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

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“Hare tolmarry.._took herimmediately 0 to' the Harlem branch of the ¥. W.|ating with Capt. H R. Pacl C. A. In New York city to learn the |the army recruiting station ' in Min American language, customs and |neapolis, (in: | obtajni application ideals. He himself had found this | rom service men for Victory medais, training at the Y. M. C. A. Mrs, Stam- has found that thesé applications are boulides entered English, art, cooking and sewing classes and soon became one. of the most popular .members of the: branch.. - Then- when little: 'Allce, Midile name shoukd be Y., G. A | oon, malled ead.oly 1,400 approved. () e 3 —and 80 1t'18-—and Alice Stamhoulides eRot ofl,c” at Philadelphia. ' can Hold Yier own'with*Mary' Afmistice | " s vorioan Tegion headquarters i anxious: that these application blanks.: shall - “be. filled out. - promptly - and. mailed, as requested,” said Mr. Whit-, CHILD' GIVEN UNIQUE NAME American ‘Girl to Go Through Life With YWCA as ‘One of Her 2 Appellations. N, Lo, . W. Youngren and family of Hal- Mrs. Mary Howe returned to Be- loqk were Bemldjl visitors yesterday niidji this morning after spending the winter at Chandler, Ariz, ; “We've named ‘her Y. W. Q. A.I" said & proud young mother as she dis- played her: two-months-old baby to a group eof girls at one of the. many Y. W. C. A. branches in New York Ql% recently. So “Alice YWCA Stambot : lides” Is, a real child, the possessor ol s g a unlque name which will always M( 3 a reminder of her mother's first days’ in a strange country. ‘When Mrs. A letter from Capum P, flp Horace G. Whitmore, -state adj t, s ‘l:hag nearly "15,000 forms have "Batties mower ad 0 5 o b <. 1t7-28 --Bakke ‘and' daughter, oS ' v Olive, ot nneapolis, are guests at e &V ngg I}{d;‘_ tl:e Osmond Johnson home. g A ‘Dr.; B. Melhy of Blooming Prairie. rs. J. B: B : ."Lee-of St."Paul were guests O__sipong “Johnson home -yester- ul" F'lorenee Minni§ks left - this Lulu Stamboulides, a pretty Rouma- MlNNESOTA LEGION- AIDS " |more. - “American Legion officers. ‘morning for. Spoone vt he will Dlan girl, first came to.the United | py g CURING VICTORY MEDALS | Want every ‘member to -receive his OTh 0L 40 Ly e el States nearly two years.ago her young Arfrtnipte dal without. delay.” spend two weeks on a-camping trip | q 3 medal without delay. Greek_hushand, M_Mm ‘Migs lebol and vismh‘ with friends. |‘er was a caller in the clty on' Tues- | 5 7 d"y ¥ Mower given away. Read. Battle's 2d tomorrow. § 1t7-28 ‘Mr. and Mrs. T. S. Ebert of Thiet, River Ms spdnt Tuesday:.in thin dt! n., . July 28.— The rtment of the Amer-| Grand:=TONIGHT Shows at 7:30 and 9:00 Prices 10c and 28¢c Blanch Sweet RUSSELL SIMPSON—MAHLON HAMILTON i £ —in— “THE DEADLIER SEX"’ WOMAN, THE RIDDLE OF ALL AGES ln Her Heart Flamed the Spirit of Women Like Mona Lisa, . Sappho, Cleopatra and Helen of Troy Ediss And when cornered, the dead ashes leaped to flame in the : breast of this modern American girl. She tricked the Wall Street wolf .from his lair in the Stock Exchange to the big No?h podl and made a monkey out of him. You call her deadly? bg, tell you she was just protecting herself. An amazingly sensational drama of speedy Amoncnn life mdoon and out. ‘A sex battle in God’s country! BEN TURPIN in “THE CLOSE SHAVE” Two-Part Comedy ‘Subscribe Tor the Ploneer. Mls 1da Hanson of Sugar Bush township spent a few hours in the city ‘this morning en route from ln- ternatlonal Falls to her home. Mra. "Agnes Buhler and daughter, "Mary, returned to their home, in Min- | neapolis last evening, after spending several weeks 'with : Mrs. “McCready and her uauxhtery ___COMING Mary lf'icktord ' s : . “SUDS” “SMABT MODEL FOR SATIN. | Miss Letheld ‘Hahn and her moth- The little: frock that “::i:“ for . : LN Ter will leave tomorrow morning for ‘b’emggiefl,':,’;d“ff‘tg:“ih&m mdnele‘i: Mrs. ‘Olga Hayth ‘of Northern is|Marion and Indianapolis, Ind., where ricot. pinik, blue or gray satin, The visiting ‘with Bemidji friends for a they: will spend the balance of ‘the g‘m ual; petoabadotiy e fan o e e ooy T iy, sides which is hemstitched, while the waist, made in Lverblouse effect, is from a' two weeks trip to Wasioga, dccoratpd with embroidery. A uci- where * he- visited his: parents, Mr.