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THE BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEER PUBLISHED NVERY AFTHRNOON, OFFICIAL PAPER---CITY OF BEMIDII BEMIDJI PIONEER PUBLISHING CO. CLYDE J PRYOR | | A_O. RUTLEDGE; Business Manager ‘Managing Bditor ‘Entered In the postoffice at Bemidji. Minn., a8 second class master. SUBSCRIPTION---$5.00 PER ANNUM SUPPORT THE FAIR. The Beltrami County Agricultural association is making more than ordinary efforts to the end that the fair which is advertised to be held in Bemidji on Sept. 26- 27-28, shall be the best in the history of north- ern Minnesota. In view of the self-sacrificing labors which are being performed by the officers of the organization it does seem as if the business men should tend their assistance to make the exhibit a success in every way possible. The farmers, too, can do their share toward making the fair a suc- ces. Some excellent premiums have been offered and these should induce the farmers to bring forward the best products of the soil. Aside from the display of agricul- tural products, which will undoubt- edly be large and varied, there will be an interesting race program which will attract many fast horses to the track of the association. This fea- ture in itself is one which will com- mend itself to lovers of track exhib- itions. There are many attractions booked which should have a strong tendency to draw the people in large numbers to the grounds. The fair deserves the support of the people. Itis an institution that deserves well of every body. Speak a good word for the Bemidji fair. OBSERVATIONS. As a matter of fact, there are no very big fish in small puddles. A fool is the gaeatest nuisance in this world. And there are quite a few of them. What many men regard as a “good‘[ story” wouldn’t go in a Sunday- school paper. The book agent and the fly get mighty little credit for their energy and industry. There would be no scarcity of harvest hands if more young men learned to handle the pitchfork as well as a cigarette. After a man has eaten of a meal that was prepared only for women, he is still hungry enough to go out and rob the mouse traps. Every girl wants her steady to be an artist at making love, but when she marries him she becomes more interested in his ability to make money. It is about as hard for a widow to reconcile No. 1’S kin to her second marriage as it is for a widower to convince his children they need a new mother. Calling yourself a fool every day is like repeated doses of medicine; soon loses its effectiveness. Self- dicipline calls for a graduate scale of punishment. VERY PROSPEROUS YEAR. Burlington Directors Declare an Extra Dlvidend. New York, Sept. '.—Directors of the Chicago, Burlington and Quincy railroad have declared the regular quarterly dividend of 2 per cent on the capital stock and an extra divi- dend of 6 per cent. Concerning the extra dividend on the Burlington stock J. J. Hill said: “Northern Pacific and Great North- ern have had Burlington for about six Yyears and during this time Burlington has not pald the carrying charges of the joint 4 per cent bonds to the ex- tent of 1 per cent per annum and therefore, to equalize this deficiency, 6 per cent additional has been de- clared on Burlington stock. Burling- ton is In & very prosperous condition. Its earnings are increasing substan- tlally and the annual report of 1907 will show that it has had the best year in its history. The additional dividend on Burlington stock will con. tribute about $3,250,000 aplece to the treasuries of the Great Northern and Northern Pacific. This is equivalent to more than 2 per cent on the capltal stock of Great Northern and Northern Pacific.” A Curious Fact. “I have some very strong letters of introduction,” said the caller. “My friend,” answered Senator Sor- ghum, “I don’t rely too far on com- munications of that kind. A man will @lve you a letter of introduction de- scribing you as possessed of every no- ble quality in human nature and in the mext breath refuse to indorse your note | pletely blocked both tracks. | New York Stock Exchange. WRECKERS DERAIL TRAIN. Express Escapes Disaster but Fast Freight s Ditched. Pittsburg, Sept. !l.—Traln wreckers wore at work during the evening on the Baltimore and Ohio rallroad at Beott Haven and Suterville, thirty, miles east of here. Spikes, it is sald, were drawn from the eastbound track for the purpose, it is thought, of eatehiug the New York express, which leaves Pittsburg at 9:30 o'clock in the evening. The wreckers, however, were decelved by the number of freight and passenger trains passing these points and the express got through Dbefore the splkes were drawn. The next traln following it, how- ever, a fast f{reight express for Phila- delphia and New York, was not so fortunate. When the big engine struck the rail from which the spikes had been drawn the rail turned over, derailing the engine and twelve cars. The tank of the engine is in the Youghiogheny river, which is a dis- tance of from thirty-five to forty feet below the eastbound