Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, April 28, 1920, Page 5

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Lots. of houses. 'Let” sell ‘you one. E.J. Willits, the landman. 2 g e 6&4-10 J. H. Sickle ot Wells ts o isitor N 1nt e"city: today N ; &2 M Nathanson of Eveleth was a. Be- midjl caller on Tuesday. Take home a brick of Koor's”ice cream, 4-5tt James. P, Powers of Crookston was a Bemlddl vlsitor yesterday. Ml‘s. Galpraith of'Cdss Lake was a callef in the ciey on Tuesday. Aron Bengson ..of Mizpah spent 'l‘uesday in this city on business. 0. M..Paulson 3 1he da, ho yestel v.»‘ %“%&“&ffi:fi:‘%""‘? SWEDISH LADIES’ AID The Ladies’ Aid of the Swedish church, will meet with ‘Mrs. August Elmquist of the fiftth ward, tomor- row afternoon at 2:30 0’clock. Lunch will be served, and a large attendance is desired.” - 4 WEDDING ANNIVERSARY DINNER Dr. and Mrs. D. L. Stanton were very pleasantly reminded of the anni- versary, of their marrigge, whan a few of their friends and neighbors: arriv- ed with a prepared six o’clock dinner, last evening. A very nice time was enjoyed by all. ; mmzs ADDS BLUE BIRD -ELECTRIC WASHER TO LINE (L E.. Bamea .announces the Blue ird Blectric Washer as an additional ne: to his ‘hardware business. He Longgdg]e bleached mug“n 39 afstates that this is one of.the surprises yard at Troppman 's tomorrow. 1t4—28 day. rrlends. oy "Mrs. William -Blakeley of Farley,|: ‘ wis. among the business transactors ‘rere yesterday. / Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Hayth of North- ern, transcted business and called on triends here yesterday. Dou?t forget the supper to .| Blue J..C Shepherd of. Wa]ka ‘was: al -business visitor in Bemld)l o 'l‘neb be serv- in modern housekeeping and that the ird Washer is an;Prnament to e ‘and’ demonstrations will. be made to any one interested, according Harold Arnold 6! fiorthern, motor- oM Bdttles ed- to Bemidji Tuesday and called on POST NUPTIAL PARTY "The home of ‘Mr. and Mrs. Iver Dahl, 915 Bemidji avenue, was the scene of a very enjoyable party last evening, when they invited in about twenty-five guests in honor of Mrs. Henry Wilson, formerly Miss. Alice Hammond. The guests spent the eve- ning in dancing, after which ‘a nice lunich ‘was served. Mrs. Wilson was ed at the Scandinavian Lutheran presénted with a miscellineous show- church’ 'l'h\lr!day evening menu. Mrs. L. W. Galloway left last even<|’ ing for Minneapolis to attend the ‘White Fashion show being hold there thls week. ns:lgg chen utensils. er;of ‘silver, linen, -cut glass and kit- NO_TIGE TO WATER GONSVMERS et your meters. +In.;compliance with action taken by the City Council April 5.4, 1929, 'Mr. .and Mre. W. R. Bdwards of | Notice is hereby given that all water ~Brainerd were among the out of town, € cnllers in this city yesterday. taps running without a water meter will"be cut out on'May 1st, 1920. +It your water bill paid? Customers whose water the. first quarter 1920 remain un- id on the 1st day of May, will have their, water gaps shut off, and service, L Mrs. M. Wmebrenner mototed here. from her home at I ake Plantagane f - Tuesday. She calléd on friends whilé in the city. ;‘ 2 Special designing, ice. Spencer|. ‘Rejuve COTB fi:z‘:eul supports, "Home appo!ntmenu, if désired. Mrs. ‘M. Fay, 218 Beltnmi ave. -Phone] 466, . 1 mo 5-6]192 4 Superlntendent of the Water : » Deépartment. &l Dated ‘Bemidji, Minn.;. April 27th, 0 4“ 30 Mr. ‘and Mrs. Benjamin Shawl of}"+ 'TEAT HURDLE MCE‘ ‘Wilton, were in Bemidji yesterday oit ‘farm at Wilton and will go to New |nounced for last Sunday night, but York in the near future to make their | which ‘was not: deliveréd, Evangelist Moyer will tonight at the First Bap- tist church, preach on ‘‘The Hurdle ' 8pot cash pald for Liverty Bonde.|Race to Hell.” Two more “afternoon ‘and Liberty Bond receipts. - See Biblé studies will be held this week, home. account |, A - :/Besause'he has been asked a numb-~ business. . They recently sold their jer. of . times about..the: sermon an- "B.. Hooley :at Northern :Grocery.. Thursday: and Friday,:at 2:30, with during the day, or at Markham hotcl. evenings.. X Miss Edyth Mllls returned last (37 =S -ning from Brainerd, where she spent the day with her father,.H. Mills, at the Northetn Pacific hospital. She re- ports that Mr. Mills is getting along very nicely. the evangelistic meetings in the even-i wm c!m next Sunday, May -secon MARKHAM REGISTER Tuesday’s register at the Markham includes E. C. Stockland, J. P. Daly, V. J. Sauer, H. E. Harter,. W. H. Croge, G. E. Nevins, J. B. Franks, B. A réal feast may be had for 50‘ Kiefer, A. M. Kiehlme and William F. cents at the Scandinavian Lutheran Served by 1t4-28 church Thursday night. the Ladies’ Aid. Mrs. C. E. Battles has gone to St. Paul to meet her sister, Mrs. U. G. visiting in Bemidji. arrive Thursday evening. Supper to be served at the Firs Scandinavian Lutheran Thursday, April 29. the menu: Bemidji Meat Loaf Tomato Sauce Beltrami Escalloped Potatoes Cabbage Salad a la Mode Ladies’ Aid Hot Rolls ‘Chief Bemidji Mixed Pickles . Assorted Cake Price 50c. LADIES AID MEETING The Ladies’ Aid of the Lutheran church on Following is Sherman Coffee 1t4-28 Buriis of Minneapolis; W. A. Robin- son of Omaha; H. B. Kill, P. Portier, A. D. Heffner- and ‘L. W. Kerr; of Chicago; G. A. Humiston, G. E. McLaughlin, 1. C. Peterson, E. W. Vance, Hugh McCarthy, A. A. Moore, who is. coming from Seatue: Campbell of Duluth; J. R. Severtson Mrs. Mooré will spend several week They expect to and James P. Powers of Crookston, Bob Frayner of Fargo, Henry Saul of New York; Mrs. E. Reven of Rhinelander, Wis.; Oscar C. Olson of t | Fargo;* John Ruhl and Edward An- derson of Brainerd; J. Reed, E. H. Scott and A. B. Pierce of St. Paul. SCHOOL NOTES MANY TEACHERS NEEDED . FOR BEMIDJI SCHOOLS On account of the congested con- Free church of Nymore will meet at|dition of the Bemidji public schools, the church on Thursday, April 29, -..at 2 o’clock. Every one welcome. ““THE M.B.A. IODGE CHANGE PLACE OF MEETING The M. B. A. Lodge have moved from the Moose Hall to the Odd Fel- ~lows halls and will ‘meet regularly on the second and fourth Mondays of each month. DEATH OF MRS MARTIN CONNELLY | Mrs. Martin Connelly, wife of Mar- tin Connelly, local yardmaster for the M. & I. railroad, died Tuesday morning at St. Anthonys hospital. Mrs. Martin was born on Dec. 18, 1889, at St. Joseph, Minn. She leaves her- father, Noble A. Parrish of St. Cloud, two sisters, Miss Burley Stokes of Monticello, Minn., and Mrs. Albert Bennewitz of M.inneapol)s She also ° leaves four brothers; Henry and Ed of ‘Minneapolis, and Jean and Joseph of ~.’St .Cloud. Her immediate family con- sists of her husband and five children, the oldest seven years of age and the youngest seven days. - Services were held from St. Phil- :1lip’s church at 6 o’clock this morn- ing, and the remains were shipped on the 7:35 train to St. Cloud for interment, Dn.l.lmn&mwn Optometrists. It trou- bled with headaches, ] ’ nervousness or eye dis- ‘of any kind, needing glasses ¥ Supermtendent R. 0. Bagby is find- ing difficulty in securing the services of competent instructors for the coming year. He is constantly on the search: for experiencedteachers, but is finding that teachers for the upper grades and High school are very scarce. Positions for next year which are still unfilled include ten grade teach- ers and a number of High school in- structors. Numerous applications for the lower grades have been filed with Superintendent Bagby but in nearly every instance these positions have already been filled. The only depart- ment which has already a competent orce engaged for next year is the junior department of the High'school. Several of the teachers who are now instructing .at the Lincoln and the North’ school have been re-engaged to teach at the Central school next year. At present there are needed two full time teachers for the balance of this year as well as one substitute teacher for the remainder of the term SIX WEEKS SUMMER SCHOOL BEING PLANNED Amngemenu are’ being nrade for a six weeks course, to be held par- ticularly for the students of the sixth, seventh and’ exghth grades during the summer, commencing about the mid- dle of June. Present estimates indi- cate that approximately 100 students from these grades will enroll for the summer work. - Teachers have not as yeb. been' selected for the course, but it is-expected that the course will be under the ‘supervision of Miss Ethelyn ! ¥ 1117¢¢ |ings at eight o’clock. This meeting “THE BEMIDJ1 DAILY: PIONEER INTEREST T0 WOMEN | = ll " this: summer will employ ur men for a perlod of at two months. R TEAGHES BOYS T0¢ - MAKE STEAMERS Baptist Missionary in Burma De- velops Unique Industry—Gov- - ernment Helps in Educatlon.‘ “On .the road to Mandalay, where ; the .old flotilla lay,” steam launches bullt by the Burmese boys of a Baptist Mission. school ‘are now making fre- quent trips and the profits from their sale-to the natives are helping In the establishment of ‘practical industrial education in that country. 10 #UEHev. Dr. C.. A" Nietiglh ‘18 :the. ‘man that -is directly responsibleé ‘for this jndustrial development. .'In far- 'y off Burma, on the actual soll of old England, even though as Kipling says, “there ain't no buses runnin’ from the | bank to Mnndllny." he secured a saw- il AR -+ T ORIGINAL AND DISTINCTIVE Calculated to make one a conli ed - devotee- to . walking is this tail- leur in dark brown velour. The has & high rolling collar, closes to the meck in front and is self-trimmed. The peplum is in cix cular effect. Imserted pockets trim the two-plece skirt, while the nar- row straight Delt. closes at the left pide. Medium size requires 3% yards G54-inch material. Pictosial -Review Jacket. No. 8659. Sizes, 16 to 20 years. Price, 25 cents. Skirt No. 8662. Sizes, 14 to 20 years. Price, 20 cents, Hall prmclpal of the junior depart- ment of the High school, who may be assisted by Miss Grace Blomberg. SCHOOL STUDENTS AID. IN CLEAN-UP CAMPAIGN Menibers of the junior department of the gemldn High school' and. of]| ¢ the -up; grades in: the-. bulldmg are asgisting in the clean-up: campaign being - conducted i midji this week. - The students un- dér the directi le teachers are devotmg about an hour:on one after-|. noon ‘of the week”for each grade, and in this .time vacant lots in the residence section of the city is being done. So far all the students have shown interest in this project, seemingly preferring the work out -of doors to the study- and recitation periods at the school. g TO REDECOM’I’E HIGH. . g - ,SCHOOI., DURING SUMMER of’ education of the Bemidji publ ~{ schools'to ndecome the ‘High #ehool building dufing the summer. months. According. to.-the. presént. plans:.con- siderable. repair ‘work. wil the seats will be removed and cleaned and varnished, all room's will be thor- oughly cleaned, walls to be kalso- ‘mined and the wnodwork to be paint- ed .in some light color. - New-window * | shades are planned for both the Cen-| tral and the High school buildings. The amount of work which is deemed to beé:.necessary on the High school Central | cleaning” up of |. It was ln Basseln, one of the towns '] grouped about the numerous mouths of -the Irawaddy, that the enterprise ' | was:begun. The Irawaddy is the very river upon which Mandalay is bullt and up which “the old fiotilla” made its way from Rangoon. Rev, Dr. Nich- ols went to work as a Baptist mission- -ary among the Sgaw Karens, one of the forty races in cosmopolitan Burma, conducting a missionary school along :the standard lines. QOne day a British commllllonor vis- iting, the school asked why the boys . were not taught a trade. Dr. Nichels inade the time-honored missionary. ex. cyse, ment.. ""The ’commlssloner. however, was 80 | well {mpressed with the progress that y boys .were making. in their studies be undertook to put a dozen of them in the government railway shops study as machinists, Here the boys it fivé years learning their trade 4nd during that apprenticeship retain- ‘their’ membership in the mission urch, ' This was the first step In e development of the industrial edu- dea. The next was the pur the sawmlill, entally the Northern Baptist ‘Convention has grasped the signifi- cance ‘of Dr. Nichols' idea, and in its New World Movement program fn- clddes & project “to establish a trade school at Moulmein and introduce edu- ‘cation 1n, the industrial arts, for indus- "“trlal independence will make for the stherigth ot Christian soclety in India us'in America.” ca Moro Starting. Work. _"Well come down to the shop to- morrow morning and I will put you to work.” : *To-morrow? . 1 couldn't ;osslhly comé ‘dntil the. day ntter. “AWhy? “\Why, tomorrow I must take part in“the great demonstration of protest of the unemployed."—Life. * 'Felt Himself a Stranger. Jobn was anxious to see his new brother, whe had just arrived. The nurse finally took him to the bedside and the new brother was crying. John looked bewildered and finally said, “He is ¢rying for his own folks.” WALLACE “EXCUSE My DUST?” A Paramount-Artcraft Picture He’s in again! Same old Toodles Roaring Road,” And in ahead! Walden of “The with the same old scorn of miles and motor-cops. Risking his neck for love, his son and a “dare” in the wildest race of epeed devils ever shown on the screen. And that glorious fight when a crooked rival wrecks Toodles’ car and sends him sprawling! Wow! with Theodore Roberts—Ann Little Tully Marshall . Also “Big V” Comedy “PIPE DREAMS AND PRIZES” 3 i18g.” ik ELK K98 THUR. FRIL. SAT PINEWOOD MAN WILL ' BE BURIED muonnow " Burial services will be-held Thurs- day at Pinewood for John H. Dodge, an old time settler in this vicinity, ;hoddropped dead at his’'farm on Mr. Dodge was 67 years of age at the time of his demise and had been very active for his age. On the day of having left Dempsey's camp aovml' weeks ago. Jack Kearns gent:the Negro .battler east until Jack %as a fight signed. -Remenihering Tate's “‘great” fight against S8am Langford here last summer at Nicollet: park, we pick Fred to win mbout one or’ two rounds.. - Subscribe for the Ploneer. his death he nad been working hard |* all day clearing land for the spring crops and after returning. to the house for supper went to the barn to do. his chores. It is believed that he must have felt that something was wrong with himself for he had left a cow which he had been milking and had started for the house when death overtook him. While on the way to the house he fell down and before he was carried to the house life had passed. The ‘case was investigated by County Coroner H. N. McKee and the cause of aeath is believed to have been heart trotible. PLANNING FIGHT New Jersey promoters are angling for a bout between Bill Tate and Fred Fulton. Tate i8 now in New York, - —EAT— - Third Stmt Cafe Our Waiters Do the Waiting ack of funds to purchase equip- | acdde R TONIGHT ONLY Shows 7:30-9:00 FLORENGE BILLINGS “THE HEART OF “A GYPSY” A charming story of a girl who answered the call of the wild. Action, Thrills, Mystery ADDED ATTRACTIONS GRAND TOMORROW Chapters 7-8-9 “Smashing Barriers” Rex Theatre MAY “THE 1-2 VIGILANTES” are coming A WOMAN'’S FIGHT FOR LOVE AND HAPPINESS IN THE LAND OF PURPLE DREAMS A Stupendous Production in Seven Glorious Parts, Further Enhanced by the ELKO SIX-PIECE ORCHESTRA Admission Torlight at 7:30 and 9:00—10c and 30c ELKO-Tonight LAST TIMES

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