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Show THE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE, SUNDAY MORNING, AUGUST 13, 1922. 2s- - case .5 Popufar Young Sait kaRe Ingenue Goes East to Begin Rehearsals LYON, daughter of Mr. and Mra. M. T. Lyon, 123 D afreet, left for New York today to, begin rehearsal of "Wild Oat Lane, at theBroadhurst theater, where Mr. Broadhurta company will open the season, SepMist Lyon t ember 8. eame on from the mjISS CAMILLA .. ago two--we- ek for a brief visit with and Sait her parent Lakefrunda "Wild Oata Lane 1 is' described a a eomedv drama, with plenty of laughter and a sprinkling of team Maclyn Arbuekle will have the leading role and will be by a company supported of players, with Miss Lyon in tha ingenue part. Camilla Lyon, n slater of Wapda Lyon, who has already made a name for boraolf in has, in tho atagoland, vet brief period of her theatrical experience, achieved notable sucfrom cess, advancing inconspicuous parti to role of importance and winning the approval of both critics and the public. 6he began in Tha Charm School two years ago, tho author. Bebert Milton, writing in- a special part for her. Thia vear she doubled with Florence Heed in The Mat the Times irer S mi are theater. It is officially given out that Mr. Broadhurst and hit producing director had a difficult time in securing n capable actress for th inWild genue role in Oats Lane, because the call of the movies had drawn the ' gteat majority of the worthy anSamh.. Tho f, Noted ,fKickS14In, double-crossin- g theater bacx-greun- Lt dance and clevemeee make up MUSIC, bill at Pantag for th current week. There also I e large portion o' eomedv Included In the program, besides picture. Tb Revel Revue perhaps gets th meet vote for the position el headliner. It is aa act composed of a bevy of clover girl who ting, dance, p'zy and wear fetching eoartumes In a fetching manner. Tb aet is conducted by a clever violinist of the male variety. Th De Michel brother are a couple of- happy wope. who keep the audiences laughing with unspoken comedy and exceptional performances on the violin and harp. Leo Greenwood end company present a novel eketeh under th title of Oh, Boy!" The playlet la comedy from atert to finish and tha cast la exceptionally good. Mr. Greenwood la particularly good In tha Jewish comedy role The Byron Girl are a trio, of brown-face- d maidens who can sing and corned" to the satisfaction of tha au- d GIRLS! i to-d- love-maki- g today. Th man who created a sensation with hi masterful direction of such spectacular picture aa Faeslon and "Lecep-Lo- n h chosen Egypt for his d In thia fascinating romance of a king who married the serving maid of the princess he was supposed to marry. An entire Egyptian city was constructed, with about fifty buildings, for the Built with hisfilming of th picture. torical accuracy and architecturally corwee It not rect, expected that these motion picture settings would he so enthusiastically Indorsed by scholars and scheol teacher, or that claesee In ancient history would study them for their Egyptian architecture. Vet this actually happened at th film city which Lubltsch built. More than lfrt.POO persons are seerf in th spectacular battle scene between the Egyptian and th Invading Ethiopian. Peul Wegener, who enacted The Golem. create a eolorful role as king of Ethiopia; Emil Jennings, seen ts an English king Deception, appears a Pharaoh; Har- ty Lledtke, seen with Pole Negri In Th end Degny bervaes, Payment," leading women, hevegreat perl n this And ell these men Egvptian romance. center their attentions upon e new blonde beauty. Dagny Bervaes, said to be the meet attractive of th screen actresses Ernest Lubltsch has Introduced to America, double-heade- company, which proved to be so much to her liking, she Juat etuck to picture. In those davs everybody had something to do with a story, from th producer down to well anybody who had an idea. In' this way Dot received her first opportunity to try writing for th ecreen. This, too, appealed to her and she continued writing scenarios, until the popular comedienne boasts of having written and had accepted over 260 ecrlpts. During th course of her screen career Dot Ferleys services have been eolight by almost every producing company, although the largest part of her time has dlanees, who like them Immensely. Tae-e- k been spent on the. Meek Sennett lot. 8h and Lean appear In a novelty sing- ls now being featured as character comeing, dancing and musical comedy act