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CARE O, U .. Some Hadn’t Notice . T saw a number of jokes in your| column’ last ht,” a. sympathizer . tells, us!, but he doesn’t say if they Wweére any good, nor does he give us| ‘any. - Well, thanks anyway, old-top, some, people h.adn;t n‘oticed any. - 3 Things, We Notice. That ;woman. . has just as much’ right to.chew. gum as has man and: that they quite frequently make use | of it.. 7] ¢ 1 ; That man is becoming an-artist at'| doing mosaic'work ‘on his face with ‘a’ safety. razor. . Sometimes he is a_ cubist. : L That, it is still the fad to wear the | goloshes unbuttoned although -the ! weather is somewhat warmer than it} was when the open front style was | first adopted. | That bald-headed barbers are the most enthusiastic . would-be ~sellers of hair’ restorers and tonics. That the guy who gets a black eye '] hasn’t always lost his fight. 5 That if a newspaper makes a mis- N a firmer' tendeney: in. the - market, | ¢ . s T TN LUMBER WARKETING - S o © & Chevrolet Parts : : : We Have a Complete Stock ll‘rlnchgvuk"‘ in in_ th 0 T R 3 § oo godonal g Telephone or Mail Us Your Order of the Normal school .faculty. and a | reading was given by Miss Dinwiddie |\ also of ‘the Normal school. Both numbers were much enjoyed. ' Refreshments 'were served at the close of-'the entertainment. COMPANY K.WILL BE . . MARKETS ‘HIDES take, everyone sees it. & ¥ L E ‘ N X ' 7 i That if a newspaper tells some-|Cow hides, No. 1. .. 1 AG0 . INSPECTED TOMORROW |erican Lumberman, though the vol- W. R. GIBERSON, INC. i thing straight, nobody believes it. |2t Biars: 2o o B ‘eeiTe Ty —Everything Automotive g That everyone wants to get their |KIPP Rices, 0. 5, 0: ‘oo ec | All members of Company K are re- oA A j ; Caif skins, No. 1, Ib :6¢-7¢ | 1 uired to be present at the inspection ; ot Deer Rive L ] ’te,'r"h"{‘ tl?e front D hat you get, | Deacons, eachi .. .. 50c-60c { T v night with all équll’pment en. i _A. H. Hanchett and: wife, formerly b s SR i at when you w you geb, | jrorce hides, large. $2.50-83,50 | S em. ' The meeting has been he country are putting forth more of Malta, ‘Montana, arrived in the ] B B 6 i city this week and are staying at‘the called for eight o‘clock.. Fallowing |eftort to stimulate business thamg, ;" home of I T. Smith in the POTATOES 3 1t iy . the inspection, ‘the payroll: for:ithe |fori.many months and an unusual i Chicago, Feb. 16.—Potato receiDts; 1ag¢ nalf of 1920° will be signed. by | feature. of this is the liberal 'd"e"}'l'i):vs‘.m;::i:l:‘:]i::%se'r.’m‘l‘;:}l&?l:;fi;; you don’t get ‘it. That-this is the last line you have read. T | THE POCTOR SAY WHAT “MEDICINE” SHOULD BE 33 cars. Market weak. -NoTtherw|ty,se who'have pay coming.. Several |tising space “being taken in many whites, sacked and bulk, 90c to 95¢ | who ‘were not*paid in th » Y {Mr. -and Mrs, Hanchett will .make Red River Ohlos, sacked $1.40. - h o sl ha) theik ok o8 $hs tarwi; which they Picturesk AN R B of the year, will receive payment 15/! Cofpunitios by them, ar, Jpayment o) Pr A 3 the. new payrolls. ‘' R Production remains at a. very lo i DI AT A . ebh, ‘so-that although I8 fa v P 8 The inspection is'to he held’ 3 hat although orders! so far GIGANTIC BLAZING COAL | vooms of the Bemildji Civic and Copi-|00ked by the producers have e o cedded the. amount of lumber pr ‘I;‘yrfl!e(r home at:North Branch to UNDER CiTY OF SCRANTON ™ eee ssectzio” : 2 R " {duced. Stocks. on ' hand at shipping day ‘after viditing at the E. J. Clovi | CITY TEAM DEFEATED: - ] €; “ful thing in the world.: _that it should work perfectly. And nature " !points; therefore, are being gradually home for