THE STODAT OREGOXIAX, POItTX,AXI. JUNE t. 1919. IheSLBNT WwW . F .--.l x- -- l ;i- :i ; , t -I T, ""t-wOi - . VT:)l . j -' " JJ: - n - . ' T v .f J - 1 ' ' rr"77ki Minis' oP fe? CTozmJbj. c, - J CJ ! '. ' ' 1, , ' ' " S - Xx-MUtC- . f . n-r-z-x it 'Zm "r hi k. : k'X'&i i fcl J?X -mam m c?cei Srorrt N - . fa Zcj'rz& . -t. A- OJz Sj-zz ," 5oie TODAY'S FILM FEATIHES. Peoples rouplas Fairbanks,,-The Knickerbocker Buckaroo." Colvumbia William Desmond, "The .Mints of Hell." Majestic B easte Barriscale, "Two-Gun Betty." Star Pouslas Fairbanks. "The Knickerbocker Buckaroo. Liberty Blanche Sweet. "The Unpardonable Hln.' Sunset Geraldino Farrar, "The Hell Cat." Globe "Heel Life in China." Circle William S. Hart, "Brand ing Broadway." RKX BEACH and Samuel Goldwyn are organizers of a film concern which promises much to the pub He in the way of high-class motion picture entertainment. It's called Em inent Authors" Pictures, Inc.. and the corporation has the picture righ for a term of years to all the works of Mary Roberts Rinehart, Basil King. Rex Beach, Gouverneur Morris, Rupert Hughes, Gertrude Atherton and Leroy the publicity man with over- enthusiasm and these paragraph ex cerpts from the announcement presage much splendid entertainment during Che coming years: "Mr. Rex Beach and Mr. Samuel Gold- ! wyn have organised a million-dollar corporation to exploit on the motion picture screen all the works of a se lected group of the most famous writ ers in the Knglish language. "The organizers have searched the English-speaking world for names that have great meaning and significance to the reading public "The executives of the new corpora tion believe they have selected from among the greatest writers In the Eng lish language those whose works are best fitted for screen adaptation. "The method of production will be a radical departure from all previous methods. "The closest possible co-operation will exist between the producers and the authors. "The adaptation and direction of each, sanative tov the mouua picture will be under the personal supervision of the author. "No time, money or attention will be spared to make these pictures the most imaginative and powerful screen rep resentations ever undertaken. Katty m Majsrician. Few people who come in contact with that polished and eminently respectable film comedian. Fatty Arbuckle, would ever suspect that he started his stage career as a magician in a one-night stand vaudeville organization. Yet it is even so. Fatty tells about It some times with delight not unmixed with the gall of painful reminiscence. "I figured out." said he, "that I could get money much easier than by rivet ing boilers, .which was my chosen vo cation for a short period, so 1 began to practice magic. I wanted to give a vhole show made up of sleight-of-hand and illusions, but unfortunately I didn"t have enough cash to get any ap paratus at all. I swiped two of my brother's pet rabbits, my sister's gold fish and some other stuff at home, but the disappearing bird-cage and the cab inet of illusions, with all the necessary mirrors, I had to manufacture myself. "I never will forget my first appear ance. I walked on the stage in my uncle Phil's 10-year-old dress euit and I had no sooner begun to explain the nature of my entertainment than a rabbit stuck his head out of my Inside pocket and a goldfish slipped out of my pants leg. I turned it into a joke, but it made me cut out two of my best tricks. Then my home-made disappear ing Dira-cage, which was supposed to collapse and fly up my sleeve, forgot to collapse at the psychological moment. Instead of making it out of wood I had used heavy telegraph wire, and my thumb got stuck in it and it never did go up my sleeve. I tried to push it up, but it nearly took my thumb off. 'For a finish I told the audience I would eat fire, but I never kept my word. 1 got a mouth full of gasoline and squirted it at a lighted candle, like a Chinaman sprinkling clothes. The explosion blew three of my teeth out and my tongue never did get back, into neutral. "I went straight from the hospital back to the boiler factory. Harper & Brothers. The first of the series deals with the peace conference, and here are a few excerpts culled from the galley proofs: "Of course, this whole peace confer ence talk started from the time Presi dent Wilson said to Germany: 'We won't deal with you as long as you occupy invaded territory.' Well, the Kaiser come right back at him and said: - 'If you can show us. how we can give It up any faster than we are I wish you would do it.' " The shorter white paper gets the more careless these Pen Hounds get with it." Grammar and I get along like a Russian and a bath tub." I was going to write a book on the war but I heard some fellow had al ready done it." There are co many books on the war that no two. people will have to read the same book." The thing, that hurt the Kaiser worse than losing the war was that in 11 the armistice terms they didn t even mention his name." 