The Village Movie Published Weekly by the VILLAGE THEATRE Co., Wilmette, III. M. L. SPARE, Editor Wilmette, Illinois, September 5, 1914: Volume 1, Number 6 The Wilmette Theatre Beginning Monday, September 7th, this Theatre will show attractions of high standard under the management of the Village Theatre Company. The class and character of photo-plays will be of a type to warrant the patronage of a discriminating public. A further announcement will be made later. How Do You Do! I have called upon you five times —or rather, this is my sixth visit. We are no longer strangers—we are acquaintances; we hope to be better friends, aud later to become intimate companions. I am trying, not only to interest you, but to be of some real service to you. Each week I bring you the entire week's program at the Village Theatre. Do you put me away every time I arrive so that you will know just where to find me when you want to know what the "movie bLI for tonight is?" How annoying it is to arrive at the picture show and find you have already seen part of the reels, if not all? And worse still, how provoking to find that you have missed one of your favorites- or some particularly fine Mil because you got the dates mixed, or really did not know that such was to be shown? And that too, on a night when you had practically wasted the entire evening lounging around home doing nothing? Yes that little drawer on the right hand side would be a splendid place to keep me, and the minute I arrive I can go there. The whole family will know where to find me, or it you don't trust them to preserve me, turn that little key and keep the secret all your own. But what'lhappentoyouifyoudon'twatchout? Watch for the Wilmette Announcements—it brings me to your door every week. One of Mary Picktord's admirers recently wrote: "To me Mary Pickford is not a Motion Picture actress, but the Motion Picture actress. She is so exquisitely natural in all her motions, and does not in the least bit seem conscious of her adorably girlish features. Other actresses seen on the screen so often betray the fact that they know themselves to be pretty, but such is not the case with 'Little Mary.' " We believe this is quite true of "Little Mary," and after you have seen her in the "Eagle's Mate" next Tuesday, September 8th, you will, of course, say the same thing. We promised not to show foreign war pictures—but a few slip in with the Hearst-Selig News Pictorial. They all come on one reel and to eliminate the war stuff means to eliminate the rest of the news pictures. What shall we do?