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NEWS OF THE THEATRES ia role which will combine the ex- “WOMAN IN HIS HOUSE” i 3 loits «of d Apolls d Her- - REX LAST TIMES TODAY Do o o ey P aamed “The’ *.0e Woman in ‘His House,” with Struggle.” As'a’horseman his skill an all-star -cast, which includes Mil- 'is such that the gods might very ° dred- Hareis, opened an engagement ' properly envy him, while his manly at the-Rex-theater last night, is in jcourage and gallantry outrivals that every sensé of the word a screen mas- of Apollo Belvedere. | | terpiece, ranking with the greatest| motion pictures ever made. The| ‘theme, which presents a striking ex- | ample of the divine power of mother | love, is-so thoroughly human that| even the most critical> audience can- | not fail to enjoy it. Age-old and time worn, it is ever new and really constitutes a -bulwark of all social life. In this instance the hands of genius may be setn in the develop- ment of the theme and in the rare and touching emotions, which have been brought out under the direction of John Stahl. . Other players who have helped o make “The Woman in His House™ a | classic of the screen are Thomas | Holding, George Fisher, Gareth| Hughes, Winter Hall, Catherine Van | Buren and Bob Walker. Irene Reels| is’the author of this powerful scicen | story. | “AN ARABIAN KNIGHT” I I8 FULL OF SURPRISES'| “An Arabian Knight,” the Robert- | son Cole Picture which opened at' the Elko theater last night and will have final run tonight, is a regula: surprise package. ¥or: who would| ever expect to sée Sessue Hayawaka | the noted dramatfitiactor 'of theli screen playing therrole of'n,mischiev- 5 ous Arabian lad? He.isa loyable| scamp, in search of adventure, meets with some thrilling experiences. And | Mr. Hayawaka's interpretation shows his versatility in striking fashion. ‘The beautiful settings and gor-| geous desert scenes, the quaint little streets of the Egyptian metropolis, Cairo, reproduced in a remarkably | realistic manner, make this picture an interesting and thoroughly enjoy- | able one. ¥ Another feature at the Elko to- “TIGER TRUE” ALIVE WITH | night is “The Sportsman,” a tw ! ROMANCE AND ADVENTURE part comedy in which Larry Semon, An unusually interesting story of | the comedy king, takes the leading ; | the underworld s found In “TigerS°le- True,” “in’ which vigorous melodra-; matic moments, romance and mys:' FOUR IN LOVE. BUT NO tety are combined.. It differs from. : the- usual rough-and-tumble film | A four-cornered love . affair, TWO WITH EACH OTHER | in | yarn® of life below tne surface, tor the reason ;that it géts .into real| character , types, with the human, touch frequently in evidence. It is| completely built and has a fine grasp | ofthe subject matter 'both in scenes’ and subtitles. oot Fraik Mayo has a strong role in the part of Jack Lodge,.a rich man’s| son who hunts tigers in the jungles| of Africa and goes into the under-| world for sheer love of adventure! and excitement. He challenges “The‘ Baboon,” leader of the crooks in a district known as “The Tangle,” and ' humiliates the desperado in his own | stronghold. Mayo gives a ‘good ac- count of himself in two hand-to- hand conflicts and also brings out some rral dramatic effects in' certain situations. Walter Long is powerful | in the role of the *“Baboon,” and Fritzi Brunette plays the heroine ac-! ceptably. ! ‘The subject as a whole is stronger | than' the usual run of underworld stories. It has a better story interest than most and gets well away from hackneyed situations. i “Tiger True” and “Trouble Bub-| bles”, two-part comedy will-be shown tonight and Tuesday at the Gmnd.j WINSTON CHURCHILL'S NOVEL | COMING TO THE GRAND | | It ever a picture may truly be said | to be possessed of everything “The | Dwelling Place of Light” is the pic-| ture. Tt was written by Winston Churchill—than whom no more| ‘prominent figure exists in the world | of literature today. Mr. Churchill's | name alone is a guarantee ot great- | ness. 1t was produced by Benjamin B. Hampton,—and to you, that one phrase tells its own story; Mr. {amp- | ton has never produced a failufe, and | Mr. Hampton never will produce a failure, for he has brought to the screen a new method,—a new tech- nique that carries with it an ab- solute assurance of success. He made “Desert Gold” ‘“The Sagebrusher,” “The 'Westerners,” “Riders ot the Dawn,” and “The U. P. Trail”. The cast is all-star and numbers among the featured players such sterling artists as Robert McKim, “the best- loved villain on the screen,” Claire Adams, whose performance far sur- passes any of the previous triumphs che has achieved. King Baggot, a strongfavorite with film followers, and many other almost equally prom- inent. - Each is firmly entrenched in the hearts of the public. In every sense of the word *The Dwelling Place’ of Light” jis_a big production,—one that will live long in the niémory’ of everyone that sces it. It is the sort of plcture that is raiying the standards of the silent, drama until it is on a plane to com- pete with the foremost attractions of the legitimate stage. “‘The Dwell-: ing Place of Light” will be shown at the Jgrand theater. "“THE STRUGGLE” AT REX TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY | Rupert Hughes who has for sev eral years past been waxing fat upoa royalties from novels, plays and movies scenarios in a recent inter- view stated that the cowboy or Wes:- ern type of motion picture represents the Olympian mythology of our pre- sent day and country. “The cowhoy films,” says Mr. Hughes, ““are our mythology, our centaurs, our gods, the like of which have gone into the limbo of the past, but will never become tiresome. The Greeks"hdd their actors who repre- sented their mythology on the stage and they never wearied of seceing their gods perform. It is the same with us of today and will be in the future the lure of our Western mov- ies'will never wane.” hat the distinguished author is right, there is no one familiar with movies will deny, for it seems that while sex pictures, society pictures and underworld pictures may come and go after a brief period of pub- lic favor. ‘but’ the “Western™ stays| on forever. ] Tn the generations before the ;ul-' vent of the now ubiquitious motion picture it was the late Colonel Cody (Buffado Bill) who carried the mes- sage of the romantic West to our fa- thers and mothers. Today this same | message is borhe by such artists as William S. Hart, David W. Griffiths and Franklyn Farnum [ A romantic drama of the plains which savors of all the old time tradi- tions of the West will be seen here at the Rex theater Tuesday and Wetl nfifflfl\' Franklvn Faraum will play oo WRTLTWH | which no two of the persons involv- od are in love with each other, pro- vides the material for “The Vice of Fools,” with Alice Joyce in the stel- lar role. It will be shown at the Elko theater tomorrow, also Wednes- | Y. . At-every change in the surprising | affairs of the four, disaster seems to | threaten. tains any degree of judgment and | Only Marion Rogers re- | 7 HEN cou | usual acting | DUsKY unselfish consideration of others. The | remaining three seek only the fulfill- iment of their own desires with reck- less disregard of everything else. Alice Joyce, as Marion, has un- opportunities for emotional WORKER OF MIRACLES Negro Saint, "Forbidden to Exercise Power, Put White Bishop in Something of a Hole, Leng ago when Peru was a jewel In the Spauish crown, there lived in that country a negro of such remarkable “sanctity that his miracles rivaled those of the best white saints of his timg. ' Fearing for the supremacy of his race, the Spanish bishop took the precau- tion of forbidding this dark saint to give any further exhibitions of his power, an order which was ac- cepted with the humility that marks the real saint of every age, land or color. Now, the Spaniards built a cathedral in Lima, and during the building of it a workmen fell from the topmost secaffolding before " the horri- | fied eyes of the holy n a fearful dilemma. A second’s delay and the man would be dashed to | pleces, “Stdp!” he shouted; and leav- fng the workman hanging in wmidair | he ‘sought ont the bishop dnd ex- | plained the situation. If the bishop | did not want a poor son of Ham to | perform miraeles, would he prefer to ‘n come and do the job himself? The bishop wiscly chose to allow his black | sheep to return to the cathedral and | carry on”; the workman fell up | again gently to his scaffolding, and the work of building went happily: on. —New York Times, Social Pleasures. | Pleasure is one of the great bless. ings of humaun life, both for its own sake and for its direct influence on! character; it therefore demands mnot| contempt ov indifference, but thankful| recognition. It i3 not