Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, August 19, 1920, Page 5

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is a visitor in this city today. E; "&.v*- Rose .og.'vy:ginla spent Wed- neyday’ i Bes il gn Dipiagss, s PaulsGory of 'Cass-Lake was a Bemidji visitor on Wednesday. + Miss Frances Reardon of Virginia was a Bemidji visitor on Tuesday. E. BE. Schulke of Tensfrike, was in the city on buisneds Wednesday. ‘, Mre, “T#G. Wells of Thief River | Falls spent the day In this eity today: ¥ Charles F. Anderson:of/ Detroit was, a business caller in this city yester- day. ; . thred Skoogland of ,Northern, was | among the out of town shoppers in the city Wednegdl. % " Hot meat sandwiches with potatoes and gravy every day at the Mark= ham Coffee Shop. 5 1‘018-19 ! Mr. and Mrs. Gust H. Fairbanks of Federal Dam were callers in the city on Wednesday. Miss li‘anny .Hohngren and Miss Marie Duffy of Red Lake were Bemid- _3i visitors yesterday. ° A Will Sandeau and O. W. Lisch of Clearbrook ‘were business: visitors in this city on Wednesday. ‘\ Mrs. Alfred Smith, of Irvine ave- o left Wednesday for Grey Eagle Zlor .an-extended visit with relatives. S' Arthur Warner and Mrs. Minnié < Warner of Puposky, transacted busi- % mess in Bemidji between trains Wed- nesday. % Hot breakfast served at the Coffee i, Shop from 7 a. m. to 11 a. m. daily. ; 2t8-20 " = ! X Mrs. J. H. Fallon returnbd Wednes- *. day from Fargo, where she visited for . the past two weeks with her brother, J. Hetland and other relatives. i Grant Ohm ‘returned Wednesday from a ten day vacation, which he spent with relatives and friends at .., Fergus Falls and Thief River Falls. | Take home a brick of Koor’s ice eream. 7 4-6tt Rex Warner of Puposky, was in * the city yesterday en route to Crooks- ton, where he will have the manage- ment of a farm during.the harvest season. : Mrs. G. O. Riggs left this morning for Aledo, 111, on a month’s visit to friends and relatives. Aledo is Mrs. Rigg’s former home. Misses Capitpla. Stewart and May- belle Brooks retarned the fore part’ of the week from Donola Lodge, Is- land lake, where they spent a week camping. ' A. A. Richardson took the first air- plane photos of Bemidji. Buy them !~ at Rich’s Studio, or at down-town - " -stores. 8-10tf Miss Zada Field, who is spending several months at her summer home at Turtle Lake, was in Bemidji en route to Duluth for a short visit witn relatives and friends. Hot meat sandwiches with potatoes and gravy. every day at the Mark- ham Coffee Shop. 1d8-19 Mrs. J. ‘M. Meimes and daughter, Margaret Leonee of Minneapolis, came to Bemijdji last week and are guests of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. James Browe. They expect to be here about six weeks. % Mr. and Mrs. S. T. Stewart, 1019 Bemidji avenue, have as their guest Mrs. R. L. ‘Altland of Manleys lowa. who arrived in the city Wednesday morning. Mrs. Altland will visit here for séveral weeks. -Spot cash paid for Liberty Bonds. See 'G. B. Hooley at Northern- Gro- " gdery Co., during the day, or at the : Markham hotel evenings. 7-29tt . Mrs. W. Goodman of Walker, was 1n.Bemidji Tuesday looking after her praperty” interests here, en route to points in the:northern part of the ‘state, where she will visit with rela- stifes for.eeveral weeks. . -Anyone who .can Hccomodate achers’ for the coming year with board or_room, also anyone who will take a boy or girl to work for board and'room while attending school, no- . tity ‘Supt. Bagby. 3t8-20 Mr. and Mrs. ‘A.. E. Shirling and _family, who have been making their ™%y ome at Grand -Forks Bay for the seanre, gummer, returned this morning to Kansas City, Mo. Mr. Shirling has -been on the normal school faculty . for the summer school -périod-and -will probably return next year. ‘Miss Nell anson of _Glasgow, Mont., and her \brother, Lflliman of ‘Chicago, were insBemidji for a short time yesterday en route to Minneapo- 1is, after visiting with-their ‘parents, Mrt and Mrs. H. E. Hanson, of Bag- ley} After a visit of a few days in ‘Minneapolis, they will go -to: their v respective homes. Miss Hanson is as- sistant county’ auditor of Valley Cb., ontana. : Drs. Larson & Larson, Mrs. D. W. Meeker of Moorhead' —————————— e e e 2 i P R S EIRL R R v OO 1> Hot meat sandwiches with potatoes and gravy every day at the Mark- ham Coffee Shop. 1d8-19 Mrs. Ed. LaPage of International Falls spent the day if this city yest- erday. Mr. and Mrs. A. T. Gilbertson and Mrs. G. P. Dunne of Remer were among the out of town visitors in the city on Wednesday. \ C. G. Hankey of Kelliher, superin- tendent of the Kelliher schools, ar- rived in the city this morning and is