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W ) il FRIDAY, JUNE 4, 1915. ! | About The City ’ | FERE R R R R R R R R R E R R = LEST WE FORGET * il&‘#l&ii«i’lkfi*i[ TFlag Day is June 14. P In case of fire call 249. » * Tuesday, June 15, is “Good Roads Day.” | | | Sumuwer school begins June 21. It will last five weeks. PR Bemidji’s Vawter-Redpath chautau. qua will be held August 3 to 7, in-\ clusively. » s 0» | The legislative excursion will| reach Bemidji June 17, spending lhe}l The above is a cut showing th day here. PO { ular meetings of the Nary Farmers’ When traveling purchase round- | === — = ose in attendance at one of the reg- club. Boost the Bemidji rail- {yesterday, enroute to Pinewood, | | where they have recently purchased There will be another sale of state {a farm and will make their future | gchool and swamp land of the county : home. i Wednesday, June 9. | E R I * % 2 | Kabo Garters Free. See Every- | body’s Magazine, page 54, advertising Baptist Conwe}:tmn, h othwesteru isection. O-Leary-Bowser Co.—Adv. association of Minnesota, will be held | here June 17, 18, 19 and 20. Josephine Brunne and Mrs. Sadie * 3 “Brlinger of Red Lake Agency spent} June 8 has been named as the |yesterday in Bemidji shopping and next meeting date of the Beltrami calling on friends. They are both county board of commissioners. teachers in the government school at . e * Red Lake. | 1 Kabo Garters Free. See Every-| body’s Magazine, page 54, advertising section. O-Leary-Bowser Co.—Adv. Beltrami county’s annual fair will be held on September 15, 16, 17 and 18. September 15 will be entry day. The state fair will be in progress | September 6 to 11. Mrs. Joe McTaggart and sons, Har- * 2 vey ‘and Charles, will leave mnext June 10 ana 11 have been the|Week for Sleepy Eye, Minnesota, days selected for the summer meet- | Where they will visit Mrs. McTag- ing of the Northern Minnesota De- gart’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. W!lllam velopment association, which is to | Montgomery, and other relatives, for be beld at Coleraine. The winter |Several weeks. session will be held in Bemidji, De- cember 9 and 10. The Pioneer is the place to buy your rolls of adding machine paper ifor Burroughs adding machines. One roll, a dozen rolls or a hundred rolls. | I—Adv. b ( Miss Nellie Shaw of Funkley, wlio has taught in the Northome schools this year, has been the guest of Mrs. | Joe McTaggart for the past couple i Q of days, and was present at the com- Imencement exercises last evening, her { brother, Robert, being one of the graduates. Get your picnic lunch at Netzer’'s {tomorrow afternoon. Delicatessen daye, lunch. Cold meats, salad, cakes,! For Wood Phone 129.—Adv. |bread and doughnuts. Episcopalian Miss Myrtle Shafer of Wilmnlguild. Sale starts at 2 p. m.—Adv. spent yesterday in the city shopping| Miss Olive Whaley, who has been and calling on friends. attending the state normal school at | ‘Winona Minnesota, will arrive in the city next week. Enroute to Bemidji, ! she will attend a house party at St.| iPaul. Miss Whaley is the daughter Bananas 20c per dozen at Tropp-'of Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Whaley of the man’s Saturday.—Adv. Mrs. James Martin of Puposky is visiting Bemidji friends for a few Mrs. Barney Gibney of the town of | Fickles was among the out-of-town shoppers in Bemidji yesterday. Rex theater. i Judge M. A. Spooner has returned Cold meats, salad, cakes, bread; from St. Paul, where he has spent !and doughnuts will sold at the Epis-| the past couple of days attending the [copalian guild sale at Netzer’s lo—' gupreme court. |morrow afternoon at 2 o’clock. A Miss Alice Butler of Turtle River, ichance to obtain your picnic lunch. who has spent the week in Bemidji, ‘;—Adv. _ the guest of friends, returned to her| A large number of Bemidji people home yesterday. |are planning on attending the Bel- ltrami County Sunday School associa- | Oranges 20c per dozen at TropD-iy;on convention to be held in Black- | man’s Saturday.