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Show .., - TWO SECTION ' - - Immmoinwrow tend- - breliktaft No rich ago. !Moab winterise like Boas of old left any such quanttty of grain to his gleaners. even ens who was and so faith. (to so was Ruth.Ito comely And es I sat there among the stubble and picked up the : gun grained beads and laid them to !one aide as I counted them. the of Ruth come to me and thins lines which read. ntreat not to leave thee. or to return from ine :after thee: for whither thoufollowing I goon. will go; and where thou lodgest. I will lodge; thy people shall be soy people. sod thy God shall be my God; where thou Meet. I will die. and there will be buried; the Lord do so to me. and more also. if aught but death thee and ase.". came to me with part foroefulinies than ever before greater in my life. I had had my breakfast at 6 o'clock that morning al,home. but as it is my custom aft.' tramping six or eight miles alooe at such an early hour to sit down for another little hit. to eat. shall I tell you what a delightful I had right there in the open fields? With my mind still on the whoa and barley that Ruth had gleaned in those old days. ages and ages after thooi that had made the great moraine upon which I eat end fed. I thought of their methods of threshing. but theirs were not any more primitive than were mine; for with thoee heads of wheat crumpled 'together in the palm of ono hand I slowly and laborid them until nothously ing remained in my hands but the kernels of wheat and some chaff. Theme the wind winnowed clean as I poured them from one hand into the Mbar. To start my breakfast then I had whole wheat right to my order'. Could anyone have been more favored? And while I sat there contentedly munching theee delicioue wheat berries bow good they tasted!I spied a big fat puffball mushroom that had Muck its head up out of the cold earth that very morning and was Just radiating freshnese everywhere. Ali. was not that food for the gods? knowing that thews fungi are seldom alone I looked about me for a few yards and found at Reset a dozen luscious ones that I ate greedily and without cooking. Between the wheat end mushroom cooties,' I sandwiched In about a dozen whole peanuts of fine flavor and then did you ever eat dompert after the morning meal?Just a little way off grew some ground-cherriegolden ripe friends of my boyhood days. also ready-mad- e for my apeciel benefit on this wonderful morning alone on the moraine. Topping off this meal with a big red Jonathan applewhat a 'IJR15'.cTUDY NOTES I Utak - mrotto.r Tsack Colssorvation sod Construction, Rather Than Inset con-ston- food Dosermetion. Marko By G. Mummer. M. ; 'b. rural , geolo gic spots on this continent--rural sights atone. but wonder. sounds. sod rasters Because I have great rivets of hiltrate the spirit. ice in thee lands end-- know a little languid hilitur The tens ofCovilier--"The Task. how they look as they plash their selves Out into immense inlets wISH I knew who so appropriately Ifrozen sea and oven into the sea itself. christoned tho Mils town of Sandy Imagine what wds the appeargroat Mein when Lake about 10 miles south of this city. sore of thtswas alive and bad such Bonneville rd Oka to take ott my hat to him huge ribbons of begrime& him and I Imo congratulate ice protruding into its waters. melt time coming out of what is now known as Im ha big acumen. 'I'd like to oak must have Little Cottonwood km it' he looked off towards the boon something likemaims a massive solid. bills the day that nom came to him crystal eerpont that sad If the inspiratiori bad anything spread its capacious jaws out over such a wide of land while its stretch rare historic the intorest with do to t tail was bidden in the mettlesome of heves about the location upon which the eternal snows far up among the the foundations of this thriving town towering heights. Juin thtnk of the ages upon alto Was built. tacit time I have eon. into its en.1 that it required to compose Each a as thia one when the ice woe moraine In or whether treas. from an Inch to a foot courier with Whom I have set mn moving:4 only hours. Large and entail boulevery tea rosolutely towards the great ders ere into tins mad. a on the eastern ground