Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, September 26, 1921, Page 2

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o - en will show tri “THINKS IT KEPT - Minneapolis Man Says Work Is “be on the payroll now if it hacn’t “been for what Tanlac did for me,” said Robert Billeter, 551 Broadway, . the Shubert Building in St. Paul. ; past going and didn’t know from one « seemed to do me any good. . just a few ‘mouthsful ,anything the least bit heavy. . first bottle of Tanlac I noticed an improvement in my condition, and the way five' bottles have fixed me upj: . certainly is something for a fellow to . feel grateful for. “has toned up my whole system and t NEWS OF THE THEATRES { V-babinbrelicbatrtesi bl ot shad ot S ralbnols Sl cholenialy ssodlodin s st el “JEANNE OF THE MARSHES” | AT ELKO THEATRE TONIGHT E. Phillips Oppenheim’s novel, “Jenne of the Marshes,” is the Par- amount picture in which Dorothy Dal- ton will be seen at Elko Theatre to- night and Tuesday under the screen title of *“Bluebird Masks.” This is & difterent type of story from Miss Dal- ton’s recent release and is replete with the big dramatic punches which one always associates with Mr. Op- penheim’s work as novelist. This is an entirely different type of picture from most of Miss Dalton’s recent vehicles and is featured with dramatic incidents, Misy Dalton. has the role of Jeanne Mesurier, a weal- thy heiress who seeks someone who will love her for herself alone, and meets with the opposition of her guardian an unscrupulos adventures. ‘The plot takes a dramatic turn when Jeanne suddenly finds herself in- volved in the efforts of two persons to conceal the body of a supposedly murdered man. Captured and taken to a smuggler’s cave she throws her- self into the sea to escape. An able cast supports Miss Dalton, headed by Fredrik Vogeding, Wil- liam P. Carleton, Julia Swayne Gor- don and others. “LAST CF THE MOHICANS” NOW A LIVING HISTORY Crities have placed Maurice Tour- neur’s picture, “The Last of the Mo- hicans,” by J. Fenimore Cooper, in a new catergory of film productions. It is called & permanent photoplay classic, which means that it will live when the ordinary entertainment film has passed on. This is for several yeasons, the tirst being that Tourneur proved he could make an -absorbing entertainment out of Cooper’s fa- mous story, and at the same time preserve the historical and education- al values. The Elko Theatre offers his extravagant production one day only; next, Wednesday. “Thy Last of the Mohicans” is a story too well known to need repet- tition, but the sweet love tale, with the humor and pathos thrills and ex- citing moments, is one that will cause every beholder to gasp—then laugh, then gulp—for it is intensely human intensely real, and replete with his- torical events that thrill. portunity to shine. ‘“After Your Own Heart” was shown for the first time here yesterday at the Rex Theatre, and it showed that Fox again has scored a bulls-eye in seeking a fea- ture for Mix. The story is full of speedy action and wholesome senti- ment. It was written by the well- known fictionist William Wallace Cook. In “After Your Own Heart” the| author took an old water hole be-| tween two ranches, and from the dis- puteover this water hole he wove a stirring western picture and put in- to it'a pretty romance, { | Ora Carew is Mix’s leading wo- man in this picture. Others in the cast are George Hernandez, William Buckley, Sid Jordan, E. C. Robinson and Bill West. :George E. Marshal directed the picture. “After Your Own Heart” will be at the Rex again this evening. “GIRL FROM GOD’;COUNTRY" LAST TIME TONIGHT GRAND “Something different,” full of the unusual, surprises, thrills, a big love interest, a bit of sorrow and lots of les compose the exceptional enter- ainment that is found in the latest Nell Shipman production, “The Girl from God’s Country,” starring Nell Shipman, which is shown for the last time at Grand heatre tonight. }f. is said that moving picture stars —in fu'ct, any of them with a bit of something like talent enough to get them into the limelight—are temper- amental. They are supposed to be “something ‘different.” It may be, however, that they are made o by an expectant public thaty would be dis- appointed 'if they were just ordinary folks like Mrs. Jones or Mrs. Smith, the next door ncighbor. And Miss