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Items for this column will be gladly received by Mrs. Harvey, telephone 114-W. Readers owe it to their guests and to them. selves to sce that items of local interest are reported. Every item will be given proper considera- tion when source is known. Mies Elsic Nuss left this morning for Brainerd and will have her ton-| sils removed at the N. P. hospital| there | S. C. Bailey is transacting busi- ness in Duluth for ‘a few days. He expects to return to Bemidji Thurs- day merning, % and Mrs. H. Thom and -son Blackduck -motored to of. NS day and spent the day 1$iness: You take 7o protgs nor post cards from Rich studio yniess they please you. 29 Tenth street.: Phone 570-W. e 3 cA 2618-16 Tugene - Kendall, manager of the John Wallace farm near Solway, was in Bemidji Tuesday and visited at the M. 1. Groff home. Mrs. Ellen Robideau returned to her heme ins Bend, Ore., Monday after being a guest of relatives in Bemidji for several weeks. Leen Amadon and family have meved frem the apartments they have cupied at 404 1-2 Minnesota avenue, to one of ‘the new 'houses Mr. Amadon has recently completed. Casht paid for Liberty bonds. G. B. Hooley, Northern Grocery Co. 1-19tf A. M. Field of St. Paul who has od at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Bueford M. Geil, Dewey avenue, sinco last Saturday, left this morning for her home. Mrs. Skenandoah returned to her heme at Seward, Nev., after spend- ing the past mnoth at the summer home of Mrs. L. G. Pendergast at Lake Plantaganet. After September 1st Mrs. William C. Pudge will take a limited number of pupils for pianoforte instruction. 1226 Doud avenue. Telephone 318-W 8-12tf Dr. and Mrs. D. R. Burgess and family returned to their home in Bemidji after visiting for three weeks with friends and relatives at Hibbing, Virginia and Tower. Mr. and Mus. J. B. Bisiar returned to her home 1111 Dewey avenue, yesterday from a week’s visit with relatives and friends at the range towns. They made the trip by auto. For ,plenic or excursion partles charter passenger boat “Thor.” A. A. Lee, licenscd pilot. Phone 612-W!. 6-26t! Mr. and Mrs. C.°B. Groff, who have visited their son, M. E. Groff, 1200 America avenue, for the past six weeks, left this morning tor Mid- land. S. D., where they will visit another son a month before returning to their home at Gering, Neb. Mr. and Mrs. N. E. Given and daughter, Jean, returned to their home in Bemidji last evening from| their t7» to Quill Lake, Sask. They| stopped at a number of places of| interest each way and traveled about| 2050 miles on the trip. They were| del by some rains and slight| ved car troubles, but report a fine time.| itk | The Bemidji Business college opens Tuesday, September 6. Make your plaus to attend either day or evening school. c0d89-820 Mr. and Mrs. William Sawyer, L. E. Asher and family, and C. C.| Asher and family, who have visited at | the M. L. Morse home, Bemidji ave-| nne, for the past week, left this mor-| ning for Chicago and other places in| Illinois and Wiscnosin before re-| turning to their homes in Puyallup, | . They are making the irip by| Mr. and Mrs. Gustave Larson and| daughter, Ito, were called to St.! Ciou:) to atend the funeral of their | nicce, Miss Signa Larson, who passed | away there last evening. Miss Larson! was a former teacher'in the Bemidji high school, and has been ill since last Easter with leakage of the| heart. “She had two blood transfu-| sicy operations from which she re-| ceived no benefit, but kept slowly| : weaker until the end came.! Skgmade.a host of friends in Bemidji | who will be sorry to hear of her! early death. B.P.0.E ELKS i There will be a regular meeting of | the Elks lodge Thursday evening. <‘ i T. C. BAILEY, Sec’y. 1 SMART AS WELL AS PRACTICAL Two attractive Summer frocks are featured here and they are as smart as they are practical. The first is in apricot voile, checked with a satin stripe in self- color. The skirt is trimmed with a band of organdy upon which are stitched circles of the same material made of tiny accordion plaited frills, Organdy is used for the flare cuffs, but the girCle is of satin ribbon. Medium size requires 434 Vards 36-nch voile, with 3 yard organdy. 