Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, December 8, 1920, Page 3

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| | | | 1= 5. Lyman of Detroit was a Tues- day visitor in this city. Sam Haaland of Ada spent Tues- day m Bemld;l on business. of Koor's ice| 4-6tf A. W. Glive of Bigfork was a busl~* V)Slt()l in Lhe city today. le{e hume a Dbilck cream. / R. E. Seaton of Fergus Falls spent | ‘Tuesday here on business. Fresh, sweet milk and cream, 8old| at Ganter's bakery. 10-6tt! ‘Aloyze TFilla of Laporte was a Be-| midji business visiter yesterday. = | Bdward Anderson of Brainerd| spent the day here on business. Empty flour sacks at Ganter’s bak-| ery. 12-4t1 | Thief River Falls ot in the city J L. Rolland was a Tuesday vi; Mrs. G. W. Merser of Frohn, wa: | a caller on Bemidji friends Tuesday. ! Ludwig Dalos of Thief River Fall was a business visitor here y’esterflny. ..For wood, seasoned tamarack, call F. M. Malzahn. Phone 17-J. 12-3tf E. A. Williams of Long Praicie was a business visior in the city on Tues- |a number of years. | day. Mrs. William Magterson of Nortii- ern, was a business caller in Bemidji Tuesday. $50,000. to loan on farms. The Dean Land Co. Bemidji, Minn. 10-27tt Mrs, E. W. Detween train shopper in the city ‘Tuesday. Mrs. T. V. Thompson of Solway was a between train cailei in the aty on | Monday. Auto livery and taxi, day and night cost. No frills, just shoes, that the’ vathony's {the Rex, Hall of Wilton was a| Mr. and Mrs. A, E. Palmer of Euc- i, ure the guests over this week of | Lrother, Dr. G. M. Palmer and ly. . A ! T 2 | How can we do it? Low selling| Consumers Shoe Co. ad answer. N 1t12-8 Mr. and Mrs. H. P. Botting and Mr. art Mrs, George Scoffield of Cass Lake were Bemidji callers on Mon-| day. Mrs. Alfred Ronneby of Mnueapa- is, was a caller in the city yesterday,| nroute to Bass lake, where she will ! it with relatives. You'll want Christmas cards this vear to send to friends. We have a \fine assortment from which to choose. Beautiful cards, beautiful sentiments mgraved or printed. When you pass the Pioneer Stationerl Store step in; ind makKe your selection. i1-13! fammil and little izhter of Kelliher, returned Tues-! ¥ to their home. The ¢hild sub- rvitted to. o tonsil operation at St hospital. Airs. Clifford [ Wesley -rjorie Daw, Col- .en Moore, Pat 0'Malley, Noah Ber- ¢y, Barney Sheiry. and Kate Price. | See “Dinty’ at! ‘Sunday. 1t12-8 All in one picture! commencing Mrs. F. S. Arnold left this noon for| Spokane, in answer to a telegram | stating that her sister, Mrs. L. fL.} Bailey. was seriously ill'in- a hospital there. Mrs. Bziley is well known here. Don’t wait too long before you ord- | er your Christmas cards. We have, beautiful cards with match. New sentiments and beauti-, ful color - embossing ' and _printing.| Your name engraved in the Sawe| style type as the sentiment. Do it |aow and have/it over with. Order it the Pioneer Stationery Store. | 11-13t1 Mrs. Bert Getchell returned to thel city yesterday morning, after a two| i'nonth’s vizit with her daughter, Mrs. | . A. Sivertson at Gre i v ‘\)r\ « }Barb‘xm Ann, returned with' her mul will spend the winter here. service. Phone No. 1. Enterpri.» Auto Co 1mon12 J. W. Naugle went to Grond Rap-| ids today on a business visit of short duration. Sorhen -of International here yesterday Bdwin L Falls spent the day on business. A. Lundberg of Wilton, w: of Bemid Mrs. between train guest iriends yesterday. Suits dved, 3 dyed, $3.50. Model Dry Cleaner Third street, 11-17 L. B. store returned this morning from ai business trip to the twin cities. Mrs. S was in the_city to Bass lake to vis and [friends. Rex today—A stirring story of the big city underwerld. where crook: snd gunnien value a dollar more than a human life. 1t12-8 Yo don't take any photographs or h Studio unless post cards from they please you. Phone 570-W. 291 10th street. 