Exhibitors Herald (Oct-Dec 1920)

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iklltci Jie (feme heme I h M&rddret Maim i pf I iheMoiherMiiie of "The Kedrtofninnaniiy' T HERE is a whole picture in those four words, spoken toward the end of one of the most hearttouching photodramas ever screeened. "Mother, I've come home!" Instinctively, you know the story — and you know, as a showman, that never before have your patrons been so eager for a real home-and-mother play — for a story that would touch every heart — for a cast that could play such a story to perfection — for a production that would satisfy in every last faithful detail. It was Mother Love which made "The Heart of Humanity" the one great outstanding triumph of its year — Mother Love and the acting of DOROTHY PHILLIPS and MARGARET MANN— and it is Mother Love and these same two splendid players which make "ONCE TO EVERY WOMAN" the picture of the hour today. From small-town to big city goes the action of "ONCE TO EVERY WOMAN"— from the shabby little parlor of a village blacksmith to the mighty stage of the Metropolitan and back again. And when you have come back — back home with Aurora Meridith, the gorgeous songbird whose voice will never charm the world again — you will have run the gamut of human ambitions and passions in an unequalled drama of Mother Love whose appeal for you personally no less than for your patrons, will live forever. Directed by Allen Holubar I 1 in Hie great Univer^aR Je^el J r*.':i;i