Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, March 25, 1920, Page 8

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' ' Siterhale of ed from Pag One,) ‘was asked what he: thought orthwest ‘and its future, he ‘- ‘metely pointed to the. fiteen million dollar . packing plant recently ' com: .. jpleted in South St. Paul.: It is con- sidered the world's greatest cattle . B.AE. McDonald, president of the Northern Minnesota Development as- sociation, gave a brief history of the association’s work and outlined a part of the 'program for the meeting here next June. [ S i 5 «“Puluth will be encouraged as a “The. low grade ore in ect of the state will also. be exhibited and able speakers will talk upon the need of this product for market. Peat lands and the uses of peat ¥ also be discussed.” ; Southwick Boosts County. " “Twenty counties in the state have oran‘ivzedt,y" said Mr. Southwick, “but you are the first to get together in this way and I congratulate you.” Continaning he said: wonderful. stock I certainly encourage. e Minnesota will ‘be the the stock ~industry in.the because we have the conditions in climate and “The real estate man is in development work. He .sman who is taking the lo 1 believe in this' organisat rk. for both state and county.: It must : M&n in e h;',rlin the standard “There will be big' business this year. The swivel chair money sharks who pointed to the blflprl;u paid for Jand called 'it apeculation. © This' is not so. Land is positively the best investment and always will be, espe- eially’ in Minnesota.” The curbstone desler must be-wiped out for the pro- tection of the dealer and the buy United * natural is er. Me. pulls off crooked deals and then we are all called sharks.” . Judge for Good Roads. Judge C. W. Stanton urged the men te raise the standard by always tell- jng the truth. He considered that the men of this county were above | the average, when ‘it came -to_truth) . and varacity. “*“The judge has regently returned| from New Orleans and urged the de- velopment of the road ‘system in the Mississippi valley. - He told ‘of the Sig ships coming’ through the }’nm’u eanal with goods from the orient and abont our-loading the ships here with ppli the foreign lands 2z necessary. I 2 000, cars operating in “before they can' run ure a license. - At $18 "income ' or 'cash-in-hand 6,000,000, and this toward road per car our will be nearly . $ will go quite a ways . puilding ‘each year. ‘ il “J ‘hope -that this body. will send a committee into the Grygla country om an inspegtion trip. Those people wp there need your help and I know that if you visited that locality you wonld be amazed at ijs development.” 7] _/Mewspaper Men Talk Briefly. +H Z. Mitchell and E. H. Denu gave short talks on' the advantages of ad- vertising and the securing of actual facts in the boosting of land values.| They pledged the co-operation of the focal press and their efforts in spread- ing broadcast the advantages of Ner- thern Minnesota. 2 W. L. Brooks touched upon the finances in connection with'the secur- ing of settlers here and outlined whay the banks could do for the newcomer. He pointed out the fact that the Be- + midji-banks would be" willing to co- . eperate in every way possible toward securing settlers for Northern Min- ‘. Earle A, Barker and B.'M.. Gile intec th vantages of such gatherings and to the many ideas de- * rived from. talks-given.: Mr. Barker -pledged the co-operation of the Civic * ‘amd Commerce’ gssociation toward furthering ‘the interests of the set- tlers, amnd ‘Mr. Gilé called attention to the fact that the boy of today is . the farmer of tomorrow. . Cnrhr'A"nelniv v In closing ‘the session, ‘ Charles Carter expressed appreciation on bi Balf of the real estate’ board an asked for a rising vote of thanks for /- the splendid work dome by John D. Wilcox and E. H.'Winter in connec- tion with work thus far accomplished. | MARKHAM REGISTER f Among those. registered .at -the Markhai on Wednesday were P. E. Norsen, E. A. Grotefeud, Charles M. ! Ceelman, N. T.'Ronan, A. A. Clothier, A Epesteln, H.'A’ Blasing, W.' H. Wye, E. D. Arnold, J, P. Daly, J. 8. " MfeGrath, F. M. Letterney, and G. vg DJI DAILY PIONEER midji Mark Chicago, Mar, 256.—Potato steady. 