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

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. .Company,” .from which it.is adapted. "' wife, who is implicated in a murder “NOT GUILTY” AT THE REX THEATER BEGINNING TODAY Not Guilty,” the photoplay which “coming to the screen of the Rex ter . today, is£ ar}t‘)usm}? mtergst 3 of that house be- AT i d Harold Mc “Parrot & a cause many have rea .@rath’s- thrilling novel, The feature is released through the Assdtiated First National Piptutes, Ing, and is a Sidngy A, Franklin pro- duction presented by Albert A: Kauf- man. s The plot is an unusual one and jnvolves twin brothers who love the same woman, and who, strange to say, are both loved by her. One of the brothers commits a crime, turns out to he a murderer and his twin changes jdentity with the guilty brother. Then events follow in rapid sequence. The inficcent brother, self-exiled, goes to India, the land of “brilliant days and purple nights” where the love, the life, the lure of the tropical east soothes the hopes and hearts of the civilized west. Then by coincidence the girl visits India. But the path of true love, which never , did run true, winds through a' veritable jungle of tense situations to an amazing climax., “I AM GUILTY" AT THE GRAND THEATER TONIGHT Teeming with*astion and suspense I Am Guilty!” J. Parker Read’s lat- est release through Associated Prfx- ducers, presents an original theme in an interesting and unusual manner. The story has to-do with-one Connie MacNair (Louise Glaum),.a neglected mystery from which she has great difficulty in’ extricating’ herself. Left alone by a thoughtless hus- band, Mrs. MacNair accepts the in- sistent invitation of a friend of her chorus days to attend a frolic given by Teddy Garrick, a notorious pleas- ure-seeker. Following the party, the host meets death in a mysterious manner and as a result, Connie Mac Nair is drawn in the web which is built around the tragic death of Gar- rick. A burn on the shoulder, caused by a struggle with Garrick, when he attempts to assault the unsuspecting Connie, caused the guilt to be placed on the shoulders of the neglected wife. This situation proves to be one of the strongest scenes ever visual- ized for the screen and the denounce- ment of the heroine is followad by an unbroken chain of -action. It is not until the last reel that the mystery is solved, and the mystery thus main- tained makes “I Am Guilty” one of the really big pictures of the year. Miss Glaum’s supporting cast in- cludes Joseph Kilgour, Mahlon Ham- ilton, little Mickey Moore, Ruth Miss Faytelle form a combination to the minute. The act consists of laughs that are new and wholesome. “POOR DEAR HARGARET KIRBY” AT ELKO THEATER TONIGHT | A, different.picture. is#Poor Dear Margaret Kirby,”" the Selznick fea: ture, starring_Elaine Hammerstein, which is showing at.the Elko theate last times tonight. The eternal tri-| angle does crop up, but it is merely incideptal, and is used only to serve as an additional obstacle in the hero- ine’s thorny path to happiness. The story written by Kathleen Nor- ris, magazine writer and novelist, con- cerns the marital affairs of a young| society girl who is shunned by her| that is/hard to'beat. Their talk is up | Carrying On With the American Legion Despite ~the long trip, the Massa- .chusetts department of the Amerlcan | iLeglon will send two large bands tc !!thu annual couventlon of the service | ‘organization at Kansus City, this fail. octet Py . m A:downtown._resg room. £or the con- ‘venience-of - farmers’ wives in the city -:for..supplies. and ..for.. city..wives. . op. shopping tours 'has been opeéneéd ~Aukiliary’ of the/American.Legion post ‘there. Because they,considered the post d commnunity asset and worthy of rec | ‘ognition, citizens of the town of Walts- | ‘purg, Wash., recently purchased a ho- ‘tel building and presented it to Sam- set when she takes in boarders to help her ungrateful husband. Miss] Hammerstein is particularly suited to | the most of the many dramatic situ- ations contained in the story. The acting is excellent, and the supporting cast chosen with excep-| tional care. | “THE SCARAB RING” AT ELKO TOMORROW AND THURS'DAYI Alice Joyce, the popular screen star, has in “The Scarab Ring,” show- | ing at the Elko tomorrow and Thurs- day, a vehicle unlike anything in| which she has previously appeared. | The role of the heroine provides her material for many dramatic scenes| and furnishes her opportunity to! wear several striking gowns. | thing necessary to make a wonderful | production, love, interest suspénse,| mystery, beautiful settings, elabor- ate costumes, clever bits of acting| and above all, it is'a human, pulsat- | ing reality, a story that might well| happen to anyone. The film is based on Harriet Gaylord’s famous novel, entitled “The Desperate Heritage. of fiction lovers in all parts of the| country, and lends itself well to vis-| ualization. . PN SE . S, How Snakes Move. Snakes move on their ribs. The snake's ribs are jointed at the back- bone, and extend down over ea~h side of the hody. .