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NEW YORK: IS LEADING NUFACTERING CENTER -(Continued From Fage 1) 000. . These factories employ almost 'a million ‘persons, or approximately 15 per cent of the totai povulation. Many of them are in the heart of the city, concealed in bask sure dim- lighted basements or the clean. airy upper floors of siyscrapers. Most of them especially the Jarger ones, are clustered along thel'North:and East rivers and in thesthinly popu- lated areas at.the city’siedge where large .open spaces still exist. The average New York City fac- tory employed 26 persons of whom about 20 are ‘wage earncrs-and the remainder :officials or clerks. Evi- dently the average establishment is somewhat smaller than that of some of the large industrial centers. Chi- cago employs an average of 48, Phil- adelphia 87, Boston. 36 and Balti- more 42 per establishment. Each New York factory worker produced in 1919 an average of $6,376.18. The average income for all persons engaged in factory work was §$1,372.02. Comphred, pvith the figures for 1914 every industry shows an increase in the amount of goods produced. More than one-fifth of the coun- try’s entire population lives within 200 miles of Battery Park, New York City. : REPUBLICAN TICKET Endersed by Republican Party Ceaveatlon Primary Election Monday, June 19, 1623 U. 8. Senator FRANK B. KELLOGG | Governor J. A, 0. PREUS Lleutenant Governor LOUIS L. COLLINS Secretary of State MIKE HOLM 8tate Auditor R. P. CHASE State Treasurer HENRY RINES Attornoy General CLIFFORD L. HILTON R. R. and Warehouse Commissien IVAN BOWEN Clerk of aupren'w' Court GRACE F. KAERCHER i Huffman & O'Leary " FURNITURE AnND UNDERTAKING - LICENSED EMBALMER IN CHARGE MILLER-HEARST FIGHT BOOKED FOR NEW YORK (Continued From Page 1) Tammany Hall will have a majority of delegates to the state convention. Hearst is counted on to control May- or John F. Hylan, who in ' turn, through patronage at his disposal, is the controlling influence in Tammany at the present time. If Hearst says he wants the pomination Hylan will cee that Tamany delivers the 'neces- sary votes at- the convention, it is believed here, % 3 The Hylan Boom "~ Hearst’s booming for Hylan for the nomination: here is taken as cam- ouflage. E According to information reaching here, Al Smith, former governor, is not being given serious consideration because of a reported break between C. F. Murphy, Tammany leader, due in part to Smith’s action in support- ing some of the measures of Gov. Miller. While this break has not be- come so serious as to become open, it is known that the former gover- nor is no longer the confidant of Murphy. Interest in the gubernatorial sit- uation is the all-absorbing topic at the present time, and overshadows the possible make-up of the rest of the ticket to such”an extent that little thought is given to the latter. Should Hearst take the Democrat- ic nomination for governor, then it is believed that Martin H. Glynn will The two are close personal friends, and Glynn has supported Hearst to ~ noticeable degree in his paper, the Times Union, in Albany. But there is apt to be sBme in- surgency, as George R. Lunn, of Sche- nectady, is also seeking one of these nominations, and unless he can be persuaded to_take something clse, he is apt to bolt the ticket and make it uncomfortable in a general way all around. CHAUTAUQUA TO PRESENT FINE PROGRAM THIS YEAR (Continued From Page 1) here this year a number of Bemidji business and professional men have signed an agreement to sell ten or more tickets each, thereby assuring the financial success of the enter- tainment. These men in turn will dispose of their tickets to the public and as many more tickets as possible. The underwriters for the Chautau- qua here this year are as follows: A. T, Carlson, G. W. Harnwell, G. H. Zentz, John T. Phillippe, C. W. Stanton, E. A. Barker, John Claffy, 1. B. Keeler, Lester P, Warford, liam Elliot, F. R. Duxbury, C. Niel- son, H. A. Bridgeman, Reynolds & Winter, N. E. Given, H. L. Huffman, G. W. Rhea, D. S. Mitchell, 0. H.