Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, April 14, 1919, Page 5

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

To each day briefs and we solicit B. J. Hourigan of Cass Lake was a Bemidji Sunday visitor. Mrs. George Till of Yola was the gitest of Bemidji friends Saturday. Andrew G. Lokken of 'Tenstrike was ‘in Bemidji on business today. River passed Saturday in Bemidji shopping. ¥ Mrs. Sidney Miller of Pinewood | was a Bemidji visitor Saturday, be- tween trains. ’ Mrs. George Keeser of Turtle i | $50,000 to loan on rarms. Dean Land Co. a71ee . Miss Josephine Hermanson of Blackduck was the guest of Bemidji friends Saturday. : Al Kaiger, president of the: First Ay National bank of Bagley was a Be- midji visitor yesterday. % aulg7™ Mrs. Matt Hogan of Grant Valley passed Saturday in the city shopping i and calling on friends. i | Miss Merle Methvin, teacher at & Pinewood, was among the out of town shoppers Saturday Cash paid for liberty bonds. In- quire room 51, Markbam 'hotel. 41t Mrs. Ch-rles Olson and Miss Clare _Olson of Blackduck 'were between train visiters in the city Saturday, ‘Mrs. A. D. Simpkins who. visited ‘relatives in Bemidji for a week re- turned ‘to her home in Turtle River Saturdag. i Mrs. William Mitchell and Miss Ella Jones of Schooleraft drove to Bemidji Saturday, and passed the day with friends. 1" #Henry Breckner of Waskish is in Aemidji today, being en route to his # home from a visit of four months | { in the southern states. li ! 1 Mr. and Mrs. S. A. Hubbell of Min- neapolis arrived in Bemidji this morning and will open their cottage at Lavinia for the summer. There will be a meeting of the Bastern Star tomorrow night in the & Masonic hall at 8 o’clock. All mem- bers are urged to be present. s sa— Money saving prices on 'quality portraits and kodak finishing at Rich’s studio ... Phone 570-W 29 10 st. 512-1Mon Miss” Bessie Dilley, teacher .at Hill City, Minn., was in Bemidji Satur- [ day, en route to Puposky where she will visit friends ‘during Easter va- catios. Mrs. Daniel Downs, Mrs. 8. C. Maule and Misses Margaret and Psther Hample of Tenstrike were among the out of town shoppers Sat- urday. ndrew Johnson, sheriff of Bel- 4mi county, returned to Bemidji this morning from Red Wing where he had taken a lad to the training school. Miss Florence Freese, teacher at Hill City, is visiting at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. F. M. Freese, at Carr Lake during Baster vacation. | H 1 | { | | Mrs. William C. Budge of Grand Forks, N. D., arrived in the city Sat- urday and will make her home here with her husband, who is druggist at Barker's drug store. ATt Mrs. Mary Guthrie, who has as- i sisted in .caring for ‘‘uncle” James Winnebenner of Dewey avenue, re- turned to her home for the week-end. She will rturn to Bemidji today. J. P. Gillson of Pillager arrived in Bemidji~ this morning ‘to -visit his brother, Bugene, who is seriously ill in St. Anthony's- hospital. While here is.the guest of hig sister, Mrs. A. D. Johnson. ¥ s~ Mrs. Groves of Sugar Bush was among the out of town business vis- ftors Saturday. Mrs. Groves teaches at that place. Her daughter, Miss Caroline Groves is a student in the ‘Bemidji high school. See the Bemidji Stationary store for rubber stamps, fac simile signa- ture stamps, notarial seals and cor- poration seals. 35t Miss Ruth Harding, a sister of Glen 8. Harding, manager of the Grand theatre, and who taught in the Bemidji schools last year, has been re-elected to teach in the Lin- coln Elementary school in Duluth. Electric sulphur vapor baths, the bath for the treatment of locomotor atoxy, asthma, Iumbago, pleurisy, geiatica and sciatic rheumatism. Phone 776-J or call at 1009 Bemidji Ave. J. F. Osborn. 