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Show THE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE, THUtfSDAY MOKNIXG, MAR CHJH, 1927. Starring Dalcie Jayne VV- r Ztt - synopsis. Cornelia Marsh, employed In th scenario department of Hentsog' Perfection motion picture studio at Fort N. J learna with sorrow that Henry Horner, the head of the department, ha been fired by Lyman Hertaog. aon of the owner of the studio. Everyone knows that Lyman la In love Jealoua of Menry because he with Dulcle Jayne, the tar of the Dulcle seem to but studio, prefer her director, Daniel K. Leland. Mr. Hertsog suggests to Lyman that '!iy feature Leland as an actor a well as a director, and this causes a quarrel between father and aon. Old Mr. Hertsog suffers a stroke of apoplexy as a result and Lyman Is left 1n charge of the studio. His first Independent action Is to discharge Leland, who takes his dismissal coolly and proceeds to finish a picture he's e been working on. Lyman- meets on location and tries to force himIceself on her. Benny Bosencrantz, land's camera man, comes to her assistance. Cornelia Marsh Is detained at the studio by Lyman after the others have gone to write a criticism of a play lie s Interested In. She asks Lyman to iet her off because she has an endowngagement to meet her motherand the town and take her to dinner Lycelebration. as a theater birthday man refuses. Cornelia misses the last along trolley, but Dulcle Jayne come lift to in her car and offers her a Dni.-and Cornelia invites the (rry her mother tn dlifn with her. - She tell Cornelia that she is engaged to Henry Horner. She accompanies the Marshes to the theater. '. Dul-ct- ' ! Installment 25. DULCIE CONTINUES HER STORY. AH Wis play progressed Dulcie chattered on to Cornelia and her. mother. "And, of course, a husband that treats you simply rotten, so while people are looking at the screen they an Imagine themselves healing up your broken heart why, I should say a marriage that was so terribly unbe absohappy everybody knew It toasset. But lutely fierce was a regular on his papa's always had foamall.form now And lips at my marrying at lie's got Lyman like he might have got salvation. ""It's because he's so scared of my pictures making a flop, and to marry Lyman'd be like marrying the firm. His letters keep saying one picture after another's a failure and the only way to secure my future 4s to marry Mrs. and Miss Marsh, I've Lyman. made two hundred and eighty thousand dollars so far this year. Wouldn't yuu think that'd secure a girl a better future than any Lyman Heruog could give her? "Maybe I ought to pretend to to get Lyman till the time came rid of him. But. aside from me not does a kind of Lyman girl, being that make me so sick the very Insldes of my bones go soft! He-- ' A startling frail change suddenly appeared In her color and ferocious little face. The skin while the alarmingly heightened seemed to stiffen and swell, as if her muscles all Its minutest through body were about to scream. "He hit to Baid. hit she "He Henry Henry!" humiliate him. When he'd discharged couldn't he thought Henry Henry and get me. Ha never Imagined how Hen-In ry was just going to hold htm up the air like a gunnea pig. Horrible, pudgy, little, low, squirming thing! And then he thinks I could ever look at him again, and at his nasty hand! And not get sick at being in the came room with it his hand, I mean. And at myself, too, for not being able to do a thing about it. Seem so queer I can't kill him! I can't even act Impolite about it to him Henry wouldn't like it at aH. I suppose you see-- A can't help mentiaaing Henry once in a while. Miss Marsh?" "Dear child," Cornelia found herself saying, "you never could talk about him enough for me. The one thing I ever had agaLnst you was that 1 thought you didn't appreciate him." There was a king vause. Then. "I am common, some ways," pondered Dulcle Jayne, In her hoarse voice. "But that way I'm not common. There muet be something really refined all through me the way I do. love you Tor appreciate Henry. hating me fur fear I didn't, dear Miss t'ornelta you don't mind my calling you that? And for reaUzing, the way 1 can see you do, how he is I've got temper. Miss Cornelia, without Henry, but strength is different you need sense for it. Henry is very wise. And I don't think 1 am wise. But when I think about Henry something swells up In me, wise and strong. Henry has acquainted me quite a little with the works of the famous poet, Robert Browning. And he's written a ploce