Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, June 4, 1920, Page 10

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i iSt. | Pau| g, at In lnnapals 1. . Minneapolis: 0, 'at Toledo 4. ‘Kansas City 7, at Columbus 6. Milwaukee 5, at Louisville 4. 7. National League.: 4 ;New‘York 6, at Boston 0. - game. ) Brooklyn. 2, at Phllndalphla 0. Clnclnnatl-flttsburgh fame ' post- ‘poned, wet grounds.’ No: other screquled. American League. Boston 1, at Washington 2. * ‘Chicago ‘6, at St. Louis 4. Philadelphia 4, at New York 5. Detroit 6, at Cleveland 3.” OLYMPIC BLANKS MAILED, Chicago, June 4.—Entry blanks for the Middle Western: Olympic tryouts were mailed yesterday to every ath- “Jetic ‘club”in’ the ‘central district of the National Amateur Athletic union. The tryouts will be held he 26. - All ‘entries must June. 19. -The ‘ninetegn’ events are open to,any amateur athlete regls- tered with the A. A, U., who is a citizen of the United States RUGBY TE}M IN GAMES. Stanford University, Cal., June 4. —The Olympic games commxttee of the = Amateur _Athletic = union has agreed to pay the expenses of the United States rugby team from New York to Antwerp and return, accord- ew. 'York 9, at Boston 5. (Second Chicago, June-4. —Potato receipts today, 18 cars. -Market|* strong. Northern Round White, sacked, $8.75 t Florida Spaulding: Rose, No. 1 317 to $17 50, N 2 $15 to $16 very strong. South Carolina Imh Cobbiers, bar BEMIDJI CASH MARKE‘I' QUO‘I'A'I'IONS. GRAIN AND lIAY Oats, bushel . .. Red Clover;’ medlum. 1n.. Popcoru, pound . Wheat, hard . Wheat, soft . VEGETABL#®S. Cabbage, CWE. ...ss's “,00 $6. oo Onfons, dry, ¢ 0-$8. Beais, cw .Butterfat Eggs, fres 6 Hogs, 6. ... s e Tessed beef, pound. ..... 'l'tu' Y8, ' live, pound. — (+). } live, pound.. gt 9, 1ba, daieaeis and’ ovol.. The following prices were beuxg pud at Sti . at time of going to press oftod, : ; GRAIN AND. HAY 3 Wheat, No. 1 $2.61-§2.71 Wheat, No. 2 ... Wheat, No. 3 ... .32429-32.44 e ..94c-97¢ .$1.20-31.45 .$1.85-81.90 No. 1 cluver. mixed 820 00 Rye straw .’ 9. Cornm . . No. 2° Timothy hay . VEGETABLES ing to a telegram received Wednes- | Beans, hand picked, navy, day from W. Harry Maloney, presi- dent of the California Rngby union, who is in New York. ROLLERS COMING BACK. St. Louis,” Mo., June 4.—Plans are league of Toller skating teams to com- pete in , jnteycity matches for na- tiongl ,4nd sectional championships, “attording ‘toRodney Peters of (this city, former ‘world’s_champioa. . Mr. Reters said a meeting WO held in, Aknon, probably in Jnne, ‘the organization would be perfected. He declared. teams would be formed in the following cities: Detroit, Chi- cago, Cincinnati,. Philadelphis, Cleve- land, Milwauke®, ‘Akron, Columbus, Boston, Pittsburgh,’ Washmgton and. points out some mistakes that he has | Potatoes, per cwt. Beans, brown, cwt. Eggs, per dozen Butterfat . . Rhubarh per cwt. MEATS “ under way for the organization of a|Mutton, 1b. ... . ... Pork, dressed Veal . b Beef, ATORB0 L < ¢ s < as e oo srs s Te-14¢ at which{ SLIPS -BY FAMOUS AUTHORS Humorous to Record, but Dmct th‘ tle From the Stories as - They Are Read. The British minister. of educatiop: come across in books. One of them runs through “Ivanhoe,” where ' the -are removed flom the Normans and Saxons are represented as two distinct races.. The fact is that ! fam b8 . Garlte, 1. Pueklnx but! . LIVE POULTRS Tarkeys, 9 1bs. up . ... Turkeys, small and thin... Geese, 12 1bs. up lnd M.,, Ducks, fat . ‘Hens, heavy, Spriugers, llu % Hens,. 5. 1bs. up, fat Dressed poultry -3¢ per wund lln atock. | — - HIDES Cawhides, No 1. Bull- bides, No: 1 Horse hides:. Wool, bright ADDITIONAL WANT ADS FOR BENT;Two modern rooms, one large: front room, suitable for two. hone 306-W. 2t6-5 WANTED-_Good collector ‘at once. M:pl;. Tom Smart. : & at the time with which the stery deals | marriage between the two races had | gone so far that Norman ‘could hardly be told from Saxon; but Sir Walter Scott did not reallze this unti} the story. was set up in type, and so the famous novel appears with this blunder right || through it. Another mistake was mad by ‘Mrs. Humphry. Ward, - who in ‘gnhe. of her books made two ‘people ‘take:f chairs ip, Kensington - gardens in the first week in October, though’al ‘chairs éfl;déns on Sep- tember ' 30. Chnrleg ingsley, ‘makes John "Brumblecofiw recite a praye! { from the: prayer book long before ‘the || . put’in; the poet weasel never dnm n “Pon - Quixofe” the. merry Cor\untes makes one. of his parties at a tavern ént two suppers in one night.' The Tife: of. a-novelist is fullof trouble, but such _|3ittle ‘things do not. seem. to matter, & greatly. We would rather have: th stories with' all" their ‘mistakes ‘thay have the dull, facts without the storles SR R Jur e Lin L . Finny Mumtlr CIalmed to Have Bun Taken Off New Jcruy—mmarlo- 5 able Devil Fish. Sallors of the. Atlantic fleet an- chored off Colon, Panama, inspecting ‘the ruins of an old cathedrdl of that iefty. ' Gobs go .everywhere and m ‘everything. ALBANIA FIRST I FIELD PR TLan “Dalry Lunch” Well Known in That Country Long' Befors It Was Introduced Here. Long before the:dairy lunch or the eafeteria, those well-known American fnstitutions into “which the American business man dashes wildly ‘at noon hour and helps himself from a tempt- ing array of eats, burst upon the great republic, Albania had them. The “pick 'em yourself” places may have been a mnovelty in‘the United States ten or fifteen years ago, but even then they were an. old. . institu- tion in Albania. ¢ The carefully scrubbed marble top of the American' dairy ‘lunch; resting “on a’long table of marble front and sides, is replaced in the Albanian one by a ‘dainty plece of rock about six | feet fong, three feet wide and. four | Oft: feet deep, resting on a bulky bit of timber, -which, in turn, is supported by wooden -legs just as bulky. The whole is as rugged as the moun- tains from which it all came. In the stone, ‘somewhere ‘back in the past, .circularlike excavations were produced at regular interyals. In the bottom ottheseahntclnreodflremoldm over which slowly, cook the chicken, the turkey, the, potatoes or the rice, . At one end of the rock are the knlves, forks and plates. SUBSCRIBE FOR THE DAILY PIONEER Amerléu claim9 to have caught - th largest fish on record—an ‘enormous ray harpooned off New Jersey, wel ing four tons, and needing six and 22 men to drag it:ashore. Th battle with the fish lasted nine honu. SOME FISH OF RECORD SIZE' b ““Men’s Union Suxts value Men’s 'Work Shlrts values.. Al Es " Canvass Gloves, 20c ; value.............llc and it lashed up spray, to -a height at‘ over. 30 feet. Allowance must ‘be 'made for ‘somq i exaggeration, but there are on recol other cases where gigantic rays, :or, devil fish; have been hnrpooned.' One ‘taken off Jamaica was so that it took 40 men to drag it :ll‘l‘;ht the