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" NEWS OF THE THEATRES AT ELKO THEATER TONIGHT Cecil B. DeMille, perhaps the fore- ost motion picture producer in the spuntry, if not in the world, displayed is. genius at its best in his latest aramount picture, “The Affairs of Anatol,” which was presented with plendid effect at the Elko theater last night. From every standpoint— investiture, its all-star cast, supmtu- ousness of settings, brilliance of di- rectjorial execution, richness of cos- turhes, quality of story and g_engral artistry, this picture marks a distinct epoch in screen production of the £ decade: . The story deals with an impres- sionable young man of wealth who finds time.to interest himself in the affairs of others and who learns by practical experience that it pays to attend to one’s own affairs and let others do the same. The cast is superb and includes such stars as Wallace Reid, Gloria Swanson, Elliott Dexter, Bebe Dan- jels, Monte Blue, Wanda Hawley, Theodore Roberts, Agnes Ayres and Theodore Kosloff. Their portrayals are artistic and add vastly to the val- ue of the production. Take it all in all, this is perhaps' the, best picture thus' far made by Cecil B. DeMille. “The Affairs of Anatol” will again be screened at the Elko, tonight and Tuesday, matinee and evening. “THE ROWDY" AT THE ELKO THEATER ON WEDNESDAY Piquant and vivacious Gladys Wal- ton will be seen at the Elko theater . " 'next Wednesday in “The Rowdy,” fi' ~-the Universal feature directed by Maj. David Kirkland. As this little tom-boy of the west coast fishing. vi lage, Miss Walton is at her sprightli- est best, the role being unusually well suited to her lively personality. Jack Mower, who has the leading role opposite Gladys Walton in “The Rowdy,” was born in Honolulu, where he learned to swim, dive and fight sharks with the natives. The shark fight in “The Rowdy” gives Mr. Mow- er an opportunity to revive his sl in the exciting pastime. “THE PRIMAL LAW” AT THE REX THEATER TODAY Dustin Farnum has won tremend- ous: popularity with motion picture patrons with widely different prefer- ences. To multitudes he is a favorite matinee idol, while to others he is the finest type of he-man on the screen. In “The Primal Law,” a William Fox phatodrama now showing at the Rex theater, the popular star ap- pears in the role of a strong, rugged western rancher, fearless in the midst of fierce fighting, yet gentle as any woman in his care of his little pal, Bobbie Carson, over whose young life hangs o shadow of a tragedy which those who love him try to guard him against. e PR The role of Brian Wayne, part owner of Willow Ranch, a property coveted by a band of desperate plot- ters for their own enrichment, is one which provides the versatile star with | exceptional’ opportunities. 1 A rare treat is in store for patrons of the Rex theater Wednesday and Thursday. Amedio, dean of accordion- ists, now playing The Capitol at St. Paul, is on the bill. i “YOUTH'S MELTING POT” | AT REX THEATER TUESDAY | One of the most brilliant casts| assembled will be found in thisJ charming little romance of an orphan waif and the young son of one of the | city’s richest men. Mary Miles Min-! ter, one of the most beautiful stars on the motion picture screen, is the leading role and is adorable as the little orphan. Wallace Mac Donald is the leading man. | i “THE MAN OF THE FOREST” IS BIG OUTDOOR STORY All of the elements which have| made the previous Zane Grey- Benj. B. Hampton Productions so popular are embodied in the newest Hodkin- son release, “The Man of the Forest,” which will be shown at the Grand theater for the last times tonight. There is romance, soul-stirring action, humor, drama and suspense. And the entire production is mounted with the infinite attention to detail which Benj. B. Hampton knws so well how to bestow. | The love dffair of Milt Dale and| Helen Raynor blossomed amid the| most beautiful surroundings imagin- | able. The cast, too, is'an added factor in favor of this photoplay, for it is| made up of some of the most popular | plnycr_s of the present day. Claire Adams, Robert McKim, Carl | Ggmtvoort, Jean Hersholt, Eugenia | Gllbeyt*all tried and true players of the silver sheet are in “The Man of | the Forest’—the newest Benj. B.