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Items for this column will be gladly received by Mrp. Harvey, telephone 114-W. it to their guests and to them- selves to see that items of local interest are reported. Every itom will_be en proper considera- tion when source: is known. William Blakeley and family, of Farl;y attended the state fair this week. ¥ Mrs. Peter Larkin of Turtle River visited friends in” Bémidji between trains Friday. it paper-| For kalsominihg, painting. hanging, naturalfwood } on A. E. Webster. I'‘have had 20 years’ experience. Phone 166. 3t9-10 Clyde Martin of Turtle River at- tended to_business : matters in Be- midji Friday. George -and Fred .Clark of Turtle River were business visitors in Be- midji Friday. Mrs. Bernard Corrigan of Chicago is a guest of her brother-in-law, M Corrigan, and family, in Bemidji. Dance in old Armory Wednesday, Sept. 14. , Music by Shuck’s Jazz Or- chestra. Everybody invited. ) 4t9-13 Miss Mary Walden of St. Paul is the guest of her friend, Miss Jo- sephine Parker, 209 Seventh street. Mus, H. Little of St. Paul, who has been the guest of Mrs. T. J. Burke, 1001 Beltrami avenue, has returned to her home. For ,picnic or excursion parties charter passenger boat “Thor.” A. A. Lee, licensed pilot. Phone Gl-gfi i 6-26t1. orris - and little son, Joe, Jr.;;and’Mrs:-Morris’ mother ré- turned “yesterday from North Dako- ta, where they have been’the past three ‘months. Mis: ‘Mayvis Phillippi, teacher of District. No. 90, east of Bemidji, is!. epending_the week end at her home| in the morth end of Bemidji. Casbipaid for Liverty bonds. G. B, Hooley, Northern Grocery Co. A Lord ‘and Miss Edith Mills Mrs.id; C. Cobb of Virginia is visit- ing friends in. Bemidjithis week, The re former residents: of ‘Beé- idj r. Cobb was amployed.m‘ the postoffice. Olaf Ongstad and family and Mrs, Frank Gagnon returned from-a mo- tor trip to St..Paul Friday where they attended the state fair. They re-| port a ‘very enjoyable trip. | | For rent: Modern furnished room, three blocks from Normal. 1218 Bemidji avenue. 6t9-14 Jack Kiley of Chisho'm has been a guest this week at the H. Mills home, 907 Beltrami avenue, and expects to| return to Chisholm Sunday. He isa/ son-in-law of Mr. and Mrs. Mills. Rev. W. F. Kamphenkel, pastor of | St. Paul's Evangelical church, has! ‘moved to the L. G. Crothers’ ‘Tesi- dence at 713 Bemidji avenue,‘ and may be reached at Telephone 479. Joseph E. Harris, judge of Juven- ile court, and J. C. McGhee,! chajr- man of the Beltrami County Welfare board, went to Hibbing this morning to attend the four-day session. of the! Minnegota social workers.” All électric light bills are due and should be paid on or before the 10th | of September. In dojng:so you save| your discount and help’ us give: you | the service you desire. 8t9:10 Mr. ‘and Mrs. D. /L. Stanton Teft yesterday for Grand Forks where they will be guests for ‘the week end of their: daughter, Mrs. H. Mayne Stanton; and family. ~The _will “also attend. the golf tournament. i Dr. Elizabeth A. Roton, licensed optometrist of Grand Forks, will be a at the Cass Lake hotel from 7:20 p. m., Sept. 22 until 2:40 p. m., Sept. 3. Atthe Markham hotel, Bemidjl; from 3:22 p. m., Sept 23 until 3:22 p.m. Sept 24. At Hotel Lee, Fosston, from 5:06 p. m., Sept. 24, until 5:06 p. m., Sept. 25. Have your own and children’s eyes exédmined, Cross-eyes a specialty. All work absolutely \ guaranteed. 