—Adv. fduck, Monday, June 7. The conven—i J. W. Curo and wife of Walker tjon will be held just one day and| were in Bemidji last evening enroute |there will be a morning, afternoon | to their home. Mr. Curo is the Cass 'and evening session. gounty surveyor, " The Presbyterian ladies will give M. G. Stokesberry of Grand Forks, |, food, apron and fanecy goods sale, district commercial manager of the Saturday afternoon and evening in Northwestern Telephone company,;me basement of the church. Ice| spent today in Bemidji on business !cream, cake, coffee and sandwiches ! One of these aays you ought to will be served.—Adv. go to Hakkerup's and bave your pic- Mrs. M, A. Clark was pleasantly| ture taken.—Ady. |surprised yesterday afternoon by a| Mrs. Afi L. Collard of Minnesota number of friends and neighbors, avenue returned from Halstad, Min- who came in and spent the after-| nesota, yesterday, where she +was | noon. Those present were Mesdames ! called by the death of her father, L. D. R. Burgess, Ed Tabor, Flatner, J.| B. Fos ‘[J. Opsahl, A. A. Andrews, A. V. Gar- 1ave your furniture ‘repaired at|lock, A. D. Bailey, H. Koors, Ellet- the bargain store, first class work ut |Son, Joe Bisiar, Carter, John Ziegler, |Falls, Tom Stewart, Langdon, Mor- {tiz and Miss Hazel Minnick. A de- g S reasonable prices.—Adv. Miss Margaret Harkins of Nevada, ) T Austin, Minnesota, were in the city |licious lunch was served by the self- Jgasoline, we have silos, we have i—a lot of college | Parshall celebrated land Capt. {thused them when more than fifty isary for eligibility—enlisted as pri-! invited guests. The Presbyterian ladies will give a food, apron and fancy goods sale, Saturday afternoon and evening in the basement of the church. Ice cream, cake, coffee and sandwiches will be served.—Adv. I remember, I remember the house where I was born, the little window where the sun came peeping in at morn. You’d hardly know the old place now, for Dad is up-todate and the farm is scientific, from the back lot to the gate. The house and barn are lighted with bright acetyline, the engine in the laundry is run by autos, we have dynamos and things, a telephone for gossip and a phono- graph that sings. The hired man. has left us—we miss his homely face graduates’ are working in his place. There’s an en- gineer and fireman, a chauffeur and a vet, electrician and mechanic, oh, the farm’s run right, you bet. The little window where the sun came peeping in at morn now brightens up a bath room that cost Dad a car of corn. Our milk-maid is pneu- matic and she’s sanitary too, but Dad gets fifteen cents a quart for milk that once brought two. Our cattle came frecm Jersey and the hogs are all Duroc, the sheep are. South- down beauties and the chickens Plymouth Rock. To have the best of everything, that is our aim and plan, for Dad not.only farms, but he’s a business: man.—Le Sueur || News. % The Presbyterian ladies will givle‘ a food, apron and fancy goods sale, Saturday afternoon and -evening in the basement of the church. Ice cream, cake, coffee and sandwiches will be served.—Adv. In its last issue the Cass Lake Times says: ‘Archdeacon and Mrs. their twenty- first marriage anniversary by inviting a few friends to a six o’clock dinner Monday evening. Occurring on Memorial day the table-talk was apropos to the occasion. Major Lange O’Neil’s reminiscenses were interesting to listen to, and listening we caught a faint echo of the patriotism which must have en- years ago they gave their young man- hood for our country. Major Lange at eighteen, in company with "two companions, left the university in his home town in Norway to enlist in the United States army, for which act he was promptly disinherited. Capt. O’Neil at the age of thirteen— his remarkable size doing away with |[§ the prescribed eighteen years neces- vate. Their promotions are sufficient | proof of self-imposed duties done. Recounting the privations of the past served only to endance the] good cheer of the present, and no lack ; of appreciation was shown for the de- s licious dinner provided by our host- ess, who in her always gracious manner served her guests in great abundance. As host and ra.conteur| Mr. Parshall is unsurpassed. | Missouri, who has been a guest at the Cleve King home for the past! three weeks, returned to her home | this morning. berg, Kittleson & Co., is being sold at wholesale prices.