| Hampton 'production. “The Man of | the Forest” is the screen version of | Zane Grey’s novel of the same name. and the program includes “For Sale” | a two part comedy. | “THE LAND OF HOPE” [ AT THE GRAND TOMORROW! One look at the glinting gray eyes | of th_ls young man convinced the sneering ballet master that he had | better beat a graceful retreat. He| had reasoned that because he had| taught hcr the steps of the ballet she ! was quite as willing to be taught ot};:r arts, s the Russian dancer in *“Th Land of Hope,” which is showing 32» the Grand theater tomorrow, Alice | Brad_y plays with all her splendid | emotional fire. We see her first as the | wistful immigrant, then as the eager- | eyed dancing girl, and finally as the| proud woman choosing between three lovers. Here you have a powerful story, realistically and coiorfully told. FEET MOST ABUSED MEMBERS According to English Writer, Only About One-Third of Humanity Walk in Natural Manner. The human foot is one of the most benutiful and*useful instruments ever -concelved, but, unfortunately, it is not what a motorist calls “foolproof.” There is a great deal of wisunder- standing ubout.our feet, We trent them outrageously, as elther custom or fash- fon may dictate. As a result, about one-third of the population is splay- footed, another third walks like a hen on hot cinders, and the remaining third may be said to walk fairly nat- ‘ural. The foot has u graceful arch run- ning fore and aft. We take this longl- tudinal arch, turn the toes outward so that the heels meet at an angle of 45 degrees, and then put all our pres- sure in a skew direction ncross the arch, No railway engineer would dream of building a straight arch bridge to carry loads neither across nor along the arch, but irregularly askew over It. We ought to walk with our grent toe pointed straight In the dirvection of progress, us Indinn runners do, and “spring from the g toe,” Instend, most of us “take oft” in u lumbering sort of way from the ball of the great toe. The arch of the foot Is supported lirgely by the tendon which runs un- der the foot to the great toe itself, and this neglect of use renders this ten- don wenk and lux, and cau depres- sion of the a The best cave for weak arch Is the practice of raising one’s self upon the great toe, that is, doing as a penalty exercise what you should have done all along naturally. If you will try when walking to keep the feet stralght, and to end each stride with a little “spring” off each big toe .alternately, you will be re- warded by finding that progress seems {Fenster, quicker- and more buoyant.— London Dally News, P Flower Sermon. Tlower sermon had it-orgin In St. " Catherine Cree, England. On Whit ©. i Monday ench of the congregation car- f.rled a’'bunch ‘of flowers, and a larger bunch was Jlaid on the pulpit cushion. The custom lias spread, but it has Somewhat changed. Now In many ghurches the flower sermon is preached on Sunday and the church is decorated with flowers, the members of the con- gregation also bring flowers with them to the service. The time of holding “this service vav in different churches, but it Is usually held in the spring or early summer when there is ‘an abundance of garden flowers, Changed in Transit. A tencher asked her pupils to sug- gest a song to be sung by the class and a patriotic little fellow in the rear called for “My y, "Tis of Thee.” His voice was so weak that the teacher could not understand and a youngster near him sang out: “He waits is Country '"Tis of Him."— Boston Stainless Needle Invented. ve ever used a needle you @ that steel rusts and stajns. But now a stainless steel has been in- | vented in the research laboratories of | an English munitions factory, It will | not tarnish when exposed to the ac- tion of different acids, i MARTIN SAYS IT | DOES THE WORK St. Paul Man Feels Fit and Ready to Tackle Any Job Since He Started on Tanlac “I certainly picked a winner when | I got Tanlac, for the medicine has/| made me so strong and healthy that | I feel like a new man,” said Peter| Martin, of 92 Tilton St., St. Paul,| Minn., well known designer for A. Moorman & Co., manufacturers of | bank and office furniture. “For over a year I had been suf- fering constantly from a sour, weak {stomach, and could never enjoy a meal. Everything I ate seemed to] lie undigested in the pit of my stom- ch, and I suffered agonies after ach meal. I finally lost my appetite altogether and got so weak 1 just felt almost lifeless.' I wanted to sit down and rest all the