THE BEE: OMAHA, MONDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1919. f Lincoln' Bureau o Bee P. A. Barrows. Correspondent" Mf LEGISLATIVE II.C.L.PR0BET0 HOLD TALKFEST Solons Have Deep, Dark Secret on Profiteering, to Be Revealed Friday. Lincoln. Oct. 26. (Special.) Ac cording to members of the special, committee appointed trom the legis lature to look into the matter of the high cost of living and" profiteering, it is probable that an entirely new line of procedure will be adopted which will be able to really fix the responsibility for the high prices in this state.. The committee probably will meet again next Friday in the hall of representatives at the state house and if hearty co-operation is given the committee it is believed that the real responsibility can be located. ', v ' ' . . f The, committee just now does not care to outline its program, but it will be thorough and among other things will endeavor to discover why ihe people in a town where a sugar factory is turning out. sugar by the thousand tons have to pay in addi tion to the regular price freight charges to Omaha and return when the sugar is purchased direct 'from the factory. Another item which may be looked j into is why last summer a live 1 chicken should,, bring the farmer f only 35 cents a pound and then by i the lime it reached th Consumer & dead the price had increased to 55 . . fj ....... ,tt.. n1f ,knt j liad disappeared from the bird was ijj- the feathers iand what Jittle blood i had been spilwd when the hicqen fi met its untimely death.f" '.." -'; m It may not require a special ; ses 1'; sion of the legislature to' solve the !s' rvrnKlpni Tt will he simnlv tin . trt ill the fellows who have adopted'. the ' "make all you can and the public, be j, damned policy to sit up and take hi notice and govern themselves ac M cordingly. . . jjf!- ) is: Welcome Committee For Nebraska Troops Reports Money Spent ! Lincoln, Oct 26. ( Special.) The final report of the committee having in charge the entertainment of re turning soldiers landing in New York has been made and shows that of the $25,000 appropriated but $7,515.61 was spent The items for which money was spent are given in the report as fol lows: Refreshments for the eoldlen, $611.11, AdverUalnf'. potters, etc., 1664.03. t Poataaa. 1176. Exponas of welcoming S55th infantry and 341at machine run battalion, 1650.11. Th'eater and baeoj ball ticket, 1126.01 Cierara and citarets, 1104.20. ' Flawera for men la hoepitale, I4S.11. , Salary; f aecretary, ll.06S.8J. ' Salary and eipenae of director, t8SS.lt. " Salaries of atenofraphera, 1521.(5. Rent of h)adauartera. IH18.80. Lose' on furniture Bought and refold, H1.84. Wreath of Nebraska eoldlera placet in court or honor, 1100. ' Loans to soldiers not reo eld. 145. The number of Nebraska men who registered is given at 3,038, and the headquarters was visited by over 2,600 home folks. The committee handled 13,974 letters, postcards, telegrams, etc. ' The committee connected with the work were N. A. Huse, chairman; Burt Whedon, treasurer; Robert T. Hill and Emery R. Buckner, audit ing committee; Effie Leese scott, secretary Otto H. Zumwinkel, di rectory J. 'A. Mcintosh, Wilson Switzer and Lulah B. Andrews. JAP AMBASSADOR HOPES TO FURTHER CO-OPERATION j ! Waterworks Employe Gets !; K More -Pay Than His Boss f't Lawrence;1" -Mass. John C. Hickey, the highest paid city em K ploye, an engineer at the local j; pumping station, receives, more J money than . liis , boss. Old fSl John J. Finnegan, whose annual tjl salary of $2,500 is outdone, by fj! Hickey by $5. Hickey receives $37 I,! for a 48-hour week, but gets Stin hi day overtime, which makes the dif ?j ference. Hickey has the better of Finne I't gan in another regard. He gets his S; house rent free and a week's vaca !! tion in the summer with pay. An I',' other fact about Mr. Hickey's pay fj is that it is the lowest paid by any J municipality in j the state for a water department resident engineer. .;'. ' Latter Day Sense. " : , Once It w-as the proper thing, In the shaping of their lives. For the men to have a string Of assorted kinds of wives. Now, until his days are done. So jealous law decrees, Every male must do with one And a few affinitiesl Cartoons Magazine. V To Provoni Grip : Toko "Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets" Be sure you get the Genuine Look for this signature 1,5 on the box. 30c A COLD RELIEVER FOR FIFTY YEARS Dr. King' New Discovery has j a successful record of half a century TIME ye of IME-TRIED for more thsn fifty tb and today at the zemtn ita nonularitv. When you think of that, vou are bound to be i, ' .convinced that Dr. King's New Dis j n covery does exactly what it ia meant "to do soothes cough-raw throats, " v ! congestion-tormented chests, loosens 1 phlegm-pack, and .breaks the most ' v f obstinate cold and grippe attack. A , . Dr.. King's Is safe for your cold, f for your mother's cold, for the kid i , ,jl die's cold, cough, croup. Leaves no . disagreeable after-effects. 