‘Tihe ends 2re connevted with plates on the underside of the snake. . These plates ‘have projecting edges, which take hold of the ace of ohjects bet Iv the re le. When| wke moves lis ribs therefore. he | an move forward just ux rapt’s and as swiftly as though he ted a0 taowiend legs. 1f you don't helieve (nis, try the experiment of putting a n oa ‘smooth plate of glass an'l wateh its vain. attempts o run. The resson z Stonehouse and other notable artists. PATHE NEWS AND SNUB . 'POLLARD COMEDY TONIGHT | _As additional attractions, the Pathe ‘Weekly News, showing visualized cur- ! rent events of the world, and comedy entitled “Spot Cash” featuring Snub | Pollard, will be shown at the Grand | theater tonight. "are fourth on the list, with” turkeys “MAKING MOVIES” AT REX | ATTRACTS MUCH ATTENTION | “Making Movies™ at this. popular’ house is drawing large crowds who! are witnessing the actual making and taking of the movies. The exhibition i$ amusing to the highest degree, and at the same time it is extremely in- structive as it gives a glimpse of the! real work of movie sta All the players are chosen from local talent | and the instructor is highly pleased with the unusual ability displayed by them. | y o A The scenes will be changed daily | and there is still an opportunity for a few more ladies and gentlemen to try out their acting ability before the camera. Saturday matinee' th entire scene will be played by chil-| dren. i The management of the theater is| to be complimented for bringing this! attraction to the city as it is some- thing in which all persons are inter-| ested and' which very few persons ever have an opportunity to witnes: BACKFACE COMEDIANS | AT GRAND THURSDAY ONLY | Mohler and Faytelle appear at the! Grand theater Thursday only in al black and tan novel entitled | “Bright Lights From Dixie, Thig act is positively one of the best black| face acts in the show b ess. Mr. | Mohler has been associated with sbme of the largest minstrel shows| ift' the country including the Doc wggr, Al Haverly | mstrels. 1 3 without doubt one’ of the greatest impérson- | ators of the darkey race now on the ! American stage, also po: ses a voice | of ‘unusual quality. Mr. Mohler and | |CLEAR THE SYSTEM O IMPURITIES AND YOU | "HAVE GOOD HEALTH “ Austin, Minn—"I cin nighly rec- ! ‘ommend Dr. Picrce’s Pleasant Pel- | = lets for the liver and for stomach trouble.. They are a very mild laxa.| tive or carthar.ic. They clear the system of ali impurities is so n for good heslth.” MRS.EMMA DELHANTY, R. 1. 5, Box 1. Ior many years [ ant Pellets ia my | and consider them very essen- MRS HIBLEN WENTWORTL, | r 8§t i | distance ! edges of Thé i of the glass. | come ducks and guineyfow). : Hens - ifully.” that ‘the snhake can move little or not S0 the proje ¢ plates ean fina nothing to take holil of on the smaoth surface & Eggs ‘and Nutrition. fcose lay the best eggs from the point of view of nourishment. Then and plovers following, but It is the hen on which the world depends for its egg supply, Not Likely. Urlah had come to inform me, writes a Labrador Mission worker in Le Petit Nord, that he could not “cleave the split: for his “stomach had capsiz 1 felt it incumbent on me to administer castor oil, thinking that that might be sufficient punish- ment for what I had reason to believe only u ruse to escape work. 1t w hard for me to give the oil, but harder still to have the boy look up afterw with 2 cherubic smile and ask If It were the same ofl that Elisha gave the widow woman!—Youth's Companion, That Simple Every-Day Life. There I8 not a thought or a feeling, not an aet of heauty or nobility, where- of one is eapable, but ean find com- plete expression in the simplest, most ordinary life; and all that cannot be oxpressed therein must of necessity helong to the falsehoods of vanity, fenorance or sloth.” Quarreled Since Wed- ding Day f “My stomach and liver trouble made a regular grouch.nf me. I was sore at everyone, including my wife, ang we quarceled every day since the wedding. She is a dear little girl and I know it was my fault. Mayr’s Wonderful Remedy was recommend- ed for my stomach trouble, and since taking it I have felt like a new man. | Mv wife and I now get along beauti- It is a simple; harmless preparation | that removes "~the™catarrhal mucus| from the intestinal tract and allays| the inflanimation Which causes. prac- | tically all storiach;*Ver and intesti- | nal ailments, including appendicitis One dose will convince or money re- funded. At All Druggists.