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SATURDAY: EVENING, .NOVEHBE%YQ'; 1921 - g Items for this column wll{ be gladly received by Mrs. Harvey, ulephm;o 114-W. . Readers owe it to their guests and to them- lves, to_see that items of local terest are reported. Every item will be 'given proper ‘considera- tion when source is known. 1. 'W. Heggle of Becida‘transacted business in Bemidji Friday, J.W. Heggie of Becida motored to Bemidji Thursdny and attended to business matters i % No portrait is so completely satis-. fying as one:made by a professional photographér. Hakkerup. 11-4tf —_— Mrs. Martha King of Grant Valley was among, the out of town shoppers in Bemidji Friday. l Fred Héndrxckson of Crow Wing is hunting big game in the vicinity of Big Falls this week. i One dozen photographs make 12 | Xmas presents Hakkerup. 11-4tf| W. G. Cook, Roy Shepherd and | William Kennedy, all of Turtle River were, business visitors in Bemidji! Tuesday. 2 Mrs. A. W. Benson and Mrs. M. A. Downs returned Friday from Grand Forks where they have 'visited for several days v . On anesota avenue between | Gill’s and’ Given’s>you will find the Sunshine Grocery. *2t11-19 Mrs. N. Cote of Bootleg lake was the guest of Mrs. Edward Jewett, ) 1110 Park.avenue, while shopping in the city Thursday. Coming Sunday ‘to ‘the Rex—*"Ole Olson of the Hills” and his company. Mrs. P. M. Dicaire is reported. to be ill_at her home on Irvine avenue| from blood, poisoning, resulting from an injury to her feet a short time ago. George E. Van Camp left Frid:\yi morning for his home at St. Thomas, N. D., after spending the last two weeks with his son, William, of thla city. Crght pald for Liberty bonds. - G. B. Hooley, Northern Grocery Co. 1-19tf1) C. F. Darner, district manager for | the Equitable Life Insurance com- pany left' last night for district managers of his company. He will be gone:for several:days. . - E. L. Horner of Fernhill whose arm was badly crushed while he was work- ing around an eiigine two weeks:ago,; and wag being cared for in a private home in Bemxd;x, is' now -at St. An- thony’s hospital where 'he is resting as easxlv as can_be-eXpected. Dre«makmg at home, Fmbxmder) a specialty. Prices right. Phone 897. 26t12-8 Mr. and Mn Erick Lnndgzen of were in the city Wednesday! shopping and visiting friends. They reported quite a fall of snow at Pipe- stone when they left there last week, after visiting relatives for a_short time. They made the trip by auto. = Mr. and Mrs, Samuel La Blen and children, Morris and Celia, who have been guests for the:past two weeks of Mrs. La Blen’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Petra at 1105 Mississippi avenue, left Thursday ing- for Fort Ripley-to visit Mrs. Phillip Man- guh, a sister of La-Blen. From there they expect to go to Tar City, N. D., to visit Victor Jewett, a brothe er of Mrs. La' Blen, whom she has not seen for 17 .years, beforc.returning to their home at Estavan, Saskatche- wan. Your friefids can buy anythmg you can’ give them except your photo- graph. Hakkerup. 11-4t8 5 .~ W. E: Dailey moppred to Bemidji Thursday and was the guest for the day of his brother-ii-law, D. C. Searl, and wife. Mr. Dailéy, who has spent the past’ four weeks on his farm in Rockwood ‘township, "erected a new barn 32 by 42 feet, while. here;. as- & a tenant . on his father’s farm, Mr. Dailey_ Jeft Thursday evening.for Edgerton, Minn., to oversee thea har- vesting of 104 ‘acres of' corn on:his farm near there.. The corn crop was “in that vieinity this engrave your ‘name on Chfistmas [ cards free?; Yes; they will on orders of fifty or more. Thev ‘have just loads of samplés’ and’ thousands ' right -in stoclg priced very reasonable. Your order: must be in by December 5. if +in place with a buckle of braid. Me- 1t11-19°. .{has been looking after goqd work for St. Paul{’ - where he will attend a convention of |- yto resume her duties Monday mor- sisted by 'his son, A. R. Dailey, who | Do you lmow that the Pioneer willf .'