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‘TRE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, JUNE 30, 1922.” iScreenings | By DON Al KEL : BY HUGH KAHLER + 5 SET ; . GOOD RECORD. Illustrated by Wil! B. Jobnstone Vincent Coleman, who has played WHO'S WHO IN THE STORY. as an escape, therefore, and would the male lead opposite @ large crowd of famous feminine atars In plotures, ; ' : _. TIMOTHY PARROT, a crook who had committed many crimes] jot count against Lawton's previous|. nid proud of his last year’e work without arrest and who has been taunting the police with anonymous} gooa-conduct allowance if the war-| "cer? letters. don obligingly made a breach in the] Vincent only missed one day’s work PLANS TO ESCAPE. T HORNE hed himeeif assigned to Chief of British Criminal Invest ‘ Department 1913-19 ting the German Hts paseport was Saas would not go into the prison record work in the prison library, where Lawton was employed bassy to the German Foretga { and where Doctor Clarke could lighten TOM THORNE, most successful detective in the Bureau—known | Prison walls and allowed Lawton and | out of the 965—and that, in the soreen for the vise, but there it was the privations a little for them both] as “The Tracker. \ Thorne to slip through it instead of Jacting game, is, indeed, some iittie a and: the | Foe thea an exhaustive search, port was used by Lody. Mr tb photograph was removed from | Lody's substituted. Mr, «Ii tained a new American p Four suspects a day sat in the “low chatr” in Thomson's office for | his embas: without training the rules too far. McNAMARA, also a star detective at Headquarters—somewhat Fentress, Sxits, mark to shoot at. ‘ {t appears, was almost And, during the day, now, he had] jealous of Thorne. is cade 00. lay imme ce rimotny|, “Glow did't de KP by orvad-ques- frequent chances to talk with Law- J. B. SMITH—shot in a bachelor apartment building, who makes | Parrot as The: Tracker was himself. | tioned yesterday. “Simplest thing in ton, But the days dragged by and he}a statement to the police before he dies and requests a private talk apd and rules can easily be stretched | the world. Just went out and nailed made no progress, Lawton would not} with the Tracker. a little when ni demanded, Tom Spy.” Germany started the war with the most elaborate secret service in Europe and ended it with the worst. the jobs that would last. The one ‘ Thorne’s plan hai strained them e-owami aly. ‘As Mr. Charles Inglis, Lady talk except in vague generalities. RAWLINGS, an alias of the Parret, who wiped Smith out be-| rather far. But, as he and Lawton|4@y I miseed was through no error base ‘Most Sy Fs Conan al . eid ae stad 1) WR gts sented himself at the, North # é And Thorne, for all his unlimited pa-| cause he read a note reading something like this—"You can’t hide ores poten yd dim lawn, fitting | of mine—my director called it @ holi- ona to decetva aiihir ede yee, ’ [Station Hotel in pee: i tence, began to doubt the wisdom of! from me, Timothy Parrot, anywhere under the sun » » » One year| {Tom the shadow of one clump OM gay and we made {t unanimous cae ” ; Senhaes eS oe : his scheme. Already he had carried} more, Parrot, before you pay for Dora Faulkner!” gira Dee es of a You will not shake hands with a spy?" Adolf Burchard, in Stockholg. it pretty far; it had needed the conni- PULLER-IN. Johnnie Walker, who has / been LAWTON, serving time for complicity in one of the Parrot’s jobs.] 3° was Dreathing quickly | when dubbed “the screens most dutiful _ The Tracker follows a beautiful girl who has been visiting the] ine’strect beyond, anal cece ot ace | enn an Appetite, prison and finds that she is registered mysteriously at a hotel. He . sed Recently while passing down West to the side of the big car, waiting in ith wared restau- learns that Lawton has a daughter— the blot of inky darkness beside the rant winsote an eG nj “No, but I will with a brave man!” grams had to pass the censo there were matters in Tnglis’s sat while he was accounting for his|gram that called for close movements. It was realized during] Meanwhile Lody took private the first weeks of the war by the]ings, realizing, no