—Adv. HARLEY-DAVIDSON - MOTORCYCLES BICYCLES AND SUPPLIES SGENERAL "REPAIR SHOP =311 SIXTH 'ST. BEMIDJIZ R this type of role, and is said to make |’ ! Amerlcan | mew road was constructed. “The Scarab Ring” contains every-|: This novel is popular with thousands | [ posts of his vicinity. L water for two days. {along” by various Ameérlcin Legion nel W. Southard post of the American Legion for use as a clubhouse, P When heavy rains washed out the | road to the village cemetery, the Leglon post of Natchez, Wash., called upon its farmer mem- bers. Each man brought a team of Lorses, gave two days’ work and a . x % Advocating a playground for the kiddies of the community members the Saylessville (Rhode Island) post of the American Legion brought the matter to completion by leveling the ground and putting the equipment in place with a saving of several hundred dol- Jlars to the city. . .. The athletic tastes of the young war vetemns of Oklahoma were evi- denced recently when the state de- 'partment asked each post of the American Legion what games they ‘'wanted at a state athletic meet. ‘Horse-shoe pitching contests led the ‘list, with temnis aund golf poor seconds. . s s Ex-service pntlel’lts in hospitals of Oregon have been extended free mem- ‘bership in the American Legion of the state, the posts waiving post dues and ‘the department paying state and na- tional fees, that the disabled may celve copies of the official magazine and the benefits of membership. . s John Broadhead Wallace, son of the secretary of agriculture, and Miss Margaret Powell, Cedar Rapids, Ia., recently married, have been receiving the official congratulations of Argonne ‘post, the American Legion, Des Moines, of which Mr. Wallace is & vice commander. .o By besting a walking record which had Dbeen undisturbed for years, | George N. Brown, Endicott,.N. Y., won a wager of $100 which he divided cqually between two American Legion Mr. Brown holds the world's championship pedestrian record. . » Chimes installed in every city and | town of America, to play “The Star- Spangled Banner” each evening, would ‘be a most fitting memorial to the war dead, according to a resolution intro- duced into the recent convention of the American Legion of. North Car- olina, seeking support of the state in the project. . . After having achleved distinctlon in Pittsburg, Pa., by being the first sallor married In an American Legion post,” P, C. Rose was stranded in Al- bany, N. Y., in the middle of his hon moon because he couldn’t collect his Dbonus wmoney. Members of the Al- bany Leglon helped him to complete the wedding trip. . . Insurance ‘against rain, high winds and liability to spectators, is being sought' by the Kansas City Flying | club in preparation for the annual convention of the American Legion ‘there this fall. Applications for the “freak” policies have been made to American companies and to Lloyd's of London, . s | {Drumright, Okla, by the Women's-|’ maid. you come?” to help the ex-service man To bring before the country in visual form the vast problem it is helping to solve, the, American. Red Cross has prepared for its Annual Roll Call, Nov. 11 to 24, a poster showing how rather than diminishing the total of World War veterans entitled to Federal aid continues-to grow. Service to these men is costing $10,000,000 a year, Sad Mistake. The family was, away from town. Théfr house was in'charge of a young Occasionally came-in to help with the cleaning. One day the maid opened the front door and was greeted Dy the angry woman. -WI've been ringing and ringing and rining,’ said the latter. “You kep' on so reg'lar,” | sald the maid, “that I thought it was only the telephone.” :s[‘—Eigh'.y [obi ‘in the 4 \‘ 550 90 sisted, must urse of Mandan, N, D.,' O per cent of the tubere United States is con! hood, according to M4, field worker for. the|#ni league. [ A health crusade, shel be ‘included in_ the mew % study. an_old woman “Why didn't | “Boys From 16 To 21 ~ Jumor Order of NOW .ORGANIZING BE A CHA'RTER MEMBER Ge! full Information from EARL LUK¥ Phone 456 Red Cross e e e e ADDITIONAL WANT ADS N FOR SALE—Good cookstove cheap. wood burner. Inquire 601 Minne- esota avenue. 3110-6 FOR SALE OR RENT--New cottage W. N. Weber, Phone 186W 4 6t 10-10 FOR SALE—7-room house. Snap for cash. Farm near Gully for saie or trade for house in Bemidji. 40 acres of- land, joins city limits e or. trade.for house in Be- midji. i} 4 i 2 houses on Beltraici avenue for sale. Terms. Inquire of Andrew Rood, over Notthern: National“bankibldg. ? 