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Show THE HERALD-REPUBLICA- r Of tiae SALT LAKE CITV, UTAH, SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1916 N, Notes ews and. i Nature Scorns Clothes and N of Child of Picture in motion douses Programs wild rides TKLLING of at her ranch 'Hypocrites' In the pale home,. In Friday, Saturday, "Praters Pnlverj;il drama; "Her rf Fire,"Parf.-ire"the Anlmate-Weekly. rti. Ilex Continuous 2 to p. "Pece at Any Price." etxhth rluji. Ped Circle"; "Pr.cle of Th Sam at Work," fifth Installment; In "Huel: Hlmon. Punch Pat Iln.m Dubs." "I'ft r"; Tuesday, VeIrifr!n y, Thursday, Florence P.erfl In "Ntv York," Path- - Gold Koonter the Friday, Saturday. vekly. mKI Kin Coal," elfthth episode of h the "Oraft"; a Fntveral ,1!content," weekly; drama: "I.uke, foft-t- l Ganpster,"' Pa the remedy. I road way. Sunday only. Tiara Kimball Younjt In "Thi Deep Purple"; Monday. Tuesday. Frances .Velon In "Love's Crucible"; Wednesday. Thursday, Alice Urady In "Woman In '1 7," anj Charlie Chaplin In "The Woman"; Friday, Saturday. Kdnsund IJreeze In "The Lure of Heart's Iesir." Today only. Harold Meh?y. Lock tvood and May Allison In "LUSo of the South Seas," a photoplay of love and adventure; "The Laird O'Kneen," the tteauty players in a kilt comedy; "Se America Firm." Imluth. Minn.; "Harry picturlnsc a' Palmer cartoon comedy, Up With the Joneses." Union music. moon'' F.irrar, th MtriioIitan ojr& tar, st t i.rli.ky ;if o.i;j"tln "Tmpti- - St-a- - J ts.m. Paramount totrraph: pi .ti et, orrhtr: ed rn . t:rrc ri. 'onllinnMi C to 11 !fS.l , MODfiilV. :. IHISl! k In "Hi" Picture In ttif . the I'.; ri"; I'.t t "WAtr '..Iny tr; rn (ifijv,-,ircut ';'.-- I Pathf? rt"'f . Path rws, Tni'sd y. '.'l n Ifr.H" rvtr? '!!'! KthH CI ay ton In . "Kilo st Fate," Tl i;r r t I v with Thury.Iay. fn S.l l;xie uriiy. ' Il..rifrj Altar": Willi and foilir r, "Fetter Late Than .Ue l!u-Never"; P.ithe news. livery after-n..'Vninsf. Mia rAsne von nopr a o. Fvrry t!r.i:aironrrrt r'vernrtr rt . McCl-lla. r.. llenrst-Vlta-Krnp- ; ":rf " !': Vt i- - " I ln-kfi'i'v- 1 iarst-Vltaxraj- i:, : " 1 r.t. rtll-ta- Frl-tU- y. h r. Pi-nr,f- . - .Am-rif- tor. y. fjherr v. n! 'i t f Thy T '! J. Prof. i .1. n. ontifiUu. p. fn. Superior I Tlv !.l i lUon rue " '! i;.!iut'. 11 r.il iluma: "Vanity t.i v. v to. 2 "T! Mnmi.iv, r;i." I'ni r ii-- "Th !r Vrinei:ay. In "A Soul MOVIMG PICTURE NOTES ' A At. rer-ptor- f.irv Tt lit Icfor.l , a arrorde-- l week In her t i ! , f Sail Lake, and H II. i:irri. t.n..c,r of ltr.rn-tn- ' t' " , .. ji it n z f. f!Kr-tf ' ut Ifir--- ; ..w ina r? . et m.vlmi" . a tm ' if. th- - '4 'At it v ..f the ! n fh iT.rhinr fnr Mr.n-- j !:. fr,, ' 5 n ; r- j ! 1 ' : r- '.' t""'--. in bu-- hm a;n- . iM,.r- E tf s Th'.t .v that th. theatre; lii.in th i i t.t lirnit of the irmit. In'.er. whi- ' - i mak- - . , ' - jF -- the exhibitors who visited the World exchange last week were A. Ahlquist of Garfield, B. G. Thatcher of Logan, A. L, Stallings of Trovo, H. K. Skinner of Ogden, II. Jensen of B. K. Williamson of Pocatelio, Ida., J. K. Ryan of lirigham City and Mrs. Klla von Prosky of JSozenian, Mont. Mrs. Von Prosky has just sold a theatre she had operated for a number of years and was on her way to the coast. Business in Butte is booming, accordmanager of the ing to It. W. Bertelaon,who has just reBig Folir exchange, turned from the Montana metropolis. Ida., and Joseph Phippen of Carey, of Lhi were among George P. Garff the visitors to the local exchanges during the week. who recently comKittyherGordon, first screen production, will pleted bo seen shortly in a visualization of a former stage success. In private life the wife of Hon. H. H. Kitty Gordon-iBeresford of the noble family of the same name. Her husband is now serving with his regiment "somewhere in France. and a company of Frank Powel thirty-fou- r players, headed by Bnio McRae, have returned from Cuba, where they have been filming' "The Chain Invisible." Robert Warwick and Frances Nelson are at Jacksonville, Fla., staging t ' - - ' ; e J .j - - ' f , " S V . . j t - si,,' - - . - . ' :v :::.: - . ' . i - - ' .v..?