Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, October 23, 1919, Page 5

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Te each Jday give an interesting and compl'g‘!}‘d‘ review of the city’s social activities is our desire. sonal mention, social items and news briefs and-‘we solicit your co-operation in its maintenance. | office are appreciated by readers of the paper and by the pubhshers. Telephone 922 CAPTAIN TAKES VACATION This page ig devoted to per- Items phoned or mailed to this {A son was born to Mr. and Mrs Dean '"'$50,000 to loan or tarms. d71tt § Land Co. "George Keenan returned from Du- luth and Deer River 1ast night. WNorthern 813tt Loans and insurance. Land Co. Phone 29. George Tanner and son, Lloyd, mo- tored in from Sauk Center last night. A Mrs. O. H Mannaugh left Wednes- i day for Duluth, where she will visit i relatives for the next week or ten !G. S. Harding went to Cass Lake 4 this morning to spend the day with trfienda. Mrs Gerrin of Cass Lake was a be- t&een train business caller in Bemidji Wednesday. { Mrs. James Martin of Doud avenue; la visiting relatives at Wiley for a short time. {Mrs. George Earlingson of Bend, OFe., is visiting her sister, Mrs. Otto Earllngson. ]Mrs A. G. Simpkins of Turtle iver was calling on friends in Be- idji Wednesday. SPOT CASH paid for Liberty Bonds ;and Liberty Bond receipts. G. B. 'Hooley. Markham. 94tf 'Mrs\ J. 1 Snoggle and Mrs. Otto Jowers of Northern transacted busi- ness in Bemidji Wednesday. i : Harold Kerr, who was operated on esday for appendicitis at the St. i Anthony’s hospital, is reported as do- ing nicely. ! Mr. and Mrs. . M. Eastman of Su- pbrlor. Wis., arnved in the city yes- terduy to make their home at 1018 Minnesota avenue. i Mrs. Robert Bass left Sunday night for Fort Worth, Texas. Sergt. Bass 1 in charge of the local recruiting of- fice of the U. S. army. | i Mrs. Josephine Fossim of Kelliher was a between train shopper in Be- midji Wednesday. While here she was a guest of friends. Manager Keenan of the Bemidji Motor Service company returned Wy- evening from Deer Riger wi another new Overland car. Mrs. Dow Jones of Schoolcraft ac- companied her parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. F. Cunningham, who are leaving for the east, as far as Bemidji Wed- nesday. xDr and Mrs. G. M. Palmer and family and Mrs. Sellihan, mother of Mrs. Palmer, were guests at dinner i at the R. L. Given home Wednesday ' evening. : 1 i g | g Mrs. Kate. Bental of Flagstaff, Ariz., is visiting her sister, Mrs. W. Ww. Jones. and her mother, Mrs. Kate Essler, who makes her home with Mrs. Jones. 4 ‘We have 70 boxes of Anesin apples which we will close out at $1.90 per bushel box. These are good ap- ples. This will be your last oppor- tunity to buy at this price. W. G. Schroeder. Phone 6566. 3d1023 Joseph Lemmieux and little son, Clarence, returned to their home at Vlrglnla. Minn., yesterday after vis- iting Mr. Lemmieux's sister, Mrs. John Taylor, 904 American avenue. | i Don’t forget the card party and lnnch given at the Moose hall tonight by the ladies of the Catholic ‘::ll:'l‘inzhs (1} ' Mrs. W. L. Burket and children Have just returned from a trip to Su- perior, Wis.,, where she visited her parents, Mr. and Mrs. F. A. Mealio, and her sister, Mrs. Leo Van Cleve, #nd took in the sights of the Twin Ports. . William Krause returned last fight from Coeur D’ Alene, Idaho, where he has been visiting his par- ents for the past week. He has just returned from military service, and will return to work on the M. & I. railroad as trainman. Mrs. Olive Fort, who has visited friends and relatives at different points in Iowa and Wisconsin and in Hankinson,, N. D.,, was in Bemidji Thursday en route to the George Fort home at Eckles, where she will visit for some time before returning to her home at Portland, Ore. Mr. and Mrs. E. F. Cunningham and son, Ralph, who recently sold their farm at Schoolcraft, were in Bemidji Wednesday, en route to Ban- non, Wis., and different points in Towa to visit for some time. From there they will go to Courtland, N. Y., where they will locate. 