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; icks of Remer spent s:n- ‘~ urday here on bnslneu ; ot Koora ice Take hgtne a br{; 4-5tf cream, A: ’Plu Bemld!l <‘ Z erleith ol’" \Rémer was a tor on Sunday. X M. D. &efl. of Wlndofi spent t)u ; & day hereflday!n !- euq Fresh, sweet milk and u-rem. lpld at Ganter's bakery. Axel umuon of.Virginia: was’ ‘ Saturday vis 4 R W D y of Shi lin wag a b\lndns \(hitor in this cuy‘ d Fred Miller of Pige River was a vlsltor in Bemlddi\nn Samrday. Kirk Kinney of lnternatianal Falls i spent Saturday here o businegs. } o Jol P Saunders of Backus was. a3 A business visitor in the city today. : E.K. Anderson is. serving- on the Federal grand jury at’ Fergus Falls. $50, 000 m loan on: farms: Thy “:'‘Dean \Land cu Bemldjl, Mn;l:, - X i )= -Hugo Schmidt otCass Lake Was a _ business visitor in this city on Sa!ur- . day. { Ray: Johnson of Gonvick spent the ;wkrend with friends dnd relatives ére. LOTS 01-" HAY NOW at Courtney g‘;ed and— Seed Company. Phono Saturday H, R. Gillette took & mix- ed carload of came to the St. Paul| ¢ market. Iohnj&‘ Grey left Saturday for a . few days visit witl friends at Grand ' Rapids. = Mrs. Peter. Larkin of ’l‘urne River, was a-business caller here batweon tralns Saturday \Missel Kate Lathsm . and Irene Kolemel of Blackduck were visitors here on Saturday. = A William F. Munch: of -Crookston, game: warden, ‘was a. business visitor | r here on Saturday. "Mr. and Mrs. Joe Stmpson of Remer f- were among’ the out of town ‘visitors k hore on Suturdly A dance at Carr Lake school Satur- Inight,/ November 13. Music by Mrs. : 4t11-15 ' Mrs. ijam Gurllnger of Spur, vas among the out of town bulneus -um ln\me city- today. 3 R W M Taber of. Park Rapids and A. G. Wedge of Minneapolis were vis- ltm in this city yesterday. Al 3 W.LA:/Botemiller, Fisher, J.' {Johnston/and P.' Klebs of Bertha [were among the Siturday visitors here. Mrs, Mable Saunders and Miss na Keeser of Turtle River, were tween -train .guests of Bemidji | jriends Saturday. t \'Vhsn you next néed feéd try the ourtney Seed & Feed Co., where orices are.right. At Grinager's Gro- L iecy on’ 3rd stree 9-94t f..Mr. and: Mrs. J.\W. Crandall;-of Buena Vista, were the guests.of Be- midji friends while. transacting busi- ness In the city Saturday; A 5 e T i Ladies’ and gentlemen’ ‘ponged and pressed, 75 cént; ual 6 other cleaning jobs.' Swiss.€Tean- 28411-20 suits Rt 3 "at the.Armory Thursday, November 18. Music by Schiuck’s six- piece jazz orchesjra, just from Win- niws Extra ladies 25 cents. Ev: ybod; 4£11-18 “Misses necll Holton ot Shevlin, Ethelyn “Dennis, Gris: Olson, Edith Bckmay, Sihga Sletten and Anna [Furnse h ot Bagley were Sunday vis- itors ‘in thh city. bnt euh pajd Yor’ Liberty Bonas B:-Hooley at Northern Gro- durlng the day,"or at'the 7-29t1 “l’! CO hrlhlmkhotel evenings. {|for fhe week. 10:6u v | The price’is reasonable. * ou uichmp-‘y' the remains there. D., is visiting with Bpmidjl hlsnd! 8. C. Balley left ms morning m&_ Grand Rapids, Where he will conduct } a state land, TR J William Riddell of Turtle Rive transacted business in Bemidji be- '.wepn zruim aturday. Y ¥ John l‘ Sandeen transacted” bustc ness i Bemidji the latter part of the week.- -Bagley ‘Herald, You don’t take any photograp! | post cards from Rich Studio- uni they please you, 'Phone 570-W. 29 10th street. 26t12-15 Mesdames O'Néil, Campbell and"W. '|C. Covey were Bemidji_ yisitors on Baturday.- gley Herald. 3 Mr._and 'Mzs. Carter Cutu\‘ and| son, Robert, returned to their home |* in Viroqua, Wis., after a visit of two weeks with relatlves and friends” in the cny i 'l‘herz wil}) be a big bénefit dance in the L.0. 0. F. hall on Tuesday, evening, - Nov., 16, by the Royal Neighbore. Every one cm-dlally in- vited. = N2d11-16 Prof. J. W, Smith is coqfined to his home today on account of illness. He retorned this morning from Owaton- na where ‘he witnessed the football gamg Saturday and i3 now suffering lron."n eavere cold. Nothing mor: npproprlate. nothing more. acceptable than & beautiful Christmas. cards. Seé thé splendid as- sortment -at the Pioneer Stationery Store. We engrave or print them. 11-13tf George Stein, ity glerk;- was call- led to” Superfor Sunday morning by the death ofskis mother. The boly will pe taken to-Eau Claire, Wis., to~ day. Yor burial, and: Mr. Stein ‘will /You'll want Christmas cards thls yéar t6 send to friends;’ We have a fine asgortment from which to choose. Beautifu rds, bealtiful sentiments engraved or printed. Wheq you pass the Pioxieer Statfonerl Store step.in and méke your gelection. 