that dienne In a series ef Mack Sennett comgoes over very uig. i he pictui featuiee edies are Clyde Cook In "The Eskimo" and Jack Lyndon a The bon of the Vi olf. IT IS SAFE to say that you have never a witnessed the last word In the art of wlll be inaugurated and th until vou see the romance vaudeville section will include n the that Is moet delightfully ' enacted by dramatic star, Lilian Burkhardt, and Gloria Swanson and Rodotph Valentino, a- company-I- n sketch, en- star and leading man, respectively, in titled Mother's Bevond the Rocks." a new Paramount Other Right Here. member of th company are Rulowa Bal- picture, showing at th Gem theater tolet, Callahan and Bliss, Bobby Lehman, day. Jones and Crumley, Emil and VVille, and Coileen Moore In "The Wall Flower," a ROACH, although gifted with a Goidwyn release, which has created much JACK amount, of imagination, ts bafmeritorious praise throughout the counfled The other day while on location try. with the "Snub" Pollard company, for on of th cameramen, which Jack Gal," Dorothy the comedisn borrowed hia wrist watch WHEN "Hurricane's e In and succeeded latest starring vehicle, breaking H In three hich opens its engagement Jack didn't eee what good It was at the pieces. American theater this afternoon, Pollard is to him until it waa mended screened, one of the most Imposing sights turned It ki to the purchasing departever filmed will b shown. It is the pic- ment of the Hal E. Roach studios to hav ture of agmlghty storm on the open seas, it fixed. This department promptly act- which takes piaes at night and which was actually filmed after sundown on th vessel emploed in making the production. No mechanism was needed to roll the ship the ocean Itself attended to that with exceeding vigor Th water which poured over the end ovpr Miss Phillips herself, for ship she I a star who shirks no scene, no matter how dangerous was contributed maimy by the waves themselves To make asCoatiaued from Pegs One surance doubly surd, however, and In to present the raging typhoon with true brilliance, a fleet of six tank ahips erv playing member of our dub was towed out to sea with the vessel th clamorous pophelping, and w used In the production. From these ulace back of tnekept rope somehow. Glancflumes were run from the topmasts, so ing over the gallery as we prepared to that th water would pour on the boat start, I saw that the gamblers were of Hurricane Gal. us again added force and that all th The cameras were mounted on platworld of New England seemed to form extending from the sides of the golfing be represented. Millie Carr was first ta ships and aupported by Iron rods. To the tee a tall, ejppl Briton with overcome to some extent th rolling ot and mustache, hair noted for his th ship the trtpode were fastened into utter imperturbability-- , I had never seen e special apparatus devised for the oc- him plav before, and even In my condicasion. tion of suppressed anxiety I watched with Still another difficulty encountered In in'ereet to see how he got his famous making the production wae in the tim- Big Bertha drives with hit equally faing necesaarv in making the Interior and mous short back swing. A flick of the exterior scenes on the vessel It was wrists seemed to do It: th ball screeched necessary to show that th movements like a seagull and stopped rolling beyond of the actor In response to. the roiling a ridge which I had never before seen of the ehlp were properly coincided when carried by a drive That is a they are just within and Just without hole, the lest shot uphill. I saw that an the cabins. accurate Iron shot with power like Carr's But be; end all these technical consid- would easily lay It on the green in two. erations the faultless dramatic effect Our man or should I ssy our men? of the scene, illustrating the Insignificouldn't do that. This was a matter of cance of the human ae with muscle, not mind. You had to ba born with such wrist as Carrie. the rage of the element. compared John B. Gillespie, caddying, teed th "Hurricane s OaJ" a that 1s a radical departure from picture Mr. Moore his driver, Any feature ball, handed ever shown In Salt Lake. It is replete straightened up, spoke In a quiet, even as tone an euch with thrills of a new sort. Of peculiar expert horae trainer local Intereet is the fact that the story uses to command hla animal. wss written by Harvey Gates, a Salt Jus your regular drive low and to he said. boy. formerly connected with the the right of the tree yonder. reportonal and editorial staffs