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Show THE FIEKALD-KEPUBIJCA- SALT LATvE. CITY, UTAH, SUNDAY, MAY 28, 193G. N, ews ll flae I ft American. h'unday and Monday k William S. Hart in the Triangle 'me production "The Primal Lure" eystone comedy, I'athe nev.s American Symphony orchestra am nam moth pipe organ. Tuesday .Vednesday and Thursday, Stuar. lolmes and Dorothy Bernard In the i'ox drama "Sins of Men"; Billi Jurke in chapter four of "Gloria tomance." Friday and Saturda Mae Marsh. Robert llarron and Tull ; .Marshall In "A Girl of the Pa the Keystone comedy. .iev.s, American Hymphony orchestrr ind pipe organ. Continuous, 11.31 j 'v . is one of the actual scenes of the production. starring. ; A aom JT 11m f?F scenes from "The Jujrjrernaut." the massive Vitapraph feature, Avhicli is to be shown for two days only, today and OXK of atthethestartling Kex theatre. Anita Stewart and Earle Williams are iu the stellar roles. An express train crashing from a trestle into a lake vJr'KNM from "Tl.e Unknown." spcH.il Lasky feature, to be shown at ' the rarr.ount-Kmprcs- s theatre on Memorial day, .with Lou Tellcjren ! -- - I $r'- . 4 1 1 . - . - r v . ' - - i - . , - , , ' 4v; v 4 . n i Pari.-Streets"- - a. m. to 11 p. m. Rex. 'Sunday and Monday, Anita J Htewart and Earle Williams in "The Juggernaut"; Billle Burke in chap-- 1 ter two of "Gloria's Romance": "Mutt and Jeff." Tuesday and Wednesday, Charlie Chaplin in "The j Pearl White and J Floorwalker"; frel fnn ITnl In ctmnter fourteen of "The Iron Claw"; the Animated Weekly; "The Ascent to Mount Ra- nler," an American scenic picture; j "Ueautirul Laue cnuzenji. a bit or picturesque Japan. Thursday, Frivaudeday and Saturday, ville bill with Grace Cunard and Francis Ford in "leg o' the King' ; i J "Mutt and Jeff." Continuous, 2 tot 11 . w i - ..,.--- all-st- Moving Picture Nofes ! i i Chaplin's Burlesque i I Helen Holmes, who Is shortly to he starred In a number of feature produc- - j ttons screened for the Mutual at the j Signal studios. Is the owner of a large ' tract of ranch In Lower California. Her1 as a screen actress which are j earnings by no means small are. to a large ex- tent, devoted in purchasing stock fori her ranch. Miss Holmes spends one ' day of each week on her property. For a brief period recently E. J. Brady, Balboa's chief villain, wore a stubby little mustache on his upper Hp. It was necessary for a play he was doing. Bather than put on crepe-halBrady grew the real thing. His roommate had a pet white rat. Brady never was over fond of the rodent. One night he was awakened by something nibbling at his mustache. He let out a yell. The roommate switched on the s?e the little animal light in time to scamper away to Its box. "I told you not to eat llmburger cheese before go"It will ing to bed." said the room-y- . stick In the brush and is sure to draw i Miss May Bosen, formerly of Ogden, I who has spent the past three years I os Anseles working: in th moving pictures, was in Salt Lake last week as the guest of Miss Ella Livingston, SS5 Fourth avenue. On the screen Miss Bosen Is known as May Cruze. She Is a sister of James Cruze of the Metro company. The last picture In which h worked was "The Impersonation." tared by the El Dorado company, soon to be released. Motion pictures were made last week hy the Deseret Film company of the Tayson celebration. Hugh Hcnny, former manager of the Fait exchange of the "World Film corporation, left yesterday for Seattle to take charge of the company's office; in that city. The "World Film corporation is adfor stories. Ideas vertising extensively ind scenarios from any and everybody. William A. Brady, head of that company, says that most of the material now being turned out by professional writers Is trash and that If anyone has an Idea or a story or any series of Incidents that will form a plot, if submitted to him direct, and tt Is logical, he will pay more than the customary rat and use it, giving full credit to the author. Justice Hotchklss of the New York supreme court, has denied the application of Charlie Chaplin for an Inand junction to restrain thefrom distributthe Kssanay company Essanay-Chapll- n ing the four-reIn -- ke -E el J r, rats." Miss Iva Shepard and Alexander .t Caden have ben selected by the company to head the players apa pearing in the first three-re- as photo-drama MuGaumont will release tual picture. The photoplay Is "Armadale," a novel which Wllkle Collins wrote over a generation ago. Jackl Saunders was late reporting at the Balboa studio one morning recently. Her excuse was a brand-neone. SThe said that as she was leaving the hotel her diminutive Yorkshire terrier seemed unusually restless and whined a great deal. "What could be the matter with "Peanuts?" Miss Saunders tried to think. Then she remembered that his toilet had been her room, hastily made. hisReturning tocombed out teeth and she brushed Gau-mor- el w Vll i 5 J ar p. m. fefHwfe ,vA:-.