Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, October 12, 1912, Page 2

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| el ENTERED AS SECOND CLASS MAT- TER AT THE POSTOFFICE AT BE- MIDJL, In ery is irregul lease make immediate complaint to this offite. Telephone 81. Outiof town subacril will confer a .. tawor. Swill . report':when they do not get their papers promptly. - Every subscriber to the Daily Pioneer will receive notice about ten days .be- tore. his., time expires, glving him an opportunity to. make an advance pay- ment before the paper is finally stopped. Subscription Rates. One month, by carrier. One year; by carrier Bight pages, contalning a summary of the news of the week. Published every Thursday and sent postage pald to any address for 1.50 in advance. Published every afternoon except Sun- day by the Bemidji Ploneer Publishing Company. 2 @. 3. cAmSON. =, X DENU. EAROLD J. DAWE, maitor. The Financial Situation. The last report of R. G. Dun and company, dated October 5, says: . “During the nine months ending September 30, there were 11,816 commercial failures reported to R. G. Dun & Co., with liabilities of $153,- 544,360, as 9,944 -defanlts in the corresponding period in 1911 with liabilities of $138,865,- 620. The increase both in number ‘of defaults and’in amount of liabili- ties-were distributed over the three difterent quarters of the year. The largest increase in number of de- faults was in the first quarter, when there were 4,828 failures as against 3,984 in 1911, but the largest in- crease in amount of liabilities was in the third quarter, the total being $45,762,137 as against $35,170586 in 1911. “The heaviest mortality was in the trading class, which reported 8,523 defaults during the nine months as compared with 7,059 in 1911, the liabilities being $69,646,- 697 as compared with $62,607.819 in the previous year. There was also an increase both in defaults and in liabilities among brokers and trans- porters, the number of failures being 454 against 341 last year, with_lia- bilities of $18,204,061 against $14,- 924,296 in 1911. The increase in manufacturing defaults 'was not so prominent, though - the number of failures was 2,839 against 2,544 last year while the liabilities were over $4,000,000 greater, being $65,693,- 312 against $61,333,505. An analysis of the nine months’ failure statistics by sections of the compared with Minnesoa .$2,066,334 . Towa ....: 1,664,664 Missouri .. 3,668,239 3,900,812 N. Dakota . 490,441 441,656 S.’Dakota . - 390,765 359,380 Nebraska . 851,782 696,568 Kansas ... 2,164,463 1,327,799 $11,196,688 $12,949,125 . An: Economic Consideration. _ Fair Visitor—I suppose you find con- stant inspiration in the flowers of the fleld, the sighing of the breezes, and the singing of the birds, and for that reason prefer to live in the country? Poet—Not at all, madam. = The reat reason is that board is-cheaper out here and postage costs no more—~ Puck, ‘The Whole Bunch. “Sir, I wish to marry your daugh- ter.” “Are you making enough to support a family?” “Why—er—certainly, if there should bappen to be a family.” “Then, take us, my boy, and be bappy.” If you have young children you have perhaps noticed that disorders of the stomach are their most com- mon ailment. To correct this you will find Chamberlain’s Stomach and Liver Tablets excellent. They are easy and pleasant to take, and mild and gentle in effect. For sale by all dealers.—Adv. Hard to Release It, “So you've been on a fishing frolis, Girksley?” “Yes.” “I presume. it was a time when you felt like saying, ‘Let joy be un- confined!’” “I felt like saying that, and did say it, only to. learn that the dunderhead who had charge of our supplies forgot to bring along a corkscrew.” y has been or. | dered out to be vaccinated.” country shows that the heaviest mortality was in the eastern part of the United States, the New England, the Middle, the South Atlantic and South Central :States reporting in- creases both in number of defaults and in amount of liabilities, while the Central East and Central West and Western states reported de- creases in number of defaults and in amount of liabilities, the Pacific states reporting an increase in num- ber of failures, but a small decrease in the amount of liabilities. Over $11,000,000 increase in labilities is reported by the Middlg states, their total for nine months being $62,794,- 062, against $51,030,123 last year. Proportionately, the faflures were even greater in the New England states, the liabilities there being $11,651,507, as compared with $5,- 639,649 in 1911. The South Central states also made an unfavorable ex- hibit, reporting - liabilities of $20,- 364,763, as compared with $13,- 246,784. There was a considerable increase in number of defaults in the South Atlantic States; but the gain in amount of liabilities was comparatively small, the total being $16,723,000 against $15,147,856 in 1911. The Central Eastern states reported gratifying decreases in amount of liabilities, the totals being $19,892,374 in 1912 and $27,840,- 467 in 1911, while the number of de- faults was also: smaller, 1,841 as compared with 1,855 ast year. The Central West makes quite a favorable comparison with last year, some decrease ' appearing in both liabilities and nuimber. Few states show any significant change, except that while there is a _considerable falling in -the amount of liabilities reported by Minnesota and Missouri, the good’showing ‘in that respect is to some extent -offset by some ex- pansiofi in number. Number. 1912 1911, Minnesota .0 199 168 Iowa .. .. .. 183 152 Missouri ... ... .... 366 348 AR ) 55 8. Dakota .. .. ...... 117 98 Nebraska ... ... ... 117 98 Kansas...... ... ... 164 = 274 Total ... ... ... ..1,114 1,138 “WIIl the order be to present armg?* e HER WEIGHT INCREASED | FROM 100 TO 140 POUNDS. Wonderful Praise Accorded Perunathe Household Remedy Mrs. Maria Goertz, Orienta, Okla- homa, writes: “My husband, children and myselt have used your medicines, and wo al- ways keep them in the house in case of necessity. I was restored to health by this medicine, and Dr. Hartman’s in- valuable advice and books. People ask. about me from different places, and are surprised that I can do all of my house- work glone, and that I was cured by the doctor of chronic catarrh. My husband was cured of asthma, my daughter of earache and catarrh of the stomach, and my son of catarrh of the throat. When X was sick I weighed 100 pounds; now I weigh 140, “Ihave regained my health again, and I cannot thank you enough for your sdvice. May God give you & long life and bless your work.” Here is a woman who speaks from personal knowledge and long exper- ience, viz: Mrs. P. H. Brogan, of Wil- son, Pa., who says: “I know from ex- perience- that Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy is far superior to any other. For croup there is nothing that ex- cells it.”” For sale by all dealers.—Adv His Sordid View of It. “There’s nothing new in this idea of ‘passing prosperity around,’” ob- served - the - argumentative boarder. “It's passed around whenever a new man {is elected president of the Unit- ed States. I got a postoffice that way once.” That North Pole. The arctic wanderer’s lot is tough, Though he the goal may win There {8 no icebox big enough To put his treasure in. Unanimous. There dwells & man in our town Who has an awful grouch, His only claim to wide renown, The neighbors all avouch, Playlng Safe, “Miss Screecher never consents to sing until she has been asked repeat. edly.” “How many times does a person bave to ask her before she will sing?" “Usually five or six times.” “Then Y'll ask her three times.” When you have a bad cold you want the best medicine obtainable so as to cure it with as little delay as possible. Here is a druggist’s opin- ion: “I have sold Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy for fifteen years,” says Enos Lollar of Saratoga, Ind., “and consider it the best on the inar- ket.” TFor sale by all dealers.—Adv. GUARANTLED 7 SEHIH BREWING (0. UNDER THE FOOD AWD ORUGCS ACTAINE 26 1906 BEeyios1 BREWING Lo i The Taste Tews ~ $1.00 per Bushel (AR OF APPLES 90c¢ per Bushel Cash on Delivery It always pays to wait for the “Old Re- liable,” 16 years in business, still ready _ to serve you at bottom prices, with better goods than the outside peddler W. 6. SGHROEDER'S 'DEPARTMENT STORE BEMIDJI, MINN. Talented. “We saw a real artist in a vaude ville show last night.” “Very clever, eh?" “Yes, indeed. He could ‘rag’ and draw a crayon picture at the same time.” His Standing. “How did your gon do in the Mara. thon race?” “He managed to keep in the rum ning.” , Sick headache is caused by a dis- ordered stomach. Take Chamber- lain’s Tablets and correct that and PREPARE FOR (0LD WEATHER! “The U. S. Government Weather Bureau reports cold weather for the last of this week. How about the Broken Glass in your Windows and Storm Sash Telephone 57 and We Will Fix Them We have a large stock of Glass, Putty, etc. A STRIP OF TAR PAPER Around the basement makes the floors warmer and saves ‘many times its cost in fuel. -Tar paper has many uses at this season. g up and telephone us. No. 1. Good heavy Tar Paper, at 2¢ a Ib. ! Medium Tar Paper at, 2¢ a Ib No. 2. Look them We will deliver what you want. String Felt, light Tar Paper, 500 square feet in roll, at $7.00 a roll Fix your Roof before it gets too cold Use Onr Certainteed Roofing - 1=ply Crescent Roofing, 2=ply DON’E “FORGE 'REALLY NECESSARY IN THE COMING COLD SPELL THEY SEE. OUR , $1.38 a roll. : Crescent Roofing, $1.60 a roll STOVE ROOM T 3-ply Crescent Roofing. $1.88 a roll. i1=ply Rubberene Roofing, $1.50 a roll : i 1 Pus 2=ply Rubberene Roofing, $1.75 a roll i : 3=ply Rubberene Roofing, $2.00 a roll T STOVES the headaches will disappear. For sale by all dealers.—Adv. William C. Klein INSURANCE, Rentals, Bonds, Real Estate Firat Mortgage Loans on City and Farm - Property 8 and 6, O’Leary-Bowser Bldg. Phens (9. Bemidjl, Minn, Special Sale of School and Other State Lands Improved by the State Becla@finn Board State of Minnesota, Office. St. Paul, September 30, 1912. Notice is hereby given that on No- vember 13, 1912, at 10:30 o'clock a. m., in the office of the county auditor at Be- midji, Beltrami County, in the State ot Minnesota, I will offer at public sale a tract of state land, twenty acres of which has been cleared of all trees, brush, stumps, grubs and dead timber, and' well plowed to a depth of six in- ches, in conformity with Chapter 367, General Laws of Minnesota for 1911, as_follows: SE% of SEY% Sec. 36, Twp. 150; Rg. 31. Surface undulating; soil, clay; road on ‘south and’ east; burned over; ap- praised value of land $400, Cost of clearing and plowing 20 acres $700, a to- tal apprajsal of $1,100, or $27.50 per acre for the entire tract. I will offer also at the same sale the NE% of SE¥%, appraised value $9.00 per acre; the NW3, of SEY% appraised value $7.50 per acre, and the SWi of SE%, ap- praised value $9.00 per acre, all in said Section 36. Terms: Fifteen per cent of the pur- chase price and interest 8n the unpaid balance from date of sale to Junme 1, 1913, must be pald at the time of sale. The balance of purchase money is pay- able in whole or in part on or before forty years from date of sale; the rate of interest on the unpaid balance is four per-cent per annum, payable in advance on June 1st of each year, provided, the principal remains unpaid for ten years; but if the principal is paid within ten years from date of sale, the rate of in- terest will be computed at five per cent per annum. Appraised value of timber, if any, must also be paid at time of sale. All mineral rights are reserved by the laws of ‘the state. - Not more than 320 acres can be sold or:contracted to. be sold to any one pur- chaser. “Agents acting for purchasers must furnish affidavit of authority. Apprais- ers' reports, showing quality and kind of soil, are on fle in this office. Lists of lauds .to be offered may be obtained ‘of the state auditor or the state commissioner of immigration at St. Paul, and of the county auditar at State Auditor's Department The Pioneer Want Ads OASH WITH 00PY Y4 oent per word per issue 5 cents. The Ploneer goes everywhere 80 your want ad gets to them all. HELP WANTED WANTED—Good girl for general housework. Mrs. H. W. Bailey, - 605 Minnesota avenue. ‘WANTED—Table shore Hotel. _———————— FOR SALE A~ e, FOR SALE—Typewriter ribbons for every make of typewriter on the market at 50 cents and 75 cents each. Every ribbon sold for 75 cents guaranteed. Phone orders promptly filled. Mail orders given the same careful attention as. when you appear in person. Phone 31. The Bemidji Ploneer Office Supp)y Store. FOR SALE—The Bemidji lead pen- ell’ (the best nickel pencil in the world, at Netzer’s, Barker’s, 0. C. Rood’s, McCuaig’s, Omich’s, Roe & Markusen’s and the Pioneer Office Supply Store at & cents each and . 560 cents a dozen. FOR SALE—House and lot, 1013 Dewey avenue. Will sell this prop- erty at a great sacrifice for cash, also two lots on Dewey avenue known as the Sprague lots. Ad- dress C, care Pioneer. FOR SALE—104 acres of hardwood timber land in section 31, township 148, north range 34, town of Lib- erty, Beltrami county. Price for whole tract $1,600. Apply at Plo- neer office, FOR SALE—Small fonts of type, several different points and in first class condition. Call or write this office for proofs. . Address Be- midjf Pioneer, Bemidji, Minn_ waiter at Lake- FOR SALE—Ten week old- Poland China pigs at $10 per pair. Eight half blood Holstein calves at $10 to $256 each. Apply at Alfalfa Dairy Farm, W. G. Schroeder. FOR SALE-—80 acres good farm land Bemidji, Minn. = SAMUEL G. IVE] RSON, State Awml in town of Liberty, section 25. A snap if taken this fall. Write or :!efluhr charge rate 1 cent per word per mnsertion. No ad taken for less than Phone 31, HOW THOSE WANT ADS . DO THE BUSINESS 80 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 Is All It Costs FOR SALE—14 head-'mares and 4 Geldings weighing from twelve to fifteen hundred pounds, these horses can be seen at Pogue's Barn Stevens and Myler. FOR SALE—One Round Oak hard coal burner and a cupboard and bed and spring. Inquire 412 Ir- vine avenue. Mrs. M. E. Smith. FOR SALE—One ten-year-old horse for sale. Inquire at W. G. Schroe- der Store. FOR SALE—Kitchen range, bed and dresser. Inquire 1018 Bemidji avenue. FOR SALE—Four room house on Bemidji avenue. Inquire 911 Bel- trami. FOR SALE—Singer bird and cage for sale cheap. 418 Irvine avenue. — 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-Néws, the only seven-day paper in the state and the paper which carries the largest amount of .classified advertising. The Courler-News covers North Dakota like a blank- et; reaching all parts of the state the day of publication ;it is the paper fo use in order to get re- sults; rates one cent per word first. insertion, on-half cent per word: succeeding. insertions; fifty cents. per line per month. : Address the: Courfer-News, Fargo, N, D. WANTED—100 merchants in North- ern Minnesota to sell “The Bemid- J1” lead pencil. Will carry name of every merchant in advertising columns of Pioneer in order that all receive advantage of advertis- ing. For wholesale prices write or phone the Bemidji Ploneer Of- fice Supply Co. Phone 31. Be- midji, Minn. BOUGHT AND SOLD—Second hand, furniture. 0dd Fellows building, call on Tom Smart or G. B. Carson.

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