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Have One Doctor No sense in running from one doctor to another. by him. in time when you opinion of Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral Select the best one, then stand Do not delay, but consult him are sick. Ask his REVISED FORMULA for coughs and colds. not, just as he says. Then use it or The new kind contains no alcohol We have no secrets to hide! We pub- lish the formulas of all our medicines. J. C. AYER CO., Manufacturing Chemists, Lowell, Mass. THE BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEE PUBLISHED EVERY AFTERNOON, OFFICIAL PAPER---CITY OF BEMIDII BEMIDJI PIONEER PUBLISHING CO. By A. KAISER. Bntered in the postoffice at Bemidil. Minn., a8 second class matter. SUBSCRIPTION---$5.00 PER ANNUM L= The Concertina. The threatened revival of the con- eertina as a serfous musical Instrument ta England would be a return to an @4 fashion no doubt, but not to a very eld one, since the concertina dates from the early part of the last century. Its Mmvention was an early indiscretion of Bir Charles Wheatstone of telegraph fame, who took out a patent for it in 1830, the very year in which some- Body In Vienna invented that similar Mnstroment, the accordion. The concer- tna was popularised by Sig. Regondl, who bad come before the public as a Juvenile prodigy with the guitar. At one time no London concert was real- ly complete without him and his con- eertina, and he astounded the Germans ‘with the music he could get out of it. Companionship of Books. Will you go and gossip with your bousemaid or your stable boy when yeu may talk with kings and queens; while this eternal court is open to you, with its soclety wide as the world, multitodinous e« its days, the chevar mad the mishty of every place and Bme? 1ato that you may enter always, ™ that you may take fellowship and rank according to your wish. From that, once entered into It, you can nev- o¢ be outcast but by your own fault. ~John Ruskin. Mislald the Pudding. Dinner was late, but when the mis- tvess started to make a mild remon- srance the new maid was on time with her excuse. “Sure,” she sald, with an Irresistible Irish smfle as she placed the soup on e table, “sure, I mislald the pudding, and there I was hunting the house for B, and where would it be afther all but I the oven!” 8hopping. Thaere {s nothing finer for the temper Man & new hat, no balm for hurt feel- Ings like a fresh gewgaw. Ordering mow frocks takes a woman out of her- self. Cut a woman off her shopping, and the result may be disastrons.—Lon- den World. The Polish He Needed. “I stopped down the stroet,” sald the man who prided himself on being Slunt, “to get a polish on my shoes.” “Den’t you think,” asked his sarcas- #le companion, “that you began at the Wrong end?'—Baltimore American, As Usual. Friend—You took your son Into your establishment some months ago to feach him the business, I understand. @4 it turn out?—Business Man Cwearily)—Great success. He's teach- fog me now.—Chicago Journal. X man Is never so on trial as in the ment of excesslve good fortune.— allace. Whe Owns an Hmployee’s Invention? Many an inventor is not a mechanic and Is not even sufficiently practical to ‘work out the details ‘of an invention, #0 that. it is necessary for him to em- ploy the skill of some one else actually to construct the invention. A complete Inventive act consists of a mental con- ception of the Invention, followed by a reduction of the invention to practice. If an employer forms a complete mea- tal conception »f the invention and then has his employee construct the thing he has conceived, the employer is regarded as the inventor. The re- lation of employer -and employee ex- ists not only where a manufacturer uses his own regularly employed me- chanie, but where any Inventor em- ploys any mechanic to reduce his in- ventlon to practice. In this sense a corporation employed to bulld a ma- chine embodying an invention would be an employee as to the inventor. If there arises any controversy as to who made the invention—that Is, as to whether the employer or the employee made the invention—the presumption is that the employer made it, and the employee must show by convincing proof that he made the Invention be- fore his claim will be entertained.