ik U ga. MOW& Naney Carroll fits the part exactâ€" ly. It was in musical comedy that she won her greatest renown; in such Pe&i is one of those girls with wellâ€"balanced senses of comedy and lightful dancer. When she dances a gang of miners and sourdoughs throw away their hats.and spend their last cent wineâ€"bibbing in her‘honor. Those enviable qualities which made Nancey Carroll a favorite on the stage inspired Charles Klein, Fox director, to cast her in the chief role of "The Sin Sister." . The actor is that of Pearl, a vaudeâ€"villian, Mount Dennis ‘ï¬;emre Free Parking Space â€" At Your Vaudeville _ .â€" _ - â€" MAJ PINKY DINKY THE SIN SISTER LAWRENCE GRAY Last Chapter of "THE FINAL RECKONING" FRANK ALBERTSON Comedy Auction Night Every Tuesday Singing and Dancing Review Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday MONDAY, TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY OCTOBER â€"21, 22, 23 THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY OCTOBER 17, 18, 19 _ _ Breakaway from The Big City Blues! THE SIN SISTER He married for a chancee at happiness, ert" i. and all he got was a family around his i neck dragging him down like a ten ton | derrick. N G Hear and Sing the Theme 0 t 19?)B Song ‘MY SONG OF THE NILF WITH HELEN TWELVETREES WED.â€"THURS.â€"FRI. WITH NANCY CARROLL BLUE SKIES Danger that lurks in the curve of smiling lips. Danger that lurks in the loveâ€"charms of two womenâ€"rivals in love. IT‘S Playing Next ks o en CLARA ‘.:::*‘fé?%j':j}i?_ 2. o iss es xo s t tss & + $y ie cosill e , PLAYING SATURDAY N omeo 8 \ _ "omoy Gom® â€"andâ€" â€"andâ€" IS HERE IN plays as "Chicago" she demonstrated her right to be called an actress. Appearing opposite Miss Carroll is that popular leading man, Lawrence Gray, Others in the cast include Joâ€" sephine Dunn , Andrews _ Randolf, Myrtle Stedman, Richard Alexander, Frederick H. Graham, George Davis and David Callis. The story was written by Frederâ€" ick Hazlitt Brennan and Becky Gardâ€" iner, It was adapted by Harry Behn. "The Sin Sister" has been annourcâ€" ed for showing at the Major Mt. Denâ€" nis Theatre beginning Thursday, Friâ€" day and Saturday, Oct. 17th, 18th and 19th. adrg ol __cin SINGING Barthelmess Phone 1128 Vaudeville nt All Tal king Richard DRAG Young Canada‘s Saturday Matinee First and Second Episode "THE BLACK BOOK" i pictuLe «"Lizbeth" has never had scereen credit, but she has had innumerable closeâ€"ups and miles of footage in moâ€" tion pictures. "Lizbeth," alas, has but one expression which is painted on her face with makeâ€"up, punctuated by shoe button eyes,. For "Lizbeth" is an old rag doll and her work has been with her loving little "mother," fourâ€" yearâ€"old Carmencita Johnson, whose work as a wee trouper is outstanding in Hollywood. o "Lizbeth" wears a plaid gingham frock, much the worse for wear, but her lack of temperament it notable. She made her initial scereen appearâ€" ance in "The Covered Wagon," and since then has been photographed in many pictures. Now she is carmerâ€" cita‘s comfort in "Blue Skies," directâ€" ed for Fox Films by Alfred L. Werkâ€" er, wherein Carmencita plays little Dorothy May in the early sequences of the picture, doubling Helen Twelveâ€" trees as a child. The picture is to be shown at the Major Mt. Dennis Theatre Monday, Tuesday, Wednesâ€" day, Oet. 21st, 22nd, and 23rd. Carmencita is entrusted with . an unusually pathetic role as the wistâ€" ful little orphan and, "Lizbeth" tightâ€" ly clasped in her arms, is an importâ€" ant "prop" in many seenes, particularâ€" ly when her diminutive mistress is sent to bed without dessert, for varâ€" lous infractions of ironâ€"clad rules, or stood in a corner by a stern and imâ€" patient matron when things go awry. _ What "Lizbeth" lacks is expression and style she makes up in understandâ€" ing, according to little Carmencita. (Continued from page 2) in the sand. To learn His deeds we must depend on human testimony. The original records were copied by hand until 150,000 variations _ have been counted in the manuscripts. The human reactions, characteristic of all religion, inevitably took placeâ€"superâ€" stition and doubt, myth and legend, dogma, controversy, fanaticism. It was so from the beginning. Paul would not have ‘written as he did in Galations, had it not been for Judaizers! nor in Ephesians, but for the subtleties of the Gnostics. PLAYING SATURDAY MONDAY TUESDAY No criticism can destroy the value TALKING THE SERMON BLUE SKIES What Are Nerves? Did you ever stop to wonder why it is that only wealthy people can afford "nerves ?" One of the hobbies of a large group of society women is to have a breakdown in the winâ€" ter and be ordered to Floridcs and perhaps another breakdownjfï¬en hot weather comes around, and then the doctor is almost sure to,prescribe a sea voyage. _ . ‘Poor things! It really isn‘t their imâ€" agination; most