Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, October 11, 1912, Page 5

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i | Gilbertson. Mrs. Hanen |lived in Bemidji. ~ " At the Methodist Ladies Aid this !week the following officers were re- Mrs. Charles Flesher, pres- formerly % elected: j dent; Mrs. W. P. Dyer, secretary and Mrs. D. Wilcox, treasurer. They | were all elected for a period of six | months. | The Catholic ladies wil hold a ";mod sale at W. G. Schroeder’s store S. E. Grindahl came down from @ Saturday afternoon for the benefit of Northome last night }Sr. Philip’s church.—Adv. The Knights of Columbus will gi\'e} Mr. and Mrs. B. H. Eastman of St. a ball in the city hall this evening. | Paul are expected to-night to be the ! guests of Mr. and Mrs. Graham M. Have you Torrance. They will be here for a Ad?—Ady. ! few days and will accompany Mr. and R. S. McDonald, of International Torrance to Buena Vista on a part- Falls, passed through Bemidji last ridge hunt while in the city. night. read the Abercrombie Mrs. A. E. Nelson entertained the James L. George county auditor, is | members of her sewing club in her in Milwaukee and Chicago on a busi-| home on Grand Forks Bay yesterday ness trip. ‘afternoon. Those present were the jus“.\lisses Beatrice and Vera Backus, ! Ruth Naugle and Ruth Wightman; | the Mesdames Noll, Baker, Hennes- sey, Younggren, Bailey and Adams. Skandinavian table delicacies arrived at Peterson’s.—Adv. Mrs. John Graham, who has been the sick list this week, is report- i z; bett:r tod;\' | There is perfect safety in the For- - !eign Bills of Exchange bought from Chester McKusick left the latter ';p. Northern National Bank. It is part of the week for the twin cities a convenient and economical way to on a business trip. | send money to the old country.—Adv. Go to Hakkerup for photos.—Adv. W. R. Mackenzie, secretary of the Dr. C. R. Sanborn is in Duluth for‘ Northern Minnesota Development as- a few days attending a meeting of the | sociation. went to Bagley yesterday Soo Line physicians. afternoon to attend the Clearwater ' county fair. Rev. T. S. Kolste leaves for Cyprus ke to Bemidji on the early Saturday afternoon. where he will| train and left for Minneapolis at § hpld!services;Sunday: a. m. He has been on his farm north of Scribner for some time. The Abercrombie ad contains real news. Don't fail to read it tonight. H. . Basr expects) 16 Isave fof —Adv. Minneapolis Monday night and will Dr. C. M. Calander of Fargo is be gone for several days. While on the guest of Mr. and Mrs. L. C. | the trip Mr. Baer will go down to | Jordan, Minnesota, to see Mr. Swed- holding | back who is taking the mud baths at % | Jordan for his rheumatism. The last reports from Jordan were that Mr. Dempsey this week. Stanton has been Akeley but is expected bac Judge court at ext week. i 18 tae st of Swedback had found much relief. ancy fruit and confections for i i [hftl;bie and sick room at Peter- ~ Read the Abercrombie ad tonight. o vou: if you want to give books away Miss Olive LaDue of Walker, cam_e lit will interest you. Don’t fail to to Bemidji last night and left this [..4 it agdv. morning for Pine River. A A surprise was planned for Rev. Mrs. Otto Morken went to Bréln.—‘ and Mrs.Amundson of Nymore Thurs- erd this morning for a few days visit |day evening. About two hundred ident; Mrs. Oscar Miner, vice-presi-] : { Mr. Mackenzie returned morning ; 1f you care for books it will interest | A true story of a tenderfoot. lNilustrated Song i gomn s 2 A snappy comedy. REALIZE LACK OF CONDITION Summer Time and a Bathing Sult| Combine to Wake Up the Too | Fat Business Man. H i “From the letters pouring in from the shore, it's evident I must enlarge | my gym again this year.” ! structor, swung round from his unus- ually heavy mail i “It’s at the seashore—in his bath-| ing suit at the seashore—that the | American business-man first realizes | his weight,” the instructor continued. “Stand on a sun-drenched August beach and watch the whitelegged, white-armed business-man, just ar- rived for his vacation. Watch him | puff out his chest as he walks sea- | ward. Watch him keep a sharp eye on his stomach, lest it stick out far ther than his chest does. Talk about the vanity of woman. “But, if you keep on watching you'll see his smile turn to a worried look. You'll see his ballooning chest, tired out, collapse. You'll see his stomach resume its rightful position, on ahead | | of him, like a captain, leading the | way. “And as the business-man eyes with anxiety and disgust his protruding stomach, he realizes at last that he is | becoming that hated thing, a fat man, and his thoughts turn to dumb-bells, with friends and relatives. | people gathered at their home. and Roland Henrionnet has taken a Rev. and Mrs. Amundson were pre- country school near Cass Lake and sented with a liberal purse. Rev. expects to spend the winter there. Amundson is the pastor of the Nor- wegian Lutheran church of Nymore. | but expects to leave in about three | weeks for Wisconsin. John Pohlhammer, of Thief| preach in the O. A. Dressmaking done at 418 Irvine avenue.