Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, June 4, 1921, Page 4

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' is circus day. NEWS OF THE THEATRES “QUTLAWED” AT THE REX ters the Peck household and is discov- ered by the bad boy. But complica- R TODAY oi“‘zltions set in and, while Mr. Robber pad Rt 4 € pers are missing. ow ' these are western town in the “Cow Lounl[lry.d finally discovered helps this episode where love and Tomance walk _u‘n to temsity an dto cap the climax of in hapd with d'snfler a::: ‘d“é;“i "‘:; the presentation, one of the most| at thiy late ddy, the ‘-v"l fis’;x_ un” realistic, railroad collisions that has! weat, and the law. of tho & ever been screened, is shown. In this| rules supreme. . -Especially is this so e Tukkic' Coogan dosa 5 ¥ i in the case of the adventurers who, 4 Gy ome_ re- | for one reason or another, seek their markable work, which calls for unlim fortunes on: its broad plains. ited nerve. = Wheeler! Oukr f comes A narrow guage Tailroad is the to the resc admirable ipride and boast of the community, fashion, and, ‘o Jackie’s big and Sierra Madre had lately become, |Sis lfil’llht to see her hero_enact: on account of this raflroad, the cat- the “‘eleven tle shipping centen of thg country. tlé brother. try came an element » with this industry “THE GREATEST LOVE” AT ~which held the law !L?u wr;'ten:g‘: fty, scheming parasi who 2 . 2 o Taw buy that of the Six- 4ELKQ THEATRE TONIGHT gun, and who, under the leadership| As its lpbnl feagure attraction, of @ desperate character, plundered fthe Elko theatre** will present to- the ‘herds, robbed the populace and|night, also Sunday matinee and eve- put the fear of death lin the hearts |ning, “The Greatest Love,” a Select of all lovers of law and order. Work- | Pictura starring Vera Gordon, notel delineator of “mother” parts for the ing with uncanny secret methods, this band of outlaws had become 80|screen. While the dominating theme is mother love, the arrest and ‘con- bold because of their success that viction of the son on circumstantial evidence lends a gripping suspense to lh(‘a’ plot which is maintained to the end. As the mother of the little family whose fortunes form the background of the story, Vera Gordon plays a role sjmilar to that which made her name 'a household word in “Humor- esque.” With her in the cast-are Sally Crute, William H. Tooker, Ean- nie Shelton and Jessie Simpson, Bob- by Connelly and Dot Williams, take the children’s roles. | “THE RENT COLLECTOR". The funniest fellow in the world has created another of his spasms_of hearty mirth ‘which deals with that ever popular individual who calls ‘on you: monthly, “The Rent. Collector.” ol ¢course, they even shipped the stolen cattle from the town under the very noses of the sheriff and citizens. But crime, no matter how care- fully plannéd, has mever proven a ;:Lcya:. $o it came about that the U. 'S. Marshal’s office was called upon to relieve the sufferings of the popu- lace. The men from that office had come hoth secretly, and openly into Sierra Madre only to disappear as completely as though the earth had opened up and swallowed them. But Knowles, the sheriff of Sierra Madre, With his trusty posse, had apparently exhausted every trick known to the \professional man hunter but without avail. The crimes continued to grow in volume and boldness. * Then the Cow-men _got together and formed the Cattlemen’s assoclation. @ Who their chief was remained a mya}ery, but their ‘headq!u‘.;rtqn:‘;l‘?:;l‘:gaxl:. Loty shaws at the Elko theatre| ond K ranch. r; t soon started tonight and. Sunday, 'just how to Tustling stopped. o o than if the | treat the man who serves landlord agdin with more bol tried to do any- and after you have seen this com- SO et e edy -you will laugh every time the e agent pays you a visit, «pECK’S BAD BOY” AT THE “LOVES BATTLE” AT THE REX SUNDAY AND MONDAY| ELKO THEATRE MONDAY The story opens in & little .rm‘fi In “Love's Battle,” at Elko next in ‘which reside the ?“k,é“"'k',!y'&d Monday and Tuesday, an exception- -’“h’“( eck 8 hig| 811y strong and human picture is pre- and dq“eenl‘;d‘ the|sented. It has as its starred players ilig clrous, lacking, | J0¢, Moore and Eileen Sedgwick, two necessary ':Te;e;‘::g::ar;s fn:to 5 tgo of the screen’s most popular players. "}"h;;i;s:‘\? his pal. Therefore, ’~wr{:n:s Z:fi:ri;hzgrc:r:gang:lh e"l:'lfi scheme takes in Mr. Peck (a wealthy /4o, 0" s real estate dealer—Jackie’s ll”a)i’ fi It is one of the most startling me:iinzalflc:“":‘:’“fi:dgefiws.;:e ‘.