— Edwin J. Prindle In Engineering Maga- zine. —_— Strcet Car Rules of Rio. There are first and second class street cars, writes Albert Hale In the Reader, and I, with a package In my arms, had taken a first class bond, as a street car is called In Rio de Janelro. Scarcely had I done so when the con- ductor requested .me totransfer-to a second class car whenever it might come along, because no one Is allowed to carry anything gretor than a lap satchel first class. So I humbly de- scended and had elther to mix with market women and sweaty laborers or to take a tilbury. A tilbury, named after the Hnglish maker who years ago Introduced 1t, Is a curlous two wheeled, light springed cab, like an old . fashioned gig, and resembles - a hansom without the attachment for the driver. He sits Inside the tilbury. A person without a necktle is no more allowed first class on the street cars than was I with my parcel. They are decldedly particular In Brazil and in- berlt many fastidious ways from the time of the empire, when dress and manners. were the mark separating the aristocracy from the working classes, They Didn’t Tally, “That society newspaper published some very flattering remarks about me,” began Miss Devane. “Yes,” replied her best friend; “but it was horrid of the editor to go and spoil it in the way he did.” “Spoll 1t, Indeedl Why, he sald I was A beautiful belle of the younger set and”"— “Yes, and then he put your photo- graph right under it.” A Different Paley. Miss Backbay—You are famillar, in a general way, with paleontology, are you not? Mr. Carondelet—No, I don’t remember that I ever happened across ft. But I once read Paley on “Hv!- dences of Christianity,” or something like that, when I was a boy, and I found it awful heavy reading.—Chica- 8o Tribune. The Alternative. Muggins—I hear you are having your .dlmahter’u volce cultivated. Buggins— '!u; I'm afrald It can’t be cured, so I ,8m doing the next best thing.—Phila- delphla Record. at this time. We also have lots for sale. During the year 1906 we sold more lots in Bemidji than any year previous. The future of Bemidji is assured and those intending to make this their home shouid not fail to purchase residence lots —_ For further particulars write or call Bemidji Townsite and Im.- provement Company. H. A. SIMONS, Agent. - Swedback ‘Block, Bemidji. a few good business The Avwfal Carib Fish. A traveler in Venezuela gives an in- teresting description of the fish of the Orinoco country. He says the party several times came In contact with the carib fish, which are the most ferocious Inhabitants of the water known. The fish are not over fourteen inches long, but the *avel in schools. Thelr teeth are tree cornered. Any living object which wttvacts their attention Is at- tacked with tury. Mr. Thompson tells of an Indian woman who entered the ‘water to fill a bucket. She was' at- tacked by the fish and reached shore only to die in fifteen minutes. The flesh was literally torn from her body. Mr. Dart, who was with Mr. Thomp- son, caught one of the fish and pulled it upoun the bank. He held the carib under his foot while he pointed at the peculiar teeth with his finger. With a quick movement the carib flopped out from under Mr. Dart’s foot and seized him by the finger, cutting that member to the bone. The fish frequently have been known to bite ordinary fishhooks In two. Progress of Dentlstry. Though dentistry became a science under the hand of Professor Richard Owen as late as 1839, there are evi- dences that it was practiced in a crude way by the ancients. Herodotus refers to treatment of the teeth by the Egyp- tlans, and evidences of attempts to supply artificial teeth have been dis- covered in anclent skulls and mum- mies. -Galen was the first physiclan to speak of treatment of troublesome teeth, and Ambroise Pare, in his work on surgery in 1550, makes mention of the preservation of the teeth. It is only since the middle of the last cen- tury, however, that dentistry has be- come a branch of surgical science. Be fore that time bad teeth were extract- ed, and mere tooth drawing constitut- ed dentistry early In the nineteenth century. The first dental school in the United States was erected at Baltl- more in 1839. In 1845 Cincinnati boast- ed