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NEW SETTLERS ARE ARRIVING DAILY IN CLEARBROOK VICINITY | Many Farms Being Sold; Local Improvements Being Made Mr. and Mrs. John K. Johns‘on,g'l Hettingér, N. D, arrived here Friday, and immediately took possession of the 80 acre farm they purchased some time ago from Sam C. Thompson, lo- cated just north from Clearbrook. Their carload of material arrived here Monday. They are highly pleas- ed with their ideal home. Potato Warehouse Being Built. Hiram Kahler is busy with a crew of men remodeling his large ware- Rhouse located on the Soo tracks here. 1t is his intention to make a modern potato warehouse of it. It has a splendid location and when complet- ed will be fully equipped with the Jatest and best machinery for handl- ing of “spuds.” Because of the splen- did quality of potatoes raised here a modern potato warehouse is much needed and will act as a stimulant to greater production. Henry A. Engelbretson, the cashier of the First National bank at this place, has been busy lately distribut- ing the new notes just issued by that institution. Hurrah for Iverson! The entering of Samuel G. Iver- son into the republican gubernatorial Tace has been hailed by service men with a shout of delight and approval. |- Mr. Iverson served in France as cap- tain in- the Adjutant General’'s de- partment. His military record unique and interesting, and because of his age, was refused admission to the regular army. He took tne next best thing, and served with credit and honor to himself and nationm, doth here and abroad. He is capable, has executive abilities backed by a thorough knowledge because of his eervice as state auditor for several years. Mr. Iverson’s platform is logical, strong and progressive, in short is follows: Progressive leadership; Promotion of cooperation; Banishment of anar- «chists; Reform in spending public money; A real presidential primary; Reform of present primary law; A fair tonnage tax on ore. He is against. i Return of saloon traffic; Compul- sory military training; Return to convention system. Farms Are Selline. Peder Olestad and Harley Hyland |a shave to summon a neighbor who went to Bagley, Monday, and closed | will stand flashing an imory emile a deal whereby Mr. Nyland became|gand inquire whether the Alderman of the owner of the homestead now |the old Tenth ward is still holding owned by Sherift Ed. D. Barness atiout, and will stiffen up and inform Bagley. Price $32 per acre. Mr.|ygu proudly that he was one of the Nyland will take possession at once. |original supporters of that same high | 9 R, : : i He is a hard worker and we be-|and mighty official. Chiefs of police , kidneys, they become over-worked 3 ZEL P AP speak for him success in his new|are, perhaps, the most popular among from the strain, get sluggish and fail ! - - i y S home. The land is located in Green-|the residents of Naples, for4n what wood township. LeRoy Bradwell of Clover township |known man in the foreign quarters? sold his 40 acre homestead to John Moen of Greenwood township forigrants to America than any other a to move further east into Beltrami|city in Italy. Those who have mot |sluggish kidneys. to move further eastt into Beltrami|peen there are going. Some are de- / county. The deal was closed the first |terred by straitened circumstances,in the kidneys or your back hurts part of the wéek. Engine for Power Co. Arrives Th i for th “learbrook ; electreice(?(fi;\'})iun? urrivid (I:Ie?'e 'l'rués. American armies to loo« after aged!four ounces of Jad Salts from any day afternoon. ‘It is a big Fairbanks relatives or close up little accounts| pharmacy; take a tablespoonful in a with a view to making a permanent, glass of water before breakfast and beauty and from appearance gives ev- ery indication that it will furnish the power. With the arrival of the dy- namo which is expected every day the boys will soon be in position to turn on the juice. They have everything pretty well wired up by this time. They are now busy with street lights preparatory to the installation of the “White Way" thru the heart of our gxr the Allies under the Italian flag. m the other side are hundreds more Jad Salts is inexpensive and city. Herbert M. Johnson, potato buyer, i binleri shipped two carloads of potatoes s?)ll‘diel:;r a::‘ler:;aj;!ol‘r: I::l;n :::?