Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, December 11, 1922, Page 5

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

o€l _human race is the theme of Daniel L THE BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEER PAGE FIVE Gethng Ready for the Commg-Out Party WHETHER . DADDY HARDING 1S GOING To UKE TRAT TRAIN €FFECT OR NOT “A TAILOR MADE MAN” AT GRAND THEATRE TONIGHT Charles Ray left no stone unturned to make “A Tailor Made Man” first | of his super-features for United Art- ists and showing at the Grand the- atre tonight is one; of the most. im- portant and most significant film _productions of the year. In'the supporting cast of twenty- eight players, there are many who have been stars in their own right, both on stage and ‘screen. It has h:enha. long: tfl;fle since any one cast |4ho of characters boasted of such light talent as Ethel Grandin, Jacqueline LE;F::’P?SE.";;;W&??:TQ yfi:z:fios. Logan, Douglas Gerrard Thomas Jef- | yation in North Dakot,apwfll devel. ferson, Edyth Chapman, Victor Pot-{op 'y new party to be known as the s Eddirhglr]iii Rlc&le:‘?;ts,kxaée Lester, | Farmer-Labor party. Political lines e “_e Bl gnv an utler and |in North Dakota have been wiped out ellie Peck Sanders. :;Jn recent years, and contests have , een on the basis of the Non is: WHAT’S WRONG WITH WOMEN? Leaguc versus all opposi':ion-’mujat :‘e‘: AT THE GRAND WEDNESDAY |turn to the old party lines is said The eternal battle of the sexes, i?lthvihe‘it;s::e?hebflos;:xa; lzf_irs’ 5 ¢ san mer raging from thei very dawn of the and the labor forces could be induc- ed to line up as either Demorcrats of Republicans is a question. They ‘would probably be more easily lined up under the head of the Farmer- Labor party, sucha s was successful in an unexpected degree in 1} esota last election, FARMER-LABOR PARLEY ON IN CHICAGO-TODAY (Continued from page 1) Working Peoples’ Nonpartisan Carson Goodman‘s dramatic and pro- phetic photoplay “What’s Wrong ‘With The-Women?” which opens its engagement - of two days at the Grand theatre Wednesday. “What's Wrong With The Wo- men?” is not unkind to womanhood. It is in no sense a sermon or pro- paganda in behaif of mere man. But it reveals the modern woman in all her strength and. weaknesses and shows by meang of a tremendously dramatic human story how a woman Sioux Falls, S. D., Dec, 11—Form- er U. S. Senator Pettigrew will rep- resent South Dakota Fanmer-Labor- ers at the national meeting in Chi- cago today Action to form a Farmer-Labor - ing interests in his native state, the in the present high-powered era of jazz and boot-leggers can best serve society. Inf"the cast are such noted players -as ‘Wilton Lackaye, Rod La Rocque, Barbara- Castleton, Monta- gue Love, Huntley . Gordon , Julia Swayne Gordon, Constance Bennett, Hedda \'pper and Mrs. Oscar Ham- merstein. R. William Neil was the director of the picture. “PRIDE OF PALOMAR” AT THE ELKO AGAIN TONIGHT A virile story of California with a powerful theme is “The Pride Of Palomar,” a Cosmopolitan product- tion from Peter B. Kyne’s noted novel of the same name, which will be at the Elko theatre again this evening. The leading roles are por- trayed by Mnnorle Daw and Forrest S“anlcy The story tells of the struggle of a World War veteran against crush- fight centering around the posses- sion of the family ranch, which he finds on his return from overseas| service, has.all but fallen into the ‘hands-ofsithé. enemy. The' picture has“an all star cast and ‘has been well produced by Frank Borzage, “who directed “Humor- esque”. Forrest Stanley and Mar- jorie Daw have, the featured roles and other important parts are play- ed by James Barrow, Warner Oland and Joseph Dowling. WALLY REID'S LATEST AT ELKO THEATRE TOMORROW We have had strike breakers, trust busters, broncho- busters and brute breakers, but now we have “The Ghost Breaker” a new form of hero which Wallace Reid is mak- ing popular in hig new Paramount starring vehicle of the same name! which Manager Harding announces as his feature attraction at the Elko tomorrow, Tuesday and Wedesday. Lili Lee, as leading woman and Wal- ter Hiers, are featured with the star. There is plenty of relishable com- edy, suplied by Walter Hiers, who as a colored valet_loes some remark- able feats in the Spamsh castle when the ghost hunt begins. There isn’t a dull moment in the photoplay, and each of the supporting roles, played by Arthur Carew, Frances Raymond and J. F, McDonald are in capable hands. “A Trip To. Paramount Town” -a special two part film showing all the ‘various Paramount stars at work on “coming productions” will also be shown as a special attraction. party in