Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, July 24, 1915, Page 3

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amidji: Volunteer Fire dswtment left last evening for St. Paul where he will remain on business until next Monday. Mrs. C. B! Wflod who has: been ——— visiting her son, Hebert Wood and R EREK ,’ x ’ ¥ & & % & ¥ |family for several -weeks, returned « LEST WE FORGET 4| to her home at Elsworth, Wis,, this KK KK KKK KK e K go i mOring. In case of fire call 349. 4ave your furniiure .repaired at e s 0 the bargain:store, first class .work at When traveling purehase:round- | reasonable.prices.—Adv. trip tickets. Boost the'Bemidjl sall-| Thos. Ervin left last evening for road receipts. St. Cloud where he will spend several PP [days with relatives. :Mr. Ervin ex- The. next meeting of the: board of pects to:return with a new six-cylin- county commissioners will be held|der Buick roadster. on August 16-. - Mrs. C. W. Triebel, who has spent several weeks in Bemidji as the There will be another sale of state |y, oy ¢ ner prother, Attorney A. A. school and swamp land of the county | o grews, returned to: her home m Wednesday, A“f‘“.t 1.1' Minneapolis last evening. On December 9 and 10 the winter he:fl:;r:n:dn;(rsfic. fl f“:r ‘;‘ Ke;dll- convention of the Northern Minne- Bak Vt '; am "{ ¥pe °; wiliing sota Development association will be aker returning on the evening train: Mrs. Baker will remain in Bemidj held in Bemidji. for several days as the guests of PR Beltrami county’s annual fair will | friends. ) be held on September 15, 16, 17 and| Max Figman and Louis Meredith in “My Best Girl.” Grand Theater 18. September 15 will be entry day. The state fair will be in progress|Sunday—Matinee at 2:30.—Adv. _Mr. and Mrs. John Hedeen left September 6 to 11. LS last evening for Duluth where they Bemidji is to have a chautauqua|will attend the Northwestern regatta from August 3 to August 7. The|which is now in progress there. Mr. large tent will be pitched on the lot|Hedeen is one of the Pioneer Linotype operators. at the corner of Bemidji avenue.and Mrs. Mary Hazen and Mrs. Has- Fouth street. brook returned to Akeley this morn- ing after attending the funeral of Mrs. Hazen’s little grandson, Edward Thomas which was held yesterday afternoon, Right kodak finishing, right quick- 1y, right.prices—developing 10c. Rich Studio, 29 10th St., near lake.—Adv. Mr. and Mrs. Edward Thomas, parents of Edward Thomas, the nine of | year old boy who was buried here yesterday, and Mr. and Mrs. Roy Wil- son returned to their home at Pupos- ky this afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. J. H. French and Mr. and Mrs. E. N. French of Blackduck left this morning for Minneapolis and other points in the state. They drove down in the French car and will be gone for two weeks. About The City BRE Mr. and Mrs. I. E. Raymond Frohn were Bemidji visitors yester- day. James ‘Boobar and daughter Ruth of Nary were among the business callers in Bemidji yesterday. A jolly crowd wanted for the Dam Sunday Boat, leaves at 2:30.—Adv. Albert Graff, who owns-a splendid farm on the shores of Wolf Lake was a business visitor in the- city Friday. Robert E. Fisher, ticket agent at the Union station left for Minneapolis last evening on a.short business trip. Dr. W. K. Dennison and D. R. Burgess motored to Puposky today where they attended to business mat- ters. Two extra prints free with orders given with film rolls left Monday. Rich Studio, 29 10th St. Prints 3, 4 and Ge.—Adv. Miss Grace Miner of Yola, a gradu- ate of the normal department of the Bemidji schools, is spending several days in the city as the guest of rela- tive. She will visit at Turtle River before returning to her home. ‘There is-a bright future ahead: for you if you take a course in- Mankato Commercial College. Send-for their catalogue.—Adv. Miss Dora Barrett, formerly of this city, but now of International Falls, was the guest of Bemidji friends be- tween trains last evening, being en- route to Crookston where she was called by the serious illness of her aunt, Mrs. Dancier. Mrs. John Doran of International Falls is visiting at the home of. her mother, Mrs. Lucy Hazen for a few days. One of these days you .ought to £o to Hakkerup’'s and have your pic- ture taken.—Adv. Mrs. F. F. Hammersley of Min- meapolis is visiting at the home of her mother, Mrs. D. Wilcox for a few weeks. E. C. McGregor returned from Minneapolis this morning where he has spent several days on business matters. Judge Marshall A. Spooner left this morning for International Falls where he will spend the day on legal business. Mr. and Mrs. James Cooks returned to their rome in Minneapolis last evening after spending several days in-Bemidji. A fine showing of white hats at the Henrionnet Millinery 313 Minne- sota avenue.