side! resits mountains the vanity and looking upon their pure granite sand. that gives up its inleas easily than almost any warred and neared declivities I have auw the sagebrush whispered to myeell that I was walk. Idividuality and tho rabbit ground,-wher- e greasettood aaervi history lig built and other vegetation grow ia tail been made and had left its eternal the greatest profuolon elk over it. e1imprint. Mut con- A name that so perfectly perpetu-- 1 cept 'where the agriculturist aua the habiliments and the charac-- ! mowed its wastes and made it supply him the necessities with and his family ad of a bit of landscape. or tells him Much of this soil has become eke looks with the mooing eye and the iof life. of understanding heart upon mountain I infected with the right character to make it fertile so that grandeur of such sublimity as be weal orgattients before him. the impatient fanner now reaps his there gaunt and gray would be difficult to find in any Ian. toward yearly. Such an outlook was mine but last Pairs For miles to tho sat of m and to Sunday morning. mine to explore and get into close communion with as I dm south of me, and rolling in symmetrical undulations off towards the strode out upon its vast stretches. And never before have 1 110011 it look so r Mood last metmet of where I morning Just at daylight. epreed inviting, so alluring. with its big long to clasp me in its U. a gigantic fan a vast sand and gra- arms outspread as the distant rei moraine of time, in everlasting embrace. I thought it was honorl blue that hovered over the peaks slowdna MOIL d coloraly melted into the tough indeed that Sandy should ocof the early morning. ?spy an Insignificant bit of the bed, tion to is It when habit alone be to my depart old Laks Bonnevillebut el the populous town right-, from the roadways and go off across plowing into alto the bolds make myself betrying es top of an ancient moraine was I am the first one besides post more than any community could lieve that its equilibrium. the wild life that has gone over them. Nand and maintain Such entirely new sensations come to gad yet. I wonder who among its inhabitants appreciate the uniqueness of one who travois ground over which the f the most valued foot of no man hag been lifted before be ansition in I know, because I have been in such places. And it was so cheering on this day from a chosen place away out on this level mess to bear a big male quail calling, "Gott eel Dank! Gott oPi Dank! Gott eel Dank!" (which transand lated means. God is praised!) , there was awakened 'within me my A BRAND WEW owls Joyous hymn of the earns It was no wonder that Mr. Quail itt..1)LEY OP was calling too lustily and with such MUSIC a tuneful note to his friends among in.! riMELIZI.MENT the greases and the brush itround him this beautiful October morning. for Ion as he stood in the midst of 'A ?HORT Ild THE PARK.- - a long as the cruel snow staysplenty off ND gay. musical sketch: ground. I sat down in about the lobewitching EMMY AND HIM PVTX, KARL. hit had boon but a little while classiest canine novelty; "YODEIrainy right in a great wheat field and VILLE UOMENT8 OP ENJOYMENT,'" by Kimberly and Arnold; counted the beads of wheat lying on EDNA AVM famous metropolitan the ground in a space above a yprd comedienne: HARRY COLEMAN, square. I counted 40 fully daveloped funniest twentieth century eon. heads in this smell area that the nogWit:islet THE DOUGLAS FAMintent farmer had left for other gleanILY, celebrated Irish singers and than those of his own kind! dowers. Iers recalled the biblical glory of Ruth Regular Naomi who dwelt in the land of so 1 . 11WHOn p 1 ) alow-grindI- " st afoot-and-alo- i Sun-M- s. post-glaci- al pink-tinge- ! e lotet I - Theatre, altint 311 Salt Lake Thee dolph 'yore. Asky. tient Famous New York The Oliver Miss Garden's Greatest, and Most Gorgeous Pallas pre& tertek andel its i IniAgoli)p.1 .7. Entertainment uentt Dore, A uetits And )uotia APECIAL I I CAR TRAINLOAD OP SCENERY. NopleMootly EntrancingFair Yousi Worsen. D 'tare sores ' t HUGE In. ;1 Bo Nifideat Chorus of Genuine New York Itandea Ever Coaxed Away Prom the Wham . of Broadway. o we- ed to wtree has pLas,b rer (cvt s mat of stars Including limpet-hal- tt the ,,t M. NORMS. CONROY and LEMA1RE. Courtney I &stem. I Pubik n the atom Prkm. Lower floo I I Margaret Edwards I AND 100 Ocher National Celebrities. $IANk BrIL 01.504 rsogli arelo, 01.00, Gal. SO& UN DAUB and harfe I In who In the . whet' THEATER it ZREKR-11"."