South Dakota was delayed at the meefing called for that pur- pose Nov. 28th until Jan. 16th and it is understood the action then de- come of the Chicago meeting today. HAS NEW PLAN TO ADMIT CHILDREN TO SHOW FREE Manager G S. Harding of the Elko theatre hag introduced a novel plan for admitting children to the show free of charge. In his advertise- ment in today’s issue he states that those children who take the paper to ten adults, have them read the advertisement and sign their names address and telephone number on the blanks provided for that purpose and bring the paper to the Elko theatre between the hours of 2 and 3 end 7 and 9, Tuesday, -Wednesday or Thursday, will be admitted free of charge to the show, after the names have been verified. The oc- casion is the showing of Wally Reid in “The Ghost Breaker”, which be- gins a three-day run Tuesday after- noon. MOOSE LODGE TO GIVE DANCE THURSDAY NIGHT The Loya! Order. of Moose an- nounces a public dance to be held at the New Moose Hall Thursday evening, Dec. 14. A radio dance will also he given if a dance pro- gram is available that evening. Good music is assured and a large attend- nace is expectad and urged. ‘DOGS ON SCHOOL GROUNDS ARE CALLED A NUISANCE The attention of owners of dogs is called to the fact that a large number of dogs gather regularly about - the high school grounds and iare:'becoming a nuisance. Owners are asked to keep their dogs away from the grounds if possible, JUNIOR ORDER OF MOOSE : HOLDS MEETING TONIGHT The Junior Order of Moose will meet in regular session tonight at the Moose hall at 8o’clock. A large attendance is desired. EARLY MAILING AVOIDS USUAL CHRISTMAS RUSH All patrons of the Bemidji post office will greatly aid in facilitating the Christmas rush and insure morc rapid delivery of mail by mailing their packages this weék, announces Postmaster A. P.- Ritcnie. Patrons are also asked to mail as early in the day as possible. This applies to businesg ietters as well as Christma$ parcels. By mailing early in the day,” the mail will be dispatched SUBSCRIBE FOR THBE PIONEEP ‘early. i | .sl.i. THE OLD HOME TOWN By Stanley 11 WHEN MARSHAL GTEY WALKER WENT To RELEASE THE i| TWO TRAMPS WHO ARE EATING THE TOWN INTD DEBT;, OTEY FOUND HE ColLD NOT UNLOCK THE RUSTY [ OLD JAlL Lock pends in a large measure on the out- -appears to be the trouble with you.” | “My father, you know, was a pretty . Some Folks By C. B. WHITFORD " ,0.0.020:0:0:0: ITOTOTOTOTOTOTOTOTATATOTONTOTOINS, (@ 1922, Western Newspaper Union.) “There’s something wrong with me, Doc. I wish you would find out what it is and put me right.” “You're not a bad looking dog, Max. I You make a good front and they say you're a pretty wise fellow, too. Why, I hear you can do more things than any dog in the neighborhood. What good water spaniel. So I took a no- tion that my best graft would be In the water line. I.liked the water for awhile and just as I was getting wise 10 my work I took¥an awful dislike to it. T'was in trouble all the time with | everybody. One of my grandfathers was a pretty good greyhound. He was a great success in his line. I kept thinking about him so much that I Just hated to go into the water and finally gave it up altogether and tried the greyhound graft. I liked the job for a while. Then they told me I was too cunning to do greyhound’s work and wasn't fast enough. Besides every once:in a while the old love for the water would come back and that I3 bad business for a greyhound. They told me that if I didn’t know anything else I might do the greyhound’s work very well. At any rate I was so smart | about so many other things I lost my Job.” “I suppose now you'll try a ter- rier’s job and just as you get going' nicely the old greyhound and water ! spaniel blood will crop out and distract you. Some day when you ought to be attending to a terrier's work you’ll want to take a sprint just to satisfy the old feeling and show the rest of the terriers what you can do. Then you'll want to go fooling around the water when you ought to be looking after the rats and the woodchucks. You're just like some folks I know that ain’t bred right. They flop from one thing to the other and get a whole ; lot of general knowledge that won't get them anything. The fellow that finds out what his best graft is and sticks to it is the fellow that gets the| money. Of course he looks fnnllsh when he mixes up with a lot of fo]l,.q who know everything, but in his oww | line he has them all beat. No, Max, the all-round wise folks won’t do. It's, the fellow that knows one thing well | and knows enough to stick to it that’ shines. He’s a star. The rest have’ got too many little lamps