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FRIDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1915. 'THE BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEER . HOW IS THIS * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * ) p ; x : » : SOME 1915 CROP FIGURES : We Make A Specialty Of ®» Lawrence Steinbrook, farm » 3 '@l * five miles west of Bemidji, * e raml 0 arm a“ s ’ % threshed 560 bushels of * ] : ¥ wheat from a 10-acre tract. X - e x George Miller, farm four 2 o & PO . . * milés west, threshed 42 bush- & A spe(:Ial Bargaln near Bemidji, Blackduck, Kelliher, Nebish [ &% ’ ’ ) ¥ J.N. Skrivseth, farm 8 miles A * ‘northeast of Bemidji, thresh- . and PllI)OSkY for sale ed 98 bushels of oats to the FOR SALE—110 acre farm, 10 acres cleared, | acre. * good six room house, barn, well, creek runs * W, G. Schroeder, four miles & betwéen house and barn, on railroad and R — : ;ve:ltmuf I;Se:id{’i, ;aise«:-tm : state road, telephone, clay soil, price $2800. ~bus o] ! i s el e B Terms: $900 cash, balance5 years 6 per cent. * Jacob Fishel, Town of Lib- * ' ) * erty, cut 2% toms of clover to * : — Terms: $2.00 to $5.00 per acre cash J oo x Come And See Us b B 0 * Eugene Fredenburg, Sol- X * way, raised an average of 45 % i payment, balance on long time at 6. 3 Teatsst on amersge ot 45 x\0 We Shall Bo Pleassd To 6ive You Full Information, . ¥ on a ten-acre tract. * 7 . . i x Average yield of hundreds i * of other farmers in this sec- * er n —— 00 ese a“ s ver “ Ic u u I e * tion in- clover, rye, barley, * 3 * oats, wheat, potatoes, al- * * falfa, corn and garden truck Phone 19 4 % may be secured at the Pioneer & Hotel Markham Bldg- Bemidjl, Minn. ¥ office. x x * . AKX KKK KKK KKK E KX K| == _— Manitoba, the Soo Line and the [White Earth Indian land cases are im - - Blackduck, O’Brien, Mud, Red Lake, |Canadian Northern. Three of these |, rair wa. . y toward definite settlement. Markham Hotel Bldg. " Bem|dl|, Mlnnesota Little Rock, Sandy, Clearwater, Mah- |roads, the Great Northern, Minnesota Before the United States court of . nomen, Deer, Big and Little Tam-|& International and the Soo connect: RSB CONES arack and Shotley rivers. 4 this territory directly with the Twin | ¢12il8 in Washington Monday a re- The balance of the townships are|Ports, Duluth and Superior; and the |hearing on the claims will begin. = . well drained. Twin Cities, Minneapolis and 8t.| George B. Edgerton, St. Paul at- —— up to recent years Red Men m.ade this| The area of the county is 4,962..29 There are no dry farming prob-|Paul, among the largest distributing torney, who, with his partner, Charles soul-stirring portion of Minnesota |square miles, or 2,515,941.77 acres, |lems to solve. Hot winds and de- points in the United States and the|, Dohs; has been waging the legal their rendezvous for here they found |of which 1,869,724.08 acres are land | structive hail storms are unknown. |largest markets in the Northwest. » s een waging the legal - “ZUNE UF PI.EN'I'Y" fish, game, fuel, in plenty, cool sum-|and 646,217.69 acres are water. The water is not only abundant, but SR battle for about 4,000 Indians, who mers and crisp healthy winters. L R e it is pure. A allege they have been euchered out el The general surface is level with a e o lands;are timbered with pine, of their interests in a vast tract of : . N maple, ash, birch, oak, basswood, Beltrami county was organized |gradual slope in the northern end of Agriculture in this count has land formerly the Mille Lacs reser- — i Near Market, Soil Fertile,|Feb. 28, 1866, with the county seat|the county to the morth and the| “or oo ' ¥y DaSlelm, tamarac, ete. Millions of feet s arms Near )y 5 | Feb. , y W] y progressed to a point where it has of lumber have been removed during vation, is in Washington to appear Bainfall and Climate Excellent; |2t Bemidji and is located in the|southern end to the south. The soil ceased to be experimental. There is |4 £ £ The lands where | I°F his clients. : ’ |northern part of the state with the|is a clay loam and a sandy loam with Sipasssev yoars: . Tho lands where|, ., ¢ involves claims totali . 3y - p B in the county, according to the last the timber has been cut are consid- e case involves claims totaling Land at Pioneers’ Prices. Lake of the Woods for the northern |a rich vegetable mould which is the| .. report, 1,577 far Th more than $4,000,000, and is among % i : e port, 1, ms. €lered as cut-over or stump land and e AL boundary. The county is one of the|accumulation of centuries. The sub acreage in farms at that time 1 ¢ £ to $18 the most important litigated actions BELTRAMI COUNTY. most advantageously situated of all|soil is clay of various debts. .There amounted to 223,764 acres, being an sell from $ 0‘ S. .p:r acre. in the history of Minnesota. “The spot of earth su r.eme]y the northern counties in Minnesota, |are no rough, rocky or waste areas average of approximately 142 acres Representgd by their attorney, the —— D D! being located