Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, August 7, 1920, Page 5

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Mrs, H. A. Eape of, Cl‘ookutonb was| "’ i caller in this c}ty mdny 'o!Beh ’rnke hope X n. vrick o" Koor’ cream N ; i 4-Btt S M . W ’{-:::s-!ot Schoolqnattf was a bvulnm visitor here Friday. — ! e Mr. and Mrs. . J. 0. Osthy of Pe- quot were Bemidji visitorson Friday. + $10 low. shoes, ' $5. 965, and lree Saturday after 5. g m. man’s. '3. P, English of Int was; a business caller Friday. Mr. and Mrs. F. Fal)s were among the Frldny visitors in Bemidji. $12 low shoes, $7. 95, and $1. trsciaturday after 5 p ny. Tro] ) man’s, 17 Mr. and Mrs. B. N. Nevins of Wi " nona were among the ‘out of town} . caller ln the city yesterday: . . callers in this city yggf,;rdny. Mrs. Alfred Smith left Friday for {Grey Eagle, where ‘she will spend a ives. nnd ‘frlends “Mr. and Mrs..B. Wi- Batchelder and Miss Loulse Golz returned yester- > " day from Waville, 'where she has vis- ited with Misa Vera cutter since Mon- day. Mr and Mrs. Henry" Miller and family returned yesterday from a sev- eral day’s visit with friends in Crook- ston N J A large land _sales - organlzatlon desires to get in communication with owners’of large tracts. - Audress Lock Box 96 Bemidii, Minn. 5-25tf Mr. and Mrs ‘AG. Fossen and Mr. slee ; H. Williams of Nashwauk -were} Austin Mciver returned ' Frida, Andrew: Rood tumed trom Mln- jeapolis this ‘morning after spend- ng the past few. weeks there for med- :ul treatment. *Mr. Rood’s condition 8 Ve 'rhomns Balley re- cently purehnse & home at 615 Mis- sissippkavenue and moved there yest- “LIVE UP T0" Tfl; cannsu vmm Condemna OIG-FuMpmd ‘Idea “'of Repression and Stern Punish. ment for Trivial Offenses. It seems to'me a great mistake to “live down to" children. They are capable of understanding and respond- ing to deep and fine'thoughts and feel- | Ings. ‘Never 'from the first did we criti- erday from’ their summer home at| ; " | Big Turtle lake, ~where they have ; spent the summer. ’ G Ouver Riggs returned last nlfit ‘Riggs “accompanied him ‘on’ th but did not return with him but | Mrs. J. W.”Mcllquhm and’ daugh- ters, E'uzabeth and: Vlctorla. of. Madl- ‘Mrs. Mcllquhm ls Bailey.: Mrs. Ogcar'Kmntz and daughters,; Alice and Mary, lef Staples, where they will.be joined by WS. Krantz’ ' neice, Pride; ‘and ‘they will leave on"a trip to'the 'west. - They will visit.at sev- eral points on their ‘way. to Portland. Oré., where they exrpect to - spend three weeks. Mrs. Ed Currey wl 3 lenve this evening for Little -Falls;: where Mr.: Currey preceeded her two:weeks ago. and where they will make their home. Mr. Currey"'is- managing the ‘“Har-. >3 whq." theatre, which: the local firm of. ’Hnrding & ‘Whaley recently ] bought ‘Willfam C.. Klein returned Rhurs- | day- night from a trip' into. Hubbard county inspecting trout streams. He \was accompanied on the fore part of the trip sy George H. Frgncg was. obliged ‘to return to Bemidji be- Mrs.. Ralph |- ‘ ¢ize or humiliate our boys In any way. We gave them credit always for the high and right. motive, and suspended judg: | ment till they had told their side, Bllt if they were wrong they were not mu'h ished. The fact that they had fallen below what had been expected of them . was punishment : enough. ‘A certpin {-standard of conduct was thus estab- /| Mshed that they. longed always to real- A" ATRY AND DAINTY. v thé intolerable ' days . there, e's this - sheer crovs-batred: mus-; i<~ thei oldfashioned . .kind with | ‘natm stripe—made into 'a . simple ‘blouse and skirt'and trimmed with plain organdy and doublefaced sat- in ribbon. ' Narrow' frills' of net fin- : ish_the| ‘collar -and short sleeves. Medium" size requires 4% yards 36- inch ‘muslin,’ with 3% yard organ- C|:dy. g Pictorla] Review Blmue No. 8970. 'Sizes 34 to 42 inches bust. Price, 25 ‘cents.. Bodice “kirt No. 8959. s:m,\ 24:to 36 inches walst, Price, 30c, Coictlng in ‘Wake of Boat. -Passengers on one of the Hudson riv- er ferries In New York were treated In the summer of, 1919 to the odd spec- /3:técle of a canoe sailing in their wa ‘all the way across the river, without_ .any means of propulsion.