making plans to move his family to that city 'today. “F. Benz of Toppenish, Wash., knqwn as the potato king and at pre- sent employed by the Northern Pa- cific railway company, was a business yisitor here yesterday. o Mrs. J. W..Meimes and daughter, Margaret Leone of Minneapolis, beck and son, James Franklin, will go to ‘Kelliher this evening for a short vjsit with their brother, D. H. Bowe, and family. They will also go on to Norden where they will vis- it another sister, Mrs. J. ' W. McManus and family. “ ’ Today’s register at ®Birchmont Beach hotel includes the following: F. M. Glacer and family, E.'J. Bruce, H. B. Lind, Ollie Lind of Minneapo- lis; Mr. and Mrs. E. R. Roberts, Val- ley City, N. D.; Knute Froysaa and wife, Valley City; B. S. Loney, E. L. Moran of -Superior; - Mrs. John H. Ruettell, Martha Shute, Mrs. William Panovitz and daughter of Grand forks; Mr. and Mrs. F, W. Hubbell of Des Moines; J. M Geist of St. Paul; G. H. Bates and T. Hanson of Duluth. i NO?ICE OF BIDS Sealed bids will be received by the undersigned for the installation of one new 48-inch by 12-foot tubular steam boiler in the Lake Julia Sana- torfum building at Puposky, Minn Bids may be for labor only, or labor and all necessary materials except the boiler. Plans and specifications can be ex- amined in the office of Mr. G. W. Campbell, Northern National Bank Bldg., Room 12, Bemidji, Minn. _ All bhids must be received at Lake Julia Sanatorium, Puposky, Minn., by August 21, 1920. The undersigned reserves the right to reject any or all bids. " Dated Aug. 17, 1920. Signed WM. H. FORTIN, M. D. iSuperintendent, Lake Julia Sana- torium. and Authorized Agent State Board of Control. 4t-8-17-18-19-20 \ ¥OTICE OF BIDS Sealed bids will be receved by the undersigned fQr the excavation and construction of a concrete fuel room q‘tlrout 50x9x7 fédf ‘on the grounds of t e!Lake Julia Sanatorium at Pupos- ky,'Minn. Bids may be for work only or for all work and all necessary ma- terials. ; i Plans and specifications can be ex- amined in the office of Mr. G. .. Campbell, room 12 Northern National Bank Bldg., Bemidji, Minn. All bids must be received: at the Lake Julia sanatorium, Puposky, Minn., by Aug. 21, 1920. The, undersigned reserves the right to reject any or all bids. : Dated Aug 17, 1920. Signed WM. H. FORTIN, M. D. Superintendent Lake Julia Sana- torium and Authorized Agent State Board of Control. 4t8-17-18-19-20 New ldea for Pictures. . It is not often that an entirely new method of producing pictures is dis- covered, and an Oregon artist is at- tracting considerable attention. with a process as pleasing as it is original. Instead of using fluid pigments of any kind, bits of colored cloth, painstaking- 1y cut to particular shape and size of each-detail of the work, are pasted upon ‘the canvas background,: which is stretched over thin board. . Some of the almost infinitesimal particles of 'fabric are shredded out to mere threads to get the desired effect, while the bulkier objects of the scéne are built up in relief, says Popular Mechanics Magazine. A sharp-pointed stick serves as a brush for this curious art. The finished pictures exemplify the remarkable results attained when ‘pa- tlence and the artistic sense are ‘co- ordinated. o : Action Soue ACTION Thrill succeeds thrill and laughter hovers ever mnear to chase away your tears. ‘All the romantic dreams. which cluster around stories filtering out of the Klondike about the heroic struggle for gold, are here focused in one intense, soul- stifring screen drama. ) “THE LAW OF THE YUKON’’ By ROBT. W. SERVICE with an e — e All-Star Cast at the GRAND SUNDAY and MONDAY DAINTY AND SEMI.FORMAL [ ore ... ic a tieon effect ' with round neck and, the underblouse is in kin 10 Bazes, 34 o 44 inches L .st, Price. 30 at the waist and finished with a deep hem. ' 0 . ) N Pictorial Review Blo . No. o.98. Bizes, 34 to 44 inches ‘st, Mrice, 30 cents. Skirt No. 7735. Siz.., 24 to 32 inches walst. Price, 20 cents. ——— WORSE THAN LIGHTED CIGAR Denverite, After Carefuliy igniting It, Absentmindedly Put the Fire- crackeriin His Mouth. As a result of absent-mindedness in his Fourth of July celebrating, Osip Salonski, 32, of West Denver lost sev- eral teeth and is carrying his face in a sling. Osip stood on the ecorner, smoking a cigaret and watching with interest the youngsters shoot off thelr -explosives. Suddenly a desire to be young, real young, once more assailed him, and, stalking up to a near-by booth, he pur- chased a whole fistful of firecrackers, Stepping to the edge of the curb, he cautiously applied the end of his lighted cigaret to the fuse of one of the crackers. A sputter and a volley