Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, October 28, 1919, Page 6

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PAGE SIX CLEARWATER COUNTY GET) FIRST TAX ON AASEN ESTATE Inheritance Assessment Made Record in County Treas- urer’s Books SUCCESSFUL FARMER TAKES NEEDED REST Two More Pioneer Farmers Retire to Private Life; Sell Holdings (Special to Pioneer.) Gonvick, Oct. 28.—The first case of inheritance tax paid in Clear- water county has just been recorded by County ‘' Treasurer Torkel L. Tweite. The tax amounted to $54 and was assessed against the Lars A. Aasen estate, consisting of 160 acres of fine meadow land, nine miles north of Gonvick. It was paid by Andrew Johnson, administrator for the estate. Having closed up his affairs, fol- lowing the sale of his farm and per- sonal property, Nils J. Lervik, ac- companied by Mrs. Lervik, left Mon- day evening for their former home at Northfield, Minn., where they will retire to private life. The Lerviks have lived for eight years on a small farm bordering on to the outskirts of the village which was sold a short {linie ago for the record price of $200 per acre. During their residence here they proved themselves to be good loyal citizens and their depar- twre from Gonvick is a matter of re- gret to many people in and about the village. A number of neighbors and friends were at the station to bid goodbye and extend best wishes to the aged couple. There is cause for joy in the home; of Mr. and Mrs. Severt Bagne. A little daughter, the first one if you please, arrived at their home Friday October 24. Gonvick's representation at the Crookston Agricultural college has been increased recently by the addi- tion of Alfred Erie and Albert Vick; who have resumed their studies there! after spending the summer vacation at their homes near this village. This is their second year at the Crookston institution. Mesdames George Berger and An- drew Bagne visited in Cass Lake Sat- e —————————— Auctioneer Stephen A. Winden made a trip to Clearbrook Saturday, near where he conducted an auction sale for Peter Lindquist, wno recent- ly sold his farm and will withdraw from the rugged life of a farmer. 1ne sale was a grand success in that all property was sold at prices profitable to the owner. The previous day, Mr. Winden cried a sale for Theo. Het- land, who also has aisposed of his farm with expectations of retiring to private life. This sale was also suc- cessful, the total receipts being in the neighborhood of $2,000. Mrs. T. Kamrud has returned from a visit lasting two weeks, in the home of her daughter and son at Bot- tineau, N. D. Mrs. George T. Hamery and daugh- ter, Dorothy, shopped in Bemidji | Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Oluf Vangen and two children left Saturday on a motor trip to Minneapolis and Albert Lea. In those two cities they will be the guests of relatives for a few days. Toney Halvorson and Frederick Stevens, students afending high school in Bemidji, returned to their studies Monday after visiting over the week-end with home folks. Mrs. Frank Tunverg had as her Sunday guests, her sister, Miss Anna Olson, and Miss Lila Anderson, who are teaching school in Pine Lake and Eddy townships, respectfully. Leslie Reimer, live-wire automo- bile dealer, went to Minneapolis Mon- - GHIEF urday. day, expecting to remain there two days on business. Alfred Gulseth of Crookston was a visitor in Gonvick Saturday, being the guest of his cousin, George T. Hamery. Mrs. John Stevens returned Satur- day from the twin cities, where she spent five days with relatives and friends. There has been placed in effect all over the country, an increase in the price of coal since the issuance of the call for the miners’ strike on No- vember 1, according to a report from Indianapolis, the headquarters of the United Mine Workers of America. A recént statement issued by the union headquarters says that the consumer is already being forced to pay one dollar more a ton for coal than a week ago, although the strike has not yet gone into effect. It is inti- mated that this action in arbitrarily increasing the price of coal in ad- vance of the strike is for the purpose of prejudicing the public against the