Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, January 24, 1921, Page 3

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

T C..W. Rardin of Brainerd was a Sunday visitor here. A. Tharaldson of Fosston was a| Sundpy visitor here: Fresh, sweet m1lk and mln. sold | at G;nter'l bakery. lo-m F. Hillstrom of Solway spent Sat-| | urday here on business. C..J. Dicks of Nnnhwauk,wal a Be- midjl visitor yesterday. pa Tike home a brick’ of Koor's fce| cream. 4-5tt W. H. Barber of Red Lake was a Sunday visitor in this city. e A. A. Miller of Big Falls was a; Bemidji visitor on Sunday. Empty flour sacks at Gfintn l Dll-‘ ery. e ¢ 1 J. C. Larson of Crookston spent the day in the ‘city yesterday. Oscar Vangen of Nevis spent the; day in' “Bemidji yesterday. FOR ANY KIND of real estate deal, see or write Willits & Olson, the land men. 12-138t¢ J. A.'Armstrong of Orth was a busi- nes visitor here on Saturday. SN L. Latterell of Kelliher was.a busis ness visitor ;here on- Saturday. We have settled the shoe problem of your neighhor, why no! you? Con- sumers Shoe Co. 1t1- 21 rimoldby of International Falls aller,in the cny‘ yesterday wa: Dr. 'W. H. Fortin o! ‘Buposky was a business caller here on Saturday. Western box aj at Troppman’s. 168, $1.95 per bo! Phone 927. 28 l-1v3t! Miss Marie M. Rider was among the out of town calleq in the city on Saturday. Fred Barker of Hch Bekles ‘was a- be- tween train. business callev in the city on Saturday. W Selling ghoes i8 our business. Sav- ing money ‘is your business. Con- sumers Shoe Co. Laura Otterstad of Turtle River, was a between train shopper in Be- midji on Saturday. Mrs. Jessie Grove, teacher at Big Lake, was shopping and caliihg on friends in the city Satirday. mch hck nfne m.knud. ?:0 delxvexy Bemdx" Mfg, c:mmlx ~13 fi Miss Margaret Ose, teacher at Tur-| tle River, was a between train shop- per in Bemidji on Satarday. I Miss Christine Newton, teacher at| Turtle River, called on Bemidji friends between trains Saturday. | pany. i If it’s shoes you are buying, can save you money any time. selling prices are low. Shoe Co. we 1 Our | Consumers -1t1-24] John Steckman of Tenstrike, was' the week end guest of Bemidji [yiends, returning to his home today, Mrs. C. R. Sanborn-left last even- . ing for Minneapolis on business mat- ters connected with the Bemidjl as- sociation. . .For wood, seasonea tamarack, can F. M. Malzahn. Phone 17-3. | 12-3tt; Mrs. Ida Sanden returned to her| home at Hibbing on Saturday, after visiting here for a short time w:th relatives and friends. Miss Anna Swenson, state inspector of rural schools, is in the city andj will ingpect schools with Superinten- | 1 dent J.'C. McGhee this week. When you next need' feed :vy the | Courtney Seed & - Feed Co., where prices are right. At Grinager's Gro- cery on.3rd street. 9-94¢| Jean Stechman of Tenstrike, called | on Bemidji friends Saturday en route| to Middle River, where he will visit | with friends for a short time. ! W, F. Marcum returned Saturflny om_ Crookston, where he attended ! e Northern Minnesota Editorial] meeting on Thursday and’Friday. .| Our shoes are. easy to wear and! our prices are easy on the pocket' book. Consumers Shoe Co. 1t1- 241 Mrs. May Aubem, who has visited | her father, George Cheney at his ‘home on Irvine avenue, for the plstl two,weeks, departed for her home in Hibblng Saturday. Mm»Edgar Shaft, Mrs. R. M. Mor- ris and Mrs. William Brunner, sis-! ters. fi-hw of Mrs. George Hebard, Sr.. ame over from Crookston Sat-| urday to attend the funeral of George, Hebatd, Jr. Two brother trainmen, Mr. $encer and Mr. Gilbert, also al» tenddl the funeral. Mr. Hebard, Sr., is a onductor on the Great Northern| nxlrfid Dn Larson & Larson,! Optometrists. If tro:: bled with headaches,| nervousness or eye dis- onim of lny kind, needing glasses , consu t them. lrt cint oyn i “«- 4 1t1-24] | Stechman, Percy I N'Pete” Vasaly, editor of the Litie] F'ahs ‘Herald, ‘spent--Saturday in the | city as the guest of friends. | Get your masks at Erwig's Nems; Stand. 