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Bie eemcassatt sewers ere * | Daily by mail, per year, **¢he use for republication of all news dis . ,ordinarily, men‘ of any great faith in a soul or a j ‘af search of all premises except pri- The Bismarck, N. Bismarck as second class mail matter. : ,George D. Mann..........President and Publisher :as vibrantly as it did when Caruso lived. ;to demonstrable proofs, to reactions that they can|spearean revival to help clean up the theater—on +They do not like to accept anything that they can-|the smutty revues and flock to see “Hamlet” and CH. B, PAGE FOUR Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, ., and entered at the postoffice at than good, in that their gifts to us have been ac- companied by a materialistic, doubting philosophy that, for many people, has robbed life of joy and the world of hope. Edison's statement is like » breath of fresh air. It is a helpful reminder that science has not set- any of the questions of the spirit; that the s philosophy ef a scientist like Haeckel, for instance, is only one man’s opinion and not a creed to which science as a whole subscribes. Edison, nearing the close of his life, is like Vol- taire, greatest of the skeptics. Edison, at 80, re- marks that a belief in immortality is, after all, com- forting and reasonable. Voltaire, dying, conceded much the same thing with the remark, “I go to face a Great Perhaps.” Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year . Daily by mail, per year, (in (in state outside Bismarck)........ Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota.. Member Audit Bureau of Circulation Member of The Associated Press Me ix: "i * | The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to} Utopia; Not For Sale itches How badly we all want a Utopia! And how eredited to it or not otherwise credited in Pa-| readily we will listen to the man who promises it! Far, and also the local news of spontaneous origin) ‘These remarks are prompted by the news of the published herein. | All rights of repuplication of ail) «soubles of another of those cooperative colonies— | BP time an organization that held forth in Lou- | isiana. It is not the first venture of this kind that Foreign Representatives cmrcacd: LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY. oy | has come to grief, and it will not be the last; but fower Bidg. Kresge Bldg. it provokes thought, nevertheless. Members who joined the Louisiana colony will- NEW “oe BUNS ie beget Ave. Bldg. ingly paid $1,000 or more apiece and agreed to work | for the welfare of the whole. The promises, per- | (Official City, State and County Newspaper) = (haps, came easily; but do ordinary, not-too-pros- | perous folk part with $1,000 unless ft is for some- thing that they want deeply? | We like to be optimistic—it’s a great American , trait—but all of us, at times, realize that life, even | in America, is rather hard. | We spend the best part of our lives ou nne| Why Plunder Highway Fund? North Dakota’s road program is years behind the pace set by many states. Realizing this the voters placed the two-cent gasoline tax upon the statute books with but one objective in view—better roads. \ It is silly and ridiculous for anyone to assert the | merely for food and shelter and clothing; the lazy people did not know what they were doing when jclouds drift across the blue sky, the tall fores| they voted this tax. There is a consistent and in- } whisper quietly on the mountains, broad fields tent demand for better roads from all classes of |looped with wind-dappled rivers, lie green and shin citizens, in fact the demand is so great that funds }ing under the sun—but we do not see:them, do not | even now arc insufficient to improve or build some | hear the voice with which they call to us. | very important arteries of commerce and travel in We are too busy “earning our living,” as we put | this state. it; and too often, towards the end, we find that we | A multiplicity of educational institutions all | have