60c a i1 BoweUAct Sluggish? ; tmrnlu bowels often remit in serious sickness and disorders of the liver and stomach. Make them act as " f they should with Dr. King's New Life j'f Pills. Keep the liver active the sys !' tern free from waste., 25c. a pottle. mi Kijuro Shidehara Arrives - in San Francisco to Take ' ;.:" Up Duties of Office. - -i . . - . , , . . . ,:. . ySan Francisco, Cal., Oct. 26. Ambassador Kijuro Shidehara, who comes to represent Japan in this country, arrived on the Siberia Maru. He will leave Tiere Tuesday morning for Washington, D. C. "I am delighted to find myself again . in America a country for which I have always entertained profound sympathy and admiration," said Ambassador Shidehara in a statement. "I fully realize that Washington is a very important post for the Japanese diplomatic service, and I am all the more sensi ble of the great responsibility Im posed on the mission with which I am now honored. Belief in. People. "At the same time I have a strong belief in the practical common sense of the American people, and, above, all, their instinctive love of justice, which have invariably proved in the end to have a controlling influence in all matters of international im portance. With this conviction in mind, I do not anticipate that my new task will be quite as difficult as it is important - "It is indeed my most agreeable duty, and my proud ambition, to do whatever lies in my power to pro mote the eo-operation between the two nations for the greater good of humanitv in a spirit of sincerity and good will. Happily, such co-operation has always existed in the past; and it must surelv be our patriotic aim to see that nothing prevents it now or in the future, and that petty jealousies and miserable suspicions shall never be allowed to come into our quarter of the globe." In Washington Before. Ambassador Shiderhara said he was looking forward with pleasure to returning to Washington, where he was stationed six years ago as counsellor of embassy. Born in 1872. he entered the diplo matic service in 1896. He was sent to Washington in 1912 ss counsellor, and was sent from there to London in the ssme capacity in December, 1913. He was appointed as minister to The Hague a few days before the European war broke out in 1914, and remained there for a year, when he was called back home and appointed vice minister of foreign affairs, hold ing that post until he received his present mission. Drops Dead While Being Tried as a Highwayman Greensboro, N. C The death of Claude Gilmer, a negro, while on trial in the superior court here, was one of the most spectacular occur rences ever witnessed in the state. Gilmer fell to the floor just as a witness testified against him to the effect that he was implicated in a highway robbery. 1 ' At tSe mention of his name Gil mer groaned, gave a loud gurgle, and fell to the floor, gasping for breath. Officers and fellow prison ers quickly carried him into the hall, where h died in just six min utes. , Sheriff Stafford and Jailer Gaffey said that he had been suf fering from a leaking heart for sev eral months. ' RUPTURED PEOPLE Throw Away Your Truss Tbotteende of raptured people ere fin dine; relief from the tortnrj "Pt?r" trim kr Being- STUARTS eeientllie AD HE8IT PLAPAO PAD8. Mk W V mind to be eble to throw ewer your em truee. Do away with eteel or rubber bands that chafe and pinch. Let ui eend yon FREE Trial PLAPAO No chare for it now or tt. lt u end yoa maea of evidence to proro what tha PLAPAO-PADS are doint for othera. Let ni nd yoa our book on Rup ture, telling rou many thing boo thl dictreaeing malady that yoa dont know. W have sworn atatementa on file from all over th oonntry, poeittwly proving that th PLAPAO-PADS have oorreeted, for all time to eome, tha dangcrone eonditiona that ie th cave of th protueion known a Tnptur.- DONT WAIT, DONT DELAY minute. 