Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, March 16, 1920, Page 8

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THE BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEER =—=—_—=m_ EASY TO DARKEN |STUDY IN SUMMER Bemidji Market Quotations ||| YOURGRAYHAIR| WORK IN WINTER 'PAGE EIGHT WRESTLING BOUT 10 'BE STAGED MARCH 23 - AT GRAND THEATRE B. A. KOLBE GROCERIES The Best That Mofiey .Can Buy - You Can Bring Back ‘ Color Chicago, Mar. 16.—Potato recéipts today, 59 cars. Market and Lustre with Sage Tea . and Sulphur When the ‘“busy season” of business begins in fall, there is a big call in offices for trained help. This continues all win- ter. Thousands have “cashed in” on this knowledge by tak- ing the spring course at Dakota Business College, Fargo, N. D., instead of idling' through sum- Hallett Will Take On the|firm. Northern Whites, bulk, $5.30 to $5.40; sacked, $5.15 to Champion Middleweight i of Bemidji $5.35. Idaho Russets, sacked, $5.75 to $5:90. : : ; s : When you darken your hair with Bemidji Potato Market—All varieties, bulk, small lots Sage Tea and Sulphur, no one can $3.25 to $3.75 per cwt. Carload lots, 880ked. and loaded, $3.50| tell, heclause Pit's done tsl:' nat,u;ally, . . 80 evenly. arin, 1S mi y to $4.00 per cwt. - though, at hor:‘n?i; n%ussy andlxt:::- Corner Eleventh and boud Phone 657 BEMIDJI CASH MARKET QUOTATIONS. A e ors Tt eecona rmieKs : . it b gfi“" AND HAY”M sl ‘""“ ... 13¢|Preparation, improved by the addi-| Recently the Standard Oil BarTes, DUSDET . s wres s s r §1.80 | HHOES, 1. s vnseiess 190200 [ ton of Sther ingredients called) Co. employed four more D. B. Red Clover, medium, Ib.. . . ..45c-48c| Dressed beef, pound.. 1ze-l4e| N S os just dampen a sponge| O £raduates, L. Thompson, R. Popcorn, pound ............3c-10¢| Turkeys, live, poun::... ;gc:;g: D oft bruch with it and draw the| Payer, W. Husen and C. N. Wheat, NO. 1. .cveevnneansas.$52.40 g:t::olll:s',.n;:;lsgun‘ Yoo 5 .2:(:30:: through your }lair, taking one small Lune, making over 70 engaged Ducks, live, 1b. . ... 16c-180 ;:t;flh;: ;is:g;;:-a rsBim’inOS::f au there. 5 ) H 4 1bs. and over . .eee220 disa 3 y - « » VEGETAEL#S. S:::;'sen. all welghts, b, .....22c|other application or two, your hair G tFoul?fw lthe iucie§$fql- Rutabagas, per cwt....$1.00-31.50 becomes beautifully darkened, glossy| ret particulars _about spring s and luxuriant. term from F. L. Watkins, Pres., HIDES Cow hides, No. 1, pound......1c-18¢c Bull hides, No. 1, pound ..13¢c Kip hides, No. 1, pound. .20c Calf skins, No. 1, pound ..30¢c Deacons, each ........... $2.00 Horse hides, large, each. .$7.00-$8.00 Tallow, pound .. ..10¢ Carrots, per cwt. .. .$1.50-32.00 Beets, per cWt.........$1.00-$1.26 Cabbage, ¢cwt. .........$8.00-36.00 Onions, dry, cwt. ......$5.00-36.00 Beans, CWt. ...........$6.00-38.00 Dairy butter, pound........50¢c-62¢ Butterfat ...... . .66¢|wWool, bright. ... ..36¢ Eggs, fresh, dozen..........50c-52¢’ Wool, semi bright............ .2§c The following prices were being paid at Stillwater, Minn., at time of going-to press of today’s Pioneer: Gray, faded hair, though no dis-' 206 Front St., Fargo, N. D. grace, is a sign of old age, and as ! ? we all desire a youthful and attrac- = tive appearance, get busy at once “HILL’S” with Wyeth’s Sage and Sulphur Com- pound and look years younger. FIVE MILLION PEOPLE USED IT LAST YEAR giLrs -~ * others because more care is taken in the making and the materials used are of higher grade. : .| ‘Black Silk |Stove Polish Makes a brilliant, silky polish that does not rub off or dust off, and the shinelasts I'l‘S different from BRONCHITIS CHEST COLDS L8 GRAIN AND HAY MBATS four times as long as ordinary stove 2 Mutton. b .e.e.v.eom-...10c-16¢] When that tightness appears in Q lish. Used on sample stoves and sold Wheat, No. 1.... - --$2.55-32.65 Hogs ... o 14c-16c|your chest and tghe sharp l;olt:ins sig- CASGARA UlNlN[ g Afitmfi.mafi&d:fi%m, Wheat, No. 2. -$2.50-32.60 | veal ...... . .. .18¢|nify inflammation and congestion you i T e O T e i your o Wheat, No. 3...........