Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, January 14, 1920, Page 5

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| CONVERTS RUBBISH TO USE| Machine Recently Introduced in Eng- land Has Been Proved to Be a Great Money Saver. TURNING HIM LOOSE: “Shall we give the distinguished visitor ‘the key-to the city?’ asked the mayor. . One of the most remarkable ma- '/‘{Wh,’,’t’s de use of all dat cere- cliines in the world has been invent- | M0 ¥ asked a newly elected alder- ed by an Englishman, W. P. Hoyle. Tan vfrom the _\gashouse d:etnct. It converts dust into cash—or, more \Vh?r ngt ]~ead dis guy am’un to d £ correctly speaking, it extracts what b“rg,.s “Pples»t,,mbafew.m tell him is worth saving from rubbish, and anyt'ing goes?”—Birmingham Age- prepares it for redistribution, ssys | Herald- ‘London Answers. Her “Sorrow Clothes.” Cinders are washed, dust is con-| yyry ENen had just finished dress- verted into fertilizer, tins are|ing a clothespin in black for Hallow- cleaned and paper and rags sorted. | een and she sald, “That clothespin Another bit of machinery, used in | bas lost her hu’sbund and has on her the refuse recovery plant deals with sorroyr. clothes. clinkers, turning them into molded Showing Them Off. Te each day give an interesting and complete review of the city’s social activities is our desire. This page is devoted to per- sonal mention, social items and news briefs and we solicit your cosoperation in its maintenance, Items phoned or mailed to this office are appreciated by readers of the paper and by the publishers. —_———————————oo— Telephone 922 — John Moran of Park Rapids spent Tuesday in Bemidji. Jesse Scarrett, who was janitor of the High school building and who| was taken to the hospital for compli- $60,000 to loan or rarms. Dean|cations of the, intestines, is reported Land Co. d71tt | not so well toda‘y. LICENSED TO WED. License to wed was granted today by Clerk of Courts, F. W. Rhoda, to M. Jagrin was a business visitor:| at Cass Lake yesterday. E. Peterson of Walker spent a few | William Rardon and Pearl Nelson, both of Bankton, Minn. H hours in Bemidji yesterday. James Rei@ of Big Fork was a visitor in this city on Tuesday. 7 - Home grown Narcissus at the : S. C. Bailey left yesterday for St. Cloud on business. He will return Friday. Mrs. David Hinshaw of Wilton was a between train shopper in the city ‘Tuesday. You can make a real saving by getting a pair of shoes at Tropp- man’s Sale. . 173 N W. S. Wheeler of Fosston was among the out of town visitors in Bemidji yesterday. Mr. and Mrs. Ben Shawl of Wilton transacted business in Bemidji be- tween trains Tuesday. There are some real shoe bargains at Troppman’s. Have you looked them over yet? = 17t The Queen Esthers held their regu- lar monthly meeting at the A. E. ‘Webster home last evening. Mrs. 0. A. Burfield of Shevlin was admitted to St. Anthony’s. hospital this week for medical treatment. " Mrs. C. J. Winter and daughter, Pearl, left this morning for Kansas City, where they will visit relatives for several weeks. Maccabee dance, Jan.” 21, at the Armory. 5d117 A son was born to Mr. and Mrs. Frank Annis on January 12. Mother and son are doing splendidly at St. Anthony’s hospital. ~ B Mr. and Mrs. Phillip Gill are the parents of a fine baby boy, born at “the hospital at 3:35 this morning. Mother and baby are doing fine. Mrs. J. W. Schultz and son, Cuf- ford, of Montevideo, are visiting Mrs. Schultz’s sister, Mrs. Mort Pender- gast. They will remain for several weeks. . Spot cash paid ror Liberty Bonds, and Liberty Bond receipts. See G. B. Hooley at Northern Grocery C during the day, or at Markham hot evenings. 