The evening world. Newspaper, July 3, 1922, Page 8

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; ‘ (HE spasm of hatred lasted only for an instant and then Law- ton was himself again, smil- ing, poised, master of his @motions, But the instant had been enough. Whatever the debt that Iny Setween this man and Timothy Par- Tot, it was something to be paid in sweating agony, and not in quick, easy death. . “All right, but no killing,” he re- peated. “I'd like to rub him out, my- self, if he's the man that handed me my troubles, but I don't intend to take any chances on the chair, even for that." “You fool, Kane! I'd risk my neck & hundred times to keep life in him I want him to live to be a hundred. Even that wouldn't pay back, but it would be something. Kill Parrot? I'd kill another man to keep him alive! There was no room for doubt. Thorne's anx‘ety was set at rest Lawton would lead him to Timothy Perrut, as a bloodhound follows the gomt. And, like the loodhound, he would not kill his quarry when he found it, but suffer it to be taken from him alive. The plan would work. The day would come after all, when Tom Thorne would make his boast good by “bringing in" the man who had) made the police look silly for years. “I'd just as soon not be in his ehoes,” he said, quietly, ‘‘It looks to me as if he had a bad time ahead >of him—if you really know where to find him. Where is h Lawton shoi a swift, piercing Blance at him “I don’t kr now,"* Thorne stared. ‘Then how are you going to find him? We can't either of us do much running around. “We won't have to. I'll know when the time comes. Don't worrv. This is my little job, Kane, It's all arranged." The Tracker found a chance to scribble a condensed report of pro- gress, and, when he and Lawton Went out, on the third evening aftur their escape, in search of news an‘i food, it was easy enough to slip the wadded bit of paper into the r hand of Sam Bohn who brushed against him as he stood at the conn- ter of the grocery. There was un- other in his palm when it returned to his pocket. Later, when he was sure that he was not observed, he read und burned it. The chief urged him to get action as soon as possible; the papers were making trouble over the “escape” at Hamilton, and the War- den was beginning to lose his nerve ‘and insist on the return of his bor- Towed prisoner. The Governor wut inclined to agree with him, and un- less something happened soon thu chief would have to make the pinch and drop the scheme. He ended with @n earnest caution against letting Lawton get away, at which Thorne|“A HEAVY GUN APPEARED MIRACULOUSLY FROM THE FELLOW’S| {Tom hoine!” couldn't help smiling. Lawton didn't Want to get away from him. He quite urging speed, and would have broach- ed the topic next inorming to Lawton ff the latter had not anticipated him by announcing that the time had come to move. time,"’ he said, cryptically. ‘We'll go and see anywa: Thorne objevied. “In daylight? To- gether?’ He was perfectly willing from Thorne and Bohn and Fraser, hat he really looks like; when IJ sued th ftily. It was dark befo ‘and he might give them a clearer hint |” sued them opately. re ry ge knew him he was a square-shouldered,| they reached Hamilton, and they|leaving him utterly useless. He could if he fancied himself unobserved even by his cupposed accomplice. “We'll have to chance it. It's not far, anyway, and we'd better stick to- gether, too, If things are right we shan’t be coming back here again, ‘Come on. They went out holdly and descended the slope toward the edge of the city's fringe of flat buildings. At the branch ‘post office Lawton stopped and asked for mail addressed to Solomon Hare. A single letter rewarded him, and he opened it so eagerly that Thorne un- consciously drew nearer. Lawton thrust the note into a pocket. “All right,” he said, briefly. ‘We've hit the trail, Kane. I might have guessed it anyway. It's exactly where he'd go—the last place a man would look for him. I'll give you one guess; ‘where is he?” “How would I know?" Thorne shrugged. ‘If you've got the dope, let's go. I don't like this daylight stun a Aittle bit.” Lawton laughed. “All right. + ERO nO pam yen seem oS oe 2a errs ns 2 teenager: Ty > = PRESALE Se Se “We ought to have the tip, by this] When— lengthened and deepened across the jon't let ‘em down. Keep 'em[ £10 suit to wear all the way over. and he's made up to look like @ sort of| at least, was keeping on the trail, and] you got Lawton along, but he'll walt.