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MONDAY, FULY 12,1015, About The City: ——= EEK KKK KKK KKK KKK * LEST WE FORGET * LR B RS EEERE R R T In case of fire call 349. . ; School board election Saturday evening, July 17, at 7 o’clock. . s s s Bemidji’s Vawter-Redpath chautau- qua will be held August 3 to 7, in- clusively. .. When traveling purchase round- trip tickets. Boost the Bemidji rall- road receipts. ... There will be another sale of state school and swamp land of the county Wednesday, July 14. . On December 9 and 10 the winter convention of the Northern Minne- sota Development association will be held in Bemidji. .. . 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. OCA BREVITIES Mrs. James Brennan of Ranier, Minn., is visiting Bemidji relatives for a few days. Orin Bjoring, E. M. Sathre and son, Forrest, spent Sunday in the town of Liberty. For Wood Phone 129.—Adv. Mrs. James Guthrie of Turtle River transacted business in Bemidji Satur- day, between trains. Mrs. A. C. Whitney of Bass Lake was among the out-of-town shoppers in the city Saturday. Judge C. W. Stanton left last eve- ning for St. Paul where he will spend today on official business. ‘ Don’t get married until you see “The Escape.”—Adv. i Sarah Gravelle of Grand. Rapids NEAT CASE OF MDAEY TROUBLE Take a glass of Salts if your Back hurts or Bladder bothers—Meat forms uric acid. 1f you must have your meat every day, eat it, but flush your kidneys with salts occasionally, says a noted nuthority who tells us that meat forms uric acid which almost paralyzes the kidneys in their ef- forts to expel it from the blood. They become sluggish and weaken, then you suffer with a dull misery in the kidney region, sharp pains in the back or sick headache, dizziness, your stomach sours, tongue is coated and when the weather is bad you have rheumatic twinges. The urine gets cloudy, full of sediment, the channels often get sore and irritated, obliging you to seek relief two or three time during the night. To neutralize these irritating acids, to cleanse the kidneys and flush off the body’s urinous waste get four ounces of Jad Salts from any pharmacy here: take a tablespoonful in a glass o water before breakfast for a few day: and your kidneys will then act fine. Thit famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined witl. lithia, and has been used for generations to flush and stimulate sluggish kidneys also to meutralize the acids in urine, so it no longer irritates, thus ending bladder weakness. Jad Salts is inexpensive; cannot in- jure, and makes a delightful effervescent lithia-water drink. "I For Men Behind the Pen You signers of checks, writers of letters, keepers of books and makers of records— here is a new ink—in fact, two inks in one. We were one of the first to add to our stock the newest member_of the Carter’s Inx family— .~ Carter’s 2 Pencraft = Combined Office | (i”ll]un and Fountain Pen == Ink We feel aure there’s a call among our friends for one ink usable in either fountain. pons o inkwells. ~ Awonderful new flow. controlleris part of the equipment of quarts, pints and half-pints of Pencraft, A slight presur of th nerconels the Come in and Tet us 6l your pen with. this_new. ink, and # show you the flow-controller. “s visiting her cousin, Stella I;arsr;n, of Lakeside for a few days.. ‘William ‘Fellows and family: of Tenstrike autoed-to-Nymore yester- day and were -the guests of friends. C. C. Aldrich and family of-Tenth street will move to Hazel, Minn., this week, where they will make their future home. One of these days you ought to go to Hakkerup’s and have your.pic- ture taken.—Adyv. Frank Brightman and Fred Rogers |of Lawrence, Ind., are visiting at the James: Sheets home: at Lake Plan- taganet for a few days. Wilbur Lycan is entertaining a party of Grand Forks young. people at a house party at the McVey cot- tage at Grand Forks Bay this week. Mrs. Sell and son, Spencer, of Bis- marck, N. D., arrived in Bemidji Saturday night and are guests at the B. W. Lakin home on Lake Boulevard fave your furniture repaired at the bargain store, first class work at. reagonable prices.—Adv. Mr. and Mrs. H. H. Taylor of Blackduck were among the out-of- town shoppers in Bemidji Saturday, returning home on the evening train. Miss Viola Luke of St. Cloud came to Bemidji Saturday and will spend her vacation with her aunt, Mrs. Garry Brennon, of Minnesota avenue. Miss Nellie Boobar of Nary, who is attending summer school in Be- midji, spent the week end with her parents, returning to Bemidji today. Extra special at Troppman’s Tues- day, Wednesday and Thursday, fancy, lemons, 15¢ a doz.