Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, February 29, 1916, Page 3

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Mrs. H. Grant of East Bemidji at- tended to business matters in the city yesterday. George Weaver of Cass Lake. was the guest of friends in Bemidji yes- terday between trains. A. Klein left this morning for St. Paul and Minneapolis where he will spend three days on business. Iver Westad is visiting with friends in Bemidji today while on his way for a short visit at Walker from his home at Crookston. Attorney J. F. Gibbons left last evening for St. Paul and Minneapolis where he expects to spend a short » - time attending to legal matters. E. H. Dea, official of the Crook- ston Lumber company, left last eve- ning on a short trip to the Twin Cities where he will spend several days on business. One of these nice days you ought to go to Hakkerup’s and have your picture taken.—Adv. 14tf Mrs. J. Kress, having arrived in the city from her home at Leonard yesterday, spent the day in Bemidji attending to business matters and calling on friends. Ray Trafton who has been the guest of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Trafton, of Frohn for the past week, departed yesterday for his home at Paton, Ia. C. G. Ekelund, of the Rood Con- struction company of Grand Rapids, returned this morning from Thief River Falls where he spent yesterday afternoon on business. Mrs. James Taylor of Tenstrike spent Monday in Bemidji attending to business affairs and calling on friends. She returned last evening to her home at Tenstrike. A. L. Gordon, merchant of Shev- lin, after spending several days in Bemidji on business matters, left last evening for Minneapolis to visit with friends for a short time. D. Dumas, a cedar merchant and dealer, was among the out-of-town business visitors in the city yester- day. He returned to his home at Siding No. 1 last evening. Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Johnston return- ed last evening to their home at Hines. They spent yesterday in Be- midji calling on friends and attend- ing to matters of business. Mrs. Herbert Taylor, after visiting for a day as the guest of friends and relatives and looking after her in- terests in Bemidji, returned yesterday to her home at Lake Plantaganet. Miss May Jurgens was the guest of friends in this city yesterday be- tween trains. She was enroute to her home at Leonard from Grand Forks where she has visited for some time. J. J. Conger, deputy register of deeds, left Monday morning for Los Angeles, Cal.,, where he will join his wife and son, Glenn. They will spend the balance of the winter there. Mr. and Mrs. R. G. Grier are spend- ing a short time in Bemidji attend- ing to business matters. They are enroute from Rochester, N. Y., to Pinewood where they will make their future home. Rev. and Mrs. J. H. Randahl left yesterday afternoon for Clearbrook. They will spend a day visiting as the guests of relatives before returning. Rev. Randahl is pastor of the Swed- ish Lutheran church. Fred Langdon, manager of the Golden West Bottling Works, return- ed yesterday afternoon from Cass Lake, Federal Dam and other points in that section of the state where he spent the day on business. Miss Florence Johnson of Kelliher was united in marriage to Frank Mitchell of Minot, N. D., by Rev. L D. Alvord at the Baptist parsonage yesterday afternoon. Mr.-and Mrs. Mitchell will make their home near Minot. Miss Gustava Trafton was:united in marriage by Rev. B. D. Hanseom yesterday afternoon to Charles Mas- oner. The ceremony was performed at the Methodist parsonage. Mr. and Mrs. Masoner will make their home near Bemidii. The Ladies’ Aid society of the Pres- byterian church will meet at the home of G. Cochran, Thursday after- noon at three o’clock. Mrs. Coch- ran will be assisted by members of the second division. All are cor- dially invited. Simon Thompson, deputy sherift; left this morning for Stillwater with} F. Severson in custody. Mr. Thomp- son will return-Wedneaday after de- and sentenced to the state prison on AbOut The City a.charge of grand larceny. A. C. Johmson, 172 N. Halsted livering Severson, who was convicted Street, Chicago, Ill., President of the largest concern of its kind in the world, wants three or four men in Beltrami county and several men in adjoining counties to work for him spare time or all the time. He can use only those who have a rig or auto. Work is very pleasant and no previous selling experience is neces- sary. Work consists of leaving: a wonderful new household necessity in the homes on free trial. Tests at more than thirty of the leading Uni- versities and the U. S. Government’s Bureau of Standards show this new article to be four times as efficient as any article now in general use in this section. Article is needed in every rural home and benefits every ‘member