11-13.8 WITHOUT FAILS OR RIVETS New. Sciéntific Method o' Shlpbulldlnu 8een in Construction of Vessel .8t Liverpool. _ Can- you jmagine a ship without ag nail or rivet in all its hull? Do you ollect the visit to the shipyards and the army of men nailing huge thinbers to the skeleton frame of a ship? And, 60 In the next yard, the swarm of en hammering the white. hot rivets in the great plates of a~battle ship? Oné's’ frdagination' 18- stretehied (consid- erably to ‘conjure am method feh a1l ‘thess” workmen' may ' ‘have™ thefr tofl reduced’ or eliminated. Yet this is today's developtient In the science of shipbuilding. The steamship Ful gar_has Jjust slid down the Liverpool ways Without a-nail or a riyet In-its hpll. “From stém. to ‘stern the tel are electrically wélded.. The Full is an ofl driven cargo steamer of tons. She .18 now undergoing final tests. ' Expefts declaré that..she will not only stand all the tests required, but her success as an' odpan carrier Will revolutionize shipping: We may now calculate what a .boon the elec trical welding process will be if great armies of men have.to bhmnmorted on the: “bridge across the seas.” Not only dees this' method release man power for other tasks, but it endbles shipyards to turn out mighty stcel llllpl within a short space of time. ‘The Average Hair Crecp. The Bible tells us that the.hairs of 6ur head are numbered, but it does not tell us even the approximate nuin- her'to a square inch, - But some one has figured this out for us. He counted thé hairs in' a square inch on’' many heads. On the nverage head there ‘are a fllonsandlh to edch square inch. Find out the number of square inches in your scalp and you will, soon know the npproxlmme number of halrs on it. We are also told that r\mu will suspend a one-:pound wefght. Th fore an average ‘head of halr shopld be able to support the. commued weight of two hundred people. . Don't ‘try it.—Ponmlor Seience M Not Exactly Church Music. Reverent_Catholics of ) demanding an ln{ufln_tlofl vhy the Dunkirk cathedral chimes, instead of playing the Angelus, dre-now calling’ the faithful to worship by exhilarat- ing jazz tunes, with fox trot music pre- dominating. e Mrs, Phillip @il and children re- Mi)ler nnfl daughter, Jane. 15 /'with-a pure MontmArtre touch, not *wmmm. And frie son was formerly Don’t watt too long before’ er your Gifistmas cards.’ ‘We-have § beautiful :Fards with envélopes match. sentiments. and beautl- ful color -.embossing andl printing. Your name engraved in the saine style type as the sentiment.~ Do it now and have it over with. 'Order . at the Pioneer Stationery: Store. 11-13tf 3 e i his viication in'| Micompanied;by her sister, Mrs. H. H: ringer must have had en-| WHO KNOWS THIS RING? reugnlzel -it, communicate with the Fox trotting is not especially' ramy in Dunkirk, but the cathedral bell | -Paris, for, according to his astounded listeners, he has béen playing recent- _misiing a single nm——bondon u-u. The ring-here photographed, of 14- carat gold and without trademark, | was found_on the body of an Ameri- | can soldier now buried in France. The | war department requests that lhe! jéweler who made it, or anyone who; ~; Pesssne &.“.“----“. mect,u msuwu IS WONDER Ocoln-ih-ouan Road Is No\Longer an . Unrealizéd - Dream-—Specifications i+ =~ Not Dowlded. mntlnefltal highway qonnecting New York \vlt San. Fraacisco, fmproved |’ .Lhroughqu s-length and forwing\a .| backbove fof7a: great natlonal system of nrter{nl roads, was only a.dream in the mipds of a few. Today the acebm- .spllsluneut ‘of. this great memorial route stretching from ocean to ocean 18 as- . sured. The Llncdln-hlghw;ny breathes the twentieth cedtury.. In'years te conie it will"be jadarned, ‘as. were the Roman “roads, .