Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, June 10, 1922, Page 3

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iimterest ure reported. Every item ‘will- be cpnsidera- " Fred Hayes of Island Lake was Eq business visitor in Bemidji Friday. - “VIMAMITE” | 2d6-13 £ -Fred Barker of Wilton was a be- tween-train business visitor in Be- midji Friday. Polar Pie. Ask for It 2-14t1 Miss Marie Lippert of Grand Forks will be an over-Sunday guest of Mrs, Louis Murphy, 1237 Irvine avenue. Come on in, the gas is fine. North- western Oil Co. Filling Station—op- posite Markham Hotel. 2d6-10 - Miss Mary Tisdel of Wilton, who has been the guest of Bemidji friends for a few days, autoed to her home Friday. 2-14t1 Polar Pie. Ask for it. Mr. and Mrs, J. W. Smith moved Thutsday from Fifth ward to the houge they recently purchased at 717 Beltrami ayenue. FOR A PRACTICAL NURSE, Call 86 S 16d6-21 ‘Walter Helmer left this morning for ‘International” Falls and other places to transact = business for a short time. ~7 & Cook With Gas : i 8-30 tf ‘Miss Esther Fjellman, teacher in fourth grade of thé Bemidji public schools, left last’ 'night for Minne- apolis to spend her summer vacation with her’ parents.” ! “VIMAMITE” 2d6-13 Mr, and ijs’.‘ George Clayton and Mr. and Mis. 'Joe Berg léft Friday by auto for Déer River, Grand Rap- ids /and other places for a two weeks’ oufil}g. Be prepared for auto trips and picriics. Get an Icy-Hot bottle at Barker's. Pints, 98¢c; quarts, $1.95; special price for this week only. 4d6-10 ‘Miss Corrine . Carlson,” " who has ght history in' the. high school at ‘/?:'u‘hwauk for the past school year, arrived in’ Bemidji Friday t4 spend her’ Summer vacation with her par- ents, Mr. and Mrs. A. T. Carlson. Northwesterh -Oil Co,, Filling Sta- tion“—opposite Markham hotel. Op- pen for business. 2d 6-10 J.:0’Shea, traveling representative of the New York Foundling hospital, trafigacted business in Bemidji Thufsday and’ left yesterday for Bladkduck.~ He will retarn to Be- midji the first of the week to spend a coqple_ of days here. Do you know that a Ford Roadster costs only $390 f. o.'b. factory?— buy a Ford and spend the difference. 4d6-10 r Mrs. G. L. Gustafson of Pilager, who has been a guest of her brother, A. D. Johnson, and family, 1218 Be- midji avenue, for thi; ast week, re- turned to her -homé this morning. Shé was accompanjed by her nephew, Kermit Jolinson, who will ‘visit. his grandparents and Other relatives at Pillager for the, next. X three weeks. A new assortment of place cards, tally cards, score cards, table num- ,‘be‘r cards and noveities just in at thé" Beniidji Book & Stationery Co. 403 Beltrami Ave.. ‘4dg-10 —_— 3 Miss Faith Plummer, who hé& com- pleted a course in art“at the Univer- sity of North Dakota, Grand Forks, retirned to the farm home of her " parbnts, south of town, Wedhesday, and she will spend her summer vaca- tion in Bemidji. Rev. T. B. Nordale returned to Be- midji Thursday night from Minne- apolis where he was called about ten “days ago because of the serious ill- ness. of his mother, who passed away Saturday of last week. Funeral services were held ‘there Tuesday. Mrs. Nordale did not return with him but remained with friends for a time. Rev. Nordale will leave Bemidji Mon- day night to attend the national con- vention of the -Swedish-. Lutheran Augustana Synod to be held in St. Paul beginning next Tuesday and continuing over the following Sun- day. He goes as a delegate wfrom SUMME Q ?piu.l nnnmg uu:nof the New| ette County, gbout sixty miles: fro: [T tlon for the ‘older ones. A play-ground fully equipped with all kinds of appar- atus affords pleasure for the young- sters, while' Motlon ' Plcture Houses, Assembly .Halls and baseball parks are places of amusement for the old- Summerlee is ofje of Thé fifteen New River Company mining towns. It has; 115 miners homes, which house more’ than 150 of the men employed' in ‘and: about the mines. It is beautifully locat- ed in a valley a short distance from the County seat of Fayette County. [ler ones. The upper picture shows the style( Two: churches are maintained, one and class of houses which are occu- [ for the white people, and the other for pled by the men. They consist of four |‘the colored people. The average Sun- and five rooms, ipped ‘with running [{day School attendance