- In a rkrtnrl7'tini i f Tfpnpv Ar - - " V A N A X ; -- 1 v lit iVi ' - V- - w-- out-of-do- : 5 ? - ' - f :; r !? .: v. - - v- j'" -- , . ;.-.- r' I if - ? ' '( - ., , . " u S - v i l :: J orVj : : .. .. TV , V v . ' r.j t ri . - v , - - ..7-- -r . " r , , mid-wint- z 1. I - " ' : ' ' t - :', - - v ' u mlli "" ' . li i a n i - - ' .L i v. if f" - . "' i " - " - - f - , I . . 4 f . . -- - - . ." - i " . ,. i ... r - - - .v ,v ! '! ."17 , I . mi i. Dorothy Bernard. of fans exist however, in China that the origiFEW better collections nated, according to Chinese legend. than that owned by The earliest reference to the fan by a Porothy Bernard, the Fox star. classical ' author occurs In Euripides" "My collection may not be the most tragedy of 'Helena." The fans of the unlike those of the valuable in existence," says Mi.s Ber- Homan ladies, were not made In one piece of Chinese, as as varied is it nard, "but certainly paper, gauze or sill;, but were comI have ever aen. posed of bits of perfumed wood much let my like thos of tcday that open and phut. "My greatest pleasure Is to run rict when I go over "Fans were sold in great numbers in imagination over the fans and cull t mind the Turkey and Morocco during the middle and different types of women to whom ageg and from Venice were distributed originally throughout Italy. For many years after many of them must have been collided by its introduction into Italy the fan They have over the world some was regarded s a symbol of levity and mf in my travels to the woman who carried one, was locked 1 bought and some wore presented upon much as the woman who waltzed jpn."China and Japan a re si t II I was regarded at the beginning of the the countries of the fan. It was. present century." any b?-lons- prc-rmi-nent- ly . - ... s ...... x . v .... ,.." . ., ... .... . . er ....v all-st- ar M Xrft-::r?:":::::-::-ljP- l '... . . six-pa- rt ri. came tearing through the car at full speed, roaring as they came. The necessary effects were obtained without the need of rehearsal or retakes. William Farnum thinks he is the only actor in moving pictures who has the distinction of having been born on the Fourth of July. "I'll bet George Cohan would be willing to start all over again to be able to say that," Farnum Eald In telling of It. "The year was that of the Centennial celebration, so you see the of '76' was mixed up in it, too, 'spirit so if I am not a patriotic, Yankee, I am nothing." , blown-in-the-bott- The Sins '.'of the-Paremtf- le i Are Visited Upon the Children ' Vv I 4 s, blood-and-thund- fer .... . f 4 er ttfev 4 ORIGINATOR 0E MINARET . GOWN NOW IN SCREEN LAND .S. s i&&:.f,to s Xiv' If sitfi;ii ance In the photoplay work at the Fort as it used to be done on the legitimate Lee studios. stage, but the Joker comedians, headed by Victor Potel and Eileen Sedgare playing the serious roles. Francis X. Bushman and Beverly wick, Landowska and Ernie Shields Bayne haves gone to Baltimore, where Yona have been specially cast for the they will spend a vacation of ten days. Immediately after their rest in the Country Mr. Bushman and Miss Bayne Should you enjoy the sensation of will return to New York, when they havinc a lot of lions turned loose in will begin work on the big a sleeping car in which you were tryproduction, "Romeo and Juliet," which ing to get a little repose? That is the Metro pictures corporation is going what happened in the filming of the to offer as its controbution to the third episode of the Universal's Shakespearian tercentenary. circus serial, "Peg o' the Ring." A completely furnished Pullman car Douglas Gerrard, the Universal lead- was for the use of the coming man. who has the important role pany equipped members then took their the and of the duke's son with Anna Pavlowa You can imagine in the berths. places in "The Dumb Girl of rortici," is very their feelings when a drove of lions proud of the souvenir which has pust been sent to him by Sir Herbert