Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, January 31, 1921, Page 3

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" 1 ‘1' Empty flour sacks at Ganter’s bak- i\ L § i i i _George Sycks of Backus was a Sun- day visitor in: Bemidji. ‘Aron Carlson of Terstrike was a jemidji visitor yesterday. Take home a brick of Koor's ice cream. 4-5t1 AV. B. Rowe of Crookston was a { Bemidji caller on Sunday. ery. 124t i N.S. Erb of Cass Lake was a visit- or in this city on Sunday.| C. K. Andrews of Grand Rapids was & Bemidji caller yesterday. * Fresh, sweet milk and cream, sold at Ganter‘s bakery. « 10-6t1 9 Charles Bryson of Bagley spent Saturday in the city on business. Selling shoes is our hnsine?s. Sav- ing money is your businesg. sumers Shoe Co. 1t1-31 A, M. Mattson of International Falls was a Sunday visitor here. . .For wood, seasouea tamarack, call . M. Malzahn. Phone 17-J. > 12-3tf 'fi I. H. Torkelson of Federal Dam was a Saturday business visitor here. | —_— - . H. Ives of St. Paul, a former Be- midji resident, was a visitor here yes- terday. Dur Shoes are easy to wear and our prices are easy on the pocket bogk. Consumers Shoe Company. 2 1t1-31 Mrs. F. E. Carver of Turtle River was a business caller in Bemidji Sat- urday. John A. Strom and Carl Strom of Spooner were visitors in the city yes- terday. Western box apples, $1.95 per box at Troppman’s. Phone 927. Ed 1-13tf William Bottineau and J. S. Dahlen of Plunnner were Bemidji visitors on Sunday. Mrs. Minnie Warner = of Puposky was the week end guest of Bemidji friends. Mrs. George Kirk left last evening for Brainerd to attend the funeral of her farteh, Adara Brown, who passed, away Thursday night at his home at -q._.,‘-vHastings. She expects. to raturn e nF 7 %Du. Larsqn & Larson, 3 = . Optometrists. If trou- y bled with headaches, R nervousness or eye dis- orders of any kind, needing glasses .or glasses repaired, comsult them. Artificial eyes fitted. ' R From a photo- graph showing how An Allsteel Hile stands so- . verestrains at all poirts. Con-|* against dust, .- Our \store is mot large, but our values are larger. ' Ask your neigh-|| bor. Consumeérs Shoe company . ‘ 1t1-31 Miss Clara Renne of Solway was the week end guest of ‘Bemidji friends. FOR ANY /KIND of ceal estate deal, see or write Willits & Olson, /the land men. 1-1tf Charles Link of Duluth, a former resident of this city, called on friends here Saturday. i $60,000 to loan on farms. The¢ Dean Lang Co., Bemidji, Mina. ’ ‘ 10-27t1 Mrs. George Becker of Grant Val- ley was among the out of town shop- pers in Bemidji Saturday. 4 J. W. Naugle returned Sunday morning from a business trip to Bau- dette, Roosevelt and Crookston. Its to your interest to become a regular customer at our store. Con- sumers Shoe Co. 1t1-31 Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Martin of Tur- tle River drove to Bemidji Saturday and spent the week end as the guest of friends. ' Mrs. E. C. Lincoln of Park Rapids arrived in the city today to visit her sister Mrs. Olive Hayth of Northern for two weeks. : % All goods left_30. days and. over, be sold. General Repair Shop, Stahl unless called for by February 1, will & Jc~obg. 11t1-31 Miss .Esther Chapman left Satur- day night for her home in Royalton where she will gpend the next few months on a vacation. When you next need feed ‘ry the Sourtpey Seed & Feed Co., where orices are right. At Grinager's Gro- cery on 3rd street. . -1 Mrs. George Walker, who has been ill at the St. Anthony’s hospital for several weeks has been taken to Min- neapolis for special treatment. Don’t blame anyone but yourself for paying too much for your foot- wear. Go.to the Consumers Shoe ‘Co. 1t1-31 ‘Mrs. Abe Grossman returned Sun- day from a visit to Grand Forks, where she has been the guest of friends and relatives for the past week. i Slab wood, $3.50 per cart load. 16- |- inch Jack pine in the round, $6.50 er. of . Can e immediate delivery. Bemdiii Mfg. Co, 12-13tt J. E. Smith, a representative of Marshall-Field company, spent Satur- day and Sunday in the city. He re- turned to his' Beine in Minneapolis Sunday night. OVERHEARD BY Almost any man is able to tell when he has had too much, but the part of disdom is to know when he has had enough.—St. Cloud Times. [4 bn . Where you get this kind of talk? The Baudette Region says: “If wages for female help continue to drop, the maid will soon be known as the hired girl again.”