Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, August 30, 1919, Page 4

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. BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEER . PUBLISHED EVERY APTERNOON BXCEPT SUNDA 7 n;’n BEMIDJI PIONENR PUBLISHING 0O." &a G. BWCARSON, : o E. H. DENU, Pres, md n_;"au.‘ Sec. and Mgr. FEntered at the. postoffice at Bm;:;t’ui. Minn,, as second- tter % under act of Congress of March 3, tion paid to annonymous contributions. Writer's name must be kNII:"n":: t‘l’m g‘dltor. but not. necessarily for publication. Communications for the Weekly Pioneer must reach this office not later than Tuesday of each week to insure publication in the current issue SUBSCORIPTION BATES [ OAT . $8.09 ne y 188 Six months . 45 A8 Three months .. TEE WEBKLY PIONEER summary of the news of the o any address, fer, ‘week. Published e e, oo 1n advance, §1.50 Thursday and sent postage paid to OFPICIAL COUNTY AND CITY PROCEEDINGS i I;E;TRAMI WILL BE HEARD FROM. What did you think of that list of names thgt appearpd in The Pioneer of the farmers who responded with s_Alactnty to the call of Charles F. Schroeder, head of the Beltrami County Fair association, for exhibits for the state fair from this coun%‘! Beltrami county last year carried off the honors at fhe stte . fair in its agricultural display and the call to donate prqdute for retention of the honor met hearty response from efi_er%;}ig:'t of the county, and what was brought in for shipment fo the county’s booth was a revealation in produce, Everything pos- gible to raise in the great county of Beltrami is there, every one a splendid specimen, and it is believed that Beltrami will again carry off the honors, i i The red blooded farmgrg and settlers of Beltrami are about the livest citizens in the eptjre £ounty and are exerting every effort possible to bring the coiinf¥up to where it should be, and . when it is up to them to “show” the state what can be produced i _up here they are entitled to every possible consideration and i co-operation, % — e PROPER POTATO STORAGE U D. Proper storage of potatoes, that a large amount of this important food may be saved and not wasted, is emphasized in a report of the United States department of agriculture. re- often store potatoes in bins to a depth of 10 to 15 feet, and only, fail to take proper care of them, individual losses in the aggregate amounting to a large sum each year. Losses sus- tained when potatoes are improperly stored often reach 25 per cent each year, and where care has not been exercised to greater. ; Storage should be provided on the farm or at the shipping station for from 65 to 75 per cent of the crop. Storage afford- from, 35 to 40 degrees and sufficient ventilation to_ remove foul air and excessive moisture. The storage house should be kept dark, as the table quality of :potatoes quickly deteriorates in the light. Potatoes should not be piled more than five or six feet deep in the bin. - -« When that new fire siren is ready for its purpose at the city building, no one will be able to say he “didn’t know there was a fire,” for it will have a two horsepower motor attached and it will go some. : —_— Next week President Wilson will start on his delayed tour to tell the people about the league of nations and the peace . treaty. Only the large centers will be visited, so we of the north country won’t be able to hekr him, but a flock of news- paper correspondents and press association representatives will accompany him, so The Pieneer-will be able to keep readers informed. - —_— The next step in the improvements of the normal school district is the present putting in of the curbs and it is a hard task to meet the street grades as there is little to be governed py. However, the city engineer is looking after the wark and it will be done properly. Then next year will come the big show—paving. ¢ 3 g e e e ey e+ 1t didn’t require. much time for those police reserves of Peoria, I11., fo put a quietus on the street car strikers, after an ho.ur’s time. The radicals naturally attempted to start some- t}.ung and they were charged- by the reserves and crowds dispersed. o : Might not be a bad idea to give the coal situation, so far as it affects Bemidji consumers, the once over, as suggested by the St. Hilaire Lumber company, whose local branch has received a survey of the present coal outlook. The question is a supply of suitable fuel for heating and cooking purposes during: the coming winter. i because of the dress she wears. But see what Mabel Normand as ‘the slavey did, and how she won a five-thousand dollar reward, married the ‘‘bell-boy” millionaire, and was happier than any girl in a fairy tale. ' ~““His Feathered Nest,” a sprightly Keystone two-reel comedy,- will also be shown as a feature of the bill to- ©|night and tomorrow. / GREAT SCREEN