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B R B TER RNV RN ‘Thursday, returning Friday to his | RO B GNP AL SATURDAY EVENING, OCTOBER 22, 1921 ;) NS - Items for this column will be gladly received by Mrs. Harvey, telephone 114-W. Readers ows it to their guests and to them- selves to see that items of local interest are reported. Every item will be gi proper considera- tion when source is known. Miss Selma’ Malttude of Becida is a guest at the Martin Moe home. ctel of Nebish was among the out-of-town ' business visitors in Bemdji: Friday. ,,, . M. W. Knox went to Nebish to at- tend an' auction’ saleiwhich was held near there Friday, Liadies” 'first-grade Rubbers; all styles—price 69c. Bemidji Shoe Store. 1t10-22 Mrs. Fred Bistham, son Donald, and daughter: Vivian, of Brainel"d arrived in Bemidji last night and will visit Mrs. Bistham’s sister, Mrs. Fred Moody, Fifth ward. Koors Pasteurized milk and cream are sure to please. 10-5tf % — Miss Esther Johnson of Becida, who teaches school at Erskine, came to Bemidji Friday to attend the edu- cational meeting, and to visit at her home until Sunday. Harold Dickinson, a student of the Bemidji high school, went to Buena Vista Thursday evening to visit his parents for a few days. Casht paid for Liberty bonde. G. B. Hooley, Northern Grocery Co. ;1-19t8 \ § Clarence Baney of Blackduck, who teaches school near Pennington, at- tended the educational meetings in Bemidji this week, and left Friday to resume his teaching. Mrs. H. Bridgemnan arrived in B.e- midji Friday night from Minnenpuhs,[ where she attended the League of | Women Voters convention. She also visited relatives at Mankato while away. ! The L. 0. 0. M. drill team will| give a dance Saturday evening at the | Moose hall. Tickets $1. Unescorted ladies, 25c. i 3t10-22 H. E. Reynolds has sold his home: at 805 Bemidji avenue, to E. W. Nix, auditor of ‘the Kenfield-Lamoreaux company, who will-move his family to Bemidji from Chicago about Nov- ember 1. Ladies’ first-grade Rubbe_rs; all styles—price -69c. Bemidji Shoe Store. 1t10-22 R. E. Bailey. and wife returned Friday ‘from' Redby, ‘where they had visited for a few days. Mr. and Mrs. Bailey formerly lived at Redby, but have recently become residents of Bemidji. + Misses Ruth Geddard and Margaret Christianson, who are staying with | Mr. and Mrs. M. W. Knox while at-| tending the Bemidj high school, left on the noon train Thursday to spend a few days at the home of their par- ents, Miss Christianson going to Puposky, and Miss Goddard to Red Lake. Visit our plant and learn the rea- son why Koors Pasteurized milk and | cream “Ends the Quest for the Best.” A 10-5tf G. A. Kehrke motored to Fosston! home at Federal Dam va Bemidji ac- companied by his wife and children, Doris and Arnold, who have been guests for the past month of Mrs. Gehrke’s mother, Mrs. Briskie, and brother, Fred Briskie, and family at Fossten. Mrs. Louis La Valley, wife of the late Louis La Valley, arrived in Be- midji this morning from Seattle, Wash., called home by the death of her husband. Mrs. La Valley is a sis- ter of Mrs. L. C. Cole, Fifth ward, and Mrs. A. M. Mitchell of Virginia Minn., who is also in the city to at- tend the funeral. You'll be pleased, if, when ordering milk from your dealer you ask for Koors Pasteurized milk. 10-5tf Edmund Meierbachtol of Spring- field, Minn., who has been attem_in,g the educational meetings in Bemidji, left Friday for Roosevelt, and will | teach -a school about 18 miles from there which will convene November 1. He was accompanied by a chum from his home town, who will spend the winter with him. W. E. and Mrs, W. C. Webb of! Webb, Iowa, recently visited Cheir brother and son, Harry Vogt, who is confined to St. Anthony’s hospital because of serious injuries -received when thrown from a horse some time ago. and who is now reported to be improving ‘nicely. - The*“parties left for their home this week. Phone 175 and place your orderl for Koors Pasteurized milk and| cre to ‘be delivered right to. your dodr every morning. 