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" RELIABLE MINNEAPOLIS| CONCERNS. ART AND MUSIC SCHOOLS EINNEAPOLIS SCHOOL OF ART rawing, Painting, Illustrating, Rndloratt. 10y and. Nignt Chasees. Hor e Catalogue apply to Registrar, 851 McKnight Bldg: iflgHH§0N ARBOPRAMAME ART, Sin for Klote 70 South 11th Sireet, GUSTAVOS Jmmmu Recosnized Leading Institution of the Northwest MIHNEAI.‘OI.IS SGHOOL OF Music QRATORY AND DRAMATI Willm H_Penig, D, Must; Obres . mn. Dir. Oratory. Q44 Eighth:SL-$6 Minneapoli, © $ond for atalogue K" v AUTO RADIATORS Only RADIATOR FACTORY.in the NORTHWEST Ploneers In Radiator Construction OQur Radiators Are Manutactured Com, ur_Facf e Repal Riakes. WORKMANSHIF GUARAN- TEED. Write for Drices. gg_go g4 | Todd Mfg. Co. i PORTABLE STEEL BUILDINGS Garages, Cottages, Tool Sheds. Ready to use—easily erected < anywhere, METAL SHELTER CO. 1009 Hennepin Ave. TRADE SCHOOLS e Your Own DRESSMAKER lernls LADIES TAlLORlNG COLLI PAUL Indlvldlml lnu.mcuon Send Ior Boollet LIGHTNING RODS Froteot your family and bulldin against 1y mnlns by squiping your bulldings with the Townsley Writ FOWNSLEY MFa. 60 4 485,50k =\ _EYES EXAMINED FREE * ‘Glasses Fitted and Guar« | - ranteed from $2.00 to $5.00. WHY PAY MORE? JAMES E. LEE OPTICIAN 528 Nicollet Ave. t SEWING MAGHINES F’ggmd,wmg ELMER, 708 st Ave. So. HOTELS - HOTEL CAMFIELD EISHTHSTRepr on Bingle rooms with private bath $1, double rooms $1.50 i Convenient toall d Modern and Up-t6-} té 'Cor. 3rd St.and 2nd Ave. So. INSURANCE—FUNERAL SERVICE FIRST CLASS -- $100 FUNERAL SERVICE, $10 to §100 Cash Bencfic; 16c per month and up.” Local Winneagtatives Eriondly Service Society, KasotaBidg. > _RUG AND CARPET GLEANING MINNEAPOLIS CARPET CLEANING & RUG FACTORY Beaumul FLUFF RUGS Made From Your Old Carpetd 0. Andersen, 2112 Lyndale Ave. S., Minneapolis. 3.0, Andorees, 2112 Lyndele Ave. 3 Mismeapolie PATENTS AND TRADE MARKS Williamson & Merchant PAREN % a4 TRAPE EOLICITORS OF UNITED STATES AND FOREIGN PATENTS 925-935 METRGPOLITAN BLDG., MINNEAPOLIS, MINN. HATS REMODELED Ladles’ and Gent’s Hats Skillfully Remodeled by Qld. Reliable Hatters at Rensonable Prices.Northwestern Hat Manufaccuring Company, 9 Central Avenue. SIGE TEN TURNS GRAY HAIR DARK It's Grandmother's recipe to bring color, lustre and thickness to hair when faded, streaked or gray. That beautiful, even shade of dark, ulossy hair can only be had by brewing » mixture of Sage Tea and Sulphur. “our hair is your charm. It makes or aars the face. When it f:bdes, turns ‘ray, streaked and looks dry, wispy and agbly just an application or two of and Sulphur enhances its appeax- e a hundredfold. l)on’t bother to prepare the tonic; you | van get from. any drug store a 50 cent LLle of “Wyeth’s Sage and Sulphur Tair Remedy,” ready to use. This can «lwaye be depended upon,to bring back the natural color, thickness and lustre of your hair and remove dandruff, stop scalp itching and falling hair. Everybody uses -“Wyeth’s” Sage and Sulphur because it darkens so naturaliy and evenly that nobody can teil it has been applied. - You simply dampen a sponge or soft brush with it and draw this through the hair, taking one small strand at a’time; by morning the gray hair has d:suppeared and after another | pplication it becomes beautifully dark nd appears. glossy, lustrous and abum- fant. ND HEADACHE OR NEURALGIA PAIN Get a 10 cent packa.ge of Dr. James’ Headache Powders and don’t suffer, When your head aches you simply must have relief or you will go wild. It’s needless to sufler when you ecan take a remedy like Dr. James’ Head- ache Powders and relieve the pain and neuralgia at once. the drug store now for a dime package of Dr. James’ Headache Powders. Don’t suffer! In a few moments you will feel fine—headache gone—no more neuralgia pain, Mrs. Joseph T. Landry of Donald- son, La., has a racing ostrich. Lady Wantage is said to be the richest woman in England. . |ing the French-British lines back on Send someone to . Niies Checked, Ber- Iin Reports, NOW OCCUPY NEW STRONG POSITIONS Claim to Have Driven French- British Lines Back at Num- ber of Points. Berlin, via The Hague, Sept. 17.