Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, April 22, 1919, Page 4

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PAGE FOUR AT THE * THEATERS ' BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEER RVERY APTERNOON EXCEPT SUNDAY: THE EEMIDJI FIONEIS PUBLISNING CO. H. M. STANTON G. E. CABSON E. H. DENU Editor Manager €104 BESSIE LOVE TONIGHT. How a young girl, by 'quick’ wit TELEPEONE 933 and bravery, saved valuable con- tract secret from enemies of.the goy- ernment, after they had kiduaped her in a taxicab, is vividly pictured in “The Enchanted Barn,’ the Vita- {graph Blue Ribbon features, which will be the attraction in the Grand theatre tonight. Bessie Love is the star in the feature, and is supported by a strong cast. The 12th episode of “The Iron Test” more thrilling than ever, will complete the pro- gram. .. NOT A WAR PICTURE. “Fighting Through,” sounds like a war picture, but it is not—~Far from it—With E. K. Lincoln, noted for his portrayals of American man- hood. “Fighting Through,” in" six parts which will be seen Wednesday and Thursday at the Grand, is a drama of the south, the story of a bashful young man, branded a cow- ard and how he overcomes this un- just reputation. AT THE REX. If any one wants to see something different, they want to visit the Rex this week -and hear Miss Dawn answer questions, you can .ask any kind of question free.. Miss Dawn does not appear at the matinees, but will on Saturday afternoon—she will | give a reading for ladies only, this means after the pictures.are over, that all the gentlemen who come to the matinee, when the pictures are over they will have to leave when Miss Dawp, will answer questions for the ladies. One man who was at the theatre last night, said, Gee it seems good to hear some one talk on the stage, once more. Miss Dawn gives her reading each night after the pic- tures are over. * 2 i AT REX TOMORROW. Alice Brady's latest Select picture, “In the Hollow of Her Hand,”’ which Select will offer to the Rex'theatre today, is the story of a young Eng- lish girl, Hetty Castleton, who, left penniless in the world, is forced to earn her own living. ' "After trying several different positions in Eng- lad she decides to come to America and accept a position offéred her. On the steamer she meets and falls in love with Challis Wrandall, a wealthy young American. - Wrandall is a rake and libertine and has a wife in New York. Hetty knows nothing of all this. When, therefore, her position does not materialize in New York, she accepts without ques- tion his offers of help. Thursday “Life’s Greatest Problem,” starring Mitchell Lewis, will be shown at the Rex. | . [ postoffice at Bemidjl, Minn., as second-class matter Entered at the 1879, under act of Congress of March 3, annonymous con_t.‘x;lbuttlonu. bKVrltt‘er‘- name must tor, but not necessarily for publication. - be m:&&h&fig' fol‘:-l' the eekly Pioneer must reach this ofgice not later than Tuesday of each week to insure publication in"the current gssue. No attention paid to 8ix months Three months THE WEEKLY PIONEER of the news of the week. Published address, to any for, in advance, $1.50 Ten containing a every Thursday and sent postage pi OFPICIAL COUNTY AND CITY PROCEEDINGS W——‘ _ NOW FOR THE CLEAN-UP EFFORTS. Every progressive Bemidji resident will give aid to the clean-up campaign which is to start next Saturday, and is to. last & week. The movement is to be conducted under the sup- ervision of the Women’s Community and Civic club and. the cooperation of all is necessary to do the work which has been outlined and which is so necessary. The greatest effort in the history of cleanliness is on! For cleanliness has a history. It’s influence can be traced down the ages. Those races that were Clean were those races that were {he Masters. i The Athenians, with their baths and beautiful homes, con- quered the Persians, with their unkempt beards and c}xrty skins. The Romans with their aqueducts, their barbers, their gardens, beat back the barbarians with their goat skins and greasy fingers. o Louis the Fourteenth was the most dainty monarch France ever had and one of her mightiest. Filth kept the Panama canal from being built years before it finally was. Bolshevism 4ourishes where the dirty and ignorant gained control in Rus- sia—anarchy breeds in filth and squalor. - Cleanliness has always been potent. The American sol- dier. in France was as miserable when he missed his bath as when he missed his hot meals. But moderp American sanita- tion saved millions of lives in the great war. Real people, the wise, the leaders in progress, always have fought for cleanliness. At times it has been a sporadic fight, a ukirmish. A clean man was handicapped by a neighbor who ‘et his premises run wild. But co-operation has been brought to play at last. This year in the United States alone, seven thousand vil- - lages, towns and cities are campaigning for cleanliness, and nealth. They are not doing so for a day or a week but in a continuous