The Photo-Play Journal (Jul 1919-Feb 1921)

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May, i g 2 o 23 Myles Calthorpe became Jim Clark, foreman THOU ART THE MAN Fictionized Version of the Paramount Artcraft Picture Scenarioized by Margaret Turnbull from. F. E. Mills Young's novel, "Myles Calthorpe, I.D.B.". Directed by Thomas Heffron. Starring Robert Warwick By MORRIE RYSKIND THE ways of second sons in §'""" '"" ' ' ' ' ' ' "' ""I the partners' private office, and English families are strange j | asked to meet one of the Kaffir and various. But for all of 1 THE CAST I messengers that night and take a them England, if it is to be wor [ tSn'tSSm"156 ^Vois^WUson ' package from him. Puzzled, he shipped, is to be worshipped from ] Henry Fan-ant.....! .'.'. .... ,.). ' M* Dumont I replied: "I'm afraid I can't do a distance. If it is to remain a 1 Matt Solomon Clarence Burton j that, sirs." land of pleasant memory, and not I Brummage C. H. Geldart \ "Then you're through with us," a place of genteel poverty, they I Jf r. ^^ * • ■ '^ Q^Jf I roared Solomon. must awandering go. And whither | E1£ ^tcott] :V.:.\\\\\\\'d or othy" Rosher I "That's as you wish," said Calls in the hands of the Fates. Fannie Dering Viora Daniel \ thorpe, pleasantly. The Three Sisters — the orig I Tom Dering Richard Wayne \ "What are you insinuating by inal Sewing Circle— sent Myles f Lucille Lorenza Lazzarini § your refUsal?" demanded Brum rj^„ „ ,° c ..it, aj ■ tl = Cook Lillian Leiqhton = Calthorpe to South Africa. There i chaperon Sylvia Ashton I maS& , . „ T , , . . " he found the ostrich farm of Solo I 1 Nothing. But I wasn t hired mon and Brummage — and with it i „,„, ,„„, , , , , „„ „,„ „,„= as a messenger, and I refuse to be a job. put into what looks to me like a There is a lot of money to be made in selling ostrich compromising position. I insinuate nothing, sir." feathers, which explained to many people why Solomon and "Well, you're through with your positions here, compro Brummage were millionaires. But Solomon and Brummage mising or not. We like men who obey our orders. You had discovered that by engaging in illicit diamond buying leave to-night." " they could make more in a minute than the ostriches would "That's one order I can obey. Guess I'll live through it, net them in a year. There was a certain Kaffir worker in too." And Calthorpe drew his pay to date, the mines who slipped his stolen goods to a white guard. There wasn't much to pack. He was about to throw away Later these goods, via a trusted corps of messengers, found an illustrated magazine when a picture of a beautiful girl their way to Solomon and Brummage. Still later, they met his eye : "Joan Farrant, one of our wild African appeared in England. roses", read the caption. The name sounded vaguely Illicit diamond buying is rated among white men in South familiar. He remembered his erstwhile employers discussAfrica as horsestealing was in the old days of the Golden ing the girl and saying she was "awfully exclusive", though West in this country. So if the game is a paying one, it is her brother, Solomon had laughed, was "easy enough", also a dangerous one. And no one suspected that the ostrich "Well, I'll take a look at her," Calthorpe thought, tearing farm was a blind for so dangerous a game. the picture out of the magazine, "and see if she's as good as Calthorpe, working late one afternoon, was summoned to she looks". With his destination thus decided upon, he set