SARAH BERNHARDT NEXT WEEK AS “QUEEN ELIZABETH”I '1 Manager Small of the Empire Exhibition Company is to regale Ms patrons the coming Week with one of the most •recent sensations of the moving picture world. He has engaged, and, as may well be supposed at something rather big in the way of cost, the reproduction of Sarah Bernhardt in her lost and most sumptuously produced play, “QueenElizabeth”Tile first Bernhardt mowing pictureswere of the famous actress as Camille. Not accustomed to the requirements and exactions of camera-acting, tlus s«rie3, while remarkable in a way, was not as effective, artistically or dramatically, as Queen Elizabeth.” This drama itself, especially the fourth act, created a furore in Faris almost within the twelvemonth, and in picture form is regarded as a marvel.The first exhibition, locally, will be given Monday afternoon, and if the success attained in other cities l? In any measure repeated, it will draw the greatest and best representative audiences seen in Music Hall since the Empire Company began its moving picture activities in the great Springer auditorium.