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i | cheap as I have my season’s work about done. Tom Smart, Bemidji, . Minn, 106tf FOR SALE—Reeves steam. enEine, 33 H. P., cross compound; in very good condition; a snap. Address Crane & Ordway Co., Fargo. N D ASKS FEDERAL AID , AGAINST BiG FRAUD| Wm By United Press) WANTED—We pay ensh for second ( | ] hand furniture, stoves, shoes and|pOoR SATLE—Twelve, lots in S lw ffixn;:::g:g:;d n(a):;be riz'_m_v}:eld;::; e, e S igoow | allof them in Block 2 in the b““' the department of justice to aid in 206 Minn. Ave. Phone 129-W. ness block of town. The postoffice ) d1020 heading off what they believe is one ——————————————————————————— B:I{Lnesol:hgc:::dtg:rgn‘z o‘f ;E&x:. of the greatest financial frauds the HELP WANTED. ing 12x36 feot bullt for & chicken | United States has ever known. It WANTED—Girl for. general house- coast to coast are deliberately fraud- Jogtand ;J‘;‘,‘,’j‘;‘:’"ho{g’gflz ulent or at least illegal. A ruling HELP, WANTED—Bemidji govern- ?{l{lhm::n Solway, Mlll:n 1018 recently inaugurated prohibits a ment clerks exnmlnnu(lmu., No:. 4.| - . 2 — land bank from being chartered if $75 month, Sample lessons free. ] \ ? Franklin Institute, Dept. 23-S. T., FARMS FOR SALE. In the face of this promoters are WANTED—Helper at the. machine| 146-32, (Town of Frohn), on |farmers. ;?ggmn:ggly Bemidjl w"’d!'aiilg long time and easy terms. Call e e e 2| on or write A. Kaiser, Bagley, 5 | WANTED — Experienced girl for Minn. sste EPISCOPALEANS URGE Kaplan, 811 Bemidji Ave. 1012 | FOR SALE—40 acres of land, one- " WAN"}ED'--Competent waitress. Lake half mile north and one-qun;ter of NEW DIVORCE CGDE Julia Sanatorium, Puposky, Minn.| & mile west of Solway; 15 acres Apply Margaret M. Neal; Supt. of the best mudow, about eight 101 easy clearing.’ For prices and| St. Louis, Oct. 12.—A special com- Hotel 1012 terms, write of phone C. A. Kil-|mittee of the Protestant Episcopal WANTI::. Young Tady to solicit the bourn, Solway, Min 1018 | church, convening here in annual D— ————————————————— ~ city of Bemidji; can work part FOR RENT. session, today urged absolute prohi time if desired. Apply B. T. ?612 FORSXTE "Tion't, pay Tent; month- |sons without special permission. ANTED—Txperionced norse Phone 1y payments, 2 houses and two, 2- TR ==lixpel o4 nurse, acre lots on Irvine Ave. Terms to 1560. . 3d1012( 44 purchaser. J. W. Wilcox. SUPERINTENDENT DYER POSITIONS WANTED. 7-101% ; FOR RENT—Rooms for housekee];- g ing; also single i, 520; Bel- husband wants position.as cook for |, small ‘crew, ‘Man will do other |, trami Ave. Fhané 69“ 2d1°1 e e ———— Phone 247 or call at 1215 Dewey W. P. Dyer, superintendent of the MISCELLANEOUS. - Ave. 3d1013 | Bemidji schools, will inspect rural MONEY 10 LOKN—On improvet Toproved FOR RENT—Five-room _—houml A; schools in ' Hubbard county next Tues- Apply William McCuaig. Phone|FOR RENT — Three unfurnished {f:&;’;‘sglofis."“‘“°'d of the Park No. 1. 5d1014 ruloms,Amodell;lfi. Rgo?%VIOO%IBo:; Next week is known as ‘‘rural FOR BALE. o e e A & A A A A PP PP schools in every county will be in- FOR SALE—Birch, poplar and oak| Park. Inquire of Mrs. Ralph An-| oiioq ;‘ZW"- W?:lnl to 1&’1‘113' cal?lé “Afld‘:‘ew derson. 014 | ™ Besides instructors in state schools, ess, Bemidjl. one 38-F ‘7 al 61‘3 LOST AND FOUND, several superintendents of city schools A Saturday,beteeeit Bunflilae ta | " aturday, between Bemidji an - Mill No. 2. 201 i vinia. Rel:um to Pioneer torore- FOR SALE—Good . big. work horses ‘Wwar, 441012 MUCH INTEREST IS SHOWN the opening of the night school in Be- midji. The night school will be op- ened at the high school next Monday evening and any adult desiring school charges. Several employes of the Crookston Lumber company have sig- nified their intention of joining the school. coop, & very mice chicken 1ot, hog is alleged that organizations from work. Phone 33-F-2. 