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=llllfllllflflfllflllil 2| egal mfiks- To meet the demand, and for the convs enience of our customers, THE PIO\TFFR is now prepared to fill orders for]egul blanks on short notice We carry in stock a good assort- ment of blanks for justice court, district court, comeyancmg and « N Zie 2 lllflflflfllll miscellaneous. flfllli!flllll J Ihe Pioneers The Daily Pioneer PUBLISHED EVERY AFTERNOON. ?IONEER PUBLISHING CO0. & By R. W. HITCHCOCK. ntered 1A the postoffice &t Bemld!l Minn,, as socond rlass matter. ficial Paper Village of Bemidji SUBSCRIPTION $5 PER YEAR Got to Import It. THE scarcity of pulp wood in Wisconsin has necessitated the organization of a company of Wis- consin capitalists for the purpose of importing pulp wood to relieve the growing distress of the paper manufacturers of that state. This fact is worth considering by the people of northern Minne- sota. This section of the state has an unrivaled wealth of pulp wood and the market for it will steadily grow more active. The location of a mill at Bemidji will mand and within a year or two the homesteads of Beltrami county will double and treble in value. That fact that pulp wood BEAUTIFUL BEMIDJI ¥ BUY_ RESIDENCE LOTS while they are cheap ARND BUY BUSINESS LOTS while they are reasonable Prices Will NEVER Again Be So Low Bemidji Townsite & Improvement Co. is growing comparatively scarce together with the establishment of a paper mill in this city makes Beltrami county’s millions of feet of pulp wood a most valuable commodity. Here is one of Beltrami’s lat- ent resources about to be realized upon in full measure. There are many others. Look to Roosevelt. THE inauguration of President Roosevelt for the term of four years as head of the nation brings us to a realizing sense of the fact that although Roosevelt has made long strides toward the solution of some of the great problems which confront us, and that in the past few months, we have reason to be greatly encouraged that the administration of the government is to remain in this man’s hands for full four years more. H. A. SIMONS, Agent. Hotel Markham Bidg. LUNG MARK,S BALSAM The Great Cough Cure For the cure of all affections of the lung, throat and chest, such as Coughs, Colds, Asthma, Croup, Whoop- ing Cough, Hoarseness, Etc, Bronchitis, Lagrippe, and will prevent consumption when taken in time. Guaranteed. Price 25 and 50 cents. PREPARED ONLY BY PETER M. MARK - Manufacturer of MARK’S CELEBRATED REMEDIES, FOSSTON, MIN N. It cannot be denied- that the influential leaders of both the great political parties are at cross purposes with the president. These leaders are members of the great corporations with which the conntry has begun to battle for the rights of the people. They are stockholders, attorneys, hired men of these great corpora- tions. Although supposed to be elected by the people, they arein reality elected by the trusts, and they serve, not the people, but the trusts. This is as true of the great majority of the leaders of the republican and democratic parties as is the fact that one day followssanother. The people have got to look to Reosevelt. They need expect no HENRY BUENTHER Naturalist and Taxidermist 208 Second St. Pastoffice Box No. 686 BEMIDJI, MINN. BIRDS, WHOLE ANIMALS, FISH, FUR RUGS AND ROBES and GAME HEADS mounted to order and for sale. 1 carry at all times a good assortment of INDIAN RELICS and CURIOS, FUR GARMENTS made to order, repaired and remodeled FURS In season bought. guarantee my work mothproof and the most lifelike of any in the state MY WORK IS EQUALED BY FEW, FXCELLED BY NONE A Deposit Required on All Work YOUR TRADE SOLICITED help from congress. Our hope lies in the president. If he shall be able to rouse the people to a sense of the fact that they are facing an industrial condition, which if not. speedily amended, will precipitate an industrial revolution, we shall get some new leaders, make over other leaders to a right way of thmk/‘ ing and accomplish some greatly needed reforms. But it is to Roosevelt that we must look. BITSINORTH b EROM | COUNTRY ¢ mvvmwwvvvwwmvva DR. F. E. BRINKMAN, CHIROPRACTIONER. OFFICE HOURS: 10 a.m. to