Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
R R R R R R RO R © CALENDAR OF SPORTS FOR ¢ ® THE WEEK @ PR E R R R RORCR RN Tuesday Mike Gibbous vs. Jack Denning, 10 rounds, at New York. Johnnie Moran vs. Bobby Waugh, ten rounds, at Dallas, Texas Ernie Zanders vs. “Kid” DeMund, 10 rounds, at Janesville, Wis. It is said Pitcher Buck O'Brien of the Boston Red Sox received a boost of a thousand dollars over his con- tract of last year. Manager Fred Clarke has but tem pitchers all told on his roster, and that includes Leifield and Noel, neith- er of whom are sure. Fans will miss the annual Heinie Zimmerman holdout story, for Zim- merman’s contract as signed with the Cubs is for three years. Hank O'Day is making control a strong point in the development of his twirlers. “It is the biggest asset of any man in the box,” says the ex- umpire. Harold Grover, the Pirate youngster from the town lots of Rockport, Mass., is said to be one young pitcher who has acquired the knack of hold- fog men on bases. The most astounding, interesting, but wholly unbelievable news from any training camp was that Johnny Evers had reported to the Chicago Cubs “so fat that he was not recog- nized.” Jack Glasscock, old National leaguer, is said to have professed “conver- sion” at the religious revival held in ‘Wheeling by Billy Sunday. Nine thou- sand people cheered him as he walked to _the front of the hall, i | Basebal Blunders. Some gent with a liking for acid baseBall history has com- plled the 20 greatest blunders In baseball.. Here they are: When Cincinnati traded a kid named Mathewson for a great pitcher named Rusie. When St. Louls traded Three- Fingered Brown to Chicago for Jack Taylor, When Charles Webb Murphy stood In tho lobby of the Wal- ¢ dorf and called Rajah Bresnahan a policeman. When John Anderson stole second with three men on. When Jack Chesbro lost a world's championship en a wild pitch. When Merkle failed to touch second and lost a pennant. When Marquard grooved one s for Baker. When Charles Webb Murphy panned the national commlssion. When Clark Griffith allowed Miller Huggins to leave Cinoin- natl. E When Sherwood Magee beited Finnernan on the bugle. When Pittsburg and Detroit passed up Grover Cleveland Al exander. When Cincinnati allowed Mar- ty O'Toole to get away without a trial. When Hughey Jennings under- estimated Babe Adams in 1900. When Umplire Jack*® Doyle twice misinterpreted the infield fly rule. When Bresnahan made faces at Umpire Billy Klemm. When Horace Fogel switched his famous Herrman-Murphy let- ters. When McGraw parted with Mike Donlin prior to the 1911 world’s series. When Lou Criger touted Ty Cobb as a bonehead. BUT HE RATHER OVERDID Husband’s Bright Idea of Changing the Conversation Left Him in Somewhat of a Fix. A man who hadn’t been home to | dinner and who didn’t arrive in time for midnight luncheon—if there had been one—finally landed at his apart- nient and was greeted with a silvery, “Is that you, dear?” from his wife’s room. : “It 1s,” he responded succinctly, not caring for mueh conversation. - “What time is 1t?” “Oh, not so late!” he answered; and then observing a large bunch of roses on a table in the hall he sought to change the conversation by re- marking: “What a beautiful bouquet of flowers!” “They are lovely,” assented the wife. “Beautiful!” continued.the late ar- rival enthusiastically. “Fresh, too, 1 should say, Their perfume is delight- ful.” “Can you smell them"” “Oh, yes; their perfume goes through the entire place. It is love- Iy “You always did llke the perfume of roses,” cooed the wife. “Yes, and these are especially frag- rant.” “Well, go to bed it that is the case. You see, my dear, those are paper roses.” WORK FOR CLOUD SPOTTER Humble but Indllpennblc Ad]un:t in the Process of Taking Mov- ing Pictures. “Among the new jobs that modern life, has originated,” said a statistician, “that of the cloud spotter is interest- ing and odd. The cloud spotter doesn’t, of course, make spots on clouds. No, no. He stand on & high roof with a costly field glass and he continually notifles his employer, & moving- picture maker, of the condi- Hon of the heavens. “You see, for an elaborate moving- pleture play a steady, uniform light is essential. The pictures must be taken all in sunshine or all in clear gray light. Otherwise they differ. Some are weak