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THE BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEER ’ Coming Events Sept. 17, 18, 19—Red Lake Indian Fair. Sept. 12-13-14—Twelfth Annual Beltrami County Fair. August 14—The Beltrami county board of commissioners meet. C The Beltrami county district court eonvenes September 11. SOCIETY A c KNITTING FOR NAVY | Thirty ladies attended the Red Cross circle of the Presbyterian church yesterday afternoon at the home of Mrs. W. E. Dean. Mesdames A. A. Warfield and Mrs. Dean were hostesses. The afternoon was spent in knitting for the boys in the navy. CLUB MEETING TODAY The Bemidji Township Farmers’ club is being entertained at the A. E. Rako farm this afternoon. Mrs. Her- man Fenske and Mrs. Sever Flom are the hostesses. This is the regular monthly meeting of the club. Personals and Newsy Notes Mrs. P. N. Anderson left yester- A splendid idea. Let’'s have a dieh of Koors’ wholesome ice cream. 62t8t Mrs. G. G. Bowers has gone to Min- neapolis where she will spend the week-end with her husband. One of these nice days you ought to go to Hakkerup's and have your picture taken.—Adv. 14tt I-R. . . . McDonald of Bemidji, a state cruiser, is transacting bus{- ness here.—International Falls Daily Journal. Miss Adelle Quinlan of St. Paul is the guest of Mrs. Mort Temple and other friends in the city. Professor C. C. Hankey and family of Saum were the guests of Mr. and { Mrs. J. C. McGhee and family Thurs- day and Friday. ‘h Irene O’Keefe of St. Paul is expect- d to arrive in the city today and will be the guest of Miss Lottie McDonald for several days. Miss O’Keefe had been visiting friends in fosston and Bagley. Quality money-saving kodak fin- ishing: Developing 10c¢; prints, 3c Good ones. Try us. See our sam- ples. Rich Studio, 29 10th St. Phone “Do we take portraits?” Yes. 670-W. 718tt There is more Catarrh in this section of the country than all other diseases put together, and for years it was sup- posed to be incurable. Doctors prescribed local remedies, and by constantly failing to cure with local treatment, pronounced it incurable. Catarrh is a local disease, greatly influenced by constitutional con- ditions and therefore requires constitu- tional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Medi- cine, manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio,: is a constitutional remedy, is taken internally and acts thru the Blood on the Mucous Surfaces of the System. One Hundred Dollars re- ward is offered for any case that Hall's Catarrh Medicine fails to cure. Send for circnlars and testimonials. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, Sold by Druggists, 75c. Hall's Funfly Pills for constipation. Ohio. Mrs, Robert Leak and Miss Clara Olson of Blackduck passed Friday in the city. $60,000 to loan on farms. Dean Land Co.—Adv. a71u Mrs. J. Lease of Nary was a be- tween-train shopper in the city Fri- day. \ Miss Violet Edwards of Nebish was the guest of Bemidji friends yes- terday. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Helmer of the town of Liberty drove to Bemidji yesterday and passed the day. Miss Gladys Johnson and M. C. McCaffery of the town of Frohn spent yesterday in the city on busi- ness, 3 Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Crandall of Buena Vista were among the business visitors in the city yesterday. Ask your da37te You'll like Koors’ bread. grocer for it. Pat McLaughlin of Bemidji greet- ed some of his old Northome friends Wednesday morning while enroute north.