Evening Republican, Volume 22, Number 290, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 3 December 1919 — Page 1 Advertisements Column 5 [ADVERTISEMENT]

'v CktUbivaa rrFIHERE is no more ti practical way of selecting a Christmas present for a man than by seeing the gift itself. We have in the neighborhood of 3000 shirts in stock for Xmas- our 9 store is small and we necessarily have to keep them in boxes. Won’t you shop early? We just love to show a customer a lot of shirts and if you will shop early we’ll show you more shirts than you ever saw before in one store. $3 to sls

Mr. and Mrs. O. W. Cedarwall, of North Union, were in Rensselaer today.

STAR THEATRE TONIGHT / SESSUE HAYAKAWA “THE TEMPLE OF DUSK” A CHARACTER OF STRONG PERSONALITY PLAYED BY A STAR OF POWER. EVERYONE SHOULD TRY AND TAKE THIS PICTURE IN. ALSO _ BURTON HOLMES' TRAVELS TOMORROW Big Seven Reel Feature AND DOROTHY DALTON “AGAMBLEIN SOULS” In this latest Triangle-Kay Bee play there is the smash and whirl and rush of the sea, a wonderful, breath-taking shipwreck, the pnmal battle of two souls in the wilderness, with suspense, violence and all that; goes to make up a virile story of primitive life. . . William Desmond, as a clergyman working in the slums/of ban Francisco, in the new Triangle-Kay Bee drama, A Gamble ifa Souls, preaches the doctrine of turning the other cheek and when a big husky wallops him on the jaw he makes good by turning the other chsek and going down again. They do say this part of the picture irked Bill exceedingly, He is a big two-fisted athlete himself, and the role of punching bag was about the last he wanted to play. _ Dorothy Dalton, seen in many of Triangle s play* during the past year, is co-starred with William Desmond in “A Gamble in Souls, a hew drama by Lanier Bartlett. Miss Dalton’s last previous appearance was as star of “The Jungle Child,” in which she came from a primeval fastness to New York. In the new play, oddly enough, she goes from San Francisco’s cabarets to a desert island. “SCRAPS AS ARE SCRAPS" IN NEW TRIANGLE DRAMA WILLIAM DESMOND AND P. D. TABLES, BOTH IN HEAVYWEIGHT CLASS, DO SOME GREAT “MIXING.” . There are two fights in “A Gamble in Souls” which make this Tn-angle-Kay Bee play, by Lanier Bartlett, in which Thomas H. Ince P re * e ““ Dorothy Dalton and William Desmond, one of the most sensational yet produced at the Culver City studios. One is a free-for-all battle m what purports to be a mission in San Francisco, and the other is a migh y hand-to-hand struggle between two powerful men on a lonely island. The free-for-all fight was staged on one of the studio stages and is remembered at the plant as one of the fiercest e ?**£*J; Ji filming it Director Walter Edward, selected the hardest men * his disposal and then instructed them to go to it. man, and the result was a rough-and-tumble, chair throwing, melee such as Author Bartlett had prescribed, but never believed wouia The twJman encounter took place on Santa Crux island, the Pacific, and the combatanta Were William Descmondl «dP. D. Tabler. Jt was filmed in several sections, and so earnestly did the it each time that they were compelled to rest for overthe The end of this struggle comes when Desmond hurls Tabler edge of a steep embankment and into the imprisoning ooze of a stagnant | BWamp - also < “PERILS OF THE PARK” A TWO REEL COMEDY WORTH A SCREAM FROM START TH,S T h E PRICE. TO SEE ITS —— ■ ♦ • iiw* A? ..