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CAGE EIGHY v Twentieth Century Laugh With Us— | Not At Us— An Artistic Beating At least one fighter, Happy thtle-‘ ton, has found out how to make Mike | Gibbons put on a real fight. Littleton | floored Mike in the first round’ of their bout at New Orleans, and right | away Gibbons made up his mind to | clean up his opponent. Sport writers | claim Gibbons administered one of | the most artistic beatings seen there | in twenty years. Vhatever That Is— A Bachelor Speaks Dear Twentieth Century: In a re- cent issue you said that they were go- | ing to organize a Girls’ City Basket Ball Team. Where is Girls’ City loc- | cated?—R. U. Wiseman. —Won't They Tell You?— Too Much Raw Meat Dear Twentieth Century: I would | like to know why beef stew quoted | at 7 cents a pound on Saturday or, sales day is worth 12 to 15 cents a| nound during the rest of the week.—| U. Tellus. You sav vou would like to know | why it is.'Ts it? ——Why is Santa Claus— Standing Out One outstanding feature of the modern Hallowe’en. desnite the fact that the country is “dry.” is that more than pumpkins got lit un. i —How Did It Look to You?— Put and Take This js excellent weather for golf- evs. Tt gives them a chance to do less | plaving and more talking. Go'f conldn’t be anv more univers- allv popular aven if the nlavers had | to buy golf balls from bootleggers. —Mashie !— Does It Growl There is reported to be a bird in Australia called the woofus. It gets its name from its peculiar habit of barking like a dog—woof-woof. —Some Bird— | BiG CONTESTS ON FOR GRID: TEAMS SATURDAY (Continued From Page 1) soldiers without the great Gipp who beat the Cadets lonehanded last fall. These three games by no means corner the class of the day’s card. The Lafayette-Penn game at Phila- delphia should be one of the best of the day, although Penn’s prospects are rather gloomy. Yale, getting ready for the Princeton game next week has a rather hand picked opponent in| Maryland. Another intersectional game of interest will be staged at| Pittsburgh where Glenn Warner’s great Panther outfit will mcet Neb- raska. Penn State and the Navy are both getting ready for their battle | next week. Penn State is playing Car- | negie Tech and the Midshipmen wi]l‘ work out with Bucknell. i Formation of Grand Bank. | The Grand bank of Newfoundland Is supposed to be composed of depos- its of solid matter brought from the Arctic seas by icebergs, which gradu- ally melt by contact with the warm witer of the Gulf stream. I S | Measuring the Moon. Compared with the earth, the moon is a tiny body, with a diameter of 2,160 miles. In the great circle of the Pacific, from which, according to an4 old idea, it was born, the moon would make a solitary island, Office Siogans. If “dictated but not read” is a good businesslike slogan for the head of the & house, what's’the matfer with “added but not balanced” for the cashier, or “stamped but not mailed” for the of- fice boy?—Leslie’s, ADDI'I'IONAL WANT ADS | FOR SALE—Ford sedan, in perfect _condition. Call 392J. 3t11-7 Would like to sell to one party 'a quantity of good wild hay in stack near Solway. $5 per ton if it is all taken. . This and last season’s cat. 0. B. Stephens, Maurice and Eighth street. 11-4 Too Much of a Good Thing “It is six years since I had my first‘ stomach trouble. It rapidly grew! worse. My food would not digest and | T was reduced to skin and bone. Vly doctor put me on a starvation diet, and when my pains grew worse I con-| cluded it was tco much of a good thing. On the ad of my drnggist | I tried Mayr's Wondcrful Povncdv, and am now entirely well. It is a simple, harmless prepnratmn that removes the catarrhal mucus| from the intestinal tract and allays] the inflammation which causes prac- tically all stomach, liver and intesti~ nal ailments, including appendicitis. One dose will convince or money re- funded. At All Druggists.—Adv. . | for making pr | it efliclent outside the clique of the ' seem to want to invade the earth. . years animals have been trying to get i "I;II!- BEMIDJI DAILY EiONEER ' MR. ROCKABILYY TH' OLE FRAME YOWM HALL HAS @ ORN DOWA 'N A GWELL YWQ-SYORM BRIQK PUT UP, | ==t W\M AROOM FER W NEW . FIRE OEPY. FLAWER,N T SWRLLESY cAL\.ABoosB W E MARKETS AR SN NAANSARRANRARSRSRRALOALNSE, POTATO MARKET Chicago, Nov. 4.