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] Y PIONEER ONEER ¥UB. CO a Propristors 81 Tntered at the ){oat office at Bemidji Minn., as second-class matter under Act of Congress of March 8, 1879. Published every afternoon except Sunday No attention paid to anonymous con- tributions. ‘Writer's name must be known to the editor, but not necessar- 11y for publication. Communications for the Weekly Pion- neer should reach this office not later than Tuesday of each week to insure publication in the current issue. Subscription Rat One month by carrier . One year by carrier . Three months, postage paid ix months, postage paid .. ne year, postage paid . The Weekly Pion Eight pages, contalning a summary of the mews of the week. Published every Thursday and sent postage paid to any adaress tor $1.50 in advamce, IH]S PAPER REPRESENTED FOR FDREIGN ADVERTISING BY THE GENERAL OFFICES NEW YORK AND CHICAGO BRANCHES IN ALL THE PRINCIPAL CITIES State Lands And the State Schocl Fund Everybody who discusses the state’s public land policy, from the governor and state auditor down—or up—assumes that there is an irrecon- ciable inconsistency between using the proceeds of the sale of these lands for reclamation purposes, as the Federal grant requires, and put- ting them into the permanent schonl fund, as the state constitution re- quires. There is no such inconsistency, nor is there anything irreconciable in the situation. If there were, doubtless the state Constitution would have to give way. If a constitutional provision can abrogate a contract on which these gifts of land are based, then the ven- dee of a piece of land can change the contract for sale without con- sulting the vendor: But it isn‘t necessary even to go into that. Where everybody who has dis- cussed this question misses the point is in assuming that when the proceeds of the sale of state land are used for reclamation purposes, that necessarily means that the money is diverted from the permanent school fund and will never get there. That isn’t so. The diversion is only temporary; and because of it, if the state will simply apply itself in- telligently to creating a sensible and businesslike land policy, the perma- nent school fund will profit enor- mously. Suppose that the state provided by law that the proceeds from the sale of state land should go into a reclam- ation revolving fund, but with the understanding that this should be only a temporary funcé and that when and as the need of its ceases this fund shall be transferred to the per- manent school fund. This would provide a fund forre- claiming state lands; and RECLAM- ATION means not only DRAINING submerged lands, but CLEARING stump-covered lands and BUILD- ING ROADS to inaccessible lands. What would happen to the state land to the state and to- the perma- nent school fund, can be illustrated thus: Take, as an example, an eighty- acre tract of state land, half in swamp, all of it covered with brush and stumps, and without a road to reach it. What is it worth? Actual- ly, nothing at all: potentially much; and as there is a Constitutional min- imum of five dollars per acre, put its original value at that. That takes the tract worth four hundred dollars as it stands. Suppose, out of the reclamation fund, the forty acres of swamp were drained at a cost of eighty dollars— a high price. The tract then would be worth, say, ten dollars an acre, or eight hundred dollars for the whole. Suppose, again, that a road were built by which a settler could get to this land and bring his produce to market, at a cost, say, of two dollars an acre. It is not saying too much to assert that this additional expen- diture of a hundred and sixty dollars would make the tract worth fifteen dollars an acre, or tweleve hundred dolldrs. Suppose, now, that the state took from its reclamation fund three hun- dred dollars more and cleared ten acres of the tract so that the settler could make a living from the begin- ning. This would make the cleared acres worth fifty dollars an acre, and the uncleared balance worth twenty; or