Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, December 28, 1911, Page 4

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. SPORTS OF VICTIM OF ACCIDENTS| Hugh Jennings Meets With Many, Mishaps. Tiger Manager Put Down and Out by Fast Incurve Served by Pitcher | Rusie, Formerly With the New | York National League. ‘Whether the Nemesis that has been following Hugh Jennings will ever capture that radiant-haired spark of radium or not is quite doubtful, but old “E-Yah” has had three heats with the grim reaper and has come out! ahead at the wire in each instance. | Jeunings’ recent automobile accident i in which he suffered rather severe | THE DAY Those who were standing near the rail of the tank; emitted a yell 6f hor- ror, for the tank was empty and being put in shape to be refilled with fresh water. 3 Jennings struck the cement bottom of the tank full force, and was uncon- scious for several hours. The latest accident to the “Tiger” leader seems to be buf one in a chain of mishaps. Those who know Jen- nings intimately claim that any one of the three accidents he suffered would have surely killed an ordinary | mortal, but they believe that Manager Hugh is endowed with “nine lives.” HOW FARRELL LOST $15,000 Inability to Determine Whether Wil- lie Keeler Had Seen Best Days Proved Costly. Because it could not be determined whether Keeler had seen his best days injuries is by mo means Hugh's first | or not the New York Americans three experience with rather jus serious in- | | When Jennings was in the heydey | of his diamond carcer he had a habit | of what ball players call “crowding the plate.” about the nerviest batter league company. He would hug the plate and any | pitcher who could see a ray of light | en Jennings and the rubber disk ' counted a man of most wonder- ful eyesight. One day Jennings was leaning over ihe plate, and Rusie was on the firing line. Jennings was with Baltimore, Rusie was with New York. In that day Amos was the master of a cata- pultic delivery. Jennings had batted against Rusie | before and he did not fear Amos’| wonderful speed. Ile had faced it often, crowded the plate and evaded accident. This day, Rusie’s speed was unus- ually burning. Jennings was unsuals ly close to the plate. Rusie let go, Jennings stepped up, but he thought R was trying an outshoot. In- stend Rusie sent an incurve straight at the heart of the plate. Pilcher Rusie outguessed Batter Jennings, and the ball struck Jennings squarely on the head. Jenniogs fell in a heap and it was hours before he regained | consciousness. That accident ended | Jennings' day as a star ball player. He contintied in the game afterwards, | but his effectiveness as a batter was| lost. He lost his nerve and stood far from the plate with the result that he e a wealk hitter and dropped out as an active player. Later, when Jennings was coaching Cornell university’s baseball squad, he in major | Manager Hugh Jennings. net up with another accident that ins ured him very severely, and from vhich he recovered after a long siege 1 the hospital. After taking violent exercise in the symnasium ore day, Jennings rushed | 1. @. U, years ago lost a chance to sell the little right fielder to the Cincinnati club for $15,000 cash. Keeler had slowed up, but it was thought that illness had been a serious handicap. Willie Keeler. back” as fast as ever, so when Garry Herrmann offered $15,000 for the crack player’s release the New York club was afraid to accept it. The fol- lowing spring it quickly developed that Keeler had seen his best days and as nobody wanted him he was re- leased outright. President Farrell told this story the other day for the first | time. | '}@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@ 1 & BASEBALL NOTES. @ PPOOOOOOOOOO® OO Bloomington in the I-I-I. league i wants to land Harry Bay, former Nap jand of late years with the Nashville, {for its manager. | “Chick” Evans of the Fdgewater i club, Chicago, is rated the leading amateur golfer in America by Critic ! Pulver of New York. Hank O'Day and Garry Herrman have agreed on a few minor essentials already, it is said. Does this relate to fines and banishments. Sioux City will assist Denver in rais- ing its Western league pennant next year, thus repaying a compliment ex- tended by the Sioux City club. San Antonio has signed a young | catcher named Gus Smith, who makes his home in Baltimore and has had some league experience in Ohio. Chicago experts are the champions of amateurism in college sports. This is fitting seeing there is so much do- | ing in the A. A. F, the A. A. U, the the C. C. B. C. A. A, the but to the swimming tank and with- | A I, N.' A, to say nothing to the G. it considering consequences dove iN. | A. A. and the L A. C. DULL MID-WINTER DAYS IN SPORTS . They Sink Backward., “Hippopotamuses are the only Water animals that sink backward when go- ing under the surface of the water,” said a keeper in the Central park men- agerie to a ‘group of visitors in front of the animals' tank.