Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, May 20, 1920, Page 3

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" 'Manley Anderson Well Pleased %'\ Frith, “1 talked to the Minnesota 7 ~annual district convention here to- ..day bankers of the. second district ' Tegular meat eaters should take now ‘Bright eyes, a clear skin and a body dsble for highest quality, purity g foll ofi_‘ywt!_l and. health may be £ad dellciousness. JUST ARRIVED, LARGE SHIPMENT g:ll'lthER LAUGHLIN’S GOOD AMERICAN 7ot will Keep your system s s . in order, by regularly. taking M We have waited and looked for this a whole year. It’s now in and on sale at 7 Propared by Orange-Crush Co., Chicage Laboratorv: Los Angeles THURSDAY EVENING, MAY 20, 1920 ‘ THE BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEER PALE ok FORMER BEMIDJI BOY —— LEARNING TO BECOME . * EXPERT MECHANICIAN tion—for a consideration. The con~ sideration amounts to three; four and five thousand dollars. The rental includes the family's usual staff of ° servants. Mrs. W. A. Vincent offers her place at a ‘“bargain’, according to the agent. Only $800 is wanted. Mrs. R. Hall McCormick is willing to va- cate for a few days for $3,000. Mrs. about ten hostesses for each woman |Charles Adsit offers her home at $700 delegate and each is willing to find a|a month rent but wants $2,500 for spare room for the guest. convention week. Five thousand visitors to the con- “Well, why not?”’ said one woman. yention have already reserved room |*“The hotels are charging $100 a in addition to the reservations made |day.” by"the delegates. . Mrs. Rasecrans Baldwin has eleven Millionaire” row on the Gold|rooms and three baths and asks $2.- coast is offering many of its choice[500 for its rental during convention mansions to visitors. They are will- | week. L o D G E s ing to give them up to the convention give up rooms in their own homes. Aristocratic north shore residents have already set the example but if the price they demand is tollowed by otherg, visitors will have to go homeless® after they leave here, if they pay them. Wealthy Chicago- ans are asking two and three hund- red dollars for letting their homes during convention week. All hotels here are booked. The last room was sold more than a l;jl(imt:ih agoA Prices for rooms in be coaxed into a rapid, continuous chigan Avenue hotel$ range from growth until well into October, they sz'?)t'ixoers]ilo(i "" day for a room. will be excellent for late fall and otels charge from 315 up. early winter use. Carrots are excellent when thus sown, provided the early sorts like French Forcing or Earliest Shorthorn are selected. Up to the™middle of July, Chantenay and Danvers may be sown. The rows should be about a foot apart and the drills an inch deep. Sow the seed sparsely, being careful not to sow too many of the small seeds. Sow also a few radish seeds of sucn a variety as Early Globe to mark the rows. Cover with at visitors for the period of the conven-| Subscribe for the Pioneer. least half an inch of fine soil and every Friday evening firm it over the seeds. Thin the car- at 8 o'clock. Miller’s Ta vorin asine the. tonder Toots JEGREE. AT 1 us| ender rool when quite smnllgfor soup and stews. FIRST Egggfin AND Repal r Shop The main crop of turnips for win-{& ter use is commonly raised from seed | | C- J. Winter, N. G., Tel. 362J Lodging houses, ordinarily charging 36 and 50 cents boosted their rates to $2 and $3 a night. Delegates will not have to roam Chicago streets in search of a place to live. The national committee months ago took up the matter of re- serving rooms for them. Women delegates will have an abundancée of rooms to select from. There will be MOST DESIRABLE PLANTiNG DATES Some Vegetables May Be Planted When Sun’s Rays Strike Slantingly, as in Early Spring or Late Fall— Others Should Be Planted When Sun ) Strikes More Direct Blows in Field Artillery Company (Written for the United States School Garden Army.) at Camp ' Funston e ee———————————————————————————————— You can easily arrange the differ- ent vegetable groups—those which are hardy to frost and those which are tender to frost. The time of planting of any crop depends largely upon whether it belongs to the first or second of these groups. For this reason you can plant the seeds of lettuce, onions, parsnips, or turnips as soon in spring as the ground is in good condition to work, even though frost may occur after the seedlings come up. But it would be foolish for you to plant at that time Manley Anderson, a Bemidji boy, who recently enlisted in the 79th Field Artillery at Camp Funston, is learning to be