Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, September 11, 1920, Page 5

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SATURDAY EVENING, S " Mrs.'S. Hare of Stephen was a c1ll- o er ln‘ this. city today. A 4 Mrs. P. Morgan pf Déér _.ver was a Friday shopper hére. S Friday visitor in this city. Take home 3§ ream. ra ki eick. of Kooy s:;lce. ) o 4-Br " Mrs. I Rulifson of Blackduck wals a Friday -visitor in this city. i i M Ii!&b;;bck of Anosa is a busi- ness visitor in the city today.’ TN Mrs. D. L. Stanton 'is visiting in Grand Forks for a short time. = _— E. H. Scott of Grand Rapius spent Friday in Bemidji on business. C. Bergebakken -of Fosston was a business caller in Bemidji yesterday " Mr. and Mrs. ‘A. D. Stephens of Crookston were Friday visitors here, Jogephh Tagley of Mentor -was a business visitor in the city yesterday. { Mrs.. Vern \Hinshawbt Wilton, was’ /4 a nout of towp ghopper here Friday. " Chickén a la King at the Markham Coffee Shop at six o’clock tonllg‘)ll;.u HE: : & L i *. Mrs. Andrew Ness of Rosby, vfiiils pib ._&pong-the out of town shoppers in Tyl _aie city Friday. | r calling on Bemid$f Markham onight. 14911 Lsis8 ‘Myrtle Fel stadt of Red Lake Falls were callers in this city yest_epflpy Fx! - Mrs. A: Christenson of Wiltén, was ong.the out of town ‘business visit- org in Bemidjl yesterday. - i éhl,cign ala King at the Markham T“CoMée Shop “at six o’clock tonight. T e T N 1lay-11 Misg: Gladys - Thompson -of North- ‘ome, is spending: the week end with ‘.'_mss,capltdla Stewart. - ¥~ ' \M¥s. Maude Briggs. ana family of | were.among.the. out:of town - Gemmeéll. we " visil e “yesterday. - - nd . Mrs. ' George. Becker of 3 t . Valley, ~ motored. ,to Bemidji iday and trangacted business. - “Mrs. J. W. Naugle, returned,last gvening from a'visit of three weeks ‘at .Racine, ,Wis., and -Chicago. ~ . Chickeh'&¥a King at’ the Markham Coffee Shop at six o’clock’ tonight. ° , d 1d9-11 C. A. Nachbar and H. D.. Sullivan of Crookston were-among the busi- ness callers in. Bemidji yestexjda_y. Mr. and Mrs. Willlam R."Léw of Crookston were among tae out of town visitors in this city on Friday. Rev. L. P. Warford will return this evening from Minneapalis, where he has been visiting for the past ten|] ; days. ; Mrs. C. B. Masters returned yester- day. from a .visit of six weeks -at Brandt, 8.D., and at JLadysmith, Wis. p . ‘- Mrs. H. W. Bolger, 1115 Bemidji avenpue, entertained at two' tables of - Bridge at her home yesterday after- noon. i When you-next need feed try the Courtney Seed & Feed Co., where prices are right. At Grinager’s Gro- cery on 3rd street. 9-9tf Miss ‘Amanda Lindgren of Little Falls, will arrive this morning to : Esther Ch, 2pmaD, £ Spot ‘¢ash: paid for Liberty Bonds.. . Seé’ G. B. Hooley at Northern Gro- cery Co., during the day, or at-the Markham hotel evenings. _ 7-29tf . Miss Ruby Leet returned on Friday . to her home, 621 Bemidji avenue, aft- er spending the past-two weeks with relatives and friends in Minneapolis and other points.” Mrs. James Mienes and daughter, Margaret Leone, returned to their home in Minneapolis this morning. They have spent the past-three weeks with relatives and friends here.- ~ | The A. N. Gould family have sold Rex Sunday—She was half Mexican their residence, 1317 Beltrami ave- - nue, to H. R. Jones of East Bemidji, and will leave soon for Minneapolis to make their home. and half American. In her veins flowed that strange blood strain of the border. A mixture of fire and ice.] ‘Which blood ruled her heart? Her mind? Its love story will haunt you. The border raid will thrill you! TIts heauty will exalt you! A drama that " mirrors the soul of that river of - blood and romance, “Rio Grande.” 1t9-11 ./ Olean cotton rags at Ploneer office. Optometrists. If trou- SOCIAL AND PE for. a visit w’ , . Miss Jessie Scott of Beltrami was ai ; o Whlliam ‘:McCuaig be the over-Sunday guest'ol Miss | - A M BemiditC Givies and - Commef RSONAL John W. B expected to ¢ &) _,p_ldo,_has been visit- A ji for the past alf’ weeks, returned to m’gi iflex'_a,yez;t.eu'lay.