Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
A Scene from “A Bachelor’s Honeymoon,” at Armory Opera House, Thursday and Friday, Aug. I8 and 19 PHYSICIANS ARE VERY OPTIMISTIC Say Crisis in fiayndr Case Has About Passed. CONDITION NEAR NORMAL Temperature, Pulse and Respiration Are Satisfactory, but No Decision Has Been Reached Regarding Re moval of the Bullet—Patient Will Be Removed to the Adirondacks as Soon as Convalescent. New York, Aug. 16.—“One more day and we will be able to call Mayor Gay- nor a convalescent,” was the declara- tion at St. Mary’s hospital in Hoboken. The patient’s condition continued sat- isfactory when he awoke in the morn- ing from his seventh night on a hos- pital cot. His attendants were frank- ly cheerful and more optimistic than on any previous occasion. The physicians will watch the pass- ing of the day with keen interest, for with its safe conclusion the dreaded bugbear of a “crisis” will be practical- ly over and they will allow themselves to consider recovery assured. The official bulletin was as follows: “Mayor Gaynor has passed a good night and slept well. He has taken nourishment well and is in good gen- eral condition. Temperature, 99 4-5; Had All His Nerve With Him, In a downtown stand up lunch place, where the clLief sourcé of the waiters’ revenue is in the form of tips and where the patrons are supposed to step lively so that those who wait may be accommodated, a man has been com- Ing of late who brings a newspaper with him and reads it leisurely, some- times for half an hour, while he takes his modest luncheon. The waiter at whose station he planted himself one day recently was prepared for the emergency, and when the man had finished reading his paper the servant handed him two others with the re- mark: “Maybe you'd like to see these?” The other waiters, knowing of the plot, looked to see the man wilt, but were disappointed. He took the papers with thanks, continued read ing, and finally, when he asked for his check, asked also whether he might keep the papers.—New York Tribune. Advance Display of Fall Styles —a real Fashion Exhibition that every woman will de- light in viewing is planned in this store on Wednesday. Dress styles and sugges- tions that have been the center of interest in New York and Chicago Dress- makers’ Conventions for weeks wil' all be here for you to see. —Wednesday -is the day, and you are invited You may be sure of find- ing dozens of new La Porte patterns and colors that will be suited to your needs and the demands of any occasion. Novelties, Dressy Combi- nations, Fine Broadcloths or Popular-priced Fabrics. On Wednesday all 35¢ French Ginghams will be offered at 25¢ a yard The O’Leary- Bowser Co. Bemidji, Minn. pulse, 70, and respiration, 16.” The police are engaging themselves with the theory that James J.' Gal- lagher, the wound be assassin, may have had an accomplice.” Gallagher denies this, but a man with a police record is under suspicion, Mayor Gaynor will be taken to the Adirondacks just as soon as his condi- tion permits, but whether he will un- dergo an operation to remove the bul- let before his trip to the mountains has not been fully determined. AGAIN CALLS OUT TROOPS One Thousand Militia Ordered to Co- lumbus, O. Columbus, ©., Aug. 16—Prepara- tions are being hastily made to rush 1,000 soldiers into the city following the orders of Governor Harmon call- ing out the troops. The action was taken because of the increased rioting in the carmen’s strike on the street railway here, the union carmen de- manding a recognition of their union. Governor Harmon acted on the ad- vice of Adjutant General Weybrecht. The announcement that troops were again called out after the dismissal last week of the 3,200 soldiers who served on strike duty here for ten days created much excitement on the streets. The ten days’ service of the 8,200 troops which ended last week cost the state $150,000. DEATH LIST MAY REAGH THOUSANDS Flood Sufferers in Japan in Destitute Condition, JOHN F. FITZGERALD. Boston Mayor Says Girls of “Hub” Are Superior to Men. WOMEN SUPERIOR TO MEN Mayor Fitzgerald Accounts for Lack of Marriages in Boston. Boston, Aug. 16.