—Potato market dull. Receipts 73 cars. Total U. S. shipments, 782 cars. Northern \vhltes, sacked and bulk, $1.50 to $1.75; ‘orth Dakota whites, $1.60 to $1.65; Minnesota and North Dakota Red River Ohios, $1.55 to $1.65; South Dakota whites, $1 to §1.3' Great Men of Culture. The great men of culture are those wheo have had a passion for diffusing, 1, for carrying from one end of society to the other, the ! best knowledge, the best ideas of their time; who have labored to divest knowledge of all that was harsh, un- couth, difficult, abstract, professional, exclusive; to humanize it, to make cultivated and learned, yet still re- ' maining the best knowledge and thought of the time, and a true source, therefore, of sweetness and light.—Matthew Arnold. Restlessness a Universal Trait, Life in the sea is so much easier than on land, and yet all creatures Through millions and millions of out_of the sea in order to lead more interesting lives ashore. Our general ' lqmtlc ancest is indicated by the " t that our blood has almost the ne degree of saltness as the sea. And the human ear, with its delicate chain of bones, corresponds with the organs of the fish. 8afer. Jud Tunkins says after studying a pleture of justice he decided the lady ought to take off the blindfold and keep her eyves on the scales.—Wash- ington Star. i he will keep playthings in place. .ma, your stumick will think you're in Adage Has Been Twisted. There have been various explnnq- tions of the phrase, “Nine tailors make | a man,” but the second word is a cor- ruption of tellers. A “teller” was in anclent days a stroke of the “passing bell” of the parish church. Three tellers gave notice of the death of a child, six of a woman and nine of a man. “When the parishioners would count the maximum npumber of strokes, their natural remark would be “Nine tellers niake a man.” Box for Playthings. ‘When there is no playroom for the children, “take a box ady size you want, decorate with cut-out birds nnd . flowers or with the picture of . a bflln and animals, making a farm yard. Varnish all over. Hinge the cover on, partition inside tq fit toys and varnish. Place in son’s bedroom and see liow Only Four Puffs. Recently Dick, age eight, became terribly sick quite suddenly, and for apparently no reason. His mother tried every way to learn what he had been eating that could have caused his illness. Finally in a faint voice he said: “Mother, do you suppose four puffs on a cigarette could make me this sick?’—Indianapolis’ News. ‘ Crab Shells as Barometers. The Araucanians of the southern- most province of Chilé use & crab shell , as a barometer. In dry, fair weather ; it is white, but when rain is approach- | ing red spots appear on it, and when ; excessive moisture is present in the atmosphere it becomes red all over.— | Indianapolis News. .} Jail Fare. i John’s mother, who is on a diet, was eating a piece of dry bread and drinking a glass of water' when he entered the room. Looking at the meager repast, he exclaimed: “Gee, Jaire YDE’S CASH STORE Ccrner 9th St. and;\Amelmh Ave. - WILL OPEN MONDAY, NOV. 7TH With a Complete Lineof ~_ 't Staple and Fancy Groceries and Fresh Meats I will carry a complete stock at all times and assure patrons of the most courteous treatment, giving them the best values for their money. It will pay you well to buy here, the opportunity it will be proven to your entire satisfac- Yde’s Cash Store tion. Amcrica Ave. and Ninth'St. To Introduce the the eating. put CREMO BREAKFAST pen: NASH-FINCH CO., BEMIDJI, MINN.— my grocer. Address. FREE CREMQ ‘Breakfast Food Into Every Home in Bemidji— We will send absolutely a large sample sack of CREMO BREAKFAST FOOD ; to every one sending in the coupon b The best proof of the BEST BRLAKFA,ST FOOD is in We invite every housewife in Bemidji to CLlP THIS COUPON AND MAIL AT ONCE! Please send me FREE OF CHARGE one sample sack of Cremo Breakfast Food through Grocer’s Name...... My Name............... SisivasiasE e Ra e dsdaea If you will give us Bel‘lld)l, Minn. Justly Celebrated FOOD to the test at our ex-" " By Charks Sughro tyw-m:Nm- VM‘ NOUL FOLKS OUGHTA BE —=="1 em ABLE YO AFFORD A OWN HALL, BUY | BEEM ALL O NEW NORK 'N: 1 AWY SEEN /= " BE ASHAMED OF \¥ "N HAVE 1T W\D SOMEMHERE, Oil Can Grip. A piece of sheet metal bent rough- 1y in the shapeyof a buffalo’s horns, ' with a hole punched in the center so | that it will fit under the spout, which ! is then screwed in place, makes an aflmimble finger grip and enables the