Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
flour advertisement. 3. Lift ' not thine lip '_ Though it may . prevent .irrite t ‘one is: that; ‘wil i1t is the first pletu Hero and heroine_ didr "Qmfllo of the Yukon; ring ‘Willlam Fox, drama of .wil] close its engagemen ind theatre tonight. This pic- m adapted to the screen-from Lar- Ty Evans’ famous noyel, “The Silent Lie,” has an irresistible appeal in its powerful romance ‘and exciting .in- cidents. It is rich in those elements that stir the imagination ‘and the emotions. It is a live wire film from start to finish. The cast includes . Miriam Cooper, Charles Clary, Ralph Lewis, Monroe Salisbury, Henry C. Barrows, Howard Davies and wn- liam Fagle Shirt. \ “m .SLIM PRINCESS” . "When George Ade's musical com- edy ‘“The Slim Princess’. started its phenominal ‘stage career, audiences ‘were convulsed by his whimsical con- ception of an Oriental country were ‘women were esteem for their ‘weight, and no girl under 200 pounds nad much chance of vlnnlng a hus- dand. - “This ‘delighttul fnrca hu vbeen ple- turized, with Mabel Normand ‘as the Zay little princess whose ninety-two pounds made her taboo with both eexes, and will be shown at the Grand Thursday and Friday. This picture fai.ed to arrive when first announced for showing and the @rst presentation in this city will be the matinee Thursday. UNUSUAL SITUATION. C— Eugene O’Bnen’l second starring appearance in Selznick Pictures w:ll be in “Sealed Hearts,” which opens; at the Elko theatre on’ Friday mnext for a two day’s run. The picture is one of the most ‘strongly dramatic tmtme:]lts of eternal triankle ever screened, and the story gives Eugene O'Brien a role full of opportunities. In; the picture is presented 'the unususal situation of a father and a youth—his adopted son—being in love with the same woman—the older man being the husband of the woman, ‘who is young and beautiful.': On the screen’ j8 - mirrowed: in ..compelling fashion the subtle clash between youth dénd age, and the final victory ont. the law of Nature over the law of The picture was made ‘tnder" the| _direction of Ralph Ince and the cast Jncludes such notables as . Robert, - Edeson and Lucile Lee Stewart. '“cnoox:b STREETS” .+ /ADVENTURE ROMANCE Ethel Clayton’s latest photoplay, “Crooked Streets,” will be the at- “raction at the Elko' theatre tonight and tomorrow. It is an adventure- ' romance of China and was adapted from an original story by Samuel ‘Merwin. Miss Clayton has the role of' Gail Ellis, ‘who, answering an’ advertise: ment; becomes secretary to-an anti- quariai on a. trip to “China.. ‘'In Shanghai, Gail becomes suspicious that her employer’s errand is not an ‘honest one. Venturing alone into the chaps, it’also preven Bead not thine - are known for ot your eyes to DIED TO ESCAPE SUFFERING Crew'of Crippled Hun sunmmnc Took ‘Fleld Mou ‘the Eas) vuy Out of &' Hopo - :nn‘ th rabbit. in ‘ascribing to' him Vperentofmoduunmdwcm | to.tender our sincere apologies to the | rabbit, whose feelings 'we. would. mot: LT3 4 rynot thy hair to dye in ac-|* an: 'with the latestykid llo brunette is a bru ket. 8. Vex not thy manicurist with fingers stained with nicotine. = Be- sides thy lungs are meant for other bleached blond is a drug on he mar- things else than holding up thy la— e valliere. 9. It's’an ill wind 'that someone no good; but .don't let it (blow you any hair wayers for lob- lollying with such is afree “ticket | to the ‘bald-headed row. blows | . 10. 'The price of style is mgh heels and both are too high. + How many could learn ’em all \by| heart? ; Coming—*Lost City.” * METRO PLAY GIVES MAY ALLISON CLEVER ROLE| “The Uplifters,” the latest Metro production starring May - Allison, ‘which was shown at the Rex theatre yesterday, was adapted from'the clev- er Saturday Evening Post story -of |- the same name by Will Jrwin. Up to the present the:life of Hor- tense Troutt, a young. stenographer, niony looms large in the foreground.. Unfortunately she receives an invita- tion to the Button = Maker’s Rally where she is inspired by their lurid talk of ‘“freedom.” She is at once imbued with the idea that she, too, is one of the downtrodden, and gives up her job, throws over her prospec- tive husband and hies her to . the s Papyrl Have wuin Practh cally, All That:ls K Grnek pa; g ancient history which, uupy!led " per- sonal view of thlqgfl. k?.‘h described ‘The pnpyrl llustrated ‘the Iilutory of administration, showing' it tual working, and not in theory. ‘There was not much Jn the papyri: ofi: mys- haunts of the-long-haired. men and | short haired women where she 'is welcomed with the cry of ‘*‘com- rade!” . These wily .