26t12-15 1 lonk- Just the place you have b Dayid Gill of the Gill Brothers Cla- hng ! ctore left Monday night for nneapolis where he will spend sev- s on business. Rey—Commencing Sunday—Mar- sh 11 Neilan wrote it—and produced it as well. and made it a yell. 1t12-8 - When you next need feed iry tbe Courtney Sced & Feed Co., where prices are right. cery on 3rd street. 9-9¢1 Dr. L. A. Ward, who has beeh at the hospital at Rochester for the past several weeks, is reported to be very! low. ester last week. Spot cash pald for Liberty Bonds See G. B. Hooley at Northern Gro- cery Co.. during the day, or at the | Markham hotel evenings. 7-29t1 Little James Coole, son of Mr. and Mrs. 1ra J. Coole, is reported to be improving today. He has been quite seriously ill from pneumonia and con- fined to St. Anthony’s hospital for several days. today. Pearl White in Moll” by Frank L. author of “The Miracle Man.” hated fiercely, her one thought was io destroy, to plunder, she went too Rex White tar, then the light caime and—but see this remarkable crook play su- preie. 1t12-8 The second of the series of Ma- .ic dancing parties will be given at the Masonic Temple on Thursday eve-; z, December 9, commencing at 9/ o'clock sharp. A cordial invitation i extended to all Masons and their fam- ilies to attend. Drs. Larson & Larson, bled with headaches, | * nervousness or eye dis- orders of any kind, needing glasses or glasses repaired, consult them. Artificial eyes fitted. Wiilson of the Wilson Fair e fer, we are cre, we can sau'e‘ money. Consumers Shoe Co. | 1t12-5 Wesley Barry played it.: At Grinager's ‘Gro- | Mrs, Ward was called to Roch-! “The Packard. | She | 3d12-8. Optometrists. If trou- } | GIFTS TEAT ARE KEPT | £ ny of the things people :'ne| far Christmas are of so little inter-| st and value that they are put away nt of sight before New year's Day | ['"rey become junk in a week, ! 1t ver so with pnuuvvmpha ofi | triends. The protograph is weleomed | Hvim delight and preserved indefinite-| \"h\l thing do you v~lue most, com- a friend or relative you have ! ? TIsn't it a photo-| ing that brings wmoand the ahzent friend closest o rer and reaews the aequainiance { effectaally. You have time to make an appoint-, ment with’us and have the pictures \madf\ and % lmL ier way is there of N or a score nL" ice. you know, can be made, ou. The Hakkerup Studio. A csil Beds Discovered. What is prounounced by scient an one of the most perfect fossil beds i the United States in respect to preser- | vation, has been uncovered in the moun- | tains pear Kemmerer, Wyo. The fos- sils are those of fish bodies and rep- | resent more than a dozen distinct several of which, it is suid, hitherto unknown to the | scientific world. The entire bodies, in several’ cases, are intact, and the bones and tissues, usually obliterated, are clearly definable. Our “Fortunes.” ¢ What we call our fortunes, good or 1ll, ate but the wise dealings and dis- tributions of a wisdom’ higher, and a kindness greater than our own. .1 sup- | i pose thiat their meaning is we should | i learn, by all the uncertainties of our | life, even the smallest, how to he brave and steady and temperate and hopeful, whatever comes, because we | | believe that behind it all there les a | purpose of good, and over it all tlmm | watches a providence of Dblessing. Henry van Dyke. Mesopotamia's Old Glories. Nebuchadnezzar's vast irrigation 1 system, which once watered all Baby- lonia, can still be easily traced for | miles about Bagdad. One giant canal, the Narawan, runs parallel with the Tigris for nearly 300 miles; it is 300 | feet wide, and all about it the takeoff and laterals may still be identified. Herodotus safd he found a “forest of verdure from-end to end” when he vis- ited Mesopotamia.