Times & Guide (1909), 23 May 1923, p. 4

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524 PAGE FOUR NEWS News Macriage with its hopes and joysâ€"divorce with its shattered °_ e Fomanceâ€"a picture to see and ponder over. . The story of a young man who becomes oneâ€"of the celeâ€" brities of his local town by sheer nerve. Cor. St, Clair Ave. and Oakwood SATURDAY MATINEEâ€"EPISODE 2â€""PLUNDER" Starring ALICE TERRY AND RAMON NOVARRO "WHERE THE PAVEMENT ENDS" s TWO SHOWS: 7 AND 9 P.M. MATINEE SATURDAY AFTERNOON AT 2.30 Ne s Parking for two hundred cars free. ‘Vaudeville Every Tuesday and Thursday Nights. Thursday, Friday and Saturday, May 31, June 1 and 2 Thursday, Friday, Saturday, May 31, June 1 and 2 Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, May 28, 29 and 30 The‘most vivid and vital of South Sea romances <‘ > . COMEDYâ€""GLAD RAGS® . The drama of a girl who wanted to become a star. "PLUNDER"â€"STARRING PEARL WHITE Thursday, Friday, Saturdayâ€"May 24, 25, 26 THE OAKWOOD ___THEATRE Speéial Matinee on Thursday, kMay 24. COMEDYâ€""THE HANDY MAN" "SQOULS FOR SALE" NEW SERIAL EPISODE 1 COMEDYâ€""DOG SENSE" LADDIE CLIFF in "THE CARD" ALLâ€"STAR CAST FRANEK MAYO m " BRASS " VISIT Phone Hill 5300 WEEKLY Weekly Wednesday, Thursday, May 30 and 31 MAPLE LEAF PHOTOPLAYS ‘BACK TO YELLOW JACKET The exceptional merit of the produc: tion is also attended by the particularâ€" ly notable cast. , Alice Terry and Raâ€" mon Novarro play the leading roles. Miss Terry will be remembered for the rare ability which she displayed in "The Four Horsemen" and "The Conâ€" quering Power.", â€" Mr. Novarro, Rex Ingram‘s latest screen find, won the highest praiseâ€"of movieâ€"gqers in "The Prisoner of Zenda" and "Trifling Woâ€" men." Edward Connelly and Harry T. Morey add new laurels to their distinâ€" guished repittations. Baby Peggy in Comedy, "SWEETIE" Earle Fox, who plays Captain Dobâ€" pbin, is a greatâ€"greatâ€"greatâ€"grandson of John Fox, who . was the ifirst Sinn Feiner in the Irish Parliament. The fact that the picture was made by the director of ‘"The Four, Horseâ€" men," . "Fhe.Prisoner of Zends" and "Trifling Women" is enough to assure fine artistry and thigh distinetion. And here. again: Mr. Ingram has, captured the true spirit of his story., And it is the living, intense spirit of a strange tale of a strange place, peopled by men and women who ‘feel all human emoâ€" tions. \ The exceptional cast of ‘"Vanity Fair‘ was not selected on a basis of ancestral fame, but it contains several descendants of men who helped make English history. & "i:;’.;lilprfiw Pigott, who is cast as Mrs. Sedley, is a second cousin of Lady Diâ€" ana Manners. 4 â€"but only by marriage!‘ she confessâ€" es. "Vanity Fair‘ comes to the Beavâ€" er Theatre for three days, beginning Monday. esnt es k James Chapin, assistant director, is a descendant, through, his mother, of the Duke of Wellington. j ; Mabel. Ballin, who plays the star role of Becky Sharp, has a famous relative,; tooâ€"she says, "I‘m related to Hugo Ballin, motion picture director DESCENDANTS OF GREAT IN "VANITY FAIR" The story was adapted by Rex Inâ€" gram ‘from a story in John Russel‘s book, ‘"Where the‘ Pavement Ends," which has had an enormous sale. â€" Sir Arthur Conan Doyle called the volume "the best book of short tales by any debutante _ since _ Kipling‘s ‘Plain Tales,."~‘ Mr. Russell acted in an adâ€" visory capacity during the filming . of the story in Elorida and declared himâ€" self highly pleased. with the realism which Mr. Ingram obtained in the setâ€" tings. + JACK LONDONâ€"Fish Patrol Story 1â€"2.