Noon, and 1t 5:30 p. m. Office over Mrs. Thompson’s boarding house Minunesota Ave. Are Chiropractic Adjustments the same a.s Osteopath Treatments?. No. The Chiropractic and the Osteopath both aim to put in place that which is out of place, to right that which is wrong; but the Path- ology Diagnosis, Prognosis and Movements are entirely different. One of my patients, Mr. W. A. Casler, has taken both Chiropruc&\c and Osteopoth treatments. The Chiropractic is ten times more direct in the adjustments and the.results getting health ten times more thor- ough in one tenth of the time than an Osteopath would. e i ol a0 o o ol THE Al 2l o 200 0 P P 2 Bluaejays at Funkley. —0— ] Brainerd wants a brick yard. —0— Bridgie is happy with ‘“the biggest saw mill north of Be- midji.” —— = Wadena creameries paid 33 cents per pound for butter fat last week. z —0— = o The anti-saloon smells sulphurious throughout t.he north cmmtw, but fihe Wa- March 1 _fkfimyfin.Fkfies To California to May 15 the Rock lsland - System will sell “colonist” tickets to prin- cipal points in Cahfomm atthe low rate of $32. 90 from St. Paul & Minneapolis Rock Island Tourist Sleepers leave St. Paul and aneapolls every Tuesday and Thursday, running through to Los Angeles or San Francisco. March and April are the pleasantest months in the year in California —usually the worst o here. The Rock Island is the southern route to California—farthest from snow and ice, nearest to sunshine. W. L. HATHAWAY, Dist. Pass. Agent, 322 Nicollet Ave,, Minneapolis, Minn. and send to me. Cut out this ad, place name and address on margin I will promptly forward a book about California, a Tourist car folder and full information concerning Rock Island service. all. 0 [ Morrison county road and bridge fund amounts to $5000 per year, —o— Sixteen teachers ‘“passed” in Morrison county—all of them sweet. —o— The Park Rapids creamery hopes to come to the top about April 1st. —0— Senator Clapp has got a croco- dile on his hands. Some Perham gentleman gave it to him. - —o— Oberg farmers ‘broke’” 400 acres of land last year which is why they are far frem ‘broke” this year, —0— Mrs. Spahr, grass-relict of Bluebeard Hoch, is teaching music at Glencoe. Did she learn harmony from Bluebeard" Politics are peaceful at Bagley. | EFFORT MADE IN VAN THE HOUSE REFUSES TO RECEDE FROM ITS ACTION ON CODE AMENDMENTS, BILL IN THE SENATE PROVIDES FOR A STATE HIGHWAY COMMISSION. 8t. Paul, March 4—An ineffectual attempt was made Friday to force the house to disgorge the 1,500 or more code amendments which it swallowed at one dose Thursday. 'W. L. Nolan of Hennepin, on the plea. ; that the house was caught napping when the code bill was offered, moved to reconsider, but he was miserably routed. W. B. Anderson, the judiciary com- mittee, in coming to the rescue of the committee, resented| any intimation that advantage had been taken of the members. He declared it was the ¢ only way to get the tode through this session. «I want to tell you gentlemen,” said Mr. Anderson, “reconsider that vote and there will be no further considera- tion of bills this session. We won't have time to pass bills. The code will eat up all our time.”" That settled it. [Mr Anderson’s warning set the members with bills to thinking, and when the Nolan mo- tion was put to a vote, only a handful came to the rescue. A resolution was received from the North Dakota legislature praying for passage by Minnesota of an elevator dockage law. The resolution was re- ferred to the warehouse committee. In the consideration of W. A. No- lan’s bill, authorizing corporations to issue and negotiate debentures on farm mortgages, heayy opposition de- veloped, but the contest finished with victory for the authar. The bill was on general orders and was recommend- ed to pass. The bill limits the dealing in mort- gages and issuing | of debentures against the same to corporations of not less than $100,000 capital, and this called forth opposition. Provides for Juvenile Courts. Juvenile courts are provided for in a bill offered in the house by H. B. Chamberlin of Minnegpolis. Under its terms the district court is made the tribunal to|try all cases in which neglected and