\~ 3&':07 i WOOL JERSEY FOR COOL DAYS of silk braid and (1~mned at one side’ So ' versatile ‘is_this model, however; that instead of the square neck, the fronts may be slashed .in a Vrshape ard rolled hatk with a convertible col- far. The belt of sclf-material is held dium-size requircs2}4 ‘yards S4-inch, material, witly 6/ yards of brai Pictorial' Review. Dress No. 9607. Sizes, 16 to 20\years and 34 to 42 inches bust. ~ Archie Naugle is spending the week end in Bemld)l with hls family. Miss Lois_Dally, school nurse, is spending today at her home at La Porte. Koors Pasteurized milk and ‘cream »re sure {0 please. 10-5tf S. D. Snyder i3 expected. to arrive home,‘today ‘from Kelliher where he several days. Coming Sunday to the Rex—*“Ole Olson of the Hills” and his company. 1t11-19 H. A. Bridgeman returned Wednes- day evening to his home in the Fifth | !ward, after H‘nnsactmg business m| | Chicago for a few days. 5 Try: our new store on Minnesota avenue Saturday——-—you 11 be surprised. 2 2t11-19 —— Axthul O'Léary, who'is employed in the vicinity of Blackduck, is spend- ing the, week end’with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. P. J. O'Leary. Mrs, C.-E. Riley’s condition ‘was reported to be slightly improved tlhis ‘morning:~ She: has_been seriously ill for the pnst two, weel&s at her home. son why Koors Pasteurized milk and cream “Ends the Quest for the Best.' ’f’ 1 10-5t; —_ Miss Mayvis Phill: " teacher of ni rural school near here, is spending the | week end in Bemidii and will return | ning. Rev. Blaine Lambert left this noon for Nebish and Pleasant Valley where he will preach on Sunday. He has been in Bemidji with his family since yes- terday. Sugar cane has become popular with Brooklyn boys, who make fre- ken to a sugar factory in wflllfln'H- burg. You'll be pleased, if, when ordering ‘milk from your dealer you ask for Koprs ‘Pasteurized milk. 10-5tf “Mr. and’Mrs. Claire Kaliher and little: son“returned Friday. affernoon to tieir home at Princeton after vis- iting ‘a week at ‘the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ray Kaliher, 415 America ave- rothers. nye. ‘The Juen are . Phone 175 and place your order for' Koors Pasteurized milk and cream_ to, be dclxverefl right to your door every morning. 10-5tf Mrs.. L. H. Bailey, who has visited her sister, Mrs. F. S., Arnold, and ‘other relatives and friends in Bemdex for 'several weeks, left, Wednesday :for‘ Denver, Col., and will sperid the | winter there with her daughter, Mrs. | Av K. Southworth, and family. His Phifosophy. “I've mever worn out the knees of my trouSers prayin’ for ruin,* says the Village Deacon, “an* what's more; I ain’t a-goin’ to. Rain an* when they’re good an’ e ean’t run the world I'm in, I certainly you want.,your name engtaved free. Visit our plant and learn t'he rea-»’ quent trips to the docks where this | commodity is being unloaded and ta- | T S W. B. A, OF MACCABEES T@ MEET MONDAY NIGHT The regular meetmg of the W, B, ‘A. ofithe: Macgabeos. will be’ held Monday :evening, at.8 o'clock at.the Moose hall, and itqis, desired that all members be presenti: DEGREE OF HONOR ENJOYS lNlTlATlON AND" SGCIAL 7 The Degree of HDHOI order initi- ated three candidates at its meehng last evening, after which a beunte- ous cafeteria iunch was served and a pleasant social time enjoyed by all. ENTERTAIN AT BRIDGE Mis. E. H. Denu and Mrs. Joseph McFadden entertained yesterday af- Werhoon’ at a second. party,.at the McFadden ' home, 1203 Minnesota avenue. Five tables of bridge were played and luncheon served by the hostesses. ORDER OF EASTERN STAR There will be a special meeting of the Eastern Star on Tuesday eve- ning, November 22; at 8 o’clock in the Masonic hall. There will be initia- tion of candidates and refreshments will be sefved. All members are