Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, November 2, 1920, Page 3

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_ THE BEMID) DAILY PIONEER 35" carry on his duyles in a proper man- ner.. "His-salafy in soine instances does not meets the ‘éxpenditures re-|afford to be without an efficient con- quired of him. He is required to re-|sular service because of a false econ- turn to his native land at stated per-|omy in our treatment of these splen- Mrs. Lydia M. Ward, mother of :1{):‘!- gl;:dio;gehigc ter:g;,’ dfila?n‘tz S;‘l;t- AGED BEMIDJI/WOMAN -, .. ., |but she said ;qha.lmxld‘nog nilas Ner i L i ] 1 hance if she could-help-it,-especiblly 5 CASTS FIRST BAI‘I‘O,T after -waliting for so man'y years to aid“her party. = RURR % fods in order to acquaint himself with | did public servants.’ / Dr. A. Ward and Mrs. A. E. Hen- EPORTS 1.0 % = o o the progress and development made i i T drickeon”af this eity, whio makes hor | COMMITTEE-REFORTS LOCKOUT home with the ]ultg(, went to the FROM DEMOCRATIC OFFI! here, and to fortify himself with the at X New Ygrk, Nov. | 2.—Effort was: 4 0 . Afnerican spirit, in order that he may - polls today to cast her first vote for A day: here in business. LEGION AUXILIARY MEETS not become de-Americanized by for-| NATION DEMANDS the national and state condidates. [made to lock:out: the democratic na~ Qe e eign influences. . But the cost of .re-| ~ THOROUGH CHANGE. The. fact that Mrs. Ward is now |tional committee from its offices in ke home.‘a: brick of Koor’s ice| 3 { ON WEDNESDAY NIGHT | turning is greater than the allowance N | eighty-one years of age placed added | the Grand Cenvtal Palace hotel here A & 47511 Owing to the fact that the Republi- |granted him for his trip. We rent our { ‘enthusiasm in her election, She is a | {or the alleged non-payment of rent, according to the seatemept issued by “Fred Hanson of Gowan spent Mon- Chicago, Uct.' ~If one.were re- ! AL J can rally was heldlast” evening; :the |consuldtes, and take any old thing we strong -advocate of the G.:0. P. and o visit- 1§} | meeting of the Auxiliary of the Am- P quired to name a single factor whichlgyig ghe wal going 1 the committée. The report said that ¥red Greon 'of Walker was a g Auxliary G is doing more than any other'to work | for Harding. golng to.cast her vote |y © oot has been paid-in full. It was safd that thé doors were actually clos- ed-against the committss. for fifteen minutes. X - % s n_get, 3 i erican, Legion was pestponed until “‘lgl: not to be w’)m\ered at, there- . 5 Wednesday gvening,_hen it will be |fore, that ‘éur consuls avail them- f%'a meaf at the Boaton Café. | held in the Association rooms at § [selves of the frequent opportunities| ber, he would probably-have to say: |easy matter for Mrs. Ward at her age ; 2t11-3 : o'clock. At this meeting further plans |arising in this era. of commercial ex- | Determination of the public to have ’ Y will.be made for the Armistice Day |pansion, to_enter private service at| & change and to get away from ¥il- 28| celebration and it is urged that all|far higher salaries, which will enable | sonism. = members be: present. - them to -lay. up somédhing for old Reports from all quarters tell of this 0.