\ It is a tale of the ways of roâ€" mance in that last outpost of romance â€"the South Seas. In this thrilling and realistic‘photoplay is pictured how love came to the lonely daughter of a misâ€" sionary.. Here is all the exotic beauty of the Southern islesâ€"here is the esâ€" sence of strange and ) heartâ€"filling roâ€" mance translated to the screen by a master director. f Rex Ingram‘s latest production for Metro, "Where the Pavement Ends," is coming to the Oakwood May 31, June REXâ€" INGRAM FILMS Monte‘ Blue has the featured part as Philip, while Marie Prevost is Marâ€" jorie. Others in the cast are Harry Myers, Vera Lewis, Irene Rich, Frank Keenan, Miss DuPont, Margaret Sedâ€" don, Helen Ferguson, Edward:. Jobson, Harvyey Clark, Cyril Chadwick, Pat O‘Malley, Gertrude Bennett and Ethel Grey Terry. "Brass" is a Warner Brothers‘ clasâ€" sic of the screen, directed by Sidney Franklin, . and will be shown at the Oakwood May 28â€"29â€"30. That is why the married couple in "Brass" go to wreck and ruin, plungâ€" ing into tragedies and unhappiness. Philip Baldwin and his wife, Marjorie, cease striving for mutual happiness afâ€" ter a while, the wife finding it in caâ€" barets with boon companions, the husâ€" band with his friem{)s. Before they know what‘s what, they are divorced. ‘fWhe secret lies," he. believes, "in the struggle for it. No marriage was ever made happy without a distinct effort on the part of both husband and wife to make it so. Married happiâ€" ness, in short, is not an accident, not a gift of the godsâ€"it is a structure which two build." Charles G. Norris, author of "Brass," the novel adapted for the screen, thinks neither of the above accounts wholly for happy marriages. Monday, Tuesday,.May 28 and 29 Some. say a_ comfortable home, others, a congenial relationship between husband and wife. What is the ‘secret of happiness in marriage ? i Friday, Saturday, May 25 and 26 HOOT GIBSON in ~ "SINGLE HANDED" AUTHOR REVEALS SECRET FOR HAPPY MARRIAGES Domestic Felicity Depends on Unified Struggle, Says Author of "Brass" "DANGEROUS WATERS" "FOOLS AND RICHES" HERBERT RAWLINSON in PETER B. KYNE‘S STORY A ’.S'n *T C V eS MOVIF 4 _ 27e y e _4 w Gey? Mack Sennett Comedyâ€" "BRIGHT EYES" sOUTH SEAS STORY â€"INâ€"â€" THE TIMES AND GUIDE, WESTON Is one that all can apprehend: Get all the facts and then \DECIDEâ€" And stick to that, whate‘er betide. He Was a Failure The only moral E‘d append And oh, the heart of me is glad, To each fair flower I dearly yearnâ€" For winter time seems very long, Till all my garden friends return. LEREINE BALLANTYNE. And crowding to my. very door, As if their love I‘d ne‘er deny, The iris patch is payed with blue,â€" Its only rival is the sky. The culture of cranberries, although not a widely established. industry in Canada, can be conducted. with profit in many sections which at present know practically nothing of the growing and care of this erop. Very few cranberâ€" ries are grown in Canada outside of the Provinces of Nova Scotia, Prince Edward Island, Quebec and British Columbia. When properly cared for, a cranberry bog will produce from.forâ€" ty to fifty barrels of fruit to the acre, and thirty barrels is an average crop. Certain natural~conditions are necesâ€" sary for a cranberry plantation. These are described in Bulletin No. 19 of the Department of Agriculture at Ottawa, which gives full instructions for buildâ€" ing up a plantation and handling the crop. , It is shown that asconsiderable amount of money is needed to conâ€" struct a cranberry bog from rough land.. A sixteen acre bog. in Nova Scotia, it is stated, was purchased, cleared,, trufed, ditched, sanded, dykâ€" ed and planted for the sum of $4,500. A considerable amount of forest growth had to be removed in this operation. The returns, however, from a producâ€" tive bog would seem to justify this expenditure. Issued by the Director of Publicity, Dominion Department of Agriculture, Ottawa, May J2th, 1923. Oh, warm and magical the air, When birds announce that spring has come, And wandering in ‘my garden fair I find again delphinium. Above‘ the trees are green and gay, The brooks are rioting and wild, And