1117tf Miss Verna Barker, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Earle Barker, was oper- ated on for appendicitis at the hospi- tal yesterday. She with:ftood the ordeal nicely, which her many friends will be pleased to learn. Conditjons are perfectly satisfactory to the phy- sicians. o Mrs. Charles McDonald of Northern was in Bemidji Tuesday. She left for Memphis, Tenn., where she will visit the Jacob Kohler family for two weeks. From there she will go to Prichard, Miss., to make an extended visit with her husband, who is em- ployed by Mr. Kohler at that place. | Mrs. George Larson and son Maurice, returned to their home at Duluth Tuesday, after visiting with their daughter and sister, Mrs. Charles Link for the past several weeks., Mrs. Link went with them All modern Samaritans are request- ed to attend a meeting Thursday, and will make an extended visit in Duluth. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Cutter are ex- pected to arrive this evening from Minneapolis, where they have been spending their honeymoon. They will spend a few days here visiting with Fred’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. S. A. Cutter, before returning to Viro- qua, Wis., where they will make their home. 3 Arthur Danuser returned yesterday afternoon from Chicago, where he has been “visiting friends ana rela- tives, and where he attended the Chicago National Shoé Exposition for the past two weeks. Mr. Danuser is one of the managers of the B. & D. Shoe store. k G. P. Irish, a veteran of the Civil war and well known in Bemidji, has arrived from the Cherokee, Iowa, sanitorjum, where he went to haxe a cancer removed that was located closely to his left eye. Dr. R. C. Seamen did the operating and it was & great success, the veterans’ health ‘being improved thereby. January 15, the officers for the en- suing year will be installed and a large class will be initiated. Both ceremonies to be conducted by Vice imperial good Samaritan L. A. Barnes of Duluth, Grand Good Samaritan C. H. Richter, D. M. Brownlee, Grand Chief Messenger of St. Paul. Music will be furnished by the six piece Samaritan, orchestra and lunch will e served. 14114 at the I. O. O. F. hall this evening. Refreshments will be served, and Green House. $1.00 a dozen. 3d115|everyone is invited to come and have| FOR THE SMART WARDROBE. [ a social time. % served a delicious supper last evening | size requires 51 yards 36-inch velyet, 5 in the dining hal lof the Masonic| 3-8 vard satin 34 yard fur banding. temple and a large number of mem- G - , £ . bers of the fraternity and friends| Sizes, 34 to 46 inches bust. Price, | tles, a week’s jam 'jar collection in |§ Come Again were present. 25 cents, Sheffield realized 56,000 sold for|# SEE of America, local unicn number 2192, . announces the 1920 wage scale, the| General Pepshing’s Sage Counsel Given minimum to be 90c an hour for an eight hour day, new scale to take effect April 1, 1920. at the Masonic temple, when mem- gram, deferred for the holiday period. | j 3 o |54 i Good music will be the feature and ing in producing a well-equipped an enjoyable time is assured. POTATO GROWERS TAKE NOTICE. pany, Bemidji, Minn., and our agent FINAL HOMESTEAD PROOFS section 8, townsnip of Buzzle. alres. caused a smokehouse to be consumed. | HE REMEMBERED THAT TOOTH dollars was paid for a twenty.acre ranch near here recently. formed a league to “strike” against tobacco trade profiteering. Members are pledged to down pipes, cigarettes, and cigars, until prices are reduced == and a standard of purity guaranteed. | name is in the front line of pass- concrete building blocks. About £38| 5 considerable amount of golt is can be saved out of every hundred | played principally for the reason that tons of waste, which is the amount | some women think their husbands look of rubbish accounted for daily by a well in knickerhockers.