Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, September 21, 1921, Page 2

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“AFTER YOUR OWN HEART” AT REX THEATRE SUNDAY Tom Mix is coming to the Rex Theatre next Sunday in a picture called “After Your Own Heart,” and William Wallace Cook, the —well- known author, has put into it some features never before attempted in stories of cowboy life. Ora Carew is Tom’s leading wo- man in this picture, and the love romance which animates the hero is said to be developed in an exceeding- ly original way. “After Your Own Heart” will be at the Rex Theatre for two days. “A PRIVATE SCANDAL” AT ELKO LAST TIME TONIGHT “A Private Scandal,” the current offering at the Elko Theatre closes tonight. It is a Realart picture and tells a grippingly dramatic story which is more than well done by a splendid! cast which contains such players as May McAvoy, Kathlyn Williams, « Bruce Gordon, Ralph Lewis, Lloyd Whitlock and baby Gladys Fox. Usually it is maturity that ad- vises Youth. But this time the si ation was reversed, and it was inexperienced young girl who was urging the sophisticated society matorn to be true to her home and her husband, above all, to her child. You never saw a more adorable little heroine than Jeanne, protrayed by winsome May McAvoy. “THE GOLDEN HOPE” AT THE ELKO THEATRE TOMORROW Should a wife accompany her f jtive husband into the bad lands, ¢ ing off all ties of family and civiliza- tion, while he makes a mad hunt for gold? This is a question that de- mands some thought but the answer is to be found in “The Golden Hope.” a Haworth prodaction with Edith Storey, which will open at the Elko Theatre tomorrow The picture shows this emotional actress at her very best. The story of “The Golden Hope” is an interesting and gripping one taken from the novel of the name written by G S Mason and John Hilliard. E. ard Schayer adapted it to the Miss Storey is the wife who sticks to the criminal husband through thici and thin until human nature n stand it no ‘longer. Then things begin to happen. These things make the punch of the picture. SMILING COWBOY HERO TO APPEAR IN SPEEDY FILM Hoot Gibson, the hard riding young Universal star, is' scheduled to spur across the screen of the Grand the- ater on Friday and Saturday, and keep moving until “Action,” his new, and smashingly dramatic wes‘ern! story reaches its whirlwind finish. “Action” could not have been a| better story if it had been luilt to Hoot Gibson’s measure. The story was originally written by J. Allan! Dunn and read by thousands as Mascotte of the Three Star.” versal bought it, assigned Jack Tord to direct, und commissioned him to| get the best cast of players in the| country for the supporting voles. Clara Horton, the exceptionally ap- pealing little emotional act play; opposite the star while the ainy of the cast will give theater goer opportunity to watch the best work of such popular players as Franci Ford, J. Farrel, McDonald, Buck Conners, William Robert Daly, Chas.| Newton, Jim Corey, Kingfisher Jones, ! Dorothea Wolbert and Byron Munson. | “Action” is particularly interesting to those hundreds of sc: ities | who have watched Hoot in his vigorous short reel Universal| features. ‘“‘Action” is his first fivc-] reel starring vehicle and a production | which immediately gave him a per-| manent place in the foremost rank of | ‘western stars. | E NEWS OF THE THEATRES ¢ | ployed to gi lconfldence in the horse, .as it had |made greater leaps than the , one taken in the picture, though never such a dangerous one. This thrilling .scene is clearly THE B2MiDJI DAILY PIONEER WEDNESDAY EVENING, SEPTEMBER 21, 1921 shown in this«picture, which story of an untutored girl, who after risking her life for her friends in the mountains, goes to the city where she wins laurels for herself. SPLENDID CAST FOR night for the last time in “Little Italy,” at the Grand theatre This play, which offer: a most colorful role a intensely emotional Italian girl, is the second of a series of foreign roles in which the star is being presented by Realart. The first, “The Land of Hope,” showed the star as a wistful Polish immigrant girl, and like “Lit- tle Italy,” was written especially for Miss Brady by Frederic and Fannie Hatton. The story of “Little