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3 THE BEMIDJt DAILY PIONEER ' ~ TUESDAY EVENING, OCTOBER 31, 1922 LOOK FOR REPUBLICAN WINS IN SOUTH DAKOTA (Bv United Press) 3 Pierre Oct. 31—South . Dakota’s time honored Republican pluralities probably will be retained next week i all instances save legislative offices. Best political observers indicate the Republican state’ ticket will go over by a safe margin and republican congressmen will be elected. g There is plenty of ‘'opintion here sup- porting the belief that the nonparti- san league will -gain *n the state legislature, however. At present the politiéal’ complex- ion of the legislature is almost ex- clusively republican. - Of the 103 members of the ldst legislature there were only two democrats and four or five nonpartisans. Nonpartisans are predicting that they will have twenty members in the. legislature when it meets Jan. 2 and democrats believe they will have at last a dozen members in the leg- islature. The nonpartisan league recogniz- ed as a political party in this state, is making a strenuous campaign, with little financial support. Taxation, rural credits, the present banking laws, and alleged blunders of the republican administration have been proved by the Nonpartisan and Dem- crats’in a harassing campaign. NORTH DAKOTA WOOL POOL SAVES GROWERS HUGE SUM (By United Press) Fargo, Qct. 31—The North Dako- ta wool pool saved farmers $15, 000, according to J. W. Haw, county agent leader at the extension de- partment, of the agricultural college. Two hundred thousand poundg were sold “at ‘aprice that netted beétween 35 ‘and 38 cents a pound- Growers outsie the pool received from 26 to 28 cents on an average. URGES N; D. FARMERS TO CURE THEIR OWN SEED CORN (By United Press) Fargo; Oct. 81—North Dakota corn has become acclimated and therefore farmers .should learn how to care for seed corn. The result will be a hardy quality and onle able to meet climatic conditiong in this state. “Each farmeér should pick and cure his own seed corn,” Dr. H. K. Wal- ster, agronomist, at the state Agri- cultural college declares. NATURE’S FREAK IN VERMONT Remarkable Stone Face Only Recent. ly Discovered in the Little Village of Hinesburg. A great stone face has been discov-, ered in the village of Hinesburg, Vermont, according to the Burlingten Free Press. It Is located fo the south end of the village and faces south, a Indian Has Remarkable Memory. The most retentive memory In America I8 said to belong to a natlve Indian of the Yakima tribe. His drain cells register everything he sees or hears. During the war he served with the army in France, and was of much vilue In carrying long messages, ob- serving positions, or checking sup- CANDIDATES FOR STATE “ LEGISLATURE ARE BUSY (Continued from Page 1) being represented at St. Paul by one from the extreme end of the neigh- boring county. The . logical place and the most populous place in the district is Bemidji and & great many of ‘our citizens hav luded that a man from Bemidji-should:k M’E‘ ; d. This being the fact it wonld'see that Harry Bridgeman has the edge on the votes from souther Beltrami county. . William T. Noonan, editor of the Baudette Region, is also in the city checking up hs, ‘“pcket . fence” on which he hopes to walk into' the state legislature. 4 _ “A picket here and there has worked a bit loose,” says Bill, “but } I hope to tack them back on, so they will hold until after election day.” Mr. Noonan is here looking after his personal fight and nothing more and is hopeful that the election Te- sults will prove as favorable to him as did the primary results. #id call off a“regimental roster and catalogue every item of - equipment without any note or memorandum. On one occasion, after making a full re- port of observations to the extent of a thousand items or more, he repeat- ed the full text of & lecture he had heard the night before.” "This was in the presence’ of the lecturer himself and was pronounced perfect. Boy Found Treasure Trove. A kettle of gold has been found on a mountaln by a French schoolboy who left Chambery intending to as- cend Mount Blanc. He had no gulde and no food, and dld not even carry the traditional alpenstock. After half an_hour’s climbing he came across a Kkettle. Looking Into it He found 165 Miss Grace Stillwell of Becida, | gold pleces dated 1139 and bearing the who was graduated from the Be-| arms of the house of Savoy. Imme- diately the young would-be moun- tainéer abandoned is projected climb and took his find to the police. midji High School last June, is staying at the home of Mr. and Mrs. A. A. Richardson while attending the Teachers :eollege. Raleigh’s Tobacco Box. Sir Walter Ralelgh was no niggard of his tobacco, if one may judge from the size of his box. It was cylindrical in form, about seven inches in diam- eter, and thirteen inches high; the outside was of gilt leather, and in the inslde was a cavity for a recelver of glass or metal, which would hola about a pound.of tobacco. A Kind of vollar, connecting the receiver with