Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, December 27, 1921, Page 2

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gumnmnmul AT T T «R. 8. V.P.” AT REX THEATER TONIGHT AND WEDNESDAY Leading the life of an impoverished artist and trying to keep up with the wwell set at the same time is 4 tough job. 1t's all the worse for Charles Ray ‘who does this in-his latest picture, “R, S. V. P.,” the First National at- traction ‘which opens an engagement .t the, Rox theater today hecause in his role of Richard Morgan, the star knows all the time that there are yieh relatives waiting around the cor- ner to give him a lift if he will only say the word. HEa: -Unlike the proverbial independent arpist of fiction, Ray’s yelatives do not spurn him when he decides to be freed of financial obligations. They simply let him toil and wait till he is ready to tell them he is starving. ©f course the girl he hasn’t seen for-years has faith in him when she Jearns of his plight; and after seeing his work she still retains her faith cven though he does mistake her for a model and she permits the .false im- pression to linger in his mind. He hasn’t found olt who she is even when he attends the social fune- tion that her parents give and he al- miost ruins the plot when he tries to sneak in his chum with him on one juvitation. Throughout a . long eve- ning the pair are on pins and ncedles waiting: for their identity to bo dis- covered and the star reaches his stu- dio just in time to.come in for a fit- ting climax and explanations all aroynd, 1 % 4 . The role of the struggling artist is a new for Charles Ray.ig “R. S. V. P.,”” his new First National attraction coming to the Rex theater, and he en- joys his opportunities to the limit in this untricd field. Jean Calhoun plays the leading woman, with spirited suc- cess and Harry Myers as his pecunious chum that gives an able performance that scconds the star's effort to keep the comedy breczing every minute. Rol Wagner, known for his articles , in the Saturday Evening Post on mo-! tion pictures, wrotc the story which is an original for Ray. The star di- rected the picture with the same 'uc—* cess that has greeted his recent pro- ductions along this line, Other players in the cast are: Flor- ence Oberle, Tom MeGuire, Robert Grey, William Courtright and Ida Schumaker. “THE CASE OF BECKY” AT THE GRAND TORIGHT It was Constance Binney’s o request that “The Case: ol‘) Bcck‘)‘:”3 was ‘selected for her. This is the fa-| mous’ drama by Edward Locke /in | which Frances Starr appeared when | it was presented in New York: by ~David Belasco, The scenario was pre- g:trod by I Clarkson Miller for Tteal- When the play.first appearefl it was the subject of much disggsxi tflu;‘:v:;‘ .sc[ergfists. mahy persons offkring the opinion that the story wayg’ fantastic and impossible. The best known psyghplogms, however, ovg'rrode these ¢riticisms with proofs of similar cases Locke is said to have obtigned matgy. ial for his plot from_ the/book, "’."‘he Disassociation of a Personality ¥ b, Dr;ullflorznn Prince of Beston, Y : e story is a study of u the subconscious ming. . 'Thf(;i:kagz cases known to sciencc-—-humq‘cds of them—where one human houty seems to ?nqrbur tvo personalities ¥ mdxv];du.ul self, and, usual, inimical to each of Ay In “The Case of Bccgl;'o’l" at the Grand tonight and W(‘dnu;'day thi heroine is the vietim of o consta 2 chnnglng from one pe ssonality to n‘: other. How she is sa ved from herw”f ?_nd rescued from a svillainous hvp’v' 0 ist who kept her hottey rolf in, ,.}g. Jection is unfolced j : drama, ) olced in this et pping each an > more: sftén than + PATHE WZEKLY NEWS AT THE GRAND/ TONIGHT ‘Pathe Weckly'News, I nos the world as'a moving’ m‘mgn‘:l{ ?.