|) pig tiner, especially around dinner| his death with admirable courage a4) father was a Scandinavian. Ludovico retired minister or teacher—clean that Lawton should elect to go alone, |8haven and stooped and his hair gray it he preferred. He couldn't get away |0sein. He's a wizard at disguising now he's got a new stunt, according That's really clever, because it makes| sharply. It was a three-story bricklas he raged and begged. “Don't| “1 simply adore handsome leading THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, JULY 3, 1922. HUGH KAHLER. RATED BY WILL B:JOHNSTONE WHO'S WHO IN THE STORY. intelligent. kind that quickens the| signs: i, hehe THORNE—the Tracker, most successful detective in the faculties instead of blinding them.| ‘John Burnett Pants to Order.” ureau, ; Lawton touched his sleeve, “Oyster Pi ” M’NAMARA—also a detective, and jealous of the Tracker’s rec-| . “We've got him. Here's the pro- iia i a ay cle ord, gramme. You help here, Ring the TIMOTHY PARROT and RAWLINGS—A crook with many} !0Wer bell and when they tet you in : f t I'll follow, Get inside the door, up-| Walter Hlers, the heavywelght char- aliases. Parrot killed a man who found a note in his possession read- stairs, and keep them busy while I go|acter man now playing in blackface ing something like this: “You can't hide from me, Timothy Parrot,] on up. Say you're looking for a friend|in ‘The Ghost Breaker,"' wag called anywhere under the sun—one year more before you pay for Dora] of yours you understand boards there.| won to be lifted onto a steamer via Faulkner When they suggest that it must bol ihe derrick route, s m Fi 4 upstairs, you can come ,on up and ite ae . jeal of ry ‘ Before the scene he looked up the LAWTON—A convict serving time for one de the Parrot’s.|hetp, if you like. But’ remember, forstnan, OE Ge Sereuceniftann bas ESTHER LAWTON, his daughter, beautiful enough to make the] you're not to interfere, whatever hap- wala: Tracker wish that she were not the daughter of a crook, gi Aine. 1s my job. You'll stand sooka here! You folks have got In order to get Lawton’s story, the Tracker assumes the name of | P¥,2n7 Say nothing till I've got what! +, xwing me from the dock to the hold 2, in I want; see?"’ nl " Kane, dons the garb of a convict and goes in as cell mate. They] «you'n leave him for me, though?'|°'"!8 vessel! Do you think your In a Iittle town in Southern Call- fornia Wally Reid, who always keeps @ mask of grim hatred of the cold,|"!* °Y** Pen, glimpsed the following BY SIR BASIL THOMSON HEFTY. Chief of British Criminal Investigation for an English curacy, was ordained and appointed to the Parish of Ap- F Ss th A ® pledore in Kent. n impressed with his abilities that Roggin reported his arrival in England on a postcard. be engaged him oo his pitvkte geetee Melin became a spy because he could find no other job. tary. Mr. Rowntree was at that time just one hour before crossing the three-mite limit, dar Wit ihe seebaluenn oe Cha RIee Trebitsch was the most astonishing figure of the war. Borna Hun- | who at last put him up to contest t garian Jew, he succeeded in being by turns a Church of England clergy- * Department 1913-19. . Ss i B s t A . he came back to Europe he applied About 1906 he came into touch with Seebohm Rowntree, who was s0 Because a Danish postal clerk in Copenhagen dropped a letter ad- |in close touch with the leading Lib- dressed to Berlin into the London mail bag, a clever spy was arrested | eras. and this brought Lincoln, as he Unionist constituency of Darlington man, a member of Parliament, spy, journalist and counter-revolutionary, {in the Liberal interest. : Pu Be, é tackle will hold?! CHAPTER X. AMBITIOUS AS A POLITICIAN. plan an escape—Esther aids in the getaway. dua ef betes t95 tad i ra?” | AY guess so!"" nonchalantly, re- AVING failed with Germans, the AUs. 20 and 21, His counsel urged] The House of Commons {s no more Lawton wants to go after Parrot anc “get him @ I've had my turn 