Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
{ | TUESDAY, JULY %7, 1015, About The City e KX RN R KK KX . LEST WE FORGET * LB RS R R RS S SRS R LS In case of fire eall 349. LY Buy your chautauqua tickets now. . s s There will be a band concert at the city dock Friday evening. LI When traveling purchase round- trip tickets. Roost the Bemidji rail- road receipts. « o . The next meeting of the board of county commissioners will be held on August 16. s s . There will be another sale of state school and swamp land of the county Wednesday, August 11. * s . On December 9 and 10 the winter convention of the Northern Minne- sota Development association will be held in Bemidji. . s . 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. e s . Bemidji is to have a chautauqua from August 3 to August 7. The large tent will be pitched on the lot at the corner of Bemidji avenue and Fouth street. 10 BREVITIES Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Williams of B2- cida were guests of Bemidji relatives yesterday. Oscar L. Dent, ditch referee, left this morning for Walker where he | will spend the day on business. Mesdames J. J. Selness and J. J. Jacobson of Hendrum are guests at the home of Mrs. A. Martinson on Bel- trami avenue. Miss Alida Peterson of Grand Forks arrived in the city yesterday and will spend a two weeks’ vacation here as the guest of friends. One of these days you ought to Marble Pudding Steamed puddings will not be heavy if made with KC Baking Powder and cooked slowly to give the puddirig time to rise be- fore the dough is cooked through. Have a low blaze under the water for at least the first fifteen minutes. K C Marble Pudding By Mrs. Janet McKenzie Hill, Editor of the Boston Cooking School Magazine. 2 cups sifted pastry flour; 2 level tea- spoonfuls fi C Baking Powder; } tea- spoonful cinnamon; } teaspoonsul salt; yolks of 2 eggs, beaten light; § cup sugars % tablespoonfuls melted butter; % cup cold water; whites of 2 eggs, beaten dry; 1% ounces melted chocolate. Sift together, three times, the flour, bak- ing powder, salt and cinnamon. To the yolks add the sugar, butter and water, and stir into the dry ingredients. Add the whites of the eggs. Divide the mixture into two parts and add the = Chocolateto one part. e Disposethetwo parts in a_buttered mold to give a marbled appearance. Steam forty - five minutes. Vanilla Sauce Boil 2 cups of sugar and a cup o} water siz minutes; add 2 tablespoonfuls of butter and a teaspoonful of vanilla extract. The K C Cook’s Book containing this and 90 other delicious, successful, recipes sent free upon receipt of the colored certifi- cate packed in 25-cent cans of K C Baking Powder. Write your name and address plainly. Jaques Mfg. Co., Chicago. 41 26 % % kb b 3k b b ok ok % % Chautauqua SEASON TICKETS . Adults, $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. G. Schroeder. Otto Schwandt. Gill Bros. Stewart’s Grocery. C. E. Battles. go to Hakkerup’s and have your pie- ture taken.—Adv. Miss Mamie McCarty arrived in Be- midji from Little Falls last evening and will visit her aunt, Mrs. R. H. Muncy, for several ddys. Mrs. Hanson of Bagley was in Be- midji yesterday, being enroute to the Twin Cities. While here she was the guest of Mrs. George French. Herbert Kaliher, formerly of Be- midji, but now of Northome, where he is in the contracting business, ar- rived in the city last evening. Raymond Elder, manager of the Patterson shows, now playing here, left last evening for Little Falls where he spent today on business. Otto Foestreich of Menominee, ‘Wis., has arrived in Bemidji and will spend a couple of weeks here as the guest of his sister, Mrs. Charles Dailey. fave your furnliure repaired at the bargain store, first class work at reasonable prices.—Adv. The Methodist Ladies’ Aid will meet tomorrow at the home of Mrs. J. B. Minnick, 914 Irvine avenue, at 2:30 p. m. All are cordially invited to attend. Mrs. Seth Smith and Mrs. B. Ed- wards of Becida drove to Bemidji yes- terday, spending the day here on business. They returned to Becida this morning. Miss Alice Stinchfield of Rochester, Minn., arrived in the city Sunday morning and will remain here a week as the guest of her sister, Mrs. Mon- treville J. Brown. Mrs. Dan Schwartz and children, Irene, Edward and Arthur, of Men- ominee, Wis., are guests of Mrs. Schwartz’s sister, Mrs. Charles Dail- ey, for a few weeks. Right kodak finishing, right quick- ly, right prices—developing 10c. Rich Studio, 29 10th St., near lake.