Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, August 15, 1921, Page 4

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«5i ered her hushand’ sitting ‘on the edgze LOUISE GLAUM AT GRAND IN “A LEOPARD WOMAN" J. Park Read, Jr., ever since he produced ‘“‘Sahara,” has been noted tor his gorgeous motion picture set- itiigs.* Yet it Is said that he has sur- ssedteven that stupendous artistic wvement in his . picturiation of Stewart Edward White's “A Leopard Woman,” showing last times tonight at the Grand theater, in which House Peters and Louise Glaum are star per- fonmers. Louise Glaum always has been a fine actress, But as a polished artist she has arrived-—-as ‘‘The Leopard (Woman.” The story concerns the elemental conflict of a strong man with a determined woman against a primitive, inspiring, natural setting. Both lose their fight against love, however, so what else matters? It's @ bully picture, destined to rank as one of the big successes of the year. The short comedy, “Ringside,” also at the Grand ‘tonight, feature Hal Roach with the little colored boy, Sambo--- it's novel scenes are un- usually amusing. “ CHEATED LOVE SHOWING AT GRAND THEATER TUESDAY King Baggot, world famous as a ecreen star and stage matinee idol, directedy- “Cheated Love,” Carmel Myers’ latest Universal photodrama. 1ts local engagement is for tomorrow, Tuesday, only at the Grand theatre The story deals with a girl in New * York's teeming ghetto and is a high- ly dramatic story with heart punches in, every scene. _ Playgoerg who. attend the. Grand itheater tomorrow will comment upon .- the humorous touches, spontaneously _introduced jnto the theme, which bai- ©“Yance” the temse drama and increase, the entertalnment value of the pro-| duction. The nintir episode of the popular serial, “Double Adventure,” is on the same program. “SNOWBLIND” AT GRAND WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY A vibrant story of life and love in the northwest wilderness of the Can-! adian Rockies is told in “Snowblind,” a Reginald Barker production for Goldwyn, which will be shown at the urand theater for two days, begin- ning next Wednesday. The author is Katherine Newlin Burt, who also wrote “The Branding Iron.” Russell Simpson heads the distinguished cast which includes Mary Alden, Cullen Landis and Pauline Starke. The story deals with the love of Sylvia (Pa‘'ine Starke) for a fugitive from the law, Hugh Garth (Russell Simpson), who brought her to his cabin when he found her wandering about, temporarily blinded by the snow. Gadually her affectiory s transferred to Pete (Cullen Landis), Hugh's younger brother. The struggle in the girl's heart between her wan- dering affection, and the jealousy of Jfugh pitted against the magnanim- ity o fhis younger brother, develop into a series of powerful dramatic situations that are admirably carried | E NEWS OF THE THEATRES ; out by the four sterling actors who tell the story. Reginald Barker has again pro- duced another of those massive photo~ plays which have won him an inter- national.reputation, CHAS. RAY IN'*A MIDNIGHT " BELEWAT'THEREX TopAY Fas;ga‘ tainment is “A Midnigh ating en 311"t -which opened yester- | day. at the Rex The “for a run of | two;@ays;“vg“}‘n;ulas iy gtars in this First Nationhl attraction, tand that fagt: alone ; fp sufficient “gustantee | that the picture-is worth seeing. Bach succeeding Ray picture por- trays him in a new type, and such is ! hia versitility ‘that he makes -all- of[* them living adn breathing characters, | true to life in all particulars. { In “A Midnigh't Bell” he is a travel-| ing salesman, young, enthusiastic and | perservering. His attempts to sell| rubber heels to a storekeeper who| doesn’t want them are highly amus-| ing. Later, obtaining a position as| clerk in_the same store, he shows his | proprietor how to make sales, using| a judicious mixture of flattery, sales- manship and ' guile. These scenes kept the audience in an uproar of laughter yesterday. . | But the picture is not all comedy. | ‘there are some exciting episodes in which Ray battles a band of bank; robbers in a haunted church. The| most hardened athlete would not, rel- | ish performing the stunts that Ray does in"these situations. In one in- stance, bound securely to a chair and unable to move his fingers more than a few inches, Ray manages to see the Dbell rope and by tilting himsell against it, rings the bell to summon assistance. It is a story of small-town life—| the kind that American audiences relish. It i3 from . the farhous stage play of the same name by Charles Hoyt and proved a happy choice. “A Midnight Bell” contains all the elements of a perfect picture. “THE MAN FROM MEDICINE HAT” AT REX THEATRE THURSDAY “The Man from Medcine Hat” will be in towns ~Thursday the (Rex Theatre is planning on a big 2 days and from the general trend of thought at present indicating the kind | of movies that ‘take,” *‘The Man from Medicine Hat” will be a winner. For pep, and daving, and quick brain and hand-and-fost work, you'll have to go some to beat it. This photoplay was directed per- sonally by J, P, MeGowan, and Helen Holmes is starring in it. Supporting her are L. D. Maloney, Thomas G.