Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, January 26, 1921, Page 3

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E R. Burns of Ironton was n'ruu- day business caller hete. H. Doyle ot Northomc spent the day hene yesterday on' business. " Fresh, sweet millk and cream, sold at Glnter'l bnhr! 10-6tt T. E.>Manion of Crooksuin was a Bemidji -buslqeu visitor yesterday. Mrs. C. F..‘Rogers of Solway, is transacting .business in the city for .a few days. = ‘Take home. & brick of Koor's ice cream. l-iu C.gmlleboe and: A, P. Hllleboe of Federal Dam were business callers“in the city today. ‘W. B. Boyce of Superior, paymast- er on the Soo Line, spent the day here on business. Our shoes are easy to wear and our prices are easy on the pocket book. Consumers Shoe Co. = 1t1-26 Misses Alvina Rogers ot Solway, | DeT. was a business caller here between trains on Tuesday. Charles Rogers of Solway, was a business transactor in the city be- tween trains Tuesday. $50,000 to loan on farms. The Dean Land Co., Bemidjl, Minn. 10-27t¢ ‘Mrs, Mike Wold and Mrs. Ed. Lin- dall of Solway ‘were between train shoppers here Tuesda; G. W. Hawes of Minneapolis, trav- eling freight agent for the Soo Line, is a business vi}!itor in the city today. Its to. your interest to become a regular customer at our store. Con- sumers Shoe Co. m 26 Mrs. H. E. ‘l‘oru and Mrs. Gll- ‘braith of Cass Lake were among the out of town callers in the city yester~ -day. Mrs. C. L. Lampman left today for Fosston and McIntosh, where.she will spend a few duyl with relatives and | friends. < Selling.sHoes 18 our. business, Sav- ing money is your business.: Con- sumers Shoe Co. 1t1-26 Mrs. Fred Pem has beetrf suffering from an attatk-of gfippe for the pist few days at her home on 1005 Missis- sippi avenue. AR J. W. Naugie-i#ft ‘this mornifig’ for International Falls ‘and Bajdette, where he will transact busiféss for several days. a Empty flour mn at Gum ‘bak- ery. 2 The ‘Misdes Léah’ and E‘V\I Porter &hm city were dinfier guésts-of Mr. Mrs. Leon Jewett on -Mlsslulppl avenue, Sunday. Mrs. L. E. Geiser: ot B‘rnnrflle, lett last evening for ,International Falls, after transacting business in this city for several days. Don’t blame #nyone-but yourself for paying too much for your foot- wear. Go to the Consumers Shoelczos. 1t Mrs. A. J. N umin rohu'nefl to, her home at Hibbing on Monday, after an over' Sunday -visit with<her sister, Mrs. Joe Steidl of Northefll‘ L. E. Poifts of the Wabnh 8ys- tem, travéling frefght Ag’ht, with headquarters ' in ‘Mnnup s, spent the day here on business FOR ANY KIND of ‘teal egtate: deal, see or write Vl llh & , the land mvn.v Lo, 181880 L. C. Coulston ' of Minnegpolis, traveling frefght| agent for thé Min- neapolis and 8t. Louis raflway, was a Dusiness caller in Bemidji today. Fred Petri was taken suddenly il Sunday night with an. attack of acute ‘indigestion, ‘but is again able to attend to his regular )lutlm Our "store is not large, but our values are largef. Ask your neigh- bor. Consumers Shoe Co. 1t1-26 Peter Ongstad of Christiana, Nor- way, arrived in the city this week for an extended visit at the home of Ole Ongstad, 412 Minnesota avenue. Whea you next need fedd :ry the Courtney Seed & Feed Co.,~where prices are tight. At Grindger's Gro- cery on 3rd street. 9-941 William Kiélér, Wilton merchant, was in Bemidji Tuesday. en - route from Sturgess, Sask., where he has transacted business for the past month. He has sold his large farm there. 5 Western box apples, $1.95 per box at Troppman'’s. Plsono\’ 7. 1-13tf Mrs. F.'J. Frost of Twelfth street enjoyed a ride and visit with her ‘sis- ter, Mrs. Jesse McPherson, on Third street last Friday afternoon, her health being considerably improved. | Cash paid for Liberty bonds. G.! B. Hooley, Northern Grocery Co. 1-19tf | Dts. Latson & Larson, Optometrists. If trou-| bled with hudnenu.\ nervoushess or eye dis-| oraers of nny kind, n | or glasses npdnd, consult them. : .eyes fif | ingss, ‘ed in marriage yesterday afternoon ineteenth and Park, by ~Jessie Bnltour of «!‘unkley spent urnirg home this evening. The condition of Mrs. G. F. Irish's health s not so favorablé of late. Mr. nia; is also a matter.of lnme anxlety to his friends. . M. “Malsahn, Phanu 17-J3. 