4 al : impressed with fiery oratory in a for- plied the big Swede foreman. ‘He that he had sent nothing to the enemy which could not have heen obtained from newspapers, but he couid not, of course, put forward the plea that he was not a spy. Melin took this last stroke of fortune like a gentle- man. He gave no trouble and when the time came he shook hands with the guards, thanking them for their many kinditesses, and died without any attempt at heroics. ROSENTHAL’S CONFESSION. One German agent was discovered through the purest accident. It was apparently the practice at that time for the Germans to make use of ex- ‘No fear! I told you I'd risk my neck to keep him alive, didn't 17 That goes. Come on. We might as well & up. There's a light in his rooms, He's there. Quietly, now, and remember to give a chance to get by." Thorne rang the bell and presently the Intch clicked and they found them-] selves in a narrow hail, nearly dark,| . Gloria Swanson has some friends in where steep stairs led away and up to-] 800 F Ber GN eee beiie? Wat coce few days after the Lawton at Nie ileal ae the beat of pany making ‘The Impossible Mrs. i compere’ ee the stairs Thorne found a shirt-| Bellew" belteve. Wi , palais oo sleeved, untidy man confronting him Recently when Gloria arrived at the tavo postcards ad- resentfully. He stepped abruptly past| Station to return to Los, Angeles she dressed to Rotter- him into a stuffy, smoke-filled living- was met by @ score or more of these dam attracted the room, and, ufter a hostile stare, the} tends, each of whom was laden with criminals on condition that they un- attention of the} dertook espionage in an enemy coun- other turned from the door. presente: “What do you want?” he de-| One more energetic than the rest, Postal Censor.|try, It chanced that some postal offi-|19Ne his work conscientiously, but he manded aggressively. “You got your|*nnounced he had made all arrange- They announced] clal in Denmark had mis-sorted a let- | VS not popular with his colleagues nerve with you all rent: re that was to arty. ise Gl a and imavely: tliat. (the) (ee adressen from Copenhagen ty overtu ntl DEO eee eee i eae Thorne had seen the face some- |" cided NM a hoe Ma be . h Berlin and slipped it by mistake into] °Vertures must have galled him, The where, but It did not Identity iteeit|e" company southward. Then he writer had ar-line pag intended for London, and|'ron entered into his soul and from to him at once, and hie mind was|'¢?, he way to ths car. rived in England and was ready to|this letter was written in German by|that time he was definitely anti-Brit- fixed on the upper floor and the risk | jt (ov aqatl nave been Might Pretty thegin work, ‘The postmark was Ed-]a man who said he was about to start | 'sh in his sympathies. letting Dee eee ne caynere.co, the for England under the disguise of a| His first act of disloyalty was to he was running in letting Lawton | right car and train. But he didn’t | ‘nburgh. traveller in patent gas-lighter in| Attempt to obtain admission into our out of his piste roe Se ae and the Los Angeles Limited pulled] The police in Scotland were set to} jeder to collect military and naval in-}OWN Intelligence organization. He Tie lealuk for. tay fried Doce (out Withoub’ the star. work, and a few days later they de-| formation, Professed to be able to tempt the lass," he explained. “I understood tained at Loch Lomond a native of] A search of the landing records was} German Fleet out into the North Sea, i ” i at once instituted, and it was found] Where it could be destroyed, and for he lived here. Uruguay, who gave his name as “ . ray that at Newcastle at that very mo-| that purpose he proposed to cross to The eyes narrowed and the face Augusto Alfredo Roggin, He was “| ment a young man named Rosenthal} Holland and offer his services to the regarded him malevolently,, "He neat, dark little man, not at all like] was on board a steamer about to sail]G@erman Consul. Though his appll- a German, though he admitted that his father was a German, naturalized eign accent than a Kentish congre- tion, and Mr. Lincoln was glad to absent himself from the House in ors der to undertake an Inquiry Into eco- nomic conditions on the Continent, I