| Lingham, William Brunton, Paul C.| Hurst and W. A. Behrens. ‘Tension, suspense, and breath-tak- ing incidents follow in quick succes- sion from one scene to another, and, underlying the stress of a railroad | gome love affair which is the inspira- tion “of the“thrilling action. ~ “The[ Man from Medicine ‘Hat'' is a photo- drama. for the whole family. Every- one will enjoy it, and those who are| MR. JINKS WAS DISCOURAGED | With All His Hard Work on “Flivver,” " "All He Could Do was Make the Horn Squawk. Mr. Jinks hag been the proud pos- sessor of a brand-new tlivver for nearly three weeks, and his preclous treasire 1s never far from his thoughts. Every moment he can spave is devoted to pol- ishing its glossy coat or tinkering with its vitals in the effort to discover the cause of its occasional spells of mulish balkiness. The other night—about two o'clock ~Mrs. Jinks was awakened by territic yowls eniftted by the family cat. Now the cat was a peaceful pu and not at all given to nocturnal voeal_demon- strutions. Tmagine Mrs. Jinks' pston- v dshment when slie arose wid_discov- of the bed, vigorously twisting the ¢éat's tall round and round. “John,” she protested, rescuing her pet with some difliculty, “what on earth ave you dofug?" Mr. Jinks was evidently in a som- numbulistiesstate, Tor he scratched his head and responded sleepily : “Sh* won't go, honey; sh' simply won't go. I've cranked an’ cranked an’ th’ horn squawks, an’ thash all. Guesh ’Il have t' sen’ 'er up fer repairs. Some- thin' mush be matter wizzer magneto, 'Sdarn shame, an’ ain't paid fer yet, even I"—From Nuggets, 1t Always Costs Him a Stroke. .. Nothing is more disconcerting to a middle-aged golfer than to be asked hy the youmg Indy who is wateaiog him drive: off whether he irtends to ehter t}l.egramlfn er's. tournament, <l Lines to_Ba. Remembered The flowering of clvilization s the finished wan, the ‘man of sense, of grace, of ageomplishment, of social m'er—the gentleman—~—Ralph Waldo rson. ;r‘ig WAT ves Away Ship's Smoke. Fentuged by a, water spray, apparats ug has beeni'invented In Ttaly to pre- vent smoke rising from ships’ funnels. {trouble and neryous -breakdown. ; | i Refiections, There Is hardly a roadside pond or pool which has not as much land- scape in it as above it.—Ruskin. Still They Are Worn. tall hat never lends much dignity instick. : | Until comparatively recent vears the umhrelln was. A, distinctive badge ot monarehs and nobles, - and today the! king bt Siam ‘Dbéars ‘us oneof - his brellas. . Explosions. Voleanie expla are commonly regurded ns the release of stores of | energy kept coiifined by external pres- sure, axd boiler explosions and geyser eruptions ure typleal of this class of | outhre: An expert of the Unired ' States geophysical laboratory finds that another class of explosions, that of explosive mixtures like gunpowiler, | are not likely to ocenr i voleanoes. 2t o third elass, that of explokive ! compounds hrought into contact with | oxgzen oF water” I8 inard probably| the usual soprce of voleanic explo- sions, auidis ilustrted by aluminum sesquioxide — finely divided — hroyzht: Infir such” relation” with water in the | electric farnace that meehanical deto- | nation eauses violent explosion. The | dust of Mont Pelee may have heen | winlogous to the aluwinum sesyui oxide, ‘Coaxing 1t. “Is Mr. Dubwaite’s golf game im- proving? “I duesn’t show muel) improvement, but 15 in earnest.” “How s that?" “He talks to a golf ball as if he were addresslug u pait of dice.—Birming: | ham Age-Herald, MNISTER DISCUSSES | HIS WIFE'S TROUBLES {Rev. /A: «H. Sykes, former pastor, of the Watkins = Park Presbyterian church; Nashville, Tenn., says: { ‘‘After seeing what Tanlac has ac-| complished ‘in my-wife's case, I am convinced that it is a medicine of | great power and extraordinary merit. | I do not think I have ever seen any-| thing to give'such promptiresults. Mrs| Sykes had been in' delicate. health for | ten months, suffering from stomach “I fraguently’'sought medical ad-! vice but Tanlac is the only thing that gave her aay ‘relief. = After taking| the medicine only a short time, she! was able to sit up and help with the | househoid duties. I think it only x\? chort time until her health will be fully restored.” | a man whose lieels are in the air, Tanlac is_sold in Bemidji by the| C_\ty Drug Stofe, and leading drug-| gists evury\_vhvre.