somehow missed the things that are of real | clamoring for pork impose a heavy burden upon ! importance. | the taxpayer. Duplication, excessive overhead costs So we are easy marks for those who come sell- | in the state educational field to the detriment of | ing Utopias. | the secondary schools obtain. If half that is being| But a little wisdom might cure us, spent for higher education in this state could be} We should learn that Utopias are not born over transferred to the little red, white or weather-beaten schoclhouse in the dale, it would be a red letter day | check. We should realize that neither we nor cur | for North Dakota. children ever will inhabit one—not an earthly one, Classes of five or six students at the ‘at all events. ° tutions of higher education, served at an exor-/ For Utopia, like all other things of value, is born bitant per capita cost, merely indicates that our} only of toil and pain and self-denial and patient, whole educational system as administered in this | endurance. This old earth has been working to- | state is out of balance. Duplication between Fargo; wards one for many.centuries now, and it is still | and Grand Forks is notorious and extravagant. It | far away. The price has been paid with blood and | should be stopped and the competition for more tears, and is still being paid; and when we pass on} buildings in which to squander the educational dol-| there will still be a large balance to pay before | lar should cease in the interests of better rural possession can be had. There will be falls of Rome, | schools. Thirty Years’ Wars, St. Bartholomew massacres, | The educational institutions—double the number | French Revolutions, World Wars and the like in| needed in a state of ,000 population—can wait plenty before the dawn finally arrives. until the highway system is developed for the com-/ Yet—can we doubt it?—it is comig. Some day,| fort and benefit of the whole state. immeasurably removed, our earth will in very truth, | Pork hunters from Cass county should take ajwe trust, be a Utopia, a place where each man and} back seat and give someone else a spell at the pub- ,woman and child may live life in its utmost full- lie trough. ness and freedom, born to a heritage that cannot | -_ be alienated. Edison and the Great Perhaps It is toward this that we are working—blindly, The discoveries of modern science, says Thomas but not altogether unsuccessfully, Every good A. Edison, faver a belief in the immortality of the | deed, every little bit’of kindness and tolerance, and soul. . humanity shown by anyone anywhere, helps to bring | Thus does one more man of science offer an af-/it nearer. It is the only Utopia possible, but it is firmative answer to the age-old question: man hall he live again?” beyond a doubt that they are brothers, and shall con- Ediscn’s life, so to speak, has been spent in the duct themselves accordingly. * laboratory. a For many years he has busied himself with test] The American theater needs intelljgent and dis- tubes and chemical equations and electrical devices.|criminating spectators more than it needs anything | inst He has been, as it were, the poet of materialism,|else, Edgar M. Woolley of Yale University tells | the prophet of the machine, the worker of miracles|the round-table conference on drama, in inanimate objects. He has even conferred a kind of immortality on|man has hit the ball squarely and fairly. his fellow men. Caruso is dead; yet Caruso, be-} For, after all is said and done, no unworthy, sug- cause of Edison's genius, still sings. The “golden| gestive play would survive a week if so many peo- voice” was not choked by the grave, but rings on|ple didn’t like to see just that kind of play. As | soon as the mass of theatergoers demand better | Now men who work miracles of this kind are nct,| plays they will get them, in abundance. hereafter. Certain New Yorkers have suggested a Shake- They are accustomed to exact figures. see and equations that they can set down on paper.