Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, November 19, 1921, Page 2

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i ?fivn‘od wi [ new “Arrow” film, _off, he arranged $ome races and gave AT REX THEATER MONDAY What is said to be one of the great- t screen efforts of James Oliver Cur- ¥ Mon and Tuesday when the o i “The Girl From orcupine,”’ is shown. y.!nnres Oliver Curwood has long been recognized as a master of fiction, Girl From Porcupine” he d all his previous efforts. rich in incident, with a ¢ theme running through it and,in “The hag surp: The story strong lo showing the development of the young girl, Hope Dugan, played by Faire Binney, into a radiant and trlun}phant womanhood under a stress of circum- stances fit to try the stoutest heart. The story is laid in the little town of Porcupine, a gold-mining camp in the Canadian Northwest with a num- Ler of incidents taking place in and about a fashionable boarding school near New York city. The picture was dirccted by Del Tlenderson. and produced by’ the Pine Tree Pictures, Inc., a Maine company. who have arranged with Mr. Curwood to write a es of special stories for them with the action laid in the Pinc Tree State. Before starting work on this contract Mr. Curwood visited Maine, where he spent several weeks in the company of oflicials of the Pine Tree Pictures, touring the state, and imself as delighted«with offered by the won- derful scener, mountaing, rivers, fakées and plains of this state, which has been long recognized as posse ing the most magnificent scenery in the world. Coming—D. W. Griffith’s Flower”—Thanksgiving day. “Love “HUCKLEBERRY FINN” AT GRAND LAST TIME TONIGHT . Mark Twain’s immortal -boy hero; Huckleberry Finn, was a “regular is Lewis Sargent, the tal- the part of Huck in the film version of the fa- famous novel, which is entertaining throngs at the Grand theater tonight last times. Moreover, he proved it to the satisfaction of every boy in TLos Angeles recontly. One of the newspapers in that city has equipped a swimming hole ecially for boys, and every day it is crowded with the splashing, shouting mob of youngs by.reason of the fact that he play uckleberry Finn” in the Paramount picture, was invited to be the guest of honor at a “Huck Finn Day” at the “hole.” Did he accept? You bet. He spent over two hours with the oys, taught them new stunts in the water, did a few dives that went one better than any that they had tried, and gave them. some-inside storic about picture ‘production. "To’ top it prizes to the winners. Lewis, freckle-faced and red-haired, is every inch a “boy’s boy,” and it's little wonder that he’s just naturally « big success as Huck Finn. “HEART OF THE DESERT" AT THE REX THEATER SUNDAY One of the punches of “Heart of the Desert,” which comes to the Rex theater on Sunday is a daring feat, which would ‘have served as a fitting cpisode climax to any serial. It 1s necessary for tha Indian character, which is played by Monroe Satisbury, to carry the white girl, Rhoda Tuttle, played by Ruth Ciitord, into the des- ext, and as she is mounted on'a horse and endeavoring to escape rapdly tdown the road, it must be done at full speed. Both Salisbury and Miss Clifford ave expert in horsemanship, but neither of them have been called upen in’ moving pictures thus far to enact such a hazardous feat as this one. With an automobile, and‘a cam- era traveling alongside of them, and in danger of dashing into the one stationed down the road, it was a dan- zerous situation” for the: entire com- pany. + But Miss Clifford has an abundance of nerve, and Salisbury is six feet tull and exceptionally stalwart, Ey- |2 n-rythmg went off ‘as planned, except that Miss Cliffords’ horse, seeing a camera in the road in front of i, thought it was about'time to slow up, ‘thereby hurrying the action up and endangering the :whole scene, and the life of Miss Clifford. As it was, he virtually had to make a leap from }]er horse instead of being pulled from it, but she landed in’Salisbury's arms, and Wilfred Lucas, who was directing, was so relieved#that he | didn’t ask them to do it over again. “Ole Olson of the Hills,” a