The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, May 14, 1925, Page 3

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~ PAGE TWO ¢< WORLDWAR PICTURES 10 BE REVIVED Film Producers Say Public | Again Wants Stories of | Armageddon ER BY JACK JUNGM NEA Service W York, May 14 imminent for a revival of war ures; movies fleshed upon the eleton of the late armageddon. urs henee, when pi tive ary for significant drama has been acquired, there will be produced o r The time New neces- | or se ‘ail momentous war picture capturing something of the mee of the great world tragedy as a whole, or. dealing poignantly with | ome phase of it. to be talked about - TO EARTH THE BISMARCK ‘LAW PERMITS | Cayuses | Helena, Mont. May 14 horse roundups, KILLING OF WILD HORSES |Mentana to Stage Roundups | | To Rid State of Range wita | planned under much | or ae “What Price Glory” has been dis- | ly cussed this p. eason on the New] tf tinge Thus far “The Four Horsemen? has come nearest being a meme | Btwn, glee iis sible oeeee- Gav photoplay of the World War. At) dens, which about the am period there were | Madise numerous mediocre productions, andj. \ywered to the ground prior to the then the trench and the tin’ hat) destruction of the Gard: nte her dwindled out because exhibitors said | sin. in comparison ¥ Page tired of being thus re people were minded of a aniversal grief and mis-| ery. | But the cycle swinging. And | there is no doubt that, pending the production of a great war pictur iany @fforts will be made to utiliz the war background and selected in- to bolster ordinary the fashion of the Cohanisti dramatists who used the flag to prop movies, | rounding her. BERLIN RAILROAD | WILL DISMISS 30,000 WORKER Berlin, May 14 the B economy, simple plays. i i AG teritutive:feelar—to: asce 1 if| Clation annou today it people are ready for a renewal of {Would dismiss 30,000 empla The | whe tiie a » Crowded Hour,’ | #ssociation now employs 00 a Famous Players-Lasky — pieturiza = tion of Channing Pollock’s and E our TO COL PEES FROM RK war lwyn’s play, starring Bebe | 4 Baielniaes a, batteltiald hareine: 1 ockholm, May 14.—Twelve per. | was adapted by John Russell and|cent of Sweden's entire populations dives iy He MuBoniHOp now licensed ra the a-| Bebe pla a telephone cpe! tes nee the sta trucs, who is, discovered at | Police begun for the first time | an amateur night entertainment on|tg Teund up illicit listeners the de-| RHeeINWeEy. Her sponsor! is 2 d for official permits has grown | wealthy young man, with whom she s and bounds, To meet the] by straightway becomes more less | expense of operating the public} entangled despite the latter's wife, | breadeasting stations the department | When war is declared, this man]ef telephones and telegraph, which | (Kenneth Harlan) hangs back, dally-| as charge of the count radio | ing with his ardent young idolator, until his brother is killed at the front. That sends “Laidlaw” and “Peggy” both, overseas—he under a tin hat, the girl with the Y. W. C, A. Being a practiced telephone opera- Peggy” is enabled to save a ent of Americans from anni- n when everything depends system, charges a license fee of § for each iving set. At the begin: ning of 1 only 4,530 such permits | had been issued, but today the fig-| bout 70,000, | y July 1 government officials | plan to have completed the five prin-| cipal brqadcasting stations at Stock-| holm, Malmoe, Gothenburg, Sunds- | upon an open wire at the front and|V#ll and Boden, all connected by the regular operator has been mor-|Wites for relay purposes, and so} tally wounded. She is forced to elect ed that ¢ part of the coun-; betw saving a thousand — men, will be equally well served. | who are only soldiers to her, and the = ! one man who is her lover. A true MARY PICKFORD ILL | heroine could do but one thing—and (By The 2 ted Pre Bebe does it. A moment later an} Hollywood, May 14.