for the white water, electric lights and a large gar- [{Sunday School during the past den spot in the rear. These houses jseveral months is 53, while the aver- rent for from $7.60 to $12.90 per month. [jage attemdance at the colored Sunday ‘The lower ph."turpvgl\;es . more geii- |{School is' 44. Public schools are also eral idea ‘of the' fa¥’ of thé “town show- |:attended‘with an average of 70 white ing both the new -and old houses. i children. The colored, school, which is ‘Summerlee Is particularly fortunate ['separate from the white school, has in the way of amusements for the|had an average attendance during the El__nerl‘ childrén and-places. of recrea- | past’year of ‘20, ~ A Miss Edith Mills, who has taught ed business_ in Bemidji Friday. school at Grand Froks the past school PRI Tesses et liyeat, returhied tohe¥ Homie, 905 Bel” “VIMAMITE 2d6-13| trami avenue, today to spend her 5 o TR .summer vacation with her parents. Stuart “Rice /is the guest of his| 3 brother, ‘Walter Rice, at Tenstrike . for a few days. He expects to re-|™ turn to l?emidji the first of the ‘week. Miss Dorothy Nangle, a student at K 4 St. Teresa’s college," Winona, arrived ul"tgoég?‘?p::,'““'” “m".‘l%?& home Friday. evening’ to spend her 3 : s ‘summer . vacation with ber _parents, J. Albachten returned to Bemidji} M¥« and.Mrs. ;, Charles, Nangle, 507 Wednesday from Minneapolis and | Fourthstreet. 3 B St,-Paul-where-he motored last week ) - i S to visit, relatives and friends for al:.RANCE TONIGHT!—at the New few days. Mrs. Albachten remained Affl"fl’y s Music; by the: Syncopators. for a longer visit. K 1d6-10 I. E. Raymond of Frohn transact- Cook With Gas 3-30 tf Vimimite—a woriderful gasoliné, | costs a little more, worth a lot more. | Northtwestern Oil. Co., opposite Mark- ham Hotel. Al " and Mrs. John Bloomquist of 2d6-10 A gptand, Wis., and Mrs. H. B, Web- 4| Ster of Buffalo, N. Y., parents and sister' of Mrs., R._A. Olson, arrived in-Bemidji Friday and will be sum- mer guests at the Olson home, 1118 Bemidji avenue. e Mrs. Margaret Prchal and Mr. an Mrs. Clifford F. McMillen, of Le- Sueur, Minn., dre guésts-of Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Gould, 611 Third street, having motored here, They are sis- ters of Mrs. Gould: Cook With Gas T 8-30 tf Polar Pie. Ask for it. 2-14tt President M. W. Deputy of the Miss Alice Graves, teacher in the Bemidji schools, left last night for St. Cloud to attend the ordination of her brother as a priest. Her par- ents from Duluth will meet her there and she will motor to her home to spend her summer vacation there. State Teachers college went to Plum- mer yesterday, where “he delivered the commencement address last eve- ning. There were e¢ight 8th grade and one high school ‘graduates, Mr. and Mrs. R. J. Boardman and| Byy a Ford and spend the differ- children are expected home today|epce, 4d6-10 from Minneapolis where they motor- . ed Thursday to meet his parents from DANCE TONIGHT'!—at the New California, who' ‘7“1 return to Be-| Armory. Music by the Syncopators. midji with them to'‘Vvisit for a time. 1d6-10 Do’ you ‘know that a Ford Coune| yii. s Mitchell and Mrs. E. D costs only $580 f. o. b. factory?—fp o " oot e T State Park d, it’s one of the finest- enclosed Zoyee motors t'o tagea, State, Par anc, 1 ! K 436-10 Thursday and visited the B. A. C. s on* the f“‘“ t ' club camp there.. They took with 7. Robinson expects to. motor| -them 'ice:c‘ream‘ for the boys which tonfprrow to Minneapolis to attend ¥:5 c\io}nat:‘c‘l thby thehKI'\\,{ams c:“b' thed co emer Xerci of )4 o). Fopor 110 88 Bavioe 2 Spen Hai“““em?:i;\l’i;gg},t’;}vsc(;u;i%efigrad; did" tifié"amd dtate that they did not o in fthmery > el will-alsg|(Ch-the heavy . ain; therg, that day uatlng at thia fthney o Hel wil . that was experienced here in the af- s i while there. George| transact business ile there. George taeoon Prof. F. P. Wirth and Prof, J. W. Smith also visited the camp Kreatz will accompany him on th from Bemidji that day, the former trip. 2d6-13 | returning: yesterday, and the latter remaining to return with them today Mr. and Mrs. F. C. Gurnes, who| when they break camp. Therd are have spent the past three days in Be-|about twenty members of the club, midji as guests of Mr. and Mrs. C. H.