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

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mmm E NEWS OF THE THEATRES i P ot bbb b bebabedhcblobebsbeliclsaiababil e el bbbt “THE MAN WHO” AT REX TODAY AND FRIDAY “The-Man Who,” by Lloyd Osborne which ‘will be remembered by Satur- day Evening Post readers 'as one of the most delightful stories of many seasons, has been made into a motion plcture by Arthur Zellner and will ibe presented at the Rex theater for sonality and an elfish beauty which especially fit her for roles of the ““good-little-bad girl type—the girl who s always up to mischief and always in troible because of her high spirits, not because she is wantonly ibad. There isn’t any one else on the screen just like Miss Daniels. She doesn’t jmitate anybody, and one “American Child Is a Greater Puzzle Than Is the American Adult.” By W. L. GEORGE, British Novelist. The American. child is to me a greater puzzle than the American adult.. I cannot se¢ how the emo- tional American, dominated by hu}rul ingpulses, de: velops out of the shrewd ap ‘\bni-d:)\‘hwriei_i‘p child. 1t KA KK XK X RPN * PARK RAPIDS * XX A KRR SRS The sheriff, constable and county | attorney made a raid on a cottage an Fishhook lake last week and rounded up five or sir men and women who paid fines when arraigned in justice court for being drunk and diforderly, The list includese scme) namesiof |men who ought to be in better”bnsi> ness. i b Mrs. Webster who is in Rcchester undergoing- treatment for goitre, 1s reported- doing nicely,./Fhe tumarj.is te of . ghi Sir Rider Hagghrd has revealed to the world: that that valiant warrlor and strategist “Umslopogans” s not a mere crenture of imagination. He was a Swazl chieftain of high and noble lineage, Who had been a warrlor Defore ‘he took service under. the Brit- ish flag. Years after Sir Rider had enshrinedy the chief in fiction, the fact | Wwas mentioned to him, and Umslopo- | gaas expressed his delight- that Lun- danda (Sir Rider Haggard) had writ- ‘ten a book; ta show that once there wag a Zulu/people, with mighty kings. Imsgr r KX REAEERERRR * PINEWOOD * fTESEEES S S 2 S R0 S 2 0 Misa Beulah Sewell of Minnea- polis arrived here Saturday evening. She will teach the Pinewood school the coming year. Mr. and Mrs. 0. J. Tagley of Men- ter, were hore Saturday looking after the banking business: here. Mr. Tag- ley has decided to build a new bank building here. The building will be of brick and construction will begin soon. IMrs. R. C. Clauson and children anpived here Tuesday morning trom two days beginning today. never. hears ' thq' comment, “Oh. ¥ 4 ibeing lgated. She L o b SHe” | 5 6 n it isya Maxwell Karger prodfiction | that’s just . like So-annl;S;)," Mled' is almost:inhuman, Tt lat county ‘attorney. {53! Bs“;fu:\?fi:n:“fsro::'}eYe:::' .:;;E‘l; ,:1;: Smfiafiu&a%}:‘ie P‘]‘:ixc;:lll,& rmogl?":::: 1s’ gestures, expressions an & + S it i fe.bShe™ ¢ E 0 it Wi E > ! dr,. Ol far Metro, starring Bert Lytell in|Daniels” g P! kisses an;adult; it- wholly'™ el ocostod. that Sie. Ridar gof hid ne|Bas juat built. Wo welcome our new the role of Beddy Mills, 'the New York bank clerk who tried to become the Man Who Broke the Shoe Trust. Beddy’s ambition to become a Man Who is inspired by his desire to win the favor of Helen Jessop, daughter of an old New York family, who has beauty. “CONVICT 13” AT GRAND i SATURDAY ;AND SUNDAY Learning the lockstep for use 1n manners ave as individual as heér’ fers. fn/im thé Emotionaly enthusiastic English ehild, ®Hich: Kapls itself upon’ the,| »gecp}e it likes and inflicts ‘upon them sticky t ‘does not give itself; it knaws what it Wah takes it with strange brutality. If.this applied only to female “children, I could mnderstand it, for ¥ome- »x it As proposed in the. necr fudgy tiirn “the @hurch to fice OX- streef,sxebuild it and thus modern” ins¢isution for. the ¥apldly increasing soclety. . o Z i, | Spiration :from . Moore's £ told ‘her, ihe deniedithe ullegation, B real orfginy . 