—Washington town of 85,000 inhabitants. In the | S'" whole of the United Kingdom it is estimated that 9,000,000 tons of wardrobe. The figure that inclines waste are thrown away every year, so B. B. 0. ELKS,, toward fulness may achieve slender | 21€. C41 work out the princely in- FR’. & s‘ T SOCIAL TONIGHT. The Rebekahs will hold a social e A black velvet frock accommodates itself to all of the needs of a smart There will be a regular meeting of | effect by introducing a bit of em- | come this represents. the Elk’s lodge Thursday evening.|y . ijery at the back as is shown Mr. Hoyle’s rubbish machine B. H. Jerrard, secy. in the above illustration. The em- | 4 113 el : : broidery is repeated on the fronmt. on, elp us to realize that in- STARS HAVE SUPPER. White. cloth forms the flare cuffs, | come, but meanwhile many indi- 2 The Order of the Eastern Star|but the. collar is of fur. Medium | vidual towns are doing valiant things on their own. Aberdeen in one day collected £567 worth of bot- Come Once and You'll Pictorial Review Dress No. 8540. by T A | £120, while Gl i i [ d AT CON TION. e Glasgow is saving rub- The Carpenters’ and Joiners’ union | URGES _BOY TO KEEP FAITH ;i:l_h,::mtll:: exteui.; of nearly £20,000 WILLIAM FARNUM the Great, in “FOR FREEDOM” A ‘Vlilliun Fox production to the Members of the Boy Scouts . CHIVALROUS FIGHTER. of America. —_— L — “Greater than the heroes of old,” General- Pershing has always been | jg the tribute to a British airman by a strong friend of the Boy Scouts of | Count Czernin, formerly Austro- America. Hungarian foreign minister. “Baron He knows to the full the value of Richfhofen, the g:mck German air- vmnntl’l_Le&Homd./ the mayy-_‘sided‘sen‘ice they gave in| man and an English airman wers the war. . |circling round each other furiously d He knows the value of scout train- | over the German lines in France during the war,” he says, “when sud- manhood,l for there were 100,000 denly something went wrong with former scouts in the army in France. | Richthofen’s machine gun and he | e General - Pershing has sent this|could not shoot. The Englishman Our potato man is in your town.| letter to Colin H. Livingstone, pres- | Jooked across in surprise and i We will bush i : ;S i ™ e lo:dva]md 1:;15'1 (;1;; t:: :}po;flacegaln 1der}t of th'e kiu'/ Scouts of A”merlcn,v whit was wrong, waved his hand, Address mail to Price-Smith Com-| urging them *“to remember: turned and flew off.” “My Dear Mr. Livingstone: On _— July 25, last year, while we were in | ~noTRONOMY IN BRITISH SCHOOLS the midst of the desperate battle of | /... b ey | the Marne, I sent a greefing:to-the, Biiti h_edueatwu committes of the ‘Boy Scouts of America from our sol- e onomicsl” - association, MADE BEFORE RHODA| diers in France, and urged them to f””s’f:‘g mainly of schoolmasters, Arthur Hannar -of Pinewood made| keep faith with the scout.laws.. is ciw®avoring to encourage the fl;xal proof befare . W. Rhoda, clerk| «Thoge were days when old and: teaching of astronomy in British of court,’on Monday for 40 acres in young realized the nevesiity . for -schools. A plan has been adopted Two final. proofs were made today,| every one to serve the couutry. Whére"y .sc}:‘OOIS may affiliate with one of Olaf Grone of Stanley post- “Today, without the pressure of a the association at moderate expense, office on 8v agres in section 15, town- great warj,t’o hold our attention upon thus obtaining the Journal, the loan ship 163-31, the other by Olaf Ander- - & G son in the same township, also on 80| the necessity of good citizenship, it loefgelsmu'a[f; slides :.nd other privie . The association is preparing is important that the 1 h i ndportany (it the, lesions of dhe & special series of lantern slides for Millville, N. J.—Christmas carols| W8F il patriotiem and devotion be i fenti sung from the tower of St. Paul’s| always borue in mind, as the obliga- ednm.txonal purposes.