Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, February 21, 1921, Page 3

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. _Falls bpent ‘THE BEMIDSt DALY PIONEER * PAGE . THREE : : E. Jarvis of Margie 'was a Sunday visitor in this city. \ . - Albert Peterson of Gemmell spent Sund:y in Bemidji.- "~ fake home a fbrlck of Koorn ice cream. . - § 4-Gtt N. Lindeen of Kelliher was a Be- midji visitor, yesterday. Cldrente Oftgerden of Fertile was a Bemidjg vlluor on Sunday. Empty flour sacks at Ganter’s belk- ery‘ 12-4tf S, R. Selvog of Rédby spent Satur-} day in Bemidji on business. Mrs. W. Gage of Coleraine was a Bemidji caller on Saturday. We_have settled the shoe problem of your neighbor, why not you? Con- | sumer’s Shoe Co. . 1221 E. W. Boyce of Backus was a Sat- urday business caller here. * Fiesh, sweet milk and cream, sold| at Ganter’s bakery, 10-6tt John Neary of Northome was a Saturday business caller here. T. Hillstrom™ of Sonway spent Sat- urday ln the cu op busi] ness. FOR ANY KINDWE res k’zd’fieal, see or write 'Willits & O'lsqq, the land men. ., | T 151t Frank P mier; " ‘of Imernu )onal day in th!s clt San ef of porte was a 'Be- mldjx : usingss visitor on. Saturday.: T My - ‘We must sell a-lot of shoes int your vicinity to make the low price pos- sible. Consumers Shoe Company. 5 1t2-21 ' ‘Mrs. F. E. Craver of Turtle River, visited “Beniidji friends Saturday. J. D. -Wlinley of Fosston was a Bemidji business visitor Saturday. “When you next aeed feed, try the Courtney Seed & Feed Co., Where prices are right. At GrinageNs Gro- cery on Third street. 9-9tf « Clarence: Worth of -Northern was a caller on Bemidji friends Saturday. J. W. Crandall of Buena Vista was a business visitor in the city Satur- day. Siab wood, $350 per cart load, 16- inch Jack pine in the roupd, $6.50 ner cart load. i delivery. Bemidii Mfg. Co, 12-13tf x A AiTrTY— EE. Schulke of Tenstrike was a business visitor in Bemidji Friday and Saturday. George Fort of Eckles is reported to be ill at lis honié with' inflamma- tory rheumatism. Is the shoe pmm,m bothering you? Tay the Consumer’s Shoe Co.—one pair or a dozen. One price to all. % 1t2-21 Mrs. John Maltrud of Becida was shopping and calling on friends in Bemidji Saturday: & —— ‘Miss Ruth Greer, teacher in Grant Valley district No. 10, visited friends in Bemidji Saturday. $50,000 to loan on farms. The Dean Land Co., Bemidji, Minnesota. 10-27t¢ ‘William Lennon, county cofimis- gioner, of Kelliher, spemt Saturday in the city o business. Martin Sorenson of Solway spent Saturday in Bemidji, réfurning to his home Saturday evening. Cash paid for Liberty bonds. G. B. Hooley, Northern Grocery Co. 1-19tf Mr. and Mrs. Nels Runde of Redby were among the out of town visit-| ors in Bemidji yestérday. A. C. Smith of the Bluebird Lum-| ber company of Tenstrike was in the city on business Saturday. ‘H. Swenson, merchant of Hines, was a business visitor in the city the latter part of the week. For clean milk and cream go to the Home Bakery, Alfalfa Dairy. 1mon3-1 N. E. Given returned Saturday from Minneapolis where he spent the past week on business matters. Mr. and Mrs. Allen Forte of Eckles were the guests of Bemidji friends while shopping in the city Saturday. Clayton J. Winter returned to Be- midji Saturday after spending the past week in Deer River on business. Mrs. D..C. Dvoracek and daughter ‘Catherine spent the day in Cass Lake as-the'guests of Mrs. Genrge K‘lmba]l. For any kind of a buy, snle or ex- “Minn. SATIN FROCK FOR SPRING With the advent of Spring fashions,. satin assumes the place, of prmumcnce as a fabri for general dressy wear. design with long-waisted blouse is déveloped in_two shardes of brown, the darker tone forming the vest and skirt. Collar, flare sleeves and peplums are hemmed with the decper shade of. satin and there is no other trinuni iing. Me- - dium size requnes 334 yards 40-inch light and 234 yards 30-inch dark satin. + _ Pictorial “Review Dress Sizes, 34 to 48 inches bust. ceats, . 