OCR Text |
Show Tk;,' vour corner. Make use of it loryour information on 0 This is your my pleasure and privilege to inm that are puzzling you. ' submitted to me. If a more detailed J fully Promptly alUuest a $ Si ",ion- AI1 communication! wiU J; 1 tiwj hidr very plaInIy ' Helen Brook.. Box 1545. Salt Uke City. ; Dear Miss Brooks: Would certainly le to heatjou opinion of Pola Negri, motion pic u L rvho has been appearing a some of the leading picture houses. It see to me that her plays are ifeilyb Ion the moral standard of ihe general American public. Are these pictures produced m America and what is her national? Don't yon think these vampire pictures e demanded by the theatre-going public of (he present day? Thanking you very much for enlightenment en-lightenment in this matter 1 am. MADGE B., Ml. Pleasant. Utah It must be admitted that there seeras t0 be a demand for the Pola Negri class of picture plays by a part ot the theatre-going public, but let us sincerely sincere-ly hope that it is not the majority. 1 believe the majority never leave shows of the class in which this actress have appared or others of like nature, without with-out feeling that the time spent in viewing view-ing it has been lost and there remains a very unpleasant "taste" as a reminder remind-er for some time. The "moral" which is supposed to be the good derived from its production produc-tion could just as easily be placed before be-fore the public in a picture which would not leave such an unsatisfied feeling of time misspent. This actress was born in Poland. Her pictures have been made abroad, in Germany and in Paris and London. Dear Miss Brooks: Will you please give me the cast of characters which played in "Truth , About Husbands." Thanking you in advance. A Ford full of love and a kiss on each rattle. MOVIE FAN, Grantsville, Utah, j Welcome to my corner. You are j very generous with your affection. I j fear you will become bankrupt if you ; do not use more economy. The following fol-lowing is the cast in "Truth About Husbands:" Jane Preece by Anna Lehr; Duncan Dun-can Ramshaw by H. E. Herbert; Mrs. Stonehay by Elizabeth Garrison ; Leslie Les-lie Brownell by Mae McAvoy ; Hugh Murry by Richard Gordon ; Lord Randolph by Ivo Gawson ; .Wilbert Barnell by Arthur Rankin ; Irene Stonehay by Loraine Frost. Dear Helen Brooks: I am going to make use of your corner and hope it Tvill not take too much of your time to explain to me hoiv burglars and others H'ho commit crimes are caught fcu their finger prints? EARNEST INQUIRER. Ephraim I am glad to welcome you to my corner. The idea is tins. All people differ in the pattern of the little ridges on their fingers. Two patterns exactly exact-ly the same from two different people have never yet been found. A man may change his clothes and the appearance ap-pearance of his face, he may look like a different person, and have not the slightest resemblance to a photograph taken of him, but his thumb-mark never nev-er changes. These little ridges may be destroyed, but no different pattern can be put in their place. So you can see if a man is found whose thumb-mark ii the same as that found in connection with a crime the evidence is extremely strong against him. Dear MUs Brooks: I fas very much surprised to hear some one say recently that lobsters nere red only after being cooked. It thu true, and xvhat is their color whih alive? MAEBELL, Downey, Idaho Yes, Maebcll. it is true that lobsters lob-sters turn red when boiled. This i caused by a chemical change that oc eurs in the brown coloring matter of the hell when it i, heated. It is a curious fact that the red coloring matter of our blood turns brown when heated, but the brown of the lobtscr's shell turns red. |