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H | } O A I A ALY ~TUESDAY EVE NING, SEPTEMBER 14,-1920 —— RESBYTERIAN LADIES WILL . nesday noon, or they may take the . | l? 3 HAVE mg?n AT FAIR articies 'out themselves entering them Anyone having.any article of can- in their own name and asking the ed fruit, vegetables, food or needle entry clerk to work that they wish to send to.the ~|county fair ‘and turn the premium over to the Presbyterian Ladies’ Aid; */may leave the articles with Mrs. J. F, Essler or Mrs. J. J. Conger, so that they may be taken out by Wed- xep‘e/ their exhibi- tjon in‘the Presbyberian ladies’ booth and rend the premium,'if\any, to the ladies’ aid. X it 1s hoped that the ladies will res-— pond.and help make the exhibit a suc- Ccess. ) B ] s that she becomes'an ohject of ridi- Fred Turner, who plays the title|cule and has to fight her way when D “King Vidor's -picturization |the hoys tease her. g e By her father's death' in an expe- REX TONIGHT Parker Butler’s novel, “The g:cflgil: l'Man" showing.at the Rex |dition to Afghanistan, she is left an tonight 'is o real life a veritable |orphan with a young.bachelor scien- recluse, living alone with only his pet tist as her guardian, but, although 5 =5y she loves him, her dowdy appearance gets his nerves on edge. It’s then : 'Eliza realizes the need of dressing in a_way to bring out her .charm, but her attempts to emulate the style of she canary.- ‘Mr. Turner played ‘the fath- ers of Mae Marsh, Bobby Harren and Blanche Sweet in “The Escape.” He also appeared in “Intolerance,” “The Hunchback”. with Lillian _Gish; and in strong characters with Mary Pick- * ford, Norma Talmadge, Be_orge Beban and Constance 'Palmgdge. * an.experienced actress whom takes as her model aye pathetic. But Eliza learns. The hoydenish girl finds her way thru love into the| .| secret ot how to attract men:” She is successful, so successful that she “THE TRUTH”. STARED!G' / MADGE KENNEDY IS - comes to be regarded as “dangerous.” | N Circumstances lead the girl into an “The Tr\fi?l%robabg'xi?lle)gg{xtgst audasious impersonation of a ‘‘vam- pire”—an impersonation In which play from the pen of America’s most Miss Dana is said to have startled _prelific dramatist, Clyde Fitch, has been produced by Goldwyn Pictures Corporation with the screen star Madge Kennedy. L. C. Windom di- arected the production of “The Trutl,” which is the program for Wednesday and Thursday at the Grand. ; His long experience in the state and as and ,thrilled her audiences. Here the play develops a situation of enthrall- ing interest and moves rapidly to un- expected denouement. S5 In the strong cast which supports Miss Dana in the picture, Milton Sills appears as Sandy Verrall, the young bachelor, and Edward Connelly as her eccentric father. Other - prominent director of screen comedies has made s ‘podsible an excellent plcture for Miss e Kennedy. . 4 i “The test of a great picture,” says Mr. Windom, “is whether or not it makes an audience. smile , thru its tears. Clyde Fitch wrote two quch scenes in ‘“The Truth’.and those who see Madge Kennedy in this picture pill pgy-a distinct tr_{ggu_te towher act-| ; . LAST TIME TONIGHT ; h\s% FAHtch's art. 3 wTh‘;ue ‘who have watched to gee if 5 o, anda Hawley would repeat hér re-|- § OUTDOOR ROLE : markable opening success- in *Miss FOR HARRY MOREY | Hobhg,” had their curiosity gratified OIn “The Gauntlet,” a Vitagraph]last night when her second Realart prodyction, starring Harry T. Morey, starring vehicle “Food for Scandal” . which will be shown at the Elko the-|opened at the Grand theatre. - atre tomorrow and Thursday, the ro-| This comedy is entirely different . bust star again plays a vigorous role from ‘‘Miss Hobbs,” but Miss Haw- 7 of the great outdoors. Mr. Morey in|ley’s versatlity is given full chance s his ten years of motion picture star- for