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L4 k2 VOLUME 12, NO. 171. SHOULD PREPARE LUNCHES WITHCARE Selection of Food for Workman’s Noon Meal Important, Says Mrs. Lamoreaux in Fourth of Series. VARIETY IS ESSENTIAL FEATURE Recommends That Articles Easily Packed Be Used—Favors Other Sweets to Pastry. ‘“The Worker's Noon Lunch,” is ne subject discussed in the fourth o the “High Cost of Living” series which is being prepared by Mrs. L. P. Lamoreaux for readers of the Pio- neer. The article is interesting and offers many valuable suggestions as have previous ones. Mrs. Lamoreaux says: The Worker’s Noon Lunch. i “The ‘dinner pail’ should be pre- pared from the standpoint of whole- someness and attractiveness and on- Iy those foods which are nutritious <hould be even considered. The se- lection of food to be served cold gen- vrally requires more care than that which is intended to be eaten hot. An out-of-door laborer requires heavy, bulky food, such as baked bean sandwiches, meats of all kinds, cheese, eggs, boiled, deviled or in salad; small cans of sardines, dough- nuts and cookies, particularly oat- meal, ginger bread and cinnamon rolls. Those doing indoor work smould have lighter food, but none tae less nourishing, and occasionally troducing relishes, light cookies, sweets and plenty of juiey fruit. “The lunch box or dinner pail sonld appear as attractive as possi- ®.e without being too ‘dainty.’ Food ly never induces a nd food that can-| packed should not be wacked in carele: appe easily anriy ot be cedd, in order to avoid ‘mussiness.’ tise plenty of oiled paper to keep the| and cake fresh and moist, I nse of ndwiche: a thermos bot- | mos lunch box is mneh | desired tor cold winter days when men need a warm drink with | treir cold vietuals. Small Pie is Better. ‘It pie is packed, it is better to make a small individual pie and leave it in the pie tin. do not advocate the use of pie with a cold lunch though, both on account of its indigestibility and the fact that it is so difficult to pack. When pos- sible always use some kind of cakes or cookies instead. Leave the crusts os the bread and cut it quite thick, nsing plenty of moist filling for the sundwiches. “Try {rosting the cookies or some zraham crackers for a little variety. Nuts and seeded raisins are always # good addition; and so are candies, sweet chocolate, figs and dates, as they are all wholesome, attractive amd can take the place of so much pie. I'or a change, put some hot soup or broth in the thermos bottle and add a few white crackers to the lunch. Be careful in packing bana- they are the most to carry ne addition tie, or a th tw be (ruit in a dinner pail. Leather Pail Tabooed. “When in preference to a leather X, as it can be scalded and aired ford it, (L«\nlm\h d on L Mrs. \\|lh.\m Shoars will leave 1 the night train for Ashland, Wis- <onsin, having been called there by the death of her daughter's eight wonths' old baby. Her daughter is Mrs. George Minzghor. The baby ¢ied this morning and Mrs. Shoars | nea |that the Most authorities | difficult 1shop possible, use a tin or en-! . or better still, if you can |large. use a fresh pa@lphmnl hn\l BEMIDJI, MINNESOTA, FBIDAX E VENING, NOVEMBER 18, 1914 THREE SECURE DEER Successful at Nebish. n‘imru °’/’I {eity ha. &, search for e, of that place. > S. E. P. White, . A. Lord returned 1. near where they spe. many hunters of thi: . successful in thei of Mr. Lord, and two doe. succeeded in securing a deer. ENGLAND APPALLED (American Press) London, Nov. 13.—England killed, wounded and missing. and Harwich, on the east war office. London, Nov. 13.—While the Ger- have driven them across the and French report the invaders mov- ing along the coast toward Ostend. French Germans positions. around Ypres have been original vigor. Russian investment of Przemy: the Posen frontier have ated. Unofficial det cow: SUPPER MATERIAL HERE. Presbyterian Supper of Next Week. Next Wednesday midji yesterday. Efforts are week the most successful ever given by the church. neer. STRONG ON HAMS Choice Meat tomorrow. It wil be ham day of Swift's famous Empire hams. weigh from and those of the The Premium other brand REHEARSAL THIS EVENING. There will as possible be in attendance. formance will be given at the Brink. ill remain until after the funeral.