—Northome Record. Mrs. E. C. Lincoln and daughter, Ila, of Park Rapids are visiting at the home of Mrs. Lincoln’s sister, Mrs. Sam Hayth, for a week. Mrs. M. A. Clark returned to Be- midji yesterday from Crookston, where she has been a guest at the Carlisle home. Miss Cora Webster of Grand Forks is the guest of friends in Bemidji for several days. Before coming to Bemidji she visited Mrs. Harold Cha- pin in Crookston. Miss Vivian Baker of Brainerd, who has been a guest at the George Kirk home on Lake Boulevard for the past three weeks, returned to her home today. Miss Dorothy Roberts, who has been the guest of her cousin, Miss Jane Hayner, for the past month, re- turned to her home in Arlington, Neb., this morning. Miss Anna Olson of Puposky re- turned yesterday from a two weeks visit with relatives in Minneapolis. She will visit friends in Bemidji for a few days before returning to her home. Miss Gladys Armstrong, stenogra- pher and bookkeeper for George T. Baker & Co., left this afternoon for Grand Forks, N. D., where she will visit at the home of Mrs. Robert Nes- bit and family for tem days. County Attorney E. 0. Hagen and wife, of Polk county, arrived in the city last night and left this morn- ing for Itasca Park where they will spend the day. Mr. and Mrs. Hagen are touring the northern part of the state and will visit the important range towns and Duluth. Have you haa your assh of Koors’ fce cream today. 628tf Jacob Goldberg motored to Minne- apolis today, where he will spend several days on business before leav- ing for Philadelphia and New York, where he will visit his parents and other relatives and friends. He was accompanied to Minneapolis by his daughter, Bertha, and son, Percy. Mr. and Mrs. James G. Burke have returned to their home in Beach, N. D., after a visit at the home of Mr. Burke’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Burke of Lake Boulevard. Mr. Burke is president of the Burke Insurance & Loan company at Beach. Miss Alice Kolars of Grand Forks, who has also been a guest at the Burke home, accompanied them as far as to her home in Grand Forks. T PPN o o IS L 0, PR 5oL . Vitagraph Dram: " " SUNDAY EVENING GRAND TONIGHT -- SATURDAY==STARTING 7:30 & 8:45 “Who Killed Jo Merrion” Also the laughable THEATRE a and Comedy “When Hooligan and Dooligan Ran for Mayor” ONLY AT 7:30 AND 8:45 H. B. Warner with Violet Heming in Selig’s Thrilling Photoplay “The Danger Trail” Mrs. T. E. Wilde of Crookston ar- rived in Bemidji yesterday and will be the guest of friends here for a week. Koors’ ice cream 1s both very nu- tritious and refreshing. 628tf Mrs. W. C. Doxie and children of Superior, Wis., who have been guests at the G. S. Knight home for two weeks, have returned to their home. Misses Gladys and Lillis Peterson of New Richland, who have been vis- iting relatives in Buena Vista for the past month, returned to their home yesterday. Ed Folstad expects his brother-in- law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Arne Klementson and his brother, Ole Fol- stad, from Hillsboro, N. D., today. They are making the trip by motor. Louis Freeman, Mrs. William Ellis of Fifth ward and Mrs. John Noel of the town of Northern went to Re- mer yesterday, where they will visit Mr. Freeman's granddaughter, Mrs. Fred Jones, and husband. Triplets were born to Mr. and Mrs. Jones a few days ago. They are all daugh- ters. Hugo Peterson, Delbert Bersing, Carl Swenson and John Dargavel, all druggists of Minneapolis, are camp- ing at the head of the lake for ten days. They arrived in the city on Thursday. The latter played on the 1914 baseball team of the Univer- sity of Minnesota, when Dr. J. W. Diedrich of this city was captain. Rev. Osmond Johnson, pastor of the First Scandinavian Lutheran church, and family and Mrs. John- son’s sister, Mrs. O. H. Bakke, and daughter, Olive, of Minneapolis who are guests at the Johnson home, mo- GO TO ST. PAUL Judge John F. Gibbons, Chief of Police Frank Ripple and Edward Jackson left yesterday afternoon for St. Paul in Mr. Gibbons’ car. They will return the first of the week. tored to Cass Lake and Walker Thursday.* l THEATERS ‘ AT THE ELKO “The Law That Failed” is the feat- ure at the Elko tonight. This is an intensely interesting drama written by Louis Reeves Harrison, the well known motion picture journalist. That a man who is proven guilty of murder can be acquitted on a legal technicality is the surprising and dramatic theme around which this unusual drama is built. Alma Han- son, America’s magnetic screen star, portrays the role of the heroine while Edward Ellis, a distinguished legiti- mate actor, makes the leading male character realistically human throughout. Tomorrow, matinee and evening, a Triangle-Fine Arts program—six reels