THRILLER. Having all the elements that make NEWS OF THE THEATERS NORMAND AT GRAND. = “Upstairs,” a comedy by Perley Poore Sheean, is the-new Mabel Nor- mand Goldwyn picture which comes 11 o%clock, . - ceived at University Farm. Commercial growers and shippers’ many farmers who grow potatoes for their own consumption |. remove all diseased tubers.before storing, the loss is even|- ing the maximum of protection should have a temperature of |benediction at 7:30 o’clbek. to the Grand theatre tonight and Sunday, matinee and night. > ) It presents the simple tale of a girl 5 worker in a bhig hotel, who more than made good. The little comedienne, as RBlsie MacFarland, always wants to see'the fairyland upstairs. She is given the chance when a young mil- lionaire, after _seeing her peeking through a doorway, secures the uni- form of a bell-boy, and visits her in the basement where she works. There are a million laughs, and a thousand giggles in the five reels. She is mistaken for a runaway girl who is about to marry a crook, because the beH-boy brought her the run- away . girl’s dress, instead of taking it out to be cleaned. While mixing with ‘‘upstairs,” in the borrowed| finery, she is trailed by dectives, es- capes, fights the crook when he finds her after following her as his flancee ‘'wreck of a yacht. .a struggle between the hero and the for the success of the big screen pro- ductions, Maurice Tourneur’s latest Paramount-Artcraft special picture, “The White Heather,” will be shown at the Elko theatre tonight, also Sun- day matinee and evening. It has an abundance of highly flavored action, fine outdoor settings, and a gripping story which works out to a powerful ‘climax. The story is adapted from the famous Drury Lane melodrama of the: same name.. The narrative chiefly concerns the efforts of an unscrupulous nobleman to repudiate his marriage to a pretty commoner, the only record of the wedding being in.‘the submerged The tale ends in villian at the bottom of the sea. The latest invention of the Williamson Brothers was used by Mr. Tourneur in taking the subsea scenes, and some S RTINS, ST. BARTHOLOMEWS, - There will'be morning services at: George ‘Backhu'rst‘, rector.” GERMAN EVANGELICAL 'LUTH. 9:30 a. m.—Sunday school: T 10:30 a. m.—Church services. will be conducted in the German: lan- guage. 7 p. m—Evangelical. - league (Y. P. S.). All members and friends are invited to attend these services. W. F. Kamphenkel, pastor.” SWEDISH LUTHERAN. 4 DCCTORS " | 'DR. EINER JOHNSON Physiciar. and Surgeon Ben:iji, Minn. ‘ LUNDE and DANNENBERG Sunday school at 9:45 o’clock . | Chiropractors There will be no morning servica. || Hours 10 to 12 a.m.; 2to5,7to8 pm. | Phone 401-W ° Calls made Services in the English-language in the evening at 8 o’clock. - ‘1st National Bank Bldg. Bemidji T. B. Nordale, pastor. 7 i Z ‘ SALVATION ARMY—-BEMIDJL. VETERINARIANS: Sunday morning, 10 o’clock Sun- day school. ° g Evening worship at- 8 o’clock. Praise service with sermon, -subject, “Woman, Where Are Thine Accus- ers?” You will have to come, éarly to get a seat. Last Sunday evening there was not room to be-had. 3 Captain Orchard, officer.in .charge MORE—SIWDAY. 3 Nymore Sunday school,:2 o’clock. “y” People's Legion, 3 o’clock: Everybody welcome. Captain Orchard. =~ . _ .. ‘,”s AP IST SERVICES, : Rev. George Kehoe, of _Rog!;ester, - - will preash at the niorning and.even- | | DR. J. T. TUOMY ing services of the Baptist church,] “ " 7 DERTIST Sunday, and the other services will North .of Markham Hotel, be conducted at the usual hours.. Gibbons Block - Phone 230 NO CHURCH SUNDAY." No church -services will be con- ducted at the. Presbyterian churcn Sunday. It i8° expected that Rev. and Mrs. L. P. Warford and children will return from the east next week, and that regular services will he re~ sumed the first Sunday in September. Sunday school and Christian ‘Endeav or meetings will be conducted as usual Sunday, but the regular church services will be: omitted. -; _ CHRISTIAN SCIENCE... . Services will be held at the Com- mercial club rooms. Charles Nangie block, at 11 o’clock. Sunday;school at 9:45. ; b J: WARNINGER VETERINARY SURGEON ..Office and Hospital 8 doors west.. of Troppman’s. Phone No. 209 3rd Street and Irvine ave. . DENTISTS .Dr. W.. K Denison—Dr. D. R. Bur:es‘s DENISON & BURGESS Veter : Phones: Office 3-R; Res. 99 ' Bemidji, Minn. ‘ DRS. GI_L‘MGRE & McCANN Physicians and Surgeons : Office Miles Block LAWYERS GRAHAM M. TORRANCE LAWYER Phone 560 Miles Block -D.- H. FISK Attorney at Law Office, Northern National Bank-Bldg. Phone 181 Specialty CATHOLIC. Collections a Phone 181 Low, mass at 8 o’clock mass at 10 ‘o‘clock; a.; m.; ySunday school, followed' b¥ bp%xed lon! of ‘the Bléssed Sacrament, at 11730 a. m, Baptisms at 2 o'clock. :Vespers andj) lfi Higfn ;. T — e oo, Fhes e ) .NEW MODEL | ’ " Shoe Shop = - . Lecated at * i The Beniidji Shoe Store 815 Minn. Ave - " FIRST CLASS SHOE REPAIR- ING AT REASONABLE ‘ ~ " PRICES " ——All Work Guaranteed- F. J. CATTEYSON, Propr. 