Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, December 28, 1916, Page 3

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| THURSDAY. DECEMBER 28, 1916, . o : \ Coming Events | “Board of County Commissioners, Jan. 2. St. Paul Winter sports carnival, Jan. 27-Feb. 3. Bemidji schools close Friday, Dec. 22, reopen Jan. 8. Commercial club meeting, day, January 2. Royal Gwent Welsh male singers, Methodist church, January 4. Former Governor J. Frank Hanley of Indiana, third number Ilyceum Course, auspices Woman’s Study club, Jan. 30 Tues- Miss Donna Lycan of the Mark- "# ham hotel entertained at two tables of bridge yesterday afternoon. Mrs. C. R. Sanborn of Lake Boule- vard was hostess this afternoon when she entertained a group of ladies at bridge. Attorney and Mrs. H. L. Huffman will entertain a number of friends tomorrow evening in honor of Miss Donna Lycan. The guests will be Dr. and Mrs. C. R. Sanborn, Mr. and Mrs. H. M. Stanton, Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Herbert, Misses Leah Berman, Donna Lycan, Dorothy Torrance and Messrs. E. B. Berman and Thomas 8. Ervin. . | Personals and i Lis, yture taken.—Adv. et e N Newsy Notes George Forte of the town of Eckles is spending a few days in the city on business. The Hotel of Character and Com- fort. Hotel Radisson, Minneapolis. —Adv. d-3-1-17 Miss Marie Larson went to Kelli- her yesterday where she will be the guest of relatives. One of these nice days you ought to go to Hakkerup’s and have your 14tt Edwin J. Simons of the Herald Editorial department has left for Be- midji where he will spend the week as a guest of his parents, Judge and Mrs. H. A. Simons. Mr. Simons will also spend a few days in Minneapolis before returning to the city.— Grand Forks Herald, Dec. 27. t e REX THEATRE mnmmmmmmPleasing Photoplaysumnminnmm TONICHT “BARRIERS OF SOCIETY” Man’s Millions Against Woman’s Will. Lloyd Carlton; Played with a Brilliant Cast, In- cluding DOROTHY DAVENPORT and EMORY JOHNSON RED FEATHER FILM GO. 7:30—8:45 5 Acts Same Prices Store will close notice. STORE OPEN THIS WEEK day Afternoon and Saturday and remain} closed until further THE BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEER Dean a71ee $50,000 to loan on farms. Land Co.—Adv. A, H. Jester, deputy United States _!| marshal, is spending a couple of days in Kelliher on business. William Chichester of Ball Club, Minn., will spend the week-end in the city, a guest at the G. W. Cochran, Sr., home. You will find more of the leading people of Minnesota registered at the Radisson, than at any other hotel in the Twin Cities.—Adv. d3-1-17 Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Tollefson of Rosby were in the city yesterday. While here they attended the movies in the evening, returning home on the late train. Mrs. John Thompson of Irvine av: enue returned this morning from Vir- ginia, Minn., where she has been the guest of Mr. and Mrs. John Happerup for the past month. Miss Mavis Phillippi, who teaches school at Buck-lake, is the guest of her father, J. M. Phillippi, and sis- ter, Mrs. Hugh Whitney of Irvine av- enue, during Christmas vacation. Mrs. John Hedeen, who was oper- ated upon at St. Anthony’s hospital a week ago for appendicitis, is con- valescing and was taken to the home of Mr. and Mrs. S. A. Cutter yester- day afternoon. Hair dressing, manicuring, face massage, scalp treatment, switches made from combings. Corns, ingrown nails treated a specialty. Mina Myersi, 311 6th St. Phone 112-W. —Adv. 12d-111 Ralph Gracie, who has spent his Christmas vacation in Bemidji, the guest of his sister, Mrs. Frank Pogue, and other friends and relatives, has returned to Minneapolis where he at- tends the University of Minnesota. Henry Rappie of St. Paul is a guest at the William H. Schmitt home on Dewey avenue, while enroute to his home from Cass Lake where he has been on a business trip. Mr. Rappie will return to the Twin Cities this evening. The pretty sentiment which ac- companies a gift of flowers—admira- tion, love, tendér regard—these hings make a flower as greatly prized as a jewel. So take even a single rose home to some dear one, not for its intrinsic value, but for your in- ner feelings which it manifests. ELLIOT, FLORIST—Adv. 1227tf &c and I5¢c Produced by 5 Acts As Last Fri- New Years Day In ‘“The Wager,” the great Metro- Rolfe production which will be seen at the Grand theater tonight, Emily Stevenst had a rare opportunity to show her tremendous emotional pow- er as an actress. Miss Stevens won high praise in ‘““The Unchastened Wo- man,” and “The Wheel of the Law,” but “The Wager” is said to bring her rare talents more actively into play than either of the first two produc- tions. You’ll enjoy The Radisson, Min- neapolis.