Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, July 20, 1916, Page 4

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THURSDAY, JULY 20, 1916, vor of Pinewood. Pinewood Saturday. Mrs. 8. C. Miller and Miss Adeline Frank Morton of Lake Itasca ar- Miller were guests of friends in Be-|rived here Saturday. = He will be as- midji Monday. sistant agent at the depot for a short Mrs. W. O. Fink and children of | time. The annual school meeting was ¥ Korelock, Mich., nrrlvéd here 1last _— held at the school house, Saturday, 4 & week to spend a few weeks With her | & % & % % ¥ & & ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ June 15. Mrs. P. Dromness and Mrs. O. Swen- | parents, Mr. and Mrs. P. Holm. * ECKLES * e H n F M n Id t son were guests of Mrs. O. Esterby George Bruun and Conrad Drom- | (By Special Correspondent) ¥%| The Ploneer 1s the jlace to buy y on' W 0 lllll o Ap' at Bemidji Saturday. ness returned Thursday from Bemidji |4 % % % & & ¥ % % % % ¥ % ¥ ¥ ¥X|your rolls of adding macliine paper The Pinewood and Buzzle nines|where they spent a few days with Mr. Ingersoll and family spent|for Burroughs adding machines. One pfial‘ Hal’l ‘nd IIIIIIVIII' crossed bats on the home diamond |friends. X Sunday at the Lind home. roll, a dozen rolls or & hund.ed rolls. I'"s Gmal lflc‘urfl. Sunday. The score was 1 to 2 in fa- N. Gerrard of Bemidji was seen in Mrs Ole Stortron has returned home Take advantage of a want ad. HE TALKS ON “MOONSHINE.” Analyzes and Dissects Modern Life. His Lecture Abounds In Philosophies and Good Humor—He Is a Strong Number. from a visit to her sister. Mr. Dandliker has sold his farm and will move to Fairdale, N. D, ina Miss Mae Simenson returned home { few weeks. ?L n L AWY EH to Bemidji Monday after having been a guest of the Misses Sthol the past few days. / Miss Rosenow, who is emnlo}"ed at : Bemidji is spending her vacation with her parents near Pinewood. CLOSING Hon. B. F. McDonald talks on “Moon- shine” instead of manufacturjng it Isn’t it a rather odd subject? OUR OLD HOME SINGERS. But, nevertheless, the Hon. McDon- ald, from the state of Ohio, has evolved HERE is a company of Chautauqua singers big enough and brave a great lecture out of that subject. It enough to pull clean away from the conventional and sing the songs, the dear old songs, of heart and home, the songs that have established themselves in human affection. A delightful sketch runs throughout the performance, and the musical and entertain- ment effects are truly wonderful. The company ;vus husscmblud m;d lar ram, and expert builders have put on the Snistimg touches. o them at Chautauqua by all meuns, 0000000000 R SALE ki Our entire stock of Men's, Ladies’ and Children’s Low Shoes must be disposed of to make room for fall stock of high shoes Sale Starts Sat., July 22, Ends Saturday, July 29th SEVEN DAYS Our entire stock of men’s and ladies up-to-date low shoes, values to $4.00, sale price only $2.45 Our entire stock of ladies’ fine low shoes, values to $3.50, sale price only $1.95 Four hundred pairs of ladies’, misses and children’s low shoes, values to $2.50, sale price only 08¢ 1000 pairs men’s, ladies and children’s hose val- ues 15¢ to 25¢, only S5c A PAIR with every pair of shoes purchased during this sale HON. B. F. M'DONALD. has fascinating interest about it. Right now you are wondering what it Is all about. Well, it’s about a lot of things in this old world that are pure moonshine. In - : private and public life, in all vocations, Thls summer ac‘er in soclety, in church and in every oth- er human activity there is a vast amount of pretense and show. Mec- . Donald calls it moonshine and lays a Io“a ar bare some of its worst aspects. He is a lawyer by profession and lectures during the summer months for . . . relaxation. He is a student, a thinker, Glacier Park in the Montana Rockies | |a forcetul orator and s likatle man. —it’s established now as America’s vacation paradise—this summer make “Glacier” your vacation-place. DEALS IN Fflfll_s On a Glacier Park vacation you’ll enjoy to the full the fascination of the Rocky Mountains. You'’ll get IN BIG LEGTURE into the “big woods.” You’ll paddle mile-high mir- ror-lakes, along racing mountain rivers hook the RS A LT L T R T TR AR T LT mountain trout. By auto-stage you’ll motor deep é among the Rockies. You'll “saddle up” and go horse-back up and onto the Rockies—cross the Continental Divide. You’ll 'j' Frad Glarks Gnm'"g ‘0 enjoy out-of-doors-land hotels where giant trees are pillars, where there are campfires indoors. Ghautauqua to Arouse, Very low fares to Glacier Park and back are in effect. Pacific Northwest Summer Round Trip tickets routed *‘Great Northern” permit stopover at the Park. FOOLS BETTER STAY AWAY. Clarke Will Clear Up the Mists and Fogs and Bring on Clear Weather For the Struggling Masses. New Glacier Park booklets for 1916 are out now—ask for them, and for detailed Park information. C.E. STONE, Passenger Traffic Manager, St. Paul, Minn. s All the fools would better stay away from the Chautauqua tent when J. Fred Clarke comes to deliver his ad- dress.. He is going to give the fools an unpleasant hour. J. Fred is not a fool killer. He is a bundle of brains, courage and vim who is trying to steer people clear of the fools’ paradise. He will inspect, dis- sect and reject two principal kinds of fools—the one who stznds out against a fact and the one who can’t interpret a fact. " The lecture is a strong plea for lib- erty and democracy, free thought and Ghe Purily ¢ Qualit of 2ig MilK: Unsurpassed You can'’t afford to eat or drink anything which you are not ab- solutely sure is PURE. Every g{fi%fi&% rggla;ngs ::‘lo?:afi progress. Its passion for liberty and od patio mili(e d in abso- k its belief in progress are as burning as c]y r:a,nin' = rstamid those of lugersclv]lk It abounds in logie, tary quartt d 3 then the milk is clarafied. ke tecture. wil 4 This lecture will fill the bill. We The Wholesomeness and Pur- have all got to deal with facts and ity of our Milk is Unsurpassed. sometimes with fools. Anything that clears up the mists and fogs of human Let us deliver you a bottle tomorrow morning. experimentation on life is a graclous help. You will readily taste the difference. Phone us your order now, to- day, while you think of it. W. G. Schroeder Phone 65 or 66 .~ Bemidji, Minn. J. FRED CLARKE. KKK KK KKK KKK KKK x PINEWOOD * ¥ (By Special Correspondent) KX KK KKK KK KKK KKK Conrad Nelson was a Bemidji vis- itor Thursday. : The Misses Zenda Bell and ~Mae Collard left Thursday for their home SALE OPENS 8:30 a. m., SATURDAY, JULY 22 - SALE ENDS SATURDAY, JULY 29 Mise Lol s, after apend- i T i i ’ TRy

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