'Northern $5.95; bulk Rounds, to $6,50. ) receipts today, 4‘4 cuar;;. Mari:‘ef Round and Long Whites, sacked,” $5.85 to $6.90 to $6, Idaho Russets, sacked; $6.40 Bemidji Potato Market—All varieties, bulk, small lots $2.40 to $2.70 per bushel. $4.50 to $5.00 per cwt BEMIDJI CASH MARKET . GRAIN AND HAY 3 Oats, bushel ...........$1.00-$1.10 Barley, bushel...... .$1.30 Red clover, medium, 1b; .40c-44c Popeorn, pound .. ... 8¢ Wheat, No. 1..... . VEGETABLES, .$1.00-8..50 Carload ‘lqt’s, sacked and: loaded, QUOTATIONS, Mutton ... e e TR E LR RRE BES x PINEW0OD o) IR 2R BB SR T R SR A SR Henry Sletten returned home from Larimgre, .N. D., Tuesday, after be: ing out 'there two. weeks. Mr. Slet- ten will move' to Dakota, where he will run his father’s farm the: com- ing year. 5 S i P i ;8. 0. Jallen; the Aure merchant, was ‘'a 'Bemidji business caller Wed-, nesday. . x 3 .Chris ' Milgaard was a Bemidji vis- itor Wednesday, 4 ; X T. 0.Gelen and daughter were Be- ‘Friday: ¥ ,C. ‘Miler was' a ‘Bemidji day. - B J. left. for' Littlefork Thursday. ‘to' look .after his logging operations: there.” , : ' . ¥ Lafleur and: Albert Lajam- ve. been ‘working ‘in the -here for some time, ‘return- fi to their home at’ Bemidji Thurs- Conrad 'Drumess. went. to Bemidji Tuesday. with his sister, Miss Gladys ‘| Crumess, who ieft for Montana on 13150°32,00] Beets, per cwt. .. 1.00-§1.2! Cabbage; cwt. .. Onfons, dry,’ cwt, Beans, cwt. ...:. Dairy butter, pound Ve Butterfat ... .G\ ... Eggs, fresh, dozen. ............ % | Cow. hides, No. 1, pound Bull hides, No. 1, pound:. Kip hides, No. 1, pound ) | Cait skins, No, 1, poun Deacons, each.. Horse hides; . large, eac! Tallow, pound. ... .o Wool, bright.. ... ‘Wool, semi bright:..: The following prices were being paid at ti_me of going to press of today’s Piog 3 GRAIN AND ‘HAY ‘Wheat, No. 1 : : ¢ .. +$2.50-82.60 ‘Wheat, No. 8. Buckwheat, per Ib No. 2 Timothy bay.. No. 1 clover Mixed..... Rye straw ...... Corn. . . .eiwees ./ VEGETABLES hand picked, navy, cwt. $5.00 ¥ : 4:00 .$3.60 .o 325 Beans,’ Potatoes, per cwt Beans, brown, oWt Beets, per cwi. Carrots, per: ¢! Onions, dry, per cw Eggs, per dozen . Cabbage, ton....... Rutabagas, per cwt.... Butterfat .. Packing butte BE THANKFUL YOU CAN'SMELL Engilsh Woran Writer Went Thisugh Life Keenily Regretting Her Lack - o of That Sense. . 'D1d it"éver . occur to grate: ful for the ‘sense of- smell? Probably | not, and_yet those wh 0, ved of ft:have felt their’ caply. Harriet Martineau, the famous Eng- lish. writer, lacked the sense of smell and consequently. the sense of taste, which depends ‘on smell. Once- and only once she tasted In all the inten- sity of flavor a slice of & leg. of mut- ton. The' sense came to her suddenly ,and. she thought 'and h 4t bad ‘come to stay.’ - - " “I 'was going out to.a great dinner that night,” she sald when telling of her qne taste, ‘and I 'looked forward with, great eagerness’ to the dainties that I knew would be set before me. How I should enjoy.practicing my new- found sense of taste!” A But, alas, the sense of taste disap- peared as. suddenly as it had' come and - never = returned, and she went through ‘life remembering that taste’ ‘of roast mutton as one of her keen- est joys. ®, e 5 i Canals, |, A suggestion' made by a Londuner -that the bed of the Forth and Clyde canal should be converted into a’ high- way, of .traffic has not been recelved north' of the Tweed with the indigna- tijn that’ might have been expected. The Glasgow Herald says the notion is not so gxtravagant ‘as it might ap- pear. . The. swift progress of .motor transport’ threatens the railways, and it can-scarcely fail to'affect the posi- tion of the capals in industrial and commercial economy.. ~The’ canal lougs to. those leisurely periods of the world’s history which saw Egypt and China at their apogee. It was, it is interesting to remember, in the fif- teenth century, a time of development 1t ever there was, that canal engineer- ing received its great impetus in the Western world owing to the discovery of the “lock” system. Engiand applied the new idea with such thoroughuess ‘that her canal system became second, probably, only to that of Holland, Accident Policy’s Limit. If & man die of blood poisoning as. the: result of :giving himself a° hypo- dermic injection, his family can ecol: lect nothing'oni' 11A; | erime and’dies as the result. This geins of St. Louis; P. H. Gram- R ‘of Crookston; J. M. Greham, Carl | Xaxson, Ralph Smith and M. 