1t is’better s uShe?, Was spun’iof; the: web: of s- tery. FA but he' never neighbors-to our coynimunity. LMR; and” Mrs (. Miller spent > i Miller’s rela- ing angd:the Misses Beulah Sewell and Kigna; &nd Esther: Bakken were Red b no use for men who were just “nice |“Convigt 13" which comes to the| S > . Ey B3 an nety Do b » B “all-laugh” prog! | $hi : . i N . i A “ZM¥8, 1viv Cutler and childrep -ar-y.* d: Late: visitors Sul 3 and ordinary. lSolBe‘rlldy d:]acldes uz g,:',’,{'!fi,.'",..,T"'uu‘.‘,l‘:ul;m;].‘xve p‘lfi?;:‘: thing of this survives. in-the American girl, hefre marriage and misfor 8 !’3‘7%'; ;m‘e safel Fnl\n‘«l:n"r-vgnm-: " Ulieretare yui Yr:nix pious or-su- | | Mrs “Tver ‘Bi':@:)‘wns a Bemidji go about faultlessly dressed, except| il Sor o some extra hours | tunes have turned her into a human being; but the male Anieticau child fifroma:visit to Osage, lowa. Miss Mar: | peistitious: bellefs iregnrding, fragrabg|visitor Suturday. 4 that his feet are always bare as a ‘ protest against the highi price of of labor. Unfortunately none of lhe‘ shows only the hardness of {he American man, not the gentleness and’ aret drove. the car the whole. dis- tance ad while she had a few ex- woods; “says the “Américan <Forestry. 71 ‘Soo- Linie work’ train will make B company had ever had any previous i whi : & Magazine. T v - | their. headquarters here for the next L8 :L‘:‘fl' g;’éf‘i 3?;;:3:?5 ;’:;:s?;‘;“gl;‘j expel:"le:ce 0 that line Td it was | tenderness which make him so attractive. pericnces that wétc, not pleasant, Aye,:?m?m tlhl: i::l::;seolrm\snl:;“::‘ six ‘weeks. Tey are filling in the { plications and inspires a national|a ew fleld to them. The perspiring This may come from the close contact between the American child “il;;",;mvml hersell a' remarkable | {11 be wade o the Thitmay or mg(,‘:”_*i"‘s‘fiflxcr;’:f ws(&';{:m‘;’“fi‘é‘;‘ - barefoot campaign. director put in ‘many extra hours doing the duty of a drill sergeant and its parent; it lives with them, is of them; it is treated sericwsly; County Auditor Heisel and - Dr. prince of woods, , (Podeaypus neru- folia), while a peg of.it driven into & auto trip to Southern Minnesota and Towa where he will remain for a ] Bert Lytell’s supporting company g includes ltucy Co"':,f,‘ s g"eleanes. to get the squad in the proper | therefore, it does not look upon the adult as a god. Notably, in the well- || Walling drave gu Puposky last Th}ll“?- house post o boats, \willlayert evil : sop; ini. ; T ,|rhythm of the prison walk. | to- Svarig f s 3 i g o : day to attend the meeting of the Tri- § . |week. sop; Virginia Valli, as Mary Turner, ion Julen Tthcy had Sokten o to-do classes, there is no children’s hour, say 5:30, when the an¥ious pris- County Sanatorium board. Mr. Helsel the shoe 'magnate's daughter who loves Beddy in spite of everything; Frank Currier, as St. John Jessop, the old New York aristocrat; and Tammany Poung, Fred Warren, Clar- ence J. Elmer, William Roselle, Mary Louise Beaton and Frank Strayer in the other roles. The photography is by Arthur Mar- tinelll and the art interiors are by M. P. Stauleup. “GOD’S COUNTRY AND THE LAW” AT REX THEATER SUNDAP James Oliver Curwood, author of “God’s'Country and the Law,” recent- ly made a special trip to Maine to watch the taking of the final scenes in the ffirst of 'a series of productions adapted from his works that the Pine Tree Pictures, Ins., will produce for Aryow Ffim Corproation. The fa- mous author was enthusiastic and on his return to New York is reported to have expressed himself as very wel} satisfied with the splendid manner in which the picture has been produced. Mr. Curwood made the trip all the way from his home in Michi- gan and was the guest of ex-Gov- ernor Carl E. Millikken and Honor- able [Fredericks W. Hinckley, the