ENTERTAINMENTS.
EVERYBODY’S. H 1 ■ EARLE WILLIAMS IN “BRING HIM IN.” One of the most thrilling mystery! sories to date is “Bring Him In” with Earle Williams, which shows to-night and to-morraw at Everybody’s. The story deals with a man who had a peculiar dream in which he fancied he killed an enemy. So vivid was this night vision that upon arising the hero ran to the spot represented in his dream and found the man dead. He was not sure that he did not actually kill the individual, and in order to gain time, hides in the North-west, where he is trailed by a sergeant of the Royal Northwest Mounted Police. How the sergeant and the hero live together in the woods unaware of each other’s identity, and how the former finally brings his man in, forms an intense dramatic story which is enlivened by a true loye interest in which the girl solves the mystery and clears the name of the hero. All the fascinating features of life in the wide open spaces in North West Canada are embodied in this picture, plus a sbory of remarkable interest. THE PEOPLE’S. “PARDON IMY NERVE.’” An unscrupulous gambler reached for a card concealed in his bootleg. A trained bulldog bit his hand. What happened after that enables Buck Jones to make his ibow in “Pardon My Nerve,” a Fox photo-play Screening for the last time at the People’s to-night. The story of “Pardon My Nerve” is admirably put together and holds the . interest tense from beginning to end. And with all his daring, his nerve, his stunts, Jones stops every now and then to frolic and gives his audience a laugh. Eileen Percy is leading woman and to-night is the final screening. COMING TO-MORROW. HARRY CAREY IN “ROPED.” The popular out-door actor Harry Carey sars to-morrow in “Roped,” a heart-throb picture of a man who proved bigger than his own misfortune. It is just that clean, exciting type of picture —with a fund of quaint humor —that suits all classes of picture patrons.
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Taranaki Daily News, 12 July 1922, Page 2
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342ENTERTAINMENTS. Taranaki Daily News, 12 July 1922, Page 2
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