Shipman keeps true to form. She IS” “something different.” And why not? Who wouldn’t be, with a P. A, S. and D. to their credit as Miss Shmmap has, and since veryone is not pnllghtenetl in the degrees, of motion-picture-osophy, the afore said letters stand for Producer, Author, Star and Director. Certainly a wo- man with such accomplishments ought { ( Of many designs submitied by ) teading American architects to the [Womun‘s National Foundation, of which Mrs. C. C. Cathoua is president, the above drawings by Francis Bur- i rall Hoffman, Jr., and Murray Hofi- | man, well-known New York archi- tects, has been finally accepted by the architectural committee for the ! Foundation’s new civic feminine | home. This will be the main build- ' ing of a magnificent group shortly | to be erected in Washington, D. C, ! on a nine and a half acre site. As | the Foundation aims to ipclude all | progressive American women, ; whether their interests be civic, lit- ‘Headquarters For Natioh’s Women At Capitdl ' Will Be Majestic Architectural Monument ! erary, artistic or domestic, provision o ————————————————————— . e e ————————————————————————————— How Ferng Sprea The fronds of ferns arcl they touch the earth, wh and form mnew plants. Some other ferns occasionally produce plants In this way, but in this specles it is a settled habit. The new plants grow up, repeating the process of walkin and soon the original plant Is su rounded by quite a colony of its own offspring without the inter tion of spores. The connections between them are slow to it ot unusual to see three or four generations linked together. HARLEY-DAVIDSON MOTORCYCLES BICYCLES AND SUPPLIES IR T TR T T 1 2] m z E z = m d = E w T < ] I Z311 SIXTH ST. BEMIDJIZ SR [ [T IR FISK AND MILLER TIRES [ | . FREE AIR 0 VULCANIZING City Tire and Repair Go. [ I A QUALITY FOOTWEAR THAT WILL FIT AND WEAR —for— ] EVERY MEMBER OF THE FAMILY PRICES ARE RIGHT will be made for these various activi-]. A second building on the Founda- tics in the new home. tion ground will include residential In the nmain building will be the|quarters for members, in whose roll executive offices not of the|every woman of good standing in \ F Shoe Repairing in Connection BEMIDJI SHOE STORE THE HOME OF "STAR BRAND” ALL-LEATHER SHOES 315 Minnesota Ave. [eH I Phone 172-W indation itself but of all clubs de-|her community can be entered at y headquarters in the national|a basic fce of $1.00 a year. There capiti Here; too, will be a theatre|will be also a Founders’ Club, to the or opera house. The unique feature, | privileges of which all women who however, of this pile will be the 3all|have helped by their initial donation of Remembrance, which is also_to be|aof $1,000 to bring this wonderful the auditorium or convention hall of|civic home within the reach of the Foundation. The architectural|American women, will be entitled: design here will allow for forty-eight | Membership in this club will be open columns representing the forty-eight|until January 1, 1923. states, on which will be inscribed| Those desiring further information names of famous women who from|about the objects of the: Foundation pioneer times to the present day have|should communicate with the Woman’s made state and incidentally pational | National Foundation, Connecticut Ave. history, -+ nue, Washington, D. C, ! tmmufiumnumuumuiu|lu|||mu||||||uunmmnun|||numm|||ullllmmums STEER THE RIGHT. COURSE ] Many a man or woman has to be privileged to be a little high- brow, in fact, all highbrow, and when such'a ;vomzm isn’t highbrow, would- she be considered “so! ing dif- A something dif- An all-lead cast, especially selectec by Tourneur, appears in this Y. The scenie backgrounds are exquisite in their rugged beauty. “AFTER YOUR OWN HEART,” REX, LAST TIME TONIGHT Tom Mix did another good job when, as star, he made “After Your Own Heart” for William Fox. And Apd wouldn’t you think, too, that a picture was different if it were | noticeable by its absence of close- up of the star? Yet Mi Shipman has a thousand opportunities for ex- celent close-up—the nature of her story creates them—but Miss Ship- man, in the cutting of a picture i which she entirel supervises, wm" always cut out a close-up of herself in preference to a bit of action that “put over” by her subordinates. his sppporting cast have plenty of op- Now, Who'll Answer