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EEEEEt, & Remember My Prophecy. I have sold more lots in Bemidji the past month than have been sold in any six months during the past two rs, Buy NOW while prices are LOW. Come in and - make your selection before the choice locations are gone. They are going fast. 5 < BUSINESS LOTS RESIDENCE LOTS MANUFACTURING SITE. Bemidji Townsite & Imp. Co. H. A. SIMONS, Agt,, Swedback Block ‘ _‘.‘1. 2332332333333333533y ¢ . D43 P W Your Building Will Look Well Longafterthe 41 _s ¢+ Paint you used is ~1a10 forgotten if you * At use Miunesota v - €3 inseed 0il Co’s Pure Prepaired Paints. Cheap Paint is extrava- g g.‘mce. ; Good Paint Economy. g The proof of good paint is in its application. To experiment with un- known articles a waste of both time and money. "\.‘Wsm URSEED Dty & Ask for color cards. Flemming Phone 57 & Downs 2 “The Road With The Big Berths” This_ig the title given by the Chicago Tribune to the CHICAGO, MILWAUKEE & ST. PAUL RAILWAY ~ This railwvay owns and operates its own sleep- ing cars and other equipment. The borths are wider, longer and higher than berths in similar cars of other linés. The Pioneer Limited, The Fast Mail and three other daily trains from Minneapolis and St.Paul to Chicago. No extra charge to ride on these trains, but it is important that you name your route in purchasing tickets Kast. W. B. DIXON NORTHWESTERN PASSENGER. AGENT 365 ROBERT STREET. ST. PAUL e e b el e b b e e e e e dlaedl DR. F. E. BRINKMAN, CHIROPRACTIONER. OFFICE HOURS: 10 a. m. to Noon, and 1 to 5:30 p, m. Office over Mrs. Thompson’s boardinghouse Minnesota Ave. Are Chiropractio Adjustments the same as Osteopath Treatments? L (4 ¢ $ ¢ 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 Chiropractic q 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. ; The Bemidji Lumber Merchant BE332 Handles all kinds and qualities of lumber and building materials. Call on him and get his figures. Esti- mates furnished for large or small amounts. i BeL A e S e s Prompt Delivery. Phone 100 FEESECEEEEESEEESCETEEEES, w Special sale on sereen Doors = S333333 & PIONEER PUBLISHING CO. By R. W. HITCHCOCK. 4 ntered in the postofice at: Bemid}i, Minn., 8 second class matter. Ei Oiicial Paper Village of Bomidii SUBSCRIPTION $5 PER YEAK FIRST OF ITS KIND. @Grief Over Loss of Money to Swin- glers Causes Lockjaw. New York, June 17—What physi- clans say is the first authentic case in the city of tetanus trismus, or lock- jaw, resulting from grief, is at the Harlem hospital: The patient is Joseph Golzerano. He arrived here from Italy on June 1 with $25 in cash. He had been here only a few hours when he was swin- dled out of the money by some of the { numerous padrones who infest the Bat- tery and Italian quarters. Golzerano became grief stricken over the loss of his money, which he 8 survey- arty of twenty men in charge of yland has! left here to locate the line of division between the Unit- ‘ed Sta and the Canadian posses- alons in the vicinity of Chilkoot pass and Kotsina river. There are to be three parties in Northern territory this summer, each having a certain division of the work. They will work in con- Junction with parties of surveyors ap- pointed by the Canadian government. They will indicate the line of division as decided by the tribunal which met in London in 1903. Trio of Negroes Executed. Decatur, Ala, June 17.—Harvey Smith, John' Collier and Willlam Jack- son, colored, were hanged in the jail yard here during the fternoon. Troops Were present as a precautionary meas- ure, but there was no disorder. Two thousand people surrounded the jail during the execution. Seven Men Missing. Hazelton, B. C., June 17.—Seven men are wmissing and have probably been drowned in the Skeena river, near Lorne creek, their upturned ca- had intended to use in continuing his journey westward. He went to the home of a friend and would sit for hours grinding and gnashing his teeth and clenchigg his hands and cursing the men who had taken his money. He became more and more melancholy and angry and five days after he land- ed he found that his jaws were closed and that he could no longer open them, even to curse his enemies. TO COVER ENTIRE COUNTRY. Foundrymen’s Strike Will Many Thousand Men. New York, June 17.