Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, August 31, 1922, Page 11

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BUCK LAKE #Rev. and Mrs J.:T. L, Coates and son Oten, who have been visiting and camping in this vicinity the paat two weeks, left for their “héme in St. Cloud last Wednesday. \Mr. and Mrs. Henry Sawyer ‘and son James, and ‘sister Ruby, left Taesday for Wolftrd, N=D., where Henry will work Wuring threshing. Mrs. Sawyer will t,irelatives and Miss Ruby: will attend school in Wol- ford. <Alex Sawyer t.\'ansacted bnsmess in.Cass Lake Thursd 7 L;st ‘Wednesday was visiting dny at’ the Joe Johnsox Hom: calling ‘there were n Larson, Mrs. Selma Rothe, Miss Han. néh Rector and Mr. an Sawyer and daughter “Messrs. | Ed.- Larso, Carlson” have finis! cn the Furt's . E. Davis i tie mver n-eadowsflwm . Oscar Hoglum is visiting his par. ents neer. Williston, N.'D. | ing in harye: and,j,h . Albin Ca Weht to Cass Lake on business last Wednesday. Mrs. Selma Rothe and Miss ‘Ha nah Rector,galled on Mrs.. Ed.. Lar- son, Mrs. Albin Car¥on;iMrs. M..O. Reghelt ‘an Mrs. Alex-Sawyer last| ¥ Joe Johnson' will sell ir personal property. and spend n-St. Paul 6n account of ealth. They ex-| e first of Oc.v M. 0. Reghétt $nd sons have finish- . THE BEMIDJI DAILY-PIONEER ... Mr. and ‘Mrs. Joe Johnson calledlthnngh here .Sunday while on his on-Mr. and Mrs. M. ‘0. Rogholt, Sun- day. Mr. and Mrs Leo Anderson, Mr. . Rogholt, Miss Myrtle Rogholt and Mr. and Mrs. Tescher and son called on Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Rogholt Sun- day afternioon. It is understood that Mrs. Selma Rothe will teach h qur school the com- ing year. Mr. and Mrs. M. O. Rogholt and family were pleasantly surprised last Friday' evening when Mr. and Mrs. C. F. Flesciter arid“son, of néar St. Cloud, drove over for a few days’ visit. < Mable, .Arnold | {and Chester Carl- son called on Mrs. Alex Sawyer Sun- day afternoon. ' Alex Sawyer left S\mday to put in a week haying south of Cass Lake. 95 T 'NSTRIKE Mr. and-Mrs. James G.-Rice and Mr. and-Mrs. Howard Ferrell and family motored to Red Lake Sunday where theyienjoyed:a picnic dinner. Rev. Gregg of Littlefork visited with his brother, W. S. Gregg, last Monday.. -.He- returned to his home Monday evening. Rev. I. Woodcock held regular services .at. Spur_Sunday afternoon. Gladys Gregg 'is spending a few days. with.her parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Gregg. Miss Adair Hofer, visited with her parents, Mr. and Mr: G. Hofer, Sun- day. Mprwand Mrs. W..A. Rice motored |to Bemidji Sunday evening. h the Turtle River| e home Thursday. | o Anderson autoed | ] ed their haying meadows - and ¢ Mr. and Mrs. to Cass Lake Fri corupanied by The Silver La s Myrtle Roghol L§ Farmers’ club and | the Ten LakesiFarm Bureau unit; held their st meeting last Thursday at thil:xome of Mr. dnd' Mrs. Leo Ander In spite of the rain; there was #!company of thirty- one presqnt' ‘Assistant . County Agent Washbury: and Mr. Omstad of near aned)ohs, were present. The president ing absent, Mr. Washburn took the chair. A clear- mg team was o amzed consisting of Messrs. M. Olsen, Leo Anderson, M. ©O. Rogholt, Edi"Larson and Albin €arlson. Mr. Qarlson was selected as captain. T will commence work September, 11. After lunch, BIr. Omstad ga¥e an excellent talk 6n farmers organizing. The mnext meeting will be} with Mr. and Mrs. Joe Johnson September 28. ; The Woodlahd Union Sunday school, as well 8s the Glee club and Blue Ribbon Gitls’ club, are missing the nbsent menfl)en these dnys Paul Haluptzok, Art Jacobson, 0. A. Bailey, W. C. Hagadone