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i " launched through The- Bemum Daily Pmer.r THE. BEMIDJI PIONEER PUB. CO. Publishers and Proprietors. Telephone. 31. Entered at the post .office at Bemidji, Minn,; as second-class matter under Act of Congress of March 3, 1879. Published every afternoon except Sunday No attention paid to anonymous con- tributions. Writer's name must be known to the editor, but not necessarily for publication. Communications for the Weekly Pio- neer should reach this office not later than Tuesday of each week to insure publication in the current issue. Subscription Rates. One month by carrier. One year by carrier... Three months, postage pal Six months, postage paid. One year, postage paid.. The Weekly Pioneer. Eight pages, containing a summary of the news of the week. Published every Thursday and sent postage paid to any address for $1.60 in advance. "HiS PAPER REPRE;ENTED FOR FOREIGN ADVERTISING BY THE AN} z»s; ESDELIATION . GENERAL OFFICES NEW .YORK AND CHICAGO ARANCHES IN ALL THE PRINCIPAL CITIEX Our Slogan: 25,000 Population in 1925” “Bemidji Editors to Aid Development. There is no means for the devel- opment of the state of Minnesota that will bring greater results than the project offered and suggested by the Minnesota Editorial association at its last annual gathering in St. Paul —a ‘“Newspaper Week,” when all of the papers of the state, with the co- operation of their readers and pat- rons, would unite in setting forth the resources and possibilities of the state of Minnesota, says H.,C. Hotaling, editor of the Mapleton Enterprise, and former president of the State Editorial association, in an article which appeared in the Monday issue of the Minneapolis Journal. Minnesotans themselves hardly realize the great wealth of the North Star state, until they commence to delve into the returns from the soil, the mines and the quarries, to sum up the vast herds of cattle and horses that feed upon our nutritious grasses. There is no more favored land in the galaxy of states. We have the soil which brings forth year after year crops that surprise the world. We have the greatest iron mines in the world, likewise the largest flour- ing mills. We have markets right at home in our great cities for many of our products and consumer alike in the saving of freight rates. This newspaper week would cause Minnesota to be known as never be- fore. Every publication throughout the length and breadth of the state would unite in giving publicity to the facts as to what marvelous possibili- ties await the artizan and the man who is willing to work in this great commonwealth. These publications would be sent broadecast, not only over this country, but to many foreign lands, with the result that. all sign boards would point Minnesotaward. There was never a time when such a move would bear greater fruit than right now. All Europe is torn with war. Many of its citizens are look- ing with anxious eyes to this land across the sea. Men in arms on re- turning home will have within their breasts an ambition to seek homes in a land of freedom, a land free from oppressive war taxes. The tide is flowing our way and the only ques- tion: Shall we take advantage of it? The rural papers of the state are and always have been willing to boost, and it is evident that the city papers will be equally eager to do likewise, for the time has arrived when the cities realize that their own prosperity, their own future, de- pends upon a development of the ter- ritory that surrounds them. They have grown faster than the country which supports them, and unless an added stimulus can be given to the rural districts they must of necessity soon reach a. point where there will be at a standstill and ’tis well said | has. ever:seen? from clover, timothy and corn. | There:i8 no-cemmunity in-which the editor cannot secure actual evi- dences of success from small begin- nings that will make intensely in- teresting reading to the man who wants to build up a home for him- self.’ These :stories will- be repro- duced time and again as they pass from :exchange to:exchange; it will be like an endless film rolling on, re- vealing the wonders of a land blessed beyond. compare. Newspaper - week is: not an idle dream. It will bring results. the immigration bureau of the state, of the Civic.and .Commerce assacia- tion clear the way for. the greatest publicity campaign that Minnesota The country printer is a willing ally. R B RS RS S R Rl S S * EDITORIAL EXPLOSIONS * KR KKHK KK KKK KK Judge Ensign of Duluth, at the age of 82, has just completed his twenty- seventh year on the bench. Accord- ing to Postmaster General Burleson, Judge Ensign is obsolete and should retire into obscurity.—St. Cloud Times. . The legislature has adjourned and after a time we shall know just what it did and didn’t do. Fortunately it did mostly' the latter and for this we should-be thankful. If it is actually true ‘that it kept the appropriations below the 1913 mark, as is alleged, we have cause for thankfulness. It demonstrated, too, the utter fallacy of the non-partisan law and it is too bad that it was not repealed. How-| ever, let us be thankful that it was no worse.—Preston Times. —— ‘There is perhaps not another city in the Unitd States with a Commer- cial club that compares with the one that blesses Duluth. This club has an immense membership and each member is a persistent worker for a greater and better Duluth. It is an extremely aggressive organization and generally gets what it goes af- ter. Duluth’s Commercial club fis certainly filling-its part. Its achieve- ments are many and its efforts have proved beneficial to the city it rep- resents and to St. Louis county as win| cialist at the State Agricultural col- lege, Wherever -he--go it -4ive, state. When it is considered that the average farm hen lays only about sixty eggs a year, and that:she:could| - easily double that figure, there -is reason .for. the, belief. that we may reach the $50,000,000 mark soon. When we do we will ask the state legislature to set-aside a:“Hen:Day,” just-as:we do-Arbor:Day —.or the Fourth of July, so that we may give the good old Minnesota.hen her due: TFHEY .LIKE:-PRISON. LIFE. -A: Class of Ffl‘lo’ll'n Japan.Who Try to Break Into Jail. In_Japan. there are people who make sham confessions in order to obtain.a period of the comparative warmth and comfort of a -Japanese ‘prison. “The Japan Mail says: ‘“The ‘police slang of vthe ~capital bhas words: to-describe aud distinguish, these -persons. Meshi- kui,". or .the .rice .criminal,. will steal some small article from a shop.front in such a way as to be seen doing it. He then makes a bolt of it, pursued by the master of the shop, or some' faith- ful kozo, but presently allows-himself to:be caught and handed to:the po- lice. ' He ‘has to’‘do: time’: for ihis ;pre: tended - theft: ‘but his rice:is: secured for a period, and when that.period has elapsed he will allow bimself to:be caught again. “The ‘unandon,’ or ‘eelbow!’ criminal, is wilier than the one just mentioned. He does not actually commit a erime, such as will put him into the convict side of the prison, but allows himself t> - be found looking in .suspicious places, underneith the broad verandas of a temple, or in'the garden-of a pri- vate house. He gets into prison :all right, but he secures the more generous treatment of the house of detention, which is to the fare of the convict jail what a ‘dish of -eels is to a bowl of plain rice. “The ‘kuruma’ is a criminal who makes a sham confession in order to get o free raflway ride. Recently a man gave himself up to the police in Sendai as the perpetrator of the crime. He was brought to Tokyo and his story investigated. It was found to be & pure fabrication.” Nineteen of the 30 young women who are to be graduated as physie- ians from the Women’s Medical col- lege in' Philadelphia this spring, have already received appiontments to hospitals as resident physicians. well. The splendid work of this band of boosters has caused state- wide attention. This commercial club has been exceedingly active since its organization and without it Duluth could never have made her remarkable stride. It is not our sole purpose to herein boost Duluth, nor its Commercial club, but to cite facts that furnish a good example of the asset of such a body to a city, town or village.