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AR PRI Laugh With He . Not At:Us— 1y X Sitastion: The . undertakers and grave dig- ~gérs at Madrid' have gone on strike, ‘but’ what's _funny . about. that? -Oh, yes, it’s quite an: undertaking. 7 —Right 'in Their Line— .. Who Can.Tell? Now- that yeast is being, used in such abundance, as a tonic and also remember. that, the Diet of Worms history.-Perhaps ' this' diet ‘of - yeast is more sighificant’ than we reanze. { —It Must Be— What. Wyuld You Do? Not .a._hundred” miles ,fx‘pn\' Folk- stone 4 few months ago, a’ wife lay very ill. Having brought up a clever orphan girl, the’sick woman: called the young woman to her and said: . “I shall soon leave ‘my little chil- dren motherless. They know you and love, you, and after I am"gone I want you and my husb&nd to marry.” < The young'.weoman,” bursting into tears, said: Y 3 “We were just talking about that.” 4 f’l‘l\e Wife Recovered— " " Ready for the ?lquxhtir The big gany2 season opens in Minnesota Thuysday,” Noventber 10. We recommend that hunters begin at once to polish up their high- pow- éred rifles. -~ 0 o o > —And Their Imaginations— Social Whirl in Arkansas “Marvin English is getting popular % with the fair sex again. It is reported that he escorted two young ladies to prayer: meeting Sunday,” reports the White County Citizen. & —He Used to Take Three— ( The Silent Demand | L X A Canadian widow recently ‘lost i her voice” dhd Within'a week she had g seventeen offers of marridge. i ¢ —Then She Lost Heér Head— May Be Hard to Get, Thnre is already. something hard about ‘the: soft coal’ this year. Hard to pay for. Hard coal is harder yet. —Have You Noticed?— POLAND CELEBRATING (By 'Unlted ' Piess) Warsaw, Nov. 5—The fifth anni- versary. of the' declaration of the re- public_of Poland is being celebrated throughout the ‘countty today. Flags are flying. on: all ‘government buil ings, and tonight official dinners will sudski, issued a patriotic order of the day to the Polish army. B ADDITIONAL WANT A0S | WANTED—To. borrow $200. Good security. Address C. J. care Pio- " tieer. 2t11-7 e e TR AL R W L LAY FOR SALE—One 18-inch hard coal _stove in Al condition; 1 reed baby “buggy. Call after 4:p. m. A. Paul- son, Second st. and Miles: ave.,| Nymore. 6t11-11 FOR SALE—Four-room house with lot, on easy;terms: Jreer Light and heavy dressed . hogs, also dressed 'beef. G. H. French, Phon 93 or 4287, 3t11-8| FOR SALE OR TRADE—Light team of horses for a Ford car. Four-roon’: house' “and gere , of | ound for Ford .car. eavy team:of horses as down payment on’dand...G. H. French, Phones 93 or 4287J. 3t11-8 FOR RENT—Fufished rooms. Pre- - for couple girls employed down town. 416 Irvir!e ave, 2t11-7 SO, FOR RENT—Two ' furnished - front rooms for - light housekeeping. Phone 342J. ‘ 3t11-8 {Civilvgervice examinations in_Bemidji in - home-brew, it might be well to |1 matked a turnitig point in the world’s || - | stine be given. The President; Marshal Pil- |- MARKETS POTATO MARKET ... Chicago, Nov. 5.—Potato market dull. Receipts 82 cars. Total U. S. shinments, 775 cars. Northern whités, sacked and: bulk, Qt.GB to $1.75; minnesota and: North. Dakota Red Dakota rourd whites; $1-to'$1.35. " (Conttnusd Trom Page 1) bound’ dominktion ‘of capitalism— pérhaps foreign—than is now the case. 4 The workman in Germany is today fairly content. are losing in purchasing power as the mark drops. But he has been: quite successtill for a long tinie'in “jimmy- ing” raises out of the government and out of private capital. “Today a pair of shoes costs him more than a week’s ‘Ppay; a suit. of clothes about two ‘thonths’ work:: Food prices having beén slowly. advaneing, and are de- d:to go higher as the mark drop$ Ab'few taxey ‘are [imposed. even isities. “The wotkman’s. posi- sved vastly, However, sincé:the armistice. ~Just after that, he was full of “reddism” ard. “strike- ism.” Toddy, he is willing to work, and is wdrking, ‘as-shown: by. figures showing that only. about ‘380,000 men are'unemployéd. .. i, : Mills are Booming with home and foréign’ orders, due to the low stand of the mark, but.indications are that this "Prosperity ‘will -blow %up with ‘a loud report-one of these days—and not so far distant. “How. Center of Pupuration Shift¥=L.o. cated in Indiana for the Last Thirty Years. For 30 years the center of popula- tion In the United States has re- malned within the borders of thestate (of Indiana. g g “THe censtis of 1020 gives Spencer ds the town' nearest the center of popula: tion. The exact point is 83 milés southeast ‘of Spencer, in the extreme southeast corner of Owen county. ' ‘Avcording té the -1010 census the center of population was in the city of Bloomington. Following are the locations of popu- lation centers for the various census- s, with ‘the' distance of westward moyement in each decade: 1790--T'wenty-thiéé miles east of Baltifiore, 1800—Efghteen miles west of Baltl- niore; 40.6 miles, 2 [ 1810—Woity ‘wilés” northwest of ‘Waghing 18Y0-N: stock, Va.; 50.5 miles. Va. (then a part of mijlés Wést of Clarks- e | Virginla) ; 55.8 18602 by milds sobith bt Chitit- cothe, 0,808 miles, L 1870 eight miles east of ‘Oin- clmmtr? 4431 ‘miles, st 185)—Mght ‘miles” west'‘6t ‘Cincin natl; 58.1 mites. - 1890—Twenty miles west of Colum- ' November. Positions, $1400-$1600. Apge,: 18 upward. Experience: un- ‘necessary. ‘For free particulays, iigstruétion, write R. Terry (for- . mert Civil Service ‘examinur), 119 Continental bldg.; Washington, D."C ; 3t11-8 FROM ONE SCHOOL @Eme\Smfidfiid ‘0il Co.,, 2 ‘N D., calls on 'Dakota Business Gollege of that city’ whenever they i doffic‘ elp. The employment i f Edwin Jepson and Melvin Rud, makes well over 100 graduates for this firm alone. Betsey Kittelson is the 8th Dakot ed employe for the big Hull I=:umince Co. ‘Would these firms and hundreds of bthers cotistantly. employ D. B. *C. pupils'unless convinced that they i were exceptionally welt taught? bus, Ind.; 48.6 miles, ; 1900—Six miles southeast of Colum- bus;- Ind.; 14.6 miles, y 1970 fhie city- of Bloomington, Tt ; 39 nam?. EAN, 4 A’ ¢lerk - who also delivers ceming in for a-lot' of kid the following experlepfio afternoont recently. 3 ‘A woman customer, hot ‘very: hefty 48 'to'pay, calfed up: ke a suit of underwéar forthwith. The clerk gdid 4ige, but Before he Iefihe re structions from the boss tolget the goods. Arriving ‘at gouds, 18- ig-about had’ one. ome, | woman the amount of cash he re- Quireq. - : “If I have to pay cash TN ‘know that they fit,” she snapped back, then wentvl‘ntoAn‘ room adjoining. 3 “And would you' belleve it the clerk s, “fHat womnnn %ept me wait- | Ing i the hot sun for half &n hour, Then she cane back dnd sald curtly, ‘T doa't want thom. Dhey ‘Ave’ too | “Followthe furceggful’ togeod jobs:and promotions. Write F. L. afafkins, Pres., 806 Front St., L Fargo, N. D.?, or. terms, etc, PRiver Ohios, $1.50 to $1.60; South | OF NDUSTRIE DISTAN» direction and result in_a more iron- 2 of course, his wages | fIOVE ALWAYS IS WESTWARD |, 1880=-Ninefeed" mlles southwest “of | W. 1'powers in ‘China, there has been a he handed in” thé packige’ iiid' told the |8 “Sport” to .Those Who Are ; telined to'ft, - Youths who - like ~adventure and ‘heaps 'of ‘excitement are advised to hunting wild:horses in’ the Qkan- - 1s near the Canadian border of on. There are several thou- I 1} 13 cows and sheep to death.. Once domesticated hotses are mingled with th e’ preséfit plan of shooting by rdnchers, they tried’ nd _sh ig the captured steeds to Ea 'Se markets. The | expense and dangér of catching alive was found above possible profits. These wild broncos. are vicious, and often, Tather than’ submit to capture, dash’ thelr brains out by running pell- méll into rocky ledgs 3 Qne_expedition ‘during & month of king shot 120 aninfals., were taken. 'Some of ila stailions proved to ‘e excel- |, lent ‘spécimens, ‘ohe brown and sorrel estimauted’ at 1200 pounds weight. The riiarés Seldom' ‘average tore ‘than 800 pounds, - oo Where 'these - horses range is a 0 :bad:land’ region . between the de and Rocky mountdins; 4 nat-| ural grass country, arid in’ Summer, but the winters are mild, with light |- snowfall, [ R U A ‘Take Your Choice, A face specialist says that the shape of the nose can be altered by paraffin . A sinipler ‘méthod, of course, Gidry. 1.1t is_only t i 'play ‘dnd’ th¥ ““ttiree’ ‘rousing clieers.” YR “AR¥ hfinved From Page 1) Versailles transferred the. German rights in Shantung to Japan, a.ml Japan, it is estimated, now main- i tains 6,000 troops in Shantung to “protect” these rights : This grabbing . China’s territory | by the world powers; and the marking out of 'special “spheres. of interest” auged John Hay, the American sec- yetary of state, i tes to Germany, Rusisia, France; ‘Grent Britain and Ttaly in 1899 o ‘ask: formul ‘ac- eptince by the powers of ‘the prin: cipal -of the *‘open door” in China, |in’ accordance with which these pow- iers would not ¢laim:in their réspec- tive:leased areas orspheres-of imter- est preferential treatment for. their nationals. In thése notés, Hay also upheld the integrity of China. " The powers-accepted- the principl¢ as put forward in the Hay circular but since then there have been edted violations and attempted jolations of the ‘“open dcor” prin- & the! development of the spheres of interest of the foreign deattering of agreements made among these . foreign -powers. to gecure and ‘guarantee their respectivé special rights ‘and ‘interests. s' particularly impor- tdnt in consideration of the develop- fluentés in China these interests. " T not, it is past due. This_must be paid . by'the 25 Please Coo&perlte With A / MINN. ELECTRIC LIGHT & POWER CO. ELMER E. SWANSON short -and “clingy’ "—Smith County (Kan.) Ploneer. : —— o berian’ “To evacuatd com ys B¢ Willing to rule |y heiF the brass band |§ SATURDAY EVENING, NOVEMBER 5, 1921 chiria’ in"" aggressive - manner, sent of China to eXtend the trans-si- put armed forces along the r: {and, began to administer adm tive . rights in the railway' zones. Then, -upon pressure -from : Russia, 4 new agreement was about ‘fo be gned -between. Russia and “China, which would have greatly increased Russian .and-decrédséd Chinese . mil tary' control in Manchuria, ‘when ong protests were made -against proposed agréément by the Uni tl ed States; Great 'Britain and Japan, |- Japan; before the Russo- Japanese wat: in .1904-1905; did not éxercise such™a dominant infiuence in-the Far ésé 'wild ‘ones they | mast as she has sincé that time. How- ‘ever, since’ the Russo-Japanese war, Japan has ‘developed what she re- gards as her “special interests” and 4 her '“special position” _the Far East in ‘a more aggressive manner than have any of the powers @heir. réspective spheres in China. Russia having failed to withdraw her troops from Manchuria, Japan | delivered motes of protest to. Rus- ‘@ with: Russia still refusing |}l , and', satishxctorfi action, Japan declared o ferred to'Japan the lease of Liaotung peninsula, including’ the harbors of Port Arthur’and Dajren. ~ Despite the fact that by Article III - of the Treaty-~of Portsmouth, Japaan and Russia mutually engaged tely “and’ simul- taheously Manchuria‘except the: ter- tory affected by ‘thelease of the Ligotung peninsula,” Japan, accord- ing“to officisl figures heré,’ is' main taining nearly 16,000 troops in Man- churig.. - her famo which brought on;the Russo-Japanese | war, following which Japan succeed- Ted to Russia’s ‘place in Manchuria. In; 1896, Russia secured: the con- ilway-dc¢ross the northern ergd 1 of Manchuria to Vladivostok. Russia Early, in 1915, Japan struck with us ;7 Twenty-one, . Demands. NOL. ALANS BEEW ’\fismm' Ax Years, had to yield. Jap: LILY OF THE - VALLEY FLOUR " None Better, Made exclusively from North Dakota Hard t" Spring Wheat —BY— CAVALIER MILL- ING.COMPANY CAVALIER, NORTH _-P,AKOTA FOR SALE BY ALL GROCERS 1 oriigy Ot WILL | I will carry a complete the best values for their m the tion. America Ave. and Ninth: ASH $T0 RE nd America Ave. PEN MONDAY, NOV. 7TH ;i1 With a Gomplete Line of.. b Staple and: Fancy Groceries and Fresh Meats stock at