Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, September 3, 1921, Page 5

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| i b Two 1as. . Of bno._ o Jocal park Sunday and Monday av 3:30. Porsford 'Indians play . o 1. team. 2t9-3 Mrs. Leon Battles has returncd to her home at Ccleraine-aftersspending a week here visiting relatives. Mr. and Mrs. J. K. Given and Mrs. Mary MacGregor left for St. Paul this morning by auto to attend the state fair. e Attend the dance at thé mew 'ar- mory, September 5. Dot Van's or- chestra. 4t 9-3 Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Elletson are expected back today from Fort ‘Rip- ley, where they have been spending their vacation. =y gty 1 vs. 1. 3/ ‘Hatton of Bsmond, N I, ved ,in _Bemidji Thursday, night to spend the/next two weeks with her sister, Mrs. M. A. Downs. For ,plenic or excursian partles charter passenger boat “Thor.” . A. A. Lee, licensed pilot. Phone 61-W. % 6-26tt «Jack Kiley will arrive here today to visit at the home of H. Mills. Mrs. Kiley, who is a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Mills, is ‘Rbre now. Mr. and Mrs. C. S. Carter and fam- ily left today by automobile for Min neapolis to attend the state fair. Tehy expected to go as far as Mille Lacs| today, completing the trip. tomor- “TOW. All parties having elaims against the New, Birchmont Hotel must file same at once With “W. L. Broks, treasurer. . 2t9-3 Mr. and Mrs. D. S. Mitchell and two sons returned last night from Minneapolis add Detrojt, Minn., where they have visited during the past week. They made the trip' by automobile. Miss Ursula Guest will leave to- night for Grafton, N. D., where she thas accepted a .position /to teach in the Grafton high school. She has been the guest of her sistpr, Mrs. W. Z. Robinson, and family during the summer months. 5 Bemidji Business College opens September 6. 4t 9-3 Mrs. Dorothy MacMillan returned yesterday from a trip to Minneapo- lis and Menomonie, Wis., where she has been vigiting some of her former Oberlin Conservatory friends, Mr. and Mrs. MacMillan have moved from their former esidence to the Mark- ham hotel for the winter. , MigsSes -and Phyllis Bolden, ~who have been visiting friends in Becida for a week were in Bemidji Friday en rouie to- Eenstrike, where they will visit friends and relatives for a short time. From there they will return to their home at Clearwater where the former will teach. Mrs. Elsie Jennings of Tenstrike spent the day with Mrs. M. E .Groff on' hé¥ wayito the Twin Cities where she will teach school for the coming year, Mrs. ‘Thayer Bailey of Bemidji, her sister, Miss Lucy Stone of Helena, Mont., and brother, Harold Stone, and Mys. Harold Meadeq and daughter motcred from Crookston to Bemidji Thursday. Mr. Stone and Miss Stone and ‘Mr. Daskm, also of Helena, started for Minneapolis yesterday. Mrs, Harold Veade and adughter wili visit withr Mrs. Bailey for' the next week. Netice of Dissolution of Partnership Notice is hereby given that the interests of. R. L. Hilde in the Hilde and Danielson Sheet Metal Shop have been purchased by R. M. Danielson, who will conduct the busjness in the future. All bills are payable to R. M. Danielson and all obligations of the firm will be paid by him. 2t9-3 R. M. DANIELSON. Emerson says: “We get nine- tenths of our education through our eyes.” Let Us Set Your Eyes Right It Will Pay You Well of Chisholm, Minn., |** | thing for money. Seme won’t work" your aisvéints, the serviceé you desire. Mrs. Frank Anderson of Bagleyy autced to the home of Mrs. John Noelof Northern and spent the week there. Mrs. Anderson js a daughter of Mrs. Noel. * After Septemver 1st Mrs. Willlam | C. Budge will take a limited number of pupils for pianoforte instruction. 1228, Doud avenue. Telephone 318-W 8-12tt Mr. and Mrs. T. C. Stuzart will leave Sunday morning by train for Deer River. From there they will go with friends vy auto ito Duluth: and Superior. At the latter place ‘they will attend the Tri-State Fair and then mator, over the northern boun- dary 'trip ‘through Canada. Before they return to Bemidlii thev alwo expect; to attend the state fair Im the Tw:i Cities. i Dance in old armory, Monday, Sept. 5. Music by Schuck’s four-| piece jazz orhcestra. Everybody in- vited, 302 NOTICE All parties having claims against the New Birchmont Hotel must file same at once with W. L. Brooks, treasurer. 2t9-8 MOCSE LODGE TO HOLD i . ¢MEETING TUESDAY NIGHT. The Loyal Order of Moose will meet Tuesday evening at’7:30 at the Moose hall. A large atendance is de- sired. 