— The official statement issued at the war office emphasized the fact that the Germans have now succeeded in checking the entire offensive move- ment of the allies in France. ] It is stated the German army is now - intrenched in new strong posi- tions and that at a number of points the Germans have succeeded in driv- their supports. So far as the entire situation in France is concerned the reports of the general staff all agree that the new pla.n of campaign ls working out 'SULTAN OF ZANZIBAR, . Marooned in Parls With Fif. teen Wives and Only $5. Cornelius Vanderbilt, possessor of millions, riding in state in a $7,500 automobile, has. been going without his" meals and sleeping in his clothes just like ordinary Americans stranded in Europe. But the plight of Vander- bilt is. a matter for jest beside that of the sultan of Zanzibar, revealed.by frantic cables from Paris. That po- tentate, with fifteen wives on his staff and only $5 in the world, is marooned in the war stricken city." England had forgotten, in the stress of war, to pay his pension, and he has appealed, to Myron T! Herrick, the American am- bassador, who informed Earl Grey, the British foreign' secretary, of the sultan’s plight. —_— E e ——————————— NAVAL BATTLE IN BALTIC in a satisfacfory manner, It is also made evident that the German forces which are operating in Bast Prussia continue to drive the Russmns back and it is expected that an invaslon in force of Russian Poland may be about to commence. General von Hindenberg is stnkmg at the Russian communjcations on the east bank of the Vistula and if his present. movement is successful the Russians will be compelled to with- draw largg forces from Galicia, thus relieving the pressure on the Aus- trian armies. Carrying Out Campaign Plans. On' both the eastern and western frontiers, the report says, the Ger- man forces are carrying out their general plan of campaign with unin- i terrupted success. The reason for a 'withdrawal of a portion of the German left wing in France is declared to be the presence of a superior French force. The op- erations about Verdun, however, are being pressed, it is said. The official war office statement de- nies emphatically the claims of the French ‘of a sweeping victory at the | battle of the Marne. It is explained that withdrawals to selected positions were made when the aerial corps re- ported the presence on the German front of an army overwhelmingly larger and it is emphasized that the | plans of the German staff provided at all times for overcoming unexpected resistance. The Germans hold the lines of the Meuse and have straightened out their lines so they are now in touch with the strong fortrsss of Metz and the German reserve lines in Lorraine. 'RUSSIANS CLOSING IN ON AUSTRIANS Petrograd, Sept. 17—With the Rus- sians closing in on the Austrians at Przemysl and the fortified positions along the San, and Grodek and Mier- eska alreadv occupied by the czar's ) troops, it was announced at army headquarters that the object of the campaign is rapidly coming to a sat- | isfactory conclusion. The Russians have advanced to- ward Jaslo. This would indicate that the advance against Cracow was not to wait, but would proceed, while the San river positions would be attack- ed by another force. i The Austrian army in the triangle formed by the Vistula and San is said to be attempting to break through the cordon now surrounding it, but it | is thought it must soon surrender. « In the capture of Grodek the Aus-i trians lost 400 .light field guns and 1 twenty howitzers. There is little information obtain- able of the situation in East Prussia, ! where the Germans, heavily reinforc- ed, are endeavoring to assume the of- fensive. It is stated the Russians are now maintaining their new' positions and that they have succeeded -in checking the German -advance, but rumors persist that the army of Gen- eral Rennenkampf had been very ;badly cut up in the recent fighting. { Tokio, Sept. 17.