Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, November 23, 1920, Page 4

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lf'l- M. Gilstad of Blackduck was ‘Monday yisitor in this city. ake home a brick of Koor's ice ream , Y 4t " ‘Robert Johnson of Erskine was 2 ‘Dupiness visitor jrere on Monday. ‘Cart}Liund of Little Falls was W‘WJ‘ 'yisitor here on Monday. ) sweet milk and cream, sold bdkery. 10-6¢1 2 —_ Arthur Thorsen of Gully was a Be- gnidji husiness visitor on Monday. Turkey Supper Monday, No- 22, 5 to 8 o'clock. 1t11-22 50,000 to loan on farms. The Dean Land Co., Bemidji, Minn. S 3 10-27t1 R. L. Given left last gvening for Minneapolis on business for a few gays. Miss’ Pearl Kverno of Crookstor “was ' a Bemidjf business visitor on Monday. g ] ~ @od coldn’t be everywhere so he fmade ‘mothers—See “Humoresque!”’ i g 2t11-23 ' 'Ted Knutsen and J. S. Lamman of Melntosh were visitors in - Bemidji Yesterday. P /A ¢ar load of New York Baldwin apples, $1.95 per bushel basket. at £ Troppmans. 11-16-t1 ] JA. D. Perry of Northern, was | among the out of town business call- ers here yesterday. - » Suits dyed, $3.50; army overcoats dyed, $3.50. Model Dry Cleaners, 309 Third street. 11-17u Mr, and Mrs. E. J. Tagley of Men- tor were among thé out of town vi. 1 “{tors in this city yesterday. t the Armory Wednesday ovember 24th. Music by 3t11-24 Dance evening, Peterson orchestra. Thanksgiving dinner will be sérv- ‘ed at' 6 p. m. Thursday at the Mark- ham ‘hotel. Make your table reserva- tions early. 2t11-24 C. L. Isted left yesterday for Crook- ston on a short business trip. He ex- pectg to return this evening. It cost 50c'in the twin cities. It is less &ostly in Bemldji. ‘‘Humor- esque.” 2t11-23 iH. 2. Mitchell returned Monday from Minueapolis, where he attended the Republican Editor's banfuet. “Humoresque’’—A tale of joy and tears, for feeling hearts. Elko, Thurs- dai’:.i'gldny and Saturday. 2t11-23 ‘Mrs, B. H. Edwards of ‘Becida, was ‘the /guest of friends in the city yest- erday while transacting busleass‘ i ‘When you mnext need feed try the . Courtney Seed & Feed Co.,” where'| ‘Prices,are right. At Grinager's Gro .eecy on 3rd street. J 9-9%1 0.'A. Davis and Charles C. Hovoy of International Falls were amonz the visitors in the city yesterday. You don’t take any photographs or post cards from Rich Studio unless they please you. Phone 570-W. 29 10th street. 26t12-16 " “Bd Fisher of Wadena, was in the ity yesterday en route to Turtle Riv- er, to spend a few days with friends and to hunt deer. 3 Bpot cash paid for Liberty Bonds G. B. Hooley'at Northern Gro- cery Co.. during the day, or at the Markham hotel evenings. 7-29t1 1 Nothing more appropriate, nothing more acceptable than a beautiful Christmas cards. See the splendid as- sortment at the Ploneer Stationery Btore, We engrave or print them. The price is reasonable. 11-13tf . B, B. Kenfleld left Saturday on a business 'trip to Chicago, Madison. ‘Wis., and the twin cities. He spent Sunday at Madison with his son. Kenineth, who attends the University sof Wisconsin. _“Willlam Foley of Elk River, arriv- ‘ed’in ‘Bemidji Monday to make #r- rangements for moving his family hereé to- reside in the near future. m, Foley's were formerly Bemidji dents. ‘Expert ful repairing and remodel- ing neatly and quickly done. Mrs. ¥, L., Mathers, 146 Mill Park. Phone 831-W. 4t12-1 RER 4 +~Mr. and Mrs. Nels Loitved and daughter, Gladys, left this morning % for ‘Lo Angeles, Cal, to spend the ;% winter. . Eoroute they will visit at ‘ 'S8and Point, Idaho, Spokane, Seattle and at Portland, where they have . another daughter residing. 4 Pon’t wait too long before vou ord- er your Christmas cards. We have ‘Dbeautiful cards with envelopes to match, New sentiments and beauti- ful color embossing and printing. Your name engraved in. the sawme atyle type as the sentiment. Do it mow and have it over with. Order i 3t the Pioneer Stationery Store. A 11-13t¢ Drs. Larson & Larson, Optometrists. If trou- bled with headaches, “ ' mervousness or eye Adis- any. kind, i lass , ‘consult them. .| ness, u_tlons. and give slight differences n 3 Bennle Johnson of Mentor -speut Monday here on bus! 2 Get ‘your fruit cake,{pork cake and minge pies for Thanksgiving 'at the 3weet’ Shop. \ 3d11-24 ‘H, B,'Elling of Thiet River Falls| sperit Monday in/ this city on ‘busi- An April day on the screen—a 'bit of cloud and a lot of sunshine., “Hu- moresque.’; ; 2t11-28 F. G.:Halgren left last evening for Minneapolis, to~attend a term of jeourt. 