—Stillwater Gazette. “Austria at End of Rope,” says a headline. And when you get right‘f down to brass tacks, it is where she belongs, politically at least. try that started the war ought to be at the end of a rope.—Hibbing Tribune. | ‘When things begin to go wrong in a general way, there is a clamor fot.d more laws instead of for enforcement of thosejalready on the statutes.—St: Cloud Times. ) = the silent.—Stillwater GaZette. s Harding is mixing prayer with his politics. man who is ready to commune with his Creator is going to be a better man and Harding will be a better president on acount of it, as there is efficacy in prayer.—Northern News. We haven’t any‘thing' against the man who gets behind and pushes. He's! a good citizen and a good neighbor. ‘But the real man of them all i the one who gets ahead andpulls.—Exchange. f We claim “Billy Noonan” of the Baudette Region has a real ap}zoint- ment and if he succeeds in prying himself out of this position without get-1 ting an appointment for life he should be acclaimed the winner gf the fninia-, ture hand-painted crow bar.—Menahga Journal. How about the cut glass shoe laces or the concrete bicycle? \ i A man in Grand Rapids, Mich.; claims to have seen a robin. JLI‘lmt’s‘ nothing; we have heard of men around here who saw pink clephants--after ! drinking the brands furnished nowadays.—Hackensack Indcependent. PRl S | Cheer up! January’s almost “shot,” and another month it'll be néar the| first of March, an’ we’ll be looking ahead to spring in a few weeks.——North- ern Light. Individuals who ate doing the most talking about plans for solying the farmers’ problems are usually not farmers.—St. Cloud Times. Anyway, people are*getting a thrilling sensation for the robber’s price they have had to pay for coal. Why go to the movies?—Toledo Blalde. Mr. Henpeck—Wot's yer steak like ter-day? N . The Sentimental Butcher—Tender as a woman's ’eart, Mr. ’enpecl Mr. Henpeck—Oh, is it? Then I'll ’ave some tripe.—Exchange. | It is bad enough to be mistaken in the big woods for a deer or Emoose, but over in Iowa they are shooting each other for rabbits.—Northern: Light. i Anybody might suppose, from all this tragic talk, that big crop: are a, misfortune, It’s food that pegple eat, not money.—Crookston Daily Times. | Of course, Caruso, the superlative singer, couldn’t be expected to' have | anything less than “superlative pleurisy.”—Little Falls Transcript. —_— Leap year is gone. But, what does a real girl care about that, if she | gets a look at the man she wants?—Northern News. | If there is no hell, remarks an exchange, where has business gone tl07—‘ Olivia Times. _ ' 1 —_— Rev. F. A. L. Larose left for| Alfred Steele. who was severely in-| Crookston this afternoon and will be|jured last week when one of I gone for three days. horse kicked him in the face, ' sufficiently recovered to return tohis home at Turtle River Saturday. ! 2 County Attorney Graham M. Tor- ance returned Saturday from Bau- dette where he was called to repre- sent the county at a coroner’s in- _quest. g Cash paid for Liberty bonds. 3 G. B. Hooley, Northern Grocery Co. | | 1-19tt 3 | Mrs. William Eberline, who hs ~ Files that Stand the Gaff i It’s worth something to know; &hat your efficient.. or swell. Co,, Ford " Office Furnit L ) i The Allsteel four-drawer file shown here is not only the strongest’ N .- file made, but has greater filing capacity for the floor space occuprd than any other file. Allsteel files protect your valuable records mice and vermint. The patented roller suspensivna allows loaded drawers to coast in and out easily and noiselc Will not warp or stick in any weather. permznent housing for your records. Let us show you the compiete line of fil'n¢ cabincts, as weil as desks, safes, transfer cases, and other office furmiture—ibe equipe ment that belongs with svceess. PIONEER STATIONERY HOUSE Phone 799-J and they can,"if they’re Allsteel, | In addition to its rigid strength | of construction, ' Allsteel office [ furniture'is handsome and highly its compactness—saves 15% to 259, space over,wood furniture. Economical,* too,”“.» because of its permanence. For these reasons Allsteel office furniture is used by $uch success- . ful concerns as J. P. Morgan & Steel Co., New York Stock