|the theory, apparently, that playgoers will ignore “If a} worth working for—the time when men shall know, | To our way of thinking, the professional gentle- | night, nor can one enter simply by writing out aj * not prove. Many of them are skeptics, and some are out-and- out atheists. It is a debatable question, some hold. whether our scientists have not done us more harm “Othello.” ‘ Maybe so. The gentlemen back of this idea, how- ever, give the theatergoing public credit for rather more discernment than we do. LEGISLATIVE CALENDAR Passed By Senate 153—Extends powers tianson of Ambrose and Joseph Carl- son, Oakes Holding company, Oakes, $40,000; J. E. Bunday, Fred ‘Sletvold, Lars Wold, Walter’ Whitver and Wrennie Williams. {support of N. D. Children’s Home ! 5 wers of society orphanage at Fargo, or so ; game and fish board to provide right! much as may be needed at the rate | ‘ | a frump if it's going to help my case. vate dwellings, for evidence of game, ; fish or hides taken illegally or out of season. Passed 41 to 4. H. B, 166—Conferrinng power upon! tgovernor to declare open or closed season in restricted areas of the state as specified by game and fish ‘Board and at recommendation of that board. Admits of appeal to court from such declared open season. ' Passed 44 to 2. A. B. 79—Amends law to give state ‘banking board power full power to investigate conditions in a locality . as to feasibility of opening: a new ‘bank; gives discretion in the mat- ter of granting bank charters. Pass- ed 41 to 6. tH. B. 80:—Requires that 50 per cent of the earnings of a bank shall be set aside annually and added to the surplus until such surplus equals capital stock. Exemption from tax- / ation is granted this surplus. Pass- ed 27 to 21. Clincher applied. , H. B. 81—Creates a sliding scale ‘faximum that may be loaned any one individual by a state bank. : Leaves 15 per cent maximum as at present, but reduces the percentage as the surplus grows under provi- j fions of H. B. 80. Passed 31 to 17. Clinchet H. B. 97—Repeals standing appro- { priation for maintenance of minimum ‘wage Henares, putting department r budget bi recommenda- H. B. 144—$21,495.88, to repay } foan made by the Bank of North bi ota to state insane asylum. Pass- 47 to 0. if} a. 152—Permits banks, trust * gompahies and building and loan as- Pas seal to oie rope in legal newspaper their home Tay, instead ‘oF the county official ; Pewspaper. Passed 37 to 11. £9 B Té1—Appropriates $5,000 to out provisions of present act irrigation and flood control. Tec Appropriates $80,000 for | of $15 per month per inmate. ‘ed 43 to 0, H. B. 169—Bill aimed to permit | Surgeons and dependents to receive passes from railroads. Completely re-written so as to repeal all regu- Pass- lations concerning passes. Passed 28 to 20. Passed By House Concurrent resolution, —- Asking congress to return surplus money in wheat sales to wheat growers. Amended by house to call attention of congress to fact that this mon is available for organizing farm re- ief. Concurrent resolution.—Calling for cooperation of North Dakota in plans for observance of bi-centennial of George Washington’ birth in 1932 and naminng state committee of 1 Concurrent Resolution.—Authoriz- ing the governor to receive from the secretary of state certain monies col- lected for “Second North Dakota Na- tional guard regiment” and to dis- tribute such funds to national guard units of state. 108.—Requiring the read- justment of rance premiums of the state fire and tornado fund to the lowest possible rate when fund shall reach five per cent of the total risks carried. S. B. 150—Authorizing the board af administration to constitute the state library commission as a legal functioning department of state. Question raised as to present status and bill was aimed to clarify status of library board. S. B. 12 — Appropriates $86,400 from fees collected, fur operations and maintenance of state game and fish commission. . f Incorporations | Crosby Community 01 comnary, Crosby, $25,000; A. K. Gubeud, John Borg, A. N. Sarbo, Edward. Chrise