—President Frank McArdle of the International Associa®n of Foundrymen has an- nounced that if the employers in New York and New Jersey, where his men are now on strike, do not grant an in- crease of 25 cents a day he will ex- tend the strike to the entire country, involving many thousand men. Work at the foundries here and in New Jer- sey is at a standstill. Involve RO EVIDENGES OF STRIKE INTEREST AT CHICAGO NOW CEN- TERS IN GRAND JURY IN- VESTIGATION. Chicago, June 17.—The grand jury room, where witnesses are being ex- amined as to payment of money for the settlement of strikes and regard- ing assaults on nonunion drivers, is still the center of interest in the team- sters’ strike. The Employers’ associa- tion is resting and the Teamsters’ Joint Council has decided to meet only #very cther day. . { Nothing was heard during the day about peace and there were no evi- dences of a strike on the streets. De- liveries of goods in all lines are almost normal. noe having been found. John P. Fuliz, a mining engineer of Louisville, is among the missing, who are miners. BRIEF BITS OF NEWS, Baron Nathaniel de Rothschild, who died at Vienna, June 13, left the sum of $4,000,000 to be distributed for vari- ous charitable purposes. William J. Dickinson, third vice president of the Louisville and Nash- ville raflroad, has resigned after a service of twenty-three vears. Dispatches to Dun's Trade Review indicated that the nation has made further progress in the right direction, hoth in business and agriculture. Susan Atwater Gillette, widow of Judge Gurdin Gillette and an original Daughter of the Revolution, is dead at Kenosha, Wis., aged ninety-five. John F. Wallace, chief engineer of the Panama canal, has left Panama for Washington to confer with Secre- tary Taft on canal matters and also to purchase materials. Colonel von Wiesmann, former gov- ernor of German East Africa, acci- dentally shot himself in the head ‘while deer stalking at Fischern, Styria. His death was instantaneous. Sir John Archibald Wilcox, propri- etor of the Liverpool Courier and largely interested in the tobacco trade as a manufacturer in Liverpool and London, is dead at Liverpool. Empress Augusta Vicforia of Ger- many is indisposed and has been obliged to cancel all public engage- ments for the present. So far as known her illness is not serious. The announcement is made that a contract for the construction of five tunnels through the Sierra Nevada mountains has been let by the South- ern Pacific company and that work on them would begin within a month. BASEBALL 8CORES. " National League, At Pittsburg, 0; Philadelphia, 7. ‘While the statute of limitations may bar indictments for conspiracy to set- tle strikes by the use of money it is said to be certain that quite a number of indictments for manslaughter will be returned against persons claimed to be responsible for deaths resulting from riots due to the teamsters’ strike. Testimony as to alleged corruption in connection with strikes was heard during the day by the grand jury. A number of business men and two wo- men were among those subpoenaed to appear before the inquisitors. The women were said to have lived at a hotel frequented by labor leaders. TOUCHES AT FRENCH PORT. Russian Auxiliary Cruiser Makes Re- quest for Coal. o Saigon, Cochin-China, June 17.—The Russian auxiliary cruiser Kouban, for- merly the Hamburg-American line steamer Augusta Victoria, has arrived off this port and asked to be supplied with coal sufficient to reach the near- est Russian port. Her request is un- der consideration. The Kouban is fit- ted with a wireless telegraph ap- paratus and carries sixteen guns' of small calibre. The Kouban did mnot participate in the battle of the Sea of Japan, having been detached from the Russian fleet to reconnoiter the east coast of Japan as far as Yokohama. On returning she learned of the dis- At Chicago, 10; Brooklyn, 4. At Cincinnati, 3; Boston, 2—ten in- nings. At St. Louis, 5; New York, 4. American League. At Washington, 0; Cleveland, 2. At Philadelphia, 0; St. Louis, 5. At Boston, 1; Detroit, 5. At New York, 1; Chicago, 5. American Assodiation. At Louisville, 4; Minneapolis, 5. At Indianapolis, 5; Kansas City, 1. At Columbus, 6; Milwaukee, 3. At Toledo, 4; St. Paul, 12. MARKET QUOTATIONS. Minneapolis Wheat. Minneapolis, June 16.