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EACH DAY From Now Until Ghristmas Will be added one or more suggestions suitable for Christmas gifts. 4 They may be purcbased at the Bemidji Pioneer Oftice and School Supply | Store. 1. Subseriptionto Pion_er 2. Stylo Ink Pencils 3. Fancy Inkstand 4, CGlipless Paper d Fastener 5. 500 Letter Heads 6. 500 Envelopes - 7. 100 Calling Gards 8 . Leather Bound Blank Books 9.« Letter File Gard File | doz. Pencils Ofice Knife Dictionaries Gross Pens Paper Clips Postal Scales Envelope Seals Gard Punches Galendar Pads Ofice Pins | Box Eyelets 1 Box Typewriter Paper 18. 18. 20. 2, 2, 23. | Box Garhon 24. Leather Memo Books 25. Loose Leaf Vest Pocket Note Books Goat Pocket Note Books Wallet Pocket Books Ledgers, all sizes Journals, ** DayBooks,"* Gash Books,* Records, “ * 26. 1. 28. 28, 30. al. 32 | “SPORTS OF THE DA @@@@0@6000@@0@50 3 Sports for the Week. @ @@9@@@@@@00@00@@ . MONDAY. _ Wrestling inatch between Fred Beall and Karla, at Wausau, Wis. Abe Attell vs. “One Round’’ Hogan, 10 rounds, at New York City. Battling Nelson vs. Willie Howard, 10 rounds, at Brooklyn. : Carl Morris vs. Al Williams,” 12 roands, at Cleveland, O. Jack Redmond vs. Joe Mandot, 10 rounds, at Memphis. TUESDAY. Tony Ross vs. Jack (Twin) Sulli- van, 12 rounds, at Cleveland. Tackey McFarland vs. Young Hickey, 10 rounds, at New . York City. WEDNESDAY. Leach Cross vs. “Knockout” Brown, 10 rounds, at New York City. THURSDAY. Annual chess tournament of Col- wnlia, Harvard; Yale and Princeton cpens in New: York. Basketball contest between Prince- ton and Cornell at Ithaca, N. Y. Willie Lewis vs. Hillard Lang, 20 rounds, at Toronto. Jack Dillion vs. Howard Morrow, 1¢ rounds, at New York City. Mlly Clinton vs. “Kid” Scales, '12 rounds, at Lawrence, Mass. FRIDAY. Frnie Randers vs. Gus Christie, 10 rounds, at Madison, Wis. SATURDAY Annual meeting of the Minnesota- Dakota collegiate football conference at Minneapolis. SAM HILDRETH DENIES TALE Was Not Refused License to Race Horses in England Because He Had Not Applied for One. Sam C. Hildreth, the veteran Ameri- can trainer who went to England re- cently, returned on the Lusitania, ac. companied by Mrs. Hildeth and Car. roll T. Shilling, the jockey who went away with him to look over the Eng- lish tracks and select training quar- ters. Hildreth denied the report that he had been refused a license to train in England. “Was such a. report published here?” he asked. “I wasn’t refused a license,” said he, “I could not be refused a license be- Sam Hildreth. cause I did not apply for one. Al 1 went over for was to look around. There would be no use in taking out a license now, for it would expire at the end of the year. Training licenses in England begin with the first of the calendar year. “I am going back in midwinter some time. I have not decided just when I shall ship my horses. There is no prospect of my going to France until after another season or two. It would be no use to do so except with jumpers. By the rules of the French tracks neither American nor British horses can take part except in special races. They have to be bred in France.” WANT BASEBALL MADE SAFER Officials of Game Expected to Make “Changes in Playing Rules—Many Players Injured. It is thought probable the National commission and the directors of the National and American league will have to come together and modify the diamond rules so that there will be fewer accidents in the future. Such & move had to be made in football, With the result that last season was practically free from serious injuries. Of the two. games—baseball and football—the former appears to be the more strenuous now, judging by the long list of players who have been hurt this season. . Never before in the history of the game have there been 80 many play- ers obliged to remain out from in- juries, many of which have been se- rious enough to cause alarm. Most of the accidents have been caused by base running. The game has become so fast and inside ball has been 50 highly developed that suc- cess really seem to hinge upon abil- ity to run the bases. Sliding into bases has resulted in a number of bad. injuries. Probably the player who has been, | the most dangerously hurt of any in. the game is Frank Chance, manager of the Cubs. He was struck in the head by & pitched ball early in the season and the doctors told him he could mever play again. Lajole Is S8ome Hitter. Lajole had a batting average of 368 this year with the Cleveland Ameri- can league team, which makes his to- tal batting average for 16 years in the major leagues .350. “What