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Allen Dqran-irazsacted business in Kelliher ‘S8aturday. ™ - o nrtie River city on I».. Neary of Northome spent Sat- rday-here on business.: : e Ross Noble of Blackd midji visitor on“Sunday. W'¥tusie home’ aivriek -of Koor':v,;e: fiesed | was.a -business ; i} -“€lyde Martin and family, of Tur- n was|tle:River, are the guests of Bemidji : triex\xds for a short time. . Mr..and hirs: G. H. French and son, || +|Lysle, . spent ~Saturday and Sunday. with friends in Pennington. 3 Mrs. Sam Hayth of Northern, was the week end guest of Bemidji friends returning to her home today. ° Pete Newman of Little Falls ' was a Bemidji business visitor on Saturday. - § s - Mrs.' Jack Jenkinson of Becin‘a,ar- W. E. Brickson of Red Lake Falls|rived in the city Saturday and will gpent Satwrday in this city on bugf- \(isi,t with friends for several days.! g ness, * g ‘Seé the ’C’ofi'rt oy ‘Seed & Feed Co., Falls-was a Sunday visitor. in-this seity. - e o : i< Dr. Brickson of Thief River F’a;i)s “was a business callér in Bemidji yes- “terdaye o g ¥ Bimer G. Swanson of Fergus Falls was a visitor here on Saturday and | Sunday. .Lyman H, Naugle of Los Angeles, t:the day visiting his cousin, J. . Naugle. need. At Grinager’s Grocery on 3rd street.. . . ' R ji Saturday en route to Union Center, future-home. s : and % yard net. J. R. Swan of Madison left-this his home after spending the past two weeks visiting here. ' _°W..N. Bowser returned Friday eve-T . ning from a businés trip to the | and visiting with friends. 1o " Twin Cities i 3 qeer i o b : 8. M. Koefod_ and Charles Miller| Price, 36 cents. of Baudette motored to this city yes-’ First Model: - Mrs. L. M. Matteson 1éft this morn- ing for-Little Falls;, ‘where ‘she will i visit for a short time. A i "Mr, and Mrs..J. K. Underhill of ? Oeakis were among the out of town . callers in this city yesterday.-.. of bl .~ D'Arey McGhee lert Friday for I* rora.and Virginia where he will visit i his sisters and other relatives. {court, which opens tomorrow. Falls; spent the week end with his| mother, Mrs. 'Emma Barlow of Ny- |more. He was on h ‘State fair. 2 - Bert Clark retiirned to Park River, PN N. D, today, ‘after spenaing a lewi days with his 7amily here. last evening for) Minneapolis, where|pakota. : they will spend a few days with rel- i 5 i atives and friends. . Mrs. Nels Strand of Leonard, and .. prices are right. At Grinager’s Gro-{their brother. i, cery on-3rd street. 9-9tt Miss Gladys Thompson, of Danola ) drich | Lodge, Northome, left this orning FOORE, dtcan from | for-8t. Paul, after spending the week e A end as guést of Miss CapiT¥la Stew- | S8Y8 that: “dogs, - cats, ‘art,” Miss: Thompson .is an:instr: in a pfivate school in St. Paul. . Spot cash paid for Liberty Bonds. : BoePG. B. Hooley at Northern Gro- Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Bridston re- cery Co., during the.day, or .yat?,h Y ‘“"“gfi‘}“ms"’““f:ay ;ven‘llng from m . Bemid}], where they havé:spent uarkhum h\otel evenings. 9 ] honeymoon, . Mrs. | Hioras | was ‘Miss* Anna’ Pederson before her| marriage, which was an event-of ‘the, C. E. Aldrich and E. J. Al I“yreturned, Saturday - morning Minneapolis where they have visited for.the past two months. -~ ¥ - . Mrs. G. W. qoel;fan returned. friends and. relatives ‘in .the- twin cities a_n“_l at the state fair. | Ruby Pederson with Mr. and . Mrs. I.. & Johnson and family, who have spent Ebin Bowser left last evening for the week’ son, 312 Tenth ayenue;, and “Miss horses “dream. - will take a commercial course. Grand Forks Herald. Mrs. Mike and Children, (15 Cot-| Judge C. W. Stanton, accompanied tonwood street, have returned to the|by his daughter, Mrs. C. R Sanborn, city after spending the summer at|and Mrs. Hallan L. Huffman, of Be- Lake Bemidji.—Grand Forks Herald. | midji, motored to Grand Forks yest- & erday to spend Sunday at the home of his son, H. Mayne Stanton, secre- tary of the Commercial club. Mrs.} of pantomimic vivid as to lead w. T. Nbonan, editor of The Bau- dette Region, George Arnold, J. O. Kulander, F. W. Schmidt and R. M.