expression. As Sylvia Figueroa, _%dom always has strivén to get a story | heiress of a’proud old California fam- ““that would permit him to portray ily, who later becomes ‘Maybelle Ijife in the open. > |Flgwers”—*Kissing- Girl” of the}. The result has bgen he has played “Vanities,” the star hits upon an en- . ‘the lumberjdck, the Kentucky moun- tirely new line of comedy than that i taineer, the rugged sea captain, the[produced in the story of the super-| tending the wedding of an Armenian | seems hard- luck, but this has hap- i ‘sleuth and other,men - who wore|faddish man-hater. And it need not{ ciny in Turkey recently were dis-| pened -to twor blue-eyed girls ‘who i rough clothing. But this does not|be said that this tale of Spanish- Ain- tressed at an embariassing pause In wished to become cinema “actresses, © mean that he is not equally at home|erica and the footlights gives excep- e 3 by the bride's| says a correspondent. They were; in business or evening clothes. He is|tional opportunities for the wearing the ceremony caused by the to1d th 11 never be “stars” on_ac ' equally at home in the drawing room |of beautiful clothes. weepiug uatil they loarned hint thia | C00 Hhes oo o, (D T ques. ° and the mountains and plains. -. Again Harrison Ford appears as| Was the proper procedure. ‘The ‘bride | count ‘o s .gm sh. A q-and ~“The Gauntlet” fs a story of the léading man, and repedts his great|and groom, immediately after passing | tloned a producer on the- matter, mountalhs in Tennessee. ' Mr. Morey |success in “Miss Hobbs.” As an im-| down the aisle of tall candlesticks, | he not only, confirmed, this, but toldM - _in the role of Roderick Beverley, finds | pecunious young lawyer who eats and | turned and faced the audience and’| me that people with brown eyes, or, e % himself involved in the feuds of the|sleeps in ffls own -oftice, he gets a| walted while' the bride engaged in.a'| better still, hazel with a tinge of *“mountaineers while_looking after his| multitude of.laughs. Other excel-|lachrymal exbibition. After the first | green, possessed the “soul” jn them yl . father's lumber interests. A tremen-|lent -players include Ethel Grey Ter-| tearful service, the couple left the | 50 necessary for film production. For ol .dous interest is created thru the|ry, Leslie Cuneo, Margaret:McWade, | poom an returned, clad ‘in biffiter | myselt, I should have thought it was machinations of a second business in-| Minnie Prevost, Juan de La Cruz and ts—the bride in.lavender satin | not so much soul as because blue in 3 terest which seeks to use thie heroine|Sidney Bracey. e garmenter- 1o Hhot h tends to come out white, as a pawn in'the game. ‘“Food for.Scandal,” will*be shown —for a gayer completion of the cere- %“‘: o‘gr agdn%fi"’to’ Know.—Ex ~"The whole action takes place amid | for the last time tonlght at the Grand mony. . " Fation : P i “ gcenes of sylvan wildness, the kind|theatre. A i . b i v 2 3 - fl='l||||||llllllll|||IIIII]IIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIlI|I|Illll|||||I|l|||||||||||||||||IIIIIlIlI[IIIIIIII|||I|_I|I|lIIIIIIIflIIIIIIHIIIIjIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII||III||IIIII]!HIIIIlllIIIIIlIIIIIII_Il||||||||||||E players are Helen Raymond, Mollie| . McConnell, Josephine Crowell, Mar- ian Skinner, John P. Moore and|, James Barrows. < = “FO0D FOR SCANDAL” ; We»lnyité: ¥You to Cal:l at Our Store I -During Fair Week ' - - e - £ \ . You will find everything in up-to- date millinery, moderately priced. ° - LaFantisee Milnery B [ £ R . Reproduced by -permission New York Tribune, Inc., Copyrighted 1920. Weepy Weddings. /% |V To have a profession closed to yc_;u Members of a Y. W. C.-A. staff, at- because you have blue eyes. certainly 209 Fourth Street of 'atmosphere that gives Harry T, —_— \ Morey full play for the robust phy-|LOVE mABm on . \ ; ’ = "TO-SEE INTO LIES sique that, has helped to make.him £ Love provides an instinctive co: 6o popular. T = ) 2 dence for a person who-is persecuted | = . 