Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, September 18, 1920, Page 5

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fen the city on-Friday. o« ¢ 7. R. Lambert of Funkley has been a Bemidjl visitur since Wednesday. #% Mrs. Ralph‘Dickerson:and family | of ' Buena "Vista,: were:fair visitors “Nyesterday. Teyn e A - /gke home’ a ‘Drick.ef. Koor's ice eream. T e 2117 Charles and George -Hegland- "ot martle River, -were businessvisttors in the city Friday.. (s weeks visiting her mother. “Mrs. A. C. Berg of Ten Lakes, s visiting with relatives in the city and vicinity-over the week end. "The: Bastern. Stars. will Hold a” cial at the Masonic hall Tueflda?‘ev ning. Sept 21. ® . é _‘:\j]‘;d?r'ls _ iMrs:D, L, .Stanton returned ithis ., motning from a two. weeks v_igit in -~ Grand, Forks and St. Paul. .. i o -y Vats:"cleansd and reblocked—Swiss ‘' Cleaners. - Phone 65. © o 8t9-20 : Miss Matie H. Ston¢ and Miss B ng of Dassel were among:the. own callers Yegterday. 3 y s Alice Butler-of Buena: Vista, 82 visttor in the city Friday. Miss. " Butler teaches at Buena Vistaj w21 t-breaktast to order frox m.~Lunch-from :11:30 . Misses Alice Dady and Fre ! esom, teacher at Hines, come to Be- ¢ _midji and attended the fair on Fri- day. S Il Fred Clark, who has.bgen employ- ed ‘at Grafton, N. D., for some.dime, . visited here yestérday em routé té-his home at Turtle:- River, o o ‘Hot breakfast to order from 7 to: 11’a. m.~ Lunch'from 11:30 to 1:30 daily. Markham Coffee Shom’1 5 M. and MYs. . Mitchell- have: returned from a three weeks trip by way: of the Great Lakes thru New " York and Canada. ° X . iMrs. J. “W. Crandall, Mrs. 1da Pe-| terson and daughter, were g\xests of Bemidji friends -on 'Friday. They algo attended the fair. ‘Hot breakfast to order.from 7 to. 114> 'm>Lunch from-11:30 to 1:30 daily. Markham_Coffee Shop.1 =, E . t9-18, ‘"The Woman’s Study clyb will hold a Bpecial meeting in their club.rooms at: the library on Monday‘ afternoon at' 2:30 o’clock. {Pastern Star meeting Tuesday eve- ning. Work at - 8 o’clock. Social " hour-at 9:15. ‘A good time assured. . v 5 ~1d9-18 < Mr. and Mrs. Walter Nichols of "+ | Melrose, arrived in the eit ~yester- - day to visit:at the.home of Mrs. Nich: ols’ parents, Mr. and Mrk. 1. E. Ray- mond of Frohn, for two weeks. ' : Qur dyeing department puts new lite in that faded coat or suit. Swiss ii Cleaners. Phone 66. 3t9-20 The Eastern Stars will entertain the Masons at the Masonic ;Temple Tuesday evening, Sept. 21. :149-18 Mr.'and Mrs. A, L. Molander.:and ™\ family left today for -a motor, trip "\ thru the southern part.of the dtate and the Dakotas. They expect to be gone ten days or two weeks. s Spot cash. paid for Liberty Bonds. . See G. B, Hooley at Nofthern Gro- ' eery Co., during the day, or at the Markham hotel evenings. 7-29tt Mr. and Mrs. J. Hamilton of Min- neapolis, motored thru Bemidji yest- erday.en toute to Blackduck, where : they will occupy their summer cot- '1 tage during the duck hunting season. Get busy—plant youi peonies and Iris now. Beltrami ursery and . Greenhouse. Phone 363<J... 2t9-20 L > i,ake, artived in the city yesterday Mrs. F. W. Rhoda; ave. Mrs. Thiel and Mrs. Rhoda are sisters. 