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Sy Y Ttoms, : will . T Y ton avenue Monday. $50,000 to ‘loan -on -farms, Dean Land Company. 1-18tf Miss Myrtle Hanchett, a, college student, returned Monday .from spending her #Thanksgiving .vacation; at her home .neap Northome. -Miss ‘Lucile Jincson ,returned to: resume cher teaching .at her sschogl near ‘Hinés Monday after visiting relatives in_Bemidji during her .va- cation. 2 FE One dozen ; photographs mxke 2. Nat:of Rackwood: were Thanksgiving dinner guests at the home.of .their daughter, Mrs. Frank * Slough and family, 1207 Irivine avenue. be gladly received | resume his® work’ at ‘his® officé this 34 owe it to_their morning after a week’s iilness at his home. ¢ Mrs. A. E. Feir cxpects to leave temorrow morning for Little Falls where she will .visit--relatives for tabout - ten " days. > : i A sor: 'was bofi to Mr. and Mrs. E. 0. Erickson, 523 Minnesota ave- h;xe,l at ithe ‘Bemidji ‘Lutheran “hos- pital .this ‘morming. .~ : ; £ Miss Madeline Saxton of Hingkley, has -been .the guést:for .4 ifqw days ‘|of Miss Verna Dalén at’ the_Ander- son:home, 11207 pswgy‘a\zq;xje;»“ a_Thanksgiving and weel a new shipme now on-display. ~They are rthe most Bliss Myrtle Halvosod returned to | popular; ‘the most :youthful .anl the Bemidji.yesterday from Nevis.:Minn. | most comfortable ‘blouse where ighe :spent her vacation at her home. Bhott ‘help “this ‘year—Come in gg;ly—Tl;q Hakkerup Studio. fmz l.;a: -and :Mrs. Frank Slongh enter-: Mr.cand:Mrs . trined ten -friepds..and relative afcoast. a ‘card party -Saturday eve lunch .wa8 served.at: 12 o’clock by Ms: Slowgh. - gres 2 g at . n_Sundays; make _appointment for sitting ev4ping. Hakkerup-Studio, 11 186tf <*Miss “Myrile Aldrich entertainéd afew friends informally at her home 1115 Mississis Avenue, - - Sunday music assisted in passing away the hours ‘pleasantly. / She resumed ‘her -studies at}" 1207 Trvine avenme. ~A| any - .- :Games .were /played .and |1 market today. {Buy.'one and Jook ivé years younger. 1t b “Miss'Dorothy-Doty. returned.on’the train ‘“Monday everning -from -Sebeca, Minn., she having 'spent Thanksgiv- 4f¢ing and the aveek-end at her home. [ She resumed her studies at the col- ¢ge-this morning- B. W. Lakin, vfom‘ierly of Bemidji en | spent the day here Saturday between trains, en route to Minneapolis from Ft. Franeis. “In company with, Tom JMéCann and ‘Howard ‘Deathe- expect- ‘to make a business tfip ite- the ay night for his thome 4t ‘Mankato. Rev.. Lambert left again. Monday. for Crookgton to ‘When shopping for Xmas remem- *‘Ut_:e!“f ; board S:W‘-g ml::h 3.\; lko ‘Ha new- [(CT31g A8l SApOTEY 9 ber this Elko Hat Shap dor dhe Hew other -officers Monday night. He esy and smartest gifts. ‘LaFrance and Victoria -Silk hose, our “price $235. . 1t 5 A ten-pound -son -Was -born to Mr: and Mrs. Bert .Landford of Solway Sunday afternoon, ‘at the “home -of her ‘gister, Mrs: “R. L. Luce, 616 First, street. Mother and bahy :’;‘.e reported ito be getting along nicely. , A'free lecture on -Christian Science will ‘be given Tuesday .eve- ning, December ‘5th in -thé - Reg theater “ai M. ‘Al .are:cor- dially ‘invited to attend, Herman “Bjerbaum, who+has “been’ employed at the Chicago Box & Crating compafly for.geveral months left. Monday .morning for. ,Ghicggv, where he will be employéd with* brother, George. Bi ~d_Te resident of Bemi g PSRN .