—Adv. E. A. Dahl, of Duluth, the con- tractor building Road No. 32, ex- tending across the northern end of Beltrami county, spent today in Be- midji on business. Mrs. H. D. Kenfield and Miss Ruby Wheaton of Cass Lake, who have been guests at the -E. E. Kenfield home on Lake Boulevard since Sat- urday, returned to their home today. Mr. and Mrs. M. D. Chandler and Mr. and Mrs. Harold C. Fisher of Minneapolis arrived in Bemidji yes- terday morning and will be the guests of Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Brooks for a week. Extra special for Tuesday—Dress Ginghams, values to 15¢. Your choice, 7%c per yard. Troppman’s. —Adv. Frank 8. Lycan, proprietor of the Markham hotel, left Sunday evening for St. Paul where he will spend sev- eral days on business. He expects to return to Bemidji Wednesday morning. Miss May McCulley of Interna- tional Falls came to Bemidji Satur- day and will visit at the J. M. Yates home in the town of Frohn for a short time. Mrs. Yates met her in Bemidji. E. S. Woodward went to Minne- apolis Saturday night, having been called there by the serious-illness of his mother, Rebecca Woodward, eighty years old, who is suffering from a .general breakdown. There will be an auction sale of horses at the Soo stock yards Thurs- day and Friday, July 15 and 16. All young western horses. Marks & Co. —Adv. H. Clementson, of Clementson, Wil- liam Lennon of Tenstrike and J. C. Thompson of Blackduck, members of the Beltrami county board of com- missioners, arrived in Bemidji today to attend the board meeting. Genevieve and Frank Carter of La- porte spent Saturday in Bemidji, the guests of friends. They were accom- panied by their cousin, Nina Carter, of St. Cloud, Minn., who is visiting at the Carter home in Laporte. midji where they will spend a short time as guests at the Mrs. M. Ma- lone home. Mrs. Malone is the man.—Crookston Daily Times. Miss Carrie Armstiong, ‘who has spent the past year at Keewatin, On- tario, the. guest -of her uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Arm- strong, returned to Bemidji last eve- ning. Miss' Armstrong will resume her position in Dr. G. M. Palmer’s office. I have some fine 16" jackpine to sell either by the cord or carload. Call C. LaJambe. Phone 113-J— Adv. . ‘When you want some eggs bad call the same Frenchman, 113-J.—Adv. Miss Bessie Newton left this morn- ing: for Walker, Minn., where. she will visit her sister, Miss Jennie New- ton, until Wednesday. While in ‘Walker Miss Newton will attend a play given by the patients at the sanatarium..during-the doctors’ con- vention. Carter Cutter, assistant-cashier of the First State bank. of Norwich, N. D., who has spent the past week as the guest. of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. S. A. Cutter, will return to Nor- wich tomorrow. Mr. Cutter was for- merly teller at the Security bank of this city. Mrs. Alvin Mattson and son of Warren, Minn., are the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Worth of Beltrami avenue. Mr. and Mrs. ‘Mattson are former Bemidji residents, Mr. Matt- son having been employed in -the Bemidji Pioneer office as foreman of the job department. Get a good horse at the auction sale Thursday and Friday, July 15 and 16. Sale will be held at the Soo stock yards, all horses going to the highest bidder. Forty ‘western horses weighing from 1,000 to 1,300 pounds.—Adv. * Sam English, who is a member of the office staff of the Minnesofa ‘& International railroad at Brainerd, spent yesterday in Bemidji. While here he visited his sisters, Misses Irene and Marie English, who are spending several days in Bemidji as members of a house party. Mr. and Mrs. Ross Reynolds, for- merly of this city, have arrived ia Bemidji from Park Rapids where they have resided for some time. In Park Rapids Mr. Reynolds managed the Great Northern hotel and comes here to accept the chief clerkship of the Birchmont Beach summer hotel. Bill Lilye left Saturday evening for St. Paul where he will spend ten days visiting relatives and friends. Tonight he will attend the bout be- tween Miske and Tom Gibbons, the first to be held under Minnesota’s new boxing law. During his absence Joe Harrington will have charge of the Markham club rooms. E. E. Kenfield, manager of the Bemidji Box company, left Saturday for Washburn, Wis., where he will attend the annual directors’. meeting of the various box