pansies have a little way Of peeping at me like a child. "Goofy" was drawn into a poker game as a "dumb" outsider, to draw the card which would win for profesâ€" sional sharks. He failed to draw the correct card, and was in the hands of the sheriff, charged with trying to steal a big pile of money. But "Gooâ€" fy" was in the hands of the sheriff just long enough to say "Howdy," and then for the â€"rest of the day he was in, out and"elsewhere at the spur of winged feet and pressing business. Enter the heroine!. She had half of a treasure chart. ‘The other half would come in when "Jonothan," member of the‘ Ringtail cireus coming to town, made his appearance. â€" MacKnight‘s fiddle having been smashed by a byâ€" stander in a moment of anger, he was free to help the girl find her treasure. He did, with the best of his dumb courage, wild rides ih flivers, handâ€"toâ€" hand encounters with city slickers and other thrilling events follow in rapid succession â€" until the\ heroine, her guardian, and Boob finally arrive in the treasure cave.. But just when vicâ€" tory seems theirs, the crooks arrive and announce their intention of "sitâ€" tingâ€"in."‘ But their Boob ‘starts all over again and things finally end right. A Thumbâ€"Nail Synopsis "Our hero" played the violin. Kanâ€" sas had worse things than eyclones and the dry law. "Goofy" MacKnight‘s fiddling was one of them. It has been declared to be as enâ€" grossing a picture as the screen has known in a very long time, and promâ€" ises a real treat for the patrons of the Maple Leaf Theatre during its enâ€" gagementâ€" here. seb This is the sereen version ‘of Peter B. Kyne‘s stirring story of the same name, which appeared in the Cosmoâ€" politan Magazine. â€" It., relates in a graphic manner the nearâ€"tragedy which befell three people,â€"Jim |, Ballantyne, Carmen, his wife, and William Carson, who befriends her/ in . her hour of need. ~"Back to Yellow Jacket," a new Ben Wilson production, starring Roy Stewâ€" art and Kathleen â€" Kirkham,â€" and reâ€" leased by Arrow, is annqunced as the féatured attraction at the Maple Leaf Theatre on‘ Monday and Tuesday, the 28th and 29th. "Just about the time I was informâ€" éd ‘of my ~duty to. make the leap, I would have sold my chance of becomâ€" ing a screen star for the same price the small boy asked for his chance to be President, viz., a quarter.â€" But I put on the costume and mounted the platform, shaking like a leaf. I felt I couldn‘t do it, but neither could I be a quitter before the hundreds of peoâ€" ple who were looking on. When the time came, Iâ€" closed â€" my â€"eyesâ€"and jumped! And I‘m living. to tell the tale, though Frank Mayo pulled me out ~of" the water more . dead than alive." : Listen to her tell about it: "When Major Hughes told me that I had to‘jump from a height of twenâ€" ty feet into deep water, whilée I was wearing a heavily encrusted gown, long and trailing, and a heavy headâ€" dress, I admit that I‘began to wonder whether this being a film actress was such a great life, after all. It wouldâ€" mt haye been so terrifying, except that I can‘t swim, even when I‘m wearing a bathing suit. In The mistake that a lot of screenâ€" struck girls make is in supposing that it‘s a "Cushy" Club, with nothing to do but wear beautiful clothes and pose in inferesting seftings. Bleanor Boardâ€" man got her initiation during the makâ€" ing of~ "Souls for Sale,". Rupert }?ughes’ great picture of motion picâ€" ture life, which will be seen at the Beaver Theatre, beginning next Thursâ€" What girl does not want to be iniâ€" tiated into the sisterhood of â€" Screen Stars? EK is a lighted candle_ about which they flutter like moths. THERE ARE RISKS IN BEING A SCREEN ACTRESS aV CRANBERRY CULTURE MY GARDEN FRIENDS Woestern Home Monthly "SINGLEâ€"HANDED" ADVANCE NOTICE Motor to THE MAPLE LEAF THEATRE "How?" £ "You see‘ a preityâ€" girl; you stop; you look; after you marry her you listen."