‘Eddon Washburn, . .who -has -been adsistent county agent in. Bemidj £6r several months, left by auto Sat- urday ‘for “McGrath, ‘Mirin, where he wlil aversee-a colony of .world -war “vétérans on a'soldier's fa - Wetwith:to announce that evening digel will “be _conducted :by Myzt- 1d H. Letschell of the Dennison Mfg- Co.; on Wi vy -and ‘Friday eve- nlsge of this week ‘from to 9 &t our stare. The public is invited Bemidji cBosk isnd Stationery Com- pany: 2t 6 - Miss HypatiaiRouse and her broth- er Chester Jr,, motored -with friends| to nidji Friday evening .to visit their father, 'C: Rouse, 423 'dth street,: They. ,I.wr&e_;lAto,Boquad Sunday to .resume their.school work in ngmc' t -No. 29 the ~following morning: . Catload .of 4 .ft, Jackpine and popple wood ontrack for quick sale CLifford & Co. 25 A few relatives_ and friends were enterjained Thanksgiving -day at .the home of T. J. Slough, 614 Thirteenth street, the affair being in the nature of a family dinner party. The guest| list included. Mr. .and Mrs. Frank Sraith and danghter,, Nora May. Mr. | Morrison, T. J. Slaigfiz, Mr. and Mrs. | Fred Boyle, little Miss Beryl -Slough and “Eawrence ‘Murphy.and ;Mr. and Mrs. ‘Charley Slough and four sons | of Lake Plantaganet. 4t12-6 suzed will_@evote his time’ during Decem- ber in.the distriét inthe interest of {Hamline- Uniyersity and .the first .of Lthe year will take.yp evangelistic ;mern 0il Co. Jerrard, "Mer- i ‘i o — ey f —— | rif— b N — i - 4 Sl — ] — 5 \ i "the K. * | gram Thanksgiving eve, at the school ] [ 1 1 ‘ ] YHE azm;b.n’ DALY fl‘o‘u“z .-thé same period in 1921. housing ;construction develops, is sthe great percentage of ;new -homes now indicates “that.:substitutes “for” wood are inclgde. (seel and ; igtings, - voofings. : i fBailders .of new rhouses seem’ to “be taking .more :to “heart the lesson that iste“have been. driving home-for. years— tlz;l_a@%at«heafimber sapply ‘of Amerjeamust:ibe icomserved, And in :gmng-fiis:i!am they have /ifound p-- t ;g;rnly;flng!fl)_afi:fles for .wood X advantage.obut . that . these sthat_ the .average without padaly increasing. his, costs. If he Yives in a section -where violent ‘wing occur, he ‘is laying a roof « that will “stay .put.” WI’lcreg he en- counters_heavy .fire risks he is sceking ‘8 material that has great fire-resistant qualities, © A’roofing material of proven merit both from the storm-resistant and the fire-resistant standpoint that is now being most widely used is the asphalt shingle. .~ - Not long ago .one .of the :leading I . by e ) cities in the South was_swept by one : @f the .most severe hurricanes ever re- A. 0. U. W. HOLDS ANNUAL MEETING THIS EVENING The A. 0. U. W. will hold its regu- lar -business. meeting and election of officers this_evening at.8 -o’clock at .:C, hall and all members are urged to’'be present. I .MGDSRN WOOQDMEN WILL 4EET WEDNESDAY :NIGHT membeérs of the Modern Wood- men?ef -America: are requested to be presgnt at:the wregular meeting Wed- nesday. evening ‘at-8 o‘clock -at .the K. C. hall. DEGREE OF :HONOR WILL ..ELECT OFFICERS TONIGHT The regular meeting of the Degree of Honor will be held this evening at 8 o’clock at the K. C. hall and it is | requested that all members be pres- ent as the annual election of officers will take place at.that time. ORDER OF EASTERN STAR HOLDS MEETING TONIGHT The Order of Eastern .Star will tonight at 8 o’clock af; the, hall. There will be_electi cers and ‘all members”are urge, Masonic f offi- present.” SALVATION ARMY HOME . ‘LEAGUGE 'TO HOLD SALE their hall -in Nymodre, Wednedday December 6. at 8 pi m. Coffec and cake will be served. The general; public . is .urged sto attend and ‘buy: their Christmas, presents at the sale. | ENJOY PROGRAM The Riverside school of Grant] Valley, of which Miss Dagny Dybvig is teacher, gave an interesting pro- house, which was greatly enjoyed by a large audience and netted the dis- trict about $12.00. This sum will be used to purchase window shades for the school-room. CIVIC AND COMMUNITY CLUB HAS INTERESTING SESSION A; large afendarnce is feported at the.imeermg of the Woman’s Civic and [Commpunity noo;x. and&%fiy’x givelt whighzshows ighsde: par%:meflfsz.té-‘he :g? .