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* M IN BEMIDJL. ¢ LK R 4 a. 0, U W. Bemidji Lodge Ne 277, Regular meeting nl‘hfi——flrlt and third uonday. at 8 o'clock ~atiQda ° Fellows hall 403 Beltrami Ave. B. P. O B +/Bemidjl Lodge No. 1052 Regular meeting nights— first and third Th\lrldul 8 o'clock—at Masonic hall Beltrami Ave., and Fiftt st © 0. ¥ every second and fourth Sunday evening, at § ..-o'clock in basement of Catholic church. + Meeting nights every ncn,ud and fourth Monday evenings, at Odd Fellowa Hall. ». 0. B. Regular meeting nights every 1st and 2nd day evening at 8 o'clock Bagles hall. -G A B Regular meetings—First and third Saturday after noons, at 2:30—at Odd Fel lows Halls, 403 Beltram! > Ave. L 0. 0. ¥ Regular meée 3 N —avery ] 8 o'aleck 402 Beltrami. L O O F. Camp Neo. 8¢ Regular meeting every seceand and fourth Wednesdays at § o'cleck at Odd Fellows Hall. Rebecoa Lodge. Regular meeting nights -- first and third Wednesday at $¢’clesk —1..0. . O. . .Hall . ENIGKTS OF PYTRIAS Bemidji Lodge No. 163 Regular meeting nights—ex- ery Tuesday evening at § o'clock—at the Bagles’ Hall Regular meeting nigh' last Wednesday evening MASONIO. A. F. & A. M, Bemidji. \VS%5 7 the sports we call “athletic.” the educated nor the ‘uneducatetd nights — first and thiré Wednesdays, 8. o'clock—at Masonic Hall, Beltram) Ave., and Fifth St. % Bamldfl Chapter No. 17¢ R A M. ®eee0ee e GlASS PLAYGROUND FORTOTS IS THANKFUL FOR ONE EYE Public 8chool Building ia Portland, Ore. Glass-covered playgrouads in which the school tota can caper about, play ball, “black man,” run races and do all the other inimitable and enjoyable things of childhood, have been built as a part of the new $150,000 Failing schoolhouse that is being finished at Front and Porter streets, in Port- land, Ore. There are two of these, 90 by 40 feet in size, one for girls and another for boys, and their object is to pro- vide an outdoor recreation park for the children in inclement weather. The glass {8 covered with fine, strong wire mesh, which makes it a source of disgust to the ordinary healthy base- ball, which is used to treating glass as no barrier. These playgreunds, fitted out as they are with trapezes, swings, “slides,” etc., coat $5,000 each. They are built in one of the indentations of the “H” shaped building. The building is of reinforced con- crete ,three stories high, and will cost when completed $150,000. It is ab- solutely fireproof in every detail. It is located on a lot 450 feet long. by 200 feet wide, and has a ground floor size of 100 by 150 feet. A new method of ventilation and heating is used. It i8 known as the blower system and heats by means of hot air. It changes the air in a room automatically every 15 minutes, and in this way insures perfect san- itary conditions in this respesct. The Failing school contains ' 28 clagsrooms. In the basement will be the lunch hooms, manual training rooms and toilet. The other floors will be given over to the teachers’ ofloel and classrooms, All the floors are of clear maple. This is an unusual feature for school buildings. ATHLETICS FOR A LIFETIME Former President Eliot of Harvard University Gives Some Advice to Freshmen. ‘With the object of preserving a sound mind in a sound body, look ahead with regard to athletic sports. It may make some difference to you in the next four years, perhaps, if you look ahead with regard to athletic sports. Under modern stresses ath. letic sports are an indispensable part of young life, and indeed, of sound natlonal life. One of the most seri- ,ous aspects of China at the present -moment is the absence there of all Neither Chinese have athletic sports in the open air. ‘All their sports are of a 233. Regular meeting | gambling nature. They are sedentary or quiet games of chance. That is a :national misfortune on an immense scale. s By looking ahead in regard to ath- . -Stated convocations iletic sports, I mean, give preference —first and third Mondays, ! | to:those sports that last, and that you o'clock p. m.—at ‘Masonic Hall Zeltram! Ave., and ‘Figeh | €30 Pursue at 30, 40, 50, 60, 70 and atreet. Elkanah Commandery No. 3¢ and fourth - Tridays, 8 o'clock p. m.—at Masonic Temple, Bel trami Ave, and Fifth St. O. £. 