—Adv. d3-1-17 Mrs. George Butler and Mrs. Glen Saddler of Redby were between train visitors in. the city yesterday. Plain sewing done at 821 Minne- sota Ave.—Adv. 6-1229 Rev. 0. P. Grambo, pastor of the Free Lutheran church of the Fifth ward, went to Shevlin yesterday on business. He will return Saturday noon, Your visit to the Twin Cities will be more enjoyable if you stop at this Famous Hostelry. Excellent Cuisine. Hotel Radisson, Minneapolis, Minne- sota. 409 rooms—275 at $1.50 to $2.50.—Adv. d3-1-17 Mrd. W. B. Stewart and little grand daughter of Dewey avenue have gone to Chicago where they will visit friends and relatives for a week or ten days. Did you finish High school last spring? If-so, what can you do? Are you qualified to accept a business po- sition? No. Then you should take a course in the Mankato Commercial College. Send for their catalog. It is free.—Adv. Mrs. S. Binns, who has been visit- .|ing relatives in Redby and Buena Vista for the past two weeks, was in Bemidji yesterday, enroute to her home in Rockford, N. D. Melba Beauty Parlors: Room 8, O’Leary-Bowser Bldg. Shampooing, manicuring, face massage, treatment for sore feet. Headquarters for Melba preparations. Make your ap- pointments early. Office phone 540; home phone 88. Open evenings and Sundays by appointment only.—Adv. 1213tf A Bridge Party In Japan, ' It wasn'’t long after we landed before we saw the Japanese woman, the type that old Japan creates. She and some others were having a bridge party. Sounds inviting, but it wasn't. About twenty of them were driving piles for a new bridge. The sun was scorching, the timbers enormous and the man overseer was abusing them. For weren’t they only women? Without education and with old Japan’s idea of women crushing them down, they deem- ed themselves pretty fortunate to have even such work and the princely sum of 10 cents a day. No, it isn’t enough for old Japan that the women should have a baby every year. They must work, work like men and animals. In Nikko we could see from a distance a long line of bowed figures climbing the steep bank of the river Daiya, and on coming nearer we saw that they were old, old women, wrinkled and gray, carrying barrels— not baskets, but barrels of stone from the river bed to the road. Such is the reverence for age in Japan.—Jean Price in World Outlook. Busy. “Loafley tells me he hasn’t been so busy for years.” “Nonsense! That job he has is a cinch. He never has to work hard there.” “That’s just it. He’s been fired, and he’s chasing around after another job now.”—Exchange. The Method. ‘Willis—What kind of a school is your son attending? Gillis—Very fashion- able, one of those institutions where you develop the mind without using it. —Life. Early Precept. Kind Lady—How'd you learn to pick pockets? Pickpocket—By watchin’ me mother fishin’ fer change in th’ old man’s trousers—Albany Knickernock- er Press. Bvery brave man is a man of his | word.—Corneflle. Origin of “Fusilier.” - Fusilier was originally the name of a soldier armed with a light flintlock musket called the fusil. At.the time of the English. civil war (164252) the term “firelock” was usually employed to distinguish these weapons from the more common matchlock muskets. Out of these companies of “firelocks” grew the “fusiliers.” In the latter part of the Thirty Year war (1643) fusiliers were simply mounted troops with the fusil, as carbiniers were with the car- bine. The senior fusilier regiment in the British service, the Seventh Royal fusiliers, City of London regiment, was formed on the Frenck model in 1688. Early Marriage In China. It is nothing rare in Cluna for boys twelve to fourteen years old to marry. The physical, moral and intellectual development of the contracting par- ties has nothing to do with the matter. Other considerations entirely regulate the affair. An old Chinese aphorism says that the great business of life is ended when the sons and daughters are married. The Chinese parents do not care to run the danger of postponing the marriage of their children, especially of their sons, until after their own death.