Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, January 30, 1922, Page 2

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E “THE $10 RAISE” LAST: TIME ‘TONIGHT AT GRAND Few producers of all-star pictures| has rarely” been J. L.|screen. have , been as fortunate as AT U T LU 'NEWS OF THE THEATRES T T admirable with exquisite photogra- phy and a perfection in the details of the art of handling of scenes that equalled on the As a drama it is skillfully Frothingham in his selection of the|handled and the interest is fully sus- remarkable cast for his init ciated Producers production, Dollar Raise,” now being ex- itial Asso-| tained. ] “The|that of a great special which should The class of the picture is be heavily advertised to_the local T h&tcd for 'the last time tonight at|public well in advance of its presen- the-Grand theatre. tations at the theatres. Realizing the importance of a good| We extend to Miss McAvoy, to Mr. cast, Frothingham able picture pla; d clding on the artists he desired to in- terpret Peter B. Kyne’s famous Sat- urday Evening Post story. William V. Mong, for years a star | the screen. of the legitimate stage, and later scenario writer, director and one of the best known character men of the screen, was finally decided upon to portray the role of Wilkins, about whom the story revolves. Helen Je- rome Eddy was chosen not only be- cause of her reputation as a leading woman but because of her wonder- ful ability and her type. Marguerite de LaMotte, who plays the romantic ingenue lead, has made sensational hits opposite Douglas Fairbanks in his recent screen produc- tion and is known as one of the lov- liest young women and best actress- s _among the younger artists. Pat 0O’Malley,. who plays the romantic role of Jimmy, has long been a fa- mous juvenile lead and is just the type a critic would pick for the role of Tod fellow and romantic lover. These are supported by Charles Hill Mailes, Lincoln Plumer and Hal- lum Cooley, three of the best known character actors filmdom affords. “IS LIFE WORTH LIVING” AT ELKO THEATRE TONIGHT In “Is Life Worth Living?” in which Eugene O’Brien, popular Selz- nick screen star, is scheduled to ap- pear at the Elko theatre tonight, a'so Tuesday matinee and evening, read- ers of the Saturday Evening Post will recognize a story which appear- ed in that widely circulated publica- tion not many months ago under the title of “The Open Door.” The story is from the pen of George Weston, whose contributions are to be found in the Post and other magazines with great regularity from time to time. In some respects “Is Life Worth Living” is quite a departure from the average of photoplay narratives. A whimsical blending of laughs and tears, it might be called a serio- comic screen production. Its serious thoughts have to do with the injus- tices which are sometimes visited up- on the innocent by laws which can acquit but cannot always vindicate. Its delicate -humor comes from the| Where/ inconse-| “but you, Mees, representation of the little, combed the avail-| Taylor, Mr. ( d + world before de-|art organization our cordial congrat- Carleton and the Real- ulations on this splendid picture. It will raise standards and is a definite contribution to the big fine things of ARTHUR JAMES, Editor, Motion Picture World. “JACKIE” AT REX THEATRE' TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY Shirley Mason, the dainty Fox star who enacts the title role in “Jackie,” a William Fox photoplay which will begin a run at the Rex theatre Tues- day, has been an accomplished danc- er since childhood. This fact stood her in good stead when she was called upon to play the part of the little Russian waif is the heroine of Coun- tess Barcynska’s romantic tale, Jackie, as a refugee from her troub- led native land, has spent some time in France and learned to perform folk dances of that country as well as those of Russia. She aspires to a ! dancing career in London. Jackie first appears in the picture in a street scene, as she joins a group gathered about a hand organ. She !is carrying packages for the woman who has been giving her food and shelter in the expectation of exploit- ing her as a dancer. The music of the hand organ has an irresistible appeal to her; she lays down the pack’nfies and swings into a pretty French folk dance. A moment later, she is performing the difficult Rus- siun dances. = A regular hand organ man was | engaged for this scene, and as there { was nothing for him to do but what he had done day by day for years, it | was not thought necessary to re-| | hearse him. Thousands of children {had danced about his machine, of | course. | organ grinder smiled, nodding ap- {proval of the dainty little actress- | dancer’s grace; but as the dancing | end