Tree. Mr. Gerrard is an old friend of the having played with him English actor, He in England. has sent him a copy of his own book, "Thoughts and Aftermy thoughts." with the dedication, "To friend, Douglas Gerrard, with affectionate remembrance," written inside ..... it. .... Dorothy Green Is passionately fond of purple. She has most of her gowns and hats made In that color, and has a peacock for a pet. which she keeps on the roof of the uptown hotel where she lives. Roj- Clements, the director of one of rilr '? & is the companies of Universal-Jokerof producing one of the most famous melodramas, the old called "The Fast Mail." by Lincoln J. Carter. The play is to be given just Waln-wrlgh- ' i v ? - 4 ? ' fi'-- 4 - w . - s Its X x -- "- - ' "i , r j5 xi ' 'V-V- 5 all-arou- training. Although he has been In minion picphotographed thousands of times Sally with a motion picture camera, Lionel Barrymore recently sat for a regular photograph for the first time in five studio. He years at the Rolfe-Metr- o dislikes sitting for a photograph and says "there Isn't any sense or excuse for a man to have a photograph taken." William Fox has discovered a girl whom he considers the most fascinatIn America. He has ing young woman set his heart on making her the greatest young film star In the entire world. The name of this girl Is June Caprice. She Is 17 years old. He has taken her right out of a New England school, bought her more dresses and beautiful clothes than any girl except tome pampered ever had. or expected to have;daughter he has sent her to famous photographers rrd artists for sittings and In a few weeks she will make her Initial screen bow In a Fox picture. Diminutive, screen stars have their own troubles which, according to Ann Pennington. th 'M "Follies" who has recently joined 'ie Fastaf, mous Players forces, are by no means commensurate with the avoirdupois of the respective luminaries. In her first picture Miss Pennington was called upon to enact a scene with n little girl of about 12 years of age. The director. In selecting his cast, designated a clever child actress of exactly that age to play the part. But when the cast was gathered together for the first rehearsal of the particular scene In question it was discovered that the child actress was taller than the star, n who was supposed to be a young lady. On the first day after her return from ' Jacksonville to New York, Gertrude McCoy was in two automobile collisions. The second wrecked her car badly. Edwin August and his company are In the outh filming exterior scenes for their n.ext World production. In the multi-millionair- -- - - - or r" tures for several years and has been V v-- -- :J7 (' ' v X I : :p;vvr' 1 r. .. .? ji-- Vf- : WM fr v.... Lau-rett- RARE TAN COLLECTION OWNED BY riLM ACTRESS .,v r iS-s- Peggy Hy v ! thur Jones's drama "Saints and Sin- I ners " a Famous Players production. I I Paramount South plctographs, Special J j American travel pictures. J feature Decoration day, Lou Tel-- j I In "The Unknown." Thurs-- l legen j day, Friday and Saturday. Blanc he I i Sweet in "The Thousand Dollar! I Husband." Welhe's orchestra, Ed IP. Kimball at "the choralcelo and Franz Rath, piano soloist. Contln-- I 12.30 to 11 p. m. ucus, , VI r n j A w a v i nndn.' TJH?i II ;r1v are Mollle cast Arthur Ashley, King, Mon-Mitchell in "A Soul Astray." j Hoffman and Macey Harlan. day and Tuesday, Marguerite Snow i Ruby In "Notorious Gallagher" and Annal Dorothy Bernard nas a mania for all Nlllson and Tom Moore in "Whof but especially sports, f Pays?" Wednesday and Thursday, swimming and motor boating. Miss Fri- Bernard's racing motor boat, tho I day and Saturday, Robert Edeson In Here's How. which won the cup In the I "For a Woman's Fair Name.1' Island regatta, .vienesy. Today, Vivian Rich and I Catalina been has from California and shipped A in "Four Months," Flying players tuned up in New York waters a dramatic three-ac- t story of a was the er.rly spring. She will throughout millionaire with four but young her speedy little craft for the mouths to live. Sis Hopkins, the I enter In a screaming comedy, "A I summer races on the Hudson. (original, Mistake." "Sea America?J Pauline Barry, seen in "Sins of Men," J First," continued views of Yosemite J her early stage career begun in an I National nark. Noser Ned as a ball In infant part at the age of 6 months j player in the cartoon comics. Music I was trained to be a singer, like so afternoon