‘]a:;" origti}rlml productli:nts ever {}:’efiented and a so- g X on the screen. eéms with human in the case ‘!“Fg?“’ .t‘:el:,el J::;;w;-]::] interest. It has a wonderful vein of dress'ed up in his 3‘5 o fmag- qomedy that is all the _more impres- meeting clethes. One can "’h i 18- |sive because of the tensity of the sub- jne the comedy situations that arise}jqq¢ from this episode, and need’less to say, Jackie obtains Pa Peck's por|«DON'T NEGLECT YOUR WIFE’ mission to take his pals to the g i and ‘@ bright silver dollar besides, HAS WELL KNOWN CAST And, of course, a “bad boy” at the circus cannot be very good. The Airst thing Jackie does upon entgr- jmer the circus grounds is to play with Nero, one of their big lions. The playful moments resulted in the lion escaping from his cage. Then the fun starts. The entire village is in the height of excitement and fear. And at the height of it all, Jackie and his pals come to the rescue and capture the animal. - Another highly laughable episode takes place in church with the bad boy, as usual, up to some mischief and Pa Peck, as usual, being made the target. In this instance, it can well be said that no situation has ever been presented in a more laughable manner. The fun starts when Mr. Peck, having pains from overwork, asks the bad boy ‘to bring h¥s lum- bago pad. Jackie brings the pad. But prior to this, he fills it with several hundred ants, which he had gathered that morning. It will not be neces- sary to tell what happens from, that time on. Strange to say, the 'min- ister takes for his text, “Go to the Ant, Thou Sluggard.” And with these words from the reverend’s lips, the ants start their work. om the church episode we find “Peck’s Bad Boy” offering some high- ly dramatic moments. A burglar en- Boy”), his pal doé’, want to sée two days, beginning on Tuesday, a ‘powerful photodrama>of marital re- lations to which every wife, old and| young, will want to. ,:nl;e her hus-| band. It ds called: Your Wife” and twas written fcr the Goldwyn Eyrinent Authors organiza- tion by Gertrude Atherton in an or- iginal scenario. Its ~human and} highly emotiional s\,nry\-;#nvpldcuhbe to human’ nature at any ‘time, in any| country-—-takes place in .the San| Francisco of 1869 and in the notor-| fous “Five Pq.nts” dive section cf the New York of that :period. Wallace Worsley directed. Mabel Julienne Scott, Lewis S. Stone, Charles Clary, Arthur Hoyt, R. D. MacLean, Kate Lester and Josephine Crowell head | the great cast. FOUR ACTS VAUDEVILLE AT THE GRAND TONIGHT With the first show beginning at 7:30 and the second show at 9:15, tonight, marks the re-operiing ol the regular weekly vaudeville' ati the; Grang theater, Doyle and Griffith ‘present a com- edy and talking act, which is hilled as “Love and Divorce,” Kendalliand Slater, a clever young couple présent *‘No Babies Allowed' which is war- anted to produce enough laughs for one evening. It is a flat:hunting epi- DON'T FAIL TO HEAR C. E. Lull, Evangelist of the South Sea Islands AT THE SALVATION ARMY HALL . TONIGHT AT 8:30 O'CLOCK He will give his 20 years experience in a lecture on Leprosy and othér dis- eases; alsotell of different tribes and how they live and eat.' » { - — " ‘EVERY IS'INVITED : —£-* ENGLISH EVANG. LUTHERAN June 5-3:00 P, M.—Eighth and Minnesota Have You Turned TRAITOR to Your. God? Your Confirmation Vow! | Have you kept it? * The implicit faith of your childhood days! Have you lost it? Do you crave a return to the warm h of your fathers? Come! . Hear next Sunday’s Confirmation Sermon on “A FAITH UNCHANGED BY YEARS”—Rev. 3:11. Holy Communion _Choir. Singing —ERDMANN WILLIAM FRENK; Pastor hour” saving of her.lit=t | mattan “is pigeon-breéd’ifr;l {boys, who have trained their flocks The Grand theater will offer for| "t Neglect |baby .into a recent]y rented apart- Tfi‘e destroyer fleet has beefi)in port for a week or two now, lined up in\thie Hudson river, for the joy and pride*of - all New York. One of the first things we heard about .its com- ing was concerned with the delight of the gobs in being ashore in New York City. I don’t know ‘exactly what we expected them to do, but our vague mental pictures were certainly:color- ed with the white lights, de own restaurants, roof gardens, ‘theatres and places to dance.” And how, then, did they spend their hours