campaign. There is a steady pressure. Tin cans, flies, refuse, dirt, waste paper, unsightly build- ‘ngs, unpainted surfaces are taboo. The drive is on. It won’t ye stopped. It has been estimated that 30,000,000 men, women and ~hildren in the United States are annually interested ih and working ‘on Clean Up and Paint Up activities. It is an army of magnificant purpose and of immense possibilities. It is yound to win. Join the forward movement. Clean Up, Paint Up and Keep It Up. Make the old enemies, Dirt and Disease and Un- sightliness, abdicate and stay out. 0. HOME PRIDE AND PATRIOTISM. . Do you want to win success?, If you do, you must want ‘he good opinion of your neighbors. Do you care about your ‘amily? If you do, you want all members of it to be respected .a your community and to live in the best possible environment. Conversely, you must want your community to be clean, progressive, honest and to have the reputation of doing its full Jduty. In other words, if you are a worth-while individual and a -god citizen you are interested in your community—you take ride in its success and progress—you have real local pride. This local pride has been a powerful incentive to patriotic nects, especially since April 6, 1917. In fact, local pride is atriotism applied at home, and without it communities cannot “ourish and the nation cannot fulfiill its highest destiny. All of which leads us to the mdtter of most vital import- ance to all loyal Americans at the present time—the success of tae great Victory Liberty Loan which is now in progress. To assure’ success in this “finish the job” financing, every community must do its share—must take the Victory notes al- iotted to it. Failure of a community may mean failure of the nation. Your community’s duty to your government in this crisis[ is very- definite, very vital, absolutely imperative. Your home ~ity is given a certain number of notes to buy. The nymber s fairly fixed on the basis of your prosperity and bank re- sources. =] There is but one thing for your community to do. Nol: —atter what the gate of interest or the terms, no matter what cou ma¥ think about the use of the money, there is only one thing for your community to de, and that is to buy its full ~hare of Victory notes. Any community that fails to do this fails in its duty just {he same as a company of doughboys would fail if it refused to o “over the top” when ordered. Any group of Americans that -von’t finish the job and subscribe its full share to make this ‘oan of peace and thanksgiving a success will be put into the -ommunity slacker class. Excuses, explanations, and alibis will e of no avail. It will be a case of——Did the community go over -thé top or did it fail? Years willibe required to blot out the isgrace of failure. ." These are the things that you -vho have pride in your locality. of-heroes or zeroes. - In addition to all of the compelling, good business, and atriotic reasons for buying Victory notes, there is this one ‘ther big reason—Ilocal pride. Your home community needs sur help if it is to do its full Victory duty, and by helping it sver the tap” you are helping yourself, your family, and our America. 2i¢ “WHEN DO WE EAT.” James Forbes, a young bank cash- ier was unfortunate enough to get into the toils of Eastern crooks who ,, | TheStore Ahead ~ E I AT = must realize right now, you Yours must be a community Sl over. It seems incredible that the legislature is to let its ses- ‘on end without having made some provision for a suitable ate memorial. The matter of a state memorial should be at- nded to at this session, and not left to those of future years. ne people of the state have madé known their desires in the | atter, and if the legislators permit the memorial plan to be| ‘ropped without action of any kind, they will have explana-} ‘ons to make that they may find rather difficult. ‘ a " THE BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEER starring Enid Bennett and produced fieeced him at poker. It is rumored |that tramps travel in freight cars. SHOP —Big Extra Special Sale— Of All Trimmed Hats Choice of any trimmed hat in the house up to and includ- ing $6.00 for. . .- Remember no hats will be reserved. Perhaps the $12.00 hat that you admired last week is still here on sale Wednesday for $4.95. The original price tickets shall be left in each hat, so you can see for yourself what a big bargain you are getting. Sale opens promt- ly at 8 o’clock Wednesday a. m. Come early before stock is picked - See Window Display - T T he used money belonging to the bank to make good his losses. However, the crooks were captured through the instrumentality of Nora, a waif, who came into town in a box car.|. The whole affair was hushed up and the young man and the.girl who ap- parently saved him-—are to be married. This is a brief synopsis of the plot of “When Do We Eat?” a new picture by C. Garduer Sullivan, CAN'T USE GAS ON FESTS Experiments Show War Product Ene dangers Both Persons and Live Stock. Washington.