and some strong. They don’t match on the screen. So the cloud spoiter on the roof, searching the heavens with his glass, studying the course and velocity of the wind, as- sures his boss of a good half-hour or hour for photographing a moving-pic- ture play, and thus saves a waste of films that would otherwise be many times larger than his frugal salary.” Inn of the Mild Henry. The inn “of the mild Henry (zum sanften Heinrich) in a little town of Posen has evidently changed hands during its career, for there is at least an intimation, in an advertisement recently inserted in“a Posen newspa- per by Hermann Dunkelberg, the present owner, that he may not be especially mild. The advertisement reads: “It has come to my notice that I am accused of having de- nounced colleagues because they suf- fered Tannebaum” (a forbidden game) “to be played in their places. As I have no desire to waste my. time in court, I hereby promise three marks to anybody who believed this report out of lack of brajus, Afive marks to anybody who spread it be- cause of malice and ten marks to the originator of it, which he can get on | personal application to me. ‘Will pay fair price for a good, usable bullwhip. Herman Dunkelberg, Jun of the Mild Henry.” Reply Coupons. The man who boasts that he never writes letters has been prodded into epistolary activity. “It was a curious little square red stamp inclosed in a letter I received from England that drove me to it,” he sald. “The stamp was marked three pence, It was totally umlike any stamp or-souvenir I had ever seen, and I didn’t know what use to make of it. The postman was also nonplussed, and only at the main postoffice was the riddle solved. It wae a reply cou pon. English stamps would have been no use for mailing a letter in New York, but the coupon could be ex changed for United States stamps. With a reminder like that thrust un- der one's very nose the most con .| scienceless letter writer is bound to re ply.” His Own Bills. Butchers are not generally credited with an especially sensitive tempera- ment, but New York has one member of the guild whose skin must be ex- traordigarily thin. At any rate, he goes to unusual lengths to exonerate himself from the charge of extortion. Above the cashier's window he has hung this sign: ;. “If prices are high don’t blame me, They have hit me, too, Here is the meat bill of my own family. Read it” Then follows an itemized ac. count of the chops, steaks, roasts and cat’s meat consumed by the butcher's dependents in one week. The prices recorded are sufficiently altitudinous to appease the most disgruntled cus- tomers, and they settle their own bills with good grace, Not the Right Kind. “T thought you said young Jaggers was a coward? In our automobile ac- cldent, we found he was full of grit.” “Humph! I'd like to know where ke got it so suddenly.” “I suppose from the ditch we -fell into.” Unknown Lower California. . The interior of Lower California is today nearly blank on our maps and Is possibly less well known from a geographical- and a geological 'stand- point than any. other region of equal area in North America. The Mexican government has at last begun & thor. ough exploration of this terra incog: nita. During the last autumn the Instituto Geologico equipped four parties, each comprising two geologists, to explore the northern part of the peninsula. The work will be extended to the southern part this yur—-SMendfle American, The Tramp's Excuse. “You seem to be an ablebodied man. Why._don’t you get work instead ot begging for a Hving?” “I can’t find anything to do in my line.” “You can’t?” “No. I'm a lightning calculator by profession, and the: adding machine put me out of business,” —_— _For Cause. He—Wny are you lwm throwing four money. in my face? She—Because 1 un't keep it out of Fruit Cost Analysed. Washington, March 26.