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1 hereby announce that Iam a candidate for the Republican nomi- nation for representative from this district, comprising Beltrami, Clearwater and Red Lake coun- ties. I believe I fully appreciate the 4 mmportance and responsibility of s this office. I have lived in the northern part of Minnesota for the last thirty years, and am familiar with the needs of the district. The present undevel- oped condition of the northern part of Minnesota is a shame on the part of our legislature, inas- much, as, it is the cause of Ameri can people settling up the Domin- ion of Canada to-the prejudice of our own country, which is more than equally as good in soil, rainfall and climate and nearer to markets. The first step toward develop- ment, I think is roads. The HENRY FUNKLEY, Republican Candidate for Nomination for State Legis- ¢ lature, Sixty-First District. principal part of the road work should be done by the state be- cause it is the party substantially benefitted. Little dabs of three or four hundred dollars per town- ship per annum isof no avail in the work that the state should do in the matter of the develop- ment of its principal part—north- ern Minnesota. Uppermost and above all, if I am elected, I will in season and out of season, vote and strive for |substantial state aid for roads. And I believe I fully realize the fight I am up against in that the representation from the northern ipart is- meager compared with the representation from the other parts of the state. But the whole legislature must be made to see that the state roads are a substan- tial benefit to the whole state, I earnestly solicit your support. Respectfully, Henry Funkley. Notice to Public. All parties who sat for pictures in my studio during the past two weeks, or had photographs in the studio previous to the fire, are re- quested to call on me or correspond with me regarding same. —N. L. Hakkerup. Hunters’ License. County Auditor Wilmann today received 500 hunters’ licenses, which he will deal out to $1 per to all who care to hunt this fall. The Efficacy of Prayer. Among my esteemed neighbors there 18 a family known for the piety of its members and their implicit confidence in the efficacy of prayer. One of the “ daughters, Miss Kate B., has almost v Teached the age when she could be re- ferred to ungallantly as an old maid. She is the target for many a good na- tured quip pertaining to her alleged hopes and endeavors in the direction of matrimony. Not long ago a certain soclety of young men which had interested itself in a campaign for higher saloon license . sent a committee to visit the homes of % the district and obtain signatures to a | high license petition. When this com- mittee, numbering half a dozen mem- bers, ascended the front steps at the B. home my friend’s wife was the first to see it through the front window. “Laws, John!” she exclaimed to her husband. “See all those young men coming to visit us.” 4 Mr. B. glanced out of the window, noted the number of the invading force and remarked, with an air of convic- tlon: “Humph! Kate’s been praying again.”—San Francisco Call. An Anecdote of Ellsworth. There was a characteristic incident In the early life of Colonel Ellsworth, the brilliant young lawyer who was one of the first notable victims of the civil ‘war. His struggles to gain a foothold In his profession were attended by many hardships and humiliating priva- tlons. Once, finding the man he was looking for on a matter of business In a restaurant, he was invited to partake _ of the luncheon to which his acquaint- ance was just sitting down. Rllsworth a8 ravenously hungry, almost starv- ing, in fact, but he declined courteously, but firmly, asking permission to talk over the business that had brought him thither while the other went on with the meal, 7t - The brave young fellow in telling the ¥ story In after years confessed that he suffered positive agony at the sight and smell of the tempting food. “I could not In honor accept hospi- tality T could not reciprocate,” was his " slmple_explanation of_his refusal. ‘I MIZAT starve, but 1 Could not sponge!™ —Marion Harland’s “Complete Eti- quette.” Starting Early. Wangles was married recently, and there was a regular hall of rice, con- fetti and old shoes for good luck as he got into the cab. Moreover, on turn- Ing round be was struck above the eye by a friendly shoe with rather a heavy heel. As the cab immediately drove away no notice was taken of the accident, and, despite the large handkerchief tied by his sobbing bride over his in- jured optie, the blood still flowed down Wangles’ face. ‘When they arrived at their destina- tion the newly created Benedict went out to a doctor to get the bleeding stopped. “How did you come by this, my man?” “Well, you see, doctor—aw—I got married this morning, and”— com- menced Wangles, when the doctor broke in: “What! Has she started already?’