—Gonvick Banner. IR SRS SRR SR RN * HEN SHOULD REPLACE * * INDIAN HEAD ON NICKLE * KHEKKHHEKKK KKK K K KF Minnesota should petition Uncle Sam to put the hen on the nickle in place of the buffalo and the Indian head. In 1900 it was reported by the Minnesota Agricultural college that the value of poultry and poultry pro- ducts in Minnesota was $7,000,000. We all gasped. A year ago, as a result of a joint investigation by the State Agricul- tural college and the St. Paul Union Stockyards company, it was found that the stupendous sum of $34,- 000,000 had been reached. It is still growing. Nor must it be forgotten, says H. A. Nourse, poultry judge at the Min- nesota. State Fair, September 6 to 11, that this $34,000,000 only included the market value of poultry and poul- try products for food purposes. Hun- dreds of thousands of dollars should have been added to cover the actual selling value of eggs for hatching and fowls for breeding and exhibi- tion. Lots of Minnesota eggs for hatching have sold for $10 or more a setting this year, and many fancy fowls have brought from $10 to $100 a bird. The growth of the industry proves its profitableness. Eggs pay more than the grocery bill on many farms in Minnesota, while city flocks add to thousands of wage incomes. Still the United States does not supply all its home demand for eggs. Eggs are imported from China, Japan, New Zealand, Australia, Canada and Mexico. “An egg a day” is the slogan of N. E. Chapman, veteran poultry spe- WONDERFUL REMEDY IN TIME TO-SAVE- WOMAN | that stagnation is decay. The movement must be forward, not backward. The immigration bu- reau has accomplished a great deal for the growth of the state; and has' been \ably. assisted: by the . railways and commercial organizations of the cities, but all of their efforts have not brought forth greater results-for the money invested :thancan be:secured from a newspaper week. ‘The editors offer their cqlumns without money and without price for the advancement of the state which | they so loyally serve. All that is necessary is for a guiding hand to mark out the preliminary work, to secure a unity of effort, and millions of papers setting forth the resources and: possibilities: of this state will be the mails. In simple language will be:told the:stor- ies of ithe - prosperity secured along dairy lines, of the wealth amassed in stock raising, of the.farms paid for T “Mrs.:Williams: Gets on: Way to Health s After :First Do of Tun.mont. Mrs. Peter WilHams of 2749 Eight- eenth st,, S. Minneapolis, was desper- ately -ill - with. stomach trouble. She faced the probability of an operation. After taking Mayr's Wonderful Remedy, discovered for her by a kind friend, she found herself on the way back to health. Mrs. Williams wrote: “I have taken Mayr's Wonderful Remedy for the fourth time and I am feeling like a new woman. I am en- tirely out of.pain. I had been sick A neutral correspondent of a Paris newspaper, who traveled in Austria brought back a postcard showing German Uhlans passing under the Arc de Triomphe in a fancied occu- pation of Paris. Mme. De Thebes, the pythoness of all Europe, who foretold the present war, now predicts that the war will end in July. Lady -Battimore Gake TheMost Popular Cake This Season By Mrs. Janet McKenzie Hill, Editor of the Boston Cooking School Magazine “This is considered by many cooking authorities the finest cake that:can.be made, - though in reality it is not at all difficult. - . KC Lady Baltimore Cake sugar; 1 cup rmlll, 1 teaspoonful vose water; 3% cups flour; 3 level teaspoon- fuls K C-Baking Powder; whiles of 6 eggs, beaten dry. Cream the butter and beat in the sngar gxndually. Sift together, three times, the flour-and baking powder, and'add to the butter and sugar, llfiernntelywlth the milk.and rose water. the egg whites. Bakein three-layer cake pans. Put the layers together with the following frosting. NoTe—The cake is a large one and sells at for_eighteen months and four of our best.doctors could .do nothing for me. They ~all egreed that an operation was the only thing. One day a man told my: husband of your remedy and that night he brought it-home to me."” Mayr’'s-Wonderful: Remedy gives per- manent results: for-stomach, liver and intestinal allments. . Eat as much and whatever you like. No, more distress after eating, -pressure of gas-in the stomach and around the heart. Get one bottle-of your druggist-now and:try it on an absolute guarantee—if not satis- factory money.will-bereturned, ‘Women's Exchanges for $1.50. - One cup butler; 2 cups granulated | . Lastly, add |: : Frosting for Lady Baltimore Cake Three cups granulated sugar: 1 cup doiling water; whites of 3 eags:. 1 cup. chopped yaisins: 1 cup chopped nut-meats; 5 Ags cut 1n thin slices. Stir the sugar and water until the sugar is dissolved, then let boil without stirring until the- syrup from a -spoott will: spin a long thread; pour upon the whites of the eggs, beaten dry, constantly meanwhile. Continue the beating until the frosting is cold; add the fruit.and spread upon-the’ cake. The K C Cook's Book contains ninety just such delicious recipes,—bread, muffins, cakes -and:pastry. You can secure a copy f7ee byltml A ng the certificate packed in every 25cent can of K C Bakin 10 the JAQUES MFG. CO., Shicago. . Small cans do not contain Cook's + Book certificates. [0 DARKEN HAR APPLY “SAGE TEA A few. -pphnuom of s-'e Tea and Sulphur brings back its vigor, _color, gloss-and" thickness. Common garden sage brewed into a heavy tea with sulphur and -alcohol added, will turn gray, streaked and-faded hair beautifully' dark and:luxuriant,.re- mave every bit of -dandruff, ‘stop sealp itching and falling hair. Just a few applications will' prove a revelation iff your hair is fading, guy or dry, serag- gly and ‘thin. - Mixing the Sage Tea and| Sulphur. recipe at lmme, _though, troublesome. An easier way is to get ready-to-use tonic, costing about 50-cent a large- bottle at drug stores, known i “Wyeth's.Sage and Sulphur Hair Rem- edy,” thus avoiding a lot of While wispy, gray, faded-hair.is: not| sinful, we all desire to retain our youthsi| ful. appearance and attractiveness. By darkening your hair with Wyeth’s Sage) and Sulphur, no-one can tell, becanse: does it so~naturally, so-evenly. :You jus dampen- & sponge or soft brush with it} and :draw-this: through your; hair, one small strand-at-a” time;:by:mos all gray.-hairs—have disappesred, “after.-another application or $wo, hair beeomes beautifully-dark, £l] ‘Office iand:Darage 418-420BeitramisAve. e . ;If ; somehousewizes ripadvert- - ently nsdibaking powder which contains alum it.is Usmally for twoumeasones—iack of knowledge as to what it-is-made | ‘of , or because -itccosts:dess.rthan. . & stendard sbrand: lMkesRoyali-Bak- +ingPowder, which-isimadetf rom .cream.of tartar. There is nouldngemsany reasen ~for. lack.of knowbedge; winve the : label on every'baking': peowderccan shows in plain’English justiwhdt iti'centains. ' If‘the‘label on yourqcen-names alum as one of the N ingredients, and you are in doubt about “its unhealthfulness, your doctor can enlighten you. As to the lower cost, there is very little differenca in prac=- tical use, about one.cent for a "whole cake or pan of biscuits—a mere.trifle when you consider the wvast difference in healthfulness . in faver: of food'made with Royal :Baking ‘Powder. ROYAL BAKING"POWDER’CO. New York Aparatus: with- which 'garage doors Under the auspices of a govern- may ‘be’opened or closed-by:a person |ment bureau Chinese carp will be without leaving:the:seat of an:auto- |imported .into Philippine . waters mobile ‘has been 'patented. where there is a dearth of food. fish. The ‘matching of coins has been By the opening of a-wireless st: brought down to an exact science|tion ‘at'Belize recently British Hon- by therinvention. of a machine for|duras wasgiven radia communication that purpose. with the rest of- the world. Skin Soothed and ‘Healed by D.D.D. Itching skin, ugly _eruptions, scaly scalp, Bozema and its allied discases ali|away, thereby relieving that awful itch yield instantly. to. the.soething influence | immediately.” A .50c bottle wlll prove of the mild, simple wash, the D.D.D.|this much to you. Prescription for Bozems. ‘We are 'so-confident that D.D.D. can From .our experience Wwith sk reach_all cases, that we offer you the. ferers, we are convinced that first full size bottle on the guaranteg . sease. is. caused by germs. bene: that if: it fails to.do as wse say, we w(’] outer skin that spread .and multiply [ Will refund tha purchase pr until. they become a mass of gnnwing{2lone to:jud, ). " D. Soap aias o enimals, -DD.D, a penetrating liquig; | keeping the Skin pure} ask us. Barker’s:-Drug- Store, 217 3rd" St., Bemidji, Minn. A & 5 'Especlally resistent to shock, strain and -vibration, the Ford"is the sturdlest most :durable-carin the world, Vanadium steel, ‘heat<treated:by the Ford process, accounts ifor the'strength -and light weight of the Ford:car. Strong, light, simple and effi- - rcient; the-Ford givesservice and:satisfac- tion~ tor-more:than 700,000 owners every day, at:an: average’eost'of two cents a‘mile for.operation:and: maintenance. ‘Buyers will share in,profits if we sell at re- tail 800,000 new Ford cars between August 1914 and August1915. Touring Car '$490, Runabout $440; Town . Car $690; Coupelet $750; Sedan 5975 f. 0. b. Detrmt with all eqmpment ..On display and sale at C.'W. Jewett:Co., Inc. Phone:474 - Bemidjl; Minn. BRGNS ) FOR: RENT:CHEAP—Small furnished destroys these gérms and-washes them | HOW TO ANSWER BLIND ADS. All ‘ads signed with numbers, or initials,; care Pioneer- must;be an- swered sby: letter addressed to ‘the number given in the ad. Pioneer em- ployes iare not permitted.to tell:who any advertisen is. . Mail.or send your answer to Pioneer No. , or Initial ,.and we forward it to the ad- vertiser. D e WANTED--TO RENT—4 or 5-room Minn ‘Ave. . Address “F,’” care of Pioneer. | WANTED—Clean (cotton :rags free from buttons. = Pioneer Office. WANTED—Second hand - household “ gopds. M. E:Ibertson. HELP WANTED. ‘WANTED—Salesman -to sell =our guaranteed 'Oils and Paints. Bx- perience unnecessary. Extremely « profitable offer to right party. THE EMPIRE OIL COMPANY, Cleve- land, Ohio. P A SR VRl U o POSITIONS WANTED. |WANTED—By German -girl, -sewing |- or, place to do housework. 321 America Ave. WANTED—Work by 'day. Pioneer office. FOR RENT, FOR: RENT—Seven-room :house, 316 America- Ave.,. partly modern. In- quire at. 311 America Ave. Inquire house; also unfurnished rooms close in. 'Phone 637. FOR RENT—Seven-room house, cor- ner Irvine avenue and 8th Street. T. C. Bailey. FOR _ RENT — Summer around Lake Bemidji. & Winter. FOR RENTSuite of three office rooms for rent over First National ‘Bank. FOR RENT—Two office rooms. Ap- ply W. G. Schroeder. FOR RENT—House in Reynolds & Winter. FOR RENT—Seven-room house. A. Klein. cottages Reynolds Bemidji. FOR SALE. FOR SALE—At new wood yard, wood all lengths delivered at your door. Leave all orders at Ander- son’s Employment Office, 206 Min- nesota Ave. Phonme 147. Lizzle Miller, Prop. W‘ —A lavallier with-three Greek jetuors engraved, between Lake _. Shore .and 916. Minnesota avenue. Return to the Pioneer office for reward. FOUND—Pair of . gloves. Pioneer office. Call at Louisville, Ky., has a-woman who holds the position of municipal serun- ber and it is her duty to see that all tenement homes are kept as clean as the health department decides the | same shall be. VETERINARY SURGEON W. K. DENISON, D. V. M. VETERINARIAN Phone. 164-2 Pogue’s Livery DRAY LINE TOM: SMART DRAY AND TRANSFER : Safe and ‘Piano Moving Res. Phone 58 818 America ‘Ave Office Phone 12. DENTISTS. DR.. D. L.