of them are literally a "bundle of nerves." But instead of prescribing Florida in the winter and Europe in the summer, their physiâ€" cian (if he dared!) should suggest a few days over a washtub. That would soon cure their jumpy nerves. Neuras is the result of idle ness of body and mind. Jumpy nerves are the result of having nothing to do. It is Nature‘s law that every living thing must burn up a certain amount of brain and body tissue each day in order to keep normal and healthy. Sleeping late, breakfast in bed, a limâ€" ousine ride to a smart hotel for lunch, perhaps a matinee in the afternoon, a formal dinner party and an evening of the message Personally, I do not believe _ that it has overthrown, or can overthrow, the essentially historical character of the records. But, for the sake of arâ€" gument, grant the most negative conâ€" clusions, what remains? Suppose that no miracle can be acâ€" cepted as a fact. What must have been the personality, which, with only natural powers, so impressed . His friends that they testified: "He went about doing good;" so impressed His enemies, that they bore witness: "He saved others;" and has so imppressed the ages since, that today a M{)hamâ€" medan can find no higher praise for the Hindoo, Gandhi, than to call him "Christlike!" Story That Transforms the World The theory that there never _ was such an historical character as Jesus, is today scouted even by Jewish writers. Granted . that a haunting concepâ€" tion of a Divine Savicur somehow took concrete shape in the first cenâ€" tury, why was it not attributed, as in Vergil‘s Eclogue, to the child of Augustus, instead of to a crucified Gallilean? How could an imaginary person produce an effect which tranâ€" scends that of any historical characâ€" ter? O sceptic, great is thy faith! Yet, even then, the story remains! And, as William Stead said to himself after witnessing the "Passion Play" at Oberammergau: "This is the story that has transformed the world! Yea and shall transform it!" World Must Come to Jesus The good news, therefore, is like the firmament above our heads. No human progress can disprove it, or dispense with it. Instead of useless controversies, let us vie with one another in living as if it were true! > Or must we admit that "Our churâ€" ches are made up of people who would be equally shocked to see Christianity doubted or put into practice ?" Let us heed the words of the Bishop of Winchester at Stockholm: "It is as great folly to disregard the will of God as revealed in Jesus, as it is to flout the law of gravitation! Change your minds, for th Kingdom of Heaven is at hand!" This is not merely a moral chalâ€" lenge, but good news! Think of this life only, and what does it mean? Imagine a,. world in which every capâ€" tain of industry imitated the Capâ€" tain of our Salvation and every artiâ€" san the Carpenter of Nazareth! In which all nations judged themselves by this rule and became Christlike! "These things shall be!" P For we cannot go on exalting Jesus, and not remark our whole civâ€" ilization. We must choose; and who can doubt what will be our ultimate choice ? Bobbie and Billie Rabbit were in the heart of the woods one moonâ€" light night when all was very still. ary> l : i% ia[{/ . f {"":,‘. o ’rfl}t“-'f-’ a C '.l’ B (ZotPe â€œï¬ 7 e \.~~;:-.;_‘;__:,ï¬>.~.-..}'. ’ ',.‘. Fatmer ) Phone Junet. 9717 By Bernarr Macfadden Ith« {appimness WHY shHouLcpN‘â€"t you TELL _ MmMOTHER ABOUr it., PINKEy 2 3y GUIDEPOSTS TO JEWELLER AND OPTICIAN SHEPPARD of bridge, while sounding like an amâ€" bitious program, is utterly worthless as far as physical or mental exercise is concerned. Did you ever hear of a day laborer or a well trained athlete taking â€" to his bed with a case of nerves? Of course not. It just doesn‘t happen, because there isn‘t any reason for it to happen. Improper nourishment can cause a physically active man to collapse but that is beside the point It is amazing how much endurance the ‘average healthy person has. Haven‘t you yourself gone to bed at times with the soles of your feet throbbing and your brain _ whirling madly around ? But doesn‘t a . good night‘s sleep in a well ventilated room make you feel like a new _ person next morning ? The long and short of the matter is that "nerves" are due primarily to poisons or toxins as medical men call them. These poisons are generâ€" ated by the system and the only way to get rid of them is by proper diâ€" gestion and assimilation, regular elimâ€" ination and sufficient exercise _ of brainancd body. "What are you thinking asked Billie of Bobbie. "I was thinking that it would not be long before Mister Fox came along on and I would like to play a trick on him," replied Bobbie. "Just what is the nature of the trick?" asked Billie. "I was thinking," began Bobie, slowly, "that if we took the looking glass from our bedroom and put