—As-a re: sult “of investigations, covering the experlence of growers on many thou- | sands of acres of orchard in Califor- nia, 1t is declared that the total cost of growing a box of oranges in Cali- fornia is $1.2987, (this includes the cost of putting on the car for ship- ment), and that the cost laid down in the market i8 $2.2706, or 18.1 cents per dozen. The dealer must have his profit above this price. It has prev- lously. been - demonstrated what - it costs to grow lemons, and it was shown conclusively, .that if the duty were,lowered, the industry ‘could not lve, As an expert professional opinion on this feat of cost-estimating, the Fruitman’'s- Guide says: ““It is doubtful if a more compre- hensive and - painstaking array of % | statistics involving the most minute, scientific and careful research has ever been gotten up in any line of industry.” It will be on data obtained in such careful, scientific, manner, both at #|home and abroad,—for the foreisn fleld has been thoroughly investigat- % | ed also,—that Congress, when it does take up this subject, will be asked to act. s FINE OLD MEMORIAL TOWER On Town Bridge at Milford, Conn,, It Records the Colonial History of the Place. The town bridge at Milford, Conn., I8 a unique memorial of the colonial history of the place. Milford was first settled by colonists from the old Eng- Hsh town of the same name, and the bridge, which was bullt to celebrate the town birthday, is an exact replica of an anclent one in the Milford over the sea. Every stone in the round tower is a memorial to some historic Milfordite. Over the massive door is the sculptured head of an Indian, sup- posed to be Ansantawae, the chief who sold the town site to the col- onists in 1639. The knocker on the tower door once belonged to the old house where George Whitfield preached in 1770. ~ The ddarstep is from the mansion of Robert“(Treat, governor of the colony of Connecti- cut for thirty years. One stone is dedi- cated to the memory of Jonathan Law, a governor from 1742 to 1750. This stone also once formed part of the governor's threshold. Another {large slab is inscribed with a tribute to the Wepawany Indians. On the bridge corner by the tower the town perpetuates in granite its gratitude to “Captain Thomas Tibbals (obit. 1703), in consideratjon of his helpfulness to show to first comers, the place and the land records.” Another tablet records the name of Peter Prudden, first pas- tor back in 1650. Several big blocks of masonry are.inscribed with. the names of the early settlers, and there 1s ‘one stone bearing Milford’s good opinion of itself in these words: “God sifted a whole nation that he might gend choice grain to the wilderness.” ‘ACTED AS A WET BLANKET Indignant Lady’s Rebuke Sounded Somewhat Incongruous, but Play- goers Will Understand. It was a sweet, sad play, and there was hardly a dry handkerchief in the house. But one man in the gallery, “among the gods,” irritated his com- panions excessively by refusing to take the performance in the proper spirit. Instead of weeping, he laugh- pd. While others were mopping their eyes and endeavoring to stifie their" s0bs his own eyes brimmed with mer- riment, and he burst into inappropri- tte guffaws. At last the lady by his side turned upon him indignantly. “I d-don’t know what brought' you b-here,” she cobbed, with streaming eyes, and pressing her hand against ber aching heart; “but if y-you don’t ike the p-play, you might llet other weop}e enjoy 1t!” Raising Water With Alr. As all schoolboys know, & suction pump can theoretically elevate water only about thirty-three and one-third feet, a column of water of that height balancing the atmospheric presure. A means has, however, been found of causing a suction pump to raise water to a height of even sixty feet. The Invention was made by a workman in the French marine. Monsieur Eys- gerle, the chief engineer of the ma. rine, remarked that one particular pump showed extraordinary qualities In drawing water frem ships’ holds. Inquiry developed the fact, says Har- per's Weekly, that a workman had thought of the plan of introducing air Into the water at the point where the suction 'was ‘ applied, thus producing an emulsion of air and .water, which, because of its diminisher density, was capable of being elevated to consider- ably greater heights than pure water. Her Feats of Memory. “I have heard and read of wonderful feats of memory,” said Mrs. A, H. Brown of this city., “but not one of them was so remarkable as those ex- hibited by my own mother at 93, the: age at which she recently ~died in Clyde, N. Y. That was her home for 65 years, but she was born in-Phelps, N. Y. “She was. an ardent reader of the Bcriptures and, having an exceptional- ly clear, v\gornuu mind, she was able, at even that advanced age, to repeat word for word the entire Gospels of