{3;8 w;rk., The; report given by Miss Robinson | on ‘the "Milk Campdign ‘being con- showed' that 'splendid” 'resalts were already appsrént: ‘Mrs- H. A. Bridge* man for the Civic-Improvement com- mittee gave an interesting report on the work accomplished by. the cam- “One featuré, sthat sinvestigation .of | being ‘ built by laboring men. Another | now used n greater .volume. . “These ' ‘ather mctal frames* t ;shingles .aud -roll . -aml . conservation- , all 'the fire * “to pe 4 dudted - af the “Teschers’, college,; U, S. Weather Bureau. extent: of millidns of’ lue was destroyed or dam- E s.were crushed and: roofs were ripped; off :and scattered in cvery. direction, yetf inall of ,the . devastated area, despite>the 70 mile wind, not one asphalt’ shingle roof was, danjaged; Not one shingle 'was “upturned and ‘not a ssingle legk developed, Asphalt shingles are 1ot only waterproof but are im- ,gerhv;togx‘gqueezmg;,md_b'&e rays of The' report - £ the " National ‘Board of .Fire «Undecwriters “on the recent disaster at_Atlanta, Ga, showed “that homes roofed - with asphalt shingles ably resisted the flames. " In some in- stances, while surrounding homes; were destroyed, houses covered with “asphalt roofing failed to ignite and’ remained ntact, i Home Owners Increasing Less than 50 per cent of the Ameri- can people are homeowners and only 20 per cent of American diellings come Photo bv Underwood & Underwood. y wind storm in the South—Many roofs of froproof con« | hstood the force of the elements, showing the great ~resistance of such construction to high winds. up to the recognized staudards, has ncver been so great an interest in new dwellings and improvethent of houses already built ‘as shown this year, . In 1920 there were 11,400,600 home owners in the ccuniry. , The number has been greatly incrcased during the intervening two years. . ‘There are 13,000,000 home owners-in the United States today. ' Reports show that there is now ne hnusmg_ shortage in Boston, and rents on residential and business properties are classed as steady; Charleston has a housing problem, but reats are slightly reduced; Dallas has no housing shorte age, and the trend of rents for homes is downward; Harrisburg, Pa,, is short of homes, although building operaticns have doubled; Marion, - Ohio, has ne shortage and rents are stationary ; Nore folk has favorable conditions, and some reductions n rent are noted; in Pittse burg conditions are normal and rents steady; Palm Beach has enough houses, and in Yonkers there is a shortage, _with rents holding_fast, ——— e —————————— EPISCOPAL GUILD WILL HOLD. :SALE AND “SUPPER The Episcopal Guild will hold its ‘|lannual Christmas sale and ‘¢afeteria supper Saturday afternoon and even- ing in-the basement ot the thurch, to which the public is invited. ROYAL NEIGHBORS HOL]? MEETING TOMORROW, NIGHT. A1l members: of the Royal:Neigh- bors of America are requested to be présent at the regular-meéting Wed- nesday evening at 8 o‘clock at’the’ K. C. hall as there wiil beelestion of officers at that time: f It MiSS KENFIELD' ENTERTAINS The Young Ladies’ Sewing club was cntertained at a theatre party in the early evening Saturday by Miss Anzonetta Kenfield, after which