of a simllar Institution, and in 1856 a dental school was erected at Phila- delphia. A Gentleman of the 01d School. Lady Dorothy Nevill in her reminis- cences tells a story of her father, a gentleman of the old school, “in nan- keen shorts, with white stockings and & brass buttoned blue coat, with big collar, over a beautifully embroidered walstcoat.” But he swore, after the manner of the age. “He was traveling at night on the continent alone in a post chaise when the postboy, while passing through a forest, began to drive like a ‘man anything but certain of his way. My father’s wrath soon rose, and the explosion of strong lan- guuge which Issued from the carriage 80 alarmed the drlver that, murmuring, ‘Je ne veux pas conduire le diable’ (I will not drive the devil), he pulled up and, having expeditiously unfastened the traces, made off with his horses at a gallop. My father, I believe, passed the whole .night alone in the woods.” Colonial Fear of Lawyers. In the columns of the New York Gazetteer of Sept. 8, 1786, there was & paragraph lamenting the increase of lawyers as threatening to the future prosperity of the.community and de- grading to freemen. ' “An honest trade in former days,” said the writer, “was all that people of common ability and education were ambitious of, but now no profession is genteel but the law- yer and thc merchant. The lawyers are now creeping into every post of Importance and thrusting themselves Wwherever there is a vacancy. Our con- gress, our assembly, are crowded with them, and even in our great commer- clal convention there are five lawyers to one mer-hant.” Curing the Bad Boy. You remember the.old fashioned wo- man who ' when she heard her young son swearing or using naughty words ‘washed his ‘mouth in soapsuds. There 1s.an Atchison boy who could not be re- formed In this way, so his father took him in hand. Every day his father called him In and saild: “Now, your mother objects to those naughty words you use, but I, being a man, like them. Go over the list for me.” The boy promptly complied at first, but in a few days he tired of the words and has now glven up his list entirely.—Atchison Globe. Smoking a Pipe. The Canadian Cigar and Tobacco Journal gives some hints to those who smoke pipes. Everybody thinks he knows how to smoke a pipe, but to do 1t perfectly Is mot easy. “Time Is a keynote of successful pipe smoking,” says the Journal, “and another is gen- tleness. Take It easy. Don’t crowd the pipe to the top of the bowl. Never get a pipe hot. Keep cool, and keep your pipe cool. You can relight a pipe, and if you are an old smoker you will be all. the better for it. When you have finished do not refill a heated pipe.” Washington Monument. The towering Washington monu- ment, solid as it is, cannot resist the heat of the sun poured on its southern side on a midsummer’s day without a slight bending of the gigantic shaft, which i8 rendered perceptible by means of a copper wire 174 feet long hanging in the center of the structure and carrying a plummet suspended in &.vessel of water. Animal Voices. A cow will moo about an octave; a dog will bark a fourth or fifth of an octave; a horse’s neigh is a descent on the chromatic scale, while the donkey will bray in octaves, No donkey has ever yet glven evidence of proficiency 1n the study of voice production. Delays Are Dangerous. “But this s so sudden! You had bet- ter give me a week to think it over!” “Very well, dear. And, perhaps, it would be as well if' I thought it over lgysslt at the same timel"—Sketching its, Breaking In. Mother--Dear me, the baby has swal- lowed a plece of worsted. Father— That’s nothing to the yarns she'll have to_swallow. If she lives to grow up. PILES CUREDLIN 6 TO 14 DAYS. PAZO OINTMENT is gnaranteed to c; caso of Ttehing, Blind, Blosdin trading piles n 660 14 0a38 or money vefumned . aar “|Inely sarcastic voice. R He Barned the Hat, 4 Barty Hilllard, who many yuvars ago lived in a small town In northern Ver- mont, was noted for his careless vaga- bond habits, ready wit and remarkable facility for extempore rhyming. While he was sitting one day in the yillage store of what Is now a part of Mont- pelier among a group of idlers the gen- fal merchant asked him why he wore such a shockingly bad hat. Barty re- Pplied that he could not afford a better one. “Come now,” said the merchant, “make me a rhyme on a bad hat, and I will give you the best I have in my store.” Instantly Barty threw the old one on the floor and began: Here lles my old hat, And pray what of that? It's as good as the rest of my raiment! If I buy me a better You'll make me your debtor And send me to jail for the payment. * The new hat was voted to be fairly wou, and Barty bore it off in triumph, saying, “It's a poor head that can’t take care of itself.”