3 Since all good things come in threes, trios of black embroidered dots are scattered over a white organdy back- ground for the sccond frock. - The back of the dress is cut in one picce, the front beinig gathered at the upper edge and joined to the waist. Upper edges of the patch pockets, collar and cuffs are of plain organdy, with 2 lace edge. Medium size requires 414 yards 36-inch figtred and 3 yard 36-inch plain material. First Model: Pictorial Review Dress No. 9415. Sizes, 34 to 48 inches bust.” Price, 35 cents. Second Model: Dress No. 9422. Sizes, 34 to 48 inches bust. Price, 35' cents. Melvin Geil will leave tomorrow for his home in Minneapolis after visiting at the home of his grand- parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Geil, 514 Fourth street, during the sum- mer months. For picnic or excursion parties, charter passenger boat “Thor”. A.A. Lee, licensed pilot. Phone 61-W. 6-25tf Mrs. W. E. Van Camp, 1104 Doud avenue, was pleasantly sur- prised when her uncle, Rev. J. L Asher, Methodist pastor at St. Paul, arrived last Saturday evening to make a short visit, returning Sunday evening. Glove . grip shoes, Brown, Blaci, Grey and Cherry calf, $12.50 a pair. O'Leary-Bowser Co. 1t-8-17 Misses Reiber and Murray, evan- gelist and singer, who have had charge of the services in the Baptist chyrch during the summer months, will leave the latter part of the week for Fosston, where they will hold services for two weeks. Martin Dullum left Bemidji yester- day bv auto for Hubert, Minn., where he will visit relatives before return- ing to his home in Oklahoma. He has been'the guest of his sister, Mrs. A. E. Ellison, and family 312 Ninth street, for the past two weeks. Brown Kkid, glove grip, arch sup- port oxtords, widths AA to C, $10.00 a pair. O'Leary-Bowser Co. 1t8-17 Short crop, Calfernia peaches, we advise canning now. Special for Thursday and Friday. $1.75 crate. PALACE MEAT & GROCERY Call ’200-201 2t-8-18 Mr. and Mrs. A. F. Panchot and Mr. and Mrs. A. R. Thorson re- turned to their home at Foreston, Minn., yesterday after visiting at thc home of Mr. and Mrs. T. C. Stuart and family for some time. They are parents and sister of Mrs. Stuart. Miss Minnie Ludke returned yes- terday from Minncapolis and other southern Minnesota cities where she visited relatives for two weeks. While she was away she also attended the state convention of the League and Sunday School of the Evangelical Lutheran church. Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Kittleson and family have moved to Bemidji from St. Cloud and will occupy the James Given residence, 1304 Bel- trami avenue. Mr. Kittleson is em- ployed by Nash Brothers at the wholesale grocery jhouse. Mr. and siven ill move to the Doran Mrs. Gi ‘apartments for the winter. Black Kangaroo, glove grip, arch support oxfords, widths A to C, $10.00 a pair. O'Leary Bowser Co. 1t-8-17 Mr. and. Mrs. W. H. Rice and ry of Won< | o 3 3 £ m X £ tersible’ tale ‘of the torrid zone was unfolded by Capt. R, H, Torrible the other day on the arrival of the steamer Denis, which plies between New York and Muanaois, a port about 1,000 miles up the Amazon river, ‘The skipper vowed by muarine and other suints that never hud he scen sights . | so strange, a¢cording to the New York v Thnes, BETHEL LUTHERAN LADIES’ .1 On a river which empties into the AID TO MEET THURSDAY | Amazon, near Mana he suld he saw ™ 5 5 myriads of electric ecls so strongly The Ladigs’ Aid of the