‘I’lcl: rent”’ ovents ‘of "inthoréapice from ev- ery corner of the globey is ohe of the attractions showing. tory) nesday at the t‘.rnn‘df”,'lght i Wed: —— “THE BRONZE BELL" AT" THE ELKQ THEATER 'fONIGHT Many spertacular night s kenes, eni- ibodying ¥licrdly beautiful lighting offeets @, put-ofthe-ordin axy as the Plot of the story itself, sgc included in “T")e Bronze Bell,” tie big Para- mar,yy, picture which will ‘he featured . the Elko tonight, alse; Wednesday “matinee and cvening. It, is an Ince- vance specful. A number wof the start- ling episodes of the stqry were pho- tographed between dusk and dawn, resulting in. bizarre atn:osphere and| background . which ave ila perfect ac-| cord with the action and characters: Doris May, a dainty Paramount | favorite, and Courtenay Foote, a well known DBritish stage stew, ussume the leading' roles of Sophim Farrell, the daughter of a British Indian army ! colonel, and David Ambkr, an adven- turous young American, around whom j the plot-revolves. Monte: Banks also appears at "y Tlko- tonight and tomorrow in/ hiz| latest’ two-part comedy entitled, “In ‘and Out.” ) “GILDED LIES” AT ELKO THURSDAY' AND, FRIDAY Adventures in the fiszem North, intrigues in the social world, and the swindling machinations of a1 spurious promoter who fools sogiety: and fleeces them with callous iugenuity, combine to. crowd thrills iato! “Gillded Lies,” the latest Selznick pietusk featuring ‘Bugene O’Brien whch comes to the Elko theater néxt, Thursitay and Fri- ay. g Bugene O’BV.en plays the part of Keene Mchs’l’ ,-a young explorer who retiirns to eiv/lization seeking revenge AT T T T LT . NEWS OF THE THEATRES IR 3 duging his absence, and is said to have a role which gives him splendid op- portunity to display his skl as a mase ter delineator o1 cnuracterizauon. Martha Mansfield plays opposite Mr, O’Brien, and among other well- known players in the cast are Frank Whitson and George Stewart. PAID BIG PRICE FOR TITLES White Men In Séuth Africa. Hardly Recompensed by Appellation of Brave and Noble Indunas. ' Thetr adventure tn Swaziland 1y told by ‘&’ doctbr’ who just returned from & ten years’ sojourn there and | who, with two other white men, was made sub-chlef in the Swazl tribe of South Africa negroes. 'Che white men were not eager for the experience, and the Initiation was far from an , Inducement, the rule requirlng that they should spend ten days of puri- fleatory exile from human society, in natlve dress, with only native weap- ons, depending upon their skill In the use of these for food. The doctor told |! with considerable feeling how they were stripped by the leading medi- cine mwan of every shred of clothing. given Swazit warrior costumes and conducted into ths hills. They were bitten by insects, scratched by thorns, |, frozen at night, scorched by day, their bare feet bruised and abraded until they were I agony, kept in’ constant fear of ihe many poisonous snakes— % but, most .of all, hungry. In spite of L'funga’s tutoring in native methods of taking game, the white men, used to dependling upon the rifle for such purposes, nedrly . starved.. However, when the chief medicine man and his assistants ‘came to conduct them back to the kraal of the queen, the fawm- ished, dirty, desperate looking white men, with ten days’ growth of beard, were ucclalmed brave and noble in- dupas. - DISPLAY 'THAT IS~ PERIODIC “Aurora Borealis” Has its Manifesta. tions at Intervals of From Ten to Sixty Years. The name “aurora horealis” was first ysed by Cassendl, who iu 1621 obserwed one in France and wrote a descrfiption of it. The: “aurora” 18 perigdic in Its manifestations, the fineyt displays - being at 'intervals of 60 dears and less marked ones at in- teewals of 10 or 11 véars. | Nt is asserted that the greater and Igsser displays | correspond . with - the ificrense and deerease ‘of spots on the sun. i v This phenomenon is generally mapi- fested in the following way: A @iny; light appears on the horizon shortly mfter -twilight and gradually assumes the shupe of ‘an 2 havivg u pale yellow color with its concave side turped earthwurd. From this arch stre.ums of light shoof