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LEST WE FORGET To pay our taxes before June 1. Taberacle meeting tonight. Memorial day, May 30. Home Talent Minstrel Show, May 30. To go to International Falls Sun day -with the baseball team. Phone Society news to society edi tor, phone No. 31. Mrs. C. A. Miller of Little Fork was in Bemidji yesterday. L. H. Ludwig of Cass Lake spent yesterday in Bemidji. F. A. Cross of Cass Lake, was in Bemidji on business yesterday. For cream that will whip Phone Ris. Phone 144Adv. J. G. Thompson of Blackduck was in Bemidji yesterday. E. H. Wood of Cass Lake was in Bemidji on business yesterday. W. M. Wood of Cass Lake, was a business visitor in Bemidji yesterday. i i Go-carts repaired at the second hand store.Adv. Miss Alma Hannah of Crookston, was in Bemidji between trains yester day. Mrs. D. J. Powers of Solway was in Bemidji Thursday calling on the loclear cal trade. Splendid reductions on Bibles and New Testaments at Abercrombies. Adv. R. W. Merserau of Blackduck trans acted business in Bemidji one day this week. Mrs. A. J. Flemington of Blackduck transacted business in our city one day this week. Ris's Cream will whip. Phone ord ers to 144.Adv. John Plummer of this city has sold one of his valuable St. Bernard dogs to a wealthy North Dakota farmer. James Sullivan, who has atended the high school here the past year, left for his home in Solway last eve ning. High grade tomatoes, 10c a can at Schmitt's store.Adv. Albert Peterson of Crookston, is in the city today. He came here to meet a friend who has been teaching at Backus. Mrs. Belle Markham camft'up from Virginia last night and will remain in the city for a short time renewing old acquaintances. Go-carts retired at the second band store.Adv. Cass Lake Times: Mrs. Ellen John son is at Bemidji today to see her new grandson born to Mr. and Mrs. C. M. Johnson last Friday. Ris's herd has been inspected. He guarantees his milk and cream ab solutely pure. Phone your orders to 144.Adv. Brinkman Theatre Where Everybody Goes Booking In Conjunction and Suit ing the Shows With the Orpie** Theatre, Fargo. Vaudeville Program Mylie and Orth Entertainers Who Will Really Enter tain the Patrons of the Brinkman Week of May 29. Tyker St. Glair Family The World's Greatest Xylophonists. Advanced Vaudeville. Picture Program Union Features Presents Tears of Blood In Two Parts. The Most baring, Dramatic Production On the Theme of the Sins of Youth, With a Vital Moral. 3000 Feet of Pictures Mnsic By Brinkman Orchestra Admission I Oc, 25c Show Starts 7: lb' Miss Marion Van Syckle of Grand [Forks arrived in Bemidji yesterday iand will remain here a short time1 as the guest of friends. I Maurice, Annette, Doralise, and Mrs. Bray of Blackduck, came down to Bemidji this morning and will spend the day in the city. I Dr. and Mrs .M. D. Fuller are the guests of their daughter Mrs. G. H. Strickland. Mr. and JVlrs. Fuller just returned from Florida where they have spent the winter They will i spend the summer here in Bemidji Mrs. Helmer of Deer Lake is in the city for a couple of days. She came to attend the Memorial day exercises here today. Mrs. Helmer is mother of deputy sheriff Norman Helmer who was killed by a tramp about a year ago. Graduates of the Normal department of the Bemidji High School who graduated last night. Top row, left to right: Elsie KHnger, Edith Petin- geil, Catherine Durrand, Anna Klein, Cathern MacGregor, Helen Minnick, Lottie Madson. Bottom row: Agnes Titus, Lilis Powers, Miss Edna Hill, teacher, Leora Hedglin, Neva Severen and Anna Hedman. Splendid reductions on Bibles and New Testaments at Abercrombies. Adv. Greg Malone left last night for I Crookston where he will spend a few days as the guest of relatives. While in Crookston he will attend the K. C.means 'initiation which will be held there i tonight. Clean-up inside, purify your blood, I letshurrys you up, hustles you the complexion, redden the lips, along, gets you there.Barker's brighten the eyetake Hollister's R. Drug Store.Adv. M. Tea, there'll be a change. Barker's! Drug Store.Adv. For milk and cream phone Ris, 144-ved, !Adv. I Now that a day has been set aside in wliich to honor mothers, a move- ,'ment has been started by Mrs. John Bruce Dood of Spokane, to set apart a day for fathers. This is to be theEmma third Sunday in June, when a carnation should be worn for honored member of jthe family. The treasurers Fraternal and Religious Societies are invited to con sult with the officers of the Northern National Bank regarding the safe in vestment of their trust funds. Every facility for investigation will be fur nished to you.