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‘Mr. and Mrs. Ole Onfgsfad}eft yes- rday for Rochester, Minn., on busi. egs. . Mrs. J. D. Klinger of Pinewod was n Bemidji yesterday on' business atters. 3 --# Cash paid for lierty bonds. In quire room 651, Markham hotel, 41tf -Mrs. Fred Swenson of town of Frohn passed yesterday in Bemidji }lobplng. ‘imrs: R. G. Tufford of .enstrike was among the qut of town business vigitors yesterday. idra. Thomas Martin of Akron, 0., % is visiting at the J. C. Spangler home tl in Turtle River for a month. _Sixteen-inch, mixed, hard and soft slab wood for sale, $3 per load. Be- midji Mfg. Co. Phone 481. 1d71 James Boobar and daughter, Miss Eliza ‘Boobar of Nary were among the business visitors in the city yes- terday. G. W. Harnwell, local manager of the St. Hilaire Retail Lumber com- pany, who has been ill for several days is improving. $50,000 to loan on farms,. Dean Land Co. darite /Mr. and Mrs. Alec Brinkman of ‘Michigan City, Ind., are visiting Mr. Brinkman’s brother, Fred Brinkman .and wife, for two weeks. Mrs. Wilham Masterson of town .of Northern and Mrs. Fred Swenson of town of XFrohn, were among the out of town saovppers yesterday. Miss LaBarge of Walker was in Bemidji yesterday to consult a doc- jtor. Miss LaBarge had blood poison }in her hand caused by the prick of a thorn. . E » " Weather predictions for Thursday night “Nice and cool, just right for the big dance in the Armory given by the Bemidji Box Company Athle- tic association.” 1d71 _Charles W. Vandersluis,. proprietor of the Bemidji Hardware company, returned to the city this morning from Kelliher whére he spent last evening on business. Miss Lottie Wolstad of Minneapo- ». Ji8, who has been the¢ guest of her ister, Mrs. H. C. Lisherness and amily for the past several days, re- ‘turned to her home Sunday night. Mrs. F. M. Donaldson and baby ieft yesterday for Rosey, Minn., where they will visit for a few days. Mr. Donaldson will join them Thurs- / dany and they will all motor back to Bemidji Sunday. ) i Keep a kodak story of the child- -ren. Film develdped 10c; prints 3c, 78¢5¢.° Money also saved you on fportraits. Rich Studio, 29 10th St. 714-1Mo Rev. George Backhurst, rector of the Episcopal church, and son, Reg- inald, returned last evening ffom Cass Lake, where they had been since Saturday, attending the Indian Mission Convocation. ‘Mrs. John Beecroft and son, Rob- ert and daughter, Kathleen of Ke- watin, .inn., arrived in the city yes- terday and are the guests of Mrs. Beecroft’s sister, Mrs. N. E. Given and family of Dewey avenue. Elmer and Harvey DeLap of Osh- kosk, Wis., are visiting their aunt, Mrs., Caspe? Knapp and tamily of Grant Valley. The latter recently 1e- turned from Germany and France after fourteen months active service. P e s i < < < Complete line of auto veils'in all ‘colors just received at Elko Hat Shop. ® 1471 Mr. and Mrs. T. D. Maxflield re- turnéd to their home in Byron, Minn. this morning, by automobile, having ~ been guests at the L. O. Petrie home since Saturday. The Petries and Maxfields are old schoolmates from Rochester. I want to go there. Where? To the second big dance given by the Bemidji Box Company Athletic as- sociation, Thursday mnight, July 3, at the Armory. Syncopators orches- . tra. 1d71 ., Miss Margaret Jacobi, trained nurse, of Minneapolis, is the guest of her uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. John Achenbach for two weeks, hav- ing arrived in the city last even- ing. Miss Jacobi is from the North- western hospital. Mr. and Mrs. G. Maines of Hougk- midji yesterday and while here were From here they went to Kelliber, ac- returning to Bemidji last evening. Miss Mabelle Aubolee left yester- day for Moorhead, where she will viYit for a week before leaving for the west. She will be joined in that * city by Miss Ardythe Schroeder and Syd and Annie Panlson. They will g0 to Tacoma, Wash.., San Francisco, Los Angeles, and San Diego. Cal.. where they will visit friends and relatives. Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Spangler of Tulsa. Okla., are viisting at the home of Mr. Spengler’s brother, J. C. f To each day give an interesting and complete review of the city’s social activities is our desire. This page is devoted to personal mention, social items and news briefs and we solicit your cooperation in its maintenance. Items phoned or mailed to this office are appre- ciated by readers of the paper and by the publishers. Telephone 922, ton, South Dakota, motored to Be-| guests at the M. LaFontisee home. | companied by Miss Kate LaFontisee, THE BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEER M. E. Carson of Mission, Tex., a brother of G. E. Carson of this city, arrived in Bemidji yesterday and will spend a month or two here. Mr. Car- son lived in Bemidji twelve years ago.. and- stage. Some acts are: phants performing ful feats. This show has t Reveals Terrible Story. weeks. From there they will go to the Lake of a Thousand Islands, where they will visit for a short - Without Trial, Many Aftsr t:me betor; going to Yellowstone Na- Horrible Torture. N tional park, returning to their h T in Septomber. They sre'mabing the] London—Parm, the first ity of any {2 lot of applause. trip by automobile, and found the| size retakem by Admiral Kolchak's r(fla:ls bad ltlhI'OI:lEh EI(]!:V& on account| All-Russian army from the bolsheviki, of too much rain, ey are accom-| offers a great study in “red” atrocities. panied by Mr. and Mrs. Lew Wilder.