Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, August 8, 1921, Page 4

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S ko b F R R “REPUTATION” AT GRAND LAST TIME TONIGHT Critics who have commented upon the strange dramatic power of “Repu- tation,” Priscilla Dean’s Universal super-feature which is showing for the last time tonight at the Grand theater, have attributed its force to the epochal story, the personal mag- netism of the star, the elaborate pre- sentation ‘and the admirable direc- tion; but all of them have overlooked a quality to which may lge credited its greatest appeal, That is the qual- ity of contrast. “Reputation” is made up of con- {rast—drastic contrasts which carry a thrill with every rapid change from character to character, locale to lo- cale; and incident to incident. . As the story opens, Miss Dean is seen as a worldly actress in a country village, the first contrast. Then comes her European tour where she is fetgd at magnificent banquets, dazzling in ‘profligacy. In contrast to this is shown ‘the man she has discarded, a friendless, pitiful wreck, wandering in the reeking alleys of Limehouse the sewer through which the human filth of the world is kept away from the discerning nostrils of London to- ward the traceless gray immensity of the sea. “Then, when dissipation has marred her beauty, the woman is shown an outcast in the slums of New York while her. daughter fis seen in digni- fied elegance and comfort, taking a place on the stage and impersonating her own mother. “Reputation” has been described }Story, as the most dramatic story ever film- ed and it is without question Priscilla Dean’s greatest dramatic triumph. Edwina Levin wrote it as a novelette under the title of “False Colors,” while Lucien Hubbard, scenario edi- tor at Universal City, adapted it to the screen, changed the theme to heighten the dramatic quality and in- troduced humor and pathos for which he is noted. “WOLVES OF THE NORTH” AT GRAND TOMORROW That there is a strain of the wolf in_all men is implied in “Wolves of the North,” Eva Novak’s screen story » of the Alaskan wilds, which is to be shown at the Grand theater tomorrow ' only. yNorman Dawn, the Universal direc- 2 tor, wrote the story and produced it in the far north. The result is con- sidered to be one of the most dar- ingly dramatic interpretations of hu- man emotion ever screened. As the story opens the blonde TR TN W o 05 TH AT TS T T T S 7 S T T 7 NEWS OF THE THEATRES i T e e stand out asione of the most artisti- cally presented screen stories of the decade. vhotographer of note and has embel- lished his theme with magnificent scenerys “THE CALL FROM THE WILD,” \ The lover gf#yholesome entertain~ ment will'be charnied beyond éxpres- sion when he attends the Rex theater and witnesses, the presentation /of “The Call From, the. Wild,” that cel- luloid cyclone ‘of mountain thrills, heart throbs’ -pulsating punches. Throughout: ~;ix,g'_§orious reels of ‘en- trancing molmm scenery the action moves with skymobile rapidity in-the development of'a blot. laid among mountaineers. whose - sands' of . life run calmly among the balsam of the pines, the babble of the brooks and the tragedies in the existence of the furry and feathery inhabitants of the canyons and peaks. The story is that of a deep and un- controllable love, of brave men and fair women, and shows intimately the lives and habits of the denizens of the forest. Wholesome thrills that will cause Boy Scouts and Camp Fire Girls to sit up and take notice are reel, while wolf-dog that is reformed into a gen- uine hero is so realistic as to give to the screen performance of man’s faithful friend a new place in dra- matic cast. There is a deep moral lesson in the | which, while not a preach- ment, still shows the efficacy of pray-/ er, the great reward for undying| faith, and the glorious compensation | for genuine love. “The Call From the Wild’ 'is a story! of human interest, heart throbs and that carries an appeal to every lover of nature, to every soul that revels 1 the drama of the heart. “WEDDING BELLS” AT REX | * TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY | One of the fastest romances,| courtship and marriage on record, with an even faster separation, is the story of “Wedding Bells,” Constance Talmadge’s latest release through As-| sociated First National Pictures, Inc., and which will be shown at the Rex theater, commencing Tuesday. “Love at first sight” can hardly ex-| press the instantaneous way in which/ Rosalie Wayne and Reginald Carter fell “in love with one another. And there is absolutely no phrase yet written to! describe how quickly they | fussed and separated. Nor is there £ heauty is seen as a school teacher in|anything but Salisbury Field’s clever a desolate arctic outpost. Two men want her enough to marry her. One is a sensitive boy; the other a beard- ed brute with a bad reputation and a good heart. Just which of them gets the girl is never clear until the story. rushes toward its climax. ¥ Supporting Eva Novak in