Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, March 28, 1921, Page 4

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“teformatio Katherine: MacDonald 18 /istar . of . “My Lady’s hkey from the fa mous novel by C. nd A. M. Wil- lamson. It is'a mystery story, and the role of Annesley Grayle, an Eng- Heh girl, is said to afford Miss Mac- Donald one of thé best roles of her screen career. ;ement has surrounded Miss MacDon:ld with an all-star cast, among the principal players being/ the following: Edmund Lowe, as Nel- son Smith, the American; Claire Du- Bréy, as the Countess de Santiago; Thomas Jefferson, as Ruthven Smith; Howard Gaye, as Lord Annesley-Sea- ton; Lenore Lynard, as Lady Annes-- ley-Seton; Hellena Phillips as Mrs. Ellsworth, Edwin Carewe, one of > th¢ ‘best’ L v cirecto.s in the film industry, is the. director. M.y Carewe recent- ly completed “Rio bruu(!e," and he has other notable successes to his credit. The scenario was written by Finis Fox, who was selected for this work largely because of his fine in- terpretation of screep value in ‘‘Alias | Jimmy Valentine,” thich he adapted for the silver sheet. “THE ROAD DEMOK” AT [ REX LAST TIMES TODAY ! Tom Mix uses in his new Fox/ photoplay, “The Road Demon” a rac-! ing car that formerly belonged to Barney Oldfield and Gill Anderson. It won races at Sheepshead Bay, Indi- anapolis and Los Angeles-Phoenix. Mix used same care in Willlam Fox picture “The Speed. Maniac,” and ll’ mne<t be a good car, because it has stood up under fiercely hard us~ge. In “The Road Demon” in his car Mix leaps from an embankment across a twenty-five-foot stream, lands ker- plunk on the opposite. bank, and rolls a hundred feet before he can stop it. And the old car then was ready for more. In the story of “The Road Demoh,” which is now being shown at the Rex theater, Mix trades his horse for the car, which has proken down on! the desert. He starts it-going.-and before he can stop the pesky. thing it drives through a wagon, a barn, a chicken coop, a fence, and lands in a cyclone cellar. HARIT” AT REX THEATER | TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY ecently gathered by a ournal showed that ~aigrity of screen p-trons when sounded as to their preference declared unanimously in favor of emotional dramas. Therefore the management of the Rex theter hos secured as the next'attraction, “‘Hab-| it”. So popular in theme and so full of drama is “Habit” that it is head ~nd shoulders above the ordin- ary screen drama written by’some un- known scenarip writers. It (fairly snaps and sparkles with clever lines and tense situations. ‘It.is superb’y mounteu and sp*éndidly enacted by a. well b:lanced cast, including Mildred H-ris It tells of the evil of allow- ing habit to enslave us. It deals with the forbidden fruit of cesire with swift bold strokes that carry the spec- tator hreathlessly to the conclusion Perhaps the s_»e.gles of most inter-, est to women.are those in the atelie 0% a Fith Avernd imnorter and e signer, where models wearing a hun- dred thousand dollars wertl w.k and furbelows parade. The.extent and richnesd of the fashions shown | will interest all women in that these worn this winter by leaders of fash- | ion, J A TRIUMPH OF LOVE IN SNOW CLAD ALPS “The Silent B-rrier” at the Elko theater last times tonight, is said to <he the best story that was ever writ- tea by Louis Tracy, author of more than forty mnovels. It is full of fast action and has a remarkable love story woven into & maze of thrilling | adventure. The snow scenes of ‘“‘The Silent | Barrier” have been made under the| eye of Earnest de Ballets, the Swiss | expert engaged by Mr. Burr to insure co rect ~tmosphere for the St. Moritz stunts, involving mountain climbing, s8ki running, skating and sensation- al pursuits. Some of these scenes are of most unusual character and ‘all of them belong to the story. MRS. LUKE DEMPSEY AT ELKO TOMORROW A former Bemidji resident, Mrs. Luke Dempsey, will appear on the Elko theater screen tomorrow anc Wednesday as governess to the little boy who starts all the trouble'in “Diamonds Adrift,” Earl Willlams latest photoplay.” Little Richard Heddrick, who won fame in W. S. Hart productions, takes the boy's part. Action, adventure, comedy, strange events, love and athletic prowess are hlerded into an intensely interesting stery in “Diamonds Adrift.” BEBE DANIELS IN DASHING NEW COin Here she i3 again! The good-lit- tle-bad girl, or more properly speak- {ng. Bebe Daniels, the Realart star who =cored such a success in “You ¢ wel nd “Oh Lady i w ed a third, star- ing picture, “She;Couldn’t Help It,” which ‘s the program tonight and' Tuesd y at the Grand theater. Tho-e who