as it is, about the cen-|in any part of the county. to each farm. Dairying, live stock, ‘The county has copi(?us rainfall, | indians’ présented . their claims blest; a dearer, sweeter spot‘ tral northerp part of the state. The * % % . poultry and general farming are car- the average annual precipitation be-|againgt the United States by auth- than all the rest,” with induce- county was created only eight years The south twenty miles of the Tied on quite extensively. ing about 30 inches. ority of a special act of congress, in- ments unequalled by any other |after Minnesota was admitted to the|county, or about twenty townshi.ps In 1912 the county had four e troduced by Senator Clapp, which section in the state to prospec- |Union. ; ifl t'hev snlzluth end, lie l(;l ;:1: dl‘:::ft; creameries. The live stock of the| Land buyers are flocking to Bel-|gave the court of claims jurisdiction: tive settlers and homeseekers. .. i sippi Valley proper an county for 1913 was as follows: |trami county because: to dispose of them. Northern Minnesota is the most The county is 54 miles mide from |by the Mississippi- river, ‘the ‘Turtle | o 3,157; cattle, 8,659; sheep,| The land lies near to a large un-| The court of claims awarded the S interesting, fertile and re- |eastto west and is approximately 125 |River and their tributaries. 2,193; swine, 1,959. satisfied market where products|Indians a verdict for almost $2,000,- sourceful region yet undevel- miles long from its southern boun- Forty-two townships of the county |-’ e bring high prices. 000 some time ago and the govern- i i i i i Red Lake basin and are : . % 2 oped in Nort‘h ‘Ax::el"ica. d:r:'h:"::esttob::kn:fn;?);zfi?olfw::: Ll:ailnne dfl:; thee i ; anads sl The population of the county in 1'1‘he :oxl fertility renews itself in|ment ap?d(?aletd to the United Stgtes ol - clover forever. supreme “court. 1910. was 19,337, of which 14,100 7, Before the time of Columbus and |Woods. tle, North and South Cormoant, were native born Americans, 1.934| There is no fuel problem. This ‘tribunal reversed the iower = Norwegians, 1,256 /Swedes 3(;3 z}er— Growing crops have more hours of [‘court#m the ground that theére had e e e O S S : e o1 ‘En,glish shd I;'ish 150 |[davlight than 200 miles further been ©n consideration of the rights e - e ; B Daiist, 94 Finlanders, 42 Russians |South. * [ot somiéof the homesteads which are . f - B|ana m'iscellaneous of ;" other coun-| There are no cyclones, blizzards|valid, jand sent the cases back for tries combined, 1,288. The county|and floods. another hearing. The appellate | § | has eight banks, with a total deposit The best dairy section must.be the|court.held, however, that the United . 3 | aggregating $1,500,000. It has 106 |MOSt Drosperous. States government, under the terms ! 5‘v rural schools, good graded schools The climate of this section is -a|of the treaty, acted as trustee for the / & and high sch’ool one normal school, |Sure cure for asthma and hay fever.|Indians and as such is liable to them N ] one agricultur;1 school and 56 The climate is pre-eminently dry|for the value of their property. = S = .. = churches of the following denomina-|and stimulating. ] ~ tions: Catholic, Norwegian, Swed-| The temperature is uniformly cool |k % ® k¥ X ® ¥ X Xk % ¥ % ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ SR ied Giinae Lutheran,, Presby-|and conserving of the soil fertility. | - * terian, Congregational, Methodist, The water is pure and plentiful. |¥ He who forgets to adver- 4 lEpisc(;pal Baptist - i Fishing and hunting is plentiful [« tise should not complain when : g . .'. * throughout this section, and finally |% the buyer forgets that he is * N Besides Bemidji, with a popula- land is to be had at the pioneer’s|{4« in business. It is just a case - foar e o Tie thousand, the|Price and on easy terms. The county (¥ of “forget” all around. x s, (@ig-|is in the “Zone of Plenty.” - * * n county has fourteen villages, Aok e — H HH — § [ tributed about the county as to be *_*f_:,*_w —_— eml ]I, e accessible to any of the settled cor- | CHIPPEWA LAND CASES it - "I‘_ p munities. INVOLVING $4,000,000 —ATTEND— e ¢ . NEAR FINAL DECISION . gee H : Wi ounty has-skx raitroads, ah : Bemidiji Business College wrlte for catalogues and Maps Of lm- follows: Great "Northern, Minne- St. Paul, Minn,, Oct. 15.—After f sota & International, Wilton & having been fought through the Day and “lgm proved and Unimproved Farm Lands Northern, Minneapolis, Red Lake & courts several years, the so-called - 80 acre farm 40 acres under cultivation, 10 acres natural mea- dow, soil heavy clay loam, level, few stones; the 80 all fenced; good road on north and south I side; 1 1-2 miles from station on | N. P; 10 miles from Bemidji, market center of Northern Minn- esota; 1 mile from school; R.F.D. and telephone. Price only $3,200.00, easy terms. [ARM LANDS| Improved and Unimproved Lands in Nor- thern Minnesota, “The Home of the Clover”. Hayner-Lahr Land Co. T Bemidji, Minnesota