ai | Radio’s Rialto | SS ee (By The Associated Press) Using nine microphones, the Chi- cago symphony orchestra, under the direction of Frederick Stock, will broadcast a concert over station WMAQ (477.5) Chicago, starting at 8 p.m. Radio listeners who tune in on tonight's program will be entertained |by George Osborn’s dance orchestra which is scheduled to play a group of popular numbers over WCCO, the Twin Cities station, as part of the dinner concert to be given at 6:15 p.m. The Butter Cup Twins will | broadcast a program at 7:30 p. m. Tonight's New York program will | start at 8 p. m. with the Cliquot Club Eskimos entertaining for one hour. The Goodrich Zippers will be on from 9 to 10 p. m., closing the New York program through WCCO, which will be followed by a dance program which will be given by the Six-In-One syncopaters. The Melody Boys will be on the air from WLW _ (423.3) Gincinnati, at 10 p. m.; WENR (266) Chicago, has a trio at 8 p. m.; the Plowboys | entertain from WOC (484) Dav- enport at 7:30 p. m., and WTAM| (389.4) Cleveland, whose program | will be featured by a glee club. | WBZ (333) Springfield has :| | group of entertainers who oy be on the tarting at 9 p.m. The WGY studio staff is seheduled to take in the evening's (379.5) the tation. WMAD (244) Minneapolis, will give | an organ recital at 11:15 p. m. | —_—_————. rd Kip- ries” was sold for | $3350 at the Paul Hyde Bonner sale; at the American art galleries, | rt GY > THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Not Ready to Swear Off Yet Js aks ae / “NOWGENTS LETS ALL y SIGN AN AGREEMENT |) JO QuiT BURNING UP SO MUCH MONEY “ New York, Feb. ughty is the New York stage? at is all the shooting about? The basis is nudity; nudity 24, -Just Just When Faith made her next visit toy Cherry in the county jail, she took with her two black si sses, ready for a fitting. Mrs. Webb, her mouth| Cherry told her. “I know well full of pins, helped Faith adjust the| never opened the darned thing. hems, while Cherry, her golden eyes| have remembered that. All I bright with interest, chattered as member is that I did ily as if she were being fitted for| when Mr. was y dress. think I ran across it when I w -|a flash of body actually ttle bit shorter, darling!”| ing other letters, I don't remember “Oh, all right! I'll be| finding it in the file baske told “Why, what can’t you remember?” | W th asked, startled | language and na, ind it one spades, They have become blanket: lank shovels. Out of scenes whe: served t of adding a quick touch of y there has grown a revel o: deliberate nakedne: pied the French performances reason that anyone can figure Can't you make it just a little lower eck? I'm going’ to look like yy. with this deep collar of white pleated chiffon. Aren't those turned ack cuffs adorable, Mrs. Webb? aith is a perfect genius with clothes, isn’t she?* “It's a lucky girl a sister like Miss F told her solemn]. Cluny doesn’t the rubber stamp date it was received?” Faith I thought that was all set- ou} the box office. And out of the of profanity, such soldiers in’ “What Price The trouble is, the rubber stamp was not set to show the year it was received. The letter may have been there a year®or two, for ail 1 know. The stamp on it just s Septem- Glo: ‘ou are to have ” Mrs. Webb vulgarized profanity that hem seems aimed so jaded and unsop! which at shocking th ated alike. of the ust how T happened to see it,”| person in music shows and nudity 1) of Vd | dri situation in the/ pades are no longer even culled but as the soothsayer spake to Ju- from | for no] other than to lure thrill seekers to | St work, ural explosions were used by has grown a torrent of needless and; again i aosos oa THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1927 FLAPPER FANNY SAYS: 7 5 work of Krafft-Ebing and others, There are, scattered about the city, cafes catering to these folk. Some are exclusively for men Jand| some exclusively for women. | Something of the tragedy of their! jderelict status was reflected in a