35 sope X it § and taxi. day nnd nieh! No. 1. Enterprise 1mon12-23 Auto livery service. © Phone Auto Co. Charles Clark of Wadena, wag ¢ 3emidji caller on:Monday, en route ‘0 Turtle River, where he will be the ruest of, his brother, George Clark, vhile deer hunting. Thankegiving dinner will be serv- 2d at 6 p. m. Thursday at the Mark- ham hotel. Make your table reserva- tions early. 4 2t11-24 You'll: want: Christmas cards this vear to send to friends. We'have & Ane assortment from which to choose Beautiful cards, beautiful sentiments mgraved or printed. When you pass ‘he Ploneer Stationerl Store. step fr 'nd make your selection. 11-13'f NOTICE A1l ‘barber shops 1 be closer Thursday, November 25. Open un- til 9 ‘o’'clock Wednesday evenhl:g,2 1t11-28 + ANNOUNCEMENT I have opened up a mill work an¢ yrniture repair shop ‘in the ol¢ Koors creamery, and am now ready to take your order-for furniture built to order and repair all kinds of fur- niture. G. A. Gerke. " 1t11-238 i MADE. HIS POSITION CLEAR . | SO His Supplication Unavailing, ' Central Figurg in Tragedy Finally Takes a Determined Stand. The night. was perfect benqflth the projontory . where * the car had stopped; the lnke lay still under the gloriés~of a full moon. But the occu- pants of the car, a man and a woman. had no eyes for the beauties of the night. The latter was beautiful, per- fectly attired. She was evidently woman fit to grace the “400.” Her hands bore witness ta the fact that she had never known work of any sort. | She and the cares of the world were strangers. The man was differ- ent. He was an ordinary man—in deep thought, his mind apparentlyytor- tured by some great prcblem. Sud- denly he broke’the silence. . “Why, O, why can you not stay any longer,” he pleaded, “at least until after the ball?” “T-have told you once before,” she veplied, “that I can never spend a mo- ment under the same roof with' a man who trled to do such an infamous thing a8 you did.)’- ¥ “I know,” he admitted, “but that wne In a it of passion. ' Couldn’t you forget that and come buck under the old conditions?”, ; / She pondered for a moment. His heart beat wildly In expectation. “I am afrald not, because I tire of the monotony of your home. I long for the city, its gay life and its opportuni- tles. No, I shall never, never come back to you. Please drive me to the depot.” * Not far from the station he drew up under the overhanging branches of an elnl Once more he pleaded with her, but she was adamant. “Ihis is final?” he asked in'a lnst appeal. “Final? | f “Well, then, get out and walk and | be hanged to you and all other cooks,” he stormed. “T'll lower the wages of any one in my house If I want to, or know the reason why.”—Brown Jug. The Butler’s Compligint, “There would be fewer divorces,” sald Gen. Baxter Sweeney at a Knox- ville luncheon, “if discipline were ob- served In marrizge—Iif the rules of po- liteness held there as elsewhere. “A Knoxville butler the other day resigned-his job. “Why are you quitting, Hallibur- ton?' a brother butler asked him. “‘Because they treat one so badly,’ was the snswer. ‘Why, they treat me as one of the family. The mistress calls me an old fool as often as she does her husband.’” Essence Not From Apple. What has been known as ‘“apple oil” or “apple essence,” usually amy! valerate, has been shown by F. B, Power and V. K. Chestnut, of the United States bureau of chemistry, tc have no existence in the apple. The true odorous principle is described chemlically as a mixture of the amyl esters of formic, -acetic and caproje acidy, ‘together with a small amount of the caprylic ester, and a conslder- able proportion of acetaldehyde. There may be also traces of methyl and ethyl alcohols. At ordinary tem- peratuves, the essential oil of apples is a yellowjsh, somewhat viscid liquid, which darkens on keepiug and when slightly cooled hardens into a con- crete mass from ‘the separation of small needle-like crystals of a paraf- fin hydrocarbon. THé parings of the Bén Davis apple yielded 0.0035 per cent of ofl, 'thosg of the more odorons crab apple gave 0.0043 per cent—rep- resenting only 0.0007 and 0.0013 per ceut of the entire fruit. The odorous substances exist . in varying propor * e iy t "egiglature MR. MRS. HOGANSON ARE - SURPRISEDON ANNIVERSARY ' The ‘home of Mr. and Mrs. A. O Hoganczony 916 Minnesota' avenue. »as the scene of a delightful ‘sur- prize Sunday afternoon, when a num- ber™of their friends: called to join shem in celehmunglthelr wedding wnniversary. ; . The