— London Answers. « Circumstantial Evidence. “You say you met the defendant on a street car and that he had been drinking and gambling,” said the at- torney for the defense during the cross examination. i “Yes,” replied the witness. “Did you see him take a drink?” “No.” “Did you see him gambling?" “No.” e “Then how do you know,” demanded the attorney, “that the defendant had been drinking and gambling?” “Well,” explained the witness, “he gave the conductor a blue chip for his car fare and told him to keep the change.”—Lippincott’s Magazine, ‘The Australians when they find a horseshoe throw it over their shoulder. A lady in Sydney found one and threw It gracefully over her shoulder. It went through a hatter’s window and hit a customer who was trying on a new hat. This gentleman, under the Impression that one of the shopmen in a fit of temporary insanity had played the trick, promptly struck him and sent him through the plate giass win- dow. A genperal melee ensued, although on consideration nobody knew what it was all about. The Old, Old Story. ©Old Lady (reading a letter from her’| son In college)—Lor’ sakes alive, Jo- slar, If John hain’t gone an done It! An' he warn't no hand fer the gals nuther! Her Worse Half—Wut's the trouble, Bamanthy? Old Lady—Why, he says he's fallen in love with Belle—er—Belle Lettres.— Too Mawy. TromLiotids. The following anecdote conces Donigzetti and the score 6f Roj “Otello” 18 told by the Musical World: Donizetti had asked Sigismondi, the director of the Naples® Conservatorie, to look over the score with him, and the two sat down at a table with the ‘work in front of them. Presently Si- gismondi began to ravesabout its “mon- strous orchestration.” Terrible was his indignation when he found that clarinets, bassoons and trombones had been employed in one place to swell a crescendo, but when the fortissimo was reached he ‘uttered a cry of de- spair, struck the score violently with his fist, upset the table and rushed from the room, exclaiming: “A hundred and twenty-three trombones! A "hun- dred and twenty-three trombones!” Donizetti in vain tried to call him back, shouting after him, “Not 123 trombones, but first, second and third trombones.” Sigismondi would not listen and when last seen was still repeating, “A hundred and twenty- three trombones!” " Cannibal Japs. Young Iieutenant = Marlinspike’s bathing suit revealed on his right arm an Uncle Sam and on his left a pea- cock, while around his neck a gleam- ing serpent was coiled, the mouth holding its tail. “This is Japanese tattooing,” the leutenant said proudly, “Nagasaki work. I was under the needle nine- teen hours in all. My two tattooers drank quite a pint of my blood. “Jap tattooers are all blood drinkers. They like it. They get to like it in the end as you or I like tobacco. “You see, as they work the blood wells forth. It flows over the design, and then, very carefully, without smearing the wet ink, they lick the blood up delicately with the tongue. Every Jap tattooer as he picks and picks away at you bends down every few minutes and licks the little rising tide of blood away. “If he is a seasoned ‘tattoer he swal- lows the blood. He likes it, he says.” —New Orleans Times-Democrat. Russian Women. A Russian paid the following glow- ing tribute to the women of his na- tive land: “The women of Russia com- bine the vivacity and wit of the Frenchwoman with the industry and thrift for which the women of Ger- many are famous. She is a superb wife and mother and withal a fine mental worker. The Russian girl stu- dent is generally in the front rank at the universities. Doubtless some of her fine qualities are due to the fact that in Russia women are free and are In every respect considered to be the equals of men, “Russian women are born politicians and diplomats and so intensely patriotic that they esteem no sacrifice too great for their country; hence as revolutionists—however mis- guided—they are Infinitely more daring and devoted than the men. Secrets have been wrung from male revolu- tionaries by torture, but never from the women.” . Sliding Down a Cask. One of the vintage ceremonies at Klosterneuberg, the famous convent which the Viennese visit annually on St. Leopold’s day, consists in sliding down a giant cask of wine. The im- mense cask was first filled in the fa- mous wine year of 1711. The origin of the sliding is found in a story of a cooper who was in the habit of return- ing home in a merry condition. His wife fetched him one day from the village Inn, and he attempted to hide | behind the cask. She seized a broom, however, and with the help of several friends forced him to scramble up one side and slide to the ground on the opposite as a punishment for his con- duct.