they went to the Kenfield home and visited while they sewed, lunch being served by the hostess at a late hour. HOSPITAL AUXILIARY TO MEET FRIDAY AFTERNOON On account of the storm ycsterday the meeting of the Hospitzl Auxil- jary was postponed to Friday, Dee- ember 8th, from 4 to 5 in the afier- noon, All ladies interested are wei- come at thig meeting which will be meet for its regular busingss session)y ;i the Hospital Chapel, kFIRST .LUTHERAN LADIES’ A AID MEETS WEDNESDAY The Ladies’ Aid, society . of the First Scandinavian Lutheran church will meet’ Wednesday afternoon at 2:80 o‘clock in the ch basement. ‘Mesdame.J. Bye, ., C. M .Boe: [E. P. Peterson :. will entertain, *is desired. o attendance BIRTHDAY PARTY L:ttle Miss Billy Denison' enter- tained nine of her little friends yes- terday from 4 o G o‘clock at her I L.ome 715 Minnesota avenue, it being her sixth birth anniversary. Kin- dergarten games were played and a birthday lunch was served by Mrs. Denison. birthday tokens. The guests ,in- cluded. -Elizabeth Robinson, Rose Marie Baker, LeaJean French, Ruth Rafferty, ‘Mary -Anne Stuart, Betity and: Jeznette Snyder, Kathryn . Died- i#lch. and Particia Grinager. METH‘QD} x v,}.ADIES' AID-TO, HOLD MEETING WEDNESDAY An important business meeting of ¥Aid of the Methodist Il B held Wednesday after- noon in"ilie church basement, as plans will be completed at that time for the Christmas sale to be held December 12, also for the chicken dinner in connection this being the last regular méeting before the sale. It is necessary that all members be paign for better condition of the streets,. and presented the cup to Fourth Street, Fifth ward. Miss Rose | Olson received the’ cup for the street. present and all are urged to attend. }At the lunch following the business ! session to which all are invited, Mes- | dames Jennie Van Arnum: D. Wilcox, |A. E. Ellison and E. R: Jahr wili Sonsirud Miss Billy received many ' No French woman would wear a| . 3 5 : | ‘The piano duet by Mesdames Nix t.mlored dress, no Amex:xcan or Eng- and Bmli,ge was highly appreciated, as b lish woman vould be without it. The, ya5 5150 the reading by Miss Ruth ~ ttailore¢ dress here shown is' 8n- Caskey, with violin accompaniment trimmed save for rows of stitching by Miss Helen Lahr. At the social and plain tucks. It may be develop- i ed in Poiret ‘twill, twill cord, dn~l vetyn ‘or tweed. ,hour following the program, tea was!ly by Mesdames Laqua and Croon. e hostesses. MRS. ERICKSON SURPRISED Mrs. Julia Eriekson was pleasant- v surpriced at her home, 528 Eighth | served by Mrs. I B. Olson, assisted|street, Monday afiernoon, the occas- lion beitig her birth! annivérsary. The i afternoon was pleasantly spent in ‘! conversation and in the late after- {noon a bountiful lunch was served, which was furnished by the self-in- vited guests. "The guests were Mes- dames J. Hook, Hans Mosen, Ed and Paul Brilliard, Fred Malzahn, J. Ny- gaard, A. Strande, Joe Biondo. A. Blondo, K. Sandlund, .Chas. Blade, Hanson, J. L. Jerdee, H. Anderson, K. Nelson, E, Lundgren, Tharaldson. J. Kittleson, also Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Hook, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Erickson, J. Kleyin, Gladys. Sandlund and ‘Edith Erickson. " Miss A Cameron returned to Park Rapids Monday morning to re- 'sume her teaching afiler spending her Thanksgiving vacation in Bemidji with relatives. Misses Tande and Dora Magnell, teathers cclleze students, returned Mondsy from Oklee where they visied at their homes during their Thanksgiving vacation. DO YOU WANT TO SAYVE MONEY? Walk-up