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t i & $4 if AT 'JHI*, MONO^y jev^JN^CIWMi lft, JgJ, S553 BB OVIES "FASCINATION" AT GRAND THEATRE AGAIN TONIGHT When Mae Murray }n "Fascina tion", presented by Robert Leon ard, shows at the Grand* theatre this evening, thtrpopfiUlr Afeiro'staf will be anpported^BV'a company of play ers,-several of whom have them- -that "has*everTbeen ass in raotio^pietures.*' Among'tli is distinguished company is HtdeiifoWare, GLORIA SWANSON AT ELKO THEATRE AGAIN TONIGHT A beautiful yourfg*'wife, nnfrrietf off by her relatives, who y^shed ,*toj get rid of her forbidden even to read, a slave tp her puritanical stern husbands leading a loveless, colorless, monotonous life on the, South African, Veldt d' An aged, stern, fanatical, eccentric1 husband, who loves his wife as, one 'loves a horse or a dog, keeping her 'in subjection a cruel merciless mast er who guides his own life by the Holy Wor^ "but rules all under him by the terrible sjamboka Ipng black whip A young Englishman of fine fam ily, who comes to the South African veldt to learn farming ,and who is the "first, man from the outside world to enter the life of the beautiful wife These are the three principal char acters around''which Alice Askew wove her delightfully" entertaining novel, the "Shumalite" which has been picturized by Sam Wood. The new picture "Under the Lash" is the seiond starring vehicle of Glor ia Swanson and will be shown at the Elktfitheatre again this evening. Miss Swanson plays the role of the "wife* Russell Simpson is the hus bandsahd THahlon Hamilton, popular leading man, is the young English, man. i "'Meet The Wife", a two-part com edy-and the Elko orchestra further enhance tne program for tonight. ENTIRE COLORED CAST IN SATURDAY EVE. POST COMEDY Entirely new, "The Custard Nine" with, a .'cast composed entirely of "colored! nlayers"is a departure in comedies and will be watched with interest whe shown for the first time Tuesday and Wednesday at the Elko therewith Zane Grey's "Gold en Dreams/'- The ".Custard Nine" is an adapt ion of the famous Saturday .Evening Post story by H. R. Farris. "GOLDEN DREAMS" AT ELKO TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY America's most popular novelist Zane Grey, is contributing some of the screen's most thrilling, plots to Goldwyn'tfi latest group pictures. Mr. Grays' latest picture, ^'Golden Dreams,"/ based upon his, stoty,cQf the same titje^and produced by %njamin Hampton,-{is coming to the Elko-for two days beginning tomorrow Jean persholt, Gus Peterson and C. QUBtfsji directed the picture under Mr.-Hampjton's direct supervision and they -have' kept something happening evecy/nlihute of the time. The ad venturous romance gathers moment Tim' witteach foot of film and goes inter as& an exciting climax as the screen ha reflected in many months. 1 Tiber* toeat cast is headed by Claire Adams ^hd Carl Gantvoort who have appearediftogether other Zane Grey 'pictnrespfiotably, "When Romance Rides." f, Others in the cast are Nor ris TOeE&y, Mme. Rose Dione, Frank Leigh, Bertam Grassby, Frank Hayn er, Walter Perkins," Babe London, 'Auo^yiChapman and little Mary Jantf Irlfrg., r\. "GOOD^irFAmTfeOE'* AT I GRJ^ W^AT?? jtOMORROW Harrfeaifoi^Swia Vs "fW- \a tVjmaent Coleman, Courtehajp? Foote^, Creighton Hale, Charted ane and Rober^Frszer. Mis* Murray herself plays a girl whov'revolts against the- rigidity of her ^home life, runs off to a bull fights becomes fascinated by a hand some toreador and is involved in a series of stirring adyentures. Larry Semon -will also"be seen in a special comedy at the Grand Sun day. "Fascination" is "Peacock Alleys" successorsand it outdoes even that pictttfce's effectiveness. This picture is making a big hit and is on* of the best Bhown here for rsom^limeC Every 'movie fatf should jhafce it a point to see it 1 re merabarjyi oV%9v se!