-Adv. Stillwater Daily Gazette: John H. Larson of the town of May, who recently purchased a farm in Bel trami county, near Bemidji, has reMorse, turned from .^thjat locality after a three weeks* stayY Mr. Larson will move to his new home the coming fall, having sold his farm on Twin Lakes. Mr. and Mrs. Martin Galchutt and family will move to Minneapolis in a few days where they will their future homt providing the clim ate will agree with Mrs. Galchutt. Their oldest son is a student at the University there and their daughters, Martha and Hilda will be students there the coming year. makei One of these nice days you ought to go to Hakkerups and have your pic ture taken.Adv. Don't ever taken anything else, cause taint necessaryHollister's R. M. Tea will get you there on time if anything will. A hustler, works day and night. 35 cents. Barker's Drug StoreAdv. Miss Arvilla Kenfield win give a houseboat party on board the "Ark" at Cass Lake beginning Saturday, and will entertain for ten days. The fol lowing will go down in the Kenfield car Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Kenfield, Miss Arvilla Kenfield, Lucy Brooks, Mona Flesher, Helen Backus, Inez Buckland, Claude Mclver, Maurice Ryan, James Malone, By Russell and Byrtle Buckland. A number of Bem idji young people will go out every day and enjoy a few days on board the Ark. Splendid reductions on Bibles and New Testaments at Abercrombies. Adv. Edward Barness of Clearbrook has returned from Canada recently. He reported plenty of snow, and cold weather, and all the English coin locked up in the vaults of the banks of that country, except that which some of the boys from here are fool ish enough to go up there and throw away, which in turn is locked up in the coffers of the Englishman, and our boys have to beat it the best way they know how, and all knows what in a new country with no credit, no friends, and worst of all no money. Imagine yourself in such a position, and you would wish to God that you had stuck to your piece of land across the divide, where friends were plenty and help -for the asking. You'll feel lively as a Flee, happy as a Lark, care free as a Babe after taking Hollister's R. M. Tea or Tab- RECORD FOR SCHOOLS (Continued from first page). Arlo Achenbaok. Seventh Grade. Hazel Back, Robert Miller, Beatrice Kirk, Charles Schroth, Roland Loit Roy Crowell, Hovey Lord. Sixth Grade. Josephine Anderson, Alma Martin John Cahill, Edmund Auger, Harold Morse, Donald Smit.h Harvey Wash burn, Anna Felke, Avis Cameron, Golz, Harrison Bailey, Bert red McTaggart, Cecelia Olson, this FifthlGrade. Grace Riley, Myrtle Collard, Bertha Webster, Hazel Smith, Gordon Jones, Willie Begsley, Evelyn Kirk. Fourth Grade. Margaret McDougal, Eva White, Neil Marin, Lily Wilson, Mary Win tersteen, Larraine Kreatz, Stella De Rushia. Third Grade. Earl Black, Henry Jordan, Ruby Gladys Madson, John Rich ards, Gordon Smith, Lucile Van De vort. Second Grade. Fern Scarrott, Francis Rhea, Fred McMeeken, Anna Lane, Bernice Kirk, Louisa Golz, George Dyer,. Byron Ben son,x Elmer Anderson, Ale Grand Forks Herald: (May 29)Side Mrs. Martin Van Syckle leaves this morning for Lavinia, Minn., where she will open her summer cottage, "Inverness," on Lake Bemidji. She will have as her guests Mrs. A. G. Mackay and daughter Gertrude, of Brooklyn, N. Y., who will spend the season with her. They visited "In- verness" a few years ago and. made many friends whom they will be deHenry lighted to meet again. Borsvold, Ruby Condon,Bailey,eLesli Ann a i Mae Cassaday, Charles McTaggart, JDora Miller, Milton Miller, Louise Thome. First Grade. Douris Black, Hilma Lind, Jack McGregar. Kindergarten, George Kirk. Attendance record in the North school. Sixth Grade. Bella Henry, Alma Brose, Gunther. Viola Fifth Grade. Lloyd Lalone. Third and Fourth Grades. Elyon Gunther, Ruble Edwards, Mehlhorn John Henry Kath eryn Merriman, Victor. Smith, Henry Will, Clara Korslund.' Second and Third Grades. Ruth Gunther, Esther Edwards, Mary Will, Edith Horlocker. First Grade. Lillian Howe. Finest English Prose. George Saintsbury in his "History of English Prose Rhythm," declared that "one of the highest pointaof Eng lish prose is probably reached in the Authorized Version of the sixtieth chapter of Isaiah/' beginning, "Arise, shine.". No other translation in any language, he says, can Tie with Eng lish in the splendor of this passage as It appears In toe 1611 Tendon. "So long as a