10-5tfi IN CREPE AND FOULARD One of the delights of the coming season is the frock to the left, fashioned in dark brown crépe of heavy quality. The one-piece kimono waist closes at the back and has the high neck: and short sleeves finished with a roll of self-material. The attached skirt is gathered and ttimmed with tucks and Iittle brown ribbon bows. Mediun size requires 414 yards 40-inch material. Check-foulard is a_favorite silk for the second model. ,The kimono waist has an open neck round:collar and : three-quarter sleeves. Girdle and pockets are trimmed. with; .bias folds of their own material. Medium' size ' requires 4% yards 40-inch material, with 7§ yard lining for underbody. First Model: | Pictorial Review Dress No. 9580. Sizes, 34 to 46 inches bust. Price, 35 cents. - “ - YSecond Model: Dress No. -9373. Sizes, 34.to 46 inches bust. = Price, 35 cents. Mrs. Charles McDonald of Northern drove to Bemidji and visited frrends Friday. Captain Reynolds of Park Rapids, spent Monday and Tuesday with his sister, Mrs. Louis Peters of Nymore. Mrs. James Wheeler of Bass Lake visited her daught St. Anthony’s hospital yesterday. She is confined there with a severe at- |tack of rheumatism. days this week with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. N. Hirt of Rockwood. ey George L. Lampman of Napoléon, Ohio, arrived in Bemidji Friday and is the guest at the home of his daugh- ter, Mrs. Scott 1. Stewart, and fam- ily, at their home, 1019 Bemidji ave- nue. ter, Lois Loraine, left this morning for their home in Brainerd after vis- cousin, A. E. wllison, and ramily, and other friends. Dance at old armory, Tuesday eve- ning, October 25. Music by Schuck’s International Jazz orchestra. Every- body welcome. 4t10-25 Oley Hisness of Funkley, wio re-| cently purchased Bemidji property at| Twenty-seventh street, is building an addition to the residence, and other- wise improving the property. He ex-| pects to move his family hare soon.| J. F. McConnell, commissioner, George F. Howard, E. F. Critchett and Miss Anna Swanson, all of the| State Department of Education, who | have been in Bemidji to attend the Northern Division Education associa- tion meeting, left Friday evening fari St. Paul. | Joe McTaggart leTt Friday for Sleepy Eye, Minn., where he will at- tend the funeral of Mrs. McTaggate's sister, Ella Harding, who died i Min- neapolis Friday. Mrs. McTaggart was| called to Minneapolis last Satu\'d;\yi by her serious illness in a Minueap: .- | lis hospital. | Mrs. H. Mayne Stanton and chil- dren arrived.in Bemidji this noon and will be guests of Judge Stanton and Miss Leila Stanton.' H. Mayne Stan- ton will probably arrive later and be their Sunday guest, en route to Du- luth where he goes as a delegate to the Port Waterway conference to be| *, Miss Dora, at Earl Hirt, who is tractor demon- strator at Rice, Minn., spent a few | Mrs. R W. Bush and little daugh—} obtained in quantity ure sure to be i | iting at the home of Mrs. Bush’s| | 8. Owens, in an analysis of a London | of London and up to a height of 400 PRESBYTERIAN DIVISION ' HOLDS MEETING MONDAY | The dining room division of the {Ladies’ Aid of the Presbyterian ichurch will meet Monday afternoon at! |3 o'clock at the home of Mrs. Al i Sthol, 820 America avenue. All mem- bers are requested to be present. HALOWEEN PARTY Miss Ruth and Kenneth Caskey | pleasantly entertained 18 guests at| a Halloween party = last evening at their home, 1023 Dewey avenue. The decorations were in keeping with {Halloween, and games were played and dancing enjoyed by the guests until a late hour, when refreshments were served by the hostess and host. MUSIC PUPILS ORGANIZE “VIVACE” CLUB FRIDAY | The music pupils of Mrs. W. B. Stewart met at her home last eve- ning at 8 