—London Mail. Clean Food. It is a good deal more important that food shall not carry the germs of dis- ease than that it shall be chemically pure. Table salt, for example, may contain some soda salts other than the chloride and still be perfectly health- | ful. Corn bread is less healthful when made from pure cornmeal than when it has some admixture of wheat flour. But food that is not clean may be more dangerous than any adulterated food product sold today, provided the adulterated article carries no disease germs.—Boston Advertiser, Sympathy. A kind hearted little slum girl on a visit to the country saw one evening a mother hen about to gather her brood of chicks under her wings. The little girl rushed up to the hen and shouted: “Shoo, you ugly thing! How dare you sit down on these beautiful lttle birds?” Vicarious Osculation. He was having some words with her chaperon, “PI—T'll kiss her right under your nose!” he said defiantly. “Oh, well,” said that lady, “vica- rlous kissing like that I can see mo objection to.”—Boston Transcript. The Widower, A widower is like a baby. The first six months he cries a lot, the second six months he begins to sit up and take notice, and he experiences great difficulty in getting through his second year alone.—New Orleans Times-Dem- ocrat. = Willing to Tell. “One-half the world doesn’t know how the other half lives,” declared a notorlous lady gossip. % “That isn’t your fault,” quictly ob- served one of her auditors. Though wrong may win, its vietory 18 brief.—Leonard. The Problem Solved. Newed—My wife has a habit of tak- ing money from my pockets when I'm asleep. Oldwed—Mine used to do that, 200, but she doesn’t any mome. Newed —How do you prevent it? Oldwed—I spend every cent I have before I go. home.—Chicago News. An Exception. “Ah, kind friend,” said the minister, *“it 18 deeds, not words, that count.” “Oh, T don’t know,” replied the wom- an. “Did you ever send a telegram¥’'— Brooklyn Life. .. . .. . = / Detrolt Free Press. elation of the nations never P 's head or the head of any mian about him, declares A. ‘L. Kielland in “Napoleon’s Men and Methods.” | In his mind peace could |only mean a pause between two wars. ‘He had ‘no idea to give tp the world, His thoughts did:not go beyord his owa life. "He shrinks at once i® com- parison with a man of science, who ex- pends his life to create a thought that ‘Will nourish and elevate posterity. If Napoleon reached the highest sum- mit of a prince and a commander, he was also the last who succeeded in gathering about his person all the glamour that‘had been wont to accom- pany and-adorn the bloody business ©of war, - There was no more of it.after his. fall. War became afterward an academic study. Military affairs came to resemble industrial interest in Which it ig the best machines thatigain the victory. ! ‘We now .strip our armies of thelr gold cords and waving plumes. The admiral, who used to stand on the bridge in his gala uniform, with hiy decorations. and sash, now sits in a steel box and presses buttons like a telephone girl. When the glamour goes from a thing it is near its-end. The Greatest General. ‘All things duly considered, the great- est general of whom we have any knowledge was in all probability the Carthaginian, Hannibal. All the in- formation we have of Hannibal comes from his ‘ememies, and yet what achievements they were forced to cred- it him with! The second Punic war— the most briltiant in history—was prac- tically one man against a whole na- tlon, and that the strongest then known. With the army that he had molded out of raw and barbarous levies Hannibal had to- fight a nation of the stoutest and best tralned war* riors of anclent times, and he had to do- this without any assistance from home. It has been well said that there is nowhere else an example of what a single’ man of genlus may achieve agalnst the most tremendous odds.— New York American. The Color of Jade, The idea of jade possessing the vir tue of bringing the wearer food for- tune drose in China, where the stone is 50 valued that the finding of a par- ticularly fine piece causes the state to take possession of the land where it was found. The best specimens rep- resent all the hues and effects of sea foam, but these are eagerly snapped up by collectors and seldom come into the public market. There is another cause ‘for the popularity of jade. Its peculiar green tinge has the effect of making the human skin look very white. In this connection the quality of the stone is of no account so long as the color is there. Indeed, many of the less expensive jade ornaments are made from chips of the stone which contain noticeable flaws.