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Now-Cash-Want-Rats '-Gent-a-Word ™ Where, ca.sh accompanies cop; will publish all “Want Ads” for alf- centy a word per insertion. Wher cash does not accompany copy th 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 WANTED—For the United States army, ablebodied unmarried men Dbetween ages of 18 And 35; citizens | of the United States, of character and temperate who can speak, read and the English language. formation apply to Recruiting Officer, 4th St., and Minnesota Ave., Bemidji, Minnesota. good habits, For in- WANTED—Girl for gereral hovse-| work. Mrs. L. G. Crothers, 713 Beltrami avenue. WANTED—Gir] for general hotel| work. Apply at the Mincesota House. WANTED—Girl for general house- work. 903 Beltrami Ave. WANTED—Chambermaidand night clerk at Brinkman Hogel. WANTED—A cook. Hotel Nicol- let. Bemidji. FOR SALE FOR SALE—Case stands and racks number 6, double news stand with rack for 8 full sized cases. Good as pew. Sell regularly for $3:75.! We have 6 of these at $1.50 each. Bemidji Pioneer Publishirg Co.! Bemidji, Minn. FOR SALE—Cheap, 6 room house Lot 50 x 140. Inquire 709 Irvine avenue; FOR SALE—80 acres of hard wood | farm land, house, baru, root houte, | 25 acres meaduw and clearing. | First $650 take it. Part cash. Inquire of M. C. Longballa, Crother’s barbershop. ¥OR SALE—Job type and body type. Fontsof 6 point to 72| point. Prices furnished with | proof shests upon request. Ad-! dress Pioneer Publishing Co., Be-| widji, Mion. FOR SALE—House. and lot on| Lake Boulevard. Part cash and easy payment on balance. quire O. N. Steenstrup, Geo 7T Baker & Co’s. Store. FOR SALE—]ob cases, triple cases, quadrupple cases and lead and slug cases, 40c each. Dioneer Publishing Co. Bemidji. FOR SALE— Modern nine room house io one of the best location in the city. Inquire at 523 Be- midji Ave. FOR SALE—Rubber stamps. Th: Pioneer will procure any kind of « rubber stamp for you an shor notice. FOR SALE—Two lots on corner of Teoth street and Bemidji Ave. $900. C. W. Vaunderslus. FOR SALE—A well built nine room house. Finelecation. 1005 Lake Boulevard. . MISCELLANEOUS WANTED—Bemidji Lady’saddress. | The name of a sister of Charles| White, will be of benefit to that lady. Lady resides near Bemidiji and is married. Address, R. W. Hale, Littlefork, Minn. WANTED—16, 18 or 20 ft. launch. 2to 3 hores power engine. Ad, dress P. B. Heffernan, State Sana. torium, Cass Co., Minn. WANTED— People to know we paint all kinds of signs. R. Martin, phone 519. OM SMART DRAY AND TRANSFER SAFE AND PIANO MOVING Residonco Phone 58 618 Amorlca Ava. Offlce Phone 12 T. BEAUDETTE Merchant Tailor Ladies' and Gents' Suits to Order. Dry Cleaning, Pressing and Repairing a French Specialty. 315 Beltrami Avenue FACIAL A Defects ) QUICKLY GDIIIIEG'I'ED The chief surgeon of the Pluhc 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 life itself. If you have a facial irregularity of nny kind write Plastic Surgery lnsmute Corner Sixth and Hennepin P | write | In-‘ |ELATED OVER CABINET FALL Madero, Sr., Calls It Begin- | ming of the End. | | STARTS FOR SAN ANTONIO ! i Changes Base From New York to the \ Border in Order to Be Nearer the | Secene of Actual Hostilities—Asserts j Insurrectos Are Making Rapid Head- | “way AIl Through Northern México. New York, March 27.—Francisco \ Madero, Sr., and Gustavo, his son, have ! \ left New York for San Antonio, Tex., \ where they can be nearer Francisco L. | ‘Madelo. provisional president of the insurrecto party. Before they left they }showed the following telegram from | Alfonzo Madero, whom they will join | in San Antonio: “Chilapa, in the state of Guerrero, a town of 20,000, is in the hands of the | insurrectos. Zahuaripa, in the state ‘o( Senora; Culacan, the capital of the ,stnte of Sinaloa, and Mazatlan, the | main port on the Pacific of the state of Sinaloa, are menaced by insurgents. 