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PAGE EIGHT Rierasnr i tion. keys for the lock.” time to » case that dence. that an Owen the employers. Chicago, Oct. Dallas, Hud. Britten P. L. Brown Mrs. Fred Graham . Charley, A. Parker . Miss Rose Schmitt ‘Mrs. Dot Van rs. B. B. Bardwell ‘Miss Nagmi; Blakely "Peter Graves Miss Marie Rider . rs. John. Nael Olivia Roy DONY MAKE A P B The BODB OF NOUR* =[x} u‘THQlfl_.“l ; D‘SE\.FD NL\K YOu Oentury i waskingron! Limited Laugh With Us— Not At Us— The' All Powerful 7 Judging from some of the yarns we have heard local hunters tell re- | cently, it is' easy to imagine that a| large percentage, of the hunters who o out with a high-powered gun: come back with a’ high-powered imagina- —Power Be Theirs— Toot! Toot! A Canadian paper in remarking about a certain man in its vicinity stated that the man was suffering from “locomotive ataxia.” We won- der if that has anything to do‘wnh the present freight rates, and if he | whistles at the crossings. Maybe it means that he has been on a “toot.” —Where Do They Get It?— In All Justice Statistics are sure wonderful. We have estimated that if all the bits of foolishness which have been run in in this column were to be placed end to end, nobody would read: them. —All Together Now— A Thankful Owner An ad in the Columbus, Ohio, Dis- patch should greatly embarrass the guilty party. The ad follows: “No- tice—If the party who stole my new Ford car will call at 128-140 East Spring street, I will give him the —No Great Loss Without— A Stitch in Time The tired business man, who has heretofore been too busy to serve on juries, now finds that he has lots of ¢ if it is a bootlegger's being tried, and the jury will be. compelled to sample the evi —Aint It a Fact?— Fnll and Winter Styles \ One big reason why there is little change in men’s clothes this fall is because it takes all of the change to keep friend wife up with the change in her clothes. —Where Is the Antidote?— He Who Hesitates Is Lost Ottawa Journal: It turns out to be ound man and wo- man under arrest charged with pois- oning the latter'’s first husband, were married five days after the first hus- band died. No explanation is given as to what caused the delay. —~Can’t Understand It!— GOVERNMENT TO KEEP " ROADS IN OPERATION {Continued from Page 1) food and fuel because of the strikes. Washington, Oct. 17.—The mails will be kept moving, Postmaster General Hays declared today in the first offi- cial statement on' the railroad strike to a government official here. Cleveland, Oct. 17. I Jacobs).—A meeting of the railroad unions’ heads here to make final plans for the October 30 strike was postponed today until Wednesday. While no explanation of the delay was forthcoming from union chiefs, 7 the delay was considered significant in view of a proposal by President Harding to summon the labor leaders * to Washington for a conference with Several of the union heads, includ- ing Warren Stone and W. clared that if President Harding ask- ed them to go to Washington for a conference they wauld go willingly. ——— 17.—The outlaw railroad unions will support other * railroad unions in their strike, which is called for October 30. The switch* men’s union, which participated in the strikes of 1919 under the leader- ship of John Graunau, sent word to- day to its 60,000 members, of whom nearly 20,000 are unemployed, in- structing them not to take jobs of the regular union men who strike. Most members of the outlaw unions will strike, it was said. THREE BURNED TO DEAT IN. ROQMING: HOUS. Texas, Oct. 17.—Three were burned to déath and several in- jured here early today when a room- ing house caught fire. HERE’S HOW THEY STAND IN. " ""PIONEER’S' $4,000 CAMPAIGN rs. D. L, Van Avnum . Including All Territory Outside the, Corporate Limits of Bemidji {Mrs. Cora Frederickson { LEY ME GIVE YOL A 1R BUDDN'. JUST REMEMBER THAT NOL ARE Iy NWE GREATEST CITN.M THE WORLD AND LAY OFF BRAGGING, ARPLY™ %) NOUR HOME YOWN. FOLKS HERE NEVER WEARD ORIV, SO . £ FUNERAL SERVICES EOR MBS. MATHISON. SUNDAY | reforestation. Funeral services for the late Mrs. "| Gertrude Mathison, Fifth ward, were held in the Presbyterian church Sun- day at 2:30 o’clock, Rev. L. P. War- ford officiating, and they were large- ly attended. The remains were: escorted to the 5 s 2. church from Ibertson’s undertaking Wisconsin 27; Nortliwestern 0. Ohios, $1.25 to $1.50. parlors by the Order of Maccabees,| Notre Dame 33; Purdue 0. T of which Mrs. Mathison was a mem- Kansas City, Oct. 17.—Potato mar- | per, The floral offerings were many ket dull. Receipts 21% caxl'(_s. I}emamll' and bedutiful. andi movement slow, Frack sales, ®4%| ‘o Mathison died at her home i i ked k lots, out weights, Minnesota Sacke Friddy, October 14, at the age of 40 i i . 