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Show T'liiinmiiiimin ! THE .rot FACE TWO PUBLISHED BY THE EAEL & ENGLAND PUBLISHING COMPANY ( the Post Office every dny in the week except Sunday at Logan, L'tub, as Second Class Matter. ADVERTIHIM KATES HUM SHED ON APPLICATION bl liMKimON KATES Paid ia advance By mail, per moath- By mail, two years advance Delivered, per month-- . Delivered, two years advance -- 26c ...$2.00 4 So $4.50 Member of Associated Press Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the one tat repute Ucation of OH news dispatches credited to It or not otherwise credited In this paper and also the local news published therein, All right at republicution of special dispatch e thereto are also reserved. Th READINGS BAROMETER "Rain' Fair Change P Today 29l!l2!l!3 19HI130 Yesterday The above readings are taken "from THE JOURNAL'S barometer at o oclock each afternoon except Sunday. The "yesterday" reading each American Motorists association has started a to have a law passed in every state providing - for the examination and licensing of automobile drivers. There are now only twelve states in which drivers have'to take ah examination. Such a plan is likely to meet with a good deal of opposition. It will be claimed in many states that their traffic is hot very congested, and that automobile accidents do not constitute a serious problem. Yet an incompetent driver can make trouble almost anywhere. - It will be much easier to get such a law enacted if such regulations are made to apply only to new applicants. The number of automobile accidents now occuring is a disgrace to modern life. If many of the reckless drivers could be ruled off the roads, it would make conditions very much --more comfortable for cautious people TIIE CITY, TTnircrtay, October 10, 1010. CArHE COUNTY, UTAH. HE.ROSIF fsassi ira THE DARK THE JOURNAL Entered rnA, 1 .00 AN SYNOPSIS: Hath Clleimorn, o young nurse, rume t& keep a rendezvous tcith her rich yonng An we, Lester JIrmn. tm t hff ubotS Loutf Island Hound but instead finds there Lrstrr'w ultirr halt brother. Safely Qiypinock. (tramock, already half blind. to soon te uiufrrao a treatment which men ctftF him or may moke h.ne He ii mi Halite ate iidnlly blitid atfreoteH to each Mher. huL he refugee to let her tell htm kor Home, lie ffites kr a turn iioiy toee tend save if A is eured he mill ndeo -ttee To the Ivory Itoertnme home " Later it develops that Let-t- rr coJiftef 4ufcrlf hs shtne of the Broon fortune until he marries a ttlrl approved by iJrannock. t thorn he hue nicknamed Sock Halite decides she doe not lots Lester. Meanwhile she is hired as motif nurse for Grannock without hie knowledge on the night ha is to flee undergo ktt eye treatment, duty will be to repoi t certain symptom to Dr, Lytton os soon os they develop, Lester home i cry late, dmnk. M'hcn HalHe steps inte the haft to caution him to he quiethe can ire her off to the droving room, throve away the key, eke ts unable to yet out until past time to tall the tlae-te- r, and Qrannoak s eyesight ip prtcUtally destroyed. 4 It Helps Your Cough By W. M. Everton When your wife- wants a coat cough nr. wants a When aaughto dress cough up. when Sonneys shoes are gone cough up. When your o.d car stops to sneeze cough up. . And many a man has heaved - t there ie.eae chance in thsmeanA that sodie fresh treatment, yet te y he discover d, may core him. But. personally, I have no hope." She stood very still. "There s one thing Hi trouble yon te sewer me." he barked, "Did yon give Mr: Brooa any Indication at all that yeu were willing te leave your patient even for one moment? "Yeg, answered Hallle faintly. "That settles it, 1 fear, Lytton. You'll write the necessary report to the hospital, I take It. . . . I must bd getting back te tows. Hallle was alone, still standing In the middle of the room, when Lester came Id, Fresh, cheerful, confident, aia ingfy good to look npon, he advanced spas her with a smile. Traid we've sort of