Italy” con- cerns the life in a thriving colony of | truck farmers who live near the great New York market, carrying on a brisk trade in garden produce and growing am wealthy, but remaining aloof from| “Just.a week before I started tak- the Amercian life all about them, and |ing Tanlac 1 was down in bed so crip- retaining all their native customs, be- plied up with rheumatism I could not liefs and feuds. move without help. My son had tak- Norman Kerry plays opposite en Tanlae, and it had done him a Brady, while others in the ca world of good, so one day he brought George Fawcett, Jack Rridgway, Ger- home a bottle and said, ‘Mother, I trude Norman, Luis Alberni nt you to take this’ When I had Marguerite Forrest. More than two |finished that bottle, I felt like a dif- hundred extras, all Italian, were em-|ferent woman, and by the time I had ¢ color and life to the {finished my second bottle, I was out in the garden hoeing. RS e “Tanlac has simply done wonders “IN OLD KENTUCKY” AT THE for me; nost seems like a mir- REX THEATRE TOMORROW [acle.” This is the remarkable state- Anita Stewart makes a startling [ment made recently by Mrs. Jennie Jeap on horseback over a broken |Root; residing at 1409 Powers Co., e a chasm, taking great |Portland, Oregon, and is only one of cene from the First N tens of thousands from well known pecial feature, “In Old Ken-|men and women who are daily testi- ’"in which she stars. This|fying to the powers of Tanlac. great Amers classic will be shown| Continuing her wonderful state, at the Rex Th tomorrow. ment, Mrs. Root said, “For years I The bridge is a draw over a ravine |suffered terribly with rheumatism, more than 100 feet deep. But the|and would cften be down in bed for In the story|days at a time. In the last five years for 1 Stewart to |there not a time that I didn’t leap over this broken draw to reach|feel those rheumatic pains all through a man who is lying unconscious in|my bcdy. About two months ago I From Helpless Invalid to Com- plcte Restoration of Health, Strength and Happiness Is Wenderful Change Mrs. Root Experienced in Three Weelks — Statement One of Most Remarkable on Record. < big scencs. the road far beneath her, where the|got very much worse and my arms villain has placed a dynamite bomb | and legs were so bad-I was almost beneath him. helpl d couldn’t even hold a pen The horse, upon which she is mo untef,tad mounted, at first refuses to make the jump, but she starts again, and spur- to sign my name. I was so weak I could not do any couldn’t even sleep, and had no rest day or night. e tmont Spead Mies |steps would tire me out completely. horse to her spur and makes When I tried to walk I would stag- ger, and when I did walk a little way and sat down I could not get up with- out some one helping me. I had no appetite and hardly ate enough to keep me alive. I could not stoop over far enough to get my shoes on. “I never knew what a night’s sleep was, and would lie awake for hours. At times I would get very cold and would have to get up and sit by the fire all huddled up, and my daugh- ters would put hot water bottles all around me. I was treated by four doctors, and took all kinds of medi- cine. Nothing ever did me any good. the jump. But it reaches the oppos- ite side by such a narrow margin that broken of the bridge are kicked from benecath its feet into the chasm wart admits that she was htened, but had every Carl Laemmle presents Hoot Gibson housework. I Even to walk a few|s I am ju : like a different person now. | All these terrible ached and pains \ft ¢, and only the other day aLie to walk up four flights of n an office building when the was out of crder. “My anpetite is just splendid now, and just today for the first time in| years, I felt so hungry that I had to go an:l cat a piece of pie between| meals. In fact, I can’t remember the | time that I have felt as well as I do now. I have not only regained my health afd; strength, butiI have gain-| ed fourtacn pounds iniweight. To tell | you the truth, I wouldn’t exchange | the benefit I have received from Tan-| lac for the best ranch in Oregon, and | 1 will praise it as long as I live.” Tanlac -is sold in Bémidji by the City Drug Store, and leading drug- gists everywhere.