—Boston Herald. No Duplicate Chandeliers. “Did you ever notice,” said the ob- serving man, “that every public build- ing has chandeliers unlike those of any other public building? There are no duplicates. You go into one church and you see a handsome chandelier that it would seem worth while to du- plicate for another church, but you aever find it in another church. You go into a big hall, and youw’ll observe some stunning globes and chandelier fixtures a-d look for ’em in some other big hall, but they're not there. 1 don't know what principle the makers of chandeliers go on, whether it Is a mat- ter of pride with them not to fit wit two buildings alike or whether cun- tractors for such buildings insist wa exclusive designs, but the chandelies people must employ some remarkably versatile artists to think up so many ‘different designs. It seems like a waste of money to make only one of a kind, but it is a pleasure to know that hall or home may be exclusive in its chan- deliers.” it O, Andrew Jackson’s Education. During each winter for two or three rears after-he had reached the age of even Andrew Jackson was sent to the ild field school of a Mr. Branch. After his he attended the select school which . Presbyterian preacher, the Rev. Dr. Javid Humphreys, taught in the Wax- law settlement. He appears to have teen going to this higher school in ‘the pring of 1780, when the inroad of Tar- ston created a panic in that portion of be Carolinas. At some later period of iis youth he is said to have attended he old Queen ‘college or seminary at Jharlotte a couple of terms, but the ime is not definitely known. As to education, therefore, it may be nfely stated that Andrew Jackson en- oyed much more than the ordinary ad- ‘antage of a backwoods boys of his ime. At the age of ten he had become 0 good a reader that he was often ‘hosen to read the newspaper to the ssembled neighbors, and he remem- tered with pride in after years that he 1ad thus had the honor of “reading out oud”"the Declaration ‘of Independence \pon its arrival jn the Waxhaws. Ror 1 lad of ten this:was, indeed, some- hing to rememper. with honest pride.— Chomas E. Watson in Watson's Jeffer- ionian Magazine. Caustic. Recently a wearied looking little nother, carrying a small baby, boarded t street car and took a seat next to wo men who were earnestly engaged n conversation. . .Neither of the men wvas very handsome, and it must have 'equired considerable nerve on their »art to hand out their photographs imong their friends unless the pictures 1ad been previously retouched with iandpaper. In a few minutes the baby yegan to cry with a reliable yelp that rould be heard above the din of the street babble for half a block, and, ¥ith a grouchy glance at the young- iter, one of the men arose and peevish- y remarked to his pal: “I think we had better sit over here, Tim.” This ungallant act plainly embar- :assed the little mother, but she was squal to the occasion. “It won’t do a bit of good to change our seats, gentlemen,” said she in-a “The baby can lee you quite as plainly over there as 1e could here.” A Dying Glass. In the glass collection at the Museum of Art in Dresden, Germany, there is a large drinking cup which stands apart from all other art objects under a heavy glass cover. It is of Dutch workmanship, and the inscriptions and style show that it .was made early in the eighteenth century. The vessel is remarkable because it is known in the museum, says a Berlin paper, “as hav- Ing consumption which can be com- municated to- other objects of glass. On that account it is isolated. There ire remedies against this glass disease, which is usually developed because of defects in the glass mixture, but these have not been applied to the Dutch vessel In order that the progress of the wasting disease may be observed.” A Big Calculation In Water. The ocean. sea and lake surface of sur planet is estimated at something fike 145,000,000 square miles, with an average depth of 12,000 feet, and is alculated to contain not less than 3,270,600,000,000,000 “tons of water. The rivers of the earth are estimated to have a flow sufficient to cover thir- ty-six cubic_miles of the above area e2ach day. Now, if all the oceans were suddenly dried and the rivers could keep up their present rate of flow, which, of course, they could not with- out ocean evaporation, it would take 8,500 years to refill the basin. Nature and Broken Bones. In the splicing of broken bones na- ture can give the best surgeon pointers. ‘When a boae is broken the splintered ends are surrounded with cartilage un- tll they are firmly held In position. Then gradually a layer of bone is placed between them and soldered to- gether. All the physician has to do is to bring the two ends of the bones together so that the point will be smooth and even. agents do the rest—New York Tribune. -books. [ Contusea the Elevator Man. New York elevator operators have a dislike of the word ‘“next.” “It is too confusing,” said one man. “For example, two men stepped into my car the other day. One said, ‘Fifth floor” The other sald, ‘Next.’ I stop- ped at the second floor and waited and ‘waited for the man who had ordered ‘next’ to get off. He flew into a rage. ‘I don’t want this floor, he said. ‘1 said the sixth floor. Didn’t the other fellow say “Fifth,” and dido’t 1 say “Next,” and isn’t sixth next after fifth? Huh? ? “The- following day one passenger called ont, ‘Third floor, and the other said ‘Next’ at the same time. I thought 1 knew my business that time. I hus- tled the third floor man right up to his landing and took the chap who wanted ‘next’ on to the fourth floor. He was angry also. ‘What did you bring me up here for when I wasn't looking? he thundered. ‘Didn’t you hear me say next? ‘Yes’ sald I, ‘but the other man said third'— ‘T don’t give a rap,’ said he, ‘what the other man satd. We were then on the first floor, and when I said next didn’t that mean second? T'll report you for inattention, that’s what I'll do.” “And that is what be did do,” sighed the operator. ‘‘Clearly the word ‘next’ ought to be abolished.”—New York Sun. The 0la Fashioned “Hired Girl.” The “hired girl” (we never, never al- luded to her as “the mald” in the small American town or quiet country place ‘where you and I were “raised”) was like one of the family, and mother was glad to bave her help, and none of us put on any frills with her, and she was not compelled to put on any frills of cap or apron with us. Ofttimes, espe- clally in the quiet country places, her social standing was as good as that of anybody else. Usually she was one of a grown family of girls. There was plenty of help at her house, and so she came -and assisted our mother at our house. _In thelr hours of ease mother and she discussed the neighborhood gosslp together. The “hired girl” had her beau; a neighbor’s stolid, sheepish son, and much was she joked about him, and finally, after years of faithful and friendly servitude, she married him. We went to the wedding, and it was quite a social affalr, with much temperate merriment and with many cheap but useful presents.—Every- body’s Magazine. Webster’s Compliment. ‘While it is well known that Daniel ‘Webster in speaking of General Tay- lor’s candidacy for the office of presi- dent pronounced it “a nomination not fit to be made,” he never failed to do Justice to the general’s military abil- itles and eminent service in the field. On one occasion he paid the old sol- dier a delicate and well deserved com- pliment. General Taylor was com- plaining of the crowds of people who dally besieged him soon after his as- cession to the presidency. “They Interfere,” he said, “with my official” engagements and violate my domestic retirement, but still I do not wish to turn my back upon my friends.” { “You never did upon your enemies, general,” Mr. Webster instantly re- piea. ° 2 The Snob. The snob cultivates a man or a wom- an not because he expects to get a job or a loan out of either, but because he thinks efther can help him along into soclety’s elect. - He cuts a former ac- qualntance because the unfortunate person seems to be of mo use in his own soclal advancement. He sup- presses the impulse that may lead him to dislike useful people and like use- less ones just as the ambitious bank clerk suppresses his small extrava- gances, his fondness for the race track. Beeause social position seems so im- portant to him-he admires excessively those who have it and snubs those ‘whose position he deems inferior to his own.—New York Mail. Sweetheart ot “Robin Adair> “Robin’ Adair” was written by Lady Caroline Keppel, the daughter of the Earl of Albemarle. Robin was a real character, a young Irish doctor who had been forced by a scandalous ad- venture to leave Ireland and seek his fortune in England. Chance threw a rich patient in his way, a lady of qual- ity, and at her house he met Lady Caroline, and the result was a case of love at first sight on both sides. Her parents objected and sent her away, and during her absente she produced the song. FUARI AR S e The Letter A, The letter A Is In Hebrew called aleph, an ox, and the Phoenician char- acter which represents this sound was originally a plcture of an ox head; hence the name. The right hand stroke of the A represents the top of the head, the other-down stroke the left side, and a line, since fallen out of use, repre- sented the right side of the head, while In very old Phoeniclan manuseripts two dots above for eyes and two be- low for nostrils rendered the resem- blance complete. Bachelor Ignofance. “Aren’t men the limit?’ said young Mrs. Wheel. “When I told my brother this morning that baby had just cut a ftooth, he asked me savagely why I had allowed it to play: with kniyes.” “And my bachelor uncle,” sald Mrs. [Whoa, “when he heard that my baby thad begun teething, wanted to know'if it would begin hairing soon.”—New |York Press. | 0da Bookmarks. ! A Newark librarian has kept a record of 0dd bookmarks found In returned The record Includes an Insur- ance policy, a two dollar bill, a pair of spectacles, love letters, a will, a mortgage, photographs, a marriage cer- tificate, a promissory note, dress sam- ples and a hare’s foot. Then She Got Furious, X She—Here we've been married just one month, and now you no longer love me. He—But, my dear— She—Don’t try to explain. I'm not blind. You made a mistake. You oazht to have married some. silly, stupid, woman. He—But, | dearest, I've done my. best. Nature's™ little | Distrust. Is the mother of security.— La Fontaine. g WANT. ONE CENT A WORD. No Advertiseinent Accepted For Less . Then 15 Cents. Cash Must Accompany All Out Of Town Orders FRIEND TO FRIEND The personal recommendations of peo ple who have been cured of coughs and colds by Chamberlain’s Cough Remeds have done more than all else to make it & staple article of trade and commerce ove: a lrge part of the civilized world. Barker’s Drug Store Crocodiles and the Cure. One does not usually connect croco- diles with a health resort—rather the reverse—but the creatures are quite a feature of the Indian bathing place of Manghapir, about nine miles from Ka- rachi. This town is a place of pilgrim- age for pious Hindoos, but it 18 chiefly famous for the value of its waters In rosy. The waters are hot, and more than 60 per cent of the sufferers who bathe there annually, it is said, are cured. The crocodiles are rather note- worthy In that they live in the hot ‘water, apparently suffering no incon- venience from its temperature or me- dicinal qualities.—Wide World Maga- zine. Terror Blanches Hair, It has been repeatedly affirmed that Queen Marie Antoinette’s auburn hair turned white in the days of the reign of terror, says the Caledonian, and an English surgeon named Parry states that just after the Indian mutiny he actually saw the jet black halr of a rebel Sepoy, who was under examina- tlon and feared a dreadful death, turn, white in the course of half an hour. In the time of the commune in Paris the dark hair of Baron Alphonse de Rothschild was blanched in a few hours. Holding Him Off. “The head of the firm,” said the su- perintendent, “insists upon our employ- ing his son in this department, and it’s as much as we can do to keep him idle.” “Idle! You mean busy, don’t you?” “No, I don’t. If we kept him busy it ‘would keep three or four other men busy correcting his mistakes.”