deliquent chil- dren are involved, and the court is clothed with authority to vest the:con- trol and care of any child under con- sideration in any reputable citizen, who shall be designated as a probation officer. ‘Workers for candifates at polling places are forbidden to approach near- er than 300 feet, in a bill offered by W. P. Roberts of Hennepin county. This is to prevent the soliciting of votes from persons entering the booths. Mr. Roberts also introduced a bilk which practically puts the bill posting concerns out of business. It absolute- campaign | 1y prohibits the posting of any sign or. it unl advertiseme 1s attentions to busine; wondertally timulate - this de- 'denaTnbune does notnoticeit at B ] ..Western Dlstnbutors.. £ Electric Medicine Company ¥ ‘ wants agentsto advertise and sell E i ONONKWA, Faj @ cures Stomach and Kidney Discases. [ q W. E. 0., % # catarrh and Rhcumatism Eradicator. B 5 JONES’ MEDICATED SOAP, E bt cur@all Skin Diseases. 5 | ELECTRIC i b Corn and Bunion Cure, B i STy = b’ & Dr.A. Jones, - Prop. = 107 America Ave., Bemidji. Yrmmmmma: S R P P R T. M. HARVEY, Prop. General Repairing Located in Pingle’s Blacksmith shop, two blocks west of city hall. % Wagon Work and i New Wood Shopg Dr. J. Warninger Veterinary Surgeon Office Phone 78. Residence 114 Irvine Avenue Phone 248, Located at Bagley Livery Barn Marcus Lauritsen would have all adulterated and deleterious food prod- ucts passed upon by the state dairy { and food commission and. the results { given publicity. In a Dbill offered Fri- day he provides for a publication of a list of the same in some paper of gen- } eral circulation. N. F. Hugo introduced a bill allow- ing the issnance of state mineral leases 1 on ground covered hy meandered lakes lana waters. ‘The salary of the adjutant general is increased to §2,500, and that of his as- sistant to $1,800, in a bill offered by the committee on military affairs. STATE HIGHWAY COMMISSION. As Outlined in a Bill Proposed by Sen- ator Cook. Senator Cook proposed a bill in the senate Friday which provides for a | state highway commission of three members, to be selected by the gov- ernor after Jan. 1, 1904. The members will serve for one, two and three years, respectively, one to be chosen each year, ome will be chosen from the First, Second, Third or Fourth congressional districts; one from the Fifth, Sixth or Seventh dis- trict, and one irom the Eighth or Ninth district. The commission, it is provided, shall appoint a secretary, to be known as “‘State Engineer,” at a salary of $3,000 per annum, and a stenographer at $600 Der annum. Six thousand dollars is to be appro- priated for 1906, and the same amount each year thereafter. The commission shall report to the governor Dec. 15, glving the number of miles improved during the year. Senator Coller introduced a bill to Tegulate “hurried” marriages of di- vorced persons. The bill is drafted on the lines of the California code and provides that ‘where a divorce is granted, the court enters an interlocutory order against ‘which appeals can be made within six months. * [f no appeal is taken, the court will direct final judgment at the expiration of one year. By a vote of 34 to 24 the senate passed Senator Taybourn’s bill dis- pensing with grand juries, unless they are convened by special call of a judge of the district court, by order of the majority of the county board or by a petition signed by 100 electors of the county. A high official of the United States Steel corporation says that a geperal increase of the wages of the employes of that company is under considera- tion. The “High Wall,” one of the finest of the private dormitories for Yale ‘ students at New Haven, Conn., has been damaged by fire to the extent of $10,000. Chancellor H. L. Muldrow, who served as first assistant secretary of the interior during Grover Cleveland’s second term, is dead at Starkville, Miss., aged sixty-eight years. The Columbia River and Northern railway has been sold for approximate- Iy $1,000,000. presumably to. Bastern 'clpitalists though, s 10 YOU WANT PIONEE WANT COLUMN No Charze Less Than 15c. To Rent a Room Get a Girl Sell a Farm Buy a Horse Hire a Man Find the Lost YOU CAN DO IT HEKE IF_ANYWHERE And for 15 cents MISCELLANEOUS. FOUR NEW TOWNS on the Thief River Falls extension. First class openings for all kinds of business and investments. Ad- dress A. D. Stephens, Crooks- ton, Minn. PUBLIC LIBRARY — O: en Tuesdays, Thursdays and Sat- urdays, 2to 6 p, m. Thurs- day 7 t08:30 p. m. also. Li- brary in basement of court House. Mrs. E. R. Ryan, li- brarian. 