entrancing evolutions, his mouth | sagged open and his eyes bulged. He forgot his grinding for a moment. ! and the scene had to be retaken. | “I have seen many with the tal- | ent, for it is among the people every- " he said to the little star; your dancing is quential, but nevertheless strikingly | wonderful, wonderful!” effective things which the laws of the universe bring forth to bolster up each failing spirit in order that the average of happiness and suaccess may be achieved. “ugene O'Brien, in the leading rolé of a typical young American of- fice employee, has a part so human| that its appeal is as wide as the scope of any community of theatre-| goers. Winifred Westover and Ar- thur Houseman appear in leading support of the star. “HUMORESQUE"” AT ELKO THEATRE WEDNESDAY ONLY/ A picture with a greater appeal than “Humoresque,” which appears in return showing at the Elko theatre next Wednesday, has never been made. It is a potpourri of all the sweetness and greatness of mother- love, blended with some of the hu- mors and some of the pathos of ev- ery-day life. The day you see it will be a red- letter day in your entertainment cal- endar. Adapted from the story of Fannie Hurst, it follows the writer’s original intention more closely than most filmed versions of published fiction. The depth of characterizations Miss Hurst created is realized as they step forward and are recognized as old friend:. The incidents she suggests follow closely upon each other, bind- ing together all the clements of a photopiay of astonishing interest. Yet not the events themselves are responsible for the greatness of “Hu- morésque.”” To the players the greatest credit is due. f nestness that will make motion p ture history, they go about their parts, and in their various ways tug at your heart. You will not forget them. The pictare is not overly sentimen- tal and supersweet, like many that! have preceded it. It is a keen and splendid offering and takes its place! among the best the screen has pro- vided. ' MOTION PICTURE CRITIC SAYS “MORALS” IS SUPERB OFFERING Into a season steps Realart with a production that for absolute charm, beauty and hu- man appeal is unsurpassed even by the greatest of the year. The pic- ture is.“Morals,” which is the pro- gram for Tuesday and Wednesday at the Grand theatre—and the star, and what a star she is!—is May Me- Avoy. The_spirit ‘of the brilliant author- ship of William J. Locke, who wrote “The Morals of Marcus,” is evident in the sereen version. There is per- fect taste and delicacy in the hand- ling of difficult situations which stu- céd direction would have bungled. illiam D. Taylor didn’t bungle, he triumphed. Miss McAvoy has in support that admirable actor, William P. Carle- ton, who, as Sir Marcus Ordeyne, is precisely in his part, and an excep- tional cast of players which includes Kathlyn Williams and Sidney Bra- cey. As Carlotta, Miss McAvoy sur- passes anything she has done for the scrcen. She is a naive as Locke could have wished, as graceful as thistle down and as lovely us a fresh tose. The whole atmosphere of the picture, both Turkish and English, is of good pictures i “SKY-HIGH” AT THE REX; LAST SHOWING TONIGHT ! “Sky-High,” the William Fox pie- | ture starring the ever-popular Tom | Mix, has so much to recommend it to the seeker after wholesome enter- tainment that a reviewer can men- i tion only the “sky-high spots.” This { picture opened at the Rex theatre last night and will continue until to- | night. It captured the audience st ! the very start. It is a genuine win- ner. Pirst in the order ‘of importance, | perhaps, are the scenes in which Mix, as an immigration officer, drive an | airplane through the Grand Canyon Lof Arizona. This is tremendously thrilling, and its equal for daring and I for beautiful photography has prob- ably never been seen in any other | picture. i Next come Mix's leap from the I’plane_into the Colorado river; his leap of 11 feet from one precipice to another where failure would have { meant death thousands of feet be- | low; his heart-stirring horse-back |riding up a steep canyon teail and around the edge of the canyon; and his slide of 125 feet down a sheer | ¢liff on a rope. ' The story concerns Mi squelch a gang which is Chinese through Arizona inte Cali- fornia from Mexico. To complicate | the plot, the young immigration offi- icer falls in love with the pretty | Eustern-bred ward of the Western | gang leader. Lynn F. i wrote the story and dirccted the pic- Eva Novak, petite and popu- lar, supports the star. Other mem- bers of the cast are of extraordinary fine calibre. KNEW WHEN THEY HAD BITE Traveler Tells of Rats Who Used Their Tails as Fishlines to Catch Crabs. Captain Moncton in his “Experi- cnces of a New Guinea Resident