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— Screenings By DON ALLEN POME. Little Jack Horner, He went to the corner Mo purchase a scuttle of foam. But they found him later In a movie “theayter” Learning “Why Girls Leave Home.” PHIL UMM SAYS. The best th’ pore, downtrodden ' movie heroine ever gets is the worst of it “till th’ last half ot th’ last reel! A NEw ONE. Kenneth Webb, during a recent Lambs’ Club golf tournament, came face to face with a new alibi. ing been a golf enthusiast movie director for some years, thought he had heard ‘em all, but he hadn't. His opponent, whom it wouldn't be fair to name, drove into the woods. Webb watched patiently, as he tried to get out. “Wham!” “Slam!” “Crash!” And “Wham!” again, went the club hhefore the ball zig-zagged out onto the course. “How many?” asked Webb. and a Ken “Three!” unblushingly auswered the deh. “Three?” gasped Ken, “Why 1 eounted tiftoon myself!” “Those were not strokes,” argued the player, “I was killing a snake!” AN APT PUPIL. You folks who will weep and sym- Dathize with the little sick child In Katherine MacDonald's “The Scarlet Lily,” can cheer up when we tell you that the child, Jane Miskinin, eleven years old, is one of the wellest and huskiets kids in the movies. “How do you like pictures?” asked Jane the last time we saw her. “Fine!” she shot back; “I've bin in we pictures two and a half years and 1 have learned something from every picture.” “What did you learn from Miss MacDonald?” we again asked. “How to be beautiful!” she euld; and meant It, too. OH! Topics of the Day Films shoots this one at you In its latest release: May: What did Nonh do for amuse- ment on the ark with no radio sets to tune in on ABC or XYZ? Ray: He took two hyenas along. What of that? : They were his laughing stock! (ris Out.) WEISS EXPANDS, Adolph Weiss, former Vice President and General Manager of Goldwyn, on Fifth Avenue th’ other day. He was all emiles. Vant to see some art and some he beamed. Being @ film editor and used to al- most anything, we submitted ourselves to the ordeal. “Well,” he went on, atill radiating, “take a look at me!’* Not being as hard a job as one would think, we looked. “I am now Artclass!"" he explained. “I have just purchased the controlling interest in the Artclass Pictures Cor- poration and have been elected Prest- dent and General Manager. The sum of $250,000 changed hands in the deal—" But we fled! When a movie pro- ducer starts talking in figures, its time to fled. NOW'S YOUR CHANCE, Talk about the guy who strolled through life with a pachyderm on his palm. Well, that elephant was gnat- sized compared with the skeleton tn the closet of Austin Parker, the soft- spoken young Famous-Players puf- flecist. Ran into Aust yesterday on Fifth Avenue, His brow was furrowed with the trenches of worry; he was pale and wan; his hand shook; his lips twitched; tears that were not of Met class?" Friendly Coward hoe EL Kid” t } Protect health and in- sure: comfort while_coal is scarce with a’ Keep comrortable’ and save coal, . Buy, your Sunbow! where you see the “Sunbowl ELECTRIC HEATING CO. 120 W. 32nd St., New York City Cowards Wearers of the Coward “Good Sense” shoe pronounce it a true friend to tender sensitive feet. This shoe embodies all the well known comfort fea- tures of the old-time broad toed shoe with many typically Coward refinetnents added. It is built of finest flexible leather on a comfortable good- looking last. Roomy space at the toe gives freedom to toe muscles, and uppers are con- Shoe measure up to a quality standard. Our old time customers of many years standing will still find their favorite shoe here in all sizes and widths. For Men, Women and Children. Sold Nowhere Else | James S. Coward 260-274 Greenwich St.,N.Y.C. (Near Warren 8.) ECTRIC.RADIATOR ” displayed.’ SIMPLEX Cambridge, Mass. all about acting and made him keep on singing all afternoon, going to put a ’ ; 2 THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, 1922, OCTOBER 16, Wild Irish Rose’’ Is running wijd. We have heard a lot of screen names in all of his future contracts with actors the glycerine species coursed down his cheek-hollows, the dedication, with the Rev. Dr. red W. Martin, the Rev. Dr. Merle St. ter, minister of the church, conducted | Croix Wright, the Rev. Walter R. Hunt, the Rev. Dr. Samuel A, Bilot and the Rev. Dr. Jabez T. Sunderland assisting. “Up all night, typhoid fever or n —— but when we read about Coy Wilson vous prostration?” we asked, rather THE BOX OFFICE. and found It was the name of a boy— soll tous Sat in during a discussion of motion | wow! . sighed Aust. “I've got al. This belongs to Cap. Woods, Children love Ralston is picture profits and losses last night ; it skeleton! Radiolite, but we'll have to answer Ralston-- great for We opined that we hoped we had,|#nd learned something. for him: “If I buy a radio set will I hild too, but that didn’t seem to soothe the} The talk drifted to the “biggest} get a shock?’ Only when the dealer the whole ent ren savage breast. moneymakers ever produced." A rep-|tells you the price. id because its “In fact,” he continued, “I have two} sosontative of a big producer asked| ‘It’s a great life If you week-end! wheat cereal. whole wheat skeletons! blurbs Aesop's Film Fables. what we thought were some of the We didn't say so right to his face, All of which reminds us that more but we came to the conclusion that|outstanding big money-getters of the/”sh are caught in stories than in C ‘ the cuckoo clock was about to chirp|past few years. Without hesitation, | renlity. Children need Children need twelve “The Birth of a Nation,"| Richard Dix earns a fine living by! | whole wheat whole wheat “Yes,” he went on, “I have two Caberia,"’ Humor-|being the “best proposer’? in the ° * proteins to dinosaur skeletons that I want to ‘he Three Musketeers,'’| Movies. An’ lookit the queens he vitamins build firm give away and nobody wants em!" We eased his mind. We told him to send ‘em up. “But this ts on the level,” he said, makes love to, too! GriMfith sald yesterday he thought motion pictures owed more to Dickens than to any other single aource. How ‘Over the Hill" the Storm."" We were laughed at. that Charlie Chaplin's and “Orphans of flesh & muscle, tokeep well. “We used the skeleto: i Neture oR, ” is H ‘ and now we Want to give ‘em to some eae eee a a eanes | oa cava tactve vals OY fone TARY Children need Children need museum and I can’t find @ home for 4 Dina Manners baw teen dared to Ay whole wheat whole wheat Fiiukin VEGe Oe waltote: bar ald y Street" was made several | the sh Chahnel. Important it [det apd carbohydrates Z ey i al’ | years ago, and has already appeared | true! fo make their to produce tank word “picture” we lost interest). Broadway on seventeen distinct} Alice Calhoun, the Vitagraph star, bones stro vi Late n the yarn. occasions, and is booked for another|new resting in the neighborhood, ng. gor & energy. preparing to start work on another big picture, showing this week, and it will be unreeled at the Rialto and seventy- five other New York houses, Strange JUMPING OPERA, ‘They had a regular Metropolitan Children need Start today —_— Opera season up at the Inspiration|as it may seem, ‘Easy Street” has UNITARIAN DEDICATION. Ralston-the with Ralston. been shown at an increased rental — Studios yesterday afternoon. Much as avery tise 1€ Hea bean’ called frorh whole wheat Children love the singing was enjoyed, it put Dick 300 of Congregation View Ceremo- Barthelmess and his company way be- hind their shooting schedule. It seems that Adolph Milar wat signed to play a certain part because he was blg and powerful. In one scene he was called upon to enter a avern singing. He did. He sang ‘Pagiiacci” in such a wonderful voice that every one about the studio forgot cereal-once every day. the storehouse, which is quite some record. its fine whole wheat flavor. Ralston The Whole Wheat Cereal nies at West Side Church, The West Side Unitarian Church at Yo, 250 Cathedral Parkway was dedl- ted Inst night by the Board of Trus- of the Unity Congregational So- ety In the presence of 300 members the congregation. ys to the new edifice, a hand- some structure in Colonial style with 1 light cream interior and blue dome, were presented to Carl O. Sayward, Chairman of the board, by Pergival R. M . Chairman of the Bul “My Lm The Rev. Charles F “STATIC. “Nursing {s an {deal profession for a young woman to adopt,” chirps Flor. ence Vidor. Probably that’s the rea- son she chose picture acting. Next Friday “Shadows,” a new film, will be put on at the Ritz and show itself at that hotel to an invited assemblage. According to the talk over at the Brooklyn studio of Vitagraph, Dick Barthelmess says that he Is “‘non-singing clause’ From a small “bake-shop” to half a million loaves a day \ VER fifty years ago a little shop opened - at No. 3 Mangin Street. It proposed to supply good bread to all who came—fresh every day! This was a great venture in those days. First women came from nearby, but gradually customers came from farther and farther away. The little bake-shop grew big. This was the first Shults bakery. A couple of hundred loaves were an enormous day’s sale for this bake-shop ' ° at first. Passed over the counter one by one they meant almost two hundred customers. ° Now, every single day 500 automobiles and wagons carry half a million loaves of Shults Bread to every part of New York and to suburbs 50 miles away. The bakeries necessary to produce this bread have grown from one small shop to 12 large bakeries—one in every important section of Greater New York. They are, sending out deliveries twice daily. Today siz carloads of flour last) about twenty-four hours Fifty years ago a carload of flour, if they had had a place to store it, would have made enough Shults Bread for a year. Today 6 carloads of flour last about 24 hours. This more than half-century of baking experience has produced a loaf unsurpassed in texture, color and flavor. The quality of each ingredient is of the highest. You will say when you try it that you never knew how delicious bread could be made. Order Shults Cream _Bread from your grocer today. He will have a plentiful supply on hand. Copyright 1988 by The Shults Bread Company Naito" Food OODMAN’S Pure Egg Noodles combine the tull food values of selected eggs and wheat. They can be served in a great variety of appetizing ways by themselves or in combination with other foods. There should be a package of Goodman’s in the house always. Send for valuable recipe boo’ it's free, A. Goodman & Sons, Ine. 640 East 17th St. New York Vitamines? Vitamines? Why bless you, cheese for years has been known to contain the two most im- portant vitamines. When you eat Kraft Cheese get the vitamines in most le form, 3 varieties: American, Pimento, Swiss, sold by the slice, pound or loaf. 8 VARIETIES IN TINS LAS, the fool given to gluttony at mid- day doth droop as the willow tree that weep- eth. And the wise man that contenteth him- self with Dromedary Dates and milk giveth him the raspberry.” The Wise Man of the Eats Dromedary Dates 10¢ IN THE PERSONAL PACKAGE The simplest way to end a corn is Blue-jay. A touch stops the pain instantly, Then the corn loosens and comes out. Made in a colorless clear liquid (one drop does it!) and in extra thin plas- ters, The action is the same, Pain Stops Instantly THE WORLD'S Harlem Office Now Located at 2092 7th Ave. Near 125th St. HOTEL THERESA BUILDING § {