of local And my sporting sense became absorbed Mr. Moore deeper interest. newspaper Mr. Gates In th Only recently visited Balt Lake and pronounced Hur- seemed1 to reach for the club automatiricanes Gal," th screening of which he cally; and automatically he swung back, viewed when he wee here. th best swung forward, his gsz fixed. Intent. of the many productions he ha written. The ball ewept net ten feet at any time the grass and seemed to roll forThe picture bill-at the American also from ever. It stopped a length a good bit bewiH Include the Pathe Review, An two hundred Yard mark. the yond appropriate musical score will be As we followed up. I watched Moor given by the American orchestra. and Gillespie, and called myself an ass to hav suspected before. The caddy situation ls shown In not AN UNUSUAL wss hanging aa close to the champion aa Big Stakes. which appears at the a policeman to a captured thrlef. Moor Broadway theater Sunday and Monday. walked on fixed mechanically, his y Whether It ts possible tor a woman to lov two men ls th Interesting problem th distent bail; the roving and P'erdng of Gillespie, now grown sinister to which ts answered In the romance of Jim eye me because of knowledge, searched Gregory, a cowpuncher. played by J. B. fairway, bunkers,myand distant green as Warner. nd the lovely eenorita, played he were though playing th game a Inby Elkior Fair. deed he wa. Arrived at th ball, he When Jim chases a stray maverick took out a brassi spoon, handed it to over the border into Mexico he eaves th man. his Full length over that little life ef tha beautiful Mercedes Alovei. and bunker.'' and, he said. Hs had scarcely finon that romantic around an attraction ished speaking d- before Mr. Moor ? T plam-elothe- rjpHREE men can atand on top of each ether in th ear of the massive sphinx built under the direction of Ernest Lubltsch for the moet pretentioue production, The Loves of Pharaoh, a big start-In- Call for ectrosa director. And Dot Farley will the answer. She will do mors than answer, having qualified efficiently in all three at different time Dot has been In the profession all her life: as a matter of fact, she was born to It. her mother and grandmother before her having been favorites on th legitimate stage. Along about 1910 Farley wae, enticed from th speaking bestage to star in a aeries of feature now ing produced at that time, by her long forgotten St. Louis Mbtlbn Picture had entered the AUTHOR to a letter received by Tho Tribune from Miss Eleanor Silver, June ha leading woman in Willard Maeks famous the act ha been accorded splendid receptions all over the ueteh, rcmt- Mist feUvera latter, was written at Vancouver, B. C., and Mist Silver says, in part: , The entire trip has been wonderful. We hae met bo many and lovely people and the act has gone over well everywhere. 1 haveinteresting grown' to admire ad ppreeiatd Mr. Macks work more and more all the time' Miss biivM adds that Mr, Mack has given her the stago name, Sita Svlver Before reaching Vancouver tha sketch was presented in Winnipeg, and the Tribune of that city aay in part concerning it: ' The manner in whieh the snowbird V playful little needle put to other sad more urgent use, forms the striking climax to Kick In, the is, powerfully appealing sketch in which Willard Mack, its author, is appearing this week at the 43 a extraordinary headline feature. Mr. Mack, regarded as one of of th. dayeartaialr Canadas greatest contribution to lk 13 supported by a worl( strong company of hi own seieetion. Ulark Marshall, very promising young aetor, gives a gripping portrayal of the hopeless young drug addict, while George Morrell is seen to good effect as Whip s Jogarty, the vindictive and Mis Sita Sylvers suppressed emotion as the wife of the reformed policeman. crook is a superb a vaudeville program has been arranged for Lagoon As usual, there will be thia afternoon. at J.30 And d two performances, leaving th Bamberger station at t o'clock arrive at th resort In tiros for the first performance. Eddie El wood and his six king of synof tb features. copation will ba on Members , of th organization are Eddie Mile Nelson. Ls Walsh,' Biwood, Jack Harlain, RobertuHaywood, Brook They and Wartck Lamoreaux. will Introduce "Kitten on the Keys" and "Lovable Eye." numbers are as follows; Other Bessie Craig and her four dancer; Mis Fern Batley, soprano; th Anonymous quartet, and Mis Ruth Christensen In a song and danc. Other Lagoon attractions will b on in full swing, including swimming, carnival