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Show THE GOLDEN BED. j ! 1 "The Golden Bed,' the second five Famous Forty-Paramount production pro-duction by Cecil B. De Millo, the man who made "The Ten Commandments," Command-ments," opens a 2 days' run next Wednesday at the Star theater. The picture is an adaptation by Jeanie Maephorson, based on the novel by Wallas Irwin which was published serially in Tictorial Review- under the title "Tomorrow's Bread." A beautiful girl is the owner of the golden bed it is a legacy from her mother. She is selfish and cruel, with a loveliness that works like a spell on men. To her the bed represents repre-sents ease and power. She marries a Spanish nobleman, but loses him an Europe and comes hack liomo, to find her father has lost his money and absconded, leaving leav-ing nothing for his daughters but the house and its furnishings. She has a sister who is her exact opposite in character, and there is a poor boy whom she used to scorn who has now7 become a man of money and power in the town. Partly to spite her sister, but mostly for mercenary reasons, she exerts her bewitchment on the young man and marries him. The young fellow now has what he has drcained of since boyhood the lovely girl who once made fun of him because he was poor. Tho rest of the slory is the shattering of his dream the slow realization that it is the sister, always unobstrusivo-ly unobstrusivo-ly helping, whom he really loves. |