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THE 'BEMIDJI-DAILY PIONEER i ‘ SATURDAY EVENING{INOVEMBER 15, 1919 - - two-part Mack Sennet.i comedy, ;;xm SCENES FOR ME“O?MY- . . ‘t,“‘,—GATHOHC cxunck' ’ ‘e a perfect scream, will be Sh"“i"‘ With| Many of the scenes for “His Bond- 1 Low.mass at 8 o’clock a. m.* High BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEER W, 8,:Hart.. :Fomorrow: aniy: ed Wife,”” starring exquisite Emmy maeg .10 o’clock a. m. Sunday’ sch@ol:followed by benediction of the BleBséd. Sacrament, at 11:30 a. m. ST. BARTHOLOMEW’S EPISCOPAL. | Baptisims at 2 o’clock. Vespers and The Stucco church on Tenth and |bengdjction at 7:30 o’clock. Beltrami. 5 o Wehlen, were made at Atlantic City, showing views of an amusement park, the famous board-walk and a fashionable bathing beach. This TER BEMIDJI PIONSER FUBLISKING 0O. ‘G. E. CARSON E. H. DENU, ™ Prea. a0 Towss 8ec. and Mgr. FLEMING SISTERS TRIO. The Fleming Sisters are examples of the devoted, faithful type of musi- cian. They have won .their way to fame entirely by their own unceasing efforts. Every dollar expended for their musical education -they earned themselves. production will be shown at the Rex B 56 : - Monday for a one day engagement, "yT‘_"emy'“c""d Sunday after Trin ~ EVANG. LUTH. CHURCH. and is a brilliant.five reel comedy de- ' p Sixthystreet and America avenue. lighttully acted.” il o,c(]!;n:‘rch school and Bible class, 10 Ghurgh services at Evang. Luth. - gx 8. M. church Sunday will be conducted in - - Entered at the postoffice at n-;z_;‘.m. Minn.,, as These young girls havev been ap- : L\‘l E o’cllv‘l)zx]-‘nl:gm.prayer and sermon, 11 Ené‘m‘nfi“ Services at 11 Q'clock a. m. ‘ander act of Congress of March 8, 1879. pearing in concert work-ever since| TEACHER CHANGED HER MIND The Episcopal church has in its unday Is;hooaaax:iele‘:so:tlo’iko'z.lo?i~ they were ten years old, and from the Lamiai - |membership a' measure of intelli- Exaug. a g ] start their playing attracted the no- tice of the best musical critics, Today they are acknowledged as preeminert in their fleld. IR VL They appear next Monday ,af, the Grand theatre in a.joint recital with Miss Amy Ellerman, the no on cert soprano. o B Earl A. Barker, under whose aus- pices the concert is given, regrets ex- ceedingly to announce that there are “ t0 -nm{nou- contributions. Writer's name must .bl ngu&: mgor. but not necessarily for publication. ¥ Comimunications for the annm must reach this office not Ister than Tuesday of each week to publication in the current issue D. m, Topics for discussion is “Jesus and} His Enemijes.” L5l > Catechetical instruction from 4 to 5 p. m. Tuesday and Fridays. : Chgir rehearsal every Wednesday at 7:30 p. m. ki Everybody welcome! Wit F. Kamphenkel, ‘pastor. gence, ability and force which makes its power far greater than its num- bers indicate. A, minister of another communion said, “We may have the number, but you have the weight.” The Episcopal church gave to the leadership of the American forces in the war—the commanding general of the army, the comanding admiral of the navy, and the chief of the chap- i . ; lains of the A. E. F. : CANDINAVIAN LUTHERAN. No One Was Thrashed ‘Fully When Cause of Fight Was Ex.' _plained to Heh, - The principal.of a certain Indiana school is very thin. Also she is very sensitive 'about ‘thig quality. At her school no, one.mantions it. Recently several of her boys had . as I L hres MORMAS (..eceiecenen TEE WERBKLY PIONEER no more seats left for the accommo- . ] : Rev. George Backhurst, rector. he services next Sunday morning: Tes pague. ccptaixing @ smmmary of the Rews of Hba Feo vasce $330 || |dation of patrons at the Grand, Mon-| & long series of quarrels with the will be conducted in the English lan-- overy Thursday ajd segt postage day night. The seating capacity is| boys of the neighboring ward school. PRESBYTERIAN. | guage. - Solo by Kern Olson. e s ot 3 488 and these have all been taken,| The principal talked and talked while many calls for more reserved seats have had to be demied. It is 8gainst fighting, but with no