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< ‘Mrs, G. 8. Parker of Brainerd was|’ ‘Chocolate Mousse at'the Markham in ' this eity. '~ [Coffee Shop on Friday. 1d8-6 rainerd was a:Be-| Mrs. Ralph Noble and three chil- day. dren of Blackduck; spent : the .day. with the G. 'N. Bvenson family of ? Koor’s {ce| Nymore, en route to Crookston. 4-6tt > olster ‘returned exteénded-visit in Minneapo- \'Chocalate Mousse at the Markham Coftee Shop on Friday. . * 1d8-6 Brooks and Esther' ‘Bruzelius were 'married, Rev. L.7P. ing. The couple Mary Bruzelius and Axge.L. Brooks. ‘These people are hoth™of this city, and intenq to make their home here. Hugh-E. Leach and tamily of Alex- ‘andria were Gallers in: this city yes ‘erday. 3 1l hold"their regular meet- edberg of Beuna Vista.}at:Camp Luna, on Sunday, August 8. ‘fiatl:?gus:m trEnsactor“.hi the city[This gathering will be in the nature Wiednesday. 5 § of a Mission Festival, and an all-day 3 X o f: “+“|picnic and regular monthly’ business By ahd ‘Mrs. J. A.~Anderson of [gession will ‘also’ be features. Rev. Fergus Falls were Bemidji visitors|F. F. Gullixson of Minot, N. D., will on Wednesday. ¢ s+ lpreach. A returned missionary from 2 China, Nicolai Larson, who is on .a furlough, will be present to address the gathering,” ~Everygne is:invited. < Dr. J:'T. Tuomy left yesterday on ‘a:business trip to the:€oast. - He ex- i one.ten days. . . .. NG 3 .,,“yects to be.g S d " These }amss are ‘listed today on ; Chocolate Mousse at the Markham |the Birchmont Beach hotel register: Coftee Shop on Friday. 1d8-6|Mr. and Mrs.” O. L, Woodward, Mrs. > . b - Lyshutz and family, W, W. Halde{; - Mrs. C. N. Johnson' of {man, C. C. Fagg, Mrs. M. Wi Barnar m’::bfil:‘iu among the out of town |and son, R. DeLaney Davis, Mr. and callers in this city yesterday. Mrs. L. B. Lunt, Mrs.' M. J. Scanlon, 5 3 Mrs: Rising, Helen Scanlon, 3'1;}1 Mr;. 5 <8po id for Liberty ‘Bonds,|J. E. Moore of Minneapolis; Mrs. 8. s:\paf,%@;lggley at'Nom{Zrn Gro-|H. ‘Bacon and Miss E. Rallings of ‘cery Co., during the day, or at the|Fargo;-Miss O. Collins .and. Miss K. arkham hotel evenings. 7-29tf | Niles of Fergus Falls; H. H. Dean of o __|st. Paul; Je+ H. Ruettell and. son of Grand:Forks; enore Patchins of Chieaga: - SOFTEN HARD WATER ~ A large'land - sales organization| - By usine Rub-No-More Washing desires to get in communication With|Ppowdep. Obtain best results by dis- owners of large tracts.) Address Lo_ck solving in warm water. Also cleans Box 93, Bemidji, Minn. . 8-25tf | and purifies, ‘Try it.. Watch for cou- : von.” ‘Ask for Rub-No-More at_ all grocers. T U1t8<5 o Mrs. Geor;e Severns of Grant Val- ley, was among the out of town shop- ‘ ‘pers in Bemidjl on Wednesday. Miss Helen Cavanaugh of Fergus Falls is the guest of her sister, Mrs. “C. F, Grinager, for a short time. B. P. 0. ELKS .All. members. are urged. to attend the regular session Thursiay even- ing, -August 5. ' Several matters of importance must be - considered at this time.- Delegates to the state convention at Virginia will be elect- ed. The session, will be very short. Please be on hand promptly at 8:00. E.-H. JERRARD, % Secretary.- Miss Lorraine Waldron of Staples, .1z visiting her cousin, Mrs.” Stephen Snyder, 505 America- avenue, for the week. 3 _/ Miss Harriet Nelson arrived: from | Minneapoiis ‘'on ‘Wednesday and will | 7 be the guest of her sister, Miss Agnes ‘Nelson for & month. |ats-5 ““Mr. and Mrs. C. Clausen, J. M. Johnson, Olga Johnson, Carl Olson,| YIELDED TO TATTOOER'S ART Hannah Olson and Anton Olson of Ry s S Pelican were among the out of town! pany Rayal Personages Have Been callers here yesterday. “Dgcorated”-——Amusing Experience . of Swedish Monarch. ‘Tt-was no secret to. his intimates :that King Edward VII of England sub- Jected his arms to the art of a tat- tooer when he was prince of Wales, X AN I8 sony the t king, was tattooéd by a ‘skill- Mrs. August Nelson and Miss Es- ther Johnson o. Grand Forks,- . who are.summer guests: at the resort at Lake Plantaganet, spent Wednesday Theress, ],‘xi"x]fll and z:mnch;, ha'v' presen just returned. f: a:two week’'s vis-) : ¥ ity ‘relatives at Duluth, Little t‘:’ :3;':5'-6-'& '&?cc',.’