factories through- out Minnesota and Wisconsin, in which he is interested. He was ac- companied by M. S. Lamoreaux of Chicago, who has spent a few days in Bemidji. THE CONCRETE SILO. Percentage of Failures Less Thaniin Any Other Type. [Prepared by Colorado station.] Cement is coming to be used more and more for construction work on the farm. This is only in keeping with progress made in concrete eonstruction along other lines. A great many ob- Jjections are made to concrete as a suit- able material for silo construction. Be- side a number of others, the following are some of the most common: Con- ‘crete walls allow mold and decay mother of Mrs.. Welte and Mrs. Nor-J Mrs. J. A:; Younggren of Beltramif around the walls, are affected by the avenue, who has been confined at{ acid of silage, and they cannot be St. Anthony’s hospital for the past| puilt to keep them from cracking and week, returned to her home yester-{ thus leak air. These statements, of day, but expects to return to the} course, come from competing builders, hospital in a short time to undergo| mostly stave silo people. Observation an operation. olr concrete and stave silos standing Ladies’ suits at $2.98; early spring side b_y side shows that the freezing is no greater in one than the other. By ;'mdils' A number _°t patterns to s?— coating the walls with a wash of neat ect from, no two alike. Troppman’s| cement or tar pitch they can be made July Clearance Sale, commencing Sat-| perfectly air, water and acid proof. If urday, July 10.—Adv. properly re-enforced and made of suit- Mrs. Floyd Williams died Saturday { 2ble material they should not crack night after an illness of over a year | 20Y more than does. other concrete from tuberculosis. She leaves a | WOrk- There have been failures in all : types of silos, but it is safe to say pusband and other relatives o MOUTT | ghat the percentage of fatlures is less The funeral service will | in concrete silos than in most other be held tomorrow afternoon at the types. That they are a success has Baptist church. been demonstrated beyond a doubt by Mrs. Ed Eastman of Turtle River| those built not only in this state, but and her mother-in-law, Mrs. M. M. other states as well. Silos of this type E:.Lst'x:nan, of St. Cloud v.lere in Be- fully for eleven years without the least midji Saturday on business. MIs.|gign of deterioration or loss of silage Eastman was called to Turtle River | through spoilage. by the serious illmess of her son, who The common causes of failure in con- is now improving. crete construction are, first, insufficient A. H. Comstock, formerly in re-enforcement; second, dirty sand and charge of the Soo line depot here, gravel; third, too lean a mixture or biit t at AftKE a " | insufficlent amount: of cement used: UE now;agenta thim, returned to'} pourty poor mixing: of cement with his home this morning. Mrs. Com- | gang and gravel: fifth, poor placing of stock is a patignt at St. Anthony’s| misture within the building forms; hospital, where she underwent an | sixth, washing out of cement by ex- operation yesterday. cessive water. The highest bidder can buy g00d - while not hombarding the Ger- western horses Thursday and Friday, | ;.,q British artillery sections be- July 15 and 16, at the Soo stock|ping tne lines held a horse show, vards at an auction sale. HOrSes|yn, y1u0 riphon goingi to a noble weigh from 1,000-to 1,300 pounds.—| 3,116 orey steed who formerly pull- Ady. ed a plough in Yorkshire. Mrs. B. C. Ostrander and - Mrs. % - Frank Rook of Minneapolis, who are| T, enable automobiles to pull spending the summer at- their sum-|themselves up 'hills or out of soft: ‘mer home at Turtle River, spent Sat- spots in roads-a South Dakota in- urday in: Bemidji shopping. They |yentor hag patented a windlass which are enthusiastic about Bemidji and|may be attached to a rear hub and vicinity as a summer resort. operated by the motor. . Mesdames Henry Welte and J. F'. Normenlefte this morning. for are known to-have been used success-i|: _ Mothers, buy. For your babies Frbmxtubu;:ulosis&eetedx«herd Avoid the danger of any-impuri- ties:in their.food- We. have. just installed a new clarifying. machine. guaranteed- to remove all: foreign: matter, and while this- machine-hasbeen: quite an expense we are quot= Ing you our-regular price of only 8c per quart " GAOGERES ‘GENERA AND: GENERAL MERCHANDISE BEMIDJI; MINN. The Avenue of Commonwealths-at the Wonderful Panama-Pacilic Exposition: N the Avenue of Commonwealths at the Panama-racific