doubt, ti Judges and the law officers, as welll are not very safe places for as by the laity, that’ the ordinary] He hired a bicycle and DOCTOR CLARKE, prison chaplain, who interviews The Tracker|real prisoner actually engaged in varice of the Governor and the Prison | following a clue on Lo gig Board, ae well as the warden and the Peak! chaplain; he had even been at pains to fake convincing case against him~- self, under an assumed name, and CHAPTER VII. THE GERMAN SPY. HERE is much confused thinking about the ethics of spying on it printed in the papers as ESTHER LAWTON, who is described bei ly” and pty eich, “at 4 rant window and read: the movements of an enemy. Meer % Cpa © was of no avail fortatent tn exploring the { arti hss IN, who is described as being “queenly” and|empty church. wton whispered] “Get a forti moal for 4 apy” against spies. ood of Edinburgh, Io i straightforward news. But it began) unlike the daughter of a crook. oe ” something to the driver and half lift-| cents! ited aa Mas Keke wider tle ee Cele / to look as If the effort had been No light is thro the wi “Dora,” howev d finally |%¢ Thorne into the tmousine. The] A halt hour tater Johnnie strotied| “MY © *lenificance that we p | they need not answer any questions, |questions for the ordinary sights a ak oe thrown on the woman “Dora,” however, and finally |car moved away, gathering speed| down the atreet, chewing a toothplok. Aiseuise our own} but that what they sald might be used | irom Edinburgh he came t0 LAm thrown away. Lawton w The Tracker decides to don convict garb and be confined in a cell with} quickly. Lawton drew down the cur- portale Ni (aor Dyegehncdgr opened iy gettin talk, even under very skilful tempta- L awton—to get the story. tains and snapped on the tiny light OH! in the roof. On the seat lay two com-| James B. Wi plete outfits of decent cloth: ad farner, the new cowboy tion. There would have to be another: way, And Thorne hit upon it at last. ‘The prison library occupied space directly back of the warden's office in the south wing, Except for the barred windows, it did not greatly differ from i most of its kind, The door from the 4). | corridor led into a stock room, instead ‘ | of the usual antechamber; set three which almost invariably induced|Here he interested himself” loquacity, and questions and answers anti-aircraft defens He were recorded in shorthand, in inburgh two days later Lawton swiftly shed his prisoh unt-|™°V!® Star, used to be a practical and to regard] 1 suppose that on the average four|Sept. 26 he went to Live! form, without speech: Thorne fol-| Joker. The word ‘used’ ts used cor- them as necessary|persons a ay sat in that chair}ocean lners were being fi lowed his example in silence. They|rectly. He isn’t any more. ‘ y evils. But any torengneys Se Mite At ee ier eared tres: ; ‘ dressed quickly, in spite of the sway- neveral . government that|nine ou every ten who might! From Liverpool he wen’ ing of the car. Lawton gathered op Sete erent nee accepted the stan-Jotherwise have been detained under|head and thence to Ireland, the castoff clothes and the coarse| “#0 $54 & former victim of one of his dards set up by|suspicion for an indefinite period were his nervo was.a little shaker gence” or “Secret Service Officers’ 1 shoes and roiled them into a compact} Jokes" decided to get even. When ) certain censortous|entirely cleared by the examination. | close auestioning that he : Frage kya naeneage bea tra bundle. Only then did he put out the| Jim returned he found a stack of let- newspapers and|{t used to be a joke among my staff}From the Gresham Hotel tm ! bathers bapell berg mag els light and raise the side curtains. ters @ yard high. He opened every declined to ask for|that no single person, however angry |Where other Americans were, Sellesxcosndghat ete ape iieeeaiees cophere,”” he said e 3 an appropriation}he was when he camo in, left the|he wrote to his Swedish 0 far corner, whder the high, narrow re,”” he softly. “It looks] one, fearing he fight miss something dent that he was becoming het window, stood a bench with small Dinder’s presses and tools, at which } the convict employees repaired