1 i Oh, Ho, Ye Ghosts! Disguise your mortnl frame in ghostly vest- ‘ments, and come to the Hallowe’en Jamboree in the Episcopal church basement sfonday, Oct. 27. Ladies, bring a lunch box for auction. 26c." Mens’ chairman. 341026 Spooks, cards, dancing. dommlttee, Harry Olin, Mrs. Harry Flack and cildren re- turned Saturday evening from Be- midji where they have been visiting with relatives for the past couple of weeks. Mr. and Mrs. Flack and fam- ily will leave the early part of the week for Minneapolis, where they will make their future home.—Hib- bing Daily Tribune: SWEDISH LUTHERAN MEETING. The Swedish Lutheran league will meet at the church tomorrow evening at 8 o’clock. FROM BEMID™ Mrs. Ed Riley has arrived in the city from her home in Bemidji, called by the serious il S her tather. —st. Cloud Dail}?smeqs& Carpets cleanéd"’cgt‘kemps Dry Cleaning house, opposite Markham hotel. 6d1023 Captain Bertram Hayes of the huge liner Olympic, who carried millions across the acean during the war, hat gone back to the farm for the first vacation he has enjoyed since the wal ON EDITORIAL MISSION. H. Z. Mitchell, editor of the Sen- tinel, leaves tonight for Minneapolis to be present at a meeting of the exe- cutive committee of which he is a member, of the Minnesota Editorial association. started. He was decorated with the D. S. O. by the king of Great Britain for sinking a German submarine. The photo shows him seeking relaxatior by hard work on the farm. JINX PURSUES BRIDAL AUTO Blowouts Were Overcome, but Lack of Years Was an Effectual Bar at License Bureau. 'NORWEGIAN CHURCH SUPPER. The ladies of the Norwegian Luth- eran church will serve a supper in the church parlors Wednesday, Oc- tober 29. Corner Eighth street and Minnesota avenue. A cordial invi- tation is extendea to all. .| Baltimore.—Luck was with Allen Walter Dehuff of Dallastown, Pa., & END:! THER’! prospective bridegroom, when he slip- ATT. ED FA' S FUNERAL. ped from bed at 4 a. m. and at the Attorney George W. Campbell re- « " toward tun;ed ‘Wednesday morning from E:::lllsgfilemfs’a Alvyer:. sped Neilsville;i Wis., where he was called 2 on account of the death of his father, brfn': :‘:ge‘;tgz‘;g’g:shf‘;'::‘; ff)‘;‘:; Willlam Campbell, who died at the age 'of etghty-one years. The senior | SPOt on the road and they turned the Campbell visited here in Bemidji last | radiator toward Baltimore, but there June ‘and-at that time seemed hale|Dehuff’s luck deserted him. and hearty. First came blowouts and then engine trouble and finally & damaged axle, but repairs were made and the “flivver” eontinued toward Baltimore and a mar- riage license. But the blow which he received at . NOTICE- Carpets. cleaned at Kemps Dry Cleaning house, opposite Markham hotel, 641033 the marriage license bureau will take two years to fix, unless he asks his WEDDING IS ANNUONCED. parents for help. He is only 19 years Mr. and Mrs. James E. Gearey of | old,and the clerk would not issue the Pine River announce the wedding of | marriage license without the consent their daughter, Helen, and Frederick | of Dehuff’'s parents, so the pnlr re- Ensign Johnstone, on Saturday, Oc-{turned home. tober 18, at Pine River. They will et be “at home’ after December 1. REPMRING GERMAN CABLES e bride is well known in Be- ite e sjje has frequently vis- Britain Also Putting Lines tp1 Bel gium Into_Pre-War 3 e was a Carletun Class inate of Miss Dorothy Cepsegsef-this city— S it it 1S ConditioWRENE. n London, England.