Show FINDS LOST TRIBE IN CHINA AND RETURNS HERE i Picture Exhibitor Tells of Trip Movies Make Great v. v Hit in the Far East It After r Ct titer r three years years' globe trotting in m almost mo t eT e every country In tho the world G George Samuels film exhibitor Is back h 11 native e land and nOli says that ho Is glad indeed to be back under th the tho jurisdiction jurisdiction jurisdiction juris juris- He lie Is Js diction of or the stars and nOlI stripes re registered r. at nt a n local hotel Chinese operators of or motion pictures make tho ho finest In lit the tho world said rold Mr Ir I Samuels amuels They The are aro adopt adept in handling picture machines und and during my so sojourn sojourn so- so journ in that country I learned to admire ad admire ad- ad mire the adapt adaptability of ot orientals for Mr tho Picture business Tho trade there yet Cl in its infancy and yet et the Chinese o are ore wonderfully fond of or the screen Tor For the past year ar tho film Tho Birth of ot a Nation has held tho the record nil ae being the picture which commanded tho the highest l price in the movie mo world for admission the tho average er of or 2 being tho the high water mark But ono one night at a picture show which I was conducting a n. Mongolian l bought tho the royal box In the theatre for tor 25 and ho came back the n next night and took it again n at nt the same name price This wa was in n China Tho The o of Baroda paid OO f 1200 rupees for a n private performance In India of ot the film tUm which Mr Samuels S. took look around the tho world worM This film was Wl the Carnegie museums museum's Ala Alaska Siberian I expedition pictures One of or the tho most peculiar experiences of nt Mr Samuels In his hill long jaunt around the tho world was on a hunting trip Into the Interior of ot China It U was about 1500 1600 miles from Shanghai hal in the theMon theIon Mongolian Mon Ion Mongolian golian ollan province The hunting party I reached a village one afternoon I the they Jud Judged td to contain about Chinese Chinese Chi Chi- nese and every O inhabitant of or the tho town was U of or Jewish faith They worshipped at their 8 synagogues spoke the tho purest Hebrew Their writing Is In n tho the graphics common in the tho time of the Old Testament 1 Mr Ir Samuels was at elt loss to explain th their lr presence and says say he has sought nought I for 10 logical reasons why this little elt city of oC Jewl Jewish h faith should have ha been isolated Isolated Iso iso- d BO so many centuries ago o among unon the tho I I Mongolians He Ho has evolved the tho following following fol- fol lowing ideas concerning th them m. m The Bible tells of oC the scattering iC of of the tribes of Israel and states that one of Qt tho the lost tribes went into the land landof I 1 of Manchuria Mr lr Samuels explains Hn Hf thinks that this is Js one ono of the lost J tribes He states that the tho people were I unusually large men unlike ce the coolies that come to America to 11 live but were Cn I fine limbed straight figures with long j q queues eu s which as at yet had b be been n uncut i though sine Mr Samuels Samuel left leCt he understands un un- that all Chinese e cut their I queues when hen China was proclaimed mcd a I republic When Then Mr r. r Samuels was in th the interior in- in in interior of or China he met another r traveling traveling travel tro In-I In In ing picture man who had hal the tho film Dau showing Annetto An- An netto nette Kellerman the swimmer He lie i I said that it was peculiar to watch the effect that thal the pictures had upon the Chinese e They regarded ed the pictures of the tho mermaids in tn the water stunts as highly Immoral Mr Samuels took his films turns Into darkest Africa His Ills stories picture those thole people as RII tho the finest specimens of or physical manhood The They are u-e nl also o about the tho most moet highly moral p people that ho he has yet ct met except In his own land Jand r rHe He e left Russia ju Just t prior to lo the tho declaration declaration dec dec- l of or war scar Ills His trip Vladivostok to Moscow was as almost twice th lh distance across tho the American J continent continent con con- covering cO miles which took seventeen e days das nUB Russian lan trains Are re tier very uy comfortable ho says carry ing ing- sleeping cars and diners Tho The roadbed is much wider than American railroads and gives gJ moro more room In the compartments compartment tr Mr Samuels says MS that Salt SaIL J Lake JAke ake City CJU with all nn Its cold weather looks rood to him and ho will linger hero to enjoy life |