* “Aquatic animals. as a rule, dive into the water head first and make more or less splashing. But the hippo goes down so quietly that if a hunter weré standing near the edge of an African pool the big river horse would disappedr without attracting attention. They keep up the custom in captivity. where there is no necessity of guard- ing against enemies. As they go down they throw up. their noses and fill their lungs. 1 have timed this speci- { men and found that she can stay un- der water for five minutes. She then comes up with a snort and takes a fresh supply of air. Perhaps she could stay down longer if she was trying to avoid danger.”—New York Sun. | | Believed In Closed Windows. An old Yale man, giving his reminis- cences of President Noah Porter. re- called a talk the kindly gentleman gave to his freshman class. “Young gentlemen,” said the president, “the {air of New Haven is especially heavy and damp at night, owing to the prox- Jennings was considered | Keeler insisted that he would “come | imity of the city to the sea, and I wish | to advise you always to keep your win- ! dows closed at night: otherwise your | health will be likely to suffer.” That | wwas the advice of the president of the | institution. It is significant of the ex- |fent to which ideas change with the | years. Now everybody is for out of | doors air, and the person who follbwed !the advice of President Porter would ! be condemned out of hand; and yet, if we are not mistaken, that gentleman managed to live out his threescore |years and ten and do them about eleven better. He was born in 1811 and’'died in 1892. He believed in closed windows.—Hartford Courant. - Whistler Was a Dandy. If taking infinite pains with his ap- | pearance means dandyism, then Whis- tler was a dandy. The very word 1p|ensed him, and he used it often, in American fashion, to express perfec- !son and bis dress. He was as careful | of his hair as a woman, though there was no need of the curling tongs with ficulty was to restrain his curls and 1 keep them in order. The white lock gave just the right touch However fashion changed, he always wore the mustache and little imperial which other West Point men of his genera- | tion retained through life. Even his | thick, bushy eyebrows were trained. and they added to the humorous or sardonic expression of the deep blue eyes from which many shrank.—Pen- | nell’s “Life of Whistler.” Welsh Bulls. Treland’s position as the country in | which “bulls” blossom best is being | serlously challenged. Tt was a Welsh | member of parliament who crushingly remarked to an opposition member: | “The honorable member has attempt- | ed to throw a bombshell at the gov- | ernment. but in the hands of the chancellor of the exchequer it was turned into a cocked hat long before it was thrown.” not the same one, who, speaking against a proposal to fortify London, began earnestly with: “Our navy is our only defense. If our navy tem- porgrily left the seas”— And then he had to stop. Delighted members, with visions of battleships swooping over green fields or climbing over house- tops, were in a roar, and it was some minutes before business could pro- ceed.—London Answers. lons Are Very Small. The smallest piece of matter is called the jon. It is so small that a person could not imagine that anything could be smaller. It is so small that its iden- tity is lost in its effect. It is the point | where solid matter resolves itself into a form of electricity. Now, think how small that is from this experiment: If the ions in a toy balloon, full of gas, were counted out at the rate of a hun- dred per minute it would take 100,- 000.000 persons 4,000,000 years to count them. The fact that the human intel- lect can discover this fact is quite as startling as the fact itself. This seems to be getting on the edge of material creation, and if the ion could be fur- ' ther divided we would have to get over into the spirit world to do it, for there possibly its last analysis only can be reached.—Ohio State Journal. Old Superstitions. It is only when we begin to investi- gate the origin of certain old customs and superstitions that we gain any ireal idea of how deeply rooted in | men’s minds during the dark and mid- dle ages was the fear of the supernatu- ral and particularly of evil spirits. To this day in a certain country the cot- tagers after the Saturday morning scrubbing take a piece of chalk and draw a rough geometrical pattern round the edge of the threshold stone. This they do, not knowing that their ances- tors thought it a sure way of keeping the devil from entering the house. An- other custom, often noticeable in coun- try parishes, is the reluctance to bury the dead on the north side of the churchyard. This is because evil spir- its were always supposed to lurk on that side of the church -precincts.