—Mary explosive shell. injures and tempor-| Pickford is confined to her bed with arily blinds her. Now she*finds her-]® cold, according to a statement is- self’ nursed back sued by her physician today, Her! sion b iy condition is not serious, and she is! the first time discovers that this wo- man truly loves the vacillating hus- band. Yhe girl gives him up and consoles herself with second choice, the loyal stage partner with whom she emerged from obscurity on the = Bowery. seum here. There are more than Throughout the picture are incor-|6000 specimens, some dating from | porated actual war scenes of 1918—|the year 9 B. C. flashes of smart des, cheering crowds, trench fighting, over-the- SCREAMIN FE * tops, liquid fire, belching guns and} West Bromwich, Eng., May 14.-A smouldering ruin young inventor here has just bought = These battle scenes do not, how-|4 ng safe. When it is touch ever, em to be an actual corporate part of the story. -The actors are never quite in and of them. And it is a curious observation that while some years ago war pictures de- clined because rasped people too sharply, these. same war scenes today are already too remote to stir people by such casual introduction as were made in “The Crowded Hour. ° ! The most moving element of* the play is the response of the selfish, petulant, love-smitten “Peggy” to the sacrifices which are constantly being made around her under patri-| otie stimulus; the change of her own nature, prompting heroism in the field of love even more than the field of battle. Miss Daniel’s rendi- tion of the role actory, but shé seems incapable of rising quite to impressive dramatic heights in * the» crises, “MANCHURIAN _ LEADER CALLS. ARMY TO COLORS By The Assoc ted Press) s Peking, China, May 14.—Consider- able apprehension exists among Chinese in the northern part of the country because of the fact that General Chang Tso-Ling, the Man- churian dictator, is massing troops. He is preparing so as to be in read- iness to meet his rival, n. La Wu Hsing, who is also m iz troops in the northern part of the country. WARHOP AND MILLER . IN SEMI-PRO BALL Two former major league players, 4 Jack Warhop and Otto Miller, are “now playing semi-pro ball in| and ggtzound New York. ‘big league days, Warhop, in his pitched for the Yankees while Miller was a catcher Syith, Brooklyn. SAT ON BURGLAR London, May 14.—A burglar tried “to rob the wrong shop here. He was. erpowered by the shopkeeper and Wife. Both of them being rather tout, they easily kept him as pris- Sener until the police arrivéd by sit- expected to recover in a few days. | A GHOSTLY PLACE i London, May 14.—The largest col-|~ {lection of skulls in the world is in the Royal College of Surgeons’ Mu-} ed by an unauthorized person, auto siren that can be heard for quarter of a mile starts screaming. RCE rth of good ts in Eng- CHORUS GIRLS § London, leoking chorus girls ex land, theatrical » One manager says more z girls} are found in the shops than those seeking stage positions. Dairy Products of only the highest grade. Modern Dairy. Cantilever shoes for com- fort-lovers. A, W. Lucas Co. Any Fuel Will Give Heat.—| But: Gas Stands Highest in the Important Tests of a Fuel. ooo Stomach Trouble | Racine, Wis.—"I had stomach trou-| ble pnd weak kidneys for years. I used ten bottles Pierce’s Golden Medical ‘Discovery and can truly say that now my health is real good considering my age, a8 I am over sixty. I can ree- ommend the ‘Golden Medical Discov- ery’ to anyone who is troubled as I was. I am very thankful to God and to Dr. Pierce for my good health.” —P. H. Roche, 1940 Asylum Ave. You can quickly pick: up and re- gain vim, vigor, vitality by obtain- ing this ‘Discovery’ of Dr. Pierce’s at the drug store, in tablets or ti- of quid, or. send We.to Dr. Pierce’s In- the sume system us used by s | western state are being organized ir tions of Montar under ed by the last The Ww, leertieettel grounds by old-time! j stackmen and ranchers in the legfs- lature, is designed to rid sections of | the state of the small, wild range |. j horses, commonly \ designated as | cayuses, which are considered by | | stockmen as utterly worthless. | | Farmers complain that, bands of | these horses, when range feed gets | poor, sweep down upon the unfenced | pasture lands in the agricultural dis- | tricts, break down fences and dam- age growing crops. The livestock department estimates that there are | 400,000 head of these wild horses on the Montana ranges. | | | | Under the law county commission- ers, upon