The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 22, 1921, Page 8

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PAGE EIGHT ELTINGE WINS GREAT PRAISE amous Continental Film, Which Broke New York Records, Shown Here TAL STARS PLAY) \ saa CONTIN “The magnificent cinema” might be the title applied to “Deception,” the famous production shown at the El- | tinge theater last night, and again’ tonight. | A new standard of grandeur and! magnificence is set in the picture un- | folded to the large audience which! witnessed the production. In this pic-! ture Lubitsch, who produced \Pas-! sion” has transfc red his characteriza- | tion of stirring times of history the French revolution to the reign of | Wenry VIII. “Dec "is the sec: | ond German cinema which has won; i, praise throughout the coun-! eception” being ranked even | than “Pi ” by some crit- | “Deveption” broke all opening | ‘ords at the Rivoli, New York, cat- ering in its first week to 54,254 paid | admissions. Jt was’ held a second week, and then a third, and when the | third week’s business surpassed the, second it was held a fourth, the only! picture to be shown four consecu-! live weeks in that theater. | Lubitsch has won great fame as aj tor who can turn from the; ning of a thousand people to the; careful filming of one or two. His “mob anes of “ ion” are dupli-; cated in “Deceptiot with a more pleasant but none the less magnifi-| cent filming of a great hunting scene ; in Merrie England and the coronatipn | of Anne Boleyn in which the famous /{ Westminster Abbey is faithfully re-! produced. Henry Porten and Emil Jannings, | two of the most famoi creen play- | ers or Europe, appear in the leading | roles, the former as the beautiful An- | no Boleyn who tore a country in twain and lifted the crown from the head of ‘a queen and set it on her) own, but who with all was more sin- ned against than sinning, and Bluff King Hal faithfully pictured by Emil Jannings as a fickle husband, a royal good fellow, unscrupulous yet with kingly courage at times, The picture makes the ‘Eltinge pro- gram slightly longer than usual but so artistically is the production pre- sented/that one does not notice the} timo pass nor does one tire. The play | is at the Hltinge again tonght. | BROOM DEMAND — SHOWS SLUMP Many Who Stayed Away Late! ZEY PYVRON-PREVOST, guest at the Arbuckle party and considered one of the most important witnesses) tor the prosecution of Fatty Arbu i connection with the death of Virginia Rappe- RR eee to shutting down the larger railroad! shops, cotton mills, smelters and other ! indistries, non-employment, forcing | the ultimate consumer to economize | and changes in methods of buying, all! had their effect on depressing the mar-! ket, according to this report. 2 GRAINDEALERS - CONSIDER CO-OP DEVELOPMENTS Meeting of National Association’ To Be Held in Chicago i October 3 | Chicago, Sept, 22—Relation of the; Grain Dealers National Association to | cooperative grain marketing com-| panies recently set under way by sev-! eral farmers organizations will be a/ subject of consideration at grain men’s twenty-fifth annual con-! vention opening here Oct. 3. An at- | tendance of 2,000 representing the; Chicago Board of Trade, other grain | xchanges, and individual grain men, s anticipated. i A special’ committee of the grain | dealers’ association, which has been} conducting an educational campaign } among farmers in which grain pool-! ing has been touched on, will report. | Farmers have been urged by the com- mittee to study grain pooling ‘con- } tracts closely before signing. Fu-' ture activities of the committee, it is | TRE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. | a ‘DECEPTION’ AT FIVE GUESTS AT ARBUCKLE EST ae LL BE WITNESSES AT ALICE BLAIKE, guest at the Ar- buckle party, whose testimony before the grand jury helped indict Fatty Arbuckle for manslaughter in con- nection with the death of Virginia Pappe. BETTY CAMPBELL, guest at the tie! Arbuckle party, wh testified before also a guest at the Arbuckle party, the grand jury and who is being kept under watch by the prosecutor as a witness in the trial of Fatty Ar- buckle. CLEAN-UP SQUAD TO VISIT'CITY An opportunity will be given every THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22 which everybody. | likes—you will, DOLLY CLARK, guest atthe Ar- | too. buckle party in San Francisco on La-, bor Day, which ended in the death of | Virginia Rappe and the arrest of Ar. buckle, Sho was an important wit- | ness at the grand jury hearing. | | i { | | ! have enough population to become a | third-class city. |. High rents in New Yori are believed | to have influenced many folk to re- {main through the winter. ASKS ACTION” ~——ONBEER BILL jSouth Dakota Senate Takes a Matter to Pres. Harding FRED FISHBACK of Los Angeles, Washington, Sept. 22.