—Mayor John F. Fitzgerald has come out with the statement that the Boston girls do not “cotton” to the men of the Hub and the one principal reason is that the women are vasfly much better educated than the men and -that in many cases their salaries far exceed those of the men who would mate with them. Mayor Fitzgerald says: “The fact that there are so many women here, however, is not the rea- son that there are so few marriages proportionately. The trouble is that the women and the men are not on a par mentally.” Tokio, Aug 16—Tokio's unprece- dented flood has already claimed 700 lives, with the prospeets that the to- tal deaths will run into the thousands, as the result of the destitute condi- tion of the sufferers and the inability of the authorities to render any but the slowest relief. There is the gravest danger also of an epidemic sweeping the city, as it is now certain that“it will be days be- fore some ot the submerged sections can be cleaned and disinfected. Wi, The waters of the Tonewaga river have not risen since Sunday, but the Florence Nightingale Expires af| exveciea subsidence ne moment tne Age of Ninety, not yet materialized and the suburbs, as well as about one-third of the city proper, are still under water. The police and 1,000 other city au- London, Aug. 16.—Florence Nightin- | thorities are making a heroic effort to gale, aged ninety, the famous nurse of | distribute food to the flood victims by the Crimean war and the only woman | Means of boats, but the service s Wwho ever received the Order of Merit, [ #holly inadequate and thousands are | not being provided. Owing to the cut- Is dead. An attack of heart fallure o "o 000 Lo tion lines . the brought the end. city’s food supply is running short Florence Nightingale was called the | anq the situation bids fair to become “Angel of the Crimea” and the hero- acute. ine of that war. History will long re- Even the well to do people of the member the refined, gentle English | city who have not been reached by woman who reduced the death rate the *flood are on short rations and among the sick and wounded British | Will remain so until food supplies can soldiers from 42 to 2 per cent. be brought in. The government is But as “Mother of Nurses” she will | considering the advisability of con- never be forgotten as long as human fiscating the stocks of food now on sufferers lie upon hospital cots. Be- | hand. fore Florence Nightingale, then a beau- Reports that come in from other tiful, winsome daughter of a prom- | cities show conditions elsewhere to be inent English family, chose the hos- | nearly as bad as in Tokio. Yokohama pital as her life’s vocation rather than | and Nagasaki have been hard hit and society the nurses in the hospital were | the deaths there will reach well into coarse, destitute of refinement or feel- | the hundreds. ing, ignorant and stupid. To become Passes Half Million Mark. a nurse then was to abandon reputa- . Washington, Aug. 16,—The popula- tion itself. Then Florence Nightingale, given |tlon of Pittsburg is 533,905, an fn- crease of 82,393, or 18.2 per cent, as $250,000 by the English people as a reward for the great work in the hos- [ compared with the combined popula- pital of the battlefield, endowed the | tion of Pittsburg and Allegheny “of first training school for nurses with | 451512 in 1800, the money and speedily the character SAYS HOME WAS WRECKED of hospital staffs became changed. Gentle, cultured and pure women took 7 Montana Cattleman; Fatally Wounds ' Alleged Bi ,(rayer. up the work. Butte, Mont,, Aug, 18.—Alleging that his home had ‘been wrecked, Dell Reed, a prominent cattleman of the state, shot and fatally wounded, Will- fam Cohen and then calmly motioned to a policeman on the corner to place him under arrest. In his cell Reed declared that he' had shot Cohen as a warning to men 8hock Kills Former Orderly. London, Aug. 16.