1‘ “Ojinaga, opposité Presidio, is be- | sieged and short of provisions. We | expect its surrender very soon. Good | news from the rest of the republic.” | Francisco Madero-was visibly elated | over the resignation of the Diaz cabi- ! net, but cautious. “It’s a little early to tell just what |1t means,” he said, “but it certainly is along the lines I prophesied. I look on it as the beginning of the end, but if you ask -me what the end will be I do not know. - Limantour is now in power, or soon will be. We must wait to see what he will do. Accord- ing as he fails or sugceeds will the | scales dip.” The Maderos would not say in so { many words why they have changed | their base from New York to the bor- | der, but they let it be inferred that | they felt events are so shaping them- | | selves that their presence nearer the | scene of actual hostilities was needed. |ONLY TWO TO BE BE RETAINED Younger Men Will Hem:eforth Direct Destinies of Mexico. | | Mexico City, March 27.—With the 1 old cabinet out and the probability | that not more than two of its members wlll be retained the likely personnel | of the new ministry is the chief topxc of discussion in the capital. The resignation of the cabinet is taken as an indication that Finance | Minister Limantour’s policies are pre- vailing with President Diaz. “The lat- | ter has given no intimation of his-in- tentions further than a determination | to appoint younger men to-succeed | the ministers who are advanced in age. The naming of General Bernardo | Reyes for the portfolio of war and marine is possible. It is believed that | Limantour will remain at the head of the department of finance despite the fact that he is along in years, although | it is thought by some that he will suc- ceed Creel as minister of foreign af- | fairs. :RANCHER SLAIN BY ASSASSIN Former Grafton (N. D.) Man Is Mur- dered in Canada. Edmonton, Alta., March 27.—As a result of a bullet fired by an assassin i through the window of his home, Will- |iam Lennox, a wealthy rancher of Buf- falo Lake, Chestnut district, is dead. He came lere from Grafton, N. D, a year ago and invested $30,000. A lnelghhor. John Fortier, also an Amer- ican, is under arreet charged with the crime, though only suspicion attaches to him. Another unknown man is be- {ing detained by the mounted police. The .dead man was the owner of two sections of land and of a big bunch of cattle and horses. | Steamers Crash and Sink. |+ London, March 27.—The British ateamer Irishbrook and the French | ateamer Villa de Bordeaux collided off Beachy head, and both foundered, the crews, totaling forty-nine persons, having only time enough to take to their small boats. Later they were picked up by a tug and landed at New Haven. Neither of the freighters car- | ried passengers. Power of Nature's Beauty. Have you never felt the marvelous power of beauty in nature? If not you have missed one of the most exquisite joys in life, says Orison Swett Marden in Success Magazine. 1 was once go- ing through the Yosemite valley, and after riding 100 miles in a stagecoach over rough mountain roads 1 was so completely exhausted that it did not seem as though I could keep my seat while we traveled over the ten more miles which would bring us to our des- tination. But on looking down from the top of the mountain 1 caught a glimpse of the celebrated Yosemite falls and the surrounding scenery just as the sun broke through the clouds, and there was revealed a picture of such rare beauty and marvelous pic- turesqueness that every particle of fa- tigue, brain fag and muscle weariness departed in an instant. My whole soul thrilled with a winged sense of sub- limity, grandeur and beauty which I had never experienced before and which I can never forget. I felt a spiritual uplift which brought tears of joy to my eyes. A Reversion. “Matrimony,” said a modern benedict the other day, “produces remarkable revolutions. Here am 1, for instance, in a few short months changed from | ¥ a sighing lover to a uvln‘ -lm. e luu-nted Bits. G WMQIAI- A waterspout is a miniature tornado originating in a ‘strong' upw rd dratt of air which occurs above thi urface of a body of comparatively warm ‘wa: ter. Its effect first becomes visible ina circular. motion at the poin clouds to which_it ascends. vapor at its center, causingthepor- tion of the cloud tlrere to drop down- ward in the shape of a giganticljelly bag. ' At the same time the continding upward draft increases the rapidity of its original swirl and the condeiised vipor caught within it until; the acending and descending masses join to form the waterspout. \eeessnruy this process - the air beneath the ut is rarefied, and thus where the phenomenon occurs at sea the water Rlvays seems to be sucked up into it, although this is not really the case to any cousiderable extent. For similar reasons where a waterspout or torna- do-passes