operator ‘to shoot the oit more accur- ‘ ately. i i ‘parent, the bottom of the basin at the rate by dissolving a bit of zinc Florida’s Remarkable Spring. Silver spl-in;,', Florida, largest <pung: in the world, fills basin 200 feet wide and 30 feet deep. one of thej, - WHAY WERE SO0 REMARKING ABDOY “Towu um.s‘z“ ] Warm Secret. An interesting suggestion for use in tonne(mm with soldering iron or steel is to make a swab from flexible elec- ! The water, which is extremely trans- tric light cord, which is used in swab- jssues from several orifices at! bing on to the work a solytion made n muriatic of several hundred million gallons a acid and then diluting- with a little day. water. NUTHIN' Get Moisture From Ice. In the "Tanana valley, Alaska, though the rainfall is very light, crops draw ample moisture from the melt- ing "of subterranean ice for. the first few years after the land is first cultl- vated. ‘Eventually the,ice recedes to such a depth that it n6longer supplies the plants with water, tastes. newest patterns and colors. . S | P Policy— One Price to Everybody e | B Our Unalterable Suits for Men and Young Men “PRULY wonderful selection of snappy single and double breasted styles for the up-to-date young man and semi-con- gervative -and conservative models for the man of more quiet Tailored in high grade, serviceable "all-wool cassimeres, worsteds, unfinished worsteds, blue serges, etc., in the season's Your suit here brings you the max- imum of value at the lowest possibie cost. en ’s Work Pants, F lannel Shirts, Gloves, Mlt_tens Exceptional Values at Real Money-Saving Prices Men’s Work Pants Heavy moleskin Pants, drdb or black and white $2,98 stripes Cottonade Pants, good assort- ment of patterns; $L79 $2.49, $1.98 and. for work or Worsted * Pants, $2.98 dress; $3.98 and ....... Heavy Kersey Pants, very serv- iceable and a real $3.98 value Fine grade heavy Corduroy Pants, in dark and army drab; $4.98 Men’s Work Mittens and Gloves Warm lined durable leather mittens, knit or elastic \p'ists, as-low as 79c¢; extra good values at... A Band-top gloves of split. and full horsehide leathers, warm]y lined, string fasteners; $1.29 and 5 ol Auto gauntlet gloves, b]ack colt, wool liners, A THE LARGEST STORE ORGANIZATION IN THE WORLD™ test-of value. Utmost Qualzty and Style at Exccpizonally Low Prices $19.75 $24.75 $27.50 $29.50 Overcoats for Menand Young Men REMARKABLE collection of i new styles and 'exceptional yalues including the popular ulsterette models with convert- * ible coflars, pinch-backs and three-quarter er all-around belts for the up-to-the-mniute young man—the Chesterfield and other Heat styles for men who favor the more conservative- ty] pes—single and (loable breasted coats tailored in the better fabrics and all Your idea of real overcoat value the season's best colors. Men’s Fiannel Shirts Blue or gray heavy Cotton and Wool material, two pockets; choice of flat or military $1.98 collar ... Gray, Khaki or Brown Cotton ‘Warp Wool Sacking, flat or mili- tary collar ) $2 49 styles ... Gray, Khaki, Brown or Olwe ‘Wool Broadcloth, ‘medium weight, coat style with flat or military collar and two-button flap pockets ... 0. D. Khaki Am\y Serge with flat or military collar and two-button flap army’ pockets; a real shirt for the $ e 3.98 All-wool meqmm weig it Flannel, an gray, khaki and -brown w:th at collar;’ $3.79 and .. $349 N-WIDE I\.',-gg—rrur:onl = 413415 BE TRAMI AVE CHAIN DEPARTMENT ALUES such as have not been offered in' years are. here presented in-J. C. Penney Co. Suits and Overcoats for men and young men. For style and qual ity this clothing cannot be excelled for it is the product of the best shops in Amer- jes—made up to the J. C. Penney Oo- standard and backed by the reputation ’ of our 312 stores. Unusual care is exer- cised in the selection of the woolens that .go _into our Suits and Overcoats; every garment is made up exclusively for ue under our strict speclficatmns a8 to style and fitting qualities. ing enables us to pick and choose from the best that the market affords—large quantity selling enables us to sell on the lowest.-possible margin of profit, thereby assuring you more for ycur money than can possibly be obtained elsewhere. We ask you to compare our Swits and Over. coats with those sold by other stores at similar prices — comparigon i8 the true Large quantity buy- Our Unalterable Policy — One Price to Everybody S o