "Unfortunaely, better aid not, always token a sound | moral or viewpot The pe had put thumbs down on the rass vulgarities, but there quickly ‘orth the mume old skeleton, H a display of mauve. rather than brains however, makeup repped trapped in Linky jective vice ‘This required keener imagina tions, better craftemen—and — the school of veiled vice got them of them are still prostituted ignoble creative work At about the mame time ft was ldixcovered that the player, rather than the author or the producer was the trademark of success realization of ‘hat fact | STARS ‘That brought breath-taking * and contracts, aborate productions, too, re leruited as lewmer luminaries and many men and women from and professions who. making more money in a day than had made tn a week, lost their heads, ran up credit with utter disregard of the future, bought $3,000 auton on time and skipped in the parade of extrava nugirestive, ob many mater wal apes p, factory they these, now that re trenchment has come, find them elven both out of work and unwill go back to the old job: hocking’ thelr machines, and hop | ing: And #0 we come up with the present hour—an hour of reckoning an well as thoughtful and round re natruction—when even the dullest are beginning to see a great light.” |“ ADIES MUST LIVE,” NEW TUCKER PICTURE The Saturday Evening Post story Must Live,” by Alice Duer been photodramatized by Loane Tucker, producer of Miracle Man,” and will be shown at a Broadway theatre in New York late in February or early in | March. “The Miracle Man” alrendy has brought in more than $2,000,000 }in profits to its maker. | George Loane Tucker recently re from a major operation | which nearly cost him his life, Prev to his which confined him to his home in Los Angeles for months, he had been working | on the editing of “Ladies Must Live.” | Immediately leaving his sick bed he finished work on the covered ous ines, three upon picture | |RUPERT HUGHES AT GOLDWYN STUDIO Rupert Hughes, who has been on the lot at the ¢ day for week |production of “Dangerous Curve Ahead!” the first story he has writ ten directly for the screen, says he reminds himself of one of Bilt Nye’s heroes, who took in washing in the day and dug wells at night, but had all the rest of the time himself, Just to keep properly busy and to prevent his lo hand from los ing its cunning, Mr. Hughes is writ ing the continuity for the tion of his novel, “The will be the next Barker production. BLAZE DESTROYS SET ng in the nce Old Nest,” which Reginald AT FOX STUDIOS} at the Fox | Fire destroyed a big set | Hollywood studio last week |was built for “While _ the | Laughs,” newest Louise Lovely ture, and shows in York's congested lower t The blaze started late at night and only a «mall part of the set was saved, ‘The loss was about $15,000, | MARTHA MANSFIELD WITH CONWAY TEARLE Martha Mansfield is working on photoplay in which she soon but as a Selznick star nwhile, her next scree ar will be in “Society Snobs," as Conway Tearle’g leading lady, The set Devil ple New Side, the akos her de ap| LATTLE | written STAR Lila Lee and Conrad Nagle, anducted in Mre that Jonnie D. ble you wot take were © mame a raged ever ey have act a wuperb figure them out of the ordin ter part @ part in the » u fortunate opted, New ng DAISY: HENRY Strand, Co-operaty National 3 x : wee aS OTS of action in new film plays at local houses. Jack Holt falls in love with best pal’s wife; Dorothy Gish runs away from husband; Bert Lytell kid- naps young society girl; Bill Farnum hunts down unscrupulous sea captain; automobile accident puts handsome Tom Moore in the hospital; Mabel Normand proves an easy victim for fake seeress in “What Happened to Rosa?” her latest screen comedy. With Pictures) hardly pond get a cb ability but and trust to luck! Boous Ruth Holme. weighs 165, and eyon, Hin wife Firing Line” “Old-Tmer”—1 Reginald Denny Hughes i* rrie’s Yonkers, N. ¥ y Pickford waa born in ‘erento, Canada, s! Robby May five weighs 100 pour has golden hair and haze ine Seyme wan a bi ri ig & brunet four in helght, Conrad } He bn is pl with him. tters nddreaned to Mac in blond, ance to you have enough ere usu: good looks thing to lift ry run, you might get a chance in a You would have to at one of the numerous studios It is el fe married to nix feet high, with blue ying in “The Realart Studios New York, will find at present ‘Sentimental Tom: at the Whitman-Bennett studi ‘arol Demp: or * and ci Murray is five feet weighs 110 pounds, | jand has blond hair and blue eyes and shipped it Kast for presentation. | sldwyn studio every | picturiza. | Mary gray eyes. Hay has dark brown hair and) She ix a dainty little sou! and at present playing second lead in Ric Bally ard in fair and has blue eyes. AN eT AS : aca, UP REO "a Floren Ziegfeld Revue. tartheimens ta five feet sev. en, weighs 125 pounds, and has dark | fornia, brown hair and eyes. 3—James Rennie and Dorothy Gish, Coliseum ; vite smn ik alee Director Films Fire at Venice Frank Lloyd, director for Goldwyn ja Uke the man who says that of cour he hat to have bad fire bre out, but if it doe he to nee it. Only Mr. Lioyd gv further—he wants to get pictures of it A few days ag he had his wish. It wae when the famous pier at Venice, California, burned. That i# about eight miles from the Goldwyn tudio at Culver City, but the fire Was so intense that the flames lit the aky. Mr. Lioyd needed some fire scenes for Gouverneur Morris’ “. Tale of Two Worlds,” Mr. Lic left the ae where he wa and with his assistant and cameramen, hurried to Venice. came back with 1,000 feet of excel-| CURRENT EVENTS _ IN LIBERTY NEWS| The Jensen & Von Herberg opening at th will show, among ot triple funeral of the slain policemen, | raising an 80-foot smokestack at the heating plant of the King st. station, and the beginning of work on the/ Young Men's Hebrew ation, PRETTY ACTRESS ON MOTOR TOUR | Claire Windsor, star of the Lois “To Please One| nan,” What's Worth While,” “What Do Men Want?" and “Mar ried Strangers,” has left for a motor | tour of the missions of Southern Call-| pending the commencement | wants | a step annoct Agnes Ayres| of work on Lols Weber's next pro-| with duction. ! [DIRECTION JERSEN & ¥ Aiways the Best for PAGE 3 el A A ee 4—Bert Lytell and Lucy Cotton, Clemmer. 5— \Douglas Fairbanks Hurt in Movie Leap — LOS ANGELES, Jan. 29.—Dougiag Fairbanks is under a physician's care at his home today as a result of @ of bis famous stunts before the camera. Fairbanks will be unable to resume | his*motion picture work for a month Sob Gieria beasbon, “physician, whose report states the rary actor suffered fractures of bones im | Dorothy Dickson, popular musical a finger of his Jeft hand, a wrenchedl comedy actress, is to pla and twisted neck. of @ dancer in ¢ Fitsmaur! While he was attempting to leap new picture » Piper | from a window, his foot caught am@ he fell six feet to the pavement, from the fa actual ows! by George Barr MoCo" NEW YORKERS TO SEE NEW WEBER FEATURES Lots Weber, America’s only wom an producer of moving pictures, has made arrangements with Paramount |for the New York presentation of 7 ad her recently completed Lager: WUl Rogers is taking the night scents for “An Unwilling Hero his “What Do Men Want?” “Mai Worth Strangers” “What's ne tellar vehic! mm 5 y nadng po wh hicle trom ah O. Henry | While.” Miss Weber leaves Los Aine y geles this week to be present at the — | premieres of her photoplays. clute Patter Hloria Swanson ig American born, of Swedish parenta So are Diana Allen and Eva Novak. Other Scandi, naviangs of the screen are Anna Q. Nilsson and Ann Forest fall during on: release will cee | Wiliam De Mill's “Midsummer | Madness,” now at the Strand, is a version of Cosmo Hamilton's and eee Antonio Moreno has returned to California from Arizona, where he| number of scenes for “Three VALUABLE FURS ARE eee STOLEN FROM STAR © Dougias Fairbanks wil appear in| A reward of $500 has been offered & screen version of “The Three Mus-|in Los Angeles by William Dunemm | keteers." The picture will be filmed| for the apprehension of the in Europe, who broke into the home of Bate sed wedded Johnson, his co-star in Owen Moore will follow his farce-|chapter-plays. Miss Johnson's chief” | feature, “The Chicken in the Case,” | loss was that of furs valued into the “A Divorce of Convenience.”| thousands of dollars. A prize dim That's logical sequence. mond ring was also stolen. —d oN MERBERG | he Liberty Guest TOM It’s more than one thrill he’ll give you in— “HOLD YOUR HORSES” From the Saturday Evening Post “Canavan,” by Rupert Hughes. As you see him here, he’s as meek as near-beer—but men grow drunk on other things than alcohol! * LOVE DAVIS ON THE WURLITZER * * e+ SF * CONCERT 12:30 SUNDAY * “La Sorella” (Spanish March) “Morning Mood” . Meyer “Pilgrims’ Chorus” From Tannhauser”. Wagner *% * * * MACK SENNETT Comedy—‘“IT’S A BOY” Chester Outing Scenic “ONE DROP WAS ENOUGH” Jensen & Von Herberg News