| with: - statvary,’ - landmarks, “honfes, . hotélg-—a phnorama of . the ‘achievements man, It will be the path of’ advancenent, a golden chain linking the Atlantic to the Pacifie;’ * The, motor truck s in its. lpfe y and highwWay freight transportation an adjunct to. the railroad is only jllll heglnnldg' But the Lingoln: Highway assoclation feéls that 1t 15 well within its province to act gs.a clearing house for the best: thiought in'the United the probable require- rterial Ametjcan high- ways in the next 20 years. . . What will-be the shecifications for this wonder road? That hag not yet been 'decided. The associagion. real- izes. tifat it-is undertaking a difficult "problem, but’ ft' belléyes ‘that it will ~have, ln_golvlng it, not only the inter- est and snpport of the American ppb- Iic, -but the co-operatioh of the engi- neers and highway.commissioners, and also the best’ technical expertl the country affords. / Some of the finest ooncretq roads of the' country are to be'found in Michi- gan. These have a standard thickness at the sides of six and a' half inches, About the best stretch of highway we have at present is the Lincoln high- ‘way from New York to Philadelphia. It is 96 mifes long, and every day there passes over it 'an aVerage of 2,000 tons. - This road-is eight inches deep at its cehter. = This is the thickest surfacing’In the ‘United States today. ‘Whether the show road of the world will be .of this thickness or deeper is under- consideration. There is some umnght of king |t ten .nnd a half inches-.at the sides and 12 inches at the mid g for it raust be permanent, If- tlie added advantage of this thick- ness”‘overbalatices the addNional .cost .of canntructlcsn then the plans will call for this depth. It may be made even thicker than this. No.one knows until’ the: ¢éngineers have expressed thelr plank.; .The width must also be cufifully thought out. fLhe I:mclntlons plang’ do not stop with tlie” construction of the road it- self, . 5 It has 1ong been apparent that ultl- there must ' develop along 's. mgip routes of heavy pas- " treight trnnsportmon. a istinctive type of accommo- pnrtlcnlnrly to such ‘trafic & d 8l hted perhiaps ‘in —the Such accommodations, trafiic and noise ters, would provide for dusty tourists, or the mntu‘amport vehicles, canvenfent:night stops where every effort wmfi particulag 'type of patronage. In con, Hon-with such accommo- dations &frangements would be pro- vijed for those tourists or travelers desiring ;o’mmp out, . Free camp sites are even_now being -provided.—By | Fred Gilmin Jopp in Populir Schence | Monthly. s Stagnation Prevented. With a perfect.’ highway system there can be no stagnation of trans- portation at ‘any time. Normal beeds promptly and properly met will pre- vent perplexing and costly emergen- cles, e A SRS ’ to Progress. - Tmpro t of public-highways, In addition to*airways, raliways and wa- | tepvays, as avenues of conveyance s | vital to, our progress and prosperity. — e Highways Cost ‘More, The buflding of highways cost $2 {200 a mile’ more today than it di ll | 1016, Q Poor Roads Uncertain. Poor roads cause hauling by truck Qpartermaster General, ‘Cemeterial Di- vision, Xashington, D, C., so that the ‘| dead hero may be. definitely identified ond the ring Mum-l to llll relnlu-. certatn. = 2 Sabscribe tor ‘nn Dally Pioneor. \ Seveniyesrs ago the Idea of a tradh- | b be made to cater to this |, | to- be much more expensive and un- | 7 X 'EASTERY STAR HOLDS ) nmvm MEET TUESDAY The Eastern Star will have its reg: ular. meetipg . on Tuesday: evening, November 16.-Initiation services will I} -the: of the order far a’social time after the Rstreen- planned »omplet(un of the work. ments v\vm be served. 73 ne lls up here the, spedmen were_found’ was once tite sfte of the old Wistar Glass works, foundefi nearly two hundred yeirs ago by Caspar Wistar, who wa¥' of Aus- trian Jextractlon and titled. 'pne?ennlyh‘anlnm seum ap, _find of old' Amerjean The.specimens found were ifor the ! | miost part fragments ;o bottle and window glass, ‘of whichthere have not beén many specimens untit now. The | museum {8 how making a'study-of the types-of glnss that were produced in the early days of Pennsylvanisz and New Jersey. The’prst glass to be man- ufactured In this country was ihat of | a‘Virginia company located at James- town, but the first produced success- fully was that of Alloway, then known as-Wistarburg.. C lznry, Albe ta.—Wheat to the que of $1,772,082 has been shipped from, the province of Alberta to the Umted States from abnu? September Brst to. October 8th, according to the United Staes consul here. - The num ber of bushels shipped in that penod Grand 7330 and' 10¢ and totslled 823 205.and the gx;ce realized'.per bushel was he consul states that -this is about times the amount of wheat ed in 1915, which was the sec- lnge:t whe\_ crop in the history e’ province. ROYAL PEBSON WELL GARBED Awunun of Pplnnd Had Clothes Suf- llclm for Bqlm-M—Alu Had Other Idiogynorasies. ™\ —_ Genuemen of fashion today are mere- ‘paupers when it cotnes to -attire, as ggmpared to. what Kln¢ Augustus m of Poland ‘deemed necessary to his comfort. He filled tw) great halls with: i clothes, and had a speclal watch, snuft box, sword and cané: for every oue of his ‘hundreds. of suits, To go Wwith them he also had 1,300 wigs. Five ar- tists’ were. kept busy painting minia- tures of the clothing and keeping these paintings In a catalog! that the king n)ight select) trom each day as he rose. He' took .the lpvely countess of Cozelle, as hlq‘ wife, and the mere fact that she had ‘a hushand already mat- “tered little. He appeared at her door ohe day with a horseshoe in one hand and 4 bag of 100,000 crowns in the other.. The gold hd«ossed at her feet sto demonstrate his’' wealth and gener- | ous instintts, and-the horseshoe he | broke with his bare hands' to demon- | strate his strength and determination. The lady, impressed, got rid of her hus- .band at once, ‘obtnining a divorce of. the sort that allowed- of remarriage. Suspiclous historians have hinted that the horseéshoe might have.been filed a bit before the. kingly hand tore it apart. R THE PIONEER WANT ADS BRING RESULTS To-Night 9:00 25¢c -~ A MAN-MAfl) RbMANCE MANNED BY A MAID ! It’s Comedy—Al] Comedy Operator who invested her Legacy of $1,000, ‘ gowns, etc, to capture a wealthy husban trouble she gotiinto:; © Also‘Showmg COY COPPER SWEET —IN— the story of a Telephone 0 in fine and—the A HANK MANN TWO.PART COMEDY. COMING—THURSDAY ONLY ‘Wanda Hawley ’ . “HER BELOVED VILLIAN" Reviewed in the December Motion Picture Magazide .-IIIIIIIIIHIIHIIIHHIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIHIIIIHIIIIIflIIIIIIHIlllllIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIlIIllIlII REX Tues. & Wed. IN' HER NEWEST REALART PICTURE William Fox presents - WILLIAM “The C ‘of the Law” A smashing, thrlllmg tale of love and lawlessness amid the pines and snow-capped peaks of the great Canadian wilds, Story by E. Lloyd ‘Sheldon, Clift, directed by Sco RUSSELL o ® scengrio.by Denison tt Punlap. AComing—*“While New York Coming—DMarshall Neilen, in “Dinty.” ’ Coming—Douglas Faitbanks in “The Black Fox.” Coming——Nazimova; in “Madame Peacock.” Sleeps.” A R O RO AR RO sverage {dllllIIIIlllfll IIIIIIIIIIIIIII Kick :lp the .Old Ji&;y and drive dnvm—N,ev'e‘? was' a show like 'this ’ul:—Never A THE FOREST BLAZED ARQUND THEM! Past them plunged wolf and mountain lion, bear.and = moose, in a frenzy of fire-fear. Beyond the fire-belt lay safety for the beasts; for the man the gallows waited if he DID get.through! And still he struggled on! OF TH! NORT From the neovel by JAMES OLIVER CURWOOD The begt since “Back to God’s Country.”” A blaze of-forest fire in one reel! A blaze of drama in every reel! A Firgt Ndtional Attraction. Keep Track of the Tracks leading to the Rex tonight and you'll find most everyone is going to see “NOMADS OF THE NORTH” " James Oliver Curwood’s greatest picture of the north You’ll See Some Wonderful Anima!s’ FOX SUNSHINE COMEDY Rex Union Orchestra 7:20 and 9:00—10c and 30c = Tady Roses Dau g’hter A GParamount dricrofl Piclire David Powell and Holmes Herbert - . Picturized from the World Famous Novel by MES. HUMPHRY WARD Comedy—“A SEMINARY SCANDAL" . TWO REELS ELKO ToNight and Tues, A GOOD HORSE RACE —is.a whole lot like modern marriage, dccording to “The New York Idea.” They tear along at such a fast clip that ~ there’s no sitting down qu]etly and enJoymg life, and the whole idea of everybody in the race is-to get separated from the nearest competitor the minute the Judge says gO. ' Whether you agree with the “I\ew York Idea” that “a divoree in time will lead to nine,” or not, you will want to see ALICE BRADY in the clever, snappy and yet thought-provoking satire on married "life—* YORK IDEA,” st the e ELKO Wed. and Thurs.