—Pear- son’s, . ¥ The-Actress’ Retort. Georgette Leblanc, the actress, wife of Maurice, Maeterlinek, was on tour ina Frenc‘i town, where the‘local com- pany “supported” her in one of her husband’s plays. But the support was weak and halt- ing. The poet's lines were mangled, and several characters seemed unable to understand what they were saying. Mme. Leblanc sought out her man- ager and spoke to him, “A writer like Maeterlinck should be treated with more respect.” “Madame,” he.answered, “M. Maeter- linck is not the first to suffer. So- phocles, Mollere, Racine, Shakespeare, Goethe and other great dramatists are daily murdered in the same way.” “Possibly, but they are not murdered allve, at any rate.” The Unappreciative Londoner. London fs a marvel. But we Lon doners do not wax passionate over its qualities as the enthusiastic French- man does over his Paris. There i more beauty, more charm, more wealth, more . culture and more art to be found in London than anywhere in the world, and we stolid English people do not really appreciate it.— London Graphic. An Unwritten Law. The smaller man bristled up. “See here,” he growled, “you have applied two ‘unpleasant terms to me.” Then he paused and scowled and came a little closer. “I just want you to understand that & third term doesn’t 80 in this country.” ‘Whereupon the big man drew back a little and said no more.—Cleveland Plain Dealer. Located at Last. Drummer (settling bill in Hagle Houss, Hayfield)—Pardon my curiosi- ty, sir, but what do you stuff “your beds with in this hotel? Landlord (proudly)—Best straw to be had in this hull ' county, b’gosh! Drummer—Ah} That is very interesting. I know now where the straw.came from that broke the camel’s back!—Puck. His Was Hers. “I heard him behind the door plead- Ing for just ome. They must be en- gaged.” “Naw, they’re married. It was a dollar he was pleading for.”—Louis- ville Courier-Journal. The Baby Will Get Even. Hewitt—Does your baby keep you awake? Jewett—No, I fooled him. As 8oon as he was born I got a job work- ing nlwzhh.-—New York Press. Before you set your heart on any- thing maturely consider whether it will 2dd to your ultimate happiness. Trollope’s Recipe For Novel Writing. Mr. Tro}lope wrote immensely and never walt for inspiration. He sald the best recipe he knew for novel writ- ing was a patch of cobbler's wax on his chair and to take great care he sat on it—"Leaves From a Life.” Long and Short. Farmer B.—This 'ere paper says they ain’t nothin® fr an appetite like a long tramp. His Wife—Land! They don’t Inow what they’re’ talkin® about. A short one ¢'n sat just ez much.—Path- lady noted for saying caustic things about her acquaintances. ing, when I was staying at her house, she vilified one of her neighbors, mnamed Stamford, without stint. ‘volume of lectures 1 had happened to ‘bring with me. ed at random and when too late dis- covered that I was in the middle of a lecture “on the government of the tongue. selected it .to admonish her, yet I dared not stop for fear of seeming to T read to the end, pretty sure that my two hundred a year to me. But when I ended she said: in pink? I was engaged to her the ‘whole of last summer. Stranger (eager- ly)—Very glad to hear it. I am the lawyer she’s commissioned to sue you for breach of promise. can send you, sir? What would you say to a plece of this cheese? Custom- er—I wouldn’t care ‘to say anything to it. It might answer me back. have ever loved?” said it that made her mad. Departing ply delightful time! glad. At the same time I regret that the storm kept all our best people way.—Brooklyn Life. steward,” he exclaimed. nal of Bir George Smart” that when 8ir George, Who was chorister at the Ohapel Royal, arranged the musical programme at the opening of the new London bridge in 1831 his chief at- traction was a glée party. Immediately after the glee party had sung “God Save the King” in the tent in which the king and queen were seat- o two unknown persens in costume, & man and his wife, stepped forward, and to Bir George's infinite disgust the man played “God Save the King” with bis-knuckles on his chin, accompanied by his wife’s voice. The king called Sir George to him and asked who they were. Sir George by that time knew the name of the performers and gave it, adding that he was sorty they had intruded with- out permission. h, no intrusion!” said the king. “It ‘was _charming. Tell them to per- form again.” 8o Sir George had to tell the per- formers that their number was en- cored by royal command, and to their great delight and to the chagrin of Sir George they repeated it. % PR e, Not Abashed. “When I was young,” said a lawyer, “my best client was a “wealthy old One morn- “By way of changing the subject I proposed to read to her from a She assented. I start- “I was afraid she would think I.had make the offense more pointed. So on reading would cost me a client worth “‘Thank you, Mr. —. It is an ex cellent lecture and would fit my neigh- bor Stamford to a T.” The Conference. “This is a grave matter,” began the undertaker. “Consequently we want more light thrown upon it,” remarked the lamp manufacturer. “I hope our views will all be in har- mony with the occasion,” put in the piano maker, “No pipe dreams,” admonished the plumber. “I hope whatever is said none will take it i1L,” said the doctor. “Then we'll all be good natured and not ask cross questlons,” supplemented the lawyer. But it was the remark of the baker which broke up the meeting. “What I want to kunow, first of all,” he declared, “is who is expected to sup- ply the dough?’