French tragedy that came to Broad- way early in the season. However! | questionable the subject, at least | jit. was handled with a degree of! taste and pity, Pees | But it loosed a whole pack of dirt- | mongers, alf sceking to outdo each | other, Thereafter camé a play of the night-clubs in which a strug- \gling young man was bought as | gigolo by a wealthy old woman; a scene in which an elderly man is blackmailed by a young — man |through knowledge of pathological | abnormalities and, finally, an entire | production concerned with male ab- | normals, one of the scenes of which showed an entire stage in the of a revel, This was the | scientific st i that set off the fireworks and t | sent the police into action, True—of course they are. Elderly women do buy young men and sup- port them. And revels such as are shown on the stage occur almost/ lany Saturday night in a cafe} |haunted by the abnormal. | Of which I will relate more in_an- | jother article: GILBERT SWAN. | Evem the Inexpensive dresses (Copyright, 1927, NEA Service, Inc.)| come high. J., removes doubt tuat army Lieu- ot tg Grey and Harris were lost,in iF | flight during recent storm. The day's news yields advanced |data on the millenium. Thus: Pull- man porters have begun an anti-tip| campaign. want salaries... . claim Theodore George Washington blood. Sure, and don’t leave Adam. Citizens of Hastings, Minn.—Bodies of two scour woods for hugger. women, believed to be victims of patch didn’t say whether the posse | houseboat drowning in St. Paul last was made up of men or women. . . | November, were found in a slough on King George has springs put on royal | edge of Mississippi river near here. 4 carriage after “riding the rods” 17 Science certainly flies _in Valley City, N. D.—Valley City State Teachers college went into tie It is snid they actually | with Wahpeton Science school for in- Chicago Swedes! terstate college championship by de- and | feating Moorhead State Teachers col- had Swedish | lege, 45 to 25. out Roosevelt | Helena, Mont.—State supreme court . ... ._ Flappers in New Or- | today will hear appeal of counsel: for leans go barefoot during floods. A! Ferdinand Schinpps, convicted at complete swimming suit merely by| Wolf Point last September for mur- removal of the stockings. . . Large; der, and sentenced to be hanged. buck deer leaps through plate gla window in Antwerp, N. Y., stirring | village, Not the first time a town |has been aroused by a stag affair. . jAnd so on, until, if Dawes wishes |to throw away his pipe, he may. Maybe Chaplin is beginning to believe that after all there is some- | about that phrase, “with jall my earthly goods I thee endow.” | The Arkansas assembly |to make chicken stealing | That's t)., “Well,” as Col. Jake Ruppert of the Yankees muses, cheerlessly, ‘“the difference between holdout and holdup isn't so great after all.” t St, Paul—-To enforce more drastic- ally prohibition act in Minnesota, the Minnesota prohibition department will | Seek conviction of offenders on two charges instead of one. \ : ‘| People’s Forum =| >—___—__—_____4 tics PRAISE FOR DEBS n @. telony. Underwood, N. D., a great help for the help. “eb. 23, 1927, Ld be Editor Tribune: Had you printed during the world war: “Would that we had men (like ‘Gene Debs) who can cry defiance jto the world, saying ‘Here I stand. Here I remain. No power on earth. or under it or above it can move me one inch. Curse you ull who oppse me!’” the powers that were would have hanged you, Perhups ¢ deservedly so. _Debs not only said the above, but jlived up to it too, Debs was a |grander rebel than’ John MeCuus- as land. Debs stood for what he be- t| Some folks turn up their sleeves| lieved would be the best for the others turn up their| whole world. He defied the whole | wor Spring's coming, boys and girls, ius, “Beware dah wides ob March!” e|..Ending of any ¢|"‘So they Were not ¢{each lived happily | ward.” modern married ever McCausland stood for what ht, 1927, NEA Service, Inc.) {he thought would be the best foe the