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‘| Charleston and other points in Vir- ..Coming Events B Today—Telephone the Pioneer of- fice,- 922, about that news item you . +hdve in mind. Your~ guests and M. W. Knox of Nebish was,among ‘friends will appreciate the courtesy. the ‘business visitors today. December 6-7_—Annual mesting of Torger Nelsoh of Ersklné was ‘in the Northern Minnesota Develop- - k 2 ment association and potato show.p ?fillnild%!il Saturday. ~He motoréd-back o Erskine. November *8—The Red Cross will 5 -give a benefic dance in the Elks Miss .Annie Paulson, teacher in, hall. Frohn, was the guest of her parents December 10 —The next meeting|here during the week end. 1 of the county Loard of. commission- ersiwill be held. % Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Newton went to Minneapolis Saturday to pass a few days on business. . Mr, 'and Mrs. William Church of Yola autoed to Bemidji yesterday. /Get a 1918 desk ‘calendar pad now at the Fioneer: office. ;106tL; Mr. and Mrs. William Fellows anri Mrs. Robert Krahn of Tenstrike au-, | SOCIETY toed to Bemidji Saturday and passed; ey E the day on business. PETERSON-LUNDE Oscar Peterson and Miss Lande, both of Erskine; were married . Saturday. afternoon at 2 o'clock at - the Presbyterian parsonage. RevV. Lester P. Warford read the wedding Mrs. Guy Buskirk of ‘Little Fallg - service. They were attended by |is visiting hersister, Mrs, Axel Fo- Miss Selma Lunde, a sister of the|gelquist, of Turtle River while her bride, and Oliver Larson. They will | husband is hunting~deerin-: that ;make their, home on the groom’s] vicinity. ti0 _farm, ten miles from Erskine. Frank Ogaroa of Minot, N. D,, is Alma |in Bemidji this week on business. He is a Jap and is looking over the city with a view of locating’here. Miss Elsie Coulter of-Lake Plan< taganet was in Bemidji ,Saturday, enroute to Grand Forks, N. 1 ‘she will visit ‘relatives weeks. i Personals and "~ Newsy ‘Notes Mrs. Jessie Grove, teacher in the Big Lake school, ‘passed*Satirday in Bemidji. © Her daughter, Caroline,. attends the Bemidji high school. Dr. E. W. Johnson went to Min- 'lwapolls last evening. A. H. Melloh of Wrgnshall, Minn., | was an . over-Sunday ' visitor at ‘the Pau) Winklesky home. - He is-itravel- ing salesman for the J. M. Averbrook company of Duluth. _Signa Paulson of Shevlin was in %, the city on business Saturday. .':350,000 to loan on rarms. Land Co. Anton Frederickson and daughter, Betsy, of Solway, passed Saturday i ‘the city. @ ‘?fm Miss Ruth Jennings, teacher mear Lavinia, was the guest of friends here: during the “week-end. Miss ernings is one of last year's Be- midji- high school graduates. Mrs. Amanda Saxrud will leave this evening for Rochester and from yres there will go to Watertown, 8. D.,| where she will pass the winter with her sister, returning to Bemidji in Mrs. Axel Fogelquist of Turtle the spring. ] B s River passed Saturday.in the city, between traing. , , = = One of these nice days you ought to go to Hakkerup’s and have your picture taken. 1 Miss Donna Lycan has gone to Brainerd -where she will take part in a play to be staged by Mrs. Clyde Parker, formery Miss Dorothy Humes. The play, as well as the musie, (has been written by Mrs. Parker. \ Mrs. E..S. McFarland of Wilton is_visiting “at the home of her sis- ter, Mrs. Jo\hn Zacharias. k Have your Xmas photos made ;mw : before thé big rush. later. “Get ] ? ‘Rich’ quick.” Rich Studio, 29 10th Miss Mary Jeffries of Buffalo, N. 8t. 1026 to 1126y, arrived in Bemidji Saturday 4 morning, having been called here by Mrs. Gerry Brennan, who has been | the death of her sister, Mrs. Thomas the guest of friends and relatives in| phibbs.. The funeral was held from Bemidji for a week, returned to her|the home Saturday afternoon at 2 home in Williston, N. D., Saturday.