her star- ring role will be seen Herbert Heyes, play that can do justice to how they| were finally reconciled. | know that such favorites as Harrison Tord, Emily-Chichester, Ida Darling, James Harrison, William Roselle, Polly Vann, Dallas Welford and Frank Honda ‘were chosen to inter- I Starke Patterson, Percy Challenger, Barbara Tennant, William Eagle- }‘;{c, Clyde Tracy and Millie Impo- ito. ““Wolves of the North” is said to pret the screen roles. The produc- tion was directed by Chet Withey. “Wedding Bells” will be the at- traction at the Rex = Tuesday and Wednesday. L ARSI I 06" | e A ; PEACH OF THE TROPICS NOW AT HEIGHT OF SEASON Midsammer is the best season for mangoes which are now available in northern murkefig, points out the United States Department of Agricul- ture. The mango is one of the real- ly great fruits of the world. India with its hundreds of millions of peo- ple has for centuries held it sacred, and celebrates annual ceremonies in its honor. 1t is a fruit, the import- ance off which Americans are begin- ning to recognize. Several fine vari- ectles are practically free from fibre. - They can be eaten with a spoon as casily as a muskmelon. These are not to be confused with the worthless seedling mangoes of the West Indies. The Hayden mango is a particular- ‘ly fine example of the *‘peach of the [ Tropics.” Tt is a seedling of the first East Indian mango brought to Ameryca. ‘The original plant was __brought_here by the United States Departmeént . of Agriculture and planted at the field station at Miami, Fla. Extraordinary care was nec sary at first to protect it from fr It was three times seriously threaten- ed. The fruit of I'ts seedlings shows a much finer development than those - . of the parent plant bore. 2 This type of mango, when ripe, is about the size of an avocado. It is smootly egg-shaped, with brilliant red coloring, «haded off to a luscious £ vellow, Northern dealers sell the & fru't at from 65 to 85 cents each. Last season they cost as much as a o 81,25 apiece. Americans are per- 3 8y hiaps more open-minded in trying out new foods than any other nationality. in the world, and when people in this country learn to like mangoes they v4'11 be grown for popular consump- ‘tion. 1 | g { Winnipeg, © Manitoba.—Four-four - thousand farm laborers will be re- 4 - quired in western Canada to harvest this year’s crop, according to an es- \ % {lmate made at a conference of gov- A arhment employment and railway of- fiehals here. - Of this number it is cstimated that 9,000 can be secured : in the west and 35,000 will have to - be brought from outside points, fiMontreal, Quebec.—The new Fur- ? ness-Bermuda line summer cruises, i from New York to Quebec, has been = imangurated with the errival of the ¥ Fort St. George with 150 passengers. This is the first time that a summer service has been running between the American and Canadian ports since The round trip takes Explaining Dream of Wolf. To\dream ‘of & wolf signifies busi- ness relations with one who is un- principled and cunning. © To be pur- sued by one denotes much sickness to the house, but If by many long life and health, Handicapped. “Ah wouldna MucTavish canna learn the game,’ id Sandy cautious- ly to his golf psrtner, “but what with being bothw religious and tongue tied It will be deeficult, aye, verra deefi- cult’." HE BELIEVES IT SAVED HIS LIFE Pinard Would Have Anything He Possessed for the Relief Tanlac Brought Him L a “I don’t Believe there is anything that will put a man who is down and out on his feet as quick as Tanlac will,” said E. P. Pinard, of 1021 Min- nescta Ave., Duluth, Minn., fn relat- ing his experience with the medicine. “For a good many years I had such a bad case of stomach trouble, and was in such fear and dread my food wouldn’t agree with me that I couldn’t enjoy a meal. T suffered s from indigestion and bloating, and had such terrible pains up through my chest that many times I would have given anything I possessed for relief. Why, if I hadn’t gotten hold of Tanla¢ I believe I would have been a goner altogether by now. Given it has not enly fixed up my stomach but it has given me a good appetite also. I keep Tanlac on hand all the time, and whenever I feel myself slipping it doesn’t take the medicine long to straighten me out again, It keeps up my. strength and weight, and ' I'm 'now feeling better and look- ing better than I have in a long time. Tanlac is the only medicine that ever | gave me relief, and I am .certainly tlucky to have run across it, for it saves me all the suffering ami misery I had endured before 1 got hold of it.” Tanlac is sold in Bemidji by the City Drug Store, and leading drug- |gists everywhere.