miners. at Law Oftice, Northern National Bank Bldg. Phone 181 Collections a Specialty Phone 181 Miles Block Phone 560 Why Not Use the BEST When It Costs No More ~ BRAND BUTTER ~ Bemidji Creamery Co, L Yuam! Y pese nog " / yum! % Nouw is the Time to Start Eating Real New Orleans Molasses! Be Sure to Get the Right Kind Every Housewife l‘m)?s the mm{; “PENICK & FORD” on a food means Always the Best of Its Kind. 22 years of quality, The Romantic Travelsof Brer Rabbit in a new Beautifully illustrated Book. Fascinating to Mothera and Children. Instructive to those who cook. Free—write Penick & Ford, Ltd., New Orleans, has just received 'I'H.'E season’s on! Your a fresh shipment of GOLD LABEL BRER RABBIT Molasses. It is waiting for you. Pan- cakes and BRER RABBIT tomorrow morning! But this is mi| ty important—Say these four words: “Gold Label BRER RABBIT” to your grc- cer. Otherwise you might get ordinary molasscs. Gold Label BRER RABBIT is the finest, the K}I“m the most delicious high-grade New Orleans olasses. It is the kind old folks recall as having eaten on sliced bread when they were little tots. It is the kind most folks have been “longing™ for but thought it was impossible to get these days. But now your grocer sells it. Your grocer also sells Green Label BRER RABBIT. Thisisa specially selected molasses for Remember—The GOLD LABEL for tabl and hij grade baking—The Green Label esp;;ally :'ogsebffingl.ngh costs less. Brer Rabbii NEW ORLEANS Molasses It THE BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEER NORTHERN MINN. AGENCY. Dwight D. Miller WE CAN Insure Anything Anywhere Offices, Northern National Bank Bldg., Phone 131 WAY EiEss] ‘When"the head feels thick or aches, when -/ one feels all out-of-sorts —perhaps a coated tongue—it is the signal & that poisons \ are accumu- lating in the system, and should be cleaned out at once. Auto-intoxication can be ‘best ascribed to our own neglect or carelessness. When the organs fail in the discharge of their duties, the putrefactive germs set in and generate toxins—actual poisons, which fill one’s own body. Sleepiness after meals, flushing of the face, extreme lassitude, bil- iousness, dizziness, sick headache, acidity of the stomach, heartburn, offensive breath, anemia, loss of weight and muscular power, de- crease of vitality or lowering of resistance to infectious diseases, disturbance of the eye, dyspepsia, indigestion, gastritis, many forms of catarrh, asthma, ear affections and allied ailments result from auto-intoxication orself-poisoning. Take castor oil, or procure at the drug store, a pleasant vege- table laxative, called Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pcllets, composed of May-apple, cloes aad jalap, Subscribe for The Daily Pioneer - e “90 for 20 'calms”" “Lef’s do the darn job together” | FIRE INSURANCE REAL ESTATE REYNOLDS & WINTER 212 Beltrami Avenue Phone 144 DRY CLEANING Clothes Cleaners for Men, Women Subscribe for The Pioneer. DENTAL CORNER GOOD TEETH Are Essential to Good Health If everyone realized the importance of caring for the teeth, there would be less sickness and pain. Don’t allow the poison- ous gases from your de- j cayed teeth to impair your health. Guaranteed Work 10 Years General Examinanation Free YOU SAVE PRACTICALLY 80 4 AT THE UNION DENTISTS Gold Crowns Nitrous Oxide UNION DENTISTS Pure Oxygen arv s BEMIDJI S5adae Dr Norcross & Co. Owners Open from 8;00a. m. t0 8 p. m. - —Ches. Field W(I-n_;l_is it that) more and more smokers millions now) are getting together with Chesterfields? A ' . First of all, fine tobaccos. Our own buyers in the Orient send us the pick of the finest Turkish varieties (Xanthi, Cavalla, Smyraa and Samsoun). We blend these by a secret method with specially choice Domestic leaf. This method brings out new qualities of flavor—a smoo;hness, a richness, a meilow- ness that go right to the spot. That’s the reason Chesterfields safisfy. . And remember—*‘Satisfy’’ is Chesterficld’s secret, based on our own private formula, which cannot be copied. _Every package has a (}xsture-proof wrap- ping—another reason for Chesterfield’s un- changing quality of flavor. - nd the blend can’t be copied S

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