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 Corrinne Carlson left yester- ‘day morning for Madison, Wis., where she will enter Wisconsin University for post-graduate work. Miss Carl- gon graduated from Hamline univer- sity in June an dhas spent the sum- < mer months with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. T. Carlson, 504 Minne- sotx avenue, WANTE® Clean cotton rags at Ploneer office. Optometrists. If troum- bled with headaches, Drs. Larson & Larson, e nervousness or eye dis- .. orders -of sany kind, . or glasses repaired, Artificial oyes fitted. . consult them. SATURDAY EVENING, SEPTEMBER 18, 192¢ Mrs. E. A. Gier was a, caller, in “{-tory_:of the wild life. ef our country. Mr. and Mrs. Henry. Thiel of-Cass : to spend the week end’ with Mr. and ° 425 -Minnesota, |- needing glasses | instinct taught them to seek the shel- j coon as possible—Exchange. v Miss Ella Ramstad of Ada was a Bemidji visitor on Friday. . 0. N, Bodding of Ada was a Bemid- ji business visitor yesterday. ' ——— ) H. A. Thower of Liftle Fork spent 1Friday in this.city on business. : John Barrett of St. Cloud.was a 1Bemidji business visitor yesterday. Misses T. Hilstrom and M. Martin’ of Solway were among:the Friday callers in Bemidji. i - Mr. and ‘Mrs. T. E. Rider, 1\[}55' Mrs. M. F. Wilspn has returned |[Marie Rider and Manning Rider of from Duluth, where she spent three Shevlin were among the Friday visit- ors here. F. A. Bartlett and-Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Fortin.of Puposky were visit- lors in the city on Friday, attending the county fair. a ittleson -of ~Bend, Ore., arrived ‘in the city yesterday from TFargo where.he has visitgd. for a‘few: days to visit relatives and friends here. . He: ‘expects .to. remain -until ‘Wednesday. o ! et . WANTED ; ¢ Clean cotton rags at Ploneer office. Milwaukee. -, i 2 4 TO HOLD ALL-DAY - - s SERVICES TOMOREOW Swedish Lutheran churech, w1 gpesk 24at 11 ‘o’clock at the all-day ‘sérvice iat the Swenson Lake school house on unday, September 19. iz " C_ELEBRATES HIS SECOND . BIRTH ADDIVERSARY Master Albert Rhoda celebrated his| ernocn. . A party of eighteen little| guests were invitea to play games for the afterncon- at the Rhoda home, 425 America avenue. - At 5 .o’clock a pretty birthday luncheon was serv ed to -the little fodks. The invited guests, were Jimmy Dalton, Dale, Or- pha and Florence Arnold, John :Mc-| Clelland, Mary and Iris Petrie, Jeah-| 34 ette and Betty Snyder, Victor and; Kermit Johnson, Marion, Robert an Donald Russell, Wilbur and Franci Jonnson, Alex Bagsley - and “Russel Kaliher. e CAMERA INSTEAD. OF the Sport Without the. Useless b “Slaughter. ; “ o] It was a notable event in the hls-,[ when the first big game hunter_hungy ‘ap, hig'rifle-and- 00k to! LiEwends wiih a camers. “°: e i Ever since _the first photographer. went.afield with a sportsman, the cams. era man has been the best exponent | and advertiser of the prowess of the; man with a gun, During the days; of the slow ‘and’ cumbersome: wet pl td ‘and long exposures the alert -and sud- ‘den wild animal was ‘about as <unat- tamable pictorinlly as the canals of Mars. ! The . dry plate opened up great pos- sibilities in the photographing of dend | _game_‘in its haunts. From 1884 on- ward American hunters of big game joyously welcomed the startling ple- fures- made by Laton A. Huffman of; Miles -City, Mont. Mr. Huffman was a true sportsman, a fine shot, and as 8 photographer of hunting scenes hei long stood withovt a- rival, Never will T forget the thrills that I recefved; in his little-old log cabin ‘studio In “Milestown,” when he showed me his stereoscoPe views of “elk and dead grizzles, glory enough for one day”} a, mountain sheep ram on the brink of a precipice, many buffalo-killing