—Japanese n.viators have succeeded in dropping bombs on the German position at Kiaochou and doing much damage. The wireless ‘station was put out ‘of commission and the ‘flyers return- ed to the fleet uninjured. .. 3 It was officially stated thnt opera: tions were proceeding aB planned. No Information as to Outcome': of Engagement. London, Sept. 17.—Although it is accepted in official circles that a na- val battle has been fought in the Bal- tic, not a particle of information con- cerning the outcome is obtainable here. Dispatches from Petrograd refer to the presence of the Germans in the Gulf of Finland and to the‘r bombard- ment of “unprotected pos:tions,” but they are so badly mutilated by the censor that their information does not enlighten. Naval experts here declare that they do not believe the main Russian fleex has been in action.' Japs “Occupy Railway Station. Tokio, Sept. 17.—The railway sta- tion at Kiaochou, five miles:from the bay of that name and oppcsite Tsing- tau, the German. fortified port, was occupied on Sept. 13 by Japanese scouts, according to an official an- aouncement. When she graduates from the state university of California, Miss Yarlock Lowe expects to go back to China and practice law. “NORMAN” The NEWEST ARROW Clne!l. Pe-body & Co.. lnc. QU MEAT WHEE‘*—% KIDNEYS BOTHER if your Back hurts or Bladder is troubling you. No man or woman who eats meat regu- larly can make a mistake by flushing the kidneys occasionally, says a well-known authority. Meat forms uric acid which excites the kidneys, they become over- worked from, the strain, get sluggish and fail to filter the waste and poisons from the blood, then we get sick. Nearly all rheumahsm, heada.ches, liver trouble, ner\ousness, dizziness, sleeplessness and urinary disorders come from sluggish kidneys. 7Thé moment you feel a dull ache in the xidneys or your back hurts or if the urine is cloudy, offensive, full of sedi- ment, irregular of passage or attended by 2 sensation of scalding, stop eating meat and get | ‘about- four ounces of Jad | Salts from any, . phuma.éy, tablespoonful breakfast and will act fine. take a glasa of water_before from the %pd lemon/(juice, combined and has bee.h used for gener: afi h and umlluf,e the kidne; t ralxze he. ncnrlu ‘itiyurine 8o i catises irritati thus ending b ; Jad Salts i ey lithia-vu T should e few: days your knineys’ This fn,:uous salts is made |- Quick as a wink with the KODAK you get the above results. . “There is no better time than the fal} of the year in which to take pictures and there’s 1o better instru- ment to do it with than the KODAK,” says Oscar Er- wig of the Barker Kodak Dept. “Never in the history of this store have we been better able to serve you in this department. ~We have instruments from the vest pocket size to the more costly: -outfit. The Eastman KODAK is the most “ popular of them all. The very newest thing in KODAKERY is the AUTOGRAPHIC KODAK With it you can date and title your negatives 'permanently and almost instantly at the time you take them. We extend you a cordial in- vitation to inspect this, the greatest photogra- phic advance in twenty years.” l No 3A Autographic Kodak, Pictures 3 1=4 X 51-2 $22.50 OSCAR ERWIG Barker’s Drug and Jewelry Store Third Street Bemidji, Minn. Auction Sale Horses, Mares, Colts, Mules broken and unbroken Come and see the biggest and best mules ever brought to Bemidji ale Wed., | Sept_. 23rd At \Poug e