8end yonr nam and addreee TO DAY. Wa wUl eand a FEEK TRIAL PLAPAO by return" matt, alio book on rustur. Address FLAPAO UU Slock MS, tit. nao. Fistula-Pay When Cured AmUdrretem of treatment that esrea Pile, Flstnlg and ethet Heeta IDiecaeee ia a short tlme.wtthoat severe ur Skl epera tion. No Chloroform. Ether or other general aaaitaeflr nil A rorm ln.nntMd i f, nvnr rmm mtmtmA for treatraant. and no raeoey t be paid miil eared. WrltB for book on ReetalDieeaMe. with name aodtaarimooialeel more thaa 1SN arominent peopM who have been permaneaUr cored. DR. Be Re TARRY 240 RalMtast OUAHA, NEBRASKA Scores of Articles Made By Omaha Factories Wanted By Dealers of the World New Weekly List Submitted Gives Wonderful Oppor tunities For Sales to Foreign Marts at Good Prices Everything Imaginable From Furniture to Foun tain Pens Also List of Foreign Buyers Now in U. S. Dealing Personally With Salesmen. Names and addresses of firms mentioned in these "Foreign Trade Opportunities" may be obtained by a request, mentioning the file num ber, to the Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce, 402 Third National Banlc, Building, St. Louis, Mo. . This government office has been established in St. Louis to assist firms in the Mississippi valley to obtain their share of export trade and it welcomes inquiries from interested parties. . "Foreign Trade Opportunities,' which are gathered under govern ment auspices, and references to other commercial information of in terest to local firms are published every Monday in Ihe Daily Bee The following are the foreign trade items received during the past week Foreign Trade Opportunities. 120. Typewriters, leather of all kinds, locks of all kinds, door springs, furniture, castors, common table spoons, window hardware and hardware in general. The repre sentative of an American firm or ganized for trade with Russia and Poland desires to secure an agency for the sale of the above products. 121. Letters for signs. A firm in Brazil desires to secure an agency for the sale of interchangeable let ters for signs of the latest devices. He desires letters which are placed by means of hooks instead of being inserted at one end, as wa formerly the case. 122. Toilet and laundrv soaos, toilet articles and cigarets of well known brands. A commercial agent in Belgium desires to secure an agency or consignation of the above articles. Quotatoons should be given c. I f. Antwerp. Terms, pay ment against documents, corre spondence should be in French. Reference. 123. Musical instruments, photo graphic supplies, chemical products relating to photography and in gen eral all that concerns photographic art. A merchant in Greece desires to secure agencies for the sale of the above products. Quotations should be given c. i. f. Piraeus or Volo, Greece. Samples, catalogs, price lists and full information are de sired. References. 124. Two firms in Germany de sire to secure the representation of exporters for the sale of - general merchandise; one firm desires -par ticularly yarns for supplying the nu merous weaving mills in its district. 125. Motorboat engines, ihe sec retary of a motorboat club in the British West Indies desires to re ceive cataloes and orice lists of American motorboat engines of from 10 to 35 horsepower, for the inspec tion of the members of the club who wish to purchase engines. 126. Motor trucks. A syndicate, comprising the leading mercnanis and exporters in a district of Spain, has been organized for the purchase and operation of a large number ot motor trucks. 1 hese are requirea for the transportation of merchan dise from the factories and ware houses, many of which are located at some distance from the city, to wharfs and railroad stations. 127. Electrical materials, espe cially those for illuminating pur poses, agricultural implements, ma chines, tools, rolling stock for rail roads, locomotives and electrical lo comotives. An agency is desired by a man in Italy for the sale of the above articles. In all cases where possible samples and catalogs are de sired. Quotations snouiu De given i. f. Italian port Payment, cash against documents. Correspondence should be in Italian. .References. 128. Medium grade pleasure cars. A firm in France desires to se cure agencies for the sale of me dium' grade pleasure cars. Corre spondence should be in French. Reference. 129. Cement. Mosaie tiles, plas ter of paris and red for reinforcing concrete. A commercial agent from Cuba who is at present in the United States desires to secure an agency for the above lines. Reference. 130. Watches. ' fountain pens, pencils, paper and other stationery, playing cards, confectionery, etc. A company in India desires to purchase and secure agencies for the sale of the above products. Payment through banks in India. References. 