comedy drama in four blig actsyrand three vaudeville acts Sunday. The least that Manager Brinkman | can say is that it is a great snow. “THE SEA WOLF" AT THE ELKO TONIGHT AND SUNDAY . “The Sea Woli,” Jack London’s greatest story, and one of the best sea stories ever written, appears at the Elko theater tonight, also Sunday matinee and evening, George Melford, who directed “Ev- erywoman,” also directed “The Sea Wolf.” * A notable cast mous characters. Wallace Beery, Tom Forman, Mabel Julientie Scott head a distinguished group. The picture is filled with thrills, with deep human emotion. with the very essence of life. The ferry boat accident is said to be one of the most spectacular scenes ever filmed. The picture is crowded ,with vivid, sur- prising rapid incident. . _The production has been on a lav ish scale. All lovers of gaod picture: all Io\:ers of Jack London—every one who likes to feel his heart beat' with L‘cmgéne excitement—will ‘want to see it. * llllll'lllllllllllllIIlIIIIIlllllllllllllllllIllllll|llllllllllll||llllllllllllllllll_llllll nin 11 be shown at the Rex theater degling with the great North Woods Young Sargent, ! interprets the fa-|> “KNICKERBOCKER BUCKAROO” | AT ELKO THEATER MONDAY Douglas Fairbanks makes his re-| appearance -ag “Old Doc Cheerful,”.| in “The Knickerbocker Buckaroo,” which will be shown at'the Elko thea- ter next Monday. The moral of this story is that doing something for somebody is a worthy and laudable ambition, but that unselfishness can sometimes be carried too far, and unless guided by calm judgment, may | bring the unselfish one results he doesn’t expect, and, secondly, that the proper place to start any recon- struction in character is at home. Of course “Doug’” shows his usual | “pep” and atheletic _ ability while driving home the moral. | | “THE CUP OF LIFE” AT | THE GRAND TOMORROW | Since Marco Polo first dared the! hidden dangers of uncharted oc nns{ to journey his way from Europe toi| the mysterious shores of India and| the Qrient, the colorful kingdoms and empires lying “somewhere east of Suez” have beckoned the adventurer with . the lure of beauty, romance and glamour. | Singapore, the trade center of the| Orient, a port of ancient traditions and modern business, where today| rubs shoulders with yesterday, is the| alluring background of Thomas H.| In latest special production for| the Associated Producers, “The Cup| of Life,” which is announced as the feature of the Grand theater program beginning Sunday. The story a tremendous drama of a father’s love for his son and of | the unjustified vengeance of a pow-| erful Chinese merchant prince. Deftly combined with a delicate love story, and scenes of stirring action, are re- | revealed the fundamental differences that will forever separate the' Orient from the Occident—the dividing line of races. The cosmopolitan atmosphere of Singapore has been exploited to the fullest advantage in attaining power- {ful and ecffective contrast, and in "reaching the tremendous dramatic % re assumed by eptional merit. Hobart Bosworth appears “Bully Brand,” the type of characterization for which he has become justly fa- mous. Madge Bellamy, Tully Marshall and Niles Welch are seenin parts no 1 important. Monte Collins and May Wallace complete the, cast. . “The Cup of Life” has been pro- duced in typical Thqm H. Ince fashion, and no effort has been spared to make it onc of the artistic and dramatic triumphs of the screen. For Colds. A flannel ygrung out of hoiling wa- ter, sprinkled with turpentine and\lafd on.the chest gives relfef in colds on the chest. . Wood Made Old in 24 Hours. By a Dy I process of haedening wood the aging effects of years are sald, to be accomplished In 24 hours. Overlooked. The man who sald that society de- pended on women forgot that most women depend on men, * Movies Hard on Pianos. Three months’ use in a motion-ple- tuve theater is sufficlent to render the average pinno valuele: And Usually Does, The woman who tries to conceal her age 1s old enough to know bhetter.