forth, pass- ing from yellow to green aud then to brilliant “violet. | The rame, “aurora borealis,” while generally referring to the \northern lights, is_applied to a simflar phe- nomenom vigible in the vicinity of the South pole, Enlightening the Ignorant. A lurga, guttural-wolced woman sat ‘ln an aisle seat fop one of the Pav- lown performances at the Manhattan opera house. She was the type who read all the captfons alond at the movles, Here her'weakness took her In the form of interpreting the pan- tomime for the. benefit of the man with ler, and those uround who ceuld not eseape. “Aw!” she would exclaim deeply and caressingly. “Her toes!” Her best romark, lyowever, was or the occasion of Pavloyva's final scene in “Amarilla,” where ‘she is dancing near the stone seat In the count’s garden. “Now," she. sald, “she Is Vorshipig vhere he at"-~New ¥ork Evenipg Post, i Lemon Bath Laxury in India, In the West Inddes a lemon bath ls almost a daily luxury. “Three or four limes or lemons are sliced into the water and allowed to lie for half an hour In order that the juice may be estractefl. A~ revparkable sense of freshnesss is'given fto the skin. e e TheCirélet is Self-Adjusting. It sim- ply eliph over the head, cl at waist eind em outugly If your: dealer can’t get it send actual bust measure, name, ad- dress & $1.50. We'll sendthe Ch’cletfircpald. Sizes 34 10 48. jemo Hygienic-Fashion Inatitute 2 FeCréAy. L fiancee'who has married N 120 E. 16 St. New York., Dep't M. Boys of the Cities Must Be Carried Through Their Predatory Stage By GEORGE L. KNAPP, Chicago The child is father of the man, yes;:but there are. et;nsiderahle differ- { thinks property rights an'imhecile convention of gré\m-ups, and longs, .in varying degree, to prove his worth by reaving 4nd harrying. Ope * doesn’t need to be a psychologist to understand this; he needs nothing but & good memoéry. I-have known boys to. walk miles to steal :apples not so +.g00d as those to be had for picking up in their oyn orchards. As to how I T know, I must decline to be inteyviewed ; but the information is accurate. Now, in the country, the hoy gets this out of his system-without doing i much damage; and when he has left: the slack of his pants in the grip of ! some neighbor’s dog and swallowed a large dose of castor oil as a remedy {or the pains caused by picking unripe fruit, he begins to see that there { may be something in thes& grown-up ideas, after all. " But in the city, the I boy's plundering hurts, and hurts folks who van not stand it, not to men- tion the enormous smount of portable wealth open to seizure on every i hand. The city hoy must be carried through his predatory stage by giving | him something else to do. It is a question, partly of money, more of men, but, nlost of all, of ‘ public interest. When people realize what can be done to keep boys from ' gtarting out on the penitentiary road, they will supply the necessary | money and find, educate or somehow ‘call into being the aeeded workers. % % % % % % % % % » w x| the sixth grade teacher in the Bagley S ‘p‘ux RAPIDS «|schools, Miss Irma Bartholomew jhas been filling that ‘position. L Sl i . . Miss Dorothy Dunton of Nora: was Mrs. Cutler and the childrenand Mr: and Mrs. Salisbury were lenter- ‘o tew days last week. Mi tained at a chicken pie dinner by Dr. iss Anna Olson spent Fridayrin and Mrs, Walling Sunday. A pleasant |Bemidji.. * 0. °¢ ; % 5 time for all'is reported. Chester Lu‘rhcm of Shevlin spent in Bagley "Monday. hith left Monday Yor Mel- rose whercé she will" visit 'with - her parents. : James Null, an instructor in the Bagley high school, is spending the Christmas holidays on the Range. FIRST CUPBOARD IN AMERICA Said to Have Been Brought to the Country by Lord Fairfax— i Preceded Cellarette. Christmas trade which was thought to be pretty slack redéemed itself the last two days of the scason and was about as good as usual. ! Thirty-two below zero was the ree- ord last