The Moving Picture Weekly (1916-1917)

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THE MOVING PICTURE WEEKLY 19 i a . i -Ko's are third and fourth from the right side of page IS; their names are Charlotte Clementine and Grace Macklyn. Caroline Wright, Eva Novak, Babe Emerson and Gladys Varden. Third auties take Bathing Suit Prizes other L-Ko players who entered the test. The pnotograph, taKeii oy Werner, with forty or more of the entrants, is one of the most unusual ever made, and gives a comprehensive view of bathin? fashion as it is practised on the Pacific Coast. Very few of th suits were i con Betty Schade who did not enter. any way damaged by salt water on the ' day of the contest. This is the first contest of this kind that Edith Roberts ever entered, and her success was so pronounced that it fairly took her breath away. It was a delightful way to announce a new Universal star. Betty Schade, whose photograph appears on this page, did not enter the contest. The photograph we show of her was taken under far different circumstances. Betty, you know, is now a married lady, and Mr. Betty Schade does not approve of his wife's entering competitive contests of this kind. Betty's suit was made to swim in, and not for parade. Miss Schade's picture is included here because she is the cover adornment for this week's Moving Picture Weekly, and also appears as the featured player in an important three-reel Gold Seal release entitled. "A Wife's Suspicion." This feature was written by Willard Mack, the well-known Broadway actor, author and playwright, and furnishes a delightful opportunity for the play of emotion for which Miss Schade is noted. In it she plays the role of a trusting young wife who discovers to her intense alarm that she has married what she takes to be a leader of a band of crooks. Rather than live with such a man, although she loves him deeply, she returns to the family in which she was formerly employed as a governess, and it is in this house that the final denouement of "A Wife's Suspicion" takes place. Here she discovers that her husband is not a crook at all, but a skillful detective whose success required that he keep his profession secret even from his wife. Priscilla Dean, who won the prize at the Venice contest, is shown also in her regular bathing costume. No photoplay artist or beach beauty would ever think of entering the water in the elegant contraption in which she won the bathing-suit contest, but this one, made of red and white striped satin is corking for every day wear. Priscilla Dean who didn't either