—(}roukston ‘_Re)'{' suix.day—Edwin 'Carewe Te- sents his first all-star production ‘PRio Grarnde,” A romance of the border by .\ugu__stils Thomaq.‘ In seyen parts, S S -1t9-11 ‘Miss Mildved ' Olson. invited a few of her-girl friends to six o’clock din- ner last evening in honor = of her birth anniversary. All enjoyed Miss Olson’s hospitality. - Mrs. E. D. Boyce, who former] slded in Park ‘Rapids, was a gue:tr; the H. A. Conner home a short time, returning Friday evening to her'home ;tlBem_idj!‘ -Hubbard County : Jour- Mlgs’AIlce- ‘Witting left yesterday morning for ‘Minneapolis to attend the state fair for a-short time before going-on to Menominee, Wis., where she will attend Stout Institute for the coming year, 5 Rev. .T. B. Nordale, pastor .o SwedishLutheran churl;h. is s;ex?:: iqg_ a short time in Minneapolis, St.. Pan} -and other points on business:‘ ‘He “expects to return here the fore part of the week. > 5w A calle Caggon, Minn., on Thufsday eve‘}m:; by ‘the serious:illness ®f his' mother Mrs... Donald - MeCuaig, " who resides With her daughter, Mrs. Andrew’ An- derson, at that place. < Mr. and. Mrs. William Pellov; and Miss ‘Alice Fellows, Mr. and s.x‘#sd. Ed. Alger, all of Tenstrike, and Mrs’ - |Topping of Baudette, who is visiting With. friends and relatives - at Ten- strike, motored to Bemidji yesterd:y fand. spent the day calling on friends. 4 . WANTE™ -~ Clean cotton rags.at Pioneer office. NOTICE The Bemidji Poultry assdciation will' ' meet at the high school bldg., i ! 1 - e R THE BE s 8960\ 8%2 - PIQUANT AND GRA As charming a frock as fancy cad conceive is this design in white and green foulard. The flounces on the skirt are edged with bias folds of white silk, piped along both edges with green. The waist fastens at the left side and is trimmed with a col- lar which carries out the scheme of the trimming bands on the skirt. Medium size requires 5 yards 36-inoch ' foulard and % yard plain white eilk, with %4 yard green silk, i Pictorial Review Blouee No. 8960. Sizes, 34 to 48 inches bust, Price, 30 " cents. ~ Skirt ‘No. 8962, Sizes, 24 to 34 inches waist,’ Price, 30 cents. GLORIOUS IMAGE OF BUDDHA by Devotees With Almost = — Insane Devotion. standing on a golden lotus flower with- in a sacred temple in “The Lama City,” reserved for residences of Mon- golian priests, . is worshiped with, all the insane devotion possible by _the. Mongolians. The great figure is heav- ily gilded; Incrusted with preclous stones, and draped with silken clotks. When. the temple fs.apened to. the faithful of the city of Urga a priest Monday evening, Sept: 13, at 8 '9"clock. - 2d9-13 Jack Willlams, Pres. PLAN ‘FOR DISTRICT " . CONVENTION HERE The Degree of Honor Lodge held:d special meeting at the home of Mrs. | M. A. Downs, 413 Irvine avenue,;on Thursday evening: to make arrange- ménts. for the:district' convention' to. “|besheld: here October 4 .Dainty re- freshments were served-at the closé gf the business hour. g INFORMAL ENTERTAINMENT HELD FOR MISS ELLA LAQUA ‘Mrs. I. B. Olson_-entertained in- formally at her home, Ninth street and Park avenue, yesterday afternoon in compliment to Miss Ella.Laqua, a ‘bride of this-month:. The guests were Miss Laqua, heér mother, Mrs. O. J. Laqua, her aunt, Mrs. Larson of Chi- cagoy and Mrs. N. L. Hakkerup. Miss Laqua was presented with a beauti- ful dish. a0 EPWORTH - LEAGUE ' HOST “T0°NORMAL STUDENTS . The Methodist Epworth League opened the church parlors last even- ing for a social evening and “‘feed,” to welcome about thirty normal school students, who. are affiliated with that church, into their circles. A crO.TWd_ of over fifty young people| mention of bows in the Statute book with Rev. and Mrs. Lambert, spent a | occurred in the latter part of the very pleasant evening. Light re- freshments were gerved at the close of the evening. COMP(NY K .T0-SIGN: _All members, of cq ordered ‘to report at: tifs‘rooms ‘of '‘the Jommefce