f. . r 1 t ... ttKrf TODAY'S KILM FEATURES. Liberty Norma Talmadge, "The Branded Woman." Columbia George Melford'a '.Behold My Wife!" Rlvoll Annette Kellerman, "What Women Love." Majestic Hobart Bosworth, "His Own Law.". Peoples Charles Ray, "An Old Fashioned Boy." Star Mitchell Lewis, "King: Spruce." Circle Hobart Bosworth, "Be low the Surface." Globe Jack London's "Mutiny of the Elslnore." Today's Mnalc Featnrea. Rivoli Orchestra concert under direction of Salvatore Santa ella at 12:30 P. M. Liberty Organ concert by Hen ri Keates at 12:3(1 P. M. Majestic Organ concert by Ce cil Teague at 1:30 P. M. PORTLAND girls will waltz with Bert Lytell. Harry Carey and other film stars, and .lucky gal lants of the town will escort Nazl mova, Viola Dana, Ethel Lake and other screen beauties In the grand march next month if the plans of cer tain ambitious members of the Mo-1 tion Picture League o( Oregon are carried out. ; Headed by A. C. Raleigh of the Co lumbia theater, a group of prominent film and theatrical men are making tentative arrangements for a Christ mas movie ball, to be held about De cember 15. at the auditorium. . And they are striving to make the event the biggest thing of Its kind this eity or any other community of the northwest has ever seen. Invitations to take part In the ball will be telegraphed this week to a long list of famouj film celebrities asking them to appear in Portland for at least one evening. Local so ciety people and prominent business and professional men will be invited -to participate in the affair. The , programme will include a dance with two Belected orchestras furnishing the music. Then there will be an entertainment furnished by performers from local theaters, and a series of speeches from the visiting movie heroes and heroines. And there will be plenty of side attractions and surprises. A portion of the proceeds - of course, will be donated to Portland charities. If nothing intervenes to spoil the plan, it should be a big thing for the city, and in many cases, the answer to a motion picture fan's prayer. An Important announcement that opens a new field in motion picture . production was made recently by di rectors of Famous Players-Lasky corporation. Instead of featuring a single star m a picture, tney plan to concentrate . a number of stars and directors on the making of a photoplay and to make the play itself, rather than ome leading figure in the cast, the Dig tning in a release. All the present leading men and women or tne company will be mergeo. into an an-star stock company for each picture. "In the near fu ture." said Jesse L Lasky, vice-pres-. ident in charge of production, "it is probable that motion picture fans .will see three or more stars such as - x nomas' Jieignan, eiuie Burke, Elsie - Ferguson. Wallace Reid. rinmih. Dalton, Mae Murray and Ethel ,Clay- ,.ion piaying togemer in big produc Hons." Manager wlnstock of the local bailie exchange has returned from trip to Weiser. Baker, La Grande, The ,Talles, Pendleton and Hood River and reports the film business thriving ail along the line. '". Pictures of Portland events, to be ' shown on local screens from. time, to TP p.m. . av-w' csNi v.v'j 1 T 4s.jMtwMfj&- it- iiiitmiii"" A Jit i "4ar v k3wiiiiJi-i.l time, are being taken by Pathe as a part of the celebration of the tenth anniversary of -the . founding of the Pathe news weekly. The average motion picture fan. ab sorbed In watching a favorite star on the screen, has no realization ' of the amount of preparation which the composition of the musical pro gramme has entailed or the Important part St plays in the enjoyment of the picture. As an example of the . work neces sary to provide a suitable musical ac companiment for a film, ; the weekly routine of Salvatore Santaella, leader of the Rivoli orchestra, may be cited. Mr. Santaella, spends many hours choosing. rejecting and - selecting again the proper compositions to go with a change of. progrrmme. There is a large library of music located underneath the stage where thou sands of numbers are filed. The leader first views a picture to obtain a line on the scenes, and then It Is run over again, and he makes notes of the musical numbers that seem most fitting -for each scene. Music properly selected helps to put over a picture, and It also is the opin ion of managers that careless selec tion detracts from the best pictures. Well-chosen -music Is an important factor in helping the theater patron fully to enjoy a good picture, al though few of them realize that the organ or orchestra, means as much as it does. J. G. von Herberg of the firm of Jensen & von Herberg, spent Thurs day in Portland visiting the Pacific International Livestock exposition. Mr. von