|man. iRev. White, R. Mitchell and A. Lord ‘b appears-to be the favorite big /,’ “unting grounds of Bemidji me in the vicinity “~amorning Rev. - Mitchell and ~t village, Wednesday at,a more rapid rate than is that of and until noon yesterday hunting, having three deer, one monster bick, which was brought down by the aim Many |less than forty families have taken up other Bemidji hunters are returning |their future homes in'that vieinity. from that country where they have was appaled today at the announcement of Premier Asquith that up to date the British loss approximates 57,000 mans are holding Dixmude, the allies; A fog is said to prevent the Anglo- warships from shelling the German attacks | repulsed. Jatle on the Aisne river resumes its Vienna. reports the |evacuation of genter of Galicia and Petrograd asserts that the Germans been advices say Russians are nearing Cra- 500 Pounds of Turkey Arrive for|C2rl has also nual turkey supper, given by the men of the Presbyterian church, and five|of Towa,” hundred pounds, live weight, of the choicest birds obtainable, reached Be- being made to make the supper of next The menu and other information concerning the supper will be printed in tomorrow’s Pio- Palace Meat Market to Offer Ton of at the Palace Premium and| hams I A ten to fourteen pounds are i news Special prices will be given. be a rehearsal of the Elks Minstrel show cast in the lodge hall this evening and it is urged by the committee that as large a number Two weelis from tonight the first per- More Than Forty Iowa Families Se- lect Land in That Vieinity for : Future Homes—More Coming s T|G. E. BRINEGAR BOOSTS COUNTY There is perhaps no northern Min- nesota district which is progressing Nebish, twenty miles north of this city, and during the past year no For this great influx one man is to a great degree responsible, being G. E. Brinegar, general agent for the Nebish Land company, whieh owns considerable property in that coun- try. He began his northern Minne- sota boosting a little more than a BY WAR LOSSES|=s; «= “I have shown the land to more] than forty men,” said Mr. Brinegar while in Bemidji. ‘“With the excep- tion of two, every one bought, many of them later doubling their orders when they realized the value of the property. Nearly all of the people settling near Nebish are from Iowa and our plan is to hold an annual ‘Iowa Day’ of the northern Minne- Berlin, Nov. 13.—CGerman aviators |sota farmers from that state. I have have flown over English ports in Kent | great faith in the future of northern coast, according to an announcement of the |misrepresent conditions to make a Minnesota and never do I have to sale. A man sees the land and he readily understandg why crops of all kinds are doing successfully here. Brinegar has a farm of 160 acres ,near the outskirts of Nebish and it is {his intention to move there after the {first of the year, build substantial along the most modern'lines. He re- sides at Thayer, Iowa, where he is in the drug store business. His enter- ing into the land business was caused Ly il healtih and he was ordered to live more of an out-door life. le was accompanied bere on his . C. Fisher, also of in the bridge and nent ¢f an lowa rail- roadil Mr. Fis tat Nebish and will move his fumil_vf Ithere next spring, having decided to farm in the future. Mr. Fisher's son purchased Beltrami county land. “The land crops, here will produce all timothy, clover, alfalfa, blue brings the an- grass, wheat, oats and corn as well as on any of the $125 per acre land | said Brinegar. STEAMER WITH 800 ‘| PASSENGERS BURNS Catania, Nov. 13.—The steamer {Savena, with eight hundred passen- iterranean Sea and three Italian ships are rushing to her assistance in response to wireless calls for help. PREUS RECOVERING Meat Marlket tomorrow. This | has received a one | State Auditor-Elect Expects to Re-! land a balf ton shipment sume Duties Next Week. 0. Preus’ friends wer many pleased when the this city today had sufficiently re- from an appendicitis | reached that Le tcovered oner, and he will be [aund at his desk in the capitol | next week after an absence of two weeks. Preus was last week elected state auditor by the next highest vote given any candidate runing on the state ticket. A want ad will sell 1t Ior you. SCOOP ierorter GOSH-THATS TOUGH - NO THAT BOSS- DIDIUH KNowW THESE BELEr\UM\ PEA FARMERS HAVE. ALL QUIT PLflN‘\'!NG—- 1t is the place for well-to-do renters Yser;whu wish to own their own farms.’ buildings and conduct a stock tarm | cr purcliased a farm gers on board, is burning in the Med- ' Bemidji| me his duties as in-| NEBISH FORGING T0 FRONT REAS(]N OF LEE’S DEFEAT DISCOVERED ““Governor’s Division” Given Another Chief Executive in Election of Winfield Scott Hammond. ONE FROM OUTSIDE TRIANGLE Was . Geographically Impossible for Long Prairie Man to Meet With Success at Polls. With election more than a week past, the St. Paul Pioneer Press has discovered the reason of William- E. Lee’s defeat in his candidacy for gov- ernor ou the Republican ticket. The| Pionger dopes it out as follows: The Southern Minnesota - division of the -Omaha road from St. Paul southwest .to the Iowa state Iine is known among railroad men now as «“Governor’s Division.” The name seems most appropriate for eleven-of the eighteen governors of Minnesota, including W. S. Ham- mond, . governor-elect, have come from towns on this 175-mile stretch of track. : Four From St. Paul. St. Paul has furnished four, St. Peter four, Mankato one, St. James one and Worthington one. Continued on last page.) FARMER’S NECK BROKEN | Peter Sunda Meets Death In Jump From Barn Window. M. E. Ibertson, county coronor, lwas called.to Hagali township yes- |terday to investigate the death of ! Peter L. Sunda, age forty-two years, jwhose neek was broken Wednesday night. The accident happened twhen Mr. Sunda jumped from a |basement window in the barm. A (neighbor visited the farm and Mr. ;Sunda told him to put his horse in the Dasement, which has recerntly been -Buil¥iias the other barn was ifull. "The 'door to the basement was not on hinges but was only fastened lin temporarily and could not be open- ied from the inside. Mr. Sunda jump- jed through the window with the in- ;tention of opening it from the out- side, when the accident happened. In jumping he lit on his head. In- terment will be made in the Nebish jcemetery tomorrow. | BANQUET FOR GARDNER. ‘Former Court Reporter, Senator- , Elect, is Honored. ! George Gardner of Brainerd, who jhast just been elected to the state {senate from that district, was the guest of honor at a banquet given by 1 Dr. Josepli Nicholson, of the Crow ! Wing county seat yesterday. Much in- terest was aroused here over Gardner’s |campaign for the senate, as he is iwell known here and was the first ,eourt reporter of Judge B. F. Wright ,m this judicial district. The place jcards were unique conceptions, be- ‘}mg a paper horse shoe bearing the i photograph of Mr. Gardner and em- bellished with the state flower of Minnesota, the lady slipper. The company responded to various toasts jin honor of Mr. Gardner. | Louman to Recover. ! Lynn Louman, who was from a wagon when it was struck by a Great Northern passenger train at the Fourth street crossing vesterday, |is much improved today, although he lis still confined to his bed. The wa- gon was demolished and a fine dap- Iple grey team, the property of Tom |Smart, injured. < I's Very Sad Isn’t It- | WAR MAP, Battle Line in France, Where the Fighting Is Now Fiercest. hurled | The Germans have massed twelve army corps, or about 500,000 men. along the twelve mile stretch between Dixmude and Ypres. From Lille to Ostend is about forty-eight miles. GOPHERS READY FOR GAME Minnesota Football Eleven Prepared For Annual Clash With Wis- consin Tomorrow. SOLON, STAR FULLBACK, TO PLAY Interest in the Minnesota-Wiscon- sin football game tomorrow is in- creasinly hourly, and while, by rea- son of injuries to the Gophers, the Badgers will go into the game with a slight shade as favorites, it is by no means assured that the Badgers will emerge as victors. Wisconsin’s team, under the coach- ing of Juneau, have always played a driving, line plunging game. Ju- neau has varied the line plunges with an end-running game marked by a strong bulwark of interference. Just what sort of attack Minnesota will spring remains a well-guarded secret. An analysis of the plays contemplated for the entertainment of Juneau’s men is about all that has not been made public concerning Minnesota’s preparatory work of the last ten days. It now seems certain Minnesota will start the game without the ser- vices of Art Erdahl, quarterback. In- juries sustained in the Illinois game have kept him out of the fray. In his place will be Deidrich