—Wheat—1July, $1.093%; Sept.,, 886 @88%c. On track ~No. 1 hard, $1.13%; No. 1 Northern, $1.1134; No. 2 Northern, $1.08. St. Paul Union Stock Yards. St. Paul, June 16.—Cattle—Good to choice steers, $5.50@6.00; common to fair, $4.50@5.25; good to choice-cows and heifers, $3.756@4.75; veals, $2.00@ 4.50. Hogs—$56.05@5.35. Sheep—Year- lings, $4.50@5.50; good to choice na- tive lambs, $5.00@5.85. Duiuth Wheat and Flax. Duluth, June 16.—Wheat—To arrive —No. 1 Northern, §1.12%. On track— No. 1 Northern, §1.12%: No. 2 North- aster to Vice Admiral Rojestvensky and steamed to Cape St. James, near here. LOSS AGGREGATES $200,000. Seventeen Business Houses Destroyed at Fort Francis, Ont. Fort Francis, Ont,, June 17.—Fire. during the morning reduced seven- teen business houses to heaps of ashes, leaving but three business -concerns in the town, and involving a loss of more than $200,000. Aid was sent from International Falls, but it was impos- sible for the combined force of fire fighters to stay the progress of the flames. The buildings were almost wholly constructed of wood and were an easy prey to the flagges. Had it not been that the residence portion of the town is separated from the busi- ness section by a wide vacant space it is believed that the’ entire town ‘would have been wiped out. INSURGENT BAND WIPED OUT. Eighty Macedonians Killed by Turki Troops. Salonica, European Turkey, June 17. —The band of Macedonian insurgents, eighty strong, commanded by’ Tont- cheff, was completely exterminated by Turkish troops near Palanka June ‘The Turks lost nine killed, inciuding two officers, and had eleven men wounded. - Disease May Follow Flood. Grand Rapids, Mich., June i7.—De- caying debris left by the flood of last ‘week is seriously menacing heaith on the West Side of the city. In the lower part of the Ninth ward and in some 13, after seven hours severe fighting. | o) ern,. $1.041%; July, $1.12%; Sept. (new), 833%c; Septr (old), 88%c. Flax —To arrive and on track, $1.48; July, $1.47; Sept., $1.34; Oct., $1.2734. Chicago Union Stock Yards. Chicago, June 16.—Cattle—Good to prime steers, $5.50@6.25; poor to me- dium, $4.00@5.40; stockers and feed- ers, $2.76@4.80; ccws and heifers, $2.- 50@5.00; calves, $3.00@6.40. Hozs— Mixed and butchers, $5.30@5.47%; good to choice hex $5.35@5.50; light, $5.25@5.42%: Sheep—Good to choice wethers, $4.60@5.00; Western sheep, $1.00@5. @7.25; Western, §5.00@ 6.65. Chicago Grain and Provisions. Chicago, June 16.—Wheat—July, 8214 @88%4c; Sept., 8414 @84%c; Dec., 8414 c. Corn—July, 527%c: Sept., 511%¢c; Dec., 47%c; May, 483c. Oats—June, 31@31%c; July, 31@31%c; Sept., 2934 @29%c; Dec., 29%c. Pork—july, $12.67%; Sept., $13.00; Oct., $13.05. Flax — Cash, Northwestern, $1.43; Southwestern, $1.25. Butter—Cream- erfes, 16@19%¢c; dairies, 15@17c. Rggs —131, @14c. Poultry—Turkeys, 14@ 15c; chickens, 11%c; springs, per dozen, $2.00@6.00. NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION. Deq_gnmentor the Iuterior. Land Office at 55 Lake, Minn., June.7, 1905. - Notice {5 hereby given that the following named settler has filed notice of his intention to- make final ;proof in suppors of his claim, roof will be made beforo the. clerk of district couri. Beltrami county, at Bemidji. Minn., on July 12,1195, viz: A = z nrich Tietz, who made H E No2033 for the n¥ of sel, 2 ;{v’(o}w!{mfl ot 5 sec 5, 4, twp 140 of rg - He names the following persons to prove s continuous residence upon and cultivation ald “land, “viz: “Marthias P-tri, John Petri, William Noble and Iver Rockf ‘all of Lynx 0; native lambs, $4.50 e Great 'Ngrhhernrt will sell tickets to Duluth and return at one and one-third fares for th round trip, on the certificate plan These tickets will be sold three days before the opening of the niceting. Consult localagent for full particulars. - State Firemen’s Conyention. The annual convention of the Minnesota State Firemen’s As- sociation will be held atLitchfield, Minn., June 13and 14. The Great Northern will sell tickets on June 12 and 13 to Litchfield and return for one fare plus 50 cents for the round trip, final return limit good until June 15. Consult local agent for particulars. Than 150, FOR SALE. FOR SALE— Rubber stamps. The Pioneer will procure any kind of a rubber stamp for vou.on short notice. FOR SALE—One four volume set of Universal Dictionary of the English Language. If taken at once, $10 buys the set. In- quire at this office. 