— A’ proposal} z |that the beer bill which failed of final ; surveillance | passage just before the recess of | by San Francisco police to prevent | congress be ‘pressed for early action his leaving the city before the trial. | was taken to the White House today | nnn | by Senator Stefling, Republican, of! South Dakota, who is in charge of | the measure in the senate... SS ; Senator Sterling said after a con- ference. with President Harding he| has been. ordered und whon sént’ to the ‘White iHouse. i ‘ a eee Contact Examiner, and representatives 10For 5¢ WRIGLEYS p- The new sugar coated chewing gum “AFTER EVERY MEAL” @ delicious peppermint flavored sugar jacket around peppermint flavored chewing sum that will aid your appetite and diges- tion. polish your teeth and moisten THE FLAVOR LASTS Makes a specialty of training young men and young '\women for the best BOOKKEEPING and STENOGRAPHIC POSITIONS B. B. C. graduates are expert, and experts are always in demand. A B. B. C. graduate never had to shop for a posi- tion. If you aspire to get a good start in BUSINESS or . BANKING let us plan a course for you, and what we have done for thousands of the: most successful business men and women throughout the United States, we ean do for you. ENTER AT ANY TIME No entrance examinations, any deficiency in the common branches can be made‘up while pursuing the special course. For particulars write Bismarck G. M. LANGUM, President N. Dak. SS ee at Night Are Safer | Dunn, McLean, Mercer, Oliver, Mortor, - fs dig ; World finance and foreign trade, as Oklahoma City, Okla., Sept. 22.—The | well as recent legislation governing | man who stayed away “rom home lat- ‘grain exchanges and marketing pro- | er than necessary this year, was only | hems, will also be discussed. half so likely to be grected with the| Speakers announced include U. S. swish of a broom or broom handle, | genbtor Medill McCormick, David R. as ‘he was last year, according to the | Forgan, president of the National Virst survey ever made of the broom | city Bank, Chicago, Joseph P. Grif- corn industry, and made public here | fin, president of the Chicago Board of today by C. B. Alguire, statistician of the hay, feed and seed division of the U. S. Bureau of Markets and Crop Es- | timates. His reviews shows that the per cap-| ita sales this year were about 40 per} cent of normal and that the total sale | of brooms amounted to slightly more, than sixty per cent of normal. | The broom corn industry has moved | slowly this year, compared with sev- eral years past, a gencral stagnant! condition existing, which was not ex-} ‘pected at all when the »eason for the! 1920 crop opened. i The outlook then was comparatively | favorable, Mr. Alguire says, with the| carry over of 1919 estimated as being! one of the smallest on record, and the! new crop which later proved to he! 33,000 tons, compared with a six-year; average of 48,000 tons, in the United! States, gave every indication of being | the smallest crop in years. { “Bear” Forecasting. The survey covers the entire broom corn industry of the United States, These conditions of “hear” forecast: | ing should ordinarily have caused an | extremely active market for “a raw product, he says, but almost the op-} posite was the case. Farmers have | hauled their straw to imarket and in| many cases refused to seil it after they : had hauled it in, saying the price did snot compensate for the !abor involved. | Increased use of suistitutes, too} many factories operating, improved ; methods of building, the decrease in the use of horses and the increase ii; street paving, new methods of sanita- tion; curtailment of ccusumption due |- For Three Generations Have Made Child-Birth | Easier By Using — | waite ror BOOKLET On MOTHERHOOD AND THI BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO... DEPT. 9-D. ATLANTA. GA. Done For The HOSKINS "si tei Reasonable Charges — We are known everywhere for the expert werk we do. Mail Orders Given Frompt Attention. MOGKINS, Inc. “Bismarck, N. D. KODAK WORK i“The Relation of the iteserve to\th2 Trade, Governor Warren T. McCray of Indiana, Frank O. Lowden, form- er governor of Illinois, Asbury F. Lever, of the Federal Farm Loan Bureau, Washington and B. E. Clem- ent, of Waco, Texas, president of the Grain Dealers National Association. RESERVE ARMY OFFICERS MEET Army Men From North Dakota and Other States in — Meeting Minneapolis, Minn., Sept. 22.