^* g|B^/wp- Mr an^ True^ie5%^nieedr^Jthe feMure|Sttractioffe-xi jlie.'fQrand kJr morrowfe tl& '^^houg ,,%stBrft' star whose |ek^o~#ion.:%fc iftto" Bookin^'t)ffi8es & ^Ataerfta, hal"al- ttenc readyjo)! him new country over1, Topulanty Was compelled to exert J^ more energy and takes greater per sonal risks in- the*fflming of Engene Manlove Ehodesr story than ever before- in his career on the Bcreen. Amrv^g professional boxers he fought were "Spike" Robinson. John ny Schiff, Young Abe AtelI,Miekey Farreil, Frank Ely and Sailor Acker man are others* These boys are all weltknown where fight fans gather. SUBSCRIBE FOR THE PIONEER Bfi, ^& ,-,-o "^Jfi vonvicts S* ,irtft*^fotothenia Gonvicts Enjoying Themselves Once in a while, life within prison walls is cheered. Here are In San Quentin winning tine California State Prison champion* hip in the centipede races What's in the Bottle? Probably the Guatemalian officials were diplomatic enough to Bervs grapeVuice to William Jennings Bryan at this recent official reception at Guatemala City. Beading from the left, are General Jose Orellena, president of Guatemala Arthur H. Geissler, AnvxSean minister, an& WiUiamJennings Bryan^ New Caliph Installed Here is shown the ascension to the caliphate, Mghest religious office fa the Mohammedan world, of Abd ul-Medjid. He succeeds Mohammed VI whose precipitate flight left vacant the Turk throne and caliphate. This picture shows the new caliph (left) at the Seraglio palace, Constan- tinople. Refet Pasha, governor of Constantinople and Kernel's right 1and man, is shown to uniform.. Wins Chinese Baby Show Prize The first Chinese baby how was held,in NewYc-ikfinder the auspices t* the Women's Sewing Crete. *J^M0& sjhQwn here, won the first prize. Explains How t May Be Br measuringra millionth ae^eeTSaperaturlmndred and a trllliont JQf electri curnt 1)r ot tQ Smithsoniarne institu. tion'has-determined for the first time the heat spectrum of starlight, as ha announced in an address at the Car negie tastltution/of Washington. Working with the 100-inch telescope at Mount Wilson observatory this fall. Doctor Abbot measured the beat at dif ferent parts of the spectrum of ten stars and the sun. The rays were dis- perseoSby a-spectrosoepr in a band BimUarJ^fie^^0JS''- 4afcjfefc**423fi&Vr ^gagtjfr&ii. S" howUn i -y. =SSS STARLIGHT HEAT SPECTRUM The'bright star Capelia, which Is T~- -i very, ^sloiilar 4o our own sun in Its '^ecfrum, was found to furnish the ^qulvsflent of one horsepower to an ^rea on the earth approximately equal to thfffytffgiot Minnesota. But this prainen\ jsiar is k^eble "compared with our sun, which is equal to a hundred billion Cepellas and sends down on twenty square feet heat equal to a horsepower. On the whole earth Capella's heat equals 500 horsepower, and as all the stars together equal 500 Capellas, this would amount to one-quarter million horsepower over the whole earth from the stara alone. TnstttuflAl SUBSCRIBE FOR THE PIONEER *t THE BEMIPJIPAILYPIONEER, (Copy for This Department Supplied %f the Atnertcan LeirJon Nw Service n" i iTHEPomP" MISSING tates Veterans.'.''bu- fhe^ UnlttHl State reau has requested the Anierlcan L,e- -gio to help fiipd JEtobert,, Carter iEage who dlstjp peared reeori"1ly r" Robert C. Page. from St. 'Elfila 'beth's hospital In Washington, D. According to a letter from C. W. Swan, chief of th division of infor mation. Page hi a neuro psychi- atric case and may.bave suffered from aphasia. His father is very anclous to get In toucb with him. Page enlisted .in the army as a pri vate, Flsing School' Detachment, Air Service, January^, 1918, at San Diego, Calif. Ife was'honorably discharged June 20, 1919., He is twenty-five years of age, about'%ve feet six inches ta^ has biue eye/j, dark brown hair, and has a deep s*ar in ttite rim of his right ear. His complexion is sallow. It is believed he went to California.' He has t|een employed Mfthe follow ing places: Sellers Manufacturing company, Chicago Cuyahoga Works, Cuyahoga, Cleveland, O. 1234 Wash ington street, Chicago, and 108 Car penter strer-t, Chicago. Page is a claimant of the United 1 States Veterans' Bureau. .Information as to his whereabouts should be for warded to his father, W. H, Page, 150, i the Portner Apartments, Washington, i D. O., or to the Information Section U. S. Veterans' Bureau. The Thirteenth Post No. 513, Brook, lyn, N. Y., of the American Legion, has requested that any information rega in the whereabouts of Frederick Pasch be sent to it, 357 Sumner avqnue, headquarters at the Thirteenth Coast Defense Command armory. Pasch disappeared July 25, having left home In ap parent good health. He is a World war Vetertin, hating serves overseas with thef One HundTeo" attI\ Fourteenth Infantry, Twehty-nlntn di vision. He is five feet nine inches' (ML weighs 165 pounds, has brown eyes andhair, and is twenty-five years^old. His wife's address is 312 Myrtle ave nue, Brooklyn. Frederick Ka^. Headquarters, (department of Texas, at Dallas, requests Information as to the whereabouts of Cecil T. Lavender, last heard from at Bakersfield, Calif. His