attraction, children's fres playground and picnicking. Considerable Interest ls being shown In ths fox trot challenge contest to take place Tuesday night. Miss Melba Sellsy and Sumner Barton of Salt Lake, winners in the finals held at Lagoon several weeks ago, will be obliged to eentest with ths Zola runnare-u- p for supremacy, Mis Andsreon McBride of Ogden end Char! ef Belt LekS, and Miss Virginia Rivas and Elbert Acker of Balt Lake. WELL-BALANCE- D all-st- ar ACCORDING s 1 Lam-orea- , Paramount-Empres- (. springs up between them. But there her eoldler sweetheart, Captain Money, who possesses also a strong claim to romance end is equally brave. Beth men love Mercedes and each one ha a strong situahold on her' heart a tion that for suspense has few equals lo A nographer ia the war department offices after the United State world war. at the tit never-ceasin- ierM w'h will appear In Wild Oat Line, a Broadhurst production. In Now York tho coming season, stated bis firm coayjetion that in Mis Lyon ha has found the young woman ho wa looking for. Miss Lyon is blessed with youth, good looks, good health and an attractive and wholly unaffected personality. She has the distinction of being one of tho youngest war worker, going as a achool girl from Salt Lake to become a ste- , Jtv. picture. senorlta at last decide. "Big Th Stakes" Is a different kind of western story, and haa the border between th United States and Mexloo as Its locale. All the scene were shot where the atnot mosphere wae to be had. and ladid Proa have to be created. Th result g action and colduction of orful background. On this bill thers also is Ruth Roland in "White Eagle" and a Century com' edy complete It. V V laV ViPDEmtZ. aoul-stirrl- - euthAv ( 4 Lee GremveM fANTASEA-- nortl te.m la Oh Bor": Dcllichtle Brother. BrCoo torn 4 IMa. Clj io Girl. Ttlerk Sou of Un Wolf." as KOTIOV T1CTVXIS. Til colonel predae-tlnPARAMOrSTXMPREM of Pbrb"( Btb "Tb AMERICAN Docorhr Phillip I "Hulrrte' dram wrltioa b Harrajr Gl. ' Gaia. s Balt Cal a atwapspor ; Paiba Review BROADWAY J. B. Wamar ia Bif Btakaa; Can Ruth Roland ia White E!a, sad tury comadr. Bwietoa. Gloria Valentis sad GEM ftololpb In tb Rock.' mi heart-rntere- st 1 or-d- er 1 clay-color- 490-ys- 1 1 -- - Ike BLEACH Squeeze the juice of two lemon into g pottle containing three ounces of Orchard White, whieh any drug store will supply for a few cents, shake well, and you have a quarter pint of the best freckle aad tan lotion, and complexion whiteaer. Massage this sweetly fragrant lemon lotien into the .'see, neck, arms and hands each day and see how freckles and blemishes bleach out tad how e the skin be- clear, soft and, rosy-whit- LAdv.i ) talnment upon the ehowtnga Th letworst movie ter continues; There is no question but that th little V HEARD quiet town became suddenly conscious of a new on today," laughed if FT 9 own abilities under ths inspiration of A its nome aa she returned Ruth Roland, the society. Young and old alike took from being on location during the filmparL One of the beet interpretations ing of her new serial. was given by a lady eighty years of age, Wo wore taking scene aay out on a who. on this occasion, tried her first lonely ranch, over ten miles from the before th public. She read appearance poetofflce, where a widow lived with her The Old Woman tn e folk play called boy. Th older brother husky Th Wander Woed, by Ella W. Peattle. was away, and day after day the younger Ch'ldren of ten end twelve did eom de- one trudged ten miles there and back, lightfui impersonation for It may truthhoping for a letter. BY BURNS MANTLE. such comedy As there ia save for A cheap fully be said that the reading waa often W had Just stopped to rest for a reaso excellent as to deserve to be called grows YORK. Aug. 12. They have bit or two of pastry slinging, while, when he returned from hi dally out of character. A good picture, impersonation. The membership of th Did you get hike. His mother asked: own way of doing things, sonably are on and our the of course, absolutely no fans, friends, other society know NEW movie friends of ours. WS quit aura to approve. any mall today, son? social line, and the folk who hav hlth-ert- a No, h replied, only ne o them each other or thought known weak hardly back to Broadway last wiehln books. of associating, hav found themselves to Likes Little Theater. ' Just In tim " Wishing books? queried the1 mother. to watch them as be and mutually interested. In u they' worked to tha desk we find two letters about fact,congenial