of drama and comedy will be shown, presenting Winifred Allen and Jack Devereaux in “The Man Who Made Good”—and others in “A Laundry Clean Up.” .. AT THE GRAND A YVitagraph program of five reels will be shown at the Grand theater tonight. The dramatic part is call- ed “Who Killed Jo Merrion” and the comedy ‘“When Hooligan and Dooli- gan Ran for Mayor.” Sunday, evening only, Selig’s great photoplay “The Danger Trail,” feat- uring H. B. Warner and Violet Hem- ing, will be the attraction at the Grand. BATTLESHIP KANSAS (Continued from Page One) been for the past week. Our uniform for the day is undershirts and trous- ers. We wear no shoes nor jackets. I only wish that I could run up to Diamond Point with you today and take a little dip. Well, better times are coming and we will soon be back, 80 write me a nice long letter and tell me all the news and if anything is censored don’t be curious because there is nothing of intereme interest. Tell your mother and father hello. From your old pal, WARREN EDWARDS. No portion of the letter was blot- ted out by the censor. Below is the report taken from the leading navy journal which calls the ship that the Bemidji boys are on the “Klassy Kansas': The Classy Kansas is back on the map, this time classier than ever be- fore. The Kansas claims their pugs can whip anything in the fleet from whisper-weights up and down and three ways across the board. skitty- wumpus and catty-corner! In the first place Fred Jordan of the Kan- sas wants the OUR NAVY heavy- weight belt. Writes Fred: “Jist give me that thar belt and I'll do the rest about clinching it for the “Klassy Kansas.” Then the Kansas has Sailor Grant, the light heavy champ and the Kansas is sure that there is no man in the fleet who can stay with Grant’s right hand unlim- bered. This lad Grant trimmed Andre Anderson and Bob Moha and put up a whale of a scrap with Billy Miske. Then the Kansas boasts of Whitie Larson, middleweight, who admits that he can just remove the Navy middleweight crown from Czar Zsarmanski as easily as the Russians removed the same article from Czar Nick. In the welter class the Kan- sas boasts of Sailor Hockman, a good boy, and Sailor Young, former spar- ring partner of Mike Gibbons. Final- ly tae Kansas has Sailor Morphew who says he can just about whip any featherweight who ever bent on a neckerchief. All in all the Kansas i8 some scrappy ship, what with a five-ounce mitt sticking out of each porthole. CHURCHES Presbyterian Rev. Lawrence Plank of the First Congregational church, Winthrop, Mass., will preach both Sunday morning and evening, at the regular hours. Young people’s meeting in the evening at 7 o’clock. Lester P. ‘Warford, pastor. m Army. ) Salvatio: ) Bemidji services—Sunday school 1:30; evening service 8 o’clock. Nymore—Sunday school 2 o’clock; praise service 3 o’clock. Strangers and poor especially invited. Harry F. Crusberg, captain. ‘Scandinavian Lutheran. Services in the morning at 10:30 o’clock in the Norwegian language. Sunday school at 12. Services at Wilton in the afternoon at 3 o’clock. Osmond Johnson, pastor. St. Philiv’s Catholie. Low mass at 7 o’clock; high mass at 9 a. m.; Sunday school at 10:30 a. m.; vespers and bemnediction at 7:30s P. in Father J. J. T. Philippe. t. Bartholomew’s Epis There will be a celeblx:‘gt?gnn:lf the Holy Communion at the 11 a. m. ser- vice. George Backhurst, rector. Lutheran Free. Services in Nymore at 11 o’clock a. m., and in tue Ordahl church, town of Frohn, at 3 p. m. O. P. Grambo, pastor. Sunday school a.lt‘“}%e?nfi:.: morn- ing services at 11 a. m.; Bible class at 7 p. m.; evening services (Eng- lish) at 8 p. m. Fifth ward, Bemidji — Sunday school at 3 p. m.; services at 3 p. m. T. B. Nordale, pastor. Coneregati 3 Morning service :ltmfll:w, sermon topic—‘‘The Possibility and Reason- ableness of Self-denial and Self-sac- rifice.” Rev. E. C. Ford of Fargo, N. D.,, who is spending his vacation at Lavinia, will occupy the pulpit at the evening service which begins at 8 o'clock. The Sunday school meets at 10:30 a. m. The picnic on Friday was well attended and en- joyed by all. Christian Endeavor meeting at 7 p. m. You