7 . city on matters ol huslness tuday. " A B Witting of Blackduck at- ‘tended the ‘méeting - of the Land QClearing Association in the city on Saturday. David Gill returned. yesterday morning from Chicago and Minneap- olis where he has spent the past week on business: —_— Roy Buor of Blackduck was among the visitors from that city who at- tended the land clearing meeting in Bemidji Saturday. A fine baby girl was born Fridiy evening to Mr. and Mrs. C..R. Welch at thejr home. Bo}h mother and baby are doing well. .Charles.Gardener-of :Nebish repre- sented the Pleasant 'Valley Farmers’ club, at the land;-clearing meeting held ‘in Bemld]i Baturday. H. Z. Mitchell 'of the Bemidji Sen- tinel returned ‘Sunday morning from the Twin Cities where he has spent the past week on buginess. . Olaf Ongstad left today for Min- neapolis whete «will ; visit Mrs. Ongstad, who is confined to a hos- pital there for medical treatment. Your wife and children would need three meals a day whether you are here 6r not; a corpse does not need much. See Mitchell, New York Life man, 1t2-21 ‘Mrs. J. L. Gilbertson and daughter the day at Cass Lake as the guests of Mrs. Phelps’ mother, Mrs. Oranger, rand friends. Mrs. Emma Hinshaw, who has vis- ited her brother, James Paul of White Rock, South' Dakota, for the past two weeks, returned to her home at. Wilton Saturday. / C. F. Dickens, one of the pioneer farmers in this county, spent the day in the city on business. - He re- turned to his home near Puposky this afternoon. Little Alfred Dechaineau had the misfortune to fall :Saturday after- noon and cut one of his hands. Dr. | McCann took three stitches in it'and along nicely. William Barry and H. N. Latter- midji Saturday on ‘business matters. | They were present and active at the | ing association. Fred Juneman of Summit town- ship spent Saturday in the city on tended the organization meeting of association. KEHSTITCHIHG Hemstitching, silk or conon, 10 cents per yard. ‘Button covering, ‘pleating. Acme Hemstitching Shop, 227 West Lake street, Minneapolis, 1t2-217 \ i NOTICE FOR BIDS ] | pendent School District No. 7 will Tuesday, February 22, 1921. Proposal I. For the sale and re- moval of all:salvege and debris -of the - high Bcheol buiiding to ground level with the‘exception of boilers, 1boiler fittings and all plumbing, heat-* Bert L. Noble of Nebish is in the OIL SPRAY SOLVES PROBLEM Shifting Sand Dunes Form Serious .Obstacle to Improved = Road Maklnu in Northwest. | smtting, up a hi wa,y soon after it is com- to..improved Tro: pnrts of-the col tr.y particularly in "the' Northwest, .To remedy the evil, | the' bureaw of, public_roads of\the . United States Depnrunent of Agricul- ture has eleDJosed a mpre extensive application: of :the agency that has| heen used in the past to lay dust on ordinary highways—oil. .~ Fifty-three miles of construction of Dalles eastward: ltes through sandy An Improved Road in the Northwest. | cBuntry, in many places of a voleanic | ash as light as flour. As fast as cuts are opened up and fills made in this light soil the wind whips out the fill| slopes and sand dunes creep into rock cuts, completely blocking the road. pleted have formed a serious obstacle building in sowe the Columbla river highway from The| % {at 2:30 o'clock. Oil is the only: agency yet found to See MISS LEET PLEASANTLY SURPRISED ON SUNDAY music and other entertainmentsand at the ciose of the afterncon delieious | refreshments which had been brought | Eb‘)l’ the self invited guests were serv« e i Those present included Misses Lu- cille Young, Louise McCready, Hazel Laqua, Josephine Parker, Ruby Leet |and Messrs Preston Gibson, “Phil | {Denu, William . Walke Charles Hobbs, Earl Baildy and Claude Bai- |ley. PRESBYTERIAN ENDEAVOR TO HOLD PARTY TONIGHT | The Intermediate Christian En- {deavor sqciety of the Presbyterian |church will hold a hard time party in, the basement of the church to- Inight, beginning at 7:30. A large |attendance is urged. PRESBYTERIAN MISSION SOCIETY MEETS TUESDAY | The Missionary scciety of Mrs. J. J. Conger at ber home, %01 | |Lake ‘Boulevard, Tuesduy afternoon | A special program I members and their friends are cordially invit- |ed to alten(l. . SUNSHINE CLUB T0 HOLD 3| MEETING TOMORROW KIGHT | The ‘Sunshine club of the Royal | Neighbors will mpet at the home of {Mrs. Oscar Krantz, 709 Irvine ave- !nue, tomorrow evening. . J. {Laqua and Mrs. Ben Kopman will as- (&ist Mrs. Krantz in entertaining. All |Royal Neighbors are | I | I the | Plets ant Presbyterian church_ will meet \\Hllr iIn Gow | entitled to | Subscribe | was bring one friend. All members are requested, to be present. credit Belongs to Franklin, Everybody knows that the versatile Franklin was the originator