Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, November 18, 1918, Page 3

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MONDAY EVENING, NOVEMBER 18, 1918 PERSONALS AND NEWSY NOTES Dean $60,000 to loan on rarms. arite Land Co. A. D. Johnson spent Saturday in Brainerd on business. Ruth D. Kolb of Bagley passed yesterday in the city. . W. J. Styniest of Duluth was a vigitor in the city Saturday. Qne dozen photographs makes twelve Christmas presents. Hak Studio. 111t C. M. Krause of New York -City was a guest at the Hotel "Markham Saturday. g Miss Lilly Clauson of Halstad was among the visitors here during. the week-end. If you want a car cal. Enterprise Autc Co. Office phone 1, residence - phorn2 10. 66t A. 8. Jensen of Minneapolis was among the week-end business visitors in the city. A. M. Karel of Grand Rapids passed Saturday in Bemidji on busi- ness matters. - E. L. Kromer of Minneapolis waé among the out-of-town business vis- itors Saturday. Mrs. Edward Currey, ‘who suffered a gevere attack of the ‘‘flu,” is re- ported better today. P A Chief of Police Essler has returned from Fergus Falls where he attend- ed the federal grand jury. ° “Keep 'em smiling.” Send your ‘boy over there portraits, post cards, kodak ' prints.. Rich Studfo, 29 “10th St. 1mo1214 Mrs. Charles McDonald ‘and’ Miss Olive White of Northern were among the out of town shoppers in the city Saturday. £ J. M. Zacharias is another “flu” victim, having ceme home from a Iumber camp Saturday. He is some better today. Chief Deputy Cahill of the sheriff’s office has returned from Fergus Falls where he was called 17 the session of the federal grand juiy. Frank Kalkbrener, ‘pressman for the Bemidji Pioneer Publishing com- pany, returned last evening from Deer River, where he spent a few days with friends. Your friends can buy anything you give them except your -photograph. Call 239 and make arrangement with “Hak’s” Studie * for “=your .Christmas -gitting today. 111t Dr. E. H. Smith has returned from Minneapolis where he received treat- ‘ment for an infected hand.. At one time it was feared he would lose a finger, but it was saved. Lou Beroud of town of Grant Valley was called to Eagle Bend to- day on account of the death of his brother, F. Beroud, who died Satur- day from the Spanish influenza. o e i Miss Ethel Foster, who is employed in the mechanical department of the Bemidji Daily Pioneer office, is home this week, recovering from an attack - of influenza.-——Akeley Herald. Private ‘‘Butch’” Klein is home from camp on a furlough. One of the chief.regrets of Klein’s military service was_that when his company was ordered across he was on the sick list and unable to leave. Judge H. A. Simons returned Sat- urday evening from Fergus Falls where he had been attending federal court. Yesterday he received a tele- phone message asking him to return and he left yesterday afternoon. Miss Sally Witting, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Witting, returned to Minneapolis last evening, where she teaches music in the public schools. Miss Witting is awaiting her eall overseas, where she will go as a Red Cross worker. E. M: Gaylord of Duluth; Edward D. Claffey, Kelliher; M. G. Fiddes, St. ‘;‘ Paul; M. C. Swanson, Minneapolis; 1 . C. Thronson, Minneapolis; F. A, Danneker, St. Paul, and J. C. Grun- George L: Andrews, - Minneapolis; berg., Minneapolis, passed Saturday in Bemidji. ' Mrs. Joseph Stolguist of Crookston, who came to Bemidji to attend the wedding of her niece, Miss Marie ¥ | Annette, to William J. Johnson, | November 12, returned. to her home Saturday. Her sister, Mrs. S. An- nette, accompanied her and wilk visit in Crookston for a week. Nels 0. Otterstad, cruiser, of Tur- ife River, passed Saturday in the city. Mr. Otterstad has recently re- covered from an attack of the Spanish “fn” and is still guiie weak. His son, Carl Otterstad, station agent at Turtle River, has algo recently recov- ered from the same disease. Mr. Ot- terstad was accompanied by his daughter, Ella, teacher at Penning- ton, who is spending a few days at home. ¥ The Gonvick Banner says: ‘‘Mrs. Ed. Sherman has arrived from Be- midii and is spending a few days with friends in Winsor and Leon townships. Mrs. Sherman will go back to Bemidji next week, expecting - to return here early next year to N’ take 1~ her residence on a farm north of Gonvick. Mrs. Sherman's son, Arthur, who has spent the p:xst‘ several months at Granite Falls, is; | expected to come to Gonvick for ¢ visit at Christmas time.” Mrs. 8. C. Case of Pine River was a between-train visitor Saturday. A. Zoerb at Aitkin was among the Sunday visitors at the Markham. . Mrs. McCaulley of Margie is visit- ing her daughter here for a few days. W. H. Rowe and William Hyntt‘ol Liit‘;,lle Falls passed yesterday in Be- midji. Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Goldberg have returned from a trip to Brainerd and Duluth. Peter Olson ;d_l':rauk Perrin of Chicago were visitors in the city Sunday. Miss Vera Elliott of Pinewood was a between-train _visitor in Bemidji Saturday. 5 5 C. H. Sibley of Deer River was among the out of town guests in the city Sunday. "Mrs. A. E. Foster of Mizpah was among the Safurday business visitors in the city. C. B. Miller of Chicago transacted business in Bemidji the latter part of the week. . Harvey K. Meyer and Peter Graves passed Saturday in the eity on business matters. H. S. Gilkey of Minneapolis passed Sunday in Bemidji, being registered at the Hotel Markham. Mrs. David Hinshaw of Wilton was the . guest of Bemidji friends the latter part of the week. Mrs. Lily Morgan and Mrs. A. Till of Yola autoed to Bemidji Saturday and passed the day with friends. Mrs. Martin Hogan of Grant Valley was the guest of Bemidji friends Sat- urday while in the city shopping. Mrs. Sam Haytlf of town of North- ern ig visiting her sister,” Mrs. Dora Lincoln of Park Rapids for a week. Mrs., Janies Wheeler:'and Miss Pearl Wheeler of Bass Lake trans- acted business in the city Saturday. Mrs. A. St. Lawerence and son, Theodore, of Big Falls are visiting at the home of Mrs. St. Lawerence’s daughter, Mrs. William Anderson for a short time. L. Nygaard returned Saturday morning for Stephen, Minn., where he had been doing carpenter work. Mr. Nygaard has just recovered from an attack of the Spanish “flu.” _ESTRAY NOTICE. Cow came to my place. Owner can have same by paying for keep and this ad. F. M. Freese, 3d1120 RETURN TO NORMAL. Miss Mabel Johnson, daughter of Rev. and Mrs, Osmund Johnson, left Saturday night forMankato normal, where she will resume. her studies, the Spanish influenza han been lifted. En route she visited friends and relatives in Minneapolis. Miss Edith Mills returned to Man- evening, having spent some time in Bemidji visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. H, Mills, the normal having been closed on ac- kato normal last count of the “flu.” opened again today. TWIN FOOLS HIS MOTHEE Grows Mustache and Mother “Can't Tell Which Brother Is Visiting Her. Troy, Ohio.—Clyde and George Fin ley, twins, aged nineteen, are in the navy, having enlisted Just after wa was declared. While in the service o: Uncle Sam, Clyde grew a mustache He came home on a furlough, afte having made six trips across on transport. His mother, Mrs. George Finley,- did not know which of the brothers came home, the likeness (s so0 striking. 4 BOYS ASSURED FUR COATS Two Oregon Youths Aged Fifteen and Twelve Kill a 200-Pound Bear. The normal Klamath Falls, Ore—Retha Oden and Scott Oden; fifteen and twelve years old, living at Pine Fiat, 15 miles southeast of this city, recently killed a 200-pound bear. The young nimrods came upon bruin w he wns up a tree. Be- tween th they manipulated their fa- ther's & spevcial ritle, and finished ofl the bear with one &hot. Now the Odens and their neighbors are enjoying bear steaks, and the two ave each been promised-a bear eoatl {or (hristmas. TANKS USED AS SHIELDS Huns Take Refuge Behind Damaged Monsters, Fut Are Driven Out by Yanks. Paris—Damaged tanks, abandoned by the French when the Germans aade their late spring drive, were nsed as shields behind which German machine gunners opposed the Ameri- cons at various points hetween Fismes and Soissons, according to Corp. Royal Thurver of: Reedshurg, Wis, “They got behind these old up- turned tanks, a2 number of which T sow, and fried to hold us up after we crassed the Vesie” said Thurver, “But, of course, it was only a ques- tion of time until we worked our way aronnd them and then the (terman maichine gunners decided they were throngh wi*n the war. They invaria- rend e er was shot in the chest and megchine gun behind one i of the -tanks. . .