~ «HE DAILY BR:T(SH WHIG. Foret Sern eer" FZ ACTIN, er Loree daar amd Her quite content with comedy roles. Wilda Bennett And Kenneth Harlan Wilda Bennett, late prima donna of {the musical play, "Apple Blossems.," and Kenneth Harlan, in a charming love scene from "Love, Homor and Obey." The picture was adapted by |Bugene Walter from Charles Neville | Buck's novel, "The Tyranny of Weak- ness." It tells the engrossing story of a young author who falls in love with a New England girl and is then for- bidden by her Puritanical father to see hgr. due to his having writtén a book containing advanced views om the subject of sex. Lois Wilson r Miss Lois Wilson, who is a Birming- ham, Ala., girl, began her career as a school teacher. She has been seen as leading woman for many stars, among ! them Wallace Reid and Bryant Wash- | office to a luxurious boudoir, from the burn, and soon will be seem in the |Stock Exchange to a mansion on leading feminine role in the screem | Riverside Drive. There are also fine | version of Sir James M, Barrie's "What's A 3 SF X 4 Fle ae |views of the Berkshires and of the Every Woman Knows," a part created | al § d Ris £50 : " {plains out West--altogether an un-|on the American stage, by Maude k {usual number of settings, The action | Adams. {includes an attempted panic on Wall { Street, some wonderful love making. {and a thrashing from the hero to the ane SDDtRe a the 94ly viond vampire man- who tries to ruin him, adminis- : > J 3 : 0 , tered in the best Mayo style, + for Sweden where she will act in a } oh ] . 8 : | : 2 ro of pletures depicting life in the For RR ) fe 3 Nog " : | Marie Mosquin} Land of the Midnight Sun. | Marie Mosquinl, the sprightly, dark character parts that present a hard The Thirteenth Bride {beauty of the comedy screen is the problem, especially when they repre- [full embodiment of laughter, Marie {sent well-to-do men or women who The Thirteenth Bride in the clutches | Just loves to laugh! Perhaps that's (must look as though they "belonged." of the pirates. Ruth Storrow Mar. | | why her forte is comedy! his little [That is where Charles Lane fits pre- guerite Clayton), kidnapped In her' [Italian beauty made her entrance to |eminently, and therein les the ex- wedding finery, is taken aboard the [the films and leading-ladydom through [planation of his screen success, 'submarine. The Mahd], chief of the [the Harold Lloyd comedies. She was| Known as one of the leading actors \ pirate gang, is shown at her left (with | 7 Ze Tle erzl" LIPS 2 eo Cero" | next made leading lady for the "pint-| on the legitimate stage--he was recent- iat) and Sari, the female member of {sized™ comedian, "Snub" Pollard, Oh, !ly seen with Willlam Gillette in "A ar Ee Brine . the desperadoes, is at extreme left. The | ' jyes! There was a little more to it [Successful Calamity," and with Julia story details the adventures of Ameri-| -------- -- ee = AS HS ------ ---- !than that! Mildred Davis had been |Dean in "The Law of the Land"~--Lane § ©An brides who have been 'captured A notable fact about the cast Is|been popular leading men. {appearing with "Snub" and. when long refused to enter the film world, by pirates and held for ransom. In that nearly every member of it has'| Tucker, whose first hit was in LHe IPDS A Star from Sweden -- The Thirteenth Bride-- Anltak ian Star -- Love, Honor and Obey -- The Marriage Pit -- Takes Aristocratic Parts--Began As School Chores vir Jims Lore Teacher. ERHAPS the most striking thing about Anna Q. Nilson aside from her personal charm and beauty is her Individuality. = 50s has absolutely no desire to form | her own company; is the only Swedish actress to reach stellar heights in this | {eountry; has a middle name that | vounds llke Bp Sam Lloyd puzzle -- | Qvirentia (take it home and try it! on your vocal chords); and last but] not least, in "In the Heart of a Fool," prominent actresses a score of years ago. The scenes shift from a Wall Street Charles Lane . If you speak with a motion picture director about his casting troubles, you will soon learn that the roles of the leading man and the leading woman are the easiest to fill; it is the >" Aor aires el Fe sari Lillian adame | {not understand him, and a dancer The character of Richard Strong 1s | ; _/ took active part. | Bebe Danlels entered features Mildred |but finally succumbed. Two of his many of the scenes the U. 8S. Navy Frank Mayo Frank Mayo has just finished 'The Marriage Pit," a thrilling story of New York's smart set based on Frederick particularly suited to Mayo, He perosnates a virile self-made man who rises from driving cattle to being a power on Wall Street. After marrying the daughter of one of the old Knlck- | erbocker families he finds she does LANDMARKS OF their leader and his cause. im- | From the necropolis we pass to Bond street, where at No. 82 stands the three-story dwelling in which Mackenzie died. Toward the end of his strenuous life, which was one of almost continuous opposition to things as they were, some of th: rebel leader's friends, moved by sympathy for his condition, presented this pro- perty to him, though against his will, for his native Scottish independence never forsook him. Here he spent his closing years years of gloom and despair, it is said, and with a consciousness that he had not achieved all he sought in the realm of strénuous struggle he passed .way, and with his passing a page of Canadian history was closed. As one sits at the old desk used by Mackenzie when a member of the Upper Canada legislature (now pre- served in the cabin of the York pioneers in Exhibition park), it is easy to conjure up the exciting scenes in which he figured, and of his five successive expulsions from the old Front street chamber. It must be admitted that he drew fire W. L. MACKENZIE Since Willlam Lyon Mackenzie King, the Liberal leader, has been ¥islting some of the shrines of his illustrious forebear, from whom he - &8ts his Christian names; it is per- _ missible for the average citizen, re- Bardless of his politics, to do the e. * The remains of the rebel leader Test beneath the low spread branches Of a mountain ash in the necropolis in Toronto. Within a small plot, bordered by a hedge, four little Stones, only a few inches high, mark IW Of graves. One bears the word "Father," and below "William Lyon enxie," next to it is a stone marked "Willlam Lyon and George Mackenzie," and the fourth "Barbara and Helen." A substantial monu- ment has been erected to William Lyon Mackenzie in the same God's @cré where a granite shaft com- memorates Lount and Matthews, two Of his chief lieu nants, who gave up their lives for the faith they had in ANE mt pm, in... --- PICKING A WIFE When | was twenty years of age I'd seen enough of life To know man must, to happy be, take to himself a wife ; So I sat down to figure out what kind of girl to ask "To share withyme a house and home, and found no easy task. On all sides there were scores of girls, shapely and cute and fair, ' Brumettes and blondes and in-betweens, with red or auburn hair ; Tall maids there were and short ones, too : to give them their Just dues, From such displays of beauty I found it most hard to choose. My eyes picked out a wond'rous maid, beautiful to behold, But ere I could propose to her my stomach whispered, "Hold ! Remember the old adage and don't leap until you look ; Before you tie yourself for life find out if she can cook." My ears called to my notice one whose voice was liquid gold, - I fain would take her to my breast and in my arms enfold 3 Again my stomach whispered, and would no refusal brook : "You cannot live on love-songs, man ; find out if she can cook." My thriftiness picked out a lass whose talents mostly ran To making her own hats and clothes--a saving to a man ; "At last," I thought, "I've found a mate, and need no farther look." - 'Again the words came up to me : "Find out if she can cook." My pocketbook discovered one who had a bank account, And all she needed was a man to share the large amount ; I'd tell her I'd protect her like the hero in a boak, J But ere I spoke I heard once-more : "Find out if she can cook." A social my attention claimed ; I bought a box of food, And when I'd tried and tested it, I found it was so good That I enquired who'd put it up, then bachelor halls forsook ; My stomach said : "At last, old boy, you've found one who can cook." The years have passed since we were wed ; I'm "fat and forty" now ; Aud royally have I been fed--that's something -you'll allow : And though i've got a chubby paunch, that I must overlook -- It is the price I had to pay for marrying a cook. , \ from the Follles comes into his, life with her unprincipled husband to make further trouble, How he wins out in the end and saves both his for- jtune and his home makes a story which will appeal both to men and to women. {was made leading lady for Harold [latest films are "Dr. Jekyll and Mr. been well known on stage. Frank Mayo comes from a| long line of actors, appearing on the stage when he was four. and made a | sy1ccess before he was twenty. Ray Ripley and the speaking Sherry, has played principal roles in several Broadway productions. Dag- mar Godowsky, daughter of the cele- brated pianist, appeared with Belasco and Belle Stoddard Johnston, Frank NA a ning. WING, as when he wrote that "the house | Was an assembly of sycophants" and { the government "a band of public robbers." "If a government eman- ating from England can cherish such a corrupt star chamber crew (as the family compact), then the days of the infamous Scroggs and Jeffreys are returned upon us! They were tools of a servile power, official fungi more numerous and pestilential than the quagmires and marshes that encircle Toronto!" No wonder there was a '"'come- back," "William Lie-on Mackenzie" was a comparatively gentle rejoinder. He was, according to his