- What made ‘the canoe go was'a question that puz- Zled many. The more observant’no- ticed that the canoe did not keep to the smooth :water directly aft the fesry- ‘boat, hut rode off 'to one side, 1 the ‘Tough waves that' the paddle ‘wheels kicked up. They also noticed that the. canoe did not.hug the ferryboat close, and that often it pursued its inystert- ous course at a considerable distance. According to a writer in who' though it traveled just as fast as the ferryboat. . 'and Mrs. M. P. Endberg of Starbuck |fore Mr. Klein’‘had finished ' his| the Sclentific American who explains were among the Bemidji visitors yes- /terday. - Mr. and Mrs. Phil Gagnon and Mrs. B. Sorenson ‘of Mizpah, are visiting at the Frank Gagnon home on Min- . nesota avenue for a few days._ ¢ Mrs. Mary Rudobough, a returncd missionary from ‘Armenia, will speak at the Nymore congregational church i at 11- o’clock Sunday morning. Rev. ‘George ~Backhurst -returned last-evening from Tenstrike and Nor- thome, where he 'visited 'his par- lshes i Miss Vera Hedman of Guthrie, was in : Bemidji Frlday\en route to her, home from Becida,” where she’ visit- ed her sister, ‘Mrs. Otto Ma_ltrnd, for two weeks. Mrs. Andrew Abbott ahd B. Abbott of Eagle Bpnd, motored: to Bemidji Friday en rotte"to:Lake Plantaganet, where they will spend the week-end wltLMrs’ Abbott’s. mother. Miss Winnitred Maynard | returned this ‘morning' to her ‘home at. Long Prairie, where she will remain for & few days before going to Lexington, Ky., to spend the winter. ' i . Mrs. A. D, Perry, an employoe at the government ‘school at Hayward, _Wis., arrived in ' Bemidji Friday en route “to her “home at Northern, where she will visit for.a month Mrs, W. J. Caftery of Mlnnenpoua, and Mrs. C. B. McDougall of Monte- video, mothor and sister of Mrs. F. ‘M. Pendergast ‘of. Grant Valley,. are her guests and’ will remlin her for several weeks. el 41,00 givén away with every pair|® . of 1adies’ kid and patent oxfords and ‘pumps’ s6ld Saturday from 5 to 10 P. m;, at" $5:95 and 3195 ) man’s.’ ltr. md Mrs. Bdwin Kalser of Hib- bing, arrived’ in ‘Bemidji Friday to spend a short time with Mrs, Kaiser’s sister, Mrs. ed Bardwell. ' They will al® visit another sister, Mrs. Joe Steidl of Northern, before their return to Hibhing. 1t8-7 The funeral of John Degermian, St., who died- this morning at the huome +of his son, William Degerman, of the “ Fifth ward, will be held Sunday aft- ernoon \from the home at 1:30) and from the Swedish Lutheran cturch at 2:30 o'clock. Misses Alice, and Mary Crosby, _Miss Catherine Johnson and -James Crosby, who ‘have been the guests of the J. C. Parker family for several days, feft this morning for their home at Minneapolis. They were ac- companied by Miss Josephine Parker, who will- visit them for the coming month. The party motored to the . w-wmdfi "mu-l'm-m : - and Inez Gunderson. - | copators. scouting trip the mystery, the cance always took a .| position 'on the forward side of & 'wavé LICENSEUTO MARBRY At the office_of the clerk of dist- rict_court yesterday, license to marry was ~granted to Joseph Jerome, Jr., NOTICE ; Dr. Ward has moved his office from the Troppman building 'ta ‘the Bsttles bufldlng oo 448-9 o3t enjoyable ‘dances summer season was held at the Birchmont Beach . summer hotel last’ evening and the largest crowd which has yet attended ‘danced to the excellent music furnished by the Syn- In addition to the patrons of the hotel,"a’large number of Be- midji people were in attendance. ELKS HELD FIRST DANCE / “OF SEASON LAST NIGHT The Bemidji lodge of Elks held its first dance of the late summer season series which it has planned to. con- tinue ‘during’ the fall. The attend- ance last night was not very, large but an enjoydble evening was spent. rding tg the plans announced by th entertn ent committee, a sim- iral dg 11 be held eoch week on da evenmgs TO0 SPREAD CONSTITUTION To place a copy of the constitution '“ of. ‘the United States “in each of th 20,000,000 homes'in America,” is th: - purpose of the néW Constitutional Lesague of America. 