| Frickson, B & D Shoe store, P. L. Brown, Quincy Brooks, L. J. Jerdee, E. D. Boyce, H. R. Jones, Reese Lor- anger, P. L. Hincs, E. P. Peterson, B. R. Jahr, D. E. Whitman, A, C. Johnson, I. B. Olson, A, A. Richard- son, E. N. Ebert, C. L. Isted, J. O. Hoganson, E. W. Hannah, J. R. Ve- loske, H. A. Pflughoeft, B. R. Erick- son, A. D. Johnson, J. L. George, PHONE 178-W or R e e e i Geo, T. Baker, B. L. Johnson and J. C. McGhee. . be the choice for U. S. Senator. | il- |- SOLD YW SPAGE O A L NE\GHBORING TOWN MeS AFF —— LISTENERS WOULD TAKE RISK Danger of Falling From Grace Negligible on the -Part of Prac- ticer on Trombone. Mr. Elisha Johnson's mind was troubled on a certain point of con- science and-he determined to seek his pastor’s advice. “Do. you think ‘It-would be wrong for a Methodist to play in a. brass band?” he asked, his open and in- genuous countenance filled with eager- ness and doubt. “Well,” said the parson, slowly, “it's for yourself you're asking, I suppose, Elisha?” Mr. Johnson admitted that the case was his own. “And- what instrument had. you fixed in your mind?” asked the minis- ter. : “Well,” said Elisha, with a grad-, ually clearing face. “I kind of thought T'd tackle the trombone, if you said it was all right, and I wouldn’t be falling from grace to do it.” . “Elisha,” said the minister, “if you can find any one who is willing to pass through the fiery ordeal of hear- ing you practice, I think you may risk the danger of falling from grilce with a good courage.”—Milwaukee Sentinel. Effect of Radiating Seeda. By careful measurement of the quantity of carbonic acid produced hy germinating radish seeds, Alfred C. Redfield and Elizabeth M. Bright, both of the Harvard medical school, fonnd that seeds which had been exposed to the action of radium rays produce that gas more rapidly than those that have not been radiated. Production of carbonic acid gas is a measure of the rate of metabolism, which is the proc- ess of growth and breaking down that takes place in all living matter, —~—Washingtou Star. <Y W erncu Leaion JEwaLen Let Your Jeweler Be Your Gift Counselor o «@IFTS THAT LAST” EARLE A. BARKER ‘ THIRD STRE ET "+| themselves. oft:‘to advantage. The .the fathers as payment. A buffalo _'THE BEMIDIT DAILY PIONEER TURK HAD EYE To BUSINESS Edhem Said Bey Got Bevy of Circas- slan Qirls for Far Less Than * Purchase Price. Edhem. Sald :Bey, a Turk who was ‘feeling acutely the servant problem in ‘Constantinople, tells of golng to Asia Minor and buying half a dozen, serv- ants:s He went to the first Cireassian village ‘and asked the 'chief of’tlel eldets to exhibit thé daughters for sales i) Inzthe evening 15 or:20 girls wers’ assepbled in the-fown hall with their fathbrs. They . were: dressed to show gipig: danced 0% the ‘tune 'of primi- tiveorlenta) apusic -composed of a fluté: and ‘cymbals. © Edhem Said Bey carefully noted which girls pleased him(sthe most, motloned thiem to one side; and called their fathers. . After ' long = bargaining with the fathers the bey went to the market and bought donkeys, buffaloes and silver-mounted arms for a tenth of the price he 'had agreed upon for ‘the girls, These were then presented to ‘which the bey had bought for 20 gold pleces, he would offer as a priceless .anfmal to be. credited to -him in the payment for the girl at five or ten times that price. His object was to make the father think he had received two or three hundred gold pleces for his ~ daughter, . althongh the actual value of the ‘material delivered might be only one-tenth of that amount, S0 that the father might boast of a high price to his friends. SPEED OF FINGERS DIFFEES Those of the Right Hand Quicker and More Accurate Than Those 2 “of the Left. The fingers of your right hand are quicker and more accurate than