|Sanborn.is secretary of the Bemidji| barking. Skinner, all of Baudette, were Sunady visitors here. ¢ actions, ceedéd her brother to that position. They will return to Bemidji tonight, Koors and B. Stechman are expected to return tonight from Minneapolis where they have spent the- past ten- days attending the State Fair. . They |4 made the trip by auto.. = Forks Herald. At the last meeting of the Presby- erian Ladies’ Aid, it was decided to increase the pledge to the pastorate s - > fund. To raise the amount the ladies Geéorge ‘A, McDonald motored herelhave asked everyome of the congre- rom Grand Forks on Saturday to|gation to take some article to the pend Sunday with his family, re-|county fair. .The premiums will be turning -to Grand Forks this after-|turned in on this fund. - The manage- noon. In two weeks he will return|ment has been assured by the caretak- to Sccompany his family back to|er that all articles will be looked aft- their home. 2 er. It is hoped many of the ladies - g will respond. Mrs. John Thompson and her sis-|with Mrs. Essler, 419 Minnesota ave- ter, Mrs. Pfaff, of Chippewa Falls,jnue, who will see that-they are taken Wis., who has visited here for a short |to the fair. = time, left Saturday evening for Min- neapolis, where they will visit for a short time before returning to their respective homes. ® Copper-Toed Pair. Seattle ' Post-Intelligencer. to get him to show. you? WANTE™ Clean cotton rags at Pioneer office. | foot? NOTICE Mr. and Mrs. Charles Nangle and . daughter, -~ Claire, returned Friday evening from a motor trip to Win- ona, where they took Miss Dorothy o'clock the first of the week to enter school. 2 dsoia' /They "also visited at the state fair. i Grant Ohm accompanied - them - as chaffeur. Jack Williams, Pres. NOTICE I will pay 10 dollars to party giv- g information leading to recovery of Marsh-Wells bicycle stolen Labor Day from in front of Grand theatre. 4t9-16 N. L. Hakkerup. ANNOUNCEMENT A. E. McIntyre, the weli known piano tuner, of the Mpls. Metropoli- tan Music Co., is here and those wish- ing their pianos tuned leave orders at Huffman & O’Leary. Country and nearby village orders given prompt attention. Work guaranteed. gee do the same. And whi plnying ‘Miss S. P. Botham, a returned mis- sionary from Soudan, Africa, will speak again at the Baptist church tonight at 8 o’clock. Those who heard her last week reported a splendid message and it is urged that others also take advantage of the opportun- ity to hear her tonight. let them show their envy? Mr. and Mrs. J. Bisiar, the Joseph McTaggert family, Mrs. Emma Simon- son and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Cim- enswi, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Patter- son and Mrs. Belding and daughter of Park Rapids, enjoyed a picnic din- r at Diamond Poi:dt yesterday. The|R. A. M. WILL HOLD atter parties motored over from Park SPECIAL MEET Rapids and spent the day. The Bemidji Chapter, NEO%GKE the Kitchen stove to dryf 3; MM wflliho';‘d a special meeting in = e Masonic Temple tonight for the Optometrists. If trou- | purpose of installing the fewly elect- 6led with headaches, [ed officers. All members are urged Drs. Larson & Larson,|to be present by order of the Secre- nervousness or eye dis-|tary and the High Priest. erders of any kind, -m'.l— 4 oz glasses repaired, them. Artificial syes fitied. Olean cotton rags at Ploneer office. | dut 1l .| that.lined the curb along Main street. 'OUTHFUL) : u;gfihe tfic:“red organdy frock to't H - e - lei eatures an exquisite color ~.C. ‘L. Mikkelson - of International labout that -car’of hay or oats youi soheme in pale blue and pink, Blue 1t9-13 | moire ribbon outlines the hem of the nthe;ed tt!:mvlc. Wldfll.'h ribbon being. s _| used for the girdle. The collar {8 of Fay Carter-of. Becida, was in Bemid- | ',;::d ]edgedn with Valeneiennes M‘ ‘Wis.,” wh 1 | lum size requires 41 yards: 3 8., where he expects to make RiS| yop materiat, with- 2 yards ribbon {Plain white pongee silk fashivns morning for Minneapolis en route to, g?:e;‘::: &fi:fi;fit‘:"ge‘:‘? trimmed with lace, which forms the upper part-of- the “skirt, the vest, "] Mrs. N. C. Hanson and nieces Alta | cuffs and collar. Medium: size re- aid-Leona Hanson of Cass’ Lake,! auires 43 .yards 30-inch material, ¢ Friday in the city on business With 2 yards 10-ingch allover lace. Pictorial Review Dress No, 8913, Sizes, 14 to 20 years Second Modeél: Dress No. 8899, Sis- terday to attend the term of district’ es, 16 to 20 years, Price, 85 cents.: A A A A AN AN AN AAAAA AP Arthur Barlow of International | SURE THAT AN'MALS DRE‘“ is return from the | Eminent Authorities Have Gomj on : G Record, Though it Has Been Subject of Dispute. : A Aristotlé’s bistory of animals de- Misses Ella and Hazel Laqua left : 3 ‘€. 