are cordially invited to all the services. C. N. Foss, pastor. Methodis iscope) Morning worslflpEal.)t 10 45 o’clock, sermon subject, ‘“‘Backsliding.” Eve- ning worship at 8 o’clock, sermon by pastor. Sunday school at 12 m. Ep- worth League at 7 p. m. A cordial welcome to all. B. D. Hanscom, pas- | tor. mmmm' Tonight o ALMA HANLON: “AMERICA’S nunmc scnm STAR” is Featured Wi EDWARD EI-LlS “The Law That Failed” An Art Dramas Producti The law shows that the man is guilty of Il:lclfl;?lgl‘. Yet it fails to convict him. How? See the amswer. SUNDAY—MATINEE 2:30 EVENING—7:45 & 9:00 “The Man Who Made Good” A Reel Lesson in Succes Taught Along Laughing Lines by— The Man— JACK DEVEREAUX The Girl Who Backed Him— WINIFRED ALLEN Also Showing “A LAUNDRY CLEAN UP” Triangle Komedy s WE HAVE THE LOTS What kind of a lot are you looking for? A good business site? A location for a fine residence? Or just a place for a cozy little home. EASY PAYMENTS Pick yours out and call on our local agent, T. C. Bailey, Post Oftice Block, for prices and June discount. BEMIDJI TOWNSITE COMPANY Cap. Nat Bank Blde. St. Paul. Minnesota. LT LT Kosonoff. Act 2 Overture. Waltz: Finale: “On to March: “Hypnotising”—] Finale 2x Finale Flora Bella Co., Sixty People! flllllllIII||IIII||IIIII||IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII||II|I|||IIIIIIIlI||III|||III|IIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII‘IIIIIIIIIIllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIlIllIIIlIIIIIII|||||||lllllIIIIII||ll||II|||slIIIIIIIIII|I|IIII||IIIII||IIIIIIIIIII|I|IIIII|IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII|IIIII|||II Time— Present. (a) “Hail to the Golden Calf” (b) Dance Divertissements .. \ (c) “We'll Dance Till Dawn “Flora Bella” “You're the Girl” .. “Give Me All of You' —Waltz Duet “Adam”—Quartette . Duet Inc., proprietors. Seat Sale at Netzer’s Drug Store—Prices $1.00, $1.50 and $2.00 Same as Charged in All Other Cities GRAND Theatre WEDNESDAY EVENING, AUC. I5 CURTAIN RISES AT 8:20 JOHN CORT Presents “Flora Bella” The N. Y. Casino Theatre Musical Comedy Success Book by Felix Doermann Revised and adapted by Cosmo Hamilton and Dorothy Don- elly. Lyrics by Percy Waxman. Milton Schwarzwald. by Carl Randall. Music¢ by Chas. Cuviller and Staged by Richard Ordynski. Dances Scenery by Joseph Urban. CHARACTERS (In the order of their appearance) Ludovie, the butler Baron Tigo Oblinsky. Countess Ola Drubetzkoy.. Count Sergius Weronzeff.. Princess Manja Demidoff.............. Sophie, the maid Prince Nicholas Demidoff. .Ted Norman Mr. Mortimer H. Weldon .Miss Lily Leonhard Mr. Irving Brooks Miss Eleanor Henry ...Miss Kate Stout Mr. Guy J. Sampsel ..Mr. Gilbert Clayton Miss Josephine Kirkwood Rosset, mgr. of “The Sign of the Golden Calf” Edwin 0. Meyers Novelty Dancers Peasants, Servants, Dancers and Members of ....Monjo and Gould “The Sign of the Golden Calf” Place—Russia. . SYNOPSIS Act 1.—The House of Prince Nicholas in the Country. —“The Sign of the Golden Calf,” in Petrograd. Act 3.—The House of Prince Nicholas in the Country. PROGRAMME OF MUSIC Direction “Afi”x"‘ Irred Schwartz. Procession of Peasants Day, Good-Night"—Quarrel Duet al Offering “Blossom of My Own" “It is Very Hard to Bring “Young Men Take a Tip From Me “Cat and Mouse"—Duet . “Love is_a Dance’ Ola and Tigo Chorus -Manja _and Chorus ja and Male Chorus .Nicholas Ola’ ahd Nlcholas Petrograd Ola, Nicholas, Manja, Tlgo Rosset and Chorus Monjo and Gould Mme. Ludoffska Flora_Bella and Chorus Nicholas and Girls \J .Flora Bella and Nicholas Nicholas, Count, Rosset and Tigo Flora_Bella and Tigo -.Entire Company 1x “Creep, Creep, the World's Asleep” Ludoffska, Count Tigo, Ola, Rosset, Chorus Manja and Nicholas Numbers marked (x) composed by Milton Schwarzwald M. J. Stout, manager. F. M. Manton, agent. Special Car Scenery! Carrying Their Own Orchestra! lIIIlIIIIIIIIII|IIlIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII|IIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII|IIlIl|IIIIIIIIIIII|IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII|IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII% 000000000 | { $ 3 7