—A dramatic se- quel to the death of Florence Nightin- gale* occurred in the death of John Finneghan, an aged soldier, who acted as Miss Nightingale's orderly in her hospital work during the Crimean war. When Finneghan was. told of Miss Nightingale’s death he was over- come. The doctors say that grief 1t 1 Killed him, - no& to stea! Fle wives of other vmen. e e i g Explorer Is Preparing for His Flight Across - the . Atlantic. An’ Innosent Aécomplice. A smuggling story in which & wo- man fooled her unsuspecting husband 18 told in the Century. The husband was a retired general, a martinet in discipline and overscrupulous regard- ing even the shadow of laxity in the performance of his own obligations. | “No smuggling was to be permitted,” he told his wife, :and before leaving Paris he insisted on making a full list of every dutiable article in his posses- sion. Unknown to him she bought several yards of Venetian lace. How to hide it was a problem until she thought of ripping the lining of his overcoat and hiding the lace inside. he regarded her cunning as a tremen- dous joke, and to this day he does not know how she laughed to herself when, wearing that very same coat on the dock, he drew himself up to his full military height and,’ with free conscience, pointed to a tray contain- Ing “all his purchases.” No idea of anything So serlous as defrauding the government had ever entered her frol- Brussels, Aug. 16.—The - Brussels { {csome mind. ' . Universal - International exhibition is virtually at an end as a result of the L0SS REACHES MANY MILLIONS Brussels Fxposition Swept by Fierce Fire. WORKS OF ART RUINED Belglan and British Sections Are De- stroyed and Other Portions of the Big Show Suffer Partial Destruction. No Lives Are Lost, but Two Score People Sustain Injuries in Stampede Following Outbreak. rthday Present. Photo by American Press Association. MAKING PRELIMINARY TRIALS Wellman Expects to Cross the Atlantic in September. Gloucester, Mass., Aug. 16.—Walter Wellman, aviator and Arctic explorer, has left for Atlantic City to com- mence a series of preliminary flights in his dirigible balloon up and down the coast preparatory to his flight across the Atlantic next September. ‘Wellman’s ship is on the Zeppelin type, . but pispenses with the inner braces; is 228 feet long and equipped with two eighty-horsepower engines and one ten-horsepower. MORE EVIDENCE ABOUT WMURRAY Former District Attorney Tells of Indictments. Sulphur, Okla., Aug. 16.—More de- tails of J. F. McMurray’s alleged activ- ity at Washington to promote his 10 per cent attorney fees contracts were related before the congressional in- vestigating committee. W. B. Johnson, former United States attorney, -testified that certain indict- ments against McMurray in 1905 were ordered dismissed by the attorney general. The indictments were re- turned against McMurray and others in connection with a $300,000 expense account which McMurray’s firm had filed against’the Indians in prosecut- ing citizenship.cases. It was alleged In the indictments that the expense account had: been “padded.” At the time the indictments were being investigated Cecil A. Lyon, na- tional Republican committeeman for Texas, was in Washington. Mr. Lyon previously had testified he had urged the attorney general to investigate in- dictments, but he declared he never asked that they be dismissed. The indictments later were ordered dis- missed. “During your term of office how many indictments were returned?” Mr. Johnson was asked. “About 5,000.” “How many of those indictments were dismissed?” “Only one—that against McMur- ray.” Cub Ream, an Indian, testified he had been prevented from securing the position of delegate to Washington for the Chickasaw tribe because he was opposed to the contracts. S FRANCE HAS T0OO MUCH RAIN Wine Output Will Be Only One-third as Much as Usual. Paris, Aug. 16.—Further reports have been made to the minister of agriculture of the destruction wrought to the wine crop in the northern part of France by protracted rains of the last few weeks. In many sections of France's best producing grape country the vineyards will yield practically nothing this year. These sections include much of the famous “champagne country,” and it is now believed that there will not be more than a third of the usual out put of the better grades of champagne this year. Already the price of wines is soaring. WILL REACH IMMENSE SUM Graft. in Construction - Contracts on Hlinois Central. Chicago, Aug. 16.—The new graft investigation. of the Illinois Central railroad in connection with the letting of grading and construction contracts may reveal stealings which will rivak the car repairing operations, accord- ing to Chicago men in close touch with the latest inquiry. Local officials of the railroad were inclined to discount the reports that as much ag $1,000,000 had been stolen from the'road in construction work on the Southern lines. They, .however, sald that the inquiry had not gone far enough fo defermine the amount. 2 South Dakota Valuations. Pierre, 8. D., Aug. 16.—The total as- sessed valuation of the state with the figures as completed by the state assessment 'board, will be $332,718, 000. Of this amount $32,637,000 is corporate ni'o}_)qrty. which is assessed by the statei board. = This is: an in- crease of a little over $16,000,000 over the figures of last year. .Bank in Examiner's Hands. Chelsea, §. D., Aug. 16—The State bank of Chelsea ig in the hands of the state bank examiner. ' It is said mat- ters will be arranged so the Institu- tion can resume business, possibly un: v With ‘no. loss: to de His Fair Customer—I want a birthday present for my husband. Dealer—Yes, wum, How would this old clock suit you? Fair Customer—Let me see. T've got a corner in my boudoir that will just do for it! And I've been wanting an old clock for a long time. Ves, that will do!” fire which wiped out two-thirds of the buildings and exhibits and entailing a loss that is estimated at from $10,000,- 1000 to $20,000,000. No lives were lost, but at least forty persons were injured in the stampede in the Bruxelles Kermesse, a sort of American “white city.” The fire, which resulted from a short circuit in the telegraph building, com- pletely destroyed the Belgian and British sections and practically ruined the International gallery, in which were the exhibits of America, Austria, Russia, Denmark, Norway, Japan, Tur- key and Switzerland. The French section was also virtual- ly destroyed. This section was filled with priceless works of art, of which those that escaped the flames were ruined by smoke and water. The flames were not checked until they had reached the Italian section, which was slightly’ damaged. Prac- tically the whole of one side of the Avenue des Natione, the central thor- oughfare of the exposition grounds, was_ wiped out. A number of houses were also burned. . Millions of dollars’ worth of dia- monds, laces, tapestries and art works were destroyed. The loss of these is what swells the total to such tremendous figures, as many of the art stores and galleries New-Cash-Want-Rats ',-Gent-a-Word Where cash accompanies copy we will publish all “Want Ads" for half- cent a word per insertion. Where cash does not accompany copy the regular rate of one ceuta word will be charged. EVERY HOME HAS A WANT AD For Rent--For Sale--Exchange --Help Wanted--Work Wanted Etc.--Etc. HELP WANTED. $50 for a steady young woman who will help -us three months, learn- ing simple photograph finishing work, Richardson, 910 Beltrami. WANTED—Girl for house work. of the old world had been ransacked Good wages. 910 Beltrami. for the benefit of the exposition, | Phone 550. There are little insurance on many 2] N of these exhibits and scores of exhib- wfig,’:}szompé;z:t WIKE:; 6“2’; 3 s itors are facing financial ruin. es b Bemidji avenue. CRUSHED BY FALLING WALLS | VANTED—Competent girl _ for general housework, 605 Lake Boulevard. Mayor of El Paso, Tex., Kiiled While Warning Others of Danger. El Paso, Tex., Aug. 16.—W. E. Rob- inson, mayor of El Paso, lost his life while endeavoring to warn a number of firemen of imminent danger from a tottering wall. At the same time Todd Ware, a fireman, was instantly killed and William - Robinson- and Dave Sullivan, also firemen, were in- jured. The casualties followed a fire which broke out in a dry goods store. Mayor Robinson, who had watched the fire, left the sidewalk and approached the building to instruct the firemen to stop further work on the unsafe walls. As he approached the building a large portion of brick wall buckled and fell, crushing Robinson and Ware and knocking the other men down. Mrs. Robinson witnessed the accident from the sidewalk. LIND SAYS HE STANDS PAT Will Refuse Nomination for‘Governor of Minnesota. St. Paul, Aug. 16—"I cling to my original decision to refuse to be the Democratic candidate for governor, though I am writing without a full knowledge of the situation.” This is the most important state- ment contained in a letter received by Frank A. Day from John Lind. . The letter was written under date of Aug. $50 if taken at once; easy terms 12, the day Mr. Lind returned from if desired. M. E. Ibertson. his Alaskan trip. . Some of the local leaders among | FOR SALE—Rubber stamps. The the Democrats are practically agreed Pioneer will procure any kind of = that John Lind will not be the nom- rubber stamp for you an shor inee. Even those who have clung | notice. most tenaciously to the idea that in the end Lind would accept are now | FOR SALE—Glass saying they have given up hope. FOR SALE. FOR SALE—Two seated buggy, good as new, $35 single buggy, $12, one harness, stoves $1.75 to $7, doors $1.50 to $2.25, baby cab $3. '8th St. between Minnesota and American- avenues. > FOR SALE—16 inch wood—50c per load at mill, or $1.50 delivered. All grades lumber, lath and shin- gles at reasonable prices. Doug- lass Lumber Co., Telephone 371. FOR SALE—19og Diaries some gilt edged with leather ccvers and of different sizes, that sold as high as §1.75 for 25c— Pio- neer Stationery Store. FOR SALE—1g09 Diaries 10c each, This lot includes books * that formerly sold for as high as 75¢c. Pioneer Stationery Store FOR SALE—200 acres good land fourteen miles from Bemidji. For description and terms write O’Keeffe Bros. Lansford, N. D. FOR SALE—Large piano cased organ; cost $135. Will sell for Ink welis— Sample: bottle Carter’s Ink free with each 10c ink well. Pioneer office. Pushed Under Train and Killed. New York, Aug. 16.—In a scuffle in the subway an unidentified man was | FOR SALE—Buggy, single harness, pushed beneath the wheels and killed. | baby cab, tent, Eighth™ and Michael Copoto, a laborer of Yonkers,{ America. was arrested and held pending an in- vestigation. He is charged, in addi- tion, with attempting to’'throw a sub. way inspector under a subway train. FOR RENT. FOR RENT—Six room house on Eighth street between Minnesota and American avenues $12 per month; also store for $10 per month. Call at house. Drouth Kills the Fish. Prairie du Chien, Wis,, Aug. 16— Unless steps are taken at once to save the fish the sport here will have to be practically abandoned for sev- eral years. Millions of fish are being literally cooked alive in the shallow waters of the lakes and sloughs in the vicinity of this city. Furnished rooms for rent 110 Sixth street. LOST and FOUND FOUND—A ‘parasol. h District Attorney Disbarred. Madison, Wis., Aug. 16.—Albert E. Schwitt. district att f Mari S¥s kame by, bizing. for thina chwittay, district attorney of Marl- i inni % nette county, was disbarred from prac- sndesiogatioly Minnesats, e tcing law in the state courts by a | LOST—English setter pup. Return decision of Judge B. Ray Stevens, who | for reward to Dr. G. M. Palmer. sat in the case at Marinette. The 1212 Minnesota avenue. court holds that the defendant does not possess the good moral character | LOST—EIlks tooth charm mounted. which is a requisite condi‘ion to his Return to A. B. Hazen, sheriff, rightful continuance in the practice of for reward. law. Owner can ifty Men and One Elephant. lnteres{lng tests were rec:ntly magde | MISCELLANEOUS in London to determine the respective [ """~ pulling power of horses, men and ele- [ WANTED—to rent modern house phants. 'I'wo horses weighing 1,600 | * or flat or 2 or 3 unfurnished rooms pounds each, together pulled 8,750 heated. Answer by giving price pounds, or 550 ‘l:‘“nd' more “‘i'“ ;‘!‘7" and Jocation “of ‘rooms. Address combined weight.” One elephant, iy idii. Mi poundseach together pullea 8,760 |20X 501—Bemidji, Minn. pounds, or 3.250 pounds_less thao its | WANTED—Light driving _horse. weight. Fifty men, aggregating 7500 | Address C. B. Heffron, R.' F. D pounds in weight, pulled 8,750 pounds, No. 1. 5 or just as much as the single elephant, p but, like the horses, they pulled more | WANTED—By the first or middle than thelr own welght. One hundred | of September, two rooms for lady meri pulled 12,000 pounds:—8t. Louls| ,nq ‘:eifi“m.’ ; i % 263, Bemidji. | NOTICE OF APPLICATION —for— LIQUOR LICENSE STATE Ol“lnlgl;leNES?TA. } unty of rami, 58, OBty of Bomidi, Notice is Hereby Given, That application has been made in writing to the ‘clty council ofsaid City of Bemidjl and filed in my office. praying for license to sell intoxicatingliguors for the term commencing on Sept. 1st, 1910, and terminating ondsam.#z‘!n;ll 1, \;y :hfi :gle: . and at the followin, Kt eont, Snt 0 S llcias pacs tively, to-wit: . $.J. LACHAPELL & LAURENCE J. . KRAMER, Co-Partners. Atandin the front room, ground floor. of that certatn two-story frame bullding located on ot fourteen (14), block fourteen (14), original Townsite, Bemidji, Minnesota. Said application will be heard and deter- mined by said city council of the €ty of Bemidjl. at the council room in the city hall in sald city of Bemidji, in Beltrami county, and State of Minnesota, on Monday, the20th day of August. 1910, at § o'clock p. m., of that 3 Witness my hand and seal of sald city, this 16th day of August, 1910, [Sellf ‘THOS. MALOY, City Clerk. Aug. 16 and 29, Proceedings of the City Council Bemidiji, Minn., July 25th, 1910, Couneil met in Council room City Hall at8 p.m. A quorum being present Council was called to order by Chairman Kirk. On roll call, Aldermen Shannon, Klein, Smart, Schnelder, Kirk, were present. Burs' , Brown, Bisiar, were absent, s of last meeting were read and ap- Brown took his seat in council, It wag moved and seconded the use of clty opera house and the cliy’s property therein be granted to the band boys for practice and concerts until further orders from council, the city reserving any two nights in the week and the city to furnish and pay for lights. Moved and seconded the powder house in west part of the city be moved further away trom dwellings it reported as a menace to life and limb, and that Schnefder and Klein be spc’l committee to notify Ohas. A. Battles and the Given Hardware Co. of the action of the council. Carried. The following bills were on motion and second allowed, : Street Gang,teams and labor to 23rd inst. . 8166 00 & gtodate 12 75 J R Miller, hauling 148 loads clay on rade Irvine Ave., . 6660 Miller, sprinkling Sts., nights of 3rd and 4th July.. . 1000 Doran Bros., plumbing repairs main 14th and Itvine Ave. . our M F Cunninabam, 2 sc transoms, City Hall. 1085 - George Knott, caring W] & ¥ 5475 Ordinance No. 46. regulating sale of intoxi- cating liquors, malt, etc., was read a third time, putupon its passage and declared lost by the following vote: " Shaunon, Klein, Schneider, Brown. “Nays” Smart, ri. Requisition for 6 long handle. pointed shovels and 1 padlock for street dept. was granted, city clerk to buy same. : Report of M'n’c’pl Uourt week ending 23rd lnsl..aglth #3.85 costs paid treasurer was ap- proved. Bids were now opened for the construction of sewer extension for y'r 1910 and were as follows: Doran Bros., of Bemlidji, for standard pipe 81.07 per foot. Do B Bemidjl, for manholes com- Do Bros., Bemidjl, for flush tank com- plgte #1040 ‘razer & Danforth, Rochester, Minn., for standard sewer pipe, $1.20 per foot. Frazer & Danforth, Rochester, Minn., for manholes complete £0.00. Frazer & Danforth, Rochester, Minn., for flush tank complete $90.00, . F. Bosworth, Bemi ard pipe SLO. 4. F. Bosworth, Bemidji, Minn., for man- holes complete $55.00. H. F. Bosworth, Bemidjl, Minn., for flush tank complete $115.00. L. P. Extrum, Bemidjl, Minn.. for standard pipe per foot. . xtrum, Bemidji, Minn., for manboles complete $62.50. 2 L. P. Extrum, Bemidji, Minn.,. for flush tank complete £130.00. ‘The requisite amount 10 per cent certified cheaues were enclosed with all bids. 1t was now moved and seconded the bid of H.F. Bosworth, being the lowest and the best, be accepted and he be awarded the contract on filing hus bond in 35008. Carried. Shannon was granted leave of absence. Moved and seconded the city engineer ad- vertise for bids for paving streets with cement paving for 2 w'ks, bids to be opened August 8, next. Carried, Moved and seconded the street commis- sioner repair bridge on boulevard and fill up washouts, and grade 2 blocks from 4th to 6th Sts., Minn. Ave,, and from 12th to 14th street, Dewey avenue. Carried. RESOLUTION At a regular meeting of the city council, of the City of Bemidji. held at the councii chambers, in the city hall, in the City of Be- miajl, Minnesota. on Monday. the 251h day of July.1910. at 80’clock p. m., the following reso- lution was introduced by Alderman Smart and seconded by A'derman Brown. Whereas, Chapter 450 of the General Laws of the State of Minnesota for the year 1909, prevides that all money paid into any municipal treasury for liauor licenses, except in cities of the first, second and class, shall be distributed as follows: 'en per cent thereof shall be paid into the county treasury and credited to the general revenue fund, and the remaining ninety per cent thereof shall be credited tothe general fund of the municipality issulng the license, Provided, that In case any such municipality is situated in two or more countles, then said ten per cent shall be divided pro rata among such counties; but the ecuncil may nngronflv ate any part thereof to any school district wholly or partially within such municipality for general or specific purposes. Such council may also appropriate the whole or any part thereof to the construction or repair of roads or streets within or adjacent to, or leading trom such municipality.” Now, therefore, be it resolved, that said ten per cent of all liquor license money paid into the clty treasury of the City of Bemidji, from and after the 3ist day of December, 1909 and which wonld otherwise bo payable to the County of Beltrami under sald Chap- ter 450, if the samels applicable to the City of Bemldji, be appropriated, dedicated and set apart for the construction and repairing of streets within the €ity of Bemidji; that ten per cent of all moneys heretofore paid into the treasury of this city for liquor licenses since December 3ist. 1909, be trans- ferred from the general fund of said city aud placed in the Pesmanent Improvement Fund of said City to be used for the purposes afore- sald, and that said ten per cent of all moneys hereafter paid into the vreasury of sald City for liquor licenses, and which would other- wise be payable to the County of Beltrami under said Chapter 450, if the same is applic- able to the City of Bemidji, be likewise placed in the Permanent Improvement Fund of said City. and be appropriated, dedicated and set apart for the construction and re- palring of streets ip said City of Bemidji. ‘Upon roll call the following aldermen voted aye: Klein, Smart, Schneider, Brown, Kirk. ay: None. Absent: Shannon, Bursly, Bisiar Roe. Carried. Abproved July 29, 1910, A s JOHNO. PARKER. ’ aloy. . ity Clerk. ok Moved we adjourn, adjourned. Thos, Maloy, J. BISIAR, City Olerk. Viée-Chalrman. . Minn., for stand- BISIAR & MURPHY FUNERAL DIRECTORS 117 Third Street z Dayphone 319. ight phones . 436 Calis Answered at All Hours : ..unn\\\““ \\‘x‘\‘.‘fl“\ll\uuu