or Haedge, regular backs. Bierman, Hamilton and Solon will be in the lineup. The players are anxious to whip Wisconsin. The defeat by Illinois stiil rankles in the Gopher camp, and it has been figured that the best way 'w cauce the game to be forgotten is to whip Wisconsin. The game will be witnessed by a large number of Bemidji rooters. One of the Bemidji hunters who was successful in bagging a deer yes- terday was J. P. Nissen, chief clerk secured the deer just east of the By "HOP" \\\\\\M//// o @ i - T STND - PALTS D, at the W. G. Schroeder store. He| FORTY CENTS PER MONTN 'ENTIRE TREATY ZONE ' MAY BE MADE“DRY” Orders Given Here, at Walker and At Cass Lake Show That 1855 Docu- -~ ment Will Be Enforced. WARNED OF LAW VIOLATIONS ] | Protracted Litigation May Result if Agents Go Further, Says Zoll- man, St. Paul Lawyer. So far as is known in Bemidji this afternoon, saloons in only three cities included in the territory cov- ered by the Indian treaty of 1855 have been ordered to close in accord- ance with provisions therein contain- ed, being this city, Walker, which was the first to receive notice, and Cass Lake. This afternoon Special Agent Lar- son and Deputy Brandt left for some point along the Red Lake line, their destination not being known. "Warned of Prosecution. While .only the saloons of three places have been ordered to close, the fact remains that the other saloons of the 264 doing business in the treaty territory will still be in viola- tion of the provisions of the 1855 document should they re- main open. The government'’s order, as given - here by Larson, under instruction from Cato Sells, Commissioner of Indian Affairs, in- forms saloon men that to remain open after November 30 meéans that they will be violating the treaty and will be punished as provided by law. Takmg this point into consideration appears that, if they are to avoid pmsecunon, saloon owners in other cities must close when those of the three other towns do. - Make No Opposition. The following summary of the situation was authorized yesterday by Fred W. Zollman, attorney for the Brewers’ association: -If Federal agents confine their ac- tivities in énforc&ng the Indian treaty lid of 1855 to such towns as Bemidji, Walker, Cass Lake, Bena and Ball Club, it is likely that they will meet with no_opposition from the State Brewers’ association’ and the Business Men’s Treaty commit- tee, of which Mayor Victor Power of Hibbing is chairman. Brewers Make Threat. If Special Agent H. A. Larson, representing Cato Sells, commission- er of Indian affairs at Washington, attempts to extend the application of the supreme court decision of June 8 to cities unfrequented by the In- dians, protracted litigation will en- sue. ' Applies to Bemidji. Mr. Zollman contends that the United States supreme court in its decision in the suit brofight by W. E. (Pussyfoot) Johnson, T. E. Brents and H. F. Coggeshall against Edwin Geralds, L. J. Krammer, Fred E. Brinkman and others applies only to Bemidji and new proceedings may be brought for towns not in Indian territory. Would Affect Many Cities. “While the language of the su- preme court decision indicates that ]l.he treaty of 1855 is in force, the court in the last paragraph of its opinion confines its effect to Bemidii alone,” said Mr. Zollman yesterday. “When the case was argued we asserted that the effect of a decision sustaining the treaty would include the entire territory, and affect such cities as Hibbing, Chisholm, Brain- erd, Grand Rapids and others distant from Indian localities and not sub- ject to Indian visitations. ‘““Assistant Attorney General Wal- lace, who argued the matter for the government, insisted that the deci- sion of the court, if the treaty was sustained, could and would only ap- 'ply to Bemidji,”” Mr. Zollman con- tinued. i Only Inferential. “From the statement of Mr. Wal- lace and the wording of the decision itself, the warrant under which Spe- cial Agent Larson seeks to close the entire territory is'only inferential. The state should have absolute police jurisdiction over this territory mnot contiguous to Indian settlements and our efforts will be directed towards enforcing home rule in these sections witlwout interference from sFederal investigators.” Ribbon feed and a hinged screen for 'a new laundry mangle prevents ‘injury to the fingers of operators. il RS