such books as showed signs of heavy ser- vice. This was, in particular, Law- ik, until Thorne's arrival gave * for secret service}room without thanking me profusely, the nin eananaged it, son, We're on} put found that each one was from onthe ground|though one, and he was a Mexican, |He wrote all his letters both tit be gate lh town," webee ioe: coe {2} some school which offered to ‘teach that it was dis-|did afterward make a claim of £10,000/lish and German in ordinary beterite And ub, With bd Ce ring him movie acting in five lessons.” honorable would be guilty of treason|for moral and mental damages. One| Without any disguise. His tn Aine wok! beeut any luck tho] ‘The victim seems to think things| ®sainst its own countrymen. man was so grateful that he asked | Would have been of comparath out much before that.| are about even now. Whether an individual degrades|iecave to make a contribution to the|tle value even if it had They were going to lock us up at 9, es himself by engasing in espionage de-| fund of the Police Orphanage. This|“ermans, which it did not. fered ne tant) eee Latah oe HEIRESS-ACTRESS, ie ea how and why he does it. If|I had not the face to allow, perhaps Aceren ee Sees ee 5 mo! i story 0 think we're almost out of the woods| Beatrice Bentley, society girl and} ». Seiicay eis Ganeeons tute et Pen aeieecT AEA, Pe tine einey Russian troops passing throws right now," He lifted his hands in a|hetress of Detroit and recently grad-| the risk of his life, without thought of |had to ‘it should be going the |'@nd gesture cf luxurious relief. “It feels | uated from Columbia University, is] personal gain; if in carrying out the|other way, . COURAGEOUS TO THE LAST, he sald simply: “mighty! the iatest recruit from the social reg-| duty he does not stoop to form friend- From Dublin Lody travelled to Xil- {ster to adopt the screen as a career. |ChI08 in order to betray them, but|MAKE THE SUSPECT LOOK UP./iamey, no doubt on his way to * | oomes out with clean hands, what is} I made a discovery about that low] Queenstown, but on Oct. 2:hey was Miss Bentley attended several af-| there degrading in his service? Butjarm chair. For some time I had|detained by the Royal Irish .Conq fairs at which she met Norma Tal-|{f he spies upon a nation with which |noticed that whenever a particularly} stabulary to await the arrival of dew madge. So smitten was the actress| his country is not at war, merely for| disconcerting question was put the|tectives from Scotland Yard. “They with the beauty of the young social] the money he can make, and lives|suspect instinctively raised himself by| found among his luggage the forged and his punishment, however hard it] Princess thet she offered her « small bore upon him, was his just due, And|Part in “The Eternal Flame.” ‘Tie riotously, as nearly all such hirelings |the arms to reply to it. passport, about £175 in cr arti and gold, a notebook with partk of the naval fight In the North Sea yet, as they jolted aver the uneven] offer was accepted and now, ‘tis sald, do, he should be treated like the ver-| My assistant, in peace time an em!- e few weeks eurller, addresses In road, Thorne knew that it was going| the Screen has gained another corking ee important business of censoring appll- Lawton understood somethin, was sound sense in sgpervising the Rooks issued to convicts as the reward ef orderly, behavior. It was only a few weeks after his entry as a prisoner that Thorne made great discovery. In working at the Pt Bench he dropped a loose sheet from Even then Thorne had a pang of self-reproach at the prospect of re- turning this man to his cell when the need of him had ceased. He had not Intended to be guilty of any soft weak- ness for his tool; Lawton was a thief, $2 if Be i a® Nevertheless, there is something] I should sit in it and be interrogated pitiful even about such men when|by him. I felt at once an irresistible I min that he Is. nent K. C., suggested one day that lin, Stockholm, Bergén and } reat hole to be hard to turn traitor to this man| *tre#®. they have played their stake and lost| impulse to raise my face to the level] 2 copies of the four letters that, Re Sains Ge who sat beside him. He thrust the and they feel the cold hand laid upon|of his. The fact is that if you want} #7 written to Stockholm. He 5 ; Care CAD, thought out of his mind. The main SIGNS I8 SIGNS. —_.. «. |tnem and all their profitless debauch-|to get the truth out of a witness the| Tied by court martial at the % Sh Se tant thing was to catch Timothy Parrot.