Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, July 9, 1920, Page 4

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. his ‘existence—clothe: .ners and pleasures—off, some: equally | - W Nmnn Aewrdm the cinema—a tory of a man, red- | Coneort Pmram i E W At Armory Sundly, beginning ‘at 8 80 p..m;, a comcert will be held the Iike of which has not before taken place in our ¢ity. ‘The principal en- tertainment will. be furnished by ‘Thorstein Skarning, considered at present the world’s leading virtuoso 904 200 3000000000 .on:the accordion, an instrument that ig very populdr in Scandinavian coun- tries, as it is also in Italy. He has participated victoriously in:various contests of skill on the accordion, his latest victory being over an Italian player in Chicago seven years ago. He then won a gold medal and a con~ siderable money-prize. Since then Mr. Skarning has trav- eled extensively in many European countries, giving concerts. in large cities. At the opening of the war, four years ago, he played an engage- ment in Moscow. Before he could get out of Russia he was arrested on sus- wlclon of being a German spy, but ‘was soon released through the efforts of the Norwegian counsul at Archan- gel. His musical ability and splen- «did mastery of the technique of the ‘accordion have received flattering comment in ‘the -press” wlerever He} has appeared, boeth in Europe and American papers according him high- ly .complimentary-mention. In this concert Mr. Skarning will | ‘Tender “Death’ of Asa,’™ ‘“Anitras Dance,” “Poet and Peasant” overture, Norwegian airs’and other Norse com- positions. - Also*‘Nearer, My God, to ‘Thee:"” sextette from “Lucia”;. ‘' Vos- serull,” and othenggelections. Ole K. Kverne with pic ‘ihres of Norway, jweden and-Denmark, beautiful views ‘interesting " happenings during flte war in the land of the Vikings and the mid-night sun. ‘GRAND SATURDAY . Dorothy Dalton and Wm. Desmond are: the two, well known stars who apaepr Saturday only in—"A '‘Gamble in Souls.” “Naughty Nurses” is the title of the. comedy. .“LET'S BE FAsmonmL"E R The popular film players, Donglas | MacLean and Doris May, are sched- uled to appear at the Elko theatre next Sunday, Monday.and Tiesday, in . their latest success, entitled, ‘‘Let's Be Fashionable.” On the same program will be the first of the new and novel ‘“‘Comedy-Art” two-part features, presenting various suluects An pleasing succession. “DOLLARS AND SENSE” LAST TIME AT GRAND TQ GHT i PR T Madge Kennedy hnu quaen' “How many rolls will' you havye please?”; and to think that she |- had ‘graduated from the Follies! Could. you blame her?” Down' to her last two cents and living on ‘beans! Did she lose out? See the' wonderful 2 remsnce of a chorus girl with:a baker philanthropist whose heart ‘was. as big. as the world. More -than ‘one thrill in this heart-interest story by | Octavus ‘Roy 'Cohen! ~The kind'of comedy that is shadowed by a little " tear here and there. Don’t miss Madge | Kennedy in “DoHars and Senge.” Mr. and Mrs. Carter DeHaven in Excess Baggage,” present a very. -pllenlng 2-part comedy of domestlc e % WHAT IS A WALK-OFF? A “‘walf-off”” is.a name applied-in 3 the play to a brainless society para-' of | &ite, a penniless and useless sp mankind ‘who 'spofige:-the ‘means of unches, ‘din- “brainless member of his set, more for- tunate financially. *_Bob, the Kentuckian's colored man- ~“servant, tells the old darky legend of Adamdland Ew;zl in the Garden. Eve, ording to-the story, got v tired :'chda:: and asked him if el:zd get God to make some ‘more people: to .-amuse her. To this God agreed and going ‘to the clay-pile fnshloned a number of new. people. ' But, according to Bob’s story, God 'was.called away before He could put the brains in the new creatures. "He ed them up against the ferce to nd when they ‘had, ‘‘dey. jes’ ‘ofl. dassal, no brai’ns. suh.” |« For action lll*lct [ rons know they get it in Willlam' ¥a num . productions- and’:“True Blue"” which' will play at the Rex theatre’ | onie day, co! .