Friday night, and though it is mot quite so cold since that, it is very severe and if it continues long dry wood will be at a premium. How- ever the roads are the best ever and this is nothing unusual at this time of year. The Madisons entertained -Judge| and Mrs. Wright and family for) Chiistmas dinner Sunday. I It was not the:custom until a recent FeTw ™ THE BEMIDJI DAILY mbnm LTI "ences between parent and offspring. Every normal .boy goes through a' . predatory stage, a period when' he idolizes Robin Hood apd Roderick Dhu, | a guest at the Albert Wiltsie home|? mas [ EEERREE SRR SRS * SAUM ¢ * [T ZZ2 2222 2 R0 8 8 81 1da Ralstad is spending Christmas at the home of Jens Wolden. Hazel McCarthy spent - Christmas day at her home a few miles north of Saum. Maria Krogseng, who is attending the Bemidji State Teachers college, is spending Christmas at home. Mrs. Ole Wolden is reported not to be improving much, if any. Kruger Krogseng, who is attending high school at Kelliher is spenling his Christmas vacation at home. Jens Wolden made a trip to Kelli- her Friday. B & The Krogseng, Rise and Hilblad fanilies spent Christmas day at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Einar Stengle. Mr.and Mrs. Garland, upon their| return from Canada, visited with their son, Alfred, onc day during the mid- dle of the week. Their daughter, Alice, remained here over Christmas. Edwin Boness made a trip to Kelli- her Friday. Thomas Dokken made a trip to Kelliher Friday. Everet McCarthy, who is staying at Magnussen’s and_attending school ilt Saum, spent Christmas day at his home. 2 KK KKK KK RE KX T AR NS x BAGLEY . ® [E R LS E Y R SRR 2] Frank Anderson spent Tuesday in Bemidji. Miss Rose McGlennon returned to her parental -home here Sunday to spend her holidays,-Miss ‘MeGlennon is a {reshman at Hamline University. Misses Irma Bartholomew and Jo- sephine Nelson were among the shop- gers from Bagley at Bemidji Satur- ay. Mrs. Orr arrived here from Fair: mont, Minn., Monday and. will' make! her home here with her daughters, Miss Irene Orr and Mrs. Quam. Mrs. G. H. Hansell spent the week end in Bemidji at the Bailey home. Miss Acquina Kolb arrived home Taesday from St. Joseph, Minn., to Yeriod for cach -person to have a sep- arate drinking vessel, and even as late as 1856 onc. writer says: - “As for <Irinke, It is usually filled in pots, gob- Tets, Jugs, bols 6f silver in noblemen’s houses; also in fine Venice glasses’of all forms, and for want of these else- where pots of ‘efirth are used. All of which are seldom set upon the table, Lut each 'one, as necessitie urges, calleth for a cup of such drinke as ha likes."” i 86 R A “cupboard Trichly garnished” was | therefore 2’ necessity in those days. That was one of the ways people dis- Played their wealth, . Lord Fairfax is sald to have brought the first cupboard to this country | when he-settled. in Virginia, The framework of the first “cup- boards” ‘' was always' covered ' with “cupboard carpet” and for this’pur- pose rugs of “Turkeyworke” tvere im- ported from-the East and became the first harbingers of those larger cover- ings .to which nowadays alone the word carpet is attached. The change from an open stagework to an en- closed “cupboard,” ‘in the modern ense, was a gradual one, and arose » out of the pilfering tendencies of the | “Almeries,” | servants of those days. or classets, were, therefore, places in the lower part .of the staging, into which the food was placed. The cup- hoard then became 2 “gardeviance,” and is frequently mentioned by old authors. After came the cellarette, Thé Thanksgiving Cranberry.:, Probably very little is generally known as to the origin of the -¢ran- berry. Originall fact, it does today 1n several of the Canadian horder states, In the, salt marshes of the“const states, in*the glades of the, Alleghanies and as'_ifnr south as ‘Virginia and the Carollhgs. The wild cranberry, however, is dis- tinctly inferior to ‘its