—Re- serve corps Officers of the army in the Seventh Corps Area will assemble here tomorrow for a convention, call- ed in an effort to unify the activities of the army officers for the welfare of the regular army. “.‘my men from Minnesota, North and South Dakota, lowa. Nebraska, Arkausas and Kansas, which make up the seventh area, will be in attendance, Speakers will include a number of active and reserve officers who will talk on subjects. of interest to the army, or related topics. Among the list of those who will ad- dress the meeting tomorrow and their subjects follow: Major James L. Frink, war depart- ment, Washington, witii the keynoie speech; Col. A. W. Bjornstad, com- mandant of Fort Snelling, Minn, on Regular Army;” Major N. T. Dowling, professor of law, University of Min- nesota, on “How May the Reserve En- list Public Opinion Belind the Pres- ent General Plan for National De- fense?” Col. G. Sturtevant, command- Emmons, Logan and Mcintosh coua- ties to receive assistaace in the set- tling of claims for compensation, ad- vice as to hospitalization or vocational education or information relative .o any problems arising f service during Oct a} 4,5 A, M., when the loca campaign is on. The Ned Cross: and American Legion are varticipating in this work at the request of the govern- ment and a united effori is being made to help every ex-serv.ice man who needs assistance of any sort. The “Clean Up” squac will make its headquarters in Bismarck. Its mem- bers, include a Medical Examiner and a representative of the Federal Board for Vocational Education Examiner, a Compensation and Insurance Claims ant at University of Minnesota, on “Hoye Cagsthe Reserve Ald ‘the R. 0. T. C% ol. B. E. Watson of Minne- apolis, on “How Can the Reserve Aid the Citizens Military Training Camps?” and Col. J; B. Woolnough, St. Paul, on “How the Reserve Aid the National Guard.” The district convention is an aiter- math of the organization of officers’ mess associations in the larger cities of the United States, according to Nel son L. Shultis, of this city, who arfanging. for the meetings. Matte’ affetting the army were discussed at} these luncheons and ii was decided to widen'the scope of the “messes” and enlist the aid of all officers in tne} area. 16,000 MOVIES | REVENUE TWO MILLION A DAY; } Milwaukee, Wis. Sept. 22.—There| are 16,000 motion picture theaters in! the United States and tie revenue tak-j| en in at these places of amusement} amounts to an average of $2,000,000 a a day, Hon. Timothy D. Hurley, chair-| man of the Motion, Picture Commis-! sion of Chicag» told the national cou-; ference of Catholic Cnaiities here to-; night, - i “It follows,” continued Mr, Hurley, Tinkering Again With Gotham Traffic; Police Have Hard Job Regulating It New York, Sept. 22.—-Again they’re tinkering with New York’s traffic. The police departmenc iong has been unable to dodge the law of physics that two objects can’t occupy the ne space at the same minute, And with the number of automobiles incre: daily and the crowd of pedestria holding its own, the traffic problem becoming worse. In the old days, traffe went up and down Broadway muca ‘he same it does in any Main street the country over—though with the same hectic confusion that reigns in the subways beneath the world-famous thorough- fare. But a little while ago it was decided that at night, at hours when most theater-goers were bouna up Manhat-! will be asked to instail wore. tet i tan to their homes, Broadway between | 38th and 57th streets should become} a one-way street. H Now that plan has been abandoned: : Merchants have complained that the! northbound nightly traffic was divert-| ing to other’ thoroughra business which should come to them. So Spe Deputy Police Comm sioner Harris has ruled that fora 30- day. trial period two-way traffic shalij be restored—to he regulated by signal) towers such as have been operating | for many months on Fifth avenue. Sig- nal Jamps atop these towers commantl| traffic all along Fifth evenue to halt} or proceed at the Same moment. If a} couple of experimental towers work | out all_right on Broatway,. the, city | SEASIDE TOWN jexpected, will