“ the city yosterday. . toward Republican success in Novem-| Going to the polls to vote was no Bant Feakes of Pine River kas.al Bemiidji visitor on Monday. it us < 2 % y i Vi age—positions which often assure| feeling, at once a desire for a change W sA v b ENTERTAIN AT HALLOWE them of retirement pay. Self-preser-| and a determination to bring it about 3 MUEL GOLDWYN vation is the first dJaw, and it operates| at the polls November 2. . e 5 Pre"nf. 1 Fresh, swiet milk and cream, sold): 5 - At Gunter's bakery. : "10-6tL -PARTY SATURDAY EVENING X 1300 ‘Naomi Meilicke,” Elsie” " Golz and Dora Jordan entertained-at a Hallo- we'en party at the home of the lat- ter on Saturday evening. Pretty on consuls Just as it does on other men. “1t will be one of the tasks of the Republican administration to make the consular service more attractive Hallowe'en decorations were .carifed’|to our young men. Much has been Whether it be from the central west, | the far'west, the east or the south, the reports tell ,of this seeking for a changs. The desire for a change is born of dissatisfaction, dislike and dis- ‘W, J. McCrea of Sauk Rapids was a visitor in the city today. ‘MILESTONES | with Mr. Wilson, The public,;by all accounts, i{s not looking for a man who will go along with Mr. Wilson or the Wilson policles. ‘. Eberhardt of Thiet River Falls : ‘ b the vob ; § : L out in the rooms and in the servin gust felt by the voters toward the Wil- i Y . . was a Bemidji visitor yesterday. Bl e tate B g:;;;ae&y zz;;ulzzp::;lcz:e:n;l:dx eth:; ton administration and the: things It Lewis Stone, Alice Hollister, Gertrude Robinson' L . Amusement consisted in-appropriate ' tic' party duri bag done and left undone.* Mary Alden You'll like the Boston Cofllhl- § ‘games and fortune, telling. These in :?:i,tn ;:;(::r:t gvflll)::n{am. u;/l:é‘h s:?fi Mr. Cox is looked on as a man who 24 ; 2 2t11- attendance were . Jrene Lahr, Mary | remains toibe done to insure perman- | if he were elected would follow the S Welsh, Dorothy Andrews, Ellen Dil-|ont officers well equipped for the track of Mr. Wilson. In fact, he has N ‘Hugo Schmidt of Cass Lake was a ley, Barbara Gibbons, Pearl Camp-[guties imposed on them. declared himself in “complete accord” Al St. Johnin his latest comedy ‘Sl’lip Ahoy, « It y o) bell, Mary Jamieson, Ruth Meilicke, “y Catherine Gilmote, Dorothy Larson,| - ‘Our-diplomacy as expressed In Roselle Rafferty-and Dorothy Bern- hardt. MRS. KOPMAN ENTERTAINS FRIENDS SATURDAY AFTERNOON -~ Mrs. E. B. Kopman entertained 1 To travel something more than 115, :z.le :}mg‘ :i):erhet:l‘;l:)fin,m2 lssatg‘:::l); ‘ompletg, eleotion returns will be| 164 miles in 13 years was the aim of |street. The afternoon was spent in rbctlved and posted at the M“Ekh‘m ‘Arthur Thibaudeau, called the world’s| mysic and conversation, after which ) Hotel beginning 4t.7 o'clock. ' 1t11-2 | greatest globe trotter, when bhe left|a delightful lunch was served, Those| 1f your nostrils are clogged and > \ Paris in 1912, He is walking. around | present were Mesdames Smait, Abel, your{ head is stuffed and you can’t ‘Mrs. Sam. Hayth and' Mrs. Charles| the world for a prize of $100,000 put|Guy, Simenson, Dahl, Marquis, Y.|proadhe freely because of a cold or Mobonald’of Northern, were-between | up- by the Revel Athletic assoclation. | Youngberg, Batchelder, Arnold, | oqparrh, . just get & small bottle of | lightning had cut two wide swaths, train callers here yesterday. ., “To dat€‘he has’covered 05164 miles|Lane, Krantz, Crothers, DeLeull, | pysg Cream Balm at any drug store. | thout 250 sheep in each. Between P r / on foot, 85,000 miles on water, and g“fih' RalghéhCehen, Gg]d;;“" Misses| Apnly a little of this fragrant, anti- | these swaths and on either side, the TS, OF. HAX NOW- at Courtney| has. 25,000 miles. to.go by anm 1, ] Colen an eney and Mrs. Gordon | o tic cream into your nostrils and|aalmals were not touched. Bémidjl business visitor yesterday. ELKO-ToNigh REX To-Day and Wed. | “The Boomerang” with Henry B. Walthall our foreign policies has a vital effect . i$80,000 to loan op farms. The Dean 'lfll‘ld Co., Bemidji, lqlnn. LAST | TIMES | 1027t Lightning's Deadly Work. A jarring crash of lightning inter- rupted the rest of two herdsmen re- PR~ STOP CATARRH!YOPEN NOSTRILS AND.HEAD — = 4 gl cently as they slept near their flock m ~Ced n" Nostrily of 1,250 sheep on the range above the Ve %, "H.',,"’o"“! American Fork canyon, in north cen- tral Gtah. A hurrled walk of some 200 feet brought them to their charges, says Popular Mechanics Magazine, Striking the close-gathered flock, the *Mrs. 3.°B.' Minnick was the week | end guest: of the:B. A. Grier family|’ at Gull lake. and- Sepd: Company. Phonel.1925, of International, Fally. ~ |1et it penetrate through every air RN X 202080 : : l;:aul;;aga t;t yo;r h:ad, st;lnthing and Inside the Lines. 7 PR, Al ) ealing the inflamed, swollen mucous As we were driving through the city William Huttermeier and family| STOKER NO LONGER NEEDED BRl'l'lSll CONSUIS ARE membrane and yop get instant relief | e l:vm-e forced to come suddenly to a of Kent were among the out of town visitors in Bemidji on Monday. =T : Use of Ol Instead of Coal Has Ren- dered Picturesque Character on -Shipboard Unnecessary. more hawking, snuffling, blowing; no \ dryn . it were the most uninhabited place on mora headache, ess or struggling earth, l-sounded my horn just as for breath. Ely’s Cream Balm is just Fact That U. S. Does Not Pay what sufferers from head colds and “E‘ Maltrud ‘lnfl’ Clarence Olson of Bédida, were in Bemidji Monday en rdute to Erskine-for a short visit. RETIRED ON ALLOWANCE Ah! How good it feels. Your nos- | pit, Two old ladles were whjking' g trils are open, your head is clear, no| ;555 the buslest thoroughfare,as I{J they got In front of the car. Oue of them stopped dead still and, giving me a very defiant look, sald: “You.don't dare run over me. \Why, we are in- side the lines"—Chieago Tribuhe REX SUNDAY CHARLES RAY “The, Passing of the Fiery Fur- Retirement Causes Many |catarrh need. It's a delight. nace” might some day appear as the title of a baok telling of modern meth- to Enter Business ods of traveling by sea, with emphasis _ : L on the bunkbring of ships with l;xel Washington, Nov, 1.—The British AT AN END—tze compla:}rllt: ofl instead of coal, ‘thus eliminating|aonsylar service is_compared _ with an vea nyesls:(es 18 the stoker who, day and nfght, ShOv-f.oyr town, by the Republican Public- mkv 6 woman's lite a Imis- eled that coal into the ever-yawningligy agsocfatfon thru its President, ery. They're Dbenefited depths of flame, ‘Doubtless those trav: | Hon. Jonathan Bourne, Jr., as fol- by Dr. Pierce’s Favorite ‘Complete election returns will be| elers who used to feel sorry for the|lows: ; : Prescription. For the de- refbived and: posted at the Markham | stoker’s plight will Join in the pleas-| ‘There are 108 consular officers on ningemexits, disorders, <Our mext president will be a Moose; as both Cox_and Harding be- 101ig to this order. . 4t11-2 _“Mrs. M. Wolt arived on Friday frém Fountain City, Wis,, for a visit with her neice; Mrs. 'W. Z. Robinson. Haltél beginning at 7.0'clock. - 1t11-2| wres of the trip with greater equanimi- | the Brinshdretired lint,l of whclulm 68 seculiar to 4 on the oll-burning boats. One of | Were retired for ill-health as the re- i % {es Mevis Phillipp1 arrived in the _:,’.. ‘most ,m,esnnggo, rocent sights | Sult of forelgn service at tropical and the sex, ghis is the proved || As Hosiah Howe, the rural . 