Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, September 18, 1920, Page 3

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'ARTICLES OF INCORPORATION.' We; the undersigned, residents’ of ». Five Minute Chats i 3 .8 Our Presidents || Minnessta, do”hereby associate. our- M : 3 selvey together for the purpose of COPOROOND i .|l comingincorporated as a co-operativi . i Oauocmtlon ‘under the'- provisions of: / Chapter 'Three Hungled and Eighty< = two (382) of the Revised-Laws of; (Copyright, 1920, by James Morgas:), anesota,tlsw alfil tlhe acts amenda- | AFT tory thereof and supplemeéntary there- Wll.l.llM Ho" ARD T to, and to that end we do hel%-e yI r .adopt. and sign the' following artie es: 'of mcorporatmm : "ARTICLE I ] (Name and Nature of Busmess) The name of this association lhall -be -Puposky Potato Association. . The general nature of i shall be to conduct-a ti anufacturing enter- | B ,plnu. {members or of:other co-opentwe as- e >. y e locxutlons, as-it; ‘or its' members;-or ““._l,..uwflw twenty-sixth gt}é:r co-ope:;)}s‘txve %ssogmt{?ns, mnly 2 etermine, ellher 1ndivi ually or col-! D0 president, .‘.‘ fty-one. “lectivély as the case may be: It shall 0 also’ fotr the: :bove Eu‘:b? elh;ve power to purchase, and ho , ease, BEN Roosevelt and - Taft todp mortgage, - encumber, “sell, §“ ange ; ‘up . Pénnsylvania * avent and_convey:such real estate, buildings lnch 4, 1909, it ‘was the first; tinie-' and personal; property as the business since Jackson’ and Van. Buren bad | of the iation may require, and “that ‘way side by .side, ‘more | to erect buildings upon| its own lands ‘than 70-years before, that a retiring or leased -grounds. . prestdent would not have preferred an- | - This corporation- shall, : also, have other seat mate and sucvessor than, the | Power to” affiliate with, and. to co- ‘one whom the fortunes of politics |operate with, by membership or other- .had. thrust upon him. ‘wise, any .other association having a like co-operative purpose; - to sub- ‘Roosevelt alone ”lm“m' $UCCeM- | . oribe for and invest-all or any part or. ‘| of ‘its funds.in the capltul stock of Naturally, averyone assumed that we | any- other -co-opérative association: o-have a Roosevelt - admin- | Tt ghall have power to .do anything by;another name, and it was land- everything, not_in®nsistent with xpéites in ‘' the campaign that--the | law, which is -necessary or desirable| p ¥ ; - -brealdent would " not go ‘farther |to accomplish the eflecu and purposes Flns.[ A'B TRAINING m the White House than.; herein:stated. lnstud. he plunged lnfio ‘ i Y ARTICLE n N Bdward att | _(Place. of Business.). . 3 The prmcxpal place of «transacting “pathetic If he; himself Balk |y, inooe of this corporation shall be iHe ‘was abler, more; nprl;ht. -1Ore nesota . lndeponaent than some far: more suc- ‘cesstul presidents. But by bent and mlnln: Ile was_ a jud‘o. -and -the ART]CLE m. (Period of -‘Comniéncement :gd Diration.) :: The time of commencing business duratlon shall be “thirty years. ARTICLE 1V. (Capital Stock.) 5 (Names and Residences of Incor- ik porators.) ‘ : 2 The names and places of residence of the. persons forming this corpora-.| tion are: Thas. Cramer, of Puposky, Minn. Joe Auchter, of Puposky, Minn. C. W. Clark, of Puposky, Minn. Chns Durand, of Puposky, Minn. el Emil Gustafson, of Puposky, Minn. M. Christensen, of Puposky, Minn. .Puposky, Beltrami county, State of | .Congressional charter, Is: o'flel:uy .designated: Te furnish ‘velui sick "and'\wounded ‘ of armies’ in time of “war, :in. neeorgnnu:‘ with the cohventions of Geneva.* To act In matters of velunury. relisf. and.-as-a . medium- of-.com-: Te continue uml carry-en a Bys- tem .of national. and-international relief in_time of peace and te-ap- ply. the ‘same—in mitigating the suf- ferings caused by pestliience, famine, firs, floods.and other great calam- ities, To devise and carry on measurss [ for ~prevénting _ these” causes of nufiorlnu. FOURTH RED CROBB ROLL GALL % Novcmbor 11-8!, 1920, M!MIERSHIg FEES: Annual .......0 Centributing Life .ccicicnne Sustaining. Patren ... 8end dues to your nearest ‘local chapter. 10 MEN AND WOMEN - ‘mot met It and borve it with a gmile. | 3¢ pypogky, County of Beltrami, Min- American Red Cross Is Teaching “ Hundreds of Thousands’ Life- Saving Methods. The purpose of instruction. in Flnt for this corporation shall be Septem— Ald to the injured offered by the Amer- ber 15, 1920, and the period for its|jcan Red Cross is fo traln men and : women to administer First Ald treat- ment promptly and intelligently when mergencies demand it. First Ald treatment is not intended to take the place of a ‘physician's seryice. - A sur- geon should alwuys be sumimoneed as a” precautionary ‘easure where there is -an -injury of -any -consequence, but when one cannot be secured a few min- ufes’ delny may mean a fatality. In such a case a person trained in First Coffin, of Pu; "|_Ald 1s invaluable not only to the lu- Pt Getatsor poaky, Mind. dividual but through bhim ‘to the com- ARTICLE -V, G T (Manngement ) = : The management of -this "corpora- tlonvnhall be vested in a boatd of ‘C. W “Clark, of-Puposky, % firand ~of -Puposky, Minn: Chas Coffin, of- Puposky, Minn. -] corporation shall |- e president ‘and|. ‘elected “annually by. & . «of directors: |~ The annual meeting shall be held Ju each year-on thethird Saturday of une. a half Roosevelt had him ARTICLE- VI inet as secretary of -war— The amount of capital stock of this had him. in.his:eye for'the presidency. | corporation shall: " be Two Thousand ad - the weakness of his Dollars ($2,000. 00), which shall be " strength. He‘:,thought he,.was strong pmd in money or-in-property or both, in such manner, at such tires and S enough to inake a prfit&g:n;m » eB“t in ‘Such: amounts as the board of di- | rectors shall order. The capital stock i shall be divided into eighty shares of "athe - standpatters; reactionary | the par value of $25.00 each. J(5'\'ces, emerged from their seven |‘md -ARTICLE- VII: alf years in ‘the cyclone cellar. _ oment the political broncho felt _The am (I:éi e:fte;l:;esls)tldness that derfoot on its back, it bucked, may be_ inctirred’ by or in behalf of |, rew Taff£Fofilithe seat of leader- | gy assocmhon shall. at- no- tirfie ‘ex ,rfil the ‘rank and -$2,000.0 3 the party ARTICLE VIIL e old rut | *“These artieles-may-be:amended’ in the manner provided by law. . ‘Tn testimony whereof, .we have hereunto set our handé, this llth | | day.. of ‘September, 1920. I C. W..CLARK. . ~CHAS."GRAMER, ' I EMI{. GUSTARSON. CHARLES DURAND. CHARLES E. COFFIN. M. CHRISTENSEN. JOE AUCHTER. Signed, sealed and delivered in.the E. L. Benner, L. R. Dick- (Seal). - of anesota, Gount - of | “clear waming of 'the disaster that overwhelmed the pirty in the congres: ' sional election of 1910, and which all | bat: destroyed it in the presldentlnl 1920, ‘personally appeared before mé g;n:;; Cramer, Joe Aug;lter, g and, as. in, Emil Gustason jand M. Chaistongon, | = to) m@:m 3'be the péno;m named 'l\tt was the flrst presldent to Graw E‘e,'&'}m 9?:?:,?:,1,21;.;,::"‘:‘:5 ‘the 'present salary of flm‘n Con- | acknawledged tHat they executed the . ‘had also adopted, two years be- same as their free act and deed, for ® lie came In, the custom of allow- [the uses and purposes therem _ex- 000 yearly for the traveling | préssed. of the president, and he be-| me ;the great . presidential traveler, mklng a record of 150,000 miles in ‘four; years,- as he went about thd pbpealing . for. a reversal of lct against his administration. fi he strove to turn back the tide, sonly sported with him. S After having elected him by 1,200,- 00 ‘plurality, the people parted with Taft!more in sorrow than in-anger. \They ‘did not question that he was a ;president; but ‘that is a secondary iconsideration. A president must be first of all a politician and a leader. E. L. BRENNER (Seal) . Notary Publxc, = Beltrami County, Minn. My -commission expires October 17, 1925. 90611. Office of Register of Deeds, Bel-| ‘trami County, Minn. I hegby cemfy that this instru- ment was filed in this office for record on the 15th.day of ;September, A. D. 1920,-at 9 o’clock a. m., and was duly recorded in Book 17 of Misc., on page 115. C. 0. MOON, (Seal) Register of Deeds. 