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' OPENS: N SOU!ETY i Burriscale the loveable, the si the rndlent star of numberless edy dramas.’ in “The Notorious 'Sands,” the Robertson-Cole Su- picture ‘which opens at the nd ‘theatre today, shows an en- new side of herself. iThe sl';oeri A ama—gives blguesol - hibit all of the in finished in- And Miss “The Notorious Mrs. Sands,” is-a hee and-subtle satire on present i conventionalities. The / atmosphere described in ‘the seript, tempted William Christy Cabanne, the director, ‘and Bugene Gaudio ' to use gome novel lighting effects. Each setting was treated in i an entirely different manner; 1o two [ were photographed alike, . and- one ‘scene which was photographed about four o’clock in the morning, just as ‘the moon was losing’ ite’ brilliancy and was changing intg: 2 mass of mllly, shadowy white. “MARY MOVES IN” IS LATEST CHRISTIE SPECIAL . Al E. Christie has completed the production of a third Christie Special comedy which ‘he has’ titled . “Mary Moves In.” which is included-in the program at the Grand tonight and . Wednesday. The picture features Fay Tincher, Eddie Barry and Patricia Palmer, making up a special. cast. George Pearce, . Al, Haynes, Edith Clark and Ward Caulfield ‘complete tk! list of players. ~ ONE GOV N AFTER AKOT]!EB, ¢ Life is just one beautiful gown afi- er another for dainty Bessie Barris- cale, Robertson- Cole star, in her lat- .est production, ‘‘The Notorlous Mrs. Sands;” a superior picture’ ‘which will «be seen at the Grand theatre tonight “.and Wednesday. As the notorious one Miss ‘Barriscale wears sixteén differ-’ ent costumes, and any number of lacy filmy negligee and evening wraps. “THE HONOR SYSTEM” COMING : ALL-STAR CAST “The Honor = System,” 'the film drama which Willidm Fox is to pro- duce at the Rex theatre today and Wednesday with an all star cast is described as a triumph in photopla\ production. When Mr: Fox set out to produce ' ““The Honor System,” which is melo- dram pure and simple, his object was not to attempt the ultimate of the cinema, but to give to the motion pic- ture public a great and most gripping human drama. The story is laid, in the mining town of Howling Dog, in :Arizona near the Mexican border. In taking these scenes. R. A. Walsh provided'a director-genius. He has pictured the ‘border foray in all jts thrilling fnter- est. The spe(:!atgr can ‘cee the hordes DHEAM OF AMPUTATED LIMBS Feelings of Thou Who Hlve Lost Arm or Leg Can Only Be 6url i by Time, Dr Edred M. Corner, the famous London surgéon, has been studying the dreams of persons who have: lgs arm ‘or leg by muputmlon. and he. re.d ports some interesting observations to “The Practitioner.” ‘It is well. known that after amputation the lost imb 13 still felt, at any rate for a time, and’ such’' sensations are called*‘phantomif + limbs.” 4 Dr. Corner says these are unusual . among thé young but frequent among the older, and they pass away with time, after eight moiiths or a year the patient being unconscious:of the lost limb ‘except when he fhinks About' it, A man who has lost'oné limb may dream that he has lost ‘both or that he has lost the wrong one, or that the one amputated is still there but seems awkward or hurts; the dreamer’ can- not bend the phantom leg or arm or finds it stiff and heavy. Badly fitting artificial llmbs aggra- vate the sensations, evidently by frrl- tating the severed nerves. Cdld, damp, changes of weathér and: ‘absenceé of occupation ‘for the mind increase the sensations. The nearer the trunk:the limb has been cut off the worse are the pains and the longér lhey are like 1y to continue, of', Villa swooping:down on Howling Dog, the hasty organization of ‘the terrified citizens fo: defense, the dar- ing ride of the hero for assistance, the wild dash of the U. S. Regulars to the rescue; and' the utter rout ot the bandits. The: all-star names of Gladys Brockwell, Mirfam Cooper, ‘Milton' Sills, George Wahh Charles Clary and others. s cast containg “the KEEP MAN GUESSING. SAYS OLD. “Old Mammy” is one of the q?l-lnt characters in *‘The Inferior. Sex,”’ & picture starring - ‘Mildred Harrled‘ Chaplin: and' releaséd by First Na. tional, which will be shown at t! Rex. theatre Thursday and Friday. " The old negress had been oft mar- WEAR BELLS' ON THEIR‘TOE'S'" Men of Dakar, Frlnch,w__n't‘Mrylel; Also cu'ry Surprising Assortment o! Other Trinkm ¢ — Men of, Dukar, the sent 14 i‘nneh | West African :administratio wear rings: on_their fingers on their: toes, ‘not to mention amulets, beads, coins'snd a surprising assort- ment. of trinkets, mostly _regarded. as charms. . The