|-que finish for the rou nd neck.is a and: Mrs. Theron Higbet and two| silk cord Medium = sizo requires & brothers, James and Claude. vards 36-inch matetial. siab wood, ‘for ‘sale, $3.50 per load. Pictorial Review. Waist No. 8894 'Be 'fim*lfls Co. Phome 481. Tfil‘n . Miss Edna Wallace, who has been| Sizes, !4 to 46 inches ‘Ppust. Price, 25' LW § attending summer school at the nor-| cents. Skirt. No. 8366, Sizes, 24 to' mal, left ‘for her home at Duluth( 24 inches waist, Price, :26 cents. Bm- th1s morning. - She has been engaged | broidery No. 12561. ‘Trausfer, blue “{ to teach at Kelliher the coming year.| or yellow, 20 cents. 5 oM. und Mrs. E. J. Kelly ‘of. Wa- ! seca. were vls'ltors in the city .yes . Kelly ‘and tamlty of Cruoks- Jesse Higbee " returned ‘Tuesday among the Tuewday visitors v'slitec inch mixed hard and soft Kunitz and J. H Davison of raifierd were bustness: callers lie\’l» 'yesterday. “H. D. Sulllvan and, E F: Rossberg ‘of: Crookston were among ‘the busi-|tomorrow. ‘mess callers in. this ¢ity. yesterday. Watch- for C. E. Battles mower ad | ™" ) “RiToa8 *| LOCATED THE MISSING SHOES Mrs. J-.K. Given and Miss Ma: gm . o McGhee entertained six littte folks "“‘"I" Who Had on Wrong Pair at a picnic supper at Diamond Point Admitted - Thinking That. They last evening. The little guests were Felt'“Pretty Tight.” Margaret, Jack .and Robert Given, Betty Lou Voigt and John-Ford. From the Charles Frohman production, *0p o’ ‘Mé Thumb, " by . Frederick Fenn and Richard Pryce. Directed by Jack Dil- lon.. Photographed by Chas. Rosher: VAUDEVILLE AETERNOON 'AND EVENING SATURDAY - “Mower given awsy. Read Battle's ‘ad tomorrow. . 1t7-28 Mr. D. of North Pennsylvania street tells of a near tragedy, or .some- C. W. Cochran 'was ca]led to Co-|thing akin to It, which occurred a hasset yesterday to see his brother,|few days ago on a morning train who had two ribs broken and receiv-| coming 1n from Chicago, relates the ed other painful injuries in an auto Indianapolis News. accident.” His wife, daughter and He had i berth son-in-law were also in the car, but e had occupied an upper b | escaped: with minor, injuries. and when he arose found that his 3 : A shoes had disappeared, A ' palr not ‘Will party. who -found purse Fri- his own were whére his should have }day nom? COY}I"-'U“'HE mone;and arti- | been, but they evidently belonged to r]es please vetrrn to this c®ice and|the occupant.of the lower berth. keep money as the reward. The ring| The porter was called, but his most valuable to owner as a keepsake. diligent search failed to 1locate ‘the 1t7-28 | missing shoes. The train was rapid- ly speeding toward Indisnapolis,: and Dr. and Mr=. J. W Diefrich and|with visions of arriving stocking- A large land. sales organization daughter, ' Catlterine. returned Jast | footed, Mr. D. was in a most unenvi- desires to get in communication with evening from Little Falle. where Mrs. | ghle state of mind. owners of large tracts. Address Lock Diedrich and child have been for sev- About that time-a portly little man Box 93, Bemidjii Minn: 5-, 25!! S;‘:]} :21;‘??;'“1?' ",flg:fiq' DrSuIt)'ll«;;; shuntered down the atsle, stopped Mrs. Charles Nangle b and xlss to.mest’them. RN ::gpah:agtfiym t?)s fiffififffi?fl:fi: ire .Nangle ‘Teft Monday. evening: s g}: an extegnded visit in Minneapo-1 CARD OF THANKS ::9 ;Xt::f:::t’; tlllll; lsl;::!"‘ed, becom- lis and Chicago. E We wish to express onr most he:‘l:'t ?‘Why. this ma‘n's lost his shoes,” felt thanks 2nd napnreciation to the 5 B & many ¥ind friends for their sympe- said the anxious porter. 