131. Wood office furniture, roll and flat top desks, typewriter tables, filing cabinets, office chairs. A com mercial agent in England desires to secure an agency tor the sale oi tne above products. Quotations should be given c. i. f. English city. Pay ment cash against documents. Ref erences. I 132. Flour, grain, rice, beans, coffee, potatoes, onions, salt, canned goods and all classes of food prod ucts, as well as drugs, paper, glass ware, textiles and chemical orod ucts. A firm in Cuba having sales men in all the seaport towns of the island desires to represent firms for the sale of the above products. References. 1 133. Drugs, chemicals, pharma ceutical supplies and druggist sun dries, A firm in . Cuba desires to represent American manufacturers of the above products. References. 134. "Windmills, small refriger ating ; machinery, motor trucks, oil and gasoline engines and light ing plants. A representative of an Australian house importing ma chinery now in the United States desires to secure agencies for the above lines. References. 135. Irrigation Pumping Plant (Windmill, Oil Engine and Small Suction Gas Engines). Iron Pining for Water, Farming and Dairying Accessories, Including Plain Barbed and Wire Netting' and Iron Stand ards An agency is desired by a man in South Africa for the sale of the above outfit. References. 136. Kentucky and Virginia Leaf Tobacco A merchant in Algeria desires to secure an agency for the sale of tobacco. Quotations should be given c. i. f. Algeria or f. o. b. New York. Payment, cash against documents. Correspondence may be in English. Referenees. 137. Raw Materials and Ready- made Articles A firm in Germany desires to represent American firms in the sale of all raw materials, as well as ready-made articles. It also desires to take charge of warehous ing goods, commission and cash collection. References. 138. Automobiles, Typewriters, Elevators, Engineering Supplies, Cement, Concrete Machines. Ma chine Tools A Russian civil engi neer desires to represent in Latvia (Lettland) American manufacturers of the above products. Correspond ence may be in English. References. 139. A company in Jamaica de sires to purchase general articles which, may be retailed at 12 and 24 cents. Quotations should be given f. o. b. New York. . Terms, 30 days, sight draft. References. 140. Automobiles, Motor 1 rucks, Bicycles, Furniture, Office Furni ture and Supplies, Such as. Type writer!, ' Check ' Protectors, Filing Cabinets, Calculating Machines and Safes; Hardware and Specialties, Phonographs, Pianolas, Machinery, Electric Motors and Appliances, Chemicals, Provisions, Cotton Goods, Billiards and Iron and Steel Goods A firm of manufacturers' agents in Colombia, having sample rooms and several commercial trav elers, desires to represent on com mission and consignment basis the above lines. References. Trade Lists. 141. Agents for American goods, Limoges, France. 14Z. Hosoitals. druggists ana com mission agents in Greece. 143. Lumber dealers, British West Indies. 144.. Grain importers, Spain. 145. Dealers in steel office furni ture in the Johannesburg, bouth Africa, consular district 146. Oil cake and cattle food manufacturer in the United King 147. Shoe manufacturers, custom shoe malcing establishments, import ers of shoe machinery, retail shoe stores, department stores handling footwear, manufacturers of alpar gatas and zapatillas, dealers in leather and sho supplies in Argen tina.' ' 148. Cutlery and hardware deal ers, Cienruegos, Cuba. 149. Importers of automobile ac cessories and garages, curacae, Dutch West Indies. 150. Importers and dealers in textiles, Peru. 151. Cordage and rope, Mara- caibe, Venezuela. 162. Industrial supply houses in Kobe and Osaka. Jacan, which im port leather belting. 153. The proprietor of a large general store in Khartoum, Sudan, BERNARD SHAW ATTACKS GREY AS ENVOY HERE Noted Writer Fears Former Foreign Minister of Britain Wifl Consider Us Outsiders and Fall Into Jap Hands. ; By GEORGE BERNARD SHAW. London, Oct 26. Now that Lord Grey has been sent to the United States to represent us there, I am moved by Robert Dell's allusion to me to declare that though I have called the policy of our foreign of fice during Lord Grey's secretary ship a Machiavellian policy, I do not regard Lord Grey as a Machia velli. I heartily wish he were. I think Mr. Dell has hit him off very accurtely, except that when an English country gentleman is so "simple-minded that he never knows what he is doing, and can, therefore, at any moment assure the country in all honor