Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, March 7, 1919, Page 7

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8pring sult for young girl, on the left. BAY FROCKS FOR ~ THEYOUNG BAL robes in Honor of Returning Soldiers. | BEST GOWNS FOR “FLAPPERS” 8treet Clothes Proclaim Victory Like Trumpets, With Their Scarlet Coloration and Embrolderics in Red and Black. New York.=—America has not yet found a fitting name for the girl of gixteéen. The English call her the “flapper,” and the Anglo-Suxon world . gge~the expression,~-whether.or not it approves of it. In America it 18 not Hked, but no onc has risen to put this type of young person in a niche and give her a name. % And ehe i1s quite important, pro- claims a fashion writer. She deserves a strong appellation—a quick, vibrant, significant name for her class, her . type and her virllity. We have w.; . - burled under the cobwebs of oblivion the “sweet sixteen” phrase. Booth Tarkington has made the one word “geventeen” classify, at least for America, the youth of our land, with its awkward, stumbling tendencies to- ward manhood, its budding emotional- tsm sternly suppressed through pride pany, and its contempt for that de- sire. But if we applied the single word “sixteen” to that gay, ecstatic, polsed, self-assured, highly educated, superintelligent, adventurous class of tall, slim things that spread over the land, usually setting the pace for thelr mothers’ fashlons, it would be puerile, : 3 It is difficult to be pessimistic if one keeps close to the side of girls of that 8ge. - Their outlook on life, their faith In themselves and the world, their un- bounded ability to find pleasure un- _alded by anyone else, renews youth in middle age, -They are no longer crea- tures held on & leash. They are rare- ~%-ly asked to obey; they are constantly consulted by their mothers, and they usually take an Intelligent part in the management of their home, its soclal enviropments, its financial expendi- tures, its ideals, and its ambitions. Granting these things—and every- one does grant them who has had any close companionship with the typlcal American girl, it is natural that her Interest in clothes should be strong, and not only strong but usually ex- ceedingly good. She dresses herself, 88 a rule, better than her mother can dress her. Many Cater to Girls. Working downward—or upward, rather—through these psychological phases of girlhood among the Anglo- Saxons, apd especially the North Americans, one finds the reason for the establishments of many success- 3 ful dressmaking houses which cater to yfinz girls, Few of the great estab- fishments here or abroad neglect the “flapper.” From the time she is twelve until she makes her bow to society at eighteen she is catered fo by houses that expend much in- genuity and brilllancy of workman- ship on her especial type of clothing. ‘b Two of the Important financial sue- *@Y ““cesses in the dressmaking world of ' New Tork started with the schoolgirl. “' Fifth avenue houses which cater to dowagers and sensatiqnal young ma- i trons have determined this year to It Is of tancolored covert cloth, made with the new length of coatwhich is left open from neckline, In the Charies Stuart fashion. It is trimmed below the waist with brass buttons, and the lower sieeve is linked together with brass buttons. There is.a cravat of the material young girl, of red wool Jersey trimmed with bands of cream-colored Jersey embroidered in red and black. The large hat is of cream jersey faced with red straw and trimmed with a red cord and tasse). “On_the right is a tunic suit for a place young girls’ clothes in thelr sa- lons. Youngsters who try to look like Mary Pickford are often used as man- THE BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEER KX KRR KRR KRR KRR K x PINEWOOD. *lx KE KKK KRR KKK Remember Koors with that can of | cream, they guarantee satisfaction on every shipment. w228tt ard, were Bemidji business visitors|Part of thestate. ‘Wednesday. y Harry Giles and Clarence Kendall, who have been making ties near here |48%: this month, left for Bemidji Tuesday th:n‘::;s]es‘;"’éty“ g:g:::n_:gfiii? John Bane I ille of | 48y evening. Everyone is invited to Solway are n;wa;dgfl;e? fi e?xelcf(l:g :tstend the dancé at Stratton’s March morning. & and hauling ties at Pinewood. Misses Mable Kirkvold and Clara Lysong of Aure were Pinewood visi-| Itors Wednesday, and were accom- lpanled home by their friend, Miss Matilda Huss, who has been em- ployed at the. Pinewood Merchantile Co., store for some time. R. Welo and F. Kirkvold, who left for Mizpah Monday, returned home niversary.. " GET SLOAN'S FOR Wednesday evening. [ Louig Stuhr of the Stuhr Lumber ¥ Co., Pinewood, went to Leonard Tues- day evening,-where he will load some lumber for shipment. N W. R. Wendt is acting scaler for the Stuhr Lumber Co., while M. Stuhr is away, i Bennie Iverson is now working on the Pinewood section of the Soo line. Mrs. J. H. Lewis, who has been acting postmistress at Pinewood for several ‘months and also connected with the Merchantile Co., store, left Pinewood Friday mormning for ‘her| 2 warm, soothing relief you never new home at St. Hilare, where Mr,| thought a liniment could produce. Lewis is now G. N. station agent. Won't stain the skin, leaves no muss, Hugo Swenson, deputy state hotel wastes no time -in-applying, sure to inspector, visited Pinewood Tuesday| give quick results, A large bottle and inspected the Pinewood hotol,| means econ: K finding only one