| with Rev. L. P. Warford, who en- VanVoorhees, 1011 America avenue,|joyed the week’s outing, left Friday for ‘their home at Rose- burg, Ore., expecting to reach there about the 24th, stopping at a few places en route to visit relatives for a short time. They are making the trip by auto. Y “VIMAMITE" Polar Pie. Ask for ft. 2-14t8 Bemidji’s popular “Gift Shop” is the Bemidji Book Store, 403 Beltrami Ave. New things in books, favors, cards, albums and framed mottos are Come in and see them, 6d6-12 Buy a Ford and spend the differ-|arriving. ence. 4d6-10 d ac b = ENTERTAINED AT DINNER Mr. and Mrs. C. M. Serrurier and W, G. Fiddes of St. Paul'were 6:30 o’clock diriner guests of Mr. and| Mrs. A. T. Carlson, 504 Minnesota avenue,_)’Fl‘)\{rsdny eveping, T DAUGHTERS OF ‘REBEKAH MEET MONDAY EVENING The regular meeting of the Daugh- ters of Rebekah will be held Monday evening at 8 o’clock at the Moose hall, and all members are requested to be present. M. B. OF A. HOLDS REGULAR MEETING MONDAY NIGHT The Modern Brotherhood of Amer- ica will hg.ld its regular meeting Monday evening at 8 o’clock at the new Moose hall. It has been voted to hold but one meeting a month dur- ing June, July and August, viz., the second Monday in each month, and all members are urged to be present at this time. ROYAL NEIGHBORS VISIT MEMBERS AT CASS LAKE About thirty Royal Neighborsh from Bemidji went to Cass Lake yes- terday morning, some by auto and others by train, and surprised Mrs. Leonard Johnson at her home there. She was formerly Miss Beatrice Mooak of Bemidji and held an office in the local order, and was recently married. The party took with them Wwell-filled baskets and enjoyed an all-day outing with picnic dinner at noon. They presented Mrs. John- son a set of silver. They returned to Bemidji in the late afternoon and all reported a very enjoyable day. | MRS, MARY GAMBLE IS SURPRISED ON BIRTHDAY The G. A. R. Circle assisted Mrs. Mary . Gamble yesterday in celebrat- ing her 76th birth anniversary by going to her home, Seventh and 1Irvine avenue, and giving her a hand- Kerchief shower. They took with them well-filled: baskets, and a birth- day lunch was served in the course of the afternoon. She recejved a num- ‘ber of other beautiful gifts also. A very pleasant social afternoon was enjoyed by all. Those present were Mesdames Mary Villiman, Wm. Schroeder, Mary Graves, John Eng- lish, Mary DuVal, A. W, Smith, Dav- id Booth, Ellen Booth of Blackduck, S. C. Bailey, H. A. Lepper; Charles Vedder C. B. Minnick, B. E. Staf- ford and Miss Eleanore Bowser. “Once Won't Hurt You."” All the troubles of the would-be dieter aren’t due to lack of will power. A woman playwright says friends are responsible for inducing one to dis- regard the doctor’s orders, however friendly their motives may be. “I'm having the hardest time,” she walled, according to’ the New York 8un, “keeping to my dlet. Well-mean- Ing friends invite me to lunch and to dinner and then are offended If 1 don't sample everything on the menu. Just once won't hurt you,” they argue—or. ‘well, I've planned this dinner for you and you've got to eat it The re- sult is you generally always do eat It —with subsequent regrets. The only remedy Is to stay home for all meals —and that takes more will power than it does to diet.” ——— What China Is Doing. A tourist en- the.trip around the world always stops at Shanghai, the principal port of China, and from It visits the show places of the prov- Inces of Kiangsu and- Sheklund. He sees rice paddles, the canals, the Yangtze, the temple and pagodas, but he may not realize that the smake- stacks rising here apd there in the calin of the Chinese landscape denote important cotton, flour and bean-oll industries that are the, beginning of a modern industrial hation. In Canton, the changing face of the city—broad streets, great stores, hotels compar- able to the best of their kind any- where in the world—Iis more striking. Once the tobbist understands whit Chinese planning is capable of, he cannot hut ywonder it awakening China Is riot' destined to hecome one df the greatest netions of the world. Rev. Father Paquin of ton was a guest Thursday and Friday of Rev, Father Jos. Fraling, and assisted him in his work. I DANCE TONIGHT!—at the New Armory. Music by the Syncopators. 