a flight of stairs !over Gill Bros. and wnave your clothes repaired and a new suit made to. order. A. Hendricks, tailor. | 12 4tf ! Misses Leura Halvorsen and Luel- {la Hanson returncd - tp Bemidji on the early morning train from. Foss- ton to resume their studies at the Stute Teachers college today. They have vigited during their vacation at their homes. Mrs. Belle Long and little son, | Walter, were guests of her sister, "C. A.:Knopke, for the past two ,days. ‘They returned to' their home al Puposky 'this afternoon. -Frank- |'lin Schrupgp of Henderson, Minn,, also visited at the Knopke home Sunday going from here to Itasca State park for a two-day‘s visit. He will return to Bemidji today and leave tonight for his home. Mr. and Mrs Martin Hogan of |8 Grant Valley -left Tuesday for Port- land. Orcgon. They, were met at Grand Forks by Mrs. Hogan’s broth- er, Wymen Ball of Reynolds, who . will accompany them .on the trip. | They will visit friends and relatives |in Spokane for a short -time, and | ezpect to make Portland their fut- |ure home. Mr.: and :Mrs. Hogan |have lived on their farm in Grant | Valley for about 25 years and their many| friends in’/this" vieinity wish them {success in their new home; i ks \ "Hot Dogs. | “An’ dat,” concluded Sam, who was arguing with Snowball about the rela- | tive merits of dogs. they had once owned, “was a wonnerfiul houn'! Why, one- day he come fooling roun’ mah daddy's blacksmith shop an’ mah | daddy got mad an’ chucked a hammer | at him, an’ da dawg—yo' know what he done? Well, he done made a bolt fo’ de do’.” “Hmf!" sneered Snowball. “Nuffin’ tall, nuffin’ tall! One time Ah throwed a hummer at mah dawg, an'he. slagt- | ed makin’ tracks fo’ de Atlantic - board railway. An’ maybe he's mak- ing tracks yet, fo' he sho’ was de wonnerfulest dawg!"—American Le- J glon Weekly. Ther ITH THE ICONOCLAST lllusions at the Bidding of Scientific “Sharps.” | Reading Les Annales we learn from a formidable scientific man who writes mna ksure marner that nowhere ear the French ceast, nor near. a pleuirg, to crappling, with found and’ destroying ‘a® man i blno;l_’-pnmpln'g And so we ‘must Mo Ionger he adyenture of Vie: “stor Hugo's 7 No I hould fhat sinfster line, “Soniething 'Setzed b l_l])e hcel,” which 'end,s' the deschiblng Sieur *“Clubln’s “ocean, cause u§"a thrill suckers.” be excited ov And now another ingenious scien- tific gentlemen assures us that Noah's ark was really one of the great pyra- nids of Egypt; that the animals en- - tering the ark—marshaled two by two —the elephant and the kangaroo— were really the signs of the zodine— the ram, the scorplon and the rest of them—symbolical figures, as shown in | the old-fashioned medical almanacs. We still prefer the Noah's ark of | our childhood, with the little wooden Shem, Tlam and Japheth, with the lit- tle wooden animals that were so ensi- ! 1y broken, Philip Hale writes in the Boston Herald. Are these arks still for sale in toy shops? We shall con | tinue to find pleasure in: the old iHus: trated family Bible, where the ark is shown securely resting on: Ararat.: Did not Dom Calmet give a minute . de- seription of the ark, making this pro- foundly original remark: “We find, Gen. 6:16, that the ark. wasto have Writer Refuses to Give Up Youth's “Must all our fllusions be dispelled? | Channel islands, 1§ there a devil-fish, | nx_mble of GTdoor T the 818y prereotfsithis is indispensably -necessary, for the pur- pose of ‘Ingréss and egress” -Dfd he | not ‘prove that the ark was without a keel ; -that-it was-no-other than.a large house “whose timbers:instead of going into the ground, whereby they would have -been held, were-detached from it, so-that when it was required to float, the waters might easily ‘ift up the ark.'