—Adv. Mrs. C. F. Wiliams of Grand Forks, who is spending the summer at Lake- side, was a guest at the Homer C. Baer home yesterday. Herbert Doran, chief of the Be- You can get a special summer rate on your scholarship now for your business or stenograpl:ic course at the Little Falls Business College. Write for information.—Adv The funeral of Edward Thomas, the nine year .old.son of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Thomas of Puposky, was held from the home of Mr. and Mrs. William Hyatt at four o’clock yester- day afternoon, Rev. C. W. Gilman having charge of the services. In- terment was made in Greenwood. ‘Women can- control men, and ought to have something to say about autos when it comes to use gasoline. Read the St. Cloud Oil Co. ad and then talk to your husband.—Adv. Misses Alice Butler and Olive Hines, who have been attending the Saves Her Mother’s summer school here during the past “I am positive that Chamberlain’s|five weeks, left last evening for (Colic, Cholera, and Diarrhoea Remedy | Turtle River where they will spend saved my mother’s life abonut twelve |the week end at the Butler home. years ago for she was very sick with | They will return to Bemidji Monday bloody dysentry. We have kept it in | morning to take the state board the house ever since and used 1t a|teacher’s examinations. number of times for summer com- The Henrionnet Millinery Parlor plaints and other bowel troubles,”|is now located in the building former- writes Mrs. A. Marlowe, New Ken-|ly occupied by Mrs. Neal, 313 Minne- sington, Pa. Keep it at hand. It|sota avenue, come in and see the only costs a quarter. Obtainable ev-|fine showing-of white hats.—Adv. -erywhere.—Adv. Mr. and Mrs. Claude Winebrenner and son Abrgham and daughter Poris of Elkhart, Ind., who have been the guests of Mr. Winebrenner’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Martin Winebrenner of | Lake Plantagenet and: Mr. and Mrs. Jas. Winebrenner of Dewey. Avenue and other relatives for the past four weeks returned to their home Friday x morning. Chas. B. Rouss was worth six mil- lion and he began business as a book- keeper. Learn bookkeeping and shorthand at the Little Falls Busi- ness College. Write for booklet.— Adx. < | A portrait of the late Judge G. F. Holland, painted by Col. Freeman Therp, who lives near Brainerd has been presented to Crew Wing eounty’ by a number of lawyers of the county bar, all intimate friends, and has been aceepted by the eounty eom- missioners. It will be hung in the district court room. The donors in: clude Judge W. S. McClenahan, Judge: A. D. Polk, Former Senator S. F. Al- derman, Judge W. H. Mantor, Judge W. A. Fleming, M. E. Ryan, F. E. FES S22 222222 2 2 R 21 Chautauqu SEASON: TICKETS . Aduits, $1.50; Children, $1.00. For sale at the following places of business: ‘Bemidji Hardware Co. First National Bank. Northern: National - Bank. Security State Bank. Geo. T. Baker & Co. E. A. Barker. City Drug Store. Netzer’s Drug Store. The Bazaar Store. The Pioneer office. O’Leary-Bowser Co. F. G. Troppman. Huffman. & O'Leary. Given Hardware Co. Schneider Bros. Co. W. @.-Sehroeder. Otjo_Schwandt. Ebner, W. H. Crowell, Judge J. H Gill Bros. ‘Warner and Judge T. C. Blewitt. Stewart’s, Grocery. —_— C. E. Battles. Among the: Moars, if .a wife does KAk kA Ak Ak Rk kkkkhkkhkkkkkkk kb . not become the mother of a.boy, she |may be divorced with the consent of e ‘tribe. and ean-marry -again. Abercrombie & McCready. 2222 SRR SRS SRS SR RSN i e OARDI!A'L GIBBONS’ BIRTHDAY _Baltimore, Md., .my .28.—Roman Cathelic societies yesterday celebrated dhe 81st anniversary of James: Car- dinal' Gibbons, born July 23, 1834. Fellow members of the Cardinal in the Sacred College at Rome Friday wereexpected to observe the event. Cardinal Gibbons was showered with birthday congratulations from the ‘Pontiff and prelates all over the world. Muscular Rheumatism. This sometimes comes: on suddenly and is often mistaken for a sprain. Mrs. Conrad Oliver, Little Falls, N. Y., writes, ‘“About .three years ago my husband sprained his neck. We had.a bottle of Chamberlain’s Lini- ment in the house and applied it. After using it a few times all lame- ness and stiffness of his neck and shoulders disappeared.” Obtainable everywhere.—Adv. _ NEGRO'TO-DIE Birmingham, Ala., July 24.