2t1-25 ‘ Little Miss Vivian Hakkerup is | reported to be recovering nicely from | a seyere attack of pneumontia. Get your masks at Erwig’s News | | Stand. 211-25 | i MA L. Mattson returned Saturday; from ‘Minneapolis,» where he spent i most of the week transacting busi- |nges and atfending ihe Northwest . \l.umbermen’s assopiatiof convention. Costumes for the Masquerade ball gor rent at the Toggery Shop. 2tl Miss Edna Keiser came down from | Turtle River Saturday to visit with | | her njece, Miss ‘Helen- Martin, who | is confined to St. Anthony’s hospitat; Ifollowing an operatign upon her ear. Try the Consumet’s Shoe Co.—ome, pair or a dozen. One-price to all. | / o 1t1-24° | Select your masquerade costume | early for thq Firemen's Ball. Co:-| tumes for rent at the Toggery Shoj 3t K. K. Roe made a business trip {o} Erskine, McIntosh and other cities' ralong the western route of the Great Northern railway last week, return- ing to his home in this city Sunday mormng ssv 000 to loan on farms. 'I‘h(‘ Dean Land Co., Bemidji, Minn. 10-27t1 E. H: Denu, of the Daily Ploneer, re- turned Sunday morning from Crook- ston, where they attended the annual Editorial association. for, the masquerade ball. Gostum for rent at the Toggery Shop. 2t1-25 - -Mr. and Mrs, John Workman of Puposky arrived here Saturday and spent the week end “with their; daugliter, Mrs. Oscar Krantz. They expzcted to return today. Ca.sh paid for Liberty bonds. B. Hooley, Northern Grocery Co. | 1-19tL Allen Olson of Fosston slopperl| over in Bemidji today en route from, Minneapolis' where he recently -un- derwent an operation. He expects tu leaves for Fosston tonight. Al Jester left for Great FKall: Mont., Saturday afternoon after spending a short time in the city with friends. Mr. Jester was formerly a resident and is now making h: home in the western metropolis. First Yeoman social daiite Thurs- day, January 27, ON Fellow's hall | Everyone welcome., 2t1 ‘Hector Brown returned Sunday’ {morning from Crookston to spend th | week end with his wife and.friends.| {He left this afternoon for Crookston to resume his duties as specia] sales- man for the.Crcokston Dryg com-| N s | Miles Smith of this city, expects | his mother, Mrs. J. Smith, to arr] some time this week from Couer D Alene, Idaho, for an extended visit. Mr. Smith and family are expected to arrive early in the spring. Mrs. | ‘Smith is a~daughter of Mr. and Mrs. H. Waldron of Tenth street and Dal ton ayenue. . ! Mrs. G. O. Ryggs entertained at a' 5 dinner party on Thursday evening at | the Ryggs home, in hgnor of he " scn . Percy’s birth anmiversary. The vited gueses were Pearl McLaughlin, Betty Johnson, M ! A Hobbs. Music assisted in enterrai ing the guests durinz the evening. CARD OF THANKS 1 wish to thank all friends who contributed to the purse which was presented to me. Thursday HEX and Friday KATHERINE MacDONALD THE AMERICAN BEAUTY y in i CURTAIN Directed by James Young The Love Story of an Actress . As a star the world bowed at her feet— | Frank Wesholek. | He wanted her to quit the || bright lights for the home he offered—bdth meant much |'|§ to her, but which meant most? 5 Is the shoe problem bothering you? i¢ HCZ. Mitchell, of the Sentinel, and | . meeting of the Northern Minne:ota ~ Get your costume picked out early ;¢ G.