—Every possible effort is being made to restore to its pre-war basis the cable system of the world, it is announced. The five An- glo-German cables which were cut by the British fleet in the early days of the war are being repaired and so are the four cables connecting England with Belgium. Cable communication with Iceland which was interrupted by the war, has just been restored. Messages now are being dispatched to Australia in as Gold Coins of “1855 in Tree Eelled by Storm e obfle. Ala.— . L. Robertson, .agéd "resident:‘of St. Stephens, Ala., in- Washington county, near ere, found several thousand dollars in gold coins. The money was in a rusty tin box that was exposed to view when tree was blown down recently. .The money was in $1, $2.50, $5, $10 and $20 gold pleces of t.he dnte of 1855. time. Communication with the Euro- ’l pean continent is steadily improving. "«‘(g‘“fl!-lnrflr'/' % \“'_"fi.n.,rv‘rr\ “Buck Privates” Would H@ve “Dugouts” Everywhere N THE long night watches on the firing line or in hospitals or rest billets, our fighting men found that tempus failed to fugit with its customary alacrity,. They yearned for amusement. To be sure, there were various . patriotic organizations catering to the social instinct, but somehow they did not satisfy. So one day there sprang into being the Buck Private soclety. Its success was instantaneous. Originally organized in the Sixth United States field artillery of the First division, which artillery regi- ment, by the way, fired the first Amer- fcan shot in the war, the Buck Pri- vates’ society soon numbered thou- sands of members in every branch of " the service. There was no formality oil Lnlttlatlon. The only qualification was that you had to be an overseas buck private. * In order that the society may become a permanent institution the charter members, now discharged, are beginning a campaign for organization. The original overseas organizer, Private Paul F. Collins, Battery D, Sixth field artillery, lives in Los Angeles. He is president and chief buck private. But one of his comrades, First Sergeant Edward M. McGuire, opened headquarters the other day in Chicago as national field representative. “The Buck Privates’ society in no way conflicts with the American Legion,” Sergeant McGuire said. “In fact, I might say one of its aims is that of co-operation with the legion. There is no question that it will be the means of strengthening that body. We hope to establish a dugout in Chicago with a membership of at least 50,000 men.” As its platform the society has adopted these planks: Broader educational work; cleaner politics; compulsory-schooling for all boys under sixteen in order to make bigger and better Americans, and lcfive study of conditions in industry, commerce and labor. Dnnn many hours as it required days in war-, THE BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEER S ————————ie—— FOCH JOLTS BRITISH Appeai Inspires British Army to Success. Tells Them They “Vanquished Napole- on; Why Not the Lowly P Germans?” “Paris—An appeal to the British sol- ‘diers dictated by the then General Foch,” asking them to remember their forefathers’ victory over Napoleon, in« spired them to attack the Germans and recover the ground they had lost be- fore the gas wave at the second bat- tle of Ypres, writes Colonel Feyler in the Journal de Geneve. Before the asphyxiating gas both British and French had been obliged to give ground. The then General Foch intended to recover the former positions at all costs, according to Colonel Feyler. He asked Gen. Sir John French to co-operate with him. “Impossible,” replied French; “my men are reudy to hold here, but I do not feel™ tha: I can demand of them, in their ‘present conditlon further sacri- fices in attacking.” Foch expressed surprise: “Their morale ‘is low,” he said. “Why don't you launch a proclamation? Some- thing like this: ‘British soldiers, for- ward. You who have vanquished the great Napoleon, shall it come to pass that you will permit the lowly Ger- man to drive you from your positions and retain them? . . “How is that?” asked Freuch. great- 1y interested. ‘Please repeat it.” And at the