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k.This is one of 117 Third St. For DRAYING Gall Phones: 598 or the exquisite Selz modelsweareshow- ing for fall.- Comes in -several kinds of leathers, the' most popular is black. We can furnish this promptly in the new mouse shade. See us for fine shoes fortheentirefamily. Bemidji Shoe Store \ . Specializing in Selz Shoes MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS ‘Wholesale and Retail Pianos, Organs and Sewing Machines Phone 573-W J. BISIAR, Manager LaFleur Bro ~i8 a Dbetter _ngwriter ‘Guaranteed for 2 years. 7+ MODEL 4 $5 down, $3 $5 down, $ per month. ‘CASH PRICE SOME LESS 'Bemidji Pioneer. Phone 922 To cut: Cedar Posts, -Peles amd Ties Extra good timber;:can work year ‘around. New camps, good board, big prices for cutting. Write or call. ; SO0 POLE & TIE COMPANY LIMITED EYE BEAR / NOSE | I | " H Hi i I | il T. Beaudette, $68.00 $100.00 | per month Bemidji . 1-J MOBEL 5" Men Wanted E. D. ALGER. Mgr. Ganley Block, Sault Ste. Marie, Ont. "A. V. GARLOCK, M. D. SPECIALIST Glasges Fitted DR. L. A. WARD PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Troppman Block ¢ Bemidji, Minn. THROAT Ladies’ and Gents’ Suits | MADE to ORDER C'I;anin(. pressing and alterations of allkinds. All work up-to-date, first class workmanship Merch nt Tailor % '230 Third Street . MORTGAGE TORECLOSURR SALRE Default having been made in the payment of the sum of One thousan nine hundred eighty-four and no-100ths ($1,984.00) Dollars, which {s:claimed to be due and is due at the date of this notice ‘upon. a certain Mortgage, duly executed and delivered by Martin Diet- rich and Clara Dietrich, his wife, Mort- gagors, to C. J. Carlson, Mortgagee, bearing date the 18th day of November, 1913, and with a power of sale therein contained, duly recorded: in .the office of the Reglster of Deeds in and for the County of ‘Beltrami and, State of Min- nesota, on the 25th day .of November, 1918, at 11:00 o'clock A. M., in Bool 23 of Mortgages, on page 139 and no action or proceeding having been i stituted, at law or otherwise, to cover the debt secured by said Mort- gage or m|¥l 1?“" thereof. NOW, - THEREFORE;, NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, That by virtue of the power of sale contained in said Mortgage, and pursuant to the statute in such case made and. provided, the said Mortgage will be foreclosed by a sale of the premises described in and conveyed by 'said Mortgage, viz: The north ‘half of the southwest | quarter (N%SW1) and the southwest ‘| quarter of the southwest quarter (swassw ) of section twenty-four (24), in’ toywnship one hundred fifty-one (151), morth_of range thirty-two (32), west of the fifty principal meridian con- taining one hundred twenty acrés, more or less, according to the Government survey. thereof, in' Beltrami County and State of Minmesota, with the heredita- ments and_ appurtenances; which sale will be made-by the Sheriff of said Bel- trami County at the front door of the Court House, in the city of Bemidji in sa:d County and State, on the 27th day of December, 1917, at Ten o'clock A. M., of that day, at public vendue, to the highest bidder for cash, to pay said debt of $1,984.00, and_ interest, and taxes, .if . any, on said .premises, and Twenty-five Dollars, ‘Attorney’s. fees as stipulated in and by said Mortgage in case gf foreclosure, and the disburse- ments allowed by law; subject to re- demption at any time within one year from the day of sale, as provided by law. Dated November . 15th, ‘A, D. 1917 C. J. GARLSON, Mortgagee. F. A. GRADY, ) Mortgagee’'s Attorney. e 7t Sat. 1117-1229 MORTGAGE PORECLOSURE SALE Default having been made in the pay- ment of the sum of One thousand one hundred nine and 78-100ths ($1,109.78) Dollars, which is claimed to be due and is due at the date of this notice upon a certain Mortgage, duly executed and delivered by Andrew P. Hendrickson, Mortgagor, to Charles J. Carlson, Mort- gagee, bearing date the 22d day of De- cember, 1913, and with a power of sale therein contained, duly recorded in the office of the icegister of Deeds in and for the County of Beltrami-and State of Minnesota, on the 23d day of ‘Decem- ber, 1913, at 10:00 o'clock A. M, in Book 24 of Mortgages, on page 268 and no action or proceeding having been instituted, at law or otherwise, to re- cover the debt secured by said Mort- gage or any part thereof. OW, THEREFORE, NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, That by virtue of the power of sale contained in said Mort- gage, and pursuant to the statute in such case made and provided, the said Mortgage will"be foreclosed by a sale of the premises described in and con- veyed by said Mortgage, viz: The southeast quarter of the north- east quarter (SE%NEY%) of section twenty-three (23) and the southwest quarter of the northeast quarter (SW NE1%) of section twenty-four (24), al in township one hundred fifty-one (161), north of range thirty-two (3#) west, in Beltrami County and State of Minne- sota, with the hereditaments and ap- purtenances; which sale will be made by the Sheriff of said Beltrami County at the front door of the Court House, in the city of Bemidji in,said County and State, on the 27th day of Decem- ber, 1917, at Ten o'clock A. M., of that day, at public_vendue, to the highest bidder for cash, to pay said debt of $1,109.78, and interest, and_taxes, if any, on said premises, and Fifty Dol- lars, Attorney’s’ fees ‘as stipulated in and by said Mortgage in case of fore- closure, and the disbursements. allowed by law; s.bject to redemptlon ‘at any time within one xg'r from the day of sale, as provided law. Dated November. -15th, -A.. D. 1917, CHARLES J.” CARLSON, Mortgagee. oA GRADY o o we, p . - “Mortgagee's "Attorney. "’ 7t Sat. 1117-1229 - 3 v $100 Rewsrd; $100 " 'The 'readers of this paper will' be oleaged o learn that there is at least one dreaded disease that sclence has been able to cure in all its stages and that ‘is " catarrh: * Catarrh’ being greatly induenced . by conatitutional ' conditios requires constitutional treatment, Hi Catarrh Medicine is taken internally, ?cte thru the Blood on’ the Mucous: 'aces of the Svestem thereby destroying the foundation of the disease, giving the -patient- strength by :building up the con-- stitution and assisting nature in doing its work. The proprietors have so much faith: in -thecurative powers of Hall's Catarrh_‘Medicine that they offer One Hundred Dollars for any case that it fails to cure. Send for list of testimonial Address F. J. CHENEY & CO., Tol Ohjo. - Sold by all Druggist, ] Remember, Tuesday, ‘“Meatless fiay” Remember, Wed., “Wheatless Day” |VEED OF DEFINITE PROGRAM :[HOME TOWN HELPS To Strike at the:Essentlal Rather Than the Incidental Is Object of Best Commercial Bodies. To styike at the essentinl rather than the ineidentsl, to®get an organic program_and follow it unwaveringly —that is the object of the:directors and’ executives of well-organized com- mercial associations : today, D There was a time when, cltizens of many communities.had & mixture of fght and wrong impressions about the tunction of such organizations. -They were right In thelr recognition of the oeed for a central directing force, but wrong in their assumption that such & torce could be made 100 per cent effi- clent without Intelligent, broad-mind- ed management and a definite, con- crete program, declares -the Indian- apolis ‘Star. = So coiymercial’ -organizations have gone through an evolution. The ten- dency toduy is to make them indis- pensable business institutions—just as necessary to well-rounded city life. as 8. public utility or any food or cloth- Ing digtrjhutor. The tendency is to make Such organizations reflexes of all other iusiness activity—a guardian of" commercial, social and civic interests. Citizens .in thelr collective capacity speak and act effectively through such ar organization. Large chambers of commerce in mary -American cities have achieved potable results for their localities by adopticg a definite program and stick- Ing to it. “Every commuzity has its own prob- lems, but there are certain lines of work that have been found productive very generally in all American citles,” sald Ernest N. Smith, general, secre- tary of the Indianapolis chamber of commerce, L . “The purpose of the well-conducted modern chamber of commerce I8 to establish departments of activity. and undertake programs of civic change that will operate definitely at every point to make the city larger or bet- ter.” PERGOLA NOW WIDELY USED Adds to Beauty of Garden If. It lo Properly Constructed and Effec- tively Placed. d P — Comparatively few gardens are now complete without a pergola of some kind;:though (twenty years ago they were almost unknown In ~America. They are, however, 80 usefuf'gn giving varlety to the garden, and:bhave so much deco :valge, that widely used. ! 5 _ Pergolas_need _ careful cons and areffort should. be made, before tullding one, to:choase a-suitable po- sition for it, sinc a pergola is set down with no apparent raison d'etre, 1t becomes a burden rather than a help | in the garden eme. It should lead to some deflned’cbject—to a _summer Louse, or a gate, or perhaps to tei ¢ steps; if It begins and ends for ni parent vensor, it is certainly misplaced. In the gardens of La Mortola near PBordighera, the pergola leads”out to a wide térFace with a stone balustrade, while heyond Hes the wonderful blue of the Mediterranean and the gray rocks of the Italian coast; and this view guins a double value from teing framed as It were, in a tunnel of greenery. “Panic Proof” Vies With Fire Proof. According to a decision. recently anade.by. Supreme Court Justice Gave- ‘Healthy Skin DEPENDS ON KIDNEYS. The skin and the