'Everybody commenced talking about the peace conference and who was to go. Some republican senators went so far as, to engage a lower berth. "There was so much argument about who was to go that President Wilson says, I tell you what, we will split 60-50: I will go and you fellows can stay.' " Tinki Like Dong." The A. E. F. ranked Douglas Fair banks as its favorite actor, according to Homer Croy of the Y. M. C. A. That opinion would doubtless find consider able backing among the folks who stayed at home. Doug" is one of America's favorites and everybody from the president down likes his pictures. When the history of the screen America comes to be written, Fair banks' name will loom large as one of those whose personality not only helped to bring the motion picture before the publio, bait one of those who actually changed the type of picture presented to the public. Mr. Fairbanks has brought to the screen the gospel or gooa cneer, me spirit of "Never-say-die," and the breeziness of his own magnetic indi viduality. Every one of his pictures is a point against the Demon Grouch, and every one carries a lesson in optimism, none the less potent for its sugar coating. That was the eort of etuff that ap pealed to the A- E. F., and that is the sort of stuff that appeals to most Americans. Never a Fairbanks picture yet that sent an audience out sad-eyed and sighing. .oDoay can go to a Fair banks film and not be vitalized. Doug's breeziness is infectious. And- "The Knickerbocker Buckaroo," whose very name is full of "pep." promises to be one of the fastest bits of Falrbanks- ianism yet shown. It's a swift story, and Douglas, after spending five months producing It, breaks all records, taking every hill on high. Blanche "Comes Hack. Theatergoers everywhere will wel come the return of Blanche Sweet to the screen in the big Harry Garson photoplay, "The Unpardonable Sin." Miss Sweet nan won a nost of admirers nd these admirers have missed her for the past year or more. "Where has she been?" and "What has she been do ing?" will be questions asked in thous ands of homes where her new picture will be discussed. There Isn't so much to say about where she has been and what she has been doing Miss Sweet's earlier work before the camera had taken a rather heavy roll of her nerv ous energy and when the t'me came that she found it possible to take a long and comfortable rest she wel comed the opportunity to establish her self in one of the real show places of lower California and live the quiet. peaceful life which she had been ad vised would return her to active serv ice better and more effective as a able Sin" are unanimous in their opin ion that, in none of her previous pro ductions has Miss Sweet done more artistic work. That she has staged a "come-back" without the slightest slip is conceded to be remarkable. main in the north- and suffer an ampu tation of several toes. The story is one of James Oliver Curwood's outdoor affairs. Stars in Sennett Picture. The phrase "all-star cast" has been so overworked that it has come to be the bunk" with a good share of the public The term, however, will take on a measure . of reality when Mack Sennett's latest and largest farce pro duction, "Yankee Doodle in Berlin," is spread out ior the public gaze next Saturday at the Majestic theater. Charlie Murray plays an Irish sol dier. Ford Sterling enacts the kaiser. Chester Conklin and Ben Turpin, Marie Prevost. and Eva Thatcher, are Ideally cast, the Sennett Bathing Beauties splash their way into consistent scenes and Bothwell Browne, the noted male actor of feminine rolen, was engaged for what may be considered the pivotal part that of an American aviator who. disguise, as a gay "vamp, worms his way into the imperial household and learns both state and domestic secrets of value to the U. S. government. Of course the personal appearance of the famous Mack Sennett bathing beauties a bevy of 'em will be the big feature of the presentation of the pic ture. The girls will make at least two appearances dally during the showing of the picture, offering a musical com edy tabloid affording every opportunity to exploit those bizarre costumes which adorn the Sennett nereids. Rogera Write Book, Inst comnleted arrangements for the I screen star than she had ever been. publication, - ot , a- fiexiu ot trrt"1-t - hy Tlioao who have seen. "The Unpardon- Hlrkmu Answers Critic A dramatic critic, who apparently can't see the moving pictures through the Mount Wilson telescope, said re cently that the claim or the moving picture people that the camera went everywhere was an exaggeration. This yawp of the critic has called forth a