ashore af- ter a long cruise on the high with their steady days of training? Did they |break down town to see the sights? Oh, no. They. beat it straight for Central Park and rowed around the lake in those dinky boats under the hot sun! possible of us to get into tl leatn to save our own live: the lives of pther people. Y all over the.pountry are; being days, and ‘evenings, as’are those of other ‘organizations, and even, some which are usuglly operated wholly as business “ enterprises. - The. Y. W., howeyer;: whoe' pools are second- to ndn, the, Yand;: will 'undoubtedly contribute more cubic-feet of swim- ming water and more pounds of swim- ming energy ~than will any other group:. Any average person can learn to swim in a week, they assured me over at the national board head- quarters, sufficiently to keep up and keep going until help arrives. And for the ambitious, there will be les- sons in: diving. and fancy strokes. Special life-saving contests will be held ‘and classes in canoe-manage- ment; all in the hope that by the time June 12 arrives, a goad many hun- dreds of lives'will have been saved in potentiality; and “that a”good many scores of--people - will reach :shore The atmosphere of the big city didn’t lighten this creature’s capacity for devoted friendship, at least. When physicians took George Bur- roughs, ‘an attendant at:the Bronx 200 .-to.Fordham - hospital, his faith- ful racoon companion, Buddy, went on .a humger strike. He finally broke the fast on being taken to the hospi- tal ‘to see his old friend, sharing the patient’s soup, without an invitation. Now he is vi g Mr. Borroughs daily till the latter can go-back'to work. so -without “splash not -have: done’ week.” Spring . evidéntly -had- brought to the girl in the flower hat a wave of ‘omesickness:£or the place where she was horn. and:had. speht most of her life.:, The nice‘young ‘man sitting on the ‘Riverside; drive . beri her | began’ ,fih iaboirt own home ‘“up-state.” “I'm homesi it is, Every time I look at the statue | of Horace Greeley down near the city hall, I want to run for the train.” | He looked puzzled. “Horace Greeley? | ‘Why, he wasn’t born in your part of the country.” The girl laughed. “It’s that plush chair, with fringe on it. We have a whole parlor set of fur- niture like that.” the tenement house. disf see them any evenin parts of the city, great:fl: eons flying in circles above the nar- row streets. On the roofs of the dingy buildings are their masters—small to come back to their wire cages at the waving of a tiny black flag on a bamboo pole. They raise most of the birds, of course, for the markets, but the more ambitious of them are train- ing real “homers” and take all the pride in their achievements that the owner. of a stable full of race horses knows. < The passenger in the Bronx trolley car was raging .in righteous indigna- tion. She'had asked the conductor to | tell her when the car ' reached her street and he had forgotten it., He| apologized, but it was no use. “You “Splash week” is about to inundate the country, from New York on out to San Francisco, leaving hardly an unsplashed spot on the map by the midde of June. It has gradually dawned upon an adult world that the bpy or girl who does swim has a con- siderably better chance when a hoat overturns than has the one who can’t. Consequently, these days, they are nt only allowed to learn, but the Red | tlemen, I havathe honor to announce C}'oss, with the co-operation of the|that the next stop will be Freeman Y. W.-C. A. and their organizations, | street.” ~~ " e et e s - “Why don’t you call out the streets?” | Right here the conductor rose to what | he considered.to be the accasion. He turned, made ‘a.sweeping bow to the interior of thg car—a bow. worthy of a cavalier or 3 fancy dress ball—and then he called,put: “Ladies.and gen- sode with a baby, and the young couple endeavors in smuggling the song numbers that are new, and the WL closes with the Anglo Armento Co. known as the world’'s fastest tumblers, ~Warren J:” Kerrigan in ‘*The Green Flame” is ‘a five part story of love’and adventure, which preceeds the vaudeville at all shows, tonight and Saturday at the Grand theater. ment resulting .in no end of fun: Carlton Chase, international singing comedian, who has ' toured every lurge country on the globe, and who has made several appearances before European royalty, has a number of —_— REX THEATRE SHOWING TODAY ONLY RICHARD KIPLING PRESENTS “QUTLAWED” A Western Production “The Diamond K. 