an expert auto-me- ichailic in one of Uncle Sam's trade schools. «This is the greatest chance I've ever had,” was Anderson’s comment when Major R. E. Frith, in charge of recruiting for the U. S. Army in Min- nesota visited him at Camp Funston recently. Major Frith went to Camp Funston to find out how the Minne- sota men in the camp were being |the seeds of tender vegetables like itreated. Sergeant Harry Jones of |sweet corn, ” beans, cucumbers, or «the local army station, received a re-|squash. port from Minneapolis today telling The time to plant depends, of of Major Frith’s visit. course, upon the weather conditions, “fvery place I went,” wrote Major {especially the datescof killing frosts. In general it has been found prac- men. - They were all. getting along |ticable to classify vegetables into 4n great shape. -Anderson is a stu-|four groups with relation to the time Bemidji Lodge No. 119, I 0. 0. F., Beltrami Ave. and 4th Si., meets ~ " OF WM. J. MOSGRIDE (By United Press) Devils Lake, N. D., May 20.—The 380,000 estate of William J. Mor- .gride, pioneer, was again in.dlstrict court here today when arguments for -a new trial were made before Judge Burr. The case centers around a will made by the deceased, leaving the ‘bulk of his property to F. J: ‘Merrick, a personal friend. Con- test’ was' made by his nephew,, who declared the deceased was mentally incompetent when the will was writ- ten favoring Mr. Merrick. “BANKERS TO ORGANIZE CALF AND PIG CLUB ting REGULAR BUSINESS J. P. Lahr, Clerk Phone 93 “dent in the auto-mechanics school. |of planting. These are indicated as sown W“mfl‘!fir.b .wm:]e ggg, Pu.:lgle RB. A. Hannah, Rec. Sec., Tel 719W 313 Second Street Phone 359-W T4 is one of the most/ thorough of its!follows: Top, ite Globe, and Purple Top kind in the Middle west. Graduates| Group 1.—Consisting of early cab-|Milan are good varieties. Turnip seed SELLS : 1y. This may || @ - BEMIDJ) LODGE 25 garage managers or expert tract-|radishes, onions, early smooth peas, |t0 Sow them too thickly ; \ . or 1gn- afito mecf:nics without diffi-|early potatoes, turpips, and mustard. be g"l'l"‘ded‘;’Y “:i"&“g ‘;“h c;’“‘ meal e — New and second-hand bi- culty with good pay. - |These crops may be planted two °"u eh““ :“t flen ""l’pl;‘gk?’“;l" Loyal Order of «anderson’s experience is typical|weeks before the last killing frost, |fully throug he fingers. Make the MOOSE, NO. 1452, 10 go to school, without having to|parsnips, carrots, lettuce, salsify, :’arnd cover with half an inch of sofl. Meets first & third REP AIRS = Kled as, caulifiower hin the young plants to 2 inches . pay. high tuition fees. At the pre spinach, wrinkled peas, t and begin using the roots for i sent. time he is learning more than|plants, celery geed, parsley, and sweet | 2Part, ‘“:1 tevgv"‘ using % & Cor. Minnesota Ave. and Third St. GunS, blcycles, lOCkS, cash Yo would get in most auto schools|corn. These crops may be planted |Soyps and stews as soon as they ar 8 P.M. B S e : listed in the 79th Field |rost T el wpulely el registers, typewriters and all Anderson enlisted in the e! . ecy. one 701W Artillery because it was one of the| Group 3.—Consisting of snap beans SKY HIGH PR[CB w‘u = fine work. . ‘Minnesota regiments. A large num- okra and tomato plants. These crops 3 ber,'of men from this state are in|should be planted two weeks after +is organization, according to Ser-|danger of frost is over. beans, pepper plants, éggplant, cu- (By United Press) D in 1 cumbers, melons, squash, and sweet| Chicago, May 20.—Three million BEMIDJI CAMP NO. done ora ba'rgaln m What we have’ potatoes. These crops can not be|dollars will change hands here dur- 5012, meets 2nd and . planted until all danger of frost is|ing convention week in the matter of 4th Tues. each month over, which is about four weeks af-|housing delegates and visitors to the _ Find out the usual date of the last|ing to estimates made here today. killing frost in your town. Indications were many visitors to The root crops are of special value [the convention will spend sleepless in the food supply because they are €o nights unless they want to park a easily stored for winter use. Some|mattress on Chicago’s Lake front and require a long season for growth, but | through the night. others like turnips and carrots, may More than 50,000 visitors are ex- be grown in a shorter time. pected to be in Chicago during the Even up to mid summer there is|exciting week and of these several still a chance to plant some of the|thousand may have to go homeless of this school are getting positions|bage plants from hotbed or seed box,|aré so small that it is difficult not ] cycles, guns, ete. of that of many others. He wanted| Group 2.