do not think that when the war broke out Lincoln had any idea of giving information to the enemy. He had lost his seat in the House of Commons and he was in financial straits, but his first inclination was undoubtedly to offer his services to Bngland. The first step was to apply for a position in the censorship for Hungarian and Roumanian correspon- dence; and for the short time of his employment he is believed to have H enemy now turned to South America for their spies. The large German colony in Central and South America was an excellent recruiting ground, In June, 1915, a phant yesterday!" And Walt was reassured, FRIENDSHIP. JAZZ. Werner Janssen, the composer, is up-agin it—and up-agin it good and hard, too, He's been sweltering in a projection lives upstairs,” sald the unpleasant for Copenhagen after making a tour| Cation was rejected, he did succeed voice, “What do you want to see} room trying to evolve a score to ac- with his gas-lighters in Scotland in obtaining a passport, and on Dec. him about, hun? company ‘The Half Breed” for a He was very glib in his denials 18, 1914, he arrived in Rotterdam. Thorne stared. “What's that toliong long time and admits it is some |!n Uruguay in 1885, and that he!nagq never lived in Copenhagen, he was| 3ERVED A THREE-YEAR SEN- you Tea be ceaaey sweetly, “Sorry | jop, himself was married to a German|not a German, he knew nothing about TENCE 0 other you, ut— * ’ WEG mena Ie! Tin pad yon Proc ey aaah Leder _Indian | woman. the hovel fom which the) letter hed}! rie German Consul, Guoiat, wand came in. I been hoping to get a look! “Not since Volstead clamped the| A% ® Spy he was one of the most) “W110 7 1. pending there was a Wary active seplonage agent, and Lin- at you for two-three days, No. 4896! | mute on the ‘Sweet Adelina’ octets |!nent that could have been chosen. | sharp movement from the chair and alcoussepPcars to have made some {m- Don't move at all!” that once used to gather along the] Even on the journey north from|click of the heels, I looked up and| (renee tay tim at first, for he did A heavy gun appeared miracu-| trai of the rail!'? we shot back. ked so many ques-|there was Rosenthal standing to at- some valucleas infor- d Kings Cross he as! iy qi mation to carry back with him to lously from the fellow's hip and] +why?" ‘ i aintances that they] tention like a soldier. “I confessevery-| England, With thi im pointed close at Thorne's solar Vell," answered Janssen, "I have | Hons of casual acqu thing. I am a German soldier. laned The antiorlen tee Plexus. Instinctively hig hands rose.| spent most of my Ife in the East|Pecame suspicious and took upon) But the remarkable part of this! the Intellinence Boome tee inte The other laughed. “Nerve? You|and have never heard an Indian sing | themselves to warn him not to go any-| story was that he was never a soldier |." Goldy sacsicaa tate eines got all there is! Break out of/and so, of course, don't know what| where near the coast. In fact, they}at all. On a sudden impulse he had} ang tort tor New Yorn on abt Hamilton and walk bang into | they'd sound like. The only Indian| vere go hostilé that he left the com-|tfied to wrap his mean existence in| Here he made a living of some kind keeper's house two days later! This| music I ever heard was a tom-tom ; 7 t the|! cloak of patriotic renpectability. by journalism, in ignorance of th ia mighty friendly of you, No. 4896.] duet in an Indian medicine show. [| Partment at Lincoln and «pen’ Tt te not clear whether he was ac-lract that the authorities In England I'll remember it, while you're doin’ guess I'll have to write the sort of| night there, tually Mberated from prison for the| were investigating a certain signature the rest of your little bit. Money| music the Indian would play if he A CAREER OF ELEVEN DAYS. |purpose of espionage, but esplonage|to a draft for £700, It transpired that played the kind of music I'm going| pe sending of the two postcards|Was the kind of work for which un-|Lincoln had forged Mr. Secbehin to write.” doubtedly he was most suited. Rowntree's name for th was quite in accordance with ordinary ‘When he found that eadditta was 8 e for that amount. Thorne caught his breath, “Man, I’m Tom Thorne. I was in there do- Chief Inspector Ward, who was demanded Thorne. ing a pigeon stunt and you're balling NON-SUITED. German espionage practice. In order|nopeless he tried to carry off the| afterward killed by a Zeppelin bowie * sald Lawton briefly. “‘He]it up, I've got Lawton -here—after! 