beach. Even rays: caught in-Bi ish waters are sometimes of great: siza. like one’ that was ‘sold in. ‘the fish market at Cambridge. * It weighed 224 pounds, and when cooked and served at St. John's. college was sifficlen make a meal for 120 persons. A ray 18 feet across and 50 feet round was trapped in Table bay, while offithe Bahama islands the natives once harpooned a gigantic skate measuring something like 16 feet across: the flap- pers. 1 Peddlers of Parrots. Novel to the eye of a_stranger 'll' fting Argentina Is the, parrot’ péfldler. en seen on the streets of the ‘towns, who carries his feathered stock-in- trade In cages, or sometimes peréficd ! on his head and shoulders. g J Thlg untry, of course, i8 too (gr south| of the Ar of Silver.” Brand Cloth $35.00 ,_VSUITS‘ now . $40.00 SUITS now. $45.00 SUITS now. $50.00 SUITS now. $55.00 SUITS now. $60.00 SUITS riow. ave native parrots,-and molt ; na means:“siivery.” or “mml‘ j dts principal! river; and | one of the greatest in the world is | called ' the: River of: snver. “p) belng another : word for the adfhe metal. thefr- origin :to-the fact' that early’ ex- plorers along the Rio-de la Plata onnd much silyer in use by the aborlgines: for personal. ornament. —Publlc ger, Phllndelphln The names thus bestowed owe: e $8.90... New, s, No, 1.$17. | Mra: F: G, Troppmag 18- in Minne:| apolis on .a’ short buying trip. - Her|. daughters, Margaret and Katheryn, |" will ‘return: with ‘her to spend-the summer. in Bemidji. 3 8. Al Lew]s, manager, of the Stel- lar Co., is very’ill at'St. Anthony’s Mrs 8 A, Cutten and daughter, Miss. Vera, were {n.from thefr sum- };oshp:’t’:l‘ rcl): %‘f:::::fihu::;’e Iv&l's mer: home at ‘Waviile, and spent to-|Lewis* brotier from Fergus Falls. NEW ENDURANCE HIGH | /RECORD MADE BY FRENCMAN . - tien Parls, June 4——Bernard, a ncl\ aviator, ‘established 'a new wiid's recdrd for endurante flight wh he landed today atter having been { his ajrplane continuously for /'t hty- four hours, nineteen miputes pnd - seven :secouds. 5 Grads Clothmg Furn Extra Specials for Sat. and Monday #s .$1.19 'Hart Schaffner & Marx and Society Bemidji, Minnesota day visiting ‘and - ehlplng. FLOUR ADA BEST, 98}b sack ---$8 15' S(mkctuon in; every sack “COFFEE PEANUTS Rolsted and Blended Duly Gur Leader A 4&:. Fresh Roasted - . CAMPBELL'S'' ».PORK"& BEANS» 3 cans - - 40¢ Early,-June‘Peas ' - 2 cans for 35c Douglas Corn: - V__DouglasGloss—,bthree Starch, 8 bs. . .25¢ glas G Ivory Starch, three “pounds for .. ..25¢ : paokages for ..25¢c. Bob ‘White Soap 14 bars $1. LARD, per pou'hd, CLIFFORD & COMPANY Phone 160 Lennox Soap 21 bars, $1 2t6-5. give exceptlonal bar ains in ishing and Shoes $1 50- Men’s Work Shoes $4.00 value ...........$2.85 "Men’s Work Shoes, $6 50 value ..’ = Men’s $5 and $6 Hats " cat. 52 95 Men’s Black Cotton Hose 35¢ value 23c Men s Blue Serge Sults $35° “value 1. .. Znloite .32785, Men’s Fine Dress Shirts, . $3.25 value . .....$2.69 '$1.50 .- 9119, ‘We are still offering any cap in the house Free Wlth any suit you may purchase e Boys Fme Suits 2 made by Hart Jm‘ Schaffner and Marx ~and Woolwear Co. $10.50-$11.50 Suits ..$8.95 $13.50-$15.00 _ Suits .$11.85 _ - $16.50-$18.00 Suits . $14.65 $20.00-$22.50 Suits .$17.95 $25.00-$27.50 Suits g .$28.95 .$34.95 .$38.95 .$42.95 .$47.95 .$52.95 THE QUALITY STORE " The home of Hart Schafi‘ner & Marx clothes - Money Cheerfullni&efunded

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