afternoon and evening Wwas] ;pent in conversation’ and music and » delicious luncheon, furnished by he gelf-invited guests was served at ix ‘o’clock. Mr, and Mrs. Hoganson were pre- sented . a beautiful gift by - their ‘riends in horor of the occasion. These present were Mesdames anc Vessrs. D. Gainey, A. Rood, E. Jalr, \. Olson, A. Casperson, S. Donaldson, A. Trelechel, P. Winkleeky, W. N Neber, J. Hoganson, Dr. -and Mrys. 3. J. Larson, Mrs. Mayme Zelgl%,' Mrs. S. Schmitt, Miss Moe, and H. “anson, Mrs. Hoganson's father. YILLION TG BE ASKED FOR H@G'B{SEASF St. Paul, Nov. 23. (Special)—Ap ‘repriations: totaling , approximately 11,000,000 will be asked of the nex! to finance. the fight ‘gainst disease 6ta Public Health association. The' entire citizenship of the state |’ vill be ‘mobilized thru thé state as- sociation and affiliated county pub- ‘fc health agsociations td make such in emphatid state-wide demand for his aid that the legislators will real- ‘ze the vital necessity of providing [, this #id and will enact the nececsary || ‘aws. early in the session. “This is further evidence of -how hristmas Seals save lives by fightin~ ‘sease because these public health socintions which will deyote thei -ergies to assisting the people. of || “tnnesota in obtaining these health w3 and funds are maintained thru +e gale of Christmas Sezals,” said Dr L. Scofield, president of the Minne- +a Public Health association. . Unteasing. warfare against tuber ulosis also was emphasized by th- vealth officers of Minnesota at thei~ +eeting in the Lowry building. The ealth officers gave a special vote of noroval to the Chistmas-Seal cam- ~aign. Many of the delegates com- nended results accruing from the ale. Final plans for the sale of Christ- ~as Seals and Health Bonds, the nuivalent of the one penny health tamps, were completed at a confer- ‘nce of {local and county campaign nanagers with Miss Eva K. MoGar- ‘v, state seal sale director. The sale begins December 1. . MACHINE TO WORK WONDERS it Reports Are Trué, Present Methoas of Harvesting Grain Will Soon Be Revdlutionized. Wheat ‘harvesting in the Central West, where planting 1s on a large scale, is on the eve of being revolu- tionized through the advent of a ma- chine that repeated experiments have shown will cut, harvest and thrash trom 40 to 70 acres of standing grain in a day. It dumps cleaned grain into wagons that move along with it. The revolutionary feature of it 18" not elone that it can accomplish so mueh, but that it does it with but one man,on the job. The difference in cost between this machine’s meth- ods and the present scheme, which in- volves henders, binders, thrashing ma- chines, separators, §traw wagons, cquk cars, pitchforks, horses and men, is ealculated at $7 an sere, which is as njuch as many,thousands of acres of wustern Kansas and Nebraska land, sold for a few years ago. Its. inventors claim for it that it will junk half a billion dollars’ worth of harvesting machinery-now in ‘use, and release western grala growers trom reliance upon the nomads who constitute the agmy of harvest hands that moves each summer from Texas te ,the Dakotas.—Christian - Science Monitor. ] Ever Catch a Micropterus? The black bass are of two specles— the small-mouth black bass and the large-moutth black bass, writes Dr. R. W. Shufeldt in the American Forestry Magazine. Both belong to the genus Micropterus, and are readily distin- guished through_the fact that in the last:-named form §he angle of the gape of the,mouth is back of the imaginary vertical line from' the center of the p}:‘pn of. the.eyg upon either side. So | giny are these fish that they are known as the “gamefish of the North,” aml anglers prefer to fish for them above all otlier kinds. On Solid Foundation. Certain world-old principles are the ! basis of every form of 'representntlve government, and each succeeding .era but proves the soyndness of these fundamentals. The clock may strike thirteen, but this is no proof of any- thing other than that it is in need of repair—Exchange. | BUEIGE i 0 | Woull Preserve Walls of Granada. A dispatch to the Madtid newspaper Bl Sol from. Granada, in Andalusla, reports that the anclent walls, which are older ¢han those surrounding the | Alhambra, are being destroyed with dynamite by a contractor in order to obtain stone for the roadways! Al in Minnesota during | he next two years, it was announced | | t the annual meeting of the Minne- |, Amberst, Nov,,sscafin.