upset the medical profession, dearie. "Ia that the way yen see It? -"Oh, say, they have been riding Chapter $ you and no mistake! Lytton tried DEPTH3 OP DESPAIR U on me but I shot him np. . . . Hal"1 BLAME myself, said D- r- Lyt- - lle, if you come to work it out, all ton. I was too sure thqt there this may turn out to be useful Ill , could be no change In Grannock's tell Socks Ive already told Lytton condition before four o'clock." that 1 was tight last night, that 1 dont eonslder that any blame I pat you hi a compromising posire- tion and that I'm perfectly prepared attaches to yon whatever, turned Dr. Russell, the eye special- to stop any gossip there Is by ist. marrying yon. . S S 5 ? V ? C( thats Thank goodness, twenty dollars less than I heaters ton & Sons lr the value yet. Yod'll be prised as you go over these heaters point by point to i, v find how much you get and how little you pay. Lawful Larceny Carries Punch Of Life Absorbing as lifes own tangles is the theme problem Bebe Daniels faces in her new film, Lawful Larceny, coming Friday and Saturday to the Capitol theatre. t -- x j m. - EMOTIONAL GENIUS 111 EVIDENCE' - Pauline Frederick, playing today at the Capitol Theatre her first starring-ventufor W arner Eros., as a preliminary to the making of the picture, slipped quietly in and out of Hollywood making use of her few hours at the studio, by taking Vitaphone voice tests. During these tests it was discovered that Miss Frederick possesses not only a delightful speaking voice but a singing .voice as well. She sings two songs in her picture. Only intimate friends of Miss Frederick have known of the singing voice, which is highly trained and registers exceptionally ' - itrEvrdence, re well. Sfie heard singing for Vitaphone. After the strenuous, two hours at the studio Miss Frederick Retired to a beach cottage to rest before beginning the actual production of Evidence a play calling for William Waits, Oct. 18, 338 Crockett Ave., tremendous emotional , expenditure. William Courtenay plays opposite Miss Frederick as the husband who divorces her, and the east includes Alec B. Francis, Lowell Sherman, Conway Tearle, Ivan Simpson, and the amazingly appealing child actor Freddie Burke Fred ; - t ' , WHY 11 HEAI51chai111CKE by the time his sedative wore off. the inflammation was acute. He realized be was alone and started out to get upstairs and find me. By that time it was nearly tour and 1 I was coming down, anyway. found him groping hie way across the hail The nurse and I got him hack td the study. Nurse Ellesmere appeared ont ef the drawing-rooquarter of an hour later. Broon was asleep on the floor. "Ha ha anything to tayf "He woks , up about midday, t saw him tor a few minutes In his room couldnt make much impression on him. He mentioned that he wasnt going to have the girl bullied as he intended to many her." "Just go and bring the girt here, will you? Dont tend a servant.' "if youve any kind of defense, Hassell said to Hallie when she appeared, I want to bear it. Werd anxious to be fair to you. You were with your patient and you heard Mr. Lester Broon come home? i know quite well. Dr. Russell, that I disobeyed orders with fatal results to Mr. Grannock aud that therefore I shall be dismissed from my profession. "Oh, yon know that, do you?" "Its obvious. And therefore appreciate your attitude but I should prefer to leave the house without this "Yon neednt waste that kiad of Russell told her thing on me, "1 know that yon were calmly. kept ia this room against your will. The point is how did you enter i didnt want to enter it at alt. Then her face she admitted. twitched violently and she flung ont her hands. Oh, dont torture me so!" she begged. "Dr. Russell you must know by now what dams age has been done to Mr. eyes. R's the only thing I that matters to me. to know about Mr, Grannock." "The treatment tailed, owing to I i your desertion. An aggravation of the original trouble was the result. Mr. Grannock is ; very Dearly