Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, August 19, 1920, Page 3

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B e ) day at the Illinois State Bept.” . 23, 1916. His time for the 15 miles - : l.N RmoAD YARDS was 12:43.40; 20 miles, 17:00. 40; 26 s d miles, 21:15.20; 650 miles, '45:19.40. The latter mark was made at Detroit, -], Riga, Latvia. (By Maili—Over five | Mich., May 30, 1917. , ¢ > hundred men, women and children |, Tom Alley {s the holder of the 100- are stranded here with' no means of |ftile mark, his Duesenberg having livelihood, as a _result of the fighting covered the century in 1:81:30:00 at MEATMAY. « ' HARDING'S ‘CREED h:plorer Stefansgon Leases| " : — - " Asetic ¥ to Grawe Bi m(;mn:tq OF CHANNEL B — Herds for Cheaper Food * Watertown, S.D., Aug. 19.—Thry in Poland. . |Phoenix, Arizona. \ - " '/ the digging of-a channel .connecting . They are formpr soldiers, with| Spencer Wishard, piloting a Mers o ‘ b i the Big Sioux-river with thie Pelican, their wives and children, from the |Cer; covered 150 miles in 2:3:51:00 (By United Press) the latter has been raised forty-two scattered ranks of General Yude- |3t Columbus, Ohio, August 25, 1912. The refugees| RalPh Mulford’s record for the 200« N FIRST HARNESS RACES STAGED 120 YEARS AGO R : Harness racing, recognized as_one of .the principal outdoor entertain- ment features at the Minnesota State Fair, Sept. 4 to 11, also ranks as one of ‘the oldest sports. ayers of na- Although the racing game has had its lean as we|l as prospective years, the records clearly - show that the time for the mile was gradually im- proved upon for,more than a century. Records on racing in this country date back 120 years, according to a perusal of the record books. ttawa, Opt., August 17.—Accordlng| ;0 3ng will be maintained at-this| ' il " v nitch’s White Army. “an ordép in council-just g,azetted level thru-a diversion of a part of the| | 3 i A | reached\ Riga, on the way to their |Mmile distance, made at Columbus, e a vast territory in Baffins Land| 0oior of the river whenever the lake | [homes in Eastern Poland and the|OBi0, July, 4, 1913, still stands. ~The ‘4 X be leased to Vilbjalmur Stefans-| 4, 0y ooy jts-present level, accord- . 5 B/ Ukraine, when word came that the |time was 3:21:48:00. } he Arctic explorer for the DUr-| . 5., o\ horities here today. ‘ -~ LAk, trontier’s of East Poland were clos-| _The half-hour race against time pose of grazing reindeer and musk.0X| "oy o hotionvss outlet has been dam- S 1 d "\ : ) “led. i . over a on’o;mlle cireular track is held herds the meat. of whict will, 1t 48}, 54y 0o the Sioux was diverted into The train in which the retugees|DY Fred.Horey. He made 34:3-¢ sald, go far toward solving the prob-|;, "y oying'it 5 good fishing lake at ‘larrived was held up in the Riga yards | Miles in 30 minutes at Springtield, Jem’ of cheaper food. g i all times during the, open season. | ]for several days, awaiting an oppor- | 111:» September 23, 1916. The land which is to be 1etsed £0T| p o\ oy the shallowness of the wa-| . $ Y | tunity to proceed, but was finally tak- Dave Koetzla traveled 63 miles in thirty years with a renewal:period| . "o, 004 preezing into the bed dur-| | - : ¢ : 3 en over by the Lettish army for-mili- | @€ hour in his Briscoe, settipg a new - ot to exceed twenty.years, 18 that|, =54 "Cinter resulting in the death \ - wary tary transport, while its destitute |Fecord for that distance at Detroit, section described as the ‘utherllilelhzlsl of‘hundreds of fish. The channel was i b gassenfiers were housed in nearby May 30, 1917. g : ‘of Baffin’s Land south of para de under the direction of the state ¢ . arracks. e e degrees north latlm£ and including glaam'e dzpnntment. s Ever since the arrival of the train| CTHE PiONEER’ WART ADS | ‘a.strip. ten: miles -wide along - the| gy yang of this channel, launches the American Red Cross has been op- north boundary .of Lake Metiling. |,.v"now ply from\Lake Kampeska ating a field kitchen in the rallway BRING, RESULTS _For-the first fifteen years Stefans- ¢, r,ye Pelican, thru the Big Sioux rds andfeeding the stranded Poles . . ‘son will be given free grazing Priv-|, ey : and Ukrafhians, who reached Riga {leges, but for the remainder of his| ) with neither money nor food. - 1ease he wilk be asked to gflgf”l-sf_‘: . N In view of the situation along the = X . 'year. ‘According to Stefansson 8|npypypy TENNI East Polish frontier, it is feared that :ta.{ement to the” Dominion govern- .OF FOUR T s the Yudenitch veterans and their aent. he.has interested sufficient cap-| = - SERIES T0 OPEN TOMORROW tamilies may be forced to prolong ital to, insure the success of his PrO-| pDylyth, Aug. 19.—The third of a their stay in Latvia for several weeks. ject. i series of four for the state tennis The Red Cross is making arrange-| ‘While musk-ox meat is-known only championship was scheduled to open ments to continue ¢aring for them to a very:few ‘epicures of ‘the north-1on the courts of the Duluth Boat during the enforced stopover. Tand, jeindeer meat is quite a COM-lelyh here tomorrow. pRits Rt 00 mon .dish on tzhe no:‘]"“il):mm z:tc;?lc The winners in the ,ellmln;nk;s | . STATE FAIR AUTO RACES * goast and is often available in: ~|contests, two of which were play G % [ Trants; a8 far south tatuf'ortl?ngée?l‘li’!; in June, one scheduled for #ugusl m—— ATTRACT NOTED MOTORISTS gon. The meat o e rein 25, and today’s contests will be sent 'AIN LES . 