intestines, which work together with the kidneys to throw out the poisons of the body, do a part of .the work, ‘but- a clean boddy nng a healthy one depends on the kid- neys. ‘If_the kidneys are clogged with toxic ' poisons you suffer from stiffness in the knees in the morning on arising, your joints seem “rusty,” you may have rheumatic pains, pain in the back, stiff neck, headaches, sometimes swollen fect, or neuralgic p; all due to the uric acid or toxic poisons in the blood. This is ‘the time to go to the nearcst drug store and simply obtain a 50c. package of Anuric, the discoyery of Dr. Pierce of Buffalo, N. Y. Then drink a cup of hot water before meals, with an Anuric Tablet, and notice the gratifying results. Anuric will help you, because it flushes the kidneys of impurities. You will find it 37 times more active than Nthia. Dis- solves uric acid as water does sugar. SUFFERED FROM BACKACHE —DIZZY SPELLS. Little Falls, Minn.——“During middle a life I suffered with severe backaches, hot. flashes, head- |aches: and dizsy i spells. I saw Dr. | Pierce’s Favorite | Prescription adver- ||| tised and bought a bottle. It gave me mmediate relief nd the second bot- years ago stillin the very best of health, due, I feel assured, to the help the ‘Prescription’ gave me at this critical period and I am to...recommend-. it.’—Mzs, . Eiia Fifth t, N gan of New York the state industrial commission may direct cwners_ of bulldings to make them “panic proof,” even If they wererpreviously fireproo_f.r The court said::“The reasonableness: of 'the gommlssloix’s orders dependsicls rectly on the question, ‘Is the building snfe from the danger’of Panic? Panle md'y result from: causes not confined to'a factory building “itself nor af- fected by its fireproof character. It 'may be caused by smoke alcne, or by fire in a building adjolning or ia the Immediate neighborheod, or by a con- flagration, or by a hostile attack in time of war from land, sea or air, or by earthquake, or even by a false alarm.” —_—— n Mad Artists. Quite a number of emirent artists have been victims of brain disorder. Sir" Edwin Landseer, towards the close of his life, showed signs of in- sanity, while the eccentricities of Tur- ner were quite ‘of the insane order. Arcongst other eminrent artists it might be mentioned that Sir Thomas Lawrence suffered from a symptom of brain disorder; David Wilkie -~ lost power of attention, and ultirzately had a nervous seizure which made his speech incoherent; while Romzey suf- fered so much from the hallucination that his talent would desert him that at the height of hisfame he thought of relinquishing his art altcgether. | AR 59 S - Screening Rear Garden With Trellls. If your rear garden is too much in evidence and chickens and laundry are not very decorative, a pretty white gate, or even a plain high white trellis reaching from the side of the house to the side fence, will shut off everything objectionable. No matter how small your back garden you'will need raore. of the white. terrlis to male-it perfocts: ‘and plant trees on both sides. |PROPER WIDTH OF HIGHWAYS Yo Writer Advocates Narrower Roads and Restoring Acres of Valuable Land to Farming. Just at this thine many are intere ested In the question, how wide should our-public roads be? ‘A number of things sheuld be consideted in an- swering this question, says a writer in Utah PFarmer. The kind of mate- rial to be used in making the road. The topographical fonditions through which the road will pass, the proper drainage of the road. . The special use to which the road may be put, if any. For years very little attention has been given to the waste of land in our road building. Land has been cheap and plentiful and years ago we did not . Good Road in West. ) give the attention to proper road building as we do now.. Public roads have been of a uniform width of 66 feet and the by-roads about 40 feet. They have been too wide if we were to judge by -the condition in which we find many of them. Wasted land on either side is used only to grow teeds. i Why not make them the width that Is used and plant trees on either side as we have advocated in these col- umns before? Then the thousands of acres of land that are now practically wasted could be put to some good Some of the Eastern railroads are teaching us a lesson- in this regard for they are farming their right-of- way. On a recent trip East I saw great long stretches of ‘land on either side of the rallroad track planted to alfalfa. Acres were planted to truck gardening. ] understand similar con- ditions are to be found in some parts of California. v For the sake of:economy in bullding and upkeep let’s build our roads more parrow. | Restore the acres of valuable Iand ‘to ‘farming. > Build scientifically constructed roads the’ proper widt KEEPING UP COUNTRY. ROAD: Whether or Not Farmer. Lives.on Pub-| . lic Highway He: Should