dictation of Foch, French wrote out the proclamation, Which was giv- en out to the troops the next day. The next morning the British sol- diers hit the line and recovered all the lost ground. CLASH OVER ORIENTAL RICE Chinese and Japanese in Hawalii Accuse One Another of Profiteering. Honolulu, Hawaii. — Japanese and Chinese of Honolulu have, temporarily at least, found the Shaptung contro- versy overshadowed by a new issue, the rice supply. Because of an em- bargo on the exportation of Japanese rice, Hawali is threatened with a grave shortage of this oriental food staple. Hoarding and profiteering, it is sald. are adding to the gravity of the sit- uation. Japanese and Chinese agree on this point, hut each nationality charges the other with doing the hoarg- Ing and profiteering. Co., Mfgrs,, Buffalo, N. Y. JELKO DOROTHY DALTON In Paramount Picture “The Lady of Red Butte” Six Part Feature Added Attraction “HEALTHY & HAPPY” A “Big V” Comedy W.G. Schroeder SPECIALS FRIDAY AND SATURDAY Boiling Beef, 1b...11c Pot ‘Roast, Tb. . 14c Rotind Steak, 1b. . .20c Sirloin. ... ... Porterhouse. . Short Cuts. . . Best Capital Flour, 49 Ib sack at . Swift’s Pride Cleanser, 10 for .. Grandma’s Washing Powder, large size, per pkg........25¢ Sal Soda, 13c size.......cccc.... 10c Swift’s Borax Soap, 5 bars P (1) RO O .25¢ Mother’s Oats, 2 large pack- ages .. S5c Bulk Oatmeal, per 1b () Extra Fancy Prunes....18¢c-23c We have only a limited number of boxes of Arnesin Apples left; better get a box, Al et e el ..$1.90 Men’s Wool Sox... ........35¢ up Full line of men’s women’s and children’s rubbers and overshoes at lowest prices. W. G.Schroeder 65—Phones—66 Lion Kills lei. Grass Valley, Czl.—For the third time within a few days a mountain Non has raided a sheep corral in the lewer part of the county. Five rams, ench weighing over 300 pounds, were killed in this raid. Two of the larger animals, valued at $50 each, were dragged more than 300 yards. In the two previous raids thirty-four sheep were killed. A romance of modern Paris, showing how a brilliant stage star is tempted and disillu- sioned, starring the most talked of woman in the world.. GABY | JUNE ELVIDGE M B. HMARDY. His, Fnthers Wife” Also Showing Comedy “YOUNG MR. JAZZ” DESLYS The Internationally famous French dancer and her dancing pardner— Harry Pilcer 1 “Infatuation” A Pathe “Special” in 6 Parts. Gorgeously produced, show- ing authentic scenes of the magnificent Casino de Paris and the entire Casino company and “corp de ballet.” The gowns and hats worn by Gaby Deslys; latest Parisian creations; will be of special in- terest to the women folk. COMINC The Play That Made the Weather Famous Avery Hopewood's clev- erest and funniest farce, “Fair and Warmer” Adapted to the screen{ for that daintiest, most winning commediennes, . MAY ALLISON This is one of the first of the great screen classxcs specials. Admission 10c and 28c Matinees at 2:30—10c-20c TONICHT LAST TIME at the GRAND R E X Theatre Special Last Time Tonight Griffith’s Most Beautiful and Terrible Poem, Griffith’s Most Artistic Picture, Wherein He Wooes the Tragic Muse in “BROKEN BLOSSOMS"’ UNITED ARTISTS CORPORATION Never has a motion picture been accorded a recep- tion comparable to the triumph that has followed every showing of this production. Newspapers have devoted column after column to its beauties and wonders. Everywhere its success has been instantaneous. STARRING Lillian Gish The Rex Orchestra will play the special musical accompaniment to the picture scenes. Admission—All Seats 50 Cents—Including War. Tax Matinees 2:30—Nights 7:20 and 9:15 FRIDAY’S PROGRAM How Much Should a‘ Girl Sacrifice for the Sake of Her Parents? Alice Brady “MARIE LTD.” at the Rex Theatre TOMORROW CHARMING—ROMANTIC—IRRESISTIBLE The story of a young woman who gave up a brilliant career to sell hats in her mother’s shop. —

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