Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, October 20, 1919, Page 5

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co-operation in its maintenance. m. Mr. Siddis of St. Paul spexit Sunday “at the A. T. Carlson home. Northern ., Loans and insurance. 813tf Land Co. Phone 29. Mrs. C. W. Clark of Puposky spent Sunday at the home of her sister, " Sheet muelc,-lo cents a copy while it lasts. Erwigs News Stand. 241020 W. Z. Robinson returned this morning from a busingss trip,to Chj- cago. Miss Josephine Clark ot' Towa, is visiting at the home of H. Mills. Sleepy Time Tales and Tuck me in tales for the little ones at Erwigs i f News stand. 231020 L B % R y |* “Migs Ella Laqua left last night for - the Twin Citfes and Wisconsin for a : month’s visit. . ’ “Fom'Slade and Tom Switt books j _ fop the 'boys at Erwigs News Stand. f@ bojes 2d1020 1 | i | 1 ! E. B. Kenfield and Mr. Hemming- !" way of’Duluth spent the week end at i Norway Béach. Don’t fail to see the wonderful Hat Shop, all colors. g Mrs. Ira \cml and children have {1 gome to Chicago where they will vis- ! '{t for a couple of months. Just received a line of popylar books for the grown ups. Erwigs News Stand. 2d1020 Mrs. George Murray and son Doug- las of Brainerd, were guests at the ‘home. of Mrs. M. E. Murray. ‘A. J. .Swartwoul and wife and daughter are visiting at the home of Dr: and Mrs. Caldwell, for a week. \.'. Just received a new line of boys " and girls books. - Erwigs Newszstand. d102 Miss Lillian MacGregor, who is teaching at Turtle River, spent the week-end at her home at 422 Irvine avenue. ! Mrs. R. W. Bush went to Brainerd “Biiturday ‘night- to visit -her parents, ] Mr. and Mrs. Anderson. She expects § : witg return tonight. i : SPOT CASH paid for Liberty Bonds fl * and Liberty Bond recéipts. G. B. i i - Hooley, Markham. 94tf F. G. Halgren and Mr. George drove to Minneapolis yesterday on .., business, and expect to be gone sev- ‘....eral days. Dr. J. M. Caldwell and family have .arrived from Wimbledon, N. D.; and will make their home in the resi- dence purchased by Dr. J. Toumey. Dean $60,000 to loan or farms. " a71tt Land €a.. . Mrs. Byron Wentworth, and Miss " Lawrence of Turtle River, spent the week end: atvthe home of Mr. and ¢ Mrs. P. L. Hines, at 1100 Beltrami i avenue. } There will be a hard time benent dance at the Odd Fellows hall Tues- Everybody cordially in- 2d1021 ‘Woodmen. vited. W. A. Walker, an old res.dent of Bemidji, has left' for Seattle and other points in the west, where he will visit his children during the winter. ““Mrs. Jens Jorgenson, of Hayward, £ Wis., visited her brother, Dwight Miller and her sister, Mrs. Ardrey £ Williams, for the past week and re- turned to her home Monday. Walter B. Erwin, production manager o. the Bemidji Box com- pany, who has been in Chicago for the past week, is expected to arrive in Bemidji Tuesday and will resume his duties at the local p'a—t. | | New Angora shawls, large sizes, adjusted with patent leather belts, just received at the ko Hat Shop. 1d1020 Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Glven had as dinner guests Sunday, Mr. G. D. Backus and daughter, Luella, Mr. William Mervin of Sacramento, Calif., Mr. and Mrs. B. H. Denu and Mrs. W. B. Erwin. Mrs. McKenzie and daughter, May, who have, been the guests of Mr. and Mrs. P. L. Hines at 1100 Beltrami avenue for the past few weeks, will leave for their home in ¥ Winnipeg, Canada, Tuesday. Notice to all members of the Royal Order of Moose, and women of the Mooseheart Legion. Mooseheart day will be observed Tuesday evening Oct. 28, at the Moose hall, by a so- cial for all members and their fam- {lies. 141020 3 Miss Mae Spellman of Superior, Wis., is visiting at the home of Mrs. M. E. Murray. Miss Spellman is a schoolmate of Miss Maude Murray, and is here to.attend her wedding to John B. Duracha which will take B ‘elc‘h Viiy gii{e an interesting and complete review of the 's Social activities is our desire. :sonal mention, social items and news briefs and we solicit your: office are appreciated by readers of the paper and by the publishers. 'River were between train shoppers in knitted angora shawls at the Elkol. 