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THE BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEER The Talk of window. Fashlonable Women are those pretty creations in Spring footwear now being displayed in our windows. are fresh from the style designers of UTZ & DUNN CO. Style Shoes of Quality Each shoe is a correct expression of what Dame Fashion calls ‘‘style.” They are pleasing to look at and equally pleas- ing in their faultless fit and economical wear —shoes that hold their shape better and therefore retain their graceful lines much longer than any other shoe of which we know. See the new colored top, side lace shoe in our The Bargain Store | | NOUONUO| 9 ] OB They SN NONSNONON SNV SN ONONOUOUOUN 0 CHARGE GF RINGERS By HAL SHERIDAN. New York, May 13.—So frequently the charge of professional ‘“ringers” on college teams foes unchallenged | that it is encouraging to find a man sport is conducted at a loss,” said Dr. Ebler. “It ig the surplus of re- ceipts over expenses of the football squad that makes possible three- fourths of the intercollegiate games. Intercollegiate contests are but the Best Thing for a Bilious Attack. “On account of my confinment in the printing office I have for years been a chronic sufferer from indiges- tion and liver trouble. A few weeks ago I had an attack that was so se- vere that I was not able to go to the case for two days. Failing to get natural expression of certain innate tendencies, characteristic of English and American youth and those of other nationalities who have come un- der their influence. It is the tend- ency to match one's strength and skill against that of another. “It is the same fundamental factor that accounts for all English and American sport, both amateur and professional, and is the cause of the Athletic Union, the Amateur Athletic Federation, the National Golf asso- clation, the National Amateur Base- ball association, the Public Schools’ Athletic leagues, Y. M. C. A. league, Young Men’s Catholic Athletic association, the American, National and Federal professional baseball leagues and the innumerable section- al state and city leagues and associa- tions of every sort. “Whenever a group of boys or young men associate together long enough to discover that certain. of them combined in a team are better than any other combination in the group, they become eager to try out their team against the team of some other group and thus, vicariously, the whole group pits itself against its neighbors, and the circle once started continues in ever widening arcs; reaching from the match between the teams of two neighboring street gangs to the great international con- tests between the teams representing the nations of the whole world as at Athens and Paris and St. Louis and London and Stockholm. Intercol- would be no intercollegiate athletics. In this they do not differ from any other type of organized inter-institu- tional sports. “Another fallacy is that intra- mural’ sports, for all students, will flourish if intercollegiate sports are cut out. This is founded on two ideas, both of which are fallacious; the first that the money saved by the elimination of the intercollegiate ex- pense could then be devoted to ‘sports for all the students;’ the other that intramural and intercollegiate activi- ties are antagonistic and cannot both to intramural sports except as stn- dents are taxed, or the college appro- priates cash from its regular funds, or endowment is provided by gen- erous alumni or others, “That intercollegiate and intra- mural athletics are not mutually ex- clusive of each other is shown by the fact that sports for all students are most highly developed in those col- leges and universities where there is the broadest development of intercol- legiate sport-—notably Harvard, Yale, Princeton, Michigan, Wisconsin and others.” ‘Whooping Cough. “When my daughter had whoop- ing cougr: sije voughed so hard at one time that she had hemorrhage of the lungs. 1 was terribly alarmed about her condition. Seeing Chamberlain’s Cough Remnedy so highly recommend- ed, I got her a bottle and it relieved the cough at ohce. Before she had finished two bottles of this remedy she was entirely well,” writes Mrs. S. F. Grimes, Crooksville, Ohio. Ob- tainable everywhere. PARK DISTRICT PLAN FAVORED BY BEMIDJI CITIZENS (Continued from Pake 1.) county. Would Be Better Off. It might be said that if all taxes in Beltrami county had been paid as promptly as Mr. Ruggles,’” that its financial condition might now be ceive a full consideration for his property. A Man of Great Wealth, Mr. Ruggles is a man of great wealth, has for years been engaged in business involving amounts running into the millions of dollars, and while he has the reputation of mak- ing good contracts and looking after the pennies, he bears the reputation of being absolutely truthful to his word, which is as good as his bond, and if the city of Bemidji takes the matter up with him along the proper lines and with the proper spirit, it The Finest THURSDAY, MAY 13, 1918, Ready Clothes Made NE of our ambitions is to have FEE i Hart this store known as the store s Where the finest, highest grade clothing 1s sold. There’s no way to have it known as that kind of a store un- less we first make it that kind of a store, and that is what we've done. who don’t know yet how fine the best ready clothing is; how great the progress has been, in late years, designers can fitthe various shapes and dimensions of the human figure. You will find here in-suits the richest fabrics woven from Eng- land, Scotland and America. There are still a good many men -clothes ought to be. Schaffner & Marx clothes represent all of these fabrics. We feature these goods because they express our own ideas of what fine Suits and Top Coats of the finest qualities as high as $35' and good quality and extreme value for the man with $15, $20, $25 = z I=ll |1egiate athletics is but one phase of : S e C1, | ke YK b i [SnSnSuSISHS I nn@uQnOuuonuonflom@)uuounonnoj_ this universal instinct and tradition, m‘:;:il:i:eet:;e:é Senidii‘bope Ghat when [l 101 style des1gnmg in fine tallormg .Young" men” and young s — E— ——-. |which is seen in its worst phase inf, o F L Srcenton ia M 2 2 . 