Yea, one of them books which successful as the whol thing wa "put over, as they ear theOn Little On from an Ohio theater. ill down In front of ths fire on an v. press It, Th Prisoner of Zend" at,th skeptic. Won't we agree with him that artistically and it owned to but one1 nlng and wish you had this, and wish Astor active season it waa the movement ls mostly bunk"? Don't failure during an theater. you had that. even more of a success And that, concluded Ruth, is ths Outride th theater were two rows of we know, from experience, that nothing unquestionably It developed person speaking. a love qf the theater or of socially brought first time I ever thought of th pathos Zenda o It wars. reembkng retiring people into th4 guards, in parson. th drama aver inspired s little theater allty, of a mall order catalogue." notice they deserved, and added to th A nice courtesy, we thourht, to tbo fad? Isn't it true that the patrons of every merriment of a town that had hardly the Zenda guard JACK AND SAM WARNER have defi-- w public; on ef these abortive attempts to Alter recovered from the solemnities of th wer identification use decided Jo mell of the sacrifices and services It dressed up like nitely Balkan .army, would Art standard of a community are and entailed. tag en all th flivver In use at the War- keep the crowds back and make room th amaor either "disappointed Impossible ner Brother studios. One dav last week teurs who would have been professionals Lacks Much of Bunk." they Jumped Into one of the flivver and both for those who wanted to get Into theyT had either wetho courage or the mane a hurried trip to tho Ambassador the theater and those who wer merely If And do know of e single talent" No, the little theater movement, half-hoA later out shuffling with the crowd. hotel, Los Angeles instance in which the little theater moveis not all bunk. a our disapthey came out of the hotel and found the of definite ment Itself, Ohio friend would Ilk to believe. has, accomplished were there not Zenda But thq pointed guards Sam laughed, and pane tire missing. for either community or comm- Inspired, it may be, by the suppressed for that purpose. They wer there to good Jack wondered what It was all about. unicants? histrionic deer of ambitious amateurs, Com on. let go," said Sam, be- make a ring around tha light and a The other letter, from North Carolina, it also represents bgaicly a wholesome fore that burglar get bach." camera that had been Installed to tak might easily hav been written In an- interest In drama. And it Is of valu the Why not call the police," advised Jack th pictures of the motion picture celebri- swer to that of the Ohio man, or to parts to the theater because of the Interest - i seriously. ties as they arrived. They were there of It. Of th two It ls th more Impor- In the theater It first creates and then "When ths fellow who stole that tire to block traffic, not to expedite It. As a tant and the more Interesting, therefor sustain find out what it he'll likely com result there was a mob in front of th let's to It first. It comes from the village With th constant curtailing of tha back. It was the papier mache trick tire theater the better part of the evening. is road tour of th worthier w ere eaeured, of Tryon. Tryon, and the pla we recently used In a scene." e charro.ng town, famed for Its beauty increas ng dependence of small town theJack thereupon suggested that identi- Theory Fails to Work. end th happy simplicity of its life, but ater owners upon the movies, thers will fication tag bs placed on all papier the place one have to be more and more little theater It is not, et first Motion picture producer apparently would select as th(lance, mache tires so that the nimble fingered center of dramatic organized if the people of many comharder on th th that proceed theory Interest.- All th same It has Its Drama munities are to preserve any tort of conexperts won't waste their time. you try to keep people out of a theater Fortnightly to which almost everyone In tact with the dram and dramatio litTHB popular screen character per athe harder will they try to get in. It town belongs, end In which en astonish- erature. enough theory qn first nights, ingly large proportion of the community QPsonalities, probably few are better butsound Aa a of th commercial thealter that It does not work so well. - ater In competitor tne citle however, or as who haa known than Jim Flnlaysoii, This "Prisoner of Zenda is Rex In- take pert. a feeder of larger either writing or acting