a total of nineteen hundred dol- lars for the tract. Suppose, finally, that this tract ‘were sold to a settler at that price. The five hundred and forty dollars taken from the reclamation fund would be returned to it. The rest, thirteen hundred and sixty dollars, would go into the permanent schonl fun. Utimately the fund would get all the rest also. Where is the loss or harm to the school fund here? This land, un- drained, uncleared and without roads, was worth at the outside five hundred dollars; and it could not have been sold, except to a speculator, at any price. Instead of a very improbable five- hundred dollars, the permanent school fund would get thirteen hun-|op; dred and sixty dollars, and ultimately ninetten humdred. The state would be'abead one farm, one thirfty settler, one industrious and prosperous fam- ily, eighty more acres rolls. ¥ - The figures, of course, are arbi- trary, and are used only for illustra- tion. But even if the profit were only five dollars instead of thirteen hun- dred and sixty, the state would be the gainer. It would be the gainer of there were no profit at all, and if the school fund only got what it might on the tax possibly have gained without the work of reclamation. By the re- clamation work it would get this amount sooner, and, more important, the state would get the settler sooner. There is nothing impossible about his plan, There is nothing imprac- tical about it. It is, on the other hand, not only possible but highly practical. It is just good business common sense. < 1t is a question for lawyers, of course, but it is to be doubted if the Constitution stands in the way of a temporary diversion of the proceeds of state land sales for purposes of improvement that will return a profit to the state and to the school fund, It is merely an investment of these funds in an enterprise that will cer- tainly return profits vastly greater than those involved in investing them in Alabama bonds at 3 per cent. And if the Constitution stands in the way, then the Commission ought to be amended. In the meantime, instead of quib- bling about technicalities, the'state officials should be studying some way to work out such a plan as this. And, in the. meantime, arrange- ments should be made whereby the remaining half million acres of gov- ernment land yet unpatented shall be patented ONLY with the restriction that, Constitution or no Constitution, the proceeds of their sale MUST bhe used as the basis for a reclamation revolving fund to carry out this idea. Hereafter, too, there should be no disscussion of reclamation in_ this state that does .not proceed on the basis that reclamation means exact- 1y what it says—not only reclaiming land from its submerged condition, but reclaiming it from stumps by clearing and from inaccessibility by road-building.—Herald Tongue Couplsts. “The honeless tongue, so small and weak, Can crush and kill,” declared the Greek. “The tongue destroys a greater horde,” The Turk asserts, “than does the sword.” The Persian proverb wisely saith, “A lengthy tonsue—an early death.” Or sometimes takes this form instead: “Don’t let your tongue cut off your head. “The tongue can speak a word whose speed,” Says the Chinese, “outstrips the steed.” While Arab sages this impart: great storehouse is tho From Hebrew wit the maxim sprung, “Though feet sheuld slip. ne'er let ‘the tongue.” The sacred writer crowns the whole— “Who keeps the tongue doth keep his soul.” v —Spurgeon. The Easiest Way. They met on the street and greeted each other with a hearty handshake. “Hello, Nichols! Been traveling in Europe, 1 understand. How did you | find the hotels?” “Hired a cah,” replied the practical one.