| pery is virtually a slaughter house. Hundreds of bodles of bolshevikl vic- tims already have been recovered, and more are being found’ every day. In the garden of a seminary, where bolshevist chieftains were wont to hold their revels, the bodies of two dozen schoolgirls already have been recovered. These girls, ranging In age from twelve to sixteen, were first at- tacked by “red” officers, then when the fiends had tired of their orgy the vic- tims were killed by being tapped on the head with a wooden mallet. This seminary garden is one con- Men, Women and Children Killed " | DeMott, Wallett Madison Square G Caesar ridden by feature. The army of clo laughing. Bennie Complete line of auto veils in all colors just received at Elko Hat Shop. 1471 West is truly the PICNIC ENJOYED. plains. A number of young people of Be- midji enjoyed an outing at the out- let Sunday in honor of Harto Aubo- lee, who has just returned from over- sea service and his sister, Miss Ma- belle Auboiee, who will soon leave for the west. AUBOLEE BACK TO BEMIDJ1 MAIN FASHION PLATE CIRCUS WILL SHOW HERE ON JULY 3 The readers of this paper will be When Walter L. Main’s Fashion Plate circus come$ to Bemidji next confidently expected that one of the| requires constitutional treatment. Hall’s HED URGY uF MunnEn largest audiences of the season will [ Catarrh Medicine is taken internally and greet this sterling aggregation. acts thru the Blood on the Mucous Sur- City’ Freed of Bolshevist Ru|§ is one dull moment in the three rings| Stitution and assisting nature in doing its that is catarrh. Catarrh being 1 Thursday, afternoon and night, it is Inlluen.celé ;y constitutional con‘;lmmz TO GET THE WANT YOU WANT TO Truly some high class circus acts| he foundaton ot the Tleocom crofos th GET YOU WANT are in the program and there never | patient strength by building Up the con- TO GET IT IN. THE ot e peiuclpe | forc, Tho propristors: Tave s finflfh THE BEMIDJI PIONEER curative ers of g REA y ? Cheerful Gardiner’s Ele- Caglrrt'l' M:dlclno lha(pothey offer On: G T WANT GEmR’ back somersault riders of the world. three Aerial Cowdens who perform on the flying trapeze received quite holds the world’s record made in ing 23 feet, 4 inches, in a broad jump and 7 feet, 3 inches is quite a is a side splitting number. The Wild TONIGHT! ———LAST $100 Reward, $100 oleaged to learn that there is at least one dreaded disease that science has been able to cure In all its stages and =g - | Hundred Dollars for any case that it fails ress F. J. ., Toledo, he champion bare.| Ohfo. Sold by all Druggist. Te. Subscribe for The Daily Pioneen and Hollis. The The horse that arden horse show, Joe Green, jump- Pre-4th of July Sale TRIMMED HATS wns keep them all the bucking mule days of *49 on the TIME———- Harto Aubolee, son of Mr. and Mrs. A. O. Aubolee, has returned from military service in France and Germany, having been in the latter place since last December. Harto was in the service for a year, and was in the army of occupation. He was the first youpgest boy to enlist in Beltrami county. 0’GRADY BACK FROM FRANCE. Mr. and Mrs. James O’Grady have received word that their son, Frank,, arrived in Philadelphia Friday from overseas. He will first go to camp Dix, New Jersey and from there to Camp Grant, where he will receive| the city and given their choice of flee- his honorable discharge. He has| ing into the swamp or being shot been in the military for-a year, nine| down where they stood. Many dashed months'of which he spent in France.{ into the swamp, only to be enguited While in France he visited Paris and | j, 1o quicksands. The others were other points of interest and also vis- shot down at the edge of a ditch, into ited Spain. which their bodies fell, and left un- RETURNED SOLDIERS HONORED. covered during the entire winter., The Victory Homecoming celebra- tion July 4, at Pennington in honor of returned service men promises to be a success in every way. T'he plans include a basket picnic during the day, sports and various amusements. Dancing will be enjoyed all after- noon and evening. A soldier’s uni- form will be his pass. The celebra- tion wil! he held at Theriault’s pavi- lion to wuich there are good zuto roads. The celebration is given un- der the auspicés of the Pennington and the Home Service Cir- tinuous grave of naked bodies and skeletons. Identification of the vic- tims is impossible. A Russian countess and her daughter were tied to posts in this garden, stripped of their clothes, then killed by a succession of dagger pricks all over their bodies. A dozen priests were crucified head downward ; two others were boiled in ofl. Hundreds of the upper classes of the city, men, women and children, sentenced to death without trial. were taken to the edge of a swamp outside South Sea Beauties Use Chalk on Complexion Philadelphia.