swift reply from Howard Hick man, Bessie Barriscale's director, which makes it plain that Mr. Hickman "speaks as one having authority and not as the scribes," Eet the critic make note of this: "Of course, the camera hasn't gone every place. It hasn't gone to perdi tion yet, notwithstanding our critic would apparently like to send it there, and I don't think there are any cameras in heaven, but then the camera is com paratively only a recent invention. Give it a chance. It has. however, been at the South Pole; almost at the North Pole; at the bottom of the sea; in the crater of more tha one volcano; in the jungles of India, Africa and South America; 3000 feet under ground in the Calumet & Hecla mine: in balloons and aeroplanes as high as 16,000 feet above the earth; in the tombs of Egypt; in the tundras of Siberia: in the un charted regions of the upper Amazon; in the front line trenches and under fire of enemy guns; in the deserts of Sa hara. America and Asia; on top of the Himalayas and In the valley of the Dead Sea; among the furnaces or the steel mills and in the swamps of the rice country; on battleships and rail road trains, in palaces and in hovels, among the cannibals of the Snuth Seaa and in the vaults of the world's treas uries; in factory and in school room, in clinic and in lecture room. "Where does our critic want the camera to go? Where indeed?' Far 3iorta with Camera. The "farthest north" record for a motion picture company engaged in the filming of a production is held by Nell Shipman'8 company of which Dave Hartford is director. In search of an unbroken vista of snow, the company went by train and sled S00 miles north of Calgary, Alberta, where they found all the snow they needed and a tem perature of 64 degrees below zero. The cold was so severe mat tne negative tn ATROCITIES THEME OF PLAY "The Unpardonable Sin" at Liberty Has Strong Appeal. "The Unpardonable Sin" is one of the year's greatest photoplays. This powerful picturization of Rupert Hughes' novel celebrates the return to the screen of Blanche Sweet in the great role of her career, elevates Mar shall Neilan to rank among the three or four greatest directors of the screen, and provides the public with enter tainment that will make an impression not soon to be erased from memory. . The Liberty theater was packed to capacity yesterday with opening-day crowds, the Portland reception of the production equaling that accorded It in Detroit. New York and other cities. Taking the theme of German atroci ties to women in Belgium, as he found it in the Rupert Hughes novel. Neilan has told the story with a restraint and an absence of sensationalism that makes the effect on an audience more compelling than the frankest unveil ing of actual horrors could have done. Neilan's method is to show not what occurred, but the unmistakable effects of those occurrences. The audience understands. The mere suggestion holds the spectator in a state of shud dering sympa'.hy. In this manner Neilan "registers' the martyrdom of Alice Parcot an 1 her mother at the hands of the Ger mans, the searching of Dimny Parcot by t.erman officers, and the final as sault upon Alice in the abandoned French house. The result of this handling, keep'ng the Incidents in their proper places as incidents of a grip ping story, is a well-knit drama that gathers power as it proceeds. A great cast has been assembled for "The Unpardonable S'n." Blanche Sweet is splendid In the dual role of Alice and Dimny. Mary Alden. as thi mother, is excellent. Beery's imper sonatlor of the German officer is one of the best the screen has presente'.. Matt Moore makes a first-class hero, KJwln Stevens is fine as the father, and Wesley Karry, as George Wash ington Sticker, is the center nZ a comedy vein reminiscent of Neilan at his best in Pickford productions. jail, which is the last place in the world the sheriff thinks to search. In the Jail Teddy sees Mercedes Syl vester, imprisoned on a trumped-up smuggling charge. He promptly falls in love wicn ner. hi attempts a rescue. Miguel Carbolic, who forces his atten tions on her. At the point of a gun Betty brings him to the ranch and is so unprepared to learn that he is the most notorious of cattle thieves that she faints. When she recovers she finds DOCG. FAIKB.VXKS BACK AGAIN" IWO-GUX BETTY' AT MAJESTIC Picture Full or Action and 'With Plenty of Fun. Bessie Barriscale dons boy's clothes, chaps, a big sombrero and a couple of big Bill Hart six-guns in "Two-Gun Betty." the comedy drama which stars her at the Majestic theater. It's a pic ture full of action, with plenty of fun. Betty Craig makes a wager that she can pass as a man on a western cattle ranch belonging to her chum's brother. whom she has never met. She is intro duced to Jack Kennedy, the young ranch owner, as Bob Craig; but the former