the past few days, Mr. Ek- Sees that'it ‘does” work “if mot interfered ! reduced ;and it i ing. i {erg 4s'a brother of Mrs. Clo (A R (Continued From Page 1) AT MINOT LAST NIGHT ingly diflicul‘:t E b;fi",:‘ r:,grd :él::re‘n:r g e Clove Ffwithe s vio ¢ a commission from the state depart- ; ixed i : ! The doctor spends. y: ; S v 1ls ; T e i mixed “items.” On- the Pacific coast. REBUILDING HOME TOWN rhs ¢ S o ment of mining. Concrete walls,| The Bemidjl city basket ball team |in the Douglas fir, terrif | > 3 many. complicated ‘parts of this machine. . . ug] itory. there LINCO! : four feet thick, are being built in all | met defeat lastnight at the'hands of [is a good deal of lumber which still OF ABRAHAM LINCOLN “He knows ‘enough -about it to realize that tunnels and crevices leading to the|the Minot city aggregation, accord- |may be obtained at hargain prices M he can’t tell just‘what’s wrong with himself A | fire. 3 : 2 ing to word received here late last!because the material was produced | (By United Press) when he feéls bad. He calls another doc- Pictire of a negro, shoveling coal| 1Ifi sections of adjacent veins, re-|evening. The contest' terminated |when sawing upon other orders and| . Petersburg, Il., Feb. 16.—Work o 3 DAd. . TAE : at midnight. mote from the scene of the fiI:e. t;.m; with the score 48 to 23. A sgmnd is of a character, grade or working, is being rushed here on the -recon- tor. w A 5 i 5 Coal isn’t very light, you know. peratures of 170 degrees Fahrenheit |game will be piayed tonight “With |ngt in grest: demand today. In the struction of the deserted town of Old| " -, So when you feel “off” yourself, don’t Lot w have been rcorded as a result of the ul:e l-nmle te?lxin“ Oncchekr:turq_htrlp, South there is some stock of 'a like Salem, where Abraham Lincoln spent| ; try to guess what's ‘fiong Let the doctor == Respect for Age fire, ines of ‘the Peo- | iag lopale will.play Crooliston Thurs- | character, but. there the market is much of his early life. . Five of the T s, obseyvatiotia e pros } Observant Waiter—*“What_is the | The abandoned mines of the fi“" BY; WIEAL: e brisker -and a firmer tendency ‘in original buildings of-the town have O -0fb; ELon.A 8.0 B .he_pre- matter with your eggs, sir? Haven't ple’s Coal company, cm:mutg];:a flng quotations is to be noted, with here been’ copied and ‘are complete ‘and SgflbES the “medicine” to help nitire work i ‘they been boiled long enough?” with the Central mine, where there CONDEMN TERM “FAIR SEX” :m there’ an -increase -ini price on the work is_ progressing on the re- right ¥ ageop - ik L AR B i Victim, — “Quite long [ enough, (18 located, contain large quantities o i items in particular demand. maining 26 buildings. Judge G. E. “Then we follow his Gidera u.cfly thank you, but not soon enough.” |88s: 1f the fire- should come in con- 3 4B ‘Because so many of the mills are Nelson, president of the Old Salem : il | . om o J tact with this gas, an.explpsion would | English Women Go on. Record as Op- |shiit down ‘and because 'production Lincoln league, is directing the work A s ey B Now We Know result, the effects of which are incal-| possd to Phrasa “Belonging to euch.'a low ebb it is becoming of laborers furnished : by the state. Doctors declare that twisted ver-|culable,’ according to experts. There | 'a Bygone Age. ry difficult indeed to ‘place orders| The state legislature \recently appro- poEsr tebrae caused the constant talking' of |18 1O immediate danger of this, the —_— "foF special cutting stock. This means | priated $50,000- for the reconstruc- irl. in Illinois.. Now we're | experts add comfottingly, and it i8| Tt has been‘officially