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OCTOBER 1, - 1615, general fund to fifteen mills, instead | WAR ‘FORCES COLLEGE to change its colors on account of | * Hello, boys ahd girls, Hear that of ten mills as heretofore. TO cm@E ITS COLORS | the shortage of dyestuff from: Ger-|school bell? Doi’t start for school many. The colors blue and gray |without a NEW BEMIDJI lead pen- SOUTH DAKOTA FARMERS Sioux City, Ia., Oct. 1.—Trinity will be substituted for purple and |cil. It’s the best nickle pencil made. PLAN REFUGE FOR Gm college, Sioux City, has been forced|yellow now in use. Any store in town sells ’em. ._Dfess Up On The Insidefi . “Of course I am in favor of dress up week and I want to say right here that one Scott Stew- art will be the best dressed man in Bemidji next Saturday.” That’s the enthusiasm Mr. Stewart displayed when asked if his store would tog up during FRIDAY, val and some of these in varigated stripes of rainbow hue are decided- Gm ly réminiscent, of Hi Holler.. Indeed "P IN M u F FI.EB the old time farmer and rural char- acter would seem never to have been with out his muffler as a first aid OB THEV'LL MUFF |3 i The maid today is quite as tena- cious of hers on Fifth Avenue as a HIT uF s E Asu N first aid to heartbreaking. Very Original, . Much originality and artistry is ~Much Originality and Artistry Shown |shown in the arrangement of these In Throat Attachments for telling throat attachments. . One maid with killing coquetry This Fall knots hers under her left pink ear, — the ingenue wears hers tied behind WORSTED ONES HAVE STAMP like a doting mother ties a napkin " i OF FASHIONABLE APPROVAL|jion o o nib forser o O 0 € Yet another wraps hers jealously Chin to Be Retired From Public close about her chin with just one Fargo, N. D., Oct. 1—Tentative arrangements have been made for the formation of the largest game refuge in North Dakota. It will embrace six sections of land near Trgusville. Eleven farmers have agreed to put their lands into the refuge under a law passed by the last legislature which provides that a contract may be entered into with the state to post their lands and prevent hunting on them for ten years. Shortage of prairie chickens in the Red River valley prompted the ac- tion by the farmers. . long end given its freedom to float Gaze By Swathing seductively behind her shapely back. DIES AS BIRTHDAY H CITY dress up wcek' . Neck Pieces Oh there is as much art required GUESTS REAC! The Stewart Grocery store will dress up also and what’s more this store will be in a position to DRESSUP everybody else. On The Inside You cannot be completely dressed up unless you start from the inner walls of your body and work out. We start from the inside and work outwardly. Our stock of QUALITY GROGERIES have done this for the past twelve months and will continue to do this as long as we are in business. If you are not being dressed on the inside by Stewart’s Quality Groceries it’s time you were beginning. We guarantee all goods and heed well the old saying that “Cleanliness 1s next to Godliness” STEWART'S GROCERY Phone 206 Bemidji, Minnesota Fourth Street in adjusting your muffler as there is joy in the perfect attainment. By Margaret Mason Good Jaw Structure. (Written for the United Press). What with the high engulfing collars, the all swathing mufflers and the all enveloping fur neck pieces 1 fear me chinning will become a lost pastime. For chins will be more then receding this season, they will New York, Oct. 1. | pe absolutely retired from public —Muttle up a little | ggze, closer even if these are dog days, Indian summer and all that. If you could be foxy in a white fox neck piece on the Fourth of July surely a little thing like a worsted muffler can’t put you out of the running now. Prostrated victims of the hottest day of the season seeking the solace of a long &a draught pleasantly vgaret Mason atinkle with cubes of ice in a smart hotel nearly swoom- ed at the appearance of a chic young May Muff Hit. flapper in a Chinese tasseled hat It ought to-offer wonderful oppor- swathed to the nose in a wide fringed | tunities for reduction also for a rub- worsted muffler, red and white strip- | ber chin strap could be worn effaca- ed like an American flag. Since then | ciously and unseen beneath the muff- though the heat abateth not mufflers | ler on its account ought to be able to increaseth mightily. induce a profuse enough perspiration All One Colored. known or unknown quantity of these torrid days to reduce any chins without any guttapercha aid. ‘Whether you be chinny or chinn- less however, you’d better muffle up in a muffler or you’ll muff the hit of the season. Winona, Minn., Oct. 1.