Jane? Jane, who lives at Sixty-first street terrace and Main street, is at that “just before kindergarten” age when life appears an exciting experiment. She tries all the possibllities in new things she encounters in her husy days, even golng so far as to make the good old English language do a trick for her whim, Jane experimented with a toy bal- loon the other day, inflating it to dan- gerous proportions so that the escap- ing air would blow the whistle ns long as possible, Bystanders foresnw dis- aster as the balloon, under pressure from Jane's lusty lungs, grew alarm- ingly. i Jane considered their warning cries without excitement. Then she asked calmly : “If T break the balloon,” will the whist’le whis?’—Kansas City Star, They'll Rig 'Em Up. A French scientist predicts that the future will €ee ' vrace of bearded wom- en. In that event we'll bet the wom- cks in making benvds attractive that the men have never dreamed - of. . HIM GN PAYROLL Easy to Him Since Tanlac 'Toned Up His Whole System “Honestly, I don’t believe I would Minneapolis, Minn., an employce of “For a whole year I was almost day to another whether I was going to be able to hold out at work. My stomach was sour and full of gas most of the time and my food never Even of anything would give me no end of trouble, and I had *to be very careful not to eat “Well, before I had used all of nxy My stomach is in first-class condition and that tired, weak feeling is entirely gone. Tanlac my work is perfectly easy for me. Tanlac will be my favorite medicine " from now on.” Tanlac and Tanlac Vegetables Piils are sold in Bemidji by the ity Drug} | Store, and leading drugg's rery. ¢ 'y ggists every- - where.—Advertisement. . SHARK FISHING IS EXCITING In Australia the Element of Danger, Adds to Its Attraction for the Sportsman. Uil Shark fishing is a sport!in Austraflia that has found many devotees among Englishmen because of the Itire of danger. As the native practiced it, there were times when the shafrks had all the fun, as in large numib ers they could transform the H])l!l't; to native hunting, remarks an exchaf:ge. Fishermen are sometimes the vict ims of the vicious tiger sharks, most klan- gerous of the species, with their swift lunges through the water pand powerful jaws. They arve hatedfiand fearad with cqual iatensi: X An English sportsman d efforts to cateh n shark and wre after all his/hooks were gone. The shark would tuke the hook, dllowing himself to be drawn almost to fthe rock | where the spartsman stood. *Thea the | shark’s sharpy jaws would sever the line f and he woud swim slowly about unti? | another hook: could be (]rn]:zv-d . Al stout hook was attached to/a e by 'l a chain, and with this thedhark was | drawn £ way out of the sater. Then | 4 wave tossed him about/and the line- passed through his Jaws, to be cut at | one skash. After this ‘several hooks., attached to a brass 1fae, were taken by the shark, hut cow'd not hold him. : Twin Highwaynmw:n of the Sea. Ice andifog are/knownfas the “twio highwaynwen of the sea.” ‘The Unitefl | Sta overnment has done much te.- | ward ‘the elimintion of the dangeér from icebergs, but it has not been alyie | to do much toward the alleviation z(»r | the fog menace. Thef steamer routies | are regularly patroled} and a constant watch, maintained for icebergs, a3l | when they are discovered the news|is | scatvered broadcast by wireless. Av Lines to Be Reynembered. To do an evil action is bases;; to Jdo a good action without incurring <danger s common enough; bdut it is the pat of a good man to do great and noble deeds, though he risks everything-- Plutareh. by / 3 Aitogether. Too Fussy. i Jud Tunkins says he knows a manf | ‘50 particular about grammar that he'li} | sit and criticize the literary style of . l promissory note instead of lnlstlmg*gy around and trying to pay it i Security of the Nation. = ! W Ticonsider that it Is on instroktion ! and' education that the future secur-Y ity and- direction of the destiny nfg every nation chiefly and fundansental- Uy rests—Kossuth, i { ! Where Reasonableness Ended. “Reasonable puppies,” advertises a i dog advertiser. Did you ever see a puppy that was reasonable when he got hold of your Sunday hat? | cording to the Ojibway custom; that is, | in the another in the /| stupid, meddiesome agents ‘of civi ] EACH HAS PLACE IN LODGE! According to Custom, the