St. Matthew, St. Mark, St. Luke~and St John. In addition she could recite lengthy passages from books of fa- and many poems, in- My algo a good Latin acholar. She had seven daughters, of whom six, {ncluding myself, survive, as'do six- teen great-grandchildren and twenty: one grandchildren.” The Real Thing. “I w'pose,” remarked. the: nngmu youd call a man-about: town? He once lwrt-cliun‘ed & cirous ticket to supper two oubrettes that been doing refined song and dance, in- terapersed with tumbling, at Hefty Mitchell’'s: Oh<You-Kid moving plcture theater; and throwed an oyster stew right into an ‘electric fan, "just’ to show that he didn’t care for expense. Aw, Dave's a reg'lar rounder, if there ver was one!”—Puck. = 2 Literally. “Did you see where a murderer in New York, sentenced to the electrio chair, declared the joke was on him?” * “That sort of humor is shocking.” Not to Be Done. “This boy is a bad egg, sir.” “Then I suppose it is of no use to try and whip him.” WHY “VICTORY” WAS DUSTY Housemald Feared Further Damage to Statuette Already Subjected - to Hard Usage. A New York woman engaged a new housemaid the other day, and was immediately delighted at the exhibi- tion of the new servant’s eficlency. Norah waited on the table with per- fect mastery; she answered the front doorbell with matchless grace; she never once grumbled when told that she must wear a cap; her dusting was & marvel of orderliness. But the mistress of the apartment was astonished, when the new maid had been in the house about a week, to find that her cherished “Victory of Samothrace” was covered with dust. The beautiful headless body stood gray and unlovely on its pedestal, and the “Victory's” owner called Norah to see what the matter might be. “I can't understand this, Norah,” she sald. “Everything else is kept 80 spotless. How have you happened to neglect the little statue. Have you dusted it at all?” Norah admitted that she had not, and said no more. “But why?” the mistress persisted. “Why?” And then, miserably, the maid owned up. “I'm‘a bit awkward with me fingers, mum,” she murmured, shyly. “And I saw how bad it-was broke, mum, and I was afraid o’ droppin’ it an’ makin’ it worse.” * WHEN THEY WENT BACK HOME Humorist - Records Some Surprises That Attended the Occasion of Popular Celebration. During a recent Old Home Week in an up-state village the following “never-will-amount-to-anythings” were in attendance: John Wilson Clarke, who was al- ‘ways too lazy to do the chores, came up from New York in his big seven: Dassenger car.’ On account of press- ing work he could stay but a few hours. Ex-Gov. Silby Kirkwaod, who was naturally thick-headed and half-baked in his youth, stopped over in his pri- vate car to ses his old home. Dr. Willus'G: Dyer, one of the best- known surgeons in the country, called the town fool when a boy, dropped in and left enough.money: for a town library, Miss Caroline Jensen Atwood,. too stupid to learn in the old red school- house, now a popular authoress and playwright visited her relatives. Charlie Druke, the spendthrift, shut up his Wall street office long enough to attend. One of the most noticeable features of the whole celebration was the ab- sence of the: men and women who gave much promise of originality and _worth during their youth. Lack of memory in their old age ac- counts for the fact that not one of the old fogies present ever saild anything but good of anybody, including the successful boys present—Don. Cam- eron Shafer in Judge. Difference In lcebergs. No ‘two icebergs appear to be ex actly alike in size and shape. Some look, for all the world, like Arabs’ tents as they glide along, and others like cliffs, castles, cathedrals,.yachts, and occasionally they resemble some well known animal. -Some of the pin- nacles of a large berg rise nearly 1,000 feet above the water, while the base may occupy an area. of ten or twelve acres. :Seen through a power- tul glass, one may detect waterfalls upon these islands of ice, and all kinds of arctic birds, and perhaps a few seals. Then the colors are almost beyond description. - The stately pinnacles glisten in the sun like powdered glass. At times the berg is pure white, at others if 1ooks greenish.