—Consisting of beéts,|FOWS 2 foot apart and an inch deep Tues. each month .and saving money at the same time.” |about the date of the last killing|larse enough. GREET G.0.P. DELEGATES See Rube when yo j geant Jones. Group 4.—Consisting of lima} - = you Want a gOOd JOb ter the last killing frost. G. O. P. national convention, accord- of these, like parsnips and rutabagas|risk the marrow chilling lake breezes root crops for fail use. If these can|unless Chicagoans can be induced to By United Press) Devils Lake, May 20.—At their ALL OF THESE IN OUR sof North Dakota expect to organize a a calf and pig club among the boys and giris of the distriet. 'Farmers| and business men have been asked to cooperate. IF BACK HURTS | BEGIN ON SALTS Flush Your Kidneys Occasion- ally If You Eat Meat Regularty SPECIAL SATURDAY And MONDAY SALE OF , High Grade Monogram Pattern Hats We assure you that in this entire lot, you will find extreme values. Many of these have just arrived and are entirely differ- ent from any of the earlier showings. No man or woman who_eats meat| ‘yegularly can make a mistaxke by ‘fiushing the kidneys occasionally, says -a well-known authcrit{. Meat forms uric acid which clogs the kidney pores -so they sluggishly filter or strain only of the-waste and poisons from the blood, then you get sick. Nearly :alt rheumatism, headaches, liver trou- ble, nervousness, constipation, dizzi- ness,. sleeplessness, bladder disorders come from sluggish kidneys. The moment you feel a dull ache in the kidneys or your back hurts, or if the urine is cloudy, offensive, full of sediment, ‘irregular of passage or :attended by a sensation of scalding, get about four ounces of Jad Salts from any reliable pharmacy and take -a tablespoonful in a glass of water ‘before breakfast for a few days and your kidneys will then act fine. This Tamous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with lithia and has been used for .generations to flush clogged kidneys :and stimulate them to activity, also to neutralize the acids in urine so it no longer causes irritation, thus end- ing bladder disorders. Jad Salts is inexpensive and can ‘not injure; makes a delightful effer- vescent lithia-water drink which all SPECIAL NO. 4 at $2.98 Children’s trimmed Hats, for ages 5 to 14 years. These are all extra values, good quality, nice- ly trimmed, and worth $3.25, $3.98 to $4.50. Choice Saturday and Mon- day only $2.98 SPECIAL NO. 1 $3.80 You will find values of $5.98, $6.50, $6.95, $7.25. Why not save now. SPECIAL NO. 2 at $6.85 In this lot you will find more than 26 hats that have been selling at $7.50, $8.50, $9.50, $9.95, $12.50 and $13.50. Now for a special clean-up sale your unrestricted chance at $6.85. SPECIAL NO. 3 Shapes at $198 Ladies’ small, med- ium, large shapes. Values that have sold up to $3.50 and more. Buy your own shape and trimmings. DECORATION DAY For this day that we so much honor, we will be closed nearly all day. Get your needs supplied from here. Children’s Hats, Dresses, and everything else in children’s wear. Boys’ Hats, Caps, Blouses, Shirts, Hosiery. Ladies’ Waists, New Neckwear, Hose, Gloves, etc. ) Flags, all kinds, at two for 5c, 5¢, 10¢ to 75c. , | | 1 i I | | 2 e e e — . " A happy halt for acooling treat =sparkling Lemon-Crush! Delicate flavor = relief from thirst = with snap and tartness that braces. and freshens like the morning ‘Made by the exclusive Ward from fruit oil pmsu‘ from freshly-picked lemons, pure sugar and citric acid (the natu- acid of the lemon). - drink, Orange-Crush, are always do- -and then to keep the kidneys clean :an? the blood pure, thereby avoiding serious kidney complications. GRADUATION GIFTS This is the place for every suitable gift at prices that are absolutely right. Jewel Cases, Manicure Sets, Beads, Scissor Sets, Fountain Pens, Purses and Hand Bags, Toilet Sets, Cut Glass, Book Racks, Ivory Mirrors, Clocks, Ivory Brushes and Combs and other items in ivory. Silk Hose, Camisoles, Silk Undergarments, Georgette Crepe Waists, Gloves, Traveling Bags, Neckwear, Silk Parasols, Watches, Writing Sets and dozens of other items as well. Women Made Young 32fpieu -set. . ..$5.95 | 35-piece set..... ..$7.45 | 49-piece set........$13.75 prices that were cheap a year ago. Six different patterns in Decorated ware. 1 ;i “The world's standard remedy for kidney, ‘liver, bladder and-uric- acid troubles, the epemies of life and looks. In use since asousd w0 mitation ll CARLSON, Of Course § THE GOOD STORE ON BELTRAMI AVENUE

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