and Jasper’ Cronk motored to Bemidj Sunday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Haluptzok are | & the proud parents of a baby boy born last Friday. Mr. and Mrs. H. D. Sorenson and Mr. and Mrs. F. X. Betz motored to Bemidji Sunday evening. WB,ite a number from here attend- ed the D. W. Griffith picture ‘‘The Fatal Marriage,” at the Elko, last Sunday. The Tenstrike baseball team will play the Laporte t at Bemidji next: ‘Sunddy™ and®*~*Monday after- noons. ‘These two games promise to be good ones. Mr. and Mrs. Wm, Travis and Roy Travis - left Sunday fdl‘ Warren, Minn., after recelvmg a message that Chflord Travis -had iundergone an operation, and that his condition was anythin gbut favorable. Mrs. Wm. Travis’ sister of Miz* pah, who has been .on the sick list| for .some_.time; - haj very much the P [ ‘way. hom¢ Rev. C,’ Trpdenu of Blackduck vis- ited here for‘a short time Monday. As-usua), a large crowd of Ten- strike rgoters. accompanied the ball’ team to Blackduck Sunday. Calhoun Grier and Martin Hass, who won the free trip to the State Fair, will leave for St. Paul the elrly part of next week. Mr. Clark Waite of St. Cloud vis- ited a few days at the Emil Falk home last week. 0. ‘A. Bailey motored to Black: duck Sunday. John Pemblé Jr., and Mr. and Mrs. L. A. Rearick motored to Blackduck Sunday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. R. ‘'W. Fellows mo- tored to “Bemidji Sunday evening. M?. and Mrs. Wm. Fellows, Mr. and Mrs: R’ W. Fellows and Henry Barlow mbtored to Blackduck Sun- day. 3 Delbert Tufford, while on his way to the ball game Sunday, broke some wvital- part.of his car, causing Del- bert a great deal of inconvenience. “ Some tinie ago a bay mare stray- ed to the Augnst Lundgren place. Anyone owning this horse should cal! at the Lundgren home and identify. it. ternoonM,flkkzFfl,x M SHEVLIN-MOOSE <Axel Felt and John Aune of Itasca spem. Friday evening here. Mr. and Mrs. W..O. Gordon and daughter Margaret returned home Saturday from Alexandria, Minn., where they had been called by the illness and death of Mrs. Gordon’s ‘mother, Mrs: J.: Petterson. Action,” shown here Sunday evenings, was - large audiences. +The mber from . here mended the dance at ‘Frank ‘Bailey’s Satur- ‘day night. . } Carrying:On With the l American Legion ! Tyrgn,; Neb., 26 miles from & rail- road, in the midst of the sandhill re- glon, has dedicated a $2,300 Amerl- can Leglon meinorial hall. s The Leglon in Massachusetts has raised funds to install a radio recelv- Ing et in each of the state’s five hos- nof lm_px-oved pitals_where service men are being| cared for. . Anton }Ir. of M pah moto d | T i car value. sired. So snug 5645 'F. 0. B. DETROIT Terms if de- the open car driving will cease to be a' pleasure. mfort, for smartness of appearance; theé FORD SEDAN For gives you just what you look for on chilly days—warmth and comf Th re is no need to store your car if'you have a'snugly closed SED N for winter. It is truly an’ all—year-round car. Th émere sale of a car- doesn’t but btgins L, nd the transagtion with us—it We. shall always be mteresbed in flie way your car operates and the condition it is ina Itis ouralm'to please you and keep bfou pleased. i Teléphone 970 I—-_.