time, and it was noth- | ing but will-power that kept me on the job. T lost considerable weight, | was in an awful condition and look- | ed white and haggard. “Before I hardly knew it,' Tanlac had me improving at a rapid rate, and I kept right on taking it until six bottles nave rid me completely of my troubles and. made me as strong and! healthy as I could ask to be. I have| a ravenous appetite these days, can | eat anything I want and never feel a | sign of indigestion. I have also gain-| ed in weight and am so strong and| energetic that I'm always ready for a good day’s work. I never miss a| chance to put in a good word for Tan- lac, for the medicine has been so fine} for me that I feel like I ought to tell | others about it.” Tanlac, is sold in Bemidji by the terelse of my best judgment and carve- | cert in which each person sings in turn | well-known | burden after each.verse. When ev | ver THE BEMIDJI DAILY . PIONEER _MONDAY EVENING, OCTOBER 10, 1921 One of the numerous features of | the Northern Minnesota Fair held nt{ Bemidji September 20 to 24, inclus- ive, was the '/Church day parade,l which was held on Thursday Septem- ber Children and grown-ups of | every denomination fell in line and Juvenile band of seventy pieces may business sec- |also be seen in the picture. The pra- 7 of fade was about twelve blocks long. march continued to the fair grounds|with the children making up for over where Dr. E. V. Pierce, pastor of the ;half of the line. paraded through the tion of the city. Then the line | | Baptist church at Brookings, S. D., delivered the address of the occasion. | In the above picture may be Seeni the marshal of the day leading the| parade, with th, Boy Scouts’ color| bearers next in line. The Bemidji Red Cross Trains | 147 Blind Vets In Useful Work Training designed to fit them for the" battle of life’ was taken by 147 blind-| ed ex-service men at the Red Cross Ie.| stitute for the d, near Baltimore, Md., during the fiseal year 1920-1 according to the report of the ! tute for that period. | Of this number, 19 have gone on to other institutions, in almost every| case to institutions where thgse hav- Ing sight are receiving advanced edu- cation. The blind e: re men who have entered such institutions are pro-| r vided with special text-hooks In| Braille, reading " which they were taught at the Red Cross Institute, Twelve men fhave passed from the Institute to successfully on some occupation or business for which they were fitted by special training. A few | have withdrawn from the Institute be- | case of poor phy condition, 14 are | receiving further “training on the Job™” and 87 are still in training, QUALITIES THAT WIN SUCCESS | Probably the Greatest Among Them Is That Subtle Something We | Know as Personality. | It takes. more than mental ability to make a man and more than the qualities that are supposed to make for success itself. It is not so much what a man knows, or his ability in applying it, as it is in ‘what be Is | himself, There Jurks in some human belngs, in overflowing mensure, " that subtle something -termed personality which | is likely to carry them much farther than anything else. Probably charac- ter, scourage und dependability are the three great assets. Theodore Roogevelt in his own ‘biography writes of the two Kkinds of success, the one being the result of natural gifts, the other being aéquired slowly, and *I need hardly say that all the 1 have ever won have been of the second type. I never won a thing without ‘hard labor and the ex- nd working long in ad- as a young man at first both nervous, and distrustful of my own proy . T had to train myself painfully and Iaboriously not mervely as regards my body, but as regards my soul and my spirit."—Exchunge. ful planning vanee. 