| Shortly after it was announcedleries sour upon the palate. It is as| worst way is to put him in a box] hall, Westminster, on Oct. 80 and 3 iu t qeet toanite Nothing cleo mattered. that Hutchingon's “It Winter Comes |if they ran uunheeding round & corner | above the level of the cross-examining petra aes Vain) 20 Pei , ‘ een at Wa eculh aot .]and came suddenly upon Death stand-| counsel; if our law courts were intel-| ‘Mat Lory | was having! 4 F aea and thin, dor against Darreeeye eee aeniy | Was to be made into a tim, an enter-ling in the path. ‘Then all honor to|{tgently constructed the crose-exami. | 10" his duty, lett the 69 - wel, Thorne and continued to cling t life with a stub. | Praing owner of a general store in}tnem if they can meet it with alner should take his stand in a kind of |'",the hands of the court. ie wa a Were to. teomealven! a stub-lthe Midwest displayed a sign in his] smite, : not ashamed of anything that N® had] born vitality that puzzled the doctors window: which read) ‘Don't tail to Me elevator and be suddenly lifted to the done, he would not cringe Tors 3 almost as rhuch as it interested them.| waa ‘If Winter Comes,’ and don't| PEG!INNING WITH THE, Proper position just before his cross-|ne would accept the detisioh ef! He had even survived the delicate op- eration which had set a stitch in his punctured heart, and assault with in- tent to kill was the worst charge that could .be brought against his assall- ant. Luckily, so far, no hint of the 7 »} examination begins. Primitive races forget we carry a full line of snow] During the first few days o : righteous sen. Her vee aa shovels coal, wood and woolen,” {I Femember a staff officer remarking, have found this out, for their chiefs] and sentenced to deuth and Was @a : that we should repeat the experience| Stand erect while their inferiors squat | eouted in the Tower five days later, » of the Napoleonic wars! we should be-]0n the ground when they are being} He met his death wndineitness sea FRIGIO. ) gin the war with the worst intelli-| questioned. on the morning of his ex At} Robert J, Flaherty, F. R. G. 8.| gence service in Europe and end with| During the first few days of the war|js related that he said to thé Assias “WE CAN DO IT. ‘THAT SHELL WILL GO.AT A TOUCH.” facts had icsisi out to the news-| who was the guest of the Associated| the best. I was inclined to think that}! detained a curious person who ar-|tant Provost Marshal, “I suppos® you) papers, and the public, very slightly] 3 could tell him the final details of theymatch and three times the flame] interested in the affair. had no tase Motion _ Disture | -Advattings at" & he was right about the first part of|rived4a the country on an American] will not shake hands with # ®py?* his prediction and I now think that he| Passport in the name of Bridgman-| and that the officer repliéd, “No, but} the mortar out between the| Plan. winked out before he gave it up and|that it was Timothy Parrot who had| U2cneom declined to make a eet last shell of bricks. A good shove ‘We'll make it Wednesday night,” |resumed his walk. struck the blow. Nor, unless he was|*Peech, but answered free-for-all | | | ‘have been Cavendish,’ / “He was here for ten was right about the second. But then| Taylor, who claimed to be named von|T will shake hands with a brave if he had gone on to say that the|der Goltz and to bo a Major“in the KUPPFERLE, THE BLUNDE! 1a Rew ‘them tumbling, Poor old| be said. “I've fixed {t with the chap-| “All ready, son." Lawton dragged | wiser than Thorne believed, had Par-| questions about the taking of his}Germans started the war with the| Mexican Army. He was a typical In} 4. mo, 14 1915, there. 