Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, July 7, 1915, Page 3

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' WEDNESDAY, JULY 7, 1915. About The City LA B RS E RS RS RE SRR S ] ' LEST WE FORGET * Cii*ii*i*il&l{ii In case of fire call 349. L Bemidji’s Vawter-Redpath chautau- qua will be held August 3 to 7, in- clusively. . LR The next meeting of the board of county commissioners will be held on July 12. .. When traveling purchase round- trip tickets. Boost the Bemidji rall- road receipts. s . There will be another sale of state school and swamp land of the county Wednesday, July 14. . s On December 9 and 10 the winter convention of the Northern Minne- sota Development association will be held in Bemidji. L Beltrami county’s annual fair will be held on September 15, 16, 17 and 18. September 15 will be entry day. The state fair will be in progress Septcmber 6 to 11 /O\ BREVIT Mrs. Will Guild of Farris was the guest of friends in the city yester- day. Miss Alma Ness of Leonard is the guest of friends in Bemidji this week. For Wood Phone 129 —Adv. Miss Tinnie Pendergast has re- turned ‘from Washington, D. C. where she has spent the winter. Miss Lucile Young of Minnesota avenue is spending a few days in Tenstrike, the guest of relatives. R. C. Hayner, the land man, left last evening for Minneapolis where he will spend several days on busi- ness. Mr. and Mrs. Ed Stafford of Foss- ton, Minn., are visiting at the home of their son, Bart Stafford, of Ny- more. Mrs. F. R. Smalley of Duluth ar- rived in the city yesterday and will be a guest at the F. D. Higby home for a week. Buy your Clarefied Milk at W. G. Schroeder’s store.—Adv. Mr. and Mrs. Case and children of Turtle River were among the out- of-town visitors during the celebra- tion Monday. Mrs. Alice Robideau of Tenstrike was among the out-of-town shoppers in Bemidji yesterday, returning home on the evening train. Mr. and Mrs. C. Turner and daugh- ter, Mercedes, of Proctor, Minn., were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Cota the first of the week. Misses Arlie and Norma Dobbedahl of Guthrie attended the celebration here Monday. Miss Arlie has en- rolled at summer school for the rest of the term. Ella Hall and Bob Leonard in “Olaf Erickson, Boss”—Grand to- night.—Adv. Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Given had as their dinner guests Sunday, Messrs. and Mesdames H. C. Baer, W. I Denu, E. H. Denu, C. A. Johnson and B. W. Lakin. Mrs. H. Brandt and two children will leave in a short time for Bovey, A % MARLEY, 25 IN. DEVON 2% IN. COLLARS FREE! “Juvenile Autos” and hundreds of other fine prizes for boys for selling the St. Paul Dispateh St. Paul Pioneer Press St. Paul Sunday Pioneer Press We want boys in every town. We have a special proposition for you. Write today— Circulation Depanment The Dispatch Printing Co. ST. PAUL, MINN If you are not keeping up to the times on war news or. other world events, it's because you don’t read the St. Paul Dispatch or St. Paul Pioneer Press. = Write for sa.nple copy and convince yonmlf | Minn., where they will visit friéends before going to Duluth to spend the| summer months. J. L. Johnson, proprietor of- the Central hotel at Fosston, Minn., and granddaughter were Bemidji visitors yesterday. Mr. Johmson is a for- mer Bemidji resident. Max Figman and Lolita Robertson in ‘“Hoosier School Master,” Grand tomorrow.—Adv. Attorney Montreville J. Brown left last evening for Minneapolis where he had heen called on profes- sional business. He will return to Bemidji tomorrow morning. Misses Florence and Lucile Burtis of Decorah, Iowa, arrived in Bemidji last evening and will be the guests of their grandmother, Mrs. Emma Stewart, of Dewey avenue, during the summer months. Mr. and Mrs. B. W. Lakin of Lake Boulevard entertained Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Given, Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Denu and Mr. and Mrs. E. H. Denu at din- ner last evening. One of these days you ought to go to Hakkerup’s and have your ple- ture taken.—Adv. A. P. White, president of the Northern National bank, left last evening for the Twin Cities where he will spend several days on busi- ness Mr. White plans to return to Bemidji Friday morning. Mrs. John Wallin and daughters, Stella and Bertha, of Great Falls, Mont., who have been the guests of Mrs. John Tennstrom for a few days, left yesterday for Grand Forks and Minto, N. D., where they will visit friends. They formerly lived in Bemidji. Last evening the Baptist Sunday school held its social and business meeting in the basement of the church. Games were played, a short program given and refreshments served. These meetings are held the first Tuesday of each month and are free to all. 1ave your furniture repaired at the bargain store, first class work a! reasonable prices.—Adv. Miss Alice Pendergast, who has been teaching at Flandreau, S. D., this year, returned to Bemidji to- day. Since her school closed at Flandreau, she has been attending summer school at the state univer- sity. This is Miss Pendergast’s third year in Flandreau. Miss Martha Williams of Minot, and Miss Margaret Williams, who is spending the summer at Bemidji, ar- rived Friday evening and will visit with friends for a few days, when they will both go to Bemidji, where they will remain for several weeks.—— Grand Forks Daily Herald. N Carter Cutter, son of Mr. and Mrs. Sam A. Cutter, of Beltrami avenue, came to Bemidji last evening from Norwich, N. D., and will remain in the city until the first of the week as the guest of his parents. Mr. Cut- ter is assistant cashier in the First State bank of Norwich and before coming to Bemidji he attended an insurance men’s convention at De- treit, Minn. Fresh kodak films now for sale. Rich Studio, 29 10th St.. Developing roll, 10¢; prints, 3¢ up.—Adv. Last evening a number of the Be- midji camp-fire girls held a picnic at Diamond Point. Those present were Mrs. George Cochran, jr., guar- dian, and Misses Edna Backland, Edith Mills, Lucine McCuaig, Doro- thy Carson, Milre Achenbach, Louise McCready, Emma Klein, Lucile Mor- itz and Carrie Brown. It was de- cided at this time to go camping at Birchmont Beach about July 19. Mr. and Mrs. N. E. Given of Dewey avenue entertained the Presbyterian Boys’ club last evening. Those pres-] ent were Walter Gracie, Ralph Gra- cie, Frank Harris, Glenn Conger, Clifford Condon, James Given, D’Arcy McGee, Raymond Hannah, George Armstrong and Vernon Lamson. Mre. Brown .and Misses Ida Virginia Brown, Margaret McGee and Muriel McGee. sell either by the cord or carload. Call C. LaJambe. Phone 113-J— Adv. When you want some eggs bad call the same Frenchman, 113-J.—Adv. Rev. I. D. Alvord and family are spending a three weeks’ vacation as the guests of Mrs. Alvord’s parents, Rev. and Mrs. Day, of Akeley, Minn., at their cottage on Long Lake, near Park Rapids. This will not interfere with the services in . the Baptist church, however. Rev, Scott will preach Sunday morning and the young people will have charge of the evening service. Prayer meeting will be held at the usual time and place and H. E. Rice will have charge. .V. M. Emmerit, high school agri- culturist at Buffalo, ‘Minn., who has spent. the last several days in Be- I midji as the guest of F. B. Lamson, deputy county auditor, has left for Tenstrike where he will investigate land conditions. He expects to walk to Spooner and_Baudette, following the judicial ditch roads. Mr. Em- merit was enthusiastic over-the agri- cultural possibilities of this vicinity and predicts a prosperous future for the farmers who have settled here. He believes that the country ic ldeal for dairying. purposes. Need any heip? ry a want ad. Givén was assisted by Mrs. 8. C.