—Adv. Rev. River Falls, ¥ Dodeen home at S p. m. this evening. | We don’t holler “cheap” as some would be competitions but are strong on customers e practical evidence tnat they approve. Peterson's.—Adv. we The ladies of St. Phillip’s church will give a food sale at the W. G. Schroeder store Saturday afternoon.! Miss Margaret Wang returned’ from Cass Lake Wednesday, where she has been for some time, nursing. Apples and Complexion. In the near future girls won't have to sail under false colors. The rouge Troppman's big sale of blankets pot is destined to go to the scrap ends Saturday.—Adv. ! heap. No longer will it be necessary for Jennie to hide her reddened piece Miss Jennie McDorin and MIS.'of chamois skin in her hat. Listen, Savor came to Bemidji from Crook-'girls! Apples are going to save the ston yesterd and will visit friends ' complexions of all American women! PRI irion U. Grant Border of Baltimore, address- ing the International Shippers' asso- On Friday and Saturday ciation, at Chicago, said: *“If women Oct. and 26. the play "A Noble ! kxnew that eating apples will do more Outc: * will be staged for the bene-'to make their complexions beautiful fit of the Catholic church. than all the face remedies in the world, they would eat them morning, Head quarters noon and night. Five years from now, periodicals by the piece or on sub- when the countless apple orchards seription. at Peterson’s.—Adv. that have come into existence the past 3 few years begin to bear full crops, the Alvin Weinhart returned from a apple production in the United States vacation In Wiscon- will exceed 100,000,000 barrels. and is again engaged | will give every woman a clrance to get a good, steady. reliabie, fast-color complexion for little cost.” nights. for papers and several montk sin, Thursda) in the Larson & Larson office. Mrs. E. H. Winters entertained the | sewing club Wednesday afternoon. | Eight ladies were present. A dainty | lunch was served in the afternoon. Danger in. Crabs. Crabs, no matter how fresh they be make some fellows sick nearly evers time they eat them. Still they take a chance on it every once in so otten | Just the same. Crabs must be very fine eating and have a lovely taste as they are being munched and put into . a the paunches of the crab-eaters. Crabs The Abercrombie store has an ad w1 eat 2 gead horse, or rats, pigs, in the Pioneer tonight that is WOrth |cats or dogs decaying in the ocean. reading. It will save you time, effort | Perhaps if the crabs were penned up and money.—Adv. {and fed on the choicest of foods jor | some days, so as to get a few of the Mal D. Clark, has left Bemidji for | dirty germs out of them, as well as rid Brainerd where he will open a law |them of the filth they eat, then it a office. Mr. Clark has been associat- | 50mewhat cleaner condition they might ed here with E. E. McDonald as Mc | BOt, after being eaten, turn the insides Donald & Clark. | wrong side out and inside outward— | both ways at the same time. Some Invitations for the first fall dance| f°l‘l’"5)‘u:19;1°t:5t f:l hitg;}l{ly insulted s s i | when r:3 ey e a chavce ;)énih:u?e;lri];d?:ii?h:t_cmb it be:every time they eat crabs. Eat ’em L at. The Party ) gng gon't kick at the doctor bilL—Fx- will be given in the city hall Satur- day evening, October 19. Charles Swanland. convicted of the murder of David Wistrom. was taken to Stillwater Saturday. His attor- neys decided not to ask for a retrial. J1' change. Subscribe for any paper or maga- | Neatly Caught. zine published either singly or in | An angler once missed his gold clubs, at Peterson’s.—Adv. | etgarette-case, and, being very much | upset about it, but not being quite Tom McCann expects to go to Min- | certain whether it had been lost or neapolis Monday and on Tuesday and : stolen, resolved not to mention the Wednesday will drive his new car | matter to a soul—not even to his wife. back to Bemidji. Mr. McCann has| I WO ¥ears had passed by when, on his purchased a 1913 Cadillac. ‘ happe.ning to meet With.a placatorial acquaintance by the riverside, the Mrs. Carl Hanen of Duluth was the | a0 astonished him by remarking: guest of Mrs. 1. B. Olson Thursday. | 1 say, did you find that cigarette- ; i e <op. | CBSE YOU lost some time ago?” She left in the evening for Inter-| “No,” replied the angler to the mors as loud | qualities. Our | That | golf and tennis, and he resolves to { write to me. i | “He writes that afternoon after ani | unusually abstemious luncheon. And | | here are his letters—50 of them—50 fby every maijl—dated from ALIanfie%' | City and Bar Harbor, Long Branch | and Cape May, Narragansett and Bay { Head.” b I CITY’S MEAGER MILK SUPPLY? Spanish Capital No Place for One in | Any Way Fond of the | | Lacteal Fluid. | | | | | There are no large dairying con- | i cerns in Madrid. Part of “the milk | supply comes from goats and a few | cows pastured near the city and kept | in lecherias in the city, where they| | are milked; some is brought in from | near-by farms, usually about six