Pictures and the Picturegoer (Jan-Dec 1925)

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72 Pictures end P/chjre$uer MARCH 1925 Smartly Dressed at Little Cost Thousands of women and girls, in city, town and country, have learned, through the Woman's Institute, to make their own clothes and hats and be better dressed at far less cost than hitherto. Thousands who are obliged to be economical have happily solved their clothes problem through becoming members of the Woman's Institute. LEARN DRESSMAKING AND MILLINERY AT HOME By our fascinating new method of teaching by post, you, too, can quickly learn in spare time, in the comfort and quiet of your own home, to make garments of every kind, or to take up dressmaking or millinery as a business. It costs you nothing to find out all about the Woman's Institute and what it can do for you. Write for our Booklet, " Dressmaking and Millinery Made Easy." Woman's Institute of Domestic Arts and Sciences Ltd. (Dept. 107), 71 KJNGSWAY, LONDON. W.C.2. SMALL ADVERTISEMENTS Rate : 3d. per word ; minimum 3 shillings. 64-PAGE BOOK ABOUT HERBS and How to Use them, 2d. Send for one. — Tnmnell, The Herbalist, Richmond, Cardiff. " SECRETS OF BEAUTY, HEALTH AND LONG LIFE" (140 chapters). 2/6.— Film Stars Dentifrice formula free. — 19, Wellington Street, Bradford, Manchester. READ AMERICA'S MOTION PICTURE MAGAZINE, Motion Picture Classic, Movie Adventures and Beauty. Sample copies 9d. each. — Write Donnachie, 3, Manse Lane, Greenock. YOUTH ON THE SCREEN.— Beautiful collection of picture postcards of the following: — Baby Marie Osborne (2 kinds), Wesley Barry, Francis Carpenter, Zoe Rae, Aberg Twins, Jane Lee, Jackie Coogan, Baby Peggy, Virgina Lee Corben, Johnny Jones and Lucille Ricksen, Katherine Lee and Master Roby Bubbles; 12 in / all, including 5 2d. coloured cards, 3 3d. sepia A glossy cards and S 3d. glossy coloured ones. Price 2/6 the set of 13 complete and post free . _'rom Picturegoer Salon, 88, Long Acre, London, ..* 'V.C.2. ICTURE POSTCARD ALBUMS beautifully ^d in cloth (assorted colours) and lettered ild on cover " Album." To hold 200 cards to hold 300 cards 3/-; and to hold 400 ,4/-; superior binding 2/6d., 3/6d., and respectively; post free anywhere. — oer Salon, 88, Long Acre, London, S FOR YOUR FAVOURITES.— signed for collectors of picture post peraa Stars. Prices: Is. 6d. to hold ,;. to hold 200; and 3s. to hold 300. und and letterpress on front in gold Favourites." An ideal present for icturegoer Salon, 88, Long Acre, V.C.2. MEN REALLY WANT" (by a book of valuable, intimate advice 1 girl should have. In plain / Free Is. from Linden-Spencer tighton Rd., London, S.E.20. Rcture&oers Guide Arabella, the Story of a Horse (IP', and F.; Mar. 16). Mae Marsh in an unusual type of melodrama woven around the life story of a racehorse. Directed by Karl Guine (who made The Street), the rest of the cast are Germans. Good entertainment. Bread (Jury-Metro-Goldwyn; Mar. 23). Modern comedy drama, with good domestic and business story and an unexpected climax. Excellent acting by Mae Busch, Robert Frazer, Wanda Hawley, Pat O'Malley, Hobart Bosworth, Eugenie Besserer, Myrtle Stedman, Ward Crane and Raymond Lee. Bubbles (Western Import; Mar. 23). Mary Anderson, Jack Mower and Jack Connolly in a fairly good light-comedyromance about an irresponsible tomboy's adventures in boy's clothes. The Back Trail (European; Mar. 2). Western drama with Jack Hoxie as a man whose lost memory makes him the easy prey of a e^mbler. Supporting the star appear, Claude Payton, Eugenia Gilbert, Elton Stone, Buck Connors, Pat Harmon and Billy Lester. Fair entertainment. Blow Your Own Horn (Ward our; Mar. 2). Warner Baxter as a penniless warveteran who has to learn the gentle art of self-advertisement before he can make good. Ralph Lewis, Derelys Perdue, Johnny Fox, Jnr., Eugenic Ford, Stanhope Wheatcroft, Billy Osborne, and Dell Boone lend adequate support. Fair entertainment. Code of the Sea (Paramount; Mar. 23). An excellent sea story about a man cursed with an unreasoning fear of deserting his post. Rod la Rocque stars, with Jacqueline Logan, George Fawcett, Maurice Flynn, Luke Cosgrave and S3m Appell in support. The Common Law (Metro-GoldwvnJury; Mar. 16). A new edition of the Robert Chambers storv of an artist's model with Conway Tearle and Corinne Griffith this time instead of Conway Tearle and Clara. Kimball Young. Elliott Dexter, Bryant Washburn, Doris May, Harry Myers, Miss Du Pont, Hobart Bosworth, Phyllis Haver, Wally Van, and Dagmar Godowsky complete a good cast. Fairly good drama of artist life. The Confidence Man (Paramount Mar. 2). Romance and regeneration and Thomas Meighan in one of his favourite crook characterisations. Supporting Tom are Virginia Valli, Laurence Wheat, Charles Dow Clark, Helen Lindroth, Dorothy Walters, George Nash and David Higgins. Cyclone Jones (Ducal; Mar. 2). A Western feud between cattle men and sheep men forms the background of this out-of-doors drama which stars Big Boy Williams, with Bill Pathon, J. P. McKree, Kathleen Collins, Fatty Alexandria and Fred Burns in support. Fair cowboy drama. The Cyclone Rider (Fox; Mar. 11). Reed Forbes (the Arrow-collar-man) in a stunt melodrama that does not take itself very seriously. Plenty of thrills, quite a little humour, and a cast including Evelyn Brent. Alma Bennett, William Bailey, Ben Deeley, Charles Conklin, and Frank Beal. Good entertainment Dark Stairways (European; Mar. 9). Rapid action crook mystery-drama concerning an innocent cashier who had to turn crook to prove his innocence. The cast includes Herbert Rawlinson, Ruth Dwyer, Hayden Stevenson, Robert E Homans, Walter Perry, Bonnie Hill, Kathleen O'Connor and Dolores Rousse. Good mystery fare.