all times and assure patrons ‘'6f the most courteous treatment, giving them oney. It will pay you well to buy here, If you will give us dPportunity it will be proven to your entire satisfac- : f'de’s Cash _Sto”re i 2 :% . Bemidji, Minn. to accépt the demands, and China] Group 5 off the demands provided'| among other things that Japanese ! political, financial- and military ad- sers work with -the Chinese: gov- ernment; that the Chibcse police de- partment be jointly admninistered by anese and Chinese; and that Japan Russia déveloped her sphere,in Man-|Group 2 of these demands, which ap-'supply China with: 50 .per cent or|the s plied to Manchuria, provided for thé'!more of the munitipn: neéded by the | wreste term. of lease of Port.Arthur and!lattér country, .or that a jointly Dairen, and of the South Manchuria worked Sino-Japanese arsenal - be railway and the Antung-Mukden rail- | established in China. way being extended to another 99 and gave other advantages to the Jdpanese. On May .7, 1915, Japan issued an ultimatum to ‘China |giving the latter ‘country 48 hours Japan maintains today a military occupation iin Siberia and the north ern ‘half of Sakhalin ) island is off the Siberian mainland, | island. This Well, Here’s Ole Ezra Goofus! | i) e southern half of which d from ‘Russia in' the War of 1904-1905, the nqrthern part, ‘how- ever, 'still belonging - to Russia, at least technically. R ‘Aceording’ to ‘official figures here, Japan has in’ Siberia 29,000 troops, and in the Russian half of Sakhalin island, '4,500. Teaspoons Dinner Forks Dinner'Knives ... (Hollow Handle Butter Spreaders . Berry Spoon Sugar Spoon . The Grosvenor and Patrician designs in Correct Service pieces and chests. ‘What could be more appropriate than Community Plate as a Xmas Gift? At DRUGS & ;. ‘4 PHONE 34— | B@fl“@ed Prices Earle A. B Formerly Now [4 .$4.50 $3.75 Set of Six 9.00" $7.50 Set of Six $13.50 $10.50 Set of Six $6.00 Set of Six $3.25 Each $1.25 Each JEWELRY arker November 7 *Red Label Coffee will be served free at 'AKRE'S GROCERY STORE ‘ NYMORE ek Monday and Tuesday YOU ¢ARE C_ORDIALLY INVITED November 8 ators ‘All Union Men #nd Wom are requested to be consistent, CO-OPERATION n, y()u!; Ffiends and Families PATRONIZE HOME INDUS- TRY, and co-operate with the Business Firms listed in this newspaper—and demand the UNION LABEL on all com- modities you purchase whenever possible, - - i The following BUSINESS INTERESTS of our city solicit the support of all working people, and are recommended _ BEMIDJI CENTRAL LABOR UNION by the L AMUSEMENTS Grand Theatre—Phone 139-W Elko Theatre—Phone 252-W . ... AUTO DEALERS Overland DeLeuil Co. AUTO ACCESSORIES: Edwin Akre—Phone 265-W Bemidji Electric—Phone 303-W Overland DeLeuil Co. BAKERIES Home Bakeéry=Phorie 425 Sanitary Baking Phone 789 BOOT and SHOE DEALERS Shoe Store—Phone 172-W Hub Clothing 'Cé.—Phone 188 Laqua Cloth. Store—Phone 581-J Guarantee Clothing Co. rahait-ConfectisWery—Phone 'm, €. Christianson=<Phone 219-J _DRUGGISTS Boardman’s Corner Drug Store Phone 304 CITY DRUG STORE—Phone 52 CREAMERY Bemidji Cr'al'l‘n‘ef&-Q'm—-—Phone 143 ELECTRIC COMPANIES Bemi FURNITURE Hannah Market—Phone 129-W ° 'BUY AT HOME! 4 GROCRIES and GENERAL MERCHANDISE Clifford & Co.—Phone 800 Co:opernfive Store—Phone 66 Edwin Akré—Phone 265-W, Nymore A. 0. Akre—Phone .501-W Nymoré Sunshine Grocery 4 Wold & Olson—Phone 190 + Nymore Qualey Cdsh Grocéry—Fhone 216 J. K. Ramsey—Phone 46 Nymore Nymore Market and Grocery Phone 452 HARDWARE STORES . Palmer’ Hardware—Phone 250 {1 . LUMBER Matson-Ritchie Lumber Co. Phone 30 - MEAT MARKETS 1 Wold & Olson—Phone 190 E Nymore i Nymore Meat Market-—Phone 452 l , " PLUMBING | Robert J, Russell—313 4th St.: RESTAURANTS i| Enterprise Cafe 0 { Third Street Cafe—Phone 90 r SOFT DRINKS and __ BILLIARDS Dinty’s Place—Phone 8 Wm. McDermid—Phone 155 4 Wm. Christianson—Phone 219-J Nymore Princess. Candy Shop A Abraham Confectionery Store Electric. €o,—Tel, 303-W | e ! ...— .UNDERTAKERS Ibertson Undertaking Phone 317-W P et C R AW L tvalin &7 Wb U iest it