-—A(l\'ertisvment. | FOCH COMING T0 UNITED STATES GREAT SOLDIER MAY BEPRESENT FRANCE IN'"CONFERENCE ON DISARMAMENT. —_—l TO BE GUEST OF THE LEGION French Dread of the German:'Mehace Will Have Its Effect on the Delib- ...erations of the Internatignal '~ ering in Washington. ;“By EDWARD B. CLARK. “: Washington.—Jules J. - Jusserand, French ambassador to the United States, just befere he sailed for Paris the other day on a short vacation, “mopped his hcated brow” and made two remarks, one of which everybody who lives in Washington is willing to say certainly 1s true, and the other of which all veterans of the A, E. F. probably hope is true. The first word of the ambassador was that “Wash- ington Is the hottest place on earth,” and the second was, “When I come back to this country early in October Marshal Foch will come with me.” Recently there “came word from the French government to the effect that 'the; milltary man who' would represent it in the. disnrmament con- ference probably would- be General Sarrail, one of the b known soldiers of France and cne of the men who helped to turn the German tide back | at the Marne in early September, 1914, and who, in fact, was one of Joffre’s most able lieutenants. It i believed that Marshal Foch, admitted by most men to be the great- est ‘soldier that the war produced, will come to this country in October as the companion of the ambassador, but whether or not he will represent the French nation later on the dis- armament conference board is not yet known. If he comes as a member ot the board Sarrail probably will not come, for it would be counter to gen- eral usage to send two high military authorities on a joint errand. Coming to Legion Convention, Generdl ‘Foch is coming to the United States to attend a convention of the Amerlcan Legion to be held in Kansas City, for which great prepara- tions. are. making. He also will be the guebt of other organizations Which grew out of the war, and of the Knights of° Columbus in Chicago. From the tenor of the recent French dispatches it appears that they in- tend ‘to include among the conferees strike and a town afire is a whole- | whom"-they appoint a military’ man rather than.a naval man, France's great’ problem in' disarmament hus to do with its land forcés rather'than its ‘navy, while with Great Britain, weary of ' mushyand impossible affairs| and Utqe g, consigarable ' extent the du coéur will ‘weléome this healthy entertainment. United, States, the matter is reversed. There has been frequent comment here on the djfference between beliet in the coming ‘of disarmament. and hope that. it is to come, Everybody hopes that ‘the ‘conferentétwill bring i chance i to’ throw awayfias many . by’ common o who'lold that there & rocks in the way. 5 - When Ambassador Jusserand sailed good miany | for France the other.day he probahly | expressed the views of his fellow countrymen, when. touching the ques- tion of land disarmament, he sald: “There are no Straits of Dover be- tween ‘Francve and. Germany and my country must protect her own inter- ests.” France Still Sees German Menace. The century-old fear that Germany intenged. some day; to disrupt France attits’ lelsure is’Rard to kill in the French mind and heart. The, fehr about the German menace is not for today. but- for tomorrow, and. so it is believed - generally.. in. - Washington that when the question of land arma- ment comes up- for discussion the views of the French -either musf pre- vail or France cannot agree to all the conclusions ‘arrived at by the othen members of the conference. There Is ainothér point 'which will he at fssue in the disarmament ‘gath- ering. Every mnation will be com- pelled to make provision for enough soldiers to do its Internal police work, By this Is meant the work of protect- ing the government agalinst riots and untoward events generally, and also | giving it a suflicient force of soldiers to be used as a nucleus in case that, at some untoward time, some other party ‘to the conference forgets its promise, tears up the paper of agre ments and, starts invading on its own hook. Therefore there is no, ‘po_ss]h!o hance thut s a result of ifhe cpnfe ence complete disnrmament whi fdam: nor perhaps anything approaching com- plete disarmament; but If the navies ot the world can be so reduceg, that troops cannot, be transported to atfack an across-the-sea natlon, and If ‘the armies of each nation are so reduced that one country cannot by its superior force insfantly “invade amnother: coun- try, practieal” disarmament will- have been aceomplished. N Congress ‘Divided’ as to' ‘Recess. One faction of the dominants party in congress today is maintaining that the