— London Spectator. The Gentle Sex. An eminent English statistician has calculated that of two children, a boy and a girl, born on the same day the boy will have only seventeen chances against eleven of living one year, while the girl will have twenty-one chances against eleven. From five to fifteen there appears to be but little difference, but from fifteen to nineteen the boy will have 269 chances and the girl 277 chances of living against one of death. ‘I 1£ a thousand ablebodied men and a thousand ablebodied women be armed and equipped for battle and ordered on a. long, weary march more men, says this authority, would probably reach their destination, while more women would be found exhausted, but more men would be found dead by the way- side.—New York American, Sl tion or charm or beauty. Never was | any man more particular about his per- | It was also a Welsh member, though ! i powder mill is a spark of fire. To |but Washington indulged only moder- | evening coat for the fiftleth time. No Powder Mill Precautions. The one thing to guard against in a avoid that the utiiost précautiols are taken. In-the first place, the plant is located so far from a tallrond track that a spark from a passing locomo- tive can never reach it. The grass and weeds are not permitted to grow bigh enough around it so that when they become dry a fire could rench the plant by that means. Strangers are kept off the grounds. -Smoking is not permitted in or uear the plant. The workmen are not permitted to carry matches. They are not allowed to wear shoes with pegs or nails in them. They wear “nowder boots.” made with soft soles that have no pegs or mnalls in them. An iron nail in a boot sole might strike a spark on the floor. Iron is not permitted to touch iron on the plant. This is one inflexible law ot all powder mills. The hammers that are used are all of wood or brass or copper, which cannot strike a spark. The cogwheels that run together are of brass or copper for the same rea- gon. The jourpals of the wheels are of copper or brass.—Kansas City Star. Famous Snuff Take, The elghteenth century was the age ot snuff’ taking par escellence. The. custom was general among all classes ot people. It was an act of politeness for well bred men to offer their snuff- boxes to well bred women. Women themselves carried their own boxes and interchanged pinches with the gen- tlemen. At fashionable dinner parties after the .cloth was removed snuff- boxes were passed around. Pope and Bolingbroke. Swift and Congreve, Ad- dison and Steele, all induiged in the pleasures of snuff. Dr. Johnson car- ried bis snuff in the capacious pockets of his waistcoat and would convey it to his nose without stint. He could not abide the narrow confines of a box. Frederick the Great resembled him fn this respect. Both Napoleon and Wel- lington were prodiglous snuff .takers, ately. Jefferson was fond of snuff, as his waistcoat and frill often showed. Henry Clay was another famous snuff taker and often ‘needed the stimulus of a pinch when-making a speech.—Pear- son’s. Nothing to Wear. The fact is that women are uncom- fortable if they are not fashionably dressed. No man understands the sub- { Which be has been reproacbed: the dif¢ 'tle and complex significance of the |rapher he said that the man who could |phrase “nothing to wear.” Witness the distressed but utterly puzzled ex- pression that overspreads a man’s face at the words. He knows that bis wife or his sister looks charming in ‘*‘the blue oue” or “the lace one™ or “the | one with the jet.” She bas looked charming in it often enough for him at last to identify it, and that, unless he is an exception to his sex, is very of- ten. He is cheerfully getting into his wonder he does not realize that some frock which the first time it 1s worn made for triumph should the tenth time make for humiliation. But the most strong minded woman—the wo- man who will, if necessary, go to the opera on a gala night in a coat and skirt—at heart exonerates the woman who so foolishly, for the reason men- tioned, stays at home.—Atlantic Month- Iy. Time For Tact. “I won $200 in that game last night.” confided a friend. H “@Good for you!” we cried. *I want to tell some folks about that—they”— “Now, look here! You keep still about it. 1 wouldn't let my wife know about that game for anything.” “But you told me that your wife was a good fellow and let you play poker all you wanted to.” “She does. She never kicks about my sitting in a game, and even If I lose she cheers me up and”— “Well, I thought so. Why shouldn't 1 tell her about this game?’ ¢ “Why, you chump! 