—Advertisement. Norman Dawn is a scenic| REX, LAST TIME TONIGHT sprinkled generously through every| the acting of the wild| thrills—a ta'e of the great outdoors| Those: who have been fortunate in| seeing the stage play will be glad to! EUROPE MAKES PLANS “Tanlac just keeps me going, for| T R A BRI TR HOSE who express their thoughts i terms of millinery must be at their happlest when they create the lovely hats of midsummer. The gracious days and nights of summertime, prodigal of beauty, are written in these lacey and flowery garnishings—they are truly the poetry. of apparel, and the talent of the designer blossoms at its best in them. While thelr season lasts, desiguers revel in them and the fashion reporter would willingly cover pages with their pletures. But four of many gems, as shown in the picture above, are suffi- clent to reveal the character of this millinery and the manner in which it has been exp! d this season. The wide-brimmed, transparent hat at the top of the picture might be ap- propriately called ‘a midsummer night’s dream; it is made of black malines. At each side there is a cluster of white lilles—the fragrant, old-fashioned lilies that bloom in gardens everywhere, re- produced with beautiful fidelity in a fabrie. Just below Is one of those fine leg- horns that is never out of style. Vel- Hats That Interpret Summer vet does not belong to summer, but the drtist, “who creuted “this bit of headw Has beén audacious enough to use it for a binding and a soft crown. . Ofé “discovers the method in this madne#s then the wreath of pond [ lilies -is cotSidered:' against the deep background- s their , waxen whiteness stands out most vividly. A pale and misty blue in crepe de chine makes the charming small hat at the right veiled with fine pretty | white lace, run with black. This is| a churming hat for matrons who have | progressed beyond the wide-brimmed | picturesque shapes just described. The last hat pictured is made of black hair braid and has a dreoping double brim bound with old blue silk. A wreath of garden roses with their folinge lles across the brim and a cluster of roses droops from it at the right side. The face is framed by a bandeau of little button roses. COPYRIGHT 3Y METERN NEVSPATER UNIO, | FOR NEW ALLIANCES By Edwin iW. Hullinger. (United Press Staff Correspondent) Paris. (By Mail)---Europe is in a state of complete flux from the inter- national political point of view. Realizing that at least untjl the League of Nations amounts to some- thing each nation will be obliged to have effective material means of look- ting after its own safety and interests, all the governments of Europe are feeling each other out. each hoping to effect some combination which uard it from any pos- around eacql cther, to see just how | much the other ¢an be.depended upon { for real help in the future. | This accounts for the numerous little international .citises which have ilbeen figuring so prominently in Ku- | propean news dispatches the last vear, each seemingly full of poss bilities at the moment yet generally pasging withouit lasting results. It explains the constant re-shifting of *bloes” in Allied Council cham- bers, first England, supporting Italy against France, then Italy and il‘m‘lh. which is so bewildeing to the |Amenican reader. E Simultaneously, the various ‘Allies are also testing out their former ene- Imies to ascertain which offers the | best timber for future friends. | France, for instance, is apparently succeeding in lining up Turkey, that is, the Turkish Nationalists, the real power in the Near East, where both she and England are so vitally inter- ested. England, on the contrary, is placing her money on Greece, now under the Pro-German constantine. England is also flirting with Arabg, another considerable force in Asia Minor. | Among the Allles, France and Bel- gium have already pledged common | cause. When 'the Quai D'Orsay makes move, Brussels invariably follows | suit. | Thd pairing off of England and It- aly 1is less comsistent, but the two |have held together on a great many | questions since the peace glic:t,\'. Tt- 1y, however, occasionally sifleh! fvith “rance against Great Brithtn.' : Poland has already become a pro- tege of France, who is nsing her juseful prod ‘in the back: of Germ | France ccunts upon W r {port in case of altercation with Ger- i many, England, on the contrary, |seems to fincline more toward Ger- Imany and against.the Poles. | | Russia remains the great isolated ! questiom mark’on the European dip- | lomatie horizon:/ England appears to be doing her'best to effect a reproa |ment, with varying success. = Aussia | holds the balancé of power in Burope |aml, until she casts her weight to one group or another, no permanent adjustment will be posa’ble. BRING RESULTS France against England, and so. the | THE PIONEER WANT ADS/: PRIZES OFFERED FOR MINNESOTA NUT:GROWERS An effort to stimulate interest in nut-growing {in’ Minnesota is being made by the Minnedota State Horti- cultural society. as the result of an offer made by Paul'N. Brooks of Min- neapolis last November to give the so- ciety $250 for spe¢ial nut premiums, $50 to be available ‘each year for the next five years. R. S. Machintosh,. secretary of the society, University Farm, St. Paul, is sendjing out announcements of the prizes to be distributed. These in- clude: B Prizes to be given in 1925 for the