-STANTON, DENTIST Office in. Winter - Block DR J. T. TUOMY, DENTIST Glbhon: Block Tel. 230 North of Markham Hotel LAWYERS GRAHAM M. TORRANCE, LAWYER Miles Block Phone 660 D. H. FISK, Court Commissioner ATTORNEY AT LAW Office second tloor O'Leary-Bowser Building. FOR SALE—S8everal good residence lots on Minnesota, Bemidji and Dewey avenues. Reasonable prices; easy terms. Clayton C. Cross. Of- fice over Northern Nat’l Bank. FOR SALE—A beautiful large col- onial cottage. Large stone fire- place. Large grounds. Joins Nor- mal School Park. At Grand Forks Bay. Reynolds & Winter. FOR SALE—A good five-passenger Ford auto, in first class condition. ‘Will consider good horse as part in-trade.. Call 522 First St. or Phone 117. FOR SALE—Lake shore lots in Ash- ley Park, Pine Beach Park, Oak- wood Beach —and Chautauqua .Beach. Reynolds & Winter. FOR RENT—Five-room house with sewer and water. Second house north of the Norwegian church. Inquire at Schneider Bros. FOR SALE OR TRADE--One-half ton Veerac truck. Would trade for 4- ft. birchwood. Ask for demonstra- tion. Koors Bros. FOR' SALE—Good nine-room modern house, three lots; would accept farm land as part payment. Berman Insurance Agency. [ *| FOR SALE—Team of driving horses, weigh about 900 1bs. each. Also carriage. Phone 501-J. Ed Akre, Nymore. FOR SALE—Nice cottage in Ashley Park. Choice lake shore lot. Four blocks from.station. Reynolds & ‘Winter. NUGH: A, WHFTNEY | Furmtnre «Undarmmg : I.am. now prepared to ! ..take care of your needs {in the undettakmg ,line : 4.0, 0..F., lld(. > PHONES: * 223 “Res. T19-W. C. W. JEWETT COMPANY Incorporated - g GARAGE AND R.ERMR SHoP i ' Things'We Do: REPAIR, electric:starters; - magnetos all-classes | of electrical and carburetor trouble, |RE'BORE Ford cylmders,mAGNE'{‘IZF: Ford mag- VULGAN[ZING iniall its branches; new pmwu, can’t burniwork. ; {iWe Invite Gompetition and Guarantee Satisfaction |Distributors, FORD, OVERLAND, CADILLAC Bunidn, anesom p|FOR SALE—Large cottage in Lake- |1 side -and one-tenth interest in.a 20-acre park. Reynolds & Win- iter. FOR ' SALE—Cottage and large lot at Riverside. Reynolds & Winter. ‘FOR SALE—Fine residence lots in Bemidji. Reynolds & Winter. FOR SALE—Five-passenger Buick. John ‘Wilcox. Phone 967-J. FOR SALE—Fine homes in Bemidji. Reynolds & Winter. 'OR SALE—11% ft. show case, glass, at 313.Minn. Ave. - ___ PHYSICIANS, SURGEONS DR.. ROWLAND GILMORE PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office—Miles Block DR. E. A. SHANNON, M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office in Mayo Block Phone 396 Res. Phone 387 DR. C. R: 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 National Bank Bemidji, Minn. Office Phone 36 Res. Phone 73 DR. E..H. SMITH PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office Security Bank Block DR. EINER JOHNSON PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Beinidji, Minn. AR RS S S S R E R RN * RAILROAD TIME CARDS + L R Ry MPLS., RED LAKE & MAN, 2 North Bound Arrives 1 North Bound Leaves.... S0Q RAILROAD 162 Kast Bound Leaves 163 West Bound Leave: 186 KEast Bound Leave: 187 West Bound Leaves. GREAT NORTHERN 33 West Bound Leaves....... 34 Bast Bound Leaves. 35 West Bound Leaves. 36 East Bound Leaves. 5 9:54 am Freight West Leaves’ Freight East Leaves at mso-r; & INTERKATIONATL Sough—Mpls. Ktc. Lv...... 8:16 am BT South—Mpls. Ete. Lv... . 11:20 pm 31 North—Kelliher L §:15 pm 33 North—Int. Falls. L 4116 am 7:30 am 6:00 am due North Bemidji 4:40 pm 46 Freight from Brainerd, due North- Bemidji. . «. 7:00 pm *Daily. o others daily except Sunday. NEW.PUBLIC LIBRARY. Open daily, excepi Sunaay, 1 to 6 p. m., 7 to 9 p. m. Sunday, reading room only, 3 to 6 p. m. FARMS FOR SALE. LAND FOR SALE—I have some wild :and -some ; improved land in :the best part ‘of Beltrami ' county for sale cheap. I am only handling my own land and for 'that -reason I can sell it cheap and on easy terms. Call or write. E..J. Swedback, Be- midji, Minn. y " FOR SALE—120 acres farm land, about 500 cords wood, -half hay land on-good stream, one mile from a town, terms liberal, price $20.00 per acre. W. G. Schroeder. ‘SALE OR TRADE—One hundred Ixty acresiof good clay land, three ‘milesifrom town. -Will take auto- " imobile_in part payment. Address _ G, Bemidji Pioneer. EER SR CESRSE R R R R * “PRICES-PAID TO FARMERS * AR LS SR ERE S LSRR RS Butter, Ib. .....c00000eiene.. 25¢ Eggsjdoz. ... eee.s 18¢ Potatoes, bu. . . 30¢ Rutabagas, bu. veeres 80 Carrots, bush. .............. 60¢ FURNITURE AND UNDERTAKING H' N. McKEE, Funeral Director Phone 178-W or R FUNERAL DIRECTOR 'y, E IBERTSON " UNDERTAKER . cottage. Would :prefer Beltrami or - -