f 0 \I (-H I I’KS OF TilK NIGHT*j Alyee Mills, winner of a recentiPittsburgli beauty contest, has made] ! her first, hid for a place in the sun- j lares of motion pictures in the loading feminine role of the new William Fox special attraction. Daughters of the j Night, which opens at the Fair the-j later today. The plot, which climaxes j in a cyclone of fire, is probably the .‘most stirring and throbbing tele- j phone tale ever told on the screen, i I And, judging from advance photo-! | graphs. Alyce Mills, as the dainty,heroic telephone girl who sticks to her post of duty when the exchange! building is burning up, not only fully * | deserved that Pittsburgh beauty prize, but has made equally good in j the movies, where she seems des-! lined to win many more first, prizes in the form of leading roles.This film is a melodrama of the j better kind. It will give you a bet-j iter understanding of the girl who;sits at the switchboard hrough the;j night, ready serve you at an instant’s j notice. IIf you like melodrama—and a good melodrama is good for all of us now and then -this picture should appeal to you. If is not the overdrawn sort, hut nevertheless, hasplenty of thrills. It will make yougrip the arms of your chair as youwatch it.* *