~— Cartoons Magazine, Tell 'Em With Flowers. Some girls have to be kidded; others ‘have te he orchid-ed. NOTICE NF MORTGAGE FORECLOS- | been mnde in of that certain 1 ana delivered a_widower. County wrwater | County hanking corporation unde the laws of tie State of Minuesott, i mortgagee, which mortgage the 17th dny af Februs 1 gage n by Gustay mortgngor t Yuury, A, 1 17 Book 33 of Mortg: Wheread, there claimed to be «due on aceount of the e 633, und, is now duo and is it the date heroof, | indebtedness secured note evidenc- ix Hundre FITty-thre and no actios proceeding at law or been_ had or instituted for recover the indebtedn thereof securad by reglstration t taxes 1 on ' the in- id note and o: S Tlereby Given, 1 i1l e foreclosed by | le of the following de Dbed prem- situated in the County of Bejtrami{ and State of Minnesota and in said mort- Hage de Doed and thereby mortgag New Yo‘rk, Nov. 19.-—Certain New York business houses have gone in for flowers to u degree one would never have expected of coldly com- al institutions. Window boxes spreading vines and color all over stone exteriors bloom all the way up Fifth avenue 'and along the cross streefs, Pretty soon they’ll probably glow from the stock exchange abut- ments. One busy man has risen in protest against the custom. He had a wedding anniversary and wanted some roses for his wife. “I" got off the street car three times on the way home at what I thought were florists’ windows, and every onc of them was! a restaurant or an exclusive millinery shop,”” he explained, aggrievedly. Policewomen shouldn’t be attract- ive and younthful. They aren’t ex: pected to be and confus John Sleven, insurance broker, queried “Lounesome, dearie?” to a young wo- man whom he also ‘called “Little} Queen of Sheba,” and the next min-! ute he had fallen t6 his knees from| a simple twist of her slender white| wrist. Then he followed her meekl, to the police court, under bona flde; arrest. For Rose Rosenberg, the “little queen,” is officially attached to the fifth deputy commissioner’s of- fice, and had the power of auhority as well as of jiu jitsu. Now Mr. Sleven will be ‘discouraged from ever even! glancing ' at another fetching young person so long as he lives. “Can you give a girl a job?” is the intensive and extensive guestion asked by the New York City Young Wom- en’s Christian association these days. The association is conducting a drive to find work for the unemployed wom en of the city and’ its registrati bureaus are busy. They have also sent a massive petition to Secretary! Hoover asking for special considera- v | tion for-unemployed women. Ten per cent more women are looking for| iobs than were doing so one year ago, according to the Y. W. employ- burcaus. “The situation is seri- " said Dorothy P. Weils, direet- or of that department of the Central branch where 3.000 girls applied for work last month. “There has been a great increase in our social service cases, because the girls who have been Imcy Jeatine Price out iof work for some time have reached close to the end of their re-| sources, there will be actual distress this win- ter.” Mr the | says it is the “white collared woman” largest numbers. Mrs, Albert Hutchin- to find work for all groups of gir! ! Chri tif of Unless conditions ¢ ange, | G Rosalie Loew Whitney, of | State Industrial commission. who is’seeking employment. in the|, = son s chairman of the committee of Y. W. which is surveying busine: Morgan is aiding actively in the drive 1a | 1s | is lit and women. Red birck, light roofs are turning a section of Far, Rocka into an Elizabethan vil-| lage—with modern plambing. Anoth- er group of French style country houses is to be erccted, so that we will have Europe and the Isles close | at hand. I vl thatehed | Il “has undoubtedly touched the high point of his career to this time in the writing of “Anna ie,” recent'y opened at the Vanderbilt theater. It i i and realism that in world, and yet it comple ne dreary sordidness of vlays that strive for that v has admitted that humor, even com- edy, c; life along with its tragedies—and almost atways . does. And ke has admitted further that there arc possibilities in life for any Fugen O is ac ply escapes 50 many as of touch. This something 'that many | pe of the Broadway, “realists” refuse