—Poison gas developed in war, cannot be used to clear Arer- fcan farms of insects’and rodent pests. Secretary Lane has decided after ‘in” vestigation, T Experiments showed that while pests were killed, there was danger of the gas spreading and destroying stock and persons living near by, in case the wind should carry the fumes. Suggestions had been made by farm-}’ ers that the deadly gases might prove of great value in destroying the boll weevil in the South and gophers in the prairie stiates, saving millions of dollars spent In slower methods. DIG UP BOMBS 45 YEARS OLD Zinc Container Found in Brazil Was Wrapped In a New York Newspaper. by Thomas H. Ince for- Paramount. It will be seen at the Elko theatre tonight only. It is a novel and hu- morous as well as pathetic little story f the Middle West and fullof huu}an nterest as well as thrill, by A McCUTCHEON STORY.- Romance and splendid emotional acting are combined in “The Mystery Girl,” the latest Paramount picture in ‘which Ethel Clayton' appears, is to be shown in the Elko theatre to- morrow and Thursday, matinees and evenings. George Barr McCutcheon, that famous weaver of charming and fanciful, tales, is the author, and he has put considerably more drama in the story than we generally find in his fiction. This, combined with a picture well worth attentign of dis- criminating lovers of the screen art. Buenos Airm-—firlug the making of the excavation for a building at Bahia, Brazil, a zinc box containing four dynamite bombs was unearthed, says a dispatck to the Razon from Bahia. The bombs apparently had e A i fr A e i e i P. live ;: . Enjoy Your Meals! ! You will enjoy your meals better when you use— Chief Brand Butter : Made in Bemidji Loy Ask your dealer. Bemidji Creamery Co. S.—Drink our .pure buttermilk,— Fresh daily. . ) PROMINENT RED CROSS WORKER IN ENGLAND PVUD IR BRI RLIIS BRI S U RGN been buried nearly a half century, as they were wrapped in a copy of the New York Weekly Bulletin of the year 874, A miserly father maketh an ex- travagant son. Yes, Rafalo, the other half has to live on what the better half is able to cook: There is more Cataith in this section’ >f the country than ull other diseases put toxether, for years it was sup- posed to be incurable. Doctors prescribed tocal remedies, and by constantly failing to cure with local treatment, pronounced | it incurable. Catarrh is a local disease, greatly influenced by constitutional con- ditions and thercfore requires constitu- tional treatment. Hall’s Catarrh Medi- cine, manufactired by F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio, is a constitutional remedy, is taken internally and acts thru the Blood on the Mucous Surfaces of the System. One Hundred Dollars re- ward is offered for any case that Hall's Send for F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, Ohlo, Sold by Druggists, Tc. Hall's Family Pills for constipation. Catarrh Medicine fails to cure. cireulurs and testimonials. The young lady | Next door Says That when her Brother Comes home From service He will Have his Photograph ' taken In uniform _’Before he . Puts it away " And that Hakkerup Photographs Please her ‘The best. STAHL-JACOBS . Furniture Renovators All work guaranteed. - Work called for and de- livered. . General Repair - Shop - 311 6th St. Latest photograph to reach this country of Lady Arthur Grosvenor, in the Ouakfield House Red Cross hospital, near Chester, England where she has been devoting. her time to Red Cross work. 2 # ; Poets often effect carelessness in their garments for the same reason Phone 488 L ot e <& TS = Wy, Ik’s Bldg, Choice of any trimmed hat in the house, up to, and includ- ....$2.95 ing $12.00 for.......$4.95 ednesday Only | will deliver to all parts of ¥ i HAVE YOUHADIT ? ¢ ¢ When you back is broke and eyes are blurred, And your shin bones knock and your’ tongue is furred, = And your tonsils squeak and your hair gets dry, And you’re doggone sure that your’re going to die, But you’re skeered you won’t and afraid you will, Just drag to bed and have your chill, " And pray the Lord to see you through, For you've got the “Flu”, boy, you've got the “Flu.” | SEE MITCHELL BEFORE, THE MICROBES GET YOU. D. S. Mitchell The New York Life Man Northern Natl Bank Bldg. Room & Phone 575 NEW MANAGEMENT I have purchased the Ny- more Meat Market, conduct- ed by H. T. Schmidt, and in- vite the public to come and inspect my stock of fresh and salted meats also all kinds of sausage, butter and eggs. I the city and do all to satisfy my customers. - Yours for business, B. M. Merseth M. H. Curry can supply you with all kinds of Shrubbery| Small Fruits and Flower bulbs fresh from Wedge Nursery, Albert Lea, Minn. We will carry a stock of small Shrubery and flower bulbs at A. T. Wheelock’s Grocery. ] M. H. CURRY Bemidji, Minn. TR REEERAARD I = E. W. HANNAH Licensed . Auctioneer I Sell Anything Anywhere, and Get Top Prices. Special attention given to farm sales. 206 Minn. Ave., Phone 129W \, o = >

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