of the household, bringing cheer, comfort and happiness into the home. Not necessary to be away from home nights. Pay from $6.00 to $15.00 per day according to ability and number of homes visited. In writing Mr. Johnson, mention what townships will be the most conven- ient for you to work in; what your regular occupation is; your age; mar- ried or single; how long have you lived in the community; what kind of a rig or auto you have; whether you wish to work spare time or steady; how much time you will have to devote to the work; when you can start, and about how many homes are within six miles of you in each direction. This is a splendid opportunity for several men in Bel- trami County and counties adjoin- ing to make good money, working steady or spare-time. Some of the field men earn $300.00 per month; one farmer earned $1,000.00 working spare time only. No investment or bond necessary.—Adv. 3d32 A Brooklyn Druggist Praises The Great Kidney Remedy I have handled Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, kidney, liver and blad- der remedy for twenty years and have heard plenty of favorable reports con- cerning it from my customers. They are satisfied with the results obtain- ed from its use. I know of many cases where Swamp-Root has cured Stone in the Bladder, Gall Stones, Gravel, Catarrh or Inflammation of Bladder, Liver trouble and Rheuma- tism. I have used it in my own family with good results; and I heartily endorse Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp- Root and believe it has good curative value. Very truly yours, ALEX. LIPSCHITZ, Druggist, 84 North 6th Street, November 12th, 1915. Tetter to [} Im.mm.uo.t ’Ilnm..'-" Prove-— What Swamp-Rooi Will Do For You. Send ten cents to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y., for a sample size bottle. It will convince anyone. You will also receive a booklet of valuable information, telling about the kidneys and bladder. When writ- ing, be sure and mention the Bemidji Daily Pioneer. Regular fifty-cent and one-dollar size bottles for sale at all: drug stores. —Adv. Brooklyn, N. Y. | TS -different from others because more care:\ T is taken in the imaking. and the materials used are of higher grade. - Black-Silk Stove Polish Makes a brilliant, silky polish that does notrub off or Qust off, andthe shinelasts four times as long as ordinary stove polish. Used on sample stoves and sold by hardware and grocery dealers. “All we ask isa trial.- Uscit on your cook stove, regi ove-pipes—Prevents rusting, e Biack Silk Motzl Polich for silver, nickel P or brass. 1t haa no equal for useon autoriobiles, {'A-Shine in Every Drop” } KKK KKK KKK KKK * “JUDGE” DICTIONARY * * SETTLES DISPUTES * KRR K KKK KKK KKK In case of doubt concerning the meaning of a word the dictionary is the court of appeal to which the aver- age individual must resort. When Dr. Johnson compiled his celebrated dictionary, offered to the public in 1755, it represented a movement ini- tiated by Swift( Addison, Pope and other noted English writers of that period to compose a dictionary that would fix forever and unalterably the English language in one perfect form. But the lapse of years has demonstrated that fashions in words change with the times and that a dictionary to be authoritative and ac- curate must be up to date. A popular demand for such a work has been answered by the offer this paper is making to its readers of The New Universities Dictionary in which thousands of words not found in any other dictionary are fully defined. Many of these words have been brought into general and proper use by the great strides made in science, business, religion and the various arts. Specialized activities, such as aviation, golf, baseball and other forms of sports have also given cur- rency to many new terms and defini- tions of which will be found in one or the other of the twenty-five sup- plementary dictionaries that have been incorporated in The New Uni- versities Dictionary. About Bronchitis. When a cold extends to the bron- chial tubes it is called bronchitis. For this disease Chamberlain’s _Cough Remedy is excellent. Mrs. Will Har- ris, Zanesville, Ohio, says of it, “Last winter I was bothered for several weeks with bronchitis. I also had a dreadful dry hacking cough that clung to me so persistently that I be- came alarmed. Finally I had the good fortune to learn of Chamber- lain’s Cough Remedy. It relieved the MATERIALS *THAT LAST. Tile, Brick and:GonaratasWaork Well In Combinatian« Taking tile, brick and concrete all to- gether, we have three excellent build- ing materials, and they work well in combination with each other. Concrete is a general favorite for foundations, plers, walks, platforms and things built near the ground. It sets:solid and makes an excellent base for most any- thing, says D. 8. Burch in Farm and Fireside. Tile! and