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

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THE : BEMIDJI: DAILY - PIONEER " PAGE THREE RED CROSS WORKING FOR HEALTHIER U. S, Thousands Aided by Instruction in Care of the Sick, Food Se- lection and First Aid. “What the Tl "Cross” accomplished | in giving proper instruction through its Nutrition Service is indicated by ! the New ear es completed during v udents envolled . completing course following table: formed classes during 142 ), New Student In addition to the above, Items for this column will be | gladly received by Mrs. Harvey, | telephone 114-W. Readers owe i it to their guests and to them. selves to see that items of local interest are reported. Every item will be given proper considera- ENTERTAIN THIS EVENING Mr. and Mrs. R. J. Boardman are| entertaining Mr. and Mrs. Phil Gill| and family at a six o(lock dinner | this evening. a total of 22,006 children were given instruction In the proper sclection and prepara- tion of foods. Through it 30 TTealth Centers, the i | | tioi: whan;jource is knows. | MODERN SAMARITANS | Mow the American Red Cross guides| Red Cross reached 90,252 persons. In § 1 e P : B | these 1 5 health lee- Miss Holmes of Minneapolis is vis- | thousands of persons to health Is | iting relatives in Mizpah for a few| MEET THURSDAY NIGHT | .,y iy summary of the so aures were given and 780 health ex The Modern Samaritans will hold | activities In the health field libits held. days. in the United States last ¥ their regular meeting Thursday ue Another shipment of Worthmore Silk Blouses, Georg- | upon the annual report for the " y " Mrs. H. A. Speck of Frohn was ning at 8 o'clock at the I 0. O. F.| . e il O 32 persons were kitled and e 3 i Aot sh;flpping - Ber:idji Taesday, J hall ALl members e asted ta b(,j cal y Through its Nursh injured in Industeial aecidents. To ette and Crepe de Chine Garments at the low present, | its Home Hygiene and Care of the| prevent this (normous waste the Red price of, each sl -.$5.00 [ ¢ i First| Cross held 5,100 fivst ada classes with 'J| Wash Blouses at, each $1 00 and $2.00 Miss T. Coffin of Solway is visit- ing relatives in Bemidji this week. and | atotal of 1041000 students enrolled, PARENT-TEACHER CLUB Wash School Dresses at, c;x(h MEETS FRIDAY AFTERNOON ‘Fr?:h( I:I(;l;g:y‘;o’l;?lai\}éef! (oh:}l]oz‘!,(mné’“f}fg citizens with proper methods of living, Bemidji State Teachers college. All| (M Red Cross carried its mes members, and those interested, are! helth into all parts of the country. urged to be present. Tie work of the Red Cross during = the war in its traditional field of nurs- | ENTERTAIN AT INFORMAL ing, furnishing the military and naval DANCING PARTY TUESDAY establishments of the Girly’ ..$2.00 and $3.00 O Leary-—Bowser Co. EMIDJI, MINN. nters and in numerous other red to acquaint masses of o | David Gill was called to Minne- ‘y apolis Monday night by the death of a nephew. The Incentive. ambitions of true honor, of the true glory and perfeciion of our Lt incentive of vir- but to he ambitious of titles, of ¢ coremonial respects and eivil is as vain and litle as the e which we court.—Siv Philip Ta he All-wool flannel middies, all sizes, navy and red $3.98, $4.95 and $6.50. Troppman’s. L 2t10-€ Frank Clark and Ciyde Martin of | Turtle River transacted business in thir i ! 877 nurs o1l known, 3 Bemidji Tuesday. | Miss Arvilla Kenfield and Miss| are todn Sidney N EVERY ONE i . s . Lucy Dunnigan entertained about| the Ameriean Red Cross and subject R i by Miss Edith, " r Am R 0 uhje i . H. Mills and daughter, Miss Bdi guests at an informal danc-| to call in cmer: During the fis- Nerve for Taxi Drivers. ;‘D"A”; I |E g}"{y "i,. taxicabs on {he highways spent Saturday and Sunday with rel- = at the Kenfield home, 1224 cal year, «d Cross nurses were | STYLES THAT ARE UNUSUAL} atives at Chisholm. | R, i i b ieses o Hocks Doud avenue, Tuesday evening. accepted to Govern-| eross ench other without relaxing 4 ACTSAND A S PARTFEAYURE PICTURE < — : ot o © the Army sind| speed and often miss each ofher by | Koors Pasteurized milk and cream| makes them -appeal strongly to the | EPISCOPAL GUILD WILL A II; Ta b e ‘", i -‘i““\' A Ihehes, 1t is <nid (hat each driver de- | are sure to please. 10-5tf | woman who would be well-dressed. The 5 R LS he United States i . | We are on what is known as t.je ‘Bert Levy Clrcuit’--The 4 actroad design in check voile has a long-waisted HOLD MEETING TOMORROW | Public Healil Ser pends upon the other to retain his shows start out of Ckicagoe and traveliniact to San F.-anci: nurses enrolled | nerve. Walter Johnson left Tuesday for| blouse to which is attached a skirt | ppe | adies’ Guild, of the Episco- In addition to 1 Oak Island where he will teach a| composed of three bias flounces. Deep 1 x i by the Red ¢'r Government s — — ———————— | d t - pal church will meet Thursday after- N 5 G el | A term of school. 8 g?;flte:hec‘;gfh "ém;f‘cv'"“fnfl":;go':flgé noon at 2:30 o’clock at'the home of | :‘:' l“"f i eIt emplosud ." Belladonna. JANYE a“d PEOR!NI ) M H M d Mrs. D. S. Mitchell |“sleeves. The neck is round and collar- Mrs. C. K. Petrie, 913 Bemidji ave-| t(l "l‘"' : Il peladonna is lalian for “rair | 0 LER&FAYTELLE r. and Mrs. D. S. Mitchell mo-| jo " ng the blouse is slightly gathered |nue. All members and frjends are in-| e U rited * AR drug was given tils | Saxaphones, Accordions, Blackface Comedi tqrgiii to Red Lflkfi %odqu on & com-| 5" dhe front, ~Medium®size equires |vited to be present. | the gr was employed in il lian women e Piano, Musical Novalty Sing{n;,( Talking, Dancing ‘bined pleasure and business trip. ! 5 yards 36-inch voile and yard satin. t | the United St , while 81 were the juic Jining thelr « b 2 5 in foreign Home I classes, gi the proper where the illness The seccond dress has a basque blouse |FREE LUTHERAN LADIES s by giving them | and is made of dark blue silk. The i waist closes on the left. shoulder and HOLD MEETING TOMORROW | under the left arm. It is trimmed with | The Ladies’ Aid of the Free Luth-! | a collar of tucked batiste inset with in- {eran church of Fifth ward will hold woene and Care of the Sick « thorough instruction in P. J. Russell and Mort Pendergast‘ left Tuesday for Mud Lake and will ‘hunt in that vicinity for a few days. BUD BOYD Official Sampler THE LOSTERS Mrs. Minnie Warner of PllpDSij sertion and edged with lace. Finishing |its regular meeting Thursdayl after-| require professional nursin Path of Duty Is First. o i was in Bemidji Tuesday en route to th]el =110lellee\§s «lll‘e cuffs ‘th match the |noon at 2:30 in the church'basement. | ing the W year numbered We must not waste chaiees of het- Hcme Brewers' Ass'n In—“A Night at Home" Grant Valley to visit friends for a| collar. ie_bands on the tunic are | [ynch will be served and all are wel picture of the Red Cross|tering ourselves—unless we muke o e AT week. outlined with tiny accordion plaited | ) ] ! . i . |come. fons in this field follow something of our own i we eannot G Clark, who has b ruffles, stitched on in inverted effect. y seorge ark, who has been em-| proqiim size requires 5 yards 36-inch — 4 g formed during do much for other people: yet the fin- ploye((ii at lilg Eolk for %m(;nthn re-| gilk, MODERN WOODMEN HOLD est way of bett o ourselves s in e —PICTURE PROGRAM turned to his home at Turtle River| " First Model: Pictorial Reyiew Dress MEETING THIS EVEN completed d N oof ‘s vivsolfishe ] 1 = ING| s completed q (he path of duty, kindliness, unscelisi- | “ wif: L Tuesday. No. 9280. Sizes, 34 to 46 inches bust. e | 4 pdents envolled . ness-—Arithur Lo Salmon, in Ch EDITH ROBERTS mn— LUR]NG LIPS i Price, 35 cents. The regular meeting of the Mod-| A e Ditle Neows, How a Beautiful Woman's wits and wiles wdn back the Man Casht paid for Liverty bonds. @.| _Second Model: Dress No. 9547, [ern Woodmen of Ameriea will be| ™ o Tl AR she loved. B. Hooley, Northern Grocery Co. Sizes, 34 to 44 inches bust. Price. | held this evening at 8 o’clock, at the| e i ot h = 1-19tf| 35 cents. rmiryen - |Moose hall, after which lunch will| T ll)filsencx(l: and a social time enjoyed. | SCHEDULE OF' TIME ee—————— . R. Gil is expected to ar- members are urged to be present. | H rive home today from Fosston where | Ggorge Cross, superintendent of| pepent J0rictore s 230 Adui3se | is spend- | Vaudeville at 3:30 Children under Six-| |- | the Red Lake Indian agenc |ing a few days in Bemldjl on busi- ness._ MISS BOWERS ENTERTAINS Miss Thelma Bowers entertained a number of young people at her home,| 1001 Dewey avenue, last evenmg‘ Gards and music assisted in spending a pleasant evening. Lunch was serv-| ed Those present were Misses Ella Elliott, Virginia Bradford and Jose- phine Parker, and Bill Elliott, Tom! Simons, Louise Rude and Charles! Reed. | ROYAL NEIGHBORS TO . HOLD MEETING TONlGHT Members of the Roval Nelghhors& are asked to note the change in time| and place of meeting, from the sec-| th Tresdav~ to the firct of anch manth a yonelap hy she has visited her mother for the| past week. | | _Mrs. M. Phibbs has returned to her | farm home at Rockwood aiter spend- | . ing a week in Bemidji with her daugh- ter, Miss Pearl. teén with written consent from their parsnts and 1c War Tax-.FREE. N";HT 1st Picture 7:15 2nd Show At VAUDEVILLE STARTS AT 8:25 9 00 (Prices Include War Tax) GRAND - Thursday REX TODAY Albert A. Kaufman presents A SIDNEY A. FRANKLIN PRODUCTION “NOT GUILTY” Boys’ suits, two pairs knickers with suit, $6.50. Toppman’s. 2£10-5 The Branded Woman Testified— BUT SHE WAS INNOCENT b Two Others Were There— WHO MURDERED GARRICK? —All-Star Cast— MAHLON HAMILTON LOUISE GLAUM JOSEPH KILGOUR RUTH STONEHOUSE and Little MICKEY MOORE It’s a storv of a “different kind” of a Chorus Girl—the wife of a prcminent attorney, whose brief return to her former life caused a thou- sand astonishing complica- Miss Ruth Gruer arrived in Be- midji this merning and will -go’ from here to Big Lake, 14 miles east of Bemidji, where she will teach school. Children 25¢ Adults 50¢ Visit our plant and learn the rea- son why Koors Pasteurized milk and | cream “Ends the Quest for the Best.” 10-5tf@ A foot expert specially trained in | | Dr. Scholl's method of foot correc- Mr. and Mrs. L. L. Omdahl of Hart|tion will be at the B. & D. Shoe store Lake motored to Bemidji and were | Thursday, October 6. 2t10-5 guestd Monday and Tuesday of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Getchell. | Miss Mary Lilleskov, assistant county superintendent, left last eve- Mrs. J. A. Younggren and Mrs.|ning for the north end of the county, J,-W. Diedrich were afternoon guests | where she will visit schools for about today of Mrs. Geolge Baker at her‘two weeks. summer home at LaMoure. | Children’s Vellastic and and f land thivt Wadnn=dn-- lat the Mance hall % . Iness meeting of the Loyal Neighbors union Suits, |of America will be held this eve- 2t10-5 | ing at 3 o'clock at the 1. O. f0 ¥ hall. There will be initiation of can-| Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Hurd and little | idates and all members are urged! son, Jack, left Bemidji Tuesday at |tq be present. ‘r\oon in a Ford -runabout for Austin, | ' You'll be pleased, if, when ordering ' 98c. Troppman’s milk from your dealex you ask for| 10-5tf | Koors Pasteurized milk. Mr. Mrs. A. W. Bengson and son, Rnl.md Texas, where they expect to make - of Mizpah were shopping and Ld]]mg‘their home. They planned to readh | M- E- OFFICIAL BOARD ‘ tions. sti it i Y P o, 1 ) o D& i 0, 1 on friends in Bemidji Tuesday. 131:;;5 destination in about three; . }iNJ{OYS CHl:KENfD:}I:INE? PATHE NEWS “SPOT CASH” Adapted ';,l(,)"fi:l?g];“x;{(;&{'fi“t' & Co.? Dr. and Mrs. G. H. Zentz and Mr. ' 'wenty-four members o e Ok Current Events of the World Snub Pollard Comedy : b 5 . 4fiua] board of the Methodist church| A FIRST NATI o S and Mrs. A. T. Carlson motored today B. P. 0. E. ELKS Ipartook of the fried chicken ban- ONAL ATTRACTION GUARANTEED ‘A1’ ENTERTAINMENT to the Zentz farm near Turtle River| rpece will be a special meeting Of |quet served by the Ladies’ Aid last, Admissicn Refunded Any Dissatisfied Patron on a combined harvest, hunting and|the kiks lodge Thursday evening. evening at 6:30 in the basement of fishing trip. T. C. BAILEY, Secretary. ithe church, after which matters per-' i | 2t9-15 | taining to the finances of the church : Miss El}a Swanson, who hfis taught‘ — 'for the coming year were dlscu«ed 1:30 & 9 in the North school since the begin-! No True Century Plant. Plans were made to put on the ""G'V\ 10¢ & 25¢ ning; of the fall term, has been com-; There are no true century plants in ,membm canvass” next Sunday from| b velled to go to her home at St. Cloud | be( ause of a nervous breakdown. i 2 to 4 o'clock, at which time commit-| tees will go out in groups of two and‘ visit every member affiliated with the | church in Bemidji. - tiat it takes them a hun- | < to Dloom. A number of | , however, do not bloom until have lived for a long term of “The classic example of such | plants is the talipot palm of India | which lives for 50 y or more and | becomes a fall tree before it blooms. | sugar, acids and s sent up its immense | figs, prunes and g | the sen: * Miss Esther Johnson, who has vis- ited relatives and friends and at the ! home of her sisiter, Mrs.*Archie Nau- gle, for the past four weeks, will leave for her home at Lakota today. ""31 | Nutrition in Fruits, e chiefly valuable for their Its. Bananas, dates, pes, owing to tln-lr Fruits Phone 175 and place your order | After it for Koors Pasteurized milk and | flower-stalk the whole plant dies. | large amount of sugar, are {he most cream to be delivered right to your: Our American “cent plants” often | nutritious. Apples, lemons and door every morning. 10-5tf | fruit at the end of eight or ten years l oranges are valuable for their potash | under natural conditions, but in the | salts, and oranges and lemons, es- valuable for their citrle the trip by automobile. E. W. Nix of Chicago, who has | been appointed to take charge of thei accounting offices of the Kenfield-| Lamoreaux company here, arrived | Tuesday and has assumed his new| duties. He intends to move his fam. | ily here as soon as he finds a suitable location. A foot expert specially trained mw Dr. Scholl’s method of foot cotrecu‘ tion will be at the B. & D. Shoe store | Thursday, October 6. 2t10-5 ‘Mr. and Mrs. Andy Larson are re- | t, King Jamshid had a great = modeling their home at* 713 Minne-| ey ey y 1w, tongue of beach running out into r sota avenue and making it modern. | f;_: ‘:Lgt‘l?r[:n- h,:::::":“?:n:zfi ‘(:::)l A:‘t;‘e the breakwaters of the fic. Scene from Not GUI ty They have raised the house and put‘ in a new foundation. are making ad-! ditional rooms, putting in hardwood ! floors, and a large porch on the front. | They are also installing a furnace. Georze Swenside left Monday for | Leonard where he will go into the Iy, instead of dving, she lost her de- to were recognized as earl restaurant business. Mrs. Swenside| spondency, ind became unusually hap- time of Aristote, when four ways by entertainment you are sure to like this picture. Matinee 2:30—10c¢125¢ Evenings 7:10-9—10¢-30c¢ and two voungest children remained | py. The king could not understand | which the mind passes from one idea i & in Bemidji with her daughter, Mrs. | Bert Naylor. for a few days longer. The house that the Swensides have vicated on Scott avenue, Fifth ward, will be occupied by Mr and Mrs. | Pete Nelhein. plants, Explains PFOPEI';I;S of Food. | aclds, | The American \Iu&gum jof Natural | History, in New York, has a collec- tion of wax models of different kinds of food, accompanied by explanations of their v in calories and other dietary ]Hll)v ¢ Home Brew Thirty Centuries Ago. Tor originaling the art of home brewing the Persians claim Thirty centuries ago, according to an| ti juice, which fermented and became sour. One of the king's wives, having learned of the liquid in the basewent, 1 which the king believed to he, and had “poison” decided to use it te Although she drank free- labeled end her life. hilarity until she confessed it is related, both the mon- her Thereafter. | This celelrated cur | follage sc cregit, | huge - and earnest | to another arch and his court with frequent regu-| larity “poisuned” themselves on home | brew. Monterey’a Os(nch Tree. | T (Ilnl% of the lower are of Anthony's nose, is formed of Cypresses o that their | ms to be |[|‘1t of one tree; | ostrich tr Hudson v two coast and the shape of it, together with the peculiar angle at which the two trunks are placed, gives the silhouette of a ostrich sllklm.' along shore. The brave old trees that make the picture are alone on a lm N «pssociation of Ideas.” This phrase seems to have been used first by John Locke, an English philosopher, who lived in the seven- teenth century, but the facts referred as the were discovered. These '\uyi‘ ation by simila v, by contrast and by were known ity, by continui succession. g P 25 ot e | YOU LIKE A GOOD STORY——-—OI‘IL that keeps you guess- ing right up to the end. This is just what this picture does. It holds the attention, keeps you interested and makes vou forget cverything else. If you enjoy good, clean film ELKO Tonight and Thursday P LS S o s N | | | % Come and see the local players acting before the camera. DUSTIN FARNUM in “The Primeval Law” E. L. Gary returned Tuesday from | house they may refuse to bloom at all. | pecially, are Harvey, N. D., where he has spent the | aArany of the bamboos act like the cen- | acid, Some fruits contain two or more gast two months looking after his| tyry plants and bloom but once after | acids, such awberries, r:wplwr-‘ I:én:;\é: ltr}l]tril;isl;s d:er:::g theHhflwezt- a long period of vegetation. Such | ries, gooscherries and cherries. These | T Z on. e made | qhoojpg knowp as monocarpic | fruits contain both citric and nialic MERMAID COMEDY-—In Two Parts “MAKING MCVIES” REX ORCHESTRA —COMING SUNDAY— s e

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