---------- a. 11 PLAYERS :roaPts Actin I . is mg' ' ha" D Ti L. Have you laith In God? raith hi Faith in Youraelt? Timm see this drama and have that faith in ro tabs witt one . i thogloand tinwli. , repots I tor it ',, set s , Dor. rOtOm P teals' Runs AU of I . , .41110 Week-41at1ne- PliersNights es 25e, 15e, prfees 15r, and 10e1 I ial . er I . . , Juulyntiotg. Matilda Cote Stevenson, who foe many years etudied Indian iOTS, especdally that of the Pueblo tribes of . VA New Mexico. was published recently 01:0011 I. the Seth annual report of the bureau of American Lthnolotl. Hrider the medicinal Uses of plants by the Zuni, Mrs. Stevenson says that medical treatment is eider than intelligence in man; Tho dot hunts the fields for grant medicine; the bear drawees the wound of follow-beher cub sr with perhaps .11 as much intelligence as primitive nuts obeerves in his mPirical practice. Primitive man does not know why his Thursday and Saturday. median, cures; he simply knows that It does cure. He believes disease to 35e, 50c; boxes 75e. Matineo be the moult of malign Influence. 113. eluding that of his. fellow man, to 25r; boxes 50c.' Whom ha attributes the power of lime emery which be himself is unable oe TheNtraele ceosee. aLIME. 'NOV. s ASTaliGiuTtA0141. ug' the ethnobotany. or early knowlsdts of botany, of the Zuni Indiana written by the late Mrs. All Nett beck Then it was sunup tot the laak Bonneville! As Nt) or om to I op e crocheted-tidycushi- i e 1Tit the i )!,i, httd been itting' made out of g.irge al red misty toned tribune In greep stood and so plentiful theteabotit. sun uncovered and allowed the s to turn all the poem of tti- and revs full upon me. Field and ot!"..p mese chipping sparrow oseinusnese monied to awaken to fo,1 when I did. am thi, glatteed itt WeirOMPTI with a the sun and h of their tst chirp, while g happy tails and wings merit thi.n tiff Into thimle the desert places after 'eerie and tumble wed 'wed. lin. 'Tete and gleaned wheat and other concentrated foods to their int. gaily offering their trthdie in singing thankfulness. wa, further As I looked tip i of tine ErPitt sand along the surface t came and gravel bed up,. The fairy-lik- e erlogontic that stood out against the deep in the shadows up againet the .o,terit mountains, shining in sis ar,i,ish-purpl- e colorings so though it had been frosted with pure silver durina the silences of the preceding night. The quiet peacefulness of the foothills on that brilliant october tiabbsth forenoon :bought expremmion In man-fetid ways full of appeal to me and I roamed at will whertm,er an3 thing stirred my fancy. I tried my very beat to make a place for myself in the original setting of my surround- Ingo until I had covered a little more than If miles, listening to the blithe. sionis songs of the multitudes of nipa- sheltered et unite. dowiarks that places here and there. and I thought as ait Just sweetly sang they elid they when I heard thent in April and May. richest of the songs twenty rang all about me and sent me on my home- ward way with a heart (nit In Minn- tug with the very compteteness of the life with which I had been in touch since before the dawn. , . : e''''''''''',..4t.e .,4,,, 1 ,, ,' , "le 'N.,,..$3.1 , I t,r 6.,.lf !ii .61''' ,.,..',.,b.,. ; 1,cr ' ,6.$1,-, (St 1'; :;,--- 1,, , ,N,,,16)1-- -- 1 'Nei4 ' 1 ,''' - 71.0 I : Cr,: A N' 17'1:3 !-- ) ,,, - 4,.. , 4Nr 1, tVott ot.. T, 3 II 111 1114-6- ,t,AI - (emtinued rrnni thret) - I V t I book I or by UtWOdi. i NicondaY. Tu eoi a I wmut M 0 1 a t preulue s Jame. 1, oi Wednesday: tt !Atli., Star. 0, In stunning offering of a modern and F:.e. filed with of unusual aurpruting scenes beauty and holding a tense in. tereat throughout. 