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Adventurer About To Be Deported!
Gained Money and Jewels
by Trickery.
By SELFRIDGE HENNEGAN.
(Copyright, 1919, by the International
News Bureau, Inc.)
LONDON (by mail).—The British
authorities are to be congrateulated |
on the rapidity with which they are
ciearing out the scum of the German
and other nations who found refuge
in Great Britain in pre-war days. No
city in the world has ever had to !ul-I
erate what London submitted to be
fore 1914 and the passing of the
aliens bill will make it impossible for
expelled foreigners ever to set foot
on English soil again.
Among the latest of the deportees Is
a German waiter who played many
parts in his time, his most successful
rolé being that of “Baron von Hrm‘k.(
er,” a cousin of the ex-Kalser. His
real name was Strett, and into hml
three-and-forty years crowded more
adventure and episode than many
men do in a whole lifetime,
Well spoker, with nice manners and
rather handsome features, he had a
passion for women, and in the space
of a few years he claimed no fewer
than 100 wives and sweethearts all
over the country. Whether he ever
went through the actual form of mar
riage with half this number of his
vietims lawfully, 1 can not say, but it
is pretty certain that many of his vie
tims lived with him at some time or
cther. He spent money to make
mioney, for robbery was the real mo
tive which imspired his amorous en
terprises,
In the West Fnd he held jobs at
several restaurants, and -n this way
he became acquainted with those on
whom he had designs. Unsuspecting
visitors to London fell into his hands
and he had no difficulty in establish
ing friendship.
POURED LOVE IN VICTIMS” EARS.
Like Landru, the French Blue
beard, he spoke loftily of his family's
wealth, and of estates to which he
was heir in California and other dis
tant lands. If asked why it was that
he followed the menial occupation, he
replied that this was the easiest way
of acquiring the language of any
country,
His methods of fleecing the wnpre
pared of their savings and valuables
was not original. He simply poured
Jove into their ears and captured the
hearts of his victims. Then he pitched
the usual tale of the family cheque
which never arrived, and by a variety
of plausible excuses and apologies so
ycited aid from his girl friends.
Domestic servants fell an easy prey
to *his stories and fictions, and from
time to time he amassed considerable
sums, which he took care to bank.
Jowelry, too, found its way into his
safe, and he had a tidy bit put away
when he was thrown into prison
Like all adventurers, gtnn be
lieved in fashionable dress, and thore
who met him outside his working
hours could never belleve that he was
one and the same Individual. He
usually wore a morning coat, silk hat,
patent boots and spats, while a daz
zling imitation pearl pin was con
spicuously displayed on his tie.
How he managed to masquerade as
a modest German waiter one week
and the next as Baron Brocker, a
cousin of the ex-Kaiser, is his own
secret, for through all his escapades
;u managed to stear clear of the po
ice,
It was in his own eountry that he
first started on his career of decep
tion, and after putting paid to the ac
counts of numerous women in Berlin,
Frankfort and other German towns
he tried his luck in Paris. Strett was
a great traveler and a cautious one,
at that,
His courtships were Invariably con.
ducted on fairly legitimate lines. His
promises, however, were always oral,
unlike the majority of suitors, he
never wrote a letter, Thus he de
r‘lvod his dupes of an important clew
or identification purposes, and when
he disappeared nobody had the slight
est idea as to his whereabouts,
‘When he came to London he worked
first of all in Solo and afterward In
the Stiand. A striking feature of hw
methods was that he never had any
use for women without money, no
matter how prepossessing their ap
pearance. To gain confidence he fre
quently entrusted his victims with
sums of money which he asked them
to mind for him till he wanted it
Then when the moment came to carry
out hig plans he would borrow a hun
dred or two and In this way regain
2 own cash with substantial inter-
A VICTIM'S EXPERIENCE.
After llving some time in London,
he appears to have made his way to
Lancashire and then Scotland, not in
the guise of a German aristocrat, but
as a Swiss waiter. Everybody who
met him was impressed {:y his genial
disposition, behind which he cloaked
his native caprice and cunrfing. No
body ever doubted his sincerity, and
his unml:n wis so cleverly engi
neered that when he vanished after
his usual custom, having enriched his
g:&otl. it was generally thought that
bad gone on some business en
gagement abroad and would turn up
again In due course, - k
One of his London vk-!s:n) to whom
he was engaged for several months
and who found ‘herself \'flx much
poorer for the attachment, gaVve me a
pilcture of Strett and his tactics,
“He seemed,” she said, “to be a
w? decent fellow, good looking and
jolly, and the sort of man you could
trust, lx-! met him in Shaftesbury
avenue, ere he was employed as &
hoad waiter in a restaurant. He asked
me to see him again, and 1 agreed to‘
do so. After a grhile we became close
friends and ap‘-rod to spend a fair
amount of money.
“When we had known each other
about « anth he asked me to murry‘
nim, but thought it was a rather
rash suggestion and I told him it
would be better to wait for a little
longer, in case he changed his mind.