brother, William Irving Lavender, Box 96, Lancaster, Tex., is anxious about him. The missing man Is scribed as six feet one inch tall, has brown hair and eyes, weighs 190 pounds, is thlrty-stx years old, and was wounded while in France. A man by the name of PowerA killed accidentally In the Aloah log ging camp in Washington, was burjed by Hoquiam Post No. ,16 of the Amer ican Legion, which is seeking the ad* dress of his relatives* The following information was obtained from Ot tawa, Canada: "No. 334744 Clar ence Raymond Powers served with the Canadian overseas forces. Broth er, John Powers, last address known, 633 Arch street, Philadelphia." The present address of John Powers Could not be found in Philadelphia. GOOD USE OF HIS TRAINING Former Soldier, New Merrill (Wis.) Legion Member and Policeman, Disperses Robber Band. George Severt of Merrill, Wis., is an other of those fighting men whom Uncle Sam trained Georget Severt. work on the vault. for fighting and who has In peace *T 1. IRELAND'SFATE IMBALANCE Ireland Will Choose During Next Few Month* its Own Form of Government' (By, Charles McCann) CUn!te Press Staff Correspondent) (Copyright, 1922, By United Press) London (By mail to the United Press)Ireland will choose during the next' lew months, perhaps weeks, between responsible government and its own .peculiar form of Bolshevism Launched in a tempestous sea, with part of its crew and half, of its of ficers mutinous, the new Irish Ship of State has survived nearly a year of its stormy voyage. It has started now upon the last and the decisive part of its trials. The Irish people themselves, the ordinary people who stay at home and keep the country going, will de cide whether the new ship is to win through to peaceful governmental waters or be smashed against the rocks which form the gravestones of the many Irish Ships of State of other years. In beginning to execute rebel gun men to take as do other governments, eye for eye and tooth for tooth in dealing with the.rebellious elements the Free State has started for the first time really to function It has started also to undergo fb^ rst time the test of Irish public opinion, perhaps the most changeable in the world. If the government can stand the test, if it can punish banditry and murder, here calling itself patriot ism, aj, do other civilized govern ments, the su"ceiis of the Free State is assured. Future Uncertain If it cannot, and it is by no means certain that it can, Ireland is in for years more of the oppression and re bellion that have made it the dark distressful county for centuries Irish public opinion is something which no person, certainly no Irish man, has hope to fathom. In 1916, when the Easter rebellion was start ed, the Republican movement was fought not only by the British gov ernment but by the Irish people. As late as 1918 when Sinn Fein succeed ed in electing its members to the British Parliamentnever to take their seats, the ordinary Irishman made no effort to conceal his hatred and contempt for the brgamirattipn.vifh Martyred "Mick" Collins engaged in at least one free-for-all fight in aid of one of his fellow-candidates against the candidate's prospective constituents. Two years later the entire Irish nation was behind the Sinn Fein, and helped it through the reign of terror which won for Ireland the treaty with Britain. Sinn Fein did not begin to become popular until it began being oppres sed by the British. That was the manner in which it won it's way into the hearts of the people. Now an Irish government has tak en over, and there is no question but that the people are behind it. They are tired of Valtera, tired of his pack, tired of his ambushes and as sassins and robberies. But they were just as tired in tiie early days of Sinn Fein until the au ihonties began executing the partici pants- The difference now is that there is an Irish government in control'.' That is the only ground for hope that the alienation of the Irish rebels from the sympathies of the people is so complete that the execution of those of them who may be caught i will not change popular support from the "oppressor" to the "oppressed." Natural Rebel Irishmen, even members oil the government, are uncertain as to the result- The strain of sentiment in the Irish people makes them natural rebels, made it posible for them dur ing the seven centuries of British rule to keep always mind the idea of being free. It wag necessary for the Free State government to tighten