Exhibitors Herald (Dec 1924-Mar 1925)

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20 EXHIBITORS HERALD January 10, 1925 New YORK.— Harry Rapf has changed his mind and did not go to Rome, but to the west coast instead . . . Ahc Carlos will sail January 17 for a six weeks’ trip abroad . . . Dr. IV. E. Shallenberger is back on the job after spending the holidays at his home in Illinois . . . Joe Danncnberg, after several years’ effort, finally succeeded in getting his picture printed in Film Daily . . . Irving Lesser and his bride are expected home on January 15 from a honeymoon trip to the Coast . . . Hobart Henley left for the Coast after seeing his picture, “So This Is Marriage,’’ opened at the Capitol . . . Bill Steiner’s press agent says Bill is offering Edith Thornton’s picture, “On Probation,’’ to exhibitors . . . Elmer Pearson has been elected president of the Sound \’iew Golf Club . . . Harry Millarde, director of “Over the Hill,’’ “If Winter Comes,’’ “The Fool’’ and other Fox classics, is again a regular luncher at the Hunting Room . . . Harry Brand, press agent de luxe et cet., blew in from the Coast with the cold wave but says it isn’t his . . . Pete Harrison was so impressed with “Greed” that he went to see it a second time and then wrote about it . . . Alan Crosland spent the holidays on Broadway and may stay to make a picture in the East . . . Sidney Olcott left for the Coast Friday to direct Pola Negri in her next picture . . . J. A. Koerpel sails January 3 to look after First National's contracts in England . . . Sajii Berman, back from abroad, fell away to a shadow on the trip, now weighing only about 268 pounds . . . Senator James J. 1 Walker, who has been vacationing in England, will arrive home this week . . . William M. Vogel is another sojourner who has returned from the other side for a visit to his home . . . Mark Kellogg, publicity and advertising director of First National, has gone to the Coast for a consultation with that end of his staff . . . Lester F. Scott, producer of Westerns, came to New York for the holidays and to find some new story material . . . Harry M. Warner will arrive this week from the Coast for a conference after which he will return to Los Angeles . . . Jack Warner will arrive next week and after the conference will sail for the other side . . . Harry Warner and Abe Warner are here and not planning to go anyhere . . . Nat Levine, sales manager for M. J. Winkler, has returned from a trip to the Middle West . . . Sam Sax has been looking them over in the South and selling them, too . . . J. D. Barton, who represents Russell Films in New York, goes to the Coast this week to take a peep at production . . . Arthur James has passed up the film industry and returned to newspaper work, having accepted an important position on the Morning Telegraph . . . George JIackathorne, natty and debonair, showed up for lunch at the Astor after returning from the Coast for a holiday . . . Phil Rosen, director of “Abraham Lincoln,” arrived in New York last week and will direct a picture in the East for Sawyer & Lubin . . . Dr. Gianinni, who went to his home in Los Angeles for the holidays, is expected back in New York early this week . . . Vic Shapiro has worked out his typewriter extolling the merits of “A Thief in Paradise” . . . Lou Jacobson discovered a moth in his fur overcoat which had waxed fat on a diet of moth balls a la cedar chest . . . D. W. Griffith is still hunting a legitimate theatre in which to put “Isn’t Life Wonderful” for a run — Spargo. Dog Pictures A scene from "Hearts and Fists,” an H. C. Weaver Production, Inc., produced for Associated Exhibitors. William Cristy Cabanne directed. An incident from "The Lighthouse by the Sea,” Warner Bros, feature with Rin-Tin-Tin. Peter the Great in a scene from the Metro-Goldwyn him “The Silent Accuser.” Another scene with Rin-Tin-Tin in "The Lighthouse by the Sea,” the Warner Brothers production.