8. No. 1, ca ?f.%o?“;efli,o;;fiiyu'grade;, slc'];: years. She leaves four children to car, field run, considerably scabby, | mourn her loss, Viola, 21; Leonard, g 18; FEarl, 16, and Gladys, 12. "Her $1.60. husband preceded her 'in death in the 1 L early summer. ' There are also two O A WENTION IN PLANES |brothesr living, one _at. Dugdale, Kansas City, Oct. 17.—Twelve hun- | Minn., who was here to attend the dred gif cratts will be available to | funieral; and:one in Colorado. carry notables and delegates to the | . She has been a resident of Bemidji American Legion convention begin-|for the past twelve years and the ning here Oct. 31, if the railroad [many friends extend their sympathy strike becomes effective; the aviation|tq the bereaved family. committee of the Legion notified the convention committee today. Many ——— ; PLAN OF REFORESTING big passenger planes will enter in the —_— (Continued From: Page 1) air derby here, and it was declared these would carry many passengers. mow of land and an. additional 3,000 mow seeded. SPEAKER URGES THAT © CHILBHOOD BE SAVED ehinis allways are ensged in, e (Continued From Page 1) supplying . their own ties and other 150 years since we started on the greatest experimentin history, that timbers used in railroad: construction and maintenance. Several other rail- of forming a nation which would have ways are contemplating similar de- its laws made by its own people for their government, there are some who are declaring’ that the experi-|yvelopments. The budgets are voted ment has not been a success, that our |py the various- railway. administra- government fiou‘;d bu;tet; hte :“;fl“g"% tions interested. ; r another kind, an a ny of [ s RO g?zx- institutions should be abolished, With her floods, Cliina is an ex- institutions which were founded by some of our greatest men. These men are not advocating the doctrine we are instilling into our boys and. girls nor the doctrine we want instilled into~them at Mooseheart, and unlgss they are given the right conception of their duties as citizens we may look for a greater menace to our na- tion from within than from without. It was that which caused the down- fall of the great nations of the past.” These were the sentiments expressed in conclusion by Mr. Brown. Mr. Brown spoke at the new ar- mory in the afternoon, and in the evening in the Methodist church. Sat- urday morning he delivered an ad- dress to the assembly at the State Teachers college, and in the evening a reception was held for him in the Moose hall by the Women of Mooser heart Legion and the members of the Moose lodge, A two-reel film, showing the city of Mooseheart, was also ex- hi at the R h HER LONG SEARCH " I8 NOW REWARDED Mrs. Ida Pickett Was Twe.nty- five Years Trying to Find Relief—at Last Succeeds MARKETS ficials.” POTATO MARKET Chicago, Oct. 17.—Potato receipts, 100 cars. Market easy. Total U. S. shipments, 2,200 cars. | Northern whites, $2 to $2:15; Red River Ohios, $1.75 to $1.95; South Dakota Early FOOTBALL RESULTS head- Normal 0. go. college 0. Northwest Hamline 21; Macalester 0. Carleton 42; Beloit 0. St. Olaf 105 Luther 0: St. Thomas: 42; Gustavus 6. Scholastic Shattuck 14; State Deaf 13. Mankato 53; Northfield 0. Hibbing 28; Chisholm 0. Cathedral high, Duluth.19; Superi- or. Central 0, Sleepy Eye 28; St. James 3. Moorhead 45; Detroit 0. Pipestone 49: Slayton 0. Little Falls 64; Long Prairie 0. Montevideo 54; Hancock 0. New Ulm 33; Lamberton 0. Braineyd '13; Crosby-Ironton 0. Rochéster 13; Faribault 0. Crookston 27; Thief River Falls 0, New Prague 25; Farmington 7. ‘Winona 27; Lake City 6. Eveleth:33; Duluth Central 0. Rock Rapids 41; Luverne 6. Osage 21; Austin 0. Red Wing 51; Wabasha 3. Stillwater 13; St. Cloud 0. Menomonie 65- Hudson 0, Milacz 48; Cambridge 0. Anoka‘’54; Princeton 0. LITTLE TALKS ON THE MILK SITUATION Standardized MilK The consumer often thinks that “Standardized Milk” is one of the dark gecrets of the milk business, something that all large milk plants want to say as little about as possible. This is, how- ever, not the'case as.the following little: talk will clearly show. (By Harold Suppose we were, to send out. our. milk withouj its being mixed and standardized—if we delivered: it “just as it comes from the farm.” We get some milk that tests as low as 2.8 per cent in butterfat—we get some that tests nearly double that amount, and tests vary all the way between the two. If we sent you a quart of milk today that tested 5 per cent.butterfat, and one tomorrow that tested only 2.8 per cent, would you be satisfied? Can you imagine the number of complaints that every day would bring us? No customer. could dependon. getting the same quality of milk th{ days in