The New York Clipper (April 1912)

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.ArjHfc e THE NEW YORK CLIPPER. Wt KNOW THAT yOU ARC fNTCReSTCO TN A RCAC hit, wo we offcr tor youR appgowi feeiai LOVIN 1 HAN words ey MUSIC ey ALBERTl/wT/tZK rttey 5A9 meae cs worwrniG new uwoeRrne son': DOT We CAN PROVC THCPCfS words ey Lew BROWN music ey VoivTfLlCR ivs got a pair ofarns that weec HADE fOR H066IN6, TO KISS, lV£60T€^e5T05ee, AWOSe TO 5BELLAN060TAMIR Or EARS TO HCAR THE LIE5 «K) TECL. \mmm\wfiivmMinmmmm, AND IV£ GOT A nOUTH TOAT WAS MADE 79 TALK, 80T-M COT 50METHII.6 BXmBtiBm ICOVeS—TfiAT'SMy, :■■•■■■ \A GGCAT NO^CLTO 50f¥G THAT !5 FULL Of 50RPMSESI A POSITiVC 5EW5ATfOWAt SOWC WT WfTrt THE Iwmcn witt octbootocappiau5e:twat nmsmsl powcw that rs a knockout CHIGAGO OPFIC6 (1-5 N.CCARtS STRCGT JULES (/cm.T.UZCR.pVG'G- CO. ALBERT VonTiLZSR iw-r. I3&7 ©ROADW/Vaf . o,ew yORts. PROFESSIONAL COPICS AND ORCHESTRATIONS TO THOSE SENDING IAT£ PROGRAMMES. NO CARDS April <" i.—Jack Hunter, "cub" reporter Is is- ilped to Interview Henry Ford, sugar merchant. He makes the trio to Ford's home. Arriving, be rescues Alice Ford from a highwayman. Alice Is on her war to star at a gl.-l friend's bouse. Upon reaching Mr. Ford, who detests Inter- views, Jack Is ejected from tbe house. He mast telephone to tbe office, and finds tbe only >ncb Instrument la at tbe Smith bouse, where Alice It stopping. It Is late, bat be attempts to •anmoa someone. In rain, as tbe two girls are frightened and phone tor constable. Jack enters wladow. girls bold him with gnn till Alice reccg- ules him. All's well. Jack gets interview, and a hlg raise In solar/. . Champion. . . . "Kid" CajiOeld (released April 1).—Learning He gambler's art as a'bov, be practiced It on his Jwnger brother and sister. This aroused bis father to a righteous, Indignation, tbe culmination of which was the driving of tbe boy out Into the www. He started his career In a Western town, u>l "« Ms art with, such adeptness aa to make his rertntatlon, as a * card sharp and monteman. Ten rears later be bloomed forth as the keeper of one cf the n*»t widely known gambling dens In the eouutry. into tubs mad vortex of the human pas- sions came a youth. He was clever, and luck waa with lum; then the Kid marked him as a victim. »e sec tie fiendish operations carried out to their horrible conclusion. Black despair overtakes BB ai:d self-destruction Is tbe penalty be pays ». tl» folly. Clutched In tbe hand of tbe lifeless victim was a photograph. Oanfield loosened tbe Sanaa of the dead youth j but his eyes falling on i£; r .""Y WgMl with horror. The face was i«t of his mother! The boy, cold and stiff, u, l, l J<)u . ns L"« w,s blasted out so cruelly, was »5iu£? b "«her. Recovering from the terrible ™» ,.'.,» th,t ue ""*• Canfleld registered a sol- <?/?».Vi to for *i>he Lis evil wayB and devote bis i?. ™ i £ I"* "K'nmatlon, In some degree, oC -n a U r>? f ,bB 1,Ild "e "ad corrupted. io„„.- Divorce Cure" (released April 3).—A S «2f'e. childless, growing weary of one an- ■^US* 1 !?, «*arate through tbe medium oi Eb79 fifi Through the good otflces of a ■jwyer .-nd doctor, a plan Is set on foot to bring r7.„i" l ' w reconciliation. The plan was orlgt- I asVi^Sl l fiS remarkably successful. The un- rtii e '" ln ' lu «<l to adopt a friendless orphan sad r,. , T* CQ * n « now comes over them, new lie £Vi!*Ti . S, B P rln « 8 IP between them, with ■■em a little clierab of their own. ,__ Thanhoaser. 8, 3J, s, «f «' the Bide Show" (released April she ,, , ni,r * u ». humble peasants, had hoped asaamS 1 ! t Srow •> beautiful. When she reached She vS, ■ h ? W1B no b| 8Ser than a dhlld of all. tomtV . , t0 m,rrT another midget at her ter ilri?.""' 11 \ »howman offered big money for «, "« and she nccepted, leaving her par- show f-,T Ml '5 l0Te w 'th the "giant" of the »ai „,., *"■ heartbroken In finding her love acres. .L reU,ra * d ' Later the little man from waswn,, h.