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Show AMUSEMENT NOTES WOMAN PLACES VALUK 0 MAN'S I.IFK Woman is tho glory of man. From his soul she Bplns the hoart strlngH of his llfo and weaves them Into tho fabric of hLs future. "Man and His Woman," the J Stnurt Ulackton-Patho feature slarrlng Herbert Itawlinson at tho Iloalnrt Theatre Monday nnd Tuesday show how two womon wove thu Ufo fabric of a man, llcrbort Itawlinson portrays n doc. tor who has discovered a tuberculosis eerum that mill benoflt humanity. Tho woman ho loves wrecks his llfo. Ho sinks to the lowest depths and his Qod-glvon power of saving llfo Is wasted. wast-ed. tint such a man owes something to tho world, It not to himself. Evo Cortlor, a womnn whoso llfo was do. oted to scrvico for others, with her purity and faith and hor love for him spurred him on to n new life. Soul and body, bIio restored his strength. "Man nnd his Woman" Is from tho I en of Bhnnou Fife. .SO.MKTHIXO 10 THINK AHOUT Onco In a whllo, and tho "oncos" nro brooming more frequent as tlmo goes on and the publics ability to dlscrlmlu ato is manifested in Its demand for hotter nnd cleaner pictured stories, along will come un offering that has much to rocommond It. "Something To Think About" is one such. It Is a Ulg plcuiro; It tolls a distinctly human hu-man story and ono removed from tho obvious mnko-bcllcve. There Is nothing in the nurratlvv that will offend; nnd It ono Is look. Ing for a moral It Is to bo found with out great difficulty In the unfolding of tho Uvo story of tho blacksmith's daughter. Tn tho scenes that aro associated with tho one wealthy charactor oniy' good taste U manifested, and comfort rather than ostentations display Is the rule. The majority of thc scenes have to do with a blacksmith's dolly Ufo at' homo and at h s forgo. These aro" cirqulsltly lone, especially tho latter, and they glv a distinct value to the picture as a whole. The mooting of the blind blacksmith, who is fishing aud tho Inqusltive grand son k a very well done but with a grcoB deal of omotlonal appeal. Thfodore Itoborts never did a better bet-ter pjuco of work, on tho otago or before be-fore a camera nnd Is unquestionably tho ctar of the picture. Ills Is a fine portrayal In every way, filling tho eye, comiellng In action and with well jrojectod and convincing personality. Miss Swanson Is oxcellont, as are Elliot Doxtcr and others In tho cast ' |