Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, September 20, 1913, Page 2

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DAILY PIOREER | PFIONRER PUR. 0O0. ors and Proprietors. el 3n Jmlt office at Bemidjl, ans ?Al(ar under Act 87 fFublished every afternoon except Sundsy No attention pald to anonymous con- tributions. = ‘Writer's name must be kmewn to the editor, but not necessar- iy _for publication. Communications for the Weekly Plon- ser should reach this uffice not later than of each Wnk to insure publica- tien In the current iss made friends since her imprisonment in the county jail at Bemidji. She will start again, and with the aid of the new found friends, will win, please God, blotting out the past, and winning in the years to come a place the business field. Is there anything we can do less than to wf§h thisgabil “God speed?”—Itasca County Inde- pendent. - Subscription. Rates. Qe month by carrler . A0 One year, by ca 4.00 H m&“m” fage paid 300 X mon 08 J One year, posta; ';.l"l 1.00 "rhe w-nuy 3 Bight pages, containing a summary of {he Bews of the week ublished svery ursday and- seni . i 0 addrees Yor $1.50. in” advence THIS PAPER REPRESENTLD FOR FOREIGN ADVERTISING BY THE GENERAL OFFICES NEW YORK AND CHICAGO BRANCHES IN ALL THE PRINCIPAL CITIES Ducks are reported as flying higher this year. Another excuse for the high cost of living. Multi-millionaire L. W. Fargo, a batchelor by trade, and on the side, president of the American company spent several days at Grand Rapids last week and according to the Herald Review gave a demonstra- tion of how to reduce the cost of liv- ing by eating “sinkers” and drink- ing coffee. We can’t use Fargo in Bemidji. Expres % When it comes to being on the job on short notice, nobody has anything on the Hon. C. M. Bacon. Showing Bemidji to distinguished strangers is Bacon’s long suit. All the require- ments necessary are, “will it do any good”. town he has always been on the job. ‘When it’s for the good of the Thursday morning Bemidji was fa- vored with a visit from I. of the Indian department at Wash- E. Boone, ington. A trip around the lake was suggested, but not a car in sight. A call by telephone reached Mr. Bacon at his home and he responded within five minutes with his automobile. The Wadena Pioneer-Journal is to lose its efficient business manager. A. G. Swindlehurst, who is to be the new register of the Cass Lake land office. . Judge Ives, Cass Lake Times, was recommended for the place by F. B. Lynch but the publisher of the it Being past 80 disbarred him. It any democrat in -the northern part of the ‘atate is entitled to recogni- tion it is Judge Ives and he is only old in years with plenty of vigor left to administer the affairs of the land office in an efficient the recommendation manner—and should have stoood.—Brainerd Dispatch. Get There Scheers. It is rumored that Chas. F. Scheers, publisher of the Akeley Herald, will be a candidate for senator from the new district comprising Hubbard and Becker counties. Old time printers in Moorhead and Fargo will remem- ber “Breezy” Scheers and wish him luck, though it will be an up-hill job for him to capture the senator- ship from Becker county, which has much the larger population.