re- quested to be present. METHODIST AID DIVISION PREPARING FOR XMAS SALE A few members of the miscellah- eous division of the Methodist Ladies’ Aid met at the home of Mrs. P. L. Hines last evening and enjoyed social conversation while they worked on articles for the Christmas sale. Mrs. Hines served lunch to the guests. SENIOR CLASS ENJOYS CLASS PARTY FRIDAY The scnior clags of the Bemidji high sthool ‘and six ‘of the teachers enjoyed a class party last Lvenmg at "the Civic and Commerce associa- tion rooms. Games were played and refreshments served after which Miss Geraldine Reed’s orchestra of three instruments furnished music for the dancing which was enjoyed until, a late hour. PRESBYTERIAN DIVISIONS MEET MONDAY EVENING The dining room, bedroom, miscel- lan‘~us and apron divisions of the Pzesbyterlan Ladies’ Aid will meet in the church basement Monday cve- ning to make plans for the coming Christmas sale to be held Wednesday, ! November 30. All members and:wor! ers of ‘the different divisions are r quested to be present. Mesdm\;f]s Hanson, Kreatz, Anderson, Opsahl, Batchelder and Kobe will be hostesses Monday cvening. BEMIDJI MACCABEES ENJOY " VISIT TO BLACKDUCK LODGE The twenty-six members of the W. B. A. of the Maccabees, who wenu to Blackduck on the 6 o'clock train last evenmg, reporting an exception- The B {nlly good time. team initiated a class of ten candi- 10 the after the business mecting a o’clock luncheon served | gdests, and the Bemi returned on the 11-o'clock train to their homes. Those-who made the trip avere” Mesdames Agnes Lafaive, June Bush, Lorlie Kerrick, Maude Rice Lena Jacobs Ada Craven, Goldie Koehn, Frank Arnold, Naomi thchc), Jane Karlstad Andrew Berg, Fenanda Hatch, Ethel “Collard, Lillian ' Callo- Foy, Ida Tiller. L;ottxc Hamilton, El- | vina Golz, K. H. Olson, Agatha Olson, Ida Enclmon, Mabel Belglund Mar. 1tha McCullough, Tom Newton, I. P. ! Batchelder and Miss Emma Golz, Height of Aurora Borealis. A Norwegian scientist, M. Stormer, was able to have photographed at sev- eral points in' his country, the aurora telegraph lines ‘and cables and pro- vided a gorgeous display” in ‘many parfs of the.world. Comparing these photographs in ro- lation to known stars photographed at ‘the same time, he has calculated the height at which this aurora borealis was .spread forth—namely, 812 miles. £ Thus, since the aurora horealls Is by proof an eclectrical illumination of the. rarified air gaves, the earth’s at- mosphere- extends at Jeast that dis- tance above the earth’s surface.—~Dee troit Ney ! - i 2 |'. 7" New; Zedland Offers Air PFize.: :: | ! A'substantful prize has heen offered for the first' flight from: Aucklabd to Wellington in a New Zealand built air- plane by a New Zeulander, g Phione Conduits for Montsvideo, Uruguay hus authorized experts‘from the United States tv make studies for can't give directions to the other one.” nd underground telephone systen in MEETS TUESDAY EVENING|. | dates for the Blackduck order, andy ji Maccabees | ‘borealis. seen -last May, which upse} . emidji guard | for I’ROBLEMS S ARISING FROM . ovama?ummn ) ¢ Mrs. Juflet-flmetc Ruble i IRTH control is one of the com-| B ing, sclentific regulations that! § will do much to settle the prob-| ilems of the ‘world,” says: Mrs, Jullet VBarrett Ruble, a prominent member| jof the committee in churge of -the; {First American Birth-Comtrol Confer-| ience, which will be held at'the Plaza Hotel, Nev. York City, November 11, 112 apd 13, This Confererice wiil bej iattonded by scientists from. all, over; the. world and some of the .committee| members’ hold that if scientific’ birth-, control of family limitation had been| lglven the proper attention half a century ago there would have been no| {world war and there would be no need| ifor tho ‘present disarmament confer- lence which has. to. discuss the prob.