1w - Dutch Concert. A Duteh_toncert:1s aso-called con- cert In which every man sings:his own song at-the snme time: that his neigh-| bor is also singing his, a practice not | necessarily 'so national ‘as’convivial. There Is another form of Dutch con- one verse of any song he pleases, some chorus belng used as a person has sung, all/sing their respec- tive songs simultaneously as a grand iinale. ? Seemed Only Explanation. Wilbur had seen the various ped- dlers come through the alley with horses and wagons pulling their wares. So when the scissors grinder appeared one day carrying the bulky machine on his back there seemed to be but one explanation possible to the lad. When the:man came near enough Wil- bur nsked sympathetically: “Mister, 1s your horse dead?" i Eggs Are Good ‘Imitations. A’ remarkable and inexplicable fact about the cuckoo’s eggs is that they commonly resemble the eggs of the bird in whose nest they are laid. Of 755 cuckoo eggs In the Berlin Nat- ural History museum, 575 strikingly re- semble the eggs of the foster parent in color and marking. & Armenian Literature. * Prior to the Fifteenth fentury Ar- menia’s literature is entirely in the form of religious verse and prose, The record of nlar events is en- | tirely In her son The - desire for freedom and patriotism is the theme of her many old son Just as her modern music is the ex on of In- tense struggle against oppression. The period of national greatuess, when as a nation Armenia was free and pros- City Prug Store, and leading drug- ‘gists everywhere.—Advertisement, | perous, is told In songs sung by shep- ' herds, and ut firesides. | practition S Y The * inyjsil strong, dtrable. prevents sideway. More valuable, costs less. 414 So. 6th St. Witches in Wales. ¢ the country folk pssed in the quar- | Arthur Hugl | of the ‘coun v | rmarthenshire. Despite the fact fortune ‘telling and witcheraft rohibited under the English law | numbers of the Welsh peasants | bring their ailing children to the witch doctors rather than to medical s. d health ofli Oiled! Axles Stop: Friction. Wheels with ovdinary axles & Iy run on films of oil. When tl ced” ‘under the' microseope its red with depressions and 0, too, with the inside of the bub of the wheel, If the wheel were allowed to run without oil the bumps | on the axle and on the hub would rub | together and cause friction. This | would cause the asle and hub to be- come heated and expand and stick. YOUR ELECTRIC LIGHT BILL IS NOW DUE And Should Be Paid Onor Before the 10th. Co-operate With Us By _ PAYING 'PROMPTLY MINN. ELECTRIC LIGHT ‘& POWER CO. Dodge & Ross, Operators - Shoelk - Absorbers S g Qe Sy ble “ mérits—neat, Snubs the rebound, Agents Wanted DEFENDER; SALES CO. Minneapolis i | ities: None. | su¢ of this publication sold and dis- tributed ‘through the mails or other- | wise, to-paid subscribers during the six"months’ preceding the date of this Mother ‘of Ballooning. A washerwoman was the mother of ballooning and it all started in I'rance about = 1780. The , washerwoman wished to dry a skirt more rapidly than could' be accomplished by air und sunshine, so she rigged it up over the fireplace, The hot air soon dried the cloth and the woman was astonished to see it round out into a ball_and | float ‘up to the ceiling. A neighbor named . Montgolfier saw. the strange | oceurréiice and it gave him, thel idea, from whigh' he made*the first ballo 4 i S Statement of the Ownership, Mai= agement, : Circulation, etc., required: by the Act of August 24 1912, of the Bemidji ~ Daily 'Pioneer, published‘ daily except Sunday at Bemidji,-; | Minn., for October 1, 1921.; Editor, G. W. Harnwell. Business: Manager, E. H. Denu. | Publishers, The ' Beimdji Pioneer Publishing ' company, Bemidji,- Minn. Qwners, A. Kaiser, Bagley, Minn.; G. E. Carson, Bemidji, Minn.; E. H. Denu, Bemidji, Minn.; G. W. Harn- well, ‘Bemidji, Minn.; M. W. Rierce, Bemidji, Minn., Known bondholders, mortgagees and -other security holders, holding 1 -per cent or more of total amount of bonds, mortgages, ol'lother secur- Average number of copies each- is- | statement, 2,459. E. H. DENU, Mgr. Sworn and subscribed to before me this 8th day of October, 1921. BEVA S. CRAWFORD, .(Seal) NotaryPublic. | My commission expires Febtnaryv | FuR work and REPAIRING NEATLY & QUICKLY You don’t need to send your Fur Work away now—have it Done Here at Home! BEMIDJI FUR SHOP At Brosvik Tailor Shop RATES DOWN THE WEST HOTEL Minneapolis, ‘Minn. Now Quoting Rooms : at i $1.50 to $2.00 Without Bath . $2.00 to $5.00 With Bath Moderate Priced Cafe in Connection . IF YOU HAVE NOT | ADVERTISEMENT SENT IN YOUR FOR “YE BUTCHER— YE BAKER— YE CANDLE STICK MAKER” ~5\\ DOITNOW A chance to win $20 Look Ué Last ’Mon-d;ay’s Pioneer .{ Contest Closes Wed. Oct. 12 Winning Answers Will'.Be e } Published This Week A | 5 O———————0 \ POSTAL PHOTOS with each SPECIA}.. LOW iiRICES ON TEn—n—— THE NEW PHOTO STUDIO OVER FARMERS STATE BANK : A Folder Photo FREE dozen— B0 PEI ¢4 DO. 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