Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
Btmm mmoRRow\L Perusal ’ of th. Daily 'Papers wlllr 2 est. llupois vsl&uo state at Urbana. Minnesota vs. ichigan at Minne- apolis: Iowa State vs. lowa at Ames. California 'vs. Stanford at Berke-| cago vs. Wisconsin. at Chicago. /Denison vs. Kenyon at Newark. Heidelberg vs. Western Reserve at .Tilfln :Montana vs. Idaho at Missoula. . Nebraska vs. Michigan Aggies at Lincoln. Northwestern vs. Evanston Ohio University vs. Akron at Ath- ens. Purdue vs. Indiana at Lafayette. Wooster vs. Otterbein at Wooster.. Notre Dame at In the South. Centre vs. Virginia Poly at Louis- ville. Florida vs. Stetson at Gainesville. Georgia vs. Alabama at Atlanta. - South Carolina vs. Newbury at Co- lumbid. Tennessee vs. Mississippl at Mem- phis. Transylvania vs. Lexington. ™ the East. Harvard vs. Yale a:‘\ew Haven. Dartmouth’ vs. Brown at Boston. | Pennsylvania vs Columbia at New York. Syracuse vs Colgate at Syracuse. Army vs. Colby at West Point. Navy vs. George Washington at Annapolis. _ Amherst vs Williams at Ambherst. Wesleyan vs. Bowdoin at Brups- | wick, Me. New York University vs. Stévens at | Hoboken. | Fordham vs. Muhlenberg at Ford- Georgetown _at ham. Boston College vs. Marietta at Bos- tom: Georgetown - vs. Lee at Washington. Holy Cross vs. Washington and New Hampshire | | tion: Prove It to Anybody Who' May Be in Doubt. A New England professor recently raised quite a‘powwow over the ques- the professor is looking for informa- tion we will promptly say yes there 1s'a wenker sex. To arrive at this c)ncluflyn.we‘ have scanned the dpily papers -and { have found several cases which prove our point. We will mention just a few. If the professor delves into the matter with an analytical mind ‘he will doubtless decide which sex is the weaker. Mr. Amiel WA Finkbinder, a well- known attormey, appeared in court and, sae that his wife had chastised Nim so severely with.4 stove poker | that he could not go to his office. This happened because he criticised the salad they had for dinner the night before. Mr. Terrance Mulvaney was dragged into the station house a total wreck. | One eye was closed and the other was | taking no particular interest in pass- | ing. events. His wife “accompanie him. According to a- disconnected |-\zor\ told by the victim, it appears | that his wife struck him=with the cook | /| stove, himng him on the head and smashing the ,stove, when new. Mr. Spug Hawkins, who claims o be | a burglar by profession, has -filed ar- | ticles in voluntary -bankruptcy, claim- | ing that his business has been ruined” on account of the fact that his wife will not allow him to go out nights. She ties him firmly to a bed post at six o'clotk every night and does not | let him out until morning. There are many other cases, but if the professor wjll read these he will be convinced there is a weaker sex.— New York Malil, hnch cost $25 | State at Worcester. . yette vs. Lehigh at Easton. on vs. Hamilton at Schenec- | sady. W+ Virginia vs. Bethany at .for-| gantowns Carnegie Tech vs. Washington and Jefferson at Pittsburgh. P e i | | Meaning of “Call” a Market Term. | A “call,” in market parlance I8 2 cQQ | tract giving.tle purchaser the option to buy a Lommodlly or security at a fixed price, within a fixed thme; It is| used in speculation in grain, cot(ou,‘ stocks and forelgn exchange. When German marks, for example, are sell- ‘g for 1.6 cents, a broker will sell for | $85 the privilege of buying 25,000 wmarks, within nine months, at 50| cents each. If the price within tha* perlod goes above 5.0 cents, the holder of the call can purchase at that price | and sel! at the prevailing mnrket\ price, and have the difference as a profit. If-the price does not reach the quotation named In the “call,” the money spent far-t is lost. 1, Wife Took Up Husband’s Duties. 