Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, October 14, 1922, Page 4

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BEMIDJI-DAILY PIONEER PUBLISHED DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY BY THE BEMIDJI PIONEER PUBLISHING ‘COMPANY G. E. GARSON, E. E DENU, Seey-Mgr. ! f:."n..%m News Editor _ . TELEPHONE #22.923 - ¢ the o Pestoftice et By nomm:. mnuou. -; N e 8, '3‘." Durgroms, of Entersd st Second-cla No ‘attention paid to Writer's name must be kno pecessarily .for publieation. - joheer ‘must reach 15 Tbree Months....... 128 THE WEEKLY PIONEER—Twelve es, published every Thursday -.nd sent postage pald to any address for, in advance, $2.0 Unless credit is given this paper, only the vutul 4s_entitled to the Ilu for re-publication ef pews’ dispasches credited -to it, or etherwise 3 and also the local news published herein. = ~OFPFICIAL COUNTY AND CITY PROCEEDINGS ==—= VOTE FOR AMENDMENT NUMBER 1 The passage of Amendment No. 1 at the coming election will enable the legis- lature to:enact legislation making it pos- sible for the state to establish and main- tain a‘System 'of rural credits and thereby loan money and extend credit to-the peo- ple of the state'upon real estate security in such a manner and upon such terms and conditions as may be prescnbed by law, and to issue and nexotmte bonds to pro- vide money to be so loaned. To. stabilize farm values, and to be able to carry out a proper system of farming and orderly marketing, we must have a * system of ‘rural finance that -can be-de- pended upon at all times. The pagsage of this amendment to the Constitution _ will. open the way for the state ~ té esablish a system of finance that will stabilize the'in- terest rate on farm mortgages and protect the borrower from excessive commmsmn charges. C The:cost of maintaining this system will be borné by the borrower and will add no taxes to.the general tax payer. This legislation will not put'other loan | agenicies out of business, but it wijll furnish competition- that will insure money .to the farmer at-a’reasonabje rate of ' .interest. The credit of the state safe-guarded. This is no\expenment works-in’other states” anl»countfles ‘and it will work for.the benefit of the great ma- jority in Minnesota if given\a chance, This is the way N. J. Holraberg, Commis- ment No. 1. All parties favor it and if the willbe properly S T T e . OUR COAL SUPPLY Information with'regard to the coal sup- ply has been furnished the local fuel 'ad- ministration by the State Fuel Distributor which is'to the effe at the Lake Coal receips will be abod! per g:om a_ver'lge when navigation closes. Receipts of coal ‘at:the- Duluth-Supmor harbor to the. first of:October totaled "1, 1,950,923 were Soft ith' 18,950 tons of against™ 10 R Users dependent upon lake '¢bal arfe ad-= vised to take such steps as are mnecessary - to make up the shortage. This means to get your coal where .you can, if coal is what you must burn. Our suggestion is to buy wood from the Northern Minnesota fnrm- ers. — CHASE MEANS BUSINESS Once-more State Auditor .. Chasge, has passed up the infliction of a tax for state revenue purposes and the taxpayers - of Minnesota . will. be several millionis.of -do]- lars ahead as a result. This parucnlar tax was omitted last year forthe first time in the history of the state.; “Mr. Chage finds that the earnings from varidiis sources are sufficient to, pay the tunnmg expenses of the state. He is the kind. of, stuff of which good Governor’s are'made and some- dny in the not far distant future he may acquire this 4 title. Fr e N — MEXICAN TAXES American Oil companies: operating in Mexico are still at loggerheads with - the Mexican federal and state zovemments The Mexican appetite for taxes.is insati- able and the constitution and laws seem to offer little obstacle to their increase. Ap- parently the recognition of Mexico by this government will not be an event - of the near future. 