“Shortly afterward he told me he
had had some bad luck, as he had
}mt his -o::: into worthless -huu.‘
sympathi with him, whereupoy
he uppealed to e to try to help him,
1 guve him all 1 had, buo pounds, ana
& Week later when i went to call on
mlu. i found he had left his employ
m‘%é:d gone to another part of
fle | was making inquiries !
*t three other wonen v’ho W alro
"‘a’!w Mr, Strett, .rud 1
hed for the first'tine thai he was
' whallr and had been robhing
What would you do with motion pictures
if you were master of the ||lworld ! o
F all the millions or tne woria s wea.tn were stored
in the next room; if all the nawral scenery of five
continents were within your reach——and the seven seas
and all the ships that plough their waves?
You could then make motion pictures exactly as a super
man would make them, difficulties vanishing at your
tosch, romance taking shape at your merest beckon.
Dramatists, directors, stars, technicians, .scenery, oceans,
foresws, mountains, each fulfilling perfectly a tunction
in gour plan, would contribute to a phetoplay that
would be a masterpiec
It you wanted an active volcano in your picture you would ask
your geographers and geologists whick was the most
suitable one on the crust of the planet, and you would
despatch an expedition across continents to “shoot’ it.
If you wanted to show in one picture for a few moments
an actual scéne on the banks of the great, grey Ganges,
you would cable your European representatives to
journey to India and do the job.
The leasing of a tropic island, the renting of a railroad, the
transplanting of ten thousand palm trees, would be
trifles in your eyes. Always you would be offered the
cream of the dramatic genius of the world first. That
would be a foregone conclusion!
This is the sort of thing you mught do 1t you were master
of the world
What will you say when we tell you that now—
after seven vears—
Paramount- A rtcraft has mobilized all the great geniuses
of production; dramatists, directors, artists, technicians;
and is equipped with world-wide facilities and
unlimited resources to make for you, to be shown in
your theatre, exactly the kind of motion pictures you
would make if you were master of the world
Great power carries with it great responsibility. We owe
it to you and to all humanity to make this great in
fluence contribute solely to the good and the harmony
and the entertainment of the world.
Wholesome American families and their neighbors on*all
Continents may place implicit trust in the character of
any picture marked Paramount-Artcraft.
Tremendous Changes are Impending
in the Art of the Screen
8o far you have noted in all the better theatres that Para
mount-Artcraft has produced the best pictures of all
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kinds. You have noted in the great national magazines
and newspapers, that Paramount-Artcraft has focussed
the attention of people everywhere upon those better
pictures.
These two facts have created a world-appreciation of the
sheer tmportance of motion pictures in enriching the
life of the community
The broadening of this appreciation of motion pictures,
with the natural result of finer theatres more comfort
able seating, better music and better presentation gen
erally—not alone in fifty cities but in more than five «
thousand centres—is the direct result of Paramount-
Artcraft policy
All this Makes Possible the Next Great
Step in the Industry
You are about to become the deciding factor in the success
of a new and audacious producing and distributing
policy
Yon are to decide by your presence at the showing of every
one of these new Paramount-Artcraft Pictures that you
want a big picture not just three or four times a year,
but a big picrure twice or three times a week |
| . .
Every Paramount-Artcraft Picture will be a big picture
and each one will prosper on its own merit, quite
apart from what is called program or series booking.
You may not understand fully the nature of this develop
ment by the written explanation. You surely will
WHEN YOU SEE IT ON THE SCREEN.
The progress of the motion picture industry is measured by the
progress of FAMOUS PLAYERS-LASKY CORPORATION,
Its resources are unlimited.
Its relationships, like the screen itself, are international.
There is not a single difficulty in the making of any kind
of motion picture that Famous Players-Lasky Cor
poration has not the mental resource and material
resources to overcome, .
But all this concentration of dramatic skill: directing talent,
star-genius, costly equipment and producing andacity
would avail nothing without the immense administra
tive and distributing organization behind it, built up
by years of earnest and tenacious effort.
You—if you only knew it—ARE master of the motion
picture world.
And being master, enjoy the fruits of mastery, as visible in
every one of the coming season’s Paramount-Artcraft
Pictures.
A few of the Paramount-Artcraft Pictures that are
being produced for release under this new plan
A Girl Named Mary
tApril Folly
Capt. Dieppe
Eliza Comes to Stay
Everywoman
Hawthorneofthe U.S. A,
His Official Fiancee
Huckleberry Finn
In Mizzoura
It Pays to Advertise
Luck in Pawn
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*Mary's Ankle
Miss Hobbs
Mother
Peg O' My Heart
Sadie Love
Sick-A-Bed
Speed Carr
*Stepping Out
The Black Bag
+The Cinema Murder
The Fear Market
The Female ot the Species
The Lottery Man
The Market of Souls
9The Miracle Man
The Misleading Widow
*The Other Woman
1 The Restless Sex ,
The Sea Wolf
The Teeth of the Tiger
The Third Kiss
TheThirteenth Commandment
The Valley of the Giants
The Witness for the Defense
The Young Mrs. Winthrop
Told in the Hills
Too Much Johnson \
® What's Your Husband Doihg
* Whistling Jim
Why Smith Left Home
Widow by Proxy
L
. &mr Production