Mag- istrate,” relates, the following fnci- dent: “Having landed on an utterly | barren lsland formed of coral rock and destitute of all vegetation, hd found it to be the home of an enor mous number of rats. There was no trace of other animal life, and It was impossible to imagine how, except by coutinual preying upon one another, it was possible for these rats to subsist. “While seated at the water's edge, | turning over the problem in his mind, he noticed some of the rats going | down to the edge of the reef—lank, hungry-looking creatures they, were, with plok, naked tails. He stopped on the point of throwing lumps of coral at them, out of curiosity to sece what they meant to do. His curiosity picked a flattish place and, squatting on the edge, dangled Its tail in the water, “Presently one vat gave a violent leap of a yard, landing well clear of grabbed the crab and devoured it, and then returned to the stéme. Other rvats were scen repeating the perform- anca” The start went well, and the; continued, through more eclaborate| Reynolds | W CUMBER FAVORS BILL FOR SUCH"GOMPENSATION 1S ALMOST CERTAIN TO BE PASSED IN SPRING. CONGRESS CHANGES ITS MIND Where the lMoney for the Payments is to Come From No One Can Say Yet—Many Service Men Don't Ask it By EDWARD B. CLARK Washington. — Senator McCumber, the new chairman of the finance com- mittee of the senate, is sald to be in favor of a soldiers’ boous. A bonus almost unquestionably will be passed some time in the spring. Coungress it- self will be obliged by the very, cir- cumstances in the case to provide the means to pay the money. Prior to the time that the late Sen- ator Penrose had recovered sufficient- Iy from his earlier illness to attend the sessions of the sepate, Senator McCumber acted as chairman of the finance committee and it was he who presided in the committee reom at the time that hearings were leld on ad- Jjusted compensation for the veteraus of ihe great war. At that time the senzcor perhaps was.not particularly keen for the bonus and other senators were in a more advanced state of oppositjon. Congress, however, finally made up its mind that the cash bonus must be provided, but the President fnterposed a reluctant objection and Uncle Sam's cash register was not called upon to ring. Now things are different. There | was great activity on the part of the | former soldiers’ representatives here in | Washipgton. They proved, or main- | tained they proved, that the great majority of American cltizens were in favor of the bonus, and so bonus it is to be, although just where the money to make the payments is to come from not even Mr. Mellon can suggest. Congress must do -the suggesting and the providing, if it can provide. Where to Get the Money? | It hos been snid definitely that bonus payments cannot be made to depend upon the debt payments made by foreign nations, for nobody knows ! when these payments are to begin, or when they can begin. Some other | means must be tound. What are they | to be? ! Some way will be found out of it | of course, but whether it will be u satisfactory way or not from the view- point of the real financiers of the land, it is of course impossible to say. The fact stands that the bonus i bilt is to be pussed, and the former | soldlers will get their chec This | perhaps Is all-sufficient- unto the im- mediate occasion of desire for the money, but it is not sufficient unto the necessity of the creation of a fund from which the money may be drawn. Former service men are split in opinion on the wisdom, the justice aud the propriety of asking Uncle Sam to pay the bonus. Unquestion- ably the majority of the men who served think they ceserve the money oand in a v-ay unquestionably they do deserve it, but the fact remains that and cannot be made to think that any man should ask for a bonus in cash because he was willing to serve In the! time of his land's need. The argnment which has been ad- | vanced and which still is being ad- | vanced by the veterans who are pro- ponents of the bonus is one hard to meet. Everybody knows what it is and everybody admits that human na- ture seemingly justifies tiie former sol- diers in asking that something be {done to “even up things.” Hundreds | of thousands of Americans of fighting |age and of fighting physigue drew | big puy in civil life while their broth- ers were druwing little pay in the fighting life. Favored by Unpreparedness Men. There is one rather curious thing to be found in this whbole bonus business. Those members of congress who most strongly were oppesed to anything like preparedness for wur and who were Instrumental in preventing pre- paredness, are now in considerable , numbers to be found among the most ' earnest advocates of cash payments to the men who served. This