3 FOR SALIE—A $35.00 violin will - be sold cheap if taken at once. Inguire at this office. Nothing can be better than the best—Mark’s lung Balsam is the best. Large supply Peterson’s, vegetables at UGN LA AALLY 2 THOS. JOHNSON 3 Builder AND Contractor Lddaiiaigiiiiiidg For any work in the line of building be sure to see me and get your work right 3 prices accordingly. Phone Faor SmmmwE T T T AAALALE ADAAAA LA AL LA LA $ New Wood Shop T. M. HARVEY, Prop. Wagon Work and General Repairing Located in Pingle’s Blacksmith shop, two blocks west of city hall. TSSOSO FOR RENT. FOR RENT—Suite of three rooms for light house keeping. Inquire 114 Irvine Ave. south. e E O T R R WANTED—To fill your wants| Nothing does it like a Pioneer want ad TryaPioneer Want Ad--Ic a word HELP WANTED. oW SS LA o o WANTED—Cook at City restau- rant. WANTED—Waitress and porter, City restaurant. WANTED—For U. 8. army able- bodied, unmarried men be- tween ages of 18 and 385, citi- zens of United States, of good character and temperate habits, who can speak, read and write English. For in- formation apply to Recruiting Officer, Miles block, Bemidji. Minnesota. MISCELLANEOUS. PUBLIC LIBRARY — Open Tuesdays, Thursdays and Sat- urdays, 2:30 to 6 p, m. Thurs- day 7 to 8 p. m. also. Li- brary in basement of court House. Mrs. E. R. Ryan, li- brarian. | ?KAA_MA“&MA Py |4 Webster @ Cooley §' z Wall Paper & Paint Store 4 One door south of 0ld P, 0. X | 4 building. Telephone No. 283, ¥ vvwvvvvvv'& Great Northern R’y ALL POINTS IN THE NORTHWEST EAST BOUND No.108...Park Rapids Line (Connects with Flye Minneapolis about No. 34...Duluth Express...12:27 p.m “ 38 “ 0« WEST BOUND ‘“ 33....Fosston Line.... “ 35 “ “ ‘€ 107....Park Raplds Line7:50 ** Full information from E E. CHAMBERLAIN, Agen' Bemidii. Minn Sun. m. FOLEYSKIDNEYCORE Maltes Kidneys and Bladder Rigi:? :;ez-sessés b W W W W W W W W W geeecees We do it--all kind Get Oy[jqures ééesegék\f Bros.: 2333 W W W W W W w 7 LOWRATES FOR ROUND TRIP ) On Sale Every Day From May 28, to Sept. 30. VIA “THE COMFOR' SENTY THIS COUPON AND2 O ET OBLET “A CAMERA J("l \ \ TO THE LEWIS & CLARK EXPOSITION GREAT NORTHER N RAILWAY For Rutes or Detailed Information, Call on or’Addréss > E. E. CHAMBERLAIN, Local Agent THE TABLE WAY.” VILLUSTRAT ISANDCLARK § Tasr. Teaflie M'r 2 ST. PAUL, Minn. J A BEEED Kl HOFF %~ b b ting ! for dinner. PROFESSIONAL . CARDS | LAWYERS. D. H. FISK Attorncy ang Csunschiorat Law Otiice opposiic Hote! Markham. P. J. Russell Attorney at Law BEMIDJI, - - - - - NN, E. E. McDonald LAWYER Bemidfi, Minn, Office: Swedback Block PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS, an and Surgeon, of the Eye a specialt, Glasses fiued, oo Diseases Dr. Rowland Gilmore Physician and Surgeon Office: Iiles Block Dr. Blakeslee Physician ana Surgeon Office: Miles Block. Beminji Dr. E. H. Mé;rcum Physician and rgeon Office: Swedback Block Residence Phone 221 Oifice Phone 18 DENTISTS, | Dr. R. B. Foster, Dr. Phinney SURGEON DENTISTS PHONE 124 MILES BLOCK. Dr. C. M. Smith, DENTIST Office over E. H. Winter’s Store. DRAY AND TRANSFER, i DRV NG TRANSEER: o Wes Wright, Dray and Transfer. Phone 40, 404 Beltrami Ave. Tom Smart, Dray and Baggage, Sate &3 and Pj a Speciatty. P12n° Moving Phone No. 58 | ¢1¢ America Avenue F. O. E. Fraternal Order of Eagles, Boml Meets every w:a:.:'-d-}"fx"c‘fif’.f.’.‘."’sm & Gllmour's Hal. A.T. W) S i Lobloar s LT T ¥ Brosdent Visiting Bacles cordially tnvited, Minnesota & International In Connection with the ..Northern Paeifie,. Provides the best trai v sesl rain ) service between ki) Nostthor Blackduck, 1, ot Fé&‘l’ii?-. and intermedia il e ate and Minne- 2nd POints ea. Fhrough coaches wd the Twin of ¢ vast and South, +ween Northome : e, No_change S, Ample i, at Brainefifl STATIONS Daily except Sunday - Lv. Kolliher, Daily ex. da FE o ™ " Shop in rear of Swedback Block. 1