—Adv. George Newton of Grand Forks, nephew of A. C. Newton, of this city, arrived in Bemidji yesterday. Mr. Newton is an expert rope thrower and is appearing at the Brinkman theater this week. Glen Thompson left last evening for Walker, being enroute to North Dakota where he will visit several weeks before returning to Bemidji in time to resume his studies as a senior in the Bemidji high school. There will be special services in the Swedish Lutheran church tonight at 8 o’clock, by Rev. Isackson of Wa- dena and Rev. Swanson of Eagle Bend. No services will be held in Mill Park as announced earlier. Louis Burchard, director of the Be- midji band, will accept pupils on the violin or any band instrument. Call at the Beltrami Music Store.—Adv. Mack Kennedy of Walker, sheriff of Cass county, was in Bemidji last evening, being enroute to his home from Ball Club where he has been on business. While here he was the guest of Andrew Johnson, the Bel- trami county sheriff. Mrs. E. W. Ashley of Winnipeg has returned to her home after spending some time at her Lavinia summer home. Mr. and Mrs. F. 8. McLaren, who have been guests at the Ashley cottage, have also return- ed to their home in Winnipeg. M. G. Stokesberry, of Grand Forks, district commercial manager of the Northwestern Telephone company, spent yesterday afternoon and eve- ning in Bemidji. Mr. Stokesberry was well pleased with the new phone directory just distributed, the work of the Pioneer Printery. ‘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. Mrs. John Doran of International Falls, who has spent several days in Bemidji as the guest of her mother, Mrs. Lucy Hazen, left yesterday for Eagle Bend where she will visit her sister, Mrs. Nora Abbott. Before re- turning to International Falls Mrs. Doran will visit relatives at Parkers Prairie. Miss Jeanette Stechman of Ten- strike, who has spent the past week camping at Birchmont Beach with the Camp-Fire girls, of which or- ganization she is a member, returned to her home last evening. Miss Stech- man will return to Bemidji the first of September to resume her work in the high school. Mr. and Mrs. A. R. Fuller, 550 Summit avenue, are entertaining Mrs. W. D. Fenton of Duluth and Mr. and Mrs. E. F. Netzer and family of Be- midji. Mrs. Fenton arrived on Sat- urday and Mr. Netzer came yesterdav to spend the week end. Mrs. Netzer has been in Crookston for some time past.—Monday, Crookston Times. . In speaking of Miss Edith Erwin, for two years a member of the Junior high school faculty of the Bemidji schools, the Crookston Daily Times of yesterday says: Miss Edith Erwin left Sunday for Devils Lake, N. D., where she will visit with Miss Bernice Young for a couple of weeks. From North Dakota Miss Erwin will con- tinue to her future home at St. Paul. 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 Abercrombie & McCready. KA KKK Kk KA KK ko k ok ok ok ok ok k ok ok ok ok ok ok kK Wk khk kA ko kk ok hhkk ko k ko ko ko k ok ok EEEEEREE KT KK had a bottle of Chamberlain’s Lini- ment in the house and applied fit. ‘After using it a few times all lame- These ing, lack of and tions of the delicate feminine organism. For over forty years it will find it of great benefit. DR. PIERCE'S Make Women Look Old and they show thehe.fect of unna_turai!n mfi‘eflnflflfinfldfl. back- iptoms indicate that Nature needs help. Overwork; exercise, and other causes have been too much. for outside aid must be called upon to restore health and strength. Dr. Piercc’s Favorite Prescription and removes other distressing symptoms due to disturbed condi- s T Toans it h‘l;:t.y“ used with more than sati ind 1. at b ‘Soid. by ‘Modicme Devlers i fiqfidmmn send Dr. V.M. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y., 50 one-cent stamps for trial box by mail. PLEASANT Uk, Togaiate theTIver, Hhd bowels. Eary (o tare oo eay: e i el ‘wives, mothers.and You ness and stiffness of his neck and shoulders disappeared.” Obtainable everywhere.—Adv. KK KKK KKK KK KKK KK * NYMORE * KKK KA KKK KK KKKKE Born—To Mr. and Mrs. Olaf Ries- land, Sunday, a son. Mrs. George Bridgeman has re- turned from Blackduck where she has been visiting her sister, Mrs. A. E. Dickenson, since Tuesday. She was accompanied home by her niece, Alberta Dickenson. Mrs. Joe Miller and daughter, Mar- tha, will leave Thursday for their home at Cleveland, Ohio, after a month’s visit with relatives and friends. Rev. J. E. Caldwell of Cass Lake preached the morning and evening services at the Congregational church Sunday. Saves Her Mother’s Life. “I am positive that Chamberlain’s Colie, Cholera, and Diarrhoea Remedy saved my mother’s life abont twelve| years ago for she was very sick with | bloody dysentry. We have kept it in the house ever since and used it a number of times for summer com- | plaints and other bowel troubles,” writes Mrs. A. Marlowe, New Ken-| sington, Pa. Keep it at hand. It only costs a quarter. Obtainable ev-| erywhere.