ibest' cared fon nut plantation of ten or more trees which shall include at least two species. First prize, $25, second prize, $15, third prize, $10. Extra prized (of $8 each for the best quart of ‘black walnuts, butter- nuts, Shagbark hickory nuts, and ha- zel nuts, entered for.the usual prem- iums at the winter 'meeting of the society in 1921:22 and 1923-24. The nutsJw(inning these prizes will be- come the preperty of the society, the society also to have the privilege of securing buds or cions from,which to propagate trees for trial purposes. Prizes of $10, $5, and $3 for boys or girls under 18 years who submit the best list of names and addresses of persons who have planted and are growing nut trees in Minnesota. Prizes of $10, $5, and $3 to be awarded in 1922 for the best. collec- tion:of nuté by boys or girls under 18 years, a quart of each kind of nuts to be exkfibited at the winter meeting fox the Horticultural soci- ety. Prizes of $10, $5, and $3 to be awarded, in 1923 to boys or girls un- der 18 years who- definitely locate a wild or cultivated or seedling nut ree beaning nuts of superior quality or size, one quart'of nuts to be ex- ‘hibited, accompanied by detailed Iotatement of location of tree. Full informatiom concerning these contests may ‘be ‘had by addressing |R. S. MacHintosh, University Farm, St. Paul. SAYS AMERICA WILL MASTER DYE SITUATION (By United Press) IR _ Fargo, N. D, Aus. 8.---America Fill master the dye situdtion 1l given, time, Gilbert A. Currie, attornay for the Dow.,Chemical company of Mid- land, Mich., declared here before tiic retail druggists. The country, { manufadifiring “in t'desperation caring the war, Currie said, but now has morgfthan two hundred concerns mem\x[:\%firing more than three hun- dred dy® in quality -equal, and in some cases superior, to German dyes. | SERRECTREEE B entered Hintg dye Ottawa, Ontario. — During the months of April and May, 1921, a to- tal of 5 immigrants entered anada, 9 being from the Brit- Isles, 8,745 from the United es and 4,981 from other coun- ‘'the ‘auidience in: dark, ‘would that be “Fmen-put out with a needle the eyes of DISGUSTS LONDON London. { By Mail to United Press) ---London’s Grand Guignol which for a year at the Little Theater has kept London buzzing with lits playlets of horrors and passion, has presented its masterpiece. 4 The morning after “The Old Wo- man’ was produced, London papers which hadn't agreed on anything in a score of years unitedly leaped upon -{*%Sheéer bestialty. ijget hold of a ,corpes, diszect it on’the:étage and handithe bits out to a thrill?” 4 1; All of which means that the critics didn’t Atke. {Mr. Levy’s: -playlat, in whiclt three gibbering lunatic old wo- 3 besutiful young girl, Misg Sybil Nics’ demand that it be . Levy replied that au- people saw it three times during the first week, Which leda doctor to say in an interview: A pathologiical sympton. Some people enjoy the shrieks of a dying pig. They usually conceal it, though. If they didn’t, avojd them.” e playle ris still going strong:. AR KR KK KRR x WILTON * FYSTSEEES S SRS 5 R 2% 22 Miss Bethol Prince returned home Wednesday after spending a eweek with Misses Ruth and O. Lina Stay. Miss Mabel Hall left Wednesday for Mackintosh where she will visit friends and relatives for a short .{ime. " Misses Bethol Prince and O. Lina Stay, Willie Olson and Martin Guis- ness motored o Bemidji Sunday eve- ning. P / A bunch of Wilton young folks at- tende, the dance at Maple Ridge Saturday evening. All report a fine time. ‘Mise Francios Hall returned Sun- day from Island Lake where she has been viciting her' sister, Mrs. Paul Englund, for a few days. Misses Ruth Stay and Stella OI- day. —————————— | D | Licaerr & Myzrs Tosacco Co. MONDAY EVE! VLY CAR-WASHJNG?&{{ | C. W.Jewett Company, Inc. wereseating it up, and some. f2 their friends would / . DRY GOODS son were Bemidji visitors over Suns | esterfield D : WE' SPECIALIZE ¥ NIGHT or DAY i i ¥ M Prices! J $1.50 o - . $2.50 . Telephone 970—971 NING, AUGUST 8, 1921 i i ik AT Y et " "Business Is Good ! .. “And it should be when we sell & \_- “The Best Gopds That Money Can’Buy” T We Carry a Full Line of e GENERAL MERCHANDISE ' SHOES = MEATS GROCERIES Try Us for Fresh Butter and Dairy Products Paris Gree: l_§ Cheap_er—Get Our Pricei | Corner of 4th and Minnesota Ave. © - ! i DAILY PiON WANT ADS BRING RESULTS HEY DO IT! We spent years experi- menting with different blends of tobaccos; to obtain —anéw flavor —a more pleasing aroma ¢ —and to obtain what is more important still —the one thing that smokers have always wished a cigarette would do— “SATISFY!” AndChesterfieldsdo “‘satisfy.”” For in Chesterfields the to- baccos—Turkish, and Burley and othcr choice home-grown varie- ties— are' blended differently — and better —to give you and all smokers that greater measure of cigarette enjoyment. —and the blend can’t be copied. 2 st " CIGARETTES e Have you seen the new i AIR-TIGHT tins of 502 i . ama————— e A PEOPLES !

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