thing not up to-the rgis liu ‘;:utc‘uw rules, and that was ropes for fire dru escapes, from each window, which 9 wero ordered installed. Sit up, some O an of you local knockers and take notice. William Larson, who has been in Linimcoent the Bemidji hospital, arrived In IKills Pain Pixi;:wood Thursday evening enroute to his home at Debs. 3 - A. T. Davidson of Bemidji. was in Pinewood Thursday evening, looking over the cream prospects in the in- terest of the new creamery which will be established ifi Bemidji. Mrs. C. A. Bye and Miss Myrle | Methven were Bemidji business visi- tors Friday. Peter Holm, Louis Fegner, Vera You don’t have to rub it in to get quick, comfort- ing relief Once you've tried it on that stiff joint, sore_muscle, sciatic pain, rheu. motic twinge, Jame back, you'll find -neiquins, but-they have not been'a vuaw ] Elloitt, W. R. Wendt and Tom Fos- <ess, " because the - sixteen-year-older ‘doesn't ‘wigh ‘to look like Mary Plcke ford. She wouldn't be caught with curis down her back, a sweet smile, eud chubby legs below a short skirt. ‘She often produces the most extreme fashlons, which her older sister and her mother copy. She i3 the type, one might clalm, for all the fashions of the clvilized world today. That's a sweep- ing statement, but just run over the gamut of fashionable clothes for the last five: years and see if you don‘t come to that conclusion. The bobbed hair, the short skirt, the round neck, the baby sleeves, the sashes, the but- toned-down-the-back frocks, the short coats—these are the fashions that have ruled the world and have begun in the schoolroom, ' What She Wears Today. The youngster of sixteen chooses materials for her own clothes that are the same as those worn by her elders, whom she envies little these days, be- cause she rules a world of her own, that everyone acknowledges. She doesn’t have to dress herself up in long clothes and high head dresses and play that she fs old. She has been known to grudgingly loan some of her clothes to her young married sister for an especially smart affair! She likes georgette crepe for her evening gowns, and therefore she wears a good deal of it. Velveteen has found her ap- proval, and she orders school frocks and afternoon dance frocks In it. She has a tailored suit which was especially designed for her judgment, and which she accepted. It has a coat and shame, its desire for girls’ com-that covers her hips, is cut on a straizht line with a slight flare ont at the back, and does not fasten, She ties it at the neck with a stiff eravat made of ribbon, peltry, Chinese bro- cade, or the material of the coat. She may have six or eight of these cravats in her bureau drawer, or she hangs them on the electric light at the side of the bureaw, in imitation of her brother. She likes her coat unfast- ened, for she never admits that she I8 cold. She has just escaped the hard- ening process of bare legs, bare arms and a cold nursery. The winter has no terrors for her and she dresses as she wishes, no matter what the ther- mometer. g - Her Furs and Hats. The “flapper” who is-tall enough to carry a big fox around her neck is sure to come into possession of one. When her judgment goes against a big animal she chooses instead a coach- man's collar of sealskin or squirrel, which rises anbout her face like the calyx of a flower and spreads down- ward over her shoulders, hugging them In the flat Victorian manner. She has appropriated for her own use many accessories in peltry. that the older woman has neglccted. She knows the cleverness of a fur cravat and the medleval splendor of a fur gir- dle. And, by the way, the “flappers” have no idea of being left out of the proces- sion of those wearing Victory clothes. They have no shrinking about their costumery and what It signifies; they are instinctively psychological, and they wish to proclaim the side they {ook in the war by every manner of clothes that the dressmakers and mil- liners have thrown into the fashions to proclaim the day of peace. So the “flapper” wears red—bright glowing, triumphant red. She doesn’t besitate a second in choosing several garments of it. She Is not weighted down by the anxieties of her elders that certain colors must be taboo be- cause age Is drawing a map on the face. (Copyright, 1913, by the McClure News- paper Syndicate.) send were Bemidji visitors Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Carl Josefson and J. ¥. Wenstrom of Debs were Pinewood gnd Bemidji business visitors Satur- ay. : Nels Rude, manager of the Pine- wood Merchantile Co., went to Be- midji to make arrangements to move his family here the first of next week. A Pinewood young couple went for a drive Sunday evening and what happended we don’t know, but any way the team returned alone without a driver, who came walking after them. Young man, when you take her out again, be sure and keep both hands on the lines which all good drivers do and never mind the waist Jines. BETER THAN CALONEL | 78 == Thousands 'Hal\.re st%overed Dr. nist Dr. Edwards® Olive Tablets—the substi- s0 closely as to tute for calomel — are a mild but sure seem to belong to the ! eir effect on the liver is . § figel'ngfitflm They are the result skin itself. Never of Dr, Edwards’ determination not to treat that coarse "mflh-ug" fiver and bowel complaints with calomel. look. And the exquisite His efforts to banish it brought out these Joateel fra little olive-colored tablets. . g tmakes These pleasant little tablets do the good 509 that calomel