associ- ation on Monday . evening, September:| 13, at'7:30 o'clock for the -purpose of signing the payrgll. - - ..: According .to.the notices sent:-out,| & plaything. no-excuse except sickness or absence from the city can be accepted. Mem- bers must sign the payroll in order to receive their pay, it is annpunced. GLADYS COOL WILL PLAY IN “THE LITTLEST GIRL” An event of -unusual interest in local theatricgls will be the appear- ance of Gladys Mary Cool ‘as “The Littlest Girl” in Richard. Harding Davis’ play of that name at the Grand theatre on Tuesday evening, Septem- ber 14. In adition to her role in the drama she will render one of her popular dancing creations which in itself will be worth the price of admission. The presentation of ‘“The Littlest Girl” and the dancing act by little ‘Miss Cool will be the special features of the Tuesday evening program. ‘Those who will participate in the performance are John M. Culver, San- ford Dodge, George Graham and Miss Cool. This event promises to-be well worth witnessing and will be seen for one evening only. | SPECIAL MOOSE MEETING Special meeting of Moose lodge will be held tomorrow evening at eight o’clock to confer degree on candidate and drill rehearsal. All members are urged to attend. K" are| ¢ have weapons. of this description. -at. the_entrance’gives each person a few drops ‘of holy water from a’filthy Jug, and the people, silent with awe, bathe- their faces with the fluid and prostrite themselves before the statue, whose: hedd is-lost in"the shadows of #hé temple roof.: They kiss its silken drfaperies, soiled by'the lips of thou-. sands) ‘and edchonegathers-a hand- ful - of: ‘sacred’ dirt from the temple - From® “nieh the wall’ huandreds ‘tbe worshiping Mongols. The‘scene ‘of worship 18 described‘by-Roy-€Chapman ‘Aiidréws in Harper’y Magdziné as one “intoxicating 1n 1t§’batbdric splendor.” "The chorus of ‘prayers which Yis¢ and fall in"a ‘meaningless hulf wild chant are broken by-the’ clash of cymbals and the boom of snakeskin drums, and one is fully able to understand the religious fanaticism-of the BEast when | the people are seen at prayer in one of these temples. — ARCHERY HELD IN HONOR 8kill jn' Use of the Bow Was Fostered in Every Way in the Twelfth Century. Archery in Scotland is as old as the| day of William the Lion. The first ‘twelfth century. On skill in use of the’ bow the safety. of Scotland had for ‘80 long rested, that in the reign ‘of ' William the Lion an act was passed making it compulsory’ for every man between the ages of sixteen and sixty In war each bowman carried 16 heavy and eight light. shafts. The principal weapon of offense of those bygone days has long since degenerated into The ‘origin of the Royal Company of Archer$, the king's bodyguard, is somewhat obscure, the first unas- sailable record dating back no - fur- ther than 1676. Some authorities claim the company was formed by James the First™ of -Scotland; who chose a bodyguard for -himself. The organization was permitted “in 1676 to call itself “His Majesty’s Com- pany of Archers,” and ‘the first pa- rade in full -uniform was held on Leith Links on June 11, 1677. Queen Anne in 1704 granted the company a royal charter. Sir Walter Scott was & member of the organization, The Rubber-Tired Goral. Among the strange animals that | came under the observation of Mr, Roy Chapman Andrews, who conduct- ed an expedition into farther China under the auspices of the American Museum of Natural History, was the goral, a mountain goat of extraord- inary ability. & I have seen a goral, says the ex- plorer, run at full speed down the face of a cliff that appeared to be almost perpendicular. The dogs did not ven- ture to follow it. As the animal land- PRI BTN W R PO T R J1, DAILY, PIONEER MANY ABLE TO HEAR COLORS " According to_ [nvestigator, the Gift Is QColor hearing, the: eonstant association of colors with words, letters, musical notes and nois- -es, is inherent, the New Orleans Times- Pleayune says, in one of every eight