- x.. . - Ti-i:- : " : . " i f V',,' ' i , ' v . ? ' v v " . y:J. J ' . " ' ( r. t jf-:- '7" , - ' . t : ' ... ' ' - - - , . . J ' s v .5 - . r-- ' 4 ' t Hy-ru- - ' ... ! ' V ' ' i ; , r f ; - T ' - -. ,.. - .... . i' , '' ..a- C . " V - . ' 1 "At our ranch home I often mount a Inn a trip throuKh Idaho ami Montana white horse of mine and without cloth-it,or Mtilital Flint company, stopped ride throuch the hills in the moonoff In Salt last week. He de- Vired huiness Is better this month light. It is not because I wish to be than in any previous February. thiiiKa It Is vultcar that I say the:because It va this sort of life that A. P.owdle Mrs. ILilph started a made me healthy." movement last week whl ! has re- suited In the sijrnlnij of a contract months will doubtless have his words under which n sertt of films on the rnr 0; .abr, wilt .be exhibited ut one ca?t back into his teeth. Miss Shep- The scenario of ard knows better. of th local theatre-"The Drifter" called for Miss Shapard nn who tet? Mis Iva S'.p- - to wear evening dress In a number of An This caused her no alarm, ard thai Florida has a mild and tern- - scenes. perate climate durlnsr t!ie winter despite the fact hat the scenes were ' " t;.v - ' i. ' ' - ' I - ' - " - ' " - ' , r " ' ' , ;,x r .x4'' " ' v I - " k 1 1 , " ' 1 . , ''jl ' , , - . , x , ' ,'' - -- v, , . - i ' , X t , ' a ' - set onj the open air stage at Jacksonville, since the climate, ns aforesaid. Is supposed to be mild and temperate. The day that Miss Shepard bared her handsome shoulders to southern skies, Florida had Its first snow in No snow Is seen in eighteen years. j j j m, r j : is "Velma." . AltTIIL'll MAUDE. Gall Kane has completed the deaert scenes in "Her God" and is back In Ford peace party to orank a camera New York. while the excursionists were engaged in getting the men out of the trendies T so much and like them awfully much, by Christmas. He reports that the. exwant you should have the first chancet pedition was unsuccessful. to hire me. I would make a fine type. vil-- d first hero for leading man, parts, I a .. V. T Howard Hall is to play the leading lens, t"Oiiviva.i t aiaticia aiiu jcwii. has been a Broadway actor of "Another reason why you should Hall ceaze this chancet is that you would role In "According to the Law," Mr. of years, besides a lot of money on me In face paint. repute for a numberseasons the picture, nor did the cameraman Isave in his own for many starring actors movie understand fill paint turrued to he of the mercury as it their faces yellow. This would not catch a close-u- p Recently be ?roductlons. this being: only his fifth Yet the necessary in my case as I have the sang In the thermometer. camera offering. The success he has j fact remains that Miss Shepard nearly jaundice." sctored prompted the securing of his j froze. As the screen itself does not services for th five-refeature which. Darmour Lawrence has Miss her Shepcondition. returned frigid to have-donbetray . he went from whither be with the (Continued on Page 8. This Section.) ard may the best paid Europe, V" r VV" v EDWARDTitiVri wSL-.V8"WaR6A- Cheats Columbus; As Lord Loveland He Finds America s , V 'J;' t 1 . I 1 el U.I 3j 1 m I IIIIUIIIIIII, IJWMJUHiJiql rrr w,m1i . nilTwain iMini i ii lii n 0 r V" ' ' : i t . - . ? . - N , " 'rr v. - ' K - - ' " - : :. 4 - 5 - . 1 - - V . , i - . '- - V. f.-r'-- e.