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B Nownd.ln tha art of being well d lles in line, and the new mes all .how the loose easy grace D has m'rked the summer styles. wnlw and’ beauty of materials and nge characterise the fall costume than anything ltu'- orm. However, greater dividuality: is:-noticed than for som me past, as there are many little de- about which the wearer can use or owWn gogd tuste, Molre ls'a groat favocrite and comes all the néw' rich colors—tete de ne- brown, bgick red, prunelle, purple, n and taupe. A dark, deep copper another wonderful shade and used ith a design like 7973-7939 a charm- gown would result. Small burnish- & buttons and a broad folded sush howing tones of yellow would com- the l\‘ucL F‘or -lll. ll this de- out this coupon and inclose 15-oents-in stampe oc coln. Be, sure to Yo obialn cicher pattern fllustrated A1l THE RETURN OF THE . , POCKET sign (7973-7939) requires 58 yards of 86 inch moire with % yard of satin for the girdle. Two-toned costumes, skirt of plaid with plain blouse, are novel and at- tractive. In less pronounced patterns dull blues and greens combine well, and a dark red and blue are often seen.. The return of the pocket is a thing m‘wllch ‘we may be grateful this sea- son; not the tiny apology tucked away n some corner or hidden by a seam, but an almost' ample patch pocket atitched, one'on each side of many of the new skirt models. An effective il- lustration {s shown in 7942. For a blouse like 7916 in size 36 it requires 2% yards of 36 inch material. 7943 may be made in size 18 with 8 yards of 86 inch material. -Each pat- tern 15 cents, No. Name . Address Progressive ' Discusses Re- - turn of Roosevelt to G. O. P. | i § L m‘m‘és POSSIBLE 'WITH ROOSEVELT| R ut,f&pi'nion on Latest 2. Story About Golonel. TS Wnshifigfon. Sept. 25.—“With Roose- elt all -things. are possible,” was the eneral fgnor of answers returned by DETressman mterviewed on the re- arks, attgibuted to Senator Suther- .at ;Jalt Lake City recently 'that e.colonel would be the Republican ominee in 1916. The Roosevelt query gained interest y a stalement by Representative lyde Kebly of Pennsylvania that the : “%olonel had refused to state definitely : -tn a: Progressive congressman who re- joe tly visited him that he would, or i rswould not accept a Republican nomi- tion. . “The question was put to Colonel oosevelt point blank,” said Kelly. “He gave his visitor every assurance that suchsan event was most improb- ‘able, but he did not make a categorical | would {mins of Iowa. + 1 cutter i Alaskan waters for the missing schoon- the: ‘Republicans and Progres- But even the loss of Roosevelt not destroy the Progressive 1t is a party of principles and based on any man’s personal- tween . sives. party. is not ity.” “T believe, if the Republican party is to be successful in the next e¢lec- i tion, a Progressive must be selected to lead the party,” said Senator Cum- “La Follette, Borah and any one of a dozen other Progres- sives would do i SEARCH FOR M|SSING SHIP | Revenue Cutter Will Scour Alaskan Waters for Schooner Wasp. Washington. Sept. 25.—The revenue Bear at Unalaska will search er Wasp, tfor the safety of whose crew land A. N. Evans, commissioner of edu- cation in Alas fear is felt. Seamen T. Berven and John Ingram of the revenue cutter Unalga are re- ported probably lost in the Arctic. The two men belonged to'a shore par- ty stationed on Kiska island and have been missing since July 8, when they | left camp in a small boat which,was found empty on July 11. Ingram was’ born in Red Oak, la. Vs SuGESssammmEEReY P. J. WOLF, Agent ngn. a3 BEMIDJI, MINN. - “I ‘believe,” Kelly added, “that the Italk of Roosevelt being nominated, by the Republicans is buncombe, merely e nttempt ‘to distort the issue be- '{FOR SALE—Official I e el e HELP WANYED. T A A A AN AN A PP AP WANTED—Competent girl for gen- eral house work. Inquire 811 Be- midji avenue. WANTED—Girl for general house- work. Mrs. C. E. Riley, 601 Min- nesota avenue. 2 A S N R S WANTED—Young man to clerk in clothing store. Apply at Gill Bro- thers. l WANTED—Good seamstresses , calli at the Berman Emporium. | WANTED—Girl for general work. 703 Bemidji avenue, AGENTS WANTED—Are you will- ling to work? - We hayve men with- out experience making $3.00 to $8.00 per day with part expenses paid. Outfit free. Home territory. Write today. Hawks Nursery Co., - Wauwatosa, Wis. FOE SALE house- H 1913 automo- bile guides showing 500 Red Line trips connected including maps and instructions indicating roads, crossings, guide posts, etc. Book 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 house has front and back stair and is large enough for two families or several roomers. Will sell on very liberal terms. Address I. G. Hay- craft. FOR SALE—Rubber stamps.- The Ploneer wifn procure any kind of rubber stamp for you on short no- tice. FOR SALE—One two-horse power motor—new—Apply at Pioneer of- fice, FOR SALE—One cow, coming fresh soon. Address Ed. Rako, City. FOR ) —Larze size_coal stove very “reasonable. Phone 568. Pioneer Want Ads - 1-2 Gont a Word Bring Results Ask the Man Who Has Trisd Them WANTS OASH Wlfll ooPY, oent per word per lssue | /[ tiniber "and 100,000 feet of 'hard Office, FARMS FOR SALE. FOR SALE—160 acre farm clay land - heavy clay sub-soil, 45-acres un- der cultivation, balance small timber, easy to clear. Price, per acre, $15.00. Seven miles from ra‘lroad station. Address, “2-B” Pioneer office, Bemidji, Minn. For and Factory Phone 31 Home WARTED. A A A A AP PP WANTED . TO BUY~—Good second- hand bicycle for boy of 12 years, Cocaster brake preferred. Address P. D. E., Pioneer. WANTED—Sewing by the day. Call -at 302 Third street over Majestic. FOR SALE—160 acre farm; 5 acres under cultivation. Heavy clay land, easy to clear, seevn miles from 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- chandise. 1 team of horses, 6 cows. ! Complete line of farm machinery. i Price $8,000.00. Address H. E. Reynolds, Bemidji, Minn. FOR SALE—150 acres good heavyl clay soil on a nice lake with lots! of fish in, seven miles from Ten- strike on the M. & L. 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 mice Birch tim- ber and about 150 thousand feet of saw log timber. Small ctearing on the Lake shore where there has been some buildings which bave been removed. Price $15.00 per 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. FOR SALE—T75 and 30-100 acres oni = famous twin lakes, one of the best | locations in Minnesota for a silm— mer home or: resort, having lake front and nice high banks with fine grove of Norway pines near. “thie water. Good level clay iand about 100,000 feet of good pine woed timber on the land. ~Only §ix 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 amd if taken with timber reserved, $t,- 200.00. $400 down and balanes on time at 6% .interest. Address V. M. Owen, Hines, Minn. —_— THE SPALDING EUROPEAN PLAN Duluth’s Largest and Best Hotel DULUTH MINNESOTA More than £100,000.00 recently expended on lmprovements. 250 rooms, 1% private baths, 80 sample rooms. lern convenience: Luxurious and itful restaurants and buffet, Flemish Palm Room, Men's Grill, Oolonial Buffet; :fnlficent lobby and public rooms; Iroom, banquet rooms and private dinlnw mom & Sun parlor and observa- in heart of business sec- zlon buz overlooklnz the harbor and Lake Superior. Convenient to everything. Ons of the Great Hotels of the Nerthwesi fully guaranteed, in hll 81-2 x13 (Can you from time to time’ WeBuy on a Gu Carbon Paper We have an assortment of high grade paper At $1 and $1.25 a box Yes, there are 100:sheéts in each box. and if the paper does not satisfy you know where you bought it—your money returned if you want it always. ~ Beware! Special agents callon the trade about the city They may offer you enticing - looking bargains—but—what if you're not satisfied? It may be a case of throwing it into the waste basket. the Same Way. Bemidji Pioneer Supply Store ?hone 31 colors 8 1-2 x 11 and beat it?) arantee and Sell MISCELLANEOUS ADVERTISERS—The great state of | North Dakota offers unlimited op- portunities for business to classi- fied advertisers. The recognized advertising medium in 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 insertions; fifty cents per line pér month. Address the Courier-News, Fargo, N. D. FOR QALE—Typewrlter 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 pmmptlyvfmed. Mail orders given the same careful attention as when you appear in person. Pohne 31. The Bemidji Pioneer Office Supply Store. BOUGHT AND SOLD—Second hand furniture. . Odd Fellow’s building across from postoffice. phone 122. p LA AT SO L SO R R BEMIDJI BUSINESS COLLEGE be- gins its fall term October 6th. he Markets South St. Paul Live Stock.. South St. 'I’aul Sept’ 24—Cn e— Steers, $6. flms 00; coWs and heifers, $4.50@7.25; calves, $6.00@10.50; feed- ers, $4.30@7.40. Hogs—$7.710@8.26, Sheep—Shorn lambs, $5.00@7.60; shorn wethers, $4.00@4.75; shorn ewes, $2.50@ 3.80. Duluth Wheat and Flax. Duluth, Sept. 24.—Wheat—On track and to arrive, No. 1 hard, 86%e¢; No. 1 Northern, 85%c; No. 2 Northern, 83%c; Sept., 837%c; Dec., 85%c; May, 90¢c. Flax—On track and to arrive, $1. 42; Sept; $1.40%; Oct., $1.40%; Nov., $1.41; Dec., $1.39% Chicago Grain and Provisions. Chicago, Sept. 24—Wheat—Sept., 85%c; Dec., 87%@88¢; May, 92%ec. Corn—Sept., 74%c; Dec., 717%¢c; May, 2% @73c. Oats—Sept., 4034c; Dec.. 427%c; May, 46c. Pork—Sept., $21.75; Jan., $19.97. - Butter—Creameries, 29 @21c. Eggs—24c. Poultry—Springs, 16¢c; hens, 1 Chicago Live Stocl. Chicago, Sept. 24.—Cattle—Beeves, $7.16@9.40; Texas steers, $7.00@8.10; Western steers, $6.30@8.40; stockers and feeders, $5.40@8.00: cows and heifers, $2.90@8.75: calves, $8.50@ 11.50., Hogs—Light, $8.45@9.25; . mix- ed, $7.95@9,20; heavy, $7.85@9.00; rough, $7.85@8.05; pigs, $4.50@8.25. Sheep—Native, $3.65@4.75; yearlings, $4.76@5.70; lambs, $5.50@7.25. Minneapolis Grain. Minneapolis, Sept. 24.—Wheat— Sept., 8134c; Dec., 84%c; May, 89%ec. Cash close on track: No. 1 hard, 86c; No. 1 Northern, 83% @85%c; to arrive, 831, @84%c; No. 2 Northern, 81% @ 8314c; No. 3 Northern, 781 @81%c; No. 3 yellow corn, 70@70%c; No. 4 corn, 68@69c; No. 3 white oats, 38% @39c;" to arrive, 38%c; No. 3 oats, 36@37%c; barley, 53@70c; flax, $1.- 42; to arrive, $1.42 Hold! Stop! Don’t throw away your old overcoat we can put it in first * class' condjtion at moderate price, new collar and lining. We do first class work of all kinds. PRESSING, REPAIRING, ; AI.TERATION. Moderate Tailor Tailors 117 3rd 1. at Bisiar Music Store Work called for and delivered. Phone 873 FILLED Regular charge rate one cent per word per insertion. No ad taken for less than 10c. “_ VETERINARY SURGEON W. K. DENISON VETERINARIAN Phone 164 Pogue’s Livery DRAY LINE. AAAAAAAAAAAA TOM SMART DRAY AND TRANSFER SA¥E AND PIANO MOVING ‘Phone El 818 Amerl Office Phene 13. o Ave _ MUSIC INSTRUCTOR. ESTHER M. KOLSTE, TEACHER OF PIANO. Graduate of Chfcago Musical College. Phoue 623. _ DENTISTS A AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA A JE. D. L. STANTON DENTIST Office in Winter Block Res. DR. J. T. TUOMY DENTIST First National Bank Bldg. Tel. B30 DR. G. M. PALMER DENTIST Eveniag Work by PAlvol?:lntllum Only —_ - LAWYERS SO I A A AN A A A A~ GRAHAM M. TORRANCE LAWYER Wliles Block Telephone 568 JOHN F. GIBBONS ATTORNEY AT LAW First National Bank Building BEMIDJI, MINN. D. H. FISK ATTORNEY AT LAW Office second ficor O’Leary-Bowser Bldg e ———————————— PHYSICIANS, _SURGEONS, A A A A A A A A A AN DR..ROWLAND GILMORE PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office—Miles Block DR. E. A. SHANNON, M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office In Mayo Bleck Phone 396 Res. 'Phone "1 OR. C. B. SANBORN PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office—Miles Block DR. L. A. WARD PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Over First National bank, Bemidji, Minn. DR. A. E. HENDERSON PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Over First Nl.unlu.\ fics “Phone 36, Residence bhcns 10" DR. E. H. SMITH PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office in Winter Block DR. E. H. MARCUM PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office In Mayo Block Phene 18 Residence Phone 811 EINER W. JOHNSON PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON * Office over Security Bank EFE XX KR EX KRR KRR R ¥ RAILROAD TIME CARDS SR SRR SRS R R E RN AED LAXE & MAN. 1 North Bound Leaves... § South Bound Arrives... 800 RAILROAD 163 Bast Bound Leaves.... 168 West Bound Leaves 186 East Bouna Leaver 187 West Bound Leaves g bt . 8:15 BEEREE | PAY CASH For Hides, Furs, Wool, Copper Brass and Rubbers. W. H. NEWTON Sth 8t. Bemidjl Phone Bi10 > 3~ )