The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 12, 1925, Page 16

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: THE SEATTLE oi om’s s Back With His Cowboy Hat | BY JACK JUNGMEYER | NEA Service Weiter BW YOR! rh at y r 1 th tn orf 1 plical arab t f f 4 ploture it ‘ ' ffi apport the ¢ a t 1 Param id | c i er or al the ages, wh I n ed “Jethe was merely lik lion lads of toda New York from the corn field woatter their patrim r for ® good tim: nd very t do made it The re is aboriou aining for bigness at the expense of drama Young “Jether, son of Jenne ble lad, pathetically eager to nee the big town and ize i in the Gim m 1 along Believes Even Vampires Have Sense of Humor ons FILO SO RHHRE bs PUTA § q o SOARS omecece KASS SIIID. LAI LS LL LILA LAL ne SPL A LIL PLAS A SPLLLI SLES LSD SILL IAAL AS IL > CALLA ALS INS SLL IS ILALMIS SSAA CKO ISIIIO RL LIES S DLA I YAALA A ASD IL ISLAAL ASA SLY D y o g , AFTER TRYING OUT the laces and furbelows of an old-time English rogue in “Dick are reezee. Turpin,” Tom Mix again appears as a Western ranchman in “The Lucky Horseshoe,” now || Indian Clubs May | playing at the Heilig. Of course he dreams he i Spanish Don Juan, but it is in hi . Be Aid to Health, | own cowboy togs that he appears most of the time. But Not to Chino | MM. MIX appears In a new guise in his latest release, Lucky Horseshoe,” when he dreams he is Don Juan and sees himself dréssed in the velvet and brocad girl of Spanish grandee and judge of| Mix fa @ beauty contest. | “The K However, he loses none of the/| story of a Weste Mix spirit in the change celalmost loses the Wat Plays “Havoc” With His Life | oop ial j VAN LOAN STORY TO BE SCREENED H. H. Var has Just com pleted a ets of Sin, which will » into production. Te ts of Sin’ my best sud Mr. Van Loan It is a melodrama. IT am lke the other one hundred and te in thin country in that I lo drama. 1 have never v other type of story, I ever shall. If picture one-half as much fun ing the picture as I di it, I shall be sufficiently rew Other stories ~ which Loan s written for the Fo: ganization are “The niac “Three Terror” and “V “JOHN BARRYMORE VARIES MAKE-UP John Barrymore may not wear| one of his famous wigs in Sea Beast,” but he is going to ome- thing more startling than this, A portion of the role calls for his| appearance, instead, with an artl-| | ficial leg | No Barrymore picture has ever been perfect without some feat of make-up or unusual chara 74 tion achieved by its gtar. In near ly all previous urea, tt has been | the effect that he has achieved with| wig that has been striking—as| say, in “Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde,” or “Beau Brummel." Ho ever used! it during a scene in “Sherlock! Holmes," where the famous detective | masqueraded. | In “The Sea Beast,” tho, there | | will be the new departure mention- | ed, The loss of his leg is a climax | of a battle between the whaling expedition that he commands and one of the great denizens of the sea jie 's a turning point in the drama me is 5 ae j ee oe HIRLEY MASON ONLY GEORGE O'BRIEN is a soldier in the British army, fighting the world war in avod, WOMAN IN “LORD JIM”! said to be one of the biggest war pictures yet produced, “Havoc” is the attraction at the BKiNey. arabon Nab OaeniMt anak (a Liberty, starting Saturday. play leading feminine role in Joseph | “pvc” which opens an en-j duced under the direction of Row-|!sm. With admirable restraint, Mr, | Conrad's “Lord Jim.” Miss Mason's gagement at the Liberty sat-| land V. Lee, Lee has kept the war scenes strict. | Work in hor recent productions has! Much of the devastation in| ly within the confines of the drama, | been of such uniformly high stand | Madge Bellamy and Georgo|ard that the role In “Lord: Jim" O'Brien of “Phe Iron Horse” famo, | Was offered her. Sho is tho only| play opposite each other again in| feminine member of the st in] action of the picture takes|‘Havoc.” They are supported by} thls story of the Far Hast and ing With Wits. See TTR ARETE TO TET urday, brings to the sereen a vivid} picture of English society under |" ' is wrought by a beautiful | the stimulating and demoralizing | W without a soul influence of war This film version of Henry Walis' officers to the front in| Margaret Livingston, Loalie ton, | the islands of the Malay archipel succeasful stage drama was pro scones of startling reals] Walter McGrail and Bulalie Jensen. | &®°: $3 Other featured players in the cast] NEWS OF JANIC NOVAK oo y scorn DOES SCENARIO, was the one whereby “Children of | of Jane Novak is under contract to ‘ tt, a constant contrib: the Whirlwind” became the prop- | 10 make four features for the Arrow] utor to the biegent of the popular Pictures corporation, She has just| magazines and weeklies, ia the finished “The Substitute Wife,” | author of “Children the Whirl-| Scott received 26 cents a wong) for Conway! Tearle, who Js complot! | story which appenred in one of the| in Arroy 8 Corpora-| his scon the loading eis Heritlene magazines, written by therine | tion release, ‘The most unique con-| Johnny Walker and Marguerite Do| none Modle mied'to way Smith, @ newcomer In the ranks of | tract ever made between a ploture| La Motte aro starred in this pro-!on hia own shor of Corinne Kiction writers, producing company and an author (duction, Griffith produc “Lord Jim," which Victor Wem. ‘x directing, are Percy Marmont, | ah Beery and Raymond Hatton, | erty of the Arrow company Mr io. Lionel Barrymore, ! i ‘ oe sani Prodigal Son Made Colossal Pruner mountains | 19 Many Bones Rogue in Film,‘ ‘The Wanderer” eines atoms" a vat|| Saye Art Lubin Spoil the Fish, Hin te t ’ “ , am fy in spending m { . bau f H Pe ‘ f her day, ar fr t Do him " 1 may re I ‘ i A ’ I ff pi And for ’ t : t 1 on . K ¥ pe t ing spendthrift NOW PLAYING DEAR FRIENDS— Tony and me are back again after hobnobbing with the crowned heads and flat-heads of Europe, and are at the Heilig in our first big production of the new season, “The Lucky Horseshoe.” It’s sure some thrilling, romancin’ affair, and look who’s with us: Billy Dove, Ann Penning- ton and J. Farrel] McDonald, who played Corporal Casey in “The Iron Hor some company for a couple of rough- necks like us. And, besides, Mr. Fox has given us a bigger and better production than heretofore, so just you lope down to the Heilig, keep both feet flat on the floor, and hang on to your seat, ‘cause you are going to be plum entertained. TOM and TONY, ~)| MARDI GRAS SCENES IN “SCARLET SAINT” TOM MIX)!’ with J, FARRELI BILLY A DOVE PENNIN HAL DEMAR AND HIS CINDERELLA BAND Expert exponents of all that is clever in the newest form of melodious syncopation. Old and new tunes played with a comic and dra- Coming— Aileen Pringle and Conway Tearle in “The Mystic” THIRD and MADISON “Seattlo's A Le Virst WILLIAM Run Pleture KOX: PRO. Theatro” DUCTION aint pUTY Ati Su tilt ReAgIIFUTaiDN haha ——— - in “THE LUCKY HORSESHOE” | | matic interpretation that will delight you. WONDER HORSE one DANCE AND BAGDAD

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