o’clock and organized a musical club to be known as the “Vi- vace” club, with the following newly elected officers: president, Miss Vera Cutter; vice-president, Margaret Lord; secretary, Mrs. E. P. McMahon. | During the winter months they will study harmony, ear training, masters; and their music, and they will meet | the third Wednesday of each month. At the close of the business meeting last evening a splendid musical pro-| gram, was given, after which lunch was served by the hostess. BIRTHDAY. PARTY, Little Margaret and Helen Jones ‘entertained 28 'little. guests’ this af- ternoon ;at a Hallowéen! party, the event being in celebratibn of the birthdays of these:’ two Is, [their | 432‘“‘"33’5 beng on'October 22! and | Halloween colors were carried out| {in the decoration of the rooms and ta-| bles; by using witches, pumpkins, and | cats’as place cards. A pumpkin bas-| | ket filled with oranges made a pretty | centerpiece, and at each end of the! table was a birthday cake, nine can-| dles on one and six on the other. The guests present included Vivian Anderson, Irene Simons, Harriet Krause, Dorothy Ziegler, Katheryn and Louise Campbell, Dorothy Nel- son, Ruth Jordan, Dorothy Borgen, {Jean and Lillian Harnwell, Blanche | Grimm, Verron Jahr, Sister Given, Dolly Titus, Kenneth Peterson, Clell Peterson, Alfred Borgen, Jay Board- man, Dorothy Elwell, Effie Row, Vir- ginia Rhea, Sonny Warford, Harriet Williams, Noraine Gill, Janet Opsahl, Dprothy Lundgren and Francis Sea- vie. An Elastic Metal. The most remarkable thing about | vanadium steels is their almost mirac- | mlous elusticity.! Today ‘the metal va- nadium comparatively' cheap. Yet only 30 years ago it sold at $450 a pound, and was hardly more than a curiosity of the chemical laboratory. When a use is found for a rare | metal, sources from which it may be, discovered. TRus: when the value of vanadium for“sfeel alloys was ascer- tained,, the fact was soon disclosed that yast ore beds containing it ex- i isted.in Colorado. It is from these | beds that the demand is now supplied. The ores are sandstone, impregnated with vanadium, d are dug out in enoFmous quantities. A by-product of vanadium mining is uranium, from | which radium is obtained. / Parties from Minneapolis, who have | been hunting in the vicinity of Island| Lake and Red Lake, for several days, | were in Bemidji yesterday en route| to their homes. They reported an en- joyable trip and fine roads. Analyzing a London Fog. At the recent conference of the British Royal Sanitary institute Dr. J. fog, shid that to reproduce a dense smoke fog about four milligrams of soot to the cubic meter of air was all that was required. - One milligram pro- duced the ordinary wiiter haze. If a dense smoke extended over the whole feet’a-trifle under 200 tons of soot woilld be present. The. domestic fires | of London from six in the ‘morning till nine at night produced over 200 tons of soot, suflicient to produce one of the densest fogs. Effect of High Altitudes. At a high altitude the atmospherie pressure is much less than at sea level. This decrease in pressure pro- duces a lowering of the temperature at which water bolls. Since water can be hoiled at a lower temperature, an egg can be cooked more quickly at sea level, provided the temperature is suf- -ficiently high to cook the egg. At a height of 18,000 feet, water cannot be heated In open vessels above 180 | degrees Kahrenheit, and this is not hot enough to set the white of an egs. ' High Mountains of Montana, held /in Duluth® Monday and Tues-| day. ° w“There. are all kinds of ways to| make a living,” said the elderly capi- | talist. g “That’s quite true,” replied the club | loafer, “but the trouble is that nearly | | | & | One Drawback. | | | all of them require some effort that is incompatible with sitting in an! easy e How much ache can a wom- an’s heart endure before breaking? If you want to understand what a libel the term ‘the weaker sex” is, see “SOME- 'ONE MUST PAY” at the Rex ‘Theatre Tuesday. i | | | | | | | [ i chair and watching the procession go by.”