“free” however,. take advantage of their new comrade and Hortense finds herself the drudge.of the studio. which she now shares ‘with a woman member. The climax comes when she discovers ‘that the poet who has been making mad.love to her already possesses three wives. Relief, however, arrives “when her former lover insists that she ‘come back to the saner and safer ‘‘shac- kles” of marriage. Miss Allison is ably supperted by Pell Trenton. Howard Gaye, Alfred Hollingsworth, Kathleen ~ Kerrigan, Caroline Rankin and Lois-Wood. The the pop lar plety and impiety. They & useful . for early Christiani belng the nntlvo country rowings of Christianity cou! from 617 'r paganism. from m p-wrt, and ‘the Christian and: p-fin pmmh- eould thus be contrasted. ' \ . play_was directed by Herbert Blache || ‘41d ‘madeé under the personal supqr- vision of Maxwell, Karger, dlmtor genanl Laqt uno tonlght Ifl-h Tnvcl Stops. The tourist resorts of lrelnud-—tho Lakes of Killarney- and Glengarriff— have suffered greatly during the war and the resumption of normal condi- tlons, with freedom of travel for pleas- ure, will be required to bring back théir old-time prosperity. So Queens- town and, to a smaller- degree, the ity of Cork has heen affected by the entire cessation. of the .extensive pas- senger traffic to and from the Ulited /Stites. Queenstown .was the princl- pal_port for Irish emigration to the .United States. ‘and’ the .change in- ‘hat respect ‘Is highly significant. There are more young men in Ireland thday "than there were for very many fears before .the war. lemtlon, which forthe ten: years ending March 1, *911, native section of the city, she is in-J averaged 38,808 from all Ireland, fell | volved in a brawl between some Chinamen ,and roistering French sail- ors:on leave. An Irish adventurer named ‘O’Dare: rescues_her with' diffi- culty, but the adventure is'n half ' 80 startlmg asthe one ‘which' foll¢ “Suffice' it ‘to. say that the. cture ends happily for Gail and her rescuer. An'excellent ‘cast, including. Jack “Holt ;and Clyde | Fillmore, . supaorts Miss Clayton n\ “Crooked 'Streets.” The picture is a 'Paramount Artcraft. Added attractmns at_the ‘Elko. to- night, also Thursday, are Paramount Magazine with “Bud and Susie” car- teon, also a Holmes Trayelogue, ... Famous Actress Says Beware.-f In- . vense of Perfur-~ for Happiness ‘Does Not Come in Bottles. G How many people can recite the Ten Commandments?, ‘Without stopping to eount, let it be said that Anita Stewart, film star 'who. will be seen Thursday at the Rex. theatre in ‘“The Yellow Ty- ‘phoon,” has ‘doubled the number of primary - rudiments that Sunday school -beginners must learn. Moreover, she made "em up out of her own head. A New York newspaper reporter - ° was asgigned to interview Miss Stew- ‘.art about her masterful makeup in ““The Yellow Typhoon,” in which she plays the dual part of-a blonde and brunette. And the interview: turned out to be a literal broadside against . & dozen; popular “ill-chosen”. associ- ates of youug girls. So glrls, you might as woll eletn /off the' top “of ‘the: bureau for:here ,Z0es . Anita’s original ‘command- mta. . Happiness, of the right kind doth not come in bottles. So beware ‘the Incense of the perfume bottle. ' Water, beloved fluid of man, dot.. not ‘wmell. So-why should: a girl ‘sator- |- ‘ate herself like a worm dipw in fish ¢ m« ‘thy povdor pul' nd ‘itmlrhtly, A shiny nose is - in 1917 to_ 2,111, and in 1918 to 980 ‘natives of Ireland, Embarkatior’ of emigrants -and ¢ others from Que‘-ns— town which amounted t0.20,883 in 1913, and 21,430 in 1914, stopped altogefher ln November 1914, Her Real Love. " "I heard ‘that pretty little: woman the other day that she was going to do her best to make her Billy’s life' erfectly happy. She mmst.'be very much in love with her’ husband.” “That wasn’t her husband ‘she -was talking about; it was her pet poodle." "w . Peril in lodine Fumes of iodine Lave recently been urged as & method of administering that drug preferable to the usual tinc- tare. It has been shown by experis \ments that' fumes are absorbed ‘through the skin and when inhaled are absorbed by the lungs, but it is shown also that inhalation is very dangerous even in ‘small. quantities, especially when there is any disease of the mplnwry passages. Womlnnrlomr anhor Miss B. Pullen-Burry was the first grapher to visit some of the un- APOLOGIES TO BRER RABBIT Net 'unny, s Anlthm flu‘ mm .pt Trees, Acoording Eaitard lxm Anofllchlolmmumamlnm lnumumtwomnn- gry and nomlng ‘else’ls .nll;hlt. they lhln up a little way and eat the'’l perta off the ‘scen! ‘not ‘wholly ; without b, but &' 4p ,cent sinner averages . np nlrly well with the rest of us. Moreoyer, the rabbit may .easily be ed. in; lipees from grace by placing & pi tar paper ‘about two feet ] plece of wire netting: ‘around the of each young fruit tree. ‘Perha predlcnt, like other probibitery meas- “not build mm 3 ‘lMllhlotfiultMvMehm mouse;is respol lpm'fo: the witld, and 'are qulct 173 | est size. Europe | grown of different kinds for ' different V-rlotlu of Pmtu L vne ponno may .be -big enonn u ) provme ‘a ‘meal for a good-sized fams People in Virginia like them that In‘ northern marke! the demand ‘15 for.potatoes of & mod. In ] are A combmatxon that makes more’ money -for the farmer than . anything else he can 'do. “Your' cows will never produce’alf - . they are capable of w:thoutfsiloge as. part of their ration. U WE wxu. BUILD A sm:vuu SILO FOR YOU IN' TIME TO TAKE’ cm 'OF YOUR cnor. '$T. HILAIRE RETAIL LUMBER co” M. L.- MATSON, Local Mnnger 5y \ BEMIDJI, MINN. : " To make room for fall and mntememhandlse (mvmces of whlch we are recelvmg : dally), we ha,ve put ‘on sale every plece of su:rnmer goods and ready-to-wear s1lks and silk gloves at mpnruotmemm‘nm- ‘ pelago. \First Fire !nnlm in America. The first fire engine in America was presented to the town of Shelbourne, Nova Scotla, by King an. I in 14 - momnlcunlnmm Seville 18 ‘theonly dty. .o apn wammmmm . L e Y S Dally Thought . - a Sta many tools, but a e is Mwmmn&mm;-a— -—_-q_—;