natives, however, are 1ot to-be regarded. a their ability to figh Of the West African tril i| bers are believed by some experts to bave been ‘at one’time masters of the Mediterranean. They. have" 3 been. conquered. and driven: ont ‘ot their ‘homesteads, . but: alwiys tain thelr racial identity, thefr physt: \love of freedom. The Berher ‘women havefought’ by ried and as she expressed it, “Four|*thefr husbands'’ sides, and thelr moral ob dem havnng promised to Iu'b nnd obey me.” As the cook in.the home. of thef wholesome adyice to -the wife, who spends all ‘her time trying to please an indifferent husband. “Keep '/ him ' guessin,’: ‘said Old Mammy. ‘“‘De onlest way to get along with men is to kéep ’em happy. An de ondliest way to make’em hap- py is to' make em unhappy. Keep 'em guessing “and ‘dey ~will be ‘unhappy and den dey’ll lub yo and be happy.’”’ ANIMALS AS ACTORS IN FEATURE PHOTOPLAY ““The; Courage of Marge O’Donne,” Vitagraph’s screen version of the pop- ular nevel by James Oliver Curwood, which will be shown atre, last 'times to live story of.love a: the frozen wllderq jof” the great Canadian Northwest. | Not the least of its exciting episodes, ‘aside from a great fight between two grizzly bears, are the 'scenes, whlch were, difficult tJ the Elko the- Bt, is a clean, adventure in young married couple, she gives some to obtain, where David Raine and| ' Marge O’'Donne, with the aid:of Tara, the trained bear, and Barrée, the wolf dog, fight their way out of the Nest, the stronghold of smugglers an men. The play opens.on a train stallod in the snow on an Arctic night and ends with a, night encampment and’ a strange meeting: far from civilization. Between the beginning-and the end are wonderful adventures and ex: il- ing incidents in'a land ‘where M ism and danger are a pnt of the dnlly routine; A FOOL AND HIS MONEY Lovers of good fiction who read and enjoyed George . Barr ‘McCutcheon’s novel” A ‘Fool and His Money’* ! mayil! view the screen version of this pleas- ing comedy-drama at the Elko theatre where i the picture, with . Eugene O’Brien, Selznick star, in“the leading role, will be. the festure attraction to- morrow and Thursday, . .: “The picture contains all the charm, wit and humor originally infused into the novel by the author and provides Mr.. O'Bri with a'role both new and plemif ) PqRPOSE IN SELF-TV‘ITUR ‘passion Dl : yufl! Lin, he Bagon, and’ ‘Randia mountains of northern co. A group of “people: s dlltrlét ‘have'for | ¢enturfes’ each Lenun season gone through a series. -inflicted bodily tortures, enduring agonies in the ef: that these Mlfldes will ab- solve them from past and‘future sins. The passiont play’is sald to be 80 sav- agely realistic that at times' perform.-.| ers have died’ as a result of injuries =gceived while: taklng part in ft. ¢ These people are known as Los/ Hernianin Penltentes, or ‘the' Penis tent brotherhood. The Penitentes Qu of ' Mexican origin, with* a.‘ marked' strain of Indian bldod. They are dense- 1y ignorant, not many. being: able to read Spanish; and only a very few are famillar with Englis! Hardly one in | ten has jever: Heen. & hundred ‘miles away from’ the isolated moungnin set- { tlements where' they m#ke their homes. | 'They. keep small. flocks of cattle ‘and sheep .and sometimes mine . for ‘gold, and: ‘silver. They‘llve in. 'mud ‘and crude stone houses; as did their ances- Sometimes an operation: ‘or massage g : will ‘cure a persistent case, but gener- lly it has to be left to time. ::':‘ Vlluable Shryb. One may look for an. increased: cul- .tivation of the so-called Guatemalan “Jjocote. maranon” (anacardium occl: dentale), which is quite commen In \that country. Tt has been found that incisions in-the trunk cause it to ex- ude.a resinous secretion that-dissolves like ‘gum- arabic, and; tl;at 8! useful, for pasting purposes. the binding- of books, it possesses, be- side its adhesive qualities; the ‘added . wvirtne 'of ' keeping 'away mom hfi- tise ‘of its acrid odor. Therd! is’aldo tained, from the same plant;"a’ caus- oil, which turns black when' it strikes the air. This has been found. reellent in the treatment of furniture. ‘he seeds of the fruit are toasted and ten, ‘as well ‘as used for various An 18 per cent extract of oil made, which is said by connois- to. merit. comparison with' the f sweet almgnds. - According: to | - e newspaper Excelstor of Guatemala cultivation of the shrub provides a ‘mcreasmg profitableness: It will aétdfi’l'i}"'cflt;gf ;y‘ofi: less to use the Real To- ‘bacco Chew. C Any man: who uses the RS Real Tobacco Chew. wlll tell you that: - ~The-full, flcfi taste lasts —and 