4 Ca 1 He must have die@ hard,| Plain so that we can work overtime | the heavy bench back and slipped into | fot the, slightest reason to suspect thnt| farthest north film, “Nanook of the| Most elaborate Secret Service organ-| ternational spy—mysterious, wheed- y jy there, ars) J] with that knowledge on his soul, An- ae yon ep : i recantees! the crevice beyond it. Thorne heard|the police knew he had struck {t. North," ization in Europe and ended it with] ling and apprehensive. He pretended a car and o rived in Liverpool another apy to be eager to enter our service, —1[!08# courageous and. pattiotig told him that we would make use of aie Leas ciency, and forbidding in his«p his services—as a prisoner of war in 1 pepo so sonal appearance. This was other week and he'd have the gasping breath as he strained his They passed. safely through two] Al ff the “actors” were Eskimos { » to finish outside! Pretty tough.” for us just Paton’ ing lea ibis] wonderful strength against the last]sleeping villages and skirted a more peripee temperature at the luncheon | Might. 4 i ‘Thorne breathed audibly. ‘Wo can| there's the chu Mow sw anay | tip of the mortar. There was a sud-| wukeful little city; tt was a little past] boing well above the 100 mark, the| 1 have already related how, at the “go it.” he whispered tensoly. ‘ shadow and make it ait of a window | 2eh yielding of the barrier, @ terrify-/the half hour when they reached a| folks sorter relished a nice, cool Es-| Vital moment of mobilization, the Kuppferle, who was belleved to have shell will go at a touch—and will happen to look ou 3 a meee ing noise of falling bricks. small house on the edge of the metro-| kimo talk. They fired questions at| Whole of the German organization in] It was not until early in 1916 that| hoon a non-commissioned offer! ail shrubs hide the hole outside, too—you | and Beet St. rm ut ike agth y Ze Thorne, was almost in the spirit of | Polls, a survival of farming days, with| their guest with the rapidity of ma-|the United Kingdom was broken up: |the capture of von Papen's check |the German Army, How yon Papem,| } ‘can see from the window. And we'd|/#on; and If you' a Sl the thing now; it was astonishingly | Small remnant of its ancient acres| chine guns, He answered them all | how \t was possible for us to despatch | books disclosed his real activities. He] who had financed him, could s¢ bbe outside the wall, too, There’s no/ enough to tide you over. I owe big! real to him, as he knelt and wormed | Still left open about it. Here the car] until C. L, Yearsley, the President of /°Ur Expeditionary Force to France} had been engaged in the United States | sent a man so obviously Ge re) S | uard on this side after six, We could} something for this, bela vigibllbaaa FJ his way: through the gap after Law.| Stopped and Thorne followed Lawton| the A. M. P. A, blurted out: without the loss of a single man or alin sabotage and probably he had come | ignorant of the English lancug 4 * get leave to work late and step out Lard Posed bein tae ‘any chances] ton, ‘The older man elbowed him out to the ground. The driver left the] “Do Eskimos really eat Eskimo] Single horse and without the knowl-|to this country for the same purpose, |the American accent into an i «without a whisper of trouble. MO enone with me. T've got no time|of the way, as he crouched in the|Wheel, and, to Thorne's amazement, | pie? edge of the Germans. but he took alarm, imagining that}oountry is tncomprehenalble, hand shook as he felt cau-/ it's different with me. Uve 6 shelter of banked shrubs, and leane1| "Uns eager arms about Lawton's neck| “On, yes!” answered the guest] It was of course not long before} his every movement was being watch- Piles, Lawton pretended to be ? + tio about the of the bricks, | to waste.’ and kissed him agai id ted to make . They] ed, and he came to us with offers of | travetic , i] seoay. eed Ninfamtiar| Hie jaws closed grimly and the \back into the hole in the wall. Thorne gain and again, be-|“On, my, yes! But they like it best]/they attempted to make good. erent cava ule GOR aut: raveller in woollen goods, of ‘ tween Incoherent words that ” tablished espionage centres at t was , ; © touch of eolor. ‘Thorne knew that he| brows gathered ebove glinting eyes. Hern peAhaeaitae the caer ietgt | tobe | He etared! blankly iti ad (ae Antwerp and. Brussels, they had| When wo found his namo among |color tor this. in the tact th ¥ was weighing tho certainty of another) Thorne whispered, Wit tienitve days|Would’give him a better chance, by|tom, still holding the vague figure PEEVED. branch offices in connection with the|the checks I sent for him from pris-!haq once traded as a woollen: i .. year’s delay against the chance of for-}an interminal concéaling the avenue of their escape | With one arm, turned to him. 1 German Consulate at Rotterdam. Un-|0" to ask him to explain. He then /cnant in Brooklyn undert the ~ feiting his good conduct by a folled|/that dragged into Gee Marte for a time, at least, Until the guards]. ‘“8rry, Kane, I forget you ataa't Buck Jones has @ real mad on |r tunately for them, there was great|™made a statement about his activities | o¢ Kuppferle & Co. aoe by attempt at escape. Hie saw the nan Laser gv eae eae ne bench: | beat through these bushes and found| know my daughter; Esther, this is] Ressont jealousy between the navy and the| in America, which was considered so] From Liverpool he wrote’ letter i Oe OU ie anne paider, immediate | while the night thickened beyond the| the broken wall there would be noth- | Tom Kan Mbp ihelped meget sway,’'|| Suck, be bought an automobile th’ aroiy and each hd been tntrusted Important that on March 18, 1918 he | certain address in Holland, Shieh aI 5 “Esther! The name thudded in | with a certain amount of Secret Serv- t ove as probably the first letter thatveome it chotee, Lawton thrust the bench back| barred window and the stare bright- ihe fe show how they had broken |. one's ears like an ominous, clang.| ore Any and started to run it his- //.. noney, on which they entered into| sive evidence against two of the Ger- | tained writing in invisible ink. find {i the ee eta e origaiasad anee aaeeest “ihey did not taik,| AS for pursult, Thorne knew per- | & ote of a funeral bell. He strained welf. a sort of civil war of competition, man Consuls, one of whom was |he conveyed information about the walt 3 the worst he would have been equally his eyes in the starlight, Then, when the durned tht ‘Anything reported by a spy em-|Krupp's agent, for attempted outrage | vessels he had se hi “Well need clothes and money andlas if by common consent preferring} fectly, that he had nothing to fear Reet naires MAIC ane clean, eke etwas alle ployed by the German naval authori-|®4 breach of neutrality. The Amert- | Ktianticn sroseing each to hug his thoughts in secret Doctor C ¢ -| t i; ee certteuied by the Mill. | 22 Government was quite ready to tics a The prison clock boomed elght times, | managed matters well, with the help] jun. phat, tne Slr he had followed} Whoa!” he goes and gite mad. tee, Intelligence, and vice versa. Thia| 2nd us back our prisoner at the end | non edmorinaiccen ommere te and Lawton moved closer to the win-|of the chief. .A Governor who flatly , the girl who] Giddap! gen non-commissioned officer, of the case, but I assured them that ; fow, staring out across the darkened{refused to considera pardon for Dan| neq poreutently come between him we were altruistic and had no desire | trac ip the meee ute E slp of turt and shrubbery In whten |Lawton was willing enough to au- ere penet d to explain his movements venturous Englishman actually passed |‘? deprive them of so interesting a] ypon osyllables, Walter Hill, alias Hi Speed, who} into Belgium to take service in une of Personality, Afterwant he published | machincry for substituting for so long has dished out mighty |these Intelligence Qffices and came eeamenice his own version of his} for the military courts ady f readable stuff for Selznick, will soon |Psck with useful information. complete, and when the do what 1s termed in the movies a|THE CLASSES THAT FURNISH LODY, THE PATRIOTIC SPY. ready he was arraigned at th sehecea SPIES. The first serious spy to be arrosten |HAiey Pefore the Lord Chet y They were prone also to engage|W* Lody. Carl Lody was a good ee a ea ug : a car)’ he whispered, “They'd have i us back in an hour if we walked out + like this, Wait till next week, and I'll * fix it vp, Visiting day's almost here, . keen competition made them a very A FADE-OUT. easy prey. On one ocrasion an ad- 7 and I've got a way of matag ng aes : like this. You leave it to me, son, It i Tawton, @ crook's daughter, and nor, by her part in to-night's affair, a crook herself in intention, if not in fact! Copyright, 1922, The Pell Syndicate, Inc. the warden took such deep content.