5 MEET AT 9:30 MONDAY All, members of the Mooseheart Legion are requested to meet at the Moose hall promptly at 9:30 Mon- day morning.to receive their regalia ‘ang@iarchsin’ the Labor Day-parade. W. B. A. OF MACCABEES MEETS MONDAY MORNING The Woman’s Benefit association of the Maccabees will meet Monday morning at 7:30 promptly. All mem- bers are asked to be present as there is"very important business to. e transacted. LUTHER LEAGUE IS TO HAVE . BOAT EXCURSION MONDAY The Lutheran league will have a; boat excursion on - Lake Monday . evening at 7:30. Refresh- menis will be served after the ex- cursion. in the ~church ‘basement. Farnk Lovgren is in charge of the tickets. BIRTHDAY SURPRISE Mrs. John Olson of Becida was pleasanty; (surpryssd by thirty-five of her friends Wednesday, the occa- sion- being:her birth anniversay. The afternoon was spent in music, games and . conversation, and a bountiful lunch was’ §érved by the'self:invited guests. All reported a very enjoy- able evening. PROCEEDINGS OF MEETING OF INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DIS- TRICT NO. 6—HELD AUGUST 10, 1921. The regular meeting of the Board of Education of Independent School District No. 6 was called to order at 8:00 p. m., August 10, 1921, Bids for bus drivers for the com- ing year were received as'follows: Edgar C. Warner, Route -$70.00 W. H. Boyer, Route 1. .$65.00 | Frank Jackson, Route 3 $74.00 | Frank : Taunt, Route 2 -$81.00 M. A. Hubbel, Route 2 .$65.00 John Suckert, Jr., Route 2......$71.50 George A. Malone, Route 1......$70.00 Moved and carried that all bids be rejected on west routes. Moved and carried that the bid of George ‘A. Malone, Route No. 1, for $70.00, be accepted. Moved and carried that twenty-six squares ot steel ceiling be ordered. | The chairman appointed a committee | of two, namely: Fenske and Wal-| berg, ' to: purchase material for one| new bus. 1 Woved, and carried to adjourn. | Herman Fenske, * Clerk. _ | o 1t 92 N % s ¥ EGyY 1 ] If He Could Charge Them Off. - The man who has a wife and two or three daughters is lucky if he cad get himself judzed by their clothes. When It Fails. It isn’t true that men will do’any- Bemidji, | * Sun and Shadow. Life 1s beautiful and should be Tived beauty. It has and must have Its adows, but there s a beauty in the ndow. as well as in the glint and immer of the sun, In grief and trou- e, and even In disaster, we can make ‘e beautitul—benutiful with courage, Ith resignation and a sublime faith the wisdom of. that Creator “whe beth all things for the best.” Some- mes there are sorpows that are good b us, becifuse (hev‘chenr our hearts selfishness and teach us to syme athize with our fellow human beings, Tief hus made many .a heart. gentle hat Was not so before, . We must take he joy and the sorrow together, per- itting neither the one nor tie.otner 0 make usiforget life's real reason for existence.—Los Angeles Times. Health in White Ceda: Water pails and other vessels ade f southern white cedar! wefe long eld to have a wholesome effect on L& contents because of supposed j+dicinal properties of the wood, sys <& American Forestry Maguazine, It vas even believed that water fssuing from ' a white cedar spigot had its Lealthfulness increased, Sleeping Sickness. Medical experts disagree in their conclusions as to the exact nature of | . Some forms of “sleeping sickne: are not unlike brain fever, while others indicate symptoms much similar to “spinal meningitis. - Physicians advise ‘caution against undue exposure to the disease untll more exact knowledge of its cause is' ascertained. . ( Japansse Sleeping Arrangements. | The Japanese bed, consisting mere-, ly of a few thick comforters and a pitlow, ean easily be made up in any, room. It is considered a mark of hos pitality to make the guest’s bed in th i parlor and put the room at his: dis- posal. ‘ -llqu. THE BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEER Straw Put o Mary Usea Satol straw, fii ute by the Mexicam tor thatehing, Is vot.such poor ma- terlal for the purpose so far ar weather proofing goes. The sotol plant grows on the high dry hills anc wountains in the upper border region. The fiber of the leaves und stalk is very' strong’ and tough. When these are pounded out and uscd several layers B ¥they e an lmpene- trable which keeps out rain and sun 2lfkE, The plant is often used for making furnfture and for carving cutlery. There are goat herders on western ranghes whose houses are tiiatched and walled with the materlal, Whose furniturg Is made of it and whose ~spoons. find forks -even are carved from It Lacking sotol, the Mexicans often use sticks, broomweed or even cornstalks in the place of L F3r Machingry Imperative, Whiie it ts-impossible to determine the extent that modern farm imple- ments have jncrensed the production per acre, it is certain that it is only through their use .that the large in- crease in population has been support- ed and sufficlent labor liberated to permit of the present manufacturing and commiercial activities in our towns and cities, and yet provide sufticient food with which to sustain the race, With the implements In use 60 or 70 yeurs‘,g%!q.