two heads of the Pine Tree Pictures, Inc., of Portland, Me., who are pro- ducing the series for :Arrow. Tmme- diately upon his arrival in Portland, Mr. Curwood motored out with Mr. Milliken and Mr. Hinckley to the Sebago Lake reglon where the final scenes ‘were being ‘*'shot” for the first picture. Mr. Curwood was enthused and delighted with the efforts and possi- bilities of the Maine woods as atmo- they could form a striped rail across| the prison yard without giving it} the appearance of a snake dance, a | new, trouble arose. In one of the| gcenes in “Convict 13" as the line| meanders across the yard an attrac-! tive young lady Is discovered bend- | to tie her shoestring. The line of stripes all try to see what they can | see, while keeping on the move. | ‘The first tume when they started to turn big Joe Roberts, with his three hundred or-more pounds wrap- .ped up in his six-foot frame gavi the line the contour of a bent hair-| pin, and Buster Keaton right in back | of him. “THE MIRACLE CF MANHATTAN" | AT GRAND THEATER TODAY| “The Miracle of Manhattan,” Elaine Hammerstein's latest Selz- nick picture which comes to .the Grand theater for a two-day run be- ginning today, is said to differ in every respect from preceding produc- tions in which this popular.star has appeared. The story, by Bradley King, deals with a young soctety bud who is un- der the impresson that it is a sim- ple matter for any young woman to| make her way in the world, alone and unassisted. An opportunity arises in which she is able to put her| theory to the test and she makes an attempt to earn her own living. She tinds that the problem is not as simple as it had seemed and is about to give up in despair when she finally | secures work as a cabaret singer. | Here she is thrown in direct contact with types of people she never even knew existed. How a romance springs up between her and an ex-gangster | some mice to keep the cat amused. T cannot explain it better than that, oners of the nursery are allowed, trembling with excitement and awe, to enter the holy presence of the grown-ups. It is no fun being an American | child ; one grows up without idols, and one must make some for one’s self, since mankind at all ages lives only by error. . The hard child suggests the hard home, which is characteristic of America. 1 visited many houses in the United States, and, exéept among the definitely rich, I found them rather uncomfortable. Théy‘felt bare, untenanted} they were too neat, too new; they'indicated the. restaurant, the theater. the cinema were often visited;-one.missed the comfortable accumulation of broken screcns, old fire irons and seven-year-ol(l volumes of the.London Jlustreted News, which make up"the dusty, frowsy feeling’i of home. i y ) "The American house is not a place where orie lives; but a place where one merely sleeps, eats, sits, works. You will E&f“that niakes u'{f_:thome life; but it does not; there is something else,: whith can favise ofily’:-OIIt of a compound of dullness, boiled mutton, an ill-cut lawn, a dog, a cat and and Americans may not understand what I mean, although any English person will, GOOD HIGHWAYS i PNEUMATIC TIRES ARE BEST Cause Least Damage to Road Surface, According to Tests by Bureau of Roads, trémely limited, so thai the likell- hood of forthcoming motortruck dam- age to public highways is consider- ably reduced. GOOD HIGHWAYS ARE COMING Federal, State and Local Authorities Join Hands for Great Good Roads Campaign. The fedéral government, the state governments, and the locul authorities have joined hands for the greatest (Prepared by the United States Depart- ment of Agriculture.) expresscd great saticfaction ‘in the management of the institution and was very much pleased that he had taken the trip. ' Schcol opened Tuesday and ‘“the children gathered from far and near.” There is a full corps of excellent in- structors, but