—Baltimore American. A 8wift Bird. . The Mexican road runner has only two short legs, but he can beat a horse, a hound and ap electric carriage and give them a handicap start. Speed is not his only recommendation. He eats as he rums, or, rather, as the things run away with him. Snakes are the prineipal part of his diet, big and little. His crop is as elastic as his legs are swift, and when he wants to prepare for a long journey he coils up a rattler or two inside of his neck and sets out across the Mexican desert with a swiftness that makes it look like a bunch of dust on a record break. ing tour around the world. Carrot Pudding. One cupful of grated carrots, one cupful of grated potatoes, one cupful of sugar, one cupful of flour, one-half cupful of raisins and currants mixed, two teaspoonfuls of all kinds of spice mixed, one teaspoonful of soda, one teaspoonful of salt. Mix all together and steam for three hours. Grease a small pafl and put the dough in it. Set the pail in a kettle of boiling. wa- ter, keeping the water well up near the top of the pail. Cover kettle over 80 all the steam may be kept in as much as possible—Boston Post. Burning Wood. ‘Wood crackles when it is ignited be- cause the #ir expanded by heat forces its way through the pores of the wood with a crackling noise. Green wood makes less snapping than dry because the pores contain less air, being filled with sap and moisture, which extin- guish the flame, whereas the pores of dry wood are filled with air, which supports combustion. Posted Him. He (vainly)—See that sweet little gir] Lusty. Shopkeeper—Is there anything else I Snapped It Out. “Dear, am I the only woman you “Yes, or ever wilL” And It must have been the way he Her Littlo Slip. Guest—We've had a sim. Hostess—I'm so At the End of the Voyage. Jonah disembarked. “The only tFip I don’t have to tip the Therewith he regarded the whale half approvingly.—New York Sun. Different Points of View. “It's hard to be poor,” sighed the seedy pessimist. 3 “That's queer,” replied the ragged optimist. “I always found it" easy .‘.m" oetic Comparison. et was fayoring a friendly goul . with his last verses, says a writer in St. James' Budget.. The verses were descriptive of a beautiful girl. The poet read: *Her hair was massed in flowing curls, The color of a whisper.” - This made the listener “sit up.” “What's that?’ he said. “Read that -8gain.” 7 “I thought you would say something about that” the poet answered. “I don’t want to appear egotistical, but that little phrase gives some scope for the exercise of the mind.” “In what way?” The poet laughed. “Don’t you see,” he said, “how beau- tifully that describes the shade of her hair? Every poet speaks of golden hair or raven locks. To be a success one must be original. © Well, she did not have golden hair. It <was nearly golden, and I convey the impression by means of that one word.” The other still looked puzzled. “You have heard,” said the poet pa- tlently, “that silence is golden?” “Yes,” the other admitted. “Well,” resumed the poet, “if silence is golden what would a whisper be? It -would be nearly golden, wouldn’t it The poet laughed again. The other was sitting down and could not stag- ger, so he laughed too. Indian Burials. The Indian method of burial was to fasten a corpse upon cross sticks sup- ported by poles in the ground or in the boughs of the treetops. Here the air and the elements silently disposed of the lifeless clay until in a year or so but little remained to bear evidence of a tomb, perhaps some broken sticks in the top and a few scattered beads or human bones beneath the burial place. I cannot conceive of anything more pitifully grewsome than an In- dian burial ground of this type. I have seen them in the fall of the year, when the winds were shaking and swaying the platforms and wring- ing the leafless trees, flaunting the burial rags like signals of distress from the dead and whistling through and over the whitening bones and neglect- ed remains of those who had many a time withstood the tempest and storm ‘when the breath of life: stirred within them.