to | concede. The acting of Pauline Lord | i as ‘Anna Chr > and George Mar- | 4 ion, as her father, the barge captain, is perfeci. That sounds like gush, [ know. Dut perfect is exactly what it s. The production is an achievement. | al ha ex . Sunset heams can come east perfectly well if one i ous; and New York apartment dwell- | wi ers have to be ingenious in order to|any signs of abuses of church build- get any sunshine at all. One of them |ings. ]rms solved the problem in a way th is being rapidly copied by all of hi neighborhood. He has rin a proiec- | tion' out of a north window which | w] never did I¢t in‘any sun, and turned | v4 a good big nfirror toward the open sp! spacé to the west. Sunshine in a broad | th: Hin! streak brightens his living room every | gold and has nceded it as desperately afternoon from'3 o’clock on. | a Disease Delay: One curious point which is shown in Insurnnee tables is that those organic, diseases which are so frequent in mid- dle life develop at a period from five to ten rs later than they did fifty yoars ago. Something Wrong. o, T shan't ask her to marry me. She can c¢ook, darn socks, and doesn’t like the pletures. There must be something wrong with her family.”— From Kasper, Stockholm. ‘I Surely. Malernal love is the most wonder- ful thing in ke’ world. Lven the mother of a practicing cornet player would hate to have him die. Frames 500 Years Old. Framed pletures date back 500 years, when monks nailed wood around thelr pictures to separate the sub- Jects. Lle as | See It. As near s T ean get at it, some thin: ¢ “punk.” while others are “fh —Touisville_Courier-Tournal, e At The REX | ToDAY - TODAY Phil Goldstone presents “The Santa fe to-wit The West Half of th ter of Seetlon Tor ter of the Scuth Eleven and t the Northea FFourteen, in I Quars Section | “Quan of 8 i liip - One Hundred | nge Thir th of one, | m to the highest | West, Didde ? Beltrami County front_door of t) Cit, % w at publi for zage and the indebtedn cured, and a gage, and premises, expens Date together with tlie of this -foreclosure. November 021, State Bank, Bagloy, Minn, Mortgag, “costs and (Corporate Seal) B v Ose ness, resident, . Kolb, r Mortgagee, fonal Bank Building, innesota. 1 26 Terror’ From the ‘story “John Ermine of ¥ Yeilowstone” By Fredric Remington. ' SUNBEAM COMEDY In Two, Parts FOX NEWS . ! Rex .Orchestra CHURCHES NOT HARMED ' Moscow, (By Mail).—The bells of Moscow still ring, Neither revolution, civil war, nor famine has affected what for cen- turies has been one of the most beau- and sonorous, qthers:with‘ high nery- ous ‘clangs, converting the entire mony and discord that momentariiy drowns all the ordinary noises of | $treet life, stairs or ladders into the belfries. 1t work from the street belyw——in their long locks, rythmically with the tones of the bell, the entire picture framed in the sten | wall of the low tower. ' ibundles, face the bells, cross.them- selves and bow-a moment in prayer, sometimes' dropping to their knces. Drotshky drivers against_their breasts and cross them- selves as they. drive past. ° £ toric religious capitol of | particularly picturesque. And there bending heads and kneeiing figures| the under-I Naherezhna (Riverside Drive). The | which they are bowing are now the ism. He) stronghold of the bolsheviks. ancient religious citadel now serves vice ha one regardless of the depths they [since the revolution and the Kremlin’s | morning are as full today as ever, were touched. BY RUSSIAN SOVIETS ul and distinctive features of Mos- cow—the daily concerts of bells at i profitable. Our large, new de- sundown, calling the faithful to'wor- MOTORCYCLES seriptive and illustrated catalog ship in ‘Méscow’s sixteen hundred BICYCLES AND SUPPLIES is. just off the press. Write for churches. = ¥ 1} your copy today. As of /yore, ‘every evening at 7S the sixteen hundred' cupolas .which'S311 SIXTH ST. ' BEMIDJIZ 204 Honnepin, Ave. lift their golden spires from all PArts | =y pynNIEMMIIRINUNENINI | Minneapolis Minn. the city, become vocal, some low HARLEY-DAVIDSON BARBER TRADE PAYS WELL Our graduates are earning good salaries and many of ‘them arg in