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PAGE FOUR _ | Vb DARING STAR HURT WHILE MAKING FILM An accident resulting in two brok- en wrists, a badly wrenched ankle, a gash over the eye and other minor bruises occurred to Charles Hutchi- son, the daredevil of the screen, in filming one of the big thrills in the Brunton-Pathe serial ‘‘Double Ad- venture’” of which the first and sec- ond chapters will make itd appear- ance at the Grand theater tonight only. it was while filming the big tower ecehe that the accident occurred. Mr. Hutchison had personally supervised the building of the tower. After its completion Hutchison took his place s called for by the scenario and pre- pared to jump from a falling tower and land into a tree. E NEWS OF THE THEATRES o | Dream Lore. ;’ For a man to dream of beating | some one denotes. good fortune; if he ! 1s in trade, he will thrive; it he is In | love, he will marry the present object | of his afrection, who will bring him Grand theater tomorrow and Thurs-‘ wmoney; if he is'a farmer. it denotes day | good crops and an addition to his The hunt as pictured is genuine| farm and it was participated in by train- 4 ed Kikauyu lion hunters. The pi tures vividly show how the lion was| Deep Gold Mines. elain and how the natives danced| Gold is being mined at a depth of about the carcass of their dead ene-| more than 3,000 feet in.South Africa, my. The hunters are rewarded by and it is belleved that the shafts can tha king with ‘a handshake and allipe sunk 1,000 feet deeper. : are happy. The pictures are;jquite] 8 % thrilling and should irterest everyy student of primitive life in the Afri-| can jungle. | {Preached 45,000 Sermons. John [ Wesley * is said’ to have! | preached : nedrly 45,000 sermons, av- | eraging three sermons a day for 54 years, LAUGHS MAT& THRILLS " IN BENNISON PICTURE There is plenty of ‘wholesom@ fun | Wormy | Hause Plants. lr!)lxed up lnwthe exciting scenes of Try putting a teaspoonful of cam- ngl:inighnn{:t the {n-:t ;xr :ll:e Iém:}s‘,‘ phor into a quart of soft water to kill n_ pictures, which e BelZ-| the worms in your house plant. Ap- He didi it over once but when the film was reviewed by the star in the projecting Toom he decided that it could be improved upon so decided to take it over again. The stage was again set for the thrill. This time, however, just as Mutchison was about to jump one of the lights ex- ploded. [This startled) the star Just encugh to make him lose sight of di- rection. In his jump he missed the limb of the tree entirely catapault- ing down through the branches and landing forcibly on the ground. He was picked up and immediately rushed to the Los Angeles hospital where his ibruises were attended to. Owing to this acdiderft Charles Hutchlison was forced to lay off frem work for two months in order to al- low the broken bones of his wrist to knit. This is only one of the many ex- periences which has occurred in the life of the energetic serial star. Life or limb means nothing to him when it ‘comes to the question of getting realism, atmosphere and thrills into his productions. Mr. Hutchison is supported by guch well known players as Josie Sedgwick, Ruth Langston, Carl Stock- dale, S. BE. Jennings, Louis D'Or, Ivor McFadden, and others. “HIS GREATEST SACRIFICE” AT REX THEATER THURSDAY Followers of Willlam Farnum--- and they are legion---will find fine entertainment in his latest picture, “His Greatest Sacrifice,”” which will open at the Rex theater next Thurs- y. In this story Mr. Farnum’s superb acting ability, which has been a great asset to the screen, stands out more clearly than usual. He has a big “dramatic part as the successful writer whose wife leaves him and their child so. that slie can give all her time to her onw advancement on the operatic stage. “Hig Great Sacrifice” brings up a question 'quite common in modern times---should a wifé have a career that interferes (with-the welfare of! her husband, her homé and her child? | The question is answered in telling fashion in the photoplay. Still, those who see it may have a different opin- jon. It makes stirring drama .and pulls hard-at the heartstrings. Reports from the William Jox. ¢tudio in New York istate that Mr.7 {Farnum took more personal interest | in the making of this picture than in any other, with! the possible excep- tions of “A Tale of Two Cities” and “iLes Miserables.” ach day in his dressing room he went over the play scene by scene with his director, J. Gordon Edwards, acting out every point on which there was any slight difference of opinion and finally getting all to a state| where hejand Mr. Edwards agreed | they would be most effective. Mr. Farnum and Mr. Edwards agreed with Mr, Fox that in this pic- ture/there is food for thought for married and single alike, for men and boys as well as for women and girls. “COLORADO PLUCK” AT! REX THEATER TODAY William Russell. who comes to the Rex theater today in the William Fox | picture “Colorado , Pluck”, rides into the heart of his admirers on one of the most smoothly running motion plcture