cultivated rela- tive. Both grow on a small,” hardy shrub, about. six inches m height, Thc {ruit takes its name from the appear- spend her Christmas vacation with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. M. J. Kolb, Sev. P. C, Packer of Bagley refer- red {the Gasketball game between Mentor and Fertile Tuesday of last . and M r. and Mrs. L. Halseth and Mrs, Charles Wright and Miss Edna Geer motored to Bemidii Wednesday. W. H. Hill of Forest River arzrived here Monday for a t the home of his son, F. W. Hill, Mr: and Mrs, A E. Dilly left for Alexandria, ‘Minny, Jast week after disposing: of. their property here. { - Miss Margaret . Mossefin, Alice Peterson .and Theresa Peterson, who attend the Bemidji State Teachers collcgq, are spending their Christ cation here. : fam Kaiser, who attends t ;:r:'\dnd l«}m‘ks university, arriyed hb£: riday for a visit with his M, and Mis, A Kateon, - PR Andrew Ostrem of Rugby, N. D, artived here Saturday and ' visited with the M. Mossefin and N. 0, Nel. .:]nn families, returning ‘home Mon- ay. Mr. and Mrs. M. Heinzelm {';aléi Itasea were Bagley visitox‘-ls“ln‘;i ek, - L. Sewell of Crookston j ved as stenogr: g First Nn]:[!onul ey grapher at the First iss Clara Renne of Shevyli attended the Bagley high .:‘c;::)‘olwhig .:]y;;e;:dmg her vacation with her [’mr- Due to the illness of Miss Mitchie, unce of the flower, which, just hefore expanding into perfectlon, bears a nnrked resemblance to the neck, head and bill of a crane. Hence the name “crane-berry,” which has become “cran- herry.” Thanksgiving and the cran- berry are one angd Inseparable. Ing the year the,cranberry market 1s steady, but in the month of November the demand is phenomenal, over half of the year's crop ‘being. disposed of within 30 days. . Over a million bush- els are marketéd each year in the| United States. e Set Up New Landinarks. Satisfaction rcfivm’fls every torward step Dy inspiring {o'still greater ad- vance. Limifations becoine matters ot history as thé modern spirit urges souls to their full possibilities. " You'have to be-the director of your own future. You.will do_well to rove erence the old landmarks. But. you will’ do better to use them. as means fo establishing new ones:; Cling to the old home if you must. Today niore than ever the nation is looking for the fellow who dares and does what conviction suggests. The whole world lies before you. Reach out and take hold of the great possibilities that lie just beyond.the reach of the old landmarks. “Let knowledge grow from meore to more” and you reveal it in wholesome, in- spiting conduct.—Exchange. ..7 it grew wild, ds, in’ Dar- | RUSSIA'S FIRST PRIVATE PAPER PLACED ON SALE By Edwin W, Hullinger i (Uniteu Press Staft Correspondent) ! Moscow, (By Mail).—The first pri- vate newspaper to be published in Russia since the bolshevik revolution was placed on sale here today. It is a theatrical tri-weekly called the’ “Ekran” (The Screen), edited by a group of former thedtrieal critics, i for circulation principally in artistic circles in Moscow. It sells at 3,000 roubles’a eopy. 2 . ‘Before a‘permt/for publication was isswed; the ‘editor-had to promise to avoid political subjects, the assistant editor-in-chief told the correspondent of the United Press, The oniginal cap- ition, defining:the objerts.of the paper, i read “Theaters; art, litgrature; movies and sports.” The, government,crossed out the heading literature on the grounds that it might, trespass on the forbidden precinets. ., The Ekran is a sixteen-page news- paper, abut the size of the Illustrated News in New York. It prints no pic- tures, however. Its typography is clean, and it is printed on better pa- per than the government newspapers, the Pravda and Izvestia. It contains an' entire page of the- atrial advertisements, two pages of theater announcements, with the week’s programs and casts, and a couple of two-inch store ads. The reading text is devoted to lengthy reviews of current plays, sev- eral “‘stage gossip’? columns, a num- ,[ber of page articles on present-day Russigmart in musice, a Short-story, and light essays on art and drama under the revolution. The sports page is given over al- most entirely to turf talk, with the re- ts of the day’s horse races in Mos- cow. T!re style is more like that of a drarpatlc critic, except that everything 1is"treated in‘a seridus vein, There is o’ slang.