‘gm,_snch condition of devel- opment ‘ag? waintained today is think- able. W1 ¢ E\arl'yspfiy Peddler. An fmportant merchant of centuries E ago was the man who did your buying for you. - Inthose days there were no wall-order houses nor was. there such a thing as running intg town to do your shopping, So there was evolved a, professional shopper who made it his business to buy what you needed. He was known as a packere, pukkere, or pake-man, and from these words the modern names resembling them have sprung. — —————— e [T AT ““cAll Dolled Up”" SUNDAY Matinee 2:30 WHY DO SO MANY for it—Pittesburgh Gazette-Times, = A T _EVER HEAR OF;MID-CHANNEL? I¢'s Been the Ruin of Many a'Marriage, a3 vou will see in Clara Kimball Young’s wonderful photo play, “Mid-Channel.” REX Tuesday & Wednesday IS YOURS A HOUSE OR A HOME? “There's a World of Difference,” says Clara Kimball Young, in her greatest photcplay, “Mid-Channel.” IS A WIFE'S PLACE IN THE HOME? “It All Depends on the Husband,” claims Clara Kimball Young, in her supreme photodramatic triumph, “Mid-Channel.” t DOES MARRIAGE MEAN SECLUSION? See the Frark and Fearless Photoplay of the Age, “Mid- Channel,” with Clara Kimball Young. " ARE CHILDREN A HINDRANCE TO SUCCESS? Learn the Great Lesson of Marriage in Pincro’s Greatest Picture, “Mid-Channell,” with Clara Kimball Young. DOES THE WOMAN’S WRONG JUSTIFY THE MAN’S See the Dramatic Answer to the Throbbing Problem of i Married Life in “Mid-Channel,” with Clara » : K_imbnll Young. MARRIAGES FAIL? “Mid-Channel” is the answer given by Clara Kimball Young in Pinero’s stage masterpiece. l “MARRIAGE Is MADiZ IN HEAVEN" “But it is Broken on Earth)* in Ethel Barrymore’s stage success, “Mid-Channel.” says Clara Kimball Young, IS YOUR WIFE YOUR “PAL"? | Someone is Bound to Be, as Clara Kimball Young shows in Her Greatest Screen Success, ‘“Mid-Chammel.” Scene from “UNCHARTED SEAS,” Starring ALICE LAKE The story of Lucretia Eastman is that of a young wife who ] Heatn tan Hichana « hpawt make good as a man. How she, in the silent cold wastes of the “Uncharted Seas” in the Arctic, solved her life’s dilemma is an emotional experience of such intensity that only so genuine an actress as Alice Lake could portray it. ON THE ROOF OF THE WORLD among the icv fields of the Arctic Cirdle the three-cornered romance was finally scttled and Lot mwemetinge of W the disillucioned wife found her long-sought hope in the horrors of shipwreck in the) frozen seas. Alice Lake in the Metro picture, “Uncharted Scas” vividly portrays this lcve storv. 7 ALASKAN HUSKIES IN “UNCHARTED SEAS” Seven Alaskan canine huskies, veterans of polar ex- peditions and numerous winters in the land of the mid- night sun. THE CAST .......................................... Alice Lake Carl Gerard Rudolph Valentino ..... Fred Turner Charles Mailes ..Rhea Haines Lucretia Eastman Tom Eastman ....... Frank Underwood . Robert Alden .. Old Jim Eastman Ruby Lawton LLOYD HANS HAMILTON and IRENE DALTON ; —in— “ROBINSON CRUSOE” Educational Mermaid Comedy REX TEN-PIECE ORCHESTRA Matince 2:30—10c-30c Evenings 7:10-9:90;15&30: ; This Store Will Be Closed All Day Monday— LABOR DAY ALICE LAKE in—“Uncharted Seas” A Romance of Frozen Wilds in the Klondyke . REX—SUNDAY THE PIONEER WANT ADS BRING RESULT! REX Showing Today Only Franklyn Farnum hailed as conquering hero on trip from New York to the Pacific Coast—an exhilarating story of the East and West— Franklyn Farnum at his best —a large company of cele- brated players. Romance of the plains—the purple glow ¢j the Rocky Mountain sunset — straight shooting and hard riding— the tale of love’s old sweet song—such is the story of Franklyn Farnum in— CAST Rance Sparr.. . Franklyn Farnum Black Sparr Vester Pegy Vivian Marrow Gertrude Hall Braden Churchill Scott Dyramite Dan David Mansficld Equcational Comedy In Two Parts A Peace-Time Comec That’ll Bring a Ballery of Roars. Fox News REX ORCHESTRA M\u!inec 2:30—7:10-9:00 _—_ SUBSCRIBE FOR THE DAILY PIONEER FURS Aok bek b in any style Coats, Capes or Sets. MANUFACTURING FURRIER OPEN FOR BUSINESS SEPT. 6th Small exnenses enables me to turn out work at ve able prices—much lower than the large city furriers. EXPERT ATTENTION GIVEN TO RE- MODELING, REPAIRING, RELIN- ING AND CLEANING FRED J. KRUSE | Second Floor—Security Bank Bldg. ‘| BEMIDJI, MINN. . 7 il Having had eighteen years’ experience in Fur Manufactur- ’ ing and Designing, I am equipped to give the public expert i workmanship on all Fur Work in this territory. | y reason- I have in stock a few Fur Coats and Fur Sets—reasonably priced—Designed by myself in the very latest styles. Also several lots of Skins, in beautiful Martin, Mink, Musk- ‘ rat and Australian Opossum, which 1 can make up to order |

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