pleasure, but| something evil that may sometimes be associated with it, that needs weeding out from our lives; and if sociability had no other claim than the simple nd junocent happiness it creates, it] would still demind a high place in our |_~ogm-<L CAME FROM COSTA RICA | g Arthur Appleyard of Newtan Upper ¥ Cwith the five-weeks-old S Rican deer-avhich he has pre- sentogd v B H = It was | me in great escitement, i V of fitted lines to der in paths vague and Indefinite, | they were sure to Ll in new plac | This they have done, presenting many models for spring thaf e interesting | and original as well as attractive, In spite of vagaries/of style, these new idens have been worked out in a prac- tical way, <o that they not forget- { ful of the chief end of coats, which is | service. Two among these new arrivals are shown “in the illusteation ahove, hoth conforming to the scason’s demand for ample flowing lines. capacious sleeves, and length that envelopes the figure | from chin to ankles. or at least some- | where near the ankles. The coat the right goes even farther and provided with a draped hood that i DArTOW way left the straigit anl | bandsome model in a light, sturdy| practi- coating, that is rainproof, ver cal for al-round weal in springtime Its fullness is disposed of in pla so that It hangs straight at the with Joose helt across the front, raglan sleeves. ck, and The model at the left is as much like | s like a coat, | a mantle or dolman as it and utilizes one of the soft, pile fab- ies that make so strong a place for elves in the esteem of nzs in points at the bottom and features the most capacious of sleeves along with the most original of col- lars. 3 copable of covering the hat. It | SEEMED FUNNY TO PERUVIAN i | South American Unable to Understand | Why Republicans Did Not Scize the White House. i | One day a Peruvian friend came to waving a newspaper, | “Senor,” he cricd, “there | revolution in the United States.” “What do you mean?” | He showed me the paper. It con- tained Y brief account of the Repub- can convention in Chicago, in which l‘ Senator Lodge said seve uncompli- mentary things about I'resident Wil son, | “You see,” cxplained the Peruvian, | “the President’s enemies openly at- | tack him. Is the army disloyal? Why | do they not suppress the demonstra- | tion¥" I I explained to him that in the United States it is any citizen’s prl lege to abuse the Chief Exceutive to his heart's content, that no effort is made either by the army or by the President himself (o check such dem- onstrations, and that the Republican | party would wait March 4 instead of descending, in a | body upon the White House and forcibly ejecting Mr. Wilson, He smiled in polite incredulity, “What funny people!” he laughéd, His own President liad gained office | by the more simple expedient of first winning the good-will of the arm, then walking into the official palace to hand the former mcumbent 4 ticket | on the first steamer out of town.— Leslie's, } AIR GLIDERS IN COMPETITION ‘ | i Remarkable Speed Attained at Recent Mecting in the Rhone District of Germany. A German gliding and soaring com- petition was recently held in the Rhone district by the League of Ger- man Model Aireraft and-Gliding Clubs. The meeting was marred by an unfor- tunate. accident, resulting™in the death of the well-known pilot, Von:Loessel. | This was due to breaking in the air | at the clevator of his glider.;A number #¢ monpplangs and hlplnnfs werg en- 3 [ tered, repofts fhe Scientific Ameriean, some of very \ok design. M. the entries hail’ caifoltable scats landing gear 'as; distinguished from the old-time gliders in which the oper- ator’'s legs swung from below the planes, ready to take up the strain of hard landing, often at the price of serious injuries. The lo 4 covered by the gliders w 1830 me- | ters, with a duration of 142.5 secouds, That record was made by Klemperer, ! with a height of 330 meters. The ap- | parent gliding angle of Klemperer's | flight was one in thirty-one, | More Than Two Years En Routs, In June, 1918, some Canadian sol- | diers, crossing the Atlantic to_join the i to the Toronto Sunday Werld. - COPYRIGHT BY MESTERM NEVSPAPER UNIOR, forces T Kiuropé, threw overboard in | mid-ocean a sealed Bottle with a note Inside to the effectithat they were on their way to the war and asking the finder of the bottle to forward the note The bottle has'just been