talbeen playing dramatic aqd comedy leads gram a rcent screening of the Anthony ent to th theater. I am Inclined to for many year. Flniayson, coming to Hop romance, and Mr. Ingram, as you Workings of Society. the little theater movement less the coast a tew year ago. waa noticed have frequently been reminded, ls th "Th habit of th society is to meet regard As' than comseriously for and Mack HorseSennett at by engaged tha Lanier Women club every other a community many ofIt my confrere. gentleman who made The Four ' good fun and activityfor edy part and, with few exceptions, has men of the Apocalypse. Friday evening during th cooler months. a profitable outlet artistic temperabeen cast In most of the productions cinema had The readers for th Tear svening arrange ments. But, professionally ago, before th considered, a flat semU the tine. H clatm to like heavy rolea achieved It present popularity, th Fa-a themselves on the low dels in substantial contribution of the made clrcl after the fashion of old-tibecause they are mostly mean charac- mous Plavers organization mi- little only to theater the of theater th peohim- This screen veraipn of the atory, with James nstrel. Each reader holds in bis or her ple. which Is ths commercial ters and th ladls hat theater, in K. Hackett, the original RAssendyll, in hand th book of the play. pleases him. the decade I Its Hatched hav developtho role of tho heroic sword iiman who .The mistress of th program name in New Y'ork. hs been tha Introcamera new saved a kingdom for hla cousin, th king each character, with ths briefest possible ment THRILL-HARDENEduction of Eugene O'Neill aa an Ameriof charof Imperrelation the the adventurously of explanation Ruritania, by still talk about the experimonacter to the atory. Etteh character in be- can playwright. ence George Coudert had In Paris not so sonating that temporarily ossified The mistress ing named arises end bow arch. ChronTexas. Houston. th long ago, says then reads ths description of the scene Big Aid to Playwright. It la, to our mind, the Ideal cinema icle. At th time, Coudret was working and And All stag directions. efsuspensive romance, commanding This, In itself. Justifies a asfor tha Paths News and had been "When the charset ere ere on th stage fort, but who ia there to believe that Mr. spirited drama, a perfect romantic love signed to cover some sensational flying stofy of for O'Neill not display would and hav due opportunities arrived, in they atand; when they are off stage they stunts performsd by LJsutenant De Brie. sft. and become, theoretically, invisible. course, by way of th regular theater? great scenic beauty.with a definite To obtain th best possible result he sedirector picture The seva little theater la Ths did, however, bring Being by public preceded reading A and climbed the cured special permit ha Mr. Ingram permitted th eral usually four intensive rehearsals, O'Nein to prominence with his Ideals unflagpole of tho Eiffel Tower, following the Sanaa, Ttaelf naturally, tf a llttl 1 to sullied. tell often the and story reading surprisingly course of the speeding plans with hia m As a playwright h would certainly siuggtahly, and devoted moot of his good. eye. camtras hav been heard from sooner or later, thought to the reality and docoratjva Headed ae 'Such White 'Tha plays but If hia approach he had been value of Its background.. for Boy, by Lenox Robertson, Lady Greg- forced during to trim bis original dramas to ROBERT VIGNOLA, director Tha Dragon,' Zone Gales 'Miss meet orys minds of th manager productions, haa All the Served by Precedent. the with Lulu Bstt end Alice Gerstenbergs movie star backed off the boards when which Overtones were read, and some original whom he would have been forced to barThus, In th coronation acene.director it cornea to receiving hav unique article result the cav been might plays of North Caroline life by members gain, would have Inspired the average through the mall. dollar on met with particularly good interpretation. lamltous. Th director's mail held a hug cocoa-n- to ipend at least e million New little theater movement No admission is charged to these per- has beenYork and to engage two or three aemlprofesslonal from the first, right off the trees in Honolulu re- palaces, thousand extras for e citizen mob. w formances, everyone being welcome, and and In every haa accomplished Instance cently. The cocoanut was completely have In to en Increase Interest e handsome pageant served piece- the idee being worth noting until It became