4 “jdeas are at your esting. the Rurbeut war + the objest | RUEEIES. or is representative, i¢ win [ 100 the use of the finest fabrics, the [l service here. There's a " " “‘Gate receipts’ are not the objee i S A . . _# i . “With the exception of To0tball oy i crecilegiate athletics. They are| ¢ Tecelved in the spirit in which the | richest linings; how perfectly the || distinctive tone of youth nearly every other intercollegiate |egsential, for without them there | SUE8eSton is made. He should re- running through our young men’s clothes and the ser- vice with which we sell them; the former are just what you want and the lat- ter is sufficiently advisory without being officious. us $15, $20, $25. A Who can speak with authority on the|any relief from any other treatment, | be successfully conducted in the same | will no doubt be met halt way hy|Jj Money > Mail Orders subject. Such a man is Dr. George |I took three of Chambérlain’s Tablets | institution. him. 1t is to be hoped that the ef- | Cheerfully Prom_ptly W. Ebler, professor and director of jand the next day I felt like a new| ‘‘The elimination of intercollegiate | forts of the council, Commercial club |l Refunded W. co: Filled physical education at the University of Wisconsin. Dr. Ebler speaks plainly and his theories are inter- man,” writes H. C. Bailey, editor Carolina News, Chapin, S. C.. Ob- tainable everywhere. sports will automatically cut off the income from those sports and there will be no funds therefore to devote ACT NOW BOUND FOR WA-VILLE Bemidji's Summer Resort Lake Shore and Back Lots are offered for sale at prices of $25, $35, $40, $45, $50, $100, $150, $200, $225, $250, $275, $280, $2.90 and $300 on terms as follows: On lots from $25 to $50 per lot—$1.00 down and $1.00 per month till one-half is paid. Balance on or before ten years at 5 per cent. On lots $60 to $150 per lot—$2.00 down and $2.00 per month till one- third is paid. Balance on or before ten years. On lots $160 to $300, $5.00 down, $5.00 per month till one-third is paid. Balance on or before ten years. A cash discount of 5 per cent allowed on the down payment if paid in full at time of purchase, and 6 per cent discount for spot cash in full. and Merchants’ association will be crowned with success. Did Much for Virginia. It may be interesting to citizens or Bemidji to know that Mr. Ruggles aided in building at Virginia one of the largest saw mills’ then in the country and that he gave financial assistance in the construction of the Duluth, Virginia & Rainy Lake rail-| — ? Most People uy at Speci road. These two enterprises made it possible for Virginia to become the city that it is today, and Bemidji may well afford to invite and be the re- cipient of consideration by Mr. Rug- gles. How Mrs. Harrod Got Rid of Her Stomach Trouble. “I suffered with stomach trouble for years and tried everything I heard of, but the only relief I got was temporary until last spring I saw Chamberlain’s Tablets advertised and procured a bottle of them at our drug store. 1 got immediate relief from that dreadful heaviness after eating and from pain in the stom- ach,” writes Mrs. Linda Harrod, Fort Wayne, Ind. Obtainable every- where. KING SAYS MOMENT NOT OP- PORTUNE TO QUIT NEUTRALITY (Continued from Fage 1) for peace giving as it did, the Greek a preponderance over the Turk- ish Whlch it has since maintained. His majesty made no effort to con- ceal his joy over the result of this successful coup over the Turks. “Have you seen those warships?” he inquired. “Have you beén on|. board of them? They are magnifi- cent ships and I have been on them under all conditions. 'When firing their gunnery is excellent. They have contributed materially toward the development of the Greek navy and will continue to do so for years.” On receiving me the king inquired anxiously about my trip through Ser- bia and the extent of the typhus fever there. I told him what I observed. “You were fortunate to escape without contracting the disease,” he said. “The queen and myself ascer- tained at first hand from the Red Cross physicians the actual condi- tions. We learned with sincere re- gret of the heavy losses of your doc- tors and nurses, but we have the ut- most confidence in the ultimate suc- cess of their mission, which while serving Serbia, protects the interests of Greece.” A neutral correspondent of a Paris newspaper, who traveled in Austria brought back a2 posteard German Uhlang passing under the showing | J Bemidji, Minn. SUBSCRIBE FOR THE PIONEER rices Like to al —And there is no stock of merchandise which 1s of greater interest than the hardware stock. —1It is-a known fact that when we offer mer- chandise at Special Prices the public has that confidence ig our advertisements necessary to thoroughly satisfy. ——You will know at a glance that what we offer below regularly sells for more money. Cultivate the “Palmer Habit.’ saving to you. H. & M. Paints, per gal . $2.25 Other Good Brands $1.85 and $2.00 Linseed Oil, pare, per gal. . 80c St. Louis White Lead' . . 8%c Nails, per 100 Ib. base . . $2.75 Wire Screen, 16 msh, per sq. ft., 3c Hand Saw . . . . . 75 Rales, 2 foot . . . . . l0c Square - oo EUGEEE G Level Hatchet Hammers . . . . . Cross Cut Saws . . . Best grade 3-ply Roofing Screen Doors . . 20 gal. Garbage Cans . . 10 gal. Garbage Cans . . It will mean a Large size Galv. Tubs, No. 3, 59 50c $1.25 $1.90 $1.25 to $4.00 $1.35 $1.25 (Mineral rights reserved.) Wa-Yille cottages now under construction. We build them for you— will you be next? We offer special terms on monthly payment plan. Call or write J. J. OPSAHL, The Home Builder T. J. TUPPER, Agent Arc de Triomphe in a fancied occu- pation of Paris, Tape Measure . . . . 25 Electric Sad Iron, 10 yr. guar. $3.00 A. B. PALMER Your Hardware Man The matching of coins has been brought down to an exact science by the invention of a machine for that purpose. A want ad will sell it for you ADD!T'ONAL ‘WANT ADS Too Late To Classify A A A AAAAAAAAS ‘WANTED—Scrub girl Apnly Hotel Markham,