Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, August 26, 1918, Page 3

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‘EVENING, AUGUST 26,1918 g ||‘|||||mm|mmE for ‘some time; hs,s returned to her home. y’lmn_ WHAT SOCIETY ISDOING i T | = HOSISATDINNER. | william Johnson and family hae Mr. and Mrs. J. Jenkinson were|returned from Paddock township, ‘hosts at 1:30 ‘0’clock dinner yester-| where they passed several days with day’ at their ‘home, Oakdale farm.|old friends, being former residents of 'The guests included Mr. amd Mrs, |that PlaCB 4 Andy Larson, Mr. and Mrs. A. Ben- son, Mrs. J. H. McCoy, Byron Benson, Mrs. McConvllle of 'Akeley who had Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Haywood, Mr. and | been- at St. Anthony’s hospital for “Mrs. . Charles Campbell, -~ Mrs. quck, Pearl Campbell and Mr. Dahl G."H. Bielitz, ]ocal manager of. the ers. Northwestern Telephone ‘ company, and - family have moved_fromg 1006 Beltrami avenue to 417 ‘Minnesota avenue. n IIIIIII IIIIIIllmIlllllllllIll!IllIllllllllll . » PERSONALS AND NEWSY NOTES of Minneapolis are .in Bemidji and will spend a few days at Birchmont. Advertising agency of Minneapolis. Mrs, Jafiles Cameron of Walker, a sister of ‘Mrs, William Clish of this mummlmmnnmnmnmnmmmm. city, has accepted a position With the ~\Mrs C. H. Skinner-of Becida pass-|government as nurse, and will com- ed ‘Saturday 4in- Bemid)l on business| mence her duties this. week at the matters. .~ government hospiltal in-Duluth. -l!llllllllllllllllll $50,000 to loan on farms. Dean Mrs. Paul Strelow of Puposky was . _%and 'Co. 471tf | in the city Saturday. She was accom- eg several hours in Bemidji Saturday on. business. to her home in Walker from Bemidji. Miss Gladys Eastman of Moose wag The auto route book of IMinne- a week-end visitor with relatives in| o whion gives you the-information Turtle River. A 2 - | you- want in a handy volume, show- s ing every desirable route in the state If you want a car call Enterprise| ;%o 7B Route Booke’ Sold at the Auto Co. On’ice phone 1, residence | pj;neer Stationery House, for 75e. pasy Miss Olive Wentworth of Black- duck was the week-end guest of Be-t Mps. Clarence Knutson and som, midji friends.. gonfild, all\}d ]«)iaugl;lter,h Lu){'erne,fltl:t; = rafton, N. D., who has been the Mis. H. 8. Stillwell of Becida was guests of Mrs. Knutson's cousin, Mrs. among. the business visitors in the John Hoganson and family for thre midji Saturday. returning home on the afternoon’ Sy - . e | train, i ickens will return t .~ Miss Ida Tollefson has returned to B:midji]vlf;idgy aenl:i wiil attezdnthg her home in Bagley after a brief visit Bemidji high school this term. with friends in Bemidji. * T AT Christ Patterson of Inkster, N. D., J. W. Naugle left this noon for Du-| who has been a guest at the I B. luth on a business trip for the Nal-| Olson- home for several days, left yes- gle Pole & Tie company.. terday for Grand Forks county. His wffe and two little daughters, who Mrs. Mary Guthrie of Turtle River| accompanied him to Bem%dji will re- autoed to Bemidji Saturday and spent | gyain the Olson home for another several hours on <buslness. week. - Mrs. Pattefson is Mr. Olson's sister. * o Mlsses Florence, and Lucy Laney of Turtle River were between train The Northome Record says: visitors in the city Saturday. “Claude Fish has a crew of men at " A work on the Grattan and Nore road, Miss Margaret Wright, ~who had|gnq, as that end of the road has been v1sxtgd relatives in Grove City for two| i guch horrible shape, we are in weeks, returned *home Saturday. hopes df seeing the work completed this fall. This will shorten the dis- One of these nice days you ought|tance between Northcome. and Be. to go to Hakkerup’s and have your midji considerably.” picture taken, . 14tf _ 3 Robert L. Given and sons, Robert, A ten-pound son was born to Mr.| gy “and Jack, returned Saturday af- ‘and Mrs. J. O. Harris of Lake Boule-| terrioon from Virginia, where they vard this morning, at the home. visited relatives for a short time. 5 £ Mrs. Given and daughter, Marguerite, || Joseph Naugle returned Saturday| will rehain in Virgginia untfi Mon- from a two weeks’ business trip to|gday, the guests of Mrs. Given’s par- the northern part of the county. ents, Mr. and Mrs. J. O. Johnson and her brother, . A Dan Gracie returned yesterday af-| yohnson. Mayorjidward iCs A ternoon from the iron range where ~~¥e spent six weeks visiting friends. B I\;I{r. and Mré: J. P. Riddell and son, s P . 2 ack, and daughter, Sybil of Virginia, 2 Mr. and_Mrs. H. C. Daniels will g0o| are visiting at the home of Mr. and to Duluth tonight where Mr. Daniels| prg, James Winebenner of Dewey will transact business. From there|avenue and at the home of Mrs. Rid- ‘they will go to the state fair. %:ll’s brother, Witliam Chistester at s b % : ; rchmont Beach. Mr. and Mrs Rid- Mr. Michael" Doyle arrived last|dell made their home in Bemidji be- evening from Bemidji, and will spend | fore moving to Virginia and Mr. Rid- the rest of the week at the William| dell’ was at that time connected with Doyle home.—Grand Forks Herald. the Crookston Lumber compédny. “Pictures can help win the war,” Miss Clarissa Spéhser, world secre- the government says. Portrait, kodak |tary of the Y. W. C. A., has returned prints. - Rich Sudio, 29 10th. to America, and is coming west on a 1mo-910 | visit, during the next two weeks. 5 Miss Spencer- will visit Minneapolis . Mrs. William McConnell of Grand|during fair week, and wfll speak at Forks, N. D., who has been the guest|the Y. W. C. A. bulldmg She has just '~ Delicious with Fresh Fruit or Berries! Crisp Armour’s.Corn Flakes toasted “just right”! A flavor so rich and sweet, little or no sugar is required. Delicious with fresh or condensed milk. ‘© ARMOURS = -~ CORN FLAKES Trade supplied by the 7 Armour Grain Company, Chicago Remember, Armour’s Oats cook in 10 to 15 minutes of Mrs. E; Elliott of Grand Forks bay | returned-to this country from Rus: sia, where she went among the first Y. W. C. A.: women to respond to the cal of the Russian goyernment work- > She left Petrograd on'the same train with the party of the United States ambassador, when it became impossible to continue work ‘there. Miss Spencer is one of the best known || women in Y. W.;C. A. work. Her headquarters are'in’London. Misses Emma and Bertha Meilicke have jugt returned from a trip|ff through the west, where they spent : the greater part of their summer va-| . If you wake up with-a bad taste, cation, visiting the principal cities. bad breath and tongue is coated; if In Los Angeles, Cal., they wer% tl}e .| guests of their "sisiter, Mrs. C. ;‘L’:;agg“za:zuzgegégfiglt‘:gazcc?xil_ Kunkel. They will visit for a short i h FR s time with their brother, J. L. Meilicke|gtipated, nervous, sallow and can’t pany. here before going to their schools. geg‘ feeling just right, begin inside Miss Emma teaches in Moorhead and ©“Mr. and Mrs. H. F. Sewell and son| Mise Bortho in Blackduck bathing. Drink before breakfast, a »THEATERS : & / panied by her niece, Lottie Simon, only as a’vampirish screen star should = Mrs. John Daniels of Shevlin pass-|avho Las 'visited at the Strelow home ee her in the 1918 version of “The for a fnonth.” Miss .Simon returned Two Orphans,” which will be shown a ; at the Rex theatre tonight and to-|tasteless, except for a sourish twinge morrow in tnis fine play which has been brought up to 1918 standards-by. William Fox, the producer, she por- frays that sweet, girlish type of whom men become protectors and who need A protection from the wiles of designing hone 10. =~ 56tf - | men. =0 y;fcte door:to; Ijretzer = Formeregg;tg matic art haé heen based not alone of the vampire women she portrays, | but _also on the innocent, womenly kind. “The Two Orphans.” city Saturday. / weeks went to Grand Ff)rks, N. D.,|" Earle Williams, supported by Grace IF John Swen;on of Swenson lake Was E:::::i?g’ tgl?l;eelt:lfi)gg visit befo:-e Darmond, is the hero in an adaption : YOU among the out of town buslness vis- 5 s of O. Henry’s ‘“Cabbages and Kings,” :_ v WANT itors SfllflrdBY- 3 Miss Eloise Dickens of Red Lake,|a Vitagraph Blue Ribbon feature en- ; T(E) fiiT ] B daughter of ~ Superintendent and]|titled “An American Live Wire.” See TH NT Mrs. A. ‘A. Partlow of Pinewood Mrs. Wi . Di _of th £ i hetween: tralh: visfior: in :Bed L;lsxé a;;ll]ecl;, F;vns icx‘\{etn!fe ':J:ity teo‘fieyd‘ Earle Williams inject some American YOU WANT TO Jbep into a sleepy southern country and recapture a stolen fortune, some- thing the country’s whole police force couldn’t do. Another of those popular Harry Carey productions will be seen at the Rex Wednesday, the offering be- ing “A Woman’s Fool,” adapted from the novel by the same name.. It is in five acts and there will also be a|will be taken at once to remedv the clever comedy added. tronble. TS TME BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEER .~~~ BEGIN EOT WATER ' DRINKING IF YOU 'DON'T FEEL RIGHT 'Says glass, of hot water with phosphate before breakfast washes out polsons, o —— your head is dull or aching; if what you eat sours and forms gas and acid in stomach, or you are bilious,- con- glass of real hot water with a tea- spoonful of limestone phosphate in it. Mr. Sewell Is with the Dollenmeyer |SINUNIIIIIIUINIIIIINIIANNLE| This will flush the poisons and toxing from stomach, liver, kidneys and bow- els and cleanse, sweetens and purify the entire alimentary tract. Do your inside bathing/immediately upon aris- ing in the morning to wash out of the system all the previous day’s poisonous waste, gases and sour bile before putting more .food into the stomach. THEDA BARA TONIGHT. To feel like young folks feel; like AT THE 0 Those who know Miss Theda Bara,|¥ou felt before your blood, nerves and muscles became loaded with body impurities, get from your pharmacist a quarter pound of limestone phos- phate which is inexpensive and almost which is not unpleasant. Just as soap and hot water act on the skin, cleansing, sweetening and freshening, so hot water and lime- stone phosphate act on the stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels. Men and women who are usually constipated, bilious, headachy or have any stom- ach disorder should begin this inside bathing before breakfast. They. are assured they will become real cranks on the subject shortly. Miss Bara’s reputation for dra- Miss Bara is a.revelation in GRAND TODAY. GET YOU WANT TO GET IT.IN THE GREAT WANT GETTER, THE BEMIDJI PIONEER REX WEDNESDAY. NOTICE TO SUBSCRIBERS. Subscribers should report any noor carrier service to this office and steps Earle Williams - i with . GRACE DARMOND . m A Five-Part Vitagraph Blue Ribbon Feature Adapted from the O. HENRY . - . “CABBAGES AND KING” “An American Live Wire”—Surprises! Pep! Humor! Comedy—*“COURTS AND CONVICTS”"—Big V HEAR. CORPORAL BRIANT'S Wonderlul Story He Has Just Returned From Over Three Years’ Service in the Front Line Trenches EVERY RED ‘BLOODED AMERICAN SHOULD HEAR HIM ‘Tt will make your blood boil and arouse every ounce of patriotism in you. P. S—If you are pro-German stay away, you won’t like it, as the Sergeant- Major tells of German kultur as it really is and nothing hurts like the Truth. ELKO g 4o 50 HOME GUARD BENEFIT FURNTURE AND UNDERTAKING N. M’KEE, Funeral Director PHONE 178-W or R i Day and. Nlahi Seme.e Office Remore Hotel,. Cor 3rd St. & Beltrami.Ave.- - ‘Office’ Phone 1 . __Residence Phone 10 WM. M’CUAIG Manager R Ex _TONIGHT - Tomorrow William Fox Presents Theda Bara in the Kate Claxton 1918 Versnon of “THE TWO ORPHANS" A production where the famous “vampire woman”’ plays an entirely different role. The story of “The Two Orphans” is known to everyone. In its new form it is even more thrilling and will win the applause of motion picture’goers. - 10c and 20c—Matinee 2:30—Evening 7:20 and 9 WEDNESDAY’S BILL HarryCarey in the five-act film “A WOMAN’S FOOL” Adapted from the book by the same name PRODUCED BY JACK FORD 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. Organizatjons 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 Waste Not,Our Country Needs It! If you have any old RUBBERS, COPPER, BRASS, IRON or RAGS—notify me and I will call for them in any part of 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. COLDBERGC 112 Third Street Telephone 638-W Bemidji, Minn. Special Map Coupon Bemidji Pioneer Pub. Co. Bemidji, Minn. i Gentlemen: Enclosed find $2.50 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. IN BTG5 s/ 5.5 s -4 o h vonariois i Siousbane S dicevints, r o &1 o or o4 AAAresE: onves vve i dntanaioniiie it sla s ie b os i i | H 1 l | i {

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