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AT AUDITORIUN FOR COWL PLAY Star in “Smilin? Through” Is Given Enthusiastic Welcome in Martin Fantasy GRATIFIED One usually associates Jane Cowl with ¢ through it. She can’t quite get away from it, but she can, and did, demon- strate to an audience which fill virtually every seat in the Auditorium last night that her art does not lic alone in the emotion which won her fame. The fantasy, “Smilin’ Through,” has been received with acclaim over th entire country. Quite similar to Bar- rie's delightful play. Allen Langdon Martin supplied the star with a charm- ing play. An unappreciative person may have found it very dull; but the audience last evening seemed quite captivated through this most unusual play, one of the last of the after- the wi as. Jane Cowl's smile and her laugh is quite as fascinating as her artistry in other lines, As an: Irish lass she appeared well adapted to the role with a bit of ‘temperament and » steadfast faith. Ethelbert D. Hales in the difficult role of John. Carteret Hales, enacted the characteristi¢s of a stern, un- bending » Englishman with unusua! faithfulness to -his role. David Tor- rence as Dr. Owen Harding. was hard- ly less faithful in depicting sympath- etic friendship. A bit of spiritland is introduced in the prologue which preceded the three-act-play. In the Carteret gar- den, England is; John Carteret, nurs: ing a lasting, hate tor a man whe shot his. sweetheart on the eve of their wedding, worshipping the mim- ature likeness of her, who comes back to him in the moonlight, and allowing the hatred to be visited up- on the murderer's son, with whom the niece of his sweetheart, taken by him to rear, is in love. The tragic scene on the eve of the wedding fifty years before is enacted in the second act, with Jane Cow as Moonyeen Clare, the sweetheart who was shot by the rejected suitor. and who comes back from spiritland to the old man in the moonlight. His lifelong friendship with his friend Dr Torrence broken over the hatred visit- ed on.the son and suitor of his niece is broken in the end, when Jane Cowl. the niece, and Kenneth Wayne, back from four years of war with shell- shock and a wounded limb, are re- united. ® & Manager Vesperman is quite pleased with the reception given Miss Gowl It was not without difficulty that the management of the star permitted the stop to be made at Bismarck, and the packed house and appreciative audience made good Manager Vesper- man’s prediction that Bismarck would welcome such a high class attraction NEW LABOR-SAVING DEVICES FOR FARMS Oklahoma City, Okla., Sept. .14.— Use of combined headers and thresh- ers in the grain fields of Oklahoma this year will cut down the amount of time expended in the harvest as well as. the labor. cost, according to H. H. Shutz, federal statistician here Mr. Shutz stated, however, that -he had no figures to show whether the average harvest cost over the state had been reduced in comparison with thes of last vear. The average wage paid harves’ hanus this year was $5.50 a day, com- pared with $4.50 a day last year, ac- cording to figures compiled by Claude E. Connelly, state labor commission- Prevent Falling Hair With Cuticura Shampoos The first thing to do in restoring dry, thin and falling hair is\to get rid_of| |Candruff, itching and irritation of the! scalp. Rub Cuticura Ointment into {the scalp, especially spots of dandruff| jand itching. Next morning shampoo with Cuticura Soap and hot water. Rinse with tepid water. ( Het in maintaining skin purity and skin health. By bringing these delicately medi- cated | groollients in (frewieat cet with your skin as in-use for all toilet. pu: 3, you keep the skin, scalp, hair and hands ‘clear, sweet and healthy. The Soap, Oint- nt’ and Falcum 25c. each everywhere. . ‘Soap shaves without mug. For INDIGESTION Ip new granular form, dry on tongue, or with vichy or water, hot or cold, preferably hot. QUICK RELIEF! Price, 25-50-75¢ a ALSO IN TABLET FORM MADE BY SCOTT & BOWNE MAKERS OF SCOTT'S EMULSION 1; PACKED HOUSE | ying. She won stage renown! o NEW YORK—Few ‘movies in whick he three Pickfords .haye appeared , ‘ave contained half the sorrow anti roublé found in the lives of Mary; (right), her sister, Lottie (left), andj ier brother Jack (center). { Mary found love's first lream a ghastly nightmare, so she} said, and she divorced Owen Moore’ ind married Douglas Fairbanks. This ; young | ing out ‘of the short time she liver ; granted. A c i Hardly had this trouble died dow! when Lottie began suit in Los An- geles, asking divorce from A. G. Rupp, ; New York stockbroker. | And now comes news of the death of Olive Thomas, Jaék’s wife, under, HOW CITIES OF NA UNDER THE. 1920 TION RANK ay FEDERAL CENSUS | Washington, Sept. 14—About one- tenth of the people of the United States live in the cities of New York, Yhicago and Philadelphia, —_ while , nore than one-quarter live in 67) ities having a population of 100,000 or more, final statistics of the Four: | eenth Census are expected to show. The three cities with populations o£ 1,000,000 or more—New York, Chi-} ‘ago and Philadelphia—have a com-j }ined population of 10,345,521, show- “ng an increase of 1,644,347 or about 10.5 per cent;, in the ten years since 1910. s Cities having 500,000 to 1,000,000) i have increased from.5 in 1910. to ) this year, Detroit, Los Angeles, San *rancisco. and Buffalo having \ad- vanced into this clas: There was a net increase. of 2 in| the cities of the 250,000 to 500,009} class with a total of 13 although 6 cities advanced into this classifica-| tion. They are Kanaas "City, Mis-| souri, Seattle, Indianapolis, Roches-; ter, Portland, Ore., and Denver. There are 42 s of from 100,009 to 290,000 this year, a net increase of C7EMA back without question (HUNT'S Salve fails In the treatment of] TCH, ECZEMA, RINGWORM, TETTER oF| Other itching skin diseases Try © 95 cont bos ot our JOSEPH BRESLOW. Druagalst Out the windoaw When the TWINS In their Lackawa: Underwear. No shivers lirnb and- muscle. evidenced by the trim, makes Lackawanna safe Scared and:startlad to.the core, SHWERS shoots ITNESS the matchless warmth of the woolly ! fabric that goes into Lackawanna {Twins body that snuggles into this innerwear so smooth to the skin, so snug, yet yielding to the play of The workmanship is worthy of the fabric,*as buttons, buttonholes and seams. Pre-shrinking avoids tub-shrinking; sterilization in live steam TRADE MARK REG.US. BAT.OFF” Underwear for Boys and Girls from BIRTH TO SIXTEEN Most shops carry Lackawanna Twins Underwear in various styles and in qualities to suit every requirement of service and price. | i, although 17 have shown increases bringing them into this class. The list of cities having a popula- —_—_—_—_—_—_———————————— ————————— “DANDERINE” Stops Hair Coming Out; + Doubles Its Beauty. A few cents buys “Danderine.” After an application of “Dande ” you not find a\fallen hair or any dandru besides every h shows new life, vigor, brightness, more color and thick: come in the door cana Suits, and chills in the little enduring character of for the wearer. d » was followed by threats of action tragic circumstances, in, Paris. against her by Nevada officials, grow- ; died from mercurial poison taken, it h French police in the state before the divorce was | began an investigation which includ-; is stated, by mistake. ; ed several resorts in the Montmartre | nj district, said to have been visited 'by Miss Thomas shortly! before she {took the poison. The Paris police soon decided that the poison was taken by mistake and | Salt Lake City, Utah dropped the probe. Ree v ° |, tion of 100,000 or more, some of} j which’ have been revised since first; Lowell, Mass. . tion: 1910 City— * Rank iNew York » Ast Chicago .. . 2nd Philadelphia . 3rd Detroit... vee Oth Cleveland . 6th St. Louis 4th Boston 5th 7th Sth Baltimore Pittsburgh Los Angeles ATL San Francisco llth Bulfalo 10th Milwaukee 12th Washington 16th Newark 14th Cincinnati 13th New Orlear 15th Minneapo! 18th Kansas C Mo., ...:20th Seattle (ndianapolis Jersey City Rochester: Portland, Denver Toledo Providence Columbus Louisville St. Paul . Oakland, Cal. Akron, 0. Atlanta Omaha Worcester, Mass. .....39 Birmingham, Ala. ... Syracuse, N. Y.. ‘New Haven,» Conn. Memphis, Tenn. .. San Antonio, Tex.. Dallas, Tex. Dayton, 0. . Bridgeport, Conn. Houston, ‘lex. .. Hartford, Conn. Scranton, Pa. .. Grand Rapids, M Paterson, N. J. Youngstown, O. Springfield, Mass. .. Des Moines, Ia. . New Bedford, Mass. Fall River, Mass. Trenton, N. J Nashville, Tenn. .... Ore. she. ich. Camden, N. J Norfolk, Vi Albany, N. Y. 82nd 50th 46th announced, is given below in their order of rank with the designation of the 1910 rank and their 1920 popula- 1920 Popu- lation 5,621,151 2,701,212 158 588,195 57,480 508,419 505,875, 457,147 437,571 414,216 401,247 387,219 380,584 297,861 295,850 258,283 256,369 243,109 237,595 237,031 23,896. 