single copy or the Tendon of 16U survires," he\ mren, "so long will there be accessible the beet worde f the beet time of Bnglk*." Richer Than the Crumb, and Stlmu. lates Greatly the Flow of Digestive Juices. ^.fvc Shall we eat the crumb of the bread or the crust? Ever since we were very young we have been told that if we ate the crusts our hair would surely be curly, but now there seems to a scientific reason why we should eat them in preference to the inside of the bread. Crusts are really the most valuable part of the loaf. According to Prof, Du Bois of Paris the crust contains less moisture than the crumb and so is richer in solid constituents. The crust has also a more pronounced bready flavor, being more tasty, and so stimulates better the flow of digestive juices. Then), .too, the crust is better di gested in the mouth because of the difficulties in masticating it. If new bread were as thoroughly masticated as stale or dr^y bread is bound to be, there would-be no reason why St would be any less digestible. Man and Monkey. The question of the simian ances try of man.has long been the subject of jest. From the zoological point of view it has been a matter of more serious concern as far as the position of men in any scheme of classification is involved. With the advent of mod ern methods of study applied to blood and the problems of immunity, data of a new sort have been furnished to bear on the real relationship of man to some of his animal competitors. To this evidence of blood relationship have now been added fresh facts do rived from the study of nutrition. The long known contrast between, man and the animals is thus made less strik ing by the discovery of those inter mediate species exhibiting human characteristics in more than one way. The gap has been bridged by the Studies on, the anthropoid apes which have now furnished to science the reputable evidence for that relation ship which the behavior of apes in vaudeville and elsewhere has strongly suggested.From the Journal of the American Medical Association.., Puzzling English Pronunciation. The puzzling place name (writes a correspondent) may be found all over England. I first realized that things are not what they seem when, one morning at Preston, in Lancashire, I inquired my way to Darwen, and was met by a blank stare. (It's "Darren," apparently.) But the greatest stum bling-block in the London district is probably the Pepys-road, at New Cross. A few years ago I lived hard by, and, when forced to allude to the road, I ventureda little uncertainly on "Peeps." OthersI think they were *he majorityhad It as "Peps." Then Pteppis" had its votaries. While the variant that appeared to commend itself to the. local tradesman "Pepsiz."London Chronicle. Stringing Pearls. Only the finest silk is used for Stringing the finest pearls. Great beads, round and shiny, unmistakably artificial, and with no more real lus ter than white marbles, with the ex ception of what'are called Roman' pearls, manufactured many years ago, may be allowed to hang together on catgut, but orients must be threaded, pearl kissing pearl, on silkem strands, worthy of their shape and "skin.* ^'r:.':':% KC absolutely ff/i htfrafcMf '-'-^"T-m Hello! Stop! Listen! Come! at the Tabernacle The Time of Your Life guaranteed in SQUARE, ROUND, SITTING, AND DREAM DANCES CARD TABLES ON THE SIDE '-^''^o.Prizes Given Vaudeville for Those who Like It pwder is guaranl pure and wholesome. There is no Rochelle salts, no harmful residue left in the food that is leavened with KC. Even the most delicate can eat hot breads raised with without distress. Try Baking Powder breads if yeast raised bread does not agree with you. MAJESTIC THEA TRE SPECIAL TWO REEL FEATURE For Decoration Day "The Battle of Bloody Ford" A spectacular Civil War production, one of those rare features that lose nothing of their charm on even the third view. "Why Did You Say You Loved Htm?" Hazelle Fellows "The Hardup Family's Bluff" (Pathe) A side splitting comedy. Next Monday mad Tuesday, "THE POWER OF THE CROSS," a wonderful two reel melodrama O TO BATCHELDER'S FOR fiOOD GROCERIES AND GENERAL MERCHANDISE FRESH EQQS AND BUTTER I. P. BATCHELDER 117 Minnesota Ave. Phone 180 "The New St^T Center" Lots on easy terms. No interest, no taxes. In- vestment in Superior Lots will make you money. InformationBradley Brink Co. (Inc.) 909 Tower Ave., Superior, Wis. May 31. 2 p. m. j^' i- 'iX-'---'-'-''' K. K. ROB, Agent, Bemidji, Minn. READ THE PIONEER WANT ADS !W$MiPJ&<t \ll 61 :KC: KC M. :iS$ilif lllil SlilSpitti-