3 tq spend several days Oriental posts, and 40 were retired remedy. . N Monday P! in the kaleidoscopic harbor of New n account of age. The average re- Towa 1 *itimaee medi- Miss Phillippi teaches at Ne-| yori was the bunkering with fuel ofl : g \ of the Cunard liner Aquitania ‘directly tire-on-account of age. The average cine for wenan, carefully e 2 retirement of the invalid officers was . f " ) 3 ead- try. th from-an;oil" tanker:: In ‘about twenty |59 yesirs-and four- monthsy their. ava !fiapfed to her delicate yprganiza- wrg:fl n;-:.df e r:m-: “hours 45,000 barrels ot ofi was stored. | arage service at retirement being 26| tion. It regulates and promotes ‘At Grinsger's Gro- by means of an 8%-inch flexible metal | years and nine months. The salaries| the proper functions, builds up 9-geg | hose, the services of but tbree men |paid these 68 officers at the time of| and invigorates the entire sys- | being required. Had all: four connec- | their rfitirement aggregat;ad- $328,000 tem, and restores- health. William Kieler, Mrs. E. Hin-| tions been used, the bunkering could | annually, or an average for each of- Are you weak, nervous and ail-¢ A g p i by | ficer 0£°§4,820. Their yearly allow-| . ! J ) Ad John Paul of Wilton, ntot have been completed jn six hours:by y ing? Then send 10c{or trial pack- b4 seven , thi: éludi; roc- | 31Ce by way of retirement pay ag- A to_this city Monday and-spent| seven men, this Including both proc- |2 ... £176,000, or an average per| age of Prescription Tablets to Dr. rube with Wall S%eet wisdom in, “\ “PEACEFUL VALLEY” “with friends. esses of discharging and receiving. 3 ¥ Rt pesssidor iatnmlig gl i offer of $2.800 @t ags of th Picree’s Invalids’ Hotel, Buffalo. NATIONA, X “The av e retirement age of el 1 3 PICTURES af Ongstad. returned to Bemidjl| saving of time, labor and expense, |'yo piaced on the retired list on ac- Consultation by letter free. count of age was 62 and eight months; their average service was 30 years and one month:. The sal- aries paid them before rdtirement ag- gregated $183,000, or an average for each officer of $4,675. Their yearly allowance by way of retirement pay aggregates $102,000, or an average - per officer of $2,650. ” 5 “Great Britain has a consular ser- b vice of which its members are justly| If you,are troubled with pains or P 'at their home, 1218 Bemidji proud, and glad they are to remain| aches; feel tired; have headache, Beautiful maney prizes a number of French aero- |in it, foster its esprit de corps, and indigestion, insomnia; painful pass- DOROTHY nué, this' morning. Mother and i are busy with the |be ever on the alert to improve it. . p I d2e; doing very nicely. ::::t::lct;?: :: e::,.“::lry flys‘ngv heav- | The average pay of British consuls is age ““me! you will find relief in PHILLIPS ¢ -also maintain a, first class re-|jer.than-air machines, The largest of |about,_equal in point of salaries to fig and alteration department in} ghese 15 a helicopter, characterized by out own, but in addition to their sal- GoLDmAL fiegction with our cleaning and. per Y a substan- aries the British consuls have cer- - ity ‘unusually large size and subs tain justifiable allowances which en- : b Heart of Humanity Ij%‘-;v‘l::;n‘lid . CI;;?;;:i tial construction, says Popular Me- |10 them to maintain a position be- 2 4 i - chanics Magazine, -The wings resem- | fitting the status they occupy. Great in ‘George ‘Row arrived in the city ble in plain the leaves of a four-leaf | Britain owne her own consulates. “D'E s T l NY,, \ fi"fliflx trom Minneapolis to| clover, and are carrled on metal tubes | “The United States pays its con-{ The world's standard remedy for kidney, . m’! after D’:d"':lfi?:hl’!:;;’:;k since the coal bunkering of an ocean i ness at Detroit, sy - | liner usually. requires the services of et ,":“’ relin';ves at Springfeld, Il.