Paramount Press Books (1917)

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Press stories to be sent out a week ahead and during the showing of “THE NARROW TRAIL” An unusual interest is attached to the first photodrama featuring William S. Hart as an Ince-Artcraf t star, which will be seen at the on for this story, "The Narrow Trail," was written by the famous interpreter of the Wild West himself, who built it around a series of narratives told him by a friend of the early pioneer days. Hart recently made a whirlwind transcontinental trip. He had visited and received ovations in sixty towns and had passed through more than half the states before heading toward the coast and his beloved ranch. As the Limited was rushing through the Dakotas, many things passed through Hart's mind, for it was in the Dakotas, then Dakota territory, that the first fifteen years of his life were passed. ■’ . . ‘ i The train made few stops, but halted for several minutes near Standing Rock — in the heart of the Bill Hart country and close to the first settlement his father had lived in. When the train moved on it carried from the wayside station an extra passenger, a tall, rangy, weather-beaten old gentleman who looked as though he might have been the earliest and last of the pioneers. He came ambling through the cars, peering into the faces of the passengers and plaintively inquiring if "young" Bill Hart was aboard. The aged man was Richard Wainwright, who knew Hart ' s father well , and had given Bill his first lesson in horsemanship. Wainwright was a dashing (Continued over) 11