Take In- a terest in arest an. Every farmer 8hould feel his. de- pendence_upon good roads. Whether or ‘not-one; lives on a :public highway he-shoul@ take an'interest in the near- est one 'to his farm or the road he must use to market his farm, orchard and garden products. There are many times when a day’s work can be spared for the road. Aft- er heavy rains the road may need cer- | tain repairs or improvements when the overseer is not ready to call out the hands. Why not individual farmers donate a day’s work on the road at such time? By keeping a road drag and drag- ging the road along one's land after heavy rains the road may be greatly improved. It is an‘easy matter to have an agreement so each farmer will drag. the road In front of his farm: This would maintain the road till the regu- 1ar hands could be called out at statéd intervals or till the commissioner could | make the repairs. | " Tre time has come ‘when we must consider the roads an asset, {ndis- pensable to the well-being of the farm- er and his family. ' This being true, is it not every man’s duty to do all he can to keep the roads in good condi- tion? —_— GOOD ROADS IN CONNECTICUT Concrete quhway@ Being Built in - Twenty-Two Cities and Towns— Cost $15,000 a Mile. The construction of concrete high- ways is going on in 22 cities and towns in Connecticut, and when these con- tracts have been completed there will be about 70 miles of concrete-surfaced pavement in that state. The highways are 18 feet wide and cost $15,000 a mile. . The longest single street of con- crete road in Connecticut is two miles in Cheshire, on the main highway from Plainville to New Haven. 1 Good Roads.’ - Any neighborhood that does "mot have enough enterprise to keep two or three log road drags going for a couple of weeks during the late fall, is sadly behind the times. Farmers who are too lazy to do this ought to be compelled to drag their weary legs through the mud to town next spring —as they surely will. . Best Results for Dragging. The best results from dragging are obtained only by repeated applicae “Hore's a “I:mm]gek” A pneumatic ‘Fountain Ink Well. The name of the well is the ECLIPSE. Nothing to get out of order. No valves, no floats. The ink from'the res- - ervoir falls into a small cup at the pase, which :provides just enough ink to cover the pen. NOT THE HOLDER. =The ink :annot splash. Air and dust cannot reach the ink, therefore the ink mever becomes gummy or. sticky. The last drop T8 as good as the first, It is made entirely of glaass.” Needs fill- ' ing but once in six months and saves 76 per cent of your ink bill. Sells for $1.00 and $1.26. WHAT! Don’t believe it? Come ang see. = PIONEER OFFICE Phone 923 CAN DEPEND &~JUPON IT When itis repai rd. THEBEMIDJIJEWELR YCO. 210 3rd Strest, - Phoss 488 For satisfactory prices, bring or ship your . Coldberg’s ‘Hide & Fur Co.. 112 3ra St. Bemidsi, Minn. | | We. also pay the HIGHEST k MARKET PRICE for RUB- BERS, METALS and RAGH | Phone 638-W - JACOB GOLDBERG, Prop. FOR SALE or TRADE ' 120;: acre_ farm, ' house, barn, good well, 10 acres-under..culti- ‘vation, 14 -acres meadow, $2,000: worth of timber on land, 8 miles’ north,of-Bemidji, sell Frank -~ Latimer, -~ Turtle Minn. -0y 37 WE HAVE THE I0TS What kind of a lot are you looking for? A location for a fine residence? - Or just a place for a cosy site? litte home? EASY PAYMENTS A good business’ Pick yours out and call on oti; ‘lncal agent, The Berman Agency, - Markham Hotel Bldg., for prices and terms.' ¥ BEMIDJI TOWNSITE COMPANY Capital Nat. Bank Bldg. . uld Youwme elter Asi'n‘ Mail 03‘3 (H neeml ¢ nearest telephone and speed along a hurry-up call to your local Fire Department \. —and they would respond #nstantly. Who pays for that fire protection, anyway? Mail order concerns? Not much. Its‘running expense comes out of the ¢ity’s taxes—and those taxes are paid by people who livekere —citizens like you—and merchants.” } 2 s That money must come out of the pockets of home people. - Then spend your money with local dealers—keep it 7z circulation here, where it will buy not cnly fire protecticn, but Dbetter roads, better schools, better parks, _better libraries— better everytiing that must be bought with money taken from the city’s “coffer.” Not one penny of ‘the money you spend with mail order concerns is passed along to anyone in this vicinity. You get the goods it purchases, You wear them out er eat them up. And that’s the end of it. Who HERE, in this town, gains by it? Not a soul! You may #ink vou do. May be deluded with the idea that you saved money. A comparison of local dealers’ prices.and. those of mail order concerns will prove you'ze iwrong. In return for your home-spent doilar the dealer délivers to you without cost for the biggest quanti chase,. U delivery and quality worth that dollaf can pur» The pi po;ihan of that dollar s 2lly fi B ds its way