sentiment in the country is In favor of having the lawmakers stick to thelr work and do all that they can do In a legislative way without thought of a rece: Another faction maintnins that the country desires that the two big legislative jobs of tarilt and taxatton should be finished and thinks 1t would be wise for the’ legislators then to go home and stay until December. It is stlll fmpossible to tell wheth- er the mueh-desired recess of congress will_ materialize or not. Congress it: eelf is divided over the question, and, as has been sald,.divided in its bellet as to how the country feels about the watter, Tl,el‘e is.some hope that there may he.a-reeess by August 25 or Sep- tembar 1y S¥eis centaln. that:glie; Presi- dent !desires this, but whether con- gress will meet .desire by cleaning. up the interim;Work and standing ready ‘to depart, pins to be seen. This Is a ¥peqifily.session of con- gress, and- times have changed so far as spectal sessl%flm(‘emm the old days.-Wher spegker of the Ndgse named. the mibibers o ‘the cor- wittees, it"was his plan, when a spe: il session was called imuediately After a_new-congress was assembled, to‘appoint only those members of com- mittees which would have to deal with the immediate legislation for which congress had been brought Into spe- cial session. Thomas B. Reed, when he was speaker, did this, and Joseph G. Can- non on one occasion did it, but in re- cent years the committee appointing power of the speaker has been taken away from him and.now a party cau- cus of the dominant membership set- | tles the matter. Special Session, General, Work. At the beginning of this congress the commlittee mermberships™ were all filled, ‘and “although” the special - ses- sion was ‘called virtually - specifically for the purpose of taxation and tarift legisintion, ‘ongres¢has gope into all kinds ‘of things, and-has been able to presetit them'for consideration because the committees of g house had been named: - and “'the ‘membersiwanted to work. T from here,, fhicre Ibgism\flan%é(hl a on!that kind, and comuifftee’ membeérs feltithe pres- sure and yfelded to'it. > There are a hundred undefined leg- islative purposes im.view in congress today, “and some of ‘the Republican members, who of course are responsi- ble becayse thaey represent the ma- jority, have insisted that other things than the tariff and taxation should be looked after at once, while other Re- publican members, feeling the effects evetywheré for of hot weather and not believing that | the country wants a“long session, have fnsisted that the tariff and.tax should bhe disposed: of and that a regess should be taken. The President seems to gide with this latter group of his party. 1 3 : There is criticism among many old- er members foday“because ‘conditions ure such that congress cannot be kept to the .duties for which it was called together, and leave minor things alone. The Republican leader of the senate and the Republican leader of ' the house each -pppare] 1y felt compelled to go to thé Whit8 House to secure that support which. would make the senate and. the house Republicans fol- low the leadexship. ./ There is one . thing, however, that thus far the;leadership has failed to nccomplish. 3t has not been able to bring ‘a - unanimity ‘of opinion, or at any rate of acquiescence, among: the followers in a definite policy on just what should be done and what should not - be done:: It séeins possible that President Harding, -if he'so desired, might be able to fotce a recess. Geddes’ Cancelled Dinner. Washington has been more than in- terested in the recent Lord North- cliffe’ incident. This titled proprietor of several great Iinglish newspapers was . invited to a dinner at the British embassy - in Washington, in which city he was a temporary guest. Then suddenly the dinner was called oft and the invitations which had gone, it is said, to the President of the Uni- ted es, the cabinet ofticers and to many men _prominent in official and social life, were recalled. Lloyd George recently deprived the Northcliffe newspapers of certain news-gathering privileges at British official headguarters in London grant- ed to all newspaper representatives, ir- respective of the potitical affiliations f the journals which they represent. The privileges were cut off because of ('l!hlclsm which Lord Northeliffe: had “passed on Marquis ‘Curzon; the British 'secretary for forejgn affalrs. The next scene of the trouble after it Teft London was‘Washington, where tlie incldent just recorded occurred. The lie has heen passed hetween Mar- quis Curzon and Lord Northcliffe, and at this writing things are still very much up in the air and everybody is still very red In the face. Juicy Topic for:Gossips. These embassy incidents always in- terest Washington, because It loves wossip as it loves politics. The Lord {Northeliffe-Ambassador ~ Geddes-Lloyd George-Marquis Curzon affair will not be forgotten at Washington dinner tu- ‘bles for a-tong time.to come. Of course s matter-was purely ao-British; one, ’,y:q'upr for Its American x».!