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i/ ADDITIONAL LOGAL MATTER Liked the Damon Company. Manager Cunningham bas re ceived the following letter from Park River, N. D., in which Man- ager Code of the opera house of that place speaks in the highest terms of the, Damon Comedy Co.: Park River, N. D., June 4. Manager Opera House, Bemidji. Dear Sir: —Played Damon’s Comedy Co. last night to a full house. They are one of the best companies that have played my house in years and pleased my people so well they wanted them to remain another night. Dawmon alone is worth the price of ad- mission. You can safely recom- mend these people to your patronage. Truly yours, —E. Code, Manager Opera House. Higgins-Bergmann. Cards have been received in the city announcing the marriage of Miss Gertrude Bergmann to Clarence W. Higgins, the cere- mony having been performed at the home of the bride’s parents, Mr, and |Mrs. D, Bergman, of Plato, Minn., on Tuesday. The bride at one time was head trimmer in Miss Hetland’s” mill. inery establishment and the groom last year was employed on the editorial staff of the Pioneer. They will be at home at 26 Grand Ave., South Minneapolis, on and after July 15. For Sale. Saw mill complete, 25 H. P. engine and boiler complete,patent tooth saw, shingle mill, capacity 10,000 per day; can be seen run- ning. Owner going away. Price $750. Call or address C. C. Hanson, Walker. Konzen-Dreyer. Paul H. Konzon and Mamye H. Dreyer, both from Lyon county, Iowa, were united in marriage at the Baptist parsonage last even- ing, Rev. Broomtield performing the ceremony. DOINGS AMONG BEMIDII'S GOUNTRY NEIGHBORS Live Correspondents of the Pioneer Write the News From Their Localities. WILTON C. F. Rogers was a business caller at Bemidji Wednesday. The base ball game played Sunday was largely attended S. H. Hildreth of Solway was transacting business at Wilton Tuesday. The Farnham Lumber Co. are busy loading cars with lumber this week. Mr.and Mrs. Med Crotteau called on friends at Wilton Fri- day of last week. There will be a grand ball in the M. W. A, hall Saturday even- ing, June 8th. Come and enjoy a good time. There will be a meeting of the M. B. A. lodge at their hall next Thursday evening. Members of the M. B, A, lodge of Bemidji are cordially invited to attend. Mr. James Watkins and Earl McMahon are siding and putting the finishing touches to Joe Burn- ham’s house and as sonn as they are done with the job they will side up J, H. Klausen’s restau- rant. QUIRING. John Anderson made a trip to Blackduck Friday and returned Saturday. Mrs. Chas LeRoque visited with Mrs. Hendrickson Friday of last week. Ed Deitrich and family visited with Mr. and Mrs. T. P. Dooher on Sunday last, Mr. and Mrs. T. Docher visited with Mr.and Mrs. Ed Deitrich on Thursday of last week, They enjoyed a pleasant visit. Miss Anna Sjogren and Miss Nora Hendrickson attended the singing school in the North schoolhouse last Sunday evening. Mr. and Mrs. J. Dooher have gone to Blackduck to spend part of the summer. Mr. Dovher has taken in the drive on the Black- duck. Mrs. W. Hills has gone for a trip to Sweden, where she will visit her aged mother. We all wish her an enjoyable and pleas- ant trip. Miss Emma Watson and Miss Nora Hendricks visited with the Youngman girls and Miss Ten- Eyck last week. They report a very enjoyable time, Decoration day was observed in Quiring by all the Quiring people clearing the cemetery grounds. Ladies served lunch and the men cleared. The work was carried on in spile of the showers throughout the day. SPAULDING. Theo. Westgaard was shop- ping at Bemidji Thursday. Miss Helen Herwig spent Sun- day with the Misses Rygg. R. Stai went to Bemidji with a load of potatoes Wednesday, Services were held at the Lutheran church here Sunday. M. Ryge and sons, Carl and Andrew, loaded a car of lath bolts for John Stoltz Wednesday and Thursday. The Ladies’ Aid met with Mrs. J. Rygg Thursday. The attend- anee was not large on account of the rainy weather. Misses Marie and Cecelia Rygg arrived home the first of the week. The latter arrived from Grand Rapids, where she has been teaching a nine months term of school. Mrs. P, Olson died at her home near Werner Thursday morning from cancer of tke stomach,from which she has been ailing for the last year. She leaves a husband and six children to mourn over her. The funeral was held Sat- urday, with a large crowd in at- tendance to pay their last re- spects to the deceased. The re- mains were taken to the ceme- tery at Bemidji. CUNNINGHAM Mr. W. H. Utely spent the fore part of the week at the lake with friends. Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Cun- ningham took dinner with Woods’ Sunday. The office building for the Steinke Seidle Lbr. Co, isnearly completed. Mrs. Lina Smith is very sick. For a week she has been con- fined to her bed. J. T, Welch and George Cen- serbox went to Northome Sun- day for supplies. Mrs. Victor Fish has been sick in bed for several days but is some better now. Lee Guptil went to Bemidji the last of the week to spend a few. days with his mother and sister, Steinke Seidle Lbr. Co. have a dozen men at work fixing things preparatory to starting the saw- mill. Miss Leola Guptil is expected this week from Bemidji to spend the summer with her sister, Mrs. Claude Fish, Christ Hillesheim, of the Stein- ke Seidel Lbr. Co., returned from Sleepy Eye Friday, bringing six mglxlx with him to work in the mill. Burt Wood, Charles Summer, Mons Johnson, Win Guptil and several others go to Grand Rap- ids this week to serve on the jury. A quantity of seeds have bren received from the Farmers In- stitution of Northern Minnesota for distribution, Call for same at Claude Fish’s. Victor Fish has secured the contract for carrying the mail from Pinetop to Northome via Cunningham for the next four years beginning July 1. Miss Hunter closed her school at Welsh Lake on Thursday. The forenoon was spent in clean- ing the yard and in the afternoon her pupils rendered a very en- tertaining program. Children’s Day at Buena Vista. Program of the Children’s day exercises to be held at Buena Vista,Sunday,June 16th. There will be a union meeting of the Buena Vista and Puposky Sun- day schools at which an interest- ing program will be given. Rev. A. I Wood, pastor of the Meth- odist church, will deliver a short address. All the Sabbath school workers are especially invited as well as the public in general. The program is as follows: Welcome song “Children’s Day,” schools. - Prayer. Address, Rev. Wood. Recitation, Cyril Dickinson. Recitation, Leora Peterson. Dialogue, Three boys. Recitation, Ruth Hogddson. Song, “Around the Throne” both schools, Recitation, Hulda Gustafson, Recitation, Ella Laqua. Dialogue, Four girls. Recitation, William Maltred. Song “Bring Them In”’School. Recitation, Mildred Dickinson. Recitation, Zelpha Elliot. Song‘ “When He Cometh” Schools. Recitation, Leslie Tone. Dialogue, Four boys. Recitation, Hazel Laqua. Solo, Violet Greenfield. Recitation, Leonard Dickinson, Recitation, Sarah Maltred. Recitation, Pearl Freeman. Song, “Sunshine” Schools. Recitation, Bertice Greenfield. Song, ‘“Come One And All” Schools. . John Hubbard, who has been living at Forest River, N. D, since August last, arrived in the city this noon and will visit with his parents and friends here for several days. ORCHARD 0N STAND Story Comnects Haywood With Many Fearful Crimes. LONG SERIES OF MURDERS elf-Confessed Criminal Tells Without Emotion His Part in Assassinations and the Blowing Up of Mines Dur- ing Strikes. £ Boise, Ida., June 6.—A well groomed, stockily built man, dressed in a gray sack suit and apparently as composed as any of his hearers, the man known as Harry Orchard, a self-confessed many time murderer, took the witness stand in the district court of Ada county at 9:42 a. m. He is the prin- eipal witness against William D. Hay- wood, charged with the murder of for- mer Governor Steunenberg, and who is, by Orchard’s story, connected with many fearful crimes. Some knowl- HARRY ORCHARD. edge of the ghastly series of narra- | tives to be related by Orchard has reached the public from time to time since his arrest, but the crowded court- room thrilled when within the first fifteen minutes of his testimony Or- chard, in reply to a question of Mr. Hawley, leading attorney for the state, coolly sald: “I 11t one of the fuses that blew up the concentrator mill at Wardner on April 29, 1899. Two men were killed.” Some Preliminary Testimony. The first witness called when court opened was J. M. Brunsell, a hotel proprietor of Nampa, Ida. Brunsell identified the names of Thomas Hogan and John L. Simpkins in his hotel reg- ister for November, 1905. Hogan, or Orchard, was at the hotel with Simp- kins on Nov. 13. The presence of Simpkins at Nampa on Nov. 7 and at Silver City on Nov. 8, 1905, was established by A. Hinkey and J. A. Connors, hotelkeepers in these respective cities. Following Hinkey and Connors on the stand came C. H. Wentz, a book- keeper of a mining company at Walk- er, Ida.,, and formerly in a bank at Wardner. Wentz said he knew Jack Simpkins, one of the men alleged to have had a hand in the murder of Governor Steunenberg, and was ac- qualnted with his handwriting. He identified the photograph of Simp- kins, which was offered and accepted in evidence over an objection from the defense. Guy Feight of Nampa told of seeing Orchard and Simpkins in