business for themselves. - We are now occupying our enlarged quar- ters. Now is the time to learn 2 trade that is -both pleasant and TWIN CITY BARBER COLLEGE y into a strange bedlam of har- A few minutes before 7, sixte ndred monks climb up the winding fascinating to watch them at thei tle velvet caps, their Leards and their bodi »inging Peasant women, passing with their hold their caps The religion' of the Kremlin, hi: Russia, i an element of the pathetic in the ross the river on the Sophiskaya | walls and golden minarets to The a dormitory for the mghest officials the soviet government, Lenin, v and others. No religious 'ser- been held in the Kremlin 1f are silent. Moscow’s religious life has con- 1aed unchanged, in all’its mediaev- vsticism through revolution and rdship: The churches..on Sunday cept that the congregations bhier. If anything, the sufferi t few years intensified re- ous devotion. The bolsheviks are not interfering th religidus ser . Nor are there are The works of art inside seem tact and not.even the vestuaries The. golden minarets of Moscow, | § hich represent an actual metallic ue of millions of dollars, are re- endent as ever,. despite the fact |} at the bolshevik government needs |§ 1 any government in history. The e_plated with real gold. Might Bs Worked Once. Jud Tunkins says one way to get a reputation for great wisdom is te think up a lot of questions and then.| beat the crowd to the encyclopedia, s Food tor Pugilists. Correspondent intrigued by “stewed uppercuts” on a bill of fave says he ordered some. The dish turned out to be stewed apricots. Swiss Have Women in Clergy. i Unmarried women are now permlt-f ted to serve as clergy in Switzerland; | they must resign in the event of their } marringe, | | | i “Rubaiyat.’ “Rubaiyat” is the plural of “rubal.” | The “rubai” is & quatrain or stanza composed in: such style of stanza. First Fine Cut 1836. Fine-cut chewing tobacco was first manufactured fn Centerville, Mich,, Im 1836. i Matinee 2:30—7:10-9:00 — REX MONDAY & TUESDAY Arrow Presents The Knickerbocker | —RETURN SHOWING— DQUGLAS FAIRBANKS | Buckaroo | An, Arterait Pictare AL. ST. JOHN In Comedy T e e VAUDEVILLE —EVERY SUNDAY-— ONE DAY ONLY! Geo. H. Webster Vaudeville Circt_lit Affiliated with Marcus Loew Circuit ““OLE OLSON OF THE HILLS” %l { i A Comedy-Drama in Four Big Acts And Three Vaudeviile Acts —F eature Picture— MONROE SALISBURY in— “HEART OF THE DESERT-” REX THEATRE Matinee 2:30—10c and 35¢ Evenings 7:10-9:00—All Seats 50c JACK LONDON’S } “ Grealest Story | SEA WOLF” “SHIP AHOY” Y and MABEL JULIENNE SCOTT ina scenefom GEORGE H. MELFORD'S '?fiugg'%g SEA WOLF! . A PARAMOUNT ARTCRAFT PICTURE . TONIGH! & SUNDAY Jas. Oliver Curwood’s “THE GIRL FROM PORCUPINE” With FAIRE BINNEY and BUSTER COLLIER Directed by Dell Henderson Produced by Pine Tree Pictures, Inc. Pine Tree Pictures SCORE AGAIN Arrow Film Corporation of- fers the second James Oliver Curwood’s Pine Tree stories of Love and Life in the Great Untamed Northwest— New York and all motion picture centers have acclaim- ed this as unquestionably Mr. Curwood’s greatest and grandest screen conception. “THE GIRLFROM PORCUPINE” TONIGHT ¢ THOS. H. INCE PRES. GRAN Huckelberry Finn” LAST CHANCE to see this Paramount Art-Craft Special Producticn of Mark Twain’s immortal drama of Youth—A treat for Young and Old—10c and 25¢ Matinee 2:30—Nights 7:15-9:00 ~ Sunday:-: = @ 0 pyoduction shown recently at the CAPITOL THEATRE ~in St. Paul at 55c—Will be shown.in this cit for—Children 15c—Adults 30c HOBART BOSWORTH TULLY MARSHALL “The GUP Of LIFE” ROMANCE AND ADVENTURE EAST OF SINGAPORE The thrilling fight between “Bully Brand” and a man-eating shark, photographed at The stirring fight ‘in o palace at Old Singapore, where two men fight unbeknown to cach other, their arena as dark as the lust in their hearts. .The great, vivid Chinese Pageant ordered in ‘celebration of a.marriage—the scenes in the Port of Singapore—land of perpetual romance and adventure. :-:Monday snlendid Associated Producers ENTS A DISTINGUISHED CAST, INCLUDING MADGE BELLAMY NILES ‘WELCH —_—] N IT'S A RARE ONE

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