The Oklahoma Advance (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 27, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 31, 1922 Page: 3 of 12
twelve pages : ill. ; page 24 x 16 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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September 1. 1922
OKLAHOMA ADVANCE
Page Three
1 TIE Li”
PRIZE ESSAYS
working out the great principles
upon which human welfare and
civilization depend.
(10) It drives home the convic-
tion of the majesty of the law and
the heroism that may be required
of officers in its impartial enforce-
ment.
C. A. GREENLEES,
521 West 18th St.
Creates Respect For Law.
After viewing that epic of the
Northwest, “I Am the Law’' that
country situated north of 54—
where men think quick and shoot
straight, where the indomitable R.
N. M. P. hold sway—one comes
away with more respect for our
own law, and we need that very
thing.
A man that is a law unto him-
self is his own worst enemy for
sooner or later he gets “in bad”
with the law, whose arm is long
and far-reaching, as is shown in
this picture, one of furwood’s best.
When a man once crosses the
dividing line of respectability it is
rather hard to beat back and he
very seldom does, rather sinking to
lower and lower stages of civiliza-
tion till he becomes an outlaw—a
hunted creature, as did the crim-
inal brother who4>aid the penalty—
death.
A red-blooded, gripping drama,
brimful of action that makes you
sit up in your seat and take notice
Picture Of Canadian North-
west Made Deep Impres-
sion On Audience.
The following are the prize win-
ning manuscripts in the Advance
contest on “Why Everyone Should
See ‘I Am the Law.' ” C. A. Green-
less won the first prize of $5.00
the other winners received $1.00
worth of tickets to the Folly.
Charged With Intense Dramatic
Power.
Everyone should see "I am the
Law” because:
(1) It is entrancingly interest-
ing. charged with intense dramatic
power.
(2) It is alluringly beautiful,
bringing the snow and ice and
frost artistry of nature in the
Northland before you in landscape
that can never be forgotten.
(3) It presents unselfish, loyal
womanhood and its worth and vic-
tory in sharp contrast to selfish-
ness and disloyalty in womau and
their dire consequences.
(4) It shows the strength and
beauty of a son’s devotion to his
brother and mother in contrast to
the weakness and ugliness of one
who lacks those qualities.
(5) It shows Ihe danger of mob
law to the innocent.
(6) It drives home the convic-
tion that virtue brings its own re-
ward and sin its own punishment.
(7) It shows that God does cot
forget His children.
(8) It shows that "The primal
duties shine aloft like stars.”
(9) It does not preach at you,
but shows you real men and women
In the simple relations of life,
—The sooner you eat at the Itroadway Central Coffee Shop the sooner yon’ll find the place you’ve been loowrag ror—
of every action, that is—“I Am the
Law.’’
BERTHA KILLIAN,
706 West 21st St.
True to Life.
The reason every one should see
the picture, “I Am the Law” is:
It is one of the most moral pic-
tures, true to life and shows so
plainly the saying of the I^ord, that
the time would come that brother
would turn against brother and
wife against husband and so on.
MRS. F. E. CHUBB,
1027 East 7th St.
Reward for Noble Character.
The reasons for every one seeing
“I Am the Law” are threefold.
First, the noble character shown
in one man and his reward. Sec-
ond, how faithlessness and drink
ruin lives. Third, how surely God
answers prayers.
The noble character displayed by
Bob, bis love for his mother and
brother, in praising Tom to his
mother; his self-sacrifice when he
loved the same girl as his brother;
his faithfulness to duty in follow-
ing his brother after he shoots the
sergeant, and greatest of all his
confession when he thought he was
dying to save his mother’s heart
from breaking by the loss of two
sons, and giving Tom a chance to
make good: teaches a lesson that
(Continued on page ten.)
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VPVViTX
VUUXV VWJ0E\nU.E
OPENS SUNDAY MATINEE
SEPT. 10
Go to the Folly and Spend What Yon Save. TIIE FAMILY THEATRE—Where Everybody Goes
ONLY
CENTS
1 ' w
•- ■ lv y ^
• ■ .
r t
ONLY
CENTS
Friday and Saturday
WM. FAIRBANKS
in
“THE CLEANUP”
Episode Three
RUTH ROLAND
in
‘THE TIMBER QUEEN’
Snub Pollard Comedy
Tuesday & Wednesday
CONSTANCE
TALMADGE
in
“Lessons
In
Love”
SOME lessons — from
love’s first miss to love’s
sixty-sixth kiss. Let
Connie teach you all the
tricks—and
«
Laugh While You Learn
Sunday and Monday
STRONGHEART
the Wonder Dog
in
“THE
SILENT
CALL”
See the Wonder-Dog
of All Dramas
Strongheart the Killer
—more than human
The drama of one woman and many men in the
hills of thrills—and of a giant wolf-dog pulling
between the blood-call of the wolf-pack and dog-
devotion to the girl.
*triste
See the Fourth
Great Narrative
of
THE BIBLE
“THE DELUGE”
Sun. and Mon.
fCH*
THURSDAY
19,482 KISSES A DAY
A Record made by
ALICE LAKE
in
A picture of Romance
and Fun.
Aesop’s Fables—SpoitReview—Topics
Friday and Saturday
Sept. 8
TEXAS GUINAN
in
“I am
the
Woman”
A New Kind of
Western Photoplay
—Also—•
Fourth Episode
‘THE TIMBER QUEEN’
Starring Ruth Roland
The Talk Of the Town
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130
West Reno
W. 6196
300 W. GRAND
Indoor Public Market
M. 3245
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1101
West 10th
W. 1336
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Coming1
Due at Kanaly’s
TUESDAY
Our First FaU Carload
of
FANCY RED
Jonathan Apples
J£” ANALY’S is the first and only retailer to obtain a
carload of apples next week. They’re fancy red
Jonathan’s—fine, big, juicy ones—just the kind for the
table and school lunch box.
Remember—An apple a day keeps the doctor away.
Remember—Kanaly’s offers them at carload prices.
BUY A BUSHEL —THEY’LL BE HERE TUESDAY
Look At These Prices!
—not “specials” for any one day only
but every-day Kanaly prices—subject
to market change.
| Mk Q 13 lbs. best cane..$1.00
W W 100 lhs. best cane..$7.75
Monarch
Fancy
Baked Beans
$1.25 'tie Armour’s Grape Juice..........98c
Kanaly s Best Creamery Butter, lb. pkg.....33c
3 tall cans of HEBE for...................25c
Pet or Carnation Milk, tall can.............10c
10 bars Crystal White Soap................43c
10 bars P. & G. Naphtha Soap............47c
LEMONS _
Choice, doz.....17'/^c ’ 0106
Fancy Sunkist, dz..25c ORANGES
Include a package of KNACK, the Wonder Cleaner,
with your next order; because one ounce of KNACK
(a tablespoonful) will cle-'n as much surface as any
14-oz. can of scouring powder.
And it does not scratch!
12-oz. package, Kanaly’s price—22c
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Johnson, Edward H. The Oklahoma Advance (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 27, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 31, 1922, newspaper, August 31, 1922; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc936437/m1/3/: accessed May 2, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.