- In 'the corner of the page is a three-paragrajwh’ summary of the result of three football games be- tweén teams ‘organized by employes in various governmental departments. :rhg movie page features ‘a staff editorial-on “new seréen art,” hédded “Let’s film Tosca,” in which the w advqcntes greater daring in Russian movie productions and urges his fel- low’ artists to show the ‘world- that Russia as well as Ameriea, can pro- duce films. - = On another page is a wel-written | short story, “A Theatrical Man’s Di- ary,” which has the distinction of be- ing ghe first bit of magazine fiction g:ubhshed in Russia since the revolu- ion. WOULD PRESERVE RARE BIRD i European: Governments in Africa Unite in Giving Protection to the Whale-Headed Stork. Whale-lieaded, or shoebill storks are remarkably. rave birds. The American Museum of Natural History -has re- ceived n 8kin and skeleton of. ope..of i these uncommon members of the feath- | ered world, Only four other speci- | | ments of the birds are known to be fn i tliis country. They were all secured by Colonel Roosevelt .and are all in- the National museum. at Washington, The whale-headed stork.is a large African bird found only in the papy- : rus. marshes of® the Upper Nile and along the northern edge of Lake Vic- toria” and on the upper Lualaba. It Is uncommon, even where found, | and- very wild. It is now carefully protected by all the European gov- ernments which. have colonies in Afriea, special . peribission bt;lng Te- quired for hunting It. 3 "It is of scientific importance for the reason that it may be related to the herons, and if so, constitutes a very remarkable link between two orders of birds, In appearance it Is of gaunt, gray ‘figure, some five fect ;in Nelght. 1ts large head is sur- niounted by a'little cirled tuft. The espression of .its eyes ‘s scowling. huge bill, In shape similar to a ale’s head,:Is tipped with' a for- midable hook, HOW ISLANDS WERE PEOPLED ',Anmrepnhglnn Belleve. It - Was as & 4+ . Result of Involuntary Voyages Made by Savages. Sisteen natives of the Pelew islands {in the north Pacific made an fnvolun- tary canoe voyage to Formosa, which anthropologists find interesting. . .Af reported, - the voyage seems to add propf to.a eurrent theory, of the man- ! ner tn‘which the Innumerable islands | of Oceanlea were seftled by man. Now, the Pelew islands lie east of ! the southern groups of the Philippines. | Sixteen savages In three canoes with | outriggers .were fishing near one of the islands when a gale blew up and carried them out to sea. They hgd nothing”/to eat! but fishi’ |riviven Touti‘Lor many: days, dixty, in which timé ‘they” traveled sixteen hundred miles in yjr- tous' directlond, aud ‘at’ !nsg s&glgtpsl', ‘Formosa,, i’ J81ant ¥ ever, heal * - Almost d_from, exhaustion, they landed nnd were kingdly treated by the natives ‘of that island. When they were able to eat-und. hadregained their strength they were sent to Hong- kong, thence to the Caroline islands® angd_from there ‘home. In a- trading schooner. After more than three months’. absence they were hailed by their friends as riseri from the dead. 1t 1 by such involuntary voyages, anthropologists think, that man was placed on many of the widely scat- tered islands. Sunburnt in, Perhaps. Chicago Ad—Lost: Purse by a widow with Initials on back.