| ilems that are caused by the over:| ipopulation of the earth. | INDIANS’ GIVING 0P MOGCASIN Many, Rzasonov Why the Red Men Are Taking to the Footgear of the White Race. Because - of- a scarcity of proper leather frowm. which to manufacture | footwear, and the availabilty of store ' shoes, Indian moccasin making will ' soon be a lost art. Throughout ~ the Northwest , the fringe-bordered and ‘bead-bedeckead In- dianmnoceasin is rapidly being snbsti- tuted by the white man’s shoe. The high-laced shoe Is a favorite with both sexes, For hunting and fishing the | 1921 “warrior™ prefers a hobnailed Kknee-high logger’s, boot. The aboriginal moceasin fabric was mouse, hide for cold wenther in the Northwest; buffalo hide with the hair on for winter on the plains; buck- skin for all general purposes, and later on beef hidg. in, place of the disappearing skins, In one fabric of the other wer@ distinet tribal models with historical events drawn in bead work. . The Crow, Sioux and Blackfoot Indian shoes poss d o hard rawhide sole to ward of ubby grass and pebbles. In the snowy regions of the north- west the moceisin had soft soles thyt | would admit. of the use of the snow- shoe, Tourists who have been searching various mnkes of moc S dle- st tribes | iminated moceasins, shoe of the Amer- Y 1ot become extifet, ¥ of Washington will at. (ullm‘ specimens of noe- made hy eve boriginal tribe on the North American conti- nent. An expedition has left to be- gin the collecting of the footwear, | | | fcan nati the U tempt to casins as improved Sewing Machine, A sewi | | s machine that will do the | family. darning has now been pat- ented, s Popular Mechanies Miga- | zine. 1 sential feature js. a slecl arm which carries the intricate méeh- anism congrolling fhe shuftie;nid feed. Fhls 18 inereaged in a hall at the end of flie avm. Tn (his way aljout twen- ty - parts -have been vlhn]lmlot!, muk- iug maintenance less expensive, nnd beeause of its simplicityy requiring less power to run. In darning, (he bedplate covers over the ball and arm ! are removed, and the sock is, drawn over the ball and along the arm. This construction also permits the sewing and mending of various other articles that require ‘¢ r_seaming. Many Native Negro Languages, ; Native Negro languages are a Jnar vel. There are zbout eight hundred, | FIRST TO ILLUSTRATE. BOOK ‘| question. i mine and more than one hundred have heen reduced to writing, said a missionnry who has just returned from flnl'(" vears’ travel over Afr We Lnu\\' not for how mhny generations |I|vw languages ‘have heen passed from |l|)l to ear, from parent to child, and from | tribg to tribe. i is Vary in Growth, . No, jtwo finger nails onyour hands grow at the same rate. The ndil on | sthe .middle finger grows Tastér 1lmn> any ofter,’ while the thumir mul i3 -0. slowest growth, “GOD AT THE FIRESIC SUBJECT OF SERMON BY DR. G- H. AT THE ‘M‘ETHODIS_T‘ EPISCOPAL CHURCH ENTZ Roman Writer 'Is Credited With Irino- vation, ‘Many Years Before the Coming “of Christ. Book | fllustrytions. are” so ‘comnon nowadays, and the varlous processes of reproducing pictures in print so highly developed, most strange to contemplate the fact that fhere was a time when the first that it seems al- iilustrated book - created a \'(-rlmhlel sensation. Dhe event oceurred in the year B. C. for a good for recognition mous fellow-citizens, History is silont on the rather in- Varro or not, but it is loud in his praise as the first writer who conceived the idca of teresting question svhether charged them for his services illustiating his work with portraits. They were crudely drawn, tom of embellishing historical: wo with wings became a fad the writers of those days. Jenny Lind in 1851, Amne Hollingsworth Wharton. writes “In Old, Pennsylvania Towns,” that while visiting in Iol- lidaysburg friends told her of othey in her book, and more romantic associations, stil recalled by old inhabitants who