1d414 Mrs Herman Fladhammer of town of Liberty, who has been confined at the university hospital, Minneapolis { for the past five or six weeks, re- { turned Saturday night. \Vnile at the hospital she underwent a serious operation. Mrs. A. Clavin and her brother, Henry Seado, left Saturday night for » j}}rand Rapids, Wis., having been ®~#“" called there by the sudden death of their mother, Mrs. Seado. They re- ceived a telegram Saturday announc- ing her death, but no particulars were given. ] H BEMIDJI NEWSY NOTES ve an interesting and complete review of the city’s ‘social ‘activities is our desire. i i devoted to personal mention, social items and news our cooperation in its maintenance. Items phoned or mailed to this office are appreciated by readers of the paper and by the publishers. Telephone 922. service in France. ) 10c and 25¢ -~ box. All This page is In observance of passion week two Methodist prayer meetings will be held 'this evening, one at the home of ‘Al P, Ritchie and the other at the home of A. T. Carlson, Services will be held each night this week and will be announced from day to day. Mr. and Mrs. Charles F. Barwise left yesterday morning for Bovey, Minn., where they will make ‘their home. Mr. and Mrs. Barwise were racently married. Mr. Barwise, who is a son of Mrs. William Lily of this city, has just returned from military Attorney Thayer C. Baliley 're- turned Saturday from the Twin Cities and Crookston. He transacted business ‘at the Twin Cities and at Crookston he visited his wife. Mrs. Bailey is staying at ‘he home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. N: P. Stone during her mother’s absence from the city. ‘ H. Z. Mitchell, editor of the Bey midji Sentinel, returned to the city this morning from St. Paul where he attended a meeting of the legis- lative committee of the State Edi- torial association of which he is a member. The meeting was atgended by a large number of republican edi- tors of the state, the purpose being to discuss proposed changes in the primary election laws. Mr. and Mrs. Otto Grimm and little eon, Donald, left Saturday afternoon for Grand Forks, 'N. D, where 'they will visit Mrs. Grimm’s sister,” Mrs. L. F. Murphy. Mrs. Murphy has recently returned from Denver, Col., where she accompanied her husband, Mr Murphy, going for the benefit of his health He had al- most recovered from his first illness, when he was taken ill with the in- fluenza. Pneumonia set in, from which he died. Mrs. Murpby is mak- ing her home in Grand Forks CHANGE OF DATE. Mrs. H. W. Bolger will entertain the Episcopal Guild Wednesday in- stead of Thursday, as the liberty loan parade will be held Thursday. LEAVE CRADLE ROLL. Seventeen were promoted from the cradle roll to the primary depart- ment of the Methodist church yes- terday morning. Mrs. F. G. Scha- degg is superintendent of the cradle roll and is assisted by Mrs. M. A. Soper, Mrs. Edward Anderson and Mrs. J. C. McGhee. The superintend- ent and her assistants have visited every home represented in this de- partment, during the past year. Miss Anna Brown is superintendent of the primary departmentt. ENTERTAINED FOR MOTHER. Mrs. J. A. Younggrén entertained at auction bridge Saturday evening, in honor of her mother, Mrs. P. J. Russell, the occasion being Mrs. Russell’s birth anniversary. The guests included Mesdames Russell, R. Gilmore, W. N. Bowser, P. J. O’'Leary, C. M. Bacon, George Kreatz, Eduard F. Netzer, J. W. Diedrich, Philip Gill, George T. Baker, T. C. Stewart, W. Z. Robinson, E. N. French and Walter F. Marcum. The appointments were carried out in pink. The guest of honor received Monday the 28th. day of April 1919, at 8 o’clock p. m., for the publishing for a pertod of one year, in some owspaper now published and which has been printed and publigshed and in general circulation in the City of Bemidj¥ for at least one year past, all the official proceedings of the council and other matters as re- quired in the charter, or ordinances and resolutions of the city. 8uch proposals should state the price per legal folio of 2650 Ms. nonpariel, as defined by the statutes of the state, for the first insertion and for addi-- tional insertions of all matters so published. The city reserves the right to reject any or all bids. Dated Bemidji, Minn., April 12th., GEO. STEIN, City Clerk. 