Motion Picture Magazine (Aug 1924-Jan 1925)

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PHOTOGRAMS are the new. popular New York vcgue. They are getting to be all the rage everywhere. Every girl who wants to be in the swim is sending Photograms to her friends. Photograms are correspondence cards with your very own photograph beautifully reproduced in the upper left-hand corner. They are the most truly individualistic vogue ever created in stationery. There's nothing like them. Nothing so appealing, so charming, so distinctive. Only by our special process is such high quality photo-reproduction possible at such a low cost. Simply mail us your photograph and S2.50 (cash, money order, or check) and we will send you 100 finest, heavy quality India Tint cards (Photograms) size "&¥> by 5! ■> inches, with your picture in beautiful Sepia color in the upper left hand corner of each card, together with 100 fine envelopes to match, neatly boned. We pay postage, (Note: We do not return your photograph as it is specially treated for our process.) Be the first to start the vogue in your oun circle.' Delight and charm your friends! Order NOW! He deliver in one week. THE SUPERGRAPHIC COMPANY* J>RINTINC CRAFTS Til. DC. 461 EIGHTH AVE.. NEW YORK. N. Y. PHOTOGRAMS Cyth. erea {Continued from page 36) was like William Grove. And in the orderly features of the wife Lee could easily trace the character of Fanny. These two seemed to dog the footsteps of Lee and Savina. It seemed almost as tho they were their dormant consciences, materialized, following them about. "They envy us," Lee said, defiantly, "we have what they have not." "They hate us," Savina answered, and her head dropped. In Cuba, as they signed at the register, they were recognized, but only for an instant. The recognition was not followed up by a greeting. Lee saw that Savina was trying not to mind. It hurt him that she had to try. One of the things that Lee had counted upon was staying with his brother Daniel into the grey ash he held in his arms. A flame. A flame that had warmed the coldness within him. But when the coldness had been within him he had been somehow intact, automatic. Now he was broken, broken into pain and tears. Solitary. A wanderer. After the funeral he went to Daniel's plantation and spent days wandering in and about the paths and winding roads. If he could go on like this, broken and incoherent, not knowing, scarcely caring, living on the pain that fed his body and soul like tormented food ... in such a state he might well live out the days that were left to him. He was too agonized to take count of what had happened, or of what might happen in the future. CYTHEREA Told in short-story form, by permission from the Samuel Goldwyn production of the First National release of the scenario by Frances Marion, adapted from the novel by Joseph Hergesheimer. Directed by George Fitzmaurice. The cast : Lee Randon , Lewis Stone Fanny Randon Irene Rich Savina Grove , Alma Rubens William Grove Charles Wellesley Peyton Morris Norman Kerry Claire Morris Betty Bouton Mina Raff Constance Bennett Gregory Randon Mickey Moore Helen Randon Peaches Jackson Daniel Randon Brandon Hurst on Daniel's plantation. There, he felt, they would be in privacy. Curious eyes, perhaps recognizing eyes, would not have access to them. Their Paradise had been one of solitude where they could learn the graphic lesson of one another almost as the first man and the first woman learned it in their primeval garden. But Daniel had never dreamed the dream of Cytherea. He knew that Lee was coming, but assumed, of course, that Fanny was to accompany him. He was exceedingly put out when Lee appeared with Savina. He had always admired Fanny and thought that children came first in the scheme of things. Besides, Lee had always been "queer" and as his brother Daniel felt that it certainly behooved him to say what he thought of "such behavior" and to act accordingly. He both said and acted as he righteously felt. He told Lee in no uncertain terms that he couldn't fling all of the conventions to the winds and expect to be happy, but that if he insisted upon dispensing with the conventions, then he would have to do so in a hotel where such things were usually carried on. Lee couldn't expect him, Daniel, to be a party to a thing of this sort. Lee didn't explain. He could see in Daniel how hopeless an explanation would be. Daniel could never know. Lee took Savina to a hotel and there they found the happiness they had sought. But it was a happiness with a haze across the sun. Savina never fully recuperated from the oppression of the trip down and it seemed to Lee as tho the very flame of Cuba was consuming her. Three weeks after their arrival in Cuba, Savina went into a coma from which she never awoke. She died in Lee's arms, and never knew the arms that held her. She died, Lee thought, breaking his heart over her still face, as a flame dies. Flaring high with tips of amazing blue, then subsiding Once he tried to tell Daniel about Cytherea and what she had meant to him. Daniel fell asleep. He felt sorry for Lee, really very sorry for him, but he couldn't sympathize with a middle-aged man who had a wife and family and had "gone daft" over another woman. One day Daniel confronted Lee with a photograph of Fanny and the two children. "After all, old man," he said, "they have some rights. They are alone and lonely. There is no reason why three people should suffer, is there?" Perhaps not. Perhaps the thing to do was to go back and put Cytherea away and play golf and enter his children in colleges where their minds would be ironed to a nice conformity and no vision would delude them into heartbreak. One had to do something. One might as well do that something for others . . . there was nothing left that Lee could do for himself. After all, the years would slip by. Inevitably, too, age would bring the chill cold places back again, would heal over with a scabrous coating the hot, sore place Savina had left when she left him. Besides, for him the riddle had been solved. Life had revealed herself. A dream had come to be. He could afford to donate the patient years to the only others who had any right to them. Lee walked into the house at about his usual hour. He might have come in from the club after his afternoon of golf. The children thought he looked tired and that his hair had grown very grey, but they had been warned to say nothing to him other than that they were glad to see him. They were glad to see him. and Lee felt choked up when they threw their arms about him and covered him with kisses. Fanny was being a good sport, too, he thought. It hadn't been easy for her. He had had the 108 Ge.