the case, was plerced with holes for plipes. . GASOLINE PRICE CUT ANOTHER CENT TODAY g Gasoline prices took another drop of one cent a gallon today making the price of the ordinary grade of gasoline 22.9 cents a gallon. This is the second reduction within a few weeks, that reduction being two cents a gallon. Word to this effect was received Monday niglit by the Pioneer from the Standard Oil’s advertising repre- sentatives in Chicago regarding the Red Crown gasoline. Announcement was made today by the local dealers regarding the drop in price, the decrease being effec- tive for the Northwestern Oil Co., and the Peopleg Oil Co., also- This decrease in price is expected to be welcomed v all users although now ag during the summer of the year. (By United Press) PHONE 16 BEMIDJI gasoline consumption is not as high | M WILL BRING SWISS TO - CULTIVATE MOUNTAINS Denver, Colo.,—Plans are being perfected for bringing to the moun- tainsides and valleys of the Rocky ountain region, young Swiss dairy- months | men to engage in cheese and butter making in thig state and possibly in Wyoming and Utah. - Two colonies of a least fifty young industrious Swiss ' will be brought from Switzerland next spring and established on suitable tracts of land where they may carry on profitably the dairying activities as in their native land. John H. Zingre, prominent native < of the Bernes-Oberland :country in Switzerland, famed for its excellent dairy products, has completed a tour of investigation of likely sites for Swiss colonies in fertile mountain sections. Intensive cultivation of the mount- ainous regions would be of tremend- ous benefit to tlic entire, state. If the enterprise is successful, coloniza- tion will be carried on more exten- sively . Columbia New Process Recerds— On sale exclusively in Bemidji by Geo . T. Baker & Co. The HALLMARK Store COR. 3RD. ST. & BELTRAMI ROSA PONSI makes rec the most dazzling meteor in the history of grand opera. Hers has bezn called the “voice of voices.” Ponselle for Columbia. tartling Good News | for Phonograph Owners! Columbia discovers a process which produces UL i S a phonograph owner yo ords cxclusively bia Graphophone Company a record that is virtually nois imperceptible wear. seratch or scrape—think what this graph owner in the world. This record has been made possible by the discovery, in Columbia laboratories, of a process by which we are able to produce a surface material so fine in texture, so marvelously smooth, so free from friction that the phonograph needle travels over it almost inaudibly and with The playing-result from the use of this mew material is actually astounding—no other word can describe it. Melody unmarred by Ppenetrating, obtrusive surface sounds, harmony without disconcerting u have always been annoyed by the swish and grinding and scratching noises of records. This “surface noise” has been considered im- possible to remove. - After years of experiment, the Colum- to-day presents to the world eless. means to you and to every phono- records free from objectionable Surface Noise! This is made practical by Columbia’s patented laminated, or three- ply, construction. The core or centre leaf in Columbia New Process Records, because it is absolutely distinct from the playing surfaces, is sort of guardian of the south portal of the town. It Is from the west that Top- ~4 the features are clearly seen. .. certain elrcles in Switzerland, reports o 5, the Al becoming: more and mere rare, and ping a good-sized rock about oné hun- dred feet from the main' road, the clean-cut lines of a man's head are plainly discernible. The chin is very prominent. The mouth 18 wide, the nose slightly hooked and the eye very clearly cut in the face. This freak of nature Is fully as plaln to the eye a8 the famous “Old Man of the Moun- taln,” near the Profile house in the White mountains. Hiresburg's great stone face was discovered, 1t Is claimed, by D. C. Store, a harness- maker n that village. He has called the -attention of a number of people to it, among them the Rev. G. C. Cor- nell, pastor of-the church at Hines- burg, who took some snapshots of the face. A couple. of these snapshots, taken from different distances, were broiight to the Free Press office re- illistrates the fam- inated construction of new process Columbia Records. A—illustrates thc much smoother playing surfaces which are made of a new substance over which the needle travels almost in- Blue Danube Waltz. ‘(Strauss) Rosa Ponselle. 49988 12-inch $1.50 Salut D’Amour. (Elgar) Pablo Casals. . 80158 10-inch $1.00 Duci de Kerekjarto. 49031 12-inch $1.50 Muineira. Melody. Eddy Brows. A-3656 10-inch $1.00 Prince Igor. Zampa Overture. maide of a harder, more durable substance. Over this rigid backbone are laid the two playing faces made of the new, ultra fine, ultra smooth surface fabric. This laminated construction gives greatly increased strength and longevity plus the most noiseless surface ever perfected. The invention of this new process record by the Columbia Graphophone .Co—for it is the genius-creation of Columbia engineers and chemists— marks the greatest outstanding im- provement since the invention of the universally used disc record. .