pictures, and antelope and deer ga- lore. 1 think that Mr. Huffman—who ! still lives and photogrnphs—en.loys| the distinction of having had more -photographs stolen for -publication without credit than any other camera man on earth; and thst, I know, Is a large order. American sportsmen hailed with joy the birth of the light, ever-ready, uni- versal-focus camera. It was the open- ing of 8 new and delighttul field of. Ohristian endeavor. It, presented l| highway of escape from the llo‘od,oti %amb-!lnuqhter photographs that had eén Sweeping over the continent like a deluge.—“Masterpleces of Wild Ani- mal Photography,” by William T. Hor- naday, in Scribner, - When Nature Conspires. We are told that the “walking and climbing leaves” of Australia were, | for over half;a century, among the best attested of natural wonders. It is related that a party of sailors, wandering inland, sat down to rest under a tree. A gust of wind shook to earth several 'dead and brown leaves. = These, after remaining prone on the ground,to’r a few minutes, pro- ceeded to show signs of life and crawl toward the trunk, which. they ascend-| ed, and attached themselves to their respective twigs. Hence, the sailor-men, who promptly ran away, sald the spot was bewitched. The simple fact turned out to be that the so-called leaves were really Jeaf-shaped insects, having long, pen- dulous legs, which could be folded out of sight, and possessing the chame- leon-like power of varying their color to correspond ‘with that of the foliage they were clinging to. Upon being shaken to the ground, ter of the friendly leaves sagain as second birth anniversary Friday aft-|- RIFLE|ES Big Game Hunters_Get the Thrill of | ’ Dame Fashion is taking enthusips- tically to the idea of using. lace in Here overblouse and panel effects. | THE BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEER - it is-employed on a frock of pale blus organdy. The lace has a.wide mesh which throws the design forward in tucks charming relief. Two deep. trim the.skirt and the.fulness at the walst is held in with gl sash of ribbon. Medium size requires 4% yard% - 36-inch A organd: with 1 Rev. T." B.-Nordale, pastor of;the|-yards 12-inch insea'{ailon.y' b Pictorial Review_ Blouse No. 8982. Sizes, 34 to 48 inches bust. Price, 30 cents, 36 inches walst, Price, 20 cents. Skirt No, 8295. -Sizes, 24 to B e Federal Prisons.” and McNell Island, Wash. . : . Hotel Kitchen Occuples Acré. The kitchen of one of the big ho- tels in New York is an acre in extent. e Federal clvil prisons are-located at: Fort Leavenworth, Kan., Atlanta, Ga,, | ToNight S H. B. WARNER . in 2 The ; story of-a strong man who had to face a suspicious. world and a treacherous father’s past. —_" also showing —— Y —in— | “He Laughs Last” " A 'Vitagraph™ Big “V” Speciql Comedy. ; Adolph Zfiqu: presents Billie Burke "Away Goes lPtr__'u dence” Picture * The “Charm Girl of the Screen’” in a“madcéap ro- mance of love laughs and excitement. i : Also showing "o - - AL. ST. JOHN Comedy = . “CLEANING UP”: ' a Fun Riot. Sun. Matinee ,106-26c, -Stm. Eve. 15¢-50c. Other days usual prices. . - ELKO SUN. MON. TUES. JIMMY AUBREY .| 8.8 Inches; girth of neck, 12.1 inches; i | ::’Pameg Humajn Flgun.‘ Ther¢ f8: much difference of opinion ! thorities on the health of the Amer!- ments constitute -the perfect figure: _Helght, 63.8. inches; breadth of neck, | breadth. of shoulders, 14 inches; woman should measure in height. 