—Phila- delphia Press. ‘Why He Quit. “For the drunkard and the glutton shall come to poverty.” *“I figured out years ago,” said a prosperous farmer, “that with very moderate drinking I'd drink an acre of good land every year. So I quit.”—Central Christian .Advo- cate. . . A Strong Man, Daughter—Wasn’t Julius Caesar one of the strongest men that ever lived, pa? Father—What makes you ask that question, my little girl? Daughter—I was just reading that he threw a bridge over the Rhine. Taste Governs Spelling. Shakespeare spelled his own name in sixteen different ways which have survived, and it is evident that Eliza- bethan spelling “depends upon the taste and fancy of the speller.” It Is the printing press which made spelling by stereotyping it, and it is, after all, on the printer’s reader more than on the professor that the spelling of the future depends.—London Star. apoleon’s Name. The name Napoleon written in Greek characters will form seven @ifferent words by dropping the final letter of each in succession. When read, these words form a complete sentence, mean- ing, “Napoleon, the destroyer of whole cities, was the lion of his people.” Bromo uinine Tablets _ Cure a Cold in One Day Cure Grip in Two Days Gl e BUY YOUR SHEET MUSIC PIANOS, ORGANS SEWING MA- CHINES FURNITURE AND HOUSE EUR- - NISHINGS. AT BISIAR, VANDER LIP & COMPANY 311 Minn. Ave. HELP WANTED. WANTED—For U. 8. army able- bodiéd, unmarried men bec- | tween ages of 21 and 86, cit zeéps of TUnited States, of good character and temperate habits, who can speak, read and write English. For - in- formation apply to Recruiting Officer, Miles block, Bemid; Minnesota. WANTED: For the U.S. Mar- ine Corps, men between the ages 21 and 85. An opper- tunity to see-the wcrld. For full information apply in per- son or by letter to' Marine Re- cruting office 208 third street Bemidji, Minn. the cure of the dread scourge. of lep- |- WANTED—Competent girl for general housework. 716 Minnesota Ave. Inquire FCR EA'E. FOR SALE—Cheap, a chiffen- nier, book case, library table, three rocking chairs. Inqaire 905 Minnesota avenuse. YOR SALE— Rubber stamps. The Pioneer will procure any kind of a rubber stamp for you on short notice. f FOR SALE—Magnificent moose head, mounted; will be sold cheap: Inguire at this office. LOST—Pair of gold spectacles. Finder return to this office. FOR RENT. FOR RENT — Residence, : cen- trally located, fully furnished with all modern living furni- ture; four commodio rooms, besides pantry ard clothes closet; waterworks and "toilet in house. Apply to this office or to N. W. Helmer, roli e headquarters. FOR RENT — Furnished room with bath; midji avenue. Inquire 609 Be- FOR RENT: Furnished room in modern house. 700 Bemidji Ave. 3 FOR RENT: Five room house. Inquire A. Klein. PUBLIC .-MISCELLANEOUS: - LIBRARY — Open Tuesdays and Saturdays, 2:30 to6p. m. Thursdays 7 to 8 p. m. 2lsn. Library in base- ment of Court House. Miss Mabel Kemp, librarian. PROFESSIONAL. ..CARDS: . LAWYER . WM. B.MATTHEWS ATTORNEY AT LAW., . . Eractices before the United States Supreme urt—Court of Claims—The United States Gencral Land Office—Indian Office_and Con- gress. Special attention given to Land -Con- Lcefl.ls—l’rocurement of Patents and Indian alms. sota Delegation. in Crongress. Offices: 420 New York Avenue.-Washington, D. C Refer to the members of the Minne- D. H. FISK Attorney and Counsellor at Law Office opposite Hotel Markham. P.J. Russell Attorney at Law BEMIDJL, = = = = = Bemidfl, Mino. E. E, McDonald ATTORNEY AT LAW Office; Swedback Block PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS. Dr. Rowland Gilmore Physician and Surgeon Office: Iiles Block DR. WARNINGER. VETERINARY SURGEON Telephone Number 209, Third St.," one block west of 1st Nat'l Bank Phone 40, DRAY AND TRANSFER. Wes Wright, and Transfer. 404 Beltrami Ave, Dray and 3 Phone No 58" | Tom Smart Safe and Plano moving. 618 America Ave. PHONE 124 Phone 319 Bemidji F. C. CHASE DRAY AND TRANSFER ‘Wood Sawing Promp'ly Done Phone 351 DENTISTS. Dr. R. B. Foster, SURGEON DENTIST MILES BLOCK. DR. J. T. TUOMY 5 Dentist First National Bank Build’g. Telephone No. 230 Want Ads FOR. RENTING A - PROPERTY, SELL- - ING A BUSINESS ' - OR OBTAINING