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.,__ M WORMS Doctors laugh at “worms.” Mothers pooh-pooh worms. Fathers spiff at worms, but children go on suffering with worms just the same. Surprising how Kickapoo Worm Killer will knock “pig-headedness” out of some parents and make them ashamed of letting their children suffer needlessly. Try K. W. K. and you will believe in worms and quit knocking. Price, 25¢.; sold by drug- gists everywhere and by . R e Are Your Coat Pockets Like O This? This? OU never have sag ging, disreputable coat pockets to be ashamed of, when you wear Clothcraft Clothes. The non-sag:- ging pocket is one of the details that give Cloth- craft Clothes their peer- less perfection. The same difference be- tween Clothcraft and ordi- nary clothes is found in the non-breakable coat front — the linings—the trimmings— the snug fitting collar —in every point of clothes merit. Pure All-Wool absolutely guaranteed by the maker, and by us—in the fashionable shades and weaves—$10 to $25. Woollasts, Wool keeps its style and shape as long as you wear the suit. You never had all these things guaranteea to you before. hy should you look any farther? r gy, Clothcraft AllWool Clothes 1 / R. F. MURPHY FUNERAL DIRECTOR AND EMBALMER Office 313 Beltraml Ave. Phone 319-2, ACIAL i& Defects QUICKLY CORRECTED v The chief surgeon of the Plastic Surgery Institute quickly rights all wrongs with the human face or features without knife or pain ¥ to the entire satisfaction and de- light of every patient. The work is as lasting as lifeitself. Ifyou have a facial irregularity of any kind write Plastic Surgery Institute . Corner Sixth and Hennepin ¢ MINNEAPOL'S, MINN, This is the Stove Polish All the \ Housewives % RE Are Talking = About S=— \ ‘T IS so much better than other stove polishes that it's in a class all by itself. Black Silk Stove Polish Males a brilliant, silky polish that does ot rub off or dust off, and the shinelasts fm}xr hflmes as long as ordinary stove polish, Used on sample stoves and sold by hardware dealers. ’ All we ask is a trlal. Use it on your, cook stove, your parlor stove or your s range. '1f you don’t find it the best stove polish you ever used, your dealeris, authorized to refund your money. 3 Insist'on Black Silk Sfove Follsh. Don'taccept substitute, ‘Made in 1iquid or paste—one quality. BLACK SILK STOVE PO) 0] S OLISHWORKS,. . THEY BORED_HIM.. . And They Came Mighty Near Boring Him Again With Lead. at few hate it with such intensity as the of the commune and ,of whom C. E. Halle speaks in his “Notes of: a Painter’s Life. A “A friend of mine," says Mr. Hallq “told me that he was in the studio of an artist when it was visited by a de, tachment of soldiers. The usual ques, tion about the possession of arms was asked and answered in the mnegative, but one of the soldjers found a gun in the corner of the studio, and on his eyidence the owper avas. told that he must come out and be shot. My friend was very fond of him, so he asked to be.allowed to see the gun. It was given to him, and with the help of a the sun as a sacrifice. The priests then few inches down the barrel and brought it out brown with rust, He pointed out that if ‘the gun had, been used the inside of. the. barrel . must have been black with powder and not brown with rust, so the artist was let off. test, and all the answer he got was: ‘Ob, they bored me. I would rather, any day be shot than bores A POET AT WORK. The Bumming May . H Wordsworth Out a Bi To see a poem in the making, the, uninitiated are apt to think, should; prove an Interesting sight. Unfortu- nately they will probably, be disap- pointed if the description, quoted by the Rev. H. D. Rawnsley in “Literary, Associations of the English Lakes,” of, Wordsworth at work is to be credited., An old retaiperof the family furgished this account of Wordsworth walkl) up and down his terrace com g: Helped, | & “Mr. Wordsworth . went bummin, and booing about, and she, Miss Dor- othy, kept close behind him and picl ed up bits as he let, fall, and she'd take 'em down and put ’em on paper for him, and you may be very well sure as how she didn’t understand or make sense out of ’em, and I doubt | that he dfdn’t have much idea aboot ‘em ejther himself. But, howiver, | there’s a gey lot of fowk as wad, dare say. “He would start a-bumming at one end of the walk, and it was ‘Béim, him out a bit.” France Has Run the Gamut. No other modern nation has under- | fo feudal, monarchial, imperial, repub- the pathetic effort to get one that|W to marry and bear children in order that Napoleon might be. continugusly supplied with troops; has known an absolute monarchy where a_graceful has known a government of, the rabble under which there was an, insurrec- tion against property and. death gen tences passed against. citizens, for .the sin of wearing aristocratic names.and clean shirts.—From “The Story of France,” by Thomas E. Watson. Wi The world. in which. a. man. lives | ;. shapes itself chiefly by the way in ‘which he looks at it, and so it proves different to different men. To one it Is barren, dull and superficial; to another, On hearing of the Interesting events | o, in their lives, too, completely forget- these events the significance they pos- 8ess when he describes,them. 'Toa man of genius they were Interesting ad-|is ventures, but to the dull perceptions | of an ordinary individual they, wauld have been stale, everyday occurrences. —Schopenhauer. A e of Suspicion. “That, speaker. . sald ‘Farmer _Corntossel, what the country, needs.” “Naturally and properly.” “I’ #’pose .80. when a man goes out of his way to tell me what I need it's always Aloém_k‘ —Washington Star. Hard Work. “Why .did ;you tell me you W working, your, way through college “I am.” . “But mnobody seems to about it.” B “Certainly not; my work consists of | N{' getting money from dad.” press. -Buffalo Ex- | Her Weekly, Allowance. Freda—So you have a weekly allow- | g ance from your. father?. Hilda—X 1 he allows me to have a gentleman caller two nights a week.—Lippin h.‘!""%i.': ":fi?{ “‘1‘\:."“’ "l‘h : .in.téglé city council'ofsafd city ot Bemidjl and filed in cott's, monas, > Inconsistent. - Only one of these birds could live period of 500 or 600 years. When its Plarscloratic OF the present e W matic spices, with its wings fanned the | DUs 18 the name of a pagan’ goddess.” rtis v ved i r ile into artist who lived in Paris in the days fmm Khos e ashes & Wov via produced, out of which another phoe- nix was formed, having all the vigor of youth. The first- care of the new phoenix was to solemnize its parent’s obsequies. For that purpose it made a ball of myrrh, frapkincense and other fra- grant.things. At Hellopolis, a city In lower Egypt, there was a magnificent temple dedicated to the sun. To this ‘temple the phoenix would carry the fra- grant ball and burn it on the altar of examined. the register and found that exactly 500 years.or exactly 600 years i that same ceremony. |, pencil he passed his handkerchief a [pod SAPSed Siace that sume % They Show No Regret In P “My friend asked the artist why he | tivy, Brittany, g had not himself suggested this simple | facts of a “hair market” there. It is 1 stated that in_different parts of the motley crowd there were three or four different purchasers of , this commod-, ity, who, travel, the country for the purpose of attending the fairs and buy- Ing the fresses of the peasant girls. They bhave,particularly fine hair and [ There. seemed to be no difficulty in finding possessors of beautiful heads!‘ of hair perfectly willing to sell. after the other, like sheep, and as | shears with their caps in their hands and _their long hair combed out and, hanging down to their waists. ference to their tresses on the part of | 3 the fair Bretonnes is to be found in the invariable mode which covers ev- | ery head from childhood upward with, il close caps, which entirely prevent any part of the hair from being seen .and of course as totally conceals the want | of it. The woney given for the hair is about 20 sous or else a gaudy cotton handkerchief. The purchasers net im- mense profits by their trips through the country.”—Boston Herald. umor, and yet on one occa- bum, bum? till he stopped, and then ;’l‘f‘,md u:: o T give me ® ‘Bum, bum, bum! back again. Then | gqpplp of it. It was bis cstom in the he'd set down and get a bit of paper | jg¢er years of his life to watch for the out and write a bit; then git up and | coming of white visltors to Fort Sill ‘Bum, bum, bum! and go ‘on a-bum- | or to Miss Adkisson’s mission, near by, ming right down the terrace and back | jn order that he might sell beaded again. I suppose the bumming helped | canes to them. From the proceeds he was accustomed. to. purchase certain creature comforts not supplied by the government, but on which he. relled gone changes more frequent, more | was talking to. him abont. them. He radical, more sudden, bloody and dra- | said matic. In forms of government France | the tobacco and.the mescal. . Yes, they has boxed the compass—has been [ put stre Mean and revolutionary. She has| Then to th ¢ t sounded the depths of royal apso-|often bad flared. With batred and cru- lutism and of communistic anarchy; | elty came a gleam of humor. He con- has made and unmade constitutions in | tinued: “I sell these canes, and the would fit; has known a military des- | purpose. They help _us _to_ walk."— | potism which bluntly told the women | Southern Workman, “that, we are knocking nearly all the manner was more. effective. at court |.Fomance and_lmagination out of life % with 3 ~+'| when we commerclalize marriage, for || than a head well filled with sense and that's about what we are doing. I | Ilke the good old way of courting, the knights were bold. I like the idea of galloping across the drawbridge and ¢ | snatching up the girl'of my heart and, putting her on the saddle before me and galloping away like mad. Wouldn’t b The Point of View, that sult oo 200 pounds.”—Cleveland Plain Dealer. rich, interesting and. full of meaning. | pg which have happened in the course of | tag. A ‘colieague called his attention a man’s experience many people ‘Wil | to it, and he displayed signs of much wish that similar things had happened | mental disquietude, ting that they should be envious rather| knaw what;you paid?”. mquired the of the mental aptitude which. lent]| colleague. b 3 Only I notice that|the system, it will take severa! days; treatment to ure jt, and, the thin’ in his particular ilne of goods” [best.temedy..touse is Chamber lain’s Cough Remedy It wil cure quicker than _:zny other, and 1lso-Jeayes the system in a natural aud healthy condition Sold by = S S e r—— TIEGLER & IIEGLER €O “THE LAND MEN" INSURANCE FIRE = LIFE = ACCIDENT A man who took hi fant daughter a time, but its existence covered a | to be baptized told m@' clergyman to €all hét Veénys.'"" R “But I refuse to call her Venus,” said the clergyman indignantly.” “Ve- Many Meanings. A . Traveler—Some expressions in the Chinese language have as many as .| forty different meanings. <5 Little Miss—Same way in English. “You amaze me. Mention one.” “Not at home.” “Well, how about your own “girl, Diana?” said the man, 4 flame and therein consumed Hair Raisi Catarrh Cannot Be Cured. A e ng with LOCAL APPLICATIONS, as they can- Husband—1 feel - in) the mood ' for | not reach the seat of the disease. Cotesre 1 reading sowething sensatfonal and |3 bloodor constitutional diseas: n OFd ons %o eure Ityou must take internal remedfes. startling—sowething that will fairly | Hall's Catarrh Oure is. taken mternsiie o make my hair stand on end. Wife. | cts ditectly on the blood and mucous s:.E faces. Hall's Catarrh Oure is rot & quac) Well, here is my last dressmaker’s bill, | medicine. It was prescribed by one.of ' e ‘Dest physiclans in this country for years ‘and 18 8 Tegular prescription, 1t s composed ot . Her Career. e best tonics kuiown,combined mwith the bodt “Well. has your college daughter de- | surfaces. .The Dertsct combination of the eided upon her career?” p 5"":"11;?“.?&“1 15 what produces such ori- “Yes; he has blue eyes, brown hair | testmonials free, - Lo o Send for and works in a bardware store.— | F:J.CHENEY & CO., Props., Toledo, O. Sold by Drugeists, price Tc. Louisville Courier-Journ: Take Hall's Catarrh Cure for constivation. FARM LANDS BOUGHT AND SOLD Go to Them for Quick Action Office--Schroeder Building BRETON LASSES. ng With | Their Luxuriant Tresses A correspondent writes from Pon- || giving some Interesting equently in the greatest, abundance. “We saw several girls sheared, one, any .more standing ready for the, “No doubt the reason of the indif- .very Dog Has His Day ; For the fqg_t sixty.days automobile manufacturers, dealers, traveling men, and the trade in gener- " al have carried gossip of every conceivable nature concerning the. BUICK: Company and the BUICK Car. One could hear any kind of a report by keeping an ear close to the ground. IT IS A LONG LANE THAT HAS NO TURNING and the BUICK Company have reached that turn by successfully floating a loan which puts them on their feet with a bang, and places them in better shape than ever before. Indian Humor. 0ld Geronimo would scarcely be sus- But in the megntime they were not idle, progress was being made, new 1911 models of the latest improved construction thruout were being built ready for.the 1911 season. The BUIGK.-Company is NOT doing what practically all the other popular priced manufacturers are trying to.carry out, that is, change the color of the paint, or some other minor. detail® and continue the same models for 1911 that they used for 1910. And what is more they started out with the idea that they would be able to unload all of these at the same old 1910 price, but before getting very far they - found that the supposed guillible public were getting.wise to this fact; then in order fo successfully get away with the proposition, they found it necessary to reduce the 1910 selling price, which was done forthyith. . Later. developments seemed to indicate that this would not solve the problem. Consequently it is hard to tell what the next move will be. : The fact of the matier in a nut-shell is, that the majority of the, popular-priced Companies must necessarily do during 1911, just what the BUICK Company did in 1910, that is, make a general cleanup s0 as to bring out a new model car. Consequently, the BUNGK:Cars for 1911 are just one year ahead of the others, for their machines wil! be brand new models, having -the latest of everything attached, and not a continuation of the old 1910 machines, which are now being sold by competitive manufacturers under the guise of new models by simply making a change in the paint, or something equally ridiculous. We take it for. granted that the automobile buying public are more than “seven’® and when they buy. a 1911.model—a real 1911 model they expect to receive, and if these manufacturers think they can put something over, they will be sadly mistaken. . BUIGK cars for 1911 will show the result of the greatest effort on the part of the best trained engineers in America today, to turn.out new 1911 models that will be the equal of machines costing sev- eral times as much, but at popular prices. . Furthermore, we have been in the business a sufficient length of time to thoroughly understand that we dare not.make these asser- tions unless we have the goods to back them up. - T Another thing, the story has gone broad cast that Sears-Roebuck Sted, In 8 ready mado gult of & Co. are selling BUICK Cars, and at a rediculcus price, we want to simply say that this report is a lie out of the whole cloth. d_forgot .to remove the_price Sears-Roebuck & Co. have never sold nor had for sale any BUICK Cars and. furthermore we will pay $1000.00 COLD CASH to any person-who.can prove to the contrary. All our models will be available within the next thirty days, so.don’t hurry, take a peep at the 1911 BUIGK: Line before making your selection. We will have something to show you that will be worth waitingto see; we haye never misled you and will not this time, To 'l"he "Dieral'ers“ in. the Geuntry T SuUpp! in_his old age. One day 1 “They. make me, walk. straight— th into me, and I lean on beady eyes that so hite. man, buys them—both for one [ Crushing Romance. “It seems to me,” sald Battersby, ay that was the classy thing when,| it wouldn’t,” replied the other an. “The girl of my heart weighs “Were you afraid people would 0, ‘-vu_x he reply, “I was.afraid, e of fhese.lobbyists woulg think it what I charge. Wushlngto‘n»S_tnr. The Only_One I,'agklus. re you so sure the £ When.a cold-becqmes, seftled in We want fo say to.yau, don’t take any stock in the maliclous storles that are being circulatad broadcast concerning the BUIC cgmygfi; ifll:‘fllls bum[lany is now in batter shape financially and In every other way than ever before, and thers Is absolutely no truth In any reports to the contrary. Competition is trying hard to discredit the BUIGK Company and the BUIGK Car for they well know-they will have hard sledding to sell their machines when the really naw 1811:BUICK Cars make their appearange on tha market.. We simply want to say to you, PIN YOUR FAITH TO THE:BUIGK CAR, and you will be the big winner in your locality, for the BUICK Company:and.-the PENCE-AUTOMOBILE CO. are too energetic to be followers or in other words bring up the rear. They are only safisfled with one position, THAT IS IN FRONT, so don’t close up on any automobile agency for 1811 unil you have sgen the BUICK Line, and have had a talk with the PENGE AUTOMOBILE CO. Get In touch with them at once. srker’s Drug Co. TICE OF APPLICATION FOR TRANSEER - OF LIQUOR; LICENSE F_MIN] el S for Tnl;ffar of Frank MATT T! dition, concerning the, | A33 1208 foont Roum dound Soorof that |, phoenix_has introduced into mi arly gry Janguage the habit,of applying that name to whatever is singular or un- LK 3 3 Black Silk Alr] I ‘Enamef ‘¢ DS e T el 6] tint .of, the: sparkied Jikp, dls- lots 21, 2. 23.24, block 16, original townsite 8. 7 4] 3 » || will ba heard and deter- o Il o ¢ - ity of. [ty of % sl oty dindhit e dis .- i 4 3 of Bemidjl, in Beltrami county. i of Minnesota, on Monday. the 3 ) ! ovb'r, 1910, a¢ 8 o'clock p. m. SRV E oo | e, Ave. and Elgyt!fl St., Minneapolis, Minn.. ? e §