Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, February 4, 1907, Page 2

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¢ SR e Colds on the Ches Ask your doctor the medical name for a cold - on the chest. He will say, *Bronchitis.”” Ask him if it is ever serious. Lastly, ask him if| he prescribes Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral for this disease. Keep in close touch with your family physieian, and follow his advice elrefully. have no secretal We publish 3. thamrmu)-nnhl!unrnnp.nflonm ror o., [ Mass! THE BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEER, PUBLISHED EVERY AFTERNOON, OFFICIAL PAPER---CITY OF BEMIDJI BEMIDJ! PIONEER PUBLISHING CO. By A. KAISER. Entered In the postofice at Bemidji. Minn., as second class matter. SUBSCRIPTION---$5.00 PER ANNUM WE'VE AFEW OF 'EM. Crookston Times: What’s the use of knocking your home town, your home county, your home state? What'’s the use in knock- ing your neighboring state? Such knocking is the worst kind of & boomerang in the end. Some there are that knock for the mere sake of the knocking; others knock because they know no better. What’s the answer for knocking, and agitating, and kicking up the sod, and making yourself a general nuisance—if you haven’t the remedy to pro- pose? We someftimes think that the knocker after death has the same experience as Kipling’s Tomlinson had when that im- mortal called at heaven’s gate. He was turned away, with .in- structions to go to the—other place. There Satan read him his earthly history and turned him off with the judgment that he was too durned mean to be admitted into the dominions of his betters, and he was sent back to earth as neither heaven nor hell wanted him. Ever since, poor Tomlinson has been stirring up discord, and he has visited pretty nearly every country on the globe. At present he seems to be residing not a thousand miles from Crookston—tempor- arily, we hope. OUR STATE LEGISLATURE. Each legislature might be said to have its peculiarities. For many years Jacobson, Staples and Donnelly were conspicuous figures. Usually, there were present on the floor of the House or Senate, many of the legal profession. This year the House is composed of men, so far as the Pioneer can judge, that come from other walks of life. They appear to be young men, and judging from the expressions on their faces we would say that they have an honest determina- tion to enact into law such legis- lation as may protect the citizens in their rights and develop the great resources of this state. They seem to be determined to pass the 2-cent-fare bill, some wholesome tax legislation, anti- pass provisions, and make suit- able appropriation for drainage of state lands, anda good law relating to the drainage of other lands. If they accomplish a con- siderable portion of this work the state will be under ereat obli- gation to the present legislation. Governor Johnson has ap- pointed Robert Hannah of Fergus Falls as a member of the State! Game and Fish Commission. It is understood that Sam F. Fuller- ton will remain as executive agent of the commission until about the middle of April, when he will step down and out and Carlos Avery, editor of the Hutchinson Leader, will be elected to the position. Sam Fullerton has been executive agent of |the commission for so | many years that his name is als most a household word where game and fish abound. Fullerton has made the game and fish pro- tection a life study and his ser- vices will be greatly missed by the commission. Grand Rapids Independent: Bemidji is after the normal school which it is proposed to establish in the northern part of the state, and if hustling and get there will gain it for them, they will get it. Akeley Herald: Bemidjiis mak- ing a stiff fight for a normal school and will no doubt land it if this section is to bave one. Bemidji would be a good place to locate the school and would be kept up by the people of that thriving little city to the north. — The Romantic Alr of Frisco. San Francisco Is permeated with an alr of romance and adventure. No- ‘where may one turn without belng re- minded of the legends that have been woven around the forty-niners and their immediate followers. The names of the streets and of the business blocks, such as Kearney, Sutter, Mont- gomery, Dupont, Flood, Crocker and Sharon, bring to the mind of the visitor long forgotten stories of riot or adven- ture and of fortunes whose vastness once excited his wonder or made him Incredulous. To read the words that are painted upon the street cars of San Francisco is to be carried back in fan- €y to the time when the city was peo- pled only by those who, having turned from all else that men hold dear, had gone In search of fortune and found it, always just as they were about to give up in despair and die of starvation or succumb to the hardships with which human endurance could no longer cope. —Chicago Record-Herald. Lincoln’s Bar Record. In his twenty-three years at the bar Lincoln had no less than 169 cases be- fore the highest court of Illinois, a rec- ord unsurpassed by his contemporaries. He appeared before the United States clrcult and district courts with great frequency, he was the most indefatiga- ble attendant on the Eighth circuit and tried more cases than any other mem- ber of that bar, he was attorney for the Illinois Central raflroad, the great- est corporation In the state and one ‘which doubtless had its choice of legal talent; he was also counsel for the Rock Island railroad and other corpo- rations and individuals with important legal interests at stake, he was sought as legal arbitrator in the great corpo- ration litigations of Illinols, and he tried some of ‘the most notable cases recorded In the courts of that state.— Frederick Trevor Hill in Century. Mental Poise and Health, People who reach extreme old age are, as a rule, pretty well balanced physically and mentally. A poised life is serene, and serenity and harmony tend to longevity. The mind that is not well balanced is constantly jangled and out of tune. There Is a constant Jarring which racks the whole human machinery. There is discord in an un- balanced life, and discord 18 always destructive—deadly. The well poised, dignified life is not thrown off its cen- ter quickly. The man who goes all to Dleces over trifles is one sided. There Is a momentum in & poised, balanced nature which steadlies its progress and helps hold it on its chosen track. Hot temper, constant mental confu- slon and disorder are vitality sappers— life shorteners.—Success Magazine. The Natural Way. A philanthropic person heard of & negro family that was repomd in des- titute circumstances, and, ecalling at their domicile, he found the report true. The family consisted of the mother, a son nearing manhood’s estate and two young children. The benevolent old gentleman after hearing the mother's story gave her eldest son §1 to get a chicken for the Thanksgiving dinner and took his departure. No sooner ‘was he gone than the negress sald to her son, “Sambo, you dong me dat dollah and go get dat In e natchral way!”"—Chicago Inter Ocean. ——————— at this time. lots for sale. For further particulars write or call Bemidji Townsite and Im- provement Company. H. A. SIMONS, Agent. Swedback Block, Bemid}i. : CITY LOTS) 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 should not fail to purchase residence lots We also have a few good business case ot vllu‘ln AT THE STATE PRISON HOUSE MEASURE PROVIDES FOR EXECUTION OF ALL DEATH L SENTENCES THERE.. REGULATION OF WILD CAT MIN- ING COMPANIES SOUGHT BY A HOUSE BILL. St. Paul, Feb. .*—The execution of ell death sentences Imposed in this state at the state prison at Stillwater is provided in a bill introduced in the house by F. B. Phillips of St. Paul. The bill is a re-enactment of Sections 5412 and 5432 of the revised laws, chang- ing them so that when the sentence has been imposed the court shall com- mand the sheriff to deliver the prison- er to the warden of the state prison at Stillwater. The evidence and court order are to be delivered to the gov- ernor as usual, and he is to fix the date, the execution to take place be- fore sunrise on the date fixed. The sheriff of the county where the pris- oner was convicted is included among those who may visit the condemned man at the prison, the others permit- ted being the prisoner’s counsel, a priest or clergyman selected by him and the members of his family. The provisions against admitting news- paper reporters or representatives and against newspaper accounts’ of the execution are retained in the bill. The regulation of wildcat mining and other investment companies which try to sell their securities to the public is aimed at in a bill intro- duced in the house by F. T. White of Elk River. The bill is made applicable to any assoclation, firm, company, partnership, association or .corpora- tion, other than building and loan as- socfations and insurance companies and associations which issue stock. No association is to issue stock before It has received a certificate of au- thority from the public examiner. The bill is Intended to protect investors in this state from buying worthless stocks of outside companies. State Highway Measure. A state highway bill was introduced In the house by J. R. Randall of Du- luth., It provides for two state roads, one running straight north and south and the other straight east and west. The roads follow the town lines, re- gardless of what towns they strike, except that one end of one road hits Duluth. This road "goes due west from Duluth to a point about six miles south of Moorhead. The other.road starts on the Towa line six miles west of the east boundary of Faribault county. It goes directly north to the state llne near Indus in Itasca county. ‘The senate in committee of the whole, with Senator Frank Clague of Lamberton presiding, considered -the bills on general orders and recom- mended several for passage. A bill reducing the minimum capital of banks of discount and deposits to $6,000 was ‘introduced by Senator A. D. Stephens of Crookston. The bill permits of the incorporation of banks with a capital of $5,000 in villages having a population of 400 or less. Another bill providing for a tax on mortgages was introduced in the sen- ate, this one being introduced by Sen- ator C. A. Johnson of St. Peter. A somewhat similar bill was introduced by Benator Frank Clague of Lamber- ton some days ago. A bill Intended to stop grafting by agents and employes at the expense of their principal and employer was Introduced by Senator 8. B. Bedford of Rushmore. The bill }s comprehen- sive and includes in its prohibitions the giving, offering or receiving of any sort of gift or gratuity in consid- eration of the exertlon by the agent or employe of his influence on behalf of the person making such gift in re- lation to the purchase of supplies, em-- ployment of labor or other matters in connection with the business of his principal or employer. Third State Fish Hatchery. Provision for the ‘acquisition of a site and the establishment of a third state flsh hatchery at or near Deer- wood, Crow Wing county, is made in 8 bill introduced by Senator 8. F. Alderman of Brainerd. £ Joseph M. Hackney of St. Paul is the duly elected seénator from the Thirty-seventh - district. The senate came-to:this conclusion after spending about {wo hours in listening to argu- ments of both sides. " in the contest brought by Plerce Butler. The test of strength came on the motion to substitute the minority for the ma- Jority report, which was voted down by a strict party vote. Senator Ole Sageng, the ‘lone Populist senator, voting with the Republicans. The vote stood nineteen ' ayes and forty- two nays. The motion to adopt the majority report, seating Mr. Hackney was then put and Senator Albert Schaller’s was the" only volce heard voting no. 7 The house andisenate drainage committee held a foint session and ‘went into a thorough discussion of the general principles of drainage and the polioy of the state in regard to it. Two motlons were passed, one expressing it a8 the sense of the committees that $200,000 be appropriated for drainage and the other that $15,000 be put in the hands of the drainage commission for cooperation with the federal gov- ernment in making a topographical survey of the state. 034 Graveyard Inscriptions. At Worcester, England, the slab erected over a departed autioneer is in- scribed with & single word, “Gone.” In Sussex the initials and date of the death of the deceased are followed by two words, “He was.” The most re- markable inscription is at Cane Hill cemetery, Belfast, where the inscrip- tion says, “Left till called for.” PILES CURED IN 6 TO 14 DAYS. PAZO OXNTMHNT is flurlnued to cure any ding or Protruding | Ulmonnynlufldefl‘ “50c A Bret Harte Joke. Sam Davis of Nevada once made & wager that he could successfully imi- tate the style of any living or dead Doet and do it so thoroughly that the difference was not discernible and that the public, the press and the critics Would not detect the fraud. As a re- sult he wrote “Binley and 46,” to which he signed F: Bret Harte’s name. The fake was put out in a publication known as the Open Letter. It describ- ed an engineer who took his train through a snowstorm in the Sierras, dy- ing at his post. From the Atlantic to the Pacific the poem was copled. “Binley and 46” was given a full page in Leslie’s Weekly, with a portrait of Bret Harte, and described as “the best short poem of the decade” It was many years before Mr. Harte denied its authorship. The poem has since ‘been incorporated in several books of popular recitations, notwithstanding Bluley freezes to death beside a roar- ing locomotive furnace, with 150 pounds of steam up and two cords of ‘wood within reach.—Success Magazine. No Surprises In Dreams. No one is ever surprised in a dream. A man dreaming Is at one moment bathing in the sea and at the next mo- ment soaring in a balloon, but the sud- den and inesplicable change does not surprise him, nor is he surprised to meet in the flesh friends long dead, nor is he surprised to find himself doing deeds that really are beyond him. The reason is that dreamers have no mem- ory. In real life to be pursued through the streets by a lion would be astonish- ing, but this accident would be accept- ed in a dream as horrible, but quite || commonplace, the memory not being there to say that it it'is unheard of for lons to pursue one in cities. In the same way, in dreams, men are not sur- prised to find themselves ballooning be- cause they don't remember that they ‘were never up in a balloon before, and they are not surprised to find them- selves conversing with dead people be- cause they don’t remember that these people are dead.—New York Press. How He Remembered It. ‘When they met on Chestnut street after some months in which they hadn’t seen each other the one chap told the other he had taken a little house in Germantown and was there with his lares, penates and coal bill. “Come up and see me some’ evening—any even- ing. We're rarely out, you know, and, then, we have a telephone, so you can let us know when you're coming.” “I suppose your name Is in the tele- phone directory?’ queried the other. “Well, no, not yet, as we've just got the telephone, but our number is—is— really it's funny, but just this minute 1 can’t—it's something like— Ding it all, it’s strange I forget that number, for just on purpose I multiplied it by two and divided the result by four, so as to enable me to remember it, and I can’t recall the first thing about it. Ever know the like? I'll write you the number.”—Philadelphia Record. Clothes and Conduct. Every man and every woman feels the influence of clothes and appearance upon conduct.” You have heard of the lonely man iw’the Australian bush who always put on evening. dress for din- ner so that he might remember he was a gentleman. Addison could not write his best unless he was well dressed. Put a naughty girl into her best Sun- day clothes, and she will behave quite 3 nicely; put a blackguard into khaki, and he will be a hero; put an omnibus conductor into uniform, and he will live up to his clothes. Indeed, in a millennium of free clothes of the latest fashion we shall all be archangels.— London Chronicle. Diagnosis of Headache, “There are more than fifty kinds of headache,” sald a%hysician, “and suf- ferers from the more common forms may cure themselves by locating the cauge and treating themselves accord- ingly. The more frequent forms are a.dull pain across the forehead, due to dyspepsia; a pain in the back of the head, due to the liver; a bursting pain in both temples, due to malnutrition; an ache on the top of the head, as though a weight pressed on the skull, due to overwork; an ache between the brows just above the base of the nose, due to eye strain.” Stale Brains. Of course there is no future for stale brains or for a man who stands still and ceases to grow. He is old who thinks he is 0ld and useless who thinks he is useless. When a man has ceased to grow he begins to die, and many people are half dead at fifty, not be- cause of their age, but because of their mental attitnde, because of the way they face life.—Success Magazine. The Honeymoon Over. “No one comes to see me,” said she wearlly, “like they did before 1 was married.” “Speaking of that fact,” said he, “I. used _to call on you seven evenings in the week at that time; But I am as, bad off as you—I now:have nowhere| to'go.” Too Much Levity. Kilduff—For a . bill collector young Dunn displays considerable il timed levity. Skidmore—In what way? Kil- Auff—When he comes after an account he says cheerfully, “Did you want to see me today?” A Rule For the Day. Give us to awake with smiles; give] us to labor smiling. As the sun bright- | ens the world, so let our loving kind- ness make bright this house of our habitation.—Robert Louis Stevenson. Only as a Last Resource. Luck is a good enough thing to trust| . fo atter you've done everything else to fuvite success,—Kansas City Times. At the Wrong Counter. The lady who went to the book' de- partment of a big modern:store and in- quired for “Crabbe’s’ Tales” was told that fish and provisions were on the ground floor.—Boston Herald. ‘ Fiction, Little Bess — What's fiction, Jack? sumll Jack—Pa says it's a story that An unbrmlefl tongue (8 the WO!I' Df iileuu.—murlmdu. 4 i Presence ot Mind. Presence of mind i3 a guality much lked of, much honored and little cul- lvated. ~ Yet, llke most other good ings in the world, it requires cultiva- tlon to bring it to any degree of per- fectlon, for in very few cases Is it a 'natural gift. - Some people 'there are ldoubtless to whom it comes, naturally ‘and by Instinct to do the right things at the right time and place, but they re few in number. Then, again, some }people are by nature cooler headed ’umn their neighbors and do not shout or otherwise become useless just when Fhelr services are required. But this e juiet composure, though very valuable, is not quite the same thing as presence lof mind. The latter consist not only in aving your wits ready for use, but in ‘knowing how to use them and being 'sufficiently calm and steady in mind to 'remember and turn to. account that knowledge. From the earliest possl- ble age children should be taught self control and the instinct of trying to remedy any mistake or accident they may encounter. Too Late. “Madam,” sald the grateful census ‘enumerator, “you have replied courte- onsly and kindly to all my questions. 'Unlike nearly every person I have met isince I began this work, you have not ‘treated me as if I were an enemy and lan intruder. You have answered satls- ‘tflctorfly all the questions as to age, 'physidal condition and ownership of ’property Your conduct meets my 'hearty approval not only as a govern- ‘ment officer, but as a citizen, and, with iyour permission, I will ask you a ques- tlon not down in my list. Are you engaged to be married to anybody?” “I am, sir,” replied the handsome ‘widow, blushing and smiling. “I feared s0,” said the census taker, with a sigh.- And he put on his hat iand went out into the cold world again, s faith in human nature restored, but {bis heart broken. | Japanese Swords. | “Japanese swords are the finest,” sald a swordmaker. “They are finer |than the blades of Ferrara, of Toledo ‘or of Damascus, The blades of Fer- rara, of Toledo and of Damascus must bend Into a perfect circle without breaking, and, a pillow of down being thrown in the air, they must cut it in two with one clean stroke, but the |Japanese blade must do all that and more. The final test of a Japanese blade is its suspension, edge upward, beneath a'tree. It must hang beneath the tree for twenty-four hours, and every lightest leaf that falls upon its edge must be severed neatly, One fail- ure and back to the forge goes f:he Japanese blade again.” Envious Canada. There is a great deal of gush about the charming and all conquering American girl. What is the truth about this much lauded damsel? The most attractive American is she who is edu- cated abroad, who imitates the voice of the Englishwoman and the dress of the FRIEND TO. FRIEND The personal recommendations of peo ple who have been ‘cured of coughs and colds by Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy ‘have done more than all else to make it a staple article of trade and commerce over a large part of the civilized world. Barker’s Drug Store Can You Count a Billiont The following remarkable calculation on the length of time which it would take a person to count 1,000,000,000 ap- peared in the English Mathematician: ‘What is a billion? The reply s simple. In England a billion i3 a million times a milllon. This is quickly written and quicker still pronounced, but no man 18 able to count it. You will count 160 or 170 a minute, but let us suppose that you go up as high as 200 a minute, hour after hour. At that rate you would count 12,000 an hour, 288,600 a day or 105,120,000 in a year. Let us suppose now that Adam, at the beginning of his existence, had begun to count, had con- tinued to do so and was counting still. Had such a thing been possible he would Hot yet bave finished the task of counting a billion. To count & bil- lion would require a person to count 200 a minute for.a period of 9,512 | years 542 days 5 hours 20 minutes, ‘provided that he should count con- tinuously. But suppose we allow the counter twelve hours daily for rest, eating and sleeping. Then he would need 18,025 years 319 days 10 hours 45 minutes in which to complete the task. Practiced What He Preached. Hills—Gruet says that he belleves : keeping in touch with his fellow men. that he hasn’t touched. Mills—Well, there aren’t many of them ONE CENT A WORD. No Advertiseinent Acoepted For Loss Than 15 Cents. Cash Must Accompany All Out Of Town Orders v HELP WANTED. WANTED—V¥or U. 8. army able-’ bodied, unmarried men be- tween ages of 21 and 86, citi- zens of United States, of good character and tempverate habits, who can speak, resd and write English. For in- formation apply to Recruiting - fficer, Miles block, Bemidji. Minnesota. WANTED: For the U.S. Mar- ine Corps, men between the ages 21 and 85. An oppor- tunity to see the world. For full information apply in per- son or by letter to Marine Re- . cruting office 208 ‘third streefi Bemidji, Minn. WANTED—Competent ‘girl for general housework. Inquire 716 Minnesota Ave. FOR SALE. AN AN AN AN ANNNAANANNNNN FOR SALE— Rubber stamps. The Pioneer will procure any kind of a rubber stamp for you on short notica. FOR SALE—Mugmficen; moose head, mounted; will be sold chesp Inqmra 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 commodious rooms, besides pantry and clothes closet; (waterworks and toilet DR. DORAN America’s Most Popular Specialist, Will Visit Bemidji Thursday, Feb, 7, at HOTEL MARKHAM Frenchwoman and who uses the money accruing from Chicago pork or New York stocks to buy, so far as such things may be bought, the old world graces of speech and attire—Canadian Magazine. A Japanese Proverb. A Japanese proverb worth remember- “He who knows not and knows not that he knows not is a fool. Shun him. “He who knows not and knows that he knows not Is humble. Teach him. he knows is asleep. Wake him. “He who knows and knows that he knows is a wise man. Follow him.” The Price. If one sets one's heart on the ‘ex. ceptional, the far off—on riches, on fame, on -power—the chances are he will be disappointed. He will waste his time seeking a short cut:to these things. There Is no short cut. For anything worth having one must pay the price, and the price is always work. patlence, love, self sacrifice~no prom- ise to pay, but the gold of real service. His Name. An unpopular man who was refused membership in a certain aristocratic elub had the audacity to write to the tlub secretary demanding the name of the man who blackballed him. The sec- retary could not resist the chance of sending the following reply: “Sir, 1 have recelved your letter demanding the name of the man who blackballed you. His name is Legion.” Big Game Birds. ‘The capercallzie, or “black game bird of Norway,” is one of the largest spe cles of game birds in the world, being very hardy and frequently attaining a ‘weight exceeding fifteen pounds, but ‘when the birds.are young they are easy prey of hawks. The birds are what are known as ‘“rangers” for the reason that while in quest of food they cover a wide expanse .of territory. During periods of heavy snowfall they burrow into the snow and remain until the storm subsides- before venturing out again. Thelr food. in winter con- sists chiefly of birch buds, and in sum- mer they catch mice and other small animals. They are rated as members of the grouse family and in habits are much like the partrldgee—l?‘orest and Stream | The Remedy, 7 . “I am greatly troubled with klepto- jmania,” exclalmed the fashionably (dressed woman as she bustled Into the 'arug department, = “Now, what would you advise me to take for 1t?” : “Your departure, madam, by all means,” replied the floorwalker, and ‘bowed her to the elevator,PHck. v > ¢ Two of a Kind, ! “You say that Faro Jim came to his end through contributory negligence?” | ““Yes,” answered Broncho;Bob. - “He Jehowed down four aces In & poker igame, an’ two of ‘em was the nco of ‘diamonds.”—Washington -Star. \ iz Great Provocation. | “You say, madam, .that you were ‘under great excltemefit whan you {struck this woman.’ : : . “Yes, Shehad just f nndfim tn.muy |Blb i n 4" mwrsst Dpeoplé on nnh.mflmq “He who knows and knows not that |~ Returning every month. sult him while the oppor- tunity is at hand. Con- in house. Apply to this office or to N. W. Helmer, police headquarters. FOR RENT: Furnished room in modern house. 700 Bemidji Ave. FOR RENT: Five room house. Inquire A. Klein. MISCELLANEOUS. PUBLIC LIBRARY — Open Tuesdays and Satnrdays, 2 :30 t0.6 p. m. Thursdsyfi 7 %8 p. m. algo. . Library in bage- ment of Court Houss. Mabel Kemp, librarian. —_—_——— PROFESSIONAL CARDS LAWYER . == = Wy T DR. DORAN has no superior in dlagnosing and_treating diseases and deformities. He treats acute and chronic catarrh, disoases of the evo. ear, nose, throat, lungs, liver, stomach and Dysgepsla, | constitutional catarrh, o ache, Theumatism, chronic female dis- ease& neuralgia, siatica, dizziness, nervous- ness, ‘slow growth in children, and all wast- ing in adults. Deformities, club feet, curva- turo of spine, diseases of the brain, diabetes, paralysis, Bright's disease. heart disease, ap- pendicitis, eczema, varicocele and hydrocele properly treated. Their system of curing Cancers, Tumors, Gotiters, Fistula, Piles, varicocelo and enlarged glands with tho sub- cutaneous injection method absolutely with- out pain and without the loss of a drop of blood, is one of his own discoveries and is the most really scientific and certain cure of the nineteenth century. Young. middle-age nd old, single and martled men and all who suffer- from lost manhood, nervous.debility, spermatorrhoes, seminal losses, Sexual de- cay, faltering memory, stunted development, Tack of energy. impoverished blood, pimples, 'acial blem(shss, impediment, to mnnll&'e- also blood and ‘skin diseases. sypbills, erup- tion, hair falling, bone pains, swe throat. ulcers, effects of mercury, kidney and bladder troubles, weak back, burning urine, passing urine tao often, gonorreah, gleet and stricture receives searching _treatment, prompt relief and cure for life. He is able to tell anyone his disease. He is not likely w doctor his patients for the wrou No_incurable diseases taken. treated confidently and privately. Consult tion and examination to those interested, Dr J. E. Doran 202 Nicollet Ave. Minneap. Just Received A large shipment of Singer and Wheeler & Wilson Sewing Ma- chines. The best and most beautiful line of cabinets ever carried in the city. Also a complete line of Pianos, Organs. and Sheet Music at popular prices. - Repairs for sewing machines of all kinds. BISIAR,VANDER LIP & COMPANY 311 Minn. Avo. ho make the most of whnt they hav Phone 319 Bon;!gfi: WM. B. MATTHEWS ATTORNEY AT LAW Practices before the ‘United States Supreme Gourt—Court of Claims—The Unif General Land Office—Indian B0 Moo oo 'i]l(m o oromts ’“3"“1 ata: a g;t.:mlg 3 Retb?r m!the membn: o(‘:‘hn B ':? o) n © Now Yotk Avenne. W achigras. B, D. H. FISK Attorney ana Counsellor at Lcw Office opposite Hotel Markham. P. J. Russall Attm-noy at Law BEMIDJI, - CRiSE NN, E. E, McDonald ATTORNEY AT LAW , Minn. Office: Swedback Block - PHYSICIANS AND-SURGEONS. Dr. Rowland Gilmors Physician and Su 3 Offices Tilles Block = : DR- WARNINGER VETERINARY L] Telephone: N il Phone 40, 404 Behnml Avu. : _ Tom Smart Bhone Novoh | S8 Aarion ks F. C. CHASE DRAY AND TRANSEER ‘Wood Sawing Promplly Done- Phone 351 DENTISTS. IDr. R. B. Fosi:er, SURGRON DENTIS'I.‘ PHONE 124 MILES EL First National Bank Bulld'g. Telephone No. Want Ads FOR RENTING A PROPERTY, SELL- . . ING A BUS]NESS = OR OBTAINING HELP ARE BEST, Miss S LT

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