—Mil- lard Carpenter, mnegro, will die on the scaffold. August 6, for the murder of J. T. Camp, a Birmingham trans- fer man, unless the governor inter- feres, which is regarded as un- likely. E: GREEN MANURE EXPERIMENTS Results Obtained From Different Farm Stations In:North Dakota. [Prepared by North Dakota experiment station.] There is a difference of opinion as to the effect on soil fertility of allowing the land to He bare. The practice is generally thought to be destructive of humus. Due to the high straw yields on fallow plats, approximately as much straw is taken off one acre of fallow as is -produced on two acres continuously cropped. Both of these systems are deficient in that no pro- vision is made for directly or indirect- ly maintaining soil fertility. A medi- fled form of summer tillage is the plowing under of a crop. This prac- tice of green manuring, aside from being a partial fallow, supplies the material necessary for restoring or keeping up -the humus content of the soil. In this way both soil fertility and moisture conservation should be attained. In the work here reported three crops have been used as green ma nures—namely, rye, peas and sweet clover. Williston does not use sweet clover. - Winter rye is used at Willis- ton and Dickinson and spring rye at Edgeley and Hettinger. A supposed advantage of winter rye is the fact that this ecrop can be plowed under earlier in the season. This gives an additional month for moisture con-| servation, which is of considerable ad vantage in the western portion of the| state. Sweet clover, being a biennial plant, is seeded with the grain crop of the previous year. Thus no extra cultiva- tion-1sTrequired for its"produttion. In the eastern parts of the state this method of handling the land is prob- ably more nearly like the ordinary method of handling fallow than any of the other methods of summer tillage or green manure except that with the or- dinary fallow weeds may take the Dplace of the green manure crops. . These crops are grown in a series of four year rotations planned according to the following general schedule: Small grain, corn, small grain, green manure, and-then repeated. Another set of rotations substitutes. summer tillage for green manure. From the standpoint of immediate re- turns it is evident that green manuring as compared with clean fallow has not Increased the yield of the wheat crop at any of the stations. Where oats fol- lowed the green manure we note nega- tive results, except at Williston, where oats after the green manures average higher than .oats- after fallow. This greater advantage in 1913 was due to the weeds choking. the oats on fallow. In all probability, with the soil still in almost its original state of -fertility, the practice of green manuring will not materially increase the present ylelds produced under the ordinary fallowing system. While the moisture problem is more important than the fertility problem, as measured by immediate re- turns, this system will not be generally practiced with profit. Due to the short period of the trials, no reliable data can be given on the matter of residual ef- fects as measured by crops grown sev- eral years after the treatment. Clean Up the Fence Corners. ‘Roadsides and fence corners free of weeds, rank grass and rubbish are not only pleasing in appearance, but in- jurtous crop pests cannot start houwse- keeping in such places. Neither is there a chance for noxious weeds to mature or dangerous plant disease to start on clean roadsides. Since the-Dominion of Canada was created, 41 years ago, there “have been only 443 divorces granted, while in the United States in the same period of time the courts have dis- solved 1,274,341 marriages. 30 Cars of Equipment ©One Big Gala i Miss Bessie Townsend, the only woman city comptroller in the United States, recently became mayor of At- lantic City for a day when Mayor Riddle and all the members of the city commission were absent. Important to Travelers. Remedy. S hundred times its cost. The Pioneer is the place to: buy|everywhere.—Ady. your rolls of adding machine paper for Burroughs adding machines. One roll, a dozen rolls.or a hundred rolls. |than women. Glacier National Pm*' Low Round Trip Fares Daily Out there inthe Montana Rocky Moun- tains glorious vacation days are await- mg you. Auto-stages andlaunches willtakeyou deepin among the giants of the Continental Divide and among the glaciers. Saddle-horses will carry you up skyland trails to the high Passes. Enroute, the mammoth new Alpmw hotel on Lake McDermott, the “Many-Glacier”’; the gateway hotel, the” “Glacier Park”; and the nine Alpine chalet groups afford unique entertainment. If you like, you may tour the Park “over trails afoot” and in a packsack you may “take your hotel with you.” California: Expositions via Glacier Park! Low Gircle Tour Fares By the Oriental Limited or the Glacier Park Limited, via Rocky Mountains and Glacier National Park, Spokane, Cascade Mountains, Seattle, Tacoma, Portland—enroute a tour of Glacier Park —aboard new steamships Great Northern and Northern Pacific down acific to San Francisco—going or returning, travel this “Great Northern Secure new free Glacler Park le(ure—“l'ktell