..;,?;‘:’h:,‘:‘;:: - Falls and _S}u? Centre: o [ Japin ik years-age.: " 4 e d - Mar: rosb; The late czar of Russia wore an L e o“vmq‘;:a_nd 'J':lze's,grosb;,, .jndelible -India-ink dragon on his left day from St:Paul to be| forearm, and quite a.number of other he guests of the:J. C. Parker family, | European royalties past and present, 0 Minnesota avenue, until Satur-| have received these indestructible “dec- orstions.” © - . s : But the experience of Charles XIV of Sweden and Norway, makes an in- a motor trip.to. Sauk Centre, West- | teresting little story by itself. It was port and ‘Wadena. They spent gev-| 8lWays a puszle to those mostintl- i eral days with relatives and friends| mately assoclated with him, that he . at these points. = would- never show: himself anywher: ¢ with bared arms. It was not until his death in'1844 that the mystery was ex- plained. On his right arm were tattooed fitm & ara, gagle nor an in- § ‘of hority, but ipstead Mr. and Mrs. L.°G. Crothers re- urned the fore part of the week from ‘" 'The Linnea soclety.of the Swedish .} Lutheran .chureh, will- give a weiner roast at the“Larson farm, near Cafr : iLake school, on Friday evening at| "8 o'clock. All' the young people are * ~cordially 4nyited. ; e Mr. and Mrs. Towne and family of e - Chicago, are in the city en route to| lcan een 1 :‘Bemidji, ‘where they will spend the | tattootd, never dreaming that lateg he remainder of the summer at Birch-| would be called to: the throne. mont. Mr. Towne is president of.the}: s ! ‘Watab Pulp & Paper Co., of this city. :Joke 5,000 Years Old: g Planned by the ancient Egyptians ~—St. Cloud Journal Press. over 5,000 years ago, a joke just came to fruition, writes Prof. Flinders Petrie, the noted archeologist. “While we were trying to find a way into 8 Mina fiy_ers. hairdressing, - sham- 5 ing, scalp -treatment. Switches - made from combings, ets. Po. Box 453 telephone 466-W. " Will call by a%-| queen's pyramia,” he says, “we dis- i _ 7| covered on & rock face a door which i Evangelist'S. A. Ruskjer of Water-| Was 80 beautifully. and. exactly fitted fown, 8. D., will speak in the Gospel | that it was difficult-to see the joints. tent tonight at 8 p. m. His subject| We immediately set to work on - this, will be ‘“‘Spirituaslism versus Chrie-| thinking that we had found at last fanity; can the iiving talk ‘with the| an entfance to: the Inner chamber. ex-| After a considerable amount of work we removed the door and found— solid rock! ‘It was o carefully ar- ranged blind. to balk anyome who wanted to find the entrance Into. the “ *'Mr. and Mrs. G. C. Berglund have had as their guests for a few days Gust Fkberg and daughters, Esther and Elma, of North Branch, and Mr. | Foyal tombs, and.had been made about ~‘and Mrs. John Ekberg of Minneapo-| 8,000 B. C. by someone with a sense Hs. They also visited with the E. J.| of humor” Clover family. They left this morning “for Duluth.. 3 X o . ‘Mr. and Mrs. A.d 'l’.MCula(t‘::;d.ugh- ter (Corrinne, " an T8, arles F. o S0 . Hieks, who has been their guest ‘for ngdon ylem ‘to ndicate that for sur- ~several weeks, will start tomorrow | sical operations, the heat condition of morning for the twin cities by car, | the atmosphere is high humidity, 80 from where Mrs. Hicks will go-on to| per cent or more, directly after oper- her home at Parkston, S. D., and the | ations, and moderate humidity, about Carlson family will spent a week in| 60 per cent, at a temperature of 64 the cities. Mr. Carlson will purchase| degrees fahrenheit, a few days later. a -full stock of-goods for fall while | Doctor Huntington points out that, if there. : these results are accepted, there 1s no A NOTICE - reason - why ' the optimum conditions £ \ < of temperature and humidity should . Dr, Ward has moved his office| not be produced artificially. in hos- rom° the Troppman building to the| pitals, causing a probable improve- es building, 448-9| ment in not less than 20 per cent in the results of operations. Humidity in