1, iq Kesson, \chief photographer| to divert suspicion the spies were In-!pretense of patriotism at his trial,| was sent over to the United States In can't change them; and there isn’t) Douglass — Timothy Parrot. For} eq, yarshall Neilan, recently crossed | structed to send harmless postcards in another pair tke.them on earth. I'll] Heaven's sake put away that cannon} +e ocean in one suit of clothes. He|yonglish addressed to different places. know him, when I find him." and help. I'm single-handed, and) bougnt himeelt a set of scenery that] roe ti aire tical Under Lawton's instructions they] you'll make the odds even. Hop,| souia shame even Jack Dempsey, but | Moreovers Aiishie luce drove slowly as the afternoon waned| now. Lawton's upstairs with Par-| 116 boat sailed before the clothing} cA! secret ink was found in his lus. apd the shadows of the wayside trees | rot was delivered, and he had but a sin-| gage. He was tried on August 20th, found guilty and executed at the ‘Tower on September 17, He went to but after his conviction he made two] ronnection with the extradition pro- unsuccessful attempts to commit sui-| ceedings, and on Aug. 4, 1915, Lin- cide. Unlike the other spies, he was|coln was arrested. After th® usual sentenced to be hanged and was ex-|delays in such cases he was brought ecuted on July 5, 1915. to England, was tried at the Old TOO MANY SARDINES ORDERED Raley and received a sentence of ithe Ret dey be aineetd Gh ree years’ penal servitude. When his sentence expired, in the summer England was a Peruvian whoee/o¢ 1919, it was Intended to send him back to his own country, but at that time Bela Kun was in power and the charter a car. It's a long walk to Hamilton, and the railroads wouldn't be safe. “Hamilton!” Thorne stared, gen- ‘prised, “Go back there? ve got all the dope on him, Kane.| road. This pleased Thorne, because | just like they are!" A harsh chuckle!” Now, one is severely handicapped going by the name of Douglass, | ne could make quite sure that Fraser, | greeted his eager demands,- ‘Maybe with’ bat one setvof clothes on ‘board would be able to furnish reinforce-{1’11 just get the tongs on you before} time, As a result Dave tells us that|declined to have his eyes bandaged| Hurwitz-y-Zender was a genuine i cs fa! traveller, though far bet-| pian had $6 be Denis eh Dane OF Deed; Pavers times | we go. ahead: his recent trip was the finest ocean] when he faced the firing party. omamercial , Blan haa $6 bederarean, as they turned corners, he caught] And while Thorne raged helplessly,| j,unt he ever slept through. Name time after his execution a Dr.| ter educated than most men of his!” When the Communist Government himself, I don't know, right now,| glimpses of another car which pur- handcuffs were snapped oy his wrists Hing. fell the deportation w: Emilio Roggin was removed from a} cal na TCE en and his arms manacied behind him, South| It happened that the cable censor |and in September, 1919, Li veepanllaes Soe Tot wus the] began to notice messages addressed |himself again in Budapere - tne America Mine dead spy and was|t0 Christiania ordering large quanti-latmosphere of that city, just recov. wrong sea: , 5 01 his head. But when I caught up with| guided their driver with curt instruc-|the prison keepers, a heavy-handed | he’s right proud of his plainness of |had befallen him. It tpepapired Shae Sid iousltioe “weal a¥ oriso ads (| Darlin oat tenered hy aces him, just before he framed me, he| tions at turns until they had reached | brute detested by even his fellow-em- | features. he was in Germany on the outbreak) / sy about the bona fides of the| there with Count Bernstorff, the for- was a whiskery old wreck, with hair|s snugly respectable residence district | ployees. He had bungled’ the busi-| Recently a couple of flappers ambled | of the war and had been compelled by | tt, whom the messages|mer German Ambassador at the and beard almost white and a fine|on the