__ Jewe‘tt If you come, you’ 3 bv glad 'fo., “THE SERVICE GARAGE” REQUIRED AGES TO PETRIFY 8cientific. Explanation of -How . Fon ests Have Been Converted Through Process of Chalcedony. The trees of the petrified forest did not grow where you see them today, They were bf seversl kinds but most ot them were related to the Norfolk Island pine,"how wsed for indoor deco- ration. Doubtless they grew in a neatby region and after falling, drifted| down a water course and lodged in some eddy’o# ‘a sand bank. Later they were buried by sand and clay, finally. to ‘a’ depth of several thousand feet. The ¢onversion o ‘stone was effected by gradual replacement of the woody material ‘by silica in the form called chalcedony, ‘ deposited by underground water. A small amount of fron oxides deposited at.the same time has given the brilliant and beautiful brown, yel- low and red. tints .which -appear in much of tle material. The petrified forest of Arizona fs really. a jes ‘of “petrified ' forests. There are four ‘of these forests fn. cluded in a government reservation called ‘petrified forest national monu- ment, created by presidential proela- mation in 1906. The name “forest” is not strictly appropriate, for the petri- fied tree trunks are all prostrate and are broken into sections. The logs are the remains of glant trees that grew in Triassic time, the age of reptiles. Some of the ‘tree trunks are six feet in diameter -and more than a-hundred feet in length. In the first forest there is a fine trunk that forms a natural bridge over a small ravine, the water having first washed aw % 1iig- clay and sand, (fifien. nnlfi"fi: a crevice, worked out thechannel wng derneath, . The-length-, of ' this 108 110 feet and the dlameter foun feet: the' butt and one-nnd: ohe-half. the top. These facts havesbe out by the United Stnes ml vey. Petrified woods are very interesting objects to study. When thtn slices are carefully ground ‘down to,gth{g ness of .003 inch or less under the microscope they fectly the original wood. s the _cells being . distinet;’ they are replaced by chal Queer Place for- Curlers. My fiance has light hair 'without & sign of wave, and desirlng to look nice when my friends met him, I“$uggest- ed he allow-me to wave it. He was from out of town, and few of m; friends had met him. \ =% pers ;on. Lge is.little, AS TR 2B i ed ‘T woman feelS when_shels g0t he h:c well down over her eyebrows.” f\fen 'go So fast; they mever wait for.us. They begin making love to us“before we've made up’ our minds M they're wearl.ng the rlght glnd ting rid .of being in love; seems, to do it right. enough, lnyhow." ‘You don‘t douk love . ‘Ln an -From_ -“The Conteaal\ms of i Sir Peter O'Brien, a lord chlefvjns- tfce’ of Treland, was.going as a com- | § missioner of assizes op. the Munster ‘clcéuit; "on which he had been for years a leader.~'A gomewhat litiglous female witriess of the peasant “class, with: whom the chief justice when One Sunday he was over to-spend | sractising. at the bar the day. Thinking I had:lots of:time curlers, I did so. I neglected to take the qurlers; off) and ‘in less- than ten minutes fos t them. He evidently forgot them, too, for luncheon time rolled around, angd the curlers were still there. dpex\- Jeulanally acquainted, © was glvinx before dinner to' put- his: hair:upon |i€viden @ chief justice fhtétfered’ with a questign, -and commenced-thus: “Now, nggy;,tell me —" The witness, with with a ludicrous expréssioirof offended dign] famlligrity of manner ity, thus rebuked his lordship’s "mm'm“- pected guests’ called my friend into} ty, Pether, if you plaze: the front room from the den to meet our friends. Can you imagine the embartassm of both when our guests gasped in [’ surprise at the-sight of the nrlers"— Exchange. Men, Women and Love. “Men who don't love you nlvnys send ym beautiful letters.” en_don’t understand how. proteets. AT OLE QUAMMEN’S FARM, 7} MILE LET’S FARM !N TOWN OF FROHN. We have derson articles that