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RELIABLE MINNEAPOLIS CONCERNS ART AND MUSIC SGHOOLS INNEAPOLIS SCHOOL OF ART Painting, Tilustrating, Modeling. D e ) and Nieht Classea, For T forated Catalogue apply to Registrar, 851 McKnight Bldg. SCHOOL OF MUSIC, ORATORY !QHHSON AND DRAMATIC ART. Send for klgt. 70 South 11th Street. GUSTAVUS JOHNSON Institution of the Northwest MINHEAPOLIS SGHOOL OF MUsiC Hn, I‘W. Huh n M Ilfll, Wilam . Oratory. 244 Eighth SL Se., Miassapelis. ‘for Catalogee “K" AUTO RADIATORS Osly RADIATOR FACTORY in the NORTHWEST digtor Construction & Pol‘;neen in Radiator e Com w in akes. WORKMANSHIP GUARAN- TEED. Wirlte for prices. g20_ g22_524 2 Todd Mfg. Co. izeesseii - PORTABLE STEEL BUILDINGS Gnruu Cottages, Tool Sheds, ywhers. 0 METAL SHELTER CO. 1009 Hennepin Ave. TRADE SCHOOLS B Ygg.r,?m..!’!‘&&%'!‘é,'&fi!s A MARR OF COM. BLDG. mm:uous 557 Y B AP ORI vl Tastrustion. Send for Bookies LIGHTNING RODS tect family and bulldings against htning i &Y"E’yoflx m’x’ndmu with 6o Tovnaley Systems b7 ega TOWNSLEY MFG. €O, 113 ich strSils HOTELS HOTEL CAMFIELD ¥ Croe ST venve Binglo rooms with private bath 51, double rooms $1.50 Convenient toall dej Niodornand Up-te-Date Hotel A"en Cor.3rd St. and 2nd Ave. So. INSURANCE—FUNERAL SERVIGE FIRST CLASS --$100 FUNERAL SERVICE, $10 to 100 Cash Bencfit; 16c per month and up. Local Wipresentatives Eriondly Service Society, Kasota Bldg. RUG AND CARPET CLEANING MINNEAPOLIS CARPET CLEANING & RUG FACTORY Beautiful FLUFF RUGS Made From Your qlfl Carpets J. 0. Andersen, 2112 Lyndale Ave. S., Minneapolis. PATENTS AND TRADE MARKS Williamson & Merchant PATS k24 J&APE BoLICITORS OF UNITED STATES AND FOREIGN PATENTS 926-935 METROPOLITAN BLDG., MINNEAPOLIS, MINN. Plymouth | Sanitarium” = Specialist Av. N. el cumatism MINNEAPOLIS | Nervousness, Blood Diseases and | Rest for the Tired and Wornout | Tlustrated book ona Write for names of cured paticn Bal._d Instruments he best--The M. ot ATTORNEY for BELTRAMI COUN To the Voters of Beltrami County: I am a candidate for re-electicn to the office of County Attorney for Bel- trami County. I appreciate the con- fidence the people of this county placed in me in electing me to this| office, and if re-elected I will con- tinue to regard the office as a public employment and as a public trust— not as a pclitical office. My policy will be in the future as in the past—strict attention to the county’s business, common-sense busi- ness management, economy, and an honest endeavor to pertérm my du- ties impartially as the attorney for} the county: I solicit not only your vote, but your open and active support. In return I promise ycu the best efforts of which I am capable. GRAHAM M. TORRANCE, Bemidji, Minn. BEMIDJI WELDING & MACHINE CO. IMILLIONS CLASH IN THE EAST Four Great Battles Under_Way. NO DECISIVE RESULT REAGHEDAT ANY POINT Austrian Report of Conflicts Now in Progress. Vienna, via Rome, Oct. 2—Four gi1- gantic battles and two fort bombard- ments, involving fully 6,000,000 men, are in progress in the eastern theater of war. At no_point has there been any.de- cisive result and it will be several days before the fighting will reach a crisis. General Rennenkampf, with 1,000,- 000 Russian troops, is endeavoring to ts [resist General von Hindenberg’s ef- forts to cross the Niemen between Drussenkenrie and Grudenkno, in Russian Poland. The fighting along this line is of the most severe charac- ter. Up to the present it has been im- possible for the Germans to break through. Another German army is engaged with 500,000 Russians in the big pine forest of Augustowo, which is twenty- four miles long and thirty-five miles broad and is filled with small lakes and a canal that connects the Niemen and the Vistula. This German army was driven from the village of Augus- towo and is now being used to pro- tect Hindenberg's flank and rear. The great Russian central army un- der the direct command of the com- mander-in-chief, Grand Duke Nicholas, is made up of 1,000,000 fresh troops, who have been mobilized in Russian Poland to move against the main Ger- man army, which has been feverishly fortifying the entire line of the Sile- sian frontier. Big Battle. Predicted. This force was in contact with the lines of communication to Cracow. This fight, now little more than a h, is expected to develop into {the atest battle of the war in the {east, as the German troops engaged lare those who were withdrawn irow the west to try to stop the Russian ince. re are 1,000,000 to 1.500,000 Rus- Galicia moving in two pa - ines. The nort 1 column, which envelcped Przemysl, has now plsted the investment of Tarnow, miles east of Cracow. The fall Tarnow feared here, as the Rus- s {ar cutnumber the Austrian gar- rison and thére are no good reasons for trying to hold the city, as the troops that would be needed there will be of far greater value in Cra- ! cow. The second Galician army, travers- ing the southern line and overflowing to the passes of the Carpathian moun- | tains, captured Krosno after a despe- i rate resistance by the Austrians. { The combined German-Austrian ar- mies in the theater of war do not number 2,000,000, including all re-| servists, while the Russians have German advance guard, which has | |been pushed forward to protect the DR. HAMMANN, _Kaiser's Chief Censor ‘Gives Out All German War News. Dr. Hammann is the kaiser’s war «censor. He is chief of the bureau ‘which gives out the official bulletins of the war. Germans have confidence in him. They believe he is giving the; public only accurate news. They cite the fall of Maubeuge, France, as a case in point. This city was re-|@ ported captured by the Germans, but|# the French press bureau did not ad- mit it, and a report gained wide cir- culation that the forts were still hold- | § ing out. Later it was admitted that|# the town had fallen, thus confirming | the Berlin report. A recently patented anvil for cracking nuts is mounted on a dish to catch the nut meats. i Pioneer Want Ads Pay. from the Palace Meat Market easy, because we always give you the correct weight in addition to the best meats to be had. superior to the ordinary kind by a good deal. not carry two grades---one for the expert and one for " X the inexperienced buyer. est we can produce. whether you come in person or send for it. _tables at this market. We aim to carry 'everything seasonable at the lowest dinner. The Palace Meat Market - PHONE 200 MEAT BELL . | It’s not so hard to do this when you by your meats In fact we make 1t Point to any meat in this market and it will be We do All our meats are the choic- 3 That insures you good meat i The Green Goods Bill Ditto There is no good reason why you should not order - all your fresh vege- Try us for-your own satisfation, by giving your order for your Sunday Bemidji, Minn. more than 4,000,000 already on the scene. Yet at no point have the Rus- | sians scored a distinct victory since! the opening of the battles. i CHANGE OF VENUE DENIED’ ‘Court Holds Rooseveit Can Obtain | Fair Trial in Albany.’ Albany, N. Y., Oct. 2.—Justice Ches- | ter of the supreme court dismissed the application for a change of venue | made by counsel for Colonel Roose-! velt, against whom a suit for libel has | been brought by William Barnes, chairman of the Republican state | committee. Justice Chester held that Colonel Roosevelt could obtain a fair trial in . Albany county. Chairman Barnes sued for $50,000 ! damages. i Tax on Autos Substituted. ‘Washington, Oct. 2.—Democrats of the senate subcommittee on finance | voted to substitute for the tax of 2 cents a gallon on gasoline in the war | revenue bill a tax on owners of 25 cents per horsepower on automobiles and $1 per horsepower on automobile sales by manufacturers. British Take Ten Steamers. London, Oct. 2—The admiralty an- nounces that the British cruiser Cum- berland has captured, off the Camer- | oons river, in West Africa, the Ham- burg-American liner Arnfriend and nine mérchant steamers. Most of || Oxy-Acetylene Welding and machine work Bemidji, them contained general cargoes and considerable quantities of coal. Pioneer want ads brliig Tesults. Garments as “Printzess Week.” ducement to early buying we are going to of- fer, for this week only: All $26.50, $28.50 and $30 coats, except velours, at - $25.00 The week beginning October 5th has been chosen by sellers of Printzess Ready—to-Wear COPYRIGHTED BY. The Prinz Biederman Co As an in- All coats now selling for $22.50 and $20 for $18.50 These coats are new, strictly up to date in style, of splendld quality and of high class workmanship, and are well worth the .higher price asked So much has been said of Printzess quality, of their nobby styles, all wool materials, master workmanship and splendid fitting quali- ties that many think of the Printzess as being high priced. One visit will convince you that such is not the case. for them. We have inherited from the old management something like 25 coats; formerly,sold from , Printzess Week .$8 to $20 (last year’s coats) which we have placed in three lots at......$3.98, $4.98. $5 98- Bargains every one, and much the same as present styles LEST YOU FORGET—OCTOBER 5th TO 10th