know the play and the story “In the Bishop’s Carriage,” | from which this photoplay was adapt- ed, feel that this is the best oppor- tunity the star has yet had to dis-| play the great possibilities of the type she has made so essentially her own. Nance Olden is a little orphan girl, adopted by crooks and taught to be a clever pickpocket. She dosen’t know the difference between \right and wrong until a chance encounter, #In the Bishop's Carriage” opens up| (of very entertaining complications. " Humor, pathos and drama are blend- 'very good-looking, i nesday. wl ! cost of keeping a bull, proportion of €dy opportunities fespeclany when | Nance, afraid . of - the ‘police, :resarts to ‘calling' the bishop ‘‘father,’’ pre- tending that she is a school girl who has become mentally " upbalanced through over-study. The story is well put together and carries the be- holder breathlessly through a. series ed to form an idea entertainment. Emory Johnson, six feet tall and plays opposite Miss Dan{ Leaping “Lions and Jailbirds” a two part comedy, completes the pro- gram. - - : A ———— Y A NEW STAR AT GRAND - * WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY * As ‘the dirty, grimy, fighting fore- man of a'steel mill, Selznick Pictures presents a new Conway Tearle to the public in his latest production, “The Road “of - Ambition,” which is the chief attraction at the Grand, Wed- Mr. Tearle, as Bill Mnlthemk'guyl the part of a young, »“who, through the perfection: of for the utilization of here! steel, becomes a financial:power in the town where he has seryed as a workman and laborer. He travels “the road of ambition” sweeping all obstacles from his pathuntil he be- comes .the most powerful factor in the steel world. His most cherish- cd dreams and ambitions ‘are.satis- fled but his firds he is unsatisfied and unhappy- T KILK ESSENTIALS AND COST Results of Two-Year Study on Number of Dairy Farms in Northwest- ern Indiana. A two-year study of the cost of milk production. undertaken co-operatively by the United States dairy division and Purdue university, on a number of dairy forms In northwestern Indinna. has resulted In figures on the require- ments for producing 100 pounds of milk In winter and summer. To give permanent value to the results, thése requirements = were determined In pounds. of feed, hours of labor, etc.. and by substituting present costs and values for various items a farmer can determine very closely what it s cost- fng him to produce 100 pounds of milk at the present time. In the summer months the require- ments for 100 pouuds of milk were as follows:. Concentrates, 20 poyinds; dry roughage, 27.4 pounds; silage and oth- er succulent roughnge, 60.1 ponnds; haullog and, grinding concentrates. $0.014; pasture, 0.04 dcré; human la- hor, 2.2 hours; horse labor, 0:2 hour; overhead and othér costs, in the winter ‘monthstthe ! refuire.. ments for, production werd? ‘Concen- trates, 88.6 pounds; dry -roughage. 66.8 pounds; silage and other succulént roughage, 147.6- pounds; hauling and grinding concentrates, $0.08; bedding., 20.3 pounds; human labor, 2.5 hours; horse labor, .03 hour; overhead and other costs, $0.380. It has been generally belleved that the cost of producing milk was consld- erably higher in winter than In sul mer; and while this holds true as as the gross cost Is concerned, the fig- ures obtained In this investigation show that the net cost of producing 100 pounds of ‘milk from November to April was only 1.8 per cent higher than the cost from May to October, Inclu- sive, and that the total cost varied only slightly from month to month within The Cow Is Man’s Greatest Benetactor | —She Pays the Debts and Saves the Home. i each of these seasons. This small dif- ference between net costs of produc- tion during winter and summer fis largely due to the greater credit al- lowed for manure during the winter season. .~ The price received for the milk, how- ever, fluctuated sharply from month to month, . { Further details on requirements for | wilk production, including such factors as cost of keeping a cow for one year, work perforraed by each class of labov, percentage relation of various factors in the cost of production, and other Zetails, are presented in Uepartment bulletin 858, “Requirements and Cost of Producing Market Milk in .North- | western Indiana,” which_may, be_ob- -{-ertion-and ‘all ti inn., has recently accepted. s »fien_h:'p_ in the Committee on 5“"“‘“““ of the. ‘Foreign Trade inaficing Corpogation, a co-oper- ative’ movement ¢f ‘bankers, manu- facturers and ers. to foster American _export ;trade by the ex- . tension of long- loans under the provisions of the Edge amend- _ ment ‘0. the Federal