1t9-10 " Emerson says: “We get nine- tenths of our education through our eyes.” Let Us Set Your Eyes Right - It Will Pay You Well 0od finishing, call |, | son’ 1-19¢f4- Daily Fasluon Hint Ty 96548 Blouse 9584, A MODISH SLIP-QVER FROCK * Easy to make, easy to wear and exceedingly smart in style is_this sleeveless * slip - over frock.. It is fashioned in’ natural color fabric 'silk and worn with a blouse of string color batiste. A round collar finishes the neck. of the blouse, which has short sleeves . with . turn-back cuffs. = The front of the dress is laid. in_plaits at the- shoulders, the backs being ex- tended over tothe front to form a-yoke effect. Medium;sise requires 334 yards 6-inch silk for the dress and 174 yards tiste for the blouse. Pictarial Review Dress No. 9634. Sizes, 34 to 48 inches bust. Price, 35 cents. Blouse No. 9584. Sizes, 34 to 46 inches bust. Price, 30 cents, s Raymond Farr of Walker visited friends in Bemidji this week. C..B, Hoyt is spending a few days with‘relatives near Grafton, N. D. _G. D.-Backus returned. this morn- ing/ from a buying trip in the Twin | Cities, and he also attended the state fair, Mz and Mrs. Wilson of MecIntosh | wére ‘guests in Bemidji: of Mrs. Wil- ’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hammond, this week. H.: A. Pflughoeft - -has returned to Bemidji from Minneapolis where he agsisted with the Beltrami county ex- hibit;at the state fair. A,!tpt, September 1st Mrs, Willlam C. Budge ‘will.take'a limited number of..pupils . for pianoforte instruction. 1220 Doud ‘avenue. Telephone 318-W hisrady i i 8-12tt . Myr. and Mrs. E. S. Ingersoll re- turned, to their home in Fifth ward Friday after.a month’s visit with friends.and relatives in New York. Mrs. J(/C. West and two children have arrived in Bemidji and the Wests are now located temporarily in a summer cottage at Grand Forks Bay. Miss Margaret Bridgeman arrived in. Bemidji _Friday for.a ten days’ vist at the home of Mr. and Mrs. H. A. Bridgeman, Fifth ward. She is a cousin_of Mr. Bridgeman. ‘ Wonderful bargains in silk blouses, choice at omne-half price. O'Leary- Bowser Co. 2td9-9 ‘Mr. and Mrs. William McDermid and Mrs. R. W. Koehn and two chil- dren returned Friday from the Twin Cities where they motored the first of the week to attend the state fair: *'Mr..and Mrs. T. C. Stuart are ex- pected to: arrive . home _tomorrow mozning, from.a motor. trip to Du- luth, where ‘they _attended the. Tri- State fair, the Range towns and Min- neapolis where they attended the state fair. H.'M. Clark of the Shevlin, Car- pentex, & Clark Co., of Minneapolis, nd’ a. party of four men from the (Cities who rented a summer cot- ‘st Point Comfort, Turtle River, oria few days this week, have o;:thelr homes. - Solsu‘-.’énergy in Plants. The, estihate is made that the apount. og' solar energy stored . in plants, gach; year is 22 times the amount of; energy represented by the coa), constmed in: the sume period. About 67 per cent of this plant energy is taken up by the forests; 24.per cent by cultivated plants; 7 per cent by grass of the steppes and prairies, and 2 per cent by the plants of desert lands, The energy received by forests coal used. But unfortunately the for- ests that receive this energy are main- ly in the tropics. In temperate re- glens we are depleting the forests just as we are exhausting the coal supply; further justifying the proph- ‘ecy that; centers of manufacture, and therefore presumably of civilization itself, will ultimately shift back to- | ward the equator.