Ex- change, Bush ,Terminal Co. visited relatives and friends at & past kane, Wash., for the three “THE FLAME| OF THE f YUKON® | " With i DOROTRY. DALTON ! KENNETH HARLAN || COMING WEDNESDAY | THURSDAY AT THE GRAND files can stand abuse-— Will not warp, shrink | Economical because of i e i ! Motor Co., Bethlehem lhm,v nesota to any loeation in the west. | nouse with the request: S, ned to Bemidj She states that she pref CHURCH BOARD MEET3 The official bo hurch will hold i usin ay evening. A special collection was held in ehurch cn request from £ v the benefit of the The coun-| oivine children of Suropes The . s it Sun- | t. Phillip he bishops for meunt ay morning's EASTERN STARS MEET " s IR . " i b A amceting of the Eastdrn Stirs Admitted she is a power. A woman suffragist said: “Woman is a snlent‘ will be held in the Masonic' teydple] power in the land.” We are willing to adnijt the power but shy a little at|T. cvening at e requ Jud Tunkins., ~ Jud Tunkins ¥ays he's getting to be man that it takes in over a day" { work than it does to do the work. such a fine business him longer to ba N A Difficult Job. Herbert picked up a butterfly that ran into the “Can’t you ost its butter.” | had ,been killed and It has fix it, mother? Where Peanuts Come From. Alabama, Texas and Virginia fur- nished more than one-half of the pes nuts; Wisconsin and Illinois 41 per cent of the clover seed, THE_ PIONEER WANT ADS| BRING RESULTS Jesse L. Lasky Lpre sents TheEnemy with Jack Holt : Agnes Ayres ! Wanda Hawley andlewis Stone A Qaramount CPiclure From the Play By WILLIAM GILLETTE The famous melodrama of love and daring that has thrilled two generations of theatre goers— The soul-stirring romance of a gallant Yankee captain and a proud daughter of the South, in the heroic days of 61— Splendidly picturized with an all-star cast. Packed with spectacular scenes, rich in the humor and glory of the old Dixie. DIRECTED BY DONALD CRISP 'ELKO | Tonight &Tuesday sz T0-Night A handsome, safe, and D WANDA HAWLES Y AN ZGURT WS B WANDA HAWLEY, AS TH IS AN ADORAB! Bemidji “HIS FIRST TINTYP; BEAUTIFUL ‘WANDA Supported By WALTER HIERS In the Picturization of The Saturday Evening Post Story By Wm. J. Neidig— “The SNOB” IT 15 A COMEDY IN WHICH LAUGHS ARE THICKER THAN SNOW FLAKES—A FINE, HEALTHY, ENJOY- ABLE STORY OF GENUINE AMERICAN LIFE FOR AMERICANS— . SNOB WHO REFORMS, A.E HEROINE ?’_—2-Part Comedy Satur- Min- rd of the Methodist | aspecially noticéable im thé Basque s regular monthly ! meeting in the church Tuea-‘ rhythms and continual chang S oclocke AN freshing. ed to be pres-| = several matters of ‘importance| Not such a bad idca. A|will be taKen up. Spanish Songs. The Spanish songs are so closely al- led to the dance music of the people | that it is not always possiblg to dis- | tinguish one from the ‘other. * This is their strong syncopated f time. Perhaps the only other gongs with suchy—- ~ 2 | strong syncopated danct Fhytuns are the negro s { | songs with ) Sick Room Hint. ! When patient’s moutly-becomes dry | nd parched during-the night, a picce § ‘ot orunge held in the mouth fme to timeswill quench thirst. /llorange shotrd be cut into swall p mfl_p\xt within easy reach of the in-: valid. It will be easler to handle (Mhaw a glass of water and is more 1e- CIGARETTE: No cigarette has’; the same delicious. flavor as Lu¢ky 1 Variety In Bibles. Strike. Because A-cdllection of 114 Bibles published ' Lucky Strike is the between 1537 and 1066 was recently sold at -Sotheby's in London. It in- cluded “samples of the Great Bible, 1540, the “Bug” 15495 the Genevan, 3| or “Breeches,” 1560, and a “Peur” Bible, 1633. | toasted cigarette. Py— At Eastertide - | A gift that happily carries the friendliest greetings, that means more than the conven- | tional card, and yet, because it does not cost too much, does | not mean too much—your pho- ;; tograph. | ! N. L. HAKKERUP The Photographer in Your Town REX TUES. & WED. " Two Hours of Hi]ax;ious Happéni'ngs With— | ANNETTE KELLERMAN In Her Mile-a-Minute Comedy Drama— What Women Love | ATALEOF TUMULTUOUS COURTSHIP Affectionate Annabel She boxes like Dempsey— She swims like a fish— She dances like a fairy— She runs like a deer— She just can’t make her eyes behave NATIONAL PICTUREZ | | i ” ANNET.TE; KELLERMAN b “WHAT WOMENTLOVE":

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