6d1018 money, is spent, for their promotion. ISt Consmss IO Rochester, N. Y. 41030 | FOR SALE—SW¥ of SB%, Sec. 31- | selling stock and promotlng among Housework. Very good wages. ‘ acres cleared; the Dbalance very (By United Press) WANTED—Woman cook. Lake Shore |- bition .of marriage of divorced per- Phone 29. / G AL < Fdn GG DY T0 INSPECT SCHOOLS work. ' Anfwer B; Pioneer, 1016 |FOR RENT — Seven-raom _houge, farm at seven per cent interest.j Klein. 0132 | day and Wednesday with Superin- FOR RENT—Three t:ottages at Mil school inspection week’” and rural have been requested to aid in the FOR SALE—House. Ed Achenbach, ~—oank, ook anc. tmo oo Much interest is being shown in work may join, there being no IF ELECTION WERE OQVER? While Democrats Are Admittedly the: Champion Question Fiends, It Is - Believed This Quiz Is as Un- answerable as Their Most Childlike Effort. If election day were past would ‘President Wilson make so little of the principle of arbitration in industrial \disputes? Would he be so sure tha#l it s more important to preserve peace, when a great strike is threatened, than ‘it 1s to make judicial methods rather than force the means of settling dif- ferences between capital and labor? If election day had come and gone would Mr. Wilson keep the national guardsmen of the country in camp on the ground that they may be needed to protect the United States against ‘Mexico? Would there be months of inaction and indecision in which no use is made of a large body of citizen soldiers? Would they not be allowed to go home or else be set in motion to make Mexico as safe a neighbor as the, y#Administration seems to think that it is already? If election day were past would the President drive through Congress a bill like the shipping bill which is in- tended to embtark the federal govern- ment upon a new venture in a hazard- pe ,ous field and use $50,000,000 of the 22 people’s money to buy tonnage held CONCRESSMAN ‘HAL\il]R CTECuErca ot g b e ‘owned that it cannot be used without peril of International complications? JIs sound pubifc policy behind such He Will Speak on Currentissues of the Day at the ithem mean anything practical? Would 8. his deeds lag so far behind his 3 [] |phrases?—Cleveland Leader. l s M [ ] Under Auspices of Beltrami Republican Co. Com. Admission Will be Free to Al If election day were not to be con- Public Generally is Invited sidered would Woodrow Wilson use so many high and mighty words in inter- jpational notes and do so little to make FIVE THOUSAND A DAY. Enrollments in the Hughes National College League. The Hughes National College :League, 511 Fifth avenue, New York, lis receiving enrollments at the rate iof five thousand a day. They are ‘coming from all parts of the country, and the work of organizing branches cities has been started. A large per- centage of the enrollments. are from ‘men who give their usual political affiliations as Progressive, Democratic or Independent. The league has received the en- dorsement of Governor Hughes,” who wired: “If there was ever a time when the educated men of the country who have its welfare at heart should work for right principles and strong government it 18 now.” Chairman Willcox of the Republican National . Committee, , ex-President Taft, and John, Hays Hnmmond have also praised the wotk enthusiastically, as much on the score of the benefitto the men thethsel We Have the Lot You Want Most -¢ dmu choice lots in Bemidji are ours to sell, because weo .them. Itis better to buy direct from the owner. PAY AS YOU LIKE In most cases these are the terms. . We are: here to, l:elp’olucnmltqlko your.own; ;. Bemldil Towasite & omment Go. : THAYER: E- mrf in all states and most of the important {! véa' asof the real work it will | ACRE OF LAND YIELDS 2.3 TONS DRY CLOVER HAY | One acre of land on'the Beltrami county fair grounds yielded 2.3 tons of dry clover hay during the pnst sea- son, ‘according to a repért made to; |S day by B. M:iGile; school agflcul- E turist, who.had charge of théiacre. This yield was on jack pl;fé soil, lighter than the average sandy soil. The ground was first plowed in the spring of 1916. Wheat was: planted the last season and the plat seeded to clover. Six tons of manure to the acre were applied in the fall of 1915 on top of the clover seeding. Manure will be applied to this plot every third year, which means that to’' farm this kind of land success- fully a farmer must keep enough | stock to manure one-third of his cul- tivated land each year. A very light application of manure the first time clover is sown, on top of the seeding helps: the clover to get a thrifty growth. The rotation used is grain, clover and cultivated crops. On the school demonstration: plots where this rotation has been used for five years, the yield of clover was 3.1 tons to the acre, showing that the land : actually improves with this method of management. ELWOOD ISTED WINS BOOK-KEEPING PRIZE Elwood Isted won the first prize in the bookkeeping contest which has been conducted in the Bemidji schools. The first prize is ten dol- lars. Florense Deneau was awarded sec- ond prize of three dollars and Claude two dollars. The prizes were donated by W. L. Brooks, cashier of the Northern Na- tional bank. Mr. Brooks awarded the yesterday .at the school. prizes | lysis. He gave a O glll I:\Iii\lIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII|IIIII|IIIIII|II TN j Ploneés: short talk on bookkeeping and stated that he would offer. the same prizes |dition should result in prosecutit again . this year. The awarded for the best work in book- keeping. There are 46 students taking the | bookkeeping course at the high school, the largest number ever tak- ing thnt course since it was begun in’ the Bemidji schools. HEALTH BOARD ASKS INQUIRY AT BRAINERD St. Paul, Minn., Oct.” 12.—Special investigation of the handling of an|a delegate. outbreak of infantile pardlysis at| More than 100 cities and yill Brainerd last August has' been: or-|are expected to be represented at,th dered by the state board of health. Dr. A. J. Chesley of the division of diseases, preventable deaths of five or six children were re- ported in that city about the time of the reported outbreak; that it was|vice Reform League. stattled no nt:ention was paid to quar- antine regulations and that there were indications of the existence of K C T0 0BSERVE cases other than those located later by board experts. A desire to gpare mothers of the sick children worry and anxiety was Bailey was awarded third prize of|the excuse given by Dr. C. S. Reim- stad, health officer of Brainerd, Dr. Chesley said, for failure to quarantine promptly and report the cases which | Oct. 12, 1492, Bemidji Knights of he later admitted were infantile para- i Al Kind Of Wood--Wholesale and R”dfi\,_u SEE Geo. H. Frertch & Sori Office M tkham H Office 177-W prizes are|the health official. make the proposed investigation. meeting. , The organization.h: Among those who will deliver dresses will be Robert Catherw said sudden sary this evening by a “si Dr. H. M. Bracken, secretary of the | the parlors of St. Philip’s chure CHOOSE FROM THIS GALAXY OF STUN- NING MODELS Splendid Suit Values at unusually low prices. Take your choice from our entire stock of Ladies Suits at greatly re- duced prices, Broadcloths, Poplins and Serges, splen- did values for the money, 34 to 44. Ladies ecloth coats in plain colors and mixtures, $5.00 to $12.50; worth double at Th¢. Bazaar Store board, said that evidence of this ooh- Dr. W. P. Greene was migned ‘to MINNESOTA CITY LEAGUE T0 CONVENE ATRED WING Bemidji will probably: send ai fl"-: ) resentative to the fourth anmual con« vention of the League of Minnesota i Municipalities. which. opens: at ~Red Wing next Wednesday. .. Actionwill probably be taken at the next meeting of the city council for the sending of membership of 121 municipnlme-. 0od, President of the Chicago Civil Ser- “COLUMBUS DAY” of Q97 i In commemoration of the disoorqry of America by Christopher Columbus Co lumbus will celebrate the mnlver- \ N d o D, OO