Reserve act. Mr. Barnes is head of a large wheat exporting. firm and is_best known to . the {:ubhc as_the- former presi- dent of the United States” Grain Corporation. He .endorses the Foreign Trade Financing : Corporation as an ex- ample of American initiative and a . sound: = cconomic principle through which our surplus of both raw . products and “manufactures may be profitably. employed in sup- plying t :yressing needs of for« ‘ountrias, tained fromn the United” States depuri- went of agriculture on request. QUANTITY OF MILK TO FEED Amount May Be .Best Governed by Body Weight of Calf—Great Dan. ger in Overfeeding. The amount of liquid to feed the young calf may be best governed by the body weight of the ealf fed. If the calf is small, weighing 50 to €0 pounds, it should receive only six to eight pounds of milk. per.day, divided equally into the number of feedings given. A heavier galf, weighlng from 100 to 110 pounds, should receive 10 to 11 pounds of milk ‘per day, properly divided. As therc is greater danger trom overfeeding ‘thun tbere<is -from underfeeding, the rule-of ‘giving them an amount of milk equal: to one-tenth of their body weight ‘ench day Is a splendid one, NAVAL ACADEMY DAIRY SIRES Herd Includes 17-Purebred Bulls, 37 Purebred Cows: and 834 Grades— Other Purcbred ‘Sires. Commander T. de F. Harris of ‘the supply corps, United States navy, has enrolled ‘the Naval_ academy dairy af’ Amapolis, Md. in.the United States depnrtment - of ‘sgriculture “Better Sires—RBetter Stock™ movement, which is almed at raising the quality of do mestic animals hi’the United States. The dairy herd incjudes 17 purebred bulls, 37 purebred:cows and 834 grafe cows. Other stock is kept also, the- sires being purebred. Hawaiians a Mixed Race. Louis R. Sullivan of the American Museum of Natural History, New York, measured the heads and bodles and noted the characteristics of 2,000/ natives of the Hawalian islands. This relationship makes the Hawaiian a cousin of the Chinese, Japanese and other Asiatic races, including the Malays, as well as a connection of the American Indian and Eskimo, He also draws some of hi§ blood frem the con- | tinent of Europe and a very little from| the original stock of the Australlan aborigine. | Ethnofogical facts also are being sought -in ’Samoa and farther south. When complete the data will be tabulated and adalyzed and the re- sulls publishd. Méanwhile, the Poly< nesian. is dying fast; bis race is pr~s- ing out at high spéed and the inves- tigations are being pushed with as little delay as possible. 1 Use of Peat as Fuel. Mnchines for haudling peat have been in use in Europe for many years, though only recenfly have they ap- proached any great degree of commer- clal success. Devefopment of the in- dustry in some of the European coun- tries has been aided by government appropriations and experimental work, In Sweden, particularly, considerable progress has been made. Powdered | pest has been burned successfully as locomotive fuel re, comparing fa- vorably with coal, @id the government has erected several large peat-powder plants, Preparation: of peat for fuel as a commercial enterprise also lns been developed in Canada to some ex- tent. From 13,000,000 to 20,000,000 tons of peat fuel are used annually in LEuropean countries, according to the United States burepu of mines.—Fort Dearborn Indepefdent. \ ———ee Not Quite the Idea. ) “Who are the mpst esthetic peopie o this town?" “Well,” said the citizon who was ! cought off his ghard don't v Jjust what you meah by ‘eStidtieX bi without a dictiouary, I'd ‘sdy.that the two most esthet ople in our town are Mr. Bibbles and M. Jagsby. Shey spend about half their” fime’ in a Turkish bath,”—Bimningham Age-Her i ald, | polnts—one a rapl] two.miles long on | the Peace river, #iid: thevother the:Six- | teen-Mile-Rapid "o} ' the - Great iSlave | river. iFor' many years the ‘Hudson’s on the Mackenzie' river from ‘Fort Smith, half way between Lake Atha- | basca and the Great Slave lake, to the district subordinate_to'Fort McPher- son, ‘not ‘far from' the mouth of ‘the Mackenzle, a distance of 1.275 wiles. Fresh Air, Following. Is by Mrs. Andrew J. Holmes: “The essential of good health is pure, fresh air and plenty of it. Go into the average, home and you find tlie Inmates languld, distclfied ‘to-ex- 2out.” The reason this 18 so is that indoors we usually -Hve-in.an. atmosphere which lacks: in life-glving oxygen and is charged with carbon dioxide; a polsonous gas con: of fié! housebold, fl' 5 thift ate seeking Jodg- ¢ In’i onstitubions - ind whick:the tange:to - thelr Imfls d.to a mum.’ ogether Swith has been red : Guatemala. Guatemala has an aren of 48,200 