5 FOLKS DO CHANGE : The same people who were recently de- manding that the Army and Navy be re- duced to practically nothing are now de- manding that the United States go t6 war with Turkey, 5,000 miles away —1t Down in Ohio a fellow by the name of Cox volunteers the pun "Repubhcans are on the defensive.” We do recall the name of Cox, now, that it has been mentxoned —— Cutting ‘remarks about the" bdmm have cut more than one foolish- employee loose from his job.—Forbes; Magazme. G 4 “Closed. éa exhibit:openia: suecessfufly says a headline. Must be that I-‘drds were sioner of Agriculture, talksu‘Ebout Amend- voters.do not forget to vote it will be car- ried. \ scorched flayor to food cooked in It. Approsimately one-half pound of oil is necessary- for each pound of chips pm- duced. 2 mw tp Fry Potato Chlpl.’ The best ‘Fesults are obtalned ;when 'the sliced to’ chips are I running’ cold water under a faucet for at _least:an_ hour ‘and ‘soaked. in! cold water several hours longer. Theé wu- 1mr in the pans should be changed'until the last wash water is practically ‘free of starclr. - The slices need not; be dried beforg immersidn, but 8 mamch water a8 posdble should be shaken off. When the oil reaches 210 degrees . (410 degrees F.) a basket of raw sliced ‘potatoes is lowered " Into the fat, and stirred constantly with a longe bhandled spoon. The object of the hot water bath sometimes recommended is| chlefly to coagulate. the protein in the polutoesl and this result can be ob- tained equdlly well by heating the fatj| to a point just below 9moklng betore’ the slices are put in. When - the slices are crisp and brown, in from three to five minutes,, the frying basket is ised and drained;’ ‘add” the chips read on brown nuper to dry. While still warm' they shos rinkled lighfly with salt. (‘mps “prepared in . this- \\nrr should kiep ‘sweet for weeks in mod- | erate temmfimm The ofi~'should be reheated to -Iw degrees ¥. after each batch of clips 15 removed. Tho best way to deter- | wine the temperature is Ly means uf a thermometer. -, If chips are made fre- | quentiy the oil should be renewed from ‘time to time: The frying pan,and bas- ket should be deep ratherjthap,ywide and made-ofiicon or.steel which | i‘( not affected »cby: high cooking tempera- | tures. Fin 6r ofaiiel-ware ‘puns”are not shown: | ia vatiety of appetizing ways for use Yike eookies or tea-cakes. The stand- erd recipe for biscults calls for the ‘following ingredients: ', 2 cupfuls. sifted flour. 2 table lnoonmll \| % teaspoonful salt. 3 3 teaspoonfuls buk- 14 \ ing powder. liquid (milk, wa- ter, or :.équal parts of each). Flere are three- good variations of tiis recipe, recommended by the Unit- ed, States Department of Agriculture: \ "Pin. Whaels. Add 2 tablespoonfuls sugar to. plain biscwit dough and an extra tablespoon- ful of flour if needed. Roll to %-incis thickness. Brush over with melted-hut- ter and sprinkle with fruit (currants. raisins,’ dates; or citron), or with cin- namon and sugar alone. Roll like a Jjelly roll and cut off pleces ¥z juch in thickness. Bake saome as biscuits, Coffee Cake. In the recipe for plain biscuits add 2 tablespoonfuls of sugar to’ the dry ingredients and one egs, well-beaten, to the liquld and mix as usual. Roll or patinto\a sheet 1% inch thick aod placé in_gremsed pan. Dot top with hits of butter and strew with sugar and 3 little cinnamor- Bake i rather ot ‘oven. ‘Mw‘ gy -be buked In two sheats and used Tor shorteake. Dutgch Apple Cake. Prepare dopgh same as for coffee cake. After placing in pan, cover top with tart apples sliced 14 fnch thics, set close togegher and allglmy ovey. lapping. Strew generously with sul dust with cinngmon and.dot with' bits: of butter. Bake In a wmoderwte: ovet until apples are very tender; & n? Otler fruits, such as sliced peuches, plumns. raspberries, stewed drjed fruits may ‘g wsed nlace of the apples in y\ls,,mnns chen'lqu«.mfl e Hl.h Caat: u' Ftflvn. In his beek, “The Evolution of Med!