—Philadelphia Tedger. Corrects Indigestion Nature's Breakfast Food Banishes Constipation DRACONT WANTS VO ! GOVERRFIENT WANTS YOURG MEN | Big Salaries, $75 £o $150 a Month— Life position, short hours, 30 days vacation yearly with full pay. No layoffs, no political pull needed. Common education sufficlent. Thousands of vacancies, Post Office clerks, carriers and R. F. D. men wanted. Examination coming in your vicinity., Write immediately to WEBSTER INSTITUTE, BUFFALOQ, N, Y. 8100 Lsward, $100. The readers of this paper will be one dreaded disease that science has been able to cure in all its stages, and that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being foundation of the disease, and giving stitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting direct- 1y upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system, thereby destroying the foundation of the diease, and giving the patient strength by bullding up the constitution and assisting nature in do- ing its work, The proprietors have so much faith in its curative powers’ that they offer One Hundred Dollars for any case that it fails to cure. Send for list of testimonials. A&drul F. J. Cheney & Cu, Toledo, Sold by all Dnl‘l‘ll!.. 160 Take Hall's Femily Piils for-consti- pation. ufinmu! munr Troops Have Been Sent to French Coal District. Lens, the Pas de Calais basin. demand a workday of elght hours. Reinforcements of police and 'a de tachment of troops have been dis- patched to the district, notably to Bethune, where trouble:is anticipated. Springlike Weather Everywhere, France, Nov, 22.—For§y-iive' thousand coal miners are on strike in The Miners MW& and Golds if Peruna were used at the ‘begin- ning of every cold, coughs would gen- erally be prevented. . After the cough beging Peruna will generally stop it just as quickly as it ought to be stopped. To stop a cough before - all” of the’ expectoration has been removed is to do great injury. After the expectoration has been properly removed the cough will stop itself. That is the only proper way Rallway mail clerks, ] pleased to learn that there is at least|[B ‘Washington, Nov. 22.—Springlike weather ‘has overspread practically the entire country east of the Rocky mountaine. Weather bureau experts | said that the Carolinas and Georgla ‘were the only states in the East where normal late fall temperatures; prevailed. The official explanation| of the unseasonable warmth is the fact that a “low pressure” atmospher- iz wave has fallen over the Northern hemisphere. to stop a cough. 5 Occasionally a cough depends upon an _frritable condition of the larynx or bronchial tubes, in which there is little or no expectoration. The problem. of stopping such a cough 1s a slightly different one. Even in those cases Peruna oughtito be taken, but sometimes it Is neces- sary that local treatment be added. Every one who has a troublesome cough or a lingering cold should write the Peruna Company, Columbus, Ohlo, for a free copy of the “Ilis of Life.” ‘There is no free pamphlet dis- tributed to-day of more real value ‘to the sick and afflicted than the new | “Ils of Life” It is filled from cover to cover with actual. cases of cough, colds and other' climatic diseases in all stages and complications. You could scarcely fail to find your case exactly described in this boolk. - To neglect to do everything possible to get rid of a stubborn cold or chronic cough 1s very unwise indeed. Peruna has enjoyed-a great reputa- tion as a remedy in such cases for thirty or forty years. As a rule, a person who uses one bottle of it is always afterwards an enthusiastic advocate of Peruna, Peruna itself is a means of selling more Peruna than all advertisements put together. Those who «!ject to liquid medi- cines can now obtain Peruna Tablets. Taft Will Visit Canada. Toronto, Nov. 22.—William Howard Taft, former president of the United States and now professor of law at Yale university, will come to Toron- to Jan. 9 to attend a university din- ner. He will spend the day in Tor- onto and leave the next morning for Ottawa, where he is to address the Canadian club. . Carranza Recruits in Chicago. ‘Chicago, Nov. 22.—General Lee Christmas, soldier of fortune, has just completed a successful recruiting campaign here in behalf of General Carranza, head of the Constitution- alist forces in- Mexico. American Militant Fined. Washington, Nov. 22.