'W. Lind of ‘Duluth; W. E. Tuhbs of River ‘#Falls,"Wis.; H. J. Landverg of De- frelt; £. D. Hyde of Fairmont; O. G. Thief River Fualls; 8. J. Thelen .ot er and Bd- cago; Robert L. (E. Kennedy ".of Joliet; B. ' F. was decided by the appellate division in a .recent case. . Lawyer (examining prospective ju- ./Vocal 'solo :{{Bgdouin Love ng, de: Plnnufl‘—'-e%wn, okt ,'Reading, “Mafdy’s Orga; ppe- | Greenblat, $2.60-52.70 .$2.40-32.50 || Parsnips,; per_ewt ae Dressed /poultry ‘30 per .pound live stock. ' i /¢ i over Cowhides; No. 1.7 Bull hides, No.’ Kips, No. 1 Calf skins, This cvem;n’s’ chafeh “the foll }be given_ under the susplcey of ithe 8 o'cloc i e, Snow. . e ‘Violin: solo, selected—Mrs. Sanborn.: ., Ofis 4 Vocal solo, “The Swallows,” W.. Z.-Robinson. g Reading, Van Dyke’s “Ha ot Clay,”-——Miss Deputy. Instrumental, ‘‘Rigoletto,” | “Liszt; “Hark! Hark! The Lark,” Schubert- Liszt; ‘‘Hungarian Rhapsody,”” Liszt —Vera Cutter., 3 g Reading; ‘“Calling -the Young Uns” —Leona Hines. :Vocal, “Felice,” Lieurange-<Cazrrie -Brown. 3 Trombone solo, -selected—Ervin McPherson. L | INTERESTING JUVENILE L g . PARTY AT THE GILL HOME On Monday, afternoon at the Phil~ 1lip Gill home,-a number of liitle folks' were invited to spend the aftermoon 1in honor of ‘the third birthday anni- yersary of little Miss Lea Louise:Gill. Eighteen received word to come and:| bring their mothers. Of this number, five. were unable to attend. ' The af-' ternoon . was spent ' in “dll ‘sorts.of games and a delightful lunch was| ‘and .they 'become’ sort of pi { and. loggy. {sluggish 'and clog you must relieve the G. N. that evening. She expects to'ibe’ gone. a,yegr. ing' done and. will. soon Carl ‘Koppang hashis new build- commence buying cream’ for Koors William ‘Thais, Frank Elliott, Sim- on Misselt, ‘Melvin ‘and Elmer Beck- en, Robert ‘Scott, .Dave and T. B. Millar, Fred Sliter, Charlos McClure, ‘land Miss Edith Peterson “were Be- midji vilstors Saturday. 8. C..Miller was at Federal .Dam Saturday for a visit with his father, who is quite ill. from the after ef- fects iof the “flu.” . .- . "+ Miss' Martha Roen arrived here Saturday for a'visit' with friends and relatives. c. . Mr. and'Mrs. Roy Ousley-and little son arrived here Monday from south- ern Minnesota for a visit with Mr. Ousley’s ‘parents: at Aure. ~Mr. and Mrs. Ousley -will soon leave: for -the Pacific coast country to make their future home. e S8id Soremson, J. Richarason and W.. Duxbury of Pine' City . arrived here Friday. 'They have bought the land from the N. M, D. Farm: Land company and will begin selting land at once. They will have their head- quarters. at Bemidji and will “work out from Pinewood; also. This will be the means of getting much of this valuable wild land settled up by a class of good people, who will do something for the community and make this one.of ‘the garden spots of ness 'visitor Monday. A ———————————— IF KIDNEYS ACT . e b HORNET * R Among those who' were in-Black- duck 'Monday - Were, | Mr.\ and Mrs, John Thullen, ‘J. S. 'Hepe, Miss R.{. BE. and Andrew Shaw. . ; At the caucus Monday night, Hen-| ry. Plummer ‘was' elected & 'delegat: to the convention in Bemidji Wed= nesday. ‘ ) ? George ‘Angell has been under ‘the}.’ doctor’s care in Blackduck, the result of a kick from a horse. b Miss Magda Grouseth Has gone to work 'at Rev. Odegaard’s in Black- duck. ;- . : Herman' Buzciks had an’ auction at his place on Thursday. ' Mr. Bu- zick and family will move into Will Lundahl’s house till school ‘is out, as another family are to move jnto the Pplace left vacant by the er, Mr. Buzick: g | Andrew : Shaw and flem'y Plum-; former own- mer were; among those who were Blackduck Thursday. - AR -“The’ town board ‘met at Valentin Angell's on’ Friday, e /George . and ' Thomas Woodwar in Blackduck on Friday.: bert . Shaw has gono to S Paul ~to . attend | the = Agricultural school for.a few. months. ST.JOUIS 1 ¢ (By United Press) .. ‘Fargo, March 26,—North.Dakota’ agricultural exhibition ' shown week at the St. Louis Bxpositi will be on display at the in ks anti'fi?