vehicles yet built for the sil- ver sheet, ! «Colorado Pluck’ 'boasts a latitude extending from the “every-man-his- own-law” atmosphere of the typical: mining camp of frontier days in the west to/the confined atmosphere of Buropean nobility. In it there are said to be two laughs for every sigh and two thrills for every laugh. «(Colorado Pluck’™ is the story. of » successful western miner who visits New York's famous Gay White Way. and eventually goes to England and marries a daughter of nobility---and therein his worries begin. The luck- | Jess miner (soon realizes his money, | not he, was the attraction to the girl. | A bad investment brings him down | tn close marging, and he decides that | his arroezant wife mist accomnanvi him on his return to America to en- gawe in mining. "Fhere is a touch of sadness in the | Mig-hearted miner's. almost childlike endeavor to win the’ love of his | haughty ;wife, yet the wide gulf be- | tween them seems impossible to bridge until the husband is shot by one of several ruffians who have jumped hid claim during his absence | abwad. The closing action in "(““IO"E rado Pluck” is said to include some | exceedingly beautiful and impressive | scenes. | | | WILD MEN OF AFRICA “THE LION KILLER"—GRAND| One of the sports of kings is the hunting of lions. In Africa, this| sport has been reduced to a science, | because the savages fight the king, of bessts in primative style in sheer| celf defense. A lion hunt by train-| ed spearsmen iis one of the big feat-| nres of the Paramount-Vandenbergh | Africa” which will be shown at the 8 m— b e Exploration series of “Wild Men ofl wood Film company will present at| . Z S T the Grand theater tonight. It has| ply this only when the plant is dry. been the’ deliberate plan ofi Ira M. | oo oo Lowry, who directed the production, ‘to I‘fmppily te\ ]augh} with every thrill. | NOTICE FOR SEALED BIDS For instance, the way in which| Sealed bids will be receive Johnny Burke fools the men who!construction of a cons:h:;feddrg::'ht(::)el tried to find out the secret of his|house in school district No. 40, four mine lis as original and ridiculous as|and one half es west of Nebish, ¢ it is dramatic. Bryson, the stock pro- | cording to 1s and specifl moter, engages a Mexican half-breed | drawn by I'humas Jonnzon, architect, and two confederates to track Johnny | Bemidji, Minn. The plans‘are on mé on his way to the mine. Johnny ob-iin the office of the: Improvement eerves that he is being folloyed. He|Bupetid, St. Paul, Minn., also at-the| gets off his.horse, hides it anyl climbs ioffise of the c - Md= a tree the largest branch of chh‘1.,‘fi‘fin,,hat‘Z'fig'{.:flfi‘gfeihfefifi;’k overhangs the trail. He takes'his rope | of the school. and, a3 the half-breed rides under, Bids Wil be’ opened on Thursday. dropd the noose over his shoulders.| july 14th ,at 2:00 p. m. at the Qf.' Then taking hold of the rope by the|fice ofl the clerk. Separate bids will other end, Johnny jumps down and!he received for the comstruction of his weight carries the greaser up into the building, mechanical eqpipment, the branches. | electrical “‘équipment- and excavation. He then ties the rape to the tree Contractors shall employ local labor and jokingly leaves him.to his fate, | wherever: practicables” The right to catches his horse and Tides off. | rejeat any or a is hereby Te- | + |serygd. “A b per qrtified check WANDA HAWLEY PRESENTS must accompany’ af ds. | Mrs, J. C. Vogfer. Clerk, BRISK. WHOLESOME COM'EDY} Postoffice, Nebish, Minn. A, situation that has occurred to| thousands of married couples is un- falded! in | T q “THe (House That Jazz, Built” the new Realart picture which | opened at the Elko theater last eve-| ning. This comedy treat of domestic discord in a clever, entertaining| v manner that carries unusual appeal | 4 ---and accomplishes the showmun'sf S desire of “sending 'em away with a laugh.” | Tt ig a real cross-section of a situ- ation that has occurred in many homes---and certainly every married couple, as well as those about to be married, will find it particularly en-, tertaining. Miss Hawley shows that | Dladder and uric acid troubles= she is a real artist in her delineation | of the psychology of a woman whose | GOLD MEDAL charms are fading. And her make- up s indeed a gem »f artistry. | I_EM This brisk, wholesome comedy will be shown, last times at the Elko the- r t. ater Lonigh The National| Remedy of Holland for 3 centuries and endorsed by Queen Wilbel- “HAWTHORNE OF THE U. 8. A”.. mina. At all druggists, three sizes. Wallace Reid has a romantic COM- | Look for the nahe Gold Medal on every bex edy ‘role.in “‘Hawthorne of the U, 8. “ and agcept no imjtation A.” which is coming to ihe Elko Stomach-Kidneys-Heart-Liver Keep the vital organs healthy by regularly taking the world’s stand- ard remedy for kidney, liver, THE BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEER OLD METHODS ARE DISLIKED No Longer Produce Results Equal to the Demands of Transporta. tion on Highways. ' Road-building experts are endeavor- I ing to impress the public with the fact that the old methods of building roads no_longer produce results equal to the 1] demands for highway transportation. If tne highways are to be developed to their capueity there must be better and | better highways. 