|: at the Panama-Pacific International Exposxtion Exhibits in Agricultural Palace at the Panama-Pacific: International Expo- sition Show Catsepillar Gaining Favor.Over._Lug-wheeler Trac- tors in Machinery,. An observer in the Agriculture Pal ace at the Panama-Pacific Interna- tional Exposition at San Francisco cannot help.noticing; in the display of agricultural .power machinery, the al- most. . complete supersedence;:of the new design of power, tractor,-known as the caterpillar, over the cumbersome, unstable, high-wheeled engine of a few years ago. There are few of the old models on exhibition, while. the caterpillar principle has been applied | * to almost every. type of engine for ag- ricultural . purposes. The. caterpillar proper is a, heavy sheet metal. chain,. varying in width from ten inches to two, feet according to the weight of the engine, which Dpasses around two heavy sprocket wheels like a belt. These wheels re- volving, - pass- the - chain -about - them, the lower part-moving backward, with the weight, of.the engine resting on the bread surface of the chain be tween. the two sprockets. An engine, of this type.can be op erated on ground soft enough to mire an ordinary farm wagon. Duplicate of the. Roosevelt African Shotgun, A ‘duplicate of the shotgun which Col. Theodore Roosevelt took with him on his African trip, a gun constructed expressly for him by an American armorer, is on display at the manufac- turer’s exhibit in the Manufacturer’s Palace at the Panama-Pacific Interna- tional Exposition, San Francisco. The gun cost its illustrious -owner $360, and its beautiful design, . graceful lines and wonderful inlay work would Justify the expenditure to any lover of fine pieces. The stock is elabo- rately hand carved, the barrels and lock .are hand engraved, and the lock is inlaid with a hunting scene in gold. The barrels are of ‘the finest Krupp steel. Defore starting on the trip the ex-president wrote to the makers: “I really think it is the most beautiful gun I have ever seen. -I am almost ashamed to take it to Africa and sub- Ject it to the rough treatment it will receive.” The left barrel is choked and the right open. It is cored to shoot either buckshot or a single ball. In a group in this Palace are dis- plays by four of the world’s greatest manufacturers of sporting arms, which form an exhibit which attracts hun- dreds of sportsmen. Each display is in charge of a firearms’ expert. Pearl Culture a. New . Industry. Among the interesting exhibits of the Japanese in the Manufacturers’ Palace at the Panama-Pacific Interna- tional Exposition is a demonstration of the methods and results of pearl cultivation in the far East. The dis- plays of this cultivated product, show- ing hundreds of pearls which until pearl culture was placed on a com- mercial basis a few years ago would have been the possessions of royalty, will delight any lover of beautiful] gems, and the methods of production will prove interesting to any ob- server. Though pearl culture has be- come a thriving industry in Japan, at- tempts to reproduce it in other parts of the world have yielded but meager results. ‘The successful method of propaga- tion was evolved by the Japanese sci- entist Kokichi Mikimoto, who discov- ered a species of oyster which pro- duted the pearl on the surface of the shell. Though the finding of the oys- ters and inserting the nuclei, then waiting for the pearl to grow to a commercial size may seem a simple process, the fact that it has not re- duced the price of .the gems, even to that of the most expensive imitations, | shows that it is beset with many diffi- culties. An electro-magnet that can take current from a light socket has been patented for handling nails in retall hardware stores. A tiny electric lamp to illuminate the keyhole, provided -with current by a dry battery, is inserted in a new door knob. 1 hs:ve some fine 16" jaclqmw‘tl:»l Gflmfflr' shnes for Men Included in our very complete line of Comfort | shoes, we have a shoe for men that is certainly | the most comfortable thing a man ever had on | his foot. Every barber, | dentist, eclerk or business man who is on his feeta great deal of the .time, should try on a pair of these | shoes. | This shoe has a heavy turn | flexible sole; is a plump kid | blucher, cushion insole, no | box, steel arch support, special men’s ! last, - low, broad hee A well made shoe, guaranteed through- out; sells for .... $4.00 and you will get that much comfort out of it the first week you wear