company at Caldwell prior to the assassination of Governor Steunenberg. Harry Orchard was then called and after five minutes’ delay he was brought In by two deputies, passing close to Haywocd and the latter’s fam- ily as he walked to the witness chair. Orchard said in reply to a question by Senator Borah that he is at pres- ent confined in the Idaho penitentiary charged with the muyrder of Governor Steunenberg. He said he was born in’ Northumberland county, Can., forty- one years ago. His true name is Al- fred Horgley, but he had been known as Harry Orchard for the last eleven years. He came to this country in 1896 and went\to work in a mine in Idaho in 1899. He joined the Western Federation of Miners at Burke, Ida., in that year and despite the objection of the defense, who asserted that Haywood at that time was not an offi- cial of the union, was permitted to tel of the blowing up of the concen- trator mill at Wardner, Ida., in April, 1899, when two men were killed. He testified this action was decided upon at a-special meeting of the union and that he lighted one of the fuses that blew up the mill, Steunenberg Was Governor. Orchard testified that at the time of the Wardner affair Frank Steunen- berg was governor of Idaho and that four or five days after the trouble United States troops arrived in the Couer d'Alene district. When the troops came into Idaho Orchard said he quit work and went to Montana, but remalned there only a short time. Then he went to Utah and later to Californta. After further ramblings through various states he reached Cripple Creek, Colo., soon after July 4, 1902. ' Orchard worked for a time at Vindicator mine No. 1, near Butler, He left there in August, 1903, going out in the general strike which was on among the miners in the district. Describing the trouble at the Vin- dicator mine Orchard said he was of- fered $500 by W. F. Davis, president of the local union of the Western Fed- eration of Miners, to send a bomb into the mine and ruin it. He finally did 80, Superintendent McCormick and Mel Reck, a shift boss, being killed. The next day he went to Denver, where he met Haywood and Moyer in their offices in the Miners’ Exchange building. Moyer, he said, gave him $200 and _later Haywood paid him $300 additional for blowing up the mine. Continuing, he said that later Hay- wood and Pettibone asked him if he could fix up a scheme to assassinate Covernor Peabody. It was arranged that Orchard was to go to Peabody’s residence. Orchard sald hé went to Peabody’s house and walched . for a week. Orchard arranged to hide be- ind a stone wall and shoot Peabody. Steve Adams was assigned by Hay- wood to aid Orchard. Pettibone gave them sawed off shotguns and buckshot with which to shoot Peabody. They were on Peabody's trail for three weeks. They followed him closely and at one time failed to kill him be- cause a lady was with him. Their next plan was to kill Lyte Gregory, a Denver detective. Pettibone planned the murder of Gregory with- them. Orchard went on to describe the kill- ing of Gregory in Denver, saying: “I shot Gregory three times myself and killed him.” On the following day the killing was discussed with Haywood, Moyer, Pet- tibone and Jack Simpkins. All ex- pressed themselves as well satisfied with it as a good job. UNDER ANTI-TRUST LAWS, Many Pacific Coast Furniture Dealers Indicted. g Portland, Ore., June 6.—In the Unit- ed States district court here indict- ments were returned against 180 fur- niture dealers in Oregon, Washington, Idaho and California for alleged viola- tion of the Sherman anti-trust law. The list includes every manufacturer and jobber in the states named and a large number of retail dealers. WOULD END RATE FIGHT Minnesota Officials Propose to Take Radical Action. St. Paul, June 6.—It is possible that before the end of the week proceed- ings that will dangerously verge on the bounds of contempt of court will be taken in the injunction suits against the state now pending in the federal district court. It was said without reserve about the capitol that Attorney General Young or one of his assistants was contemplating a step that would bring the suits which have for their end the right of Minnesota and other states to regulate railroad freight rates to a quick head. The step in contemplation is noth- ing more than a complete ignoring of the federal injunction order in the im- mediate bringing of a suit in the state courts to compel the enforcement of the rate law now in controversy. If not dene by the attorney general’s de- partment the duty will fall on the rail- way commissioners, who are also in- clnded in the federai enjoining order. This order enjoined the attorney gen- eral the railway commissioners, cer- tain shippers and certain officials from taking any steps to compel enforce- ment until the right of the state to make such laws had been passed upon by the federal courts. = Such action would be contempt and would result in~the party or parties bringing it being jailed, but it is thought that from it would come quick results. It would call for habeas cor- pus- proceedings and result in some- thing at once, where, as things stand now, the case might be dragged on for years and the entire lawmaking and enforcement machinery of the state be completely tied up. BAYREUTH FOR AMERICA. Mme. Nordica to Erect Festival House on the Hudson. New York, June 6.