2 FOR RENT OR SALE—160acres land; 100 acres under cultiva- tion, balance pasture. Good house, barn and well; 8 miles north of town. Joseph Steidl. FOR SALE—Limited number of copies of the Pioneer’s souvenit edition. - Pioneer office. HELP WANTED. WANTED- Cook at City hotel: WANTED—To fill your wants Nothing does it like a Pioneer want ad WANTED—Position as clerk or bookkeeper, good reference furnished. Box 78 Crookston. WANTED—Information as to the whereabouts of Benjamin Ross,who left Brampton, On- tario about fifteen years ago. His father is dead and a for- tuneawaits him. Address Wm. Ross, Brampton, Ontario. WANTED—For U. S. army able- bodied, unmarried men be- tween ages of 21 and 35, citi- zens of United States, of good character and temperate hablt.s who can speak, read and write English. For in- formation apr!y to Recruiting Officer, Miles block, Bem\d]1 Minnesota. FOR SALE. FOR SALE—High grade Ply- mouth Rock roosters. J. H. Thomas, Crookston, R. F. D. No. 1. FOR SALE— Rubbcx smmp~ The Pioneer will procure any kind of a rubber stamp for vou on short notice. LOST AND FOUND. LOST—On Minnesota avenue be- tween Seventh and Third streets. a gold photograph pin set with a moonstone. Finder retyrn to this office for reward. FOR RENT. FOR RENT—Five room cottage, 905 Minnesota Ave. App]y at Schroeder’s store PROFESSIONAL CARDS.. LAWYERS. D. H. FISK Attorney and Counscllor at Law Office opposite Hotel Markham. P. J. Russell Attorney at Law BEMIDIL, = = = = = MINN. Bailey & McDonald LAWYERS Bemidji, Minn. Office: Swedback Block PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS. L. A. Ward, M. D., Plfysician and Surgeon. Diseases of the Eye a specialty. Glasses fitted. Dr. Rowland Gilmore| ! Physician and Surgeon Office: TMiles Block Dr. Blakeslee Physician and Surgeon Office: TMiles Block, Beminil Dr. E. H. Marcum Physician and Surgeon Ofice: Swedback Block Resldence Phone 221 Office Phone & DENTISTS. 5 Dr. R. B. Foster, DENTIST MILES BLOCK. Minnesota & International RAILWAY COMPANY In Connection with the .Northern Pacific.. RAILWAY COMPANY. Provides the best train passenger servicebetween Northome, Hovey Junc- $lon, Blackduck, Bemidji, Walker and intermediate points and Minne- apolis, St. Paul, Fargo and Duluth and al! points east, west and south. Through coaches between Northome and the Twin Cities. No change of cars. Ample time at ‘Brainerd for dinuer. Dail; STATIONS Daily ex. Sunday LA p.m.T; Daily except Sund v. .. ..Kelliner. -.Hovey Juncion. .. N. P.RY. Ar. p.m. Lv. p. m. I 6:00 W.H. GEMMFLL. @.A. WALKER General Manager, Agent, Bralnerd Bemidjl. Dr. C. M. Smith. DENTIST Office over E. H. Winter's Store. HOTELS AND RESTAURANTS. Palace Cafe, FRED THROM, Prop. PR 219 Third Street, DRAY AND TRANSFER. Wes Wright, Dray and Transfer. 404 Beltrami Ave. Tom Smart, Dray and Baggage, Safe and Piano Moving a Specialty. Phone No. 58 | 618 America Avenue Phone 40. Wood For Sale! Ihave for sale an unlimit- ed quantity of Fine Jack Pine and Tamarack Wood % in any lengths. D. S. DENNIS, 710 America Ave. _Bemidji. oo + ..Nymore House.. A first class house for board by the day, week or month. Transient trade solicited. F. J. Moser, Proprietor. %f water pipes freeze up, Great Northern R’y ALL POINTS IN THE NORTHWEST EAST BOUND, No.108...Park Rapids Line..5:30a. m. (Uonnec'.s with Flyer at Sauk Centre, arrives Minneapolis about 3:00 p. m., formerly 4:45 No. 34...Duluth Express...12:27 p.m L) . « 12:49 a.m ‘WEST BOUND ¢ 33... Fosston Line..... 3:52 p. m. (LS T S 0 « 2:55 a. m. ¢4 107....Park Rapids Line7:50 '* Full information from E E. CHAMBERLAIN, Agent Bemidii. Minn When your pump or do not wait until they burst—but phone to DORAN F. E. COOLEY, Painter, Paper Hanger and Decorator. Phone -‘-_x- S BROS. 225 and have No. them - thawed out. s | | ]