washed ashore at St. Fres 'in Corawall and the request been carried out. ‘AVhat would be in- teresting to know would be where the bottle has béen during the last two vears and a half, and what is the drift that brings so much flotsam and jet- sam into-the harbor of the little fishing town on the Atlantic. There are many theories, one of which credits the Gulf stream with a memory for the old smugzling days’ and an intention, in the ¢ show awnreness of these good new days which find fresh uses for things of unlovely repute, i Ideal Lighting. According to an illuminating engl- neer,_what is wanted today. There is nothing in the world quite so nourish- ing or helpful as Scott's Emulsion for thin, anemic girls' of “teen-age.” It.is well-worth trying. Scott &Bowne, Bloomfield,N.., § ——ALso MAKERS OF—— Ki-moibsS (Tablets or Granules) For INDIGESTION 20-18sk CESTITER N CEESITERT, FOR LUBAGO™ P w25 () Try’Mustérole.” See How' Quickly It Relieves You just rubMausterdle in briskly, and usually the pain is gone<a-delicious, soothing comfort comesto takeitsplace. terole is a ciean, white vintment;- ‘madewith oil of mustard. Use it instead of mustard plaster. Will not blister. Many doctors and nurses use Muster- 12 and recothmend it-totheir patients. ey vill glacly tell you what relief it'gives from sore throat, bronchitis, i nock, asthma, neuralgia, n, pleurisy, rheumatism, lum- and aches of the back or sore muscles, bruises, osted feet, colds of the . Nlways, dependable. Muminatfon Ts the sort-of good ITght: . ing that’is found on the shady sidé of a tree on a sunny afternoon. Substi- tute for the sun‘a new 100-watt lamp, for the sky the creamy ceiling of a living room and for the tree an opales- cent disk or bowl from' the ceiling you | now get a soft radiance which floods ‘the entire room as though it were opened | | to the sky; from the diffusing .disk | you get a generous addition of light directly beneath having the quality. of | filtered sunlight. You :have approxi-| mated the .charming effect of mellow | radiance that was apparent under the | women, | e of the Canadians’ bottle, to | supphsed tohacg b molar teeth of ai riminal and pro ho dicdl ‘by-the ggilh n dicebox | @ piece of his skin, | was one of the curios dlisposed of by | & Paris curio dealer. | E. P. PETERSON * Expert Watch' and Jewelry Re- pairing. * Watches Diamonds Rings—Pins Silverware Mail Orders a Specialty Beltrami Ave., Bemidji BETER THA CALONEL Thousands Have Discovered Dr, Edwards’ Olive Tablets Are a Harmless Substitute Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets ar: the result of Dr. Edwards’ determination not to treat liver and bowel complaint:; | ‘with calomel. For 17 years he used | these tablets (a vegetable compound. mixed with olive oil) in his private practice with great success. They do all the good that calomel does but have np bad after effects. No pains, no_griping, no injury to the gums or danger from acid foods—yet they stimulate the liver and bowels. | Take Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets when you feel “logy” and “heavy.” Note how they clear clouded brain and perk up the spirits. 15¢ and 30c¢ a box. : 5 g 1t appeals to. everybod: because of the pleasure ‘and benefit it affords. y S N ngos kgt P OFTER . EVERY 'MEAL The longest-lasting refresh-* B ment possible to obtain. Sealed tight—kept right in its wax-wrapped impurity-proof pack‘éz_q. "C - WRIGLEY'S JUICY FRUIT CHEWING GUM Allsteelfurniture in OberlinCollege Office. Allsteel office furniture is used by zuch firms as J. P. Morgan & Co., Cadillac Motor Car Co., Bush. Terminal Co., National City because modern . organizations de- ‘mand modern equipment. | | L ‘Modern Furpiture — a Sign of Success Alisteel filing cabinets can be putitos gether in almost limitless combinations to' meet the exact needs of the one-man bus ] ness as well as the requirements of the big organization. ‘You simply add more units as your b\usiness warrants. Saves Valuable Space | Allsteel filing cabinets save 15 to 257" floor, space over wood cabinets, and have greater capace ity. Alisteel is fire-resistant, warp-proof, wears proof, rodent-proof, dust-proof ax)d cverlastmg._ Come in and ‘examine the Alisteel filing units. Look at desks, safes, counter height files and other units of Allsteel office furniture, the equipment that belongs with success. PIONEER STATIONERY HOUSE Phone 799-J MINNESOTA