south. He defied the nosth only. ——__—_——-+! Events have proved he was“mistaken. ‘et_he died an unrepentant rebel, | Old Masters with «curse on his lips against ca 4 north. “0 little self, within whose smaliness| Debs died believing he was right. ber 14, with the numbers 192, then| The Hsing curtain’ of one such ies _,, | However, not with a curse breathed love this full-skirted black satin] blank. Whoever used the ‘stamp| performance shows a young woman | All that man was, and is, and will] at those ‘who had not only opposed the little basque wais: that day didn’t fix it to record the [facing a man in a stable and hurl-| atop, ieee Mati to kin ae ee the white lace fichu,” Cherry told Faith] y Probably an accident. Lolajing at him such epithets as are n unseen that comprehends the} Warld to him except hang him, but a little later, as the second dress was nzules worked for him before 1 usually ited w h underworld skies | with “God forgive you,” And tells the tracks by which being tried on. Her small white fing-|did, but Chruchill says he can't get | brawls. oom scenes have the| So in my estimation Debs was a ers caressed the gleaming, thick |a thing out of Lola. She's Banning’s |come so commonplace as to be con-|qpae wig hanets Foams Bander rebel that | McCausland, black satin. ; Dante 1 look like a| witness. Ae 5 piieeedl Gabi te) a one of Sst pened poglaies knows the mie eee right, time Puritan maid, Mrs. Webb? That's witness for the prosecution?” | three raided plays, which rose from eae ee * + the way I'm ioing to look when I|Fuith demanded, icy terror running | failure to immedinte-success on the| TH tiger's strength, thé eagle's EDWARD ERICSON. —¥ say, ‘Before God, I am innocent!” | through veins. “What in the | strength of the raid, revealed three | ang in the’ heed ex ; Se L “Don't, Cheri world does she know about the|young women —- very “modern,” oy ep ‘i jovel exn consort with her sharply | ; course--bent upoti the eduction 6t| or clothe Mme with hi | Bills Allowed By “Don't be silly,"*Cherry countered,| “I suppose she'll testify against |a timid young man. clothe a god with his own mys- her face flushing brightly. “Church: | a my character,” Cherry yawned again. “Thank heaven, Bob made Alexander ill has been coaching me ever: th: SueT MAKE UP A BATCH OF “Hoge Food PILL@ FoR NouRselsy AND HELP-TAKE THe GHOCK, 4 SLAVE, ~~ “THE SINK SERF,~ THE CULINARY CHATTLE fe HAM, ~~ MY CONCENTRATED FooD PILLS WILL FREE ALL HOUGEWINES FROM WAT BONDAGE! OFE MY GROCERN AND MEAT RILLG != The storm rose over the dramati- ery; O with what darkness do we cloak | City Commission ‘ia ead Secemene oeren 0 i for a week, telling me ex Cluny tear up that awful report that| zation of subjects heretofore con-| w thy light, to look and what to say. ¢ that spying ‘brother of Lola's Pete | sidered puthological. Clinical sub | What dusty folly gather thee for| Fire department, pay roll....$ 8.00 pression for my . But I’m stic! jonzales, you know-—-made against | ject eretofore considered by mil- J E. E. Ricker, light bi aS The to the truth, darling, Don't you) me to Alex. That would be a pretty |lions to be unmentionable in polite| TU who alone art knowledge and| Marcovite Grocery, alps aves worre about that. He's tried over| thing to spring on me when I'm fight-|and_ even impolite company, havelane heavenlt ke for poor ......./........ 2,56 ane Peed to make Bed geen ae a| ing for my life.” — their — inte. the theatar, ie poy read, the beautiful, Mandan Pioneer, advertising 150 self-defense plea, but I'd rather die — ere are, doubtless, millions in . fehn Burden, H than say I killed poor Mr. Cluny Prasanna jfhristmas -day in small cities bout the nation to] © living ast © ‘god, O-morning|"°Gump seermeker ges 19.50 vhen I didn’t. All right now, honey ?”|Jail and an exciting diseovery by | whom these boldly flaunted perver-| ¢;: ‘ \Street d 395 Her tone changed back to lightness | Falth and Bob. sions. are half-believed ‘myths. Give us thy light, forgive us what) Fouls Thesan supplier tor 222 and gayety as she prepared to slip O Sea Fe. 4 boiler... Chik the lovely black satin dress over her wa he pRethaps one of the attractions, of —John Masefield: Sonnet. 