that he is not doing it, his simplicity is not of the kind called holy, I should not myself have sent Lord Grey to America, or even, since our successes in the east, to Jericho. As an English country gentleman Lord Grey regards Americans as outsiders and czars as insiders. He made that clear in his dealings with Morgan Shuster. He may have been right. But is not the point, which is that as our relations with America are extremely delicate just at present, and likely to become more so, and as the Americans do not regard themselves as outsiders (possibly again quite wrongly), the appoint ment ot Lord Orey is hardly the masterpiece of tact it has been hailed as by the British press. Well Received in Society. As to what Lord Grey will do in America, which is, after all. the im- portant thing, he will be well received- in American society. The conscious part of him will respond very agreeably to these attentions, and his speeches will be reassuring and quite intelligent and pleasant. And the unconscious part of him will fall into the hands of whoever the Japanese equivalent of Isvolsky may be, and will maneuver for a strangle hold on Our most formid able rival, now that Germany is dis posed of. What else is there for Lord Grey to do. with his official traditions and his instincts as "a simple-minded country gentleman''? Now, if there is one point more than another at which the Ameri cans mistrust and dread our old diplomacy, it is the Japanese point. The einkreisung is too obvious. Yon will never persuade the American diplomatists that Lord Grey has not secret treaty with Japan in his pte flavor and wkolcomenM of Hm baited foodi is never excelled Gooch's BEST- Flo ur Mai t$ home oalung more economical. Sold in the be$t ttores is now in this country to purchase and secure agencies in all lines of general merchandise. 154. A man in La Pas, Bolivia, desires to purchase plumbing ma terial and supplies, bath room fix tures, hardware, tools, paints, zinc, tinware, tin. iron and steel goods. electrical goods and supplies, glass, hardwood flooring, medical and sur gical instruments and appliances, tractors, agricultural machinery and implements, paper and machinery tor the manufacture of tile flooring. 155. A merchant of Cape Town, South Africa, desires to purchase and secure agencies for South Africa and London in hosiery, underwear, dry goods, tractors, farming imple ments, boots and shoes, automo biles and general merchandise, 156. A representative of a firm in Buenos Aires, Argentina, is seek ing agencies for that country In au tomobiles, auto accessories, textiles, office supplies, novelties, specialties, furniture, pianos and general merchandise. VOTE FOR Charles Grau of Bennington for delegate to CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTION H is absolutely qualified one of our foremost constructive citizens ths only Douglas Co. candidate out side of Omaha and the people's choice. VOTE FOR HIM Spanish Employers To Lock Out Every Workman in Land Madrid, Oct. 26. The congress of Spanish employers, sitting at Barce lona, declared a general lockout of workmen throughout Spain. The lockout order will be effective Tues day, November 4. The minister of the interior, in announcing the decision of the con gress, said it was an act of provoca tion' against the workers and ex pressed the hope that the employers would not carry out the measure. "At a moment when the workers are asking nothing," he added, "the action of the employers is foolish." The congress also decided to make its organization permanent, as a protest against the alleged crimes of the syndicalists and take steps looking to the protection of the em ployers, a Barcelona dispatch says. The employers declare that their ac tion has been taken as a protest against the government's fajlure to protect the employers' interests. The employers are dissatisfied with the new social laws granting workers shorter hours ana providing pensions. The government is taking all nec essary measures to deal with the situation. The governor of Barcelona has begun negotiations with the employ ers and workmen, with a view to preventing the lockout. s: Docket And that is why I would not have sent Lord Grey to Amer ica. . I shall be asked. I suooose. whom I would send instead of Lord Grey, the implication being that he is the only diplomatist in the empire. I reply, precisely and without a moments hesitation, that I should have sent H. L. Mackinder. Not so much because he is a man of ability so distinguished that he may be classed as one of our few