of many things. But few realize that he was the first American cartoonist. “Join or Die)” the famiiiur sketch of the | chopped-up serpent, with each piece t A number of friends of Miss Ruby representing one of the Colonies, was sand _dunes which cover|Leet gave her a pleasant surprise entirely the work of Franklin. Even party yesterday afternoon. The aiter-| the cutting of the type-metal was noon was very pleasantly spent with ' gone by his own hands. This fitst | newspaper carfoon ‘appenyed 1n; the | Pennsylvania * Gazette, 9, 1754, | and was a device for' urghig united ! action upon the Colonies at ‘the. time of the French and Indian wars, It may be noted also that he engraved a map of the sicge of Louisburg and published it in the Gazetfe. This is said to have been the earliest attempt at illustrating news.—Asa Don Dickin- son in New York Times. Britain’s Coronation Stone. The Stone of Destiny once rested within the walls of Dunstaffnage cas- tle. The stone is better known in I3 land as the Coronation stone. What- ever its origim, tradition has it that it brought hy Symon Brek Spain to Ireland and was from there taken to. Argyll and placed in Dun- stalfnage, where it remained till Ken- neth McAlpin, the first king of the cots, ‘transported it to Scone about the year 850, whei | It remained il 1206, when it was r maved by Edward I to Westminster abbey, where it now rests bencath the coronation chair.--Christian ~ Science Monitor, The Wonderful Tigris. From Bagdad to the sea, more than 600 miles; the Tigrls Is navigable fox auy boat not drawing more than about cight feet, " River gieamers go to Bag- dad, though they often run aground ou the shifting banks. IS for The Dumly Ploneer the hand is repotted to be getting] {ell, bankers of Kelliber, were in Be- | |meeting of the Beltrami Land Clear- | business matters. While here he’ at- | the Beltrami County Land Clearing ! accept proposals up to 7:30 p. m. | Ruth, and Mrs. R. A. Phelps spent} i The Board of Education of Inde-| i | A ‘The steam. atomizes the oil and sénds | projected in the Wirection of the wind | stop the trouble. The equipment used } to'spray-the crude oil consists of two | supply tanks, or drums, in which the | oil is carried from the /storage tank | at the railway siding, and a tractor, which - draws the oiling rig and sup- plies the steam through a hose to the‘ compressor tank, which is carried on | a trailer. The oll is heated by the| steam and forced through a hose with a nozzle conslsting of a half-inch pipe. it in a fine spray for 100 feet or more, depending on whether the spray is or against it. For obvious reasons, spraying is usually carried on in the direction of ‘the wind. | Where sufficlent oil Is used, this! means of controlling the sand dunes is very effective, and it is believed that the cost will not ‘be excessive, though exact figures are not obtaln-! able at this, time, | —_— NEW AND GOOD ROADS BUILT! Needs of Commercial Interests, of Tourists. as Well as Farmer, Have Been Considered. Wenderful progress is being made! in construeting a great network of| good roads throughout the country.| The needs of commercial interests, o?' tourist, as._well as the farmer, hnw been consulted in designing this sys-| tem. It has long been a reprmu-h that American roads were inferior to| those of most European countries but this condition of affairs is now being | corrected. In 1916 the government | appropriated $75,000,000 to be sflenl[ GRAND 5% Ta-Night LAUGH VllTH YOUR BETTER HALF , SE ; BravcHfg QWEET U IN “Her Unwilling Hushand” A pert-and naughty comedy of a fascinat- ing and the ot © From-the story by ng maid and two men; one will- her unw1llmg. Kenneth B. Clarke It’s semi-naughty, slightly risque, : near-bedroom Farce Comedy. “THE BIRTHPLACE OF THE WEST” A Scenic Reel in Col ors, and the Comedy, “ARE FLIRTS FOOLISH?”—Complete the Program in five installments, the last of which, | amounting to $25,000,000, was to be | released July 1, 1919, and this has since been increased by an additional , $200,000,000. Up to May 1 plans had | been approved for “building 27,970 miles of road or nine times the dis- ! tance from New York to San Fran-| cisco and of this 13,540 were actually | | under construction.