—Moor- head News. Praises Grand Jury. The jury of Beltrami county has just freed Faith Benedict, the sixteen vear old girl -mother, charged with having killed her tiny baby. No body of men on God's green earth ever did a finer thing. Oh we are not advoca- ting the freeing of murderers, but stop and consider the case a moment, This girl was just fifteen year old, without a home, without council, and then came the man, a man almost old enough to be her father. Crazed with grief she was taken to a hospital and nine days after her baby was born she started out to walk 17 miles to the only friends she had in the world. Is it a wonder, that with all those weary days of thinking she became crazed with grief, and took @ life, that was, without question precious to her, even under the cir- cumstances. You mothers and - fathers who think that the jury should have in- dicted the girl, think of your own daughter. Impossible you say—ah, but the best of us are liable to make mistakes. Can you bear the thought of your daughier wronged, an out- cast from cociety, and standing day after day with her face pressed against the iron bars that shut her away from life, and all that makes NO VACATION FOR HOUSE Kept In w:-hlngton for Moral Influ- ence on Senate. ‘Washington, Sept. 20.—The big Democratic majority=in the house will be kept in Washington as a moral in- fluence over the slender Democratic control in the senate while the cur- rency bill is under way, according to plans announced by house leaders, who definitely rejected, for the pres- ent at least, the idea of a third day recess. ; After a conference with President Wilson, Represenjaive A. Mitchell Palmer, chairman of the.house 'cau- cus, declared no effort would be made for an extended recess for the house. 1t is understood that the president Lelieves the presence of the 'house the administration’s efforts to pass the currency bill in the senate. GARRISON BEHIND THE BARS Friend of Sulzer Charged With Contempt. Albany, N. Y., Sept. 20.—Governor Sulzer’s personal friend and special Personal slept all night in a cell of the Al bany county penitentiary. He was remanded to that institu- tlon by the sergeant-at-arms of the questions put to him by the- speaker following arrest on a charge of con- tempt. The charge grew out of his alleged statement several weeks ago that four legislators sold their votes on the resolution impeaching Gov- ernor Sulzer. and a name for hers‘ill perhaps in. ¢ v WANTED-—Cook . for. WANTED—Competent girl for gen- will have the effect of strengthening|— graft investigator, James C. Garrison, | ‘state assembly and refusing to answer|" . school. ..em- ployee’s"Mess at Leech Lake Agen- cy. Persons interested, write to the Indian Agent, Leech Lake Agen cy, Onigum, Minnesota, for full particulars. WANTED—Good. competent girl for ‘general housework. Mrs. A. Lord, 903 Beltrami avenue. . B eral house work. Inquire 811 Be midji avenue: WANTED Girl for housework. 919 Beltrami avenue. Phone 570, ~ WANTED—Good seamstresses - call at'the Berman Emporium. WANTED—Girl for general work. 703 Bemidji avenue. WANTED—Dishwasher at the Hotel Markham, at once. WANTED—Girl for general work. Mrs. A. Klein.. 5 Agents—Salesmen WANTED—To "sell Ciders and Soft Drinks to dealers on commission, either exclusive or side line. Our . g0ods have been on the Market for seven years. Crookston Pure Food €o., Crookston. Minn. house-| FOR SALE FOR SALE-—Good Buggy cheap. In-|~ quire P. A. Nelson, 522 street, Phone 117. First I Don’t Sleep Well No Good Reason Just Can't Sleep Some people can’t sleep. There seems to be no special reason. They have no disease of the nervous sys- tem. Digestion is fairly good. Their habits are pretty good. They may smoke a little or drink a little, yet their habits are fair. Still they can't sleep well. Just a little unbalanced in the nerve centers. That is all. They should have a little “righting up.” A tonic will generally do this. The right sort of a tonic. Peruna is ex- actly the tonic. Digestion is hurried by Peruna. The stomach is empty and ready to rest for the night. The circulation is equalized. FATTONE -~ ~ e mmea e~ The Peruna acts on every blood vessel in the system. It acts on all of the nerve