over a building it does most of its damage by exhausting the air | outside, causing what is within to ex- punc,l and blow the structure to pieces. The White Whale. The white whale, or béluga, 1s an arctic cetacean and closely allied to the narwhal. It is pure white .in color, twelve to elghteen feet long, whalelike it form, with a huge muzzle and nu- merous sharp conical teeth. The white- whale swims with ex- traordinary speed by doubling its huge tail--under its body and then striking out with it. Scientists who have stud- fed it in its natural environs say that it is able to catch the swiftest of fish- es, often pursuing its prey far up the northern rivers. It is gregarious and may be seen at times in herds of. forty or fifty. These herds not-infrequently gnmhol around boats in“thie arcti¢ seas,.and the natives of Greenland often capture them with harpoons or nets. The flesh of the white whale, in fact. is a ‘¢on. siderable source of food supply . to them. From it also is derived ong, of the finest grades of commercial ' oil The skins are tanned and the leather sold in the trade as “porpoise hidé.”— New York Times. i Sing a Sorig of Sixpence.: | The London Globé attempts an:ex: planation of the rhyme “Sing a ?ng of Sixpence.” Here it is: ‘The four and twenty blackbirds represent ’the - four and twenty hours. The bottom of the pie is the world. - The top crust represents the sky.. The opening of the pie is the dawn of the day, when the birds begin to sing, and surely such a sight is fit for a king. The king' in his counting house™counting out his money is the sun. The money the king is counting .represents the golden sunshine. The queen, who sits in the parlor, is the moon. The honey she is eating is the ‘moonlight. The industrious maid ‘who is working: in the garden before the sun has risen is the day dawn,.and the clothes she hangs out are clouds. The bird that so tragically ends the song by nipping off her nose is the hour of sunset.” Traditions of Mother Shipten. - Of all British prophets Mother Ship- ton''is- beyond doubt the 'most cele- brated. She was; in fact, all that al ptopliet and witchi should be, -in strange contrast to the serious and scientific nostradamus. .. The day. she was born the sky’ became ddrk and gloomy and, according to her biogra- pher, “belcht out nothing for an hour but flames, thundering "after 'a .most hideous manmner.” -Her personal ap- pearance, described by her -admiring biographer in 1662, is scarcely flatte ing: “Her physiognomy was s0 shapen that it is altogether impossible to express. fully in words or for the most ingenious to line her in colors. though many persons of eminent qua] fications in that line have often at- tempted it. but without success.”— Metropolitan Magazine. Ups and Downs. Not every statesman -takes his dis- missal with the humor of the Duc @'Epernon, who fell into disgrace with Henry of Navarre. Descending one day the great staircase of the Louvre, he met Richelien ascending it. and on the cardinal asking indifferently ‘if there was anything new taking plage D’Epernon replied, “Nothing, except that, as you see, I am going down and you are going up! Mr. Bloundelle Burton tells the story in “The Fate of Henry of Navarre.” Advanced Fast, “Mike, didn’t you have some trouble when you landed at New York?” “Divil a bit, sor.” “You hadn’t any password ndmlmng you' to the country, had you?” “No, sor, but before I had been in Chicago Tribune. Not Always ble. * “Shall we advertise for a man.with experience?” “Well, 1 don’t know. The last man tiad 8o’ much experience that' we couldn’t teach him anything.”—Pitts- burg Post. Warranted Not to Fail. Doctor—Your wife needs outdoor ex- ercise more than anything else. Hus:: band—But she won't go out. What am 1 to do? Doctor—Give her plenty of money to shop with. Knew All About It. “Do any perquisites come in your wayy at the office?” “Not much, they don’t. We have a husky janiter who throws them kind of folks out.”—Baltimore ‘American. Cuffs and the Laundress. Why are laundry women the most Torgiving of their gex? Because- the: ‘more ‘cuffs you give them the more they will do for you. 7 The Spectacled Bear. The spectacled’ bear of Ecuador is s0 called hm:lme of a patch of white around each - nye. which makes the animal look as though he was peering through a pair of great spectacles, In size and general color the spec- tacled bear looks not unlike the Ameri- can black bear. But its-hair is very ‘shaggy. At each side of the head'is a |’ whlte bar, which gives the animal the pearance ‘of wearing a balter. the “most distinctive tntyxrf | been ll‘! ted.. It "probably contained | | 86ns°best. knowp to herself: | to hmpeck Chambers’ Journal, the country tin days I had the grip.”— |. 'ing expedition.”—Baltimore American. >whlto around the eye #linx of a cer- Canadlan, bas often mdst maliciously express- record. - To one broth- er the doctur lett bis books so that be might learn to read and acquire com: mon sense, - To another brother he left his big silver: watch that the said brother might know the hour at which men ought to.get np of n’ morning. , To, bis brother-in-law he left his best pipe “in: gratitude that be married my sis- ter Maggie, whom no man of taste would ever have takel eldest son of a friend he left g silver tankard lest if he left it to the friend himself, who was a rabid teetotaler, the latter. mlght melt it down to cast temperance medals.. To one of his sis- | ters he left a silver drink cup_“for rea- er the family Bible, so that she might learn as much of its spirit as she al- better Christian, and to his eldest sis- ter a five acre fleld to console her for being married fo a man that she had A Pair-of Cheerful Liars. The crowd in, the little country store was watching the rain when Deacon ‘Witherspoon remarked that he'd seen it rain about as bard as anybody ever had seen it rain.. Somebody said: “Peacon, how hard did you ever see ‘train? (a “Well, sir,” u]d the deacon, “once upon a time, when I was at home, we bad an old cider barrel laying out in the yard with both ends out find the ounghole up, and, would you believe it, it rained.so hdrd into that bunghole that . water couldn’t run out of both ends fast enough, and it swelled up and busted!”, Then Reuben Henry spoke up. He said he'd never seen it rain very hard, but he'd seen some mjghty cold weath- er. Somebody said. “Rube, how cold did you ever see it get?” He said. “‘Well, sir, one time when I was living down in Pickaway county, in hog killing time, we bad a kettle of boiling . water setting on 'the stove, and we took it out in the yard, and it froze so doggone quick the ice was hot.”—National ;Monthly., | Black Inhabitants of France. Lying so much off the beaten track. the village of Port Lesue, in the Jura department of France, is visited by but few from the outside world, and consequently this tiny community of men and women of color is but little known. It is not a large village, for its inhabitants number only about a hundred, but every one is either black or copper colored. It owes fts origin to the fact that about a century ago the famous 'pegro chief, Toussaint L’Ouverture, Wwas brought” from Haiti and imprisoned in Fort de Joux. Many of his friends, all negroes, fol- lowed him .and encamped near ' his prison on the bank of the little river Loue. From that encampment grew the village of Port Lesne. and when Toussaint L’Ouverturé died more than 100 years ago his friends decided to remain in France. The pessing of | years and intermarriages have trans- | formed the ‘séttlement into a French village of folk, all of whom are enfranchi The poet erles under one reslrlcuon only—namely, the necessity of giving immediate plenmre Nor let this ne- cessity of producing immediate pleas- ure be considered as a degradation of the poet’s art. . It s far otherwise. It is an acknowledgment of the beauty of the universe, an scknowledgment the more sinceye because not formal, but indirect; it Is a task light and easy to bim who looks at the world in the spirit of love. Further, it is a homage paid to the native and naked dignity of man, to the grand elementary prin- ciple of pleasure, by which he feels and lives and moves.—William Worde- ‘worth, 3 In For It Either Way. Minister—Now, Tommy, suppose you did something baughty and were asked if you did it. What would you say? Tommy—I d\mno. Minister—You, don’t know? Why— 'why, what would happen if you told alie?’ o , Tommy—The devild git me. Minister—That's right. And what if you told the truth? Tommy—I'd git the devil.—Toledo Blade. A Killing Jeke. “] made Dr. Knifem, the eminent surgeon, very angry when I met bim one winter day emjoying a spin over the snow.” “How did you ‘make him mad?’ “ congratulated him on his sense of the fitness of things in taking advan- tage of every “I bave been told,” seid verformer, “that 1 make my vlnl!n sound like the human volce.” “Yes,” replied the candid friend, “but there are so many kinds of human voices.”—Washington Star. ¥ Yourself. I you want to be miserable think about yourself—about what you want, what you like, what respect people ought to pay to you and what people think of you.—Charles Kingsley. : The Same Girl. Young Husband—When 1 used to kiss you, you slapped me. Young ‘Wife—Well, you won’t get slapped mnow unless you forget to kiss me.— Illustrated Bits. People leldom improve when they have 0o other model but themselves to pattern after.. _—Goldsnmh ‘A Tip Fon John. Mr. Crimsonbeak—Here’s an item which says the: swan outlives any oth- er bird/ in extreme cases reaching 300 years. Mrs. Crimsonbeak—And, re- member, John, the swans live on wa- ter. i 3 . An Old_English Inn. The _Seven. Stars is an .inn or pub- ‘Mc house' in Manchester, England, :which has: held: a license continuously | since- 1370 thd s ;the: meeflng es band of .| J McElroy services janitor and A A Hinl. - % Tnchar—! hnyp been frying tor-ome time to get the room so quiet that we: could” hear a pin drop. 1 have drop- pedithe pln several tlmes. but you have ‘beén maklng 80 much nofse that it has ‘been impossible to hear ‘it. What do you think we had better do, ‘childrén? Reddy Backrow—Tie a dumbbell to it Bext time, teacher.—Brooklyh Life. Proceedings of the Gity Council of the City of Bemidji March 13th. 1911. 3 Council met in council rooms, city hall, at 8 o'clock p: m. A quorum being present meeting was called to order with president Johnson in the chair. Roll call showed the’ following alder- men present: Moberg, Smart, Bailey, Bisiar, Roe, Brown, Crippen and John- son. Absent, Klein: Minutes of ...e last meeting read and approved. The. following_ bills were read and on motion ‘and second allowed: engineer, March G M Torrence services city atty $14.70 Mareh= 2, s Ll S s e 11.60 ‘W E Hazen services street com- missioner March ............ 15.75 E J Gould services supt. water board March 21100 W L Brooks insur. premiums. 52.80 Barker Drug Co. medicines poor Jan. and Feb. contract ..... 49.00 Doran Bros. Matl and repairs water maing. (.. ... 000w 24.60 E H Winter & Co.,, wood poor farm' ., - 24.50 Graham & Doran farm Bemidji Prov. Co. mdse pa J A Smith scavenger wors . President Johnson now ani committees for lhe ensuing year as follows: Finance—Johnson, Roe, Crippen Audit—Klein, Crippen, Moberg Water & Light—Klein, Bisiar, Bailey Streets & Sidewalks—Smart, Moberg. Bisar Sewer—Roe, Bailey, Brown Buildings—Kiein, Crippen, smart Fire—Johnson, Smart, Klein Parks—Roe, Moberg, Brown Printing—Bisiar, Brown, Crippen Salarfes—Crippen, Smart, Brown Health—Smart, Roe, Bafley Purchasing—Klein, Bisiar, -Johnson Poor—Brown, -Moberg, Bailey. Transfer of liquor license application of Bd. Fay from that granted to H. Stechman was read and granted by, the following vote: Ayes—Moberg, Smart, Bailey, Bisiar, Roe, Brown, Cripnen, Johnson. Nayes—None. Absent—Klein. Liquor license bond of Bd Fuy, with the United States Iidelity and Guaran- ty Co., as surety was read and on mo- tion and second w: proved and ac- | cepted. Liquor license application of Andrew Willmar was read and same granted by | meat poor the following .vote. Ayes—Moberg. | Smart, Bailey, ar, Roe, Brown, Joh son. ' Nayes—Crippen. Absent—Klei Liquor. license bond of Andrew V mar, with the United States IFidelity & Guaranty Co., as surety was read and approved and accepted, The following bonds. that of A Carter in the sum of $500.00; of Geil in sum of $20,000.00; of Geor Stein, in sum of $2,000.00; of L. P. lck- strum, in sum of $500..0; W. H. Ander- son, in sum of $500.00; of Chas. Nansle, $500.00, were read and on motion und second were duly approved and accepted. Communication of Louis Anderson, i asking for the privilege of runnming a Family Garden, was read and on motion and second laid on the table indefin..ely. Report of I3 J. Gould, Supt. W Board, to March 11th, showing "‘0'."40‘ collected and paid the city treas., was read and ordered accepted and filed. Alderman Klein entered and was de- clared present. Nominations for city scavanger were | now opened. Applications were read from Wm. Pickels and J. A: Smith. No! further nominations council proceetied to ballot. Result of such ballot was Pickels 6, Smith 3. Wm. Pickels de- clared elected. On motion and second the bond for city scavanger was placed in_the, sum of $500.00. | Moved and seconded, that the aity clerk advertise for bids from man and wife for. monthly salary, for the care taking of paupers at poor farm and handling_poor farm to best advantage. City to furnish the necessary supplies, light and fuel. Bids to be opened March 27th. Carried. Upon motion andl second the clerk was authorized to purchase two push or dump carts, and a half dozen street brooms, suitable for cleaning-pavements. Clerk was also authorized to have made a suitable cupboard or filing case, also to purchase a high or standing desk. On ‘imotion and second the building committee were instructed to confer with county commissioners in regard to repairing the veranda at peor house. The city attorney was instructed to draw an ordinance prohibiting restau- Tants or lunch coufiters . occupying a building wherein the license to sell in- toxicating liquors has been granted, ex- cept where such ‘restaurant or lunch counter has a door or entrance leading thereto from the street or ave. On ‘Motion of alderman Moberg, duly seconded, tne city attorney was instruct- ed to prepare an ordinance setting tne license to sell intoxicating liquors in the city of Bemidji at $1,000.00. Said ordinance to become effective about July 1st. It ‘was now moved and seeonded that when we adjourn Pres. Johnson ask the mayor and city attorney to meet with the council in secret session. Carried. Thiere -being no further business it was moved we adjourn. Adjourned. Approved, L. F. Johnson, Chairman. Attest:- Geo. Stein, City Clerk. EW PUBLIC LIBRARY Open daily, except Sunday and Mon- dayllto12a.m.,1t0o 6 p.m., 7 t0 9 p. m. Monday 7to 9 p. Snuday 3 to 6 p. m. BEATRICE MILLS, Librarian. il S If you have North American or Vermillion to sell; Call on C. G. JOHNSON BROKER : -Sewser Bldg. BEMIDJI, MINN. R. F. MMRPHY FUNERAL DIRECTOR . - ; _unkuu LMER [REKDY FOR. GEMENT WORK f M. v I do all kinds of Cement Work —Lay Sldewalku. Curbing, Etc. ; npi Ave.~ Phone 470 . | MALZAHN & CO. !SI'ATE.AND msumnci: {FARMILOANS, RENTALS ELS LOITVED whiman aun 813 Miss Bemidit, Minn Live Stock, Summar Cottage, Tornado, Credit ‘Fire Life Health Personal Accident Marine' Burglary Theit T & REAL FARM AND, Iz ESTATE 2 CITY LOANS |2 ; g ’I'ELEPHOvNE 395 "OFFICE IN POSTOFFICE BLOCK g ] V. L. ELLIS |t g Q GENERAL. INSURANCE & SURETY RENTALS AND 2 BONDS & COLLECTIONS g o Employers' Liability Eleva(or Personal Effects . Steam Boiler ,g.: Theodore Roosevelt says: N is 8o safe, so sure. s0 certain to earich its owners as undevelop-d realty.” We will be glad to tell you about the City of Be- m‘dji. and quote you yprices with easy terms of payment if des red on some of the best residence and business propertv in thar rapidly growing City. A letter addressed to us will bring you tull particu- lars or if you prefer to see the property, call on H. A. Simons, at Bemidji. The Soo Railroad is now running its freight and passenger trains into Bemidji; i tunities off-red for business on MR. RENTER Have you ever stopped to think that every few years you p actically pay for the house you live in and vet do not own it? Figure it up for yourself. 0 Investment on earth nvestigate the oppor- a smail or large scale. Bemidji Townsite & Improvement Co. 8T. PAUL 404 New York Life Bullding MINNESOTA |Shoe Bargains One lot Men’s $6. Shoes, odd sizes, choic 00 and $6.50 € $3.75 A Pair. One lot Ladies’ $3.50 shoes, small sizes, widths A, B and C, choice $2.50 A Pair. One lot Misses’ shoes, worth up to $2.50 a pair, nearly all sizes. we are closing out A, lot $1.45 A Pair. OLEARY-BOWSER GO0, BEMIDJI, MI P.S. Spring Styles King Quality Shoes For Men in Basement. your table in steriliz Fresh From The on the Alfalfa Dairy Farm 3% » miles west of the city £ Order your milk and cream with your groceries each day Gream, quart hottles, 38¢ Gream, Pint bottles, 20c Groam, 1-2 pint bottles, 13¢ less 3cfor bottle Milk, quart botiles, 12¢ less 4c for- bottle Milk in Gallon Lots or more 25¢ per gallon Kindly get your milk ordersin before 8 o’clock a. m. to have them delivered by first delivery. First delivery leaves the stors at 8 a. m, ‘W. Q. Schroeder 2 n!nnoooti Ave., Cor, Fresh Milk and Cream Have your milk delivered to Fourth St. ed bottles Cows less 4c for bottle less 3¢ for hottle in order s AN \.