2 smal chew gives more genuin R longer satisfaction. Put up in two ttyle: \ RIGHT CUT is a short-cut tohacco } W—B CUT is a long fine-cut tobacco 2| ‘about ' 40 mil iAmerican eaglé first flppenred as an ,Stntes,,ndopted June 20,/17823"its de= | ‘Stated to“hayg been' largely suggested) lty is of a high character.” In Dakar’ €ah also be seen the Serers, a’ triby of ‘natives that worship the snake and' belleve in the transmigrition of Souls. A" height ‘of “six feet’ and six' inches ig Dot uncommon among the men of the Serers. @ . Among' the ‘most intelligent of the mmves are ‘the Fulahs, - whose folk tales 'Dbetray. lofty ideals and; poetlg imaginary’ tliat is comparable with eule; Greek and Norge' lore. Their horsemnnshlp is famous,’ and their cavalry._is noted for daring and The intelligence of their men and the respect accorded them s attested by the proverb: “Let a fel slave enter a househald and she comes mistress.”. Gtatute That Will AppearAbsurd to .Moders Understanding.' more ‘convictions. But it s such - prosecutions have been for. here comes & report from & q-n dian court to the effect that a . woman over there has lately ‘been ‘sen- tenced to prison for “practicing Witch:' craft” for all the world like thE ae cusations that used to bé flled against “|'people in this country. The yoéung woman ' in thls ‘She 'sald a farmer’s. oats -had” ‘gtelent by a man.and & boy, that they: drove a bay, mare,.and edwgat- ward after the robbery, .would be foungat. | found her st rested ‘the - pi A wh t] farrier 5 &s @an‘!mxm ‘ggve: the ‘information)iwasiin Ho: po- | sition to know:the ifiictsi@he -relited except’ through eumMuning with *the’| spirits.” ‘people ‘Bégah' falkirig “about her being a witch) with' ap. anclent s Athe' girl prosecntelf q her pains in M mg ‘the officers Taw. * If it were ot all duly The * Ameti w}ufi&hended or -bal Geérman is known . as the eagle, - probably 1dentlcall; ‘with. the golden eagle of Europe. Our eémblem on the great, seul of the ,United sign 'was a’ shield on the breast of an American, bald eagle.. The ‘device. is, to John Adams when minister to Great: Britain by Sir John Prestwich, -Eng: Hsh ‘apriquary. The eagle was fi A used’ on:'United; Statés coins’ in ‘The ' Persians, = Eiruseans, Ror ! l‘re'nvh under, -Napoleon, - Austrinns, Russians and Prussians have all m nlan‘eagle is the single-headed hinck ‘with red claws. and tong own of Chal'~Tiagne over the lmllllllllllllllllllllllIll!llllllllllllilllllllllllll!lllllIlIlIIIIIII,II]IIIIllllll“llIIIII!III]IIIII||II|II[IIIII!IIIIIII!]IHIIIH fllllllllllllll_lllllllllll I hfe is too short and mankind ls too modernized: to ‘go_out in the woods and gather roots and herbs for the cure of the: nurltiplymg 1lls of the day, as the, did in ancient times. BECAUSE lT A would take you hours, or days, or perhaps weeks to. go to the woods and find what this drug store can sell you for a quarter or a half dolh You can get many remedies here.that you could never even find in' the woods, remedies that both eure and: PREVENT snckneu is THE NECESSITY of EVERY community . It is- easier to, KEEP WELL than it is to be cured after you get sick. ‘We sell simple "~ and mexpenswe preparahons that KEEP / CORNER DRUG STORE : lIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII!IIII|lllIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIlIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIllIIIlllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIfllIlllllllE. el LR o b Our ‘Greatést Program‘- mmniuunfimimmfinmmlilnimm|i|nimmflnmnmmlimm‘ by Schwelzer‘ Sextette, lty _-w1zards froxp 'AMERICA’S FORE. - MOST IMPERSONATOR" . John B. Ratto in one of 'those ' ‘evenings: you can’ never forget. Humor Pathos, TInspiration. MUSICAL PLAYETS Montague nght Opera k o.,amus1ca1‘tr1umph i "}WINSOME G!RLS The’ ‘Althea players, ; tette ‘of talented violin=" = ists.\ .Charm, - song, ar- - tlstry i .. CONCERT ARTISTS -Elsa Kressman trio. A feast for music lovers . PUBLIC. BDEFENDER ' OF PITTSBURG. . -+ Rollo MeBride: ~Know: “the ' Underworld. Gri pmg address." o THE GOVERNOR WHO - BROUGHT. PROFITEERS“ LOW , Ex-Gov.- E. W. Hoch of .. Kansas, in fiery address ‘on America’s problems. CA HILARIOUS SIDE- SPLITTING COMEDY . “The: Elixir of Youth.”’ Funnier than “It Pays to Advertise.” Crammed full of laughs. BOLSHEVISM—DO WE WANT IT? . 'If so, why? If not, Wf'ry not? Homer C. Bobhtt ~saw Red Russia first hand ' s —-—hear hxm. i JULY, 21st--25th & IIIIIllIIIIllIIIlllllllllllllllllllllllI|II|IIIIIlllllllllllllfllllI|IlIIIIIIIlllllIlllllllllllllliIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIl“-§ : - ..y: 3