centers. One begins to sleep and hardly knows why. Take a teaspoonful to one table- spoonful of Peruna before each meal. Sometimes another tablespoonful at bedtime is necessary, where the qleep- lessness is very pronounced: Just try it, neighbor. glad if you do. -One bottle will con- vince you. Peruna is no sleep medi- . cine. It is not a nervine. It contains no narcotics. It is nothing of that sort. It is simply a regulative tonic. Every home should be provided with the last edition of the “Ills of Life,” sent free by the Peruna Co., Columbus, Ohio. GOVERNMIENT WANTS YOUNG MEN Big Salaries, $75 to $150 a Month— Life position, short hours, 30 days vacation yearly with full pay. No layoffs, no political pull needed. Common education sufficient. Thousands of vacancies. Railway mail clerks, Post Office clerks, carriers and R. F. D. men wanted. - Examination coming 1n your viclnity, Write Immediately to WEBSTER INSTITUTE, BUFFALO, N. Y. bl Mo P it R GHICHESTER S PIL E DIAMOND B r Iiry L8, for years known s Best,Sa(eet Alvaga Rejiple SOLD BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE: 2n{ g&u I/Fa" ifion- Big* Manufacturers Exhibit. : Gorgeous Fall Fashions Display. Farm Garden “and Dairy Show. Band Concerts \ souvem s\ given to' V1s1tors A mp) ‘o Duluth for _thig: hig the stay in this world worth living? No you can’t and you know it. Faith Benedict isn't bad, she will go out into the world again to a place Exposman is- well worth "your Get ¢n thé train “and for at-least one enjoy-: You’ll'be welcom . where-she can start afresh. She has The brain bR et You will be FOR SALE—One six’ room cottage, «pastly modern, snap at $2,000. Ad- »-..dress C. W., care Pioneer. FOR SALE—Official 1913 automo- bile guides showing 500 Red Line trips connected including maps and « instructions indicating roads, erossings; guide posts, ‘ete. Book OASH WiTH GOPY ‘Oont por word per lssue house| Office, % FARMS FOR SALE, FOR SALE—40 acres of land, well improved, 3112 mHtes. north: of town. Hay meadow, wood and wa- ~ter on the land. E S AW FOR 5ALE———160 acre farm clay land heavy clay sub-soil, .45 acres un- der cultivation, -balance small -timber, easy to clear. Price, lLuai' acre, $15.00. - S -miles from ra‘iroad station. Address, “2:B” Pioneer office, Bemldjl, Minn, 'FOR SALE—160 acre: farm;: 5 acres | iunder cultivation. land, easy. to. clear,: seevn ‘miles sfrom station. . Price, $12.00 per “:acre. Address G. E. Carson,-Be- midji, Minn. FOR SALE—No. 21—260 acres. 40 acres under- cultivation, 25 acres meadow. 65 acres fenced for pas- ture. - 9 room frame house with basement. Large hip roof barn with hay fork. Granary. Store building. $1000 stock of mer- achandise. 1 team of horses, 6 cows. Complete line of farm machinery. ‘Price $8,000.00. Address H. E. Reynolds, Bemidji, Minn. F'OR SALE—150 acres good heavy ~clay soil on a nice lake with lots 1= of fish in, seven miles from Ten- “strike on the M. & I railroad, and four miles from Puposky on the Red Lake railroad. This is an ex- ceptionally good piece of land fairly level and mostly hard land with some low that will make good natural meadow, when cleared. About 1000 cords nice Birch tim- ber and about 150 thousand feet of saw 10g timber. Small clearing been some buildings which bave been removed. Price $15.00 per has 500 pages showing distance in miles between cities. Apply at Pioneer Office Supply Store. FOR SALE—A bargain, I wish to sell my 9 room home in Heffron add- ition will sell house and 8 lots this|FOR SALE—T75 and 30-100 acres on. house has front and back stair and is large enough for two families or several roomers. Will sell on very liberal terms. Apply L. Pioneer. FOR SALE—One 24 horse power hoisting engine, has been used for Minn. FOR SALE—Dne'slightly damaged three burner Kerosene stove. Also other household goods for sale cheap. Phone 264. FOR SALE—Rubber stamps. The " Ploneer will procure any kind of 2. Tubber stamp for you on short mo- tice. FOR SALE—Six room modern house . Fast front. Address “S” care of Pio- neer, FOR SALE—One two-horse _power | fotor—new—Apply at Pioneer of- . fice, Littie Cost 12 3 <'7n°'_ Pioneer Want Adn. One-half cent a word-cash with copy Phone 31 ”’GQ:'TO“ L0y N9V e jip % BOORETesiioh DAILY' Three Months Subscriptio ~Six-Months Subscription::. One Year Subscriptian. WEEKLY ‘One Year Subscription..... -Two Years Subecription .. ()nb bolhrs Worth Five Dollars’ Worth B TCHELDER’ fi00llfl (GROCERIES ANII,..fiENERAl. MERCHANI)ISE ’ FRESH'EUGS”AND BUTTER L _P. BATCHELDER i 117 Minnesota AVe, 0 v Subscription Price In the Schroeder-Pmneer Free Piano Coatest ' * MERCHANDISE BOUGHT UAT-SCHMROEDER’S If you have a friend who wants to” win umz pmno' “and gast your votes for her. . See 10 it that you get vates and recelpts with - your, paynients for merchandise and N'bwn acre. One-fourth down and bal- ance time will be given at 6% in- terest made payable in equal an- nual payments. V. W. Owen, Hines, Minn. famous twin lakes, one of the best locations in Minnesota for a sum- mer home or resort, having lake front and nice high banks with fine grove of Norway pines near the water. Good level clay land i/ about 100,000 feet of good pine .‘,‘al.l}"§u5t“.,‘-‘¥?§5 will c?fiyh%g&fl “ptivihan and. 100 OO0 faat nf hard J.woed timber on the land. Only six miles from Hines" and Tenstrike and on good wagon road. Fine fishing in these lakes. Price, if taken with the timber on, $1,- . 600.00. $600.00 down and if taken with timber reserved, $1,- 200.00. $400 down and balance sud Factopyr, Phone 31 ! Heavy - clay |+ on the Lake shore where there has | Home Agin WANTED. B T 'WANTED—Puplls to take piano.les- “sons. Mrs. W. Burnes, 320 Minn. “Ave. Tel. 671, WANTED 'TO BUY—Good second- t~ -hand bicycle for boy of 12 years. Coaster brake preferred, Address P, D. E., Ploneer/"#¥ 10 MISCELLANEOUS ADVERTISERS—-The great state o! portunities for business to classi- fied advertisers. The recognized Daily and Sunday Courier-Newi the only séven-day’ papér fn thc 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 insertions; fifty centr per llne per month. Address the < Courier-News, Fargo, N. D. PSR SALE—Typewriter ribLons for every make of typewriter' on the each, Every ribbon sold for 76 cents guaranteed. Phone - orders promptly filled. Mail orders given the same careful attention as when you appear in person. Phone 3. The Bemidji Pioneer Office Supply Store. BOUGHT AND SOLD—Second hanc furniture. Odd Fellow’s. building across Irom postoffice, phone 12% gins its fall term October 6th. {_I'I‘l_rl_?_e Mark—eT;! South S8t, Paul Live Stock. South St. Paul, $4.50@7.25; ers, $4.30@7.40. Sheep—Shorn shorn wethers, ewes, $2.50@3.80. Duluth Wheat and Flax. Twninth Sant. 19.—Whaat—QOn try lambs, $56.00@7.00; $4.00@4.75; May, 92%c. arrive. $1.46%; $1.45; Nov., $1.46; Dec., $1.42%. Chicago Grain and Provisions. Chicago, ' Sept. he first and third Thursdays | on time at 6% interest. Address|g8ise; Dec, 90%c; May, 95%c. Corn|o e m Inthe 1°0. 0. 5. Halteid . V. M. Owen, Hines, Minn. et 4%c; Do, T3@TIRG: May,| " FIrst National bank, Bermias, Mias > m. i = 73%c. Oats—Sept., 41%¢; Dec., 43%.c; | .. = FOR-REN1 May, 46%. Pork—Sept, $21.10; Jan,| OR. A.-EHENDERSON x 3 A $19.90. Butter—Creamerles, 29@3lc. PHYSICIAN "AND SURGEON LaRtoosevelt, No. 1623, Regu, | FOR RENT—Furnished - .or:unfurn- |‘Bggs—24c. Poultry—Springs, 17c; | Oyer Firat Natiorl bank, Bemidji, Mins and four ished modern rooms for rent, 523 Minn. Ave; l PIoneér"Want Ads” They bring buyer and ‘seller together. word. One-half . cent ‘o _ Phone 31 Phone 180 ‘Voting Power and |== Votes Price n . 