1 won $200— that's why. And I need the money. If my wife asks where | was, tell her I was out losing $50 on a prizefight.” —Cleveland Plain Dealer. Seen on an Ostrich Farm. It is no uncommon thing to see a male ostrich strutting about followed by three or four distinst broods, all of different sizes. When the incubating process 18 completed the cock bird leads bis young omes off and If he meets another proud papa engages in a terrific combat with him. The van- quished bird retires without a single chick, while the other, surrounded by the two broods, walks away trium- phantly. Thought of the Kitty. “John,” sald Mrs. Gayman, with a knowing twinkle in her eye, “you seem to be exceedingly kind to animals.” *“Why—er—hbow do you mean?” asked ber husband. “In your sleep last night you said, ‘Take out something for the kitty.’ "~ Bxchange. Bright Johnny. Teacher (to class lo geography)- Johnny, the Hudson river flows into New York bay, That is its mouth. Now. where Is its source? Johnny (after careful dellberation)—At the other end, ma’am. — Cleveland Plain Dealer. More Than Serious. Eulalia (elderly helress) — Do you think the baron regards me seriously? Rosa—Seriously? Why, my dear, every time | mention you be looks positively sad.—Fliegende Blatter. Quarters and Dollars. Jack—Why did you give up your bachelor quarters? Tom—Because I'm going to marry dollars.—Birmingham News. Two Evi There are two things in life that a sage must preserve at every sacrifice— the coats of his stomach and the enam- el of his teeth. Some evils admit of consolations; there are no comforters for dyspepsia and the toothache.—Bul- ‘wer-Lytton. . More e It. “Do you wish to call your husband up on the phone?’ “No, 1 don’t. I want to call him down.”—BExchange. .| everything.—Sydney Smith, The lsland of 8t. Helena. 7 St. Helena nas been an, island of tragedies—tragedles that haye been lost sight of walling over the Cor- slean. On thé second day of my visit the governor took me by cairiage road through the turns over the island. At one point of our journey the road, in winding around spurs and ravines, formed a perfect W within the dis- tance of a few rods. The roads, though tortuous and steep, were fairly good, and 1 was struck with the amount of labor it must haye cost to build them. The air on the heights was cool and bracing. It is said that since hanging. for trivial offenses'went out of fashion no one has died there, except from falling over the cliffs in old age or from being crushed by stones rolling on them from the steep mountains! ‘Witches at one time were persistent at St. Helena, as with us in America in the days of Cotton Mather. At the present day crime is rare in the island. The Ancient Dragon. The pterodactyl, whose fossil re- mains have been found in the chalk at Cambridge, England. and elsewhere, with a very varied spread of wings, which in the largest specimens must have reached twenty-five feet, is al- most idenncal with the dragon of fable. A batlike creature, with an elevated body and long neck ending in an absurdly small head with a por tentous beak, it could run very swift- ly. was a fish eater and could swim, or it flew by means of huge membyra- nous wings, which connected its long fore quarters with its hind legs. The pterodactyl evidently existed down to a comparatively recent geological peri- od, and it 1s not at all improbable that the traditional dragon is described from the last living specimens as met with by primitive man, Sim ed Spelling Effects. “We find in the letters we receive,” said the correspondence clerk, ‘‘some marvelous esamples of simplified spell- ing, some of these unconsciously pho- netic, some evidently deliberately in- tended, some that, though they serve their purpose wonderfully, verge on the comic. For instance, we received yesterday a letter from a man who starts off in this way: «“What fx would follow’— and so on. |other words, that because they ar “Of course the meaning of that was The Pioneer Want Ads OASH WITH ©COPY % cent per word per Issue 5 cents. They tell what you have to sell to e ad gets to them all. }{egular charge rate 1 cent per word per insertion. No ad taken for less than HOW THOSE WANT ADS DO THE BUSINESS Phone 31 verybody in Bemidji. The Ploneer goes everywhere so that everyone has a neighbor who takes it and people who do not take the paper generally read their neighbor’s so your want Y5 Cent a Word Is All It Costs Can’t Lose Much by Taking a Chance HELP WANTED WANTED—Compentent girl for general housework. Mrs. John Wilson, 1101 Dewy Ave. FOR SALE FOR SALE-—Work team; weight 3,- 000 1bs.; 7.and 8 years old; color, black; well matched. Address Wm. Tryou, Turtle River, Route 1. FOR SALE—4 room house, large lot, small cash payment, balance paid at $8.00 per month. Huffman, Harris & Reynolds. FOR SALE—Rubbgr stamps. The Pioneer will procure any kind of a rubber stamp for you on short notice. FOR SALE—5 room cottage on Be-| .. FOR RENT e S FOR RENT—4 desirable rooms for housekeeping for couple without children. Heated and partly fur- nished. Centrally located. Apply this office. | FOR RENT — 6 roomed house, 212 Tenth St. Inquire 1014 Minneso- | ta Ave. FOR RENT—Rooms for light house- keeping, furnished or unfurnished. | Over Gill Bros. FOR RE modern. —Two furnished rooms; 921 Minnesota Ave. 2 furnished rooms for light house- | keeping. 