—Eostan Transcript. | r | nomic socialist. wno's wuolN RUSS[A « |peasants.; Is from' the Caucasus, y whero under the czarist regime learn- i i ed the problems and troubles of the small nationalities. e (By United Prass) NIKOLAT LENIN-—Premier of the Soviet government. ' His real name is Vladimir OQulianov; and he signs his name as such, with the Lenin (a pen name) in brackets. . Onz-of the origi- nal sovieters, generally supposed to| be one of the constructive element in|Pe the movement. . Largely responsible for the forthcoming change 'of eco-| 3unacrite tor nomic :policy. Small, alert, with a dome-like forehead; smooth-shaven. | GORG TCHITCHERIN — Ministen| for foteig“;n affairsy A diplomat who gaingdl hig experiesice in foreign, af- fairs'as a member ‘{the czar’s diplo- matic service.. a8 out of office for some ygars-before the revolution. LEQN, TROTSKY — Minister “of ‘war, ‘nd suppesed to ‘be one of the die-hards of the, communist. element. Small, with ‘scaity black beard and fierce, magnetic appearance. A radi- cal even among ‘the Bolsheviks. NIKOLAI KRESTINSKY—Finance minister. One of the strongest per- sonalities in the cabinet. Secretary of the Russian Communist party until last March, and lately Soviet repre- sentative in Berlin, though: retaining the port-folio of finance minister., FELIX SEMASHKO-—Minister of health. A popular figure." Prominent and erergetic in anti-epideniic work. A good speaker and a .well-known writer on health and sanitary prob- lems. ; e DZERZHINSKY — Minist ¢rof transport and home affairs:’ Nominal- ly chairman of the extraom\inayy"faxh-‘ ine commission. A capable."grgan- izer and a tremendous worker. - Has done much to keep going the crippled transpart systems, Of amiable; sim- ple disposition. Chairman- of’ the children’s welfare section pf ‘the' cen- tral executive committee.” . " 7. PETER BOGDANOF—Hed of the supreme economic council. - A hew! figure. Chairman of ‘the last confer- ence of economic coungils in :May. Is an engineer, and until the recent fam- ine emergency comparatively ‘un- known. One of the founders of the new economic program. Is-an eco- Of sober disposition ; studious. R 3 OSSINSKY—Minister of ‘agricul- ture. Formerly prominent in the Third Internationale: $7 STALIN—Minister of nationalities. Takes care of the interests of the small nationalities making ap the em- pire. Also has charge of ‘inspection of conditions among workers andl Nanaimo, B. C.—The hérring har- vest will soon be at its height and it is estimated that about 18,000 tons £ these fish will be saltéd and ship- d to the oriental market this full: ‘'he Daily Ploneer. CHARLES RAY gy — R SV.P. A humorous, sketch of the life of a gay Bohemian. Here’s fun laid on in large daubs. Charles Ray. just splashes humor around in a picture that the criti¢s call a masterpiece. (.., = - Help Charles Ray break into ;high society:«He has a com- T plete: dress-sult all>but coat | vest, socks and’shoes, Who'll assist in_his debut? Toonérviifé ;‘l'rélley Ct;medy In Two Parts Rex Orchestra Prof. Zelikoff, director Matinee 2:30 Evenings 7:10-9:00 Prices: 10c and 25 X DORIS MAY - THOMAS H.INCE Presents ¥ By LOUIS JOSEPH VANCE Q@ GParamount GPiclure; COURT FOOTE Love and Adventure in Two Worlds A Famous Novel Turned to Thrilling Action on the Screen. Monte Banks Comedy—*“IN AND OUT” ELKO-Tonight & Wednesday 130 e T a man can.mekea | db better mouse-trap «i* hiamhis neighbor --- .. even tho he builds -hig’ Kouse in the : i-the world ' will' make- a beaten " path to his door T T > 10c & 25¢ -advantages of the mouse-trap. —_—_— - J AR Here is the strange story of a girl with two selves—two souls —one of them good, one of them bad. And the things that one did the other knew nothing _ of. Can’you imagine the possie bilities in such- a plot?: ‘Constance - In“the Realart Picture ‘The Case. of Becky "' PATHE WEEKLY NEWS “LATE. HOURS”—Comedy Tonight %9 El IIIIIIIIIIII|IIilllllllllllllll_IllilllllllllIllllIlllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIlliIIIIIIIIIIlIlIIIIIIIIIIIE AT PROVIDING he advertisss the il

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