blind. He may retain 'a glimmer ef Sight If he does, Gran-.nock- Why Suffer? , Onr DERMA "HEALTH RAY" LAMP, u a lamp with 1 00 HEALTHY USES. It tratc derp mto the rous-- ft cd Mood etreems, creatine ,e active circulation winch hr mas healthy whrte blood ctHt to the injured parte. Thu eoOem the veins and reliefe aU confeetww SoStnhS SEND ONLY If you are euffenn with RHEUMATISM, COLDS IN CHEST, OR ANY OE THE ABOVE AILMENTS. OR ANY OTHER KINDRED BODY AILMENTS OUR DERMA "HEALTH-RAY- " LAMP WILL BRING YOU POSITIVE AND QUICK RELIEF. IN ORDER TO FURTHER ADVERTISE OUR SCIENTIFIC LAMP. AND PROVE TO AS MANY PEOPLE AS POSSIBLE THE WONDERFUL POSSIBILITIES OF THIS LAMP, we an mekin ym a special low price of only E3.9S far the neat M daye eatr. t SS0Cjat0n ATfwX?L i prohibition amendment the ULTRA VIOLET LAMP MFC CO.. Dept H- -. 31 Ttod rGmtlcfnen: Endooed ffeew And vum of 91, Kindly rush one complete DERMA "HEALTH-- ! W"---1 foUw charge JAr J lltanae Jf" IjTailgniEEK i i i . W- r-- f M rr . Poor old Socks! Has be really? What rotten luck! "No, It wasn't bad luck. It was you and 1 who sent him blind by my treachery and your Oh, don't yon worry yeurself! Whatever happened to poor eld Socks' tyt last night, yon couldn't have done anything. You're nob a ' doctor. Tm a mfrse. I was the Burse on duty. My orders were to watch for certain symptoms and call Dr. Lytton it they appeared. Then its all Lytton, fault, countered Lester, easily. It he had the Job In hand, he ought te hav sesn it through by himself. Anyway, we cant help poor old Socks trouble. Our cue is to get him to consent to our marriage. "Im not going to marry you." Oh Lord, darling, dont start being that way! You know yon love me. "Is that love that 1 felt for yoa? ! doat think it Is. ApyWhy, its gone. 1 dont feel anything at all for yoa now, not even loathing. The door opened to admit Lyt-to"Oh, hello!" aald Lester, amiably, "Thought youd gone off with the other one. I think I told yoa that Miss Ellesmore and I are going to ' be married? "Did yoa?" rasped Lytton. Thats between the two of yoa, of coarse, ft wont affect my report to the hospital or my attitude to Miss Ellesmore as e nurse under my orders. Mr. Broon la mistaken," re turned Hallies He has asked hue to marry him but Ive refused. What on earths biting yon. Halite? . . , Look here, Lytton, dont mind telling yoa in confidence that weve been engaged for weeks. "Its between the two of yon," repeated the doctor. "A taxi will be here for yoa In ten minutes. Lytton said, ignoring Lester. "Please bare your things packed by then. Aad, needless to say. you will make no attempt to see Mr. Grannock. by Hoy VkhertJ (Copyright. New tiappIneM cofim to Halil In Monday chapter in a way ah lea at expect. il, MO Womens Christian Temperance Union AM suffering Soce sOvieOt oho Mthfef vHbj ton infarmeticNL. . teCentr ly issued a bulletin charging that drinking has increased under prohibition; that America spends three billions of dollars a year in drink and that prohibition has not increased prosperity nor added to the national Wealth. Professor Thomas Nixon of Harvard university said immed inter- est of women so widely as this new Daniels show, adapted to the screen from the Samuel , Shipman stage hit. Bebe plays the part of a wife who turns the tables on a love thief. Having lost her husband to the other woman. Bebe finds revenge and profit by stealing the other womens , , lover, Sharing honors with Bebe is Lowell Sherman in the part of boy the vamps - philandering the role he friend. played in legit, Sherman gets-thmost from a character always hilariously furyiy. d Others ia the cast are Kenneth Thompson, Olive Tell, Purnell Prat, Lou Payne and Bert Roach- "Oh, dont torture me tel" cried Hallle. Do you know" she said, ter "it Id bees called, Id have tackled it according te your instruc- eyes fixed upon him "can you be awdre that your brother tions," said Dr. Lytton.. . "But t wasnt called. Grannock says that has lost his sight? - itrI ,Our Lamp