the buildings will be as usual overcrowded. Very sson more room must be provided. Farmers are taking advantage of the fine dry weather to secure the crops: which have Dbeen abundant, .with the possible exeception of pota- toes and those -may be better than many have anticicpated. The ‘home ball team suffered ' de- featiat the hands of the Long Prai- rie teara Sunday on ,the home grounds. Score 7 to,2. i The boy preacher from Minneapo- lis, Lex Souter, held services every evening last week in the Baptist church. He drew a good congrega- tion gnd there seemed quite a general interest. He: is 17 years of age. A. R .Batcheller, formerly a resi- dent of Park Rapids, but lately a resident of Argo township, died at his' home W{:dnesday and was laid to rest jn Greenwood cemetery last| Saturday. Labor Day was not observed here excery. that a few laborers did not work and the banks and post office were closed. Waste not, want not, is a motto I would teach, Cherish well this precept and prac- . tice what you preach; Never spend your earnings without a reason why, For you mever miss the money till the well rung dry, ] - : T I g - FISK L O T T T AND MILLER TIRES FREE AIR VULCANIZING . Gity Tire and Repair Co. TR O I M NI Il [ Ilkl_m B [ One of the Greatest Schools in the c tend to take a Commercial Course it rollment, 1,500 students. Ideal con Experienced teachers. penses reasonable. i i Fall Term Opens Firs MANKATO Unusual opportunities for securing positions.. Send for Free Catalogue. Mankato Commercial College MANKATO COMMERCIAL COLLEGE ountry, establisher 1891. If you in- pays to attend the best. Annual en- ditions. Practical courses of stuély. X~ t Week in September. sphere for his pictufes. They quoted ,ni 15 subs 1 v el zood-ronds % i 4 ¢ never saw such beautiful coun-| o, stances is shown in a vivid man- | damaged during the period of the [ world. [¢ p s s U ¥ e g {comedy contpletes the program. 5 Sl o T "f:,f,,iizflf;;fim fri ik englneers responded Immediately by | tion or planned for early develop- ;wt%lt thé pure Juw: (;fo(f)r::h i hara 2 pOn £h8 maked Qs bullding thicker roads and roads of | ment. : ruits our syrups are r him where he got his great love for | “APPEARANCES” AT ELKO Jiteom durable materlal; but In the| The aggregate projects call for the | cent pure. Our dispensers I imagine.” laughed Mr. Curwood | force. the Donald Crisp produc- 4 i . Parsons writes in the a : full-blovded Indian, so | am mot a|Pears. last times, at the Blko theater) o5 : . s you can have every kind of machine % ) ¢ |tenight, 1s notable for the strength | ASticulture, develop the facts that| From the time we rise until the daj ca great many generations away from |'(VIE! ength repairing done expertly, promptly of caat which, headed by David Pow-| When @ solid-tired truck strikes @ {is done, we maintain an Intimate a&- | ~.5 " 0000 oo cost. Our equip- . my Indian ancestry that bred in me ell, includes lhx:v. delightful young sociation, Taas ment is adequate , for any kind of such love ifor the out of doors. And |2€iress, Mary Glynne, who - plays one of Its by-products. The leaven-| oy oy erom grilling small holes to in all my years in the -Canadian |HCLTY Seajon's :wife, Kitty; —also tag agent in our bread and the a8, . hayling a big machine. If you Northwest only enhanced my tnsm"‘“"“h”"’“'"'.""""