Herberg, who owns a large farm a few miles from Seattle, is an enthusiastic stock fancier. - He has Just returned from New Tork, where he attended a meeting of the board of directors of the Associated Wrst Na tional Pictures, Inc., of which his firm is a stockholder. ' . . War time brought meatless, sugar less and tutterless days. The recent strike settlement has now brought "orchestraless" days. Monday at the Columbia and Wednesday at the Peo ples will be days on which organ mu sic alone will be featured. Before the recent strike nwisicians worked on either a five or six-hour schedule each day of the week. The peace pact signed at Seattle provides for one full day off every week. Orchestras will start at 1 P. M. and will play through the greater portion of both evening shows, the total working day being six hours. Cecil Teague, organist of the Majes tic theater, will play the following selections at the' Sunday concert to day, starting at 1:80 P. M.: "Father oVictory".tGanne, "O .Promise Me" 4 'i'v yZj-JS Seal (DeKoven), "Jigs and Reels From All Nations," "Gold and Silver Waltz" (Lahar). "Rlgoletto" (Verdi). One of the most prominent motion picture directors in the country start ed a wide discussion among film peo ple and screen patrons recently when he declared in a magazine article that "the public has the mind of a 9-year-old child." This director Is one of the most experienced men in the film industry, and his conclusions are entitled to respect, - however radical they may be. Taking the opposite view, Lloyd Ingraham, a noted picture director with a record for "sure-fire" produc-1 tions, disputes the statement. : "It is much more likely to be the case," said Ingraham, "that a director who forms such an opinion of audi ences has believed himself to have created some particularly subtle or clever film and has simply missed fire. "It Is a very human thing to place a high estimate on our efforts, per haps, and deprecate the seeming in ability of the public to appreciate them. But that is a very bad attitude for any artist Jto fall into, either in our line or any other. "Nothing is more apparent to me than that the pictures have brought the masses up with them and thart they are constantly demanding higher quality. It Is true that hu- .Allan 1 wan, director, who champions west as Betting; for pictures. .. .. t Si nillflllj wiMJI .MW.A- Irf-WWUWmHjgj I 1 It 111 - - , j 1 y j I rii-wt-"ifiliiiilii-fl-n-MsMs. -i-'-vrr-fi invrslfc-ifc-ij f THE SUNDAY OREGOXIAX, PORTLAND, NOVEMBER I r. ;- 3 ft A A w : 4 .4 tHrrSS ' inanity remains elemental and juvenile in many ways. 'The colonel's lady and Judy O'Grafly' are the same under the skin. And instead of being a fault it is rather a virtue for adults to have 'nine-year-old minds.' It is the child mind that is receptive to the emotional appeal of the drama. Long mav it orevail. "Clever photoplays -with clever sub titles will take like wildfire, and those with subtleties in them will be astonishingly appreciated in most cases. The greatest mistake a direct or can make is to underestimate the Intelligence of his audience. It will put a stop to his own progress and kill his enthusiasm. . The Rivoli orchestra, under the di rection- of Salvatore Santaella, will play the- following programme at the regular Sunday concert at 12:30 P. M. todav: - Selection; "The Firefly" (R. Frlml), request; "The Rosary" (E. Nevin), as arranged by Mr. Santaella; "American Patrol" (F. Meacham), "Canzonetta' (E. Waldteufel),- overture, "Zampa' (F. Herold). - Henry B. Walthall, .famous as a screen star, will arrive In Portland today at the head of his own company for a performance of "Ghosts," an Ibsen drama, at the auditorium this evening. Mr. Walthall became known as a film star of the first magnitude by his portrayal of the part of the- little Southern colonel in xne iiirtn of a Nation." He is now making tour of the country with his present vehicle. ., - " L.' C. Mearsi former manager of the Peoples theater, is now with the local Universal branch exchange. He left for a road trip during the week. ."- O.' M. 