—Birmingham Age-Herald. Experienced. Ryder—One never knows what will please awoman. Thomas—Oh, I wouldn't say that. In the case of my wife, anything beyond our means is sure to—London Answers, : e g i | elevations exceeding 12,000 feet, and | several unnamed peaks rise to greater | ! in Carbon county, in the south central Six named peaks in Montana have heights, according to the United States | geological survey. All these peaks are in {he Beartooth National forest, part of the state. The highest of | these Is Granite peak, 12,850 feet; the next highest is Mount Wood, 12,750 feet. P RS | speetrum, Mahogany- A cork dipped in a misture of equal parts of oxalic acid and water and | then rubbgd over the stains on a mahogauy piano will remove then. | Wkhep the stains have disappeared, wash_the wood well with elear water | and polish as usual, i f t ARE YCUR JEWELS GENUINE? Many Precicus Stones Now Are Imi- tated So Closely That Detection Is Difficult. Rubies, sapphires, emeralds, many other stones, can now be imitated so beautifully that it is no longer easy to detect the difference, upon a casual ex- amination. Fearls are made in a num- ber of varietles, and imitation pearls are plentiful and often worn. While only an expért can determine | whether some gems are ‘genuine, there are certain sipple methods by which in most (‘uses’v‘}the genuine ar- ticle” may be detected at home. Color is usually considered the first great criterion of all precious stones. 1t is now generally coficeded, however, that color alone |£.l'ot a eriterion by | other | physical properties must be taken into | which stones may' be judged; consideration by the jewel expert. The structure of the stone is a more | reached Moscow, by way of the Baltie ke ! certain test. The optical properties | Sen, through Riga, and a journey by HAVE YOU PAID i of the stone, however, are the most | cart and by foot over a distance YOUR ELECTRIC | certain test—generally known as its where the railroad had rusted out, he LIGHT BILL? “refractive property.” This can be | was weighed down with 4,000,000 e ¥ | ascertained by means of a small jn- | *ubles. These were the fivst gifts or ANNOUNCEMENT If not, it is past due. strument known as a “refractometer.” | word from the outside that the We have moved from our This must be paid Refraction means simply the bend- | Tutherans had had in three years, old location on Third St. by the 25th. i ing of the light rays out of their nor- mal course, when passing through cer- tain solid objects. The called the “refractive index.” In | tremely 5 + ] most transparent bodies, including enough to buy a candle. i gems, the refractive index is ¢on- ' —_— LIGHT & POWER CO. i stant and known. Hence a degree of S Dodge & Ross refraction which differs from that | “Dead Man’s ‘Chebt.” Operators ] established for the species leads to ! Robert Louis Stévenson mude this k i‘}, the certainty that the stone under ex- | amination is not a genuine one, hut an imitation.—Hereward Ph. D, in Leslie's. Carrington, degree to | which these light waves are bent is LONG DIVISION | A New’ Problem in International Af- | fairs. If §200.00 is sent by courier 700 wmiles by rall, steamship, and horse { cart, and divided among 100 pastors and their familles, how much does each | pastor receive? The answer depends inlmgflhcr upon the geography in- | volved, This time the pastors happen | to be in and around Moscow, so the | nuswer is 200,000 rubles ‘each. Dr. John A. Morehead, European Com- missioner for the National Lutheran | Council that operates in 17 countries in\'or there, met a Moscow merchant lin Berlin in the sumwmer, who pos- sessed one of the ravest scraps of | paper in the world—a passport from | the Soviets—and who offered his serv- ices as confidentinl wessenger to the Bishop of Moscow, Dr, Morehead checked out $200.00 and by the time the good merchant The money hought one meal a day of bDlack bread and rice, for nearly a | week, for each family, with a little change left over where they were ex- economical, sometimes even | ditty famous in “reasure tsland,” but | the verses were not his oewn. Thou- sands of persons have speciated since whether the chest was part of the GENERAL BODY COMPANY Manufacturers of Commercial; Truck Bodies Bast Bemidji Phone 13-F-2 General Office: 418-22 Belt. Phone 970 Minn. Factory: Bemidji - to 514 MINNESOTA AVE. P o B T {The invisible with merits—-neat, strong, durable. Snubs-the-rebound, prevents sideway., - More valuable, costs less. Agents Wanted « DEFENDER SALES, &0, 414 So. Gth-Stc +-'vMinneapolis NOTICE Please Co-operate With Us. MINN. ELECTRIC —_— —_— | |§ubscr!be for Tne Daily Ploneer. R R ( / anatomy of a corpse or mefely u sail- It may sc¢em L or's box for personal belongings, The somewhat earl WIG TOO SMALL FOR FRANKLIN | fuct is that q certain bay i the Carib- | yars X i b it s et Ko for Haliday sug- | bean islands was known as . “Dead 3 & i Representative From the New Amer. Maws Clest” in. the days of piracy |}’ gestions, but a e ica Had to Appear Before French | because of its resemblance to a- sail- ? great many peo- King in Bald Pate. | or's trunk. . % : ple, with the idea W Al s The identity of the author of the None Bettel I of sending photo- 1 Benjamin Franklin was about to be | pallad is unknown. Hulf a century Made exclusively from §!| graphs for Holi- meso{ned to 4|h(: I n-nu‘h king on the ygo it was a popular “cRantey” on North Dakota Hard il :day tavars B, 1 occasion of Nis first visit to I'rance in | the merchant ships of those days. Spring Wheat Ve O EORS | the capucity of representative from mjere are a dozen star i thie L g for pictures be- the -new America. The court custom| original text, dealing with the wreck- —BY— fore the Chr -— of the time (h-mnp(lvd that one going| jng of an English pirate vessel after a CAVALIER MlLL- || mag rush begins. to an audience With the King must | gpyesome night of mutiny and murder. : 11 Surely there is no wear & wig: of the proper fashion. AI Stevenson did not plagiarize in ING COMPANY 1| easier, more eco- count, who had Franklin in tow, sent| g« the verse, for he metely put into {§ CAVALIER, NORTH DAKOTA i v 1 way of a wigmaker the day befpre to take| {36 youth of one of his eharacters a Ll B Franklin’s measure and fit him out | o : FOR SALE solving the { for the audience. The wigmaker ar-| fi;;" e l]hu\‘ werampthag Hine knoyn BY ALL GROCERS | Christmas prob. | A 3 gmaker ar-| gy gver the seven seng, Aaristing ProD= 3 rived at Franklin’s lodgings, measured . e < BEMIDJI BRANCH lem than this. a5 the poll of the great American fore = 3 = 2 Y i and aft and around and nbout and| BY Our Own Wait Mason. X : i took his departure. An hour before | She stood up in a trolley ear and . <> ot> P the ‘audience the wigmaker returned | {rled to cling to a stin 'hul'(hn teack m c ual i with the wig.. But when Franklin at-| “"“* ""“":“"l“""‘ :'“1 Q‘I‘ l“ j‘;';“::'" "‘I’:[ J o tempteéd’, to put it on it would not| !B A Young maws lp. Uown i 3 ,P tab l, ik on ‘, % oy down up--at last she Hred, and said AGENT HAKKEH“P fit; he ‘chuldn’t begin to get it on his 3 . i PHONE NO. 1 H head. - §ir,” said Franklin to the| \\.'lrh' a weary smile: \.\HI Nfllll('h')(l?' o 2 sTUD'u 3 - wigmaker, “your wig is unfortunately | Kindly tell me, please; how many Bemld]l & too small for my lu‘:ul_"' | laps to ihe mile?"-—Boston nserfpt. “Pardonnez moi, monsieur,” replied | -~ - = = — : === = = % = the wigmaker, “your head is vastly too | WWWWWEumw;fi‘ large and quite beygj e fus B ETTTTTITTIT T T oo, | 1= ] e s v o oo o 3 e . f I i e st i s LU UL LA 1aaad = Franklin appenared, therefore, at|J==| = - court with, his bald pate and shaggy | 4= =] gray hair.