Hobert Browning has. I mean; with a line tn It sounds as if he had written It about Henry: '"Lived In his mild and magnificent eye." "Henry has a mild and magnificent A kind of a calmeye, Miss Cornelia. ing eye. See now, when I think of It, J can get back o telling you how we got hold of Heart of Fire.'" The telling dealt with two Mrs. terrors that Rignold would sell her novel to some other company and that the Hcrtsogs would persist In buying it themselves. "Of course, Henry refused it. And Pan refused it. And I refused It. But they could hsve bought It. anyhow, end put somebody else out in IL Only Julia Rignold couldn't be satisfied with anybody except me, because the trouble wss she wrote It for me. Yes, wal-An- w . 1 , By I Virginia Tracy after she'd seen tna In on of Can's pictures her story cams to her about me, and she wrote It, thinking when It was a pioture I would play it. We got after her and mad her go ea what my Hertiog were like and held out hope pktture of my getting loose If we oould'v her th least prospect of any given definite dale she'd have waited ilk a shot. But her agent. Bllertck, waa sending it everywhere and offer of- whol fortunes jrrom..other companies war falling round her like a bUssard and her husband thought, of course, she was crazy not to take them. And while we were pretty near erasy ourselves, w found out my mall waa being monkeyed with Lyman, of course! Trying to see was I having other offers, and what was I up to, anyhow. Wi), w didn't know what might leak eut, because Julia Rignold is certainly an excited and indiscreet writer! When she go to New York, Into th middle of all the fuss about her book that she hadn't quite felt the shock of 1a Peoria, she got keener than ever, of course, for the picture and the money, and the more afraid of advantages being taken of her. Just as I was getting more and more to feel that all the rest of my llf,. and Henry', too, that was being taken away from me, depended on my right out in 'Heart of Fire.' bursting And w both went an out of our heads that Dan even thought, on while, we'd Just make a bolt of It run away to Germany, where the law couldn't get me, and do our picture there. Klther go without the American rights, that'd be worth five times all the rest of the world put together, of course, or else trust to the picture sue a hit abroad ltd force making Hertsog's to make term But then our lawyers convinced him not to. And whatever we would have done I don't know. If we hadn't been able to get Mrs. Rignold stuck on Dan. That and her being so awfully moral. "You know what I mean by moral? " ants to Join cause and support Meals and make the world better and happier for her having lived In It. 'I shall pass this way but one' and all, only real modem women' clubs and keeping their identttles separate and birth control and everything. They're like that now, when they're moral, Henry says. So, it her book that started It, she wasbeing all ready for our Ideal, Independence Pictures, smaller and better, doing things right he called It self expression; the only true form of art, she said it was Then, you see, as an authoress, she'd gone soft on her sympathetic heavy 'Heart of Fire' Is a girl's but Once the man gets into It hestory, does eat it up. While Mrs. certainly Rignold was writing him he came to mean ail sorts of tn her till h had got him fixed up sacred as a In a little shrine her tern- holy statue .peranum had made for him, so Kh. couldn't speak of him. hardly, without her voice changing. And who was to do him?' I might have been wiped out. maybe, by some other blonde wit :i check, but she htoked .ft snowed her for him and she wnatney all was vain. felt Then she came east and saw Dan. "He was it. MUs Cornelia. I "Well, mercy. thought If she feels this way about him In the daylight, so tn speak, how will she feel if ever fhe sees that profile of hla on the screen and that sad smile? If she ever sees him act! And, even at llertzng's, now and then a lash of acting will leak So I thought once I could get him on me ('n in i fissions ior we ha-her chained up for life. friiu So as we had Dan, Henry and me, long we had her, and so king as we had her to start out with Independence Pictures were safe, once we could get to making them. So long as we had Dan nothing mattered and then Dan All the same, after Lynianh.aUjnca got excited about 'Heart of Fire,' and papa would have been on her and it me. for and Ellerick and accepted her husband were Juki fire down her back for her breathing to sell It tj