—Children of Peter Speltz, pioneer of Winona county, arrived here yesterday to help the venerable Winonan celebrate his seventy-seventh birthday. In- stead they will attend his funeral, for an acute attack of heart desease caus- ed his death this morning. A family. re-union had been planned and the arriving guests were met at depots by Winona relatives who informed them of Mr. Speltz’s death. The funeral took place this afternoon. It you want to be a dashing Little run about this year Pray don’t cut out your muffler They are very smart my dear, Alas, the poor swain who yearns to espouse a damsel with the weak chin and plastic temperment of the cling- ing vine may discover to his conster- nation after marriage when he first glimpses her chin unmuffled that she has the firm and stable jaw structure of the advanced feminist. Success for Triple Chin. This ought to be a most successful season for the lady with the triple chins. She is sure to own a collection of mufflers from A to Z for she knows to her joy that two chins in a muffler are as good as one in the open any day. IOWAN IS FOUND GUILTY OF MURDER Fort Dodge, Iowa, Oct. 1.—George McDonald has been found guilty of] first degree murder for _stabbing Charles Hird of Dubuque the night of September 13. McDonald did not take the stand in his own defense. The men were strangers to each other., They were . drinking and quarreled over who bought the last drink. JURY HOLDS RIGHT : ARM WORTH $18,600 Regina, Sask., Oct. 1.—A jury in the Melville, Sask., court, gave Claude Hyde $18,600 for the loss of his right arm in a Grand Trunk rail- way accident. Hyde sued for $30,000. The Grand Trunk counsel will ap- peal. Such hectic hued affairs they are too in glowing combinations of stripes and spots and splashes while some are one color on one side and another color on the other. Solid colored ones of bright pur- ple are fringed in gold with a quaint gold embroidered monogram on one STUDENTS ORDERED TO end. A tempermental flame toned CHANGE MODE OF DRESS one has the reverse side in ash grey v and a tigerish confection has black Watertown, 8. D., Oct. 1.—"Fresk stripes on a tawny background. legislation” has been enacted by the Silk and Worsted. school board when, at a meeting at- There are all silk ones and fibre |tended by a committee of ~eight silk ones but the worstéd ones have|wWomen from the Parent-Teachers’ the real stamp of fashionable appro-{association, it passed a resolution to regulate the attire of seventh and |l eighth grade and high school stud- |} ents. Under the rule silks, satins, chif- fons, laces and frills for girls are placed under the ban beginning September 1, 1916. The resolution Pioneer want ads pay. , = Pioneer Motion Pictures of the NORTHWEST Presented every MONDAY by William A. Lochren in Zupmmn_———————————w————————00s HEADLIGHT OVERALLS (U""’"M"’i‘? : provides that the girls of these H -1 H H | g . iy s £ e Bemidji Daily Pioneer’s satisfaction a dress of the sailor suit or middy = ' = with every = " blouse style, cut reasonably high at the neck and the sleeve to cover the elbow. Boys are required to discontinue the wearing of “sweaters” or jerseys” in school rooms, and parents and teachers are urged to use, their in- fluence for the early adoption of such attire. WEST CENTRAL MINNESOTA CORN SHOW AT ORTONVILLE Ortonville, Minn.,, Oct. 1.—The third annual corn and alfalfa expo- sition of the West Central Minnesota Development association will be held here October 13, 14 and 15. The exposition will be in a large park in the center of the city. The program this year will be exception- ally strong. Each morning will be devoted to departmental sessions and demonstrations along the 'lines of SERVICE At Grand Theatre Bemidji, Minnesota F'RST iin the field with Motion Picture ‘ News of the Northwest OLD DOC YAK live stock raising, grain raising, farm < : See me in management, drainage and farmers’ FIRST wflfll: the Bllg News WILLIAM A. LOCHREN’S clubs. ‘of the wor Among the speakers are: Gover- - N OR TH WE sT N E ws nor Hanna of North Dakota; Gover- : 2 i i ioF B3sie of Noxih Dakbtaraiia Gav: PROD“‘CED and distributed solely . Exceptional Motion Pictures ernor Hammond of Minnesota. with Northwest capital this tick s ticket £ | MOORHEAD MAY An Exclusive Northwest Institution ’ RAISE TAX LEVY You See These Picturers Every Monday at the Grand Theatre in Bemidji Crew of Expert Camera Men Covering The Whole Northwest 24 Hours X - A Day And Seven Days A Week Guaranteed the best overalls. iou ever bought or money ack after 30 days' wear. Schneider Bros. Co. See Saturday Evening Post, Oct. 2. Moorhead, Minn., Oct. 1.—Next Monday, Oct. 4, will be submitted to the electors of the city two amend- ments to the city charter. The first amendment provides for a poor fund to be created by levy- ing not more than one mill on the dollar of the assessed valumtion of the taxable property in the city of Moorhead. The second provides for an increase of the tax levy for the TR T I T 1 TR T A —————————————————— Smmmim