—Adv. Miss Jane J. Martin, head of th advertising department of a lara trading stamp concern, is said to he-| the highest paid woman in advertis- ing work. Every man woudl like to live a few days after his death to hear what his kin say about him. His Yallerweed. Many persons are under the impres- slon that America has few, if any, na- tive plants worthy of cultivation in the home garden. They have been accus- tomed to look upon them as weeds and wild things, and so unfamiliar are they with native flowers that they fail to recognize them when they meet them outside their native haunts. A writer tells how he transplanted a stalk of goldenrod from a fence corner in the pasture to a place in his garden. It flourished luxuriantly and sent up many stalks as high as 4 man’s head, each crowned with a great plume of brilliant flowers. A meighbor: was at- tracted by the beauty of the plant and declared it must have cost its owner some dollars. When told, however, that numbers of the same plant were flourishing behind his barn he exclaim- ed: “What! You'mean to tell me it’s yallerweed!” And he went away with the air of one who had been imposed upon.—Country Gentleman. To date over 87,000 women have applied for war service in England and over 67,000 munition volunteers have enrolled. Let 2 want ad help you. Save The Baby Use the reliable HORLICK'S ORIGINAL Malted Milk Upbuilds every part of the body efficiently, ndorsed by thousands of Physicians, Mothers and Nurses the world over for more than a quarter of a century. Convenient, no cooking nor additional milkrequired. Simply dissolveinwater. Agrees when other foods often fail Sample free, HORLICK’S, Raciné, Wis. W No Substitute is“JustasGood" as HORLICK'S, the Original TOILET & BATH Your Vacation ° Low Round Trip Fares Daily ing you. among the glaciers. unique entertainment. Low Ciscle Tour Fares 7/ travet this “Great Northern way.” plane Map Folder’ as. Glacier National Park! Out thereinthe Montana Rocky Moun- tains glorious vacation days are await- Auto-stagesandlauncheswill takeyoudeepin among the giants of the Continental Divide and Saddle-horses will carry you up skyland trails to the high Passes. Enroute, the mammoth new Alpine hotel on Lake McDermott, the “Many-Glacier”; the gateway hotel, the “Glacier Park”, and the nine Alpine chalet groups afford 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! By the Oriental Limited or the Glacier Park Limited; via Rocky Mountains gd Glacier National Park, Spokane, Cascade Mountaius, Seattle, Tacoma, nd—enroute a tour of Glacier Park—aboard new steamships Great Northern. ; and Northern Pacific down the Pacific to San Francisco—going or returning, Secure new free Glacier Park Literature—*Hotels and Tours,’ “Aero- ¥ and Walking Tours Book' —and Expositiors Folde. ! General Passenger Agent ST. PAUL, MINN. Raibmay bos beew ewardsd the Gold Medal gt the Panam-Pacific Iniarnaionsl Exposition for the Best Display of Scewic, Agriculinral i 5 J e H. A. NOBLE ‘and Industrial Resomrces. Remarkable Results Achieved In {niiial Gampaign. : REVIEW OF WORK DOME. Dr. T. M. Beatty, Secretary of the State Board-of Health, Has Reported That the First Campaign Reduced the Death Rate Throughout Utah. The second cleanup contest in the state of Utah is now on. The first one ‘was inaugurated early in 1914 by the secretary of the Utah Development league. He worked through the com- mercial clubs of the state, the gover- nor and the state board of health. As a result Utah in 1914 conducted the first cleanup town contest ever held in this country under the auspices of & state bureau. So remarkable were the results last year, says the Survey, that the con- test 8 being repeated this year by the state board of health, the Utah De- velopment league co-operating. The manner of conducting the contest and the mode of scoring will be essentially the same this year as last, so a brief review of last year's event will show the general value of the movement. The contest started about the middle of March. Each town organized a committee of citizens who outlined and directed its campaign. Provo, a town of 10,000 population, selected a commit- tee of fifty. A captain for each of the 250 city blocks was also appointed. By a centrally chosen street t®e.town was divided into two competing sections. WHAT A CLEANUP GATHERS. -| From the citizens of each seetion a doc- tor and layman were chosen, constitut- ing a committee of four judges. ‘When a resident finished cleaning up he notified the judges that his premises were ready for inspection. The judges scored his premises on a possible basis of 