|® a Roo'f in Sfimatfa‘A'v“ [l Building car] g not thin lothing. Bird Film Artist. ¥ New York has a bird which has started on a s ful - film screen career, He is a cockatoo ealled Cocoa, | His beaufiful white feathers attracted i the atteation of the director of a | large film company, and now he has a job appearing in all scenery where i birds are needed. | salary, ower, | & Jacobs. City Has Endowed Flagstaff. @here is an endowed staff in the United States, that on the common at Lawrence, Mass. At the time of the Lawrence strike some years ago, | when many indiguities were shown | to the American flag, .there was held | a flag parade of 40,000 persous, each | carrying a flag as a protest. A public- spirvited citizen, Joseph Shattuck, of- fered to erect a flagstaff and to set aside ‘funds, the interest on which woul] buy flags. for .the staff, city of Lawrence accepted the offer, and tabes, | »: and tubes, reject any cr Bemi finest flagstaffs in the world, | Lit{le ¥ aunt’s on sent to his nd fold to re- Vaudeyille turn innnedintely, iy remained one he On hix recirn his mother said: what Is your ol.fect in staying || T told you to come . et oy || FRIDAY ONLY what da you 1 y object, why, Tnever even took it with me. I left it home || PLAN NOW ON: SEEING ONE in my tool 1 e OF THE BEST BILLS WE'VE UESNCT HAD. Bee-Hunting Pr ble Business, e Tt | GAYLES and LANGLY ng of “hee tr ihle bust- Tid-bits of Vaudeville ness. Record of déposits McKEE and SAFFER “The Blues Chasers” of move th 500 pounds ‘in hollow | nnote The trees are hunters who o follow located by (e || emc——— The Original 'Frisco Hobo s e, || ™ FATRFIELD TRIO d 5f he will, but i | Saxaphones that he must u nd, whether hie Banjos Avrtists on Each will or net.—CQuir MATINEE AND NIGHT V/er:] te Avoided. It is ot a Bc | [GRAND ToNight Decors Gpen at 7:00—Curtain at 8:00 THE HARMONICK CLUB . __PRESENTS—— “The COURT of KING COLE” HOME TALENT PLAY —IN— “Thi Cradle of Courage” His Newest Paramount Release " with ANN LITTLE and THOMAS SANTSSH[ Come See the Bxggest Flght oi His Llle ! TO-NIGHT AND E L i{ a TUESDAY Matince—10c-20c Nighlo—!ic-”c enter of Sumatra, biilding the roof of a dwelling, probubly is' of siriking for bigher wages because of the increased cost of He gets a good | The | and today on its commen is one of the word, this “fmpos- | i 1 comes of those that ton in their mouths— [ How “Bundle Burials” and “Burials in the Flesh” Were Conducted by | <aAncient Race: .. After an Indian meund _has been cleared and surveyed ft is stripped of the surface sod and, excavated by a series of trenches: :One, mound, says the: Southern Workman, coutained no lgss, than 45 “bundle burials,” with two ‘buriuls'{n_ the flesh” abave of later se. “bundle” burlaly were ulisnrtk;ulutea skeletons that had been ¥ !taken down from ‘trees and made into $lbundles. In each “buudle,” as a rule, fVFQ!O the'ones of from two to_four :'igdividuals, - They were placed end to end, lengthways, north to south, and formed: a ldyer some ten feet long and five feet-wide. They were.placed on & caretully: prepated bed of alternate ' Igyers of golden and bright-red sands, evidently of ceremonial import, and surronnded by several stone altars, On. these, appropriate sacrifices were made to the dead; there were signs of fire all about. Sowe half-burned human baones in , well-preserved oak charcoal were found near. the top, in- | dicating that somwe poor captive bad been burned at the stake to inlster to the svuls of the dend on their jour- ney to the happy hunting grounds. In the top strama were found two skel- etons, both of , them strongly fixed, with the knees drawn up to the chin, They were evidently of considerable age,. but of later origin. than the “bundle” ‘burials. | In fact, all the | bones in this gronp of mopnds showed ! extreme .signs of decomposition. It was necessary to “paint” them all with a. transfusing fluid the minute. they were .exposed to the air, Th iwo skeletons, ywere perhmps the remains tof people *vho had died during the construction of the mounds and were given burlal in the top of them. | | | | Before the Speach. Some orators start with a rush, oth- ers begin quite slowly. . A spenker we know has the hablt of striding medi- | 1atively_ across the stage ance or twice | | before he begins his address. On one | oceasion we heard a lively young fel- | | low in front of us \\mspfl‘ to his girl | with reference to the peripatetic gen- | | tleman on the platform: “That, T | | suppose, i8 his - preamble.