will become of Kid Elberfeld now that Clark Grifith has been made. manager of the Washington club?” asks & critic. He might go a little further and inquire “what will becoms of the whole team.” . The. people of Bemidjl are fortus nate in having in their midst an up- to-date Home Bakery in W. A. Gray’s modern baking establishment.. the holiday rush coming on this shop is making -special preparations to and people who ad gets to't With | - ent per word per insertion. No ad taflu"forhutbnn Vi - Phone 31 DO THE BUSINESS Thay kell what you have to sell to everybody in Bemidji. The Ploneer goes everywhere 80 that evervone has a" ;leighbor who takes it a?l not take the. paper generally read their neighbor's so your want 14 Cent a Word Is All It Costs Can’t Lose Much by Taking a Chance goods. “Jule Kage” the famous Norwegian fruit cake is an_ article well known among the Scandinavians of this city |- and Mr. Gray will make a good sup- ply of this food and will continue to| - carry it in stock for the trade. Other goodies that will be carried in stock | - for- the holiday trade are light and dark fruit cake, pumbernacle bread and butter rolls. Mr. Gray has secured the services meet the demand for fancy bakery| - WANTED—For U. §. ~bodied unmarried mev -between HELP WANTED A:my—Able- Apply Tom: Smart. FOR SALECarload of good young | horses. ages ' of 18.and 85 citizens of the United States, of good character and temperate habits, who can speak, read and write the English language. - For information ap- ply to Recruiting Office at Scroe- der Building, Bemidji, or 217 Tor rey Building, Duluth, Minn. of Olaf Larson of Duluth as his fore- man, whose reputation as a baker will compare with any in‘the state. This Bakery extends a cordial invitation to the general public to inspect their WANTED—Wood cutters to cut 300 cords tamarack and 300 cords jack Tenth St. ta Ave, —_— HOUSE FOR RENT-—Corner Seventh and Beltrami Ave. -“Bemidji Ave., or phone 351. FOR RENT Inquire FOR = SALE—Wood- sawing outfit. Inquire of 0. J. Weekly. FOR RENT—6 roomed house, 212 Inquire 1014 Minneso- 700 pine; near town. Inquire of Wes Wright. plant at any and all times. It is lo- cated at 407 Beltrami avenue, two|. doors from the post office. WANTED—Good girl son, 1101 Dewey Ave. for general housework. Apply Mrs. John Wil- At The ‘Grand Theater. Tonight and tomorrow night the WANTED—Competent girl for gen- FOR RENT—Two : furnished rooms for light housekeeping or roomers. 415 Minnesota Ave. FOR RENT—Rooms for light house- keeping, furnished or unfurnished. Over Gill Bros. eral housework. Mrs. E. H. Smith - 717 Beltrami Ave. 511 Third St. Two furnished rooms for light house- keeping. Rood will sing Ernst Boll's lates success “To the End of the World with You.” Four full changes in WANTED—4 bright boys to work af- _ter school hours. Armour & Co. motion pictures every week. Monday, Wednesday and Friday nights, and Girl wanted at once at McDermid | ial request. Every song is selected by the management from the latest hits | by our greatest composers. Admis- | sion 10 cents, children 5c. ! Uye Before You Patch. “Never patch a garment just before it goes to the dyers,” was the advice of a young woman in a dyeing estab- lishment. © “Unless the patch and the thread it is sewed on with are exactly the same kind of material as the gar. ment they will come out of the dye pot different shades. Here is a blue skirt that was brought to us cream colored. The cloth had worn through In"several places, and the owner had patched the tiny holes so painstaking: ly that the patches could not be de tected in the original color, but after the dyeing they showed up a darker blue. The amount of dye any ma- terial will take depends upon how much cotton, wool or silk-it contains. It is so hard to determine that exactly that any garment that bas to be mend- ed can be matched much better after dyeing.”—New York Sun. Air Sacs of The air sacs of the nlgeon consmutu a system of interstices, the value of which lies in their absence of weight and resistance. Flying is possible only to a body of high mechanical efficlency divested of all superfluous material. The original reptiles, which by evolution became birds. were divested of superfluous ma- terial, and the body spaces thus ob- tained were filled with air sacs. The body wall, adapting itself to the me- chanial requirements, became a hollow cylinder serving as a support for the organs of movement, the mobility of whose parts was assured by the sur- rounding air sacs. . The air cavitles in the bones of other birds are similarly explained.