—Adv. Henry Cominsky went to the Twin | Cities last evening, where he will at- tend the wedding of M. S. Nathan to Miss Feinstein, which event will take place Monday. Gasoline Filling Station—*Crown | cOmplete. Gasoline”—12 6-10c per gallon. C. ¥ W. Jewett Company.—Adv. Mrs. F. B. Lamson and two chil- dren have returned from Dassel, * Minnesota, where they were called by the death of Mrs. Lamson’s mother, Mrs. Agnes Nodine. One dollar will do the work of two at the closing out sale of Aker-| Matinee at 2:30 p. m. berg, Kittleson & Co.—Adv. The House Showing how the New York Very interesting. “‘A Billy Comedy,”’ featuring in the 5 reel picture The entire $10,000 stock of Ake:-‘GRAND TH EATER i Tflmgm flflh’ “THOUGCHTS OF TONICHT” A two part drama of the hills. “MAKING A GREAT NEWSPAPER”’ “BILLY’S STRATAGEM” Admission, Children 5¢, Adults 10¢ Tomorrow—Valli Valli, late star of ‘‘The Chocolate, Soldier,”’ STHE HIGH ROAD*” of Quality The story will interest’you. A\ Times is made up and printed Harry Fisher. | 5c—Admission—15¢ THE BEMIDJI DAILY. PIOREER = well | @ Natlonal Bureau of Education Advo- cated the Making of Home Gardens. If every back yard in every large city in the country could be made to produce fruit and garden vegetables for the home the cost of living would receive the most depressing shock of all its ruthless career. A For the national bureau of education the idea is not a dream. The bureau believes that schoolchildren, backed by competent - teachers of gardening: em- ployed by the public schaols, can make the home garden an immensely impor- tant: factor in domestic economy. “Bxperiments already made by the bureau of education,” declares Com- missioner Claxton, “show that with proper direction an average child -be- tween the ages of six and twenty can produce on an eighth of an acre from $50 ‘to $100 worth of vegetables. A third of the children in the city schools might easily produce $300.000.000 worth a year.” An agent of the bureau has returned from a tour of the south, west and east. Out of thirty-two cities visited fourteen have adopted ‘the home gar- den along lines suggested by the bu- reau of education. Nine others are planning home gardens under the. i rection of women’s clubs and play- ground. associations. “God first planted a' garden,” -says Bacon, “and indeed it is the purest of all human pleasures.” A reel within a ball takes up the slack in the wire in a new .electric light fixture which permits a lamp to be meved to almost any part of a moderate sized room. BACK YARD GARDENS. PLEASING PHOTO-PLAYS AT THE REX THEATRE REX SATURDAY i A drama in two parts demonstrating that ‘self denial brings happiness. It is called “The Millionaire’s Hundred Dollar Bill”’ Leading characters are played by Leah Baird, Leo Delaney, Ethel Lloyd, Lillian Burns and other noted performers. An exciting play based on an actual raid made during the Civil War \ : “The Railroad Raiders of ’62” An Essanay comedy i “A Coat Tale” SUNDAY 4 Marguerite Courtot and Tom Moore play the famous three aet rama . ' “The First Commandment” supported by the Kalem steck company all high class people.’ Children 8c —ADMISSION— Adults 10c Matinee 2:30 p. m. Evening 7:30 p. m. Advertisers who want the best results always patronize The Pioneer. They know, by experi- ence, that it has no equal in this section of the country as an advertising medium. | -sizes from 4 | - Choice for have but six One suit, size 38, One suit, size 36, One suit, size 40, One suit, size 40, One suit, size 41, One suit, size 42, The Bazaar Store Beltrami Ave. Saturday Specials at the BAZAAR STORE One lot of summer dress goods, Suitings, - Bedford Cords, Ratines, Lawns, Fancy ‘Crepes, etc. at Half Price. | One lot of Misses’ and children’s dresses, " One lot of Ladies’, Misses’, and Children’s “straw hats at One Half Price. One lot Ladies’ oxfords, sizes 2 1-% to 5, sold “from $3 to $4, while. they last only - 98¢ From a purchase of over 100 high-grade “The Sunshine Line” suits and coats we black serge - . navy princella - - black serge - - navy silk poplin - . navy gabardine - - navy gabardine - - | All colored cloth top shoes, the $4 and i $4.50 kind at - = - .Come in patents and kid, lace and button to 14, priced up to $1.50 - 75¢ 816.75 [7.50 (7,00 20.00 17,50 17.50 Former Price $33.50 35,00 34,00 40.00 35.00 35,00 suits left, $3.00 ; ~Bemidii, Mifin.