%—Boston | Transcript. ¥ Rare specnman | There was once & woman who nev prl | spoke @ cross word to her busbaud. | She's dead. And we know a man who | claims he never said ap unkind word | to his yife, He's a liav,—Philadelphia | | ! Inquirer. REX Tuss, & Wed. Presénts— Cecil Raleigh and Henry Hamilton’s Drury Lane Meglodrama Terrific fight in dirigible bal- loon is’feature of— “Stolen Orders” Staged at an enormous ex- pense—It is the biggest thrill ever seen on the screen. In Elght Reels—-surrm: | Carlyle Blackwell Kitty Gordon Montagu Love June Elvidge Country in the V-c nlty o(Tdaunt Ve suvius Graphically Portrayed hy.. Gmod Frenchwoman. - The counm at the foot of, Vesuflun is the most fertile and-best eultivated of the. kingdom _wost _fayored .by heaven in all Europe. The celehrnted Laccyma Christi vine flourishes beside land totally devastated by lava, 8s it nature here made & last effort aud-ve- solved to perish in ber richest.array. As you ascend. you turn to gaze on Naples and on the fair land about it— the sen sprrkles strewn’ with jewels; but all. the splen- qQars ol creation nre'éxtluzulslml by qdégrees, A8 yous ashes and smole, that aunounce. your appro: in the-sun as if enter the region of ch to the voleano. The iron waves of other years have traced large biack furrows in the soil. At u cortain height birds are no long- er seun ; further on plants become very searce; then even jusects find no nou ishment. At,last all life disapoear you enter the realm of death, and the ain earth’s dust s1ips bencath your unassurad feet.—Madame De Stael. Carly Savings Banks. The first xavings bank in America was opened in Boston 104 years ago, December 13, 1816, Tn the sawe year an institution called the l'hllmlvlphu Savings York Americu was founded in New In 1819, The first regulur savings bank was established in Hamburg in 1778 and the second at-Berne, Switzer- land, in 1787. The oldest’ snvisgs bank in the world is in Zurich, Switzer- land, .and is_pow in ity one. hundred and seventeenth year. The ‘first regu- lar savings bank in Great Britain was opened in Edinburgh 107 years ago. BETER TN CALOVEL Thousands Have Discovered r. Edwards’ Olive Tablets . JAre a Harmless Substitute | - Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets are the fesult of Dr. Edwards’ determination not to treat liver and bowel complaints with calomel. For 17 years he used” these tablets (a vegetable compound mixed with olive oil) in his pnva\e pracice with great success. They do all the good that calomel * dogs'but have no bad after effects. WILLIAM A. BRADY | Dix-ected by Harley Kneles - .No ——p— h Much in Little. A baby will make love stronger,! days shorter, night’ longer, bank rol smaller, home happier, clothes shal bier, the past forgotten and the futare worth Hving Zor —Otaca. Topics. , no_griping, no m)ury to. gums or danger from acid food: (hdy stimulate the liver and bowels Dr. Edwards’ Olive 7 I:leu; .whpn you feel “logy” and “ Note how they clear doudnd brain 1nd perk up the spirits. 15c and 30c a box, “yet LAST TIME TO-NIGHT RINGING THE VILLAGE BELLE! Hoo Ray! Here’s Charlie in a new picture from his own studio. His best /comedy—a gale of giggles from title to tail-piece! Arthur S. Klne presents = Charles RAY 19 mo PHYLLIS Story by Frederick Stowe . Directed by Joseph De Grasse A Pirst National Attraction FOX SUNSHINE COMEDY . IN TWO PARTS . FOX NEWS . Rex Umon Orcllentrl——R A. Amndnn, Dlrector Matinee: 2:30——10c-26c Evenings—7:10-9: 00-l—10c-30t Just received a big shipment of new dresses direct from New York, which will be placed on sale at once. Your choice $14.75 <

Other pages from this issue: