Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, September 30, 1922, Page 2

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THE BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEER B i d Can A Woman Love More Than One Man? brad she went to Paris with her blind _sister. Kldnapped by a nobleman’s servants, thrust into the pagan splendors.of a mldnlght orgy, she is saved by a young aristrocrat.” Thus be- gan one of the finest love stories of history. She met another man—A Giant of the People Danton, the leader. Saved by the aristocrat, she saves the revolutionary. Protector and pro- tected! Woman’s chief instincts challenged! Danton, afterward savior of France, becomes Henriette Girard’s second lover. This love is the most adventurous ever tolds The love of these two for Henriette, her love for them, is is the golden cord Mr. Griffith has interwoven through “Orphans of the Storm.” A. BIG DR.AMATIc ‘SCENE’\FR M D .W. GRIFFITH > S *ORPHANS OF 'THE( § THEATRE Young, slim, wistful, blonde and country- ' OPENING SUNDAY FOR THREE DAYS This is D. W. Griffith’s Biggest and Best Picture; A Film every Person i 2 kal&s_m AND 40c EVENING SHOWS 7:30 and9 ALL SEATS 40c SPECIAL MUSIC SCORE BY SPECIAL ORCHESTRA l OCt 1 2 3 R E x SUN.M City will WanttoSee o‘_nunl hag j"sl'-he _Story of Love . .1 .Two men loved Henirette Girard, country-bred, who journeyed to Paris with her blind sister Louise. The pas- sion of the handsome aristo- crat makes the sweetest love . story fo history ; that of Dan- ton—leader of the people in their revolt against a brutal- ly crushing monarchy—forms the most adventurous The noble lover had saved her from a powerful and wealthy roue who had her kidnapped. The roue was slain, the young noble exiled, the People’s leader lost his power—all for love! The love that brought a revolution! The love that brought down a great monarchy, from_the ruins of which sprang a great republic. The greatest love story of all his- tory. Sweet, tender, appealing! An empire of new emotion. Love ‘often bears the hardest blows of Fate, Two orphan sisters, one blind, one a victim of a nobleman’s lust, brought near by a voice, a thrust-apart again by a thief’s. greed and a sp’s.law. The climatic moment in a sthy that runs the gamut of all human emotions. See It And Believe! “There is semething beyond the emotion of the stage— something bigger.”—Archie Bell jn the Cleveland News. “ ‘Orphans of the Storm’ is the greatest dramatic enact- ment the world -has ever known since the living contests in the Roman Ampitheater.”—Amy Leslie, Chicago Daily' News. “I was simply overpowered by the terrific forces anfxth turns loose in the theater.”—Fred Mclsaacs, Boston Amer- ican. . “There are ‘moments when one has to look away to keep from bemg entlrely swept away by the flood of: emctwn o —New York Sun. ““A better bit of suspense and excitement and heart-tear- ing seconds has not been shown in New York P New York Evemng World. ILLUSTRATEDR BY Fundred furiist vested initiative It you have patience to wait. bed-| ging factory at Vie (Continued from last {zsna) She gave him a grateful look for his trust,- now perfectly assured of Shot- tle's useful future. But the General did not appear to be easy in his mind, and a little later when he and Drace were walking about the yard, beneath the trees, he referred again to the in- vestment. Drace would have shuf- fled away from it, but the old gentle- man cornered him with a question: “T want the truth. Did Liberty, lle to me?” “Yes, sir, he did.” “I began to think so the moment he left me. Well, it is a singular thing, presence of my wife, and I regret that “I-may thave seemed in doubt. But Drade, ‘that fellow makes me angry with myself. Confound him, he almost convinees me at times that I have no stability of character. And yet I am fond of him. I am always glad to see him come, And let me say that he il- lustrates” one truth very clearly—that ability! consists- mostly in the fervor with wliich we go at a thing. I sup- " pose he has cost you considerable.” “Oh, net very much. I am fond of him too, and I believe he is going to be of much help to me.” “well, T've lost five hundred this morning, but T can stand it. I have or- dered the mules hitched up, and am going ~to. drive with you. about the plantation. I am going to show you a | government here in the delta.” During the drive the old gentleman was talkative; sometimes with the schoo} man's hesitating precision, but more often as the free companion, | agreeable = rather than discursive. Drace evinced in ererything a keen in- terest, but it was not real. His heart “'Evsrythmg all right at the office, Janu?" "'That s good—-Yas, I’m having a fine time.” time always comes; history is strewn with bedtime. It came slow-footed for Shottle, but quickly enough for Drace, with his nerves of steel wire. And how delighted he was with his roon, & museum of antiquity, a great four- poster bedstead with a canopy heavy enough to have served as deadfall to some uedieval’ giant, A chair that looked like the oaken throne of an an- cient Briton, a wardrobe wherein Blue- bearil wight have hanged his wives, a raigh-hewn maantelpiece remindful of a -beetling cliff—these were fefitured in the light of a hanging lamp big engiigh to turn G:e ashes of a cre- f dragou. ght was warm, and through {hie windows the alv came cool aud lulling from the 0 until- daybreak '»pffll:‘ he slept when he awoke the noontime bell was ringibg. A neg acked to tell him that -dinner was re The Geners and Tycle were s d. hut was not st th with thel following Drace’s explanation from “I gave him the five hundred dollars that he was to uut in with the Sve . an early boat for that city. I think it fs a fortunate thing for the South that they discovered a wild plant, & sort of jute, really better for making ropes and bagging than either flax or hemp. T had seen nothing about the discovery, but I am not a very close reader of the newspapers. But Shottle assures me that this wild jute can be grown on the poorest land and that it needs no tending. I am naturally cau- tious, Virgil, ’"l“ T did noet. m;selt in- vest, but bacKing your judgment in | the matter, T loaned Liberty five hun- dred. Whénl dd Foh féxpéeb wetiverop- |11 A erations toward building the factory?” Tycie forestalled “Oh, T am suve At e it will be a gront-fhing, @ pecigly for} Liberty. He has tried so hard, but| somehow his ‘energies haven't' been properly directed. And he'is so cap- able!™ She was so confident. and so hopeful for her luckless kinsman, that Drace played protecting villain to Shottle's 1 don’t know exactly when re to begin work, but soon, I trust.? was not with him. It was in New Or- leans, in a narrow street where boards were nailed_across a_door.. (Continued in Next Issue) “] Want the Truth. Did Liberty Lie to Me?” that when he is with me, I believe in him, but the moment he is goue my faith has gone with him. T have had much experience with men, Mr. Drace, in the army and cisewhere, but my wife's nephew is the most—I don't know how to define him. TLet me thank you for protecting him in the Away From' Home! No matter where you go—whether on a vacation, on a far away. visit, or just a short automobile trip, the telephone keeps you within easy reach of your-place of business. . ., Many busmm men spend a ooneiderabie amount of time away from the ofiice The telephone makes‘supervxswn possxble ‘The Blué Bell Sign m‘pmct‘t'enlly e;re;};whcre s It is‘easy to talk to your place of business from wherever you ‘may be'and learn the progress qf i . affairs. v /% & 1 EPHONE COMPANY e

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