'Whltlngton, " who wons the Liberty and Grand theaters of Bend, Or., spent several days in Portland last week buying films for his houses. Other visitors at the exchanges were John Silva, omfner of the Peoples theater of Clatskanie, and C. F. Hill,, who has two motion picture houses in Albany. . s V. M. Schubach passed through the city Thursday on his way to San Francisco, where he will become man ager of the Universal film exchange. He has been manager of the Seattle branch exchange of the company. His brother, Ed Schubach, was at one time manager of the New Grand theater of Portland. . - . M. H. Milo. leader of the minstrel act now at the- Star, received an abrupt reception upon his arrival in Portland to open his engagement. Driving into the city for the first time, he clashed with another auto mobile at Broadway and Washington streets... Hia first. impressions of the "3 1 m city have been marred By strenuous efforts to smooth things over with the owner of the badl-battered ma chine that received him. Edward Armstrong, district mana ger here for the Universal exchange, left Thursday night for San Francisco for an Important conference. Before leaving he entertained about 20 ex hibitors with some new releases in his projection room. . F. W. Tuefil, former majiager ot the Rialto theater 'of Butte, Mont., assumed activn direction of the Peoples here last week. , Sam Sax owner of the New Grand, tried the uncertain experiment the other day of trying to emulate some of the feats of Barney Oldfleld and Ralph de Palma on a - slippery pavement. His car turned turtle, but no one was injured. While about a dozen pedestrians hoisted the machine back to normal, Mr. Sax telephoned to his office to. make sure that his accident insurance nolicy was paid up. The ' Columbia theater's new or chestra, under the direction of Vin cent Knowles, will start its engage ment Tuesday. - NEW TORK. Nov. 20. (Special.) FOPFLAR ORCHESTRA LEAD- ' ER SOW AT PEOPLES. Photo by Davies. John Brits,. ' y Wlth the signing of the peace pact between the firm of Jensen & Von Herberg and the musi sicians' union, a new 13-piece ' orchestra becomes a feature of the Peoples theater. The leader of this .orchestra is John Brita. well known in Portland musical circles. Mr.- Britz came here last sea son from New York to take charge of the Alcazar theater orchestra. He received his train ing In "playing" pictures al the Strand theater, one of the larg est motion-picture houses of New York city, and was a mem ber of road companies of Klaw & Erlanger, H. W. Savage and John Cort. He is a skilled per former on the violin, cello and piano. . Mr.. Britz opened his engage- . ment at the Peoples yesterday. He announced recently that be would use both popular and classical numbers in his first programmes, but later, if public taste warranted, would depend on classical selections entirely. If" Jllijlliiiii JIHH-iimiiuuniMiuwi ! Immmmmmh uiNcf, "-pi 21. 1920 -a ! it 5 x -v. No less a personage tnan the great D. W. Griffith "started something" in New York the other day. He declared In the presence of a large group of picture folk, representing all branches of the trade, that the west, as envi ronment for pictures, was dead. All the good locations had been "shot," he said, and of course the eastern pro ducers applauded him. loudly because much - good money has been taken from the east to be 6pent on the coast in studios and other locations. In the audience was Allan Dwan, who is spending a few weeks in New York, and he took exception to Mr. Griffith's remarks. "There are plenty of wonderful lo-. cations all through the west with which the average picturegoer is un familiar,' he said. '"Then. too. the ideal climatic conditions give almost a year-round of picture-taking. Every kind of eetting can be found in the west, from tropical scenes to deep drifts of snow. I am here not seek ing eastern location, but just for a brief vacation, and w'll go back to make pictures on the co&st. thorough ly satisfied with the environment It provides." , Later Mr. Dwan was asked about Portland as a natural eetting for pic tures. " "Some time when it is not the rainy season, I am going up there to get some pictures. I have a story in mind right now and you need not be sur prised if you hear that I am on the spot," he said. He commented upon the Dig spread advertisements of picture theaters so common in the west. .This type of ad vertising Is almost unknown in this part of the country, though It is grad ually being employed by a few of the progressive exhibitors. ' "This method. Mr. Dwan said, is vastly superior to anything in the east and the box office returns prove that it Is really worth while. Eastern exhibitors will, sooner or later, rec ognize its value and Imitate their western friends in the film business. The west usually starts things first and then the more conservative east, having witnessed . the good results, takes the idea as something new and good.". Mr.' Dwan came east really to at tend the big football game between his alma mater and West Point, and brought Notre Dame good luck. He used to play on tne team in nis coi lege days and tries to see as many games as possible. He has a lot of college friends in the northwest, as well as relatives in both Portland and Seattle, and in northwestern Canada, where he was born, not to mention