—From Harold X shepltnne- #Icebergs” in 8t. Nicho-. ln. i “Liked . to Be Gulled.” Sir William : Gull, -the well-known London physician, was once the vie- tim of an amusing piece of repartee on the part of a fellow practitioner. The occasion was a dinner party at which - several, distinguished medical men were present. The conversation happened to turn upon the subject of quackery, and ‘Sir William Gull ev- pressed his conviction that a certain amount of it was essential to success in practice, adding: - “It is an exam- ple of the old saying, ‘Populus vult | decipt’ ” (people like to be decetved). “'Quite 80,” said the host; “now, can |’ any one present give an English equivalent to that?' “Nothing easier,” dryly remarked ‘a well-known physi- clan of one of the Manchester hos- pitals. . “The pllbllc liked to be ‘gulled.’” [‘sternly. N SILYEMR TERM /Congressman Curley Pro'fio'm Change in Conatitution. MANY. ARE IN' FAVOR ‘65 T Strong Efforts Belng Made to Stop Of- fensive Lobbying—Congress Asked to Acknowledge Services of Captain Ericsson. By GEORGE CLINTON. ‘Washington.—Representative James M. Curley of Massachusetts has intro- duced a joint resolution into the house providing that Section one of Article two of the Constitution of the United States ‘shall be amended so as_to Tead, “He shall hold: his office during the term of six years and, together with the vice-president chosen for the same term shall be eligible to serve not more than one term."” This resolution of Mr. Curley’s re- fers, of course, to'a change in the Con- stitution which will_extend the time of the term of ‘the president to six years and makes him ineligible for reelection at any time. There is & good deal of feeling in congress among both Republicans and - Demo- crats in favor of this constitutional change. Speaker Champ Clark has gone on record in'favor of this change and it is said also that Presi- dent Taft thinks that it' would be ad- visable. It has been humorously suggested in Washington ;that the president would like to make the change in the Constitution retroactive and' to have the term fixed at seven years, virtual- ly the precise time which Theodore. Roosevelt held the highest office ia the land. Hit at Lobbying. Members of both houses of congress this year have been introducing bills to stop lobbying in its offensive form. Lobbying is not carried on as openly. and as flagrantly as it was a few years ago, but it is still in evidence, and it always- will be in evidence, no matter what laws are passed, because there is certain kind of lobbying which is recognized as being proper, There s nothing to prevent men and ‘women from telling members of con- gress their side of the case upon which it is proposed to legislate. The kind of lobbying which is aimed at in the various bills is the ‘“pernicious ac- tivity kind” where representatives of great concerns selfishly interested in legislation use their influence to pro- mote it or to retard it as it seems best from their point of view. Representative Charles B. Smith of Buffalo, an old-time newspaper man, has introduced the most recent bill “for the suppression of lobbying and for the regulation of duly accredited representatives of persons, firms, cor- porations and associations Intsultsfi in legislation before congret The Smith bill provides that every person who is employed for compen- sation as counsel or agent of any con- cern interested in legislation shall file with the secretary aof the senate and the clerk of the house a paper stating the name of his employers and the de- scription of the legislation on behalf of which or against which his services are to be rendered. The bill .also pro- ‘vides for publicity of expenses of such lobbying : agents. :-Violations of the iaw shall be, according to the bill, punishable by imprisonment or by s fine of $1,000 or both. A @Gongress has been asked to make public acknowledgment of the serv- ices of Capt. John Ericsson, the engl- neer and inventor “who: constructed the Monitor, which fought the Merri- mac in Hampton Roads early in the ‘war between the states.. The acknowl- edgment of KEricsson's services “is based not only on his work of con: structing the Monitor, but because, as the resolution puts it “his skill and services effected a revolution the naval architecture of the world.” . Renews Old Controversy. - The fiftieth anniversary of the fight ‘between the Monitor and- Merrimao has just been observed. It brought about a renewal of the old