square miles, slightly larger than that of the state of New York. It has a ropulation of about 2,000,000, which is approximately 40 -per cent of the en- tire population of Central America. A large part of the population of Guate- mwala is of Indian blood unmixed with the blood of Europeans, In this re- spect Guatemala differs from its four neighboring republics, . in three of { which the majorit; | of mixed; blood, { the Indians we) d in_one of which exterminated, Mrs. Robert 0. ngn’glds ‘I'have actually gained twenty-five sounds and I just think Tanlac is the Mrs. Robert ‘0. Reymiolds,) 127 North Denver St., Kansas City, Mo. “For ten long years I suffered from 1 very bad form of rheumatism, stom- ach and nervous troubles. My appe- ..e was very poor. . What:little I did soured on my stoml* and I suf- lered the most severe s in my »ack, hips and shoulders. My rheu- uatism was so bad that I could not caise my hands to comb my hair and ay arms hurt me to my finger tips. < became so weak and run down that [ lost all my energy and life had be- come almost a burden. I tried many things but nothing helped’ me. “I had only taken my first bottle >f Tanlac when I noticed my appetite was improving and I could sleep bet- er at night. I have taken three bot- tles and the way it has helped me and built- me up is really astonishing. 1 out the slightest disagreeable after- oftects. I sleep just fine at night and am in betetr health than I have been {r years. I am glad to give this statement, hoping that any who are suffering as I.did may experience the ;ame wonderful resuits, which I be- eve they will if they give Tanlac a § fair. n:i-l.”r % ; Tanlac is sold in.Bemidji b{icitv Store, Knutson & Lilja at Graeeton, V. M. Owen & Co. at Hines, James Taylor, Tenstrike, and by the leading druggists in every town.- —Advertisement. " QUiCK RELIEF FROM CONSTIPATION 3 y. Tal [u ive Aer calomel. No atm these tElemlnl They cause the liver bl and bowels to act normally. They never force them to nnnaturai action. Dr. ipdy uiile ard? Olive Tg:)lets ““5} s Fos etablecomy 5 & Jve T b 1k you have @ Laa .aste;bad breath, “nel dpll tred are constipated or and sl Ie- e e 15c and 30c hialin Tablets at_bedtime. 2 hox. es of! was{ nzie-basie, allimavi-- ’ ‘miles, iat ‘but "l\'b‘! % oney vine and Bay company has operated steamers ! tipialiy being thrown off by each mem- | of the:populace- is grandest medicine in_the world,” said | . can eat anything and everything with- | ama canal Y ‘ - O ts” magic bell. Tie well was blessed noted for ihe ness “of Lits: Tt o ston: was THE PIONEER ‘WANT/ADS v the old,Francisean monks who flrst. | Inhabited the fionse. In the narrow entrance hangs thie bell, which, nccord- ing to local legend, brings marriage within a year to cvery unmarried per- ' son passing beneath it, hut a divorce i j0se to & warried person, m‘.n ‘o?dl,_d'l rich in vitamins; ¢ are more use than others. {8cotfs Emlsion .is replete with those RATES DOWN THE WEST HOTEL Minneapolis, Minn. Now Quoting Rooms | The Hall of Fame, “The Hall of Fame for Gr | feans” is the na “ding on University = beight ek, In which are inseribed on brenze rablers the. nawes of famous American men and women. Nomination: it Alner honor are made by the and Ahbaiy et lemi d ine s s o PG ‘- ¥ elements that determine psapelighlon ol A '$1:50 to $2.00 ' growth and strength. *every HVE™ yUntS” to, oIl s SR azs 1 8 Scett & Bowne, Bloomfield, N. J, names. . Tl Witheit Bath ———ALSO MAKERS OF—— | : ... $2.00 to $5.00 { uln 4 , With Bath l°ll . : .:i ‘ B Cad ; (l'“.rm)o s © || moderate Priced cate in | 8 pon INDIGESTIONS . - | i Hi ) Connection L - ANNOUNCING M — 2 ——"Lilies That Do Not Perish=——ce NO.A1 | FLOUR - Try a Sack Photographs made here in your new Eastét attire will sure]y be appreciated. .'No remembrance of the Easter Season will Money Back give you or others greater joy in years to come If Unsatisfied than a good photograph. i Without Question - W e 3 at Your Grocer i Photographs, unlike lilies, enhance in value ' with time. X COURTNEY SEED || & FEED CO. f’ We Extend to You and Your f H WHOLESALERS . || Friends the Season’s Greetings. | : Feed, Seeds & Flour |! “e~d us your name ~d we will mail you ~r prices regularly. | STUDIO OF N.L. HAKKERUP . l . MOTORCAR It is owned by many who can afford to pay anything they. wish for the things they use. It is "always bought be- cause ‘of its known value and its -after economies. ' . The gascline consumption is unusually low The tire mileagé is unusually high BEMIDJI AUTO CQ. OLAF ONGSTAD, Prop. y i ; 416-20 Minn. Ave. Bemidji, Mian. - ‘ { | | | | I ==5— OIN0ULCOOOODNCINTEENEIROIO QLT

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