| exception. Jdrama‘ot: the : ing, however, a’ phase of life mew to \blooded, strong, virile—a thoroughly 'Amerlcan. undaunted. and courage- Qus, i\ deals with ‘an Engllshman-—-a “remittance man,” who suddenly be- comes possessed ‘of a title and estate, but who deserts his American wife and little son; to return to England to claipr his inheritance.’ Back 'in England the father, on learning of the death of his first wife, has mar- ried ‘again and has another son—a dissipated, profligate young man. Through a strange series of inci- dents the half brothers are brought together 6n the western ranch— .one with deep resentment in 'his heart; the other, weak and uqeonsclons of the relationship. = William Farnum as the strong brother, Begins the re- formation and regeneration of hi§ weak relative .and this accomplished; sends him: back'to his people in Eng- land—a man. STAR SAYS DIVORCE CAN BE WIPED 0UT “Divorce’ courts” would be out-of- date if the:romance of courtship days were carried into; married lite” says Mildred Harris Chaplin, star of “The Inferlor Sex’’ and.ghe proves it in the picture ‘which- wil}-be shown at the Rex theatre tonight. Flirting'It 4 Tonin . “And as ‘to flirting, a_little of it will ‘stimulate the interest of any sweetheart or any husband. . I'do not mean of course, fllrtlng in the’ wvulgar sense in which it is used, smiling at strangers. ' That 1s only disgustiyg, but you can show little attentions and let men of your acqunlntance see that Yyou enjoy their company and are in- terested in them: nnd itheir conversa- tion. . | “A Tittle dose of this to a husband ‘who is slipping {s'gomethimes a good tonic.” If he thinks that his wife be- longs to him body and soul and that she is not lntemted in" anyone else and that no one i8 interested in her, |- his attentions will'cease. But let him see that other men are ‘attracted byl Yyou and he will begin to realize that there is something due on his part to interest you,”that he must exert| 4 himself to entertain youdn order to hold your love. “Docility gets. you nowhere. A lit- tle spunk and a show of independence will win respect and love also.” Lightning Bryce, Jack Hoxie and Anne Little tonight only. T APANEE SCREEN STAR W NEW ROLE| Sessue’ Hayakawa, the gitted Jap-|: anese actor, has: done.more. notable work but for ‘sheer dramatic force rend rapidity. of<dction none of . his previous perlm'mnnces for the scréen can equal’-his. rpretation of the dual tltular rolgesin .‘‘The, Devil's Claim,” & “corking stury of:1ove, ‘of mystery and ady which will be seen at the Elk stre tonight ‘and Saturday. It ‘was’ adapted for the screen by J. exnnder, noted scenario. S The picture, .p,Bohertson-Cule Su- perior, is an odd{¥y.in’a way. Virtu- ally two stories are told, one is sup- posed to be fiction, the other ®eal, but the make-believe story: reguires|. : such .peculiar alds, that eventually it decides - tne 'ultimate- l’ate of the treal” actors. Hayakdawa not. part of; Akbar 'Kha#; a ‘Hindu novel- rho -achiéves '« Buccess in. New literary . circles:'as’a writer of sellers,” but also acts the-lead tlon story.. His work:does not become unusual, however, until he is forced by ‘the ‘exigencies or his own plot' to become . a.character ‘not unlike Stev-|: enson’s, Dr. Jekyll and 4T ra1yue, An added attraction, at the Elko| tonight and tomorrow, is'“Sauce and Senoritas,” a two-part “Big.v com- edy, with Jimmy Aubrey pnd/other tavorlte comedians taking part. Pt S Rcm-rkablc Tnufnrin'atlon. John had been with his father o» the ou“ on of his maiden effort with & ‘car. ~ Waiting for. friends, in'anoth er car, before 'starting ‘on, &’ pleasure, -trip,an . inadvertent . turn ‘too’ far ‘the side of the road had.r being nicely caught ni about ing bad ‘jurde merry over:the'task of pushing out' the car, - John, later in the' - day; . excitedly; ucflblng the af: ladies into. men, to just ‘push th mck: mnd." 'n-uth and Conaclence. An unsigned lettér, with 40 cents tnel came to. the R. W. Furn Ice €ream company Friday. It read: “Alittle contrlbuuon to ‘the 'eon- gclence fund.’ A “During the Slippery. Gnlch cele- bration” in Indianapolfs ' some months ago I had occasion to purchase—and consume—some refreshments to the ‘extent of 40 cents from the man in charge of your concesslon. : “Neither of us having the mer change we ‘let it go’' for the momént. 