—Dr. Henry Smith Willlams, in Hearst’s Magazine. Office of Independent School District 1 Number:7 - Notice is hereby given that the bids on .the brick, tile and stone, now on the cld Jumior-Senior High School site, Sept. 13th, 7:30 p.m., with the Tight reserved to reject any! or all bids. FLORENCE F. NETZER. Clerk. Subscribe fur The WDally FPloneer. alone Is 14 times the energy of the . Clerk of tiis Distriet will receive| ENJOP WIENER ROAST Miss Mildred. 'Olson’. entertained eight young lady friends at a weiner roast at Rocky Point last evening in homnor of her birth anniversary. The guests; . were Misses Mabel Croon, Dolores Barnell, Ragnhild Moe, Alice ‘Ballingrude, ' Myrtle Kolbe, Della Dupuis, Margaret Carson and Jean Walker. MES. WILCOX SURPRISED About twenty iriends surprised Mrs. D. Wilcox last evening at her home, 611 Irvine avenue, it being planned in honor of her birth anni- versary. A pleasant social evening was enjoyed with conversation, and a word contest was held, Mrs. Ber- nard Corrigan of Chicago, being the winner and receiving the prize. A fine birthday lunch was served. The guests presented Mrs, Wilcox an um- brella as a birthday gift. The guests included Mesdames C. B. Minnick, J. ‘B. Minnick, Van Arnum, Tuller, E. P. Gould, B. S. Gould, M. Corrigan, VanVoorhees, E. J. Gould, Kemp, Scott, Phelps, Eickstadt, Courtney, T. J. Andrews, A. Ellison, Stafford, Bernard;, Corrigan, N. Gould, M. Hammersley and ss Flora Shep- herd. The guests departed wishing Mrs. Wilcox many more nappy birth- days. DELVING INTO MOTHER EARTH: Maa Has Gone Far Underground in Search of Riches That She Has, Concealed. For, centuries man has been engaged in burrpwing his way deeper and deeper- into the crust of: old- Mother. Earth, In order to extract the minerals which she hides beneath hei surface. A century ago 1,000 feet was thought to be a stupendous depth for any shaft; for. in. those days there were ne engines. capable of pumping from greater depths, and no system of ven- tilation had been devised which would make it possible-to work in galleries at a greater distance from the surface. Coul pits over 3,000 feet deep are row fairly common in England, while Belgium has two which exceed 4,000 feet in depth, i But coal is not alone in ing deep pits. There is in Australia a silver mine whose bottom is. 3,500 feet below the surface, while a gold mine at: Ben- digo, in Australia, has been sunk to 4,300 feet, A famous Transvaal gold-mining company. Is sinking -a shaft which, when complete, will measure more than 7,000 feet. Breathing Under Water. ‘If 'a- swimmer {s thre¢ minutes under water he is looked upon as a prodig, but M. Thoor a French doctor, de- clares that a.man could remain half an hour if he only knew hov: to handle the carbonic acid in his system. A man proved recently o a body of medical experts and scientists that it was possib'e to rer and laugh at the audience surrounding a 12-foot deep aguarium, eat cherries, take out the sto pull a ary face when the cherry proves sour, and smile when a preity woman touched the glass with a cigarette, The secret of all this lies in using as soon as you are under water, to_ex- hale the carbonic acid gas. This requires some¢ practice. When this is dong you stop: the nostrils, thereby keeping off £ll inhalation. Rid of the ¢arbonic acid in the blood, under water. Diamonds in China. The gold mining bureau of Kwan. gyinshan, Kirin province, Ching, :hns Jard’s Review. The stones are largq and of an appreciable fineness, and specialists have given the opinion that; the deposit is worth while as a: work- ing" proposition. Oscar Peterson and son, Orvel, re- turned to Erskine today after spend- ing a week with relatives and friends at Becida. Esthcr Johnson left for Erskine today -to resume her duties at the last yeur. = 1 under water | a special method of natural breathing | a man Js abl¢ to remain much longer |4 discovered deposits of diamonds in a f4 gold mine now being worked, says Mil- {] Lake Region school where she taught | ig FALL TERM OF COURT T0'0PEN NEXT TUESDAY (Continued From Page 1) are being brought against Mr. Gib- son, the boy’s, father ,by John Con- nelly, Mrs. William Sprague, and Mildred VanKirk, each claiming that they sustained. $5,000 damages. Sam Hong an employee at the Kel- liher Cafe,, is seeking $3,300 dam- ages which he alleges he suffered in an altercation with Clarence Oie, Harold Kerr and others last winter. Clarence Oie is also suing T. C. Fen- son, proprietor of the hotel, for dam- ages which he claims he received on| the same occasion, | A third suit against the Soo Line is| that of I L. Hall, who claims he re-| ceived $20,000 damages when his hand was crushed while coupling cars near Thief River Falls on October| 27, last year. The criminal calendar calls for| four cases. One against Bowman of Baudette on an assault and battery | charge, and the other three against C. Stewart, Joe Mathews and Charles| Beggerman on grand larceny charges| in the 'second degree. A number of | other cases which were expected to be turned over to the grand jury at this term of court were settled some time ago before Judge Stanton when the defendants pleaded guilty and were given sentence. SANG WITH PATRIOTIC FERVOR Dibdin for .His Work in Popu- larizing the Navy. | Charles Dibdin did more to gain re- cruits for the Britlsh navy in the na- val war between France and England than all of the press gangs combined, | and to him belongs the credit of typl- fying the British sailor as a being of | reckless courage, generosity and sim- ple-heartedness. He sang his patriotic songs with ‘a fervor which was con- | tagious and his notes were caught up | and repeated throughout the land, es- | peclally, those: which referred to .-\d-‘i miral felsxxn. For this the government | gave him a peuslon of £200 a year, He was paralyzed about a year before | his death, which .occurred July = 1814. The great! mass of his songs, however, are now forgotten, although some of his operas still infrequently | are heard, and his melody and sweet- ' ness are c¥céelled by few. Dibdin | wrote a dozen novels, a histery of the stage ‘and an autoblography. He was | the eighteenth -child of a Southamp- | ton silversmith, and his mother was | nearly fifty years of age at his birth in 1745, Dibdin’s,purents designed him for the’,churclhi but he would have none of the life of the cleric and ‘ ran away to London to be near the theaters. When only sixteen he man- | aged to bring out one of his operas, | “The Shepherd’s Artifice,” at Covent | Garden, the very, thegter which made | him musfeal “director some years la- ter.—Chicago “Journ: Britain Owes Great Debt to Chariea | LOST—One purple wool scarf, turn to Pioneer for reward. FOR SALE—Two beds, rug, commode, rocker, Sonora, large fern and other articles. Inquire at 516 Minnesota ave. 319-13 FOR RENT— Furnished four-room house. ‘Phone 615. Re- 10 davenport, | 619-16 | | WANT TO TRADE—Common boards | dimension and drop-siding for team work in digging a cellar, or common labor, or carpenter work. J. J. Cpsahl, Phone 177-R, Bemidjt, | Minn. At9-14 FOR SALE—160 acres fine farm land at Battle River, %mil> from Red Lake, flne location, good roads, consolidated school, telephone, mail route, good open meadow and acres ready for the pasture, 30 plow. Price $20 per acre. The improvements| are worth the money. C. M. John-| ston, Box 793, Bemidji. 2t9-12 FOR SALE—Two lots. Inquire at 808 Irvine ave. Phone 201. G9-17 Having sold my ho and moving into smaller one, 1 offer for salé 5 rugs, i dresser, 1 bed, mattress and spring, 1 library bookcase full of books, 1 porch swing, . office desk, 1 coffice letter file, 3 draws, 1 small desbh, 2 cots, 1 small. bed sprinj; and mattress, 1 stair carpet, kitcuen taole, dining table and & dining chairs, 1 J-picee parlor set, 1 center table, one wardrcbe, one hox, 1 kitchen cupboard, 1 heat- er, one armcaair, 1 cream separa- tor, 1 air pump whitewa:h syrayer, 2 cil heaters (new), ! Queen incu- bator, two brooders, 1 light. double ice harness. Can be seen at auny time at 521 Minnesota ave., forra few duys. After that at our hgme in Nymore. E. J. Wiil Phone 285-W 1t9-10 s school girl, Gan give best of character, and 1t9-12 WANTED—P in privatce fam references as to auvility. Phonc387-W. Mahua Tree Produces Alcohol. A new source of nicohol for com- mercial purposes lias heen found in the mahua tree, which fAoarishes fu I 1. Much Betic Better to put your Lest foot forward than to depend on (e left hind fost of a rabbit.—Bestun Sranseripz. I I —REX SUNDAY— James Oliver Curwood’s “QOD’S: COUNTRY and THE LAW” Directed by Sidney Olcott [l g i m [T Fr A i \ \ a0 ADOLPH ZUKOR TPRILONTS SIE RO / /@\I/I/Ll/lz{M D.TAYLOR'S pRODUCTION “rcred and Profane love A PARAMOUNT PICTURE A Romance of Love and Musig, Youth and Fame. * Dressed in Sil but touching at times t Lost the Fight. ks, basking in Luxury, he Haunts of those who Also—MONTE BANKS—In Comedy “HIS DIZ Admission: Ini a Realart Picture from the amusing story by Frances Hammer, of ,a too sternly brought up girl who makes a holt for life, liberty and happiness the instant she l:alchel her majority. BUSTER KEATON that Wil Make the Theatre Ring With Laughter ZY DAY” Children 10c—Adults 25¢ fhe Famouz Cemedi ‘NEIGHBORS”—in ian Recently Seen Hcre in Another Comedy Scream “CONVICT 13” ‘improvements, | Eighth and Minnesota TRINITY LUTHERAN CHURGH “MISSION FEST” 0% Rey. Heurick Nuoffer; Cass Lake, Min War March of the Pricsts - -, = .= =. Mendelssohn Pleycl's Hymn L T T VA Westbrook Lovgs v il e lgeoneg i SN T il (Mr. Frenk, organist) * - It Came Upon the Midnight Clear e = = = = Willis ' SO - = - Lane In the Hour of, Trial, (Children’s Bring Others! Ca;ol (;hoir') Rev. Frenk, M. A,, Pastor Woeilcome! | A(She Was of the Small Town Type— Carefuly and. Prayerfully Reéared. She Married and Then— See William Christy Cabanne’s Leaf. From a Woman’s Soul A Robertson-Cole Super Special ALSC] MACK SENNETT’S COMEDIANS In Comedy with Originality and Speed “CALL A -COP” ELKO ORCHESTRA SUNDAY EVENING Matinece at 2:30° Nighis at 7:30 and 9:00 SUNDAY & MONDAY ELKOQ_Theatre _— “DEVIL DOG DAWSON” An Arrow Attraction “Devil Dog” Dawson, that is Jack Hoxie, and a rip-tearing character he makes him in his latest Western feature of that name. And Tomorrow Nighlt His Rival Was to Wear THEIR Dress Suit BOBBY VERNON VERA STEADMAN EDDIE BARRY And a Huge Christie Cast in— “SHORT AND SNAPPY” Two Reels of Luckless Lovers and a Lost Pair of Trousers. A Christie Comedy FOX NEWS REX ORCHESTRA Matinee 2:30—7:10-9:00 ————————————————————————————————————————— —_TUESDAY & WEDNESDAY—" " JEWEL CARMEN in a ROLAND WEST Production “NOBODY” A Master Drama of Woman’s Motives The story of what happens when “nobodies” try to be “somebodies” and a “somebody” 77 ¥ covets a “nobody’s” love. A FIRST NATIONAL ATTRACTION