‘:? . The ex| i g the fine tural”display. shown, thé attract NORTE DAKOTA CORN SHOWED WELL AT agricnltural featufes;. especially tion. g 3 *'/ Suhseribe’ for Tne' Ploneer. be, ready toll » Agam our 5ftent§6n.ii callgd tOthefgct tilat fires ‘do happen ‘and in unexpected places. . Twomore homes d_estrdyed, 5 . with contents totally . Are yofi‘flllly' ineprea, aceordmxto the present prices of labor and ‘ma_éjefials? ‘ We want your insurance business. . . 'BAD TAKE SALTS| Says Backache Is Sign You Have Been Eating Too *. Much Meat. = When you wake up with backache and dull miseryin-the kidney region it generally means you have' been eating too much’ meat, says a ‘well- ‘known. authority:: - Meat formsiuric - |acid- which overwo;fi the kidneys in blood When your kidneys get their effort to-filter it from the them,like you relieve your bowels; removing .all the . body’s . urinous waste, else you have backache, gick headache, dizzy spells; your stomach sours, tongue-is coated, and when the weather is bad. you have rheumatic twinges. The urine is cloudy, fall of sediment, channels often get sore, water scalds and you are. gbli seek relief two or thre the night. g : er “consult a 'good, reliable physician at: once or get from your phdrmacist about four qunces of Jad Salts; take a tablespoonful in a glass of water before breakfast for.a few days and, your kidneys will then dct fine. ‘This famous salts is. made from the acid.of grapes ard lemon .juice, combined with lithia, and- has been used for - generations to clean and stimulate sluggish kidneys, -also to neutralize acids in the urine s0 it no longer irritates, thus ending bladder ‘'weakness. - A .(Jad Salts is a life saver for regular meat eaters. . It is inexpensive; can not _injure and ‘makes a delightful, effervescent lithin-water drink. - served, the most interesting feature|' of which was the birthday cake: The names of the children: present were Lea Louise Gill, Catherine Died: | rick. *Billle” Denfson, Rose :Marid Baker, Elizabeth Robinson, Leagene | ®rench, ; Ruth Gilbertson, Erwin Jack Marcum, Mitchell, William Mitchell, Marion Johnson, Clifford Klein, and Kath- eryn ‘Russell. " Those who.could not ‘be there were Daniel McCann, Fran- cis.and Jimmy Hughes, Marienne and John Stewart. Several pictures were taken of the little folks. =Miss Lea Louise received many beautiful gifts. s SUBSCRIBE FOR THE * ' DAILY PIONEER T00 LATE TO CLASSIFY .The raté for want ads may be found at heading of reg- ular classified .department. | Ads received later than 11’ | o’cleck a. . will appear un- | .der this head in current issue ror in eriminal case)—Mr. Juror, have | you any fixed opinion as to the gullt Melissa | ; $ - Starting ELighting Battery and “Ex 1o ¢ Service sor Automobiles ON’T neglect your - 1.7 Starting and Light- ing Battery. Like other vital parts of your car, F e o3 e o e it at a reasonable .cost; If you need = imew battery, we will sell you the . 'best—an ‘‘Exide.”’ * There's.an ‘ExiDs’ Bat- tery fos every car.”” (219 Fouith St ll¢, famous dramatic’so- prano of thel Metropolitan Opera Com- pany, and her brilliant sister Carmela, both - exclusive. Coluthbia ‘artists, sing mystery of moonlight on its slecping. lagoons and shadowy palace walls is in’ é Hoffman. T ’;\uuu/_/’///_// T T T L S T T G T T LTI . Sea Stracciaris .of Mother Love Po seneisisiers- in Barcarolle’ _»Roia Poqu ‘their first combined record. The soft - magic of ‘a. night 1 Venice with the ' this seductive duct from the Tales ol‘ 788463150 . " Allof 2 mother’s impassioned prayers -.and heartaches at parting from her son are in Stracciari’s simple ballad *“Dear: Columbia artist gives you all the yearn-. ing melody of this moving mother song. e "S"ingé“”’f-'f T This love song of the sunfiy South . shows Oscar Seagle’s dramatic power 1n rich, résonant negro melody. ““Sorter Miss You,” the: coupling; gives you' this exclusive Columbia artist at'his splendid vocal best. .. A.2875-$1.00 Send us your money’ " St -order or check with number of record wanted .and records will _ Dalton Block 200 Third Street TheHALLMARK Store O T DT T L T = be shipped * S b = = = = = =

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