does, but have no bad after effects. They don't injure the teeth like strong liquids or calomel. They take hold grance it a delight to use. Have rou tried it? Take a bax I:ome today, of the trouble and quickly correct it. Why . cure the liver at the expense of the teeth: {4 Calome? s;:eames lays havoc with the Ba ’. ke" s to take calomel, but to let Dr. Olive Tablets its place, S s lazy feeling come from constipation and ‘om a disordered liver. Take Dr. Edwfi 217 Third Street “heavy.” Note how they “cl clouded et how they up” the spirits PHONOGRAPHS KODAKS Sodostrong liquids. It is best not wis| Drug&Jewelry Most _headaches, “dullness” and that Olive Tablets when you feel 10c and 25¢ - tox. Al druggista RS ST I SR E VIR 2.5 Good for the Whole Family “Grasmy” Chamberhia _ A good cou h remedy is one that can be depengded upog to cure g,oughs. Not one that cures some particular cough, but coughs in general. It must be a cough remedy that can be relied upon for all the different coughs that are so prevalent. While the causes of all coughs are primarily the same, yet the condition of the patient is what makes the difference in the nature of the cough itself. Coughs of healthy persons are easier to cure than the coughs of snvalids. The powerful convulsive cough of alarge man is harder to cure than the cough of a baby. If you get a remedy that will cure a large man’s cough and yet not be too pow for the baby, you have a good cough remedy. Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy ie just this kind of remedy. It is good for any member of the fanj'nily. It relieves coughs of all kinds. It is the product of much thought and study to produce an ideal cough remedy. It is com- posed of things which cure easily and soothingly without harm- ing the most delicate tissues of the throat. It acts as easily and safely on the young as on the old, and is the ideal remcd)f _fo: coughs, colds, croup, influenza, whooping cough and bronchitie. R R e R e Y] STEENERSON. * KR KKK KKK KKK KHK Mrs. B. A. Evans returned home Friday from a pleasant visit with her Mrs. Jennie Elllott and son, Rich- (8008 and daughters in the eastern William Zavorill has his steamer at the Charles Peters place Wednes- ; .Martha ‘Webster was pleasantly surprised by 20 of her friends Mon- day evening, being her fifteenth an- Indigestion, and BloatFrom Acid-Stomach An acid-stomach cannot digest food wn}y connected with the stomach. roperly. Instead, the food sours an leasant tasting EATONIC TAB. erments and, passing into the intes- LETS that you eat like a bit of candy, tines, becomes a breeding place for quickly put an end to your stomach countless millions of deadly germs— ¢roubles. They act as an absorbent— toxic poisons they are called. These literally wipe up the excess hurtful poisons are absorbed into the system acid and- make the stomach pure, and cause untold misery. So, yousee, &weet and stmn& Help digestion so it is just acid-stomach, nothing else— that you get all the power and ene: that makes 50 many people weak, from your food. You cannot be wel listless' and unfit; saps their strength without it! and en ; robs them of their vigor 1f you are one of those who have and vitality. Biliousnees, bad liver, *‘tried everything’’ but in epite of it nervousness, blinding, sgiit&ing head- still suffer all kinds of acid-stomach aches, rhenmatiem, lumbago, sciatica miseries—if you lack physical and —these and many other still more mental strength and vlaor—begin at serious nilments often are traced to once to take EATONIC, Get back the common source—an acid-stomach. your physical and mental punch and Take EATONIC and get rid quickly enjoy the good things of life. Like of the pains of indigestion, heartburn, thousands of others you will say you that horrible, lumpy, bloated feeling never dreamed that such nmuingly disgusting, belch::g, quick relief and such a remarkable sour, ‘gassy stomach. improvement in your general health These stomach miserios are caused by~ was possible. what 'doctors call “Hfil‘lfl(fl?. * Your druggist has EATONIO, We 1t's just ACID-STOMACH. And i authorize hi mmm it to give addition to the pains and miseries it you instant or refund your cmm,AOID-S'I%MAOH isthestarter money, Get & big box of EATONIG of a long train of ailments that most today, it costs but little and the results people -never dresmed are jn any are wonderfull Who Benefits By High Prices? You feel that retail meat prices are too high. Your retailer says he has to pay higher prices to the packers. ' Swift & Company prove that out of every dollar the retailer pays to the packers for meat, 2 cents is for packers’ profit, 13 cents is for operating expenses, and 85 cents goes to the stock raiser; and that the prices of live stock and meat move up s oo Phalel, — Gy Chom bl | } and down together. The live-stock raiser points torising costs of raising live stock. Labor reminds us that higher wages must go hand in hand with the new cost of living. No one, apparently,.is, . responsible. No one, apparetitly is benefited by higher prigés Atidt; higher income. : We are all livingon ; prieed scale. One troub that the number :of: multiplied faster th tity of goods, 84 that eac tildo wid g buys less than'formerly. 2t laodoa i Swift & Co o8 10 doreM ni moidmsith bo13v0D vale vsM o1 911 1o 1011 ot .d3gas1s- st 101 nolizTegorq eidT llsuey 2l weidoe1) 1o et byl i fififffie u'ilun;:mlmmmuuu[mmmmfl‘ At A1 Azal) 2387 7l91ime anhizigre 097

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