*". ca , lne <"»l renewed his suit. She ■■ThJ.ni i h L" u «»tlon and accepted him. The clri -I oC J 1 * Q vove" (released April B).— Her BtL W .*i. pwt,lr ! ^"ng and a business woman. lbs SSL lU ' 8 ani •ne takes up the business of alV5U s & e »e "aa too busy for love ai n J n T|.i m L t 1 , **• J " lax " Sne BawkwJ he has •nd ,|I btJ. wlfc S . the r*»f* She loves him, Into ul Ll° eni l l K »"• Sn* 8*™ another go * h »t nro.M ;* "£? .'onwttlng herself, rescues '"'o Uer «S, 1° ^ the ""«•" She tskes her "«rn imsaTUS V a . b ^°f the man Into the ■*5bnL aSf 2S e »» sleeping, telling him what 3a? the twS^S?!™ tlm t0 ?»• ^Ich he does. loretber w "»on vow to lire a happier life waits ontsde the restaurant which she observed her husband enter In company with snother. When hobby comes out and calls a cab and takes bis lady friend for a drive, he Is made to feel the welgbt of bis wife's wratb by being driven over tbe moat uneven of roads possible to find. The whole terminates lu wlfey finding that she has made a slight mistake. , Rex. "The Unending Love" (released April 7).—His love for his Invalid wife Is strong and tender. He meets a girl of tbe stage sud forgets. The suffer- ing wife notices the change. He tellB her he loves snother. and grief kills her. ne marries the other. Later tbe husbsnd, upon entering his bouse, finds bis wife in tbe srms of snother. He orders the man to leave, and the weak womsn goes with lilm. In the lonely hours tbBt follow, the spirit of hta first wife's love haunts him until he Is crazed, and grief takes Mm to the wife who loved. *prn fli ^Kn*" Mentally Deranged" (released "KbM in^ii !L ■ n *<'">ly becomes childish and de- Ri> IS ""..the old pranks of his boyhood days. "I" ivlfi, ~it. V J" i ,r «n" or nis ooynoou nays. Mor nm H." "doctor In, and it Is found tbst operation il ve i" on ■• brain. A sensational fnllr nmi.i " _ p ? rf 2 rn, ed, and comes off success- ions r amid mnch fnn. ' An KnJn.vaWe Hide' (released April B).—A '"On;: wlf* I- ... \"riv»»eu npru u|.—rt living, ,' rA »™Wenly seised with urave mla- "m. onlr .» u " '"'"hand'a fidelity. 8bc followa "cbincri J?i„fv v ' hft ""P'elons confirmed. She ""ws clothes with a lady cab driver and Law, wbo dropped from Brooklyn Bridge with a Earachute, and made a successful landing. Mr.' aw's daring and sufferings attracted world-wide attention, and Is lending tremendous Interest to tbe atory which is woven around the feat. Mellea. "Tbe Ghost of Sulphur Mountain" (released April 18).—Bob Stanley, from New York, arrives in Sukphur Mountain, bas trouble with Jose, a Mexican, and Is Injured. Joe, a miner, and his wife, nurse and shelter him until he recovers. Joe mistakes his wife's sympathy for Bob for love, snd decides to put himself out of the way. He dynamites the mine, leaves his bat and coat, and it appears he has been killed. But Mary laved Joe, and her grief Is great. Later Joe, greatly changed, returns. But li is mind does not recall who he is. Miners, believing lilm a ghost, flee In fear Bob heads a party to investigate, sud comes face to face with bis benefactor. Joe's K« and iJ AMELIA CATTANO. - -Who appears in "Love and Hypnotism." the Clncs film to be released April 6. Imp. "Bradhurst Field Club Four Mile Run" (released April 8).—A picture of the recently held run in New York City, ond In which there were over ,100 competitors. Just now when the Olympic Oames at Stockholm are attracting world-wide attenlton. it will probably be of Interest to the general pub- lic to learn thnt In this Imp picture there are the photographs of many of the American athletes who will do Stockholm In negt Joly. Theae Include Martin Sheridan, Johnny Hayes, Kramer, and others. "A Leap for Love" (releawd April 13).— £ till picture is shown fas dirisf feat of F. B. Bind slowly regains balance, and he remembers C has a wife. He accuses Bob of stesilng her. Bob persuades him to return home. Joe flnda his wife still longing for bltn. and arrives In time to share the joy of tbe arrival of an offspring. tieorgc Kleins*. "The Brigand" (released April 9).