511 Third St. | - FOR RENT—6 room house for rent. A. Klein. Huffman, Harris & Reynolds. | FOR SALE—Rhode Island Red Cock- erals. Phone 431. _ In Japan the Rich Pay More. A common complaint made by tour- Ists in Japan is tbat they are obliged to pay for everything far higher prices than the natives are charged. or, in e for- e being flecced, hut a eigners they | perfectly plain. but the bookkeeper and | glance at the social conditions by which 1 had to smile over it for a moment, jthe people have heen educated would and when we showed it to the stenog- write words like that ought not to stop at simplified spelling—he ougbt to go right abead and invent a new short- hand system.”—New York Sun. Chinese Idioms. ‘When a Chinese writer wishes to ex- press that the wealthy parent of the heroine has set his affairs in order in ber favor before dying his idiom is. “He has settied his plums.” “To have plucked the kwei (eassia) flower” signi- | fies gaining the master’s degree at the | triennial examinations. Their idiom for “Let there be no backsliding” is. “Let there be no absorption of sweat.” | A runaway wife is said by Liu Chia Chu to *“‘carry her guitar to aunother door.” When you wish to say that you have secured a vindication, you ex- | press it, “My adversary has been forced to paint my front door.”” When a great man dies they say, “A corner of the city wall has fallen.” —J. S. Thompson's “The Chinese.” Green Turtles. The green turtle finds its home in the coral reefs lying to the north of Jamaica, though it is found in other parts of the West Indies. The creature is caught by the employment of ex- tremely strong nets, which are inter- laced between the rocks. Once caught the turtle is taken to Kingston, where it is kept in special sea water pens on the seashore. - When in the pens the turtle is provided with a peculiar kind of sea grass, which it likes very much. Curiously enough, when it is taken away from the West Indies it refuses to eat this grass. Indeed, it will die of starvation sooner than touch the grass, however carefully preserved. It takes eight pounds of flesh to make a single quart of soup. Timely Ans “Do you remember how hungry I was at seven-thirty last night?” *I should say I do.” “Do you know how I appeased my bunger in a half hour?” “No; what did you do?" “Eight a clock.” “That's nothing. Do you remember how unlucky I was at the raffle at twelve-thirty ?”* “I certainly do.” “Well, 1 wasn't so unlucky a half hour later.” . “No? I'm glad to know that. What did you win?” “One a clock.”—Lippincott’s. Lacking In Official Zeal. “I see,” remarked the travéler, “you have an anti-horse thief association here. What's the matter? Can’t you leave the punishment of horse thieves to the constituted authorities?’ “Not by a durn sight!” said Grizzly Pete. “They ain't anti enough.”—Chi- zago Tribune. Paraphrase. “I thought she exhibited verve and aplomb,” said Mrs, Oldcastle. “Did you?" replied her hostess. “Josiah said she had nerve, but was,a peach.” —Chicago Record-Herald. Touching. Jennie—Everything he touches seems to turn to gold. Jim—Yes; he touched me today for a sovereign.—London Opinion. The truest wisdom is a resolute de- termination.—Napoleon 1. His Use For Soap. , “Lady.” said Meandering -Mike, “would you lend me a cake of soap?" “Do you mean to tell me you want soap?”’ 2 “Yes'm. Me partner's got de hic- cups an’ I want to scare him.”—Wash- ington Star. | Ignorance. Have the courage to be ignorant of a great number of things, in order to Japan’s long period of isolation it was an accepted principle that the rich must live for the sake of the poor, and prices have always been based upon bis presumed ability to pay. This un- derstanding remains largely in force today, being fully recognized and acted upon by all favored classes throughout the empire. The occidental, coming from lands where the reverse practically holds good—the poor living for the sake of the rich—naturally complains of being robbed, as from his point of view he foreigner, but because, being a tourist, he is presumably wealthy.