—Miss Lucy Burns, the capital’s first militant suf- fragette, paid a fine of $1 in police court for chalking the White House sidewalks with “Votes for Women.” A Night 0f Terror KEEP WATCHING Few nights are more terrible than that of a mother looking on her child chocking and gasping for breath during an attack of croup, and nothing in the house to relieve it. Many mothers have passed nights of terror in this situation. A little forethought will enable you to avoid all this. Chamberlain’s Cough Rem- edy is.a certain cure for croup and has never been known to fail. Keep it at hand. For sale by Barker’s Drug Store.—Adv. Find the person with the button the same number as yours, and bring him or her to our stfre BEAUTIFUL PRIZE, P ABSOLUTELY FREE KN WANTED—®Girl ‘or woman to work in small modern home at best ~ wages. Night school in town. Ad- dress”C. M” care of Pioneer. ‘WANTED—Five clerks' at Megroth's Variety store, 2 WANTED—Girl at Hotel at once. the Erickson tice: POSITIONS WANTED 'WANTED—Position to 8ing and play at parties and dances. Also to = teach piano lessons. Inquire W, Burns, 320 Minnesota = avenue. Phone 671. FOR SALE FOR SALE—Official 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—One care’ load of ‘ the finest horses that have ever been brought to the city of Bemidji. These are all splendid stock draft horses and are everywhere in de- mand. They will be offered for sale in Bemidji at Tom Smart's barn 612 America ..venue. FOR SALE—Modern house close in must be sold by December 22nd. on acount of mortgage foreclosure. ‘This is one of the best bargins ever offered in Bemidjl. Hayner Land Co, FOR SALE—Fixtures for small restaurant and seven rooms fyr- - nished complete. Inquire “J. RB" Pioneer office. % FOR SALE—Brand new pair of Hockey skates size 12 cost $6.00 new will sell for.$2.50—Apply at Pioneer. fOR SALK-—Rubber stamps. The Ploneer win procure any kind o1 rubber stamp for you on short no- tice. American Adding Machine The Latest Adder Costs But $35 See our exhibit---ask for 10 days’ frial Here 18 a new price on a competent Adder. On a machine that is rapid; full size and infallible. The very latest machine, bullt by men who know, in one of the largest metal-working shops. It is an individual Adder to be placed on one's desk, close to one’s books and papers. To take the place of the central machine requiring skilled operators. It 1s also intended for offices and stores where costly machines sre & luxury. Ten Days’ Test Now we maxe this offer so that offices everywhere' may learn what this machine means to them. We will gladly place in any office one American Adder for a ten days’ test. There will be no obligations, and charges will be prepaid. Compare it with any non-lister— even the costliest. Let anyone use it. See If any machine can serve better than this. Just send us this coupon and we'il send the machine. The price 1s due to utter simplicity, and to our enormous output. Seven keys do all the work. Each copled shown up for checkins betore (ha addition 1s made. The machine will _add, sub- tract and multiply. With very Please send us an American Add- : ing Machine for ten days’ free trail. slight practice anyone can com- Name ... . pute a hundred figures a miaute. And the machine never makes BStreet Addre . mistakes. - Countless offices, larse and City ....... small, are getting from these raa- Stat : o . s chines the higheet class of eer-. vice. Manufsotured and Guarantesd by AMERICAN CAN COMPANY, CHICAGO Sold In Bemidji By The Bemidji Pioneer Office-Supply Store I Will Buy 7-ft Jack Pine Posts Delivered to me at Bemidji on car lots at'other towns. and see'me. I. P. BATCHELDER General erchandise Bemidji, Minn. Call A Splendid Chance to Help Your Fav- orite Contestant GoOD FOR Cast these votes for' No. This coupon when neatly eut out, brought or mmled to the W. G. Schroeder 'store on or'before February _ | 4th, 1914, will countas 5 votes for the m:m repre- - nted by the absve number. : {21l persons interested in the sale of aer- FOR SALE—Car load of horses drafts drivers and mares with foal at Pogue’s Livery barn. FOR SALE—Have customer for small 4 or 5 room cottage, must be cheap Hayner Land Co. FOR SALE— Canary bird singers at 21st street and Irvine ave. WANTED. B TS U SN ST U WANTED—Table boarders 814 Bel- trami avenue. Subscribe for the Ploneer. IEh_e Markets HII Duluth Wheat and Flax. Duluth; Nov. 21.