‘ Who plays Kitty's we bake 1t With axc from coil; so are 1, o machinery of any kind. better far life In the open. For this reason | ChIvalrous friend, Sir William Ruth- the agents that tan our shoes &2d|},00 our address handy. You may try tor the making of motion pic- tures. It is the living glorious syno- nym for the well-known phrase, ‘the great outdoors.” Had you gone north of 52 into the very wildest regions of Alaska, you couldn’t have added | more color or realistic atmosphere the out of doors, Mr. Curwood’s re- ply was of the sort that would prob-| ably be of interest to exhibitors and thousands of others who have seen or handled Curwood’s stories made into motion pictures. “I inherited it, | the forest primeval. It was probably | I have always tried to keep the na- ture element uppermost in my stories. ner. | ‘Mis3 Hammerstein’s leading man for this occasion -is Matt Moore, | brother of the Selznick star, Owen | Mootre. g “In Again,” a two-part Century | LAST ‘TIMES TONIGHT | Apart from its value as a photo- play the story of which is based on |modcrn scelal conditions, and a love {story which is presented with dram- | erford Percy Stand ng, brother of Wyrdham, and a tamous actor of| We are “told that dakihg thé next five years there will be’/at the disposal of the state highwuy departments a grand totdl of not lesy. than $3,000.- 000,000. Nq fewer than’ 22 great na- tloual highways are under construe- war by the impnaet of heavy motor- trucks. The natural result of this was to warn highway engineers of the Importance of planning all future ropds with reference to the kind of traffic that is likely to use themn, The absence of definite knowledge of the probable strength of the impact they have not known exactly how thick or how strong the roands must be made, Recent tests of the impact of motor- expenditure ‘of $600,000,000 during the present year: [ ST A TR, Are We Living Off a Coal Bin? elther with coal itself or that vulcanize the rubber of our auto- moblle tires. We are Indebted to coal need us in a hurry. REFRESHING AND EXHILARATING That is the effect of our so- \das at ail times. Flavored are experienced and their soda water achievements are complimented by all patrons of our fountain. LT BT R T T T T T T LT L RS Of course, I try to write entertain- |, PCOVY™ parts, who glves an excel- for the varlous forms of ammonia ing storles—stories that the public|teNt impersonition of Dawkins, a that go Into fertilizing, refrigerating, will like. Fvery s ¢ iclas |shady company promoter; Marjorie \at £0, b i , . vy author tries o doly ol B Alie o the Mugh Ford electric batteries and houschold uses; EMID-” AC"I"[ ORKS : do that. But aboye that ambition 1, cherish the other, to create in my| readers a general love for nature.” “DEVIL DOG DAWSON” AT production of “The Great Day.” and many other, well known British play The' play was written by ! Edward Knoblock. : for aspirin, salieylic acld and many .other cures for common colds; for elements used In manufacturing, in- sulating, coatings, phonograph rec. ords and pipestems; for benzol, the: REAR OF 319 BELTRAMI AVE. TELEPHONE bl-W 3 THE REX SATURDAY “SACRED AND PROFANE LOVE” best avallable fuel for nutomobile and i i — " ) i ¢ = . THE REE AsTUR i o e § e is interestingly and ably ed in the pictured story of “Devil Dog Dawson,” the coming film traction at the Rex theater on § urday. It is well known and granted t in metropolitan cities such as N demonstrat- York, Chicago, L , Paris i dthers, i ,““L,“" m,.;’"flsz -nlx ‘;t:x,.li(“:fl.“"e"e purchased by the star en route| Pneumatic Tires Save Highways. Confessicns of a Cynic. Broducts, Ice Cream : ' N1 ek lstence. hia T home from a six months’ trip around I am very fond of dynamite fire- el rupted “dual existence, playing the | B a0 fE S designs by Cal-| one-inch obstruction, the impuct may i 7 < role of law-abiding business man in| cne part o1 the eity, and doubling| | Wearing the latest Parisian fash- ionable gowns, Elsie Ferguson will at. | prove a big attraction to women of ..