—Mme. Lillian Nordica, the Herald announces, will establish on the Hudson near New York a Bayreuth in America. With a part of her great fortune the noted singer will erect the Lillian Nordica Festival House, which will be to this country what the famous operatic in- stitution founded by Richard Wagner and now maintained by his widow is te Europe. The site for the institution was pur- chased for $100,000 and Mme. Nordica expects that the opera house will be ready for its formal dedication one vear from next summer. An American instltute of music, where American young men and wo- men who aspire to operatic honors will be taught by the foremost teach- ers in the world, is included in the plans of the singer. Cuts Down Army Appropriation, Rome, June 6.—The refusal of a parliamentary committee to recom- mend the appropriation of $40,000,000 asked for by the war office is consid- ered significant. The committee rec- ommends a grant of only $6,000,000. As the meney was required for artil- lery the committee’s action is consid- ered to amount practically to a redue- tion of armament on the eve of the meeting of The Hague conference. GOVERNOR WARNER DENIES 11 Story That President Advised Him Re- garding Railroad Legislation. Lansing, Mich,, June 6.—Governor Warner has issued a statement deny- ing a published report that President Roosevelt, while in Lansing last Fri- day, advised the governor to go slow with railroad legislation and let the interstate commerce commission work out-the problems now under consid- eration. “Nothing of the kind occurred, says the governor in his statement. “I am at a loss to know why such a statement should appear in print. Cer- tainly it is not in accord with the president’s address to the legislature here. The state as well as the géneral government has problems to work out and there is no reason why there should be any conflict in these mat- ters. It is important that they should be worked out as soon as possible and the national laws supplemented by state legislation.” Governor Warner says that he talked of railroad legislation with the pres- ident, but that nothing the president said to him on the-subject could be construed~as an admonition for the Michigan legislature to go slow. The | governor would not relate the detafls of the conversation without the per- mission nf_tha nresident Slight Shock at S8an Francisco. San Francisco, June 6.—An earth- quake shock lasting about ten seconds was felt here at 12:27 a. m. The ,oscillation was from north to south, No damage has been reported. A Testimonial For Veracity.” “It's a moighty foine thing to have a character ‘for truthfulness,” remarked 0'Grady .when he returned home the other evening, % “Indade an’ it is that same,” agreed Mrs. 0'Grady, with an approving nod, 8s she hauled one child out of the fen- der and scraped the cinders off hils frock. “An’ what makes ye say that, Phelim ?” “’Cause me. master belaves in me veracity Intoirely,” was the respons of Phelim. He lighted his short pipe and took - his accustomed seat on a broken chalr near the chimney. *“I tould him this morning that I couldn't help being late an’ that I had run a moile in a minute an’ a half to get there in tolme. An’ what do ye think be said?” “Mebbe that ye desarved - another sixpence a week.” “Better than that. These are his very words. ‘O’'Grady,’ ses he, ‘Ol wud Just as soon belave ye if ye sed ye had done it in half a minute’ So ye see what faith he has in me veraclty Intoirely.”