International Exposition, Crowds- passing before ‘the: beautiful New York State building, which is one of the finest of the state buildings at the buge Exposition in San-Francisco. Dry. batteries, can be used in wet places and their lives. extended by packing them in sawdust.in glass. jars and pouring melted. paraffin over them after - waterproof wires have been attached. For polishing shoes an , English inventor has patented apparatus in which a band of cloth is pulled back and forth by wooden -arms- long enough for a person to manipulate them without stopping. Resulta are must &iways:certain when: you- use. a Ploneer want ad One-half cent & word.: Phone 31. et e Subscribe for the Floreer. A small pocket for coins or street car tickets appears in one corner of -|a new handkerchief for women. Frenchman to enable any cottonseed oil mill to chip and shred dried copra. ine If You Exam ' A Flake You can see little white ‘‘puffs” on_each flake —a distinguishing characteristic of this new. food. An entirely new method of making these New “Toasties brings out all the delightful. corn; flavour; and gives them a body and firmness—that don'’t ‘mush down in cream:or milk— But let the taste tell: Eatsome dry, justasthey .come from the package, compare their delicioustaste _with that of any “corn flakes” you have eaten and -you canunderstandwhy New Post Toastiesarecalled | SHOWING TONIGHT ONLY Maclyn Arbuckle’s Famous Imw. tween: the Famous Players Film Co. sonation of “The County Chair-| :I'::r the v;mte:; theatrical p:loq“epr, man” Korv:;m. ;‘lll"n ‘:;'::;:io"; Ed Temaie e S{Avnge's phenomenally = successful Celebrated: Subject Latest Famous|production of George Ade's ‘great Players Production.. comedy of love and politics..- For Maclyn Arbuckle, one of the great- | nany yearg the production has-been’ lest stars-and: character. actors of the{described as -one of ' the greatest present dramatic-epoch, is presented{comedy-dramas.ever produced on the in the latest Famous Players feature|American stage, and in the opinion in his noted impersonation of “The|of many authorities, the subject ~most County Chairman,” his greatest stage | responsible for George Ade’s characterization. This is the first:| tinction as the:greatest: humorist in production of the film alliance be-|the country. Firsb:show 7:20, second 8:45. Adywission, children Se, adults 16¢ TUESDAY “THE TERRIBLE ONE” A three reel feature 2 Vitagraph—Lillian Walker, Evart Overton, Garry McGarry, Lillian Burns;.in y “THE LOVE WHIP” By;B: Bassell, Produced by Wilfred North 3 : Admission 5¢c and 10c Coming—*‘The-Pursuit of The Phantom’’ REX THEATRE PLEASING: Lubin—in.. REX PHOTO-PLAYS Tonight— A Mutual Mastetpicture film version of Harold McGrath’s famous novel 3 “THE LURE OF THE MASK” The ordinary motion. picture seems commonplace compared with this splendid photo-drama so full of spirit and daring: ro- mance. Harold Lockwood; Elsie Jane Wilson, Irving Cum- mings and other famous players are in the cast. Matinee 2:30 Evening7:30.- Admission 5¢ and. 15¢ Coming Friday, July 16th— “Rumpelstiltskin’ for the ‘‘Kiddies’’ and a,story of ling- ering fascination for the grown ups. GRAND THEATRE Tonight Only The House of Quality “The Fox and The Pig” Seventh chapter of the “Diamond-From:the Sky” This chapter promises to.be unusually:goed, resembling in speedy action chapter three, whieh; caused much comment among those who saw it. A fox hunt is to. be-seen, showing-some wonderful riding, many falls, and to. cap-the. climax, Arthur Stanley does another of his hair-raising, daring stunts.” See who gets the dia- mond, last seen in the owl’s-nest. =3 “THE GRIM NESSENGER” A 2-part drama of the north, featuring; EDNA MAISON, an exceedingly strong story with a climax that will interest you. KING BAGGOT in the comedy classic “PRESSING HIS: SUIT” This is King Baggots first appearance on the Universal program in this city. Our Popular, Big Foto-player, Big- ger and Better Than Ever We have just installed twenty-seyen big-bass pipes, thelargest one being over six feet high, which gives an-entirely new efisct to the. music, - The few. people who-haye- heard-it are loud in their praise of this wonderful instrument. Hear it tonight for-the first time.: -~ Shows at 7:30, 5c—Admission—15¢ - Tomorrow—Vivian Martin in World feature in 5 parts, “LITTLE riSS- BROWN” _ You'll have no more use for your head if you buy one of these vest pocket Loose Leaf ' I-P booklets. Come in and see them at the Idji Plonser Office Supply Stors