8,000 $1.00 . 6,000 2,00 12,000 4.00 ievisB, 000\ ($1.50 5......10,000 - | 3.00 15,000 hens, 166, © 7T ¢ A Minneapolis Grain. Minneapolis, Sept. 19.—Wheat—- :Sept., 84c; Dec., 87c; May, 92%c. Cash close on track: No. 1 hard, 88%c¢; No. 1°Northern, 863 @883c; to 'arrive, 86%@873%c; No. 2 Northern, 88% @ 86%c; No. 3 Northern, 823, @84%c; No. 3 yellow corn, 70@71c; No. 4 corn, )| 68@69c; No. 3 white oats, 393% @40c; :)f toodarrive, 39%ec¢; No. 3 oats, 36%@ il 88c; barley, 56@71c; flax, $1.43; to arrive, $1.43. Chicago Live Stock. Chicago, Sept. 19.—Cattle—Beeves, :$6.80@9.30; Texas steers, $6.90 9 800; “Western 'steers,” $6.20@8.35; and feeders, $5.40@8.00; cows and heifers; :$3.90@8.76;-cal" s, $8.756@12.00. Hogs—Light, $8:45@ 9,165 mixed, $9.00@9.12%; heavy, $7.76@8.95; rough, $7.75@7.95; pigs, $4.76@8.50. Sheep—Native, $3.50Q 4.75; yearlings, $4.75@5.80;" lambs, $B.L5QTA405 o o o oW 38 EFt ,S gscfim for The Pioneer Sealed pro ’bh‘ duplicate, each | envelope mAr ed roposals for timber, e Indian Reservation, will be receiyed at: the office ~of the - Super- ln!erndent of Red Lake; Indian. School, “Minnesota until 12 o'clock B% of Section 18; the he sl&g« of Section 7; the Si4 of SW% of Section 8; nnd trunc( lonal portldn! of ‘Sections 19 an 2} 8 i1 ) all accessible to a railroad Re: fl Lake. ‘The minimum 81'1&0! Whleh Wwill be ac- M. feet for white 0 per M. feet for Norway imber must be cut under scribed by the Sacretary the Inter or. All timber must be and removed_before Jllnn 1, 1914, Wl!h nch bid . a cert tfed check on a solvent nal bank- must \1! submitted in the t of $1, 000 00. These checks will ind out he number pqionn. urned :t0_unsuccessful bidders, a; ne'f toward the phy ment for timber 1t d Ha accepted and retained as a for- {5 aocepted and, the Bldder 1all§bto eomsly with the requirements of rieht of the Secretary of tha ‘xnmrlnr to walve technical defects dvema.m.nu nd bids, and to re: { any and ol hids. 18 reserved. Fur- her nformation as. o {the tumber, and Goples of the ‘ppro & foren oF contract, be obtained upon _request from h- s mekem rintendent of W n?fi:{: z@exn«u-h R Yo e R in fon, D C. August 12, A2l M‘; Allllh’t éo llloner of Indian ular charge rate one cent per word rtion. Ne-ad taken for less than 1 ' ‘North Dakota ofters unlimited op- |. advertising medium in the Fuarg. | - state and the papér which carri._ . the largest' amount of classifiec |. market at 50 cents and 76 cents| DR. G. M. PALMER BEMIDJI BUSINESS COLLEGE be- Sept. 19.—Cattle— St , $6.50@8.00; cows and heifers,| b calves, $6.00@10.25; feed-| DR. ROWLAN;) GILMORE Hogs—$7.50@8.35. shorn and to arrive, No. 1 hard, 88%c; Nu. Phons 396 Rea. 'Phone 31 1 Northern, '87%c; No. 2 Northern, = -~ 85% @86%c; Sept., 87%c; Dec,, 87%¢; | UR. C. R. SANBORN - - Flax—On track ‘and to Sept., $1.45; Oct., 19.—Wheat—Sept., ~ LODGEDOM IN BEMIDY, 000600060066 66 e Bemldjl Lodge No 877, Regular - meeting nights—first and ‘hird Monday, at 8 o'clock, —at 0dd Fellows hall, 403 Beltrami Ave. Bemidj! Lodge No. 1052. Regular meeting nighta— y first and third Thursdaye 8 o'clock—at Elks hall. oo ¥ every second and fourtk Sunday evening, at § o'clock Inbasement of Cdtholle chirch, W. K. DENINQY. TWI{NANAN Phone 164 fi Pogue’s u DEGRER OF NOXON DEAY LINE. . Meeting nights every A mecond and fourth Monday . evenings, at Oda Fblll)wl Hall. - — e e r. 0. R Regular meeting nights every 2nd and {th Wednes- day evening el & - Eagles hall, 1'0! ¥ AND TRANSFES SAPE' m PIANO MOVING Res. 'Phone 58. 818 America Ave O1 one 12. MUSIC_INSTRUCTOR. e a % Regular meetinges —i'irm and third Saiurday sfisr noons, at $:30-—et Oac e lows Halls, 602 Belican Ave. DENTISTS 4B. D, L. STANTON - DENTIST Office in Winter Bleck 3 £ 0.0 ¥ Bemlidjl Lodge No. 116 - < Regular meeting nights —avery Friday, 8 o'ciock ©da Pellows Hall - 402 Beltrami. DR. J. T. TUOMY DENTIST Firat National Bank Bldg. TeL 8k Rebecca Lod, Regular meetsng nights -~ firzt ens third Wednesday at 8o'ciock —I1. 0. O. F. Hall EWIGETS OF PYTHIAZ Bemid)i Lodge No. 181 Regular meeting nighta—ax ery Tuesday evening et s o'clock—at the Eagles Hali | Third street. : DENTIST . Miles Block Bvening Work by Appointment Only~ LAWYERS GRAHAM M. TORRANCE LAWYER Miles Block - Telephone 58t LADIES OF THI wag s CABEES v « Regular meeting nignt | - last Wednssday evening in each month JOHN F. GIBBONS ATTORNEY AT LAW First National Bank Buflding BEMIDJI, MINN. | 0. H. FISK ATTORNEY AT LAW Otico mecond floor O'Leary-Bowser Bldp A. ¥. & A. M, Bemidj, Regular meeting nighu — firet and tatrd Wednesdays, 8 o'clock—at Masonic Hall, Beitram! Ave.,, and Fifth St. Bemldji Chapter No. 17 R. A. M. Statad convocatlogs —first and third Monday# § oclock p. m.—at Manonts Hall Zeltram) Ave., and Fi? street. PHYSICIANS, SURGEON% e e e e 2 e SOV V VU PHYSIGIAN: AND SURGEON SHTIES = AROU; oK Elksnah Commandery No. 20 K. T. Stated conclave—aacond and fourth Fridays, 8 o'clock p. m.—at Masonic Templs, Bal- tram! Ave, and Fifth St ' DF. E. A. IHANNON M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON NfMos -in Aaro Dleck SONS OF NERMAw. | Meetings held thirs ) Sunday afternoon of esob month at Troppmag's | Hall. e PUYSICIAN AND SURGEON (Jtflco—l‘llal Blncl DR. L. A. WARD PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON" SAMARITANS. Regular meeting nights oa s Office 'Phone 36, ‘Residence 'Phone 7% each month at leht o'clock in Odd Fellows PR. E. H. SMITH PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office’ tn’ Winter Block n WA Bemidjt Camp No. 5018, Regular meeting nights — first and third Tuesdays at 8 o'clock at 0dd Fellows Hall, 402 Beltrami Ave. O. f. 8. Chapter No. 171, Regular meeting nighte— first and third Fridays, § o'clock — at Masonic Hagi, s+ B(oltrsm! Ave, and Fifth o Bt. DR. E. H. MARCUM PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office in"Mayo Block Phene 18 Residence Phone 31; EINER W, JOHNSON PHYSICIAN ANDL SURGEON Office over;Security Bank YROWANS. B Meetinge the first Friday eveniug of the month st the home of Mra. H. F | Schmidt, 306 Third streat. 1 North Bound :Leave & Bouth Bound Arrives = R.F. MURPHY ! Cam 342 en[ UNERAL DIRECTOR 4 106 South Bound Leav, 6:30 am AND EMBALM!I 5‘,-,."“'"‘: Hoac B Savasat, 28 am Otfies’81S Beltrami Ave. ° PR MINNESOTA & INTERNATIONAL 83 South Bound Leave 81 North Bound Leaves. 84 South ‘Bound Leave: 83 North Bound -Leave: Freight South Leav. Freight North Leavi NEW PUBLIC LIBRARY 2.05°0 daly, except Sunday, 1 Sun » 7t n. m. mxy, I to 6 'p. m. 1 PAY CASH For Hides, Furs, Wool, Copper b Brag d_ Rubbers. ‘W.H.NEWTON I Suabae 'THE SPALDING 'UROPEAN PLAN Dul\lth'l Largest and Best xoul DULUTH MINNESOTA More than §100,000.00 recently expended on improvements, 250 roam-. mvmm H{ baths, ifl nmpxl.a Mlml. drs tfil convenlenco: Luxutions an restaurants and ‘Room, Men's Grfll. Mnnmcant lobby and pul Ballroom, hmfi rooms an dining_rooms % tory. Located in & to 6 ) day, reading room; Oz of the lml Ilhh l;'lh lldi!ld STOVE WOOD FOR SALE | BUNDLE W0OD, 12—20 in. long "Delivered to Bemidii, $2.25 to 7th St.; beyond, $2.50 Dellvu‘edto Nymore, SZ.NM ¥. E. IBERTSON|[*=", " UNDERTAKER and ||| 7, 05iped o Ssmidi, $2.00 to COUNTY CMoNER,« - s,zl)elfveml to Nymore, $1.75 and FUNERAL DlRECTflR:’ . Telophone Orders Nc. 82 TERMS—CASH ON DELIVERY

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