Universal Weekly (1917-1934)

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THE MOVING PICTURE WEEKLY ■33 CAST. "Cheyenne" Harry Harry Carey His Mother Mrs. Townsend Grant Young Harry Rattenberry Molly Young Molly Malone Ben Kent Vester Pegg The Sheriff Wm. Gettinger ried by his silence and is coming to look for him. The sentimental cowboys allow him two weeks of grace. Young, who has kept track of Cheyenne and believes in his innocence in the matter of the death of the messenger, offers Harry his ranch and his daughter for the time of his mother's visit so that she shall not be disappointed. The Sheriff lets him go under caution. He goes down to the station to meet the little old lady. "My boy!" she cries, and he picks her up in his arms, and lifts her down from the car platform. "Boys, my mother!" he says to the sheriff and the others. Cheyenne's mother has a wonderful time. When her visit is over, Cheyenne returns to the prison and gives himself up. Just as he is about to be hanged, a passenger in the coach at the time of the shooting arrives and tells tne shei-iff that it was Kent who shot the messenger. Harry is allowed to go, until as the sheriff says "they have had time to forget the attempted ] obhery." The boys have singularly short memories, and it is not long before Cheyenne is returning hopefully to the ranch where Molly is waiting for him. MOLLY MALONE AGAIN LEAD FOR HARRY CAREY. |y|OLLY MALONE, the little actress with a name like an Irish love song, makes her third appearance in Butterfly pictures as leading lady for Harry Cai*y in "A Marked Man." She was the heroine of their recent success, "Straight Shooting," and before that she appeared with Mignon Anderson in that other Butterfly hit, "The Phantom's Secret." Molly, though not yet twenty years old, has seen and done a great deal for a person of her years. She was bom in Denver, and educated in this country and Europe. Before she had put her hair up she had made long trips through her own country and Mexico. She spent a year with relatives in South America and later took a trip around the globe. Two years ago she took up a pictui-e career. She gives as her motive the stern reason "Necessity." She had had no stage experience, her time having been divided between travelling and going to school. But she took to pictures like a duck to water, and though her first experience came only about two years ago, she has already won for herself the position of leading lady in fivereel features. Miss Malone is an outdoor girl. She loves to ride, swim, sail, hunt and fish, and she is a splendid camp cook. In "Straight Shooting" she had to perform a sort of female Paul Revere act, riding a cow-pony bareback to warn the settlers of a raid by the cattlemen. She loves her work, and her greatest ambition is to succeed in it. CAREY RESCUES A HORSE. TpHAT all horses can swim is a fact which is generally taken for granted. Most people imagine that a horse can take care of himself in the water as naturally as a fish. But Harry Carey, star of the Western Butterfly Pictures, knows better. His knowledge was the means of saving a valuable horse for the company, during the making of his latest picture, called "A Marked Man." Director Jack Ford, who has been responsible for the last two Carey successes, "Straight. Shooting" and "The Secret Man," decided to stage the hold-up on the stage, which was a featnjre of the story, in the very middle of a stream, by way of a novelty. Four horses were attached to the stage, and among them a new one, which has just been received at Universal City, where the Butterfly pictures are made. The driver plunged into the stream, and three of the horses started to swim. The fourth, however, showing signs of desperate fear, struggled madly, unable to support itself above the water, and endangering its teammate. THE NEXT NESTOR. 'J'HE next two-reel Nestor in which Eddie Lyons and Lee Moran appear is entitled "Taking Things Easy." Juanita Hanson supports the Nestor twins in this remarkably funny two-reeler. Its release date has been set two weeks after urriT OT