—An order for 200 farm tragtors:has been placed from a western point: with the Robb Engineering Works. - This order rep- resents a selling value of more than six hundred thousand-dollars, and én- _SamrelCaldwyn - ) v - presemis” i 2 o fart J ,\ i i ROCERS onest Mrich Ad d_ e e aron Dudtidion tives By 1538 & ol o Gaired Smith Directed by Clazence Bagger WED. & THUR. * Grand sures steady work at the tractor plant for months to come. The' plantlis fstill working!on a recent: order for a hundred farm tractors. | Coming to the REX ‘National Prodficti«;ns R presexgtsv “Phe KENTUCKY COLONEL”. By Opie Read . / Featuring . Joseph Dowling, the Miracle Man of thel Screén. “Produced by Na- tional Film Corporation of America. ' Distributed by W. W. Hodkinson Corporation. 527 Fifth avenue, New York City; distributing through Pathe Exchange, . Incorpo- rated. b AT e Rex Today and Wednesday As Virile as the Bracing Air of the Great ' “The GIRL from NOWHERE” with CLEO MADISON The story of a helpless mercy of the lawless in the £rontier of the northwest country. ; » BRIDE 13, Rex Ufiion Orchestra, R. A. Amidon, director Matinee 2:30—10c-25¢ \ ~ ) Noflhwen/ and WILFRED LUCAS girl, memory gbn. at the wilderness of the far flung . “Entomed”’ ' Evenings (10c-300 L © FRANK “Brothers Divided” A Drama of American Homes Of how a driftwood human came up from the depths put a heart into a crab-souled brother. the eyé because it touches the heart—it touches because it tells of the home—virile, of a prison hell—to It wets the heart wholesome, entertaining. JIGGS COMEDY, “Father’s lAme:i_c-'s Greatest Character Actor ! : —IN— : forceful,. st N Cioae\ Shave” GRAND # Advice Is Cheap, So It Is Given Freely to Slck eople .When a watch—a lifeless combination of wheels and screws and springs—gets out of order; a person wouldn’t think of listen- ing to advice from friends that a- screw driver ora mallet or monkey wrench v;vould be just the thing with Which to “fix” it. It would gound foolish. And the watchl:naker ;would be-hunted up—without qugst}on. So'it°is no wonder that men who know amazed at the ease with which people will swallow fearful and un- known ' compounds; wlten ) well—all upon the “advice” of friends. And the human body is a thousand times more delicately adjusted than a watch. It are constantly takes years to learn the of nervessand, muscles and secretions— just what is wrong with them when they do go wrong in sickness. to learn what is right in the . doctor who puts in these years of learning. ! 1t is the doctor’s lea)ning which enables him to write the proper prescription— which tells him the way to help nature resume her many delicate functions. public protest has been sent to the | minister of public orks. : > 10 TONIGHT & LASTTIMES | they don’t feel delicate functions KEENAN , LT L T T T T T It takes years a given case. It's lllllilllllllllIIIIllIIIIIMIIII:IllIIlIIlIlIIlIIIIII’II Bl & . Montreal, Quebec.—With the:rati- fication by. the ‘shareholders 'of . the Direct United States Cable compan’ of the' British government’s offer, to purchasg the company's lines, ':m “all red” empire cable’ becoimes "possible add"the linking up of London with: ‘Australia and New Zea!n\l‘d and the nethermost points of QBnqdn. ¢ sig i MLARY. MILE “EYES OF REALART S MINTER: 712~ THE HEART' PICTURES - .As the bind girl whosé.restored sight brings a train _of intensely/dramatic incidents, MARY MILES MINTER in “EYES 'OF THE HEART” has a role entirely different from. anything, she has ‘ever done. . E LK 0 ' TONIGHT & - B A WEDNESDAY - [“pumonesou” | Wonderful Screen Drama ., . 4 ¥ = ELKO I )Matinées 3:00—10c-25¢ . Nights 7:30-9—Any Seat 35c Tha'nksg“iving AND TWO MORE DAYS NOTE—It cost 50c to see " “Humoresque” in Twin Cities. ljllllIIlIII‘IIlllIlIIIIIIIlllllllIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIII IllIlllll!lllu;lllllllllijl Rex Openirg Thanksgiving Day A n Thanksgiving Day. hree-Day Run “While New York Sleeps” r “ Do you want to see the New York sky-line, the Gay White Way, the Midnight Frolic beauty girls, the world- famous Dolores, the Brooklyn Bridge, the famous New *YorKipolice boat in action, the millionaires” homes, East River? , You'll see them”all at this theatre beginning “While New York Sleeps” will thrill and amaze yoti as no other pictuie has dofie. Don’t fail to come .and bring your friends. % & THE SENSATION OF A,L!FETIME T e T T T T AT I‘IIFIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllIIIIHHIlllllmlllllllllllflllllllllllllll“llllllmlllllll

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