2 -'J."..»h’.l‘::?hillbnve, rector. _'SCANDINAVIAN LUTHERAN.. The services next Sunday morning will"be conducted in the Norwegian language.. e Come, worship with us! school at 12. Osmund Johnson, pastor. GERMAN LUTHERAN. German Lutheran services will be held in the First Scandinavian Luth- " e sz || HUEFMAN & OLEARY FURNITURE AMD UNDERTAKING Services ats Nymore church at 11 o’clock a. m. H. 'N. M’'KEE, Funeral Director Sunday Young People’s meeting at Aardal church, Town of Frohn, at 3-p. m. 0. P. Grambo, pastor. ‘ METHODIST. 10 a.' m.—Sunday school. 11 a. m.—Morning service. Third sermon on ‘“The Wells of Salvation.” 7 p. m.—Epworth league. 8 p. m.—BEvening service. Blaine Lambert, minister. PHONE 178-W or R —_———— startling effects were obtained. Other attractions at the Elko to- night and tomorrow are a. two part satirical comedy, and music by the Elko orchestra, at evening perform- ances. : : Beltrami County —Travelers— SUDDENLY INHERITS WEALTH. ‘His newest photoplay, ‘“Too Many Millions,” 'a comedy of money, love and adventure,- which will be shown at the Elko theatre next Monday and Tuesday affords Wallace Reid one of the best.roles of his screen career. In this picture he is a book agent who suddenly inherits forty millions of dollars.and ‘the..entire. course of his existence naturally is changed there- by. 5 e —————— DR. E. A. SHANNON, M. D. ' Physician and Surgeon © Office in Mayo Block % ‘Phone 396 Res. Phone 39' will find a warm welcome at The West| Minneapolis Service our watchword BATHS A bath for all ailments for either ladies or gentlemen - Ladies hairdressing and massages Lady attendant. Call at 1009 Bemidji Ave. C. R. SANBORN, M. D. Physician and Surgeon Oftice: Miles Block House Phone 449——Office phone £6 || Electric Vapor Sulphur Eye—Ear—Nose—Throat Glasses Pitted DRY CLEANING and Children Make your appointments by phone 776-J J. F. Osborn DR. D. L. STANTON DENTIST “_Office in Winter Block = ~ Mrs. A. R. Williams | Piano Instructor | 5] " Studio’ 520-4th ’Sl{;.I it Sfiéciéi attention séivéxl:‘»‘:be; ginners. Reasonable rates-: 194 Furniture- ; . Renovators ‘All work guaranteed. Work called for and de- livered. <General Repair Shop Phone 488 - 811 6th St. - A. BROSE 400 Minnesota bAve First Class Rooms-in Connection - Pipe Man and e Tobbaconist HOSE who em- ¢ N ploy “us have the assurance that they will. receive the highest degree of service and sat- . isfaction. We are equipped to I;M]e a commission,in.3 " thorough midnnet. Our’ servicés® are dependable and po- Reduce the H: C. of L. by trading at the Palace Meat Market Beef Pot Roast .. .. 17c Beef Stew, rib. . . Round Steak. . . .. Sirloin Steak .- .: Shoulder Steak .. Veal Stew ........ . Shouler of Veal Leg of Veal. ... Lamb Stew . ... ." Shoulder of Lamb. Leg of Lamb Pork Sausage: .« c»u Hamburger Steak .” ‘Baéon Squares®. ... 33¢ 'Illzru?ehgrd d Herng:'33 Fresh dressed Herig,'33¢: Fresh Dressed Sfl%' RAIN OR SHIN You Can Call ! ! get a car to go any- wllere, any time. Deliveries 9 anc 8-and 5 p.m. 8 ok 7 pass ‘"m.. o BEMIDJI AUTO LIVERY Nerves and Healtt HE net work of nerves which carries the ‘norpial flow of life-giving energy to every organ ard tissué is re- sponsible for the health of the body. These nerves are dis- tributed through the spinal col-* 3 umn. ¥ . If through accidents, blows, strains.or unnatural curvature the moveable bones of the spine be- come slightly displaced, they press on the nerves and obstruct ‘the - free passage of the health-giving currents. The organs or tissues fed by the obstructed nerves na- turally become weakened and dis- eased.. Pressure on the nerves leading to the stomach, for in-- stance, is often the cause of mom- ach trouble. : v o = = CHIROPRACTIC by a method of scientific adjustment eorrects these spinal defects, relieves the pressure on the nerves and removes the cause of disease. With normal econditions restored, the. life- giving currents have full power to repair and’ ¥ strengthen, and health results in a natural way, without the use of drugs or surgery. No. matter what the ailment, - experience proves that it can be relieved through Chiro- practic (KI-RO-PRAK-T1C) adjustments’ of certain parts of the spine. The sick'shouldal'lot be discouraged, even g though they have sought relief for years and L tried every known method of health. HIRODRACTIC " has done wonders in bringing relief in long standing and obstinate . cases. Investigate and learn what Chiropractis is doi for others, and what it can do for you. e e Drs. Lunde & Dannenberg CHIROPRACTORS - " 1st Nat. Bank Bldg. ~ Phone 401-W Bemidji, Minn. * T < m Dafacrtiva

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