11A-- I EARLE Ms The handitome Vitagraph favor. A Adam It , , 1 i in, ! "The Car and Ills 25 Last Tueaday afternoon Mrs. Vright entertained at her home in Kew GarA few friends to afternoon dena. tea, Mrs J. Kingstittry. the MeAnnova Earl Skidmove. F. Leaver Stauffer and ft, 4. Easton, The ride down hy train and the view of the country ,itA an enjoy1bl'. trip. , - Majesty" which short t I t I t "Graustark" I , ' RusPPY story In At 434 west One Hundred and Twenbright young man tries to earn tieth street Mime Mina Taylor has takhie hying and win a fortune by en an spartmnt. MIAs Taylor's tooth.' motor. driving hie er and mister arrived three days ago "1H1E: mAHLE7r RUN SER." and Are now furniahing thir small: 4 De) Next carting Tharaday, home in comfortable Nahum for the Veneto rivabtuan and Retreril, coming winter. Bal me in A return engagement of The aedding cards.; of MIPP Emma! (Hip "if the eitakere at toda50 sur - Reebe and N. tirann have found Kelly who has lets wae Elder 'Willard Bean. uf both the Joeeph Smith farm at their wxy here to the friend. charge are xtendoel -- t'ongratulations Palm la. :V. V. Mt. Bean will be to parties, to ht. newlyweds" by thous) tortun-r Sew lotk tintil nout time in Noventenough to receive cards. and as her when he returfl s. to the farm near ate Mr. business this Kelly brings way' Palmyra where Ma family now are very often. it is hoped he and hie hriti visit their triends city !treat. Walter V. Momon wax the may have the the pieasure of fleeing them.' BRoOsEA.DAyDOWNLy.AY other svotokrr ehtinli Nervico today. anti ttrieft) "ustmod thp conterenee a large attendance ad There see an in uf talk hattpettim:s int,.reating So many stuel chapel service &mini Return engagement by popular hid, Art hour. dent. are constantly arriving which request. makes it pleasant for the Utah colony dava ago Mr. Stauffer. wife of an many identity themsolves with RIM PETROV& Br. Fred Stauffer, arrived tn the city the different societies in the branch In an Intense and powerful new. to May a few weeks with her daughter JANET. while in the city. aattonal drama. been dropped to the earth by the Star Another Dumas VAMPIRE." Romance. "PRE People. twine were originally human I Monday. Tweeday, being', others the property of the We are reminded of the amazing litgods. and all were the offspring of the GAIL KANE In Earth Mother. $o interwoven with erary fecundity of the elder Dumas by "THE frbicAnzer OATIL" i in both life. a an and plant religious economic way. are the custom' and the announcement that a novel of his. lbellefs of the Zuni people. and so de- never before translated. has just appendent are they on the products of peared in London In an English verthe evil. that ti,eir culture may be mon. The French edition of the works said to have had its origin in concepts of Dumas Nis 110 volumes. The most I to the pertaining vegetable kingdom. Important of these have been transSirs. S:evet..eit. frond that plant,' lated. This latest Dumas romance to "LIBERTY." used in medicire by these Indians find Its way into English is celled A daughter of the were not employed entirely in a. "The L A. Lovers - Neilson. Neapontan The greatest pholonlay sensatiOn of shamantudic way. experience having' fresh from the victory of the Nile. Is modern timm with shown that many medicines derived a leading character in the story that IIARIE WALCAMP. from plants have real medicinal val- gives. in the main, the disastrous adue. They are often properly and ef- ventures of Ferdinand IV of The little dare devil of the films In Italy. The -LABEirrvs SACRIFICE."' fectively prescribed by native translator remarks et the story: "It An exciting story of love and sd although the medicinal practice may be admitted that the best way to of tha Zuni has not passed beyond writ a romance. a historical romance venture in the the empirical or experimental maga.. especially. is not to select the murder. HE ICA N BORDOR. notwithertanding their relative high era of one's own father as the prinlipe America Mut." ollis To Ittehmood." degree of culture. The various uses cipal characters" ReV.1110, or filial to which plant& and their parts. are duty. appears to have been an Harry Palmer Animated Cart000 animatput by these Indians as food and ing motive with Dumas in Comedy. writing the medicine. in weaving, dyeing. basket- romance. It is doubtrul whether .THE WATER CIAle." "The decoration toilet. ry, and Neapolitan Lover," will add to his An unumottly interesting Bayou,' ceremoniee, as well as a source of fame