controversy as to which of the two vessels really ‘won the fight. It s claimed for the Merrimac that it was an ironclad asd was bullt before the Monitor-and that therefore its designers were the ones Whose work' “effected & révolution in ‘the naval architecture of the world.” - “Whole volumes were written at the ‘Hmé of ‘the Tecognition of the fitieth anniversary of this sea fight between the fronclads. Some men take one side and some another, and it might ‘e maid in passing that there were one ‘or two morthern men who took side-‘of the’ sdherents of . the - Merri- ‘mac, saying that ‘it is. not altogether true that the victory. lay. entirely with ‘the Monitor. Most men, however, pro- nounced the whole discussion fruitless. -:.The senate finance committee has been holding hearings on .the . tariff bill affecting. chemicals_which was passed by the house not long ago. A "New York man representing a manu- facturer of celluloid -in New Jersey isxld ‘that:he was_ responsible for the celluloid collar. .“The committee was discussing: the question of the . duty on things which cnter Hnto celluloid | ‘manufacture. b “Are you mlnonnlnlu for the uflu— loid “collar?” ‘asked Senator witness; “and fixed them so you can- not tell the difference between them and linen collars.” "Ihlvehountrm\'mloclum mponlihfllt] for these collars for some time,” sald Senator Kern, se- werely, but with a twinkle in his gt SHE PIGKED THE WRONG MAN Woman With Prominent Jaw Did nn _Qet the Seat She 8o Evi- _: dently Desired, ‘She had a Jaw M somehow re- minded one of the cowcatcher on & 1o- lvp—porlupl because it was al- s somewhat in advance of her . Also mto Was & look | Kern, “Yen, I invented them,” replied the | |FOR RENTFurnisheq : o 917 Minnesota Ave. Phone|BOUGHT AND SOLD—Second hand TS ‘004 Fellows building, aside, that she had no desire to be re- garded as a shrinking violet. Yet ghe | | was rather good Iooking, and:she was | dregsed in such a manner as to indi- | cate that she was free from the ne- cesaity of practicing economy. After she had fought her way into the ‘car she looked at the men who were oc- ‘cupying seats and then stationed. her- self in front of .a smallish, gray-haired gentleman whose expression was kind and even lamblike. 7 The woman. engaged his attention by kicking bis toes. He curled hisfeet back under: the seat and continued to read his paper. Then she “hemmed” 'Joudly and bumped -against his knees. He looked up at her, indulged in a sigh of weariness and tried to make room for her by crowding closely to the woman who sat at the left of him. She declined to budge, however, and’ the old gentleman again' turned hls attention to his paper. Exasperated by such ungallant be- havior on his part, the woman Wwith the decisive jaw sald in tones that in no wise suggested the haunting mel- ody of a tinkling brock: i “I suppose I'll have to stand all Lhe way home. I've heard of men who had the decency to get up when the .cars were crowded, but I guess they'ré all dead.” “Madam,” the little old gentleman mildly remarked, “I would give you my seat, but I'm saving it for a lady.” —Chicago' Record-Herald. Centenary of Moscow Campaign. One hundred years ago Napoleon set out 6n his campaign to Moscow, and it is perbaps only natural that Moscow and Russia generally should be eager to celebrate the centenary of & cam- paign which was so disastrous to the Invaders. Already preparations are being made in Moscow to open the 1812 museum, and an immense number of objects relating to the campaign | have been collected. The centenary has already been celebrated by a con- cert, which revived the marches and mjlitary airs of both armies, and some of these, according to the Debats, are most interesting and curious. More Interesting still, as-likely to recall the events of that year, will be the visits that are to be paid to the battlefields - ““Theory and Experiment. Theory and_experiment must go ' hand {n hand, and much depends on | one“as much as-on the other, mot merely on its accuracy but also upon its nature. Hundreds of experiments may be made, which, however, not- withstanding their refinement and accyracy, “contribute little to the march of human progress in the right direction; they may of course .in ages count for much, but the chief thing is that the experiment should . be of the right kind, and it is often desirable that as much time, if not even' more time, should be spent in deciding upon the right thing to be done than in doing that‘thing itself. One bad theory is often. worse than ten bad experiments, because even it these are properly carried out, they may yet, if based upon false notions, i add lttle or nothing, if not to the store at least to the advancement of knowledge; and count almost for as little as the one bad experiment ‘Whether based upon theory or not.