|o’clock, Rev. B. D. Hanscom of the She is a former Bemidji resident. Methodist church officiating. "REX TODA King Bee Films Corporation Presents in Two Acts, in o — “Doughnuts” Supported - By Ethel Burton, Babe Hardy and Leo White Directed by Arvid E. Gillstrom Margaret Landis, R. Henry Grey-& Barney Fury —IN— “Feet of Clay” A Great Revenge Foiled by Love. TOMORROW & WEDNESDAY Coldwyn Features MAXINE ELLIOTT . | | A “Fighting Odds” % THANKSGIVING DAY—“THE MAN WITHOUT A COUNTRY” "| Dewey. avenue, :| McDonald: came Saturday to ac¢com- \RED CROSS NOTES to cover the territory. The hardest el FALCON FEATURES ; 10 and 20 cents é X 7:20-9:00 ym- Church of . Yola has re- turned from Hopewell, Lynchberg, ia, where he went intending to find a desirable place to locate. He to this state, having' decided Minne- sota {8 the best state in the Union. but ' Harry Janicke, who {8 with the|Roi company, with headquarters in Min- | wri neapolis, was the guest of Rev. and Mrs. L. P. Warford yesterday. He is spending a couple of days in the city on business matters. .can big L. A. Lamoreaux of Minneapolis|of the story is a man who believes with,Henry Ford that the laborer is -{ing a day here on business matters. | Worthy of his hire, Mr. Lamoreaux was architect on the|scheming and unscrupulous capital- returned home yesterday after spend- nd came | ist E. E. Kenfield .residence ism, up to:look over the building. It will be:completed in about a week. unt; Mr, and Mrs. G. A. McDonald and daughters, Marion and Helen May, |are of ‘Grand‘Forks, who have been the|Pay guests of Mrs. McDonald’s parents, |Possible for exhibitors by giving Mr. and Mr. Frank McManus, -of |this employer an advance showing of their |¥‘Fighting Odds” to obtain an in® orsement of the picture that can be ‘bublished in advertisements or used In publicity. The value of doing this 18 that you will interest the working .class in the picture, in addition to ‘feeling certain that the society and other classes will be interested in returned - to home this afternoon. Mrs. McDon- ald “and-daughters have been here for:‘the past several days, and Mr. pany his family home. —~— the its Baudette Card P: chapter of the Red Cross- “realized $20.50 as a result of their first' card party to raise funds to buy material | pro for the soldiers. ‘| sho Credit’ is due Mrs. W. F. Hack-|the ett, who had charge of the commit- 5 Membership Drive. . Although the Red Cross Christ- mas drive does not negin officially until Dec. 17 it is. already -under way in.‘those districts where mem- berships:‘must be solicited among farmers and residents of smaller towns and villages in the Northern Division. In such districts John Leslie, chairman of the division membership - committee, possible haste in-the campaign. If the drive is: delayed in' such places it means -that cold weather and snow will make roads impassable by Dec. 17 and it will be impossible of the work of the. drive, Mr. Leslie; de- clares, must be done before the first heavy fall of snow. . G "~ Already On Job. When R. B. Forrest, Slayton, Minn., was appointed a member of Bui these :two. star tefitures, making an evening of best entertainment. ture, “Fighting Odds,” written - by In‘ “Fighting 0dds” these two fa- | mous authors have written a play. of a wife's loyalty; of well-paid Ameri- this industrial and domestic drama In every city or town where there " - -GRAND 'TO! Submarine warfareN 331]1{;-11: with all very gateway of America by the un- d;ert-watieri figl\hting craft 4s vividly "ty % picture n Thos. H. Ince’s million Baudette, Minn., Nov. 26.—Local|dollar cinema spectacle which com(:as to the Grand theater for.two days, beginning tonight. laaded with women and children tee, as well as Mesdames L. F. Hack-| little did he: dre: H ett, C..H. Dodds, F. W. Schmidt, B. T e, T F..Osburne, Julian Peterson, Reggie|sational method of sea fighting al- Middleton and B. P. Eagan.. Mrs.|most to the sh i i0’'Neil “of: Spokane won first |prize eIl his country. pean countries would carry this sen- Newspapers recently have been fi ndMrs. Willett consolation at pro-|with the details of zinkmg ships L.l:g gressive five hundred. Coffee, sand-|submarines along the Atlantic coasfs “I'wiches and war cake were served. In ¢ . : E is pictured in detail with hair-raising realism. The European countries by bringing their conflict to this side agent for this big production which everyone will surely wish to see. Donations, consisting of cash, gro- urges all ceries, vegetables ‘dnd canned goods of every description were given at will be used in filling baskets for the needly families in Thanksgiving. expected today and tomorrow. Anyone wishing to buy hay or straw in carload lots, see Reeves & Reeves at the e Elliott Tomorrow, did not like the country so returned ,ofj"‘;‘n";‘&}’eéflzsg‘:y" };“?,,‘:;,,‘S,"‘E}: liott, the famous beauty, in her de- in the celebrated Goldwyn pic-/| Cooper Megrue and Irvin 8. New. York Fidelity and Casualty|Cobb, the latter one of the foremost ters in the United States. labor; of scheming financiers—a play of Big Business. The hero You 'see a plotting to destroy wage ideal- . Detroit figures as the scene of il it shifts to New York. liberal employers of ,labor who and believe in high wages, it is personality of Miss Elliott. terrors has been brought to the ||’ s % G v RASHIMVRA T0GO bk P « ..g -os o ad ik ‘¢ s P [} a Dearest Sir: Next week, P. M., Mr. Boss he shows great pic- ture. Him funny like nothing so much. “Togo,” he 'lfGIJOtg, 3 “this is great statistics” which he tell me he made on last Para- ,"‘ mount Picture. - So come early—now, sh-sh-sh—a State sneekrut g —1I make love like anything. Hoping you are the same, o Yours truly, 4 “Hashimura Togo.” Matinee 3:00 - 10c.20c Eve. 7:30-8:48 When Mr. Ince duced the wonderful spectacle wing a submarine in action and sinking of a great ocean liner i ‘Civilization” this teriffic warfare ¢ the ocean have turned press THANKSGIVING FOR POOR ADDITloNAL LOCALS Dale Walker returned .Saturday from Thief River Falls where he had s been employed as surveyor for the Bemidji f Rev. M. A. Soper, of the American | government for some time. He. has M d i or | sunday School Union, held services finished his work there. ore donations arefay Layinia and East Bemidji yes- - terday. .| . Miss Maude Phelps, who has been a guest at the G. A. Walker home, returned to her hbme in Thief River Falls Saturday. various churches yesterday. They HAY HAY - P. S. Hammersly of Minneapolis, who was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Markham Hotel | D. Wilcox during the week-end, went 1ding. Phone 20. 1mo 1212 | to Crookston yesterday. Remecmber, Tuesday, “Meatless Day” the advisory council for the Red Cross membership, he could not bel. found to receive notification. He i was touring the farms about Slayton | collecting donations of all kinds for {} the Red Cross. Here are the totalll collections for one day of his trip: Twenty-four chickens, 8 hogs, 6 sheep, a calf and $54 in cash. i Good Work Done. i Every member of the forty-first di- vision, men nearly all of them re-§: cruited from national guard orga- nizations throughout the Northern Division, has been equipped with ‘a Red Cross sweater. This messagel| reached €oler Campbell, director of{! the division bureau of military re-|, lief, from John Magee, director of | the bureau of military relief in New] York. Members of the Forty-first are encamped at Mineola, Long Isl- and, eXpecting every day to receive orders to sail for France. In addi- tion to the sweaters the men havel]] been given other knitted ' articles, such as wristlets, socks and helmets. The supplies furnished them have come from Northern Division homes; i Elko, Todav. i A comedy that will prove a mostf effective antidote for the blues i anything faintly ‘resembling them, i “Hashimura Togo,” a fascinating] screen version of Wallace Irwinls| own Japanese schoolboy | which are so fmailiar to readers of (i the magazines and newspapers ot this country. ‘Sessue-Hayakawa, the| well'known star of “The Bottle fmp” “Alfen Souls” -and other productions is the!star of the production'and he | has'béen able to lénd-to the charag ter of Togo all the charm and h mor of his great genius. seen Billy West in one of his King Bee pictures, two reels, and in addi- tion will be shown Margaret Landis in the absorbing drama “Feét of Clay,” the story of revenge foiled by love. The program is complete with b SRS " Today and Tuesday Matinee 2:30- Nights---One Show 8:00 The Crowning Achievement of the World’s Createst Producer Thos. H. Ince's Massive Spectacle ] [ ] B ] . “Civilization” Never so stupendous a production ever before conceived by Brain of Man “Outdoes the ‘Birth of a Nation’ ”—N. Y. Journal Amongst the Many Wonders you will see the Actual Submarine Warfare And Its Effects As It Is Now Being Waged “Civilization” is a poweérful picture of humanity that portrays the pathos of love and war. It brings the world’s battlefields -and its raging con- flicts befdre your eyes. Every foot of film of this ‘startling production abounds with realism. It's Fascinating - Thrilling - Amazing Prices: Children 25c. Adults 50c v 4