New York Times. story. : nanies pertaining to clans, are de, ecribed by' the author. India n names designating plants were soniettmes found to be the name for two or more kinds. but instead of this Minifying a lack of specific , knowledge on the part of the natives, SEATS this was found to be due tel the fact that these plants served the same purpose or bad similar characteristics. Finest Moring Picture Theater in the World. although unlike botanically. . names Show a Mows ilasOelatiOn with TODAY LAST TIMEVIRGINIA PEARSON in animal names. and a number of them are supposed to belong to the for which they are named. a fact which accounts for an erroneone, belief on the part of some students who have thought these particular medicines a part of. or mad. from. the animal. Instead of its seasociated plant. Resides the plants held to be the property of the gods, other's belong to medicine orders of secret fraternities FIRST FOUR DAYS NEXT WEEK. or individuals, whits some of their botanical remedies are the property The Worlds Most Famous Actor. ' of the general community. Antisop. MR. E. H. SOTHERNSupported by the popular English tics and narcotics were employed by the Indians. as well as other primiactress Peggy Hyland in tive peoples. at a very early date. alPaul West's spkndid drama of a marriage that was born though civilised man wets much slower to adopt theee now indispensable in sordidness and ripened into a beautiful fulfillment. aids to medical scienee. It seems. however, that while narcotics were News and Complete Program of usual pleasing variety Pathe used in many operatiotua they were oeldom given when bullets were beMcClellan in Organ Recital Monday night at 9:15. Prof. ing extracted. the Zuni saying that, Franz Rath and American Concert Orchestra afternoons as men were not like Women. they muot At noemetty be teen, and acand nights. cut were out bullets the I cordingly -. , , . ,. without further ado. .,. . A 1 , The Return of Eve from, ittnrest for Fng land on Oct. whre he goes to fill a MiSSIOn. re! VItgru, h tie rom ' , 1)lis monk. 101: oh - mailed n Itoh The Mutual will begin its winter' work next Sunday 1Vening. Eider nolds has been chosen president or the society and la already outlining the coming work for the society. F. flew lett 4F otrrwilmt ..1 IS ire.011 Thestrw C.. Of . 1 It. st Prmot. A h 5,. , , "God's Country Mr. agEider . and the Woman" I Th31,-11,,- 1 30, 10e. 23e. 504.130C. TVitl hers durtsts the seek. he is nos In Philadelphia altendina a medical cm,- ventton and will gn on to Boston h.- - tor cominx her, street between Eighth mild Ninth mien. Mr, and M. liPetrc. and daughter i'lltiOneP of Logan, itre staying for the present until thtt can get permanently lortatt,i. Mr. Thatch. er will engage st once in the musice work that brought him hro and th family wilt take advantage of the open aeason. Heim 6n. 1 VI Mprgarita Changes Studio Address and son. laaand Mrs. f sew and Salt Lakers in Gotham .r Staufrar atraet.OneDr. Hundrad Stauffer sill Seventy-rourt- CO. . V s , LIBERTY I - - 1!- ;;; 0011111151111111 ' ,,.4k i s , 0 at V.N. Margarita Fischer, the beautiful star now with Mutual 1 4.. - i AbleS !Intel. And Jg.titie 44.. I ,, In 111 . - ' .1! Alen-de- a ' '' , . HARROLD kl4W- ,1, ;.' ,i' Valhi webs in DINEHAKT ILIA f 2r71,14--7K I:un ,. MEE ',it T41141 ( ... tN,;:... ,. 112 tr '.: ' liesmiliner.3 11111 i a:,' i ,k ' I 1 . color. 4 Bow. Beginning Vied. 1 NEM At 0E, 111.1,E HILL NI I .11 t , 't. rite etineertui e 1"1, 041 . " .4;51., '' : The hypnotic aerial. lathe's Pretty tita. RUTH ROIAND tz -- A Beirlitiontiti AtertE'''' ,. t., 4;:,,-,t1- 0 ,1;.- ,..4ç4,,,, ! in..1044!.4t, I Ti. , vt,,k0 r,r, A A., a NIA Inaliments It M1S1LKS Of 0 '44,,,,,:ieIc . ,1, : -t- 4: 4 't .1 , I 234 - :t;', 't to it ii. in. Mink ; all meats lec; nights, 10c, 150 ' ,' ', t d , , :onuoa ' V ),,:, : Day l'hotoplaptNextThree ' ' : i ':' ,, I l' I h'''11;1 " r .. ,4 ri I1 o.S,,,.gr , wh 0,,c i, i,11;- 1. '44 .,, 1 kilt"Ilg"17.41 ,,.. :4 41c, ,. ' V I .';'; ..4."..,,A-A- -, ( st . . ,',1,.' ;.t Tirdr 3; r0 -''. ',VI,voe . - -- , 7.) 0 .V,,, -, 'Iar ;oe'. 77 , 7 . ''''''' ' ..,..........:.,. leiit ..,,,,, ,.',-4'''- ' - - ri . 