Occupants| of Indian Tepee Have Their Allcted Space. As there ave six different ways of building camp fires, it should be ex-| plained that my friends built theirs-acs | led “lodge fashion,” by | upright, leaning them ing them over one ner of lodge poles. When the fire lighted, the wind- shields formed a perfect draft to carry the smolke up ‘through the permanently open flue in the apex of the structure, and one goon realized that of all tents or dwellings, no healtltier abode was ever contrived by man. Indeed, if the | Z ol tion had been wise enough to have left the Indians In their tepees, instead of placing the sti together, and cl found himself a misfit in the business world—poorly paid or uncongenially employed. Our competent instructors ana- lyze your capabilities and help you decide for what you are best fitted. i We train you to make the most of yourself and fit you for a pleasant occupation and a good Lichens Make Superb Color. What It Contained. Some of the most striking scenes The highwayman had followed her upon the earth owe their characteristle | from town. He had observed the featurcs to,mosses and lichens. The | purse which she held in her hand. It famous “crimson cliffs” of Greenland, | was fat, even as a plump chicken. She which extend for mil orthward from | was returning from the city, and he Cape York, derive th splendid color | bided his opportunity. It was dusk from the growth of red lichen which | A lonely part of the road was reached. covers their fuce. The cliffs rise be- | He sprang forward, snatched the purs tween 1,700 and 2,000 feet straight | from her hand and disappeared. He from the water's edge, and being com- | wended his way back to town. Glee > paying position. posed of gray gravite, their aspect | fully he sought his attic room. 2 ¢ BEMIDJI BUS]NESS COLLEGE shall dine well tonight,” he said. And he opened the purse, and swooned. It was fat with dress patterns! would bé entirely different from what it is except for the presence of the lichen. Phone 36 Corner 4th St. and Minn. Ave. DU T mmmflg T T forcing them to live In houses—the ventilation of which was. never unfer- stood—they woul¢ cen spaved. at least one of civilization's diseases— tuberculosis—and many more tribes- men would have been alive today. On entering an Indian tepee one usually finds the first space on the right of the doorway occupied by the woodpile; the next by the wife; the third, by the baby, and the fourth by the husband. Opposite these, on the other side of the fire, the older chil- dren are ranged. To the visitor i3 allotted the warmest place in the lodge, the place of honor, farthest from and directly opposite the doortvay. When the dogs are allowed In the tepee, they know theirr place to be the first space on the left, between_the entrance and the chil ~—Arthur Heming in World's We toasted to seal in the delicious Burley flavor—- S sty Noenieas. Btaces Sir Walter Rale}igh ‘Had A Bright Idea . 2 OU remember the episode of the rainy day when he threw his cloak into a puddle that the good queen might cross without getting wet feet and perhaps the “flu.” “That was advertising, Sir Walter had a message of import to her majesty. He wantad a hear- | ing. Hegotit—by a courteous and ingenious method of attracting favorable attention. It was another case of advertising that paid both ways! Business today is metaphorically throwing its cloak . before you. It seeks your favorable attention. It uses : its most effective method of capturing it—advertising. Day after day it caters to your tastes, and your desires through advertising. o . The men who advertise in this paper believe that if they succeed in getting their messages across to you, you will often be interested and sometimes inspirad with a little of their own enthusiasm for their wares. Advertising will help you. Whether you realize it or not, advertising isa big vital force in your life. Through it, American genius and American manufac- turers are putting within your reach the many boons of modern life. ! Advertising keeps your information up to date on i every article of human need, whether food, clothing, ar- ticles of household utility, necessities or luxuries. Advertisers deserve your support. The queen knighted Sir Walter. 2y " Patronize The Advertisements it I A T [T du ) R

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