scattered so they don't shed much light. This 1s) the day of the big single star.” “Maybe I ain't just struck my right graft, Doc. I'm wise enough to maks a hit if I could only get in right.” “It ain’t that. You ain’t wise enough | to.stick.; You think you'll strike some- | thing bétter whel¥ you can show off | your versatile tajents. But all jobs| are pretty much aljke. They are what | the fellow makes them. I know a man | Just like you, Max. He's bright, he’s industrious and 4 good fellow. He: has done almost anything from making ice cream to runming an underta%ing establishment. HIS ice cream was bad. | The livery and his funeral service was not fit for the dead. “But Tl tell you, Max, there is a’ little hope for you. I know a lot of folks that have failed at everything they had undertaken and having noth- ing else to do they went into politics and made a great hit. If you can find a job something like that you may be a winner. Otherwise you are lost. “The really wise man who is a spe- clalist has no chance In politics. He can shake hands but one way, and he is all the time talking and saying things people remember. He's got| | don't often get the chance to be big | A fellow with just your kind of mized t breeding. A real mongrel in the af- when fattening hogs. To minimize the | { ment; hence it became known as the i toration of the animal has been com- [ Was Introduced into France by a Regl- opinfons” that are’ fatal.to his success. He can only carry one bucket on one LlBERA'. FEEDS BEsT shoulder and if he don’t like a bad thing, he can’t help saying so, and offending a whole lot of voters that look at these bad things through prac- tical eyes. The man in politics that knows one lina well knows enough to know he doesn’'t know everything. It he is the big chief he knows enough to pick out hls specialists. But he as Rapidly as Possible. Self-Feeding Is Most Satisfactory Method, While Hogging Saves Labor of Gathering Grain and Hauling It to Pigs. Liberal feeding should be the rule chief, for if he did he would kill the game. It is one of your all-round fellows that knows a little of every- thing and a great deal of nothing that makes his mark in the political ring. fairs of the, world, who thinks he's an risk of loss from disease and to cut the all-round philosopher, make a front and play tight and loose with any propbsmon the people hand him.” - “I'm there with the front all right, Doc, and 1 dor’t know enough about anything to hurt. What me and the political stars have got is talent all right, and if I can fit my talent into the vight place I ought to shine. Some star politiclan ought to appreciate me because I éan sure go'all the gaiis.” made as rapidly as possible. The greatest gains are made in the least time by self-feeding, consequently this method is the most - satisfactory for fattening. These are the views of E. F. Ferrin of University farm, St. Paul, in charge of the swine production section of the animal husbandry divislon. “Corn and tankage,” says Mr. Fer- rin, “are two of the cheapest and best fattening feeds. If each is given sepa- rately in a self-feeder, the pigs can se- Mastodon Finally Clothed. After standing for half a century in his bones in the New York State mluseum, a mastodon of the Ice age has been clothed with skin, and now bears a colorful resemblance to the animal who ranged the northern hemi- sphere in those remote times. The skeleton was excavated at Co- hoes in 1866. Dental trouble in the right jaw had arrested its develop- mastodon with the toothache. After more than a year's work a lifelike res pleted by a staff of naturalists, whe made careful researches. A photo graph of the reconstriicted monstet aliows that it is a cross between o Pison and an elephant. NECKTIE DATES FROM 1660 Fall Pigs at a SeHf-Feeder. lect the amount of tankage they need. Instead of using a heavy allowance of the supplementary féed, the tankage necessary to make a hundred pounds galn is usually less than hand feeding. Hogging down corn is a variation of the self-feeding plan. It saves fhe labor of gathering the grain and haul- Ing it to the pigs, but as a rule the hogs are not fat enough to market out of the cornfield but need finishing in dry lots, ment of Cravates—Fashion Some- times Became Extreme. The neck was left unconfined by the ancients. The earliest form of neck- tie was a simple cord worn around a starched band of linen attached to the shirt. The modern tle was introduced in 1660 by a regiment of Cravates which .came to France. A bandage of silk or muslin was worn about the FOR FATVENING HOGS Gains in Weight Should Be Made able only to! labor cost, gains in weight should