re- membered Jenny Lind's visit to Blair county in 1851. Mr. Suyder relatet an hicident connected with the Swed- ish Mountain house, roud junction mear Hollidaysburg. singer's stay at Fhe While at this hotel the singer en- gaged a carringe to take her up the mountain side and on reaching a place from which there was an extended view of the distant mountains, the valley and the Juniata beauty of the scene that she greeted it with an outbuist quisite, said the narrator, that Jbirds, her only "hearvers except conchman, must have felt that a rivn of thelr own kind had joined them, The view of the Lill and valley may | Swedish nightin- gale of some seene in her own land, have reminded the ng with which she broke of the Home." as the s on the stillne: was “Home, Sweet Tunnel Ventifation™ Trled. The test of the ventilation system {in 2 model vehicular tunnel, a repliea of the proposed Hudson River tunnel from New York to Je Bruceton, near Pit sidered a success by the officials and members of the New sey Bridge and Tunnel commisslon who attended. Experiments were made the effeets of motor gases, the heat and the smoke, to effzcts on motorists in tunnels, \ To Clean Lnther Baqs Brown_leather hugs ‘may be cleaned by rubbing on a thick Iather of pure white sonp. utes, then wipe dry with flannel cloth tand' polish with vaseline; rub this in - With bare hands; rub very havd; don't use too much, and wipe off well, Vi/hy Look on the Dark Side? Oung every-day life brings so many troubies and- disappointments that we 70 Varro, a rather mediocre writer of ancient- Rome, had been struggling many years when he suddenly conceived the idea of preparing a volume containing the biographies of 700 of his most fa- and as to whether they were good likenesses or not, will always remainh an open But they were Hiustrations all tlie same, and after that e cus- s among which .was situated at a rail- flowlng through it, she was so impressed by of song so ex- the the mountain slde defer- | methods of - eliminating all’ such | Apply It with a sponge, rub hard, let it remain on u few min- 1 1 1. sey Clty, con- | B ducted at the experimental mine of | the United States hurenu of mines at | shurgh, was con- bhureau's | Jer- | ment.—ANDREW ROOD. _ Subacribe for Money Back without 1 HUNT'S QUARANT! SKIN DISEASE REMEDIES Bosrdmana Corner Drug Store GENIUS IS TALENT .+ 'DEVELOPED The development of talent is not a miracle but mereiy a matter of hard and painstaking work: There outstanding principles Wed in the develop- ment of ar singing, viz.: Thor- ough relaxation ‘of the tongue and: throat, development of the right kind of breath, and diaph matie control of the breath, These out- standing principles can only be at- tained through careful study under a teacher who knows his work. Call phones 142 or 458 for appoint- at The Daily Plones: NOTICE! October Electric Light Rills ARE NOW PAST DUE and Must Be Paid By Novembker 25th Please help us by your co- operation in paying your bills and thus enable us to give the most efficient serv- ice possible. ‘ 25 November Kl. 8 ——PROGRAM—— ; Concert aw J. G, NORDGAARD are foolish ‘to look -on the dark side B of things ond eourt many a rap thus L mighi otherwice he avoldad. This 1Is the time of the year when you want your furniture re- paired. We call for it, fix it, nnd mturn 6. 4 SAWS FILED SKATE‘!« SHARPENED GENERAL REPAIRING Jak ¢ sRepalrShop Tenth & 1 Phor.e 897 it J. G. NORDGAARD Forste premie 25th Juni, Foredrag av Bjorgulv Bjornaraa. Based on Burn’s - “COTTER'S SATURDAY NIGHT” At 8 P. M-———+$U Ta« E@aus@ Efiail Frad: Tog ekstra premie i Kristiania 16th Mai, 1910. Forste prelme Sth Juni i Mt. Horeb,, Wisc, rookston, Minn, Dans i Norsk national dragster fra Satersdalin INDGANGS PEN"ERM'FI .00 V PAGE THREE Let the Radlator Doetors Fix It . All Work Guaranteed Now Located 507 Third St. THE NEW. Radiator Husmtal At City Livery Barn £33 . S