it. All sizes E and double E Iast Bamldjl Shue Smre " ARTS AND. ORAFTS OF 10000 YEARS AGD SHOWN IN THE TEHUANTEPEC VILLAGE AT THE PANAMA-PACIFIC INTERNATIONAL EXPOSITION The House of Quélity Bob Leonard and Ella Hall, the two popular star; played the Master Key in the 2 part drama of the-woods. ““Olaf Erickson, Boss”: “The Affair of the Terrace” melodrama feati Bew Wilson and Dorothy Phillips. ‘‘His Only Pants”’ comedy with Lee Moran, Jac lon, and the daintiest little comedienne in movnes, Rhodes. % Shows at 7:30, 8:30, 9:30 S Admission- THURSDAY., ». Max Flgman and Lolita Robertson.in tlmt noted, play from the book “The Hoosier Schoolmaster” Shows at 7:30, 845 . . .. 5. £3 SN A G s 35, 2l S < v»The Tehuantepec village on the Zone at the Panama-Pacific International Exposition is a bit of the oldest civilization of the world brought to San Francisco from the country of-the Aztec ruins in Central America. Beautiful «earpet weaving is:shown; together with onyx cutting, clay and wax modeling, ancient dancing’and singing, pottery making and coloring and other arts characteristic of the people. A typical garden is open to the visitor in the -concession in which.is.to be seen the-landscape art:of this people. ORPHEUM VAUDEVIHLL ‘Davis and Elmore.. .. Fifteen minutes .of artistic nonsense; mtmducmg funny sayings, harmony smgmg and bright clean comedy. Cleone Pearl Féll Dances of all nations PARAMOUNT PRUGRAM K:lem—Sirategy. Llovd V. Hamilton and Bud Duncan in “THE PHONEY CANNIBAL” 1 Biograph—The two reel “LORNA DOONE” . Vitagraph—Boebby Connelly in* SSONRY JIM AND THE VALENTINE™. When you see it you will be just as glad as lhe.glrl' : who -got it. It leads to a surprise and much unex- pected happiness. Chemically treated cloths have Tests by European scientists have been invented for washing windows |shown that the durability of various without water. bronzes is proportionate to their content of tin. Results are must aiways certain when you use a Pioneer want ad One-half cent a word. Phone 31. EDIR’BURE DRUGS THERE ARE IN THESE UNITED STATES Pioneer wants—one~ha]t cent » word cash. Prices: . 10¢, 20c, 25c. Show starting at 7:30 contin;bus’ PLEASING PHOTO-PLAYS REX THEATRE REX Wednesday and Thursday The ninth episode in that popular serial “THE BLACK BOX"” ; showing exciting situations in the story and the perils of a stranger Z “‘Lost In London:” A Vltagraph drama “THE TEST OF SINCERITY” Helen Bray, Augusta Anderson and Wm. J. Butler play the lead- ing characters. Even the fat lady wakes up and. gets busy in-the comedy “MR. JARR’S MAGNETIC FRIEND” Friday—A Mutual Masterpicture “STRATHMORE” A drama that has created an epoch in the motion picture art, based on Ouida’s famous love.story-of-plet and counterplot. 2 Children B¢ —ADMISSION— Adults 10c Notice—Brakemen Not Breakmen Doubtless some of the thirty-one are supporting husbands, not breaking them The big hat looks suspicious though—must have cost a lot We Have A Lot of Litle Things Here That Gost Litile 1001 Articles of Household Necessities Needed Every Day Let Us Supply You E. F. NETZER 'S It solves the summer refreshment problem. ‘Keep Welch’s in your ice chest. Otto 6. Schwandt ‘Winn. Ave. Phone 33 there are records of ln Every Branch ; of Evel'y Business ”m\evll‘:t:‘er those records are the best for the business or not is sel- dom considered—“We've used them for years and . they've served their purpose.” . And there the mat- ter drops—but we don't intend to let you drop it until we've had a chance to prove to you that there is an - emmPemmBook made expressly to fit the needs of every depart— ment of your business. Made to save money for you—made to keep your records at a minimum of cost:and a maximum gf accuracy. I'PBook for ‘ Every Business and Profession v ‘In any color to flt any make of typewrlter Each 75c These nbbons are fully guarantsed as the best on earth.’ Come in neat tin boxes. . There is an PEIS Informatxon in detail for the askmg o - Bémimi Pionger Office-Supply Store " Security Bank Bldg. Phone 31 3 st

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