—Paint and pow- der on the faces of “women the world over” were condemned by Rev. Dr. A. Pohlman at the Presbyterian ministerial confer- ence in the Witherspoon build- ing. Doctor Pohlman, who was formerly an African missionary, “Three Also 8 MRS. CONNICK INJURED. Mrs. Della Connick, who went to Mooseheart to attend the Mooseheart convention as a delegate from the Bemidji lodge of Women of the Mooseheart Legion, was slightly in- jured while in Chicago on her way home, according to a letter written to her son. The injury was in her shoulder, and members of the Moose lodge in Chicago immedfa...y sent her back to Mooseheart where she says she is receiving the best of care and expects to return to Bemidji the latter part of the week. Her mes- sage to her son did not say how she was injured. . ATTEND ANNUAL CONVENTION. Rev. Osmund Johnson, pastor of the First Scandinavian Lutheran church, returned to Bemidji this inorning from Crookston where he attended the annual convention of the Norwegian Lutheran church of America. The Northern Minnesota district comprises the territory north of the Twin Cities and west of Duluth. In conjunction with the church convention, the Youig Peo- ples Lutheran League held its a nual meeting, as well as the Woman’s Missionary society. This was the first convention the church ever held in Northwestern Minnesota. “In their desire to make thefr * faces attractive by paint and powder women are the same the world over. In Liberia they use white chalk on their black faces. i Here they use red and pink. EL e otam 0 B VPASS s s, D MPM B o0 ol B PR TR B o SRRty R s i S ol SN o SRR Ml DM M. R, 08 What ix the difference?” crresressrssnse, TONIGHT ———— LAST TIME ALICE JOYCE “The Lion and - The Mouse” A Vitagraph special in 6 parts, from the famous play by the same name. She had brought the rich- || est man in the world to his knees—and she loved | his son. Did she get him? See Alice Joyce as Shirley Rossmore in “The Lion and the Mouse.” ‘THE SNOW CURE’ A 2-Part Keystone com- edy—AT THE GRAND J. WARREN KERRIGAN ‘THE BEST MAN’ TOMORROW e There is something for you in the Want Ad column today. It's on the last page. FEWER OLD MAIDS Bright, sparkling eyes and a sweet breath are dependent on a healthy condition of the stomach and bowels. Rouge and other cosmetics fool no one, and are dangerous to health. Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea drives out im- purities, pimples, blackheads, makes health-giving red blood and that means a clear skin with rosy cheeks, bright eyes, and steady nerves. City Drug Store and Barkers Drug Store. —_—————————— TOMORROW AND THURSDAY BRYANT WASHBURN In the Famous Story “VENUS IN THE EAST” ELKO and THURSDAY Spanglér of Turtle River fdr two N And a Girl” “Girls & Grubbers’’ said: Special “Big V’’ Comedy SUMMER MILLINERY WHITE GEORGETTE HATS Pure White, Very Summery only $5 & WHITE BASKET WEAVE HATS &+ Hand Made (Trimmed) at $2.50 ¥ PURE WHITE PANAMAS, $3 ¥ EVERY COLORED TRIMMED HAT ? in stock up to $10 value only $5.00 ° Men These hats are in black, brown, blue, rose and grey with feather and flower trims. EXTRA‘ OFF ON ALL CHILDREN’S HATS BON TON MILLINERY howing KO ——MERCHANTS! — (g ) urge upon you the importance of keeping acurate accounts. “Not keeping proper records does not excuse you,” says the Internal Revenue Collectors’s office, “and the United States Gov- ernment will deal harshly with those who seek to evade Federal taxes. The penalities are severe but toward the taxpayers who mean to comply with the internal revenue laws, fully and honestly, the bureau extends a helping hand. When you are asked by the Revenue Collector to show your books, have Your House in Order, so that when Uncle Sam’s man calls to check you up and prove your statements you will experience no trouble. . The A. B. C. Bookkeeping System for Retail Merchants OR Greenwood’s Approved Business and Income Tax Record, of which thousands have been sold and of which users are loud in their praise, are Systems so simple that you actually require no knowledge of bookkeeping or accounting. All you have to know is to be able to add and substract. The great success of these systems are the simplicity. It combines all of your books in one, and is arranged in such a way that you cannot possibly go wrong. There is a space for every day in the week for fifty-two weeks, twelve monthly statements, a yearly statement and income tax suppliment. There is a space for your daily purchases, sales, cash receipts. There is a space for every item that you pay out, whether it is merchandite, wages, express or freight charges, advertising, furniture, fixtures, personal, and every item down to the smallest detail. These books may be seen at the PIONEER STATIONERY HOUSE