—Jack, a daahlng fellow, resents Ibe attention of a soldier. to Martha, bis sweetheart. A quarrel ensues, snd the oflleer killed. To escape punishment. Jnck loins the brigands. In a sklrmlah later, he la woanded. found by Martha and he* father, and taken to their faNk Tbe tobjlcn discover this 71 ..eeli of flue Film, $: a reel and up; a.oooft. of One stock, no worn oat Dim, so. and tip, •sac Midas, $1 a est •nd o». A Power No. 8 Machine); f 100; Edison Exhibition Machine, "B" Calcium Maohlne, $90. I also bar Film, Slides and Uaehlass, If good. O. F. OAIXOT. TO Christopher Ktroot. K. T. Oit». 600 8.1. 180] Model fact, and search tbe boose. Jack la lowered into a cell by Martha, and saved. "The Signal that Failed" (released April 10). —l'retty Lucille has two admirers, Marlowe, com- missary of the army, and Horace, son of Gen- eral Oerard. Sbe favors the latter, and Marlowe vows vengeance. In a furious battle Oerard re- ceives word tbat the army's left wing Is being bard tressed. Malicious Marlowe rides to headquar- ters and reports a total annihilation, and Uen- eal Oerard Is believed to have disgraced bla country and Is sentenced to death. The order to bo transmitted by aerial signal. Horace and Lucille destroy the slgpul apparatus, and arc Im- prisoned. Meanwhile the general tarns defeat into victory and Is triumphant. Cln-e». (O.BO. KLKI2IZ.) ' "The Brigand" la tho interesting title of a thrilling and picturesque film story by the Clues Company, about 1,000 feet long, which Ueorge Klelne has for release April 0. It Is a romantic drama, filled with innumerable sensational Inci- dents sustaining an Intense love story, briefly, tbo plot Is sb follows: A company of soldiers is quartered upon the farm of Martha's father. An officer makes love to Martha In spite of her pro- test, and at a scene of village revelry, the officer becoming persistent seises Martha In bis arms. Jack, her lover, a dashing young fellow, Inter- feres, a quarrel ensues, and after a bitter fight the oflleer Is killed, and Jack seeks refuge with s band of brigands in tho mountains. Several stir- ring conflicts take place between tbe soldiers and brigands, and during one action Jack Is severely woanded, and left on the field as dead. The faithful Martha and her father rescue and convey him to their home. Tbe soldiers bear of his es- cape, and search tbe house of the farmer, but Jack cleverly manages to elude them by being lowered Into s well. After many adventures of an exciting character, the lovera finally contrive to leave the country,. and, safe In another land, a happy conclusion la brought about. "•Madame lloland; or, An Incident of the French Ilevolutlon," Is the title of an extremely Intense and interesting historic drama, enacted by the Cln-ea Company, nnd to be released April 18, by Ocorge Klelne. Tbo scenes deplete*! are picturesque. Tbe interiors and costuming arc cor- rectly carried out according to tbe period In wblcb tbe action takes place. Madame Itoland, a woman of great personal charm and ability, was one of the most pitiable victims of that terrible uprising, tbe French Revolution. Sbe Is first seen scornfully rejecting tbe attentions of Vlard, au unscrupulous suitor. Vowing vengeance, he brings charges of Royalist tendencies against her and her husband. The latter manages to make his escape, but she Is arrested snd taken before tbe Revolu- tionary Tribunal. There, Ilio undaunted woman defends herself In soch a manner that an acquit- tal la granted. But Vlard succeeda In basing her arrested again upon a new charge. This time the fates are gainst her, and abe Is thrown Into prison. From there site Is taken on the "fatal cart" to the guillotine. Surrounded by an ancry mob of Revolutionists she steps up to the guillo- tine and majestically bowing to the statue of Lib- erty, cries out the words tnst have since become famous: "Oh. Liberty, whst crimes are committed la thy name." / Url)iin-E«-lli!»r. (Obo, Klsimb.) "The Signal That Failed."