those of your left, says the Popular Science Monthly. The ring finger of your left hand shows a burst of speed when- ever it can work with the forefinger of your right hand; and it slows down noticeably when it must tenm wit | of these facts“about;:the, ,\\prkmgs of 1 your hands.” They were conclusively the middle finger of your left hand. Two fingers: working - together are faster than ,one golng it alone. And a -combination of two fingers on op- posite hands Is faster, than two fingers on the same hand. Practice, while it increases the speed of all fingers, tends to increase the rate of the slow ones more than the fast ones, thus overcoming the handl- cap of the ones that lag naturally. If you are a typist or planist, per- haps you have ‘already discovered some | “@emonstrated by a serles of tests con- ducte@ ‘ut the Carnegie Institute, of Technotogy by Esther L, Gatewood. 1 Origin of “Fifty.Fifty? “Fifty-fifty” originated in the thea- ter box ‘office, It developed back.in the. old ‘days. before; engagements for various .. companies were arranged from New York by owners. of chains of theaters. Then each company had and made the best deal it could for a division of the receipts wjth the owner of ‘the theater, explains the Detroit News. “Sixty-forty” was a good deal the “forty”_ going. to the house. More often- it was a “sixty-fiverthirty-five” basis, ¢ So. the adoption of “fifty-fifty” ag an expression to indicate an absolute- 15 even division of anything, whether i or out of the theater, was a per- fectly, natural development. — Er'nanclpatiun Days. “There~are_+ emancipation . celebra- tions at varfous times of the year. Au- gust 4 Is observed as a-celebration of the emancipation ‘of Haltian negroes by the British. ~Atgust'11s celebrated as the anniversary of'the proclamation set frep ipthe, West Indies at that lions of dollars to the slave owners as. ebrated, however, is September 22, the anniversary of Lincoln’s proclamation issued in 1868, T who must sell. THESE ARE JUST A FEW - IHAVEON W hite porceléin—top worth $11:00, for 9x12Rugs ........ APESE (ireie ivesone I can sell for less because I buy stock . for spot cash at my own price, from those Strong Steel Cots,-at ........... .$3.50 MaplePorch Rockers, new. . . $2.65, $4.95 6x9 Congoleum Rugs ........... .$7.50 ‘Full size, full weight, layer felt M:«,J.b-s Fumed oak, leather seat Chairs, at. .$3.65 8,000-mile guaranteed Ford Tires. . $8.35 E. W. HANNAH ’2085203;Minnesota Ave. OF THE MANY BARGAINS HAND NOW. Follow’. the Crowds to to.look out for its own engagementg THE STORE THAT HAS'BROUG THE LOW PRICES TO BEMIDJI issued August 1, 1834, by ‘the British [j government, freeing slaves. in its colo- ] nies. More than 700,000 slaves were time, principally in Jamaica, the Eng- i lish government .paying several mil- }] ~ At JOHNSON'S Kitchen Tables,s ...$1275 9.50 O I Chosen Costume asis in these— FOR THE BRIDE— Fostwear That Will Add the Final ‘Charming Touch to Each Carefully efully, how happily, the Bride of June chooses robe, from lovely wedding gown to charming keen understanding of her footwear wishes firids THE STORE OF QUALITY, SERVICE AND ECONOY BEMIDJI SHOE STORE ‘f&‘lS‘MINNESdI' A AVE. in the Trosseau. Newest styled - Pumps of ‘white to match the wed- ding gown. Smart Walking Shoes to accompany the traveling costumes. : J Sport Shoes for wear with -§ summery frocks or outing > ‘costumes. "y i Daintiest Pumps for eve- i ning wear, ') Boudoir Slippers in: de- * lightful styles. Truly a'splendid collec- tion from which to choose, and one which stresses three important points in selecting footwear for the . troussgau: fine juality, newest style and moder- ate prices. T T JOHNSON’S John Just One Day French Gingham Dresses \ ~Over 300 Dresses : ‘to choose from. ALTERATION FAEE This is without a YOU CAN'T BEAT . PHOENIX PURE SILK ‘HOSE | ‘Sale have ever offered, so| £ be here early please| | to.avoid the big rush.