- .cime,”. Sir William: Qsler quetes a bit of the ancient Mawmurabi cede .thus: “If 2 doctor has treated a gentleman |- for & severe weund: ‘With<a bronze lancet and has cored the man, or has opened. in :hca; of the eye for a -gentlemiin’ Witk' the Dronze lancet and has: cured the eye of the gentleman, he shall take 10 shekels of silver. “If the docter has treated a gentle- man for a severs weund .with a lancet of bronze amd has caused the gentle- man to die, er has epened an abscess of the eye fer a gemtleman and has caused the less of the gentleman’s eye, one shall cut of his hands.” “ A Deubtfiul Hit. One sister in-this Evansvilie family Is & newspaper reperter and the othet a school teacher. And the little teach- er is much given te berrowiug her sis- ter's clothes. The geed-aatured re- porter uspally doese’t ebject, but the other day she felt her sister had gone too far whem she were Ler new silk dress and fall hat’te scheol. She told ber so, teo. “But I ad heard the school board weuld be at the bullding today,” the teacher exeuked heri2lf, “and I want ed te make o hit-with then.” “I bet you iul" eame back the dry retort, “for they all mearly weat wild about that dress whea 1.were it to the gchool beard meeting last night"— ludlunbo\l.»i«u ‘ Mletr Me‘rimrfilw aiprofessor of gemn try at the University of Nevada, . ¢ We bakés'nis ellef o recent “{last cast of principal | “” YHE BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEER ™™ I .!"NICE PEOPLE” AT THE ELKO THEATRE SUNDAY A _colorful’ portion ' of Japan famu the batkground folfap: im- 4 illibm i ,lfifl}u gitls serve:as check; Yendants and cigarette girlss Japan- ese youths in'tne costumes of their ancestors fill the attendant ppsitions everything except the food, the'guests and the music, is Japanese. ¥ne first is ‘America, the'second are cosmopol- itan and the third is Hawaiian. | The setting is one of ‘the most elaborate and lavish ever construcetd for the screen. It consists of a spac- {dous entrance hall<leading into a large Japanese .garden - illuminated by. Oriental lights and lanterns, dot~ ted with tables<and boasting of nu- merous interesting-pieces of;Oriental sculptoring, vegetation, pergola sand pagodas. Wallace Reid, Bebe Daniels, Con- rad Nagel and Julia Faye are featur- ed and Eve-Sothern, Bertram.Johns, ‘William Boyd, Claire McDowell and others are prominent in the cast. Clara Beranger adapted the story from Rachel Crothers successful stage play of the same name. “HURR!CANE KUTCH” AT REX THEATRE AGAIN TONIGHT Charles Hutchinson, the “Thrill-a- Minute Stunt King, if he doesn’t like the hazards he must take in the new Pathe serial, “Hurricane Hatch” can not heap epithets on the head of the head of the author. That is, not with any degree of satisfaction, for Mr. Hutchinsin, himself, is the con- cocter-in-chief of the 'plot and' de- signer and inventor of all the thrills. Contrary to the evidence against him in “Hurricae Hutch,” Mr. Hutch- inson does not foolishly risk his life, ery stunt and thrill is careful and, when it permits, mathematicaily or seientifically worked out before it is ever attempted. “Hurricane Hutch” will be seen at the Rex theatre again tonight. {“BE' MY WIFE” AT GRAND - .. ¢ THEATRE AGAIN- TONIGHT “Be My Wife” the.new Mgx Lind- er featule comedy showing at the Grand theatre for two days, last time | tonight; ‘under: the, Goldwyn'\rbnnner has several nmuual situations-.. comedian essays: uu;ly g!wk\llfles {whiclr are ni fi 1, but serve to presen§ e rcmarkn ble ‘abit"| ity of Mr. Max ander as the man ‘“who talks with i The plot conc!e?rns rfj W young man’s attcmpt. to wm"thc hand ‘of .his lady- hwhrngnovel A0 