Bethel Luth-| ¢jypged with electricity that the broad REBEKAH LODGE MEETING IN I. 0. O. F. HALL TONIiGHT The regular meeting of the Daugh- ters of Rebekah will be held this eve-| ning at the 1 0. O. F. hall at 8| o’clock. All members are urged to be present. . e@’k"‘.hkfl’ will meet Thursday af-| yogoygor the'stremm Wilitlooded with | terngbn ‘§t 0 o’clock at the home| jrp. ¢ e il T ottt T of Mrs. HMenry' Ohngren in the Fifth ightpgiid Shg srow bl fagrept | their pocket Bibles by the glow, which | estimated at 40 watts per cel. © When seamen brought some of these i-voltaged: epls on-deck, Captain ble said, the ship’s dynamos were All are welcome. MISCELLANEOUS DIVISION PRESBYTERIAN AID~TO MEET There will be a mecting of thei - ¥ AR OB Miscellancous division of the ‘Ladies' | Sao b Poy ut the dfy were discon Aid of the Presbyterian church to- ‘w - 7 T et Mitbas i But Skipper Torrible hadn't finished. night at the home of Misses Mary| i S Denis was tied up at the and Florence Bell, 911 Minnesota| .. . avenue, and all members are urged| M€ & boy who was working with a loading gang fell into the river, 'The to be present. tuminous eels surged around him, and | when he was picked up he was dead. | & physician who examined the body { sald that the lad the vietim of | an clectrie overcharge, Captain Lor- ward. PILGRIM MISSIONARY SOCIELY MEETS THURSDAY AFTERNOON Mre. Max Manders will be hostess | ta the Pil sionary =ocicty Thur:lay afternoon, at the home of Mrs. H. A. Bridgeman in the Kifth ward. The meeting will egin at 2:30 o'clock and all who ave interest- ed in missions are invited. | dodging monkey, which prowled only at night. He declared that the simian, | like an owl, was casual and apathetic | by day, but when the sun went ov the horizon the moukey had 20-20 | glims and was an ultra-lively stepper. The captain took newspaper men into PRESBYTERIAN LADIES’ AID BED ROOM :DIVISION MEET | and pulled down the skades. The sun La-t L oplating and tmmediately eating a straw.kelly recently purchased at con- crable outlay by one of tkt yeport- The Bedroom division of the dies’ Aid of the Presbyterian church, of which Mrs. G. E. Kreatz is chair- ™} man, will meet Thursday afternoon at | Sid! the sur.ner home of Mrs. H. L. Ras- “IS mussen at Waville. It is. desired| The skipper sald that he had pur- that all members be present. 1 chased a Braziliun sloth to vring back - to the United States, but the animal | shorticlreutted gnd therg was the dick- | | vible brought back with him a sun- | - | Kitehen or I his cabin, where the pet was, kept, | dodger reacted to the, gloom by ap-. BLE TALE | SEE EXHAUSTION OF RADIUi| GOSSIP Voyage to the | Many Authorities Belicve There Will | Cit: N | Be [None Remaining in’ Abeut | Twenty.Five Years. | Some authoritles predict that, 25 years from now, there will he no ra- dium left in the world, By that tiwe, ! it is ofal all available ores of this wonderiul mineral will liave been used up. ¥ The se-ealled radium emanations are supposed to be eleetrified particles though just what these particles are nobody knows. They do not scem 10 Dbe Identifinhlo iy kind of ter, But after heing given off, they cense | to becelectrigally eharged, and assume the form of belium, /s ‘Here ds a0 ease altogtither extraor- | padinary, in-which one elpment s nctual- Iy transmuted into ghother element—a | phenomenon which s hitherto been | thought Impossible, | beltum was fisst discovered in the It was lator found In" our own atmosphere, which eonfains-n mhute ! pereentage of it. Natural ga§ from’ | some wells i Toxag: and (elsewhere | | ¥lelds conslderalife quantitfes ‘of- ft— so much in certainiingtance$: that, be: | ing noninflammalde, it renders the gas [less userul ax fuel. ! - Is it to be dmagined that all of the existing helium was orfginally derived | from radium? = Nobody can gnswer