and evening. j many actors and actresses In the silent drama. B. F. Keith, the theatrical promoter, sent her to school In Boston, and she sang for six months at the his silky hair, "Peanuts" was all Boston theatre. Mr. Keith wished to star Miss Marry in music, but her right thereafter. Gertrude Franklin, wished her "I am convinced," says Winston teacher, to study dictation and not speak aloud Churchill, "that motion pictures are for four years. She is now doing that capable of great development as med- in the "movies." iums of entertainment and art and will Alice Gale has joined the forces of be of untold educational value provided William Fox and may be seen In "Sins Men" her first picture. She has been their proprietors are Imbued with a of on the stage for forty years and has sense of responsibility and refrain played with such favorites as Mrs. Lest, from catering to the Ignorance, preju- lie Carter, Nat Goodwin, Marie Amelia Bingham, Robert B. dices and sentimentality of the people. Edwin Booth, Minnie Dupree, I am most anxious to see the produc- Mantel. e Otis Skinner, Charles Rlchman, tions of motion pictures take their Taylor and Louis Mann. Although for the legitimate place as a supplement of an actres3 of recognizedsheability was as neryears, worthy novels and worthy plays, for last thirty-fiv- e they have a realm into which neither vous as a school girl at her appear- of these can enter." Kathlyn Williams had a beautiful prize white Angora cat. rather should say has one, or what is left of him. Kathlyn was extremely proud or his beautiful coat of fur and called him "White Prince." Prince dectded the other day to see the wide, wide world and did get as far as some fields of grain In the vicinity of the Wllliam.s home, fields thickly sprinkled with burs, which became imbedded in Prince's long fur. He returned home a eorry sight to behold, and the result was that his mistress found it neces. sary to have his fur shaved off. His pitying mistress bought him a sweater and requested the neighbors to kindly refrain from shooting any amazing object they might see wandering about, explaining Prince's plight. Viola Dana, the newest Metro star, is an expert boxer and "fights" three rounds wLth her sister Leonle every day. It might be explained that Viola's father was an athlete and taught his daughters the value of Paramount-Empres- llartrl s. ? v iM hi! 4sfr : ,vr?'w-'i?W"-AT- . 4 a-l- i comedy. '"Charlie on Carmen." , ' w 7 III , A , f IJ v v. So says the old adage and in the case of "Peg O' the Ring "it .was true. Through the sins of Peg's mother, Peg was afflicted with a strange malady which no one could, solve. It led Peg and her admirers into heaps of trouble, trials and tabulations that no one could forestall. When Peg's mother, the skilled handler of wild animals, was attacked- and killed, it left - A-Strang- e's full-blow- !.' I... f- - I ' I t'J r .v. I i . k ; . f ' " " r - - r . . T. ' t f . v t - - t 4 . 1. ,, i . .. r v .fl ..... 4 y - ..s ;i ' - , tj "5 ,v-- v , S . s Fate in Store for 66 mn This fate hung over Peg like a dark cloud, threatening her at the most inopportune moments. It drew her into dangers. It drove her friends to despair. It but why tell more you can learn it all by reading our new serial Hattie Burks. it served the purpose for tneir lasnions io costuming, a which conceived it feminine the ultimate limit of blzarreness attracted attention.mind Once having acwill be quick to remember Hattie complished that nothing was able to women who were Burks as the female of the species who stop it and the around middle became even bulgy to "minaret" gowns first brought so more narrow and with accented the America. While playing a series of en- semipantalcon skirts tapering downMiss ward, while the wastline and hip digagements in the English halls "minmension bulged outward noticeably. Burke conceived the idea cf the went to Paris In vaudeville Mis Burks has wem aret" and had it built just the way she want- most astonishing gowns, always of her own creation and design, and thee she ed it. Rated by most men as an atrocity of hopes to bring into the movies soon. W OMEN who carry 1 and-straightw- ay A Thrilling Story of the Circus and Circus People You'll Miss One of the Best Pieces of Fiction Ever Written If You Don't Read St Story now running- in The Sunday and in motion pictures at the Rex theatre every Thursday, "Friday and Saturday. X - Hcralcl-Hepublic- sin |