2t10-5 equipped model ra pearance of a Tategmodel:*Tires and mechanisiiéin goad shape.; A’ good buy. Phoné' 663 gvenings after 5 o’clock. # i ~ 50 10-4tf FOR "SALEZ Ford !sedan, ' good running-order. Hds just-béen over- hauled. Mrs. Fred Grant,;Nymore, Minn. i 2t10-5 FOR SALE—1 4-foot cigar case. Inquire at:Ideal Pool Parlors. 4t 10-4, 10-8, 10-11. 10-15 FOR SALE—Regal car, with delivery truck body. 1916 model. Will take | wood or potatoes part payment. Car in first-class condition. Price $75. Inquire at, 1422 Minnesota ave., Phone 524. 3t10-6 SLOW DEATH Aches, pamns, nervousness, diffi- culty in urinating, often mean serious disorders. The world’s standard reiaedy for ki-dney, liver, An American Legion emblem, wrought In exquisite crochet in mem- ory of the dead and wounded soldiers of the World war, which won first prize in a national knitting contest for Mrs. Velma 8. Cole, Binghamton, N. Y., has been presented to her local post of the Legion. Mrs, Cole is an invalid. * s x Holding that a sense of shame would work where entreaties failed, the Amerlcan Leglon post of Zillah, | Wash,, recently took photographs of | every dirty and unsightly back yard in the city. These photos were dis- played in several stores of the city's main streets, and within a week, ev ery back yard had beeu cleaned to perfection. oo | Pransferred from San, Francisco to | St. Paul, Piivate Charles Gilbert, U, S. Marines, gained permission to hike | to his new. station. Ie completed the | record match recently, after having beent <lost In. the désert 'country ‘of Battle Mountain, Nev,, and without He was “lifted posts which he visited route, along the H . . | A romance of the Rhine énded trag- | fenlly recently when Sel John' Wolf of the army died slfortly after return- ing to Americn with his young Ger- | man bride. Penniless, following the illness of her husband, the widow was taken In charge by the Ameriean L glon of New York and will be se back to her home at Coblenz with money contributed by the Legion- | nuires, | . bladder and'uric ucid troubles— GOLD MEDAL v @‘J E& bring quick relief and often ward off deadly diseases. Known as the national remedy of Holland for more than 200 years. All druggists, in three sizes. Look for the name Gold Meda! on every box and accept o imitation Gives a brilliant glossy shine that does not rub off or dust off—that anneals to-the iron-=that lasts fous times as long as any other, Black Silk Stove Polish | 1s fh.a clags Dy dtself.. It's! more atrefully iade and made fromy detter malerials. Try it on your parlor stov, yourcook stova e your gua Tango. 1 you don’t find it thabeat polish you ever wsed, your hardware “or wrocery dealer is authorized to re= fund your money. Subscribe for Tne Dally FPioneer. it i A 4 0 e e RN ] amusing story: acting in “Madame’ Sans-Gene,” a cat stole on the stage and rubbed itself against her. “touch,” :she picked it up and set it down.a foot or-two awa 2o to sleep. went to sleep. the audience drew Ellen Terry’s atten- tion to the animal again. sleeping peacefully on a red-hot “fire.” Hardly Realistic. Ellen Terry tells the following Once, when she was across To’ introduce a° realistic telling it to The cat curled up and * But a murmuring in The cat was SECRETARIAL AnnaSamuelson forsook the school- | room . for .the ‘bettcr cppertunities open-in businzss.: - To get the nec- essary training she took: the Secre- tarial Course at Dakota Busines College, Fargo, M. D., and was vecently sent to a $100:azmonth Ex Industrial Commissicn. C. graduates. when you’re thinking: ““What school shall I attend?”” now. Write E. L. Wal 206 Front &, Fargo, N, D, ! JOB 'BEATS TEACHING Like { scores - of . tcachers, Miss wation with. the -North . Dakota Nearly 700 barks employ D. B. Keep this 12 mind “‘Follow the fucccCiil.” Caroll kins, Pres., YES! WE'RE STILL.IN B This is to notify the p’ulghc that we have moved now better MATLAND’S VULCANIZING SHOP S AT Iilll IIIIII‘I‘IIIII USINESS the street from' our old location—we are equipped .to handle your. work. NEXT DOOR TO THE CITY HALL SR n: HURIRRInn s LHTTHO BT OUR MENUS APPEAL You’ve often heard the story of the man who goes into the restaurant, looks over the whole ‘menu and then in desperation 'orders ham andeggs. But its néver been told about this restau- rant because of the various" items on our bill of fare are selected with the idea of ap- pealing to every man’s taste. An dthey do! He finds just what he likes best cooked the way he likes it. B, SAME KG 5 for over 30 years. Ounces for than of -highe:-priced. brands Satisfactior guaranteed or money Why pay, war prices PRICE | BAKING POWDER 25 USE LESS R i (More than a pound and a half for a quarter) r‘_efuhdgd‘ ' ? Millions of pounds bought by the:government

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