Surgery. ton' hospitals by Dr. Bllsworth Hunt- Drs, ‘Larson & Larson, Clear Field. e ey P i oA, bere 1a 8 lottr trom the o4 e Daatinr, Tty | erwnat does 1t sy? ettt : 5 ssterday afternoon fit 4 o‘clock at |- yesterdaylthe ,Bresb'yt_e’rhn parsonage, Peter V. {. t-| rfj\ha-(hncordln»Young People’s so- | Warford officiat- |.. rere attended by | q he home of Rev. L, J. Jerdee, | ~ A RARELY CHIO FROOK. The :styles for mid-summer have brought forth nothing more charm- ing than :this pale yellow. organdy, self-trimmed 'save for the bit of ‘dou- - blefaced ribbon on the girdle. Nar- row-bands of the organdy, finely tucked, are uséd to trim the ekirt, waist and turn-back cuffs, while ac- cordion -plaited organdy finishes the deep diagonally adjusted collar. Medium size requires 6514 yards 86 inch material, Pictorial Review Dress No. 8949, Sizes, 34 to 50 inches bust, Price, 35 cents. g 4 HISTORY. TOLD N MOSAICS »Buumubl Examples of Early Art to Be Found in the Ruined Temples ) of-.Egypt. tistlc expression was through the: me- dlum of the mosalc. Ruins of that li- centious city . of the East, Nineveh, contain examples of the art. Mosa- ics are found frequently in the ru- ined temples of Egypt. It was In Greece that the art was first used to any'great extent. @ All through the rocky little: peninsula may be found the beauty of the Hel- lenic temperament expressed in mo- saic.' The erectheum, in Athens, con- structed about the fifth century B. C.,, contalns many exquisite specie mens worked in both glass and mar- ble. & 5 Mosaic 'did not reach. its highest de- velopment, however, until the power of Rome had bloomed. to the full, . The Investigations made in several Bos- |. Romans not -only utilized . this form of art themselves to a great extent, but’ spread. it all through. their cone quered territories. ‘One of the ways tsteps -of fl.le Ro- eans Jt the-mo- "} young Plymouth Rock hen and 'a white ‘| ing; around In the chicken park, ‘or | seen walking together around. the One of the e.urll_'ést. attempts at ar | S art was contin- ued down through the mediveal and renaigsance periods, flourishing espe- clally. In Ttaly—Exchange. . “SPITE. HOUSE”' THERE YET Boston Bullcfing 18 8aid to Go Back to Days of ‘the American o )fle\(oluclon. ‘What 18 believed to be one of the -narrowest and oldest dwelling houses in this country is that at 44 Hull street, Boston.- The house is less than 11 teet wide and its erection s said to date back to the American Revolution- ary-period. The dwelling, constructed of wood and.particularly peculiar in the midst of the modern brick struc- tures in that vicinity, 18 located direct- 1y opposite the entrance of Copp's Hill burying ground and withia the shad- ow of what once was the ammunition barracks of the British army. It is 21 feet long, with its entrance on Hull Street place, which is also. #o narrow that one has almost to enter the alley- way sidewise. There are three storles and an attic floor.. One room, the kitchen, is i the basement, and cn the street floor are the dining and lUving rooms. There is a hedroom above these, and on the third floor is another The !wemnl s reterred to by North | Enders.as the “Spite House.” . It earned this sobriquet, according to & legend that has been persistent for years to the effect that the original owner, a Tory, had tbe honse erected to shut off the matural light from the home of. & neighbor with whom he had quarreled. As the result of the al- leged “spite” the neighbor, sé the leg- end goes, was obliged to keep & ean- dle burning within his: home. A Manor House Find. guineas in the prfess of an old Hert- fordshire (Eng.) manor house is told in The Bookman’s Journal. The house changed owners, and the new pro- prietor, a few weeks after taking pos- session, examined the attics systemat- fcally. In ome of the -presses there be found a number of tattered and stained bdoks, among them Doctor Croly's “Salathiel,” which he opened in casual curlosity. On a page he came across a penciled mote, indicat- ing where valuables had been hidden in the house during the crisis of the 45 