1d6-10 Mrs. Mary Kellogg, housckeeper for Joe Pogue and family, Mis sippi avenue, who has been seriously ill at the latter’s home, was reported sligh‘tly improved today. M. B. A. ATTENTION! The M. B. A. will'ireet in the New Moose hall Monday evening at 8 o’clock, All members should be present. Dancing after meeting. Music by Melody Boys. 1d6-10 Colorful Stripes In Sweaters The possibilities in color and design that present themselves in the popu- lar sweater seem to have lingered un- til the present season, when sudden- 1y they appeared to be exploited in a host of attractive models. From the slightest ornamental element to the full field of colored figuresin Navajo effects, the sweater seems to have run the gamut of decoration. ! Of special interest in the decorative development is the fearlessness with whichstripes are now handled. Con- scious of the danger of producing un- desirable eff ects, the stripe in the sweater has always been the night- ‘mare of the designer, Today, howev er, the stripchasbeen i tamed. Figura tively speaking, de- | signers have taught it to “lie down | 1 and roll over,” for the simple reason ‘»tlut.they have mastered the elements | of width and color. Indeed the num- ! erens gorgeous results seem to indi- iuh_thut they glory in their mastery. | A group of artistic aweaters with: '”l&_?lll atripes seen qin one of the jfashionabl resented and silk and mohair mixed. Another shop exhibited the sweater shown /hare. It is a sport neck slipover of 'foreign alpaca yarn, Belgian luce ifth Avenue shops rep- stitch, with oriental colorings through. (ot the body and sleeves. arments of<silk, mobair, GRAND .\ ‘GLADYS WALTON 'DAVIBBUTLER ~HALLAM COQLEY. ‘The Wise Kid’ they called her the “Wise Kid””—See this clever roman- tic comedy of “Beanery Beauty.” ir st A New Two-Part Century Comedy ALSO SHOWING— “SPEED 'ER UP” in the dust. The Law, that blindly ground an innocent man The Wowman, who fought for him, dared for him, lifted him up. The Story, filled with a hundred thrills and the S lure of lovely Betty s g et Compson. Concrete Houses, The use of concrete houses Is he- coming common in various sections of the country. In connection with the general program for the investigation and Improvement of housing condi- tions now. belng carried out by the burenu of standards, several trips of Inspection bave been made by mem- bers of the stsff of that bureau te study improvements in the building of concrete houses. The trip recently made included many projects in the viciaity of Pittsburgh, Cleveland, Chi- cago and Minneapolis. Great improve- ments, both in the ordinary uses of ! the concrete and iIn the architectural and ornamental effects obtained, were noted on this trip. It seems cerinin (hat some style of concrete house will become v common in the near fu- ture-—Sclentific American. Q@ GParamounl GPiclure Adapted from the Clyde Fitch Play, “The Woman in the Case” Matinees 10c-25c—Nights 10c-30c SUNDAY ELKO mm “SOUND THE TOCSIN!” IT WAS— ‘The of retribution for the criminals and law- RAY DAWN’ law in their own hands. From a seeth- ing caldron of intrigue and treachery, ‘breakers whose reign of lawlessness held San Francisco in a grip of terror. Mur- ‘lers were a daily occurrence. The law ,fi'as ridiculed, justice thwarted. Death lurked in every shadow, and a hundred lamp-posts offered mute évidence of the wave of crime which swept the city like a scourge. Such was the condition of the crime- “ ridden city when the Vigilantes took the San Francisco became a city of law and order. The lawless were banished. Many paid the penalty with their lives and stern justice became the order of the day. This is the story of “The Gray Dawn,” the most engrossing narralive of ro- mance and intrigue that has ever been p‘rescnted on the American screen. ; - By STEWART EDWARD WHITE Who has éiinte,d a story of California’s Early Gold-Rush Days with_ a brush that seems to have been inspired. ROBT. McKIM b GEO. BACKATHORNE CLAIRE McDOWELL CHAS, B. MURPHY GRAND e :— CAST OF SEVENTEEN STARS —: CLAIRE ADAMS SNITZ EDWARDS MAUDE WAYNE MARC ROBBINS 2:30 7:30-9:00 10c & 30c 10c & 25¢ CARL CANTVOORT STANTON HECK ZACK WILLIAMS GRACE MARVIN A Picture Pulsating With Life—Living and Breathing the Early Historical and Romantic Days of California, When Crinolines and Hoop-Skirts Offset the Drab Black of Frock-Coats and Stove-Pipe Hats. SUNDAY | RS

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