it out here in the moonlight and I got behind a tree so that my face showâ€" ed in the mirror, then Mister Fox would think I was my image in the glass and he would go for me and when he found that I was not there, I would be so far away he :couldn‘t catch me." 5 "Fine idea; you go and get the glass and I‘ll watch for the Fox and if he comes before you get back. I‘ll thump twice on the ground and you‘ll know enough not to come back and I‘ll join you." Saying this, Billie preâ€" pared himself as the lookâ€"out. _____ Billie ran out of reach of the Fox while they waited. He was supposed to tell Bobbie when the sly fellow hove in sight. In a little while he went thump, thump, thump on the ground and Bobbie knew Mister Fox was comâ€" ing. By and by Bobbie came back with the looking glass and put it up against a tree, placing himself opposite it with his back against another tree. TWD DDUE THIEVES £01 A RFAL SGARE Two strangers who: entered the home of Mrs. Groves, located on the Dundas Highway near Dixie received a chase which they will long rememâ€" ber and they are indeed fortunate in not being apprehended. A week ago last Wednesday Mrs. Groves, who was absent from her home, had locked up everything in the usual way, and when she returned to her surprise she was informed that unwelcome visitors had entered the house. "Ho, ho; hi, hi!" exclaimed Mister Fox. "This is the time I get you." And with that he made a dash for the fingure of Bobbie in the mirror. CRASH! Away seampered Bobbie to join Billie and when they met both made off through the moonlight in the woods The Home of Mrs. Groves At Dixie Was Entered On Wedâ€" nesday Last By Two Men Mrs. Groves informs the "News" that as far as she could ascertain nothing had been taken, although it was quite evident that one or more persons had gone through the house. It was the night of the Cooksville Fair, and Mrs. House, who_ lives across the road from the Groves home, was rather suspicious of a car which drove in the Groves‘ laneway. The car later backed out, and when some member of the House family, asked one of the two men what his business was he stated that they were in need of gasoline. The police were communicated with, but before they arrived the two men evidently became suspicious and beat it, but not before The mornings are getting dark when it is time for rising. Do not be late. Have one of our Alarm Clocks that never fail to alarm. Fine line of Mantel Clocks. Beautiful Musical Chime Clocks. Moderate priced. CLOCKS 4 ies L s» Y â€" ‘S . C “ ‘ ! | @ â€"" /4 7 ) A M C P 2915 Dundas St. about ?" By TERRY GILKISON It is thought that when the memâ€" bers of the House family entered Mrs. Groves‘ home thinking that they might find the burgulars, they were upstairs hiding, as there was no trace whatever of them in the cellar or the first floor. It is thought that there Bill Fraser, son of Sergt. Fraser of the Toronto Police Force, who is a sonâ€"inâ€"law of Mrs. House, took after them on his motorcycle. He chased them all the way to Toronto, but in the heavy traffic he lost sight of them at Jane St. Weston T heatre â€"at your next party Pale Dry Phonesâ€"Weston 74 If you want to wear a manâ€"sized, genial grin this winter buy Irvin‘s Coal now at a warm weather price. â€"Says Practy Cal. THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY. OCT. 17, 18, 19 MONDAY, TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY, OCT. 21, IRVIN LUMBER CO., SERVE Evangeline ‘tYOU’ The Black W atch "The Lone Wolf‘s Daughter" wWith MYRNA LOY, DAVID POLLINS, ROY D‘ARCY Pleasure Crazed An All Talking Fox Movietone Feature A Talking Comeay One Silent Comedy Ted Wells in a Made to Order Hero A Western Picture for Saturday U‘LL LIKE IT BETTER" VICTOR McLAGLEN A Fox Movietone All Talking _ Production Also Millions enjoy Evangeline Ginger Ale. Three men worked out the closely guarded formula blending fruit juices with ginger in a manner never known before or since in any other drink. Matinee For the Children Ginger Ale Evangeline Beverages Bert Lytell LIMITED FRUIT BLEND WITH (Ont.) Ltd. â€"BRAMPTON were four in number, two in the car and two in the house. In making their escape the two men travelled, drove through the traffic at a terrific rate of speed. Bill Fraser was fortunate in being able to obtain the license numâ€" ber. "I don‘t see why you call this a rare volume." Big Creek Muskrat We sell live muskrats for breeding purposes. . We have a very attractive ranching agreement to offéer you. : We have the largest enclosed and best developed muskrat ranch in Canada. We sell on easy terms, where deâ€" sired, You are invited to visit our ranch at Port Rowan. For full particulars write: ‘It came back after I had lent it." Farms Limited BIG CREEK SALES, LTD. MUSKLRATS Fiscal Agents, 614â€"16â€"18 Lister Block, Hamilton, Ont. IJUnction 9662 Rare 21. 22. 28 LilHly K Â¥h