1916 - . ,,,:. ley. ' - Ancient Botany of the Zuni Indians D C" , Won& It i.igths Wanda Lyon. CHIPLOW. RORIE 4rINN. FR.4-NI- L Collins And Hart 4eMAHO4.6DIAMOND quint 4. I 1411blit sithaitglth.seanwlilditiblitrdwer'arntho going awaY of the auInto the midst of the Winn flowers and the, grattite ssin'.. me ;Id litee0160 :ht.. where tar behind the mon imai n, valley to the westOf the Oquirrho painting the tips a dusty gold tint? Th.r of ITtlimit and watched this the greatext sa he thrust Alio tunionio trumh out into space and spilled atol the colors of dawa along e,,wt, the with huried mountain-side- s and rolling on with inereos raiti,tity foothine the 1. ully covered he with one great onseli. r,;iread of the face who the es t's OF URES OF STAGE REAL SPLENDOR. I I them-.elve- inch losas. r--- 31.--- The : ----28 SATURDAY OCTOBER --, N. Scott. of the Tenth (avair). Tho (Aasoriated Press Correspondence.) OF Triune Mens Christian samociation ha. HEADQUARTERS 1110.- 41.000 and furnished envelope. IFIELD AMERICAN PUNITIVE 000 letter heads. which are gRen out IN MEXICO. gratis. With the Bed Crone end the ot. army chaplains Young Men's Hebrew asnociation. it ale, sends reading matter. The tent who accompany the American punieeveral score and tive expedition in Mexico have not will accommodate generally le well fillet only marched abreast of their toughMore than five month. ago the est charges clear through to the Sier- chaplains filed their application for a outfit. but it was not until ra Madre& but hers they have dis- cinema the teat day of August. that the first tinguished themselves in a new say. show was given. During imptember They have established the find elec- there were 111 and all were well atEstimates of the nightly radius of tended. tric plant within sitt-mil- e run as high as 1.000 and not this spot in Chihuahua, for the-- light- crowds even regimental minetrels cut down ing of a reading room and a movie the number of patrons. The election show" reserved for officers. which holds However commonplace the electric shoot 110. is always packed. light has become in the suites, it is The crowd comes early and mays still rather an innovation in this part until the flicker. Right after relast of Mexico. especially in an army camp treat. gasoline cans. soap In the Cams Grandes But. boxes, bearing valley. even cumbersome arm chairs. thenks to the chaplains who devoted eecur coveted positions surthe they much time to pestering the authorithe projecting machine. preties for permission to bring the neces- rounding pared for an hour and a half wait. sary machinery in on motor trucks, The show doesn't mart until 7110 and the gas engine. generator and other It lasts an hour and a half. Here is equipment arrived about two months where the chaplain oboes hie guile. ago and now the meanest private can He intends that the performance will read the latest periodicals and write both amuse his charge. and keep his letters under electric lights. Even them out of mischief. So he holds the general hasn't that privilege. until 0 o'clock Then there is As for the movie" shows. it's hard them not enough time before taps to do to usderstate their influence for good much of anything but return to or the interest they have aroused and their tents. sustained. At home. the movies The silent drama may be a good mean nothing more than a nickel. a name movies In the states. but short walk and an hour or so killed. not at for the Dub Ian. The film charBut in camp. the evening show is acters Camp to speak for don't have something to look forward to all day the do it for them spectators and talk about the next day. Making and their comments, it must he conadobe brick and other officially Preare such that fessed. Chaplain scribed ways of peening the time soon Moons stays In hie office pails, even games have their limita- back ofgenerally the reading room during the tions. But the motion picture shows It is soldier wit. moatars always popular as ennui breakers. performances. Y. although a great deal is burlesque Manages the Shows. show reminiscences. The cream et The busy little Mettle that Mimi-Met- the comment. however, comes from the reading room. runs the pro- - the members of the Twenty-fourt- h for the picture shows. Infantry and the Tenth cavalry, who prisalight arena