and Tours,” ‘*Aero- plane Map Fnldel“ ‘and **Walkjng Tours Book”—and Expositions Folder. o SW.W.LLOYD . - TTocal Agent, Bemidji, Minn. H..A. NOBLE General Passenger Agent ST. PAUL, MINN. “See America First GlacicrNatinnal Park The Great Northern Railiway has been awanded the Exposition Jor the Best Display of Scemic, Agricultural and Indusirial Kesources. THE FOOD-DRINK -FOR ALL -AGES |parts, a riot of fun from start to finish. ‘TARE A ‘PACKAGE HOME SU"NO SUBSTITUTE IS “JUST ASG0GD" Never leave home on a journey or outing without a bottle of Chamber- lain’s Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea It is often needed and when that time comes is cheap at one. Obtainable Men" have a stronger sense of taste on the roadba Gold Medal ot the Pamama-Pacific Intarnational Every Commodity RIGHT AT YOUR FINGERS TIPS. No:hunting through your files—no for- getting the name «of the firm who made the price—It's all before youin an o] Proxm Quotation Record ‘Its-use will simplify-your buying remarkably "There is an mem]Peem BOOK for Every. Business and Profession Bemidji Pioneer Office Supply Store Security Bank-Bldg. Telephone 31 Return Engagement of THE GREAT PATTERSDN SHOWJSY The World’s Biggest and Best Carnival Company 16--HIGH CLASS ATTRACTIONS---16=—— ‘Bemidji’s Big Mid-Summer Carnival Week July 26 fo duly 31 Week Oommenclng Mday, July 26th °H ‘Program Tonight -‘Tho ‘Aviator Spy”’ in four parts. Charley Chaplin in **The Property Man” in two Sc-and 15¢ Sunday Vaudeville WAMECKE & CO. The man from India presenting a rare assortment of fantastic tricks, intricate illusions and deceptions, including the great Tesi- tation act where any man, woman or child from the audience can take part and float in mid air without artificial support together with select program of funny monologues. HARRIS & HILLIARD Harmony singers. This is positively the best show of its'kind r-none. Lubin presents A Romance of the Navy,” fea- turing Ormi Hauley, Louise Huff, Earl Metcalf and Edgar Jones In 3 reel feature. Essanay, “‘Swedie in Vaudeville” with Walher Berry. First show 7:20 Mongiay, Daniel.Frohman presents the dainty mag‘neticb star Marguerite Clark, in a bewitching characterization ‘‘Wildflower”, lfiy Mfil;y Germaine, Coming Thursday, ‘‘The Making of Bobby urnit’’. GRAND THEATRE The House of Quality Tonight Cleo Madison and Murdock McQuarrie in the 3 part drama “The Faith of Her Fathers” from the story ‘‘A Daughter of Isreal” by Bruno Lessing, one of the most popular writers for the Cosmopolitan Magazine and the Saturday Evening Post” This show was witnessed by a large number last evening and was pronounced very good. “All in the Same Boot” Nester comedy featuring Jack Dilton and Billie Rhodes Shows:at 7:30 and 8:3) 5¢ Admission 10¢ Special SUNDAY Special Max Figman and Lois Meredith “MY BEST GIRL” A “Metro”— always good !—comedy drama in 5 parts from -the pen of Channing |Pollock, author of “The Pit”", “Such A Little Queen”, _ete. Max Figman is too well known to require special an- | nouncements, as is Lois Mer- edith. The play contains 200 scenes and required a cast of thirty-eight principals,beside a large number of supporting players. Matinee 2:30, evening shows 7:30 and 8:45. 5¢ Ad. 15¢ Tomght Saturday. An honest, clean-minded melo- drama, dealing with men and women of the backweods. Vidorvus:action all through the play “Who Bears Malice” the hero and the “heavy” indulge in no less than three desperate battles An excellent casi—Edgar Jones, Justina Huff and other stars. A Kalem “‘Ham and Bud” comedy “Rushing the Lunch Counter” Jack Mulhall, Irma Dawkins and Gus- Pixley play in the Biograph drama “A Much Needed Lesson” SUNDAY. S8ix'Photo Plays. Tom Moore and Marguerite Courtot in a three reel Kalem drama *“The ‘Black Ring’’, an exciting melodrama—inciting amnsed interest. “The Sinews of War’’, “Who Stole the Dog- gies’’, ““A Hot Time in Punkville”. Matinees 2:39, evening 7:30. Children 5¢, adults 10c - Monday, July 26th—Florence LaBadie, Harris Gordon' and Arthur Bauer in a Thanhauser production, “COD’S WITNESS” ‘A romantic photo-drama of love, mystery and adventure, adapted from the world famous novel by Angusta Evans Wilson, ‘At ths Mercy of Tiberius.”” Floreace LaBadie plays the part of the aubed heroine—an:American girl of the tys)e everyone loves, is a magnificent supporting company, including Arthur Bamr as : the fire-eating Confederate general and Harris Gordon as theloyal friend. A MUTUAL MASTERPICTURE. Rex Theatre Monday, July 26th Matinee 2:30, evening 7:30 Admission 5¢ and 15¢ Advertisers who want the best resilts always patronize The Pioneer.. They know, by experi- ence, that it has no equal in this section of the country as PLEASING PHOTO PLAYS

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