141020 day eve. Oct. 21, by the Moderny. This page is devoted to per- Items phoned or mailed to this - Alice and inez Butler of Turtle Bemidji Saturday. M. S. Shockley and family were in¢ Bemidji between trains Saturday and transacted business. C Mr.. Start and family of Alexan- dria, Minn., are looking over differ- ent towns in Northern Minnesota, in- tending to locate. . :M. Boss of Deer Lake was called: to. ‘Minneapolis Saturday by the serfous illness of her husband, who js: at the hospital there for treatment. - Miss Nellie Cooette, a _teacher-gt Menahga was the guest of Bemidji friends this week. Miss Cooette was formerly a teacher in the Bemidji schools. o STARS MEET TOMORROW. There will be a regular meeting of the Eastern Stars tomorrow evening at 8 o’clock in the Masonic hall. NOTICE : >€arpets cleaned at Kemps Dry Cleaping . houge, opposite Markham il 631023 vls, “"FOR BRIDE-TO-BE. Miss Grace Hooley entertained Saturday evening at the Hotel Mark- ham, for Miss Maude Murray, a bride to-be of this month. “POTATO KING” PREACHES. F. Benz, “Potato King of Yakima Valley,” Washington, preached at the M. E. .church Iast evening. Mr. Benz at one time was a minister. DUCK DINNER. Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Kenfield enter- tained Miss Mary Owen Doyan , of Doyan,-N. D., A. J. Macmillan and Mr. Condon at a duck dinner last night. . p— “TOE” SOCIAL. FEATURE. The Woman’s Benefit association of the Macabees will hold a regular lodge meeting October 23 at 0Odd Fellows hall. All members are re- quested to be preesnt at 7:15 o’clock as a special meeting will be called to discuss_important business and vote on a nuniber of new cafididates. Af- ter the cloge of the meeting the mem- bers will enjoy the ‘““toe” social. MRS. CUTTER HOSTESS. Mrs. S. A. Cutter entertained the following guests-at her home Satur- day afternoon in honor of Mrs. C. h. McKenzie: M7, F. T. Beaver, Mrs. Andy Larson, Mrs. P. L. Hines and Mrs. E. H. Denu. Mrs. McKenzie will return to her: lome at Winnipeg, Canada, tomorrow, after being the for the past nine weeks. OBITUARY. Mrs. Elvira Towle died at the home of her daughter, Mrs. George Slater, Saturday evening. The deceased ' has been a resident of Forestin for several years, but has ived in Bemidji for th¥°past seven years. : The remains will be Princeton, Minn., for interment. She leaVes six cnildren to mourn her loss. TOE SOCIAL.™ § ,a‘l;eé ‘Women’s Benefit association [of tlié_Tg‘Maccabees are giving a toe so- ‘eidl affd dance Thursday evening, Oc- tober 23rd at Odd Feilows hall. Van orchestra will furnish the music. Judge Harris will officiate as auc- tioneer. A very pleasant evening is assured as the ladie Macabees are wide awake and are planning many amusing and original stunts for the |- All fraternal orders are 1020tf evening. especially invited to attend. SHE CLEANED IT. “You always have that same wait- ress in the restaurant, don’t you?” said the business man. “Always,” Teplied his friend. “She’s very careful to bring me clean food.” : p “How do you know ?” . “Why, today I saw her brushing the dust off my piece of custard pie with her apron.” GAIN ALL AROUND, “This furniture is. rather old and battered.” “Um.” “Too old to sell as second-hand.” “I feared so.” ‘“UNever mind; it will bring much better prices as amtiques.” THOSE GIRLS. Edna—So you've broken witn Jack? Edith—Yes, he was entirely too hard to please. FEdna—Gracious! How he must have changed since he proposed to you. r——— guest of her sister, Mrs. P. L. Hines, taken to| - The Shivering Girl ‘B!'RALPHHAMENN B e LSS AN EASENON (Copyright, 1919, by the Westera News- i paper Union.) Adrian Revere proposed to June Lindley with all the sincerity and ardor of a true lover. She was rich, beautiful, a queen of her soclal set and she was very fond of the manly, ath- letic young fellow who came of one of the best families of the city, Then there was disillusion for the devoted lover. As he became better acquainted with June he iearned of ber failings. She had been reared in the lap of a never-varying luxury and the experience had spoiled her. Little by little Revere comprehended that his choice had fallen upon a hothouse flower., June was gifted, intelligent and sweet-tempered, but she seemed never at home outside of an atmos- phere that contributed to languor, ease | ‘and comfort. | ..The shivering girl,” Revere over- heard an acquaintance remark one evéning when they were returning from a day's trip on a lake steamer. The words affected him depressingly, for he had to acknowledge their verity. It had turned cool, and even with all her wraps around her June. com- plained of the cold and insisted on seeking the shelter of the cabin., Her action was the crow fig" one of a series, gradually conyipeing .Revere that his promised wife would require constant care, and likely to become in the years ahead, a delicate and com- -plaining half-invalid. She was er nibbling at chocolates, unwholesome pastry, and frothy, dainty’ viands . formed most of her sustenance. Ex- Count Von Berchtold Solely Respon- | ercise was a bore to her, even' to the sible for Outbreak of extent of a game at tennis. Hostilities. So, when Mr. Lindley announced — that he was going to take June on a Vienna.