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22 THE SHOW WORLD September WE CARRY A FULL LINE OF FOUR COLORED LITHOGRAPH AND TWO COLORED BLOCK PRINTING FOR THE PICTURES DEFENDED BEFORE STATE BOARD JEFFRIES-JOHNSON FIGHT PICTURES All Sizes from 34-Sheet Herald to 20-Sheet Stand. Use of Motography Advocated for the Instruction of School Children RIVERSIDE PRINTING CO. 203 Schiller Bldg., Chicago, Ill. 220 Third Street, Milwaukee, Wis. ^|\| • The Leading Journal I O l\1 A CPHTIP of the Moving Picture L liC IilUOl/U|iV/ business in Europe. Has the largest circulation and is the best Advertising Medium, bar none Subscription, $2.00 a Year. Sample Copy Mailed Free. 31,33 and 35 Litchfield St., LONDON, W.C., ENGLAND PRACTICAL INFORMATION FOR M. P. OPERATORS An ounce of prevention is worth a ton of cure. If you are looking to avoid serious trouble get a copy of the NOTES FOR OPERATORS ; they will set you right and save you time and worry at 20c. today; tomorrow may be too late. J. W. Buicke- rood, 131 W. 24thSt., New York City. (Dept. D.) MOVING PICTURE NOTES Realty & Amusement Company is plan¬ ning the erection of a new vaudeville and moving picture house at the corner of Covert avenue and Madison street, in Brooklyn. William Taylor, of Chi¬ cago, has purchased the interest which Mr. Baber had in a moving picture theater in Schenectady. North Carolina—Carl Davenport has purchased the Palace theater, Asheville, from Sugg & McLaurin. That moving picture shows of the five- cent variety are not injurious to chil¬ dren, but on the contrary, are beneficial in vividly portraying a great many moral lessons, is the theory advocated by John A. Lapp, of Indianapolis, in his speech before the conference of state charities at Marion, Ind., recently. Lapp was opposed to abolishing the moving picture show. He regarded it as one of the greatest institutions ever produced for good, and he believed that it should be regulated so as to produce educational pictures instead of sensa¬ tion. He said he hoped the day would come when every church, every club, every institution for the betterment of the child and the adult would have a moving picture show, and he thought the matter should he taken up by the schools and these pictures used for edu¬ cational purposes. There was some talk, he said, of es¬ tablishing a board of censors in Indian¬ apolis for the five-eent theaters, but after the matter was discussed Ifci was decided not to do so because a large percentage of the films are censored by the national hoard of censors in New York, and the proprietors of the places in Indianapolis are favorable to clean pictures as a business proposition. How¬ ever, Lapp was of the opinion that no children under fourteen years of age should be permitted to visit the moving picture shows unless accompanied by their parents. makers of American moving pictures in a statement recently made by Vice Con¬ sul General Baker, of Sydney, Australia. MOTION PICTURE CRAZE GROWING IN TURKEY Admission to a moving picture show in Turkey is two piasters, or 8.8 cents. There are four shows in Salonica and the craze has attained such proportions that upward of 3,500 people attend these “•*—“ -all of Italian STAGE, BASEBALL AND MINIS TRY G ONE BACK McKee Rankin, Veteran Actor, Talks Interestingly for Show