'Ranch” Featuring Y BILL PATTON and CARLYN WAGNER Reelcraft Comedy in Two Parts AN ALL STAR CAST Direction and Story by Alvin J. Neitz Produced by Sylvanite Production Co. REELCRAFT COMEDY ° IN TWO PARTS Starring ALICE HOWELL Matinee 2:30—7:10-9:00 Rex Orchestra ~ COMING TUESDAY— BUCK JONES in the “MAN TRAIL” ' Coming—NORMA TALMADGE in— “PASSION FLOWER” . " Coming—MARSHALL NEILAN Presents Randall Parrish’s : “BOB HAMPTON OF PLACER” Scenario by Marion Fairfax A FIRST NATIONAL ATTRACTION ; | June *8.—Junior-Senior Prom. June 10—Commencement of Be- ! Sept. 21 to 23-—Northern Minne- | WOMEN'S CLUBS HELP T0 during the week of June 6-12°4nd it wasdetermined to makea: eved | trat 0015 | the ountry. ¢ ing.opén- | coclatiiom of 1 Bact: 57th ‘street,. to ed free ‘to; the ‘public -during those | complete at once the- restoration of Roosevelt Hot Theodore Rooseyelt. Said M sident of* the National Federation of Women's. ginbs, comprising over two million women, “I"’‘commend movement 6 the general federation and hope that each of, its members will join the Memorial - association. Americafi:women should he glad to contribute each a little to keep as a remorial of their eminent friend the iirthplace of Theodore Roozevelt. “The House was laid in January, last ‘by Major General Leonard Wood. structure itself vill incorporate much of the material of the old Roosevelt mansion, which jis now to be accur- ately reprcduced. When finished, it will contain the ‘bedstead in whichlh ..o vooionn RS ‘Theodore Roosevelt was born, tog: er wW'th other gfithe original furnith- safely this coming summer who would |ings, now in possession of the Roos: velt family. tional lis'needed for the work of re- storation. Ottawa,- Ontario.- soldiers have.taken up farms under; the Soldiers’ and that more than $108,000,000 was invested \in this reestablishment, jaboirt - his effort, -was the statement made by on’t,” she interrupted:| Major John Barnett, chairman of the | ‘enough right now as | Soldier Settlement Board. 2 Qubscriba " tor SCHOOL “Complete, courses in piano, voice, violin, publicischool masic, dramatic art, leading to diplomas. had no right to forget,” she repeated. I midji High school. sota Fair at Bemidji. REBUILD T. R. BIRTHPLACE At qlunchean need-him Thisbank! nson, sis- il effort-by club women-tg assist oman's -Roosevelt Memorial as- 'u&today. coynt. wi_th SATURDAY EVENING, JUNE 4, 1021 A FRIEND future welfare—~who is there when you the friend of its (-i’epositors; . May we be aifriend to you? x}Open an ac- == the 'birthptace of - Thoinas'(i:: Winter, pre- BEMIDJI, MINN. this Roosevelt Millions- of Woman’s NORTHERN NATIONAL BANK Is one who knows you intimately—who knows “your ‘worth-—who_speaks well of you to others-—who assists you.to build up a reputation—who keeps an eye on your corner-stone of Roosevelt The About. $150,000° addi- Switches. ‘To date, 23,550, Reestablishment 'Act, FeWe also have The Daily Pioneer. - . One of the | largest music . schools in America BEST EQUIPMENT Deer River rud for freé catalogue CHEVROLET REPAIR PARTS We carry a complete stock of Repair Parts—also a full line-of Starters; Generators, Cutouts, Coils and Ignition i . We have speciaiized for years'on Auto Electric Repairing. : an repair and return the same day. grepaid on parts sent in for repairs.’ Our W k-mansfifizand' prices will please you. EST Battery Station in the Northwest. i We Rq;air All Makes of Batteries BEST MECHANICS W.R.GIBERSON, INC. "7, SERVICE YOU WILL APPRECIATE Minnesota TERM OFENS'SEPT. ¢TH ih MINNEAPOLLS, minn. Present lines of new .season. Ay Beginning June 1st the.new series an | 1 i i ' Flint, Michigan. o .4 0ld Prices Model 22-44 Three- Passenger' Roadster; $1795 Model 22-45 Five Passenger Touring, - $1795 Model 22-46 Three Passenger Coupe, - $2585 - Model 22-47 Five Passenger Sedan, - - $2895 Model 22-48 Four Passenger Coupe, . - $2985 Model 22-49 Seven Passenger Touring, $2065 Madel 22-50 Seven Passenger. Sedam;, - $3295 vt Pioneer Builders of Valye:igs) Motor Cars SN Branches in al Pri Beltrami Airenué Buick six-cylinder- ‘models will be carried thru the 1922 prices will be as follows, f. o. b. factories, v -3 H 3 e New Prices $1495 ~ $1525 $2135 $2435 $2325 . $1735 + $2635 Bemidji iWHEN BETTER AUTOMOBILES: ARE BUILT, BUICK WILL BUILD THEM

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