geniuses, because that fact is indis cernible in the House of Commons, which is as unconscious of his be ing anyone in particular as it was for 30 years of Lord Rhondda. I would send him because he knows that North and South Amer ica are only a couple of perilously situated islands, and that it is dan gerous for us to tomfool with island security. FIND $7,000 IN SQUIRREL NEST IN DEEP RAVINE Young Women Hunters in Wood Uncover Cash and Bonds Stolen From Bank. Los Angeles, Cal., Oct. 26. A squirrel, building his winter home, and a covey of quail joined the prosecuting force which expects to send Lewis B. Harris to the peni tentiary for the robbery of the Ar tesia bank, the latter pointing the way and the former causing discov ery of the bandit's secret cache to three young women hunting three miles northeast of Artesia. Led into a deep ravine on the properly of O. Chamberlain by a covey of the delectable game birds, Mrs. Verne O. Curl of Artesia and Mrs. Richard F. Brown and Mrs. J. R. Winings of this city came upon a squirrel hole in a bank. As they looked, a busy squirrel pushed a bit of currency out of the orifice. Other paper money was seen scattered about, and the young women investigated. As a result, $1,000 in bills, mort gages, postage stamps, blank post office money orders and other se curities valued at more than $7,000 were turned over to the authorities. It has been established that these papers were part of the loot from the robbery of the Artesia bank on March 25 of $18,000 in cash and bonds. That the squirrel and quail have conclusively proved Harris' guilt the authorities say, is demonstrated by the fact that empty Liberty bond containers found in the cache bora the numbers of bonds Harris is known to have hypothecated in San Francisco Stow Part of Whale in Safe Deposit Vault New Bedford Mass. Hidden in the safe deposit vault of a New Bedford bank lies a 20-pound lump of ambergris, removed from a sick whale off the Hatteras capes and brought into port here by Capt. H. A. Mandly, in comn7ini of the Provincetown whaling vessel John R. Manta. AMFSEMKNTS. AMUSEMENTS. TONIGHT AT 8:25. Aas TUES.-WED WED. MATIN Nights. SOo t 12.00; Wed. Hit., ICOHAN HARRIS S fSRCSKNT I IEC. 250 to II. SO. a -CKHs. S JaC . Vf THEALTITU0E RECOHO FOR ftUStC, PUN and LAUGtme The Whott romlne, a Delight te Both Eye led Ear That Will Never Be For- aottea. 7E BROADWAY FAVORITEES , ( lO AUGMENTED ORCHESTRA ' 0 COMING EVENTS Boyd's Theater m;X EVERY NIGHT THIS WEEK. Pop. Matt. Wd., Thurs. and Sat. The N. Y. Winter Gardens PASSING SHOW IN ITS ENTIRETY WITH THE ALL STAR CAST HEADED BY Willie & Eugene Howard ROY CUMMINS WM. PHIILBRICK JOHN BURKE EDWARD BASSE AND ISO OTHERS. INCLUDING THE BEWILDERING WINTER GARDEN CHORDS PHOTO PLATS PHOTO P LAI'S PHOTO PLATS. BRILLIANT MUSICAL BURLESQUE Twici Daily veek Mat. Today Final Parformaaca Friday Nlta Banter Gerard Prcaanta Watson & Cohan witL and tha GIRLS DeLOOKS In a Legal Muekal Bariatta , Entitled "Slitkin & Slotkin lawyIIV A Gerard Beauty Chorus ALWAYS IN FINE FETTLE DKAB READER: The Doualu County Bar never ha4 ee member! two luca ehveter lawyere ea Slitkin Blotkin. They hare no re epect for truth and henesty. but Dreamt 11 ell In euon a funny meaner that you itmply can't distrust them. A mlioty good shew. I'U tti. PIT) MAN JOHNSON. Mrr. Geyety. Eenini A Sua. Mat., 28, SO, 75, $1 Wats 15qnd 25c Chew gum if jreu like but no emakina LADIES' tfli AT ANY WEEK TirtrBTS DAY MATINEE Baby Carriage Garage In the Lobby 3 TWO SHOWS IN ONE. Comeey Sketch. Twe Sweetheartet atehel Whitman ed Her Dixie Boye: Jeaeette Chllde. Remii Troupe, eea GledMBroekw.il In Her PhetoHay. "CheelM RalnheweV' Me Swale Coeiee-"0tlei Cheater." anf Pathe New. MAT DAILY 2:11 Txt el it EMMA HAIO eei JACK WALORON iVERY E9L NIGHT iiB VAUBCVIU :l5 IT. ROY BARNES lea ISESSII CRAWFORD xi at it "THE CURRENT Or FUN" J. K. Emmerts Msr Ryan A Ce.; Nayaei A Ereelle; 8tM Juhau; Sutter A Belli Kin ogreme; Teploe ot the Day. PHOTO PLATS. Katherinc MacDonald and Thot. Meighan "The Thiderbolt" eJeTje . i i imnaiui n i' Viola Dana in "The Microbe" 5R w 0 0 THE GREATEST PHOTOPLAY EVER PRODUCED Don't Mist It The Love of Life and For Animals Actually Portrayed in "la; to At the Today to Thursday Am Abjoluta NoYalty, Unique! Different! Q The Story of Dolores, the Swimming r of the Canadian Wilds, end how her love sympathy for animals won the love of "Wapi, TJ the Killer," the great fighting dog trails. 4"," Leave your nams at tha be office Wa i g mail you tha "Rialta Mirrsr." the .m ijr fS.WT- aS 1 ' L-l a Je TODAY J