â€"The Ladies‘ Home Journal. "Stop, look, listen!" The reflective man stopped to read the railroad warning. "Those three words illustrate the whole scheme of life," he said. Her Head Not Missing His sisterâ€"Alice seems to be posiâ€" tively crazy about the fashions. She has quite lost her head. Alice‘s husbandâ€"â€"You wouldn‘t think so if you had to pay for her hats.. The steam wave is sweeping the country, There is a uhiversal ery for archeaper power with greater efficiency. Steam motors only can supply the reasonable solution. A sfeam car has more power, more speed, is easier to operate at. half the upkeep expense, and will last from thl’@&tov\fi\’(} times as long. There is absolfite]y no annoyance from gears or motor and no troubleâ€" some electric system. ‘~ This is a second of a series of articles on "Steam,"‘ as applied to automoâ€" bile transportation. 3 s [X § $/|1/7 FOR FURTHEKR INFORMATION ADDRESS Midland BondCorporation _ In the year:1770, Nicholas Cugnot, a FRENCH inventor, built two steam road carriages, one of which is still in existence in the Conservatoire des Arts et Metiers in Paris, France. Several others were produced during the 18th Century, one by Evans of Philadelphia and one by Trevithick in 1802. In 1827 Walter Henwick produced a number of steam wagons used for pasâ€" senger service. One of these known as the ‘‘Automaton,""‘ ran for twenty weeks and carried over 12,000 passengers. The development of railways soon put an end to, profitable enterprise in this direction, and later progress was hampered by the absurdly severe lawsâ€"governing the use of automobiles; so one can see that steam was the first mechantcal power. 27 years’ago the first production of steam cars was started, butâ€" on account of the crude and. clumsy appearance, Cbupled‘ with the fact that a new engine, known as the gés engine, has been designed, the steam ear fell from popularity. During these last 27 years a number of men have overcome all the, difficulties exâ€" perienced in the building of these first cars. The general performance of the steam propelled automohile has never been equalled' by the most highly developed gasoline driven car, and no innovation in the gas car has yet been able to give steam car performal}ce. Engineers have overtome all objecâ€" tlons and steam cars are now being built that give satisfaction which means that in the near future, steam power will become universallly used. d mc enc S apees. acea fisp ols dn tA esn Aasts) neoigles P o ba w o oo o w m Bres it w o w " â€"~ Wws â€" M esd oc Aet C mnks â€" ... We â€". S m .. s esn slmen Auain Padlss < beos R % fa‘ To Mo n ju Te 7 ce uhod Acminsncleh 1 Ceay ut ol aoth css hhus en ta ies Geet ) ooey w ie ons popedanes /+ io Te i J ded as t F e Bs > [ss y yod Eo Bralk ds PCP â€"»Wo PA <éitc sn artiitce WeW | ceftitites CA rapratie y mt ore uonl seas es o t k s l CAtune Snkuleys fos hos ts V es Good Parking Space ARTICLE 2., Applying Steam to "RAPID TRANSPORTATION" 13 KING ST. WEST 153 Years Ago the First Steam Car Made Its Appearance Try Our Office for Good Printing N ¢ £16y withstand more moisture. Wellwor th 15 G box They are Different and Better. . ¢ A t o p a® A e Ask for them THE CA:‘I_VADIAN mATCH CQ i6 . LIMITED, MONTREAL Aldcded reach @A.. Medqnms _ LIMITED PHONE JCT. 3744 OR WESTON 26 > The added length of MAPLE LEAF MATCHES means greater safety when lighting ranges, stoves or lanterns. They will not glow after use. They are not poisonous. ‘~ Rats won‘t gnaw them. They withstand more moisture. They are Different and Better. TORONTO foewer blisters and you will get your crops in on time regardless of the late~ ness of the season. $ Forb Moror CoMPANY or CANADA LiMITEN FORD OntaRIo \ WEDNESDAY, MAY.23RD, 1923 MATCHES Weston C, A, GRAHAM Ontaria 4) %

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