5 :You don’t ! thy and assistance during our late|SUPPose you-all might a’ mistook sad hereavement. . them for yours, do you?” i Mrs. J. C.' Courtney and Mrs. Belle ‘Denley and son, Merton, left this ‘morning. for Park Rapids to visit a ‘few days. . i ) ! Dr. and Mrs. H. D. Burns and Mrs. Burns of Albert Lea were among the " 'out of town visitors in Bemidji on ‘Tuesday. ‘Mr. and Mrs. Harry Wi Stewart and Mr. and Mys. Fred C. Johnson ' of ‘Owatonna were Tuesday visitors in ‘Bemidji. i Dr. and Mrs. J. W. Gillette.of| Grand Forks, are enjoying a ten-day vacation at their summer home at ‘Buena: Vista. . T4 i Paramount-Artcraft Picture ROBERT WARWICK Lure of Women, Mystery, Robbery, Secret Ser- vice, Prize Ring, Love, Revels, Beautiful .Gowns, Veiled Identities, Social Intrigues, Smashing Action Blackface Comedy Mlmie EVANS AND CORELLI Harmony Singing and Talking ‘REED BROTHERS With a Great Supporting Cast BEBE DANIELS, WALTER HEIRS, SYLVIA ASHTON, KID McCOY Nels Christianson of Phelps, 'wiaf,‘ “has: arrived to spend the remainder «0f the summer with his daughter, Schu?ml_xer and MI;s Carola Bernick. things felt pretty tight” NEIGHBORS LAST NIGRT And then there occurred a hasty ex- The Roy»l Neizhhors were =uests| change of shoes just as the train of the Modern Woodmen of America pulled into the station. . at an informal dancine patty last evering at the 0dd Felolws’ hall fol- ; lawing the husiness meeting of the MAKE SK'LLFUL AUTO DRWERS Woodmen. Refreshments were serv- b v o . ed and »11 who attended report a most | African Natives Conduct Vehicles enjoyable evening. Along Jungle Tracks After Short e Term of Apprenticeship. ‘NOTICE : b sl | Any people who would like ‘to.have| It is natural that since automobiles : Mrs. H. L. Rasmussen. Sam, Lalone. T::im tt:: por;ly_ party tookthg lo;"k i Paramount Magazine and % Lloyd Lalone.- at his “feet and discovered that he | Comedy Acrobatic Novel ® ‘Frank Bernick- returned to. glt e 1t7-28 | bad., . : i ty Holmes Tuvelqgue Cloud yesterday after spending’™ : “Well,” sald he, considerably cm.% week-end with his sisters, Mrs. R."H. WOODMEN ENTERTAINED grined, “I thought that the pesky : i ) 1 TONIGHT E:LKO TOMORROW e Miss Ruth Essler left this morn- ing foriz visit of several weeks with relatives at St. Peter. En route she ‘will visit &ith “relatives in Minne— apous and, St Paul.. A ten-pound daughter was born to Mr. and Mrs. Archie Naugle at the A. W. Naugle home yesterday after- noon. Mother and infant are doing very nicely. REX Theatre THURSDAY i ne, |2 student work for board an@ room |have found their way into every part 4 [ w:g:: :l.l: e;ln ?3,?,':;32 ¥§,‘s§°§:§?£ during the school year notify the Su-|of the world, the drivers would vary J @ '™\ time Tueedayen royt: Tenstrike | perintendent’s office. ' 3t7-29| in appearance, and in attire or lack of The Peter Pan Girl of fl.e r to spend ‘a month .with” her parents, : attire, according to the customs of the *,' Mr. and Mrs. Willam Fellows. BIDS. + | countries In which the motor car Is o Sealed bids will be received by the| called to.do service. 1f you were to undemgned "to be opened at a reg-| Walk along the road leading from the ular meeting of the city council of) west coast of equatorial Africa several the City of Bemidji, to be held on|hundred mfles into the interior, for Monday, August 2nd, 1920, at 8| instance, you might see a motor truck, o’clock p. m., for painting the steel plowing through the jungle, and in wa;;r thank ;li'd tov:ler e e the chauffeur’s- seat, driving with pe- rther information can ob-| culfar and cheerful abandon, would be this Tho n?:: i;y]:fit::'r L::l:L:-angz tained from the - superintendent of|q west African n-tlve.‘mAnd from the | will a.s:ume ‘management of the W.Tt;‘; z:mfl reserves the right appearance of his driver’s uniform, it “‘Harwha™ theatre for the local firm all bid ; would be evident that the high cost to reject any or ids. of clothing would bother him not one 3 of Harding & Whaley. Mr. Currie’s -~ HT gamily will toltow ‘later. somuted Bemidji, Minn., July 23rd,| wht, These ‘natives become full- GEO. STEIN fledged chauffeurs within three or four George M. Gunderson of Thief Riv- 8d7-27 . ("}ity Cle'rk. weeks from the time they see their er Falls, county superintendent of I first motor vehicle. The trucks, of schools o‘f Pe“’i‘«‘:fton cgunlzy,“.gpe;;t 3 Whlclh there are about 200, maintain the day in Bemidji on business. e ; P - regular schedules as feeders to a lar; . 4s.yeturning to his home after a trip . Parasite Spreads Disease. ‘| steamship line plying between wei: " 1o this section of the state looking| A peculiar disease that is still con- | Atrican ports and Europe and Amer- for teachers for the schools in that| fined chiefly to certain river valleys of | jca, They are loaded with men and .county. Japan, but suggests possibilities of | gupplies on the Inlind trips, and with breaking lcose as a widespread epl- | cocoa produets, palm ofl, hides, and demic, has been a:subject of recent In- | rybher hound for. the const. Forks Sunday by the death - of her| vestigation. It is known as “tsut- < i Bbrother, Horace Preston. Mr. Preston | sugamushi,” and is transmitted by the Clemenceau -and Heaven. has visited in Bemidji on several oc-| “akamushi,” an insect parasite of cer- The latest Clemenceau anecdote that casions and is well known here. He| tain field mice. It is a fever striking- 18 going the rounds of the boulevards was' 29 years of age and his tlieath 1y similar to typhus and Rocky mount- 18 to the effect that the premier:was was caused by quinsy. Funeral Ser-| gip ‘gpotteq fevers. The tnvestigators annoyed because a tree in the neigh- vices were held from the Baptist < church .at Grand Forks yesterday,| Dave learned that its chief occurrence | poring garden overshadowed his. 'The is in the months of June to October, ev. J. G. York, pastor of the church tree was the property of some Jesuit 'gmalatlng. Intel:ment was made in| Which is the time of development of | gathers, on whom M. Clemenceau Memorial .Park cemetery, where|the Insect carriers, and the season |cgjied, politely mfalnhg that his at- three small brothers, Gordon, John| when the peasant victims of the dis-|¢jtnde to the ¢hurch was unchanged, and Jesse are buried. He leaves three| ease are brought into contact With |py¢ he would regard it as a personal sisters, Mrs. Clyde Wifllams of Ten-| the mice. The mortality, though very favor if the Jesuit fathers would cut nessee, Mrs. George’ Kush of Minne-| variable, sometimes exceeds 50 per down the tree, “because it prevents me olis and Mrs. Nikle. cent. Undér existing conditions, bites [ ¢rom seelng the heavens.” The Jesult ————e | DY - the insects cannot be wholly |ggther who receivad him was very TQD_AY——LAST SHOWING Wl LLIAM FOX Presents WILLIAM LES MISERABLES = SEE |ITAT VIOLA ida, had the misfortune to lose his barn: aif@ a large quantity of new clover hay on Tuesday. Spontaneous ‘combustion‘in the hay was the cause of the fire. s ( ) Christ -Olson, postmaster at Be- ! - (Y Mrs. A. Nikle was called to Grand . William Fox. presents William' Farnum as immortal Jean Valjean in Victor Hugo’s “Les Miserables.” . Pat- ronage is invited with the promise of towering supremacy in screen worth and power. “The Pansnan Tigress” A Brilliant METRO “SHORTY HAMILTON TO COLLEGE” o s avolded, and cutting out the bitten | eourteous and was mich flattered by Comedy Drama & Drs. Larson & Larson,| part does not prevent the spread of | thq premier's call. He promised that L . mm:ittflhmh I nl;ou- ?;1 virus, while sucll: ‘remedies a; the offending tree should be speedily || Coming—Saturday eadac] es, | jodine, mercury, arsenic, quinine and | pamoved, but he added, with the suave nervousness or eye dis-| Gyes have proven. ineffective. The |gmile of the ccclesiastic: “I am afraid, “OVERLAND RED” REX UNION ORCHESTRA orders of any kind, needing glasses| oniy hope of stamping out the disease | M. le Premier. that, Just the same, starripg Matinee 2:30 Night 7:20 and 9:00 10c and 26¢ or glasses replired consult them. Artificial eyes fitted. seems to rest in the extermination of you will not see hegven.”—London the field mice. Morning Post. Harry Carey 3

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