succession—it ‘would all depend upon. whose milk happened to be sent them. ' * J. Lee, de- Then, too, we. pay. for our milk on the basis of its butterfat — test. Suppose we were to charge you on this basis, for we could hardly. expect you to.pay as much for milk with a lower test as you did for that which tested higher. Today youg bottle of milk might cost you 8 cents—tomorrow- it might cost you ‘15 cents— for each individual bottle would have to be tested and sold accord- ing to its butterfat test. Of if we could arrange it so that you got milk with the same test every day—your next-door neighbor might be getting milk with an altogether different test, Do you think the fact that you were not paying the same price would do away with: dissatisfac- tion? One or the other would be sure.to feel that he was not get- ting as good value as his.neighbor for the money he paid for milk. Mrs. Ida Pickett, 274 South Divi- sion St., Buffalo, N. Y., says: “Twenty-five years is a long time to keep looking for something with- out finding,it, and it’s no wonder I al- most lost hope. But I finally found what I was hunting—a medicine to relieve me of an awful case of in- diqeation. “Tanlac rewarded my, long search You can readily see that it would be impossible. for us to send out milk this ‘way and have it give satisfaction. Instead, we mix all, the milk in large vats, combining the lower testing milk with one standard. Every vat is tested—every vat is brought to the same standard—every. day’s milk tests the same as every other day’s—every customer is treated alike in the matter of quality. for relief, and I now enjoy better health than I have in thirty years.” Many people on verge of despair have taken Tanlac and recovered. Tanlac 'is. sold in Bemidji by the City Drug Store, and leading drug- gists everywhere.—Advertisement. FIRE We are keeping this standard of butterfat as high as can possibly be done, and yet sell milk. at a price that will not work a hardship on the great majority of our customers. But when you . think of the quality. in milk, remember this: Milk must not be judged solely by, its'cream line; cream is good, we alf like it, and it is"the most easily digested fat food we have. -But, after all, it is a fat food, and.a perfect diet includes only a limited amount_of fats, for fats are only heat and energy producers. The protein— the food substance that builds up and repairs bodily tissue—is not in the cream, it:is.in the skim milk. You never heard it said that i 8 a parfect focd—miilk ig, but you have to include the skim mi ith the“crcam to get that perfection. District No. 1 Suspicion of city standardization of mille is not limited to congumera alone. . Some producers participate in it. This explana- tion mxght to clear the air for a]l. . The standardized test is a nec- essary feature of; any system which buys its milk of the producer in the fairest manner, possible, by the butterfat content. Ifi is really simply selling milk tg the consumer on a butterfat basis, Koors Brothers ——PHONE 175—— District No. 2 300,560, 199,550 613,550/ 504,300 374,750 73,625 132,050 earbrook. ample of the world of the need of [ e Arbor Day of China is a national holiday now, and it is observed in schools and by high of- Michigan 30; Michigan Aggies 0. North Dakota Aggies 34; Moor- South Dakota State 60; Huron 0. North Dakota University 40; Far- Concordia’ 27;' Jamestown college 0. St. John 28; St. Cloud Teachers 0. MONDAY EVENING, OCTOBER 17, 1921 JUST: WHERE DOES 1THIS HERE GULY "\.EW\S“’, ween ;Qbacfifl L8 1 We state it as our honest belief that-the tobaccos used in Chester- field are of finer quality (and hence of better, taste) than in any other. cigarette at the price. Liggett & Myers Tobacco Co. £ i [ 3 g i esterfield ‘CEGARETTES of Turkish arid Domestic tobaccos—blended NEATS OUR EIGHNT RO0ONMS WITH [ LES. The CaloriC éives you two big advantages—More Comfort, at Lower Cost. More comfort because it heats by circulation-—and: circulation takes the cool air out of the building—thus allowing the warm air to flow freely to every part of every room without resistance. : CaloriC circulating heat means uniform heat—as much warmth at windows of far-off rooms as near the register, as the thermometer will show. Lower Cost because scientific pipeless construction and patented triple-casing insula- tion deliver practically all the heat from the fuel directly into the rooms through the one register. et £ 3 ' ; Th‘e; experience of the CaloriC user, who heated 8 rooms with one-third less fuel than g(e) formerly used to heat only 8 rooms, is the common experience of more than 125,- )00 users; SRR 4 Get a CaloriC now under our definite guarantee that it must give you satisfaction or your money back. _\ BEMIDJI S