‘tlng, but_it ‘digme pretty: near involving the Presi- :dent of the United States in_an un- ‘fortunate: Mdtter, for it heihnd talked with Lord Northeliffe for un hour and a half bef the thing occurred, as he Aid talk With him after it had oc rred, he would have been accused of taking Ides in ;-1‘ personal British contro- " As it WhS, th@lPresident dit not know anything about the canceling of ‘the embassy dinner until after e had iseon and talked with Northeliffe. At this writing It Is impossible to ‘tell whether In any way or not Ambas- sador Geddes “put his foot fn it,” but it he did it is his own government an:i ‘not that of the United States whick must take cognizance of the affair and of the ambassudor’s part in it. READ THE PIONEER WANT ADS Morgover, there- wis; pressure |. EHOY Ty, wag: | | sengers. , room, The vessel is an oil. burner, BEARSKIN A MARK OF HONOR Five British Regiments Won Right to | Wear Headdress, at the Battle of Waterloo, 1 Recently published portraits of the | king of England at the historic British | ceremony, “trooping of the colors,” at thevHarse guards parade in London show him' wearing 'the high,. shaggy | bearskin headdress which-unRents, 19: the uninitiatéd to be a heavy, uncom- | fortable article of apparel. As a mal ter of faétiit ig mot as uncomf b1 as 1t looks, ../{ " ) The bearskin, as it Is called to™ is mada of Wieigkin of the Ru hear angd \strefched over'a basl | framework. - In reality it is not any | heaxier than.theroldtime helmet. ‘The | one thi RidE ware on this occasion had a \vmté\)lume o the-side, the insignia | of the Grénadier guards, of which regi- | ment King George is honorary colonel. | Five British Guard regiments are en: | titled to wear the bearskin, a dis- tinction they won at Waterloo wlien the British guards defeated the OId | Guard of Napoleon, who wore ‘thig towering form of headdress. Besides the Grenadier guards a regl- ment dating from the time of Charles II, the Coldstream, Scots, Irish and Welsh guards, the latter formed dur- Ing the World war, wear bearskins. They form the brigade of Foot guards in peace time and are part of the houseliold troops, whose dutles ‘include: the - guarding of Buckingham and-St.” James palaces; NEW FRENCH LINER ARTISfIC The Paris, Recently Launched, .Has Eleven Decks and Is Like an ’ Art Museum. A writer in a recent number of Le Petit Parisien devotes nearly a column of most poetic. prose to the new steam- ship Paris of the French Transatlantic company, launched recently at Le Havre for the New York run. The Paris is a little more than seven hun- dred and sixty-eight feet inlength (not quite as long as the Mauretania), has 11 decks, 64 lifeboats and three stacks. Her weight is 35,000 tons. | While not palatial, the new liner is | described as a work of art. She car- ries a.crew of 664 and about 8,000 pas- Among the features of. her equipment are mentioned a. terraced cafe and an elaborate children's play- tinguish lt,,.lr(}_nuhe shnko and busby; ie fi“}g e and all the cooking and heating is done by electricity. A The French writer, above mentioned, observes that the Paris would do very nicely as a.museum and is a “perma- | nent, lasting salon .of modern French art.”” In the grand drawing roomi, lined with mauve woodwork, the Pain- ter Lalique has employed a design of butterflies representing ‘the hours, while a symbolical canvas from ‘the brush of Albert Besnard pays hox?uge to France and America. < Citrus: By-Products. i In . co-operation” "with" “the citrus fruit - growers .of . California, . the United - States "bureau of ~chemistry has, been trying for some years past to develop methods whereby profitable uses might & found for the enormous quantities’ of: oranges:, and. lemons which 10w ‘go: to.waste because unfit for shipment. . It does not pay to ship to. market any fruit’that is not first class and In prime condition. ' Of waste oranges, called “culls,” there are 14,000 tons a year. What shall be done with them? A partial answer to the question is furnished by a score of factories whith have already been put in operation for the produc- tion of marmalade and jellies. Also, a profitable market has been found for orange oil and lemon oil, orange vinegar, citric acid and dried orange peel. Fresh orange acid is used for the marmalade, ‘while the ofl is ex- | tracted by pressure from the. skins. | Up ‘to the. present time: all of our orange ofl and lemon has come from | Italy and Sicily. Kipling’s “Brevities” | It is quite true, as Mrs. Gerould says, that Mr. Kipling's fame rests upon “significant brevities,” but what she and critics of a similar complex- fon cannot see is that these “brevities” are “significant” in_a sense diametri- cally opposed to her interpretation of the word. She means, of course, to.be complimentary, to intimate that Mr. Kipling is brief from cholce; whereas the exact reverse s the truth, and, far from being brief from choice, Mr. Kip- ling is brief from necessity. Mrs. Ger- ould would intimate that Mr. Kipling prefers the short story, whereas, in point of fact, Mr. Kipling's gifts re- wtrict him to the short story.