is, so! to speak, curious because it secms toi prove in a way that these men aret beginning to feel that they were re- sponsible fn part for the ills whichi came to our soldier forces in the; camps in this country, and on the bat-’ tlefields of Europe. g | Unpreparedness cost the. lives ofi thousands upon thousands Of Ameri-r can soldiers, and of course multiplied’ the names on the lists of the wound-. ted. Military students and ‘even lay- men know today that if we had been: even partlally prepared for a war that it was known must come, the casualty, lists woull have been just about half! . the length to which they were drawn, out by unpreparedness. So in this it} may be is found one reason why some congressmen are anxious today to do; pe lally for the wounded ones. ! Official Receptions Resumed. \* President and Mrs. Barding Lave given their first official reception of 1022, an affair tendered to the mem-: the water, and with a crab, clinging to 3 =i ers of the foreizu embassies and pgther, ler heart is broken. its tafl. Turning around, the Tt jooqpong ecredited to Washington. over—" The New Year's day reception, which SOLOIERS BONUS | some men who fought do mnot think ' © with foreign affairs and the repre- was really the thst gevat affair, was an entirely public rece/ tlon. At the reception to, the foreign am- bassadors, ministefs, ind the members | of their staffs theme’ were present for the first time in fcRg: years represent- atives of Germany' and Austria. So far as outward apja:arances were con- cerned, there was o difference in the tone of welcome giNen to these gentle- men and their wivgs from that of the welcome given to ‘‘he representatives of nations with ‘whom the United States ‘wag associdted in the war to overcoie Germanyf and Austria. Peace 18 peace and dipfomacy. can give no recognition_ to pafit. differences when diplomacy iis repgesented at a sqcml affair. H The official recef tion to the ambassa- dors was the first one given in Wash- ington since 1014), for while the Wil- son administratiim :continued its offi- cial receptious to 'the members of con- gress, the judges'of the district and to the day that tita United States en- | tered into the war, i* had discontinued the ambassadorial! receptions because of thy fact that wisile France and Eng- Iand and Beigiuny and Italy were at war with Germdny and Austria, it would have been ‘an exceedingly diffi- cult thing to get ‘them together in th2 {Whl!e House patlors without causing constraint, coolngss and perhaps sowe- thing worse. 2 ! Refreshmerits Not Served. ! President aud Mrs. Harding went back to the Rootevelt days for cer- {tain arrangements' for the four great | winter receptions.; When Mr. Taft came into office bé wude changes in: the manner of hiding these affairs and when Mr. Wilson came in he made further chafiges. One of the changes which the Tuft administra- tion made, and wifich was adopted by ‘the Wilson administration, probably | was much to the Kking of the guests, {for Mr. and Mrs. Taft set forth a 'bountiful supply off refreshments for the guests, ! ‘This year there are uo refresh- ments and there is reason for the de- privation as there was in the Roose- velt day. President .and Mrs. Roose- velt did wot like to curtail in any way thelr invitation lists; and the result was that there were enormous crowds at each one of the flour great recep- tions, a fact which prevented the serving of refreshments because of the crowding of the guests every nook und corter of the big rooms. It was the custom' in the Roosevelt ; days to invite evershasly to each of the four receptiens...Mr. !and Mrs. Hard- ' (Mrs. Wm. S. Hart) - ing are bent on what.might be called ; an eniarged heart hospitality. They have adopted the Raosevelt plan and | seemingly everybody who was in- 'vited to the first reception is to Le invited to all of. the other receptions. | The President and Mrs, Harding have | made one change in the custom which prevailed in all the other administra- tions. Hereafter. the President and, his wife will:haye.in the receiving line with them ope representative of the cabinet, who will be accompanled, of course, by his wife. Cabinet Members in Recsiving Line. | In the old days the only man in the receiving line wag the President him- self. His wife had with her the wife of each member of the cabinet. At the reception to the foreign representa- tives the only persons in the receiv- ing line with the President and his wife were Secretary of State and Mrs. Hughes. The reason for selecting the secre- tary of state and his wife for this honor at this reception is apparent. The secretary of state’s oftice deals sentatives of foreign countries werce the guests on the occasion, When the reception to the members of the senate