—London Answers. Reading the Face. Restless eyes denote a deceitful, de- signing disposition; greenish eyes mean falsehood, malice and a love of scan- dal; blue eyes tell of tendency to co- quetry; black eyes mean a lively, spir- ited and sometimes deceitful charac- ter; eyes with a yellowish, bloodshot ‘white usually betoken strong emotions and hot temper; gray eyes mean dig- nity and intelligence and brown eyes a tender, true, kind and happy nature. A mouth had better be too large than too small, for a very small, pursed up mouth is seldom significant of good conversational power. Large mouths are more often found In conjunction with libéral dispositions than very small ones. A person with a pointed chin is fanciful, refined in taste and difficult to please. A broad, square chin signifies ardent love, often accom- panied by jealousy. A broad, round chin means ardent love, with a stead- fastness and purity of affection When Did You Oil Your Watch? ‘When did you oil your watch last? Never? You may remember when you lubricated your sewing machine, type- writer, lawn mower or grindstone— within a year, probably—but your watch you never ofled, that you can remember. Yet in a period of eighteen months the balance wheel turns on its axis 13,996,800,000 times. Expert watchmakers say that a watch should be thoroughly cleaned and oiled every elghteen months. Many persons wear a watch for years, winding it up each night, and never oil it. Watches are instruments of uncertain agé; some run indefinitely, keeping accurate time, without need of repairs. As a matter of fact, nothing is so neglected as this small, delicate and useful instrument. —North American, Blond Indians. One of the mysteries of Mexico is presented by the Maya Indians, who inhabit the Sierra Madre mountains in the lower part of Sonora. They have fair skins, blue eyes and light hair, and students of ethnology have always been puzzled to account for them. There is a tradition, however, that these Indians are the descendants of the crew and passengers of a Swedish vessel wrecked on the Mexican coast centuries before Columbus discovered the new world. But this tradition is founded on nothing more substantial than a folklore tale current among them that their ancestors came over the big salt water hundreds of moons ago. A Frog of Peculiar Habits. South America has a frog of peculiar habits. Dwelling in the virgin forests, at the tops of the highest trees, it chooses as a site for its nursery some hollow stump and then proceeds to line it with resin procured from trees in the neighborhood. This lining serves to catch and hold the rainwater, with which it quickly becomes filled. As soon as this takes place the eggs are laid therein, and here they undergo de- velopment into tadpoles. How the re- sin is collected is a mystery, nor is it yet known how the separate pieces be- come welded to form the water tight basin necessary to insure the safety of the treasures deposited therein. Something of That Kind. “Young man,” sald the serious gen- tleman, “did you ever pause and think that each tick of the clock brings you another moment nearer to the end of your existence?”” “I was thinking of something of that kind this very minute,” cheerfully re- plied the youth, “only the idea struck me that each tick brought pay day that much nearer.” A Puzzler, An old white haired darky living on a plantation, not feeling well, had the doctor pay him a visit. The doctor told him as he was getting old he must eat plenty of chicken and stay out of damp night air. “But, sah” sald the old darky, “how can you ex- pect me to stay in de house at night and still get my chickens?” Rising Day. “He never did rise in the world till he stumbled over.a lot o’ dynamite,” the village gossip said, “an’ even then, like so many men In the risin’ busl ness, he never did know what he riz fer!”—Atlanta Constitution. Health Recipe. One time a man asked the poet Long- fellow how to be healthy, and this is the answer he received: Joy, temperance and repose Slam the dvor on_the doctor’s nose. Mutiny at Tsarskoe-Selo. St. Petersburg, June 6.—A mutiny broke out during the day among a squadron of hussars of the guards sta- i tioned at Tsarskoe-Selo, to which place the imperial family had jour- neyved. The mutineers were promptly surrounded and disarmed by other troops and were arrested without any bloodshed. S SiE Kills Husband of Divorced Wife. Fort Smith, Ark., June 6.—Leak McLean shot and killed Joseph Jeff- reys and then committed suicide by drinking carbolic acid. McLean was under bond for trial on & charge of attempting’ to kill Jeffreys, who had married McLean’s divorced wife. = RS R COURT DENIES MOTION Trustees of Eddy Estate Lese * First Round in Fight. VICTORY FOR NEXT FRIENDS Petition Asking That Trustees Be Sub- stituted for Relatives as Plaintiffs in Pending Suit Fails to. Secure Ap- proval of Trial Judge. < Concord, N. H., June 6.