|thorize the Warden of Hamilton to Suddenly he stiffened; a man passed] release the convict in the custody of casually along the payement across}|Thorne, and the formal document the street and paused to light a cig-| which he had signed to that effect arette or pipe. He made clumsy work {did not specify the method in which of it. Three times he struck a safety| that release was to be managed. It can be dope—and done safely, if we take our time and keep our heads.” - Thorne nodded and went back to his work, It was the longest week of his life that intervened before Lawton Another Instalment To-Morrow. 1h em —— ~ That 1s, Waithill will pack hts example of the patriotic spy. ‘He had], TPS evidence produced om: tig ee ‘unsuitable people; the sort of py. He had) gay left lttle doub he resi! STILLS. The Vol Stead Film Corporation special writers. Now watch a bun quite unsuitable peop! bi € thewe Y who hag |@8y left ttle doubt of the wreaul » SHIP NEWS INFORMATION Judging from what Alma Rubens,|!% Meported to bo Alming “Lips that |of scenarista drift back into the Ber | ny ee eee ete toc rhe mc” | people who in war time at once bs-| 10% song enough in the United States [*® tial, and the court rags wi Touch Liquor Shall Never Touch pencil stubs and move from the Selz-|come what the Frenoh call ‘agents| !!vedsiong enough In the United States Paper game. ase ‘ ' to acquire what he believed to be |P*@ctlcal certainty that tt would m ’ i Due To-Day. the screen player, said yesterday, she] ying," Playgoers Pictures yesterday an-|"/ck stable over to the Columbia that is to aay, they attempt to _ncquire, whet he believed to be | Census followin ernie ae is Cantigny, Ante ooo. 5: --gune a1] will NOT don short skirts—no mat-| Movie advertinements whoop tt upy nounced two releases for July. ‘They | burlesque offices. to Serve Doth eee ote ay orene| cent. He had held a commission in {Dever met. During the night tat * | fins, Bosunrncon ’..- June 23) «what Paris may dictate, Mebbo|for ‘The Law That Divides Kathleen] will be “The Woman Whe Gan i object of obtaining pay or of | (oe German Navy and was a Reserve {to Prison the Chief Warder ; Rochambeau, Havre Jun 1 Clifford in five part Back" and “Her Majesty. Fe ©} We regret this very much for a/making their lives safe in the event | Qo 0° a muffled rapping from meereee, Te veretn as he hi ‘oupla good reasons, ‘a And we , é . 4 Due To-Morrow, ® oA Lane $4 Sa ee a ERE SURE in vamping—stand up! | didn't even know they were in jail, | Uber Of reasons. The fret fe that Of saeaatiee Be eom shake eR pate He then entered the employment of |°el!: He dressed himself hastily! ce June 30 pe leetpe ni least in: tbe {s returning to the] Jack Voorhees, up to now promi-|f!ma are losing! one of the most|r Mee imecine them running cheap|the \Hamburg-American Steamship |CA™m® out inte, the $ 4 Jone ag Diana,’ Marion Davies’ next star- ‘ nent in the speakies, has sailed his| likeable chaps that ever manhandled gambling hells, frequenting the docks Linelas @ guide for tourists. In that | ¥°S mes Pe us night warder, « + tune J} ring vehicle, should prove welcome haee, sotng. fim brite recently straw Kelly into the movie ring. a typewriter and the second and, to|to pick up some dishonest profit, re-| capacity he had travelled all over at fe ae abe could not ‘ June 19] on a hot August day, It is that of an | fount 6 Movie rémauran! — e little blackma!! and ‘per.|25sland, and had even attempted, D z “une 34) 0 5 Rami tae anne itbat somes aay than one MELO'S DADDY HERE. oe arey of Gtekiog. the most tm- salary tha) (thers sgate pel rihecel though unsuccessfully, to obtain em ie ne Sie master ae 1 une & iH} Dlast. sugar ‘culation, rtan e r pen al dune 10] "Yeaward Fezu, noted Swisa guide, Things are going along fullest Tanooln J. Carter, the granddaddy| Duaiey will get ah of Waltrice | White Slave trafficker. pevares voces eens. - Thomas pipes TiNgune 18] who was engaged to ptlot the C politan company through the wild Juve 22] Canada during the shooting of “The : Valley of Silent Men,” says there is] Minaret."