1 Aid Tn filqhway Research, ! Ingineering departments of leading | colleges and-universities in this coun- | try are aiding national bodies and ac- | tively co-operating in the work upon. a: natjonal prog'rum of highway re search, : Money for Good Roads. It i3 announced in Washington that the various “states lave 2,000,000 for the building of roads—not, hoi- ever, for the payment of exorbitant profits to unscrupulons contractors. Give the Kiddies . Plenty of Good Wholesome + Ice Cream The food value is unsur- passed—and how they do crave it! Teach Them to Say KOORS ICE CREAM - SUPREME At All Dealers theater tomorrow, Wediesday, only. The role of Hawthorne is said to fit Wallace Refd ty pertuction. His| leading lady is Lila Lee and others| inthe cast are Harrison Ford, Theo- dore Roberts, Tully Marshall, Charles Ogle, Gay Oliver, and Edwin Stevens The" picture is a Paramovnt-Artcraft and was directed by James Cruze. S b e Wnerp'roo{ed Silk Ribbon, The burcifi-of standards says it 18 impossible to waterproof silk ribbon and yet have It remain soft and pii- able, for the reason that anything that would make it waterproof fills up all | the spaces between the fibers of the | silk. . ‘ Washing Bottles. Put erushed. egg shells in srual? bits or a few carpet tacks or a small quan- ity of gun shot Into a bottle. Then fill one-half full of strong soap suds; shake thoroughly. Then rinse in clear water and the bottle Wili be cleansed. | GIRLS BECOME BANK OFFICERS We can_deliver Fish to your door cheaper than,you can catch themi/ ANDREW Perch, per 1b . PHONE '605-J " FRESH FISH - DELIVERED -Ev "i'y Tueésday | oo ufi Thursday i PRICES DELIVERED' White Fish, per lb. Pike, perlb ... Pickerel, per lb. Gold Eyes, per Jb. Sheephead, per lb. Suckers, per lb .. White Carp, per 1 -Order at Least Two Da_ys ‘Ahead AUBOLEE . ‘When news was received at Da- kota Business College, Fargo, N. D., that Eleanor Rambeck was ap- pointed asst. cashier of the Farmers State Bank, Mavie, Minn., and Hazel Burt, asst. cashier of the Eirst State Bank, Loma, they ‘checked up’’ and found thatsome 40 girl graduates are now bank officers. D. B. C. trainingis prac- | tical, above all. Graduates enter business life armed for success. At D. B. C. Summer School you get more individual attention, grad- uate sooner. *‘Follow the $uccegg- ful.”” Write F. L. Watkins, Pres., 806 Front $t., Fargo, N. D. digestion cf food, tho of nourishment from it and tho elimination of the waste, Let anythin ‘processei, -1 lnter{er‘n with theso full n me: SEWER that in turn often means EXTENSION oyeriahed o Doy WORK L You will save a great deal of worry and bother for yourself by calling on us when you are ready to fig- ure on any of this work. development of Rheumatism,—due to some interfér~ ence With the process of elimination, faflure to get rid of certain body poisons,—cannot be expected to yield to any medicine that fails to correct the. condition responsible for it. Could any reasonable person expect to rid himself of rheumatic pain as long as ROY V. HARKER D S PHONE 122 ‘THIRI NR does it by improving \digestion, assimilation and elimination --- the logical way. houmntié “polson 1s allowed to Te- B«“‘ifi the body. i Mink ¢f this. ‘It explains the suc- _of /Naturc’s Remedy (NR Tab- in 5o many cases where other ines have failed. 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Y at the circus, and father says there Philadslpiia were spelling ‘bees young. The only bees T have met so Sames, far-are the stinging kind.” ton, "others, Intelligence of Animals, ¢ wrote the small when he was THIS TIME LAST YEAR | . Bancroft, New York, got six sin- mlog out f § After losing eighteen the Athletiics' beat . Washing- times un and accented Holke knockerl ithe Braves-that beat Brooklyn: after he-had struck aut three times. Jones, Hurvard fixet baseman, came to.terms with theAthletics. v home. run for successive | pyp PIONEER! WA’&T ADS BRIN‘; RESULTS Prince _A_lbert’é.'i Il.t?W: : -igy_s 9_{ rolling ’21—__11 ‘note Talking about: rolling your .own' cigarettes, ‘we’ll “tell’ you /right here that Prince Albert ftobacco has You've got.a handful-of- happiness coming your di- rection when you pal it with P. A. and the makin’s papers!" For Prince Albert is not only delightful to your taste and pleasing in itsrefreshingaroma,but our exclusive patented process frees it from bite and parch! PRINGE . in the And, for a Tact, rolling up Prince Albert is mighty easy! P.A.isctimpcutand stays put and you whisk it jinto shape :before you can count‘three! And, the next instant you’re puffing away to beat the band! Prince Albert is.,§3'good. _that’it has led four men to smoke jimmy pipes where one was smoked before! It’s the greatest old buddy- smoke ‘that ever found its way into a pipe or cigarette! 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