23Vhen the forest lookout on Tahquitz ,penk, i the San Jacinto district, Call- fortia, was Incapacitated this fall Mrs, Reindorp, wife of the district ranger, donnéd khakl, londed blankets and grub on o horse, apd took over hig dutles, lolding the lookout post for more than a week. This is one of the | fncldents peported to the United States Deparunent of Agriculture through the | ‘forest service Marriage Promotes Long Life. Marriage, according rte Doctor | Schwartz of Berlin, is the most fm- Portant factor of longevity. Of ‘every 200 persons who reach the age of forty yedrs, 125 are married and 75 unmar- | ried. At sixty the proportions are 48 ' to 22; at 70 years, 27 to 11; and at | ninety years, ® to 8, Tifty centenarl~ _ans had all been married. il flML'mH‘ | ‘ nH" p " - wuimu}um I ) \wwm wmflum ) WEEK BARKER 217 Third Street f- sian Statesmen Impressed Amer. DIPLOMAT SANG OF NATURE Attitude of Man Who Outwitted Rus- | ican Traveler in Japan. | t “McDonnel and myself aindd wm\“[ | Hagiwara and Kuroda at a Japanese restaurant,” Willard Straight wrote in his diary in May, 1905, says Asia. “Is There a Weaker Sex?’s Ifr 3 THE BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEER = U %% oo = WANTBD—Girl for genéral house- work, 612 America avenue. Phone 58-or 12. 3d11-32° i FOR_RENT—Modern steam heated’ goolh, 520 Beltrami avenue. - s 1d11-19 i £ Ozts, bu. Re(t Clover, medium, 1b. Wheat, hard Wheat, soft . Rye, bu ... Mutton . Hogs, 1b., . Dressed. bcer 1b, Turkeys, live, Ib, Old Toms, live, 1b Geese, live, 1b Ducks, ifve, 1b. Hens, 4 1bs. and’ 45¢-50¢ :..12¢c-15¢ 1.20-$1.40 $1.10-81.20 c.... 8130 Inquire at slfi 1t11-19 FOR RENT—House. Mississippi avenue. 7 |FOR = RENT-—Fygnished modern room, 1023 Minnesota ave. Phone 317-R. * 1t11-19 LOST—\Beiween Bemidji and \the Cloverlear farm, one cowhide robe. Finder leave samé ‘at Piopeer of- fice or Hotel S\rea for reward.. 2t11-20 VEGETABLES Potatoes, per ewt., " sthall lots . . Pctatoes, car load lots. Cdbbage, cwt .-. Onions, dry . Beans, cwt . . Butterfat . .. Bggs, fresh, dozen $1.00-31.10 $1.10-51.25 $1.50-82.00 $1.50-32.00 .. .$6-87 .608 2¢-65¢ ¢ HIDES Cow hides, No. 1, 1b .. Buil hides, No. 1, 1b.. Kipp hides}. No. 1, 1b. Cait skins, No. 1, Ib., Deacons, each . , Horse Irides, large . X P ; | CLERKS .(Men, Women) over 17, for | Postal Mail Service, $125 month. Experience unnecessary. For free particulars, of examination, write R. Terry, (former Civil Service Examiner) 119 Continental Bldg., ‘Washington, D. C. 4t11-23 P PP Gt S — 3 y One of our national fnstitutions, less well kuown than most of Uncle Sam’s various activities, is the national training §chool for girls oiy the very i | cdge of the capital, where Conduit road meets the district line. Here In old- fushioned cottage buildings in the midst of woods and pleasant meadows our\ government gives ancther hance to girls wha have lux’l\m distriet or federal * FOR SALE—Choice first mortgages laws. Those in the photograph are gathering alfalfa fpr the;qnh:y herd. ;; on Bemidji p)upegta);hr:}oodlfitle ;2; Chicago, Nov. 19.—Potato receipts, 34 cars; mari(et dull. M)nnesota U. 8., No. 1, $1.25-$1.85 per ¢wt., Michigan best '$2.00: Wisconsin Round W}utes, bulk, $1 75-$1.90. Red | River Ohios, $2.10-$2.25. Idaho U. 8., No. 1, sacked, $2 25- $2.35. ; interest. IS \ “Gelshas danced and I cannot say |§§ that I was particularly impressed. Their®, attitudes seemed awkward, particu- larly the strange heekand-toe move- | _ment. Hagiwara's song ‘on the beau- | ties of Scoul Jmpressed me more than anything else. He, the Airst secretary of the legation, sat there and sang of the spring flosvers, the tender green folinge near his home, of the surmer scenes on the river, the silver shining moon, of the autumn and the golden wmaple, of the snows that come with the shdrtened days and.the whitened hills. He improvised as he went along. He seemed so near to nature! It is. the keynote of Japanese ‘life, The diplomat, the man who with his clilefs outwitted the Russlans, sang of the simple woodland and charms, We-cold westepners are too | fearful of raising a scornful Inugh: ever to show our true feelings in such | an’open way. The soldier fighting with | every scientific appliance known in | modern warfare, understanding its | mechanism, finds pleasure in admiring | the Iris-bloom or the cherry blos- | soms!” Larynxless Man Can Whisper, How a man whose whole larynx | Ras been cut out can continue to talk ! is tald by Dr. T. Horshino of Nugate, | Japan, in the Annals of Otology, Rhinology and Laryngology (St. Louis). Dr. Horshino describes the | eperation by which he removes -the larynx in serfous cases of cancer and | proyides for respiration after it has | | gone. | He farnished the patient \mh arub- | ber tube, one end of which is inserted nto the trachea (windpipe) and the other end Is held in the mouth.’ By sending his breath through the tuhe and ‘vorking his lips, teeth, tengue, palate and pharyngeal muscl the man can whisper in such a way as to | be understood. | Artificial larynges have been made for such cases, but they are” complex | affairs, and Dr. Hoshino says patients much prefer the tube | Stacking Cereals. | One year's harvest of our -cereals would fill a canyon 100 feet wide, five ' miles long and two-thirds aL a mile deep. \ The Scientific American estimates that this Barvest of a” single season in the United States, if stacked-on .one | acre of land, wolld form a column 214 times as high as the Woolworth i bullding in New York. Or it would bury the whole of Central park to a depth of 100 feet. If this crop of cerenls were to fall upon Manhattgn Island like rain at ¥ the rate of a million bushels a day. starting tomowsow, it would not cease falling until the year 1930. . Some Exciuded. Little Joe was visiting at ~grnnd- | ma’s house. Usually he paid very lits tle aitention to his youngest auntie, | Lut this day he follawed her ahout continually. Finally they were alone aid he began on a new line of goi- its |} At the George T. Béker & Company Store has Made Hundreds Happy by Being Able to Secure Unheard of Bargains Easy Payment Terms Prlces Cut ‘Deep We are not asking spot cash for these bargains, but are sellm«r them on easy payment, terms, just'as we haVe in the past at the regular selling price. Never before and perhaps never again w111 such an opportunity. " present itself. Vo If you have ever drenmed of ‘securing a Phonograph or Piario for y The i insurance companies have paid liberally all the damage incurred on every mstrument, deducted in each case. [ - P2 our home, now is the time to. buy. w}uch amount is \ \ but there are still many from which to choose. To They lock hke new and are new Hundreds have snatched up some of these bargains, see them will convince you that they are all new fresh stock, and they are. and have ¢come out of the fire without a scratch. < “Sale Will Continue Until All Goods Are Sold Look these wonderful bargains over and secure yours by makmg a small payment down. SONORA PHONOGRAPHS Fire Adjustment ‘Sale Price $40.00 $175.00 - 15.00 145.00 35.00 125.00 -PLAYER PIANOS' Regular Price Fire Adjustment . $950.00 $200.00 775.00 200.00 150.00 STRAIGHT PIANOS Fire Adjustment $200.00 150.00 100.00 160 00 Regular Price Sonora Minuet Oak.. $215.00 Sonora Brown Mhny 160.00 One Sonord Oak 160.00 COLUMBIA PHONOGRAPHS Fire Adjustment Sale Price $35.00 $190.00 25.00 *150.00 . 25.00 150.00 ~\45.00 115.00 25.00 -, 135.00. 25.00 135.00 35.00 115.00 -15.00 135.00 15.00 135.00 35.00 ,/90.00 25.00 100.00 15.00 110.00 15.00 110.00 10.00 115.00 Sale Price’_ $750.00 575.00 ° 625.00 One Player One Player One Player Regular Price $225.00 175.00 175.00 160.00 160.00 160.00 150.00 150.00 150.00 125.00, 125.00 125.00 125.00 125.00 Hamilton Hamilton One Howard One Monarch . PATHE PHONOGRAPHS Regular Price Fire Ad)ustment $150.00 $45.00 150.00 35.00 135.00 \ 20:00 75.00 35.00 regn]ar price $60.00 each—Choice Sale Price $375.00 425.00 350.00 265.00 - One Walnut ... H 2 Mahogany H2 Oak ...,.. G 2 Mahogany G2 Walnut . G2 Oak .. F 2 Mahogany F2 Walnut F 2 Mahogany E 2 Mahogany E2 Oak .. E2 Oak . E2 Walnut . E2 I\Kahogany Regular Price $575.00 575.00 450.00- 425. 00~ - Sale Price $105.00 +115.00 *115.00 40.00 $17.50 - hggany .'lf‘fi'i"ee Pathes, versation. “My daddy says I can’t take any more money from grandpa and grandina,” he said rather. dejectedly. “Yyi can't?” auntie sympathized, and- § Joe neticed that note of sympathy ' | in her volce, His voice brightened. “But he dtda't | say anything about not taking it from you and Aunt Grace.” he added. lswmm_‘ for Tme Dally Plonesr. The HALLMARK Store MINNESOTA EMIDJ I