gal- |lons in tin cans in straw baskets | slung across a horse upon which the i'rider mounts; some from neighboring | villages by train or wagon, all in tin | cans; and a small amount from north- | ern Spain by train—a twenty-four- | | hour trip. Deliveries to regular pat- . jrcns are made by mozas carrying a frame from which are suspended | about eighteen small pails or bottles, | ! each holding about a quart, but it is | | probable that most of the families in | Madrid do mot receive regular sup-| plies, such as is needed being brought | { in by some member of the family, or a | servant, who carries any convenient | vessel or pitcher from the house. This milk is secured from small milk shops, called lecherias, of which there are about 550 shown fn the city directory. The milk is always boiled as soon as i it is brought into the house. It is al- | most impossible to secure cream and it is almost invariably sour when ob- tained. ! Reindeer in Alaska Increase. | From 1892 to 1902 the United States | { bureau of education introduced 1,280 | European reindeer into Alaska at a | time when the natives were threaten- ed with starvation. At the present time these herds have increased to | a total of 33,629 head. Their meat is in great demand by both whites and | natives, and their skins supply the | best winter clothing. It is expected that the exportation of reindeer meat will soon become an important indus- try. Above all, the reindeer has proved a most efficient civilizing agency. The success of the Alaskan reindeer enterprise induced Dr. Wil- fred Grenfell, in 1908, to import 300 reindeer from Lapland into Labrador, where they have now increased to about 1,200, and are a great boon to the natives. Last year the Canadian government bought 50 of Dr. Gren- fell's herd for introduction into north- ern Canada. Increased Cost of Living Serious. Since 1900 the price of bread has risen 11 per cent. in Germany, the price of beef 13 per cent. and pork 33 ber cent. In Essen, by the figures ot the Krupp Co-operative society, since 1900 the price of black bread has risen 30 per cent.; Dotatoes, 30 per | national Falls, where she will visit | astonished inquirer; “but you didl® with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. John | cent.; veal, 34 per cent., and bacon, 0cper cent. “Vultures and Doves’’ «The Mine Swindler’’ | i The speaker, a noted physical in-| _ Masestic THEaATRE | Friday and Saturday’s Program (Vitagraph) (Kalem) “Fiddle-dee-~dee’’ Miss Hazelle Fellows “The Brown’s Have Visitors” (Eééafléy-i Try a2 Want Ad 12 Cent a Word-==Cash FUNERAL DIRECTOR AND EMBALMER Qffiee 313 Beltrami Ave Phone 3189, THE SPALDING EUROPEAN PLAN Duluth’s Largest and Best Hotel LAUTH DU MINNESOTA More than £100.000.00 recently expended on improvements. 250 rooms. 125 private baths. 60 sample rooms. Every modern convenience: Luxurious and sfih htful dining rooms; Sun parlor and observa- tory. Located in heart of business sec- tion but overlooking the harbor and Lake Superior, Convenient to0 everything. Ona of the Greal Motels of the Nerthwest irand Tonight. The Mountain Daisy (A Nestor) Story of a tenderfoot photographer who meets a pretty girl whose parents will not consent to their marriage and they are chased by the father and sheriff. The Meddlers (An American) Story of John Huxley and his handsome young wife who go to inspect a western mine—and an explosion which buries the faithless wife and her private secretary. lllustrated Song: “Take Me Back fo the Garden of Love” Farmer Allen’s Daughter A Majestic story of a young farmer and his sweet- heart and her father who wants her to marry Old Man Grimes who is very wealthy. They elope and she is discovered by her father who later becomes reconciled HOTEL RADISSON MINNEAPOLIS FINEST IN THE NORTHWEST LOCATED IN THE CENTER OF THE RETAIL DISTRICT, NEAR THE LEADING THEATERS, CON- VENIENT TO EVERYTHING. RATES ROOMS -WITH RUNNING WATER $1.50 PER DAY. ROOMS WITH TOILET $2.00 PER DAY ROOMS WITH BATH AND TOILET $2.50, $3.00, $3.50, $4.00 PER DAY. GIRGULATINGIGED WATER Subseribe for The Pioneer Abercrombie’s Will On Saturday Put On Sale 300 Popular Books They Are All Best Sellers Fifty Gents Each This 1s the first time in the history of Bemidji that best sellers have been sold at less than one dollar each. Get them while they last. Sale starts Saturday morning. Here Are Some ofgWinners: “Galling of Dan Matthews” By Harold Bell wrighe. “Madame X"’ By Bisson McCohaugny. “Freckles” and “Girl of the Limberlost” “Grain of Dust”’ By pavid Graham Phillips. “Thurley Ruxton,” “‘House of Bondage” “dohn Marsh’s Millions,” *“Trail of the Lonesome Ping” By John Fox, Jr. “Excuse Me,” ‘“‘Ailsa Paige”" By Robert . Chambers. “Graustark” and *‘The Rose In the Ring” By Geo. Barr McCutcheon. These and 300 others will make “excellent Christmas presents. Come in and let us show you our line. complete Abercrombie’s Ab Abercrombie’s Fifty Cents Each By Gene Stratten Porter. By Reginald Kauffman. It 1s ercrombie’s Abercrombie’s : I | r

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