2 3 ' Q‘g‘r‘y palatable and not unlike that of |¢o Boston this season to participate ENTEBED. AT STATE FAIR The_ public is going to seée a real HE dignity of the white-tailed demestic deer of the|in the national championship meet. hair-raising series of automobile races oir: profession- ' -western states. &l . Only northwéstern players are com- 't“ tlhle Minnesota State Fair, Sept. 4 0, ictianati < o . peting in this years contests. A ban 4 fence of apples, piled side by o'l‘h. ¢ th " 1 e s f EER MEAT NEXT has been placed on all pl side, five apples high, could be built| . e d"“'ea"';l‘lo e racing world is matches the high w Gse has been found for the|tlonal fame. \ around the entire fair grounds from ::c:::s :‘_ 8 -]sz'f;'tzrggez::&;‘:d“y standards we have %eliidecr. - The picturesque ' animal the apples which will make up the| “pirt track racing is the most popu- set for the conduct with its great horns is; of course, massed exhibit in the Hortleultur®lliar form of automobile competition of our business. ‘familiar to every child.from the days|ET.KS DRUM CORPS IS Sent 45'0 1 nnesota ‘1\'. today. Most of the expensive speed- . when we believed in the existence of & ~ ep £ iy | way courses of the country have been ‘Santa Claus.’Later we have occasion- “ATTENDING STATE MEET ~More than 1,200 boxes of apples of [torn down, and long distance racing, ally seen actual reindeer in zoological| - gt Paul, Aug. 19.—<Under the di- all varieties common to Minnesota|with one or two exceptions, has lost gardens or circuses. It is not gen- irection of Dr. John Davern, the Elks’ have been entered by apple growers|its novelty. -erally known, however, that there are|.qrym corps that organized during the to. date. So many apples have been| Fred Horey of St. Paul, is the: ‘tens nf .thousands of reindéer still{},st mid-winter carnival has been or- entered. that it will be impossible to|world’s champion over the 15, 20, 25, living - in’ northern’ countries. . The|ganized and now contains+32 pieces. accept any other entries, according|and b50-mile distances. In his Fiat “high cost of meats-at present has sug-/'The qerps is attending the state con- to Superintendent J. V. Bailey. demon, he broke three records in one. gested.-the possibility of raising the|vention in Virginia todey_and tomor- . familiar_ reindeer in' large numbers| row, ! “for food purposes. It has been call-| ="/ ¢ / MELDRIN OF SAVARNAE IS LEAPING SPEAKER Jamestown, N. D., Aug. 19.—The leading speaker at the annual meet- ing of the North Dakota Bar assacia- tion here today and tomorrow will be Peter W.-Meldrin, of Savannah, 4 o o . Ga., former president for the Ameri- ‘fir Hngfl't Po-Y-Vble Q”flll” can-Bar association. During their . . . stay here the visitors will be guests \ \41' Lowejt Po.f.flblf Pflfe of Jamestown lawyers at an outing - & at Spiritwood Lake. ~iculated with great care just what it “would cost to raise a reindeer. how much meat i( would supply and what it would cost to bring it to our tables. Millions)of tons of good meat. it is “believed, can be produced in this way and sold in our markets cheaply, and a.company has actually been formed " to start a great reindeer farm for the purpose.—August Boys’ Life.. {SUBSCRIBE FOR THE 5 . .DAILY PIONEER ’ ~ < g T g ) FTER smoking your first Spur, you might say : A JOlll) thfle “just’righ,t." ‘‘immense’” or ;‘greaff’—megns the - sameghing. Means: ‘““There was room at the top T . = [ . 7 for a cigarette that can refresh a tired and much ‘ i = ; = - ' "tried taste. And Spur’s that cigarette.”" ' | o Our Store Is fhe Gateway to the ¢ " In the new Spur blend you find : ¥ T . -t Y . Organized Efficiency of “The richness of the full bodied Oriental leaf : [ » - : ' tempered by the mildness and fragrance of Burley L and other choice home-grown tobaccos. It’s a 0 IR i - happy fble,nd that brings out to the full that’ good ‘ ¥ = a—lat : ' tobacco taste, - v i P your dealer cannot supply you, scad w I . BT e ; i : And what’s morel Satiny imported paper, - s pep oo pory s A place to a better new way. ,crimped, not pasted—makes an easier-drawing, . C""'"" m"’*"f” “‘":’.'“ e e The individual failor who once worked at his own bench 3 slower burning cigarette. A mighty neat ‘‘brown . ifll‘mnltv.mn:u\m’ 1 fi . . Tailor - + e e The good old way of tailorirg has given ‘has joined our organization of"two thousand individual . v : " : tailoJra working gide by side under one roof—each. | and silver”’ package, with triple wrapping, keeps »\ man specializing on the part that he can do best. The ’ / i M result is— - - e \ 'Spurs fresh and fragrant. Just smoke a Spur and - N P ‘. More finely finished detail, making a . S g : g e & . better complete garment. -y i ; see. . / i p " Great buying power through volume. ’ i . % .« s Midew dcbmoiadin] operktish throogh, | = i Liccerr & Myers Tosacco Co. unity and specialization. - -~ S ¥ Better tailoring values as a natural ¢ ’ 3 result. 3 “It will be interesting to every. man who appreciates ; ; o : ) ¢ {1 real quality woolens to -see our offering priced in the ’\ 2 O ¢ - We assume the resl)'ops’ibility of fifihg you and ‘Q 'fi.l' pleasing you in\ every respect. : . L i 2 ] neighborhood of $55 and $65 tailored to individual ' measurement.

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