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We Are The Dealers in this locality for GERTAIN-TEED ROOFING. Find the Certain-teed roofing ad in any magazine or paper, read it and then do what it tells you to do, viz; “Go To The Dealer who will quote you price and give you further information about our products.” What Else Do They Make? Tarred Paper Wall Board String Felt Insulating Paper Plaster Board Roofing Paint Rosin Paper Roofing Gement Doadening Felt Metal Paint Garpet Paper Shingle Stain Slated Surface Roofing 1 ply 5-year Certain-teed roofing....... 81 35 a sq. 2 ply 10-year Certain-teed roofing......$1.60 a sq. 3 ply 15-year Certain-teed roofing......$1.85 a sq. GIVEN HARDWARE CO. Your Money Back 1f You Want It Bemidji, Minn, PHONE 57 -1 Hang Your Pictures H) welghing up to 100 bs. with Moore h Devie will not disfigure w e BEMIDJI AT THE ) Bemidji Pioneer Office SUPPLY STORE $1100—Quarter section loam soil, clay subsoil, level surface; county road runs through land; 4 a. cleared; 4 a. meadow; good drainage, considerable spruce and Jack pine timber; neighbor adjoins north side; school close at hand; old Bruner homestead; se qr. nw qr., SW qr. ne qr., nw qr. se qr. and ne qr. sw qr. 27-144-34; half m. r. Terms easy. $1200—160 a. level land on main auto road be- tween Park Rapids and Itasca State Park; mile to Yola P. 0., school and church; log house and barn; 5 a. broken; 20 a. cleared arid ready to break; first- class clover land; would make fine stock farm; A. D. Stevens homestead. Se qr. sw qr., s half se qr. and ne qr. se qr. 27-144-34. Half m. r. Terms eary. $1800—-154 a. level land, good sandy loam soil; 12 m. to town of Guthrie on G. N. with hotel eleva- tor and good schools; includes frontage on nice lake; 11 a. meadow and 8 a. in timothy; timber never cut and $500 of good standing pine timber. school on adjoining section; old Schultz homestead; -half m. r. sw qr. sw gr. 23, lot 2 and w half nw qr. 26-144- 34. $700 cash, balance three installments 69, The above lands are on an aiito road, 12 m. to Laporte with 300 population, Baptist church, bank, Commercial Club, creamery, three saw-mills and weekly paper. Combined tracts would make good stock farm, and could be handled for $1,000cash, balance easy terms. $2000—Very fine quarter, black loam soil in old well settled German community with improved farms on all sides; first class auto road, 12 'm. to county seat; estimator says “fine growth of pea vine and clover, and considerable timber; cheap at $15 an acre.” Old set of log buildings, easily repaired; $600 cash, balance annual instalments at 6. Half m. r. 50 M standing pine. E half ne qr, sw qr. ne qr. and nw qr. se gr, 20-142-35. Send for list farm, meadow and timber lands in Minnesota, Wisconsin and Dakota. The Farm Lands Investment Go. 632 Security Bidg. Minneapolis Hubbard Gounty | KKK KK AR KKK KRR T R E KR KKK x k& TEAMS IN DOUBLES HANDICAP MATCHES BEMIDJI TENNIS KA KKK KKK KKK KK KKK IR E KKK KK KKK KKK KK KH : STANDINGS OF Barker and Denu (15) Randahl and Strickland (30) Lakin and White (15) D. L. Stanton and T. C. Bailey (30) Manaugh and H. M. Stanton (30).. Brown and Lindebergh (s) ... Brooks and Hedges (8).. Baer and Wilcox (30) ... Johnson and Halgren (30) . Wedge and Palmer (30) Nelson and N. E. Given (30) Stewart and Walsh (30)-... Malone and Warfield (40) . Paige and Meyers (40) .. Younggren and Hayner (40) Guenther and Ervin (40) .. Larson and Marcum, E. H. (40) McAlpine and Towhy (40) . Lycan and Cross (40) ... Herbert and Christie (30) . Gile and R. L. Given (30). Feir and J. K. Given (30) . Hunt and Andrews (15) . SAYS THREE CAUSES SPELLED DEFEAT FOR ECONOMY BILL (Continuea rrom Page 1.) ¥ | opportunity—not the opportunity of which our reformers speak, opportu- nity to serve the people of the state, but rather opportunity directly or indirectly to help one’s self. They were the patriotic spoilsmen who could not abide a ecivil service.law and could not heartily support any plan that had for its purpose the making of a public officer earn the salary paid him. They could not look with equanmity upon the elim- % |ination of soft snaps and fat jobs given as rewards for political ac- B | tivity. Officeholders Use Influence. “These were some of the forces in the legislature opposed to the adop- tion of the plan, while outsidc of the legislature many of the officenolders under the independent commrissions and bureaus and other establishments resisted to the utmost any attewrt