2d9-17—18 X H. D. eI TN ! munity hr whlch heTlves There s perhaps no way of asceb taining the number of deaths or seri- ous disablenients which result from- lack of proper safeguards or prompt’ emergency treatment. It Is safe to as- sert. they number thousands daily. There can be no doubt that the appli-- catlon :of - First. Ald methods to each case would immeasurably - lighten the country’s toll of suffering and death. ‘The-dissemination of First'Ald traln- ing"and inforwatien has already pro- duced-a farreaching and-beneficial in- fluem ‘in' the prevention of accidents on rallroads, in mines and in great in- dustrial-concerns. The benefit of a widespread knowl- edge of First Aid In ithe event of @ great disaster, such as a train wreck, an “explosion, an earthquike, etc., s obvious.. Laymen who have had First "Aid: tralning can render efficient as- gistance. ‘Many lives may depend upoun such-emergency care, Red Cross First Ald - work -includes (1) the formation and conduct, through Red Cross chapters, of classes for in- -struction- in accident prevention and First Ald to the injured- among men and women in all communities and in every industry; (2) the introduction of courses of instructlon ‘in high schools and colleges. The Red Cross is preplred to supply First Ald books and equipment at rea- sonable prices. Every person in. lhll country able to do so should, in his own Interest, re- celve Red Cross First Ald instruction. H Information about the.course and in- s - struction classes may be had at the nearest chapter headquarters, r-ald to the Be sure to see me before you ull - Phoné 807 'BEMIDJI -Why Not Plan for " investing is the only sure way. INVEST DIRECT Bread Kneaded on Korean 8treets. Bread Is kneaded on the streets, and with an excellent thoroughness, in Korea. After mixing, the dough is laced on a board in the road in front . of the little bakeshop. - Theu two stal- wart Koreans proceed to pound it with great beetles. The natives do not claim that the quality of the bread is improved.- by the addition of Impuri- ties in the way of fsects and dust which naturally result from the open- alr treatment, says a bulletin of the Nattonal Geographic society. But if one objects to eating It, a native will quote a proverb which, being Inter- preted, runs: “He whe would enjoy his food should not look over the kitchen wan." 5 PO up home prosperity. larly‘by mail every six months. Come in _an appointment. Banjo Originated in lndl-. The modern banjo was introduced into England from America, to \vhlch country it was probably taken by the African slaves, who originally obtained the idea from India; The unmusical name “banjo” seems to have been de- | rived from “banya,” the name of a Senegambian Instrument of the gultar ‘specles. - — i e v e e e e s T . = O S 2 e e ek A s ___._-__ When you begin digging your pohltou 1 would like ‘tu have . ‘ you communicate with me... 1 will pay you highest market prices und I can arrange for you to load at your nearest railroad station.-. A‘KRUEGER With the Potato Growers’ Exchange : Chfi‘.’ox_d’s Warehouse Financial Independence? Regular systematlc saving and sound in modern properties serving the evei‘-growirig peeds of the public. Put your money to work in your own community where it helps to build . The large family of shareholders of the K_o.or§ Broth- ;.. ers: Company receive their dividend checks.regu- the matter over, or phone the general manager for Koo_rs Brothers Company w0 | o e e ye .‘r 3 : ‘,. "‘:j THE MOST 'BE.?I’ILTIF’ILL CAR IN AMERIC. xRS AR e~ R A Do L D Wt il i e I you inspect the chassxs of a Paige “Glenbrook," you It is ‘impressive just to m;EZ:‘t these rings, but a- ride in tfle car will prove a revelation. 'Fhen, you will understand why ‘the ‘entire country is talking about the easy riding gualities of this five passenger model. If you know of a really. bad stretch of road, ride it with the “Glenbrook” —and draw your own conclusions. b MOTOR INN ' Phone 78 ‘Bemidji, Minn. ” PAIGE-DETROIT MOTOR CAR COMPANY; DETROIT, Michigan Mafiufac:urcrs of Paige Motor Cars and Motor Trucks

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