sufficient petition, may designate a roundup foreman, who the drive, impounds the rses gathered, records: their ands, if any, and exuses the pub- | of a notice under which | such stock as redeem yment of a small are destroyed. Yl! 0 IPD oa <a oy jnon, There is a market for about 8,000 head of these horses annually. They Z See ar nea erie Sy NOE re HeLa a. highway department, who was pre-|tion restraining the radio concern | Hoffmannsthal case was pending and are bought by an eastern concern to be slaughtered and the choice pieces of the meat prepared for export, Fer- tilizer and dog food are by-products. It has been reliably stated that ‘ of food consumed by worthless cayuses would 000,000 head of sheep and d of cattle annually. sustain 800,000 he CONTRACT LET _ FOR ROAD WORK IN WELLS COUNTY The contract for tie construction 7 miles of road grading in Wells county was awarded to the firm of| adgett & Wallace of Leeds, N. D. regular letting held yesterday senden, county seat of Wells cording to A. D. MeKin- of county project engineer of the state! sent at the letting. The new road will run east and west through Fessenden. The suc- cessful bid entered was for the to- tal sum of $65,000 for all construc- tion work, COURT PROTECTS AUTHORS AGAINST RADIO BROADCASTING | Berlin, May 14 writer's poems, es erary productions same copyright pro s is the publication of such works in print, according to a decision of the Berlin courts, Gerhart H. Broadcasting a ys, or other lit- subject to the plmann and Hugo von Hoffmanns' two of the best known of Germany, filed suit against a Berlin radio sending company for broadcasting their works without their permission and with- out paying the author y-royalties, In the ense of auptmann court issued a preliminary injunc- , 2,000,000 women each sum- mer use Great Western Sugar . for jelly mak preserving. ing, canning and , 2,000,000 housewives endorse it. We GUARANTEE it. Join the two million ! the | { THURSDAY, MAY 14, 1925 gg sca arco sg oe ire from kroadcasting his works. It was would serve asa precedent. The court understood that the decision in the|sustained Hofmannsthal. . For The Graduate a Diamond Something that will be appreciated, and a constant reminder of one of the greatest events of their life. ¢ , We have a fine selec- tion for your inspec- tion. FOLSOM’S FROM ONE OF THE 2,000,000 Known to thousands of housewives in the Middle West is Mrs, Ida Migliario, editor of. The Household Magazine at Topeka, and counselor extraordinary to many housewives A on the important subjects of cooking, home making and kindred matters. The wide ex- perience of Mrs. Migliario and the trust- worthiness of her counsel make the more convincing this testimonial of hers to the satisfaction of Great Western Sugar for every cooking purpose: “If you use Great Western Sugar you willbe satisfied. That statement comes as a result of my using the sugar made by The Great Western Sugar Com- pany. It applies to candy making, cake making, canning of fruit, making of pickles, jams, marmalades, preserves— but best of all to that trickiest of cul- inary attempts—JELLY MAKING.” a BUYING SUGAR NOW FOR THE FRUIT SEASON? Some housewives are. They are putting it-away. They- are using it for the early fruit. Throughout this territory Great * Western Sugar is being purchased now for canning season duty. Your grocer ‘ / knows well the G-W brand; he'll see that you get it if you ask him for it . by name, GUARANTEED! \ ‘We guarantee Great Western Sugar to give satisfaction in jelly-making, canning, pre- serving’and for every other sugar use. It must satisfy you, as it has satisfied Q 2,000,000 other housewives. This guarantee i is made by the largest beet sugar refiner in - the world. THE GREAT WESTERN SUGAR. COMPANY * Denver, Colorado , ’ . The most thorough information on | jelly making, canning and preserving, with many practical and delightful a) tecipes, has been put in book form by Mrs. Ida Bailey Allen, noted cook- ing authority. We are mailing itfree to any interested housewife. It isa handsome, valuable booklet. Write today for a copy. e THE GREAT WESTERN SUGAR COMPANY é Sugar Building Denver, Colorado.

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