| many men for several days. It is also Sther e :‘l;!'gresting to note that the liner’s & it run with oil as a fuel resulted Liberty Bonds. t 2'\';,.‘}:{:, ‘:: N’n:th:rn Gro- in. the consumption of approximately during the day, or at the| 8:900 tons, as against the-usual 5840 hotel evenings. 7-29tt :On! of coal.—Christian Sclence Moni- or. New Aircraft Rises Vertically. Stimulated by recent offers of large Scene from Remember Sol Smith Rus- g : 5 “THE_RBOOMERANG" fi H sell’s dear-old play? This is it in Films, FEATURING r. dnd Mrs. M. A. Greenblat are arents of a fine boy which ar- LOVE—the Eternal God, solves the great problem of Severed hearts, Wall Street and the empty dinner pail. Has the babe born in poverty equal rights with the lap dog of the millionaire ? ant star of “After all that the world has suffered on the battlefields of Europe, is it still true in our country that ‘Might Makes Right’' 2" . d: the day here with his family | which radiate from a central upright. |sular service nothing on retirement.|jver, bladder and uric achd troubles and . f to cast his vote D e ot of | his pFight 18’ motnted on the mid- |A man who has served thig. Eovern-| National Remedy of Holland since 1696. ye:s:f;cff}l.lo ul:htlo;‘z zz“m-szo:fi: B i v - or B of o e Tobgn an T | S 88,0 (1 26,0, 0 2o T o v, v || B o e At fitti the Shevlin, Carpenter, Clark| volved by &' niné-cslinder radial en- g 3 for the Gold Medal on every bex her great drama thought the same 3 iimber company. Mr. Row was garment when he is no longer fit to}_ and sccept no imitation B bst. Did she, too, lose? merly connected with the Bemid- —— e TOMORROW M:.l:; of the Orookston L{xrnlfer G D = = TO-NIGHT .. GRAND ONLY, 8 P. M. SIX—ARTISTS—SIX ’ BEL CANTO QUINTETTE IDA HAGEN PITMAN TWO HOURS OF THE FINEST with Piano Accompanist MUSIC, SONG, SOLOS, ....Violoncellist " WILLIAM FOX presents “BRIDE 13” Rex Union. Orchestra Matinee 2:30—10c and. 26c | Evenings 7:20 and 9:00—10c and 30c suits Taadies’ mlnml 5;n;?me:;s s = : % 2 sponged and pressed; 75 cents. Equal : ) g @ REX Thurs. and Fri. *.:Miss Ursula Grest arrived Satur- {dpy evening from Fergus Falls, for a shOrt visit with her sister, Mrs. W. 7. Robinson, ~ She will accompany Yer. parents, Mr. and Mrs . John ‘Grest, to Watrous, Saskatchewan, to- day. Prom there they will go to Cal- ; Sk ) / “stotnta to spend.the winter., Mr. and | d ' - . Grest have been guests of the WPt d “Hobinsons for-the:past week. JOSEPH M. SCHENCK presents . ¥ ' ‘Good References’ 921 Minnesota_avenue. It’s peppery and it’s nice—full of real e e N Bhasnon 8 good fun, many stay to see it twice, better L AVANTE™ Glean cotton rags at Ploneer office. ,MEETS WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON e Liadies Aid of the Methodist Dramatic Sopran EDNA LEE ... atid Mrs. George Walker. ] %maml'fif:rer' get here on the run. :::: 3:::‘3: P . INSTRUMENTAL DUETS, . ' - e HAEL BRYNGLESON ... \TRIOS, ETC. at the ELKO WED. and THURS. PRICES—50¢c, 75c and $1.00—including the war tax Saturday, “TARZAN OF THE APES.” “Romance of Tarzan,” the sequel, will follow a little later. ——————————————————————————————————— ———————————————————————————————————— will not be coming fast-before 10 o’clock. Let N. B. ELECTION RETURNS the Del Canto Quintette with their exquisite musical program entertain yo ufrom 8 P. M. to 10 P. M.—TONIGHT ONLY.

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