* one sure way of avolding falling when] ‘They might ask—even beg—folke to mountain climbing—stay off the! use mountain, of modern melodrama, drifted into New York yesterday and went right into a conference with the William Fox officials in regard to producing some of his old-time favorites the full (ile, “Douglas Fatr-|soreen, ed : found the man hanging d CH In war time you will find them| CK & Son. A few daya before ing dead trom ahead at the Norma Talmadge studio, Aug, 4, 1914, Lody returned to Berlin |°¢!! ventilator. He had tled this whore the star will soon start hard work on “The Voloe From the merry quips instead of this column. WORGn oan aL get by thelr complicated villainies ta| With the German Intelligence, and, taking his stand om @ hea CH. book, had kicked it awe It happened that there was staying away from apent with doth hands. ‘They live like n him. Every effort was thede te The prospect of falling out of and q in Berlin at that time an American 3 2 | princes and dress ike Brokers’ clerks.| mea Charles A. Inglis, who had|*tre life by artificial respiration, Lavonia, Faeinnd. Bide, ‘Liverpoo! ‘Tolow, Port Din Dante’ Alighier Queenstown he 4 Sew indow forty feet to the HE INTERVIEW CHAIR. in val Railing T banks in Robin Hood," but they'll] About fifteen years ago, Carter,| ™ ground 7 applied to the American Embassy for }'" Yn. # Sravenserfioré, Bereen malic, about selecting Airle for a] never teach the mansos or classes to latter gathering in his fortune from |{omn't Worry Jack Giddings a bit, He} qnere was in my office an armchair|a vise to his passport enabling him| C°**ieht 1922, Doubleday, Page Coy Mavenserfiord. Be min? ‘i eels ae Bseired oes oall it anything but ‘Robin Hood, the “ten-twent'-thirt’,” retired to his|'# called upon to make fust such @ fallin which every spy, real or fancted,'to continue his trav in Europe, (Continued To-Morrow,. p # Atty) Jackie Coogan has & new director, | farm in Ilinois and declared he would |for his heavy role in his latest Para-{_————___,_—sssss—sssssssss—sF oa Satling To-Morrow, men to wear tights In a movie, Ask] None other, by the way, than \E, M Homeric, Southampton, Finland, Antwerp. let some one else serve the thrills to the multitudes But, after seeing some of the films mount film, To the oniinary man such @ fall the custing director of "When Knight-] Mason Hopper, The film, of course, hood Was tn Flow will be “Oliver Twist,” Not to knock the staxe at all—but hanging by his teeth and with both )been Writing stories for the ‘“His Ras-| “‘Ah will haive t’ ride a lahat ted behind bim—or changing|cals'’ films, was discussing his now|tioned Sammy. f Aarraine, Haves : Mary O'Hara is prop ring the soreen|that are laying claims to the thriller|WOUld look like a first-past-the-post| parachutes three times in one de-|story recently, ‘Sunshine Sammy,"| ‘'Yes,"" answered McNamate,” ; Kren” Arihur. Piyiouth Prepared press notices of a certain] yersion of ‘Pex o' My Heart" for/titie, he just couldn't stand it any|OF & dead heat—but it doesn't foane|soont? the chocolate drop, was an open-| “An’ Ah will hafve *' use @ eager” film declare the film concerns “the| Metro, longer and says he's going into the| Jack at all, ‘Tho answer, of course, ts ‘‘Nuthin’,"* | mouthed listener, foh a whup?” cies life of a typtoal woman of the New| Metro announced yesterday that it| movies to “thrill ‘em up a hit!" Whatis a mere forty feet to a man “And tn this film, Sammy," went on| ‘Yes."* ‘ 2 > wonderfully beautiful, but} would goon abotish its scenario staff] Well, he's just the buy who oan|Whe relishes such stunts as changing NOT FOR SAMMY. Tom, “you will have to ride a lionand| ‘Looka heah, Mistuh Tomijoje } and order all its writing dome py |do it! jfrom one airplane to another while] Tom MoNamare, artist, wig has | use a snake for a whip,’ sho’ dun got yo’ pronouns mixed.’ 7 , } + \ 4 , t cH “s ;