—Harper's Weeklv. DON'T PULL oUT THE GRAY HAIRS A Few Applications of a Simple Rem- edy Will Bring Back the Na- tural Color. “Pull out one gray hair and a doz- en will take its place” is an old say- ing, which is to a great extent true, if no steps are taken to stop the cause. When gray hairs appear it is a sign that Nature-needs assistance. It is Nature’s call for help. Gray hair, dull, lifeless ha:-, or hair thar is falling out, is not necessarily a sign of advancing age, for there are thousands of elderly paople with per- fect heads of hair without a single streak of gray. When gray hairs come, or when the hair seems to-be Uieless or dead, some good, reliable hair-restoring treatment should Dbe resorted to at once. Specialists say that one of the best preparations to-nse is the old- fashioned “sage tea" which our grandparents used. The best prepa- ration of this kind is Wyeth’s Sage and Sulphur Hair Remedy, a prepa- ration of domestic sago and sulphur, scientifically_ compounded with later discovered hair tonics and stimulants, the whole mixture being- carefully balanced and tested by experts. Wyeth’s Sage and Sulphur is clean and wholesome and perfectly harm- less. It refreshes dry parched hair, removes dandruff and gradually re- stores faded or gray hair to its na- tural color. Don’t delay another minute. Start || using Wyeth’s Sage and Sulphur at] once and see what a difference a few || days’ .treatment will make!’: in - your || hair, This preparation is offered to the public at fifty cents a bottle, and is recommended and sold by &1l drug- FOR SALE. on easy terms, 136 acres | FOR SALE—Nearly new 5 room cot- | FOR SALE—Rubber stamps. Pioneer will procure apy kind of | WANTED TO TRADE—What have you to trade for new standard pia- Call at secopd hand "store, | 0dd Fellows Bldg. FOR SALE—¢ room cottage, 70 ft.| —— iR e S FOR SALE—Baled hay and straw at of rich hardwood land on lake shore and County road, one mile from Puposky. . Improvements ! consist of good log house, fine hay meadow arnd five acres under culti- | vation. There . are about 1000 cords of birch besides other tim- | ber. I will take cord wood as part | payment. Call'on or write to E.| J. Swedback, Bemidji, Minn, tage on Bemidjl Ave., with 50 or‘ 100 ft. frontnrge easy. p:yments.} Huftman, Harris & Reynolds. | The The i ti icty , “In th ety g:tletitn v;nc::-;el:"" (Ipmcp;“ ?The l’ln-m)t-1 WANTED—Girl for general house- FOR ;:SNT 6 room house for rent. per's Daughter.” “A Lucky.Chatige w?;l_(i. AMrsA I. 0. Harris, 703 Be-| A Klein. i ” midj. ve., and “The Stronger Man. Andrew MISCELLANEOUS | ADVERTISERS--The great state of North Dakota offers.unlimited op- portunities for business to classi- Hotel. fied advertisers. The recognized| {full change for every Sunday night. | advertising medium 1s the Fargo The illustrated song changes every 52 | Dally and Sunday Courier-News, night -except when repeated by spec- FOR SALE I the only seven - day paper in the; state and the paper which carriee the largest amount of advertising. classified | Courier-New: covers North Dakota like a blank- | et; reaching all parts of the state the day of publication; it is the paper to use in order to get re- sults; rates one cent per word first insertion, one-half cent per word succedding insertion; per line per month. Address the Courier-News, Fargo, N. D. fifty cents WANTED—Dining and sleeping car -conductors, $75-§125. unnecessary, we teach you; write Dining Car World, Buren, Chicago. Experience 125 W. Van & rubber stlmp for.you on shoru notice. no? Iot on 12th St. $500. Harris & Reynolds. Huffman, furniture. BOUGHT AND SOLD—Second hand 0dd Fellows building, across from postoffice, phone 129 2 | Bailey’s and 1st add. ... 72.00 Wes Wright’s' barn. * Near City Dressmaking wanted. Miss M. Bemidji Lbr. Co., wood poor Hall. > %54 farm . 450 . Derby, 210 Stxth.St, Bemidji Lbr. Co., plank. 13.00 E. F. Stevens, stationery. 3.00 . A, B. Hazen, sheriff,” board prisoners October. . 59.00 . 5 Street gang, labor_streets..... 3428 Racine Iron & Wire Works, Babedek fire extinguishers... 75.00 Northern Const. & Engr. Co. final estimates paving an sewer contracts . . 473465 ; $1.00 each--- { ‘Tmas Gite| 8T, hqy s a year's Jfifi..":.“.-' America. . Fign |- _ foultry, pets, camping, trapping and Boy cbuts dept. boys interested now. Sent to three homes -a whole year for $1.