Will Relieve You at Once of the Probably no picture current season has drawn hoe-slhl- has not sung in public for fifteen years, bu(t Darryl Zanuck associate executive1 of ; Warners, after -- listening to Jesse Buttars, Oct. 18, Clarkston, the test songs, said that the public could expect an unusual treat when she is first erick, jT Mas iately on the publication of the wet organizations propaganda: The association against the prohibition amendment Is highly subsidized. It pays immense salaries to its employees and they find out what they are hired, to find. And Professor Irving Fisher, possibly the leading economist of the world, reolled In answer to a telegram from the W C. T. U.: No economist hat been found who will say that prohibition is of no economical value. The investigations of Professor Carver of Harvard, of Professor Far-naof Yale, Of Professor Her- m stage-traine- - THE ICE CHOPPER . MODEST MAIDENS THURS., FRI. parents ' By Most . Alice Judortpea puhikunentswhi we 2 eirtpdf safety Ives for bur own e itions and more ., less harm ill toi rhom the children against ''J: they are directed. Punshments ia always a last resort. Used frequently la la; a clear confession of parental failure. lly think of the punishment of children as the, infliction of physical pain, of penalties, restrictions, or loss of or pleasures. privileidges These are deliberate conscious punishments. There are other punishments frehowever, which parents quently employ without being aware trf it. These are disapproval, and the Withdrawal, of confidence and love. There is at least this much to be said for the punishment which is in the nature of a penalty of a .pain It causes the child to feel that he has paid for wrong doing, that accounts ara wlDed out and that he can start with a clean slate. The withdrawal of love has no such refreshing effect. It simply causes the child to feel You shouldn't have slapped him for kissing you. He must bo discouraged and inferior without permitting him to acquire menially defective. a clean conscience through exof the piation of his. fault. man Feldman of the British overcome the conclusions Thus this subtle psychologicommittee that National Education . association Parliamentary cal, punishments Is in some lately inveslgated American in- that prohibition has enabled dustries of engineers of the type five million children to go ways most cruel of all, for it! of Herbert Hoover and attest- through high school who would- .deprive the child of that por-nhave been able in the sa- it km of his sense of security ed reports as to its economic . that Is grounded in parental good from hundreds of employ- loon era. ers cannot be lightly dismissed. The association against the Jove. is I It is furthermore amendment especially The association against the prohibition the old brewery tac-- 1 destructive because it is apt prohibition amendment cannot adopting to be over force the of a period brute tics prolonged arraying overcome the conclusions of the of several hours, even days or Salvation Army that poverty of money against the truth. This Is devasting to i weeks. from drink has all but disap- child for whom each day! It Rogers Hornsby, manager of .the peared under prohibition. cannot overcome the figures of the Chicago Cute, gave his old should mean a fresh start, the United States Bureau of team mates the St Louis Card-- ! The Only punishment which census which show that prohibi- Inals a football pep talk, be- - ts likely to be effective is that1 tion has saved more lives than fore the last 'game of the which is short, harsh enough the American army lost In worlds series, but apparently to be unpleasant, and which in no way causes the child battle during theworld war. some of the boyS had never yet to dcubt his parents love. The wet organizations cannot been to college. ot SKIES'! AWUL lARCENYI BEBE DANIELS KENNETH THOMSON 10WUL SHERMAN OLIVE tat Also Leather Pushers and News Last Time Today EVIDENCE .with Pauline Frederick , e |