that question A Rice. Toy. | Put up a short line of narrow rope the | or strong twine in a corner of narsery, Make it | three or four fect long Give | small tots of theee or four years of | age ahandful of ciothesping amd some old pleces ef pioih, The dittle givlsand | | hoys, tho, Will enjoy hanging up | clothes “like mother does.” The Meaning of It. | Professor (pondering) —Now what | was it that his knot in my handker- 1 ehief was to remind me of? Ah, ves! | Tt was foday| that T was to fump into | | story and they repeat it as if it were g Nee take more pleasure in tracking the infol r o than the one informed "about, |daughter, Miss Marion, left this mor- Ining by auto for Minneapolis to vi: |friends and relatives. They were ac- ‘| companied as far as St. Cloud by their daughter-in-law, Mrs. Walter| Rice of 'Tenstrike, who will visit her relatives there for some time. = | NOTICE OF ANNUAL MEETING | The Red Lake Northern Railway &| Construction Company will hold its |annual meeting at the office of J. J.| {Opsahl, Markham Block, at 8 p. m.| { Tuesday, September 6th, 1921, to! |elect directors and to transact such| other business hs directors deems ex- pedient. Leo J. Opsahl, secretary. | 8-16-23-30. Mr. Geil. MiSCELLANEOUS DI1VISION METHODIST LADIES’ AID MEET The Miscellaneous division of the| Ladies’ Aid of the Methodist church| of which Mrs. J. W. Naugle is chair- | man, will meet Thursday afternoon at the home of Mrs. G..W. Harnwell, | 923 Beltrami avenue. The members| are requested to bc present at 2 o’clock promptly. SURPRISE PARTY GIVEN W. P. DYER AND FAMILY | About twenty Bemidji friends of | Mr. and Mrs. W, P. Dyer and daugh- | ter, Miss Alice, of Minneapolis, sur-| prised them last evening at the sum- mer home of Dr. and Mrs. . H. Smith at Grand Forks Bay. Refreshments were served by the self invited guests. and a social evening was enjoyed. il MISS McCUAIG HONOR GUEST | AT PRE-NUPTIAL SHOWER: Miss Lucene McCuaig was honored at a pre-nuptial shower given by-Mrs. R. G. Whinney at the hcme of her parents, 'Mr. and Mrs. C. N. Shannon, last evening. There were twelve guests present and the evening was 'pleasantly spent in conversation, music and games, and the hostess| served refreshments. Miss McCuaig receiver a number of very pretty and useful gifts from her friends. ROYAL ARCH MASON ELECT i OFFICERS FOR NEXT YEAR The Bemidji Chapter No. 7, Royal| Arch Masons, held an election of of-| ficers Monday evening aud the fol- lowing were elected: George 8. Knight, High Priest; George A. Walker, king; Henry Z. \Mitchell, scribe R. H. Schumaker, treasurer; D. L. Stanton, captain of hosts; N. F. Given, principal sojourner; Robt. J. Russel, Royal Wrch captain; D. H. Fisk, secretary. KOTTKE-GREENSLITT Miss Nora Greenslitt and Lawrence L. Kottke of the State Sanatorium at Walker, were married Tuesday eve- ning at 8 o’clock at the home of Miss Greenslitt’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Bert Greenslitt, on the Jefferson high- way, two miles west of Bemidji, by Rev. Erdmann Frenk, pastor of the Trinity Evangelical church of Be- midji. . The Greenslitt home was daintily decorated for the occasion, and large number of friends and relatives were present at the ceremony. The bridal couple were attended by Roy Jackson and Bridgie McManus. A wedding dinner was served after the ceremony. Mr. and Mrs. Kottke will make their home at the State San- atorium at Walker, with which Mr. Kottke is connected. i Benj. Johnson has returned to Be- midji from Fargo and southern Min- nesota cities where he has visited friends and relatives for two wecks. Thayer Bailey returned this morn- ing from Crookston where he went| Monday to visit relatives for a few days. Mrs. Bailey remained there at the home of her parents to make a' longer visit. Shert crop, (lul‘l"(:‘n]u peaches, we vise, canning now. Sp 1 for Thursday and Friday. $1.75 crate. PALACE MEAT & GROCERY Call ’200-201 | 21-8-18 | W. C. Truesdale and son, John, of Richland Center, Wis., arrived | in Bemidji this morning and will be, zuests at the home of Mr. and Mrs., Buefcrd M. Geil for a few days.