—There were made public| trip with him to visit a brother in from the archives of the former Aus-| northern Oregon, Revere hoped the tro-Hungarian government minutes of | change would give endurance and the meeting of the privy council on | hardiness to the frall but loving girl July 7, 1’9,1‘_4. at which it was virtually |"who,was turning out quite a disap- decided t&:begin war on Serbla. pointment to him, for it was late fall According to this publication the | und Revere recognized that there ministry of Austria-Hungary, especigl- | would be some really shivering days ly Count Leopold. von Berchtold, | far up near the Canadian border, forelgn minister. was solely responsi- | and that June would have to put up ble for the outbreak of hostilities. with something less than a scented The minutes show the meeting to | bath and a steam-heated houdoir. have been opened by Count von Berch- Two letters came from June and told, who pleaded for an immediate | Revere felt hopeful. She described resort to arms against Serbia, stating | hunible folk and a primitive habita- that Italy and Roumania ‘“could be | tion!in the wilderness, but a fumlily compensated afterward for not hav-| with €our children, whom she desig- ing been consulted-beforehand.” natéd as chierubs. The environment ot + Count S_teplgeniTlsm, then Hungar- ber pew home, too, with its moun- fan premier; oppokéd ‘the war, demand. tal*nfig’ forests and rushing cascades ng that diplomatic action be taken had ‘aroused the artistic in her nature. first and then that an ultimatuin of an | Then for over a month no further word acceptable nature be sent. Only in arrived, and Revere began to grow case both failed would he have resort- | anxious when he received a letter from ed to arms. : Mr. Lindley at San Francisco. Count von Berchtold thereupon said: “If you have the time, and the in- “Now, Is the right moment because | cliration.” it read, “you might join me Germany is ready to assist.” here and go to my brother’s after June - Count Tisza again warned against | with me, and enjoy a pleasant home the danger of a general European war | journey in our company,” and Revere a8 a result of steps which were con- | gpeedily wired his prospectlve father- templated, whereupon Count von | in.luiw that he would take the first Berchtold said: “The opportunity is so usdermech & B toseineco Peter Noonan, former star catcher for the Philadelphia Athletics and for the last year or more a Knights of Columbus "secretary, has inherited a fortune estimated at $1,000,000. AUSTRIA FORCED WAR Minutes of Mutiny of Privy Coun- cil Reveal Secret. extreme departure.” “I think,” spoke Revere with a smile, “that we both are Inclined to indulge June In her wishes.” “Nicely spoken, dear boy, and 1 thank you,” veplied Mr. Lindley effu- gively. “We had a terrible experience tmmediately after our arrival at my brother’s home. A forest fire drove us all out as refugees in the night, and we had to join a vast fugitive throng n a hurried journey one hyndred miles to the North. Storm and cold had set in and my brother's wife was so ill that she was helpless. But my. brother found a farm with good buildings -he could purchase in his new environ- ment. I bad to come down to the coast on bysiness, but June insisted in remalining with her relatives, as some one had to look after the children. Now comes the remarkable outcome of her experience. I received a letter from her informing me that she felt that she had come upon the ideal life for her, and hinting that when we re- turned home, and after the wedding, she hopad I would arrange so we could come back to the coast and remain there permanently.” It was ten days later that, muffled o furs, passengers in a huge sleigh, fa- ther and flance drove up in front of the great comfortable appearing new home of Mr. Lindley’s brother. A merry hall welcomed them. Suspend- ing a battle with snowballs, the hue. of a new health showing on her lovely face, June Lindley led a group of ex- cited urchins up to the newcomer. The heart of Adrian Revere leaped with delight, his eyes sparkled with Joy. Before him stood June, trans- formed, in love with the zest and spur of the new bracing life, and he reg!- ized that “the shivering girl” was » memory of the past! Subscribe for The Plonser Openly Arrived At. 3 Hc—"The lecturer said that a wifw should be .an ‘open book to her hus- band.” She—*“I admit that, my dear. And a husband should be an opea pocketbook to his wife.”—Leadville Herald-Democrat. . ’ H. C. NELSON Piano Tuning and Piano and Violin R.pnirin.—“w Filling 216 Beltrami Ave. Phone 573W GETRICHQUICK —for all your photo work. Quality work at money sav- ing prices. Folder portraits only $3 per dozen up. Kodak: developing 10c, prines only. 3, 4 and 5 cents. ‘ Rich Studio - Phone 570-W i 10th St. and Doud, Bemidji TO GET IT IN THE GREAT WANT GE THE BEMIDJI PIONEER a white girl speaks train for the West. favorable that fmmedlate actlon 18| ' It was.at a fashionable hotel in the necessary.” lden . Golden City that Revere was welcomed Finally a resolutionr was adopted by Mr. Lindley. There was an unfa- that such far-reaching demands be; mijliar air of activity about the father made of Serbia that she could not ful- of his fiancee that indicated that his fill them and thus a way would be| Western tour had put new vitality opened to a resort to arms. y into him, and Revere hoped the same ~ | beneficial influence had exerted itself in pehalf of June. Fans 'in China. Fans are carried by men and wom- en of every rank in China. It is a compliment to invite a friend or dis- tinguished guest to write some senti- ment on the host’s fan as a memento of any speclal occasion. a whim and I am bound to indulgé her. SUBSCRIBE FOR THE Of course I felt It Incumbent upon me DAILY PIONEER t_g‘leurn your seniiments to¢ such an “I thought it hest to suggest your coining on,” said Mr. Lindley, “for be- tween you and I, Revere, 1 fancy June has so completely fallen in love with her new home that she may ask me to settle down out here. It doesn’t seem [_@;:(EIIII-I-IV/A“;TEYMW c ek S A ) T N H”i]"f' ARSTRS | Inventor Lifts Terrors of the Fog From Harbors WASHINGTON.—Ocean fog has been tRmed by .the navy, so that 1t will no longer be necessary for battleships and liners to lie outside harbors waiting a chance to creep in when the weather lightens. In a contract signed took the first step to make practical a i --:m’gfifl m ] : M.' A N m outside harbors. Tests will he made at once at the naval base at New London and later in Ambrose channel in New York har- bor. By the use of the invention in connection with the radio compass, which the navy has now perfected, de- | lay in: ocean travel due to weather is to be eliminated. The radio compass brings all shipping “In sight of land” and the new device, like a friendly hand, reaches out and takes the biggest of ships through the most tortuous channels safely and quickly to its pler. new device to control vessels in a fog 1 SCENE “BROKEN D. W. Griffith’s gracious satire, of reality. Starring The new device is a simple one. A cable is laid in the center of the ship channel. Through it is sent an electric current of low frequency, which through the listening devices on board ship gives off a sound of certain pitch that cannot be mistaken for any other sound. The ship hugs the cable from harbor line to the dock. On the bridge and in the captain’s cabin listening devices like telephone receivers are placed and-attached by wires to the hull of the ship. The ship follows the course of the ' cable. i } tive Paae Admission R E X Theatre Spacial Tuesday - Wednesday - Thursday The tragedy of a Chinese Youth’s love for for the world.” Rises into atmosphere of. pantomine beyond drama. DNWGRIFFITH’S All Seats 50 cents a story of “one heart FROM 3LOSSOMS¥ A Film with a Senational Success ‘“Broken Blossoms’’ UNITED ARTISTS CORPORATION most tragic and most beautiful production that ever reached the screen; a drama of wistfulness, of un- love and of furious Lillian Gish The Rex Orchestra will play the special musical accompaniment to the picture scenes. Matinees and Nights R —d

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