$2.40-32.50 | Beef, dressed. .7c-14¢|need a hot application right away. » nkflfll”‘ ::d_; fimflfi{fufiufiflsw:&ufl yoar i wevesee..812-83c|Lambs ....... 124-16c| Heat eases pain, and when you use Stasidard cold remsdy o 20, yeari M0 in 11quid oF paste—one quali Black Silk Stove Polish Works se Ing on G"“.'..':E“.‘.‘u" Mw&%’:fivfinfld@ automabiles., oats ........0.. Barley .. .... Rye, No. 2...... Garlic, Ib. .o .- 36C Parsnips, per ¢ .$3.00 Squash, cWt.....ccvveenn. .. .$1.00 Begy’s Mustarine you get just the right kind of heat—penetrating heat —that quickly reduces all soreness —in_tablet form—safe, sure, no opiates—breaks up a cold in 24 hours—relieves fnp in 3 days. Money back if it fails. e .$1.13-31.35 .$1.566-$1.58 Buckwheat, per 1b. A and congestion. Apply it tonight and enuine box has a Red Jso i No. 2 timothy hay . ceee..$24.00 - QL};E “l;OULTRY cover withha cloth. You'll feel lots glo;ic;:'ieth Mr. Hill's P A w_ DrO T No. 1 clover Mixed..........$22.00 | LUrKevs, e Ualeisistoryieiate better in the morning. It’s a grand y Rye st ‘55 00 | Tuskeys, small and thin... sensible remedy that all who use it At All Drey. Steces Y p 2 Ye Straw .......... ceeee...38.00.| Gogge, 1% Ibs. up, and fat raise. 80 conts. S C. Wells & A wrestling card, which promises|Corn ................. $1.00<31.20 | DUCkS, fAt .o voeennnrn.. Co, LeRoy, N. Y. - £ — to be of more interest than ever be- Hens, heavy, 4 1bs. and over. -Co., y N. Y. fore staged in this city, will take . Springers, live ....... 3 p - ' place at the Grand theater, when C. VEGETABLES Hens, 5 1bs. up, fat.. 3t = - Dressed .poultry 3¢ per pound over * live stock. E. Hallett takes on L. C. Curtis in a catch-as-catch-can match, for the best | Beans, hand picked, navy, cwt. $5.00 two out of three fall§. Potatoes, per cwt . . ..$3.65 The match is staged for Tuesday|Beans, brown, cwt. evening, March 23, with a grist of in-|goeys par ewt. . ... teresting preliminaries. 2, UST&R « THE YELLOW BO~ The Weather Man Pro‘n_hasies Rain | Maybe He’s Wrong! HIDES 3 i Cowhides, No. 1....... 5 Bull hides, No. 1.. Mrs. Hallett has challenged any|CArrots, per cwt.............31.76|gips No. 1........ R .24¢ . A e gyl ol s e kg N Lo e e She was Fat: But such trifles never disturb this studio.” With our the one who stays with her for more s P : P @aCONS . ... 5 .81, = % e than ten minutes without a fall. It|Cabbage, ton.... -+$75.00 I raniow ..., U6 & Be| pmvontan Shenhow he medern equipment we tan make portraits at any .$7.00 Fovked’ and " i Horse hides. . looked"and _fel. is understood that two women have|Rutabagas, per cwt. time. Patrons say the lighting effects we obtain already accepted the offer and this|Butterfat ......... . Wool, bright. ... ..35¢/| easy directions of Koreln syse % will be a special drawing card for|Packing butter % 5 Whanl, gemi-bright. .. 25e “élghffflm?n“::‘ AL are beautiful. e, ag men= tally alert and in better the evening’s entertainment. The Hallet’s have been ir the game for years, having traveled from coast to coast, extending offers to all com- [22°8 . The management of the grand promises a gopd, clean program and extends a special invitation to the women of this community. Seats will be sold at the popular prices of 75 cents and a dollar. 'NORTH DAKOTA VOTING TODAY ON DELEGATES \Cdntinued from Page One.) can” convention at Bismarck Febru- ary 17 is followed. That convention advised all candidates to stay out of the North Dakota primary. It nomin- ated a slate of convention delegates, presidential electors and national committeemen, ‘however. William Jennings Bryan was made a presidential candidate in the demo- eratic primary. Democrats led by Col. J. H. Bloom, Devils Lake, circulated petitions and secured signers to place Bryan on the democratic ballot. Bry- an attempted to withdraw his name but was too late. In addition to naming one candi- date for president the republicans will name a vice-presidential candi- date. William Grant Webster, New York, is the only one filed.. They will name two for national committeemen; fourteen for the five officers as presi- dential electors; and twenty-two for the ten places as delegates to the re- publican national convention to be beld in Chicago in June. Ole H. Olson, New Rockford, and Gunder Olson, Grafton, are the rival candidates for national committee- man. The democrats will name two aspir- ants for national committeeman; ten for presidential electors and twenty for the ten jobs as delegates to the national Democratic convention to be held in San Franecisco, also next June. . She leaves, besides her husband = Repeal Question Up. ke " 15606 for elementary teachers and i g Bismarck, March 16,—Four propos- ;;‘s:)ercsl\;l:;e:.b&l;:trher. mother, six $1,031 of those teaching in high [ 1'5 ed amendments to the state constitu- S schools. Rural teachers in many i = ‘tion and four present.laws for repeal o . states were paid as low as $150 and o will be before the voters of the state GO ius =0 ctied: o Hotior, $200 a year. In 1910, state, county i ¢ o today at the presidefitfal primaries. toribus scovered part of the lejty and private normal schools, ; = l’fhe amendments provide for: Re-| western continent on Hlvr. 12, lHt)‘.’. abe | representing 60 per cent of the total <! e . { 4 o call of congressional,. judicial, legis-|tleretoie coserves the title, ever | normal schools in the country, there C d l k P 5 o lative state or county officers; leas-|though he id not sce the mainlans | were 11,603 fewer students enrolled Ome ln an 00 em Over o fng of coal lands for agricultural|of America vn il 1498, John Cabot an« | November 1, 1918, than during the G X = cultivation, increasing .debt limit-of| his son Lustinn, are considered the | pre-war period. A similar falling off g a political sub-divisions; and permit- ting qualified electors who move from one precinct to another in same coun- ty to vote in the precinct from which they moved until they have establish- ed the thirty day residence required by law in the new precinct. Efforts to repeal the Blue law of the state will be made at-today’s pri- maries. The laws were initiated on petitions filed by the American legion. ‘The fight to preserve the laws was ied by the Women’s Christian Temp- erance Union, the president of which is Mrs. E. Preston Anderson, whose son died in the world war. He was decorated for bravery. The Union was backed by church organizations and - These measures would establish a . state athletic commission for regulat- ing boxing, repealing all laws in con- flict; permit sale of cigarets under regulations! permit Sunday baseball and Sunday theaters. ‘Subscrive for'the Pioneer. IN WOODS OF MAINE (By United Press) Portland, Ne., March 16.—Maine last fall had its first open season on moose in five years and it is the opin- ion of Willis E. Pearsons, commis- sioner of fish and game, that another open season will just about extermin- ate all the moose in the Maine woods. ‘“Moose had so increased ‘in some counties,” he says in his report, “where they had not been hunted for four years that they had become quite tame and appeared often in the settlements. But they fell an easy prey to the hunters who had them located months before the season opened. i “One more open season will exter- minate the moose. Our lakes and streams, when depleted can be re- stocked but when this monarch of the Maine woods disappears, he is gone forever.” Deer hunters, according to his re- port, had a big season also. Resi- dents of the state took out 84,313 li- censes and non-residents received 2,- 557 permits. These hunters bagged 51,748 deer, 4,185 of which were shipped out of the state. The bear killed in Maine totaled 146, the report indicatéd. FUNERAL SERVICES FOR MRS. CURTIS HELD SUNDAY Funeral services were held yester- day for Mrs. Nellie Curtis, who passed away at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Evens, in Hubbard county, about 15 miles .southwest of Bemidji. Interment was made in Greenwood cemetery following a short seryvice by Rev. L. P. Warford, pastor of the Presbyterian church.. Mrs. Curtis came to stay with her parents a short time ago on account of poor health. She formerly lived at Charles City, Iowa. diveoverers of the North Ameriear continent, having reached the coast ot Labrador or Nova Scotia, June 23 1497. Their veyage was inspired by the reports of Colambus’ discoveries and to Columbus is given credit for being pioneer discoverbr, though, of course, Columbus never saw the North American mainlgnd. i Busy Swatting Files. I was a guest at a ‘Sunday sobool plenic, and everything went off ‘nicely until we sat down to supper. I had the seat af honor between the minister and his ison. We had the tables set outside, und the flies were thick. A fly never lives wien I am around, so I stood up and sarted to swat. You can imagine my embarrassment when I felt a kick under §he table. The min- fster was saying grace and every one had their heads bowed while I was busy swatting files. No more Sunday CLOSES THOUSANDS Low Salaries Prevail in All Sections, Specially in Southern States * Washington, March -16.—The coun- try is faced with a serious ghortage of school teachers, chiefly through failure to provide adequate ‘salaries, according to reports to the United States bureau of education.!” Condi- tions are becoming slightly better, however, report states in some sec- tions, compared with those of last Oc- tober, when the National Educational association conducted an inquiry into the situation. = Based on returns from state school officials, the reports show that on February 13 last, there were 18,279 schools closed because of lack of teachers and 41,000 being taught by teachers characterized as ‘‘below standard but taken on temporarily in emergency.”’ Greatest Shortage in South. Greater shortages are shown to ex- ist in the Southern states.. Responding to a questionnaire sent out by the commissioner of education, a great majority of the states in which schools are closed report the children as being transferred to oth- | er districts while the remainder re- port pupils losing the grade. "To an- other question as to what extent tax- payers are interesting thgmselves in paying better salaries for teachers, the response was almost unanimous for an increase. Average Salaries. * Salaries paid teachers in 1918, sta- tistics show, were on an average of endorsed_by heaith. Reliable aoti-fat phssician: it al Oli f Korein "a re_brochure is shown in teaching-training depart-|- ments in colleges, while other depart- ments show greater increases in en- rollment. There has been an increas- ing withdrawal of men teachers from the profession, the percentage of male teachers in 1918 being only 17 per cent, or one in every six. T0O LATE TO CLASSIFY The rate for want ads may be found at heading of reg- ular classified department. Ads received later than 11 o’clock a. m. will appear un- der this head in current issue -, FOR SALE—Gray wicker baby. bug- gy. Call 1009 Bemidji ave. 4318 P S i r picnics for met—Chieago Trid: |y ANTEDGirl for general. house- work. Phone 58 3-16tf 1 (comy Borein Co., ND-2 OF SCHOOLS IN THE US. es t0 yon in_plain wra 01, Station T, New York | l 4 ey Afe Héfe! The Little “OVERLAND 4” Has Arrived. Sales Rooms at the former Baker Jewelry Store now open for business. or have us demonstrate Kaliher-DelL.euil Co. Distributors of Overland Willys-Knight Automobiles and International ' Trucks for Beltrami and Hubbard Counties BEMIDJ], MINN. 116 THIRD S We are NOT . High Priced Hakkerup Studio ‘one for you. TREET DIII:Illmlnll:luunnnDumuaununnnumruummnan Einl[=¥s ]} (1=} s} sl a Defective

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