Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, November 16, 1920, Page 3

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.*'".Bpgt cash paid for Liberty_Bonds. e I o ! : _oort g Srd sre: \ . city ‘Monday.. visitor’here on Monday. cream. _ 4-5tr i — ’ E: A. Frende of Cohasset was a-Be- - midjt visitor on Mor(day. ; Fresh, sweet milk and cream, sold;| . 1at Ganter's bakery. 10-6tf . B. 'R. Burns of Ironton spent the day in this city yesterday. Thomas Anderson of Nebish was a ' Monday vlgltor in this city. 3R B._B. Mosher of Crookston was, a Monday business visitor here. .. D. L. Wright of Virginia was a bupiness visitor hére on Monday. Charles Newquist 6 Fosston spent Monday in this city on bus?n‘eu!. Y Antiernon ot C,roo’thon.'wv:ls a Bemidji business yisitor yesterday: \ iy $50{000 to loan on farma, The Dean Land Co., Begiidji, Mt 1:10."7“ Thomas A, Randall ‘ef - Puposky lpon‘ Monda’y'ln this. cify on ‘Dusi- b . kR Rt Lopae -/LOTS OF HAY NOW at Courtney Feed agd’ Seed Company. Phone - 861 Y 10-20tt fi H. Dickinson of Internatjonal Falis sperit the day here in business yestérday. i ~-.7G." Morrison, Jr.,. of Red Lake, waé & business visitor.in the city on /Monday. £ ¥ Mts. William Keeler of Wilton; was a befween train business caller in the "A-car load of- New York Baldwin apples, $1.95 per bushel basket at Troppmans. 3 11-16-tt “Mré. Emma Hinshaw of Wilton, motdred to this city and spent Mon- day on business. ...~y o ] Mis| J. Collopy of Northern, was among the out of town business call- ers Nere yesterday. Se¢ G. B. Hooley at Northern Gro- cery’Co.,. during. the. day, or at the Markhaim hotel ‘evenings. * Mps. Charles Van left last ‘evening toriglnnqapolh, where she expects to apertl -the winter months. You. d;pn t take any photographs or gost “cards from Rich Studio unless they plesse you.. Phone 570-W. 29 TUESDAY EVENING, NOVEMBER 16, ol Ranger ot St."Cloud Was 3 . Tl o h?m_o' a brick of Koor's ice|. 7-29% fnorthern points. 1920 yhu(l}fu“ Cal—il:o at 11 Cents'a yarfi at Tropp- mans.’ . J 2t11-17 That big 255 pound New York cream’ cheese will be-cut -next Mon- day. :Leave your order today. Tropp- mans. £ 11-16tt Mayor L. F. Johnson has as his guest Mr. Nelson, a merchant of Elk River. Mayor Johnson and Mr. Nel- son -started out in a hunting trip yesterday. Men’s annual _turkey: supper at the Presbytérian _church on - Monday night, Nov. 22, from 5 to 8 o'clock. Price 75e. 1t11-16 Harold Kerr, manager for Clifford & Co., willeave Wednesday morn- ing for International Fa]ls and other He expects to be gone about a week. Men’s annual Turkey supperat the Presbyterian ', church on Monday Price 76c. : 1t11-16 _Rec. H."R. McKee, pastor of- the Wirst Baptist church, Duluth, and 10th ‘street. 26¢12-15 w0 . 5 “F. Kilborn and F. W. Craig of kis' were athong the out of town busingss visjtors in Bemidji yester- da; hing moreappropriate, nothing /acceptable - than a beautiful as cards. See thé splendid as- nt at the Ploneer Stationery B ‘We engrave or print them. The Price is reasonable. 11-13tf M4 A. Thomphon 'has’ been con- fned Ao her home at 404 Minnesota formerly pastor-of the First Baptist church of Bemidji i in the city to- day énroute to Laporte where he will officlate at the funeral service of the Dally brothers-who were accid¢ntally drowned a week ago near Ghthrie. Reév. McKee will -return to Bemidji this evening and will be the guest of the H. E. Rice family while here. Men’s annual Turkey supper at the Presbyterian church on Monday Prices 76c. 1t11-16 % ety WITHOUT NAILS OR RIVETS $eide for several days past With ill- | New gcientific Method of Shipbullding ‘Wieh you nexy need: foed try_ the Courtney Seed. & & eed Co., where pridei are right. At Qflfll‘fi” % 8 Doris Giinble of Bt. Paul, left Sun by way of Duluth for her home, after a three months season with' the LaFontisee millinery. . Ladies® and _gentlemen’s sults sponged and pressed, 75 cents. Bqual -to other cleanifig jobs. Swiss-Clean- ers. ‘Phou €5. 28411-20 Mrs. C. R: Koch returied Sunday evening to her home at Huron, 8. D., after _m#(ng two weeks with_her parents, Mr, and Mrs. Thomds Bai- loy.