—National ~ Geo- | | graphie Society Bulletin. Proud of Armorial Bearings. The early Dutch settlers of York, who founded important famiiies, I were frequently aristocratic Holland- ers who brought their coats-of-arms with them, as an integral part of their household goods. Such families as the | Van Reasselaers, De Puysters. Beek- mans, Schuylers and Stuyvesants had their arms:beautifully engraved on the | elaborate silver services which were among their proudest possessions. “Cloth” From Bark. In the tropical islands of the Pa- cific there arc several tribes which make use of the bark of a tree as a substitute for fabrics. It is called “tapa” and is obtained by heating the | bark and then treating it to a pasty | preparation. After the boiling proc- \ ess, the fiber shows a regular over-l ‘ lapping arrangement of {he strands | like woven, material, | Frederic C. Howe, acting c¢hairman, and Llollin; having made her home in Bemidji for | EASTERN STARS ELECT age a phonetie substitnte for ideo- | M ! graphic eharacters. Not at all. There | is 2 movement to supplement ideo- | . o - s achiov 1 ranhs i ot oo ow |l Without doubt, the highest achievement pronunciation, the aim being Sl ‘ha =i " d 43 ictures—It is diifer- te as much to standardize pronun- | the history of motion pietures It is diifes 1 nnl'n,, milils will be erected and itively that fifteen ! be spent in the capital is :nd is is reported plans to ]’.u( no one will answer the call ibe a been in And only the peopie shall weep; 40" yours And no one shall work for money, - And no one iAnd only the people shall suffer, i project, v ultimately 0.000,000.000. markel. <ha!l sow ang re shall shi R Juliv =t Shall Caesar We Feed: Today?”? Than ome-Have Jiore r Share. doughnuts or dynamite— — \ e ————— ! [ d:i pickles or dates were H the same to Rosamon- de's pet alligator. New Circuit—Better Shows FRIDAY-DEC. 10th " Matinee—2:30— —Nights—7:30-9:15— —MURRAY & RWIN— “Whistlers From B.rdlund" EUNNY WMARTIN ! “The Novelty Girl” Euployers oD & GRACE McCONNER o0 & o s ® Prom the Ballétin of *' q- fi A fon, Denver. Coior When 4 apitalisn’s heen shaticred. & Avd smashed to the ve S roets “Fun at the Piano” 5 : FOUR HARMONY MAIDS vhen all of the be ave heen “The Saxaphone Four” Madge Kennedy’s Latest Comedy Is a Laugh Riot. From left to ington. - Maurer. presi- right: enator David L Walsh of Mz dent Pennsylvania State Ifederation of Labol Also Showing. FRANKLIN FARNUM and BUCK JONES in the short western drama “THE DESERT RAT” MA@”‘“ 5 KENNEDY THE RADICAL'S AWAKENING plundered And everyone's shavei > shell prase— thoy lated - in the luot a trifle be- e e S e OFFICERS FOR NEW YEAR RO IS LYONS & MORAN %» The Arnual electio ul' efficers ¢! yye Cre with the old rotten sh.-| in the Lmuh,,,;, picture | 'the Eastern Star at th tem “La La Luciile” 1 envelopes to ‘Masonic temple last o\mm'" The Now T wonder who'il give s o || ere———s——emene— el b 2 i Night. Admission Price—5Cc Adapted from the famous are those elected to fill the rollowi i M., S Children WITH THEIR PARENTS offices for the coming year: \ i Saturday Evening Post Story: e "1 sih; | *nd thase Who were slobs shall be Will Be Admitted for 25¢ TRIMMED WITH RED e Wilask: comdwetonoss, Mon. They shall sit in the tsa ders ¢ %” @Wallace lrwflwrcctcuyHUGO BALLIN E. H. Denu; coeiate et x. 1 \lihou 1 have noihing r i . .fl l‘.} 00 {Mrs. A. V. Garlock cfast - U ‘E 0 N'GHT s St TR, i MOOSEHEART LEGION TO MEET THIS EVEVING The Mooscheart Mheir regular meet tonight in Moose !umn hall Junch will be served to the Moosge and the legionaires. After the Ewatre 'WANT LANGUAGE UP TO DATE SDAY and FRIDAY Common Sense Behmd “Literary Revo- | lution” That Is Now Prevail- ing in China. What Is termed the Tterary revolu- | 48 tion in China aims a reform of the | Z Tangunge used in books, magazines, | o8 newspapers and public disenssion. The | 38 coutsider will jump to the conclusion that this means an attempt (o encour- Samuel G@ldwyn