of little sparks announced that the noise was on the way. Then Osip’s mentali- ty failed to function properly. With a quick movement he slammed his cig- aret into the street and jammed the end of the firecracker into his mouth. A terrific crash, which disengaged three front teeth and bespeckled his face with powder burns, brought Osip to the conclusion that all was-not just as it should be. He made a run for the nearest drug store, and he i emerged a few moments later reeking with the fumes of lodine and his face and peck swathed in bandages, and he looked much like an accident that had gone somewhere to happen and, apparently, ‘had been a sucopss. — Denver Times. REX Theatre Saturday HARRY " CAREY “SQUARE SHOOTER” Ace of the western drama, is at his best in ‘Square Shooters,’” his latest pictures. LEWIS J. SELZNICK - presents ELAINE - HAMMERSTEIN “The Shadow of Rosalie Byrnes” This beautiful star is be- coming more popular ev- ery day. See this feature —and learn why. _ IN ADUDITION Big V Special Comedy “NYMPHS and ' *_ NUISANCES” ‘| this part of the world is truly relished .| dough for native bread, and the bread One of the daintiest . and .pret- | vessel of hot ghee. tiest frocks of the eeason is this | preparation of all meat dishes, and of ' requiring 11, yards 236-inch | many vegetable dishes. Some natives, satin and 3% yarC. polke | particularly the Arabs, boil it with “@otted foulard silk, The overblous® : milk and drink the mixture, “GHEE” MUCH USED IN EAST Concentrated Form of Butter Fat Em- ' ployed in Preparation of Al- mast All Dishes, Ghee is briefly described as clari- fied butter. Cow’s or buffalo’s milk is submitted to a process of churning and bolling which yields a concentrat- ‘ed form of butter fat considered to be entirely free from curd, whey or wa- ter. This product keeps better than ardinary butter, but has a taste not ysually appreciated by Europeans. Al- | though commonly associated with the diet of the British Indian, ghee is used us_ well throughout the Red sea dis- trict by the Arabs, Somalis, British Indians, and other native elements of the population. In a minor way ghee is used medicinally and ceremonially ; but. its principal use is in the prepara- tion of food, and no native meal in unless ghee is generously used in some form or other. It is worked into the ‘is fried in ghee; or if ordinary bread 18 used the pieces broken off to b eaten are first dipped. into a cup or It is used in the P TONIGHT LAST SHOWINGS BRYANT WASHBURN —in— “What Happened To Jones” with Margaret Loomis An orgy of laughter for all who “take it” and all who “leave it alone.” e Paramount Magazine “A Jungle Romance” Holmes Travelogue The Battlefields of ' France Ostrich Telephoning. ‘When the cggs on the ostrich farms in California are on the point of hatch- ing, a curious tapping of the shell may be heard. 'This the keepers call “tele- phoning.” The sound is caused by the chicks inside the eggs endeavoring to break out. Those which canngt easlly emérge are assisted by the mother bird; which will sometjmes break an egg from which the telephon- ing is heard by pecking it carefully, and will then ald the chick to get out. At the Pasadena farm the sight of a boy riding an ostrich as he would a pony. may sometimes be seen. Modern Tanning Mferfor, Commenting on an article by Robert G, Skerrett on.the tanning of leather, the Sclentific American . says: ‘“The modern art of tanning falls short' of| the standards set in days gone by. R used to take two years to convert the modern tanner thinks that he | doing well if he deyotes five' months| to the process., No chemical process has been developed of speeding up the process without detracting from the quality of the product.” Subscribe for The Dally Ploneer REX - TODAY . SPECIAL FOR TWO DAYS Edgar Lewis Productiqns, Inc., presents “OTHER MEN'’S SH | HIEIWIMJN A heart play of two brothers, and how the strort%er, freed from prison, comes back to be his brother’s keeper. A powerful drama of a man battering his way against tremen- ous odds, but who keeps the faith—and wins. A drama that stirs your deepest feel- ings. The drama that is making the town talk. See it. You will recommend it. It X-rays the heart. e Try to Get Into OTHER MEN’S SHOES “THE LOST CITY,” featuring .~ Juanita Hanson .- o - REX UNION ORCHESTRA o s 10c and 25c ’ Will Rogers going hell-bent for leather in a zippy comedy of thg plains, with a love story that will bring a lump in your throat and a smile to your lips at the same time. A real picture of the real west! | Andy and Min “THE GUMPS” ‘green’ ,hide into marketable leather;|’

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