—F. A/ Waterhouse, in the Yale Review, Pioneer Log Building Restored. An old log building, near Chehalls, Wash., ‘Which housed one ‘of the first federal courts ever held in the Pacific northwest, has been rehabllitated’ and presented to the state, The building, 1" erected in 1845, housed Gen. Phil Sher- jdan and_ Gen, George B. McClellan when they weré In the northwest be- fore the Civil war and had to travel between Fort Vancouver, on the Co- lumbla. river, and Fort Steilacoon, “on Puget sound. i ¢ | soiel ey i Prize Stock for. Canada, | | The prince of Wales won.most of | the prizes with his exhibits of Short- horn cattle and Shropshire sheep at | the agricultural show, held recently | in England. He declared his intention | of shipging some of these farm arls- | tocrats®to his ranch in Alberta, Can- | ada, where there is already a fine | blooded aggregution. Jubscribe tor Tne Umily Ploneer. | of this test shows that the greatest T st swithin M ? K b yth Disproved. Chan i i ly ro ge Your Key. A recf)rd was kept from®*1840 for The fellow whd 18’ always hatping on twenty years for thé purpose of testing | gne string soon . gets out of tune with the truth of the popular beliet that if S G rain fell on St, Swithin's day it would el worlt ST PR DS raln for forty days after, The result True Thrift. Thrift is steady earning, wise spend- ing, sane saving, careful investing, and the avoldance of all waste. tor The number of rainy days had occurred in ‘these two decades in years when St. Swithin's day was . Ve HRTE i) Bubseri '+ Daily Plonaer. | Subs wvally Pio er. HE proved oil producing areain the United States is estimated as only 4500 square < am When you contrast this withithe area of the United States—3,026,789 square miles— - the proved area is but a finger print on the map. Yet from this 4500 square miles must come - the raw material to drive all of our motor driver machires; -ands practically all of the oil to lubri- cate-the ‘machinery *which makes possible €heg: \ ‘happiness and prosperity of the natjon,”” """ ; Ta magriify this finger print is the task in which . the Standard Oil Company {Indiana)is engiged. n of the Burton Process, which largely. e amount .of - gasoline ' recoverable nti t , and! dozens - (Indiana)'has multiplied the quantity of petroleum; products available for the use of men- wherever they may live.- . . The-development of the Burton Process has done more to promote the manufacture ofiauto- motive: machinery than any other sing] covery since: thé usefulness of gasoline_as’a was made known. Because of it there.is-3Lip! tiful supply of crude oil available toddy, and gasoline 1s selling for a low price” i the price of this: fuel would'be beyo of the average man; * . The use of this pracessis not confined,to the., refiners of the Standard Oil Company (Indiana)..’ alone, but.is being made available to others under conditions which ate just and equitable to all.- - The Standard Oil Company (Indiana) has a just pride in the work it has done, and is doing, to so increase the- quantity and quality of its,: ‘products as to make:possible the-use of labor saving machinery throughout: the world. Thus is the Standard Oil Gompany (Indiana) . doing a big: work in conserving -the natural resources of the nation,and in’ helping others to do likewise.: : 4 Standard ((I?dll) Company. 910 So. Miqhighn Ave., Chicago’ 2556 UT of the fire-scattéd safe of a Baltimore jew-" elry store the ledgers were carried. They had been baked and then drenched with water inthe great Baltimore Fire, but the J. S. MacDonald Com« pany was able to.rebuild its business life because the records were written with - ’ ' ¢ “u«w8 CARTER’S INK ‘This emergency seryice is-yours if you ¢ eed ity but e o R you eyerineeliy . Carter’s Writing Fluid writes a deep blue and turns an ever~ lasting black— ° Carter*s Cico, a'new liquid paste, al Vi And Becaiise every Carter product is made with - ‘the' care and skill-learncd through sixty years.of .. . man! PIONEER‘STATIONERY HOUSE Phone 799-J Bemidji

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