that. But add a strong-minded nnnfig& fat irival and several ridicdlous $ituations directed by Max Linder ‘himself, and an hilarious comedy is the result. A upfiorts the star. “THE SIREN CALL" AT THE GRAND THEATRE® SUNDAY Dorothy Dalton - an utusual woman. She demonstrated it in “The Flame of,the, Yukon,” “Flare Up Sal,” “The Ido] of the No#th” and in other pictures, 50 when Irving Will- at sought out a woman, ;or the leading role in his newest production, “The Siren = Call” . which cones to the Grand theatre next Sunday and Mon- day, the part fe]l almost automat- ically to her. This is a story of. the boom in Alaska with its colorful life and the clashing of strong willed men and wo men where civilization’s veneer is scratched in places. Miss Dalton can portray all the tempetuous dash need- ed for the part; she can ride a horse like a cowboy, she can handle a canoe Where He Got It: Gerald—"I always put on a good front.” Geraldine—“Yes, you are & credit to your landlady.” ' What He Invents. “That fellow is an inventor.” “Of what??, - “Qf excuses for'not having a Job.” Unusual. his wife” “That so.-, Who is he?” My hnslmmv'-—Detrmt Free Press. presents his - BE APeop}e" ‘which “conies | a entre S\mdu ’@na-y nor recklessly attempt a stunt. Ev-| “There goes a man who is good to MAX LINDER NNy v St e S e e S ey 4 v hkc an Indian, she has no fear of tue rushing currents of mountain streams and she can even retain her poise| among a_string of Alaska dogs that are ready to ahow their teeth at the. {persomfles strength, herm ness and the rugged-spiril west. Because this beloved character was such an ideal type of American man- hood, Ul_'xilversal has filmed an epic, in history”embodying the most active tand romantic days-of his life. “In The Days Of Buffalo Bill” is the name lof this- educational ~entertainment which will have its first showing at the Elko theatre again tonight. < ‘During the unfolding of the drama the steady progress of the building of the Union Pacific is shown graph- ically. The golden spike at Promon- tory Point, Utah. ,is .driven to com= memorate the completion of the first transcontinental railway uniting east- ern and western Umted States. with "bonds of steel. Buffalo Bill . with hrs braver‘y and knowledge of frontier .life proves himself a hero to many families who find' themselves unexpectedly in the toils of the blood-thirsty Indian neigh- bors. It is a type of picture that will appeal to every member of the fam- ;lly. Mother will enjoy the love theme, father will glory-in living over again the stirring days he used to Tead about in the “yellow-backs” and the children will find thrill after thrill to entertain them, with all re- |cexvmg a liberal education in the history of their country during the hectic days that marked the era of Buffalo Bill; “THE YOUNG DIANA” AT ELKO THEATRE TONIGHT “The Young Diana” a Cosmopoli- tan creation released by Paramount staring Marion Davies, which will be the big feature at the Elko theatre tonight, last showing, ranks among {the best productions of the current ‘season. . Miss Davies is admirably supported in this novel and entertainng photo- play. In the cast are Forrest Stan- ley, leadng man, Macklyn Arbuckle, Pedro de Cordoba and Gypsy O’Brien, | The picture was directed by Albert gnpella\‘__li and Robert G. Vignola, two 'of the most capable directors: “JUST TONY” AT THE REX SUNDAY AND MONDAY Tom Mix, the popular star of the Fox constellation, was once named by a ngwspaper critic “the movie hero ‘who never made a-failure,” and, ever since, Tom’s one ambition has been to live up to the criterion which the newspaper writer had set for him. That he has been able to achieve this goal is ‘attested by the ‘vast fol- owing of fans who acclaim him the greatest screen thero of his type. That Tom deserves the praise he has received is easily demonstrated by ‘his work in the latest William Fox production, “Just Tony” which comes to the Rex theatre Sunday_and Mon- day. “Just Tony” also features Mix's noted horse “Tony” and was written by Max Brand as a novel under the original title of “Alcatraz.” In this photoplay of romance and friendship and western valor, Tom again rides the edges of a pantomimic hell, shoots with the accuracy of a super—nntural aim, and fights for the love of a beautiful woman in such fashion.as to thrill the most blase of picture goers. Withdrawn. Author (proudly)—My works will live after I am gone.”: Critic—"Pos- sibly; but in strict retirement.” If Not Mated. Howell—"Did you and your wife vote at the election?” Powell—‘No; for once we were paired.” In Fact, It lsn't. “Justice is blind.” “Then how is it a pretty woman gets so much the best of it?” — latest comedy - = MY WIFE | = SAFE-PLACE FOR VALUABLES Harassed Citizens of American Cities Should Welcome Idea That Comes From Buenos Aires. Tn these days of lawlessnes the honest citizen cannot tak around the block with any certain that he ‘will not be held up b bandit, the novel idea of Antonio Mou- neo, a eltizen of Buenos Aires, ought be ofiz¥alue. ts: suspndes: with pock- —tigo_pockets, say, en Wteh\: e — e A mrme ™ SATURDAY EVENING, OCTOBER 14, 1922 holes; iwhiah Huffan onfo the ording buttons of the waistband of the trow ers, thus making the pocket flatly sc- cure against the body of the wearer. To prevent escape of its contents, each flap. when walk | for loot beneath a man’s waistcoaty - {and =0 the suspender pocket should afford excellent hiding pl | money. inst pickpockets " they | ought to furnish a perfect proteetion, —Milwankee Sentinel. i "1t Did. Iaw\’or—‘blnl I| e 1aop of e toger SUNDAY AND - MONDAY TUM MIX in “Just Tuny” bound ahead of the wmd pocket is provided with a buttoned, 2 Few bandits would think of looking ' \ ¢ A THRILLING STORY OF: THE\TE)(AS One stride, in front.of Fate’ i One league to the good of his pursuers. Was “TONY"”—the hunted horse Who shares honors with TOM MIX “JUST TONY” A William Fox Production CLYDE COOK COMEDY IN “THE ESKIMO” ‘FOX NEWS REX 6-Piece Orchestra Mat. 2:30, 7:1C-9 Adm. 10c & 30c REX rrEATRE TODAY WM. STEINER PRODUCTIONS Present NEAL HART AMERICA’S PAL Rangelan “CATTLE RANGES E Fox_Sunshine ‘Gomedy---*"WEST 1S WE SI" memum; with; {he essential ofls of Foertain destrt Blants. These olls ap- “parently ‘serve’ss n protection ugainst the extrame hest of moenday and the chill of nll‘t. The vaper of the eils absorbs more heat tham ordimary air, he'says. Rose @il absorhs thirty-Six times as much heat and anisol 352 times as much. By surrounding itself with u layer of such odor-filled air, the plant reduces the amount of heat which reaches it'in the Auytime and-alse ebtains a sort of air blanket te pram't it unlm the chill Bepight, - - - o _.written and directed by Max'kinder, ZCCh'arfles Hutch1son Tie Tumwe-A- MinuTe STunt king HURRICANE HUTCH Tussday William Famum in “RflUEH % READY” A lltue lamnn mero\es p{nupfl‘ vreser\e —R_ex_()rchest ta Mat. 2:30 7 10--9 10c-25c Can W“momm,m Bakma{ ¢ Codkl&s or Tea-Cakes. “Brimniing with laughter '—was invented for this ‘picture—it fills the five reels to overflow=- ing. | { s s i After-dinner coffee -should :be mude: double strength. ... A teaspoonta! of baking powder will make fudge wmore mey. Ve .. ot (rrepaqflfy“ih- Lnued llum Departmeat f - A cabbage leaf is an mouent me~ YotAgeloul ng greasy- tinware. The *ingeénlous. Jlousekeener will fing; &um for fl”‘“_ gren pese xm'g"‘m‘r'f'fii"‘m.?«x’}éi% :fi Grease spots on walipaper should d be Tubbed with; camgliofated “chalk. 3 x Three: «Godd Varrlhom of Recipe aséy’ Rocvn:‘thulded by the Department | ntmaunuro—ulny Fruits . .\’Afl Yseful Adm. 10c-25¢ LAST TIME Shows starti?:30 & 9:00 TONSHT . GRAND

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