« With New Process Columbia Rec- ords you get all the real beauty of voice; all the exquisite, delicate tones of the cello and the violin! You get melody uncontaminated by objection- able surface noise that has been con- sidered impossiblé to remove UNTIL In no other record can you get the same wonderful degree of surface quietness and pure, uninterrupted music, for the simple reason that Columbia alone possesses the secret of making a material which, employed as a surface for phonograph records, obliterates obnoxious and intrusive surface sounds. s This new substance does not hush loud surface noises. They are never created. Surface noise is merely fric- tion, the point of the needle grinding on microscopic roughness and multi- cently by Mr. Cornell. How, long the audibly. t ~ stome face has been discerhible in B ilfusteates the mgch harder Muropolitan Opera House. 0 COLUMBIA REMOVED IT! plied by Yhe sensitive reproducer. In Hinsburg s not known, as it s only centre, core which rosists A-5218 12-inch $1.50 So great is our confidgnice in the en- New Process Columbia Records this recently ‘that It has drawn- attection. warping. Norwegian Bridal Procession. joyment New Process Columbia Rec- microscopic roughness is refined away Licbestraum. Percy Grainger. ords provide that we ask you to tear till friction is almost a fiction. e i Bobby Burns’ Snuff Box. Robert Burs was never happler than wheén.he could “pass a winter evening under some venerable roof and smioke a plpe of tobacco or drink water gruel” He also took tobacco in the form of snuff. Mr, Bacon, who kept a celebrated posting-house north ot Dumfries, was his almost insep- urable companion. Many a merry night they spent together over their cups of foaming ale or bowls of whis- 234 O Me. - Nora Bayes. - :M:Jsdcy&tlnfifii ‘:n g:::;eb:fr dm::; :::e‘d s 1 s 'e;. ' A-3652 10-inch ' 7S¢ In comparison ‘v;ith ordix{xary rec- Colunca‘:uNewS:o‘«l:ianrdlfmm S ¢ : ilver 3 ds, d T tus lumbi 3 several of . his bestloved convivial Put Thése New Process In Rose Time. New E&'fisfi ‘&fu&ifizfi;fis il ._néo hear these c:lrumbia Records! s0Hgs. * ‘The bard and Innkeeper be- cafmé 8o attached to each other that, @ token of regard, Bufns gave Ba- m his “snuff- box, which. for . many yéirs had been his pocket compénion. : Those Vandal Tourists. - Indignation has been arouséd In the, Geneva correspondent of - the London Dally News, by the vandalism )4 in destroying the “flora of ps. . Some of the flowers are lovers of the. meuntains have been pafhed . to. find on thelr excursions whole roots dragged from the Sofl and| Columbia Records to the "Hardest Comparison o Tests! i " In My Home Town. A-6217 Two Little Stars. Calm As the Night. s Barbara Maurel. - A-3643 10-inch $1.00 A Song of the Hills. Tandy Mackenzie. . 80351 10-inch $1.00 12-inch $1.50 The 18th Hole. Frank Crumit. A-3665 10-inch 75c You’ve Had Your Day. I Ain’t Never Had Nobody Craxzy Paul Specht and His Hotel Astor Orchestra. < A-3672 10-inch .78¢c Send Back My Honeyman. Georgette. Ted Lewis and His Band. - - % A-3662 10-inch 75¢_ | out the list of records in this adver- tisement, take it to a Columbia Dealer and have him play them! Possibly he can play the same selections by other makers! Each comparison test will be a greater Columbia triumph! You will be thrilled by the Columbia reproduction of every note, every in- flection; of the most delicate phras- ing—shades of harmony exquisitely expressed that have previously been LOST IN SURFACE NOISES! prove immediately preferable. : No other record can be like New Process Columbia Records. No one can produce anything even resembling them, for they are fully protected by broad basic patents. =% COLUMBIA GRAPHOPHONE CO., New York With new and unbelievably quiet playing surfaces, the dream of making the phonograph a musical -est type has become a reality! Columbia’s new surface discovery has solved the whole question! Re- production of music hasnow entered a new and greater phase! To-day, the phonograph with the New Pro- cess Columbia Records is a master- ful triumph. You can mow buy Take this list with you! . Note the smoothness and fullness of Columbia tone! Note the beauty of expression! Note the seeming presence of the ac- tual voice or instrument! GO hear these recards to-day., 1 . TO HEAR Pable Cisals is to have born in one an utterly ying dead: _ i new conception of the “This {4 espectully the case with the nificence and beauty of the edelwelss, ‘and the mountaineer writes vwlu:db Jlé l‘:l.h-h‘ @ master. Casale meka: records exclasively . Columbia. gentinie; one of the rare spots n that nefghborhood where the plant still blooms, ‘tnany; roote ‘were found pulled up. - The edelwelss Is somewhat difi- cult to pliick, and those who: gathér 1t ‘should cut the steni of the flower with a Raite, so that thé root may be left to flower agifn- iext year for the plensuré Of GtHer fourists,