postage plastered on one side wtth contemporary drama. Th only charge nothing as It were. a practically professional stamps. The fruit wa opened and di- meal, enterprise. There are brief scene of th passing is a moderate membership fee sufficient There is no vided among tho cameramen and prop way to ruin a occasional glimpses of th to pay for the books purchased, and for promising plsy quicker process.on. to hav than it staged boys crowd caught close enough to the.camera the very small rent of the clubhouse." and acted by amateurs, and In any high-l- y face on the the to ' show expreesions field the little theater competitive OE MARTIN has refused to be drawn Charmingly Simplified. and a gorgeous but modest shot or two that, by inference, seeks to set an exthe Interior of tho cathedral during movement a for is theater to follow, little theater the then, Here, ample seclarger his trOveray on evolution. Through i charmingly simplified aa the writer frequently does more to discourage than at the Universal ceremony. doubles the roles of Stone retary, A. C. Sleeker, Lewis a intereet in th be. eerloua to of And life to the encourage Tryon report and th king. Being an Intelli- what a relief must these fortnightly read- drama. City aoo, Martin declined to comment on Darwinian gent and gifted actor, Mr. Bryan's attack on th Lewis makes tha be to the of current drama the Alio Terry ings theory. It waa rumored, however, that moet of both opportunities. winter residents of those villages that- (Copyright. 1922, by the McNaught Synthe groat simian actor la Incensed at the is the fascinating Flavia, pretty and been forced to depend for enterdicate, Inc.) promiEdeaon give an ex- have Robert and Imputation that certain person nent politically are member, or even in- cellent characterization1 as Sapt, Raaeen-dyll- 's friend. direct descendant of hla family. There I more than th usual attention hero th to of outdoor th th development of character, end paid LEW CODY, who has Juat returned from Banff. Canada, where he ha been workcannot and sent It dow-- n to a vulcanizing Now Jack is dally exestablishment. pecting an automoblla tire. ed THIS WEEK'S BILLS I of some of the (Olf fHi -- - 1 1 1 D ten-ye- ar ut Ras-aend- prtn-cess- y, daredevll exploits, you probably conceive of Bill Duncan with thia decoration screwed In hi eya. Yet In hia latest Vltagraph production BUI assume th role of a hard bulled north woods guide who seta out to His aft irta pro nobleman. a language-- " t vide comedy aplenty, with a goodly numAnd excitement thrown In. UBBl.ING with enthusiasm and glad ber of thrlU and --wife who era Jlavsrp oeaudful and talented Mack Ben- THE husbandand Ev in th Adam nett comedy star, has again taken up her studio grease paint and mirror. episode In th Mams woods wet Ben with Turpin airreated for slaving partrldg in the Phyllis, in oompany and Kathryn McGuire, appealed in a closed season. "They should hav fol vaudeville sketch oti Pantages time in low sd their original ancestor more closeseveral of th west coast cities, and, ly," cays Viol Dana, the llttl Metro while the claims that the 111 of a star, and stuck to apple vaudeville artist is all that may bs ex ILLIE DOVE, recently signed as a pected, she, nevertheless, wants no rooro of it suc prominent Metro player, ha cumbed to the lure of the southern CaliBUI Duncan In Imagine you course fornia golf CAN If you have seen th athAfter practicing driving for half an letic star In hit western pictures hour, says Miss Ixvs, I find that thsrs steers, wrestling with grizzly are a lot of muscles in my body that bears and perform 'ng a hutched other never hav been introduced to before." ing on a new picture, says he learned to speak Eskimo and Indian cuss words whila In ths frozen north. ou drive when And." says Lew, a dog team over acre of tee and snow like I did until you're frozen stiff you need all the cuts words invented In any two-fiste- d, rough-and-rea- . re B Marvelous New Beauty of Face and Figure In Two-Wee- Time-Guaranteks ed How One Woman Regained The Radiant Health and Youthful Charm She Thought Cone Forever A Precious Secret Every Woman Should Knew bull-doggi- dressed the ball and tent It fair and true, first soaring and then running over th Hs lsy some low, untrapped bunker. seventy-fiv- e yards from the green with a naatv, tricky approach if he elected or Gillespie elected to pitch and run. The Briton was a bit of a golf machine himself. Th advance guard of the gallery had scarcely reached him before, wtth one