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Show 1 YOUR DOLLAR & laken to Ogden Groceteria will buy more than any- JeW where. Your dollar at the Groceteria will not buy deliveries in small quantities. ; Your dollar at the Groceteria will not buy salesman ship; we do not have an'. Your dollar at the Groceteria will not buy telephone ; service. Your dollar at the Groceteria will not help pay bad B debts of others. Your dollar at the Groceteria all goes to buy just groceries, not service. j Below are a few of our regular prices in effect today, j I tomorrow and every day : II Half-gallon jars, dozen 98c I You can have either Masons, Economy or Kerr Self Seal I $1.75 5-pound can Schoolboy Peanut Butter $1.29 40 Hip-o-lite Marshmello Creme 35c Barrington Hall Soluble Coffee (instant) 50c (Equal to two pounds regular coffee) i m. 1 5 bars White Soap $1.00 ! Loganberries, 2z size can 29c 2Vl pounds "Maid o' Barley" Coffee 43c j j Best Coffee, pound 46c (Same as the 65c cans) 2-lb. pail Mountain Brand Lard , 49c 3 pounds Crisco 95c ' No. 5 pail Ideal Shortening $1.38 Remember the Place I OGDEN GROCETERIA 181 Twenty-fourth Street 1 1 The first Groceteria ever started in Utah, and so far ; as we arc able to learn the first one ever started any- ! where in the world. i We will deliver free $5.00 orders which do not include I sugar and flour by the sack, but they may be sent along MsT j with a $5.00 order of other things. 1 ALH A MBR4 1 1 L UTAH'S FINEST THEATRE I H IT BEGINS TODAY 1 PLAYING HIS LAST GOODBYE! I The night before he had been the great musician, playing j to rapturous thousands. Now he was just a plain old mother's ! "baby," playing to her and the girl he loved. Perhaps he 6 should play no more perhaps not sec them again. i ( So he played "Humoresque" that laugh on life, with a tear behind it and was gone!. . . .Where?. . . .Why? A story that blends the slum and the avenue, the din and f the music, the sorrow and smiles of life in a happy melody, ! HUMORESOU E I A PHOTOPLAY eaurirta Vs Alma Rubens 1 I ji CparamountrkraftQicture Based on Fannie Hurst's Great Story in the Cosmopolitan A picture that makes the hopes and joys and tears of plain folks live on the screen. "Humoresque" is very close to every human heart. Adapted from Fannie Hurst's great story, this is one of the photoplay masterpieces of all time. : Here Are a Few of the Striking Scenes i Months of suffering had driven "One dollar for a birthday pres- the daylight from the mind of Leon ent! I tell you, Mama, the way you Kantor; in the darkness he strug- spoil our children, it will some day I gled against that all destroying come back on usr thing, fear, fear that he could never use his wounded arm again. .Go zzje! fs a customer! Re- Lke a little scraggly plant, member, the first asking price is j grown without sunlight, is Gma Ginsberg, a daughter of the Ghetto. the last three figures on the tag!' Read This Editorial by Dr. Frank Crane 1 I ( SOMETHING HUMAN J H BY DR. FRANK CRANE. H (Copyrighted 1920 by Frank Crane,) 1 1 (Reprinted by Courtesy of Dr. Frank Crane) As we ko up find down the ways of this busy mother had enveloped me In her personality ago, th.- thlnif thru mak. . us Stop and wonder. The art of the thing It unconscious. Somehow JRj j the thins that la like th- discovery of hldd--n trea the spectator feels that neither the writer of the ' I sure or a pearl of (Treat price. Something Human. play nor the director of the film production nor the j : l h .ve se-n two whopping human treasures ictors themselves really intended to do the smash- JB One le tho writing about Mexico by lbanez a woii Ing thing they have done. ThOJ won Intent upon H derful piece of Journalism of which I may speak t.-lllng a story and making uood pictures and dc- K ,1 later. veloplng the love sc.ti -s I-1 ween th- oy and the The other Is a moving picture entitled "Humor- Bjirl and showing lb- trials .', a Struggling artist. tl esque," based on a story by Fannie Hurst. But all these are by the Wy It Is the uiiple. The Intense humanity of It Is emphasized by tho salve, child hearted Jewish mother that w alks away i fact that It Is all about people who live In a world with the whole performance. : J I entirely different from any I have known, ome- . DB ... ' , ' Kor after all. It Is the mother who Is the one ' thing human appears all th- more luininn when It i rtr- ' jh H i - .. . universal ilgure. It s the moth-r who la the real Bl Japancar, or Hott ntot, r E.iklmo I hi n It la nniver.ru i w i . . ., .... I ,.,llrue of Nations t Is In motherhood that thero 1 brought bom- to you that these people, fo different reague oi n-.A .... , . u n. uli, r 1 1 w nor t-i.t c. Otevk nor Barbarian. MM In their environment from your, art, after all 13 hoiuhji J,n "r mm blood of the same blood and spirit of the sain-- bond nor fr -. .Wj H spirit. There art) all manner of tongues ciiftoms, tastes 'M Hj The characters In this movie are taken from th' an divergencies among1 human beings but the one flW Bfl Ohctto Thc are all Jowlsh. In this story we ar strong red cord that binds them forever loKeth'. r la wm BbbbbbbI thrust Into the midst of this little world, as close motherhood. and clannish as ever n little world wan, and our Jfi, hearts arc melted within us at the realization of And this Is the truest, deepest business of tho our common humanity. theater lo reveal to us our humanity, to show us I The real star of tho play Is the Jewish mother. stinngc types and how, ait- , all, ihej are no; .MM performed by Vera Gordon who Is not starred at ilrange at all. 'gn all on the program and of whom I h.i. never Here la the real hope of mankind. That under g J ! heard I have no hesitation In saying that It Is neath all our differences our struggles lor preced the most remarkable md appealing characterization en. our. rac h-.i .'ut l-i-b.ng .-.Highness, our 'Ad j I have ever seen upon the screen. clamant competitions our wars and ruinora of wars. -Hj Bh is th. Inparhatlon of "hat ufUr all, is the our contests of classes, our angry disputes of labor HI most inter-stlng type in nil the world a mother and capital our ..nv. superclllousnes and pro. In mm She Is the most perfect representation of mother clallsm underneath all the- la th. mothers lap. j hood I have ever seen. All the strong currents of around all these are tho mother's everlaatinug I mother feeling affection, fear, tenderness, appre- arms. henslon, gloating, pride and Joy stream from her Most books are written, most plays are tinkered WK H face In an overwhelming tide. up. Once In a while a story Is born, not made. B j j WMU 1 have never had the acquaintance of any "Humoresque" was born, and don't forget that the . lady of the Ghetto. I had the feeling as If my own greatest figure in It Is the Jewish mamma. MM r C 17 A rr r t Adults Balcony Loges Shows at fl IMi 30c 50c I I ; SPECIAL PRICES FOR CHILDREN t 9:15 S M1MMMIMII1IIIIIIIBIIIIWIBHMII ilillllllHW II IMHIIII llili i III lillli Mi HHi iS iH |