be determined by this | yeteran of the World War in Burleigh, | {rom the Red Cross and the American} , onvention. Legion. Persons Who aave made prev- BABY BORN ious ‘claims ‘which thcy believe were | not satisfattorily adjusted may apply for a re-opening of thei: cases as well as men desiring vocativaal training 01 awaiting claim adjustm, An especial effort i: get in touch with eve county who is in any assistance. Where it because of illness or disaiility to pres-| sent claims in person, the iocal Red} Cross workers will enileavor to assist in getting necessary information tu members of the squad. As‘this is the most itensive effor. which has.yet been made to locate all claimants and adjast their claims satisfactorily the co-operation of every | resident ig asked “in reaching these! cases. , Additional information may secured at Red Oross headquarter eing made to man in the entitled to not possible} “That no-one individua) or combina. | tion of individuals engaged in produc- ing films for exhibition should ‘fav: the uncensored right thal any or eve film, produced should he exhibited| without’ restriction. Sach exhibitions! rightly come within ‘state control un-' der the police power, and have re-| peatedly so heen held v3; the court oly last resort, i «The seating capacity of theaters in| this country is more than 5,400,000! On ‘the average this is filled several { times ‘dally. According tc the govern- ; mental.figures motion picture thea-; ters in'this country too in in admis- | sions $767,000,000 in the fiscal year| eding in June, 1920. | GROWS BECAUSE | OF N. Y. RENTS) Long, Beach, N. Sept. 22—Long| Beach, that seashore resort selected by writers of musical comedies w: ever, dn American Ostend is desir for,a scene, now has become an all-| around-the-year community. The bathing girls wiii not be play-| ing ‘on the ‘sands, but’safely tucked} away from the breakers will be many summer residents who have put up substantial houses. ‘rhe largest hotel has announced it will remain open a *| winter, and if the majo of the sum- mer residents remain, the village will| _v ey Over 48 of burdensome fat is reparted by Andrew R. Chaney, who ions, The average was ‘pound daily, Another message comes from & L. eg who lost over was Ghiee pounds a week, "Many bow fat be-' Pa P Ger come Korein Tabules from druggit today—stare Cc ee eis te faribeetes © poems (Co. NP-28 Station X, New York, N. ¥. | she should profit by Mrs. Patten’s ex- ~ ON PEAGE DAY After Mother Had Been Re- stored to Health by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Salisbury, Mass.—‘For seven years Thad a female trouble and such bearing- 5 mi down pains I could hardly do my. house- | awork. The doctor said, ‘If you can} have another baby ; it might be the best thing for you but I} am afraid you can- not.’ I Began tak Hing Lydia EB. Pink- | hamvesVegetable | Compound and my : baby was born on! * ‘Peace Day’. If women would only take Hoe Vegetable | Compound they would have better | health. I always recommend your Veg- | etable Compound to the neighbors.’’— | Mrs. TRacy PatTeN, 2 Lincoln Ave., | Salisbury, Massachusetts. | The experience of maternity should ; not be approached without careful phy- { sical preparation, as it is impossible for | aweak sickly wife to’bring@healthy | children into the world, nied Therefore if a woman 1 suffering | from a displacement, backache, inflam- mation, ulceration, bearing-down pains, headaches, nervousness or ‘‘the blues’ | | i i { | i | | | ! i | \ 1 | | rience, take Lydia E. Pinkham’s © ‘egetable Compound and be. restored to heaith ———— New Phone Number BISMARCK TYPEWRITER COMPANY Royal and Corona Agents $300.00 Takes'an Ouerland go With New Tires’ BOX 601 : LADIES \| We have a machine to steam | Plush Coats. CITY KOREIN:tabules are dispensed in thie city by iall good druggists, including "J. Bresiow’s Pharmacy 7-""* _.CLEANERS AND DYERS BATTERIES GUARANTEED FOR TWO YEARS (Free replacement for eighteen months) Electric Service & Tire Co. 215 Main Street MINNESOTA Safety and Service THE TWO STRONG PILLARS ON WHICH WE ARE BUILDING OUR BUSINESS OB ME CLINIOGK CO MINNEAPOLIS. VINNY With our‘new McClintock Burglar Alarm System which we recently installed, our bank is a safe place to keep your Liberty Bonds and other valuables as well as to do your reneral banking business, First National Bank, Bismarck, N. D. GET A SAF ETY DEPOSIT BOX NOW Safety First a

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