—Ex- change. A WOMAN---THE LAW---LOVE SEE Emily Stevens _In._ “THE WAGER” A Marvelous- METRO Master Play of Business Life and the Underworld —IN FIVE STUPENDOUS ACTS— GRAN A Very Little. ’ Bob—Before marriage she told me she loved me a little. Rob—Well? Bob —But, my stars, if I had only known how little!—London Answers. 1:30---8:45 5¢ & 15¢ TONIGHT His Inheritance. Askitt—Did young Dodge inherit any- thing from his father? Noitt—Yes, I believe he inherited the old man’s sire-to avoid work.—Exchange. de- = LOT 1. cial to close quick, a pair— $1.98 LOT 2. $5; special, a pair— $2.39 “THE ECONOMY CENTER” IIIII|II|I|II|IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIll||WIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII|IIII|IIIIIIIIIII|II|I||I|III|III|III|II|||IIII|III Contains blankets that are worth up to $4 a pair, and not any of them less than $2.75; spe- Wool nap and wool finished extra large heavy -.--blankets, very few soiled, worth from $3.25 to Warm, wooly, wide extra large blankets at prices that will make you wonder how we car do it. The story is brief, we Lought the entire sample line of blankets of & wholesaler through with them, at our own price on account of being slightly soiled. who was LOT 3. The largest and heaviest of the lot, values to six dollars; these are blankets that are seldom carried in stock in the sizes we are offering in this sale at, a pair— $2.69 OFFICIAL WEIGHT MACKINAW HERE Just received 100 yards, with more reserved, of the very heaviest bright red mackinaw obtain- able, and accepted as the official weight for Car- nival Suits, 60 inches wide. now. B/G - DELARTMENT7- STOREL - Get your order in [} “You 00 BETTER PAYING CASH.” l‘l!lllllI!IIIIIII|lIIlIIIIIlIIIIIIIIlllIIIIIIII||IIII||IIIII|IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII"’: 5 These Are “Good- Serwce” Advertisers Offering you their “good-service” and spending money to tell this‘commun- ity about themselves. HHKEKEKEKE KKK KK KKK DRY CLEANING Clothes Cleaners for Men Women and Children THE MODEL DRY CLEANING HOUSE Hogan Bros., Props. * ok Kk ok ok ok ok kK AKX KKK KKK KK KX XK KK KKK BROSVIK, THE TAILOR Phone 938 Tk ok khd ok ok ko k ok ok ok k ok ok k * ok owok ok ok k KKK KKK XX KKK KKK KKK KKK * DRUGS AND JEWELRY & ¥ Wholesalers and Retailers +* Service and satisfaction. Mail & % Orders given that same ser- ¥ % vice you get in person. « * BARKER'S * « Third St. Bemidji, Minn. & XXX KK KKK KKK R K HEHHEHH KKK KKK KX x * DEAN LAND CO. *x * * * x Land, Loans, Insurance * x and City Property *x ¥« Troppman Block Bemidji & *x KKK R KKK XXX KKK * Why not call them up? B A R R ok x x * KOORS BROTHERS CO. <« x * * Bakers and Confectioners & %« Manufacturers and Jobbers % % Ice Cream, Bakery Goods, & % Confectionery,Cigarsand ¥ * Fountain Goods x % 315 Minn. Ave. Phone 1235 % KKK KKK XX KRR R K& Typewriter Ribbons Garbon Paper Second Shests Paperineveryconceivable form Phone 922 PIONEER OFFIGE (222222222 2 2] AR SRS SRR R LR R ¥ GENERAL MERCHANDISD * ¥ Groceries, Dry Goods, Shoes, ¥ ¥« Flour, Feed, etc. The * careful buyers * *x buy here. * *x W. G. SCHROEDER x ¥« Bemidji Phone 66 & ISR R R RS RERES &4 EEKEKKKKK KKK KK KK x * *x *x x PHOTOGRAPHER *x x * * Photos Bay and Night * * *x N. L HAKKERUP *x * * * *x KE KKK KKK KKK AKAKKK KK KKK KKK KK % MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS <« *x ‘Wholesale and Retail * % Pianos, Organs and Sewing & *x Maechines * « 117 Third St. Bemidji % * Phone 578-W *x * J. BISIAR, Manager * KX KKK KKK KKK KKK LR R R R ERERE 8 *: * * BERMAN INS. AGENCY % *x Farm, Fire, Tornado * x Insurance R % Money to Lyan- Land to Sell & ¥« It will pay you to know us & Phone 19 ' Bemidji, Minn. % XK KKK KKK KK EEXXKKK KKK KKK KK * For Farm Insurance and * x Farm Loans, See *x J. P. LAHR * * x * * Lands Bought and 8old & * Markham Hotel Bldg. L * Bemidji, Minn, * A ELEEX SR SRR L2 R 1 i

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