him. It wis what he did to Dan los' Lyman his last chance. He engaged Wynn Perceval to do all my heavies W ynn Perceval in 'Heart of Fire'! Her stomach turned on her and she sold us her book for ten thousand dollars. Ten, when she could have got maybe a hundred from Lyman. Ten thousand and a percentage! "It was the very afternoon before my night work on 'Light of Dawn' Dan got her to do It. He wa so scared that if she refused lt d kill my work that night he wouldn't even let me know he had an appointment with her. We were banking on of Dawn.' because we meant to'Light steel one perfect film before any cutting, but what ran and Miss Goldman decided on got let loose on it; we meant to show that film to a picked crowd of the industry's Influential men in a projection room In New York, so that they could see whelher or not we'd really fallen off in our work, Dan and me, and we did It. Dan did it." f (o) L. Chicago. . . 6t40P.M.CTj PITTSBURGH Jfor WASHINGTON BALTIMORE PHILADELPHIA and tha Heart of New York and Brooklyn via motor coach from the terminal without additional charge. Cur Gardner DUtrtct Freight and PmV Representative J--i UM.e States N.tl Beak Bids Vfk aaa Stout Su, Dasver, Colons V BAITIMORE&OHIO 1827" TMMM.iici" 1927 FCZEI ,1A L. Relieve that itching, burning tor ment and ttirt the healing with esieo!1 . iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiaiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiint old - ARTHUR FRANK'S NEW STORE -- is j five-figu- I i 1 ous sisehe is going to do even more for you. And we, the makers of the clothes he sells, are going to help him te The Tribune. SPANISH FORK. March 16 annual day was observed Tuesday afternoon by appropriate programs- and exercises at the Relief society halls of the First and Second wards. At the First waTd Presi-- . dent Carrie Holt presided and also was In charge of an appropriate program, the features of which were a sketch of the lives of former presidents given by Mrs. Ann Warner, and talks by Bishop WiWiam C. and Mrs. Astred Jacohson of the Palmyra stake board. The refreshment committee served 110 members and visitors. At the Second ward Counselor Teena Cornaby presided, Mrs. Phoebe Hughes hsd charge of the program and President Edna Brockbank gavs a short address of welcome. The ladies' chorus sang two selections and an Impersonation of six former president of the society was given by six ladies and a sketch of the!- - lives read by a member. The refreshtnmt committee served eighty. The Third and Fourth ward societies will give their annual day program Thursday evening. Relief-societ- y We congratulate Mr Frank on his success; join with him in his pride of achievement, and corigratU' late Salt Lake City on being Served by such a store HART SCHAFFNER School 1$ to Be Held on Saturdays in Price tn The Tribute. PRICE, March it Members of the faculty of the Harding Junior high school, believing that a large number of the usual retentions can be avoided and that considerable expense can be saved the school district by cj special help classes on Kt- urdays for students who are behind ( nave ail voted to spend worn, in ineir the two hours each Saturday from 10 to 1! o'clock doing such work The Initial classes will be held next ' Saturday. Teachers are f, ing this work without extra remuneration and the study will be supervised by Principal George A. Fox. Students at th Harding school were notified that the classes will be held. All those needing help were urged to attend, a It is expected a large number will be saved the trouble of a second year In the tun grade. Letters will also be sent to parent of pupils wv might benefit from th special help. cupid scores Twice. IDAHO PA 1.1,8. lusho. March Two couples were marriwl Wednesday in th county rou'rihou by R c Wold. ptvba4e Judg. The couples were Wilford E Brown. Ashton, and Anna Whiltie, MeryivUl. and George Rex burg, and Effie L. I. Wilding, ! Lake. Emory, 1 something for the community it serves'somc thing the community appreciates Now, in his enlarged store twice its previa -- ' a store has to double its space after only a few years, it's a sign it has been doing Salt Lake Gity. He has been giving you splen did styles, honetservice and great values Relief Societies Hold Annual Day Celebration Special When Arthur Frank has been doing something for (To Be Continued.) Special a monument to valuegiving i Beck-stro- Via Washington with ttopDvrt priviUztt 21 I & MAR Good Clothes Makers Siiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 11 |