—Detroit Free Press. = 4 = = = Osculatory. =| = The gob was on shore leave and | 3= =] happy because he had found a girl as | §= O ‘ | r 0 I I | e OW l I = | affectionate he. His joy was | J= _— = dimmed, however, for a bluecont had | J=| i ' EJ -1 forbidden spooning in the park and his | 3=5| K ! = girl had tabooed it on the streets. But | =5 4 . =| life took n new turn when he saw a | o= " = 1 man Kiss his wife farewell in front of | J== . a e | =] thé Pennsylvanin station, New York. | 4==| =] He rushed his girl toward a crowd hur- | #==5| = rying toward the Philadelphia expr = =] ) - and bade her a fond farewell, \\‘Iu'n; = ||III|IIII!IIIIIIIIIIIIII =k T the crowd thinued, they joined a throng | 3=, =] for Washington, and repeated the act. | 3= = They repeated it again before the Chi- | 3= (= | cago train, 1= D F Y = e What It Can Do For You E ter who had been watching. He |45 =] stepped up to the gob.: “Boss,” he suid, | = Ei = ‘why don’t you go downstairs and try | #==| First of all, it can hring to you the NEWS of your .. PR, == the Long Island station. Dem local | §55) it it ppinta i = trains am a-leavin® mos' all de time!” | 3=5 own home town. Week after week, ." prints in = —Everyhody’s. = detail the happenings of the community. F aith- 1= = ‘g fully it sets forth the goings and comings of its é\ Oldest Frame' Building. = people, giving careful attention to the homely ‘§‘ The quaker mecting house at Kaston, | $25) little items that are ignored in the overcrowded I=E - M., is probably the oldest frame build- | §=5| e 5 S = Ing standing in the United States— | J=| dailies of the big cities. = Just where it was built and as it 1= (=] built, without any change, additions or | 4: =k subtractions, and with an aunthentie s 2 . : oaf} f 5 == record since 1683 An occasional re- | 3= It can furnish you with more interesfing infor. = placing of the shingles on the roof and | & mation about people you know, or used to know, . . = of the weather-hoarding are all the re- | - than could a dozen private correspondents The ) =k - pairs it has Its frame, inside g 'h itas 46 ¥ av & ly a few of =] L woodwork, and some of the weather- & one who wriles to you may know only a e\ = hoarding are the same as when built your friends at home—but your Ilome Town ‘E about the smme time that William Penn, who visited the building, was trading with the Indians und laying out Philadelphia. The only preservative used on the wood has been old-fashioned white- wash on the outside. Seven of the original plank seats and the wood- work Iiside have had no puint what- Paper knows them all. It tells you about people you are interested in. I Finally, in a good, hard business sense, your Home Town Paper is of value to you. It keeps you posted as to the industrial and commercial < I arate them, and their existence is proved by the shifting lines in the The variations in bright- ness, it is thought, can only be due to the attraction hetween the two stars raising immense tides in their molten | or vaporous glohes, which, throuzh the efforts of compression or other- wise, digplace the spectral lines, TN ever. White ouk, white pine, cypress ' B i z EURERI TR e and southern pine from the Maryland | J [ growth of a community which [‘lm{ll‘lr‘ty may AR 0 A=] forests were the woods used. =] have caused you to neglect. It often reveals s g = I that keen people see, right in your home town, RS I=E — Tides in the Stars | a mine of golden opportunity. “The moral is ob- 3 "= Some time ago it was reported by a | vious— , i L - = distinguished astronomer that the star | ¥ v = called Xi Geminorum, which has long | i . 5 . = been known as a variable, Is in re-| i . it = ality double, but its two components | - e ) ‘El are so close that no telescope is able S .b P b T d ¢ f g Y A =‘\ T AR ROA AL Home Town Paper Iif [T [T il It o