—For the release of April 10, George Klelne announces aa Interest tag Eclipse photoplay about 1,000 feet long, dealing with an historic subject Incidents depleted sre said to be episodes of the wars of the French Revolution. The action throughout Is lively, anil a martial atmosphere Is carried out vividly with gay military uniforms and trapping*. Marlowe, a commissary In the army. Is In love with Lucille, the fiances of Horace the son of Oeneral eJeranl. As the general seems to favor the marrlafe of bis son to Lucille. .Marlowe, in a Jealous rage, swears to avenge himself. Oeneral Oerard receives an order frim headquarters to take command of the troops encamped on the frontier, sad Commissary Marlowe is aaabjncd to MCenjpanjr Aim. On the BARGAINS - BARGAINS Motion Picture Michlnot. Edlion Klnttoioopo, $70. Power* Ctmtrigriprt No. 6, %< 0, 20th Century Marvel, $75. 8Undird, SEW. $150. All Supplier HARBACH & CD., 809 Fllbirt St., Phlli,, Pa. battle Held tho first engagements appear to be re- sulting disastrously for the general's troops, and Marlowo solace the opportunity to advise beau- quarters tbat Oeneral Oerard Is being defeated. The hope of Marlowe being that the uufortuuuie general may bo sentenced to deatb. The general'* son, Horace, bearing of the departure of Marlon c for headquarters, and suspecting uilichlcf, pre coeds hastily after blm, but Is delayed en ront<>, and, finally arriving, learns It hae been decreed by the court martial (hat tbe general shall be ptil to death. Tho sentence Is to be transmitted by aerial signal to tbe army. Learning of this, Hor- ace and Lucille decide to Intercept the mensin.-e by destroying tbe signal apparatus, but unluckily they are discovered while leaving tbe tower, and are arrested and thrown Into prison. Meanwhile General Oerard haa turned the impending defeat Into victory, nnd although severely wounded, tri- umphantly rekurna to headquarters. The decree of death Is recalled, and tho general Is welcomed with full honors, and has no difficulty then In obtaining the liberty of his son and tbo faithful Lucille. Edison Exhibits' Home Kliietoaeoiio. Mr. Hj IIlips nnd Mr. 0111, two assistants of Thomas A. Kdlson, demonstrated at the Astor House Thursday, March 28, to a group of experts and newspaper men, tbo actual workings of hie vory latest Invention, Hm home Iclnctosconc. Tfals Invention, which Is the product of a great deal of labor niul money, Is a miniature moving picture mu- clilae. Its chief difference from the ordlnrnv commercial klnctoscopo lies In tbe fact tout It Is very simple and compact, and tbat In dims are non-inflammable, The little machine, about as large as a talking miutilne, waa set up about twenty feet from an aluminum screen, and a fllin, not much larger than a narrow typewriter ribbon, adjusted, and tbo connection made with the nearest cnandcller socket. Tbe pic- tures vary in size, according to tbe strength of tbe Ions used, tho slsc of the machine and the distance from the screen. Tbe ones pro- duced at this demonstration were about two feet by a foot and a Jin If. The machine wilt project o picture on a visiting card, beld Close, and it will project on a screen Bixtv feet away. Tbo best homo results, however, ore obtainable at a distance ranging from fifteen to twcnly-fivo feet, but a porfectly dis- tinct and satisfactory series can be run oft with the machine and the screen only ten feet apart. According to Mr. Phillips and Mr. Oil), the films have withstood all teals of tliolr non-Inflammability and non-explosive- nesH, and It la said that one of tbese ma- chines shall be Installed In ono of tbe Now York acbools shortly. I s , i Picture) limine Darned. In a Ore panic March 20, at the Then- torium, at New Lexington, o„ tho clty'i only iilcture house, one womnn waa seriously In- ured and several others badly bruised. Tbe oss to the theatre, which will reach 11,000, was caused by n lilm exploding. S ii • FarDiiHicrc (Icrst has resigned from to* Champion Stock Co.