5 feet five Inches, or an inch and one- half taller than Professor Sargeant's perfect woman. Should Have Cured Her. an ‘was reading aloud.- the announce: oblivious to the in .her . vicinity. slowly .dled- away, and ter as she read this-aloud, from the screen: “We hate' to put ashes in any- body’s ice cream; but:deliver us from the woman wlo reads the mgving plc- ture titles aloud.” : Puritans Used No Wedding Ring. The Puritans ‘of - the seventeenth century used no ring at the wedding ceremony, as’ they considered it “a pagan symbol and superstitious con- trivance.” - All they required was that the man and woman should Join hands when stating their purpose to live together in wedlock, AL ST. JOHN “Cleaning U p,v ot The mortgage on the old home due,the money miss- ing, and the only gal slip- pin’ fast! But when Al's .They say that a bank check bearing e “signature of Rudyard Kipling tches a bigger price for its au.togruph an for.the amount of money named on the gixb}ept of perfect human meas- o urements, but-according to Professor th Sergeant, one of thie best known au-'{ 4 ypo check, Probably much depends : ‘ on- the size of the check. can ' woman, the following measure- gulshed poet of Boston orce sent a poetic contribution to & well-known periodical. and published and In due courte he re- celved a check for $3 for it. ' Instead of ||.; 121 inches; girth of hips, %.4‘iilcl_ies': y g:w:;&filg?“;,:p‘::;i:le:nle'zzag»,fi: girth of calf, 13.3 inches; girth of up-+! friends, Possibly” Mr. Kipling ma; per arm, 10.1 Inches; girth of thigh, - h h'd tmilar ‘1 rlfy ‘| 21.4 Inches, and of forearm, 9.2 inches, ' u:gvznr:en:';?e;:::&:‘hf?fl::‘:}mé. Many other authoritiey Insist thatia ! nq cost value.of checks tent to him. —Boston- Globe. ol i .This -expression :originated -from' “stand pat,” a poker term used by a . | player to announce his Intention to At 1 moving picture theater & wom: play cards originally dealt him with- .out helping ments that accompanied the piciures,’ cards. annoyance of those' political slang by Mark Hanna, in Suddenly her voice 1902, to indicate the attitude on the the crowd tariff question of leaders of the Re- about her was convulsed with laugh- publican party. o old nag got to caperin’ round that track at the county fair—gosh!! Ye never saw such speed or heard such laffin! ', ‘A-Racing Riot That Would Make a Horse Laugh ELKO SUN. MON. TUES. 'WILLIAM FOX i ]Jresmts Ghe daredevil of the screen in The Feud i By Gharles Kenyon Staged by Edward s Samnt S¢¢appt LKO COMEDY Rex Union Orcheséra Matinee 2:30—10c and 25¢ Nights 7:10-9—16¢ and 25¢ Rudyard’ Kipling’s Autvyrapm - A distin- 4 2 : the heart appealing . - It was promptly accepted s o ~? . Irish drama MAVOURNEEN" —~Written -andrcdirected: by, Charles J. Brabin:! -~ - ™ REX Tussday. Which was the real Kid? Stand-Patter, s, hand by drawing.| The term was first applied es L3 fi _Something new for" a 'bad, man f.,rom'Texas—the "+ close embrace of a mother’s loving arms. :See. this picture of sudden thrills and heart-warming sentiment, JACK PICKFORD . DOUBLE ~-DYED DECEIVEIDIC By O. Henry. Directed by Al. Green .HANK MANN in “The Lost Detective” Matinee 2:30 Nites 7:30 and 9:00 SUNDAY and MONDAY GRAND 7HEATRE - One Night Only TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21 GOODRIGH ~ : flPPEAn/NG“ PERSONALLY IN THE GAY,FARCTE COHED)’ IN NEW YORK. W _AND MISSED. ! Seats on sale at“ Boardman’s Drug Store-—Prices $1.00, $1.50, $2.00. THEDA BARA|

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