| The picture has an having AT THE THEATERS . GRAND TONIGHT. Romance, mystery and intrigue combine in the powerful picture, ‘““The Bottom of the Well,”” at the Grand theatre tonight, wherein a mil- Jlionaire mill owner is sentenced to death for his own murder, together with a young lawyer who loves his daughter but who is spurned by the father because of the mystéry of his parentage. One of the thrilling scenes in ‘““The Bottom of the Well,” is where an American smuggler is captured by a British warship. Evart Overton plays the lead with Miss Agnes Ayres, Adele DeGarde and other Vitagraph favorites are also in the cast. GRAND TOMORROW. Only aCtherine Carr could have conceived the odd and pathetic types which move vividly and picturesque- ly across the screen in Triangle’s lat- est play, “The Atom,” which is to be the attraction at the Grand for Tuesday. ELKO TONIGHT. Tonight the Elko will show “Honor’s Cross,’”’ a special six reel feature distributed by Goldwyn. There is not a false moment in this production. It is a succession of heart throbs, thrills and intensely dramatic moments. Starring ‘Rhea -~ Mitchell, added value is given to the play because of the presence of this gifted girl, though “Honor’s Cross” is not sacri- fied in any particular to‘emphasize the principal player. -Edw. Coxan, Adde Farrington and others of pop- ularity are in the cast. pretty high, particularly in these days, but-there is no end of it in ‘““Honor’s Cross.” ELKO TOMORROW. One of the strong features of the third Paralta play starring Bessie Barriscale, “Blindfolded,” which will be the attraction at the Elko theatre for tomorrow and Wednesday, is the tension of suspense which is main- tained throughout the production. excellent plot with many striking situations, and these are multiplied in dramatic value by lighting effects and impres- sive settings which are far above the standard.of the majority of photo- plays. Miss Barriscale appears in the character of ‘“Peggy Muldoon,” a girl crook. REX TONIGHT. Tonight at the Rex will be shown the Universal . film feature, Harry Carey in ““Three Mounted Men,” di- rected by Jack Ford. Carey is known as ‘‘the ace of the western stars” and as Cheyenne Harry crouches into the slime of a solitary cell while Buck Masters, another convict, is granted unusual liberties for his services in juggling prison accounts for.the gain of the warden’s son. Masters is eventually pardoned, while Cheyenne prison discipline. Masters the warden’s son for hush money. With a pardon in his pocket as pay, Masters and return him to prison. comedy. Tomorrow at the Rex - will be shown an usual feature when Pat Sullivan shows by a series of car- toons in film form, “How Charlie Captured the Kaiser.” This is a series of cartoons drawn on feature of the movies. There will also be shown an L-KO Realism in motion pictures comesj’ Harry confinually gets the worse of [ &ches and fainted two or three times. hounds | On a recent morning they found her Clieyenne Harry starts ‘out to catch | murmuring very softly her husband's UNUSUAL FEATURE TOMORROW. knives” held lots of terror for little the screen in-picture form and are a big The feature will be “The Marriage Lie,” in five parts. COMING TO THE REX. Un Wednesday, Constance Tal- madge will be seen in “Good Night Paul.” . Thursday and Friday the program will be Dorothy Phillips in “A Soul for Sale.” - POTATOES FOR SALE. Seventy cents per hundred, field run. You furnish your own trans- portation and sacks. Offer holds good until Wednesday noon. M. A. Ald- rich, 20th and Norton Ave. 1d1118 Anclent Writing Implements. When writing, Confucius used & small brush, like a camel’s-hair hrush, for a pen, and so did his ancestors for centuries before his time. The reed came Into use for writing in the marshy countries of the Orient. It was hollow and-cut in short lengths. DON'T LET A COLD KEEP YOU AT HOME Dr. King’s New Discovery almost never fails to bring quick relief Small doses once in awhile and that throat-tearing, lung-splitting cough soon quiets down. Another dose an?l hot bath before jumping into bed, a good sleep, and back to normal in the marninkifl : Dr. 's New Discoveryis well known, or fifty years it's been relieving coughs, colds and bronchial attacks, For fifty years it has been sold by druggists everywhere, A reliable remedy that you yourself orany member of your family can take safely, 60c_and $1.20. e ——— Train Those Stubborn Bowels Help nature take its course, not with a violent, habit-forming purge= tive, but with gentle but certain and natural-laxative, Dr. King's New Life Pills. Tonic in action, it stimulates the lax bowels. Sold by druggists. 25 | her brain, caused by grief. DEATH IS TRACED TO BROKEN HEART Clot Forms on Brain of Woman as Result of Worry Over Husband. San Francisco.—A tragic Incldent of the war has been revealed in the death | of Mrs. Frank H. Anderson at the home of her purents in Atwater, Mer- ced county. Physlicians stated that Ter death was due to a blood clot on She had not been ill to any great extent, but ever since her husband left for the Atlantic coast on his way to I'rance Judge J. E. Harris of this city re- ceived word -of the death of Earl Dell, at Rainy cause of his death being the Spanish influenza. age and is one of the five orphans left by the death of Mrs. Alice Dell of Irvine avenue. My wife having left my home, I will her bills. There will be a meeting of the|=wmm THEATRE - Eastern Star tomorrow night at the regular hour. TUESDAY PAGE THREE ORPHAN BOV DIES. $50 REWARD Will be paid for the arrest and con- viction of the parties who stole my radiator presto life tank and car- burator off my Buick truck. W. G. Schroeder. 10d1122 GRAND River, Friday, the He was about 15 years of NOTICE. not be responsible for any of Joe Dumond. 3d1120 0. E. S. MEETING. ‘with the United States navy Mrs., An- dcrson had steadily declined. She thought of her husband day and night, and although he enlisted Could Not Conquer Her Grief. with her full consent and she even safld at the time that she would not have him hide behind her skirts and stay at home, she did not seem strong enough to bear the separation. Anderson was placed in clas§ 5 in the first dreaft, but he and his wife de- cided that he should answer his coun- try’s call immediately, and in March he joined the navy. When he left for active service Mrs. Anderson went to regide with her parents. When, Anderson’s furloughs allowed him to visit his wife Mrs. Anderson was perfectly happy and never al- lowed him to see how she missed his companionship. But when the final call for France came, and later, when he had gone, she could not conquer ker grief or control her longing for. her husband. She seemed to droop as a flower which had been torn up by the roots, and later she spoke of severe head: unconscious and only once again did she speak before she passed away, name, “Frank.” Fears Operation. Pittsburgh, Pa.~The “doctors’ big Johnny Kearns, aged nine, but sleep: ing in a graveyard did not. To escape being operated on for the removal of his tonsils Johnny ran away from home and for four nights lie made big bed in a cemetery near his home, ELKO ~- THEATRE -- TONIGHT ONLY . Not Money and Jewels But tender wooing and pro- tection was the reward sought| _ by Rhea Mitchell In Six part Feature “Honor’s Cross” A story of “real people in real life.” It’s all story, and presented most entertainingly by real actors. Also Showing Comedy “THE INSPECTOR’S WIFE” TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY Paralta Plays ‘“Pick of the Pictures” presents ESSIE ARRISCALE with Edw. Coxen, Helen Dunbar, Jos. J. Dowling in the excellent play ] BLINDFOLDED | Also a Comedy BETTER THAN CALONEL Thgusands Have Discovered Dr. ' Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets—the substi- tute for calomel — are a mild but sure Jaxative, and their effect on the liver is almost instantaneous, They are the result of Dr. Edwards’ determination not to treat liver and bowel complaints with calomel. His efforts to banish it brought out these little olive-colored tablets. These pleasant little tablets do that calomel does, but have no bad effects. They don’t injure the teeth like strong S n \ A of the trouble and-quickly correct it. Why : e | cure the liver at the expense of the teethi i | Calomel sometimes plays havoc with the ums. %o take filomi&bg; “i let Dr. Edv:ards ive Tablets take its place. OIMost headaches, “dullness” and thal lazy feeling come from constipation anc a disordered liver. Take vards Olive Tablets when you feel “lo_ggy anc “heavy.” Note how they “clear’ clouded Dbrain and how they “ 10c and 25¢ = box. REX TONIGHT Matinee and Evening Edwards’ Olive Tablets are a Harmless Substitute. | the good after liquids or calomel. They take hold So do strong liquids, _It is best not Dr. Edwards| °'UUINE OTAR ; ; ¥ rk up” the spirits druggists. 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 ol your latest State, United States and War Zone maps, a combination of “three in one” map hangers. e M NEME. oo siounmmmsismssinlsaes TSP, IO AdAress. ....ccco0otinecssvossrossrose ; ., Scene from. The.Bottom of the Well e e B A Thrilling Drama of Love and Adventure in the Tropics GRAND HHEATRE TONICGHT 1) o SPECIAL PRODUCTION—Directed by JACK FORD HarryGarey in the rilling Universal melodrama “THREE MOUNTED MEN™ They Are Bold as Brass and Smooth as Glass Starring the Ace of Western Actors Also an LEKO COMEDY Matinees Night 7:20 and 9 o’Clock 10c and 20c NEW FEATURE TUESDAY Pat Sullivan’s Masterpiece “HOW GHARLIE CAPTURED THE KAISER” dnes.;;‘l;i —Norma Talmage in “VCoodWNiiEht Paul.” F}sza;l.;\' and Frvida‘ —Dof;tll; Philelips in “A Soul for Sale.”

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