8. Chapter No. 171 Regular meeting nights— first and. third Firidays, ¢ o’clack — at Masonic Hall Beltrami Ave.,, and Fiftt St M.B. A Roosevelt, -Ne. 1638 Thursday everings at § o'clock in Odd Fellows Hall. WA ‘Bemidji Camp No. 65013 Regular meeting nl(lu- first .and third Tuesdays & o'glock at Hall, 402,Beltrami Ave. DERER 3 Regutar meeting nights e the first and. thiré Thursdays in the 1. O. O. F. Hall at / p. m. 808 OF EERMAN. Meetings held thirc Bunday afternoon of eact month &t Troppman’s Hall the ' month a° H F sSchmidt, 306 Third stree' e evening of the home of Mrs. g \» ‘TIMBER SALE Red Lake Raservation. Sealed proposals in duplicate, envelope marked “Proposal for Timber, Red Lake Reservation,” will -be received each 'I am beginning to hope 80 years of age. You know what the lasting K. T. Stated conclave—second -sports are—walking, rowing, sailing a :boat, tennis—any sport which can be -pursued by the average individual all ‘through life. Lord Bacon says that riding horse- iback 18 -the best recreation for men who use :their -brains. The sports that .an .individual can pursue all through his life.are the best ones to fearn in youth. ' The wise choice .in- volves looking ahead.—President Eliot Regular meeting nights | 10 Harvard Freshmen. Find Ants Are Seamstresses. A party of (German naturalists .re- cently returned from ‘Ceylon have re- ported the existence :of a species of ant that has been observed in the act 0dd p.u,'. of sewing two leaves together for the purpose of formimg :a nest. This re- port confirms the observations .of the English naturalist, Ridley, made in 1890. They saw a row of the insects pulling the edges of leaves together, then others trimming and fitting the edges, and finally the completion of the work by still other ants, which fagtened the edges with a silky thread yielded by larvae of the same :8pecles the workers carried in thefr ;mandibles. It is said that the sew- g ants pass the thread-giving larvae ke shuttles through holes in the dges of the leaves. Natural Cold Storage. A millionaire tells of a grand, deep, Jry ‘well on his race horse and stock farm down in the Blue Grass, relates the New York Press. In the old days the former owner used to have the at the office of the Superintendent of the meat for his family and slaves tied Red Lake Indian School, Red Lake Min- nesota, until 12 o'clock noon, central time, Wedpesday, February, 19, 1913. for | ‘Well with a windlass. ©on to a rope and let down into the Two or three the purcinase of approximately 800.000| sheep were killed at a time and very feet of dead and down and fire-injured pine timber on the Red Lake Indian|Often a steer. The carcasses soon be- Reservation, Minnesota, Thfs 4, Se township 1. 2, 3 and 4, Sec 19; lots 1, 2,3nnd4 Sec. 20: lots |, . 3 and 4, Sec. 24, ship 160 north, range 34 west. The tim- nber is upon Lots 1, 2, 3 and nge 35 west; Lots came chilled in the dry, cool air under- ground, and it was no trouble in hot weather to keep the meat a week or § 3 and ot séc 21, town- two. Every day the mutton or beet was drawn up out of the well, a day’s vex niered for sale consists of White|supply was cut off, and the big pleces and Norway pine, approximately two- thirds White pine and one-third Nor-| Were lowered again. way. Only dead or fire-injured timber will be sold. All of it of good quality and accessible to a railroad or to Red The minimum prices which will Lake. Would Follow Lover in Death. A Spanish girl who arrived at Cal- be accepted are $4.00 per M. feet for Nor-| eutta from South Africa several days way pine and' $56.50 per M. for White pine, ..e timber must be cut under|ag0 to marry a Mr. Fraser, a cotton regulations prescribed by the Secretary|mill manager, went to a hospital of the Interior. All timber must be paid for and cut prior to June 1, 1914. Bidders | Where he had been lying ill, and where ‘must submit, with their bids, a certified| ghe had previously visited him, and check for $§ payable to the undersigned. 400 on Sgme solvent bank | was told that he was dead. She was checks will be returned to the unsuc-|allowed to enter the room' where his cessful bidders, applied toward the pay- ment of timber If bid is accepted; and | ody 18y, and there, after looking at retained as a forfeit if a bid is accepted | his face for a few minutes, she took and bidder fails to comply with the re-| gut her hatpin and thrust it into her quirements of his bid. “The right lo r. jsct -n¥ and all bids is reserved. breast, inflicting a severe wound. The ‘ormation ‘as. to umbor. ua tho pin, which Wnetnhd four m l’DPO'Gd form 0! con! ained upon 'tomflflum ls.".l’ B, ‘i nans A‘.-L-- 000000‘ Novel Feature in Connection With a Philosophor Thinks He Has Sesn a1 Much in His Time as One Man Ought. Recently W. A. Morgan, the father of W. Y. Morgan of Hutchinson, lost the sight of one of his eyes. “While 1 was at the hospital” says :Captain Morgaa, “1 did a lot of thinking how 1 could get along supposing 1 went entirely blind. 1 wouldn’t be :able .to read, just sit in darkness :all the time { was not asleep. Then 1 figured that I would be mearly helpless. I ‘would have to get somebody ‘to lead me around wherever I went. But sup- posing that I couldn’t get anybody, what would I :do thep? I remembered that I had seen blind men who were led around by dogs, and 1 commenced to speculate on how long it would take me to train up & pup to hawe sense enough to lead me around. “And then suppose that ‘it should 8Dy a cat on the other side of the ave- nue ‘and take & sudden motion ‘to catch it. That would mean that it would lead me out into the street 'where i1 . probably would run over by :an ‘automobile or a -street car. «+And just when I had become desper- ate .somehow: the, situation seemed to get ridiculous.and ‘I laughed. Now I :am feeling pretty well again and 1 ‘have wone :good lamp left. . Of course it iis unhappy when one comes up on ‘the 'blind ‘side, ‘but it beats no eyes &t :all ‘too ‘bad ‘to talk about. 8o I ‘have:a good:deal to bé thankful for. Anyway, I am:not certain that I have ‘not :seen as much in my time as one :man:ought.to.see,”—Kansas City Jour- mal. Love of Country. “When do you sail for Europe?” “Next week. And oh, I can’t tell 'you how I hate to leave the country -of my birth! Others rejoice -on leav- ‘Ing for abroad—I1 weep!” ~ “I honor your:emotion. ‘you sail front?” ““Philadelphia.” “Why -are ‘you sailing from. New York?” “Because I'love my country. And ‘it s much -easier ito bid farewell to .America in :Philadelphia than'itiis in New “York ~ Where do GRAY HAIR TURNS TS NATURAL GOLOR AFTER APPLYING A LITTLE SAGE TEA MIXED WITH SULPHUR IT DARK- ENS BEAUTIFULLY AND TAKES OFF DANDRUFF. Almost every one knows that Sage Tea and Sulphur, properly com- pounded, brings back the natural col- or and lustre to the hair when fad-| ed, streaked or gray; also cures dand- ruff, itching scalp and stops falling hair. Years ago the only way to get this mixture was to make it at home, which is mussy and troublesome. - Nowadays skilled chemists do this better than ourselves. By asking at any drug store for the ready-to-use product—called “Wyeth’s Sage and Sulphur Hair Remedy”’—you will get | a large bott for about fifty cents. Some druggists make their own but it’s usually too sticky, so insist upon getting “Wyeth’s” which can be de- pended upon to restore natural color and beauty to the hair and is the best 1u'emedy for dandruff, dry, feverish, |itchy scalp and to stop falling hair. Folks like “Wyeth’s Sage and Sul- phur” because no one can possibly tell that you darkened your hair, as it does it so .naturally and evenly, says a well-known .downtown drug- gist. You dampen a sponge or soft brush and draw it:through your hair, taking one small strand at a time. This requires but a few moments, by morning the gray ‘hair disappears and after another application or two is restored to its natural color and looks even more beautiful and glossy than ever.—Adv. STANDARD OF THE WORLD The Cadillac car of today has behind it the ex- perience of ten years, during which period its makers have produced more high grade cars than any other plant in the world. Every car—more than fifty thousand of them—is a monument to the high ideals of the organization which produced it. The Cadillac organization is an organization of specialists, each an expertin his particular vocation. There are specialists on motors, specialists on trans- missions, specialists on gears, specialists on tools, specialists on foundry work, specialists in electricity, speclallsts in body construction, specialists in finish- ing, specialists in every branch, trained in accord- ance with the high ideals of the Cadillac Company. muflm Five 'Pissenger Touring Car. Pricel 3915‘ N ORTHERN AUTO CO. Phone 474 DESIGNED BY . SHEAHAN. XOHN & CO. it a point to see our Exceptional Baryains, a The Final Wind Up of our————— Great Clearance Sale of Suits andOvercoats ‘&% | We have decided to make a General Cleanup on our Entire.Stock of Winter Suits and Over- coats, and in order to close out quickly, we of- ‘ferourcomplete line of these winter garmentsat cut of 20 per cent. Gill Bros. " If this means anything to you, make BemldJi, Minn. Cepyright 1912 The House of Kuppeaheimas