1d414 BETTER THAN CALOVEL Thousands Have Discovered Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets are a Harmless Substitute. 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 niot 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 the good ‘that calomel does, but have no-bad after effects, They don’t injure the teeth like strong liquids or calomel. They take hold of the'trouble and quickly correct it. Why cure the liver at the expense of the teeth: Calomel sometimes plays havoc with the gums. . So dostropg liquids. It is best not to take calomel, but to let Dr. Edwards Qlive Tablets take its place. @ Most headaches, “dullness” and tha lazy feeling come from constipation and a disordered liver. Take Dr. Edwards | Olive Tablets when you l‘eel “mggy" and n ey up Toe. druggista, ! Beltrami County a large number of beautiful gifts as a remembrance of the anniversary. PROPOSALS FOR CITY PRINTING AND ADVERTISING. Sealed bids will be received by the undersigned to be opened before the | City Council of the City of Bemidiji, | at a regular meeting to be held on Pershing Fulfills Hope of Ancestor Greensburg, Pa.—Gen. John J. Pershing fulfilled the wish of an ancestor that a memper of the Pershing family should save Al- sace-Lorraine when he led the victorious American armies against the Germans. This fact is disclosed by Rev. Justus N. Pershing, a cousin of General Pershing, who has made public a letter written in Alsace-Lor- raine more than 200 years ago by Frederick Pershing, General Pershing’s great-great-grandfa- ther. In this letter the general’s ancestor expressed the hope that his son, Frederick Per- shing, Jr., or his descendants, “would come back some’day ‘and redeem the fair lands of Alsace- Lorraine from oppression.” According to the letter, the Pershings lived in the village of Kehe in Alsace-Lorralne in 1774 and fought under Emperor Charles against the Magyars. Soon after that, when a law was passed that all able-bodied men between the ages ‘of sixteen and fifty must join the landwebhr to protect their country from rav- ages by the Austrians, Frederick Pershing, Sr., sent his son to America. Frederick Pershing, Jr., reached this country in 1749 and, after marrying a Miss Wyant in Baltimore. settled ih Westmoreland county, Pennsyl- vania, where General Pershing’s grandparents were born. Few Negroes Die of “Fiy.” Undertakers at Stamford, Conn. have been mystified at the scarcity of deaths among colored people as a re sult of influenza. City Health Officer Costanza says the negro race is not immune from the disease so far as he knows, but cannot explain ‘the fact that few if any cases among them have been fatal. Teach Farming by Mail. Farming is to be taught by malil by & New Hampshire college. The course is open to all residents of the state. The plan was adopted as a re- sult of the feeling that the technical side of agriculture education has suf- fered during the extensive production campaign that has been going on. —Travelers — will find a warm welcome at The West Minneapolis Service our watchword I TONIGHT! 2nd SHOW AT 9:00 ALICE JOYCE “ EVERYBODY'S GIRL” from the short story “Brick Dust Row” by O. Henry. also, episode 11 “Iron Test” At The GRAND Wed. & Thur. Lina Cavalieri ALSO Fatty Arbuckle AT THE ELKO ‘part ‘to the increased cost of building WILL REBUILD REIMS Cost of Reconstruction Estimat- ed at Billion Dollars. Twenty Projects for the Work Are Submitted by Leading Architects. Refms, France.