results. suggested that those not having ‘re-| The fighting continued. Finally, one served seats be not.inconvenienced ;l!; day, she announced that she would i S0y < atiending as-no standing room Will} oi0l’ the combatants at her school Moral: Build the armory,” com- | a thrashing if any more frays follow- mented Mr. Barker. ' ed. A long time and all was quiet. Then one day came the usual fight DRAMA. COMEDY. MUSIC. and, of course, the inevitable lining In her portrayal of the role of| up for the “licking.” Stella Derrick in her Paramount- “Before I punish you, I want you Arteraft picture, “The Witness for| ¢o 4o 1o Ph N oL, Py ht"’ FIRST BAPTIST. the Defense,” which will be shown ne what you were nghting| 10:30—Sunday school. mercial club rooms, Charles Nangle: at the Elko theatre tonight and Sun-| 8bout this time,” the principal told .“O_Morning WOrShi?; Sub- | plock, at 11 o’clock. Sunday school. day, matinee and evening. Elsie| the recreant ones. ject, “Entire Consecratio.n. Serip-|at 9:45. Ferguson is required in the action | A} wore silent, but finally the ture reading, Romans 12:1-8. R TSR e shoot her drunken husband. The i ; y 7:00—B. Y. P. U. meeting. Old European Famliles. scene is one of great dramatic inten-| least fighter spoke up. “Well, the "Rse. llot—Evenitng sgrvg:eé = s“é’jeft’ The oldest family of Great Britain. sity and perhaps the strongest pro-| boys up at that building teased us pentance toward God.” Serip-| g l0i5'to be the Mar family, in Scot- ture reading, Acts 20:21. 5 vided by the author, A. E. W. Mason, : i s ’ ; race pedigree to- in his story. How she is exhonorated and said that we had. the skinniest 8:00—Thursday evening, prayer tancs which can't o ¢ inci i study the ‘year 1098. Then, too, there are> ¢ by unselfish sacrifices of one of her| Principal in town, and we told them |service and Bible study. 3 lovers and how she attains happiness| you weren’t skinny at all, but slen- George W. Kehoe, pastor. zet Ca:zpl])‘ells o:{l:orgyl'i:hwhass origtn: ‘ makes one of the most dramatic| der and then they began fighting.” es back to 3 e Grosvenor plays of the year. ) y began nhghting. METHODIST CHURCH. fanifly,"that ‘of ‘the duke of Westmin-- OFFICIAL COUNTY ANWD CITY FROCEEDINGS s .| Sunday school at 12 o’clock. - will speak on the subject, “Burden- | POt languages. . bearers and Hewers of Stome,” (1 S“I"‘“’; 3‘ hSolwny at 3‘30 p. m.. Kings 5:15). Sunday evening the| Osmund Johnson, pastor. sermon will be on the theme, *“Peril and Protection,” (John 17:15). : : Sunday school will meet at 10 ENGLISH EVANGELICAL LUTH. a. m., and Christian Endeavor at 7 Services at First Scandinavian: p. m. : Luth_eran church, at 2 o’clock p. m. All are most cordially welcome. Rev. L. J. Lemky, pastor. ' L. P. Warford, pastor. THE MEANING OF THE POPPIES. : When Bemidji wore the poppies on-Armistice Day, many were not quite cerfdin of the meaning, and for thosg who are not familiar with the details it might be information to throw a little light upon the wearing of the crimson flowgr. The poppy, of course, is indigenous to that section qf France where thousands of American boys laid down their lives in the cause of world freedom. But the poppy would scarcely have come into its own as a symbol of heroic scari('ice had it not been for one “Jack’” McCrae of Montreal, a Canadian physician, who wrote a poem now famous throughout all the allied nations. McCrae, at the time a lientenant colonel with the Canadian expeditionary force, called his verses “In Flanders Fields,” and the verses are as follows: i IN FLANDERS FIELDS. In Flanders fields the poppies blow Between the crosses, row on row, That mark our place; and in the sky . CHRISTIAN SCIENCE. Services will be held at the Com-- Fugi e The larks, still bravely singing, fly, M 20 Need] t thrash- : 3 A ’ : : ack Sennett’s very latest comed ess to say no one gof Tas! 10:30 a. m.—Morning worship. | ster, refers its origin to the same yeat- : §wcarce h:“?i axgllclis:ttl‘;: guns below. “Back To the Kitchyen," teéturiné ed.—Indianapolis News. “Christ’s Constraining Love.” Com.