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THT SE TTLE STAR ES 250g “ee mans Valentine tm | Fetere te “ie. | aries May tn “A —Eatith Steck- ‘Sere | jurray in “Tread- 1 “TODAY'S PI rs STRAND — We “eed COLUMBAN —" ie MONIC | _ Talhor-Mindhe Mas | WINTRE GARD! tow in “Thre ¢ COLISKUM Mae | way Rose LIBERTY — Alma | Valley of Sthemt | COLONIAL. —Bede jouth,” and Anua @. What Will Women De’ OAK Marela Leyd in “From n wand | [COLUMBI HUMAN MEARTS” (Catvernal-Jewel) Mouse Petere Raith Hatior A] Tom | The Girl an Tt is doubtful if a happier selection | than House Peters could have been | made to play the role of Tom Logan in Universal's picturined version of | the great stage success, “Human Mearts.” whieh will rum a second week at the Columbia theater. He] te gifted with a rare understanding | that enables him to give a sympa. thetic and lovable characterization of | {)\!! Be carried over another week at the simple-hearted chap who merl.|‘"> Strand theaters booed t alt of love. ne hig ah an the sitar of bull, he springs to one side just as r “LIBE RTY “% | the horns of the huge beast are about lte bore him, This is atten repeated, |Yery popular with Mexican film tans, | neater | while the audience holds {ts breath. jrecently entertained General Serrano “THE VALLEY OF SILENT MEN heal ta ree oe to the ground /the secretary of war of Mexico, and} and carri rom the arena, His} (Paramount) 0 end Marette Radisoa . Aima Rubens | first defeat was caused by a woman} Jose Juan Mendez, upon the Corporal James Kent lew Cody {who watched him from the ar joceasiog of their visit to the Warner) 2—Alma Rubens, Liberty. —Mae Murray, € ‘oliseum. 1—House Pete rs, Colum bia. MEXICAN GENERALS ENTERTAINED BY STAR} | Marie Prevost, who is said to be Gen. Away up in the Canadian Rocktes, |% po brothers’ studies in idee tilticy dentiacet aaters, “il BLUE MOUSE i The Mexican officials have decided man must be a man even to survive. that the motion pleture business “Kent, the Tracker.” « corporal ot | “A TAILOR-MADE MAN" should be given @ foothold in their | the Royal Northwest Mounted Po | Tntted Artista) jcountry, so they sent the generals to liee, as he was known thruout the| John Pao Jand, was trailing 4 fur thief, when) Tesyse Hy he was shot from ambush. After “getting his man,” he had just strength cnough to ride to the near ext cabin, when he finds his friend, Jacques Radison. standing over the bedy of John Barkley, an outlaw fur ‘wader, who had been strangled with & strand of woman's hair. That ts only the beginning of the story in the picture, “The Valley of Silent Men,” which i# now showing at the Liverty theater. COLISEUM “BROADWAY ROSE” (ketro) Rosaite Lawrence Tum Darcy. art Charles Ray Eenel Grandin the Hollywood colony to find out all jabout picture production Commencing Saturday at the Bive| Mouse, the many local admirers of Charles Ray will bave the oppor.| tunity of seeing him in what prom jises to be his masterpiece, if time, care and a great story count for something-—-a cinema version of the intensely popular stage play, "A Tailor-Made Man.” For this is the costliest production Charles Ray has ever made, and is in keeping with | banks new picture his announced policy of two super: | ~ productions « year for United Artists, |in ENID BENNETT Enid Bennett has caused coast film stare and fang to marvel by her work on the stage in Oliver Morone: production, “A Sporting Thir Do,” written by Thompson Buchan an. Miss Bennett entered the Mo- rosco play just after completing the leading female role in Douglas Pair Robin Hood.” ‘« new “The Case of Becky.” Opponite In fact, “A Tailor-Made Man” is {her is Glenn Hunter, well known ju Ray's first screen play under his) Venile, in the part of John Arnold. new alignment while Frank McCormack, who ap- | A scene from“ 4 Tailor-Made Man,” in which Charles Ray is obliged to wear handsome evening clothes, including | ja fur-collared coat and numerous other garments suitable | peared in “East Is West” and other New York successes, and Montagu Love portray the roles of two rival Murray --Monte Bias | WINTER GARDEN Mae Murray will be seen Saturday “GLEAM 0° DAWN” hypnetiots. | for various hours and occasions, All this because he craved | at the Coliseum theater in her latest y= a a Ho Bnav ge wey ne ern ag | the position shown in the picture. feature. renaray Rowe Toe sory [ga ¢ Dewees iaareame nate | times Maturday. she atarta out in| Ops ea fe intensely Interesting and, }high gear and is stil! |POLA NEGRI SOON briefly, deals with the love affair of a beautiful dancer. She marries the son of a millionaire who insists on keeping their marriage a secret. The TO BEGIN NEW PLAY Pola Negri is scheduled to Hollywood John Gilbert, new William Fox| when she get» married star, will be at the Winter Garden | %-———— Sunday in a picture called “Gleam 0’ | | Dawn, arrive DOUG'S “ROBIN HOOD"| Preparation ia now going forward at September 25, from * based on the story by Arthur | parents soon learn of thelr son's TO-| Gocsrich muthor of the play “Yeu or|™ SERUMeNe WLAN ror the initial presentation of Doug-| New York, in time to begin mance and finally convines him that). Gilbert comes trom theatrical | Winch? © jing Fairbanks’ version of Robin| Werk in the Lasky studio on Pag ease 7 a By gnibeg stock. His father at one time Was! gre de Merincow i Hood, following a luncheon given|the — Robert Hichens story, buy them!" | Her jife director of the Baker Stock company | Mar Dea Motte tty this atar at the Pickford-Fair-| “Bella Donna.” It was made known able after her husband beg her|in Portland, Ore. His mother’s stage | Richard Medel Wallace MecDor nis star H rvapabasr ge odor get marry money. | bank and boy ca th wee to u) ‘ee! Nage Terenas che. to needa haves, batore| ™mne was 100 Adhir. |The tale of three tives jp tpld in| Onn MNCs Netion of the! have the Heading male role and will i Last times, Saturday, Edith Stock | Gouverneur Morris’ story, “Trumpet | jommemorate the completion Of the 114. ihe part of Miss Negri's hus ts “ the story comes to its end. ton in “Thru the Storm.” Itatand,” Oak theater Sunday which will be shown at the| Picture and also to celebrate {he | hand in the production, which George and Monday, | Signing of the first contract ke erat | Fitzmaurice is 7 srs tin ae hae STRAND COLONIAL |) The adaptation was made by Lillan| ‘The luncheon was given ip Doug's a “ eee and George Randolph Chester, who! honor by the Hollywood Chamber! It ts promised that the life and “BLOOD AND SAND’ “THE CASE OF BECKY” personally supervised the editing.|of Commerce primarily because It} work of motion picture people (Paramount) (Restart) This is one of the biggest productions |ia felt that Fairbanks hae done |they really are will be shown in Ru Joan Gallardo -Redotph Valentin | Dorothy Stone (Recky) shown at this theater this season. | much to establish Hollywood as production of hin own | Carmen Canatance Finney | “acacia Gleke ater, Harold Lioyd's comedy, “From|a show center as well as a produc for Sale,” the sereen Rodolph Valentino gives a remark _ Hand to Mouth,” and the picture}tion center by arranging the first adaptation of which he is now pr able demonstration of his fleet foot-| Constance Binney, a Realart star,| “What Will a Woman Do?" will clone | presentation of his new picture for! paring for Goldwyn. The cast has edness in “Biood and Sand,” night ‘the film elty instead of New York, ot yet been announced which | will be shown Sunday at the Colonia! | Saturday NOW HERE— FOR ONE WEEK ONLY! The screen’s incomparable dancer— = MAE MURRAY a in another human story written by the author of her former success, “Peacock Alley” — SECOND NEAR SENECA HELD OVER! FOR A FEW DAYS 0) The screen’s perfect lover— RODOLPH VALENTINO 3. in Paramount's « ny worthy successor to “The Sheik"— MONTE BLUE —and— WARD. CRANE “BLOOD and SAND” GORGEOUS GOWNS AND STUPENDOUS SETS with LILA LEE and NITA NALDI IN A LOVE DRAMA OF DEEP APPEAL! The picture the whole nation is talking about! She—a famous dancer—seeks real love only to find disillusionment COLISEUM CONCERT ORCHESTRA e35e STRAND ORCHESTRA under WINELAND Afternoons, 25: Evenings, 35¢-50¢ a on the organ Coming—“Above All Law” _4—John | Gilbert, Winter Garden. lee BY JAMES W DEAN | YORK, Bept } | } | NEW Georges producers of with his rope, has surprised the his new film wenne. starting movie a London correspondent informs me | “Film sense” is a new attribute of | players. It iw rather vague in mean ing, but in the case of Carpentier it | probably implies be has forgotten he lis a prisefighter when he the camera as a nobleman. The term might have a more spe cific meaning applied to some of our] American p ®. And to directors, | too. It ts pi a lack of film |rense that results in some of our tremen rigging themeelves up like specters of @ rarebit nightmare ern overplaying t and 4 nd producers adding bunk notage of film sense ma: ude of wins of omins -* pbably oth | ei Carpentier’s picture ls based on an daptation by Andrew Soutar of “My I tady April,” a novel by ton, He plays a dual role, a noble man's grandson and « boxing gypry The picture is now nearing com: pletion. More than 500 appear in the | cast, Flora Le Breton ts the heroine | She had the title role in “La Poupee and appeared as the companion to| is before | John Over- |" OPULAR stars of the silver screen are being shown in spectacular dramas at leading photoplay houses Saturday. “Human Hearts” will begin a sec- ond week at the Columbia; “Blood and Sand” held over at the Strand; Charles Ray at Blue Mouse. The Colonial, Winter Garden and Oak Theaters |}change programs Sunday. The features are, respectively, “The Case of Becky,” “Gleam o’ Dawn” and “Trumpet Island.” 5—Rodolph Vale ntino, Strand. 6—Constance Binney, Colonial. velopment Brown's process lies In an arrange. | Carpentier, prize-fighting idol of Eu-| Ment of photography and projection. | " is used to! double jensed mera “Film Sense” —W hat Is It? Asks Georges Carpentier | photograph thru red and green color | filter sirau! that two exposures bel ‘Thi in black and White on the in turn is screen thru color filters. The ft im uses arranged » usual 16 images de by images side, film, projected upon the The recured | printed but | i to the| instead run ning time of the film is half that of | the ordinary film ee | not The movies continue to make ap-| preciable the popul Fox has and i le visible ity of the stage 1 for the coming win er season two of tant Shubert theaters in New York. | the most inroads William | upon impor Lyric and the 44th Btreet. Such} films as “Nero, “A Little shall Lead Them,” “Monte “If Winter Comes,” “The | hat Forgot God,” and “F Shepherd King’ the heroine of “The Glorious Adven-| ture in which Lady Diana Manners | | was starred Mary Clare also has an important role She recently London stage as the the Sonnets,” in “Will Shakespeare” |worthy’s “The Skin Game J. Stuart Blackton, the producer, hax included in the cast many of | those who appeared in “The Glori-| ous Adventure.” Among them Wil. | liam Luff who was King Charles 11! appeared on the} “Dark Lady of Clemence Dane's | and also in Gals: Catherine } eee | | . ing inve | motion y oyd Brown Is credited with hav. 1a new color process for | He has been work jing on it four years at Hollywood laboratories. Unlike other processes I this one is not based on chemical de- ctures. , | Harry Cullen Landis, Goldwyn featured is in the supporting cast of Carey's player, will “The have extended | One which is soon to be released. Earle Williams and Rodolph Val- entino will star in the new Vitagraph ;| photgplay, “A Rogue's Romance.” . “The Man Who Saw Tomorrow,” Paramount production, stars Thomas “nd Rosalie Heath who was Queen | Meighan, Theodore Roberts and Lea ° trice Joy. Maude George has just left New where she has | personal appearances with “ York, per Jewel, for ‘7 Merry - Round.” been making | rison Picture Patter] Man,” al ‘oolish Universal City, ‘to take | unprofessional her part in Von Stroheim’s next su-| dreamed of a theatrical career tor I their daughter, |upon her return from Europe very | months. PAGE 3 ovie Quizzes (Conducted in co-operation with Associated First National ‘Pictures, Miriam—Ruth Sinclair is the wife of Irving Cummings. She played opposite Guy Bates Post in “The Masquerad Follower—Yes, there were report: ea rum of tho engagement Mabel Normand to Prince Ibrahim, nephew of Khedive of Egypt, but recently, Miss Normand was on the subject. Miss Normand been “doing” pictures over — there, but got lost in Paris, London and Berlin, swam with the social elect at Deauville, and had a fine time generally during the last three Poland—Despite rumors to the contrary, Pola Negri has at last arrived from Europe and ts on her way to California, Rah, gee competition for our “vamps.’* | slad the dream of her life hag oan realized. | 1 Elsie—Sure ‘nuph, that was Her Ford you saw with No Talmadge in “The Wonderful Thing.” A few others he app in with Norma are “The | Flower,” “Lo Redemption,” and jin the dual role played in “Smilin” — | Through.” eae Connie—Now with the coo! weath er coming on, no fear of me saking you. No hot wane $ cuses—Bert Lytelt is married i Evelyn Vaughn; he is 5 feet a inches tall, weighs 155 pounds. (f he's been on the go) and has esa aE hair and hazel eyes. His i Wilfred is on the “legit,” you know, playing opposite Marjorie Rambeay in the “The Goldfish.” Matt Moore is still enjoying the freedom ‘4 bachelorhood. He was born in free land in 1888. It seems to me he | 4 will soon have to pay alimony to a spinster—with new laws, ete, —~ ‘Theodora—From school teacher 8 moving picture uctress was Ma McAvoy's next step. Oh, my, She is a New York girl with most parents who never NOW PLAYING— JAMES OLIVER CURWOOD'S famous story that rivals “The River's End” in thrills— LEW CODY ALMA RUBENS: In Paramount’s— “THE VALLEY OF SILENT MEN” ie The picture that was actually filmed in the land where # man has to be a man in order to survive and where the red-coats keep law and order!