and the house of repre- sentatives is given, it is probable that Vice-Presigdent Coolidge and Mrs, Coolldge and Speaker Gillett and Mrs. Gillett will be present in the receiving line. Wuen the judiciary veception is ziven Attorney Geueral and Mrs. Daugherty, If she is then sufficiently recovered in health to attend, prob- !ably will have place in the live of re- ception with the President and Mre. Harding. Secretary of War Weeks and Mrs, Weeks and Secretary of the Navy Denby and Mrs. Denby will re- ceive with the President and his wife on the ocension of the army and navy reception. the officers of they army and navy up | into | MONDAY EVENING, JANUARY 30, 1922 PROPERLY RANKED AS HERO! Deserved Tribute to Collie Who Gave Master the “Last Full " ure of Devotion.” Clyde Scott, four years old, lies dying on his father’s farm near Beck- ley, W. Va. His pet collie is dead. A viclous sow, bearing the scars of bat-| tle to the finish, is so badly mangled | that she must be killed, too: It is one of those simple stories of | a dog to which all human sympathy responds, remarks the Baltimore Sun. : The boy, playing in the yard, was at-/ tacked by the sow, which had escaped: its pen. Hearing the child’s’ screams™! the collie ‘rushed ‘to the rescue and engaged the sow in fight. It needs no assurance of the; telegraphed item to fell him who knews his dog the details. t The child’s mother came into the' picture, bearing her torn baby to safe-| 15. But the dog remained. His was' a supreme duty, that knew no com- promise. The infuriated sow was a ' menace to those he loved. It was and into the job he put his concern. It was his concern only to remove the menace, and at any cost. His own life mattered not at all, and in the end he lost it, in as noble a strig- gle for what he believed to be right- eous.as any that ever brightened the [ annals of man or mnation. i We do not know the little collie's name. print it in honorable memory of his gallant conduct. and a gentleman; he was a devoted comrade and playmate; he was all that a dog is and that a man should | be. We hope he had a Christian bur-! ial, for he was a Christian, if to be Christian jmplies sacrifice of self and love for others. He was all of that and he was a hero—a hero on four ‘legs. In a Master Serio-Comic| Photoplay— ilons read the story in . Saturday Evening L O R T O Ty REX Tomorrow & Wed. A The Amphibious Bus. Residents of Marseilles were x|s»! tounded not long ago to see a queer | {looking opmibus with seven passen-; ! {gers and chauffeur luniber through | ithe heart of the city on eaterpillar:/ {wheels, amble down the beach and make cff across the surface of the | Roucas-Blanc basin of the barbor. It | {was the amphibious omnibus invented: by Teon Foenquinos, an engineer of | |ihe higher school of aeronautics in.| | Paris. 1t Mr. Foenquines will continue | {the work iuto the field of his special-: ty and add wings to the hull of the | tractor, what a gueer creature it wilt.! be! 5 ! s LA Ea . SHEC L TR [ Obliging Is Right. 1 Gentleman Mike—Pardon e, s but have you seen a policewan any | where around? Obliging Citizen—No, indeed. | Gentleman Mike—Then may I trouble I you to let me have your watch, vocket- | | was soon gratified. Rat after rat something for the service men, and ”':‘mwk and perhaps that rather uice Ihittle stickpin, too? — Too Much. wYes, 1 am suing him for breach of promise. My heart is broken. ::y y | { “Don't tell me his heart is affected.” 1 READ THE PIONEEK WANT m_{ SHIRLEY MASON JACKIE The romance of a waif® who rose to fame~ Storg by Countess Barcynska Disection by Jack Gord '—Thursday— William Fox presents WILLIAM RUSSELL “DESERT BLOSSOMS” e his business to remove that menace, | . ’ An Army Marches On Its 1# we did we should like to | He was a soldier | ‘man . being is regulated almost en- { mental labor. ailments find life a burden; they lenk PARROT MADE MUCH TROUBLE Meas- _|.Abilities of - Brooklyn Bird Entirely Unappreciated by the Women of the Neighborhood. For several weeks past young wom- en passing along Hanson place bave been much annoyed by loud whistling, i apparently coming from someone who | wished to attract their attention. The whistling has had a most peculiar ef- }'cct, depending on._the temperament of the women. Some Lave quickened their pace and tried to get away; oth- ers have turned and surveyed the man ivho happened to be bebind with- flushed faces and angry glances. or two have even complained to the police, while a few have lagged to find out what it was all about. Recently a highly indignant woman complained to a policeman. “That man behind me has been whistling to attract my attention for five minutes,” she said. “I'wish you waould stop it .. - - & § "- el o lier amazement the police- Oue | man ~ lnughed ' unrestrainedly. [le pointed with his haod to a window opposite. the . Hanson * Place Baptist ! church and there’sat the culprit, wink- | S'lug and whistling away. It wa ad | gray parrot with a long red tall. Ile | | had learned to whistle like a mischicv- ; ous country boy, but he reserved his : For tricks for the women: passing. | some time the flirtatious parrot iupset the equanimity of the entire neighborhood.