—The peti- tion ‘6f the three trustees to whom Mrs, Mary Baker Kddy had trans- ferred her property, asking that they be substituted as plaintiffs in place of “next friends” in the suit to secure an accounting of Mrs. Eddy’s property, was denied by Judge Robert N. Cham- berlain of the Merrimac superior court. The trustees are Henry M. Balker of Bow, Josiah B, Fernald of Concord and Archibald McLellan of Boston. The “next friends” are George W. Glover of Lead, S. D., son of Mrs. Eddy; Mary Baker Glover, his daughter; Dr. J. Foster Bddy of Wa- terbury, Vt., an adopted son, and George- Baker of Bangor, a cousin. The suit is for an accounting of Mrs. Eddy’s property, which, it is alleged, is under control of Calvin A. Frye, Mrs. Eddy’s secretary, and other Chris- tian Science leaders, who are named as defendants. The question of Mrs. Eddy’s physical and mental condition figures in the action. The decision is in favor of the “next friends.” A long hearing was heard | on the quesiion two weeks ago, at which General Frank S. Streeter of Concord argued for the trustees that they should be substituted because the original plaintiffs were hostile to Mrs. Eddy and, as he alleged, wete not acting in good faith. i ‘William E. Chandler, senior counsel for the plaintiffs, opposed the petition on the ground that the trust deed was executed for the purpose of avoiding the suit and it was void owing to Mrs. Eddy’s alleged incompetency. CONSPIRACY IS CHARGED. Sult to Annul Deal Made by J. P. Mor- gan and Others. Toledo, O., June 6.—A petition op- posing the confirmation of the sale of the Toledo Railways and Terminal companies has been filed in the Unit- ed States circuit court here by the Ohio Savings Bank and Trust com- pany. It alleges that J. Pierpont Mor- gan and his ailies in banking and rail- road circles entered into a conspiracy at the time the Terminal road was sold and that a committee represent- ing the bondholders bought the road at the set price of $2,000,000. It fur- ther charges that the creditors were prevented from bidding on the road by a prearranged plan of Mr. Morgan and his allies. It is said that the road would have sold for a much higher price had it not been for this alleged agreement between the railroad interests, where- by the road was to be bid in at the upset price of $2,000,000, thus freezing out unsecured creditors and holders of floating indebtedness. The petition avers that should the sale of the road be confirmed a scheme is afoot to organize a purchasing com- pauy and bond the road for $6,000,000, these bonds to be secured by the Pere Marquette, Lake Shore and other roads said to be in the Vanderbilt sys- tem. Convicted on Eight-Counts. Pittsburg, June 6.—Upon the open- ing of the United States district court a sealed verdict was returned by the jury in the case of the government against Charles Menzemer, former as- sistant teller of the failed Enterprise National bank. The defendant was found guilty as indicted upon eight counts charging the abstraction and misapplication of funds of the bank. WANTS ONE CENT A WORD. F HELP WANTED. WANTED=<For U. 8. army, able- bodied, unmarried men be- tween ages of 19 and 35, 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, Mina. WANTED—For the U. S. Marine Corps; men between ages 21 and 32. Anopportunity to see the world. For full informa- tion apply in person or by letter to 208 Third street. WANTED: Experienced wait- ress for restaurant dining room work. Good wages. Armstrong’s Cafe. WANTED—Good lady cook an a laundry girl. Palace Hotel, Blackduck. FOR SALE. FOR SALE— Rubber stamps. The Pioneer will procure any kind of a rubber stamp for you on short notice. FOR SALE—Magnificent moose head, mounted; will be sold LOST and FOUND FOUND—Check. Owner must prove property or check wiil be returned to bank issuing same. Inquireat this office. FOUND—Locket and chain. In- quire Chas. Knepke, Cor, 5th street and America Ave. LOST—Locket and chain;picture in locket. Finder return to this office. FOR RENT. FOR RENT—Furnished rooms by day or week, 304 Third street,over Downs & O’Leary’s store. FOR RENT--Unfurnished rooms. Inquire 1101 Lake Boulevard. FOR RENT—Furnished room, 515 Bemidji Ave. MISCELLANEOUS. PUBLIC LIBRARY — Open Tuesdays and Saturdays, 2:30 to 6 p, m. Thursdays 7 to 8 p. m. also. Library in base- ment of Court House. Mrs. E. R. Ryan, librarian. Ghe PIONEER Delivered to your door every evening Only 40c per Month Notice to Horsemen The Black Prince, red by Black Diamond, and he by Brilliant, is a beautiful black, American -bred- Percheon, seven years old, weighing 1760 pounds. Will make the season as follows: June 2, 16, 30 and July 14, at J. J. Jenkinson’s farm, Hubbard Co.; June 9, 23 and July 7 al Nary, Minn,; the balance of the timne atmy barn in Bemidji. Owners of mares and others interested in the breeding of horses are always tioned places to see this horse. Welcome at the above men-- Terms, $2 down and the bal- ance, $8, when the mare is known to be with foak .= WES WRIGHT, Owner, Bemidji, Minn M. SPLAN, Mgr cheap. Inquire at this office,