39.55 head. ew York for the small town visitor 7 “Guess you girls want to talk Justajingle is not so much that things happen|* > gm wae 8.25 things over,” Mrs. Webb said ami- | @———-————9 | which are unknown to them as it is]! At The Movies =| | poster advertising xen ably, as she waddled heavily away to Mom heard the doertell: ring the open display of them, ve(* marck Tribune, advertising 6000 * n-easy chair in a far corner of the Sights and scenes that make ee fies " ° Ben aeuiaes canis: The sound of it near wregked| whispered and “Rabelasian sinail a CAPITOL THEATRE |Ghy "Aeduaame ney mice’ sae “Lord, I'm tired!” Cherry sank into er. talk in the pool room. and the to-|, In “Desert Valleys”, Fox, Films|/ AH. Olson, orchestra ...... 60: a chair. “Churchill's been at me for| She didn't answer ‘cause she, khew| bacco shops are found open to their| atest production, Buck Jones is|L’ §. Fredericks, services as °°" hours. ‘He's still trying to mal It was a bill collecto + | inspection in Manhattan. given an opportunity to show his| dog catcher Or aes | remember more about — tha \ For years New Yorkers have| horsemanship to good advantage.| John Edwards, ink 300 letter. Good heavens, I'd re: During November, 1926, the United| known of haunts of men and wom-|From beginning to end, the picture | Police department, pay roll’ .. 139.00 * if I could, wouldn't I—when my life] States ‘mints executed’ 38,110,055| en, whose pathological peculiarities {calls for unabated action. Buck is|Hempel's Grocery, supplies for may depend on it?” pieces of domestic coins, have “been elaborated on in _the| seen, in one “sequence riding at a) poor 0... oe 13.86 - 2 — - : ——|furious pace over _sage-dotte i peer Sa me plains, in another sequence “he is| ‘detentier hacueaen cee 46.1 OUR BOARDING HOUSE By Ahern |urging sitver up the rock-strewn | water Doran water zon 107° So~ -_ Hike AC 2 meaataley et in etalk an-| for poor a 4:00 | cs wae ice er sliding wi ilver do es aie 4 EGAD MDEAR, ~~ You HME OFF ON ANOTHER precipitous canyon. Red Rock and| Hay” Wiser rePaining 11.00 PREGENT THE VERY PICTURE a TAL Jawbone canyons in the Mojave! city hall ........, “a 154.00 Aunt MY CONCENTRATED FOOP OF YoUR PERIODICAL MENT qietcen Betas of ene antes tte Maserati, eso. BS PILLG WILL DIGPENGE WITH WW GPREES, EH 7 FOOD PILLG, formations which provide excellent | ‘line s.ccr sso Eee 19.99 Time Fae HMM —~ WOMAN Lo G0 THATS Nour LATEST » w Detet Valley,” a romance of the ba re te i 3 i ed by Scott R.i F, T. Hi : SHACILED “UE EER WEAD- GENS’ ~~ 1 GURPCOR | | Emr rebel siete Senet: | oh aes ! M i : | ENDING KITCHEN DuTiEg! ~~ Now Got THE IDEA FRO “44 ing tomorrow. aa ~ WOMAN ~THE GTove | INDIGESTION PILL, ~~ WELL, ~y ELTINGE THEATRE | 1.195 “The Red Mill” with Marion Davies featured as Tina in the story of a little Dutch slavey and the Charlie Chaplin comedy, “Shoulder Arms” wi} be shown for the last time at the. Benes: tonight. | A THOUGHT a ——— ee The wind bloweth where it listeth. eet y and Saturday the B- —John iti:8. inge wi, show ies at Play, ages comedy drama with the story Yeon-| , lil blows the wind that profits no- cerning a girl and her maiden aunts | body.—Shakespeare, who'are all desirous of obtaining an ‘inheritance of a million dollars tangl- ed up with tricky provisions attached. Doris Kenyon is the Lor Fazenda and Ethel Wales are the New England spinster aunts. Lloya Hughes is a shy hotel clerk whom Doris wants to marry, whilé Philo McCollough, Hallam Cooley and John Patrick are three “sheiks” who show mn ladies the) town. Many ations provide hilarious! LITTLE JOE Four United States fliers leave Santiago, reach Valdivia. arm: odwill chile, United States Trans; arrives at Shanghai wi who remain aboard. jaeennte pont Doves bilt aatharie ie rans’ burea: meke to veterans on ladjuated service oo tificates, rt Chaumont 1200 marines Findi wie SR al tn!