—Wheat—On track and to arrive, No. 1 hard, 86%c; No. 1 Northern, 833%c; No. 2 Northern, 833%c; Dec., 83%c; May, 88%c. Flay —On track and to arrive, $1.37%; Dec., $1.35%; May, $1.403 South St. Paul Live Stock. South St. Paul, Nov. 21.—Cattle— Steers, $5.50@7.75; cows and heifers, $4.50@6.60; calves, $4.25@8.75; feed- ers, $4.30@6.85. Hogs—$7.50@17.70. Sheep—Lambs, $5.00@6.69; wethers, $3.75@4.25; ewes, $2.50@3.75. Chicago Grain and Provisions. Chicago, Nov. 21.—Wheat—Dec., 86% @8634c; May, 90%c; July, 88%c, Corn—Dec., 7T1%c; May, 70%c; July, 70%ec. Oats—Dec., 3834c; May, 42% @42%c; July, 41¢c. Pork—Jan., $20. 95; May, $20.87. Butter—Creameries, 33@34c. Eggs—34c. Poultry—Springs, 12c; hens, 10c; turkeys, 17c. . Chicago Live Stock, Chicago, Nov. 21.—Cattle—Beeves, $6.65@9.60; Texas steers, $6.50@7.65; Western steers, $5.90@7.80; stockers and feeders, $4.80@7.50; cows and heifers, $3.25@8.20; calves, $6.50@ 10.25. Hogs—Light, $7.40@7.90; mix- ed, $7.45@8.05; heavy, $7.35@8.07%; rough, $7.35@7.55; pigs, $5.25@7.0 Sheep—Native, $3.90@5.00; yearlings, $5.15@6:25. Minneapolis Grain. Minneapolis, Nov. 21.—Wheat—Dec., 82%c; May, 873c; July, 89% @89%c: Cash close on track: No. 1 hard, 86%c; No. 1 Northern, 84} @856%c; to ar- rive, 84lgc; No. 2 Northern, 82%@ 83%c; No. 3 Northern, 80%@81%c; No. 3 yellow corn, 66@69c; No. 4 corn, 63@66¢c; No. 3 white oats, 37@37%ec; to arrive, 37c; No. 3 oats, 35@36c; barley, 45@65c; flax,.$1.37%; to ar- rive, $1.37%. CITATION FOR HEARING ON PETI- mo:r 1'0 SELL, MORTGAGE OR LEA! LAND. State 01 Minnesota, County of Beltrami In Probate Court, In the Matter of the Estate of Cather- ine E. Welsh, Decedent. T STATE OF MINNESOTA TO tain lands belonging to said decedent. fThe petition of T. ‘Welsh, as repre- |sentative of the above named estai 1 praying that a license be to him n-ru:tad to gell the same: W, THEREFORE, You, and Each of You, are hereby cited and l‘ uired to show cause, if any you have, before this court, at_the Probate Court Rooms in the ourt House, in the City of Bem flj at ten o'clock A. M.; why the prayer of.the [Bsid petition should ot be gran ‘the Judge of said Court, and Ao s sald _court, this' 7th y of Novembar, 1913, FOR RENT 3 FOR SALE—At once. All household furniture at 520 Beltrami Ave. FOR RENT—Three rooms for light housekeeping and' one bed room furnished inquire 719 Beltrami W. K. DENISON VETERINARIAN Pogue's Livers Phooe 164 DRAY LINE A AN AAAAAAAANAAAARAAAAAAA TOM SMART DRAY AND TRANSFER SAFE AND PIANO MOVING Res. Phone 58 818 America Ave. Office Phuna 13, WANTED—Newsboys at Ploneer of- - ave. 5 FARMS FOR SALE. FOR SALE—Nc. 21—260 acres. 48 acres under cultivation, 25 acres|ESTHER M, KOLSTE, meadbow. 65 acres fenced for pas- | TEACHER OF PIANO 'KUSIC INSTRUCTOR ture. 9 room frame house with |Sraduste of Chicago Musical College basement. Large hip roof bara Rhunsg oir : with hay fork. Granary. - Btore bullding. $1000 stock of mer- DENTISTS chandise. 1 team of horses, 8 cows. Complete line of farm machinery.|DR. D. L. STANTON, Price $8,000.00. Address H. B. DENTIST Reynolds, Bemidji, Minn. Odiice in Winter Block FOR SALE—The S.W. Y of the 8. B/ of Section 21-146-32. This|DR. J. T. TUOMY torty has a falr house and barn DENTIST and a few acres under cultlvatlon{First National Bank Bldg. -and is on a mail, telephone and|’ cream route. Price $20.00 per|DR. @ M. PALMER acre. Time given to sult purchaser DENTIST - :m:::t!a:a p::“cix::.ufl‘:;d:\;:h: Evening Work by Appeintment Only Kalser, Bagley, Minn, FOR ~ SALE—1G50 acres.good heavy clay soil on a nice lake with lots ot fish in, seven miles from Ten- strike on the M. & I railroad, and four miles from Puposky om the Red Leake rallroad. This is an ex- ceptionally good plece of land fairly level and mostly hard land Tel. 230 LAWYERS 