and Rex Beach Present RASIL KING'S famous story XTHBOUND ‘ Directed by T.Hayes Hunter ‘ pre sents arl white ent from anything you have ever scen, either on stage or screen. ke it easier to learn to But this movement arouses ne stich inferest and exeitement as the Tit- " revolution, "he latter is an attempt to make the spoken langnage the ndard lan- - for print. Lite Chinese is - from the vernacular as Latin English, perhiaps further, It is s ngo, adorned and frozen. To learn it is fo lenry ier langnage. The reformers LTON, NAOMI CHIL- C E. FRANCIS HAME PMAHLON is from aetuat w » impossihi ke o A ctuated by the pr inpossibil - TUESDAY of makinz edueation v i when in addition to the a3 nies of mastering the ideozrap hitdren in the elementary sehools are compellod 1o zet their edueation in terms of a o Tanznnze, e actuated even more hy 1l f that it was not possible 1o de velop o literature which <hall express the Hfe of today unless the spoken miage, (he language of the peopl used. Apurt from the employ enviching of the valzar fon not possible to develop wener sion of the issues of tod moral, eeonomie.— THEATRE YOU PUMOR SPRE JTALK ABCGUT It Is Mot So Ead, but When They Whisper —Lock Out! 1 disens L sociul v Repblic, Mr. Gratebar’s Troukle Test. Could these he any better proof of | the insubstantial nature of most of our troubles than is found in the fact fhat old troubles are completely hrushed away by new? We may fret and hoth- er and worry over something for days, T and even e awake nights over it if we must; but let some new trouble. real or fmagin come along and 6:11 FRANK L'PACKARD i Author of THEMIRACLE MAN" | colossal super i crook drama with an amazing spiritual twist o &~ 5~ " he story of a who fought ber way backagainst tremendous odds straightway we forzet the old one en- tirely, showing conclusively that the old one v never worth wo over. We've all had that r‘\]n'rn-nu- haven't we? Surely. And the chances are a lamdred to one that this new {rouble that has popped up isn't worth any more serious consid, tion than the old one which it has displaced.— New York Herald. Think Sneeze Portends 111 Luck. Sneezes and saperstition cost m lives annually in India. This was the ement of Tir. Anna Degenring of the Woman's Ame Baptist For- eign Mission society, e ELAINE HANME? TEIN WVHISPERS doctor in India. SNEezZe Means ) = = g § great impending ecalamity to the In- A Beautiful Star in a Brilliant Photopiay. dianmind,” said Doctor Degenring Full of Romance, Action and Intrigue. SOUNDS THE UTTERMOST DEPTHS Whatever happens on the day that With a New Mack Sennett Comedy OF THE HUMAN EMOTIONS one hears & sneeze is sure to turn out ill, and the Indian will enter upon nc undertaking of impertance on such a day. Many of our patients have re- ! fused to have operatipns on which their lives depended on the day that had been arranged for, because they happened to sneeze that morning, or even to hear some one elee sneezet “ 3y Admission, 1¢ Shows start 7:30-9:00 TONId,HT & II||IIIIIIIlllII|HII|HHIIII|IIII|Hlllllllllllllllll!llllHI|||IIl||IiI!IN!llllllmlllllllm"' ZLL COMEDY ra—Special Musical Program Vuatinees, 2:30—10c¢-30¢ Oc, plus war tax, 2c. Children 15¢ IIHHIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIlIHlll!lll"lllll"ll!i!!ilI!I|ilIIIlIIIIIIImIII|IIIlIIIINIIIIINIIIII|"IIIIHHIIIIIIIIIIIHII-. P A~ : ! e g = e + ok 1 N i’_ 5 j l ] ‘ | \ . THE BEMIBJI DAILY PIONEEF. PAGE THREE! A o C G I "l i d | They shall \\'mder at will thru !ho‘ cuvm‘l, Lt‘l.iC,—Wiith thedintten; a mansions, { establishing an iron and steel merican Lommission on irelanc t Where tyrants once throned in the | : the lower mainland the all; Steel, Limited, has been {They shall ring to have dinner at © ¢ with a capitaliza- | seven, 5.000,000. Blast furnaces _k.« I . | | e | { | | e i | I i |

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