18 i\clares that horses, oxen, sheep, goats, S looking after his farm "interests m{ dogs and all, viviparous quadrupeds’ .dream. . Pliny, In his natural history specifies the same animals. Buffon = her-sister, Miss Emrud of Montevideo, ' describes the dreams of animals, Mac- i When you next need feed try the|were in the .city Friday.en route to| nish calls attention to the fact that . Courtney Seed & Feed Co., where Staples, where ‘they will visit with j-horses neigh and rear. in their .sleep, i - and affirms .that cows and sheep, es- pecially at the period of rearing their “‘Parwin, in the “Descent of Man,” horses * and’ prebably; at.the higher -animals, even birds; as’ s stated on--good -authority, |, | have vivid dreams, and this is shown -volce.” > bial, and quotes Seneca and Lucretius, day from a visit of a few days Withiearly 'part of the month. A. Peder-i and furnishes proof ‘from Dr. Lauder Y Lindshy, an eminent authority, Bccehstein holds that the bullfinch dreams. and gives'a case | between tropical plants and certain that Lake Bemidji, motored | - dréuin fook - i from its perch, and 'four great author- itles say that dreaming.becomes so |do-damage. to somnambulism. Guer gives a case of somnambulistic watch dog which prowled in ‘search ). of imaginary strangers-or fowls, and exhibited toward them a whole series including . assocjation of commerce, having suc-| pirds'in dr?::,:e?};::::é, :;n:"ll'ttle - £ as Judge Stanton is to open a term Gordon Smith, Philip Denu, John |of “CC8E SN o O row—Grand | BOOTS NOW AND LONG- AGO _Some’ ‘Difference’ in. the Price of Pumps and the First Real Do you remember your first pair of boots; with ‘the copper toes; bright and shiny, proof that you were a real fellow, ‘asks Charles E, Hunt in the And the red leather tops? And do you recall that: you had not.yet learned to dis- Articles may be left| tinguish the right from the left foot and went back to Shoemaker Condon And didn’t he punch a hole in the red top of the right one, by which you were to know thaf went on the right ‘What happened in the school yard that first morning you appeared with The Bemidji Poultry association| the boots on? Didn’t Kitten Smith ;’gl dmeet ‘“lthe high school bldg., | with full knowledge of his advantage nday evening, Sept. 13, at 8] according to the rules of the game, walk up and deliberately “Put-too” right across the shiny copper toe, a d didn’t your trusted chum Difch Ma- you were “pum, pum, pull-away” and before the last bell rang didn’t every boy in the school yard spit on your boots to break ’em In, as they_called it? Hadn't every feller before you stood for it? And seeing as how you were the proud owner of the only pair of new boots with copper toes in the whole school couldn’t you afford to And have you forgotten the heavy, damp snow and the first day when you went sliding down hill and catch- 2t9-14| ing on bobsleds and got your feet wet? And how the new boots pulled off hard and mother put them under And next morning when you tried to put them on? And how you puled and suffered and the skin seemed to be peeling off your feet in layers? But you get them om, didn't you? Do you remember how every inch of skin shrisked out your sgony Aas Jyou WANTED walked to school and your drawn face _goncealed your paia? Didg't broken:in boots. *:Do°you remember the hitching posts ‘And- the’ big auger holes in them and the wood that had been chewed away hy the horses because thelf owners had been in town trading all day and the horses were tired? That has to do with Vene Hershom, don’t it? And dldn’t Vene -always come to town with bis pants tucked in his boots, and he bat was torn, and he traded and. the store let him have the things without | money. until-his harvest ‘was in? : ~.’And what would Vene's big boots cost him today. if shoes are high be- you recall what you paid for Friend “Wife’s new pumps because the newest heels are” not so high -and- French Teels are golng out? Figuring-on the cost of leather, Vene could not afford “could he? Because If they' cost the same as wife’s pumps on the leather alone, Vene would pay $197.65, plag war tax, wouldn’t he? .Electrical Sterilization. 