| Keeps: 52,000 Remlt * THE NATIONAL YOUT! Kedzie Building, CMWD, L H’ We make brick and can fill all orders promptly.. Build your - house of brick made by Are For Sale'at Nefzer's Pharmacy Barker's Drug Store Berman Emporium T. J. Grane & Co. 0’Leary-Bowser Go, Bazaar Store McCuaig’s - Troppman’s Baker's Jowalry Store Gould’s Abercrombie's 0. G. Rood & Go. Markham Hotel Pioneer Office (give him or her) a year’s subscription to the Pioneer with four - beautiful carbon gravures which will make suitable Christmas gifts for four others---° $5.00 makes 5 Xmas gifts for 5 persons at or a 6 months’ subscription with two handsome plctures. at less than $1.00 each or Makes 3 Xmas gifts for 3 persons a three months’ subscription with one beauti- ful picture, makes 2 Xmas gifts at less than 75 cts each. No they have not stopped coming for these pic- tures, nor will they until we shut off the sup- ply. Picture framers report that they’re kept “busy framing them, so there will be more than a few given out for Christmas presents. - 31 and learn all about the above offer. Phone BRICK - FACTORY FOLEY BROS. Bemidji, Mh_mn. 2 | Inventory .. ... Due_from: County account tax levies. County. account court fees, Disbursed account warrant -$ 579.11 DR. 3 +:$107,455.30 . 58,327.74 261.02 For Armory rent For buildings ... - 427.60 609:35 For 9,957.64 - For 22422 200.00 9. 14 For prisoners & jail 601.51 For state hospital . 180.00 For stationery a printing . ... 372.84 For sewers, ete. ... 5,187.83 For scavenger 466.83 For sprinkling . . 409.50 For sidewalks & cross- ings . . 7,503.46 For streets, etc. .24,163.80 For town Northern .. 60.00 For tools & equip. ... 226.22 For municipal court .. 126.32 For water dept.' . . 3,630.89 For poor dept. .. . 2,273.36 L1171 Funds. Sinking fund investments -$27,314.65 Sinking fund cash .... . 11,656.27 Interest fund cash 1,854.95 ‘Water fund cash .. Library fund cash Inebriate fund cash Paving fund cash ... County 10 per cent fu) 2,426.52 Bonds and Loa | Water bonds General bonds Perm. Imp,, bonds Revolving ‘bonds . Paving bonds .. 0 $135,000.00 Invest. & Improvement 88.767.82 Due the Northern Construction Co. 4,734.65 Receipts. From cemetery ....$ 300.00 From city hall rents 189.00 From interest ...... 1,072.5 For liquor licenses.. 9,500.00 For misc. receipts .. 84.90 ' For misc. licenses .. 931.48 For poor . .... 10.00 For water dept. .... 4,910.29 For Mun. Court .... 2467.77 For paving and sewer collections . ...... 4,292.45 23,758.39 Funds. Due sinking fund by revolving T $ 7,558.10 Due sinking fund by interest e 4,756.46; Perm. Imp. fund overdrawn.. 3,580.48: Poor fund overdrawn 5,419.55, General fund overdra Revolving . 17,110.38: 22.49, $290, . Respectfully submitted, GEO. STEIN,, City Clerk: _— PROCEEDINGS OF THE CITY COUN~ CIL, CITY OF BEMIDJI, MINN., NOV. 13, 1911, Council met city hall at 8 o'cloek p. m. A quorum being present, meeting was called to order by President John- son. - ROLL CALL. TUpon roll call the following aldermen jwere declared present; Klein, Smart, Bailey,. Roe, Bisiar, Brown, Johnson; {Absept: Moberg, Crippen. MINUTES. Minutes of the last regular meeting were read and approved. BILLS. The following bills were read and af- ter being audited, were on motion and second allowed; Wm. Pickles, scavenger -work APPLICAT | cation “of hig granted, all yea. liquor license, which was aldermen present BONDS. Carthy, with the Fidelity & Deposit Co. of Maryland as surety, approved. REPORTS. City clerk’s report and city treasurer’s 14th to Nov. tee on motion and second. MISCELLANEOUS. Requisition was made by the munici:. pal court for the sundry dockets and; registers, which was approved, and clerk ordered to purchase the same. There being no further business it. was moved we adjourn. Adjourned. Approved, Attest: EW PUBLIC LIBRARY, Open dajly, except Sunday aggd,Mon-. daylltolza.m.,lwfip.m..’ln‘!)y.m. Sunday 3 to 6 p. m. Monday 7to 9 m. BEATRICE MILLS, Librarian. THE SPALDING EUROPEAN PLAN Duluth’s Largest and Best Hotel DULUTH MINNESOTA More than $100,000.00 recently expended; on improvements. 250 rooms, 125 private bauhs. 60 sample rooms. " Evers modern, convenience: Luxurious md el shmu m Room, Men’s Grill, Uokmhl Bflflflt; H-zmuuun lobby and publl Baltnoom. banquat. Fouis ems peivate dining_rooms: Sun parlor and i doserys: tory. Located in heart of bus tion but overiooking the hnrhor lnd lee Superior. Convenient to everything. One of the Great Hotels of the Northwesi Huffman Harris & mmlds Bemidji, Minn, Application was made by Thos. Me- . | Carthy for the transfer of business lo- . voting - Liquor license bond of Thomas Mc- . was read and; for the quarter ending Oct. 31st, was, submitted and read, and clerk of the, water boards report for the period Aug.. 13th was read, the same. being referred to the auditing commit-. @ 4