7 GRAHAM M. TORRANCE LAWYER Miles Block JOHN F. GIBBONS ATTORNEY AT LAW Phene 560 ‘with some low that will make good st N?s‘-‘:fl?ilflmk Patiding; natural meadow, when cleared. About 1000 cords mice Birch tim- 0. H. FISK ber and about 150 thousand feet ol saw log timbér. Small clearing 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 aeres on 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 about 100,000 feet of good pime timber and 100,000 feet of hard wood 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, Over First Nmonal bank, Bemidji, Minu 600.00. $600.00 down and it |Office Phone 36 Residence Phone 36 taken with timber reserved, $1,- 200.00. $400 down and balance on time at 6% interest. Address V. M. Owen, Hines, Minn. _____ MISCELIANEOUS ADVERTISERS—The great state of North Dakota offers unlimited op- portunities for business to classi- fied advertisers. The recognized |y y % 4 % X E KKK KKK KK advertising medium in the Fargo |y RAILROAD TIME CARDS * Daily and Sunday Courler-News y x 4 4 & % % % % % kK K X & ¥ % the only seven-day paper in the MFLS, BED LAXZ & wawN. state and the paper which carries|s North Bound Arrives the largest amount of classified |1 North Bound Leave: advertising. The Courfer-News covers North Dakota like a blank- et; reaching all parts of the state the day of publicatiom; it is the paper to use in order to get re- sults; rates one cent per word first ATTORNEY AT LAW Office second floor O'Leary-Bowser Blds PHYSICIAN, SURGEONS DR. ROWLAND GILMORE PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office—Miles Block DR. E. A. SHANNON, M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office in Mfiyo Bloek Phone 396 Res. Phone 3. DR, C. R. SANBORN PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Offiice—Miles Blocik DR. L. A, WARD PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Over First National bank, Bemidji, Miox DR. A. E. HENDERSON 5 PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON DR. E. H. SMITH PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office In Winter Block DR. E. H MARCUM PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office in Mayo Bl lock. Phone 12 Residence Phone 211 162 168 186 187 West Bound GREAT NORTHERHN 33 West Bound Leaves. 84 East Bound Leaves. insertion, ome-half cent per word o succeeding insertions; fifty cents Fulgnl West Leaves at. per line per month. Address the|“Te!Eht East .eaves at... Loyl Courler-News, Fargo, N. D. ,m’g:‘:,: 1:3:. NATIONAL FOR SALE—Typewriter ribbons for every make of typewriter on the market at 50 cents and 75 cents each. Every ribbon sold for 756 - cents guaranteed. Phone orders promptly filled. Mail orders given the same careful attention as when' you appear in person. Pohne 31. The Bemidji Pioneer Office Supply Store. CHICHESTER S PILLS hdleu! Ask l'lll l Redlndflol‘ etal| mu', Sealed with B M Take lnl olhv b Dld"l‘h. 'ER DIASTOND BRAND SIS s yedrsknownas Best, Safest, Alwhys Reliable SOLD BY DRUGG!STS EVERYWMERE: THE SPALDING EUROPEAN PLAN Duluth's Largest and Best Hotel DULUTH MINNESOTA More than umtmm recently expended on improvements, 250 rooms, 1% unvlle baths, 60 sample rooms. Enri convenience: Luxurious and delf rea_‘nnnnts and buff Frelg’hl South Leaves at. Freight North Leaves at. NEW PUBLIC LIBRARY Ovan fllfly, except Sunday, 1 to 6 p m. Sunday, reading roo Sy, 2%0 ¢ D m. ATTEND Bemidji Business College 0’Leary-Bowser Bullding DAY AND NICHT 9 9 FUNERAL DIRECTOR ¥. E. IBERTSON UNDERTAKER and COUNTY CORONER fet, Flemish Men’s Grlll, Oolonnl Bnflat( M, ficent lobby and ~publ mmn Ballroom, banquet: rooms ln Alnmn xooms; ‘Bun parlor and of Located in heart of business. lec- uun ‘but overlooking the harbor end Lake Buperior. Convenient to everything. Ons of the Breat Hotels of the Ferthwest vna | PAY CASH For Hides, Furs, Wool, Coppe: Brass and Rubbers. W. H. NEWTON STOVE WOOD FOR SALE BUNDLE:WOOD, 1220 in. long i hl-h $2.25 to Dzoskvmd(hvflm $2.00 and IlI.OCl WOoD to Bemidji, sz.oo'a. 7651: hyul;fi Dalivered' COUR C RK. dla o%?rvbfl.te Court. G. 'W C. b