234,595 216,361 208,438 200,615 191,601 179,741 178,270 171,647 162,399 162,351 161,308 158,976 152,559 143,152 138,075 138,036 137,783 120,485 119,289 118,342 118,110 116,309 115,777 112,759 T is characteristic of folks after they pass the allotted “three score years and ten,” to look back over tho days that are’ gone and thoughtfully live them. over. I find myself, at seventy-one, frequent}: rifting back ‘a quarter of a centu: a when I see myself in the litile drug store t owned at Bolivar, Mo. making and gelling a vegetable compound to my friends and customers—what was then known only cs Dr, Lewis’ Medicine for Stomach, Liver and Bowel Complaints. For many years while Iwas perfecting ™ formula I studied and investigated” (ie laxatives and cathartics on the market and became convinced that their main fault was not that they did not act on the bowels, but that their action was too violent and drastic, and upset the aystem of the user; which was due to the fact that they wero not thorough enough in their action, some fimply acting on the upper or small: intes- tines, While others would act only on’ the lower or largo intestines, and that thoy almost invariably produced habit re- quiring augmented doses, I believed ‘that @ preparation to produce the best effect must Lrt tone the liver, then act on the stomach andcatire alimen= tary system, If this was accomplished, the medicine would, produce @ mild, ’but thorough eljmination of the waste without the usual sickening sensations, and make the user feel better at once, After experimenting with hundreds of ditfcrent compounds, T at last perfected the formula that is now known. as Matare's Remedy, which I truly believe goes farther TO-NIGHT- and does’ more than any lazative on the market today. The thousands of letters from users have convinced me I was right, and that the user of s asa family medicine, oven though he may have used it for twenty-five years, mevér has to increase the dose, | My. knowledge of medicine and the re- sults of its use in my own family and ariong my friends, before I ever offered it for ecie, caused me to have great faith in Nature’s Remedy from the very first. And nowas I find myself nearing the age when Lraust bow to the inevitable and go to another life, my greatest pleasure is to sit each day and road the letters that each mail brings fzom people as old or older than I, who tell of having used Matere’s Re for ten, fifteen and twenty years, and how they and their children and grandchildren have been benefitted by it. It is @ consoling thought, my friends, for a man at my age to feel that aside from is own success, one has done something for his fellow man. My greatest satisfac- tion, my greatest happiness today, is the multgn feoplo will take: a Retrv’s Rewrety million le wed ‘abl eo and ge Peers health: appier e ou Ww boone of them. calories AM wrt Gas, A. H. LEWIS MEDICINE CO., 8r. Louis, Mo, du & role) 6 fa ee Ga a GES (0) = eee, “ xy q S Wilmington, Del. Cambridge, Mass. ‘7th Reading, Pa ho 107,784 Spokane, W: Kansas Ci Yonkers, N. Y. Richmond, ho 101,177 h 104,402} 6th. 100,226 , 89th city in 1910,| tion of, the United States lives in 33 110,168 | addition to the above list’ will com- plete the country’s cities having 100,- 000 or more population. More than one-fifth of the popula- has. not yet been announced. Its | cities. | Goodrich Tires today cost 25%less and give _ approximately 160% Greater average mileage ’ than they did in I9I0. The one yardstick to measure the value of any article is the service you receive. Judged from this standard, Goodrich Tires have no equal regardless of price. Compare these prices: [FABRic TIRE PRICES | [sre | 1910] ropay | 30x3 | 25.45 | 19:10 30s | 33.05 | 23.20 | 324 34:4%| 65.35 | 53.15 | 35x | 02.75 | 6.35 t Be) odrich Tires Best in the Lo Mil !