5 § | . 7 X g / s . g VIOLA Bélngx(gz,‘.sm NEW trom-all sides. The pgssession of love, = : - N - ’ 5 >, g & & according to Vitagraph's latest Earle [== a ’ . 4 ’c y i oy 2 ik ESMOND PICTURE | Willtams picture, enables one to see|= ; A . - ; Viola Dana has the most important | thru lies. The production -in' which E ¢ P - .0 : ; " ' drnma‘?; h;{r “?,"";fi ;a:eer in "Dan‘; this belief -is suggested, is ““When a i D g . . op = ) , . — ~ gerou To dgn.” which Is sunounced | Man Lores " wich wii 00 showses & © The foremost drugless method in the then it i§ equally true that they function . = theatre, for a run of two days, begin-| last times tonight. United States today is thatof Chiropractic. improperly. when the nerves supplying. = | . Mr. Williams plays the role of John Howard Bannister, son of a wealthy English lord. He suffers a reverse in his first love affair,’it later pursued by a society bud whom he doesn’t love, finally falls in love with a girl in the remote Far East. The societ; girl who segks his hand pursued him half around the world, and sets u an intrigue to break off his'affai % - ning Thursday next. The screen play is an adaptation by A. P. Younger - . of the famous Erglish drama, “Eliza e Comes to Stay.” which was produced in Lbndon with the author H. V. Es- mond and his wife, Eva Moore, in the leading roles, and which scored one . of the biggest successes of the modern e English stage. The role of Eliza taxes to the full Not.only are there'more Chiropractors in ~_ them are pinched.” In brief, the' carrying ‘business, but the largest non-medical insti- capacity of these nerves is destroyed if they tution in the world is a Chiropragtic school. are cut, while it is diminished if they are- There must be a reason for the strgng@h ; pinch'ed. ‘ ey shown by this system. That reason lies in_ y o ik S Viola Dana’s versatile powers as a|with the qther young woman. E t};e Simple’ 10%11.0%1 f}'-?d ré-aso:\na'blg exDéag' th Exa}nlna_-glonl dlSClO?leS t{le fact that - comedienne, pieturing the develop-| At this point the story reveals how ation -upon whie e seiernce is founded, ere.is oné “place, and only one, where ; . b / F : ndnd ? f : : L”xfé‘i ‘1:°§lrsaeu":a:? 5%{%33"&331 ;vn‘%g i’é’;?&"‘.fi?fiifl"fy“;‘f?:fif.?fl"vis"%fifm - and in the percentage of results obtained, - these nerve fibres can be pinched. ’ This is elor’, ous as his ward, — : . % s L. . . o e ovart het oW seddotive :lei.insg;;f:w:r;eg:ni;gr :fflmgtmhri = which far surpass those of any Otbe,r m the spine where they ']eaive the Splfial :&zl;:stthgx'l:cz,t I?ee:p;?dt’:geé‘::;n‘: = method. ok 3 cord an_d make their " exits through tiny 1zed society of the aristocracy. y , 0 R openings between the bony seg'ments.' If W e = iigihoton el There is a vital, God-given quality in one 'of these segments gets out of position, and processes of love makin. It Jeads every _person which makes him act, the size of the opening is decreased and / o an wnusual etimax. 1= Yyreathe, think and live, Itiscalled Innate - a5 a consequence the nerves are pinchd. also on the program in their “Vaca- (meaning inborn) Intelligence. It 1.3 an_ _ =it ’ tion Time.” 2, * : s 3 A 3 -~ % - - — —_— intangible something which .is carried to : b < x \ F 5 - PR 5 y " .. COMFORT.IN AIRRLANE CABIN all parts of the body through the nerve T St L e e 3 o . trunks and their branches. Asallthenerve o 1e 0 Tre o O other h (;(p't =Rng S it oy s Jraioesd| nems abi) fontentine: trunks have their origin in the brain, then * * &%, ©° © SO lf.’o t‘}*lr 3}2 s 1 ;ls one " e L oo it is the logical conclusion that the center pplying the stomach, we foom which this life is distributed must be _ have abnormal functions there. It makes the brain > g Eo dlffergnfie