| Mr. Truesdale is a brother-in-law uf\ | was too lazy to eat and died on the | words, suflicient” to- cause a smile, u] | ‘lake and end it all—Honston Post. way here. YR REAL HUMORIST OF AMERICA | Mr. and Mrs. 1% |dore Hagen of Thief River Falls tored to Bemidji yesferday and be guests at the home of Mr. In One Writer's Opinion, the Country Mrs. E. N. Ebert, 919 Beltrami Editor 18 Entitled to Honor /nue, uniil tomorrow when they of the Title. leave for Charles City to visit fr Ibefore returning to their home The funuiest things which are writ-, S and B No Ebert are brothers. ten und printed in this country are! . 4 s not written by Irvin Cobb or Georg RETURN FROM THE WEST Ade or Ring Larduer. They are not| Mrs. 1. Y. Wilse written by the prof jonal humorist | Dorothy, returned mo- will | and and daughter, | from a two of the great newspapers. h u They are written by the so-called | part of the United States Tu country editors and motubly by so-|evening route visited at ountry editors and iotably y 0 Bofse: Portlund, lduh; called country editors of Ohlo and 2’(‘ Kansus. We hardly think anyone ™ with g real senge of humor who reads large numbers < of newspapers and | maguzines and modern books will dls-‘ pute “this assertion, | Humor is merely the ability to see zand react understandingly to the wirth-provoking side of human nature which is not the least ample of its] sides. A humorous paragraph may b grossly exaggerated in its interpreta- tion of human nature, but human na-} ture must be somewlcre down near| the bottom of it or it is a failure. Phis explains why humor Is so much | more amusitg, so much more satisfy-| ing than wit. Wit needs no human nature as its foundation, it may be Simply a lightnipg-like play on mere Seattle and Spokane. laugh perbaps, but none of the solic comfort derived by the discerning from true humor.—Ohio State Journal. | Compliment to the Mare. Talk of automobile drivers lu']ngi arrested for violating the speed limit) when they fly up znd down the high- ways at 40, 50, 60, ete, wmiles un hour, drew one day i bit of rem-| iniscence from Captain Thomas Halls of the United States secret sel ice. “[ remember one time back In ay little Ohio towa,” sai¢ the captain, sswhen my father was stopped by an officer of the law because he was driving his mare more than 12 miles an hour/’ rv- “*You was going more than twelve miles an hour, said the oflicer; ‘Lil arrest you for speeding. “*No, get up, get up, A compliment 12 my father to the| an “Ihat’s can't Detroit I sald. mare. hour. g miles Ir iCat's Meat. ! The port of London authorities are famous novet Lj KATHARIN NEWLIN BUS + Oi.s st oy REGIF 2.0 SARKER spending more than $5,000 cat's meat, that the large arn pl cuts | required to deal with the rats and mice infesting the docks may be sup- ported in the style to which they have been accustomed. So presumably the | cats are purely “sportsmen,” just kill the rats for the fun of the thing, but never eat their prey. And also, pre-| sumably, the cats don't make much! headway with thelr jobs, since we are ar for | | It is a powerful drama upon a backgrcund of amazing scenic keauty — drama so intensely realistic that one cannot behold it without deep and lasting en- jcyment. assured the staff has been continually @ G N Incrensed—and Iikewise the appropri- | Simpson, Qul{w ations for their support. It looks like Landis, Pauline Starke §. Ebert and Theo-| months’ trip throughout the western a political sinecure—~Los Angeles Times, 1 Telephone for the Deaf. The “Phonophor,” for people lard of hearing, is the smallest telephone yet produced. It is about an inch long, and its open end being inserted in the ear, is l:eld there by its shupe, no strap being necessary. It is ad- justable for maximum clearness. The usunl membrane could not be ¢ ployed, and a picce of specially treat- ed skin with a bit of iron in its center | i3 substituted, § | Bubscribe for The Daily Ploneer. and Mary Alden head the cast. } COMEDY “DANDY LIONS” Two Reels Grand Tonight 10c and 25¢ Matinee and Two Night Shows THURSDAY. . FB'%M OF INSAMITY? 