far side of the town. Here, at|ness hideously; it would be sheer, | 0Ut to the Paramount lot where ane the German Government to serve as) were addressed.” He turned out to | United States. case of tremor in his wrists, Right| reduced speed, they crept along the] lind luck if both Parrot and Lawton | Old Homestead’ is belng shot, and/, medical officer with the troops in} "rs arsin Hithno Rexala® pisiees It is said in Germany that the ex- curb until Lawton found the house he]qaia not slip out of his fingers after] Started asking questions. the field. It had taken nearly two) 70 toa trequently been seen in|treme Right will swallow anything, to the note that tipped me off. He's | Was looking for and the car stopped. | this! “And where is the handsome lead-| yearg for him to obtain his release 5. conversation with the Ggrman Con-| Their political sagacity has never painted a birthmark on his left cheek.| Thorne glanced at the building] McCarty—for it was he—chuckled|!m& man?” asked the flapperiest one, | ing he now was on his way back to] eo err ee pane tttosely [been consplpuous. Kapp was at the Uruguay. examined for some indication of a}™moment secretly preparing for his MELIN DID LITTLE VALUABLE] code, They had been despatghed by|coup and it surprised no one when it PRIZE BEAUTY. Frank Hayes, character screen comedian, never won a beauty con- test—professional or amateur, and middle-aged fellow, with an easy,| slipped through its ill-lighted streets|not even use his hands now to selze hearty way of talking, and there| without attracting’ any more atten-|and hold an escaping prisoner. Too Wasn't So much asa streak of gray in/tion than any other car, Lawton|tate he recognized the man as one of it hard to get any description of him, | Structure, with the street floor housing} worry, Forty-eight Ninety-six. 1f]™eD Mf we should happen to strike the|a shop of some sort, the windows of] you've got your pal upstairs he'li| , Being rather bored, the opts WORK. oe was reported that Ignatius Timothy sre Siar y AE rae omer Nn HST DPS Caan pee. by lowered | come, Das joo, ut always play eailaa > Hayes i: "| About the same time a well edu-| On July 2 Zender was arrested at Trebitsch Lincoln had solemnly been was! ¥ ‘st. it 5 - appoint plea eng Mes ne Tctieno a shes Decay “Asaleesa tor Wine Rie: wee thing frst, Tot you, any") ““vpnis,"" announced the A. D., point-|cated and well connected Swede of be- Nawcensey kad ne oe es short-lived Keon Govern are thing, That's exactly Iike Parrot, |menta, and a doorway with two bell| ‘There was a sound of hurrying] ine to Hayes, tween ‘itty and sixty years of age, [sccm trprise that there eas any|many days the appointment lasted ts He's left so many contradictory de-| buttons in the frame led up to them|steps overhead, a muffed nolse of|!"s man—Mr. Hayes named Ernst Waldemar Melin, arrived | 6! : Mast ten aun treaty. ad. [not auite cartalay but apparcnty evn scriptions behind’ him that I doube| from beside the store. Lawton stopped| yolces, and then one clear and distinct |_| ‘The girl shuddered a bit aad then lin this country. He had been a roll- sia esa that ne had been at Newcestie, (Col. Bauer found him more than he whether the police could get him {den-|to glance at these and straightened} Speech in Lawton's crisp tone, shot right back at him: | “Why. Ting stone all hie fe. At one time he| mitted that he had been at Neweaatle: (°°) "an, om: Mt pene am he tiffed if they caught him. He's clever,| with a barely audible sound of sat! T've got yon, Pert. ve got you, ant WH, Haya waesih New canaged 7s fap pea aren & feta NR io had been made for his|Central Europe are the only fishing THs Jaw, cldoed end’ hia iends lights |farpolty) | Hin maw that (oe nian's byon there. - fo traveluall ver tha. work. 8 B89 Geuth America for hie defense. ‘The|We may even hear of him again. had narrowed and his face frozen into found casual employment in OP | roceedings were, therefore, post-| Copyright, 1922, Doubieday, Page & Co, (Copyright, i922, the Bell Syadivate, Inc.) (Continued on Wednesday.) NO MAKE-UP. Reel Reviews By DON ALLEN ‘This week in the Broadway cinemas oes not loom large or impressive.