rebellion. Forthwith he had the flooring of a cupboard taken up, and there in a cavity lay same thousand spade guineas, a quantity of rare china and silver, and first editions of Congreve, Wycherley, Dryden and cer- tain of the late Hilizabethans—all care- fally wrapped in silken dresses of that docade. The story of the find of 1,000 spade ' when set to work mark the s , . H. VanLoan b3 . st by szgeh Ty by H KITTEN CHUMMY|® —— ' S ) ' . -Ostrich Plumes, q Ostrich plumes are not ~actually plucked, by the way. They Are cut— pruned with no damage or pain to the bird. When the feathers are “ripe” the ostriches are driven 'into a. V- shaped ' enclosure, . Thelr heads are. covered with a hood' like a stocking, - which renders them tractable,. = The wings - are .spread by -the man doing. the “plucking’:and the feathers’are clipped -off fairly, close ‘to the flesh.'| RITA mE 2 "This does not hurt the bird in the | .. Classy Vocalst teast and’ within sixty days the dead [} FAmm p & wm quill’ ends-drop out- of their own ac- || cord. :The ' tall 'feathers' are also in, “Blow Your Horn”: ': cllppegl_. 1or” = R LOUIS EARL & WAL i In-!ruuunl;i and Vocal Novelty Matinee '2:30 Nights 7:30-9:118 "HEN AND Really Remarkable Case’ ‘of ' Friend- ship That Is Vouched for by Woman Writer, The strangest friendship that ‘the /writer has ever seen was that of a Kkitten. . i “Gold Dust Screamers' When the- kitten was about two months old she was very fond.of be wherever the chickens were. She was the friendliest kitten alive and showed a disposition to chum with every liv- ing thing. But the chickens paid no attention to her except to get out of her way. The hen in' question,- how- ever, met her advances kindly and .they soon became boon companions. Many fimes a day they were to be Chinese Paradise Fish. { A little Chinese fish known as the paradise fish i3 rémarkable ‘for its brilllant ‘coloring ‘of’ crimson and blue, In the sunlight it shines in a rain- bow glow of color. The dorsal fin ex- tends from near the back of the head to the tall) The paradise fish was first brought to France from Ohi by M. Simon In 1869, having been found in a brook- near Canton. . The most interesting thing about this little fish is the nest made by the male for the reception of the eggs. It makes a little floating nest of glutinous bubbles below the surface of the water, and measuring up to six inches across Here it places the eggs, some 200 in number, and mounts guard over them, place. The hen would frequently stand still while kittle would rub back and forth against her breast. And while Biddy scratched for bugs and worms, the little white kitten was never far away. We do not kuow what . was their means -of communication, ‘but they evidently had a satisfying- one, for they never seemed to tire of each otl_\er. They associated together to “the exclusion of the other fowls and cats on the place. “One seldom saw Blddy with the other .chickens, and little white kitten absolutely deseried her little white twin. -We sometimes TOMORROW and Friday Selznick Pictures wondered if the kitten thought she 2 was a chicken or the hen belleved her- NET A l VE TH self to be a cat. At all events, they Unperturbed. “Ha,” exclaimed the cllent. *“You predicted the world was coming to an end a week ago.” “Did I replied the soothsayer, dreamily. “You certainly did. But we are still here. Nothing has happened. What have you got to say for yotrself?” “Just this” sald the soothsayer. *“Im as glad it didn’t happen as you are. Mustapha,” he continued, mo- tioning languidly to his dark-skinned assistant, “show the_ gentleman out and admit the next seeker after trath.” ~Birmingham ~ Age-Herald. were most congenial. This state of affairs continued ‘unttl the sale of the farm necessitated thelr being parted.—Mabel J. Mcllwane, in Our Dumb Animals. “Footlights and Shadows” by Bradlgj !(ing LET’S GO! GREAT. MAN NEVER HESITATES 8elf-Reliance One of the Most Impon. tant Possessions That Can Be Acquired. Insist on yourself; .never |mitate. Your own gift you can. present every moment with the cumulative force of a whole life’s cultivation; but of the adopted talent of amother you have only an extemporaneous half posses- sion. That which each can do best none but his Maker can teach him.