Moving Picture News (1911) . kee, Wis.—Phillippi & Eberhardy will erect a$7,500 moving picture theater on Hopkins street near 23d. Chicago, 111.—Felton & Soderman will erect a new $6,000theater at 4225 Elston avenue. Youngstown, Ohio.—Plans have been completed for theerection of a new theater on N. Walnut street. Cincinnati, Ohio.—Empire Theater, capital, $12,000. FrankWoodward, John E. Wright and Smith Hickenlooper. 38 THE MOVING PICTURE NEWS ECONOMICAL BROWN (SOLAX)In Which Miss Fanny Simpson and Mr. Lee Beggs HaveRoles to Which They Do Justice When the motion picture shall have become like
Moving Picture News (1911) . kee, Wis.—Phillippi & Eberhardy will erect a$7,500 moving picture theater on Hopkins street near 23d. Chicago, 111.—Felton & Soderman will erect a new $6,000theater at 4225 Elston avenue. Youngstown, Ohio.—Plans have been completed for theerection of a new theater on N. Walnut street. Cincinnati, Ohio.—Empire Theater, capital, $12,000. FrankWoodward, John E. Wright and Smith Hickenlooper. 38 THE MOVING PICTURE NEWS ECONOMICAL BROWN (SOLAX)In Which Miss Fanny Simpson and Mr. Lee Beggs HaveRoles to Which They Do Justice When the motion picture shall have become like the news-papers and the magazines, the mirror of our times, it willhave attained its highest educational merit. To reflect fromthe screen all the frailties of human nature, to show graph-ically the ambitions and the machinations of society, shouldbe the ambition of all good scenario writers and in such a way can the motion picture become a forcefor good. The trend to-day is in those In the Solax production of Economical , Brown is re-flected a peculiar characteristic often discernible in manyAmerican husbands. This characteristic is the one of ex-treme extravagance outside of the home and absolute parsi-mony on the inside. In other words, there are men whonever stint themselves when they are out with the jollybunch having a good time, but as soon as they cross thethreshold of their own homes they are seized suddenly with athe chief thoroughfares in bygone days to the dismay ofwild desire for economy. Usually the wife is the sufferer. Economical Brown is just such a man. Good cigars, taxi-cabs, high-class tailors and good wine are not too good forhim, but his wife, he insists, must economize. Brownswife is too clever for him, however; she soon shows him howtruly wrong are his principles of economy. In fact she hassuch convincing arguments for him that he finally loosens upand comes across with a three-flgure check. Miss Fanny Simpson, the clev
Size: 1285px × 1944px
Photo credit: © The Reading Room / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No
Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjectmotionpictures, booky