sees through her disguise, as well as do all the other ranch hands. They say nothing and Betty is jubilant over the way she is fooling the men. With the girl's arrival at the ranch trouble commences. She is given an improvised bunk in the harness room, where in her solitude she is despond ent. But she picks up sufficient cour age to go through with her plans. The boys at the-ranch plan a fete, in which the joke is on Betty. Disguised as "bad men," members of the ranch hold up Betty and her party. The fol lowing morning a hundred steers are reported missing. Betty sees in it an other joke. While out riding she chances upon Pathe Weekly, comedy and screen magazine are other features. DOUBLE BILL AT THE CIRCLE is captured, thrown in Jail, effects an that her boy's wig has fallen off. Jack escape and the plot goes on with Teddy ! confesses that he has always known ever etiaeavoring to aid others, and that she was Betty Craig and that ne j as uimn miming in nut. water, j loves ner. tvery new move to help others results in inconveniences often of the most embarrassing sort to himself. In the end he wins the girl and regains for her and her brother a fortune the crooked sheriff was trying to get his hands on. One of Doug's most exciting stunts is climbing out of the window of a speeding Pullman, continuing up to the roor oi tne car, running along on top or tne train, then jumping: to the swinging arm of a water feeder and leaping to the back of a horse. It's the start of a thrilling chase in which a hundred or more cowboys chase the hero up into the hills. . Pretty Marjorie Daw, Frank Campeu and other well known players are in the cast. , Branding Broadway" and Charlie Chaplin in "The Bank." "Branding Broadway," that very popular William S. Hart Artcraft pic ture, and Charlie Chaplin, king or comedy, in "The Bank, form the double bill at the Circle theater for today and tomorrow. Hart, the man of the plains, lnvaaes New York in "Branding Broadway." In troducing wild west methods to the Great White Way. He's assigned to keep the son of a railway magnate out of mischief and Bill succeeds, but not before he has bumped, into more ad ventures than befell his lot in the land of the gun and lariat. There's a pretty little romance involved, with Bill car rying away a bride to the west. "The Bank" is generally rated as one of Chaplin's very funnieft comedies, with Charlie a Janitor in a bank. REEL LIFE IX CHINA' AT GLOBE Wonders of Strange Country Vividly Portrayed. The wonders ot a strange country are vividly portrayed in "Reel Life in production which opened a special en China." the splendid educational-travel gagement yesterday at the Globe the ater. This unusual picture is screened In conjunction with a lecture by A. Frsnklin Myrson. Herman H. Barcley. traveler and photographer, is given credit for the amazing and highly entertaining scenes of "Reel Life in China," The author of the picture traveled for five years through the celestial king dom and covered many thousands ot miles to secure views never before pre sented to the public Educationally the (Conr:udf,l on Pago 7. Two Theaters Present "Old Doc Cheerful" This Week. Douglas Fairbanks, "Old Doc Cheer ful." is back again, and this time it takes two theaters to hold him in Port land the Peoples and the Star. Man ager John C. Stilie Is trying the unique experiment of showing one picture in two houses at the same time, and yes terday's crowds Indicate that another theater or two might be used to handle "Doug's" admirers. Seven reels Jammed with action and thrills and romance that's "The Knick erbocker Buckaroo." Narrow escapes and daring escapades are as numerous as the villain's cigarettes In the aver age melodrama, with Fairbanks un corking a lot of his old acrobatics and some he has Just added to his reper toire of strenuousness. "Doing something for somebody" Is the slogan adopted by Teddy Drake, blase New Yorker who tires of the old gang and the old sights and, as he figures that the New Yorkers would think he was playing a con game if he tried to do something for them, he hits out for the wild and woolly west. Down in Sonora. Mexico. Teddy meets Manuel Lopez, leader of an outlaw band. who is pursued by the snerirr. Bcenting 9 I TODAY AND TOMORROW Wm. S. Hart Hventni-o with his sloaan ever in the two cameras of which Dal Clawson I mind. Teddy changes clothing with the ! gj was pilot froze several times and two bandit and leads the eniorcers oi law members of the company sustained i and order on a merry chase, finally frozen, feel, one of them bavins to re-' taking refuge on the roof of the county "BRANDING BROADWAY" Gee VTnla! Big Bill la a Dress Suit. Also CHARLIE CHAPLIN Sstf iTm THE BANK' nUlOCinV IEn Ifl C Oim From t Tlork ! tie onli( I'ltll AUnliOOlUll ISC) IUll 36 4 o'clock the Following Blaming.