1zation, Professors Beattie and Lewis of Liverpool university, concluded. that milk can be freed from disease germs without heating above 145 degrees to 147 dégrees Fahrenhelt. ~At this low . temperature, the state of ‘the milk is not altered and ite properties seem to be in no way impdired, while the elec- tric treatment” greatly increases the fime of keeping. The tests were made - with two types: of apparatus, different degrees of current and several qual- itiés of milk. . She Had It All Wrong. _was giving a graphic go!” N ‘o’ Jersey1” E : Lessened Mortality.' . -~ A Baltimore specialist on diphtheria ed that statistics reveal that where | ‘areaded disedses. . Profitable Companionship. {mnl, may live together for their mu- tugl benefit. . Very often one. of the partners gets food for the.combination, This is the arrapgement that subsists specles. of ants which live and feed in . their hollow stems, and in return drive away other insects that would Real Success. ‘“Uncle George, what is success in life?’ asked the small boy. Unele George—It's gettin’ ither folk to thhk as highly o' you as you think o _youraelt.-l.‘ondon Blighty. Subscribe for The Daily Pioneer. 0 REX Theatre TUESDAY & WEDNESDAY KING VIDOR presents “THE JACKKNIFE By Ellis Parker Butler A totally different picture for all children from nine to ninety. A First National At- traction. wore a coat, and his big coarse straw _cause of the high cost of leather? Do . In a-new feport on electrical steril- Trow escape he )lad- ‘Alaimed; “an’ ‘there I was! I was afraid to hold on, and I dare rot: let “Between the horns of a dilemma, as it were,” ventured Miss Dublous, “No,” replied the young. man, “I wasn't between the horns at all; and, ’|'besides, hé wasn’t a dllemma, he was 18 quoted as saying that the conquest of this diséase in its first- stages can || ‘how be formally proclaimed. It 18 stat- formerly ‘four out of every ten- per- sons stricken with diphtheria dled, now only four out of 100 die. - It is only ‘a comparatively few years. ago that dlphtheria was one.of the. most | while the other. receives .protection. There are a thousand- things to re- member and to ssy about:the river, which seems to be: of little use in the half-dozen miles I know best, after it| Two experienced sales-" ‘has made Itself of great consequence ladi by serving to carry perhaps a dozen adies. G "’ or 20 mills, of one kind and another. | . e e 3 Between its dam it has a clvilized and On&:;?enen?ed dry goom 2 subjected look, but, belp .falig,: at. the Landing, .1t -feels Htself, to be.its own ma and serves in no.publie capacity.except to ‘carry 'a 'boat -now and- then 1 think ‘its:chlet ume is its ‘beauty, and that has® hever‘been as widely appre- clated a#it ought tp be—8. 0. Jewett. One e)&pe_"x.'ier;pet-l .thg man : One stock: girl. . s O’Leary-Bowser Co. : Subscribe foi' The Dally Pioneer. .gfinsgrlbe tqr The Daily - Pioneer. ALBERT E. SMITH presents EARLE WILLIAMS SN “When A Man Loves” This star has beén conceded to be the supreme leader of film love makers. He brings to the art a won- derful natural endowment of grace;.and he has per- fected the science of captivation. This picture gives him scope for the fullest display of these talents. It is a feature full of romance and heart thrill. Also the De HAVENS in “VACATION TIME” TONIGHT and; E L K - TOMORROW" " Matinee 3 p. m. Daily Evening Shows Start 7:30 and 9:00 ~ " LOVE AND LAUGHTER Beautiful Charming " WANDA HAWLEY in her second Realart picture with the love for w5 Ed| “Food for ' Ty There’s a combination to promote health and happiness. You'll gasp at Sylvia’s audacity; yow'll laugh at the mis- chief caused by her good intentions and badly directed efforts; and every'minute you'll be in hearty sympathy "Also showing “LOBSTER DRESSING,” and “VOD-A-VILL” in the Movies ToNght= Grand BIG DANCE in Moose Hall WEDNESDAY NIGHT SEPT. 15 Seven-Piece Orchestra Tickets $1.00 Per Couple Unescorted Ladies 25¢ Dancing at 9 p. m. Music by Union Band e e REX To-Day , ‘ A DRAMA OF FLAMING PASSION ALONG THE BORDER LINE “RI0 GRANDE” From the Famous Play by Augustus Thomas When two men fight about a woman—and one is a red-blooded American—and the other a warm- blooded Mexican—and the girl half American and half Mexican. There’s drama! There’s action! There’s romance! There’s a clash of wills! You'll Clutch Your Seat When You See the Wild- Riding Double-Barreled Border Raid! “Rio Grande” Will Thrill You. By All Means See It! Cordedy—FOX SUNSHINE, in 2 parts _ " Rex Union Orchestra Matinee 2:30—10c and 26¢ A Evening 7:20 and 9—15c¢ and 30c e