brick are used largely for walls and work higher up. All three materials can be re-enforced by rodsor wires laid in the joints. And, by the 'way, barbed wire and woven wire are both good as re-enforcing material. In tile special grooves are made to receive re-enforcement. Thus, in making a tile silo you have your hoops just the same as for a wood silo, but they are right in the wall, firmly embedded so they can’t slip up or down and protected forever from rust. The reason you can conceal the hoops is because tile neither shrinks nor swells, and there would never be any occasion to touch the hoops: I would hesitate :to: say: that any bullding. is _fireproot,. but. certainly neither concrete; - brick mor tile- can burn :or be greatly harmed, even though.all the contents: of a' buflding burned up. Brick, for instance, is made by heating clay to 3,000 degrees F'. and can’t burn any-more. Tile'and-cement are also-the direct products of furnace heat hot enough.to melt the ordirary metals. Wood is an excellent building mate- rial because it is So easy to handle. You can saw, chisel-and shape it any way you want and then fasten it to- gether withi: nails,: screws or bolts. Every town has at least-one lumber vard, and wood is easy.to get. Cement, brick and tile are harder to procure in some localities and a little more diffi- cult to work with, but when you are all through and you clean off your trowel you feel just a little: better satisfied, because what you have built is perma- nent, fireproof and will need neither painting nor repairs for years to come. You can safely cut down your insur- ance policies, because there is less to burn up, but the chances are youw'll never have a fire. Hitch For Wire. Fence. There are numerous methods of at- taching wire fencing to concrete posts. Some makers ‘place staples or wire loops in the green concrete; others make holes in the posts. The former method is not desirable because the fastener cannot be located exactly where the wire of the fencing will come when the post is set in the ground. Then, too, the fastener will eventually rust or break off and will thus injure the looks of the post. On the other hand, holes through the posts weaken them, and therefore this meth- od is in general unsatisfactory. The simplest, easiest and cheapest way of fastening a wire fence to a con- HITCH FOR WIRE FENCE. irritation of my throat and two bot- tles of it cured me.” For sale by all dealers.—Adv. Pioneer advertisements are re- l{able. Take advantage of a want ad. D.D BARKER'S DRUG STORE Prescription for Eczema —for 15 years the standard skin remedy—a liquid used externally—instant rclief from itch. the mildest eansers — keeps Soap e Come anand healthy. sk U3 ebout ot Evening only 7:30-8:30-9:15. Evening only 7:30 8:30 and 9:15. Rex THEATRE Rex PLEASING PHOTO PLAYS Tuesday—A three part drama of mystery, suspense. and excitement “THE SHE DEVIL” Cladys Brockwell, Geo. Beranger: and Constance: Tal- madge take leading parts. ‘JERRY’S REVENCE?” is the comedy, by Ceo. Ovey. Admission 5¢ and 10c. crete post is by encircling the post with a wire one size less than the cor- responding wire in the fence proper and by twisting this wire around the strand of the fence. This is done in twoways. The fastening wire is placed around the post, twisted upon itself and then to the fence wire, or one end of the fastening wire is twisted around the fence wire, and the free end is then carried around the post and twist- ed on the other side to the same wire. Bither plan is.good, but care must be taken to draw the-fastening wire tight, or else stock trying to get through the fence may raise or crush down the fencing with their heads. If any. trou- ble is experienced -the post should be roughened at the fastening point with a cold chisel. - Expansion and contraction of the fence, due to heat and .cold, are cared for by the tension curves or “kinks” in the woven wire fencing, and no fear may be felt in drawing: the fastening wires as tight as necessary. Wooden: nailing strips should never be imbed- ded in ‘the posts, for moisture will swell the wood and crack: the-concrete. Robbing or Saving the Soil; The farmer who robs his ‘soil is saw- ing -off the' limb*upon ‘which he is sit- ting. - Your deed: calls:for the:subsoil as well as the surface:soil, and the sub- Wednesday—A three reel drama, staged principally on shipboard, “THE SECRET AGENT” Dealing with the efforts of the U. S. secret service to prevent smuggling. A farcial comedy “BUNGLING BILL, BURGLAR” Children 8¢, Adults 10c. Shows at 7:30-8:45 NEW GRAND THEATRE The House Of Quality Jesse . Lasky.,_ presents - SWEET with House-Peters-and Theodore Roberts in a picturization of Margaret Trunbull’s emotional dr:ma “STOLEN GOODS” A Paramount Picture in 5 parts. soll is a mine of fertility and.a well of water if' properly ‘utilized: Lime is the one thing most needed:by. the average ‘rundown: ‘soil: - Phosphos rus, next.to: lime, -is.the mineral:plant food: probably most needed: by the av- erage unproductive soil. Manure as regularly as you harvest. Stable ma- nure is the best .form' of fertilizer. Where stable manure is not available green manure must be used: Proper tillage becomes more impor- tant as the farm grows older until on “‘worn out” farms it is a factor of chief importance. Tillage gives the crop more soil surface on which to feed without increasing your taxes, makes existing plant food more available, gives air to the roots, regulates water supply and kills weeds. Where the land lacks natural drainage everything else depends on how. thoroughly the soil is ditched or tiled. ; HOW TO ANSWER BLIND ADS. All ads signed with numbers, or initials, care Pioneer must be an- swered- by ' letter: addressed to the number given in the ad. Pioneer em- ployes are not permitted: to tell who any advertiser is. < Mal or-send your answer to Ploneer No.——, or Initial Children 6c, Aduits 15c. Tomorrow, E. Forrest Taylor and Helen Rosson in “THE WHITE ROSBTTE.” A Mutual Masterpicture DeLux-in 5 parts. Matinee at 2:30. , and we forward-it to the ad- vertiser. KKK RRK KRR IR K KKK ¥ Subscribe for the. Ploneer. ¥ No, Philburt, I am not a-arguing with you. I'm just a-telling you —when you want a real smoke, get behind a pipeful of Tuxedo and watch all the big and little Worries that have been a-besieging you, evacuate their trenches and make a rushin’ advance to the rcar. Those fragrant whiffs of ““ Tux”” make them feel too joyful—no self- respecting Worry can stand for. that. acco for Fize and Cigareie The combi,nation of the best smoking-tchacco lcaf in the world ‘and the best method ever discovcred for refining and mellowing tobacco puts Tuxedo in a class by itsclf, Kentucky’s ripest, mildest Bur- ley leaf, when treated by the orig- tnal ‘‘Tuxedo Process” loses every trace of bite —develops a wonderfully gleasing fragrance and flavor that are -not found in any other tobacco. M FRITZ KREISLER ‘World-famous Violinist “1 have cercinly found in Tusedo the onz and only fobacco that measures up to all my requirements, rich in fra- srance, altways cool smoking and so itd that | con okt pioefu e No other manufacturer knows pipeful at a sitting."” the “Tuxedo Process”; that's why g Aty o imitdtor ever equals Tuxedo! YOU CAN BUY TUXEDO EVERYWHERE Convenient, glassine wrapped, moisture-proof pouch . . . SC SR T Famous green tin with gold 1 lettering, curved to fit pocket _OC In Tin Humidors, 40c and 80c In Glass Humidors, 50¢ ard $0c THE AMERICAN TOBACCO COMPANY The : I ! The wc[F YOU WANT A GOOD FARM s will . " g road sk for — Why Not Buy It Direct From the Owner == mean a big east-of the sacrifice on There is some: satisfaction in knowing that only land from my part and one man can get a “rakeoff” if you deal with the Blackduck rather than publish it in this advertise- ment it will be kept a secret be- tween myself and the prospective buy- er. 1 have been a resident on this same property for 22 years and feel certain that any- one seeking a real bargain will buy a tract of this property on sight. All I ask to Cass Lake and another road runs north to the county road. You can drive up to the farm with automobile or team. -4 forties drain into the Mississipp river on a gradual slope and 2 forties drain to Red Lake. Three forties are still timbered. There is a fine consolidated school man who owns the land he wants to sell. You will spend less time, that is wasted time, by being taken direct to the property he has for sale. I have 240 acres of the best land in the county, located on the “Divide”, three miles east of Hines and four miles from Blackduck. Twenty-five acres in hay and crops and sixty acres seeded to clover and timothy grasses. TWill Sell It in 40, 80, 120 or 240 acre tracts. is that you look at it before at Hines, Minn. The bus you buy, elsewhere. The fact Terms easy. calls daily for the children. of the matter is I have more See this Interested parties are requested land than I feel able to look before to write or call at the BE~ after, and anxious to sell parts of g MIDJI DAILY PIONEER it 'in order to improve the - bal- OFFICE for references or fur- buy. ance. If you buy you can ther . information. We might add depend on one thing and I also that in no other locality will that is that I will continue must sell. you find a finer lot of neigh- to be your neighbor, Filld out bors and a more pleasant place together with others living in this vicinity. to live than right in this par- ticular section. why. SESE LSS S S ‘k*i‘kgv . If you have & room to rent or *: to rent one—you get the ¥ choioe - through ' a: Pioneer ad. Phone 31, * t * Wk KK AR RS SRS SR EEE R E

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