—Boys’ Llfe. | TEST DURABILITY OF not\ps‘ Government Bureau of Road Building Has Constructed Stretch of Road- way at Arlington. In order to accurately determine the durability of the various kinds of road- way, the government bdweau of road building has constructed a stretch of | roadway at Arlington representing all the different methods of road build- ing, and over this a heavy machine is drawn back and forth by cable. This 18 supposed to reproduce the action of vehicles passing over 1t and the re- sults are carefully noted and com- pared. The result of the operations | will be used as a guide to the expendi- ture of neavly $300.000,000 which will be made under government auspices. 0dd Job for Tractor. One of the odd jobs on many farms where tractors are operated, is.the dragging of the private roads ‘with either a home-made or manufactured grader. Won't Build Tool Sheds. 1 “Everything comes to him who ‘walts,” but that doesn’t mean that put- change in real estate or personal jing ventilating fixtures’and mater- fing ofl!be buflding of a shed for farm property. seee Tess Baudette of thedal which is”to be cared for by and | ‘mp]!“?n[g wHI bujld it. Northern Minnesota Real Estate Ex- | change. 214 Beltrami avenue. Phone remain property ‘of: ifhe board. | Proposal .H. ~For7 taking down.! 68. 1mon3-1 jthe walls:to ‘ground level, cleaning Drs. Larson & Larso: Optometrists. If tron- | bled with headaches, nervousness or eye dis- orders of any kind, needing g or glasses repaired, consult them Artificial eyes fitted. ___ Z and piling.all "whole brick and me‘ |and the rgmoval of all debris. - The right to reject any or all bids | is reserved by-the board. |3t2-18—2-21 DR; J. T, TCOMY, (Clerk). + Best Soil Application. lLotted manure is commonly consid- eredto be the best application that can be gh en the soil. ‘WHtsr Ditch Is Harmful. A water ditch in a field is like a rot- tm potato in a bin. It soon eats up’ vml-: PIONEER WANT ‘ADS ' t2€ good pari of the feld. BRlNG RESULTS |Bubscribe for Tho Wally Pioncer. rom | R ; = Scituate. Scituate is an old but small town on | the coast of Massachusetts bay. By | rall 1t is about twenty-five miles south- east of Boston on the line that'runs on to Plymouth. ty. It was founded in early colonial times and had a part in the war which | the Intan chief known as Kipg Philip waged against the English colonists, In 1676 Philip was defeated at Tur- per's Falls and later at Hatfield and Hardley. Then the war shifted to the southern part of the colony, when Ply- | mouth, Bridgewater Scituate and severnl other places were partly i sacked and burned. For several months | all southern Massachusetts was in con- stant alarin, It ig in Plymouth coun- } JUNIOR BALL TONIGHT AT MINNESOTA UNIVERSITY (By United Press) + Minneapolis, Feb. 21.—On W.. the dance! Tonight’s the night of the “Junior Ball.”” Those who rank in .that-all important class at the University of Minnesota will be entitled to.at- tend -the very informal affair at' 1.11& St. Paul Hotel. - “Commen Peepul” will dance—at the University armory. And likely they won't envy the proud juniors'’ who wi!l have to “plunk down" for all the formality, frills and flowers that go with the annual ‘Junior | | | | | | Lewis J. Selzuick Dresents Wnllar } Mac o[ DO smmx,.,n.cwls_...fl. Directed byBurtcuGeorge and TUESDAY STRONGEST NORTHLAND STORY EVER TOLD ELKO Tues. & Wed. REX To-day PINNACLE PRODUCTIONS, INC. PRESENTS— The Strongest Vengeance Ever Devised By Man Failed Because —SEE— “THE STEALER WILLIAM CHRISTY CABANNE’S POWERFUL HUMAN DOCUMENT A page of life so wonderfully wrought by the hands of a master, molding the character of Man, that the picture almost lives and breathes. HE HATED GOD—CURSED THE WORLD BUT HAD ONE REDEEMING FEATURE X } i TO SEE IT ALL—COME EARLY! Starting with Feature PROMPTLY “at 7:30 Elko: 7:30 TO-NIGHT o:v5 Last Times IN INEAL HART Danger Valley” Wherein Wolves of Wall Street Engage Wolves of the Desert in Deadly Combat— Actually Filmed in Famous Death Valley. Rex Orchestra . FOX NEWS Rcelcraft Comedy Matinee:2: 30—7 10 9:00 Foundéd upon Arthur Stringer’ as published in McClure’s REX—-~WED & THURS MAY ALLISON IN “ARE ALL MEN ALIKE?” Strips cf Clamour from Studio Life s novel, “The Waffle Iron,” Magazine. REX—FRI. & SAT. “SHOULD*A HUSBAND FORGIVE” The problem of the ages reduced to the terms of modern life. Of all photodramas, this is the most 2mazing in its theme and answer.

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