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i the \beayt] }u!y 4 qAn., 1 -—Union tent lhnt- Brnnch of Ches ! fng by Evangelist C. F. Weigle. VR g ) \ X 8 July 21-26—Redpath-Vawter Chau- R A RS of the h ‘tauqua. ‘line was’ emh‘ ished between the tov;; July zc zs—«county Teachers’. ex- : e % nuutlon of Bemidji. ¥ § g s S ’ ||'ny raanon ot "Q‘ et swtemher 6-11—Minnesoia State D 3 e e i L ol ihe. Iden oalr X : 8 . : B ithe propefties, fixed:up Sept. 15, 16, 17—Beltrami County \ g 9 o Yent fres to wqumen Wwho would WM“‘ e ; N-) ‘ ‘ <o |[7] | them nnd.take careof them. The only Bndak ¢ : stipulations made-{n selecting_tenapts | ; | are that they be respectable and t.hrlll'- = ty peaple who wiil take pride In main-) EEP: RESPECT FOR SABBATH . : i3 penia mio S0l ke o that they agree to make:all their own ‘expense. riter's Recollection of How Day Used to Be Observed When He Was a 8mlll ?vy. Love. as a Camoufiag To fall 'in love nieans'the surrender ing of ‘one’s normal capacity for: Jndg- ment, says a modern novelist. | It /ig| Imposslble bdth. to. loye. and crltlclu. Love turns every .goose_ in| My mother -was born and reared in little country village in western New fork. On the farm where my grand- 1 other lived, it was the custom to be- gin Sunday’ on Saturday night at n. The “hired man” came in y & £ Love is:/the - greatest.of Dk g » m the chores, grandmother put L L3 : can make way all her work n the Kitchen, and ANNAPOLIS FOUNDED IN.1604 [ MADE TOMBSTONE OF ROCK i ol c'r'ue:;';“' ,:",?:”’klz:; 7.7 little troubles.i¥Why wait until'th en the entire family gathered in the PR A e e nd | Probably New Yorker WIll Investigate | ness, ‘ingnity has.a., sort of, genlus, ; requlre e'xp xve repau-s'f st room and studied the Sunday chool lesson, or had a reading from the Bible, led by grandfather, and all the mily retired not later than nine ~ 7 8 e Hova Seonisjmay Tae it e nt‘:“ qulte' l;vnlleyhef:re ’I’ :)r(lm:: point out: the truth to you (as- they the earliest colonizedland in North | bent lawyer In New York relate !n.;h':l::::;fl:mg ltutu'ndmgr;o:: :1‘:: Ammm ca, with the etcepflonnfsr. Au- | bis friends a ‘personal _experience| certainly will), you either. Tose r. jm, the team that had niot been used | gustine; Fla, ‘where. the Spanish es- | which'he had one summer when, betng | temper o your friends, or spen 1 ey él] before was hitched up to the tablishinent ; was m.flg as: early as| Somewhat run down in health, he went | whole life.in :inventing mitigating cln- B g Is your plum nK u to ‘da X four-seated wagon and the entire | 3565. " Port, Royal, now the. little town Into the Adirondacks to. rest. cumstances. ' - In either.case you ard 2 : ' 'beautiful medem Ko ler “Columu i gamily, 1ncluding the “hired” help, went | f Abnapolis,’ was founded .in 1604, | One day, as he was wandering aim- inevitably and quite properly regarded | 8" .~ bia’ Lavatory '(as illustrated). or o e ? h. There was preaching serv- three years before the English settled lessly through the woods. he came up- | as a fool. ‘Do not . imagine that you fine pew. Kohler “Vweroy”- Buil from the | can love with discretion, ' win . the y 5 in the forenoon,.and then we ad- | 8t Jamestown. = The brave. French [ on a buge boulder. not far ) R would add greatly surned to a lunch for ourselves and | ploneers ifound: it ‘mecessary to' sus- | railroad that runs along the shore of | thrills, at the. same ‘time retaining the g o team. Then we went in to a Sun- pend thejr colony for three years, but 8 lake. Listlessly he began to carve feputation . of well-halanced B achool service, and after an inter- | the " settlement was ‘re-established in his name on the rock. ‘but gradually | That 1s Imposslhle—mxcharlnge. there was another preaching serv- “group of Acadians. + warmed to the task.and chiseled ' zeal- R T after which we hitched up and | The Acadians were in almost con- | ously away until hé had wrought hoth e Blowly back to the farm. ‘stant conflict’ with' the English. The | name and date with_various embellish- That was the way Sunday was xept | colony fell into'the hands of the Eng- | Ing flourishes. western' New York a little. more ek and was each time returned As bhe was proudly surveying the fifty. years ago. I can ‘remem- |0 French before the English final- | result of his labor, an elderly. back- ‘hearing my mother say that when Iy captured it in 1710.- The Acadjans | Woodsman appeared on the scene.. Aft- .was agirl in the same New York remained steadfast in their hopes that | er 'the customary. greeting, he dex- te village, she was not allowed to French rule would some day return, | terously shifted his pack to.the ground. walk except to the cemetery and back, | but their hope was destined mever. to then with a somewhat quizzical air Sunday, and was not allowed to be realized. They. however, persisted surveyed the ‘lawyer's work. " read nny't;o'oks except the Bible and |J&’ maintaining their identity. ‘even “Qn'l_te a bit of art yo s Book . of mrtyrs."-—Chmum 'sgainst the English Insistence that | there.” he cbserved. gravely. a. : $ th ahandon thelir allegiance to their The lawyer accepted t.hls -tribute nnconntry complacently. Thc “descendants of the Acadians, “Kind of curious how things come numbering 300,000, are to be found in lbout.” he: went on. “Now, .the first /Maryland, Virginia, the &rqllnn. time a train was run into: these here Ceorgia “and Louisiana. ‘When ''the | woods it come in contact with a'tramp, ‘Acadians were expelled from the Basin | long about here; and that there boulk of Monas, Grand Pre, ‘when they re-| der marks the spot where we buried | fused to take the oath of feaity to the | him.'- Now, here he fs provided with a English sovereign in 1755, many of them | first-class tombstone and’ an . inscrip- escaped to the wilderness 'and ' later | tion that anybody might be proud of. drifted back to-thelr former homes only | Kinder curious, ain't #tY” - ... : to find them occupied by new settlers fmm New Englnnd states. b umgm,. m,.““_ Y T Apropos; of ‘the ‘popular intersst ‘m Rebuilding Guatemala City. .‘,"A'n"""' "I‘""‘"t" correwpondent says: Guatemala city, 'in" the republic of{ experimpent 1n umconacioyy ration may.be made in -thi the. same name, which ‘was the scene Take a b.cent plece and to it (ch of one of the most violent earthquakes fin e 0,16 av st e silk, thread with a_ bit.of :seal 4n.«Central American history, ~during wak Theh iake an &t ‘ apty tombler and the latter months of 1917 and the early suspend the nickel in the center of.the part of 1918, is now being :gradually ginss, holding the thread tightly be- Tetigiit, tween the’ thumb and finger and’ rest- Guatemala - was for centuries the ing. the elliow on .the “funny bone.’ home ‘of the Maya-Quiche Indians. At| mpan without conscious volition of the' Quirigua are located some of the most muscles, thlnk of its movement east, remarkable ruins. in the - Americas— west, ‘liorth ‘or-south, or: returning. to monoliths - resembling Egyptian obe- the center. You will find that the coin lisks, from the top of which gigantic, &y obey the ‘thought, ‘although - you faces stare at the intruder. Excava- give consclously no dircction for the tions in the vicinity have revealed the| u,vement.”—From' ithe Outlook. ground plan of what must have been a remarkable and imposing temple. A bulletin of the National Geographic society states that in:the mountains of WBGHT IN GOI‘D’ southwestern Guatemala live pure- blooded Indians who are known' for ~| their physique, cleanliness and scrupu- lous honesty. s Before He Carves His Name on When you: fall .in lov Ancthér Boulder. In North ‘America, With Excep- thq of 8t. Augustine. P ‘The many ople who call us.r o ‘2 "larly prove our work high gude an ogf charges nlways fdir and reas able.” - woman with ' very moderate 160) you frequemly do) ‘and your. friends 've got 3 Anclent Bricks Well Made. ) : Of the' durability of the anclent J bricks the ‘remains ‘of ancient.walls and courses that go back to prehis- % toric times bear witness, So strong 5 are the well-made sun-dried bricks e ARG dhat they are found as a foundation AR many: courses deep, beneath the pon- derous stone work of anclent temples. The remains of the ancient town, now known as El Kab, still exist, with a wall constructed entirely of such bricks, still a solid mass. These bricks now, as in anclent “days, .are. 0 . made, with. ‘mud from the Nile” and chaff, not straw, ‘but the admixture ‘was by no:means always required, as the Nile 'mud dJiffered considerably in different places, and in second-rate brickmaking the mixture of “tibu” or chaff was not used. But in great works, such as the greater wall. in- closing the temple group 'of Karnak A which was made under the impulse of the government at the time, this chaff . was always used. X Buvscribe for The Ploneer. Meredith and Lady. Haebnh. Lady Butcher In her “Memories of George Meredith,” recently published, gives the world not a little. new infor- mation _about the novelist which 'is both, significant and extremely enter- taining. Here IS one of the passages rlie quotes from her diary which shows his amazing power to paint with words: “Mr. Meredith went with father-and me to see Irving and Mrs. Crowe (nee Bateman) in‘ ‘Macbeth.! Dhrlng sup- per he explained the acting of the sleep-walking -scene :to mother, . and s o e o | — rllmg Cahmets b This Is What St. Paul Man Says of Tanlac—Had Suffered ' . Eleven Years Ancient H. C, L. The H. C. L. is no brand new phe. nomenon of our own day. It was old as far back as the second year of Klng Darias, about 520 B. C, “Ye have 'sown much,” Hag,al an orator of his time, taunted his towns- men, “and bring in little; ye eat, but ye have not enough; ye drlnk but ye are not filled with drink; ye cldthe you, but there is none warm; and he that earneth wages earneth wages to put it into a bag with holes.” Haggali's platform, his scheme for reducing that H. C. L., was the build 1pg of & new temple, WANTED ke toContractfor LR Lm'nted Amount . kAED Sweet Cream to Be Delivered “If everybody knew how much » good Tanlac has done me there isn’t anyone who wouldn’t think as I do— that it is worth its weight in gold and should be in every home,” said Gust Kirchiff, 493 West Central av- enue, St. Paul, Minn.,, an employee of the Foote-Schulz Shoe company. : “When I started taking Tanlac I i S had been suffering from spells of 1 nervous indigestion for the past eleven years. Whenever these spells came on.me I would bloat up some- thing awful for two or three days at 2 time and have intense sharp, shoot- ing pains in the region of my heart. These attacks aiways left me in a very weakened condition and I was unable to work for several days following . them. Many a night I would walk thie floor in agony that was almost unbearable, and I could never get a 3 : good night’ ep; for when I wasn’t ik lying awaki ith pain I would toss i ; and roll from one side. of the bed to the other.on account of nervous- ness, and always got up feeling tired and wornout. I was also very con- stipated and frequently hnd severe nervous headaches, and was in a bldly run-down condition generally. “Since I began taking Tanlac, how- ever, all my troubles are things of the past. It has built ‘'me up ‘and strengthened me so that’ my work doesn’t tire me any more. "I never have a headache and my stomach is in splendid condition. I haven’t had an attack of nervous indigestion since I started taking . Tanlac, and my ap- hands from nose to ear, he said: ‘My . | ¥ dear Mrs. Brandreth.'I assure you that, SR | A ess she came through 'ber hands'like 'a e ; Ay Sl em u.s corpse stricken with mania in the act < PR I 3 3 of resurrection’ 1"—From “Book Gos- *ip.” \ b knwmmandeoumy—uvuls&ozs%w woodtummeandhulfiryum_m ‘ i ,_4.\ Oflica Furniturs Allsteel files are ‘the wYmid?nd’ ok against fire, dw.\vemm. and/rc Whether you'need “desksYfling cabinetsy, waste baskets,} you; areXcettam{to‘find!;mf A 'Fe -dr;w'fihu "cabinet l'q : rn ::rwm p-'s;-.'-\m j:!;] petite is so good I can hardly get . iprogressive need among the *Allsteelline of office furni enough to eat. I have been telling Direct to Factory f 'makes the YdrawersYalide Lcasil geq\npment ‘that belongs with successs - everybody I could about Tanlac, but e, 5 ; land. noiselessly” 5 7 I know I can’t speak to everybody TR SRR AN NG personally, so I am glad of this op- portunity to tell others what a grand PIONEER STATIONERY H OUSE Koors Bros. Co - S0 eI medicine I think Tanlac i (The ‘All-Steel Store) id‘fll}- Tanlac is sold in Bemidji by City Ty 3 Pl Drug Stare and by the leading drug- BEMIDJI AR 3 Lk Phone 799-J A N MINNESOTA gists in every town. IllIlIIIIllII|IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIlIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIlIIIIIIIlIIIlIIIIIlIIIlIIII