-;r- - - - '. . - w - ' rv. - .V ' , , - Among- et bolic of truth. ''"UPI t ' - "Ke-piis- Money- - QiiSet h j j which she galloped over the hills nude and mounted on a snow white horse, and asserting; that Robert Service's quotation was her doctrine. Miss Ildwards, known as a physically perfect girl, has answered the criticism made npalnst her appearance as the Naked Truth In "Hypocrites." Advocates of "Hypocrites," the condemned picture, claim that the role taken by Miss 1'dwards Is artistic, and I clnxr aymbollc of Truth. Is portrayed bh painters and sculptors have Imagined It and produced It for centuries. Members of the censor board In Los Anjreles. while not condemning nakedness In art, declare that the animated figure- of a nude woman should not b exhibited. In defense of her appearance In the "Naked Truth," Miss Kd wards today recited her life as a "child of nature" and advanced her own theories why the picture should be shown. "I have been taXtrht." she said, "that my body is a temple of purity. I was a child of nature and I love the open, the truth In everything;. I have been Messed with excellent health and consequently my body Is well formed. "A healthy body Is the foundation for a clean mind. There Is too much false modesty In this condemnation of nature In art. Unclothed nature is symMar-Kar- tr Par-ur.io.i- nt f'.-ih- l 1 1 why you Ift! T:ovilt tellVon Klttrl for oi i prf i,tr-- ; .'Ymr Joh? r'Unar lh f'.u'ii'iiiii: The Triki!, Kr.iru Itath V!h"'" pUn jmj . I'ontlritiOim 1.15 to II i ; ly Here Is one that came by mail last IO Olltf Ol LUC llllll vvw..0 ' companies: j "Gents: Much against my families'! a movie wishes I have decided to be actor and as I have seen your pictures actingr of her career in "The Drifter." .WCCjrW ra.i t'w.ir m.tl n v Bi i ii - M Jsu Sii dltii 1 ma n r.? f Mi bjoss a fit ra Mi mti MB mi t 21 1 1 fj 1 t- - r-- H ELLIOTT & SHERMAN PRESENT D. W. GRIFFITH'S MATINEES AT 2.15 4 i'rN. fCT COST 3000 "DKCISIVi: I5ATTLKS OF THK CIVIL WAR "SIIKKMAX'S MAKCII TO THK SKA 'THK IU HXIXG OF ATLANTA" LICK'S SCHHKXDKK AT APPOMATTOX" WHAT WAK COST MOTIIKHS. WIVKS AM) SISTKHS" THK ASSASSINATION OF PHKSIDKNT LINCOLN "TH K KISK OF THK KV KLUX IvLAX" "THK COMING OF THK PHINCK OF PKACK A 'tir. of teA If this graphic presentment serves ' -- 1 E . r;Hr V':5 AW'V-- . , - V . J r.-"- ::' 5000 18,000 PEOPLE lieiESTll Never Hclnie Hns'Tliis City Uvvn PrivileiMl Seal to Witness a Photoplay of Such Magnitude. . . f .," mJ ti .i.!. i fa "W ii iii I mini I , I in I., nil i Morally and educationally it establishes the futility of armed conflict. A member of th Senate of the United States expressed the foregoing sentiment. "Anyone contemplating war should seo this picture, added the senator. "I sincerely believe it will do more to deter people from engaging in war than anything written or spoken on the subject in years. Great care has been taken not to glorify battle. Even the music stops in Its motif of glorification to, sound the note of terror and desolation, which is the real truth of war. Armies seldom settle disputed questions of state. But, where they accomplish this much, in the wake of conflict arises newer and more terrible questions. But for the hatreds engendered in the Civil war, the suffering of the Reconstruction period would never have, been known. 1 "The Birth of a Nation" Taken From Thomas Dixon's "The Clansman" Has No Competitors. n IS ill WW To See it Is a Treat. EVENING 50c, 75c, $1.00, $1.50 and $2.00 To Miss It Is a Misfortune. 0 fcm.i.iiiiiii it of great importance. SCENES "linn no other ptn pose, its message for universal peace marks U 11!F&2P 1 Peace . wild ritlos that comniandoorctl a county day and eot $10,000. Nisrli t photography of hattlc scM'iios, invented and p.TtVeti't! at a post of "$ 1:2,000. Wondeifu! artillerv duels in which real shells, cost-'mi- x $0 apieee. were ued. , Miles of trendies, thou-?iiuof lighters, "war as it actuallv is." Musical score of T0 pieces, synchronized to the several thousand distinct and individual scenes. I'm a f' ro IJUmMM - I MATINEE . . . . . 25c,50c,75cand$1.00 i m POSITIVELY NO TELE-mMonday, February 28 ORDERS VJill Be Taken -- KaSI Orders How Being Received Sale-Open- s mi From Coast to Coast the Most Stupendous Dramatic Sensation This Country lias Ever Known. Now Playing to Delighted and Enthusiastic Multitudes. "IT'S WORTIPS5.00 A SEAT." P New York Journal. Special Rates On Kaiiroacis 3 l! |