1 forgot it. 5 ““Truth’ being flm elogan in this fair city this weel:,»l am glad l‘m here to reimburse you, . “Please put the inelosed in the M ; er place.” Indiannpous Nm l?nblcrlbo rnr 'l'no Plonoer. et T Mt e e e -ed to the raccoon, with a very nly interprets the| the City cof chuhh,fi. AL Xnng ago.in Bmklynaln ‘thie W Wood .was ‘Thisiaany: ‘riaye#? of York, and the ‘plrenniul Mpn:u the oYen AN dn o Hllu Study of Ietull-n. money has been, raised by #0d: the canning in- r an Intensive study of botul- California. .-According to -Sci- the lahol Onjversity Medical lchob'l ‘and '.hc‘ ew | George Willlam Booper Foundation for | yMedical Research: of the University of iQulifornia, and the co-operation of the HUnited States health service and the :Qalifornia state bogrd of health. The oinvestigation - will - include ‘careful | atudy of the distribution of the ba- | dllns botulinus in nature, of the ways tides of East river, and the: round green patch of Governor’s island, and the ‘long low metropolis of Manhattan, and the hills of - New 'Jersey. atid Staten isignd heyond thié busy; harbor! what a broad’and noble ou 4 rural, self-complacent’ & ,thine, O city of churches, aged by the flerce intellectua the century,” wrapped in:New Eng- ‘land traditions ‘and based on a Alolld Dutch financial toundatlon! Beecher and. Storrs , Jachin and Boaz, pillars“of the ora- torical :temple—and. s Lord, -how ' they hated each other! Walt Whitman also: ‘was: thine, the lnsurgent rhapsodical poet—but thou knew: him- not - be- cause he was flannel shirted. Plggid d(prlm“ were thy streets, and thy’ spl rlt,,?u self-contented, sure that. the ultimate truth and the final_social form were embodied in;Brogkly (Reader, I am afrald ..that these paragraphs, if_you follow: the. punctua- tion, ‘may seem like uu-cap‘ltnllzed vers libre. - Let ‘us get back: to honest ‘prose.) May the 1st, in the days whlch 1 recall, was the time appointed for the transmigration of households. lt 'was not'a movable feast, it was. a fixed feast of movables, The little houses poured forth theit | ‘accumulated treasures and rubbish ‘to be.conveyed to other little houses. “Apartments” were unknown, but tene- ments _had begun to exist. ‘Neither the origin nor the destination mde any difference. The point was 'that you: ‘hd@ to move if your lehse was up, ‘and your ‘goods and chattels had 'to} move with you. . Great was the disclosures ‘o day of the stuff that had been accumu- lated. The discreet, gigantic movlng van bad not yet.been invented, i Y lntroduclng the Bassari 2 Ev‘r meet-a bassarisk? .. P No, not a basilisk; that is somelflng fferent. A bassarisk is a cncomhtle But the animal is better kuown a8 “civet cat”—though why so cdlled nobody knows, inasmuch as it is not a civet and not a.cat. It is.a strange little cveature, |te fied l L" .bushy tail ringed in.black and ometimes” it ‘1" Galied ‘& “ring’ ‘cat” and sometimes a. “cat-sq he/latter designation : benow ccount " of .‘its “squirrel-like ‘habit ot cllmbing trees and nesting - ln hollow ranches. B . Like a cat, it catehes rm.s. mices! Jana ms 1 birds. It- is ‘about. 16 inches he.: ‘not -counting the ‘tail, which ensures another 16 lnches. 1s.-brownish gray. It'ls a- night ‘prowler, like a cat, and often makes its home - in -outbuildings and deserted ranch houses. 'The civet cat ranges ‘from México: and Texas 'to California and as’ north as routhern Oregon. . Qccasjon ally it 18 <ept in captivity'as:a pet. " Aioof. P "W'ho is your choice for. the nom|~ nation?” Farmer Corntossel was.| asked. . - - "Hn\en‘( made any," replled Fnrm er Corntossel. -“Nobody asked me'to “no, convention; an’ I don't see any ‘sense to’ my: neglectin’: work an’ both- orin’ argund . like it was a guessln ennlest with no prize attached.” . “False Acute Indigestion. What' is commonly called acute in- dlgestion is, according to Dr. Beverley Robinson of New' York, primarily an over-strained, weakened heart, already‘ || diseased, .or a cerebral. hemorrhage.: Such cases:he treats with- aromatic:| spirits of ammonia, having first placed ' 8 one-minim hypodermic tablet - of: trophanthus under the tongue to dlr : m their latest “Let’s Be