declared in Eng- | that the market is firm for timbers|tion of: the town. It was at Old | f,eifl?:;fl.fi;‘{“‘,‘}‘m,,f“::}’d it the doc. |predicted that within a few weeks, | 1ang that women, en bloc, are heuh:r and lumber if this class and so far |Salem that Lincoln studied law. Ann | through the present method 6f fight-| i eayn nop “fasr At lenst the Wom-}BS. this end of the business goes it | Rutledge, the sweetheart whose death tors are ‘right, many things will be b y benefited, ~ The war will soon be ing dfl"" flames, the fire will be smoth-| o1, proeqom league, under. the leag. |15 to ‘the (liking of ‘the producers.|is said to have tinged Lincoln’s whole erpes ership 'of Councllor Margarét Hodge, over, the maje can’spend a quiet eve- | 217 3rd St ning at home, and the quiet folks can enjoy a motion picture show much . better without the usual line of chatter which accompanies the explanation of the picture’s title. . oo A La;Carte Postal A St. Paul woman in endeavoring to obtain a divarce states that her husband refuses to speak to her and ‘writes notes when he wants to com- municate with her. Additional grounds came forth in the allega- tion of cruelty. Our opinion is that if more. women adopted this line of communication with their husbands there wouldn’t be much use for di- vorce courts.. A .man can read al- most nnything‘wit‘hout flinching. X Contributed The only contribution which Twen- tieth Century has received to date is as follow: Please send us some more, INCOME TAX FACTS ALL SHOULD KNOW Many inquiries from newlyweds as to the amount of taxable income for the year 1920 are received by the Bureau of Internal Revenue. In many cases both parties were ¢m- ployed up to the wedding date and the point on which advice is sought is whether/ the joint income must be shown. The ruling of the Bureau of Internal Reévenue is that if they were married on or before Dec. 31, 1920, a return must be made of ‘their .combined income, if it equaled or exceeded $2,000. Separate returns of income of each or a return of their combined income may be filed. If the net income of husband or wife ex- ceeded $5,000, separate ‘returns should be filed for the purpose of correctly computing . the surtax which applies only o incomes in excess of that amount. The newlyweds are entitled to a $2,000 exemption plus the additional $200 for each dependent under 18 years of age or who is incapable of self-support because mentally or physically ' defective. This exemp- tion may be divided in any proportion in separate returns of husband and wife if filed that way. ' “And remember that March 15, -1921, is the final date for filing re- ‘turns and payment wf one-fourth of the amount of income tax due” is the admonition of the Bureau of Internal Revenue. Rich Kitchenware. Tn the days when the Roman em- pire was at its Leight, if you went into the culinary department of an ele- gant establishment you would find saucepans lined with silver and pails of various descriptions richly Inlaid with arabesque in siiver, and shovels yery . handsomely Yand intricately JAPANESE PAPER WANTS . 'TO EXPEL MISSIONARIES Tokio.