—Advertisement. elevato: WITH A BIG i SPECIAL CAST The big Thrill-a-minute Western Feature of Friendship and Fights Love and Laughter. "REX O THEATRE s the| FARMERS WOULD COLLECT Judgment has been entered in dis- Itrict court against three prominent e ket SAYS HER HEcquHY i Alice Brady will be seen here to- farmers. of this vicinity fh collec- | se EI‘\il Judgngsn; Ggl;la’n tN}l y WAl ™ tion of a $7,600 note which they |Link, Niagara, G. F. erg, Niagara ox ACCPMODATION NOTE signed as an accomodation for the|and H. O. Haraldson, Northwood. * | Grand Forks Americon, former non- Grand Forks, N. D., Sept:~21.— |partisan league paper, ~which has|THE PIONEER WANT ADS BRING. RESULTS now suspended publication. Suit —————— was brought by a Chicago bank who (X =] Real All-Purpose Car The Oakland Six .Sport Model. $1265k pleasure car are combined thereby making distinctly an all-purpose car. Outstanding features of the Oakland Six Sport Model are: Wire wheels. 32x4 cord tires. \ Genuine Brown Spanish leather uphol- stery throughout. B Special top with plate glass rear window. Slanting weatherproof windshield. 17-inch corrugated, laminated steering wheel. Genuine walnut instrument board. 44 h.p.six-cylinder overhead valve engine. 115-inch wheelbase; 6Yz-inch frame. Alemite lubrication system. 18 to 25 miles per gallon of gasoline. 12,000 to 16,000 miles per set of cord tires. Light ‘maroon finish with black fenders. "HE Oakland Six Sport Car meets a well defined automobile de- mand—the demand for a real four- passenger, lightweight, six-cylinder, all-purpose car of tested merit and outstanding value. Nearly as light as a roadster and correspond- ingly easy to handle and low in cost of operation, this car seats two additional pas- sengers or provides ample space for luggage or business equipment. The ordinary car that is suited to business needs has neither the room nor the appear- ance to make it desirable for use outside of business hours. But in the Oakland Six .Sport Model the features of a business and Other models of Today’s Oakland Six are: Touring Car $1145, Roadster $1095, Sedan $1725 with cord tires and Coupe $1625 with cord tires—f. 0. b. Pontiac F. M. MALZAHN 405 MINNESOTA AVE. To-day's Oakland Six| " Unit of General Motors Corporation | BEMIDJI 0:’0=0=’0=’O=’°=0=0=°=O=0=0=°=0= [4 A . 9 ction A UNIVERSAL PICTURE —FRI. & SAT.— GRAND = 4BIG | VAUDEVILLE ACTS EVERY THURSDAY AND FRIDAY, STARTING :E_' SEPTEMBER 29th and 30th = SHELL FROM ST. PAUL The Younz Evanrelist Will Conduct EVANGELISTIC SERVICES Every Evening at 8 P. M. at The Congregational Church at NYMORE Beginning Wednesday, Sept. 21st Concluding With Sunday Service. » COME HEAR HIM! And Bring, the Sick And Bring Your Friends. C. E. Telephone 21 B re : Come to the WINDMILL at the Fair Grounds He will have something there for you. If you want to see Battle Store, come to 411 Beltrami Avenue. Make his store your uptown headquarters during the fair. brimful of the best hardware to be seen in this section of the state. BATTLES -:- 411 Beltrami Ave. Battles Wants to See It is = N—{ 7 ONE BRAND- ONE QUALITY- ne Size Package "All our skill, facilities, and lifelong knowledge of the finest tobaccos are concentrated on this one cigarette— CAMEL. Into this ONE BRAND, we put the utmost quality. Nothing is too good for Camels.” They are as good as it’s possible to make a cigarette. Camel QUALITY is always maintained at the same high, exclusive standard. You can always depend on the same mellow-mild refreshing smoothness—the taste and rich flavor of choicest tobaccos—and entire freedom from cigaretty aftertaste. i And remember this! Camels come in one size package only—20 cigarettes—just the right size to make the greatest saving in production and packing. This saving goes straight into Camel Quality. That’s one reason why you can get Camel Quality at so moderate a price. Here’s another. We put no useless frills on the Camel package. No ‘‘extra wrappers!”’ Nothing just for show! Such things do not improve the smoke any more than premiums or coupons. And their added cost must go onto the price or come out of the quality. One thing, and only one, is responsible for Camels great and growing popularity —that is CAMEL QUALITY. ciinini H TR T R.J.REYNOLDS TOBACCO CO., Wl.nnion-s‘-lem. N.C. — e} e

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