—The total cost for the reconstruction of Reims, according to estimates just completed, Is placed at 5,000,000,000 francs, or $1,000,000,- 000. .This is the figure of the.indemnity which the Germans imposed on France at the end of the Franco-Prussian war, and ‘which they then considered suffi- clently large to ruin France, commer- cially and industrially, for years to come. In spite of this terrific cost, due in materials resulting from the war, Relms.is losing no time rising from its ruins. For the reconstruction of the cl'ty 20 complete plans have been sub- mitted by leading architects of Parls, Relms and other French cities. No one plan will be adopted, but the city will pick out of each the features that seem the most desirable and arrive at a final plan which will be approved by the city council. Among the detalls already declded upon are big, broad streets for the principal arteries; workingmen’s quar- ters, with gardens, and three series of boulevards. llke those of Paris and ~ NEW MANAGEMENT 1 have purchased the Ny- more Meat Market, conduct- ed by H. T. Schmidt, and in- vite the public to come and inspect my stock of fresh and salted meats also all kinds of sausage, butter and eggs. 1 will deliver to all parts of the city and do all to satisfy my customers. Yours for business, B. M. Mureth. | 1 TONIGHT! & TOMORROW " g i MGG EmEa ] us H “He Comes Up Smiling” Valet to a pet canary[—A new role for Douglas Fairbanks —and then the bird escapes, Some Chase!! With added attraction; two part “BIG V” Comedy “Misfits and Mafrimony” ELKO TONIGHT & TOMORROW FLORENCE REED ~——AND—— WM. DESMOND —IN— “HER CODE OF HONOR” AT THE GRAND PAGE FIVE e e e ] Brussels, rorming™ complete ~ circles, there being one inner circle of boule- vards, then a middle circle and finally* an outer circle. v It also has been decided that the buildings encircling the cathedral, nearly all of which are now in a com: plete state of demolition, will ‘be cleared out entirely in order that the cathedral may occupy a vast open square where all of its beauty may be seen from any point. Character of Community, / Roads- index the character ol any community. They determine its im- portance. 'They either limit its ad- vance or aid it. If it ‘isn’t ‘worth a good road, it isn't worth' living in and land isn’t worth what it sells tor. Holds Down' Four Jobs,, M. O. Corbett of Des, Moines, In,, ia tiolding down four' jobs. '‘They are at- torney at law, train.dispatcher of the 8. M. & St. P,, referee. in bankruptcy in the 'place of Referee Frank Com- fort, and detail:man in the bankruptcy office for Gus North, also in the war. Otherwise, 'his working ‘hours ' are from 8 a. m. to 11 p. m. Cat Skillful Hunter. Wilkes-Barre, Pa—H. M. Beck-says that it is his experience that “if-a cat discovers a bevy of quail or covey of grouse or a 'brood’ of‘weodedek she has one mission in life ‘after'the discovery, and that is to destroy' them all, and if she doesn’t get them today ‘'she will tomorrow or the next day, and a more patient, skillful hunter never existed. ’ 10c, 20c¢ ” Condemnation, WEDNESDAY % -Frank Keenan in “Loaded Dice.” “THE LIGHTNING RAIDER” 4th serial that was to have been shown Saturday, April 12th, will be shown Thursday, April 17 REX--Theatre M———— TONICHT ———ax Fritzi Bennete in Douglas Gerrard’s production + “THE SEALED ENVELOPE” . A drama of surprises in 5 parts EDDIE POLO “The Last Trick” Final episode of the “LURE OF THE CIRCUS” L-ko comedy Matinee ---TOMORROW --- Rialto Film Corporation presents Frank Mills supported by Bliss Milford and Lillian Kemble “My Husband’s Friend” adopted from the sensational story of “False written by Frederick Chapin 7:20, 9:00 If { IT’S NOT A WAR PICTURE By HAROLD BELL WRIGHT Friday & Sat., April 18-19 MATINEES, 3:00—Children ,25c; Adults, 35¢ NIGHTS, 7:15 and 9:15—Any Seat, 50c ~——— PRICES INCLUDE ADMISSION TAX — ELKO--THEATRE I

Other pages from this issue: