Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, May 22, 1922, Page 5

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e - THE BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEER ! " PAGE FIVE gladly r d telephone 114-W. it to their guests selves to see that items of local interest are reported. Every i will be given proper cons tion when source is known. Mrs. Thayer Bailey left yesterday for Crookston to visit her parents for a few days. ‘Mrs., C. Dafndld of Northern was shopping :and_ calling. on, friends in Bemidji Saturday. Mr.: andi Mrs:: George Fort of Eckles drove to Bass Lake and vis- ited friends over t\: week end. “A Pair of Sixes™,? ? 7 ! 11d5-22 Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Wilcox motor- ed to Tenstrike today to attend the land clearing demonstration there. Miss Dorothy Allen of Cass Lake is the guest of hen aunt, Mrs. R. W. Koehn, and family, 413 Irvine ave- nue. Mrs. Martin Dunn and children left Saturday evening for Minne- apolis to visit relatives for a short time. Mr. and Mrs. ‘F. Hall, Wilton, - were in Bemidji Saturday arranging to move here if they can secure a suitable ‘location. 5 Cook With Gas . 2 8-30 tf Mr. and Mrs. Allen Fort and sons, Roy and Lester, autoed to Bemidji from their home at Eckles Saturday and visited friends. Mrs. Carl Durand:of Puposky came to Bemidji this morning and is the guest of her sister, Mrs. Oscar Krantz. She expects to return to her home tomorrow. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Richards are visiting relatives in St. Paul. Mrs. Richards will be matron of honor at a society wedding which is to take place there the first week in June. “A Pair of Sixes” ? 7 7 !!1d5-22 © Dr. and Mrs. H. A. Northrop, Miss Sarah E. Arnold, Mrs. Bretta Louf- bourrow and Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Win- ter spent Sunday at the Northrop hunting lodge at Three-Island lake, making the trip by auto. Miss Agnes Cullen, teacher in Cen- tral school, was moved today from St. Anthony hospital, where she has been for the past ten days following an operation for appendicitis, to the E. E. Kenfield home. Cook With Gas 3-30 tt Mrs. Sylvester Lodemeier of Roy- alton, who was the guest of her sis- ter;- Mrs. R.-H. Schumaker, and fam- ily, last week, returned Saturday to her home. - She came to attend: the Legion Auxiliary convention held ~here Wednesday of last week. Paul McCullough of International " Falls visited his mother here over Sunday and had as his guest at 6 o’clock dinner Sunday evening Mr. MecGarry of Brainerd, train dispatch- er. Miss McCullough had as her guest at dinner Miss Bertha Toutant. Would you place your fate in a hand of poker?—*“A Pair of Sixes.” 1d5-22 Judge B. A. Spooner left on the noon train Sunday for Deer River to_make investigations as attorney for the school board in alleged care- lessness in construction of the dor- mitory of the school built there last year. The case was to be brought up at Grand Rapids today. Polar Pie. Ask for It. 2-14t1 Mrs. Minnie Houston of Dunseith, . D., was ‘the guest of her sister, Mrs. A. A. Richardson, and her cous- in, Mrs. I. N. Keeler, in Bemidji last week for a couple of days, leavin the latter part of the week for Min- neapolis to visit relatives. She will return to her home via Bemidji in about a week. — DANCE TONIGHT! at K. C. Hall. 1d5-22 Mrs| Olva Hayth, 412 Irvine ave- nue, left today for Brainerd where she ‘will visit friends and relatives and attend the Decoration Day ex- ercises. From there she will go to Park Rapids to visit her sister, Mrs. Dora Lincoln, and also her sister, Mrs. Ben LaLone of Verndale for a short time. She expects to return to Bemidji in about two weeks. Are you interested in pill manu- facture?—see “A Pair of Sixes.” 1d5-22 Mrs. L. E. Pierce..and grand- daughter, Ethel, arrived in Bemidji Friday noon from Tacoma, Wash.,: where they have made their home for the :past.two years. :She was a for- mer resident of Bemidji, and says that Bemidji looks better to her than the west; and she wilt purchase a home and locate here ‘again. At present she is a guest at the home of Mr.-and Mrs. J. Bailey, Twenty- second street. ’ Mrs. W. T. Barry of Kelliher, who went as 4 delegate from the Wom- en’s Study club there to the Federa- tion of Women’s Clubs convention at Sauk Center last week, stopped in Bemidji Friday en route to her home, and was a guest until yesterday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. M. L. Mat- son. Mr. Barry motored to Bemidji Saturday evening and was also a LOOKS WELL IN-FOULARD As a stunning evidence that its wvariety is not limited because of sev- eral seasons of popular demand, foul- ard silk appears in combination with plain satin, in this quaintly simple frock. The blouse has an oval-shaped neck, finished at the back with a cape collar. An irregular lower cdge gives an added touch of smartness to the model. The cape collar is lined with satin to correspond with the skirt. Medium size requires 4 yards 36-inch foulard and 234 yards satin. Pictorial Review Tunic Blouse No. 9871. Sizes, 34-to 46 inches bust and 16 to 20 years. Jupon Skirt No. 9873. Sizes, 34 to 48 inches bust and 16 to 20 years, .™ A~ ~—~ S. C. Bailey left for Roseau on the night train yesterday and will ‘cionduct, a state land sale there to- ay. Cook With Gas 8-30 tf Coming, “A Pair of Sixes.” 1d5-22 Miss Ila Lincoln, registered nurse, atrived in Bemidji Saturday and will remain here for some time and will do private nursing while here. DANCE TONIGHT! at K. C. Hall. 1d5-22 A. E. Barker, who visited at the home of his son, A. L. Barker, and family, for a few days last week, returned Friday night to his home at Minneapolis. Polar Pie. Ask for It 2-14t2 Mr. and Mrs. Adam Jenkauski of Eckles were in Bemidji Saturday en route to their home from St. Payl where they have visited friends mfi relatives for a few weeks. B Cook With Gas 3-30 tf Mr. and Mrs. M. L. Matson and little daughter Virgie expect to mo- tor tomorrow to Fertile, Minn., to attend the funeral of an aunt, who passed away there yesterday. DANCE TONIGHT! at K. C. Hall. 1d5-22 Mrs. Frank Canada _and Mrs. Nona Belding of Park Rapids were week-end guests of Mrs. Joe Mc- Taggart. They expect to return to their homeés at Park Rapids tomor- row. $50,000 to loan on farms., Dean Land eompany. 1-18t8 Mrs. Beatrice Voight and little daughter, Betty Lou, were guests yesterday of Miss Ethelyn Hall at her summer cottage near Birchmont. They returned to Bemidji last eve- ning- Polar Pie. Ask for it. W. J. Donaldson of Duluth, who was the week-end guest of Mr. and Mrs. E. G. Brown, left this morning for International Falls to transact business before returning to his home. ¢ Polar Pie. Ask for it. 2-14¢2 Mr. and Mrs. Archie Reed and family moved today from Tenth street to 506 America avenue, where they will occupy the Snyder home during the summer months, they hav- ing gone to their farm near Staples for the summer. 2-14¢8 Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Baer left Sat- urday noon for Chicago on a com- bined pleasure and business trip. During their absence, Miss Holton, R. N., of Elk River, is staying with the children at their home, 915 Lake boulevard. Mrs. M. Berglund, who has made her home with her daughter, Mrs. Gustav Larson, Fifth ward, left:the latter part of the week for an extend- ed visit at Drayton, N. D. While there she will be the guest of an- other daughter, Mrs. Emil Erickson. Did you ever win with “A Pair of Sixes”? 1d5-22 Mr. and Mrs. T. C, Stuart, daugh- ter Marry Anne, and son John left Saturday for Crosby, Minn., to visit Mrs. Stuart’s sister. Mr. Stuart will return to Bemidji today, and Mrs. Stuart and children will remain there for about two weeks when they will go to Forreston, Minn., to visit her mother and sister. They expect to DAUGHTERS OF REBEKAH - HOLD MEETING TONIGHT The Daughters of Rebekah will meet tonight at 8 o’clock at the Moose hall for a short business ses- sion. At 9 o’clock a dance will be given to which the public is invited. Good music will be provided and a pleasant evening is planned. METHODIST AID DIVISION HOLDS MEETING TOMORROW The bed ‘room division of the La- dies’ Aid of the Methodist church, Mrs. S. A. Cutter chairman, will meet Tuesday - afternoon at 2:30 o’clock at the home of Mrs. Frances F. Elwell, 1319 Beltrami avenue. Alll members are.urged to'be present. BASKET SOCIAL A basket social sponsored by the Farm Bureau of Becida was given Saturday night at the J. J. Jinkinson home and was well attended. The baskets were disposed of to advan- tage, and good music was provided for dancing which was enjoyed until a late hour. . MOOSEHEART LEGION HOLDS MEETING WEDNESDAY NIGHT The regular business meeting of the Women of the Mooseheart Le- gion, to be held Wednesday eve- ning at 8 o’clock at the Moose hall, will be followed by a social hour at which a 15-cent lunch will be served to the members of the Legion, the Junior Moose and Moose order. It is urged that there be a large at- tendance. ENJOY PICNIC DINNER Three auto loads of Bemidji peo- ple went to Itasca State Park yes- terday afternoon and enjoyed a bic- nic dinner, returning to their homes in_ the evening. Those making the trip included Mr. and Mrs. Thos. Porte, Mrs. Chas. Zahn and daughter Lois, Mr. and Mrs. A. G. Jacobson, Mr. and Mrs. E. H. Denu, Miss Vera Backus, Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Given and family, and A C. Johnson. A A A A A A A A The appearance of the interior and exterior of the M. & L. freight de- pot has been greatly improved by a coat of paint, recently applied. Misses Anne McBride and Jean Towers, teachers in the Bemidji pub- lic schools, spent the week end at In- ternational Falls, Ft. Francis and Ranier, returning to Bemidji Sunday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Lalliberte of Minne- apolis spent yesterday in Bemidji, having arrived here by auto. from Cass Lake. He is traveling sales- man for the Nelson Roofing com- pany, and is transacting business in {this part of Minnesota. TO THE PUBLIC! Ericksen’s Grocery and Confec- tionery will open May 23rd, at 523 Minnesota ‘Avenue. The entire place has been reno- vated and an absolutely new line of stock is being installed. We solicit a_trial. Phone 384. 0. E. Ericksen, 523 Minesota Ave. 1 DANCE Look Look ZENITH Novelty Orchestra That Snappy Orchestra from Duluth Will Make Their First Appearance Here— ' g Saturday May 27 —at— New Armory This Orchestra is putting out real snappy dance music. Don’t Miss This Dance! Admission, $1.00 Extra Ladies, 25¢ Dancing, 9 to 12 O’Clock guest there until vesterday, when they both returned home. be away from Bemidji for about six weeks. -| BECIDA LADIES’ AID HOLDS : JONIE LU il "Mr. and jMrs! J,‘G rown nnfi family, and theiriguest, W. J. M¢. "| Donaldson of Duluth, also Mrs. Les- ter Achenbach, motored yesterday to Itasca State Park where fishing and picnic lunch were enjoyed. They re- turned to Bemidji in the evening. WELL-ATTENDED MEETING A large crowd attended the meet- ing of the Ladies’ Aid of Becida held at the Becida hall Sunday, there be- ing 125 present. A program of music and speaking was enjoyed and refreshments were scrved: PRESBYTERIAN DIVISION TO HOLD MEETING WEDNESDAY Division No. 2)of the Ladies’ Aid of the Prespyterian church, Mrs. M. L. Matson chairman, will meet Wed- nesday afternoon at 2:30 o’clock at the home of Mrs. H. A. Northrop, 413 Bemidji avenue. It is desired that all members be present. MRS. ARNOLD ENTERTAINS Mrs. C,. L. Arnold entertained * apout twenty friends yesterday at a picnic dinner at Diamond Point, com- nlimentary to Miss Lenholm and her daughter, Miss Florence, whose birth anniversaries occurred yester- day. She was assisted by Mrs. R. W. Keohn. A pleasant afternoon was spent out of doors and they re- turned to their homes in the evening. BIRTHDAY PARTY Miss Eva Collard entertained seven guests Saturday afternoon at her home, 1018 America avenue, in cele- bration of her twelfth birth anni- versary. Music was enjoyed and al- so out-of-door ‘games, and a birthday lunch was served by Mrs. Collard. The guests included Misses Dorothy Borgen, Ardyth Bliler, Norma Slake, Alice Kennedy, Mildred Butts, Effie Row and Eva Hannah. Miss Eva was presented a number of birthday remembrances. Verbena. The verbena is a low-growing annual with a creeping habit. The flowers are borne on terminal or lethal shoots which lift themselves from five to seven inches off the ground, and when grown in mass the plants will form a mat that in full bloom will give the soil the appearance of having a car pet of flowers. The colors include white, pink, scarlet, blue and purple. The length of stem and the texture of the flower are such that the verbena is of value for bouquets and table deco- rations. It can be used with good ef- fect in beds, borders, mounds and win- dow boxes.—United States Depart- ment of Agriculture. —— Alligators and Crocodiles. Alligators differ from - crocodiles mainly in having relatively broad snouts and by the eircumstance that as a rule the first and fourth tooth on each side of the:lower juw enter into .pits .in the upper jaw, whereas those of crocodiles slifle outside of the jaw and are visible.” SUBSCRIBE FOR THE fmp's “NEST” REALLY RAFT Water-Hen Prefers Floating Home— Classed by Some Naturalists as a Land Creature. You know the green weed that £rows in great patches on any rocky shore. We call it senweed, but really it is a land plant which for some strange reason has taken to the sea. The e is one of the most inter iples of sueh curious transfe yone knows this bird, with its red beak, its long dangling legs, and its white t As you walk along the hank of a stream, it starts up suddenly with a fearful fuss, flap- ping its wings and beating thé‘water with its feet. Finally A& manages to rise into the air, and vioves' ofF with a lumbering flight, ¥ o Though it is worg af' home on the water than in thg e, alfon diyiland, the water-hen is” ¥eRlly. ' Aandg bird. Apparently it * AlEBovagedy scehturics ago that food “Wwag reat .obtain in ponds and stréams, and Jecided to adopt an aquatic life. Its feet are not webbed, but it has learned to swim and dive as well as duck. The water-hen's nest consists of a raft as big as the ,top of a barrel, and is made of rushes and twigs an- chored to the stems of water plants. Sometimes it is not moored at all, and the parents follow it about as it drifts over the surface of a pond.— London Tit-Bits. Salvia. % The scarlet sage, or scarlet salvia, is a standard bedding plant that keeps the garden brightbwith color until late in autumn. This plant lends itself to many uses; it makes a good pot plant, does well in window boxes, and Is useful for cutting, to glvé color, Its commonest use, however, is as a hedge or border plant, giving long broad bands of vivid scarlet. On account of its very striking color, cnution needs to be observed in using it in this way. It can be most effectively used in small clumps among or against masses of green. Sceds should be sown in win- dow boxes or frames six weeks before the last frost and the plants set out- doors after nll danger from frost Is past.—United States Department of Agriculture, “Nature-Twins.” At the age of seventy-five years, Christopher J. Lake of Bridgeport, Conn,, is cndeavoring to enlist con- gr onal interest in a type of air ma- chine which he has invented and which he claims is safe and stable, Just as his son Simon has invented a submarine vessel, the value of which has been proven, Mr, Lake, the elder, says that the airplane and submarine are nature-born twins, in npature twin clements of all life, and no bat- tleship or similar device can live or e effective when contending with the airplane and the submavine. With this combination making use of the wireless system, no enemy could ever effect a landing on the shore thus pro- tected. DAILY PIONEER PRICES: REX - Tuesday and Wednesday RETURN ENGAGEMENT AT POPULAR PRICES! D. W. GRIFFITH Presents Way Down East Based on Wm. A. Brady’s Famous Play By Lottie Blair Parker. LLYLUIAN GISH?E. RICHARD, . CARTHELMESSTin D WY.GRIFFITHS YWAYTDOWN EAST:# Children 10c—Adults 25c ENDED DREAM OF WEALTH HMumorous Side to Alchemy Fiasco Which Was at First Taken Quite Seriously. Alchemy—the science of transmut- ing baser metals into gold—no longer commands’ the serious adtention of learned men, although it was at the basis of many of the scientitic inves- tigations of the anclents. It has not been given respectful consideration *Gity of Divessified Industfies since the famous fiasco which termi- " nated the efforts of Professor Semler Business Men of Germany, in the latter part of the Nineteenth century, Semler experimented with a com- | pound known as the “Salt of Life,” the discovery of a certaln Baron Hirschen, which was supposed to be the universal medicine, He left a so- lution of this composition in warmth for several days and, on examination, was astonished to discover In it some thin scales of a yellowish metal which, when tested, proved to be pure gold. His dis ery eaused immense excite- ment, which terminated in a legal In- quiry of Semler's claims, It was fMhally brought to lght that an old und devoted servant of Semler’s had been slipping small pieces of gold leaf into the solution slyly, and with no idea beyond gratifying his beloved master. One of the great laughs of the affuir was furnished by the discovery, dur- Ing one of the tests, of a sort of brass composition in the Jjar, instend of gold. It turned out that this had been placed there by the servant's wife, who had Dbeen intrusted with the money to purchase the gold leaf. She had procured brass instead, spending the balance of the money for her fu- In cdditlon o intimate man-to-man con- vorite beverage. tuct in the general and deparemental sessions e of che convention, affording opportunity to = oy s obmain light on individual preblems. there willbea Who Prosper in the Next 10 Years will be the pret prese quickly inters itions and read- just thei lans (o meetthenew times, Greatre s await those who know and understand how totranslate their knowledge into effective action. Several thousand such people will assemble at the. Eighteenth Annual Convention Associated Advertising Clubs of the World Milwaukee, June 11 to 15, 1922 They will swap experiences, ex- change ideas, discuss plans for theim- provement of their advertising and selling methods. For some years business has been done on a rising market. Now, we must readjust our plans to a falling market. Few business men, active today, know whatthat means, except those who have been finding the way during the last few months. There will be business men at Mils waukee from half way around the world—and thousands from the United States and Canada. exhibit of domestic and foreign wing how others have created dvertising. tatlon facilities and the fact that June is Wisconsin's ideal munlh.lnlu': & very large attendance. You do not have to be & member of an advertis For mmtlele inform: woad races, hotel rescrvar Bring uws your clean ooé- ton rags--no buttons, bands or woolen cloth acoepted. Associated Advertising Clubs 110 West 40th St., New York, N. Y. Pioneer 6ffice e v T JOHNSON'S Follow > for the : Phoenix Crowd: 1o, Hosiery POPU g.#gkl)BRlCED ..IOHNSON'S . oo “ALWAYS BUSY” FRENCH GINGHAM DRESSES - - 1$5.95 COATS - - - Q.95 COATS - 12.50 COATS - - 1995 % BATHING SUITS ; ARE HERE §. All At Those Low, ~~ Popular Prices. Hundreds and hundreds of them to select from. UL LT BATHING CAPS JUST RECEIVED! ¥, Come In and Look Them Over! 49c andup _ (A Prices Range Ifrom § 19¢ 29¢ 39c All Wool Tricotine Suits $13.50 —

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