\ Dahce at .the Armory Thursday, November 18. Music by Schuck’s six- plece Jazz otchestrg, just from Win- nipeg. Extra .l 25 cents. Ev- erybody fnvited. l 41118 Jesse Higbe and Non, Walter, were called to Rochestér’ Motiday by the serious illnéss of theformer's mother, Mrs. Theron Higbe, who is confined to thé Mayo hospital. * Yow'll want Christias ca yéar to seud-to frietds’ We Havea finie Adsortment from which to choose. Beautiful cards, beautiful sentiments engraved or printed. .When you:puss the Ploneer Statignerl-Store Atep.in and make your selectfon. 11-138¢ Don—ft walit too long before you ord- ;jyour Chriétmas, cards. .,We have utiful’ cards with ‘envelopes to match. Néw. seatiments hnd beauti- ful color émbossing -and printing. Your name ergraved iin the saiie -style type as the sentiment. Do it #ow &nd have it over with. Order at thé Pioneer Stationery Store. er b “~8een in Construction ¢t Vessel at Liverpool. Can you imagine a ship without a pall or_rivet in all its hull? Do you redolléct the visit to the shipyards and the army of men nailing huge phinbers to the skeleton frame of a shfh? And, over In the next yard, the, swarm of men hammering the white hot rivets In the great plates of a battle ship? One’s imagination.is stretchec censid- erably to conjure a method by which all these workmen may have their toll reduced or eliminated. Yet this is today’s development in the science of shipbuilding. The steamship Fulla- gar has just_slid down the Liverpool ways without a nafl or a rivet in its hull. From stém fo stern the plates are electrically welded. The Fullagar is ah oil“driven cargo stemmer of 500 tons. She is now undergoing final teits. Experts déclare that she will not only stand all ‘the tests required, but ‘her succéis ‘a8 an ocean carrier will revolutionize shipping. We may now. calcnlate ‘what.a. boon the elec- }flm welding process will be if great ‘armies of men haye.to be transported on the “bridge ‘across the seas” Not only "does this method release man power. for other tasks, but it enables shipyards 'to turn out mighty steel ships within'a short space of time. ROAD DRAG MOST BENEFICIAL ‘Implement Ts ‘Used Aupcrwcr Roads Are Built—Ruts Are Removed 9lckly by Its' Use. lfthenlsgenulorlplecevf machinery to economize the growing or Kandling of crgps Tt seems to be -forthcoming sooner or later. But it remained for a farmer to invent one of ‘the simplest as “well as the most beneficial of implements from the standpofnt of universal comfort brought about by its use. It is used wherever men build roads, and ruts disappear after it has taken a trip over them.” Measured-in dbllars and cents it costs only a<trifle, but meas- ured by, the service it gives, it is worth miflions. We refer to the road drag. Before it was invented the ronds were worn only by ‘travél and it often Ahemi| it in e day: took to do It. The drag does| Olaf ll]nrkn{nn:s néw statue, “Columbia,” which has already™won ‘great | praise., Columbia is”depicted as shielding with her sword, the eagle. . She i3 | 4, younig nation, vivaclous and enthusiastic. LSS ROYAL PERSON WELL GARBED Augustus of Poland Had Clothes Suf- ficient for Regiment—Also Had Other Idiosyncrasies. o Gentlemen of fashion today are mere paupers when it/ comes to attire, as /compared to what King Augustus III of Poland deemed necessary to his comfort. He filled tw) great halls with clothes and' had a special watch, snuft box, sword ‘and cane for every one of his hundreds of suits. To go With them ‘he also had 1,600 wigs. Five ar- tists were ‘kept busy painting minia- tures of the clothing and keeping these paintings In-a catalog that the king niight select from, each day as he Tose. RA He took . the lovely countess of ozelle as his wife, and the mere fact that ifhe: had a husband already mat- _tered little. He\nppeured at her door one day with-a horseshoe in one hand and a bag of 100,000 crowns in the other. The gold he tossed at her feet to demonstrate his: wealth and gener- ous fnstincts, and the horseshoe he broke with *his bare hands to demon- strate his strength and determination. Theé lady, impressed, got rid of her hus- band at once, obtaining a divorce of the sort that allowed of remarriage. Suspicious historians have hinted that the horseshoe might have\been filed a bit before the kingly hand_ tore it apart.- y Remove Seed Pods. _ 1t seems unnecessary to suggest that each day you remove all dead leaves and flowers, but some fond gardeners do neglect ‘this phase of the work. You know if you don’t do this two things are sure to happen: First your garden appears untidy, and second your flow- ars develop Seed pods, and this means the energies of the pldnt are all de- voted to maturing seeds and mot to sending forth new growth, and hence you have fewer and fewer and finally a0 flowers.—Exchange. o1 ——————en Taking Care of indoor Plants, To make ferns grow rapidly indoors and look fresh and green, chop a few\ oysters fine and mix with the soil and | then water well. This may be dene every fortnight. Wash the leaves of your rubber plant with. a cloth wet with olive ofl. This nourishes the piant and keeps the leaves dark green find velvety. Add a few drops of am- monia to a quart of lukewarm water when you- water house plants. The chemical acts as a tonic and fertilizer and makes the follage fresher. And be careful, when real winter weather. comes, not to water your plants with water too. cold. Water running frora a faucet in January is far too cold for tender: plants. Add enough hot water to make the drink you give your plants lukewarm—as rainwatbr aiways 1s in summer time, . Radio CBntrol for Alrplanes. There can be doubt that if the war bad, lasted a few months ‘lenger ' we would have witnessed the leading ar- mies employing great -fleets- o6f air: planes controlled by radio means. The United States. ariy “bad péogressed JPretty far along. this line when the srmistice was déclired. The same can be sald for Germany.. Now- we learn that the French: have demon- strated that five or six smaH and in- expensive bombing planes, without pi- “ghepherd” in-a larger plane through, the means of Hertzian wavea~Scleritie | fic American. . Marriage Promotes‘Long Life. . Marriage, according. -te Doctor: Schwartz of Berlis, ‘fs" the njost Im- | portant factor of longevity. Of every 200 persons who reach the age of forty years, 125 are married .and. 75 unmar- | ried. At sixty the proportions are 48 | to 22; at 70 years, 27 to 11; and at b years, 9 to 8. Fifty centenarl- 4ns ‘bad @il been marrfed, - - - {church will hold its first public meet- ernoon, at 2 p. m.” :All applicants for |NORWEGIAN LUTHERAN LADIES'| lot, ‘cin be stccessfally guided by a | PRESBYTERIAN: LADIES WILL MEET WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON ‘The Presbyterian-Ladies’ Aid will hold their, regular ‘meeting on Wed- nesday afternvon in the basement of the church, . The hostesses will: be Mesdanies E, Y. 'Wilson, C. Warfield, and E. J. Willits. A cordial, invita- tion 'is “extended to ‘all. - NEWLY ‘ORGANIZED LADIES’ ' "AID MEETS TOMORROW The newly “organized Ladies’ Ald of the English Evangelical Lutheran v ing at the home of Mrs. O. Olson, 516} Fourteenth street, on Wednesday aft- membership ‘must register their ap- plication withithe pastor prior to the meeting. ' | AID WILL MEET TOMORROW | The Norwegian Latheran Ladfes’ Aid will meet tomorrow afternoon at | 2 o'clock in the-basement of the| church. Mesdames Aubolee and| Gasperson will be the hostesses. Ev- eryone is cordially invited. EASTERN STAR TO HOLD | INITIATION THIS EVENING A mecting ‘of - the Eastern Star| lodgze will be held tonight in the Ma-| sonic hall at eight o’clock. There will be initiation of candidates. All mem- | bers are asked to be present promptly lat eight o'clock. ~ - | A.F.&A M, TODGE MEETING | ON 'WEDNESDAY EVENING There” will be a'regular communi- cation of the Bemidpi lodge A. F. & A.'M., No: 233, Wednesday evening at elght’o’clock. There will be work in the third degree. Every member is urged ‘to be present. - Cardinal’s Hat Sy:nbol of Office. ‘The pecullarity of the cardinal’s hut is that 1t Is not to be worn. On one occasion only i8 it to be seen on the head of the cardinal, and that is when the pope himself ‘places it there'as a symbol of its owner’s elevation to the Sacred college. When the cardinal dies it is placed in his coffin. The hat is of a deeper red than that of the robe worn by the cardinal. It has long heavy silken cords, each with 15 tas- sels at the end, hanging on cither side. The crimson robes which, like the hat, denote the cardinal's office, are made, of cloth which for several generations past has been supplied by a firm of cloth merchants at Burtscheld, near Aix-la-Chapelle. The process by which the .dye is-distilled 18 & jealously . guarded secret. ] The Domectic Optimist at Wik, “My husband bas never spoken & cross word to me.” “Datghter Is always at the head of her iclass, and she doesn't have to | study a bit Hard. She really seems to have more time to play than any of the other girls.” “T'm so glad you came, T assure you. One extra for dinner doesn’t matter.” “So glad -you called! I didn’t care to go to the matinee, anyway.” “My husband could get a much larg- er salary by going with another house —in fact they are begging Lim to do | it—but his present employers have ' treated him so nicely that he just | won't leave them.” “Never mind breaking the vase—it was not one that I cared especlally for."—From Life, i - | Not Exactly Church Music. | Beverent Catholics of Dunkirk are demanding an- investigation why the Dunkirk cathedral chimes, instead of | playing ‘the Angelus, are now calling the faithful to worship by exhilarat- Ing jazz tunes, with fox trot muslc pre- dominating. Fox tiotting is not especlally ram- pant in Dunkirk, but the cathedral bell | ringer-must have had his vacation in Parls, for, according to his astounded Iisténers, he has been playing recent- Iy with a pure Montmartre touch, not missing a single note.—London Mall, Printing Cards. 1 Folders Dodgers - Receipts " Statements Bill Heads Packet Heads . Letter Heads Call at Pioneer Office Phiofies 922 and 923 I | { | | ! GOODWORK 1S | port. ‘Winnipeg, Manitoba.—Winnipég's \company will realize $30,000. first venture into the:hemp industry lauinched this spring by the Western Fibre company, will result in a suc- ceasful first \year, according to: re- There were 526 acres of hemp sown Dby the different farmers of the! | | ; Niverville dibtrict,-and-the probable yield is around 300,000 pounds. With tha price at’20 ‘cents per-pound. tlie )\ Grand Thurs. . OUR SPECIALTY ents. Elsie C ergyson ‘Lady Rose's Daughte‘r” 1\/;1'5. Humphry Walzd's world famous love story ELKO LAST TIMES TONIGHT ( | Society Aiit)mmetic 2 Young People equal 1 marriage 1 marriage equal 2 quarrels 2 quarrels equals. divorce 1 divorce equ 2 marriages ALICE BRADY» JFeNEW YORK IDEA’ asiis "unonorf' miTcheLL . RERBERTBIACKE MARY “MURLLO But she had failed to reckon in the Greatest Common De- noniinator—which, as every- body knows, is Love. Among its thrilling scenes is a great horse race taken at Belmont Park. Elko Seed 5 cost- the-‘eompany -about-$8,500--and- machinery @ little over -$20,000;-s0 that’ with a moderate expense for reaping the first year's operation will show a smhll profit. 2 aek “While New York Sleeps” film of thrills, pathos;:se tion, heart throbs -and: punch’ 4 2 COMING ; The idol of the west; Tom} Mix, in “The Texan.” & NEW YORK'SLEEPS . - 'OX PRODVCTIO BY JAMES B. HENDRYX ~ | OIRECTED BY LYNNF. REYNOLDS . 7:30 and 9:00 10c and 25¢ Grand To-Night . =Male" The adventures of a telephone girl in. search of a husband ‘COY COPPERS ’ A'HANK MANN | TWO:PART COMEDY- .11I!IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIlIIlIIIIIIIIIlIIHIIIIIIIllIIIIIIIIIIIIilIIlIIIIIIIIIIIllIlIIIIIllIIIIIllIlIIl ' REX TaDay & Wed. William Foxspresents | WILLIAM RUSSELL —in— “THE GHALLENGE A smashing, thrilling tale of love and & lawlessness amid‘the pines and snov‘v—capped peaks of the great Canadian wilds. Story by E. Lloyd Sheldon, scenario by Denison Clift, directed by Scott Dunlap. 13—“The Flaming Tongue” . BRIDE Rex Union Orchestra | il Matinee 2:30—10c and 25¢ Evenings 10t and-30e 9y ¢

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