— (By Mail to United Press) —The attention which has been called to the burning of certain missionary schools in the ‘Chientao district. on the ‘Korean border which were sus- pected of being used as headquarters | for insurgent Korean bands, has once more brought the missionary ques- tion to'the fore in Japan. The Hochi, a sensational sheet with ‘considergble circulation, suggests that it may be best to exclude missionaries from Japan, just as the United States excludes Japanese laborers from her shores. ““Christian missionaries are disturb- ers of the peace of the Orient,” says the Hochi. “Not only. do they insti- gate rebels in China and Korea, ‘but they dare do so even ih this country. Should we not follow the example of America and prohibit the entry into - |this- country of missionaries.” Christianity is assailed from an- - | other angle by the {Kokumin, ‘which, as has several other papers, expresses ing altogether too temporal. TP STREAMERS” WIN CLASS DEBATE AT M. E. CHURCH The debate,’ given by members of the “Up Streamers” and *Philathea” classes of the Methodist Sunday school, was largely attended last night. = The subject of the debate was “Resolved that the United States take the lead in world disapmament.” Three girls of the Philathea_class, Misses Florence Bagley, Lucille Jamieson and Jensen took the af- firmative and three boys from the “Up Streamers,” Paul Bagby, William Jamieson and Raymond Farr, -the negative. Decision was rendered in favor of the negative, by the judges consjsting of Dr. Palmer, M. W. Deputy and Rev. Willlam Kamphenkel. A whistling number = was given during the program, by Mrs. Ness the belief that this religion is becom- | has put'a ban on thé terms “falr sex’ and “wenker sex.” = “Spinster” and “mother-ii;law"” ‘have also been put on the feminine index. - Further, ft. is averred, once and for all time that: Woman's judgnient-is as . good. as manjs, £ e Wornen talk less than men. Women ' can keep a secret. “One itritating custom,” sald Miss Hodge, “comes from an age when to be falr 'was. woman's. first: and . foremost duty.' The only women: who - counted were for ornament rather than for use. Women may be the weaker sex physi- cally, but certainly not morally. ' The name mother-in-law is still the stand- by 'of farces and comic literature.- 1t is an‘{dea from some bygone age.”— London Chronicle, Big Task. i One of the big cguses of delay. in the movement of freight is the heat- ing of the journal boxes of car axles, coromonly called- “hot ‘boxes.” one journal box in a train gets seri: ously hot it Js necessary. to stop the whole ‘movement of traffic, until -the condition ‘can. be remedied. ,This makes very. timely a serles of tests now being carried on at Purdue' uni- versity, to determine nccuynfie‘ly‘ the benefit to be derived by sing ‘vefiti- Iated 1ids Instead of the solid 1fds now almost universally used on, the axle journals.. The tests consist.of records.are kept of the temperature attained in each class of apparatus. Medals Long in Use. Medals are; of ancient origin. The word medal, or medallion, was first applied to productions of the mint-of | anclent Rome, or struck in provinces under the empire. Medals were made by belligeréht natlons: during the war and awardeq to soldiers in recognition of distinguished service, Telephone Statistics. ‘When, eight-hour ‘runs with heavy loads at ] high. gpeed,, during which - aceurate |, WANTED- TO BUY—Team, haruess. and some cows, also some chick- ens. Address H. A. Glick, Box 826, or call at Bemidji avenue and 26th sireet. % 3t2-1% a ‘cheap car. Address H. A. Glick, - Box 826, Bemidji. 3t2-18 8. e ' EVERY. ADVERTISEMENT IN YOUR PAPER IS A . SHORT-CUT. ADVERTISEMENTS MAKE IT POS- " SIBLE TO TELL YOU IN A FEW MINUTESALL - ! YOU WANT TO'KNOW ABOUT THE SERVICEOR " ARTICLES YOU NEED. | ; Pt Rl . ATAGLANCEYOQU CANSIFT WHAT INTERESTS' 'YOUMOST AND IN A MOMENT YOU KNOW JUST WHEN AND WHERE TO GO FOR WHAT YOU. - WANT. FIGURE HOW MANY STEPS, HOW MUCH NEED- LESS WALKING AND TALKING THE ADVER- TISEMENTS NEIGHBORS. THUS SAVE YOU AND YOUR \LIZE THE GREAT ECONOMY ' OF ADVERTISING IN YOUR i e oo e e 5|0 S~ * | DALY PIONEER WANT ADS BRING RESULTS _ -