—Brooklyn Eagle. Famous Greek Letter Societ The first Greek letter society Phi Beta Kappa, the letters s for a Greek motto which is tran: “philosephy, the guide of life” It ‘organjzed at William and Mary co | lege December 5, 1776, as a secret so- {cial club and literary society. It has become- an honorary - fraternity to {which men and women are elected on !a basis of scholarship. —_ Subacribe fur The Ually s nding (Y Ploneer. i Stomach, Said Napoleon The Great Corsican Kne\.v That Success in Life Depends Upon Your Strength, Energy and Endurance. G By Harrison Vaughn When Napoleon led his victorious armies through Europe, his worst enemies were not the nations defend- onslaught; but he was confronted by the graver question of how to pro- vide nourishing and strengthening food for his soldiers. The Great Corsican realized long over a century ago, as has every commanding general since, that men’s bodies must be perfectly nour- shed if they are to retain their nat- ural strength, energy and vigor; in fact, that the very health of the hu- irely by the stomach. Under-feed- ing, insufficient nourishment, means loss of flesh, anaemia, lack of red blood and subsequent weakness of the entire system. What such people need to enable ! nature to bring back their strength and vigor, restore their lost weight, and put them in fighting trim, with rich, red blood coursing through their veins is Tanlac, the powerful recon- tructive tonic and body builder. A man or woman suffering from sour stomach,. bad breath, biliou: indigestion or gas on stomach, s unfitted ~either for physical or Sufferers from thesc on the worid through blue glasses, hte joy and rewards of the vigorous, happy, normally healthy person is not thei Their troubles embitter, them against the world, destroy their ambitions and make their lives dull and unhappy. i How foolish to continue in this condition when on every hand thru- out the length and breadth of the ing themselves against his smashing| weak daily testifying to the remarkable ! powers of Tanlac in conquering re- constructive medicine builds up the and the despondent; gives them new hope and happiness and o new lease on life. Tanlac’s name has been praised by hundreds of thousands. Testimonials from every corner of the United States and Canada have shown con- clusively that even in cases where | patients had almost given up all hope . and where men and women had be- ieved themselves doomed to a life of misery and suffering, Tanlac has overcome their trouble and brought i back health, energy and happiness in- i to their lives. If you are not “fit as a fiddle” in | the morning and don’t feel better | than when you went to bed; if your breath is offensive and you have that bad taste in your mouth, your body is not being nourished properiy. What you need is Tanlac to restore you to normal so Nature can b back the flesh you've lost, put the | bloom of hea'th in your cheeks, the spring of energy in your step and i the sparkle of happiness and con- tentment ‘in your eye. | Note—Tanlac Vegetable Pills arc an essential and vitally important part of the Tanlac treatment. You cannot hope to get the most satis- factory results from Tanlac without first establishing a free and regu'ar movement of the bowels. ~ Tanlac Vegetable Pills are absolutely free from calomel and are sold on a posi- tive guarantee to give satisfaction. Tanlac is sold in Bemidji by the City Drug Store and leading drug- gists everywhere.—Advertisement. 'land, people by the thousands are | ‘MORALS’ From Wm. J. Locke’s novel “The Morals of Marcus.” AN EXCEPTIONAL MOVIE! The story of a girl reared in a Turkish harem, * then transplanted to British soil and baffled . by English con- ventions. TOMORROW - PETER B. KYNE Famous Author, Known Throughout the World for His Red- Bleoded Storice of Real Life, Wrote THE $10 Raise WHICH WAS PUBLISHED IN The Saturday And wheih, as an Associated in seven parts, Grand Mattinee 25¢ The Rebate Tickets Are Good Tonight. IT'S THE TRUEST-TO-LIFE TALE EVER OFFERED WITH AN ALL-STAR CAST, INCLUDING Pat O’Malley, Marguerite De LaMotte Helen Jerome Ed TINES Evenir.g Post Producers Soccial Production showing at the s TONIGHT Night 10¢-30¢ dy, Wm. L. Mong “THE CRATER OF MT. KATMAI” A Volcano in Eruption—and “Take Your Time”—a comedy

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