?” a2 “And in like manner We‘,??‘?‘“?}'er;f‘? the Kraken, .that great Dbird, the ro the- sea-serpent, -and abpve all. th huge squid—!a vast pulpy mss -] longs In Igpgth dnd breadtn, of glancing _ éréam | color, Tong arms radfating from' its ‘center, and curling and twisting like a nést o anacondas, a¢ if blindly to clutch® at any hapless object within reach”; the = squid ~ without' perceptible face ot front, “an unearthly, forriless, ¢hance- lke apparition’of 1ife"; thie great live « i inndtherable | 7 squid, “which, they say, few ‘whale ships ever beheld, and returied to their ports to tell of 1t.” Evanescent. Crabshaw—Why, 1 gave you money URESR—. to have a permanent wave put in your ' hair. ! Mrs, Crabshaw "eral weeks ago.—New York Sun, Since Skirts A.re Long. “Have you saved up anything fora ada day?" - replied Miss Cayenne, “A r of silk stockings.” | | Purebreds ‘Are Important. | Purebred live stock on every farm is greatly needed, for purebred stock | make bigger returns for time and feed I Invested. _ ~ ) endurencé’ and physical power to rfsist disease. He grubbed and culled from nature medicinal herbs and plants to relieve and re- stere him in time of sickness—he found no elixir of life. ‘But the savage and caveman of the past left to mankind his valu- able herb and plant discoveries. Away off in Oriental Europe in the famous Balkans live a race of pepele called Bulgarians, who con- sider themselvse still young at 60, and only in their prime =t 80. Thous ards live to be over a hundred years. Sickness ang disease is almost un- known to them. The savage caveman sought for' an elixir of life to give him strength!and improves the blood, toncs and For miny centuries the Bulgar- ians have relicd upon nature to keep then hale and hearty. They use an herb tesz composed of roots: barks, leaves, hcrbs, plants and: flowers. i This Bulgarian herb Tea when brewed an taken h nature to remove { ELKO SAIL THE HIGH SEAS OF RCMANCE AND ADVENTURE— | between ‘men, THRILLS—SUSPENSE WYNDHAM STANDING DOROTHY MACKAILL i ful taken hot at t bedtime aids dangerous time you ¢pent in rg{ndihg this item. 10c & 25c 7:15-9:00 To the trovical isle where a faith- less wife makes her final choice SURPRISES— “THE ISLE OF DOUBT” ORCHESTRA EVERY NIGHT THURSDAY ONLY Primitive Man Brewing Herbs poisons’ from the system, freshens stimulates the liver, and keeps the stomach and bowels in a healthy condition. Bulgarian herb tea was first introduced in America about twenty years ago by H. H. Von Schlick of Pittsburgh, Pa, Its fame has been so great that today it is used the world over and praised by milions of sufferers fighting dis- ease and warding off old age weak- nesses. They include happy girls tudding into womanhood, or women ;;055i“g precariou |thresholds of 1Te. For centuries the Bulgaridns have used this famous herb tea for nearly every human ill. To break up colds quickly, a spoon- bedtime gives splendid results: Its gentle laxa- tive qualities aid nature to relieve constipation, indigestion, biliousness stomach and bowel trouble. ‘But that was sees ATETY Just ask your druggist today for* a trial package of Bulgarian Herb , ana u will never regret-the Tonight 2 600 Ft- REELS OF FUN Devore| in the Educational Christie Comedy 9 (The spice of ‘the program A rollicking riot of race track sneed and fun MARIE PREVOST WITH TROY BARNES In a corking good comedy drama— “DON'T GET PERSONAL | 2 DOROTHY L