will be sold. nander Hanford cN] the Legion, has nnnopnced himgelf in favor of every Legion pdst ddopting a. troop -of boy scouts or forming s in communities where none “Scouting 1s. the best educa- tion in' America today for developing uture -eitizens I favor anything that tends tow: its promotion,” Mr. will'y of a’ certain’ lndutrlul town on. ‘be- half of ‘a deserving charjty, .when he encountered an overthritty merchant,’ upon whom all the clér‘mn‘n’q‘s!n‘ "guence was wasted at Brst,; I believe this is a deserwihi. ehar ity,” admitted the merchant. “Is de- serves to succeed, but I can’t afford to give “anything. ~ nowmr; ‘you Mve my goodwill.” (ks ‘. “Thank yonu, sir™ sgid’the. tlersy- man. “If that is all yoy. feel you able to give; just sig youn name:hore, and write ‘goodwill’ after :then the townspeople will-kngw :what ‘ypur. gift 1s.” 3 The paper was signed, but the m r- = chant put something more wm"‘agnlnat his nam Chickens Don’t’ Go_ :Rou The United States chicken last year, report of ‘whi able, ‘possesses sentimgn! Dbusiness interest. There 885 chickens ‘on farms in States on January 1, 280,340,957 - chicken: or more April 15, 1910. Inasmuch as many chickens are- slaightered ‘and marketed each year bétween January 1 and April 15, comparison is-difficit. The actual increase if there'wis any: probably corresponds “withy that inVege production—5.2 per cent. Im’ actuality - the - growth of fowl . population-:dnes not .keep pace with: thal beings. No wonder eggs ;nd fried cliicken come high. ",k itk 27,746,510, with ILti and Texas not far hrmnd. Qeclded to locate in Spokane, Wash., and will sell everytlnng we own to} the hlglieat bxd- s date. Everything cannot be"lyted here, but this bill'w ve an idea of some of the Come out fil‘ifl‘ice what bargams you may pick up. You can have a good vmt wnth your fl vgllbors nf you don't‘seéanything you wuh to bld on—s0 your time will-be well spent. ; ; 1 Team of Horses, 1200 and} ‘1300 lbu ea.ch. CATTLE— 1 Red Cow, 6 years old, fresh. ‘1 Red and White Cow, old, fresh. .2 Brush/Breakers. : &M Stzl Drag. 8 years}'3: -1 Red Cow, 6 ye.ars old. 1 Red Cow,:7 years old, fresh' “ December 15. ‘1 Red Cow, 5 years old fresh December 15. 2 Red Heifers, 1 year old. ~2 Red and White Heifers, com- ing 2 years old. "1 Red and White Heifer, year- ling. 3 Spring Calves. 2 Large Hogs. 9 Young Pigs, 3 months old. IMPLEMENTS & TOOLS— 2 wide-,tir_e Wagons, with top boxes. 1 set of Work Harness. 1 Single. Harness. 2 McCormick Mowers. ‘1 seven-, 1 Shot Gun. ing. About 2% acres Field - Corn, standing. Some F odder Corn, standing. ’ P —— 1 two-houe Cultivator. 1 five-gnlloh Cream Can. lon Barrel Churn. 1 ten-galion Barrel Churn. FEED AND HAY— About 6% acres Potatoes, stand d «f i{arley-Davndsdn Bxcficle. »}'Columbia Range, Gllolq with ¢ reservoir. 2 Wood Heaters. : sijs2.Dressers. 1 Hakley Piano. Columbla Grafgnola, «abinet *style. SiEs) 41 solid lenther-covered Rocker. 7 | 5. Tables. . = 1 ‘China Closet._ . 1 Combination Book: Cale and : iting Desk. g 3‘L‘arge Rockers. g RS i+ 1 et of Quilt Frames. sawr 1 set-of Curtain Sh'etcheu. roriBeds. © dl; Sagless Sprmg md Mat- i esses. -3 FlatIrons, Iromng Boird and T _SAQT e Clothes Rack. 2 ash Tubs, O‘opper Boxler * and Wringer. Pu;]des and Preserves. And any number-of other ats " ticles, not mentioned., . TERMS Sales of $10 or less cash. Over t,lns amount cash or bankable paper.. Thq;e denrmg credit are expected to make arrangements for same thh the: clel‘k before goods ‘are removed 4\4 Ule auammen, gy AUGUST JARCHOW Auehonder

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