— | Jobn Butler Burke. —_— Jealous Fighes in a Duel. “Fish are liable to the same pas- sions as you and I, and they fight and love as we do,” said Dr. Francis Ward. “I can show you a photographi of a rainbow trout in what would have been a fight to the death if T had not Interfered. In a pond were a big fe- male trout and her partner, who re- sented the intrusion of another trout. “Suddenly one fish charged the oth- er and seized him by the jaw. He shook his opponent as a dog shakes a rat, and kept on until his enemy float- ed to the top. Then I took the fish out and revived it with a little weak whisky and water.” Troublesome Account. “My husband has given me a thecking account.” “Isn’t that lovely? Now you can buy anything you want and just write out a check for it.” “Yes. I'm rather sorry on 8ne ac- count, though. It seems such a lot of trouble to have to write out a theck for one’s car fare, especially when the cars are crowded or when and the ceremopies that are to take place there. | you have to pay as you enter.” Depar tment The Pianeer Want Ads OASH WITH CGOPY | | % ocent per word per Issue ; 15 cents. 80 your want ad gets to them all. Regular charge rate 1 cent per word per insertion. No ad taken for less than Phone 31 HOW THOSE WANT ADS DO THE BUSINESS 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 14 Cent a Word ls All it Costs % HELP WANTED WANTED—Dining-room girl WantedE at Lakeshore Hotel. ! FOR SALE | A AN A AR RN FOR SALE—Pure blood Rhode Island | i Red and Barred Plymouth Rock| <ggs for breeding purposes. Jack! Williams, 1015 America Ave. FOR SALE—Stock and eggs from| thoroughbred Single Comb White | Leghorns. - Eggs $1.50 for 15. C.] D. Lucas, 523 14th St. FOR SALE — Thoroughbred Ply-| mouth Rock, Rhode Island Red and Buff Leghorn eggs. Telephone | 686-2, J. H. French. “ fOR SALE—Rubber stamps. The| ‘Ploneer will procure any kind ot | « rubber stamp for you on short aotice. ! FOR, SALE—Full blooded Golden | Wyandotte eggs for breeding. E. S. Woodward, 507 Irvine Ave. FOR SALE—Bemldjl residence 1!1'0])-! ‘erty for sale or exchange for lnndw F. J. Swedback. s 1| i FOR SALE — Thornixghbréd Ply- mouth Rock hens; telephone 686-2, J. H. French. FOR SALE—No. 5, Oliver Type-| writer in good condltlon‘ Inquire Pioneer Office. FOR SALE-—At a bargain, a'piasio in good condition. Nicollet-Hotel. FOR SALE—20 foot gasoline launch | _“Silver Heels." Apply Barker's, FOR SALE—Portable steel garage. J4x20. Apply Schueider Bros., FARM FOR SALE—Improved, in city " limitd. Address H. Brakke, city, —_——————————— room for rent. - 0dd Fellows Bldg. house. A. Klein. |FOR RENT—Nine room. house for rent. 411 Minnesota Ave. BOARD and room, 900 Jth St: MISCELLANEOUS ADVERTISERS—The great state of North Dakota offers unlimited op- portunities for business to classi- fied advertisers. The recognized advertising medium is the Fargo 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 paper to use in order to get re- sults; rates one cent per word first insertion, one-half cent per word succeeding insertion; fifty cents per, line per month.. Address the - Courier-News, Fargo, N. D. | WANTED--100. merchants fn North- ern Minnesota to sell “The Bemid- 3i” lead- pencil. ‘Will carry name of ‘every merchant in advertising all receive advantage of advertis- ing. For wholesale ‘prices write or phone the Bemidji Pioneer OF- fice. Supply Co.' Phone 31. midji, Minn, WANTED—I desire to place my new: will take good care of it. To a responsible party, I will be willing to give a full term of ‘music les- sonsg free as I am ‘anxious to or- ganize a class'in music. Address 1106 Pioneer, Bemidji. WANTED TO TRADE—What have ° you to trade for new standard pla- no? Call at second hand store, furniture. across from postoffice, phone. 129.‘ WANTED—Sewlns “to do at home columns of Ploneer in order that Be- piano with a private- family who -