—Scientifie church here during the holidays|\tions in peace time are as urgent as Ame““‘fi_...h.; marked the inauguration of that cus-|{ . Let th be 1 f & tom in New Jersey. in war. ere no relaxation ! in your efforts. Sincerely yours, “JOHN J. PERSHING.” C. M. Landon, 6d117 Acting Financial Sec’y. INFORMAL MASONIC DANCE. The Masons will give another of their informal dances tomorrow night q&XANST WASHBURN -~ Stirring story of a man’s emancipation from unmer- ited imprisonment. Directed by Frank Lloyd bers of the fraternity and their fami- lies will resume the winter’'s pro- Tonight and Thurs. ‘The Beauty with the Soulful Brown Eyes DoLorES CASSINELLI Known as “The Cameo Girl,” in ‘T Virtuous Model” IN SIX PARTS A SAtory of Life in Modern Paris Of the high-art circles of Parisian society, and of the half-world will get in touch with you at once. Price-Smith Company, Bemidji, Minn. 6d117 peculiar to the European art center Also “SEA SIRENS,” a Christie Comedy —at the— GRAND - Subscribe for The Ploneer. TONIGHT — LAST TIME Sutter Creek, Calif.—Firemen fail- ed to save the pork when a fire that was being used to smoke a shoat Matinees Daily, 2:30 Nights 10 and 25¢ 7:30 and 9:00 Chico, Calif.—Thirteen thousand| member of American Consulate at London - Quickly Satisfied as to His Visitor's Identity. . America has another George Washington in the front line of de- fense. The present bearer of that London.—Croydon smokers have SAME OLD EXCUSE FOR “Stepping Out”’ port trenches ‘at the ,American con- sulate in London and is a negro. Ever since the United States put into force its rigid passport restric- tions George has been one of the busiest Americans abroad. Washington: broke into the con- sular service some years ago at Mar- seilles. He fought in a regular ne- gro regiment in the Spanish-Ameri- can war, afterward coming to Europe in a Wild West show. Con- sul General Skinner, then stationed in Marseilles, gave Washington a job in the censulate. Then George went with Mr. Skinner to Berlin end finally he came back to London. He speaks Premch, German and Spanish. . Recently.when an American negro comedian sought a vise Washinghn remembered him, but. he remem- . bered éven better the diamond filling in one of the comiedian’s teeth, “Still got that diamond there?” Washington remarked as the man came into the consulate. The come- Daily Fashion Hiwt “THE PEUD" WILLAN FOX PRODUCTION WILLIAM FOX presents TOM MIX —IN— , “THE FEUD” -’ Paramount-Artcraft Feature, Starring ENID BENNET But she’d get square with him for staying out at night! She knew how to tame a frivolous husband! You just come and watch her do it! PARAMOUNT MAGAZINE—HOLMES TRAVELS Nights 10c and 25¢ TONICHT & TOMORROW sabe~//625 TRRESISTIBLY SIMPLE L 0 : Among the very handsome frocks | disn smiled broadly and the dis- ©f tha season is this model in Bur- | mond was there—London Mail. A typical Mix drama of the great outdoors, by Charles Kenyon, staged gundy broadcloth trimmed with by E. J. LeSaint. black soutache braid and embroid- ery. The vest, cut with round neck A WISE H outline, and the cuffs are of black o_us:nomn_ and red fulness at the waist. For g mediuni size one requires 3 yards She—Oh, George, the Y‘m Pipe 64inch broadeloth and % yard 36- has burst, and the water is !poiling inch silk: the new hall carpet. Go and get a Pictorial Review Dress No. 8540. plumber quick! 5 ce'nt:: to, 46 inches Price He—That’s all right my dear. Let Braid No. 11535, Transfer, blug'or | it go; it's. cheaper to get & new car- yellow, 15 copts vet.—Loudon Answers. LEO COMEDY Matinees 10c and 20c ELKO Union Orchestra 10c-25¢ Night 7:20-9:00, | v T ' _.M | — 3 - —t- .__.*& 5 [

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