90 points. If he scored 75 points he was given a red or blue button accord- ing to whether he belonged to the.red or blue army. The army receiving the greater number of buttons prevailed. In Lehi a prize of $25 was given the winning side. The same system of scoring as was used locally was employed by the state wide judges in scoring the towns in the final contest, excepting that five points were reserved for sanitation of schoolhouses and other public buildings angd five points for vacant lots, making the highest possible score for a town as a whole 100 points. The state judges began scoring the towns on Aug. 15, before which date all preparations for the contest ceased. The three judges, one of whom was J. H. Wallis, former state food and dairy commissioner of Idaho, were paid for their services out of the funds of the state health department. The judges were busy scoring from Aug. 15 until the first week in November. Of the possible 100 points 15 were devoted to sewage, 15 to stables and corrals, 10 to garbage disposal, 10 to water supply, 5 to public buildings, 5 to the marketing of food, 5 to the pres- ence of flies (or, better, the absence of them), 5 to house sanitation. To the aesthetic, as distinguished from the sanitary aspect of the scoring, the re- maining points were devoted—namely, to the condition of streets, parks and alleys, towns and flower gardens, va- cant lots and fences. The towns fell in six classes, from A to F inclusive, depending on the pop- ulation. . Salt Lake and Ogden alone constituted class A. Manti, a town of between 1,500 and 2,500 population (Class D) received the highest score, al- though there was a prize for the lead- ing town in each class. T. B. Beatty, M. D., secretary of the. sate board of health, states that the campaign reduced the death -rate throughouc the state. Federation of Civic Clubs. At a recent meeting of the Federa- tion of Commercial Clubs of Minnesota the federation voted to merge with the recently organized Minresota Commer- cial and Civic federation. The meet- Ing was attended by delegates from clubs at Duluth, St. Peter, Brainerd, Austin, Stillwater, Osakis, St. Paul and Minneapolis Important to Travelers. Never leave home on a journey or outing without a bottle of Chamber- lain’s Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy. It is often needed and when that time comes is cheap at one hundred times its cost. Obtainable everywhere.—Adv. * _Dr. Flora Murray and Dr. Loule G. I ISASRNS Ty IRSA S Pure Sweetness You get a double sat- isfaction out of your chew of SPEAR HEAD —the delicious fruity sweet flavor and the : absolute assurance that it’s supremely pure. SPEAR HE is made in one of the most up-to-date plug factories— spotlessly clean and rigidly sani- tary. That luscious, gold-brown plug of SPEAR HEAD from which you bite the tastiest, wholesomest of chews, rep- resents the highest form of lug tobacco production. !1)‘17 SPEAR HEAD — the very best chew that money can buy. THE AMERICAN TOBACCO CO. GRAND THEATRE Tonight Only The House of Quality World Film Corporation presents Eugene O’Brien and Elaine Hammerstein in the 5 part photo-play - “THE MOONSTONE” from the famous novel by Wilkie Collins. Lynde Deing, one of the foremost critics of the ‘Moving Picture World’ says of this- photo- play, “‘so fine is this production that it warrants special’ mention. Elaine Hammerstein is a beautiful charmingly natural girl as Ra- chel Verinder into whose possession the moonstone passes, a - gift from her fiancee.” With such assurances of 3 good picture you can’t afford to miss this one. Shows at 7:30 and 8:45 be Admission 15¢ TOMORROW—dJoe King and Cleo Madison in “THE TORRENT” PLEASING PHOTO PLAYS TONIGHT, Tuesday—Selig’s two reel western drama—plenty of action—ends well, “THE TEST OF JEALOUSY” The sheriff—his daughter from college—her eastern friend—her western lover and Mexican Pete are prominent charagters. A Vitagraph comedy—a real funny one “THE STARRING OF FLORA FINCHURCH” Jack Drumier and other popular players are in the Biegraph “FOR HER HAPPINESS” Wednesday and Thursday Wonderful s¢enes and thrilling adventures in “THE BLACK BOX” Essanay comedy ‘‘A Bunch of Keys.” Biograph Drama “‘A Day’s Adventure.’’ Matinee 2:30, evening 7:30 Admission 5c gnd 10¢ Anderson have established a military hospital in London which is under TONIGHT “Charley Chaplin in the Park” Selig—Two reel drama “The Lonely Lovers” Vitagraph—Antonio Moreno, Betty Gray, Geo. Stevens in % 1) “The Park Honeymooners” ' “His Wife’s Seeret” Presensing G. M. Anderson Thursday—Jesse L. Lasky presénts the favorite conpdlan Edward Abeles in the pretty romance = - - ;i “THE MAKING OF BOBBY BURNIT?