the screen followers who like his pictures. But the west is grateful to him for taking up her part In the east-west moving picture location controversy. Doubtless other folk will express themselves on the subject, too. For what would the west be without its picture centers? KKLLER.MAN GETS STAR. CAST Well-Known Artists Support Div ing Venns at Rivoli. - Annette Kellerman was given an all-star cast in her first modern com edy-drama, "What Women Love,' which s at the Rivoli theater this week. After the story was purchased from Bernard McConville, the famous screen scribe, for ?10,000. Sol Lesser instructed Harry . Caulf ield, his pro duction manager, to spare no expense in securing the best available talent for Miss Kellerman's support. , Wheeler Oakman, who played the masculine lead in "The Spoilers," "The Ne'er-Do-Well," "Mickey." "The Vir gin of Stamboul," and other successes, was chosen to play opposite "the div ine Venus." Walter Long, who has been chosen GLOBE Eleventh and Waskfngrton The Mutiny A Jack London Story. W .. . Si ..4 jry&s7z ZXsrj? Jyzs-irgr '' as the ideal heavy by D. W. Griffith, ever since Long played the part of the negro Gus in "The Birth of a Na tion," was picked for the part of the villainous Larson. Ralph Lewis, the veteran character actor; Bull Montana, who is now be ing featured by Marshall Neilan, and a host of other well known players com plete the cast. "A Seminary Scandal," a two-reel comedy, and a Fox news reel are other features of the new Rivoli bill. SCENES IX HADES FAXCTFTDX Elaborate Sets Feature Picture Starring Xorma Talmadge. Scenes in Hades, said to rival even the most fanciful of Dore's ' famous draw'ngs, have been reproduced on the screen in Norma Talmadge's lat est First National starring vehicle, "The Branded Woman," which is be ing shown at the Liberty theater. Because of the elaborate nature of the sets called for in this motion pic ture, which was adopted bv Anita Loos and Albert Parker from Oliver D. Bailey'3 well-known stago play. cranaen, Hugo Banin was engaged to design them. The result has been an artistic triumph. In addition to beautiful interiors for a private house in Paris and the Ritz hotel, a fashionable boarding school for girls up the Hudson, the library and other rooms of a wealthy New Yorker's home, are some re markable scenes in India. But most remarkable of all are the allegorical scenes in Hades. One of these sets, which represents a dream of Norma's, wherein she imagines herself dragged down by society into a niaeous whirlpool of slime and filth, from which she is rescued by tne man sne loves, was filmed in huge pool discolored and apparently ruiea witn norrmie creeping creatures like the "slimy things that crawl with Sunday COME! Monday ZZZZZZZZZZ2. Open From 9 o'clock in the morning You Will The crew in a sunken sub marine fighting death from suffocation. Bosworth's plunge to the depths, where he saves the joy-crazed seamen. ADMISSION TO THIS 4j i 5 leKrvr wings" in "The Rime of the Ancient Mariner." "The Race of the Age," ah exclusive picture of the recent meeting of Man o" War and Sir Barton on the Windsor racetrack, is also on the Liberty bill.. Ida Lldyard returns in a singing number. CHARLES RAY AT PEOPLES "An Old-Fashioned Boy", Sees Ac tor in Favorite Role. .. Charles Ray Invariably Is artistic in his country boy impersonations, and in "An Old-Fashloned Boy," JUs latest production at the Peoples this week, he does not violate the stand ard he has fixed for himself. 1 Mr. Ray has a typical role In "An Old-Fashioned Boy," of which- he makes the most. As David Warring ton, a bashful suitor for the hand of a rather snobbish girl, he displays all those mannerisms which have con tributed to make him famous in his especial field of entertainment. His trials when a trio of boisterous chll- ' dren are placed in his care and when to amuse them he engages in a sort of taffy-pulling contest with more or less direful results provoke many a laugh. ' How he finally wins the love of the girl he woos makes a worth while picture. ..' Ethel Shannon, as the girl. Is ex cellent. The support was clever -and the work of the three juvenile play-, ers was effective. Jerome Storm di rected the picture, of which Agnes Christine Johnston is the author.. . MAJESTIC PLOT STRIKING Hobart BoswortU Production' De clared Among Best ot Season, A striking plot Is developed in' "His Own Law," which comes to the Ma jestic this week. J. C. MacNeir, a construction, engl- (Coneluded on Pas 12. f till 4 o'clock the following morning.' CUE Want to See: The boy's rash dive to tlve wreck in which he lost his wife and see what he saw through the porthole. . ", A great love story of the sea. ..v FEATURE 25 CENTS