enemies, a reptile, a niel dog, a seditious little liar, a firebrand, a political mountebank, a squip scribbler who began to feel his importance among small people and, like the frog in the fable, to swell with pomp and vanity. Another Mackenzie reminder in Toronto still exists in the old Doel house, on the northwest corner of Adelaide and Bay streets, John Doel became associated with the leaders of "the party of reform." During the exciting days preceding the. ac- tual outbreak of the rebellion at the skirmish at Montgomery's farm, the house was a rendezvous for Mac- kenzie sy#ipathizers, while larger » gatherings were held in the adjoining brewery 'where the Canadian Alliance society was probably discussed if not formed, and other plans laid for the raising of an armed force, and where their leader no doubt frequently met with them, ¥ Yet another visible reminder of Mac kenzie is a pleasant one in his por- trait in the city hall, lL mayor of Toronto, in 1834; indeed, | as the first mayor ever elected in | | Upper Canada. Jt was during his | year of office that the "little mounte- | bank" proved to be a hero in person- | ally risking his life during a cholera plague; in fact, he was striken with the disease, but fought it success- fully. Among the Mackenzie relics in the John Ross Robertson collection in the Toronto public library are some of the military orders issued by Mac- kenzie and his rebel army, as well as the proclamation offering £1,000 for the capture. A curio in the Normal school museum is a cane apparently given to Mackenzie by some political enemies in a spirit of irony, the let- tering reading: "This vine was cut on Navy island, C.W., after the Lion | (Mackenzie) and his pirate followers fled to the boats on January 16th, 1838, finding the grape of Canada toa potent for their relish." (Signed) mp." More than one old Ontario farm house has legends of having given him sanctuary during his flight. A cave near Dundas is still pointed out as one of his hiding places, while, in the same town, the building which he once occupied--the Leslie house-- has survived the passing of the years, Queenston also holds a pathetic reminder of the turbulent Seot in the ruins of hig old printing office, in which the Colonial Advocate was first printed and which so 'exasper- ated Sir Peregrine Maitland gnd all the government rulers of , the day, and, generally, a glimpse of Navy island, in the upper Niagara, tolls its Story ofdthe short-lived provisional governmeNy there set up by Macken- zie, ere he finally escaped to.the Am- erican shore, . Lloyd. So, with all these terrible com- plications in the film world Marie Mos- quinl became a leading lady. She hasn't yet stated that she desires to Frederick Vroom have {Mayo's aunt, was one of the most {play Juliet or do tragedy, but seems |Hyde.," and "Away Goes Prudence." {He has just finished filming 'Three {Women YLT.oved Him," in which he {plays one of the most important parts lin the story. as the first! Office Phones 528, 1500 Donnelly Salvage and Wrecking Co., Limited | Ontario Kingston TUGS, LIGHTERS, DIVERS, STEAM PUMPS, ETC. Supplied on Shortest Notice *\ No. 2, 8.8. "EUGENE ZIMMERMAN," afloat and docked at Sault No. 1 8.8. "EUGENE ZIMMERMAN," sunk in the Soo River in > Ste. Marie, was salved by the Donnelly Salvage & Wrecking May, 1916, laden with a cargo of 9,000 tons of coal. Company, Kingston, Ont., on May 19th, 1016. A false bow 28 feet loyg by 25 feet high, was made in six days, 20 miles from the scene of the accident, floated down stream and a placed in ey i'n was so watertight that the ZIMMERMAN was pumped out by her ballast pumps. Connected With Wrecking and Salvage Work Since 1850 Without a Failure STR. "CORNWALL"--Powerful light draft steel steamer, outfitted with a 40-ton steel derrick, fitted with clam shell outfit; 3 12-inch rotary steam pumps and boilers; diving outfits: air compressors, lifting jacks, 11 inch wrecking hawsers; syphons, 2 68-inch, 1 4-inch, 12 ,-inch; steam connections and steel hose for steam pumps. . LIGHTER "HARRIET D." (850 tons capacity) --Fitted with McMyler clam shell outfit. Can deliver lighterage and discharse it out of every hatch. SCREW TUG "FRONTENAC"--Fitted with 100-ton pulling steam winch: 2 2-ton anchors and 2,500 ft. of inch steel cable; syphons, 1 6-inch, 1 4-inch; steam connections and steel hose for steam pumps. SCREW TUG "WILLIAM JOHNSTON"--Fitted with 4100-ton pulling steam winch; 2 2-ton anchors and 2,500 ft, of 1% -inch steel cable; sfphoné 4 i-inch, 1 2% -inch; steam connections and steel hose for steam pumps, in- cluding special coal pump in warehouse and hydraulic. THE DONNELLY SALVAGE & WRECKING COMPARY i: devoted exclusively to Salvage work. The above outfits are on board the wrecking sleamers at all times and are ready to go at a moment's notice {o any vessel re- quiring assistance, night or day. ; JOHN DONNELLY, 1% President and General Manager.