‘:;: from here Monday. They were the crowds in line, while the weary highest priced potatoes ever shipped c!erks- go throu’gh the dajly task of from Clearbrook. Farmers from near stamping visas and settling .ious- Fosston are marketing potatoes here ands of minor troubles. So hard becauce of the big price paid bY|;reqsed has the consulate been since Mr. Johnson. Twenty cans of Brook trous fry ar-'h,q Joaned the services of four ex- rived here Wednesday morning from the Detroit hatchery. Ten cans were planted in Ruffy brook and bronght out hy Nels Olson who resides three miles east of this creek, and six miles from Clearbrook. The halance were planted in tributary to Clearbrook under the supervision of Earl W. Jensen, vresident of the Clearbrook Game, Bird and Fisn Protective asso- ciation. The state Game and Fish commis- sion has never stinted Clearbrook in its share of game fish fry when they have any for distribution. HEHEKEE KKK KKK KKK KK * SOLWAY * 2% % % % % % % b k% % % The farmers around here are get- ting ready for spring work. Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Lee spent Sunday with Mrs. Lee’s folks, P. J.| myself.” Rock. Returning to their home in Nymore Sunday evening. ‘The new electric light plant is giv- ing good results. You can now see| pemoved dead trees from a church- | painfal consequences by taking out town at a great distance. The Solway farmers’ club met in the school house Sunday. Miss Dosena Peterson h as been [rally and bought a note is the good confined to her home all week. turn record of Scout Troop No. 1 of Charlie Rogers, Lula Horen and |Bushkill, Pa. . ’ - Verman Horen called on the C. F.| Boy Scouts of Salem, Ore., in their [Capsuies] Rogers folks here Sunday. 'l;h:_l P“-Di}s in theisch;)ol here are|and magazines gathered in a total of | The world's standard remédy for kidney, reviewing for examinations which |48146 pounds of T, than L o DaDeR, . oF - £1ove National Remedy of Holland since 1696. come in May. __huermc for The Ploneer. is|one who knows someone you know. [ The Store Ahead Elks Elko Hat Shop Bidg. | Not being able to supply our many customers on our last week’s sale. We will repeat our unusual $6.95 Sale FRIDAY and SATURDAY We have just received 100 new hats from our various stores that will be included in this sale. Some of these hats are worth as much as $15.00, none less than $7.60—Sale Price $6.95. The original price ticket remains in each hat. Perhaps the very one you priced last week at $12.50 you will find in this sale at $6.95. Our connections with large millinery establishments enables us to give these unusual values. Left to right: Speaker Lyons of the house of represenatives, Miss Alice Puul .of Philudel, hi‘ Sen » 4 3 S A 2 i, Senaf 1 of South Dakota, Mrs" F. B.Hillis, Senator Poole o Delaware and Jefferson I'aul. RS NEAPOLITANS ALL IT COSTS A FORTUNE WAIT, DON'T OPERATE KNOW AMERICA| TO WED IN AUSTRIA |5, Suiet cedries,rsrvee p for Dissolving Gall Stones and for e o e it Telier i an By Captain Carl O. Dennewitz (By United Press) cases of Gall Stones, liver trouble, such Written for the International News Washington, April 15.— The high f’:n d"'"‘:: :stlgk d:;gsp:'lz;n nc‘:};‘ronln ap- Service. cost of marriage is causing general | rrh. pains ip st h back, 1 Naples, April 15.—Stay in Naples |discontent in Austria, according to a 2 smir:m::e':‘% nI‘Toe;"?aL;vnll‘t?d et LARGE HATS EMAtG e X Sto-li-i 2 a half hour and you will find some- | Vienna newspaper forwarded to the|poX of Jtocligal, from Sour, qruggiot BLUE HATS BLACK HATS commerce lde);artmexln. 210.. | irotimenials. out "positiv. acta. Sto- e cost of marriage now is ,-|li-gal has_helped thousande of people '1\s RE HA'IS 000 crowns for the bride alone, ac-[3nd it will positively give you jrelie: SANGA o B en ed, regal e cording to the mewspaper schedule. [or Sour- age or 'duration of . {rouble. BROWN HATS ALL KINDS OF HATS This is equivalent to about $6,000 \g’;ts“tor ‘f:r;lzo ‘é"‘{“é“'e~s,”°pf'“’l""fi'."“" 7 estive iemical 0., . ul, nn. counting the crown as worth 2% | iV RaNiMIGe Boardman's Corner ALL KINDS OF SHAPES . . . cents. ug Store and Barker’s Drug.: Cass Dri This amount would .buy 32,000 |Lake. ~ Gardner's Drug: = Blackduck, crowns worth of dresses, linen 44,- g%';';fsg"fi-em‘,gfig’r}o Neil's Drug, and 000 crowns ahd furniture 164,000 She was Fat crowns. In Austria it is customary for the bride to furnish the house as The shadew on m‘mm‘m There had adways been a rumor among travellers that if you stand long enough in the Place de 1'Opera in Paris you will see someone you know, but in Naples you do not have to walit. Descend from the trair and there is a swarm of faquinos. - Their princi- pal object is to obtain the job of carrying your baggage, but their next inquiry is: ‘‘Please sir, are you from South Chicago?” Probably you are not. You may be from Seattle and proudly say so, whereupon a nearby faquino rushes up, swears eternal Come Early Friday Morning—Sale Price $6.95 SEE WINDOW DISPLAY well as providing her trosseau. THE PIONEER WANT ADS allegiance to Seattle and asks how tem she red: 38 the Mayor is getting on. BRING RESULTS in three menti Now sho : . tally alert and in better = You may get past the faquinos, and your cabman surely will demand the city of your birth. The neighbor- ing one will hear you declaim your city and demand that you occupy his stately chariot. At any rate the ho- tel porters will be familiar with your city and state. The barber in the hotel will leave you in the midst of QUIT MEAT WHEN KIDNEYS BOTHER Take a Glass of Salts If Your Back Hurts or Bladder Troubles You No man or woman who eats meat regularly can make a imstake by flushing the kidneys ' occasionally, says a well-known authority. Meat forms uric acid which excites the fre._orochure (comes o0 you in plain Wrapyer) U Korein Co., ND-301, Station v.nxw Yu?fi i’my? Bealth. Rellable aaui-fat self-treatment. Many wo- 4 - Taen have reduced. casly, -/ H 3 lastingly, 10 to 60 pounds. Beoows - eequisilcly st e T o R oo orela 2t Say russte: of wris for l ' to filter the waste and poisons from the blood, then we get sick. Nearly all rheumatism, headaches, liver trou- Naples has supplied more emi-|ble, nervousness, dizziness, sleepless- : ) < ~ ness and urinary disorders come from - [/ 1 e \ . | i g 3 . city is not the chief of police the wvest The moment you feel a dull ache but they have friends who are beg- |or if the urine is cloudy, offensive, ging them to come. Others came back | full of sediment, irregular of passage to the wars vefore America entered; or attended by a sensation of scald- more came home after serving in the|ing, stop eating meat and get about home in the land for® which they|jn a few days your kidneys will act fought. There are thousands in Na-|fine. This famous salts is made from ples and many more in the United|the acid of grapes and lemon juice, States who sing the praises o. Amer-|combined with lithia, and has been ica. us i At the United States consulate ’fi:;i“]?:; tlf:’l:?;:s;:’ al':) gf:!::,;:fl cach day there are hundreds of the|ise the acids in urine so it no longer reservists who came back and fought causes irritation, thus ending bladder weakness. : is a pleasure to haveja garden when . & results are satisfying—a disappoint- “ment when the garden fails. It s 'justuenytoh.ve.goodpndcnu ‘a poor one. Usually it is impossible who are going to America for the s : g 4 y disco mw‘mm“w e The consutate s swamped, Ital: et Bt delighttul effer- . A1 m':“ " o e e o 1 sk g , 5" Start out by being sure of your seed: io:s k‘;;nel:'ru:'mpleiufi%:zmemg i : A .. Nor thrup, King & Co.’s Veg and ‘most every community. They are “euiy to chooss from the upright Sterl- ‘ing Seed Case. Cultural directions - -EAT- Third Street Cafe January, when the flood of reservists started, that the American Red Cross pert clerk-interpreters to Comsul B. Henry Carroll, so that the return of the reservises may not be delayed. The consulate is open from morning to night, but, though weeks have passed, the crowds that appear with dawn over the bay are still as large a5 ever, waiting for the magic paper e A Our Waiters Driven to It ! 243 \ “My boy,” s;'l‘:imur Grabceoin, “ard Do the Waltlng e ‘3 dy s j you getting ready to settle down?” “Yes, dad. I guess Ill have to.” ! ! “A sensible decision, sir.” : “Perhaps. Most of the chaps I went to college with are doing some kind of | S ] ol ot s st st o S beastly work, and one hates to sit around his club all day with nobody to talk to but the walters. Ho, hu:;di I'll have to go into business to am l Death only a matter of short time, THE BOY SCOUT'S BUSY LIFE. Don’t wait until pains and aches yard, searched the woods for a miss- ing man, took part In the Victory Loan m mAL drive for the collection of newspapers liver, bladder and uric acid troubles—the 24 tons. This was sold to a Portland a & Tb i all or a net n exe l m . ) SR Lo T ey A BEMIDJI HARDWARE CO., Bemidji, Minn.