—Arthur May Knapp in the Atlanti Saved the Crown Jewels. A very romantic adventure once be- fell the Scottish crown jewels while they were deposited for safety in Dun- ottar castle. This stronghold was be- sieged by Cromwell so hotly that the little garrison decided to surrender. On the eve of yielding the wife of Ogilvic. the commander of the beleaguered cas- tle, managed. with the aid of the wife of the local minister, to elude the bhe- slegers and get the jewels away. ‘The latter were buried under the pulpit in the restoration. though the minister and his wife were tortured to disclose the place where the jewels were hid- den. Ogilvie was afterward reward- ed with a baronetey, and Keith, who stoutly declared he had seen them in the possession of the exiled King Charles II., was made an earl. But the faithful minister and his wife went unrewarded. A Connoisseur. A great painter was asked by his lit- tle son, “Father, what is a connois- seur?” ““Well, my son,” the father answered, “did you notice that tall, white haired gentleman at my studio tea yester- day?" “The one with the sable lined over- “Well, my son, be is a connoisseur.” “But how do you know he's a con- noisseur, father?” ' “By his actions, my son.” “But, father. he acted like every one | else at the tea, didn't he?" “Certainly not, my son! Certainly not! The others drank my Russian tea, ate my foie gras sandwiches and took leave. But he—he bought a pic- ture!” P A Biting Retort. Lady Wortley Montagu, one of Eng- land's most brilliant women, incurred ! Pope’s undying hatred in the following manner: The poet. who was deformed and very dark and addicted to ques- tioning everybody. once asked bher to define an interrogation mark. She de- fined it as “a little, crooked black thing that asks questions,” Particular Woman, Judge—She insisted on having a wo- man lawyer secu. & her divorce. “Why was she so particular?” = “She did not want to go contrary to that portion of the marriage ceremony that reads, ‘Let no man put asun- der.’"—New York Herald. The Drone. Son—What kind of a man is a drone, ptpa? TFather—One who stands in a revolving door and waits for some one else to push it around so he can get in, my son.—Judge. Mean Thing. Maybelle—See the beautiful engage- ment ring Jack gave me last night. Estelle—Gracious! Has that just got around to you?—Toledo Blade. Deliberate with caution, but act with avoid the calamity of being ignorant of decision: yield with graéiousness or reveal the curious fact that throughout | the purchaser's rank in society or upon | really Is, but it is not because he is a | the parish church and lay there till coat, father? Oh, yes, I noticed him.” | midji Ave. Your own terms.| House for rent. Inquire of Frank Huffman, Harris & Reynolds. | Lane. FOR SALE—6 room modern house, | easy terms; MISCELLANEOUS | ADVERTISERS--The great state of | North Dakota offers unlimited op- | - portunities for business to classi- | fied advertisers. The recognized advertising medium 1s the Fargo 1 Daily and Sunday Courier-News, | the only seven day paper in the state and the paper which carries the largest amount of classified | advertising. The Courier-News | covers North Dakota like a blank- et; reaching all parts of the state the day of publication; it is the | Dpaper to use In order to get re- sults; rates one cent per word first insertion, one-half cent per word succedding insertion; fifty cents per line per month. Address the Courier-News, Fargo, N. D. | i | | | WANTED—Dining and sleeping car | conductors $75-$125. Experience unnecessary, we teach you, write Dining Car World, 125 W. Van Buren, Chicago. WANTED TO TRADE—What have you to trade for new standard pia- no? Call at second hand etore, 0dd Fellows Bldg. | BOUGHT AND SOLD—Second hand furniture. 0dd Fellows bullding, across from postoffice, phone 129. EW PUBLIC LIBRARY Open daily, except Sunday and Mon- :layll ti2a.m,1t06p.m,7t09pm Sunday 3 to 6 p. m. Monday 7to 9 p. m. BEATRICE MILLS, Librarian. MUSIC LESSONS MISS SOPHIA MONSEN Teacher of Piano and Harmony At Residence of Mrs. G. Crone 519 Minnesota Avenue . . Engagements made Monday, Tuesday l and Wednesday | | Try a Want Ad 12 Cent a Word-==Cash THE SPALDING EUROPEAN PLAN Duluth’s Largest and Best Hotel ] ouLuTH MINNESOTA More than £100.000.00 recently expended on improvements. 350 rooms, 12 private baths. 60 sample rooms. Every modern convenlence: Luxurlous and delightful |{ restaurants and buffet. Flemish Room, Palm Room. Men’s Grill, Colonial Buffet; Magnificent lobby and public rooms; |{ Baliroom, banquet rooms and private dining_rooms: Sun parlor and observa- [§ tory. " Located in heart of business sec- |{ tion but overiooking the barbor and Lake {] Superior. Convenlent to everything. Ons of the Great Hotels of the Northwest BRICK FACTORY We make brick and can fill all orders promptly. Build your house of brick made by FOLEY BROS. Bemidji, Minn. INSURANCE Huffman Harris & Reynolds Bemid)l, Minn. - - oppose with firmness. Phone 144 Fe g 1 Ly e i

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