—Army and Navy Life, The Pelican. The pelican is not an attractive bird. He offends both the eye and the nose. But he is commendably regular in his habits. The parent birds catch fish and after eating their fill deposit the others in their pouches under their bills and carry them to their young. These pouches will hold from three to eight pounds of fish. They are elastic and when distended to their utmost nearly touch the ground. When empty, the pouch lies close up under the big bill and is merely a mass of wrinkles. It {3 this pouch that gives the pelican his characteristic and disagreeable odor, caused Dy particles of decaying fish. The pelican’s legs are short and strong, and its feet have large webs. It is not a fast swimmer or a rapid flier, but it 18 practically tireless in both air and water. On land it is awkward and un- wieldy. How Frozen Insects Revive. Experiments in reviving frozen in- sects by a naturalist show some sur- prising results, A large cecropia moth, frozen in the center of a snowball until it was perfectly brittle, revived in twenty seconds when held near a stove. Several newly hatched io moths revived in a similar manner after being frozen stiff and then thawed out. Sim- ilar experiments with ants, butterflies and house files gave the same results. But the naturalist noticed that recent- ly hatched insects resist cold better than older ones. The Organ. Like most important inventions, that of the organ is veiled in mystery. The Invention of the organ has been attrib- uted to Ctesibius, a barber of Alex- andria, about 250 B. C.; also to the celebrated 'Archimedes, 220 B. C. It 18 certain that the organ. was brought to Europe from the eastern or Greek empire and was applied to religious devotions in churches about A. D. 650, Out of the Hymnbook. A minister, having given out his “no- tices,” was about to read his hymn when he was reminded of one notice he had forgotten. Stopping, he made this announcement, apologizing for his forgetfulness. Then, . much to the amusement of his audience, he began to line out the hymn as follows: “Lord, what a thoughtless wretch am I?"—Judge’s Library. To Simplify English, It is the vowels which are the great {difficulty of English pronunciation. ‘e want our vowel sounds standard- dzed for us—all the pronunciations, (with the correct intonations, set down for us In some intelligible and easily mnderstood form.—Country Life. The Genius. 5 Mark Twain said of genius at a New York banquet: “A genlus, as an old lady in Hanni- bal once explained to me, is a man what knows more'n he can find out and spills vittels on his clothes.” Handel’s Philosophy. Handel, when the curtain would rise upon a nearly empty house, would say soothingly to his associates: “Ach, mever mind; the music will sound all the better!” There are two ways of meeting a trouble—either give it no attentlon at all or give it a great deal of attention promptly.—Atchison Globe. A Loud Kiss. Bob Footlite (actor)—Failure? 1 should think it was! . The whole play was ruined. Bhe—Graclous! How was that? B. F.—Why, at the end of the last act A steam pipe burst and hissed me of tha stage. A Lark. What a lark it would be if an egg came down the chimney! No, it wouldn't, unless it was a lark’s axg,l:.l:laventhumnnmuw There is no néed of anyone sufier- ing long with this di for to effect-a quick cure it is only neces- sary to take a few doses of Chamberlain’s olic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy fact, in most cases one dose is sufficient. It never fails and can be rel!ednponlnmlmmh nme::xd :::lseforchlldmundkmmm of saving the lives of many children each year. In the world’s history no medicine has ever met with greater success. PRICE 250. LARGE SIZE 50c. : (3 WANTS - ONE CENT A WORD. HELP WANTED. WANTED FOR U. 5. ARMY: Able- bodied unmarried men, between ages of 18 and 35; citizeas of United States, of good character and temperate habits, who can speak, read, and write English For information apply to Recruit ing Officer. Miles Block, Bemidji i Minn, WANTED—Lady compositors. Inquire at Pioneer office. WANTED—Woman cook. Inquire Hotel Nicollet. e FOR SALE. FOR SALE—Rubber stamps. The Pioneer will procure any kind of a rubber stamp for you an short notice. FOR SALE—16-inch dry slab wood $1.25 per cord delivered. M. E. Smith Lumber yards. Phone 97. FOR SALE—Good Jersey cow. In- quire C. L. Heffron. FOR RENT. e e e e P RPN, FOR RENT—Two furnished rooms. Inquire 719 Beltrami Ave. MISCELLANEOUS. PUBLIC LIBRARY—Open Tues days, Thursdays and Saturdays, 2:30to6 p. m., and Saturday evening 7:30 to 9.p. m. also. Library in basement of Court House. Mrs. Harriet Campbell librarian. LOCATIONS—Good desirable stone and timber claims accessable to market. Address P. O. Box 493, Bemidji Minn:, WANTED—To know good opening for restaurant and confectionery 2 store. Address Lock Box 305, City. For good board and room. 1121 Bemudji Avenue. YOU OWE it to your family; a means of instant, certain and inexpens- ive communication with the outside world. Order the 5 Northwestern g Inquire Y BUY YOUR KODAK “SUPPLIES OF US We Do Photo Finishing Right Price List Free Prompt Service T.V. Moreau Co. Hodak Supply Depot 616 Nicollet Ave., Minneapolis Gse PIONEER Delivered to your door every evening Only 40c per Month