16t ol { Sty ‘ur T ] Vi enmnles of Authorities Who Have Dea't | Marauis L overSfour and a half fect in length."*"The hends are long and; much, of the grain fudly formea ith the Problern Are Strongly of That Opinion, ~ 3 The - forty Men and women who goss! sald g Dr. B IL Bullock of Ch Cty 1o the health divector, cannot he in the rvight mind, and should be given the | closest attentlon to get them back to —REX SUNDAY-— [ normal. They have been calicd “us- | snssius of oh i, | 1 Jenking, n psyehologist aud seeretn You the to the board of police commissione; s, Thrill of Your Life. THAT'S WHY | EVERYBODY WILL SEE “OUT of the DUST” | The Great Remington Drama and the anenymons letter writer have lowest and most to Gne of the nastiest, vicious forms of fnsanity known medical chrcles, Their distorted Ination vismlizes scenes which they would have come trug, and their in- sane mind immediately geasps the || true, Gossip @ anonymous letters, su the ‘New York Medieal Journal, are constant pest at police headquarters, but reports registored with police ofi- cers inan attempt to injure charaeter by ‘these ‘megns or false telephonie reports are a fallure; in fact, the | Blind People Good Gardencrs. Blind men make good gurdeners, suys | Mrs, Duncombe, of London, founder of the Guild of Blind Gardeners, who was | an enthusiastic gavdener hetfore her sight began to fail. I ean tell difter- ent flowers quite casily by the sense of touch,” she sald, Miss DL Brown, who is futerested in the guild, quotes | the instance of a blind gardencr she ciployed who could tell different types of roses by touch alone, where to other prople seent was the chiet guide, MACK_SENNETY BEN TURPIN LOVES QUICAS oyl twe Small Boy’s Lament. wus alling and obliged to miss u day in sehool.. THis mother pre- | pared dainty food for him and nursed him n a manner to his Hking The | xtday s he started o sehool he heard to grumble, "0, why didn't pve enough sense o stay sick? 1 inst didn't know u good thing when 1 had it REX Thursday and FRIDAY Free Medicine For What Ails You “The Man From Medicine Hat” | Will Cure the Worst Cases of Enni, Discouragement, Blues in an Hour At _the REX THEATER st AT THE GRAND ¢ FRI. & SAT. e e s REX Theatre Today Harry Garson presents Clara Kimball Young —in— “The Forbidden Woman” From the famous book by Lenore J. Cofien. Sumptuously Staged Photo-Drama. THE LOVE-STORY BEAUTIFUL AN EVENT— IN THE ANNALS OF THE PHOTOPLAY HISTORY OF THIS CITY picture for any for it panagement of this theater takes pleaure inoanrou app ce of Clara Kimba!l Young in her second bl Fouity “THE FORBIDDEN WOMAN," today. It event in the land to announce and exhibit nts Miss Youny at the height of her request our patrons to come as carly be accommodaled, seated promptly and co capacity and oyerflow crowds, for the pictur ance and undoubtedly will have it, coming, New York run. THE STORY Ol Clara Kimball Young “The Forbidden Woman” deals with the life and love seerets of a dazzling Pari at the height of her fame, with wealth, position and huxu playthings. The story is gorgeously invested, assuring you ning of de luxe entertainment. yuetion, I expe + such attend- it does, direct from its We 0 A MERMAID COMEDY With JOHNNY ADAMS—“HIGH & DRY” Matinee: 2:30—7:10-9:00 F——— —-COMING THURSDAY— The Man from Medicine Hat ———————————————— T Rex Orchestra