| No man yet knows what {t s, nor can ' till that person has exhibited it. Where ' 18 the master who could have taught | Shakespeare? Where is the master who could have instructed Franklin or Washington or Newton or Bacon?; Every great man is unique. The Eclp-, fonism of Scipio is precisely that part he could not borrow. If anyone will tell me whom the great man imitates in the original crisis when he performs a great act, I will tell' him who else can teach him. Do that which s as- signed thee and thou canst not hope too much nor dare too much. Dwell up. there in"the simple and noble re- glons gf thy. life, obey.thy heart and thou %halt reproduce” the Foreworld againRalph Waldo-Bmerson. Coming to| The Rex ||TONIGHT cAlice ‘“Brady LANTERN The screen boasts no greater dramatic artiste than Alice Brady. And she has given no finer per- formance in her life than this photoplay reveals. They Fight to the Death at the Bottom of the Sea! If you never had a real thrill in all your life “The Best of Luck’”’ will give it' to you Presented by Screen Class- ics, Inc. with Kathryn Adams and an all-star cast. If’s a famous: Drury Lane melo- drama. Adapted to the screen by A. S."Levino. ' Di- rected by Ray C. Smallwood, Maxwell Karger director general. A METRO PLAY How to Treat Stammering. Before the kindergarten section meeting of the National Soclety. for the Study and Correction of Speech Disorders, Dr. Walter B. Swift of Bos- ton, read a paper on the treatment of stammering in its very early begin- nings. Stammering In very young chil- dren often results from nervous stress and strain, great fright, the imitation of others and sometimes from accl- dents. Almost all of these things can be prevented. The imitation of anoth- er case can easily be stopped by the parents. Nervous stress and strain can be eliminated by proper home hy- giene, which when put into practice has been know to stop stammering in two weeks. Great strain from fright can be avoided by having the compan- fons of the children refrain from pur- posely frightening them, and after any unavoidable fright it can be minimized by proper conversation and advice after that fright has occurred. Doctor Swift described one case in which a cure was effected in two weeks, = TONIGHT Prices 10c and 25¢ H. B. WARNER in a stirring story of romance and adventure The ‘Pagan God ANDY and MINN, “THE GUMPS” the famous cartoon characters, in “ANDY VISITS HIS MAMMA” : Victory, Worth White. There's no satisfaction equal to the conscjousness of measuring up to your Hmits. Thé man who does the merely ordinary things can never take the pride In his achlevements men of vision take. They see what lies be- yond the ken of calculating mortals. Struggle to them is second nature. £ 3 They delight in hard things because they are hard. And to them come the great victories that never tarry long enough to be made sure to the weak- ling and the fearful. It may cost toil and struggle to land the crowns men- pray for, but they have no value with- out sacrifice. When men purchase re- wards that demand the strain of every capacity to win them, they aré train-. ing the personalities in reserve that REX Theatre Friday «»d Saturda S ' Announcing the Arrival . Absolgtiem. |2 of the Latest Thriller! Absolutism, as - practiced by @& . - Catherine_or a Napoleon, on an im- WILLIAM FOX presents perial scale, may dasile the imag- ‘ ) = ination. . It is & system which has corresponded, ‘historically, to & Wwell- defined stage In popular advance toward self-government. But as soon as even an imperfect form of consti- tution has been- established, the defects of absolutism appear colossal by contrast. Above all, when Abso- lutism in its decadence holds a.small state, it-loses that appearance of con- centrated power which is one of s chiet justifications, and looks and mean. It seems to be .& : i “3 Gold Coins” ,A Tale of Love, Stunts and Romance s