be | the ration and a poison for hogs. Care should be taken to avoid salt poison- fog by gradually accustoming the pigs to the compound. When used to ft, one of the best methods of supplying salt is to furnish the compressed blocks so commonly bought for cattlé. “To finish necessary to market hogs advantageously depends upon the de- mands of the market. Just now welights around 250 pounds are most accaptable. shorter feeding periods and lefs finish ‘Is the best plan. The Earthquake BeIL ks ¢ The immunity of Great Britain from earthquukew 18 due to its geographical situation, It lies at least 1,000 miles north of the nearest point of the great edrthquake “belt,” which selsmologists have located and traced right round the globe. This troubled zone runs roughly parallel to the equator through Japan, China, Asia Minor, the Mediter- ranean countries, the Canary Islands and Central America, with an auxiliary belt running southward along the west coast of South America. Every big earthquake of modern times has hap- pened somewhere along this belt, and generally when the sun an@ moon have been so placed that their combined raull along the critical region has been at a maximum. We owe to the Japa- nese, whose country is so often the seat of a disastrous earthquake, the inven- tion of the seismograph and the most thorough study of earthquake phe- nomena. Would Speak for Itself. The small boy entered the butch: er's shop whistling briskly, and de- posited a sheep’s head on the counter. “Mr. Jones,” he sald, “mother’s sent back this meat,” and turned on hig heel and started to leave. But the butcher wanted an explana- tlon. “What's wrong with It, sonny?” he asked. “Well,” sonny replied, “mother didn't say what was wrong with it. | She only said ‘leave it, and the head will speak for ftself! " Not so much lard is want- | ed as In former years, consequently ! Insurance that INSURES Protection that PROTECTS The Equitable Life Assurance Society - of the U. S. C. 8. DARNER,District Mgr.Phone 148-J DO PIONEER ADS PAY? To determine, I will deliver to any Bemidji housewife, a beautiful present in exchange for this ed. Or will accept it for ONE DOL- LAR on this order. 1 box Dandrucide ‘shampoo. 1 bottle perfume..... 1 bottle Aspirin tablets. 1 package C: ra tablet Total value $2, with this ad $1' Mail ad or phone 588-J A.W. SMITH Meet Me At THE West Hotel MINNEAPOLIS, MINN. Everybody seems to be there Good Service—Low Rates i Splendid Cafe In Connection SUBSCRIBE FOk THE PIONEER TONIGHT Methodist Church Monday Evening, December 11 8:00 O'CLOCK Admission 50c and 35¢ Everyody Come TICKETS ON SALE AT ALL DRUG STORES J TONIGHT WOMAN’S STUDY CLUB PRESENTS Ralph Bingham HUMORIST, LECTURER, MUSICIAN l_n '"llIIIIIIIIIIIIII|I|II|IlIIIII||II|IIIII|IIIIIIIIl‘III'|I|IIIII||IlIIIIIIIIIIIIIII|III||III|III|IIII|I"§ < GRAND :- COMING WEDNESDAY Wilton Lackaye Constance Bennett Mrs. De Wolf Hopper Baby Helen Rowland =—’| IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIlIIIII “What’s Wrong with the Women?” Paul McAllister IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIlllIIIl‘lIIIIlIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIII Barbara Castleton Rod La Rocque Julia Swayne Gordon Huntley Gordon O R il neck of the officers, while the soldiers wore simpler stuff. The ends which fell over the breast were disposed in bows or hung in tassels. After the Revolution cravats disap- peared along with tight breeches. In 1796 it recovered its popularity, and was Increased to a degree of extrava- gance. Huge pieces of muslin were worn around the neck by some per- sons,” while others wore a padded cushion of numerous folds. The collar worn at this time arose about the ears, and the mouth and chin were buried nose-deep by the upper edge of the cravat. The neck wes puffed out larzer than the head. — Curlous Hedyjehogs. There are several living spectmens in “z00s,” of the “temirec,” the hedge- hog of Madagascar. It is said that stuffed specimens in museums give no adequate idea of these very curious creatures. Their resemblance to hedge- hogs rests only.upon their possession of a spiny cowering. The shape of their bodies resembles that of an in- flated globe 4ish. They are insectivor- ous, and ars: declared tn be restricted to the Igand of Madagascar. The specimens seen in this cpuntry are re- markable for their habit of yawnlng. “Salt_is both a_desirable addition Educational Comedy in two parts Grand Orchestra II —_——— GRAND =——— TODAY || ARTHUR S. KANE PRESENTS W, 2 CHARLES RAY »“A TAILOR MADE MAN" By Harry James Smith, Released by United Arityts Corporation - Fox News Matinee 2:30, 7:10-9

Other pages from this issue: