Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, September 13, 1918, Page 5

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FRIDAY EVENING, SEPTEMBER 13, 1918 THE BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEER PAGE FIVE WHDHNTHRERN R WHAT SOCIETY ISDOING £ llIllII|IllllllllilillIIIIIl’lIllIIIII!I!IIIIIIIII} HOSTESS TO0 LEAGUE. Mrs. Westeen entertained the Lu- _ tner‘league of the Swedish Lutheran church at a weiner and marshmallow roast -af her ‘summer home at Grand Forks Obay last;evening. 22 ¥ HU T “AID WILL SERVE. Thg Swedish Lutheran Ladies Aid of Fifth ward will hold a sale tomorrow afternoon and evening' in theSdlyation Army hall. They will also_sérve supper. ; LASS MEETS TONIGHT The-Bible class of the Norwegian Free church will meet at bs st 'PERSONALS AND - NEWSY NOTES IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllllllllllllllllllllllIlIIr B 34 ‘St. Paul was a busmess visitor in the city Thursday. Illlllillllllllllllll =t .2 w g 1= 3 Dean $50,000 to loan on rarms. a71tf ~ Land Co. . E. J. Kane and A. H. Taylor of Kel- liher motored to Bemidji Thursday ‘returning in the evening. Miss Mary Bagnell of Duluth is spending a mont‘h at the Tom Smart home W. W. Johnson of Kelliher is . Johnson and family. - It you want a car call Enterprise Auto Co. Office phone 1, residence _ phone 10. 56tf Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Gardner of Cass Lake were guests of friends in the city Thursday. One of these nice days you cught to go to Hakkerup’s and have your picture taken, 14tf Mrs. E. R. Armentokut and daugh- .ter and Mrs. E. Layton of Keokuk, Ia., are guests at.the Markham hotel. it Genevive Johnson of Hines, was a between train shopper in Bemidji yesterday. Mrs. Hz T, rived in the city ‘and will remain for some time. Mrs. James Wheeler and Miss Pearl Whedler of Bass Lake visited friends in Bemidji-yesterday. John G. ‘Wallace of Solway was a busin\ess visitor in Bemidji Thurs- day. Mrs. G. R. Misner of Deer River attended to business matters in the city yesterday. Mrs. Fred Bucksen and Miss B. __Middleton of Lake Plantagenet called w4 on friends in the city yesterday. Let McCall Patterns help do your fall economizing. For sale by J. C. Penney Co., on Beltrami avenue. 1t913 Miss Leta Halladay of Ranier ar- rived in the city last evening and will spend the winter with her grandpar- ents, Mr. and Mrs. A. M. Crowell. The . government says, “Pictures can help win the war.” Portraits, ko- dak prints: Rich studio, 29 10th St. 1mo-1011 Miss Dora Evenson has returned ‘from Rineholt, N. D., where she has been the guest of relatives for sev- eral weeks.- Those handsome Marabeau furs are very smart for early fall wear, shown by J. C. Penney Co., on Beltrami ave- nue. 1t913 Company Halt Army officers shoes in dark tan calf for sale at J. C. Penney Co., on Beltrami avenue; price $7.49, too. 1t913, R.J. Cupler of Chicago, who repre- sents the Standard Advertising com- pany of that city, spent Thursday in Bemidji. Mrs. F. J. Kune of Shevlin, who has visited friends at Grand Rapids, was-in Bemidji yesterday enroute to her home. Select your fall wraps early, our ready-to-year department offers a very fine assortment, reasonably priced, too, J. C. Penney Co., on Bel- trami avenue. v 1t813 Mr. and Mrs. V. M. Owens and Mrs. H. Owens of Long Prairie spent yes- terday in Bemidji shopping and call- ing om friends. Palm Olive Soap sells for 10c bar at J. C. Penney Co. busy store on Bel- trami avenue. Cutticurri soap at 19c. 1t913 Rudolph Springer, who was oper- ated on for appendicitis at St. An- thony . hospital, is much improved and has been removed to the A. O. Hoganson home. l spendmg the day with his son, Dr. E.’ eg of Nebraska has ar- | Senator and Mrs. T. C. Bloomgren apd son and A. C. Sutherland andj wife were Bemidji visitors Thursday, having motored here from their home in Canibridge: home at Graud summer, returnezf’“ Minneapolis today. A party cousistmg of Jv B. Hughes, J. O’Leary, Mrs. E, S. 8hoop and Miss Wethern, all of St. Pnul spent Wed- nesday ~and . Thursday in the: ty: They were uests at the Hotel ham. 5 Mrs Clyde Cooley and Priscilla Bingham of Glenwod were in Bemidji yesterday, “enroute to Yola where they will vxsit relatives a short time. They are’ making the trip by auto. Quincy Long, W. H. McPherson and William, B Davis, who own homes- steads” iu thls county north of Cass Lake, were in Bemld]x Thursday on business( 3 Mr. and Mrs. G. B. Upham of In- ternational ~Falls are spending a month in the city. ~Mr. Upham was formerly connected with the City Drug store of this city. COATS WlTH FUR COLLARS Nearly ail coats are designed to fol- low the straight-line silhouette and many soft-faced fabrics — velours, broadcloths and others—are favored for them. There is an effect of semifitted garments made by the use of ‘loose belts or by cutting the back so that it follows the lines of the figure and beltmg in ‘the sides and front. On the better grades of coats furs are used for collars and’ cuffs. with cross-bar tucking on’ the back ‘panel, a narrow belt of the fabric and a large, rich-looking .collar of Hudson seal. -TINY CROSS STITCH ANIMALS Latest in Hand Needlework on Ju- venile Costumes—Colored Cotton or Worsted May Be Used. Hand stitchery continues to give the touch of distinction to simple lit- tle frocks made of inexpensjve mate- rials. Smocking, feather stitching, hemstitching, tiny hand run pin tucks, small buttonholes worked with ex- guisite care, daintify dresses for tiny girls these days, and a little frock of cross barred dimity, smocked or feath- er stitched, with minute buttonholes fastening over lace buttons is infimite- ly better style than an elaborately trimmed costume loaded with machine made lace. The latest thing in hand needlework on juvenile costumes is cross stitch animals. Rabbits, kittens, lambs, cows and other lovable beasties—from the childish standpoint—are worked In cross stitch with colored cotton or worsted, the designs being somewhat conventionalized and rather square and angular, but unmistakably rep- resenting what they intend to. A red and white striped gingham frock for a littie girl of eight has a white pique yoke cross stitched with tiny rabbits in red. A white and blue percale has cross stitch bluebirds, and so on. The cross stitch animals are very tiny and are usually embroidered in a border effect, each design taking up exactly the same space and the pattern being geometrical and less reg- alar when completed. Guide Signs. In the various proposals for develop Ing motor transportation over our high- ways nothing has been said about guide posts, but that they are necessary is fully demonstrated hy the frequent reports thdt have appeared of fleets of government trucks losing their way, especially at night. Con- siderable good work in this direction has been done, largely through private enterprise; but there is still much to do in distinctly marking every fork and turn on.all main routes, partic larly through towns, And in this con- nection it would be well to put on the statute books stringent lawsato re- press the rural hoodlum with a cheap gun or pistol who delights to use road signs as a target, to the great annoy- ance of travelers to whom guide signs in unfamiliar territory are an absolute essential.—Scient American. The Important Question. It will not be fashionable to steal f'daughter. "| William S. Hart’s new Artcraft pics flllIIIIllIIlIlllIIIIlllIIIIlllllllllllfllllllllllé : ATTHE S GranD g THEATERS g TONIGHT — 7:30 and 9 §IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllililll"lllllllilllillllr 5 REX TONIGHT “Somebody’s got to settle with me,” said Dale Revenal as he faced a group of cowboys. An:unknown hand: had sent an apple-core in Dale’s direction while he was talking with Mary Jane ypleton, the ranchman’s pretty Margery Wilson with Wallace MacDonald in “Marked Cards” It’s a gripping and heart clutching drama which every man and woman should see. ~ Dale’soon decided who he had to lick and in another moment the com- batants had squared off in battle for- mation. And in less time than is consumed in the telling Dale’s antag- onist was sprawling on the ground, in -attitude of surrender. Comedy This is only one of the. thrilling.|] P " scenes of the Bluebird production. |Jl * Newspaper Clippings “Hungry Eyes” shown at. the Rex tonight with Ruth Clifford and Mon- || Keystone roe Salisbury in the lead roles. ' It is a quick-trigger western drama and | TOMORROW gripping in its intensity. There will also be'a comedy, “Mar- Norma athon Maniacs” shown. ‘Talmadge GRAND TONIGHT, Mat. 2:30 and Nite “Marked Cards,” latest Triangle picture ‘{‘o be announced for ‘the in repeat showing Grand theatre tonight presents a « » complmauou both amusing and ser- MARTHAS ious-amusing to healthy-minded Amer | VINDICATION” icans and serious enough to two young lovers. “Marked Cards” is a dram#every Also Universal Weekly - THEATRE Tomorrow & Sunday - Matinees 3:00—Evenings 7:20-9:00 New Production Thos. H. Ince presents Wm. S. Hart in his New Photoplay ‘Riddle Gawne’ An ARTCRAFT Picture First Time Showing in This City They called h1m “Riddle” because he had only one object in life—to “get’’ a man. He had nursed his hatred through a score of years. Now, when they saw him face to face with his man, they knew that hell had come to earth. Added Attraction A keystone two part comedy “Newspaper Clippings”’ is also on the program. ELKO PROGRAM. The cattle rustlers of the west have been long the sworn enemies of lawful cattlemen and they play an important part in “Riddle Gawne,” Instant Postum has a peculiar import- ance these days, not alone cn account of its wholesome purity as a ture which will be seen at the Elko theatre tomorrow and Sunday, mat- inee and evening. Mr. Hart is for- tunate always in his selection of sereen material, but Le has never had a better choice than in this story by Charles A. Seltzer. It is a thrilling narrative, one of the red-blooded type, but full of human quality and the The coat shown ‘above is of velours |- table beverage, but be- cause of its labor-sav- ing convenience. No Boiling Necessary charm of genuine love amidst com-| pelling situations. Mr. Hart was di- rector and Katherine MacDonald . is his leading woman. “Her Blighted Love” is the Para- mount-Mack Sennett two-part comedy to be shown tomorrow and Sunday. HE’S COMING SUNDAY. On Sunday at the Rex will be seen Charlie Chaplin m the rib tickler, “Musical-Tramps.”” This will be an added feature of the regular <plen— did Sunday bill. Made instantly by plac- .inlg a -level teaspoonful inrd-cup of hot water; stirring, and adding cream or milk. Little or.no sugar_is needed. ‘ELKO0.TO. REOPEN. The Elko theatre will reopen for the season tomorrow, after having been closed except Saturday-and Sun- day during the hot months. T L 9 " The Monkey's Descent. e There s a Reason School children are not always as at- tentive as they should be, but Miss man and woman should see.. It por- . trays.the dangers of carousing and Paramount-Mack Sennett cards and, lack of purpose in the lives _ Comedy of young men. —_— In Two Parts “*Her Blighted Love‘ Re-Cpening Program THEATRE REX Tonieut. Bluebird Photoplays Present “Hungry Eyes” RUTH CLIFFORD RUPERT JULIAN Drama of Western Love and Regeneration Comedy--- “ MARATHON MANIAGS " 10c and 20c 7:20 and 9 o’Clock Tilly Teechum’s class was a wonder. There were few things they did nor know. ENTERPRISE AUTO CO- “Now, children,” she said, . . o wun descend from?” Auto Livery and Taxi Service The answer came like a boomerang: Day and Night Service “From a monkey!” Office Remore Hotel, Cor. Miss Teechum beamed, and, singling 3rd St. & Beltrami Ave. “what did out one bright little fellow, she asked: “Tell e, Jimmy, what did the mon- key descend from?” “Please, miss, from a tree,” surprising answer. Office Phone 1 Residence Phone 10 ‘WM. M’CUAIG, Manager was the Subscribe for The Piofleer SHOE POLISHES LIQUIDS AND PASTES. FOR BLACK, WHITE, TAN, DARK BROWN OR OX-BLOOD SHOES. PRESERVETHELEATHER. The F. F. DALLEY CORPORATIONS, LIMITED, BUFFALO, N. Y. HO T LR T L LT TR LR L LT LT T CRAWFORD & ANDERSON Wishes to announce that they are now buying Live Stock and will pay highest market prices. IR Office at 203 Third Street, Bemidji '_!llIllllllllllllllllllIIIIII|III|IllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIII]IIIIIL Mesdames C. R Sanborn, L. H. umbrellas the coming season, says an Phone 470 Bailey, F. S. Arnold and Mise Minnie| €3Pert on fashions—or on umbrella = Bailey, will go to Bagley this after. | Stealing, one forgets which. But will E noon where Mrs. Sanborn will speak | it be fashionable to return some of = on Y. W.C. A. work. those stolen last season? A T T T B T T —————f—— — > = = — __T_.. COMING SUNDAY N CHARLIE CHAPLIN in his latest rib tickler “MUSICAL TRAMPS” TOMORROW Bemidjl’s Modern Theatre RE-OPENS Special Map Coupon Bemidji Pioneer Pub. Co. Bemidji, Minn. 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.

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