persons, ; Idol in the “Lama City” Is Worshiped |. An So-ff;ot wooden image of Buddha | of' tiny "Bilddh¥s 'khze fmpassively of’|| ed on a protecting rock, it would bounce off as if made of rubber and |’ SUBSCRIBE FOR THE DAILY PIONEER Subscribe ‘for Thé Dally Piopeer. l leap eight or ten feet to a narrow ledge that did mot seem large enough to support a rabbit. — Youth's Com- panion, - Not Uncommon—Possessed by '." One Person In’ Eight. or . chromaesthesia, Altew years ago a moted physiclan’ told his audience that the day was uot, far distant when sound would be seen L and color heard, and time .bas con- firmed his statement. .- It seems in- credible that a beam of-light can pro- duce sound, yet it has been:accom- plished by throwing a ray of sunlight thrdugh a lens on a_ glass vessel con- staining lampblack, or colered silk or worsted; ‘or any similar substance. A disk having slits or openings cut in it .| 18 made to revolve swiftly in the beam .ot light so as to “cut it'up” into alter- nate flashes of light and shadow. When the ear is placed to the glass vessel the sensitive ear can distinguish strange, falnt sounds as long as the flashing beam falls upon the vessel. " A still more extraordinary effect is ‘produced when the beam of sunlight 18 first made to pass through a prism, 80 a8 to produce what 18 known as the solar spectrum, The disk s turned so0 that the colored light of the rain- A Grand Special In addition to the reg- ular feature picture pro- gram‘at the Grand Tues-" day evening, John M. _Culver assisted by Sanford Dodge, George Graham - and Gladys Mary Cool, in Richard Harding Davis’ dramatic gem, “The Littl- est Girl,” and a new dance creation by Gladys Mary .~ Cool. Every one is going. Dont miss it. A SPECIAL EVENT Ol"l REAL MERIT REX THEATRE Fair Week : Appealing to every 'child : from nine to. ninety King Vidor Offers a totally different play. By the noted Amer- ican humorist, Ellis Parker Butler. “THE JACK-KNIFE MAN” - A homely story of the picturesque Mississippi River Shanty Boat People. “Tie Luck of Geraldine Laird” > starring BESSIE BARRISCALE The Story of a Heart’s Awakening A Kathleen Norris Novel At the ELKO TONIGHT—LAST TIMES i Bow passes through [ and [s dlternate. | ly interrupted and' transmitted by it. Now, if the ear be placed to the glass vessel containing the silk or other ma- terial, it will be noticed that-the col- ored lights of certain parts of the spectrum will make sounds, and those of other parts will not. For example, if the glass vessel.contains red wor- sted and the green light is flashed up- on it, there wiil be comiparatively loud: sounds, and ‘when the red and’ blue pacts. of, the ralnbow. fall’ upon’ the el vessel there will be faint sounds; but | 5 ! other colars’ will produce..no sounds O Leary-Bowser Co. SUBSCRIBE FOR THE __ DAILY PIONEER!. A bare-handed fight with a full- grown and blood- thirsty.lion. Think of it! And it’s only one of the dozens of spine-tingling thrills in this latest and greatest of Tarzan pictures! THRILLING SEQUEL IN SEVEN PARTS TO “TARZAN OF THE APES” Wanted Two experienced sales—.b ladies. : 5 One experienced dry goods# man. b One-experfenced shoe man; One stock girl. 2 Sy, UBSCRIBE FOR THE An Epic of the Jungle—Robbed in Romance, Threaded with Thrills. : Tarzan Returns to His Wild Life in the Jungle. ' Bare-Handed Battles with Savage Beasts of the Jungle. The Most Sensational of All the Famous Tarzan Pictures! At Grips with a Bloodthirsty Lion—a Bare-Handed Fight for the Life of the Girl He Loved! i 'Fifty-six Wild Beasts in Their Native Haunts, Firé at 7" Sea, Romance, Intrigue, Thrills, Thrills, Thrills! § “BRIDE AND GLOOMY” ~ “'With GEO. OVEY COMEDY ‘TO-NIGHT and SUNDAY " Mat. 2:30—10c and 25¢ Nites 7:30-9:00—15c and 30c GRAND THEATRE - o SUKDAY MONDAY TUESDAY in the story within a story “WHEN A MAN LOVES” ‘A feature full of romance and heart thrill- Also the De HAVENS in “VACATION TIME” DAILY PIONEER -

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