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Show lOM TALMHDGE OKI TOmiGHT Jennie Malone, the character played by Norma Talmadge in "A Daughter of Two Worlds," loved her father so much that when the judge, who was about to dismiss the charge of forgery for-gery against her, recognized him as Black Jerry Malone, keeper of a low dance hall, and assailed his reputation, reputa-tion, she broke into a bitter tirade against the court with the result that she was ordered held under heavy bond. The sceno in the photoplay, which will be screened at the Or-pheum Or-pheum theatre tonight and tomorrow, furnishes one of the best hits of acting in the film version of Le Hoy Scott's novel of the same name. Jennie calls the old judge a hypocrite, hypo-crite, pounds the bench and shakes her tiny fist in his face. "How dare you speak to my father like that?" she asks indignantly. The judge's attitude of leniency promptly changes, but Jennie's Uncle George gains her temporary release by providing bond to insure her appear-auce appear-auce at the trial. Jennie does not wait for her trial. She is taken away to a fashionable hoarding school, where under an assumed name, she breaks Into "upper cruet" of society and meets the man who wins her love. The stain of the past creeps into her new environment, and Jennie faces a com-j com-j plex situation, when the life of a friend of the underworld depends on her rc- I voaling the whole truth, i |