up, to' deal firmly with the rebels and take the chance of breaking them or be ing broken by the people, or slowly die of anemia. i Thegovernment cannot turtn back., fl Th times proved he^obscure was ttralned well. Severt is a member of the Merrill police force. A gang of tyffgmda, li the darkness if ,ofgW, ftttt&flpted, to *ob the^posi office. Seve*t discovered, the outlaws,v sev eral In number at He challenged the lookout, as the American doughboy used to challenge on the firing tine, and his answer was a ball of bullets. Draw ing his revolver, Severt engaged In a battle of bullets, driving th^ robbers to cover behind a, corner of t(be build ing. Then the policeman, who iq a mem ber of the Edward Burns Posjt, Ameri can Legion,'at Merrill, ran arhund the nuildlng to attack from the rejar. And his attacK was do hot, thaMM 3*tS\ men fled precipitately.' SUBSCRIBE FOR THE PIONEER i4,ja*.jL "SM&^rs' J4^- announcement, tha four gunmen had been executed, meanV as they knew, that they had i cast the die. The men executed' were Irishmen, sons of Irish mothers, I boys known in some Irish village, not as gunmen, but as soldiersand as Paddy ana* Mick. It should not be long before it is knowft whether Irish 'fentiment will stand- irm and what be the fate not only of the Free State govern- I tnent but of the treaty with Jreaf Britain, and perhaps of the Irish people themselves. FORSEESMANY EARTH TREMORS COMING YEAR (Continued -from page 1) lations. In common with most scien tists he agrees that quakes are caused by the cooling of the interior of the earth. He points out that certain rocks in the heated liquid state ex pand in process of cooling thus forc ing a, displacement in the interior of the earth, which reached the surface. He" assumes that perhaps this was the cause t^ie4/Chilean earthquake,' 'citingvthe st^ateinjent of a British sea 'captain^, who sounded the -sea-bottom at the,jnoment when the tidal wave struci^his ship Instead of 10,000 feeC depth which the charts indicated Ltne rounding-showed only about 500 fjp^^v Nordma^j believes the sea floor, may have,been heaved up by the displacements in the interior of i the earth. Nordmann states that the earth's iROEEKT Z. LEONARD MAEpHWdS MUBJtAy FASOMTIQI By Edmund Goulding A TIFFANY PRODUCTION RAN you ready?WOW!Nail on your wigchain your false teethgrab your lidhere it comesGosh darnl What a picture!HIP HIP HOO-RAY! Buster Keaton in his new one Jane Novak coming in "THE SNOW SHOE TRAIL" Millions have read the novel-^Millions will see the Picture! COMINGLORNA DOONE {Ht LAST TIME TONIGHT Shows at 7:10-9:00 Orchestra Evry Night Gloria Swanson JLA,HM HAMILTON RUSSEL SIMPSON, in ''UNDER THE LASH" Is a wife the chattle^of her husband? Gloria Swanson answers t&e question in a nove wanner in her new Paramount picture1. Also"MEET THE WIFE"Comedy 2-parU TOMORROWZANE GREY'S "GOLDEN DREAMS" With an all star cast including CLAIRE ADAMS and CARL GANTVOORT Zane Grey, author of "Desert Gold", has never painted a more dar- ing picture of romance than this matterpiece of Spanish loves and hates. ELK O THEATRE SEE THE MAN WHO SAW TOMORROW i.- r^o&ifve crust is in motion practically^ con tinuously, but the movementS'iare so slight as to be unnoticed. Seisomo graphs in several parts of the worfel record as many as 30,000 quakes per year, of which only a few are J*erv ceptible. FLORAL SOCIETY ELECTS DULUTH MAN PRESIDENT The Northwestern Peony and fi^ Society, auxiliary of the Minnesota State- Bbricultural Society, has just elected J. M- Kleitsch of Dulutb, president 'Mrs.~H. V- Tillotson, "and" H. A Humphrey of Minnesota, -vice presidents, and T'A. ehnmg-]& Minneapolis, secretary and trfealftfr er. The annual meeting and show of the National Peony Society will be held in St. Paul next June SUBSCRIBE FOR THE PIONEER GRAND TODAY A girl's great adventure between dawn and dawn is depicted amazingly LARRY SEAMAN in his funniest comedy "A PAIR OF KINGS" FOX NEWS GRAND ORCHESTRA Matinee 2:30, 7:10-9 10c-30c HARRY CAREY ATTA BOY, HARRY! With eyes agleam and panting breath you'll thrill when this super western sweeps across the screen Hoses chagnig at beak neck paceAutos careening in dizzy flightCrash! Bang!Over the precipice! The rescueWhew! Kidnapped and batteredplot tings and conflictredhot passions of love and hate^ Election Day!the battle in the cabcetthe struggle in the Turkish bathtwenty to one and O NE triumph ant!Hold tigh don't breathedon't swallowar-e -^.ra? A 5 Adm. 10.30c \4 at' i %tk