'Among the di- rectors of the league are former sec- retary of the interior Lane; C. ‘E. Hughes - and ex-Attorney-General ‘Wickersham.. It'is the desPre of the league to. bring about a more general knowledge of the constitution and to ‘encourage its use as a mede for self- government-in fnduatrlal Pants and elsewhere e ; Tropp-| and Kept it all the way across. The wave- carried the canoe along us the surf’ carries the Huwuhan on his si boerd. ! Set Alm . In Llfo. A definitely fixed gonl is a ehul- lenge to ingenuity. That {s especial true for the ‘tra goals are apt. te way of least : resistance. ' Attaining ‘them is merely @ mattes of finding the ing purpose it’s different. Every pos |db‘le motive ‘and. means is ‘marshaled | o gain the end.’ Oldtimé methods are seen to fail when most needed. . So the youthful dreamer puts his wits to work to discover .new methods te gait the poih¢. ‘And -it's surprising what an amount of unrated genius there is waiting to be called forth by a great oceaslon.——Ea;chnnge. Somcwhfl Vilinio ovsl $ALN Bill Nye. Kuowy’ i his iy, 48 2 humorist, owneyl. % wivéh fie want- ed to sell. and’pr tisement in- the. papeyr wiich weaud-like. this: "Owlng to Bi-healthi, 1 will #ell at. my residence, 1o township 1900 range 18 accordlng to the @\emmfl'\t survey, one plnsh rflq)hcrrv cow, 'aged eight e i3 of 'y dnubted courage milk: freq who does not fear d t she would be ‘a-great booh.. She ig very much attached .to. ' her present home with a.stay chain, but: she will be soidito any one.who.will agree to treat her ‘right. . She s one-fourth short-horn and three-fourths: hyena, 1 will also_ tlirow. a double-barre} :shot gun; which goes: with her. Her name is Rose. I would rather sell: her to 8 non-realdent.\” LACTS TONIGHT ONLY 4 ACTS " Shows at 7:30 and 915 FAIJI.KNH( & WARD in “Blow Your Horn” ‘ Prig:'es"zscfi apdvfio'c RITA ROSE Classy ‘Vocalist DOUGLAS FAIRBANKS . in “HEADIN’ SOUTH” Grand THEATRE SRESUSSSIISYICUY lazer.. Haphazard: ize. They were able, even then, to see the beauty of certain qualities and the <ugliness of others, It was Tovely ‘to 8ee them trying to conform to the hab- it in the household, of unfailing | courtesy and unselfishness - and re- straint. They' often failed. They often showed their temper. But they grew 0 be more and more ashamed of thelr failures. . Character cnnnot be bulilt h'om the outside. Coerclon does not. make for gtrength—only for compliance. . That, it’seems to' me, is"the great mistake {I' some parents make,’They. exact obedi- ence when they should instill prinel- ple. Inspire! That is the better word. Then the child .will. have an . inner light to guide him,'a compass to stger him to a certain ‘goal. When' the guiding hand is lifted, so many are left with no: deep convic- tloas—principles to: shape their des- tiny—but impulses. They may be good, | they may be bad, as life plays upon itheir emotions and; desires. A To trust to them for guidance is like going out upon a stormy sea in a tiny craft at the mercy of tossing waves and wind. .—Katrgn Trousdale. in Ohrllthm Her- ald. 3 N EARTH IS GROWING COLDER | Old-Fashioned Arctio WIn‘cr- Seem tq Be More and More Recognized Institutions. How do the old-fashioned people ac-" count for the fact ‘that this second dec- | now | ade of the twentleth century, near its close (the decade, not the cen- tury) has produced more “old-fashion- ed winters” than.any like recorded. pe- ! “The climate is | riod in-the past?: growing mijlder,” some people say. It appears more likely it is growing stead!ly colder.- The oldest inhabitant cannot remember a ;more Vermontish sort of a winter in Boston than the ene which has happily come to an end, remarks ;the Transcript of that city. One would, indeed, rather expect it-to be s0. _Our moribund earth is con- stantly radiating its heat into the shiv- ery spaces between the planets.:. The B, sun is pumping away into regions far : planets, with a positively B1c rediiénsiess of wastetul- ores of heat and energy. We are trying to warm up, the milky. way and .are :only chilllng ourselves in do- ing it 'f‘he process has been going on for a million years and more. ‘Perhaps it 18 begiining to tell on the weather at Boston. ‘Year by year the old-fash- foned winters will be getting more new. fashioned—until’ at. last Guiana and Amazont 11 e sending their’ Arctic expeditions to Massachusetts bay, as we are now sending Mnclmlnn to Baffin’s bay. '#achelor to the Rescue, In a street car the other day'I sat airectly behind & woman who was try- ing desperately to untie a face vell. 1 was fescindted by her persistent but fruitless attempts to untle the. veil witn one hand’ while with the other she clutched: her nose, glasses, which were helplessly entangledin it. I was just wondering why some woman pas- senger did not-offer assistance, when she turned to me and said: “Pardon me, but would you be king enough to see if- you can unfasten. this vell.” After frentic efforts, amid the: sup- | pressed merriment of the passengers 1 came out victor. * But I was a much embarrassed: bachels -Exchange. lllrrlnq 'rhlnn Up. omrude is 4 years of age she faces the ‘world fearlessly, looks it 'squarely in the eye, and if it ‘doesn’t track ' exactly to 'suit her she tells it things. ' ‘Her mamma had . gone away ' the other day and left Ger- trude in the care of her grandma, and, after a clash of wills, Gertrude had been put into a room to remain for a specified length of 'time. “If you stir out of that room before I tell 'you you "‘mAy,” cautioned grandma, ‘severely, “I' am ‘going to spank.you.” Gertrude' stood with ‘arms akimbo fer a 'moment and then retorted in a'tone of. finality: “Well! , When you' spank me you will ind that business is cer- tainly beginning to pick up in this nei;hborhood "—The, Argonaut. 3 MINNESOTA WOOL1S =~ * POURING INTO CHICAGD Minnesota wool growers are pour- ing their olips into Chicago in ac- cordance with plans worked out by the Minesota livestock breeders and wool growers ‘of the state. Forty- two county wool-growers’ associa tions have been formed and reports received: from their agents by F. L. French, executive secretary of™ " the Minnesota Farm Bireau federation say that from 150,000 to. 250,000 pounds of Minnesota woll is already on .its way to 'Chicago and by the middle of August from 400,000 'to 500,000 pounds will be in storage in Chicago or on its way there. ' This plan to cooperate in shipping wool is in line with a general plan developed at a recent meeting of the ‘American Farm Bureau federation in Chicago where 1t was decided to form a Pan- American cooperative marketing or- ganization to handle grain and live stock for the farmers of the United ||+ Sts.tes and Canada. J. R. Huward.l nowered to.appol 17 to work ;:Pt;; n submitted ‘at andther me in| federation fn Junv 4 Lnt Times—17:30, 9-00 g SELZNICK pictures -Olive 'l'homasa_l —ln— “FOOTLIGHTS “AND SHADOWS” by Bradley King Thrilling,” gripping, in-. _ teresting story of a girl’s " adventures after she had been awakened by ‘a- strange man’s entrance into her apartment. Also shdwing 5 JIMMY AUBREY —in— ‘PALS AND PUGS’ A Vitagraph Big “V”. . Special comedy.sfi i REX - TODAY ‘If it’s thrills and ac¢tion you want—just lhfin! WILLIAM FOX presents The Inimitable and Dynamic Daredevil of the Screen ~. “3 Gold Coms A Tale of Love, Stunu and anlnce By H. H. ‘Van Loan Directed by Cliff Smith WILLIAM FOX et fonly [om ]]1/\ 3( ()l 19 COINS ‘FOX SUNSHINE COMEDY in Two Parts . REX UNION ORCHESTRA Matinee 2:30 Coming Evening 7:20 and 9:00 10c and 25¢ — “THE LOST CITY” Coming—ANITA STEWART in' ° “THE YELLOW TYPHOON” Grand. - SUNIAY AND MONDAY Shows at 2:30, 7:30 ‘and 9:00 Blanche Sweet CHAS. MEREDITH nnd HERBERT STANDING “Simple Souls” If you like a romance of youth and dreams; if you like to see gorgeous.gowns, beautxful women : and wondrous . outdoor scenes; then this wonder play will gladden see. -~ Prices 10c ,and 26c¢ your spmt and hghten the day. Come and . -5 LA also showing - FATTY. ARBUCKLE —rf— “THE ROUGH HOUSE” One of the Best Two-Reel Comedles'He Ever Made

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