¢. | Bemidji when her latest Paramount I pleture, “Sacred and Profane Love” |is displayed at the Flko theater to- morrow and Saturday. The gowns re- Icently came from Par where they | = lot; 'Lumiere models by Madelaine ef | fectants. “While coal furnishes us plerle acid and trinitrotoluol, it also carrles locked In itself ofl of winter- green and’ the most delicate flavoring extracts and perfumes, PRl TR crackers when they are shot off over be as high as seven times the load, in the next state. SE USEL Kng Dairy 'ICoors as tthe very lowest sor Madelaine and a score of others re-| an average belng about four times. A not fn a ! j.,,gn‘“'s‘f’r‘k‘)l;’f!"""Km‘,"[‘fl( ct the very latest dictates of the| The fests show, however, that the qellfl;‘hke“,::""'{l Q};fi:}'ej"';qf L,',i pt " e ? et fashion ateliers, 't de) ¢ he kind | S = e il . s claimed that this was only | “heqon s Impact depends largely upon the kin 1o e of it. § possible in such large centers. T Sacr ed and Profane Love™ i3 a|ang condition of the tire. Pneumatic the Q'h,er.peop; hfimhsa;in tion mage- P 5 , 5 H rer, & Gl o William D. Taylor production, adapt- oy % ) I always read all the fic g! - i pellowver. the story Dlot of “Devil | o'}y Julty Craword Lvers from the| T3 Culse (he least fumuiy o the | ines T can get. I think the ads are 4] Dog Dawson” shows how a v ke Ak r e cushi v re- . y . : ¥ such a small community as a north- | (ONTA¢ Nagel. Thomas Holding andj o greater than 134 times the static I never worry about little fhings— - 2 % westerd camp. (Jack : Hoxie, well Winifred Greenwood are in the lead- Joad the whbols Al.lhuugh the 1like microbes. There are so many big- et i g known and popular cowboy Star, is|ME roles. .‘" .:’"l ’pm, Wit the speed of | €er things that are worth while, CRAVE 3t T 5 % §' belng featured in this pleture, It is| R R [ e a1t 18" th e itore bighty | 1 would like to know what kind of Ch i B another: one bf his splendid series of | SUBSCRIBE FOR THE B e o A battle fleet a Pactflc fleet is, unyhow, i 1 | thia type oft production and is sald | to bethe best so far. | DAILY PIONEER| desfrable to limit speed by strict reg- ulation, the use of pneumatic tires would make higher speed permissible, I have never had time to play gawf, and don't belleve I have imlsspd very much.—New York Mail. ! ] L You'll learn to like our p milk—you'll remember “ONE. WILD WEEK” 1 S | 7The tests of the bureau of public s Sl 9 e % S - mgmn Pt ATTHE | o LD | ronas have pointed the way to. more | == to say Koors Milk. 1t's e 3 & X ATER SATURDAY 5 " | sclentific. -deslgifing of ronds for mo- An Irish Will. i : j:(} , Ploture fans will ‘welcome the ap- R ortruck traflic, and there Is every as- | The will of one Hinry Green, dated | J a name that stands . . i pearaute sSi urday awd Suuday at, = EX SUNDAY“‘ {'surance that pngineers will' now be | December 22, 1879, “'as recorded gave (¥ py ity and unquestion- P LR h . the Grand theater of Bebe Daniels, the popular Realart star, in another | amusing “naughty girl.. role. James Oliver Curwood’s :able to'bulld roads with practical cer- |"tainty thnt_ they will withstand the to his sister, Catharine Green, all his lands, and after her decease to others condition that she ed food value. By iy, 7P SN rlos in trust, upon 1 This timc she port 1 orpha ¢« Q) blows ©f s héavy vehicles, ] A who is brought \pr vel r|£:|§th|‘,l\|~‘ GOD S COUNTRY | Further reassurance in this respect | should give four green waistcoats to 3 < . i a spinster aunt, The girl has sach a | dreary girlhood that she determines | and THE LAW” to make up for lost time as soon as 5 she reaches her majority. Hence the' Directed by Sidney Olcott title, “One Wild Week.” | {lles In the Information that manu- | facturers ure not building as many | trucks exceeding five tons capacity as | formerly. The number of Industries in which very large trucks can Dbe Miss Daniels has a whimsical per<i U T | kept . continuously warkinz 1s ex- four poor women In a green old age every year, such green waistcofits to be lied with green galoon lace and to be delivered to the poor women on December 21 so that they might be | worn on Christmas day.” O0RS BROTHERS | = N PRODUCTS. 3 BEMIDJI. MINN.* NASH-FINCH CO. Bemidji, Minn. \\

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