|that the Conqueror ‘“came oOver=— & : We are 5 efa]. i 0 hd lgot i © |Louise Fazenda, is also on the pro- —_— munion service. 1068, - The Austrian house of Hapsburg: . b e lived, felt dawn, s;w sunse gow,l_ 2 gram. The Elko orchestra has new IDEAL FOR THE PLACE. 12 m.—Sunday school. goes back farther than that, its date- h 2 Lovull aFn;l e lgive’d, and now we lie » musical selections which will be — 7 p. m.—Epworth league. being 952, while the Bourbons of 2 n Flanders Iields. : played tonight, also Sunday evening. The railway board, a current story Posss "')’i‘“’tll‘és_E:e‘&“g ];‘;:?:l"'m, ;‘Tl:le France proudly mention 864, as the- 3 ki Take upfthe qfu?lxjrel ;nt}:l the lo:r! goes, had met to consider the case |gpjy 2 o HTIeN0"| qate of their origin. P To you from falling hands we throw “HAY FOOT. STRAW FOOT.” of old Tom Jones, who, in a train| Next week will be observed by the : L 5 : The torch. Be yours to hold it high! 5 If ye break faith with us who die ‘We shall not sleep, though poppies blow In Flanders Fields. Y| P— GOT IT WHILE THE GETTING WAS GOOD. From a Duluth paper we had gleaned that Bemidji dele- gates had inaugurated a campaign at the meeting of the Nor- thern Minnesota Development association, to secure the summer meeting of the association in Bemidji. Action was taken at the meeting in Duluth yesterday and we noted among the delegates the name of Charles S. Carter. Just as The Pioneer was about to be put to press along comes a message from Mt. Carter and informs the paper that after a_hot fight with Eveleth, Bemidji was chosen. g i That’s the Bemidji way of doing.things and that’s *w] . € » | Epworth league as Win-My-Chum 5 i Charles Ray has a unique art of| 8ccident, had become deaf. “Well, Week with a meeting in the league Alcohol From Molasses. ; making us laugh at the awkward| said a director, “old Tom; has been | room at 7:30 each cevning execept| Alcohol is now made from “black: :::: ?f:fii’lfif,‘;?firgyo{,‘}“ghn‘:“d,fl‘ "rhe with us a long time now, and we |Saturday, and incluidng also th}e reg- | strap,” a very cheap and comtx:on- the boy who is made the butt of jokes| ¥ant to find him a new job. What | e Sunday evening Services.” The | grado of molasses which comes from by his thoughtless associates. No| do you suggest?” “I know,” said the | ""Bjaine Lambert, minister. the We ;t ndies, story in which he has ever appeared i “ILet’ im in charge gave greater opportunity for the de. clainan, Let' stputdh tmi ”E_ 3 velopment of this characterization of the complaints ERRTHACT than “Hay Foot, Straw Foot,” the| Outlook. Paramount Ince photoplay which will be shown at the Elko theatre Monday and Tuesday. Subscribe for The Ploneer [ Bemidji.” P v 0 ', “~IT IS A GREAT LIFE. . The country expected much from the price fixing ma- chinery. s bl i 43 Adolph Zukor It has received many glowing premises. and is;waiting for P 3 fulfillment. Gk Presents But waiting is a virtue—when necessity makes it such. And the consurher is so virtuous from long waiting that he is in prime condition for another royal plucking. In time, no doubt, the people will learn to expect nothing and receive less than expected. = : It is a great life. 1 e ) 3 Each day we look expectantly for another illuminating remark from the governor of North Carolina to the:governor of Stevenson’s Fight for Recognition South Carglina. o ' Pt RS i, When George Stevenson invented the locomotive, ; Professional agitators are a menace to democracy, and|||] - all the forces of incredulity that ignore; the conserva- democracy is the foundation stone of every free and self- tism that hates; the ridicule that mocks what is new. ¢ governed people. The remedy is obvious, if we would preserve were brought to bear to oppose his great invention. this country from the fate of Russia. The same spirit of mockery, opposition and criticism o has confronted practically every new and worthy idea. Lloyd George broke all precedents by signing the peace||] : g 3 i treaty with a fountain pen. It is not the fitst time that the ’ Chll‘opaflilc Under Fir e gentleman has created a new precedent. Those who accepted disease and