to place over them -effectual supervi- sion.” The state is on the right track, however, Mr. Hammond said, and a new commission it at work to pre- pare a bill for the next session. He did not mention passage of the budget bill by the last session, but said the legislature had curtailed the growti in state expenditures for the first time. ‘““The people are not in favor of parsimony,” said Mr. Hammond, “but they demand their money’s worth.” Discussing the present Minnesota system, he said there is too much scat- itering of responsibility among boards, giving the state ‘“not one governor but many governors,” with little co- ordination among - the different bodies. FACULTY FOR BEMIDJI PUBLIC SCHOOLS COMPLETE (Continued from Tage 1.) ship; Alma Olson, United States his- tory and English grammar, and Helen Shannon, geography and English. Vera Backus, for several years a members of the junior high school faculty, recently resigned and will study in Chicago. Miss Budelman Principal. In the Central building the chil- dren will find that Miss Kathryn Bu- delman is to be their principal. Miss Budelman, a teacher of unusual ability, will have charge of one of the first grade rooms. There will be three first grade rooms this year, this change being made possible by the dropping of the kindergarten course. Other teachers in the Central build- ing will be: Agnes Strand and Ruth Harding, first grade; Laura Welch and Abbie Murphy, second grade; Elsie Schmitt and Katherine Chance, third grade; Beatrice Sliter and Clara Folkestad, fourth grade; Margaret McDonald and Winifred Johnson, fifth grade; Josephine Ostrem and Grace Brazier, sixth grade. In the North School. The North school teachers will be: May Brunner, fifth and sixth grades and principal; Delia Skagerberg, third and fourth grades; Sadie Hill, second grade; Ella Idste, first grade. East School Teachers. Teachers at the East side school will be: Sadie Chesborough, first, second and third grades, and Susan Peckham, fourth, fifth and sixth grades. Jessie Phillips will be the new music supervisor, succeeding Miss Margaret Newton, who will teach at Moorhead. e The faculty is considered to be one of much excellence and the school board anticipates that the ensuing year will be one of the most success- ful ever conducted here. KR KKK KKK KKK KKK KK x PINEWO00D x KKK X KR KKK KR KKK Mrs. N. B. Nelson of Leonard and | her sister, Mrs. Sovald, of Everett, Wash., were the of Mrs. Sthol Monday. Mrs. Percy Johnson and Mrs. J. Peckels of Bemidji arrived here Mon- day to spend a few days with their guests | husbands, who are employed at the lath mill. Pete Dromness left Friday for Shel- X BEMINJT DATLY PIONEER Sets Played Per Cent 1.000 1.000 600 600 400 <333 ‘Won Lost WO NHNOOCOCOCOCOCCOOCOOWANNA®W® CPOC00000C0CCOOOOOHNH®WB® RN HOOO0OCCCCCCOOONRWH®WO O 000 ly wheré he will be employed on the Tronnes farm. Iver Hovan, Conrad Dromness and Carl Humberstad left Friday for Adams, N. D. They will remain there until the snow falls. After spending a few days with her brother, Theo, Peterson, Mrs. Neuman left Friday for her home at Valley City, N. D. Mr. and Mrs. P. J. O’Leary and son, Arthur, of Bemidji were guests at the Sthol home Sunday. Conrad Bruun went to Fairdale, N. D, Friday. Pete Bakke of Aure transacted business in Bemidji Friday. Miss Lillian Booth of Bemidji ar- rived here Saturday to spend a few days with the Sthol family. Mrs. C. A. Bye and daughter, Char- lotte, who have spent the past week at Hendrum and Hawley visiting relatives, returned Monday. AUTO POLO KING. “Red” Walter Sterling, star driver for the American auto polo team that is to play the crack English cham- pions each afternoon and evening at the Minnesota State Fair, Sept. 6 to 11, is known as the greatest auto polo expert the game has ever known. There -appears to be nothing too dar- ing for him to do. His dexterity at the. steering wheel is wonderful. There will probably never be an auto polo driver better than he. Because Mary Junck, a. British girl, married a German she is now a German, an English court decided, sentencing her to prison for being in a restricted military area. ADDITIONAL WANT ADS Too Late To Clasaify WANTED—BYy colored girl, cooking or chamber work. Apply 312 Minn. Ave. Take advantage of a want ad. Bottle ‘We have always tried to be just a little ahead of the other fellow in the general equipment of our store.* As an evi this desire to show PR il b ! ) - Carter’s : Pencraft Combined Office [R5 A and Fountain Pen (\( Ink ° v b of s Carte'sIas fadly Pioacialt Iok weiss s blus aael 1166 4 ot Hlesl e aisacially il semosth ad Farmebent; Gl s\ o o Whe e Carns botils with the new flow-conkalles BEMIDJ1 2 PIONEER - Phone 81, orus + || How to Standardize Your Stationery Every business man appreciates the value of standardization. The idea as applied to stationery is just as practical and valuable. All the -letterheads and forms used in your home office or your branches, and all the blanks and slips used in your factories, can be standardized in at least one respect—the paper upon which they are printed. The first requisite, of course, is to find one paper good enough for a letterhead, strong enough for a form to be handled in the workshop and cheap enough to use for everything. HATTERTIILL BOND certainly possesses all these qualifications. You will find that it suits the man who wants quality, ‘crackle’” and strength in a letterhead. The ripple or linen finish is particularly suit= able for letterhead use. But HAMMERMILL BOND is so low in price you can use it for all your slips and forms. It is particularly adapted for them in fact, because it comes in twelve colors and white. You can have different slips printed on different colors and make it easy to dis- tinguish themapart. Everysheetis watermarked 7 You can specify HAFIFIERMILL BOND by name i\ AM M and be sure that you get it by looking for the watermark. That watermark is your protec- tion. It is the manufacturer’s assurance of a stanadard quality on which you can depend. HAMMERMILL BOND is the ideal paper for a large concern with many branches in different parts of the country, each buying their own stationery because HAMMERMILL BOND is carried in stock by paper jobbers in every large city. One set of specifications will do for all your branches. The actual money sairing and the added assurance of a reliable, al- ways satisfactory quality makes it well worth while to standardize your stationery on HATIMERMILL BOND. The Bemidji Pioneer Publishing Company Hammermill Bond is made by the Hammermill Paper Company, Erie, Pa., and sold by paper jobbers in every large city It comss in twelve colors and white, in Ripple, Linen or Bond finish—white and all colors in each finish. Stock envelopes to match. BEMIDIJI BUSINESS DIRECTORY CLASSIFIED ALPHABETICALLY ABSTRACTS OF TITLE DRY CLEANING MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS ‘Wholesale and Retail BE. M. SATHRE Pianos, Organs and Sewing ABSTRACTER Machines. O'L B Bld, 117 Third Bt. Bemidji. ’Leary-Bowser g. Clothes Cleaners Phone 573-W Bemidji, Minn. For Men, Womgn and Children J. BISIAR, Manager. PENCIL SHARPENERS OSTEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN “THE NEW. BEMIDJI” Sold in Bemidji “The Boston” DR. F. J. DARRAGH Day and Night Calls Answered At your favorite store for Specialist of Chronic Diseases Best nickle pencil on earth. $1.00 Free Consultation. J Lasts a life time. ASK THE MAN Pliotaisy. 208% 3rd St., over Blooston Store __ GENERAL MERCHANDISE Groceries, Dry Goods, 8hoes, Flour, Feed, etc. The careful buyers SUPPLIES FOR OFFICE ‘Typewriter ribbons, carbon paper, typewriter paper, clips, paper ftasteners, punches, eyelets etc., etc. BROSVIK, THE TAILOR Phone 938 = buy here. Get quantity prices W. G. SCHROEDER PIONEER OFFICE STORE Bemidji Phone 66. Phone 31 Security Bank Bldg. BAKERS AND CONFECTIONERS| PIONEER OFFICE SUPPLY PHOTOGRAPHER STORBE Everything for the Office and School Security Bank Building Phone 31 KOORS BROTHERS CO. Manufacturers and Jobbers Ice Cream, Bakery Goods, Confec- tionery, Cigars and Foun- tain Goods 316 Minn. Ave. N. W. Phone 125 Photos Day and Night N. L. HAKKERUP GROCER FANCY AND STAPLE GROCERIES Holstead Coffee Beachnut Brand of Jams and ¥ Jellies Fresh Onions and Rhubarb CASE'S CASH STORE DRUGS AND JEWELRY Wholesalers and Retailers. Service and satisfaction. Mail Orders given that same service you get in person. BARKER'S Third 8t. - Bemidji, Minn. KEMP'S DRY CLEANING HOUSE 40 acres on main road, 7 miles from Bemidji. No incumbrance. ‘Will trade for car, Ford preferred. Clothes Cleaned and Pressed, We Call for and Deliver Promptly. MORRIS & LONGBALLA ___BANKING AND SAVINGS LUMBER, COAL AND WO00D Save uynlemntlénlly. Make use of our Savings Department. We wel- come your open account. : : i : Any quantity you want. Building material of all kinds. SECURITY STATE BANK Bemidji, Minn. ST. HILAIRE RETAIL LBR. CO. Phone 100 Bemidji