|side ANY picture of snow and cool, Summer has sure burned its way into] dark looking places would be accept- the movie-goer. some of the films| ble. So tha’ placed on éxhibition also show signs of @ wearing. The line-up for this week's movie] weather, “game” is as follows, with Ol’ General Public acting as umpire: Wallace Reid brings his much- fouted Richard Harding Davis story “The Dictator” to the Rivoli, where it replaces “While Satan Sleeps,” and His Satanic Mejesty is napping for Me. week at the Rialto, At the Gtrand they have an iaea fv weather film in James Oliver Cur- ‘wood’s “God's Country and the Law.” At the other Broadway picture houses there are hang-overs from last ‘week such ae “The $5 Baby” at the @xiterion, Barrymore in “Sherlock | Richard Harding Davis and screens} ghirley Mason has a new bathing Holmes” at the Cameo, “Nero” at the Lyric, “Silver Wings” at the Apollo end “The Story” at the Central. Conscience, great| looks, The balance of the bill 4B ac-| aia in ‘White Shoulders.” Northland as a playgro ithily' ceptable hot weather entertai it. Jackie Coogan wired us again yes- Paris and Copenhagen, re re te wer poned for eight months. ___(Continued on Wednesd: ginning of the war he found himself)" 7. witnesses that had been Higtiyayincal| without any means of}, sient at great trouble and ex- poned his trip abroad. We'll bet Eu-] Or a flappy hat. ie epoted without success, to his|PeRse could really say nothing in his Tope 26) ‘Upeet about tt to He never yelled through a mega-|reiations, and then, hearing that|{Vor and in due course he was Five thousand feet of bamboo are! phone in his life there was plenty of remunerative work. found guilty and executed in 3 e belng used for “East Is West" sets.| and—he never views a set through| tg be had in Antwerp, he went to Tower on April 11, nine months after That's about half as much as ulpiue glasses. Delman with the genuine desire to] te date of his arrest. Zender was teacher used during our early school} Introducing—Ladeez an’ Gemmun—| obtain honest employment. ‘There at|the last German spy to be executed days. George Fitzmaurice, long known in|)’ care ne came into touch with one|'m this cauntry during the war. A certain movie column conductor | the East as the ‘fadless director’ and} or the espionage recruiting agents] LINCOLN MOST ASTONISHING {s highly indignant because Screen-|rapidly gaining that same distinction| .1. were always on the lookout for FIGU ings Placed George Walsh sts oon-lin Hollywood. English-speaking neutrals. At first,| Perhaps the most astonishing fleure Mistalcee wil Tespon, gg Mrone date.| He simply will NOT live up to the | according to his own account, he re-|that bubbled up to the surtace during Mistakes will happen, and we're sorry traditional directorial portrait, willl sisted the temptation, but at last,|the war was that of Ignatius Timothy c but we wonder if it was a ‘mis-lthis director, now making ‘To Have} cing utterly penniless, he succumbed |Trébitsch Lincoln, That a Hungarian days out of the two weeks they were | take’’ when fourteen items out of the and to Hold.” espio: schools ould succeed in bein; turns from California, doesn't it? culled from Screenings? We hope so,Jany props whatever Fitzmaurice has avr A private showing of “The Fast] anyway. 5 peeauced such pictures as “On With Sor - t Naar eas nein he bape in England ee soaring Mati" was given recently. We agree] Mabel Normand is scheduled to re-|the Dance,” “Forever, 18 of Clay,” eeanaydee giles combination of qualitiés. His original with the rest of the newspaper bunch | turn from Europe by Aug. 16 to start|“Three Live Ghosts” and “The Man |°°1™ put up in & boarding house in|hame appears to have been Trebitsch. that it is one of the “fastest” pictures] a new picture for Mack Sennett, From Home.” y rh : Hampstead as a Dutchman whose|He was born at Paks on the Danube ever filmed. It will not be released] The shooting of “Day Dreams” has} Indicating that pictures CAN be fpr had been ruined by the Ger-|about 1875. His father, a prosperous until next year. * been somewhat of a nightm: to] made without the aid of puttees or ¥ Emmett J. Flynn, taking a vacation] Buster Keaton, ee & megaphoi miss Coheed nae, vee pomaes See Dar eee fs following the making of “Monte} A Yale professor has just written a shipping office, He made himself|tended to enter the Jewish Church, will make @ feature picture} Joe Schenck praising ‘Smilin’ agreesvie to his fellow lodgers, who|He made a study of languages and in New Fork before he returns to Through." ‘That makes it unanimous.| 4 very unkempt tndividual tried to} fully accepted his story. He was|when he was little more than twenty Hollywood, Mary O'Hare is preparing the screeM}see Rex Ingram, the Metro director, | under police suspicion from the first;|/he visited London, On his return to Blue-jay. A toucl stops the pain in- very acceptably. We like the acreen| putt tree Qense the mee version of “Peg o' My Heart” forlthe other day. He wanted a job as}but there could be no confirmation| Hungary there were quarrels between] stan ly. Then the cora leosehs and version much better than either the|the right whenever she done it Ten} ewe, an extra, Rex was too busy. Theluntil he began to write. father and son and in 1899 Ignatius! comes out, Made in two fortes original story or the play—and that's| or white ail with red trim Way | Flaygocrs Pictures yesterday an-| unkempt one then insisted upon send-| His first communications were|went to Hamburg and was recelved| colorless, clear liquid (one deg doe saying quite a lot, as we liked both | "slice Gutere the old coe nounced two releases for July, They]in a card written on the margin of newspapers, |into the Lutheran Church. itl) and'in extra thin plasters, ‘Use other versions. It is full of zip and] pay the title role in “Captain Black. | Wate” and eroman Who Came] Rex, after gazing at the card forla method which the Germans had| Later he crossed to Canada to as-| whichever form you prefer plasters Retna couse the oie G tha chases pay Sp soe 2 apt ain Black-| Back" and "Her Majest And/several minutes and noting how|then begun to adopt, He took his ar-|sist in a Presbyterian Mission to the] or the liquid—the action is the same, he wants to be Just as romantic as he| Mtyaon” Washhure yom 2 oD | we didn't even know they were tn/finger-marked it was, sent for the|rest’ quite philosophically, Fortune|Jews and when that mission was| Safe, gentle, Made in a world-famed ee aeniaiae Ais tome hint kee Bryan\ a me hee is the cast] jail. . office boy. had dealt him so many adverse | transferred tothe Church of England.| laboratory. Sold by all druggiste, . |that will support Katherine McDon-| Jack Voorhees, up to now proml- js man," he instructed, “that | strokes that she could not take him Trebitsch changed his denomination. He doesn't feverishly consult a scenario while on the set. He never wears puttees— trails its man all through the latest STILLS. story, “God's Country Five Mermaid comedies are running now unraveling at the | merrit = h errily in the Broadway cinemas this Strand. As a detectiv conscience has Sherlock Holmes, Bill Flynn and] Wek That in itself is somewhat of Mike Fiaschetti roped and hog-tied, | record. With the meroury scraping an ac- Jerome Storm is busy directing for quaintance with the 100 mark out-| ox. Too bad he didn't have the job of bossing “The Storm.” The company that journeyed to the wilds of the Adirondaaks to shoot scenes in “Moonshine Valley” didn't even find any sunshine, much less moonshine—and only shot scenes two terday just to be sure we'd tell the world (readers) that he had post- puts “God's Country and the’ Law” into the acceptat class. It would hardly attain that honor in normal movie - going “The Dust Flower,” a feature film, several minor screen offerings, a bal- let and music are the offerings at the Capitol this week. “The Dictator,’ so long a favorite jas a speaky with William Collier in the title role, is with us again, this time as a movie and with Wally Reid screening right well in the old Collier BERTILLON. It is from the story of the ‘ate The simplest wey to end a corn is nent in the speakies, has sailed his|1 caypot engage him because I do not| unaware. He had @ gift of oratory and made Wor ‘oataable ‘pan HO Meap ts Pert. straw kelly into the movie ring, recognize his fingerprints!” He was tried. by court martial some impression in Canada. When or of the Peet. »

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