suffering as a I natural part of life’s experience, laughed and scoffed when Chiropractic first launched the idea that ill health was unnatural and the direct result of spinal pressure on the nerves, which shut off the life forces of the body. And they ridiculed the idea that by simple Chiropractic spinal adjustments, without drugs or knife, this pres- sure could be relieved, the cause of disease corrected and normal conditions, health restored. T ~4|sumes the fantastic title of the 3 Goddess of the Red Lantern, which NEWS OF THE thrills the people to a fanatic religi- THEATERS ous frenzy, and they determine to ex- terminat the “foreign devils.” Charlie Chaplin will be seen in a two reel comedy, ‘“The Fireman.” = “THE RED LANTERN”—REX. Nazimova, the distinguished Rus- sian actress will be the attraction at the Rey theatre tonight and Sunday, in ‘tife {powerful drama, “The Red Lantern.” She is seen ina dual role, pldying both Mahlee, the Eurasian, and Blancne, the English girl. The roles are of such vastly different character, that it is amazing to think that one woman can portray them both. Directed by GEORGE FITZMAURICE A Paramonst Arkeraf Pichur+ MOORE PICTURE—A TREAT. “The Gay Lord Quex’” the latest Goldwyn picture starring Tom ‘Moore which was shown at the Grand thea- tre Friday and which will be shown for the last time tonight, proved a rare treat for the patrons, but more especially for the many admirers of the smiling Tom Moore. Swiftly moving and interesting to the last degree, the picture ean well be classed as ‘“gay,” Tom Moore as the frivilous, fickle romantic young nobleman who flits from love to love, The jury had set her free. But if a dead man, once her husband—slain But in the face of it all, Chiropractic has advanced because it has proved it is right. Thousands who for- n!grlytv‘ suffered are now enjoying health through the aid o jungle — could have spoken, what, would HE have said? 2 CHIROPRACTI Il THE BETTER WAY TO HE —szpifl?g{:eih?a;;l:s?::azz sa\;;:;'e\;: finally falls in love in earnest, and and fl.: is rapidly being acce.pted as the logical, most Edtamonsic MACK- SENNETI‘ Comedy orutable dauhtor of twe races..|then complications begin. The plot effective drugless Health science of the ages. If you " ' 0 g the child of an English father and o|becomes too fangled for anyone to are not enjoying good health, give ~Chiropractic Back to the kltchen” Chinese mother—whose instincts, f;;“o; ;l‘;"" f.g'l’i“’h‘;?‘}fi:“iwlgfis"‘:i (KI-RO-PRAK-TIC) & fair, open-minded investigation i g z.‘-’:‘:it;xg?scu;gflgzg::‘; 2‘;’%2 i ll; often used before, “Did anyone sver and prove its value to_»ryou and your loved ones. Sennett’s Very Latest tell you what wonderful eyes you ) 1::;?3.1 outesst, ‘belonging to nelther have,” bring a pleased chuckle from The story reaches dramatic heights :‘l;e spectator who leaves with the when the unhappy girl finds that|19¢2 thaf‘ he has been well 'e,nter- i her yellow blood is an insurmount- ::;‘;ed'c omefiyw°:g:;;“;gsglxh;";st . able barrier betweena young mission- U ou . ary: whom she loves and herself, and | S12Pstick stuff, but generous in the . ; g that although he is powerfully at-|fe2l humdr”it aflor(?'xa. The Guy r8¢ un e annen er traoted to her, this difference of race|LOTd ~Quex” and “A Wonderful Featuring Louise Fazenda, with “Teddy” 't~ THE ORCHESTRA PLAYS EACH NIGHT Matinees 3:00—10c and 20c ' Nights 7:30 and 9—10c and 25¢ Night” wiil be shown for the last RACTO can mever be overcome. Wiid jeal- as 5 - -ousy grips her when she finds that|time tonight at the Grand. CHIROP! CTORS 1 H he . really loves her half sister, , o i Blanche, (also played by Nazimova), WM. S. HART—SUNDAY. First Nat’l Bank Bldg., Bemidji, Minnesota . né ;n x; fsrenzy“?he agre;s t{: the pro- “The Narrow Trail,” considered posal of Sam Wang, who loves _cr,|the best Wwestern picture Wm. S. one - but: whom she hates, to go with him |Hart ever appeared 11:1, will be shown i LW TONIGHT & TOMORROW and lead the yellow races in an up-|at the Grand theatre tomorrow (Sun- Tising against the whites. She as-Jday) only. “A Kitchen Lady,” a