12-3t¢ Miss Eunice Asbury resumed her teachiing duties at the normal school yesterday, after an enforced vacation of four weeks. ‘While at her home in Indiana, she submitted to a surgical operation. ' 'Good music at Y an dance at O. F. hall tomorrow- night, only 75¢ per ‘couple. ‘Will look for you. 1t1-26 M, W. Deputy, president of, the local Normal school, returned this been .in auendance at the state Nor- mal school boatd meeting sinceMon- day morning. Slab wood. suo oart 1 !8- inch Jack pine in the round, per cart load. Can make imm delivery, Bemdiji Mfg. Co, 12'“" Miss Lelia Jones of Nebish, an em- ployee at the Rex theatre, and: a younger sister who is a 'High school student of this city, are now makKing their home at' ‘the residence of Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Borgan, 1001 Mis-| sisgippi avenue. . NOTICE = All goods left 30 days and over, be sold. Gemeral Repair Shop, Stahl unless called for by February 1, will & Jcoobs. 11t1-31 NOTICE The first of. a second series of Ma- sonic dancing parties wil be given next Thursday” evening, Jan. 27 at Masonic hall. Joe Forrester will fur- nish the music. All masons and fam- ilies cordially invited. 2t1-26 f nrjsbonn LADIES WILL The ladies’ guild of thé Episcopal chiurcli will' meet on Thursday after- 'froon at 2:30 o’clock ‘at the home of Mrs. E. F. Netzer, 806 Beltrami ave- nue. m LDJGE TO HOLD . INFORMAL_ DANCE FRIDAY Announcement ‘was. ‘made’ today that ‘the Elks lodge would hold an lnformnlt—d-nc(n.‘p rty at: its temple oh Friday évening. ' Good music and n good -time: are’ lnmred the Elkz and t!Mr friends.. - . L mORE LUTHERAN LADIES . ‘MEET TOMORROW AFTERNOON TLe Nymore Lutheran Ladies’ aid will meet tomorrow afternoon .at 2:30 o’tlock in the church basement. Lunch will be served. . Mrs. A. O. Akre will be hostess. It is urgea that there be a large attendance. MASONS MEET TONIGHT FOR THIRD DEGREE WORK || A special meeting of the Masonic| lodge, A. F. & A. M. will be heid in the Masonic etmple at 7:30 tonight. G. M. Palmer, W. M., requests that all Masons be present at the above hour at which time work in the third degree will be conferred. Refrésh- ments will be served at the close of the work. ST. PAUL'S YOUKG PEOPLE ‘ MEET TOMORROW NIGHT The Young People’s League of St. Paul's. Evangelical church will hold its regular monthly business meeting tomorrow evening at 8 o’clock at the Hector Brown residence, 1405 Calla- han avénue. Mrs. H. Brown and Miss Bértha Krause will entertain and all mrembers are kindly asked to be pre- sent: . SCHULZ-BROOKS Arie L. Brooks and Miss Helen Schulz, both of this city, were unit- at 2:30 p. m,, Rev. W. F. Kamphen- kel officiating. The couple was at- tended by Mr. and Mrs, Peter Brooks, brother and sister of the groom, and the ceremony wag performed at the Golz residence, where Rev. Kamp- henkel makes his home. The young couple will make their home in-this city. ; ‘Worning, o reart. There are two kinds of shells nsefl fn thé manufacture of small articles, the porcelaneous and the nacreous. The former are extremely hard and can be worked only with the aj ratus used by the lapidary. The lat- ter are more generally used and may be sawed, filed and turned with some | facility. The pieces should be roughed out on a common grindstone. After turning they should ‘be smoothed with pumice stone and water, and polished | with_rotten stone with sulphuric acid J slightly diluted: Illumination of Manuscripts. The art of painting manuscripts with miniatures and ornaments is an art of the most remote antiquity. The| | Egyptian papyri containing portions of the Ritual or “Book of the Dead,” are ornamented with drawings and colored pictures.. The Persians, Hin- dus and Chinese have illuminated | manuscripts with great beauty, nove of - which TPompete with those of the western uations in autiquity. :he day in the city on business, re-| . Irtsh’s"health, " impaifed by - insom- | . .For wood, seasonea ti-mck. caln 'MEET TOMORROW AFTERNOON | Teaching Them to morning from St. Paul where he has| . . Scene 1n a classroom in the plant where alien employees are heing tayrgl | governmental idc: No “National” in Title. There is now only one national bank in_the United States which does not have “nationnd” s a part of its name. It is the Bank of North America of Philadelphia. A special act of con- gress is required to permit a national bank to operate as such without ‘in- dicating the fact that it is a national bank in its name. Meions. Melons were first extensively cultl- vated in France early in the Seven- teenth century, but were known to the anclents from the commencement of our era. The Egyptians grew them. They. are said to have been carried to America by Columbus, and to the Malay archipelago by the Portuguese. LN Experiment with Air. | A man wished to measure the force that drives the sap upward in trees' and shrubs. He cut a vine and tied a bladder oyer its end. In two hours . the bindder was greatly distended, and inside of three hours it burst with a: plop, 8o great was the force that drives sap upward. Monlreh'n Mummy Flnally at Rest. The. mummy of the celebrated Egyptian king, Rameses II, reposes in“the Egyptlan- museum in Cairo. The mummy was first interred at Bib- anet-Muluk and was subsequently concealed- from_grave robbers in the shaft at Deir-el-Bebrl, where it was - found in 1881, and’ later removed to the museumn mentioned. % == TO-NIGHT 7:30-9:00—10c-25c VIGOROUS and Likeable— Whimsical and Human— Ready to Laugh or-to Fight at the Drop of a Hat—that’s HARRY ] < In His Latest Big Preduction— “BLUE STREAK McCcoy”| A stirring outdoors story rich with romance and wmdmg up with one of the most desperate fights you ever saw on the screen. Don’t Miss This Picture It's the Real Thing ~—ALSO SHOWING— “LAUGHING GAS” A Two-Part Comedy GRAND ®r . 31 eaa Vaudeville FRIDAY ONLY PLAN NOW ON SEEING ONE OF THE BE?“I’A DBlLLS WE'VE GAYI.B and LANGLY Tid-bits of Vaudeville MoKEE and SAFFER “The Blues Chasers” CURT GALLOWAY s0 they can obtain their ci i CAREY | J— THE BEMIDJI:DAILY PIONEER of the Griffin Wheel company, Chicago,’ it the English language and American enship papers. How It Looks to One Pair of Eycs. 1t is delightful to think how new everything spite of description Never heliey that there is an old world, There is no such on my honor! You will find ¥ France, T and the Eas you have read and heard, as altogether new as if they were created by your eye, and were never sung, painted, nor bewritteni—you will indeed. Why—to be sure—what were the world else? . . . len and Ink cannot take the gloss off your eyes, nor can any man look through them as you de. I do not believe the simplest matter— sunshine or verdure—has exactly the same look to any two people in the world. How much less a human face —a landscape—a broad kingdom? Travelers are very pleasant people. They tell you what picture was pro- | duced in their brain by the things they saw. . . . How it looks to one pair of eyes; would be a good re- || minder penciled on the margin of many a volume.—N. Parker Willis in Rural Letters. 3 oKl yes, 0 Davis The Original 'Frisco Hobo FAIRFIELD TRIO Saxaphones ~ Banjos Artists on Each ——————— MATINEE AND NIGHT GRAND — to the drumbeat of adventure? Do you enjoy a good romance? Does your ‘ & pulserespond e to a good, “story of out-door life? If the answer is - then “Webster—Man’ Man’* was written for you. Not since . *“Soldiers of Fortune,” by Richard Harding anything like it—or anything of the kind so good. A Noble Language. Painting, or art genérally, ag suck, with_all its technlcalities, difficulties, and particular ends, is fothing but's noblé and expressive language, lnval- uable as the vehicle of thought, but by itself, nothin, —~John"Ruskin, ' LEWIS J. SELZNICK presents William Favei‘“ ham “The Man Who Lost Hiii:self” =+ He was “broke" and in a strange land, and one morning awoke to find himself surround- ed by wealth. A story of twin per- i sonalities with Amer- i ica’s greater actor in a dual role. |ELKO Entertained the Ardungn. English Paper—It is interesting to remember that in the audience on that occagion were Dante, %;lel !tqsettt W and Algernon.. (‘hnfles\-gwlh ‘Boston Tmnscfl}lt LAST TIME WILLIAM A. BRADY Presents— Cecil Raleigh and Henry Hamilton’s Drury Lane Melodrama 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. A GIoom-Chuer HONOR and BEHAVE Five Rippling Reels A Mack Sennett Produciio'n With Cha]a'[lxe Murray, Phyllis Haver, Marie Prevost and a hundred others help- ing dn the fun, il m Eight Reels—Starring Carlyle Blackwell Kitty Gordon ~“Montagu Love June Elvidge Directed by Harley Knoles Fox Sunshine Comedy —In Two Parts— Rex Union Orchestra —R. A. Amadon, Director Matinee: 2:30—10c-26¢ Evenings: 7:10-9—10c-30c brogu True Henr COME ON! THERE’S A FIGHT! DON'T MISS IT! | messELOvE| In Vitagraph’s “A Fighting The feature with a n' pohtlcal paign and a pretty Dwell Where the Fight Cclleen” e, a combat, cani- love story. ts and Noble Souls Yes, ) 'l;:::;’s a ‘ : ¢ Comedy - Peter B. Kyne Wil e Cory | Does your ear answer ELKO Theatre \ Tonight & Thursday RE THURSDAY and FRIDAY Katherine S He wanted her to quit the offered—both meant much has there been First Installment Be-| gins in This Issue of The Pioneer—Read It. THE AMER[CAN BEAUTY CURTAIN Dlrected by Jnmeu Young THE LOVE STORY OF AN ACTRESS As a Star the World Bowed at Her Feet Macnunald bright lights for the home he to her, but which meant most? . From The Gargle lrin ’

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