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MONDAY:EVENING; AUGUST &, 1918 m ~ (7] o 4 > r 7] > Z > L 'NEWSY NOTES RNy D. S."Mitchell went to Walker this morning on a business trip. ice. 7$50,000 to roan on farms. Tand To. Dean da71te bon, Wis. Mr. H. Fladhammer of town of Liberty passed Saturday in the city on bus- iness. Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Boobar of Nary were among the business wisitors in the city Saturday. two weeks. Mrs. William' Masterson of North- ern -was among the business visitors in the city Tuesday. guests of Wednesday. - “One of these nice aays you ought togo to Hakkerup’s and have your picture taken. 14tt | Minneapolis, B. J. Letford motored to the state park yesterday afternoon, returning to Bemidji in the evening. Mrs. D. W. Sheets of Lake Plan- tagenet was among the business visi- tors. in the city Saturday. apolis this morning. midji yesterday. v pital is critically ill. Mrs. Emma Lease-and Mrs.-Mabel Lease of Nary were between train visitors in the city Saturday. Mrs. James Davis of International Falls was in the city Saturday, mak- ing arrangements to reside here. 3 ® stockfor their millinery parlors. It you want a car; call Enterprise Auto Co. . Office phone 1, restdence phone 10. 66tf | attend the Bemidji high school. N ———t l__.l_l—_/ 1 el e cnm—! |, Frank Gratton and Roy Stagg left this morning for Syracuse, N. Y., hav- _ing been drafted into military serv- ice. and Mrs. Elmer Swanson of Mineapolis are guests at the summer home of Mrs. Swanson’s mother, Mrs. Rose Koors, at Birchmont-Beach, for E. Y. Wilson, one of the proprie- tors of the Fair store, returned-Sat- urday from St. Paul, where he had been on business for the past week. Max LaCore left this morning for St. Paul, where he will visit relatives for a few days ‘before going to F't. Meyers, Va., being in military serv- Philip Denu,-son of Mr, and Mrs. E. H. Denu, left this morning for three weeks’ visit with friends and relatives at Madison and New Lis- Mrs. A. Flatner.and.daughter, Lil- lian, returned last evening from Tur- tle River, where they had been the Mrs. H. A. Brown since Mr. and Mrs. Norman Nelson of who -have been ' the . guests of Mr. and Mrs. ‘Olof Ongstad, ‘returned to their home in‘‘Minne- Anton Frederickson of Solway and sons and two daughters were in Be- Mrs. Frederickson, who is confined at St. Anthony’s hos- Misses Real and Fayal Edwards went to Chicago this morning where they will spend two weeks studying the millinery styles and purchasing * Mrs. Harry Smith of town of Northern ‘was in. Bemidji -Saturday, making - arrangements - to -move ‘here| Miss Pauline Lazier and Misses Mari- this fall, in-order that -her: son may e e L Among -the visitors at Itasca State| jeadwaters of the Mississippi, but park yesterday were Mr. and - Mrs. J. W. Naugle, Prof. and Mrs. Charles Borchardt and little Robert Gotheir @ A of Norway, Mich., and Arch Naugle. Mrs. Henry Norton and son, Don- B ald, have returned home from a motor - g-ip to ‘Minot, and other points in ] oR ) R ¢ S.' Steffin of Franklin, Minn., has moved his family to Bemidji. Mr. Steffin. is employed by Koors Bros. yesterday. Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Huffman and Mrs. C. R. Erickson were visitors at the state park Sunday. stithe;lake, Mrs. George Kusba-and daughter, Lorraine, have returned from a three weeks' visit with friends and rela- tives at St. Cloud. —Grand Forks Herald. Miss Esther Telle, clerk in the county treasurer’s office, is enjoying a vacation, which she will spend with her parents in Wilton. : the civil war veterans. Your soldier appreciates pictures evén “more than letters. Portraits; kodak prints. Rich studio, 29 10th street. 1mo-810 RE '; TONIGHT STUART PATON PRODUCTION AWIFEWITH APAST :@Supported by J.'Morris Foster and Joseph. Cirard FIVE PARTS to Bemidji about September first. CALE HENRY and W. M. FRANEY, Famous Laughmakers, In Screaming Comedy ‘10-20 Cents 7:20-9:00 o’clock Waste Not,Our éountry Needs It! If you have any old RUBBERS, COPPER, BRASS, IRON or RAGS—notify me and I will call for them in any part Vaf the city and Nymore. Just telephone-Goldberg, - 638-W. I also guarantee to pay the market price, so don’t throw away your old articles. .They are worth money. We buy HIDES and FURS and*pay freight on all 100 pound shipments or over to out of town shippers. J. COLDBERG 112 Third Street Telephone 638-W ‘Bemidji, Minn. THEATRE Coming---“EMPTY "POCKETS” Mr. and Mrs. L. B. Wilson, accom- panied by Mrs. Wilson’s: mother and sister, Mrs. Sibbison - and Miss Grace Sibbison of Northfield -and Mrs, Cole of Brainerd, autoed to the state park Bemidji friends have received word COmMBANY: ¢ announcing the death of Mrs. J. R. ‘| Pupore of Reeves avenue Grand Mrs. J. H. Koors and son, John,| Forks, N. D. She was well known here,. as she-passed several summers Rev. Jonathan Watson, G. R. and Jack Jacobi, formed an auto party to Bemidji last night, where they will spend the week-end. Dr. Watson will preach at Bemidji ‘Sunday morning. Ald. J. M. PRhilippe left this morn- ing for Portland,-Ore., where he will attend the national encampment of L U llI|l|IlIIlIIlIIlllIIlIIIIlIIIIIIIII%EI CAN INSURlhlllllllll"llllllllllllllllllllllll e P. O. Box 204 Phone 747 ; BEMIDJI, MINNESOTA LU T T N AT G TR UL L _v; Z ANYTHING—ANYWHERE {1 g, O %[ COMPENSATION T £ap o g - > > w mE BTS INSURE |E |« - © 3 Cimg >x 4| £ z §8 D usnZ| u WITH S|E W % B ®m°| £l MILLER|Z | & > m 2 = 9) 5 D2 Oa - WL aS AND BE 8|2 &5 2 JiSEiTsl L SRE_IGIE " % 88a"™% FH| wuFEINSURANCE | < = §'. _O Q Office Security Bank Bldg. % -4 a = V. SInInnannmanRnnnannnnn THE BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEER Hector Brown, son of Mr. and-Mrs. P. L. Brown, who has been home on a ten days furlough, returned to Camp Humphreys, Va., this morning. Mr. and Mrs. O. Ongstad and fam.- ily, accompanied by Mr. and Mrs. Norman Nélson of Minneapolis, mot- ored to the state park yesterday. Miss Della Hendrickson, trained nurse, returned the latter part of last week from the Muskegon, Mich., hos- pital, where she had been caring for sister, Mrs. R. M. Smith for the past two months. 3 Misses Ida Heng, Anna Benda, Ber- tha Thompson, Ella, Sonstrud, Anna Fesenmaier and Ava Sonstrud motor- ‘ed to Itasca State park yesterday af- ternoon and Were six ‘o’clock dinner guests at Douglas Lodge. Mrs. W. M. Barton and Miss Flor- ence Waldron of Staples have been guests-at the Matt Meyer home in town of Northern, and have also vis- ited their aunt, Mrs. S. Snyder of this city, for the past week. Mrs. J. W. Naugle, and:son, Arch Naugle, Prof. and Mrs. Charles Bor- chardt and Robert Gothier of Norway, Mich., who.are.guests, at the-Naugle home, autoed to Crookston Saturday, where they visit friends and attend- | ed the fair. K. P. Letford, son of Mr. and Mrs: E. J. Letford, who js.in military-ser: vice and who is taking a course in electricity at the University of Min- nesota, spent Saturday and Sunday in the city, returning to his duties last evening. Miss Dagna Engstad will return to- day from a two weeks’ canoe trip, an and Lillian Bendeke were other members of the canoeing party. The young women -expected t0 go to the a log dam prevented the completion of this trip, so they went no farther than Cass Lake. They have been away for two weeks and according to reports sent back; have had a rather -eventful trip.—Grand Forks Herald. Mrs. Given-McGee has received a telegram, stating that her nephew, Stanley Howard Martindale, son of her sister, Mrs. J.- Martindale of Au- rora, Minn.,, was gassed July 23, while in active service ‘‘over there.” He enlisted in Ottawa, Can., and has been in service since last Christmas. His brother, Ray Martindale, died in a hospital in Winnipeg last April from pneumonia. He was training when taken ill. The message receiv- ed by Mrs. Given-McGee did not state how serious the young man’s condi- tion.was, but stated he was in a hos- pital in France. CARD OF THANKS. We wish to express our heartfelt thanks for the kindness and sym- pathy shown us at the loss of our He will also{ beloved son and brother, Arthur. visit his daughter, Mrs. Hugh Whit- ney, formerly of this city, at Boise, .Idaho, enroute.. -He-expects to return Mr. and Mrs. Herman Fenske “and family. 1-88 There is something for you in the Want Ad column today. It’s on the second page. Wanted, to Rent A 5 to 8 room completely furnished house for 6 months to a year. Must be strictly mod- ern.’ Responsible tenants, no children. Address “X Y Z,” Pioneer Office. T Northwestern Gollage A Christian Boarding School Departments: ACADEMY BUSINESS MuUsIC Tuition, Board and Room $25 per month, by the Year in Advance For information address g Rev. Carl Solomonson, " President Fergus Falls, Minn. No success without efficiency. No efficiency without educa- tion. Ro‘lo}ege SaintThomas SAINT PAUL, MINNESOTA {Under :the. Canirel and-Direction-of - Archbishop Ireland Collegiate, Academic, Commercial and Preparatory Courses A.COLLEGE. COMBINING FINEST CATHOLIC TRAINING WITH MILITARY DISCIPLINE Designated by ar Department as “Honor School” —A distinction reserved to ten best Military Schools in the United States Splendid Buildings, - Grounds; Library and Equipment Junior ana Senior Di. visions of the Reserve Of ficers’ Training Corps. Eight hundrec and forty - twc students regis tered last year. For catalog address Very Rev. H. Moynihan, D. b. Pres tive Page J:assumes ‘two-roles, appearing-firs$ as| lIlllllllllllllllllIIIIIIlllm!IIIIIIIIIIm AT THE THEATERS GRAND TONIGHT Alice Joyce appears in the leading role of “The Triumph of the Weak,” a Vitagraph Blue Ribbon feature, at the Grand tonight. As shown in this play the strength that weak have is the knowledge of love in a stronger nature on which it can lean. The story has much in it that is fresh and interesting. A comedy, “Spooks and Spasms” is also on tonight’s program (at the Grand. {15 NI 2 Bl GRAND TUESDAY. The distinguished and beautiful ac- tress, Belle Bennett, appears at the Grand tomorrow, matinee and even- ing in “The Last Rebel,” a photo- play of the north and south. She a girl of the south in pre-war days, later as the granddaughter of that girl in modern times. REX TONIGHT. At the Rex tonight will be shown Priscilla Dean, supported by J. Mor- ris:Foster.and Josepl Cirard. This is an absorbing film in five acts and is filled with tense situations. There will also be a screaming com- edy with Gale Henry and W. M. Franey in the chief of comedy roles. COMING TO REX. “Empty ‘Pockets” will be another big attraction at the Rex soon. ANOTHER JOINS COLORS. Russell Ga]lagher’ of Remer is another who has answered the call. He left Saturday for camp, having been enlisted in .the medical corps by Sergeant Foucalt. COUNCIL MEETS TONIGHT. The city council will meet in reg- -ular session tonight and there are some things of importance to come up for discussion and action. IS YOUR ‘DESK - MAHOGANY? More Than Fifty Different Woods Are Put on the Market and -Sold Under That Name. The name “mahogany” is applied commercially to more than fifty differ- ent woods. Perhaps half the lumber now sold under that name is not true mahogany, for the demand greatly ex- ceeds the supply. The tree is only native to the limited area between southern Florida and northern South America. Nowhere else does it really flourish, But the public will have mahogany. Women want it for furniture, business men prefer it for office fixtures, and teak and mahog- any are rivglg in the affections of ship- builders. erefore substitutes flour- Ish. It is not surprising that the real wood is so expensive when it is learned that it takes from 100 to 150 years for a mahogany tree to reach merchant- able size. Most of the substitutes bear little more than a general resemblance to the genuine wood, but skillful finishing makes them very much alike. Experts can usually distinguish between them by the aid of an ordinary pocket lens. The efforts of the superficial, however, to judge the wood by its appearance, weight, grain and color often lead them astray.—Popular Science Monthlv. sgetegesupotedebitede i bbb bl et ool Clear, Peachy Skin Awaits Anyone Who Drinks Hot Water Says an inside bath, before break- fast helps us ‘look and feel clean, sweet, fresh. Pm— Sparkling and vivacious—merry, bright, alert—a good, clear skin and a natural, rosy, healthy complexion are assured only by pure blood. If only every man and woman could 'be induced to adopt the morning inside bath, what a gratifying change would take -place. Instead of the thousands of sickly, anaemic-looking men, wom- en and girls, with pasty or muddy complexions; instead of the multi- tudes of “nerve wrecks,” ‘rundowns,” “brain fags” and pessimists we should see a virile, optimistic throng of rosy-cheeked -people everywhere. An inside bath is had by drinking each morning, before breakfast, a glass of real hot water with a tea- spoonful of limestone phosphate in it to wash from the stomach, liver, kid- neys and ten yards of bowels the pre- vious day’'s indigestible waste, sour fementations and “poisons, thus cleansing, sweetening and freshening the entire alimentary canal before putting more food into the stomach. Those subject to sick headache, bil- iousness, nasty breath, rheumatism, colds; and particularly those who have a pallid,. sallow complexion and who are constipated very. often, are urged to obtain a quarter pound of lime- stone phosphate at the drug store which will cost but a trifle, but is suf- ficient to demonstrate the quick and remarkable change in both health and appearance, awaiting those who prac- tice internal sanitation. We must remember that inside cleanliness is more important than outside, because the skin does not absorb impurities to-contaminate the blood while the pores in the thirty feet of bowels do. | “A Wife With a Past,” featuringf 'TONIQHT--7:30 & 9 ~ALICE JOYCE Popular Vitagraph Star in “Triumph of the Weak” A Blue Ribbon Feature—They’re All Good Also Showing a “Big V" Comedy Tomorrow-=Matinee-&:-Evening BELLE BENNETT Distinguished. Emotional-Actress in “The Last Rebel” A Romance of the Past and the Present Comedy--“DID SHE DO WRONG?"'--Keystone ‘Special Map Coupon Bemidji Pioneer Pub. Co. % ‘Bemidji, Minn. Gentlemen: Enclosed find $2.560 to pay for the Daily Pioneer for six months and 32 cents for which send me one of your -latest State, United States and War Zone maps, a combination of “three in one” map hangers. NAMCOTcoiinsionstho o5 8 Sabmeiemmmn s s o 54 & b Address. . covsssuensivisases EVERY HOME BEGIN IN THE KITGHEN FOOD SAVE | roe2 LET'S TALK IT OVER PHONE 76 FUEL MODERN CABINET GAS RANCE BEMIDJI GAS CO. That lad of yours, over seas. All that is humanly possible is be- ing done to see to it that he is well : fed, well clothed and efficiently equipped. Organizations like the Y. M. C. A,, are looking to his phys- ical comfort, healthful recreation and clean fun. If he is sick or wounded the Red Cross will provide for him with tender, loving care. Yet there is one thing that will bring a smile to his face and a joy to his heart that none of these can give; that only you can give— your photograph. Hakkerup, the photographer in your fown ENTERPRISE AUTO CO- ||| HUFEMAN & O'LEARY FURNITURE AND Auto Livery and Taxi Service UNDERTAKING Day and Night Service Office Remore Hotel, Cor. H. N. MEE,— Funeral Director 3rd St. & Beltrami Ave. PHONE 178-W or R Office Phone1 Residence Phone 10 || WM. M’CUAIG, Manager | N | 3o