keen, appraising glance toward th green, he had given back swing, flicked with hi wrists, and the cheer that began in the main gallery wae echoed by an offshoot of th crowd which had gathered up by the green to eee final The Briton wa on In two. Beresult yond th bunker John G. Gillespie drew out a maahle niblick. I eouidn t hear all he tald, so quiet and even was his tone, but I caught a ch p and a yard uphill from the pin. M's found that the Englishman had iu,. mads the green he had a putt of orty feet or more across two nasty undulations and Moor lay not flv feet from the pin. The English pro. who already had practically a birdie, tried to make It an eagl and almost succeeded; his approach putt'died a foot from th Just rolr tt Brio that hole gen-t- lj cup. ! said Gillespie. The automaton did ft The Englishman, takirg aa much car as though he had a forty-foputt, holed out. Mechanical stead'ness had Just stood off brilliance. They had halved for a birdie four, I shant trv to deacrip the match In detail I shan't try to describe In detail two hour Evanything about the next memories. impres erything emotion 1 understand now sions era too mixed. why men who hav been in battle can never tell you much of Anything that happened After they went over the top. I remember A sens of sinister quality In which grew almost to horror. I Gilleapl began with a horror of- - Moore, too a Into a flabby machine but man mad kind of protecting that changed to there was the irritation of Then pity. waiting, waiting for Mr. Bavin, hope of th situation, to act. But she didn't dutv aa policewoman on Just ignored the course, clung close to the rope and to me, and watched. I remember a wonder, which became an obsessing curiosity. to what she intended doing Aa I look over my copy of ths card to that Immortal match I realize that Umust have com out of th haze which fogs my memory at th sixteenth hole. Still 0rfeeLmchanlcal golf was standing off "i e his-sho- rt hr They wer all genius. square. The card show that ten hole had already been halved. Here a streak of gentue blazed from the Englishman. He made hla longest-driv- e of the day; holed hia Iron approach not for a birdie but for an eagle. Our champion barely laid his second shot to the edge of ths I green. Instead of picking up Moor might almost Say Gillespie approached and ran down In a four. M'atchlng G intentlv. I could see that he was disturbed. His eye glanced hesitantly from right to left The score occurred to me. If they halved the remaining two holes aa they had been doing, the Briton had won. I spoke to Mr Bavin then I believe It wa th first word had addressed to her that afternoon. It Moore he's betting on," I whispered. she- - whispered back, "Yea I saw almost Impatiently. But on the seventeenth brilliance paid for Itself, as It usually does. The Briton hooked to the rough on an Impossible lie; he had to chop downward almost perpendicularly to get It out at all. He took five: the golf machine holed out In four, and they were all square with on to When the tiny plunk of Mr. play. Moore a ball en the metal of the, 7 cup started th gallery cheering, a sway of Mr Bavin's figure brought her shoulder against mine. Sh wa trembling. I looked down and realized that It waa not the tremor of awe, such as we had experienced that morning on th link but rather the quiver of a thoroughbred wait in for th signal to start. Why didnt she start? I felt an Irritation of Imps tienee toward Mr Bavin. . There wa only on more hole to play and if Mr. Moor won It That last hoi Is rather long for par four. The calm, unemotional Englishman hit too far; I saw the whit dot of the bell leap Into the air and disappear be hind a clump of low bushes Moor laid his drive -- with meticulous accuracy dead on th strip of fairway, got his full distance with perfect direction on his wooden second, and laid It not s'x yards Breath from the edge of the green. less, th gallery watched the profesa.onal two full the for minute a situation study A second shot to the green wag Impossible; a- bush had him completely He accepted the Inevitable, booked. popped out with his roashie' niblick. Caatlmed e Pxg Toot strength and BRIGHT EVES. ROSY CHEEKS, f - rY. CLEAR SKIN RED UPS FIRM FLESH WELL ROUNDED NECK. Clear Slda, Firm Flask. Bright Eyes and Body Tingling with Vitality are what win In lov. business or social life. Just watch fhe Difference in How You Look and Feel Alter a Short Courso of MASTINS VITA-MQTablet with your meals. 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