what organ is affected, it can ety = e traced back to the spine and there it It is & well known fact that if ‘all the , Will Bebfound thiae pne of te ectelmc nerves leading to the hand were cut, that (small bones) found in the spine is out of IO . by Passenger. “. . | to register continual’ happipess and = | contentment on the smallest’salary .of hand would be paralyzed, and try as hard - position. S as we might, we could not move it. This — — = = 3 —4 == —3 — —3 { IIIIIIIIIJI_IIIIIIIlIIIIIIIiIllIIIlIIIIlIVI‘I_III i .charm and how it makes her regarded as a dangerous woman. It ig said to \, . .. ’be Miss Dana’s favorite role. The question of women’s clothes is brought prominently into the story. Fliza, the daughter of an eccentric + . explorer, has been brought up by a spinster aunt, who insists that the girl dress to he ‘“safe” from men. Wiz- " nrecautions are so excusly ¥ Il i . Asking Too Much. The Difector—Rentémber each time you “appear, you must register happi- - ’, IIIIIIIIIIIll_IIlllIllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII!HIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIilIIIIIIIIlIIIiIIIlIIIIIIIiIIIlI ' [ il . making two airplane flights in the — eame day, the first in one of the com- : | pletely 1inclosed transport machines, the second In a fighting machine which was developed in Amnierica during-the ~ last few months of the war.and wm;n has nT.;peeg of about 185 miles an I ed by the : Afr against fly}W“ fate 18 —R+ about three times as great at’this 92 ®peed as it is at 80 miles an hour. & During the first of these two trips the only complaint that could have been raised sgainst.conditions in the Pllot’s compartment would have been that it was rather close and we P ——— i~ A Grand Special | In addition to “the reg- ular ‘feature picture pro- gram at-the Grand Tues- day evening, John M. Culver assisted by Sanford 1 recently had the opportunity of | 5,y jeadin’ lady on the lgr'en!\ f _is also true of the heart, which is supplied The Chiropractor is trained to locate the by nerves and which is dependent upon nerves which are at fault, to determine the- fhem far its proper function. Itisalsotrue Dplaces where they make their exit from the of the'stomach, of the kidneys, of the intes- ~~ spine, and to adjust the displaced verte- tines, and in fact of every organ in the brae back to their normal positions. As T T i _ finally had to open & window In th Dodge, George Graham A s . — side o the body to secure a ite ve- || g Gladys Mary Cool, in body. : . \§ 54 soon as this is accomplished the pressure : the cabim wys wearing a moft felt hat,|| Richard Harding -Davis’ i SRR X g on the nerves is rehe.ved and health is the end not the tlightest rustle of air dis- || dramatic gem, “The Littl- If it is true that an organ stops function- result, because the life current is allowed” * e T dlght, on the otmer || ©St Girl,” and a new dance ing when the nerves supplying it are cut, - to pass freely to the Qliseased organ.’ hana, 1t ly with af creation by Gl Ma: ¢ . : o Sl toh i . o 5 :’ogm 1:;:3 “s; ieaa m‘?::l& ,::: ey n by Gladys ry ' Coggultauon and Ex_amma!’l_gn Free N\ ‘Efl e gunner's cockpit to look over K : I the side at the ground. The, instant e X 2 5 = : - % B my head was faised above the top ‘Every oné is going. First National Bank Bldg. DR A D ANNEBERG LA = Mne of the airplane body, so that the Dont miss it. -~ . Phone 40 [P NG (e o d ; Be!md_}l an = wind R f ) " i one 401-W < g L4 . = Tiad got a shancoat i, my baie threst || A SPECIAL EVENT OF ; CHIROPRACTOR : B ward P. Warner in Yale Review. ‘ REAL MERIT - < ) s 5 = L - ghiribecstod YRe - Dally. Ploukr. s : fi“llllIIlII||||||ll|||||I|||llllI||||I|III|IIIIIIIIIllIIIIIlIIIIIIIII||||||||||H|IIII|l|’||||||||II|||||||Illllfll|||ll||||||||||||||||||||l|||||||||lmlfll||||||IIIIlllI]Illl[llllIIlIllllllllllllllllllllllfi —_ e i i < ]