Fashionable” Also—— “Mother’s Angel” . ‘The new “Comedy-Art” E Iko SUN-MON-TUES iinwhich food materials' may become ted, apd of ‘the steps necessary estroy the qrxnnism when it ‘has A staft to infécted raw food materials. ‘of: specially. trained workers.has been'. engaged and !t Is expected. that the work will requlre at least two ‘years It Follwnd : When Aunt’ Helén ' kept company -with a- young Heutenant in the army she prevailed on;: her - ten-year-old nephew to -wear -a:'soldier -overcoat. The young lieutenant was succeeded.by. a boy ‘scout’ executive, and Bobby re- ceived a boy scout uniform, which he had to (wear to please auntie. " - But ‘the boy: scout .executive: and f‘Aunt Helen: have ‘disagreéd and ‘Bob- by has ‘been.much interested in know- ing’ who.will be his’ successor in win: ning: Aunt . Helen’s attentions. The other glay. e made a discovery, and: came. runnmg in the house to tell mother about it, “Oh:.mother.,” he began, {you mlghtb, as well get me a Prince Albert coat, 4 white: vest ‘and atle. beglnmng to-warm up to the minfster.” ~Indianapolis News. Eggs ‘Miraculously Saved. A ‘young' man' at_Meredith, making an evening call,” in". going through the hail opened. the cellar door by mistake mid stepped into’ space. ‘bringing “dowin’’a number of jars of preserved blueherries and* landing in a jar contaifting’ 18 dozen eggs. He emerged scratchéd and covered with blueberries, - but “although he weighs 200 pounds not-an egxg was broken. ng,.| In color | Aunt Helen {s- N. H,; " Amerlca’s Toy Output. In 1913 the United States possessed | ; 71 {tactories, producing ' toys ' to ' the value of more:than $7,000,000. ‘ In 1918 the ‘nuimber of factorien had Incredsed | to 165, and the total amount of manu- factures reached nearly $20,000.000, Complete line of ‘Tices and Supplies. - Baby Carriage Wheels Retired. | Furniture Repairing and Upholstering. GENERAL REPAIR SHOP STAHL & JACOBS : 311 Sixth St., Bemidji. Phone:488 !‘ake {Sto-gu nl] a Dootor’ MD- on for Dissolvine Gall § “for Complicated" Stomach: - One hox 'gives instant reljef in all cases of gall” stones, liver. trouble, such: as indigestion, . chronic appendicitis, gag, sour stome -ach, ulcers;;catarrh, pains in st ‘and ‘back, -constipation, ete. wait, but get a box of Sto-li-gal from: your; druggist today.,._-Price, 31,00 Attention] No fake,testimopfal positive facts. - Sto-l-gal has:h thousands of people and it will itively giye you rel au Y mentioned, regnmléi%fiu f duration of trouble.” Write tor literature. Department. ‘F, Digestive ~ Chemical Co., St. Paul,” Minn.:: So) in Bemidji at Boardman'’s Cornel Drug:Store and Barker’s Drug; Cass . Lake, Gardner’s Drug; Blackduck, Moon’s Drug; Bagley, .O'Neil’s Drug, and druggists everywhere. . —Adv. . sunrcrthe for Toe P’oneer. MADGE KENNEDY “with KENNETH HARLAN in - “DOLLARS and SENSE” . From' the'Satarday Evening Post Story, “Two Cents Worth of Humaneness,” that made two million readers laugh A CHORUS GIRL’S ROMANCE WITH A BAKER LAD Its a clever story with a: beautiful .clever star Also showing- MR.'AND MRS. CARTER DE HAVEN in . “EXCESS BAGGAGE,” two part comedy - 7:30--9:00 10c & 25¢ Gran COMING SUNDA Tonight MABEL NORMAND in ' ‘THE SLIM: PRINCESS’ The “Cheerfulness Drmk HERE S cheerfulness in every glass of Brazilla, the - ‘deliciously refreshing new soda fountain drink. ' . People who try it find _themselves smiling uncon- sciously. It gives them a feeling of happiness inside. /. Tt.cools and refreshes. ItlsanldealSummcrdnnk. Its flavor is'a blend of tropical fruits, herbs and spices. - Everyglassyoudnnktasteshke“more. Besides its qualities as 3 drink, it has a real stimulating effect. It “‘cheers’’ you up. It makes the world look rosy. : Thete:sanewmgred:mthrazilla,neverusedbdote "':masodafountmndnnk. It is delicious and it creates “pep” in in the most jaded. It is everybody’s drink. Grownups delight in it, the. children love it. It is harmless as a Summer breeze. Tryxtat&ne—neamtsodafounwn. Brazil]aualsov bottied for home use, or you can get the syrup to mix at home. ltuequnyddbouwhhplmwamawlthm- bonatedwater Tryxt. . i dyspepsia,, "' t!’»‘lflf‘

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