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"WORKERS T0 MEET the ‘program will be as follows:: - ‘Devotional meeting—Mrs. Bagley. ' | stration—Miss Elsie Sclimitt, - ““/SBolo—Miss Carrie Brown. Ghee, gt Gilbert: HOSTESS AT DINNER Powell. STAR TO:MEET D _ pess “meeting will commence. -at o'clock, - £ | Personals and - For sale by P. Barnell. passed the week-end in the: city. Presbyterian church, March 20. end. Week. * Ename!l your car with:Blax Shin 26-326 This evening, from 8 to 9 o’clock, the Sunday 'school workers of the . Methodist: church’ will ‘meet at.the -~home of Mr. and Mrs, P. L. Hines. “Story_Telling’ will be the topic and Al M Blementary story telling demon- “Value of Story Telling With In- termediate Pupils”—Mrs. J| C. Mc- “How May Story Telling Lead to Decisions -for Christ?’—Miss. Louise Solo—Miss- 'Marguerite Johnstbn. Business meeting—A."T. Carlson, Mrs. C. B- Powell entertained at .6 . o'clock dinner Saturday. evening in honor of her birth anniversary. The guests . were ' Mr. and Mrs. William H, Schmitt, Mr. and Mrs, F. G. Schad- egg and son, Milton, Mrs. M. Benson, Miss Anna Johnson, Irene and Ione After: the regular business. meet- ingof " the HEastern Star tomorrow evening in the Masonic hall, progres- sive -cards will be played and a Hoo- verized lunich will be served. - Busi- 8 - -Newsy Notes e. 35 cents for a big supper at the - 2-319 ‘Wyman Ball of :Grant Valley vis- ited relatives here during-the week- Mrs.: A Eord: lei_. last;evening for Minneapolis wheré she: will spend a m :* TONIGHT : ‘GOLDWYN Presents The Snuggly Girl in The drama of thrills, mys- tery, laughter ‘and love “DODGING AMILLION’ ' The romance of an heiress who lived in luxuryon nothing a year. ¢ Alsofine FOX Comedy 10¢c and 20c ~ 7:20-9 o’clock TOMORROW Florence Reed ;In-a magnificent production of atremendous story THE ‘ETERNAL SIN It’s a Selznick A Drama of the Days ‘When Death Lurked Everywhere By The great novelist VIGTOR HUGD How a woman’s enemies forced her to take an awful revenge. THURSDAY ‘The Lone Wolf’ By Louis Vance—Starring HAZEL DAWN - NORMAND y last evening for Minneapolis where Mrs. M. Hogan of .GranL, Valley | 1 ited her daughter, Mrs. L. B. Ander- ‘evening where she attends the mnoz- Dean : $50,000 to loan on farms. & : da7itt Land- Co.. Mrs. Frank Jackson of Solway transacted business in -Bemidji .Sat- urday. B 3 'C. M/ Jacobson has ‘géne to Brain- er;i on high' school( basketball - af~ fairs. - e L Miss Josie Wetter of Solway spent the week-end in the ecity ~with friends. . 5 : One’of these nice days you ought to ‘go'to ‘Hakkerup’s ard ‘have . your picture taken. 14tf M and ‘Mrs. Emil Tuseth left they “will “visit, Born, ‘to- Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Hughes at St. nAthony’s - hospital, this morning, a son. o b " Don’t forget-the:date, March 20— annual' Easter ‘sale and supper at l?resbytgrian church. 2-319 Miss Edna- Wright, teacher - at Bootleg lake, was the guest of Be-|. midji friends Saturday. & Mrs. W. M. Hunt of the ‘lown of Northern was among:the. out-of- town visitors Saturday: Miss Augusta ‘Anderson and Miss|. Lela Elliott of Solway passed Satur- day in the city the guests of friends. Youx‘ _portrait is-a dainty compli- ment. for a friend at Easter.. Rich Studio, 29 10th St. Phone 570-W. £7 - 26-49 Mrs. F. S. Scott, who has visited relatives ‘in -Clearbrook for a month, returned’ to. her home. in . Glasgow, Mont., Saturday. C. M. Johnston does all kinds of)) furniture ‘upholstering, = auto _top, cushion and curtain work. Call and see” him, 211 4th St. 2-319 Mesdame§ John: Miller, Tom Mil- ler and Sidney Miller of Pinewood passed Saturday in “the city shop- ping. While here they. were the guests of friends. SR B, A. D. Simpkins, who has been con- fined at St. Anthony’s hospital for some time, suffering ' from = heart trouble, was “taken to his home in Turtle River Saturday. C. M. Johnston has returned from Battle River, where he has been on his farm” since -January. He has again opened up his business of up- holstering at 211 Fourth street. .+ Mrs. H. A. Hangbn, who has vis- son, of Clearbrook for two weeks, returned to her -home in Bagley §at- urday. She stopped in Bemidji for a 'short. time while enroute. % The Presbyterian ladies will hold their annual Easter sale and supper Wednesday, March 20, at the Pres- byterian. church. ~ Aprons and use- ful articles for salé in the afternoon. Supper will be served from 5 to 8 o’clock. s 2-319 Miss Editl"Mills, who has been the guest of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. Mills, and family during spring vacation, returned to Mankato last mal, ~ The spring. term will open to- morrow_morning. - 3 P Twelvé (12) inch blue print copies from . gevernment certified plats, showing all govermment notes, ¢wamps, highlands, rivers, etc., and the location of judicial ditches to be sold at May, 1918, sale at Be- midji, Minn., 25¢ each. For sale at Pioneer office. % 226t GzavD TONIGHT ONLY JACK MULHALL SOINE MIDNIGHT MAN"’ IR And a Scream of a Comedy See that fat face FRIDAY ‘| urday for ‘Sauk Rapids, where they Mr. end Mrs, Ed Vandersluis and two daughters, who were the guests of Mayor and Mrs. C. W. Vandersluis and family for a short time, left Sat- NEW. AND GREATER THINGS { Possibility Ever:Open to Mankind as/ .the Perlods Dividing Life Are . Successlyely Crossed. The poetry.of all ‘growing lite con- sists In carrying an oldness into a new- ness, a past into'a future, always. So only can our days possibly be ibound {‘each to.each by natural plety." I] | would not for the world. think ‘that.20{- years hence I should have ceased to see the things which I-gee now, and love them still. ‘It would ‘make lfe' wearl- some beyond expression if I thought that 20 years hence I should see them Just as I see them now, and love:them Wwith no deeper love because of: other{" visions of thelr lovableness. ‘And: so there comes; this deep and simple rule of any man as he cresses the line:divid- ing one period of ‘his/life from another, the same rule which-he may use:also as he passes through anyr critical ;oceur- rence of his‘ife, Make it a time in which you shall ‘resHze) your:faith,:and also in which you:shal-expect: of "your faith new and greatc:. things. . Take b what you believe and are,'and hold‘it:in < your hand with a' new. firmness.as, you COUNCIL @ IONIGH’.F go forward; but look on_ it.with con- . The clty council will meet in reg-| tinual and confident-expectation'to see ular session tonight. There will be it ‘open into something -greater and’ :some appointments: of city employes| truer.—Phillips Brooks. due, and other matters of import are PR A NS . P scheduled to come up. = FARM AUCTION MONDAY % 7 An auction sale of -horses, cattle BMTBER DIES, and farm machinery will be held on Miss Lola , Brodtkorb, one of the the Ben Cooper farm five miles east teachers in the local schools, was of Bemidji, Monday, March 25. The oalled o Edgly, N. D., yesterday by sale starts at 10 o’clock in the morn- the ‘death of her brother. He had|ing& and a free lunch will be served been ill a long time. ! at noon. H. C. Baer is the owner NEW POSITION and Col. K. W. Reeves will be the auctioneer, Miss Margaret Titus has accepted a position as stenographer with the Bemidji Manufacturing-company. will make their home. . Mr. Vanders- luis and family have been living at Thief River Falls. He has purchased a paper at Sauk Rapids. Mr. and Mrs.' G, R. Jacobi = of Reoves avenue are looking forward to a visit from their daughter, Miss Geraldine Jacobi, who will he here in about ten days, to spend~a week. Miss Jacobi -has: been' playing with the “Daddy Long Legs’’ company this winter, and is to have a week’s rest after finishing -a . series of ‘engage- ments in Kentucky.—Grand Forks Herald. ; Mis8 Olive Curtis returned Satur- day morning from Grand Forks, N. D.,. where she had ‘been the guest of Miss Ruth Miner, - Mrs. M. 8. Gil- lette ‘accompanied ' Miss Curtis * to Grand Forks and from'there went to Malta, Mont., where she will join her husband and spend the summer ‘on 'theirclaim, . ‘While {n'"Grand Forks, Mrs. Gillette ‘was also the guest of Miss Miner. Bevo is a great favorite in tie Army Canteens, where none but pure, soft drinks may be sold. After drill or march, you are sure to sce a long line of hot and dusty-throated soldier boys“making a bee line for Bevo. They know that there lies cdmplete satisfac- tion, full refreshment and pure wholesomeness. At hqme or abroad—at work or play—between meals. . or with menlg, you will appreciate what we have done for you in making this triumph in soft-drinks. You will ind Bevo at inns, restaurants, groceries, department and drug stores, picnic grounds, baseball parks, soda fountains, dining_ cars, in the navy, at canteens, at mobilization camps and other’ places where refreshing beverages are' sold. Bevo—the all-year-"round soft-drink Guard against substitutes. Have the Bottle opened in front of you, first seeing that the seal is unbroken and that the crown’tops bears the Fox. Sold in bottles only, and bottled exclusively by . ANHEUSER-BUSCH, ST. LOUIS MABEL NORMAND TONIGHT | “Dodging a Million"” which is to| be shown at the Rex theater tonight, has neither murders nor detectives to create suspense; but by a clever y —NI— unfolding of ,a novel plot the in- terest is kepfat high ‘tension to the i1 " - | ‘very end. 4 i CRE ' Everything is handled from the . viewpoint of the heroine. CAME” SESSUE | Stone-Ordean-Wells Company L. C. DEMPSEY Wholesale Dealers BEMIDJI, MINN. Probably in all the screen career of Mabel Normand. she has not had ~|a part that has been” as cleverly adapivd to her charming person~ ality, or that exhibits in succession the many phases of her histrionic { ability. ‘‘Dodging a Million” is not the adaptation of a stage play, but was especially written by Edgar Sel- wyn, the celerated dramatist and the production “that some day im the not-far-distant future, we will see many of the scenes Mr, Fairfax has incorporated in ‘The . Secret Game’ enacted and written in the innals of history.” year and -deals ‘with the Japanese- American situation in a new and unexpected manner, showing the two great countries to be, the strongest of allies and friends. Although a native of Japan and still a loyal citizen, Sessue Haya- kawa, the noted Japanese actor. hae “Bill” Hart Comine. uthor of “Nearly Married,” in col-1)ived 5o lon “Big BN ot i . L g in the United States 3ig Bil Hart's coming to town laboration with A. M. Kennedy, tol 15t he has come to look upon it as|this week. Not in person, of meet the requirements of the little| (o 1and of his adoption and one of | course, but in his latest Thomas H. Ince photoplay, “The Silent Man,” which has just been made for Art- star. ‘Also one of those splendid Fox the highest ambitions of this well comedies. = tries firmly established as craft, and which will be seen at the : and allies. - When reading over the|Ilko theater on Wednesday. No, Big Selznick Feature. scenario of his mewest Paramount|you've never scen this picture in Be- In Herbert Brenon’s production of | picture, ““The Secret Game,” the fact midjl before. that this point was strongly empha- sized pleased Hayakawa. ‘I have no doubt,” he said in speaking of “The Bternal Sin” for Selznick pic- tures, at ‘the Rex tomorrow, Flor- ence Reed plays the part of Lucretia _| Borgia. - The sgtory is taken from Victor Hugo’s drama, which casts a different light upon this character from that generally accepted by his- torians. 3 The traditional view of Lucretia Borgia is that she was responsible for much of the crime and vice at the court of Ferrara. The author of the play, whose deep humanitarian- ism ‘is revealed in his_other master- piece, ‘“Les Miserables,” refuses to believe this, and shows Lucretia -as a woman who was a victim of cir- cumstances rather than:a deliberate vampire. Throughout the story, Lu- ‘cretia is gwayed by .the highest and purest emotions, and ‘it s only when she encounters injustice on the part of her enemies, that she becomes un- scrupulous in Ler vengeance. R ELKO TONIGHT “The Secret Game” is one of the most up-to-date photoplays of the Japan, a Great Ally, saves U. S.Transports Keer WRIGLEY’S in mind as the l[ongest- lasting confection you can buy. Send it to the boys at the front. War Time Economy I Sweetmeats— a 5-cent package of WRIGLEY’S will give you several days’ enioy- ment: it’s an investment in benefit " as well as pleasure, for it helps teeth, preath, appetite, digestion. * Influenza . _ .. “No one who has not had Influenza can realize the suffering it causes or how it defies treatment. I know of nothing that will give such prompt relief as Charaberlain's Cough Remedy, for when it is taken the pain in the chest disappears, the fever sub- sides and the whole body becomes more comfortable. Then again, the after effects of Influenza are often even more distressing than the disease itself, but they can be avoided if you use ’ Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy Though the greatest danger from ‘this diseaseis Pneumonia, I have never known a single case of Influenza to result in it when Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy was freely given. The persistent cough that frequently follows Influenza can be relieved by Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy, and should not be allowed to run’on until it becomes troublesome.” Chew It After Every Meal The Flavor Lasts! WRAPPED N p— 1a | el ] \ | 88 | | | | 1 iR | I \ { | | 1 1 s | { ' S B 4 | | { | 1