and make- follow the plays with Intense and vaudeville shift stage, belongs to the vociferous interest It la spontaneous equipment of Chaplain J. M. loom, of and doee not shame the well known the Seventh Cavalry. He also man- African sense of humor. The film that brings the cheer. is ages the shows. censors most of the soldier mail for several regiments and the one with a fight or more in every sole as agent for the money order de- reel. where the hero drops from an partment of an impress company. aeroplane to the top of a runaway From his stipend for blatant these or- freight train. to the diseruel of the cam. funds ders for sera squadron contingent. OT wallops originally the bringing down the films from El both the hirelings of the unscrupuPapa. Ha, by the way. has made out lous lawyer and the lawyer himaelf money orders for li4t.000 in three and winds up by marrying hie- rich months. But the money NP thus ex- employers daughter. The yell that pended from his chaplain fund will goes up when overalls and Penguin be paid back from the athletic fund gown rush into a close embrace Just that has grown to &most WOO from before "good night'. flashes on the the proceeds of half a doom boxing canvas must arouse misgivings in the exhibition& Chaplain J. A. Randolph. hearts of the natives at 011111111 Grande. of the Second 1111101100111, performs the And just to start the abow right. saTh. oMces at El Valle. this sign is shown: The reading room which is well ladIee w ill kindly remove their hats. Campaign bate are lighted and supplied with benches and tables. is in charge of Chaplain O. J. Net aa large. Think it over." t. i to hhl Sc I . P "Silent Drums" Proves Mhmonier When Moine 3000 Soldiers Witness Productions on the StevenCorning Early to Avoid the Robb-- needing nooses tor the Midler. (iw$: matt-moo- : Camp Dub Ian Thanks Army Chaplains For Electric Lights and Film Plays ne-o- L ti ,.. ,. ,, , , Burroughs Nattwe Study Association of . DESERET. VVENING NEWS . .., ......... . L tommommommommoml ITIVNAsiati ' 1: ' V1 ' I : f t: 41 - t i 1 - 4 1 : ! I i , ' - doe-tor- s. ; k ' 0 , 'ó il ! r ei I , ; , folk-lor- 3000 I f' 1 3000 nrviElenil p t I ! .1 rf:i It. ant-ma- tft.., "The War Bride's IP, ti t Secret" ; t : .. . fp ,A t 0 f I :. ' ,, 1 . THOMAS MEIGHAN and ANITA KING In 'THE: HEIR TO THE HOORAH I , . c :.', A, ,o' ek t. EMPRESS THEATRE eineo,-,ate- t - - I. b ' aARAMOUNT e 1 I., to overcome: hence be must summon the aid of the beast gods, who alone gewgaw the poser of combating the opEw malevolent prsoicee of the sorcerer, IPiewimoOrOIMPUommomminmonmeni elIMMIE 11 while he administers their medicine. The plants of the gods cannot effect "The Aristocrat ofiMotion Picture Theatres, a cure, however. by the mere use of the medicines concocted from them; Fill'heretQcouallity isePxarrounte." during the treatment of the patient. 11 prayers and supplications must be offered to (Ito ir cie to whom the mediJess; eine belongs. LaskyscPresnenFtasvorthieteAs.ccomplished The therapeutics of those Indians With occultism. I. largely these discovered having people through the ages and brought into numerous ure valuable practical plant medicines. although in the firm stages It was not understood that they were endowed with healing properties. ex. cept as they were aesociatect with the A filmed version of one of Broadway's most famous successes. A most diverting and yet 1;0414 and the old conception still, pro- veils. pathetic story of romance and adventure in the West with as many complexities as a New That plants pity an Important part York 'Society Drama. In the daily life of the Zuni is shown BURTON HOLMES TRAVEL PICTURES. WORLDS NEWS IN MOTION VIEWS. by Mrs. Stevetirm. who found that in Willard Weihe, Edw. P. Kimball, Harry Reichman and the Paramount Orchestra. their belief, plants verily forst a part of themselves. belair rogarded as gen Shows start at 12:30, 2, 3:30, 5, 6:30, 8 and 9:30. Come then and there will be no waiting tient beings: for the initiated of the for a seat. Zuni could talk to them and the plants MEM could answer. Plants wee oleo hem to be ere& some Of them ha Ville : ,iit : I .1 . . , ,tt I ',;',, it t ; 3( t Tin . - , . . ., . . , . - - , , ' . , . i.,' ' 41 YA L 1 ,I ' II ! |