track. Five of the derailed cars turned over and were more or less wrecked, the mer- chandise being scatiered along the tracks, while the other cars com- The fire- man and the engincer escaped injury by jumping. ROUGHLY HANDLED BY MOB Artist Who Sent Wife Away In Order to Marry Another. New York, Sept. |—Ferdinand Pen- ney Earle, the artist, who sent his wite to France, her old home, to se- cure a divorce so that he might marry another woman, recelved a sorry wel- come when he returned to his home in Monroe, N. Y., after bidding his wife farewell at the steamer, according to advices received here. Earle was met by a crowd of villagers as he stepped from the train, who at first Insulted and hooted him and then pulled him from his carriage and dragged him through the mud of the. village streets. Earle courageously faced his tor- mentors, exhorted the crowd in an attempt to vindicate himself and then, goaded for an instant by the insults of the people, he seized his carriage whip and slashed at the crowd. A man snatched the whip from his hand and, bystanders state, struck the artist a stinging blow. Further trouble was prevented by the appearance of offi- cers, who forced Earle to drive to his home, though he persistently tried to explain his views to the angry crowd. BROKERAGE FIRM FAILS. Was Active Lately in Northwestern Railroad Stocks. New York, Sept. 3.—The fallure of Watson & Co., grain and commission brokers, has been announced on the It is un- derstood that the firm has been very active in trading in Northwestern railroad stocks lately. The firm {s composed of Lewis T. ‘Watson, the Stock Exchange member; Henry P. Watson, H. V. Jones and G. F. Anderson. It has branch offices in Duluth, Hot Springs and Minneapolis. Mr. Newell is the firm's office man- ager. The donts of Watson & Co.’s office in Broad strcet were closed after the announcement of the failure, a placard posted on the door announcing that the firm had assigned for the benefit of its credltors. No statement as to the cause of the failure or as to the firm’s resources was obtainable at that hour, but one of the clerks sald that a statement would probably: be issued Jater. Watson & Co. have been large operators in grain. H. V. Jones, a member of the firm, is a crop ex- pert and spent much of his time go- ing through the wheat belt following the progress of the crop and issuing estimates of it. The firm has been identified particularly with Great Northern and Northern Pacific stocks. Soo Buys Superior Property. Superlor, Wis,, Sept. .—By deeds just filed the holding company of the Soo line has gained possession of all the available land on Connors point, the only outlet to Duluth. The point of laud is now all owned by railroads except the city dock and the ground on which a public school stands. A population of over 400 will have tc seek homes elsewhere. The Great Northern and Northern Pacific roads own the remainder of the land. Fusion Assured in Nebraska. Lincoln, Neb., Sept. .—Returns from the primary election of Tuesday indicate the nomination for judge of the supreme court of George L. Loo- mis of Fremont on both the Demo- cratic and Populist tickets, which will insure fusion again this year. Different Names For Waves. They have curiously different names for waves about the coast of Great Britain. The Peterhead folk call the large breakers that fall with a crash on the beach by the grim name of “Norrawa (Norway) carpenters.” On the low Lincolnshire coast, as on the southwestern Atlantic fronting shore of these islands, the grandly long un- broken waves are known as “rollers.” Among east Anglians a heavy surf, tumbling in with an offshore wind or in a calm, is called by the expressive name of a “slog,” while a well marked swell, rolling in independently of any blowing, is called a “home.” “There is no wind,” a Suffolk fisherman will say, “but a nasty home on the beach.” Suf- folk men also speak of the “bark” of the surf, and a sea covered with foam s spoken of as “feather white”” The foam itself 1s known as “spoon drift.” 8o, in the vernacular, we have it, “The sea was all a feather white with spoon dritt.” The Bat. Nearly all bats have the faculty of hibernating. Thelr hibernution, how- ever, Is not perfect—that is to say, that ‘when the warm days occur in the mid- dle of winter they wake up, together with the insects which are their food. Still theirs Is a true hibernation trance, differing from sleep, with very low rate of pulse, heart action and respiration. Probably they would endure immer- sion in water for an hour or two without drowning, as other hibernators for §20"—Washington Star. have been found to do. —— i Y2 St A Myastery of Indo-China. The great mystery about Indo-China and one which must ever be Insoluble Is the story of the lost race and the vanished clivilization of that strange country. The mighty walls of Anglkor- Wat, rising In the midst of sparsely settled jungles, remain as the memo- rial of a great empire which has ut- terly dlsappeared and is altogether lost to history. No one will ever know who planned this gigantic temple or what tyrant hounded on his myriads of people to build up those Immense blocks of stone and cover them with the most elaborate of sculptures, Ang- kor-Wat was one of the most aston- ishing monuments in the world, and this forgotten temple was built so as to endure as long as the earth itself were It not for the lrresistibly de- structive effect of plant life on the strongest walls that man can raise. Only a highly clvilized and very wealthy people could have erected Angkor-Wat, a very different race from the Anamite of modern days. The whole nation has disappeared as utter- ly as the busy myriads who once pop- ulated the wastes and solitudes of Memphis.—SIngapore Free Press. He Got the Trout. A story dealing with a large trout ‘that was rising regularly and frequent- ly is told in “How to Fish: A Treatise on Trout and Trout Fishers.” This is the story: “He was going up and down, up and down, up and down; not as the insects offered themselves, but as it suited his composure that he should take a midge from the abundance. One youth was casting at the trout; another was look- ing on, Said the angler, ‘I'll have that fish whether he takes it or not’ ‘How? ‘his friend asked. ‘I'll throw the fly \into his mouth’ The trout went on'\ rising; the angler went on casting. 'I perceived the angler’s no- tion. It{was that if he kept casting accurately) and the trout contimued to rise in thejregular manner mentioned, the fly woulkd ere long fall at the very moment when a midge was belng taken. This reckoning was justified. The large trout was hooked and land- ed by a fly that had been cast into his mouth.” Old Fashioned Oratory. “We don’t have no sich forensic ora- tory ast we used to have,” said the old settler. “Lawyers nowadays don’t orate. They only just talk, “Take old Bill K. Simmons of Eau Clair. If Bill was defendin’ a lowly chicken thief he’d speak with the tongue of angels. I'll never forgit the peroration of his Impassioned philippic In the Clay. Bull case about the poison- ed cat. It runs like this here.” The little, thin old man rose, reared back in a deflant attitude and shouted In the cracked treble of age: “‘Restin’ upon the couch of repub- lican liberty as I do, covered with the blanket of constitutional panoply as I am and protected by the aegis of American equality as I feel myself to be, I despise the buzzin’ of the profes- slonal inseck who has just sot down and defy his attempt to penetrate with puny sting the Interstices of me im- pervious coverin’ New York Press. The Log Driver. ‘The life of a river log driver is a life that seems to get hold of one after a year or two. You are generally wet through for twelve hours out of the twenty-four. Ten of you sleep in a 12 by 15 foot shanty; you live on fried everything, “black strap,” treacle and stewed tea. You go to bed at 10 and get up at 8. You are ever lastingly cursed and never praised by the foreman. Your life s in danger more or less all day long, and you never get more than $35 a month for work that is worth $100. “Then why stick at it?” you say, and all I can answer 1s, “Just give it a fair trial for a year, and then you'll know.”— Wide World Magazine, Superlatives. Dr. Johnson says In his “Grammar of the English Tongue,” “The comparison of adjectlves is very uncertain and, being much regulated by commodious- ness of utterance, 18 not easily re- duced to rules.” Then he quotes passages from “Para- dise Lost” in which the words “virtu- ousest” and “powerfullest” are found and a passage from ‘“Samson Agon- istes” which contains the word “fa- mousest.” Surely Milton had an ear.—Notes and Querfes. . Tough Fare. In a New Zealand town one of the municipal candidates, a pronounced Scotsman, had recelved a present of a huge Scotch thistle, which at the mo- ment happened to be lying on the ta- ble of his committee room, A friend, entering, withdrew suddenly, with the remark: “I beg your pardon. I didn’t know you were at luncheon.” Too, Too Much. “Thank you, son,” sald old Tightfist to the boy who had run several blocks on an errand for him. “Here’s a penny fur ye.” “Don’t tempt me, guv'ner,” sald the bright boy. “If I was ter take all dat money 1 might buy a auto wid it an’ git pinched for scorchin’.’—Philadel phia Press. Ingenious. Servant (to artist returning from a holiday)—There have been so many callers since you left that I have been obliged to wash the names from the slate twice to make room for others.— Pearson’s Weekly. What Is the Answer? BShe—That is a woman whom I envy, and, curious as it may seem, she en- vies me. He—How can that be? She —We were both afier the same man— and I married you.—Illustrated Bits. Goldsmith's Generosity. A beggar once asked alms of Oliver Goldsmith as he walked with a friend up Fleet street, and he gave her a shil- ling. His companion, knowing some- thing of the woman, censured the writ- er for his excess of humanity, saying that the shilling was misapplied, as she would spend it for liquor. “If it makes her happy in any way, my end 18 answered,” replied Goldsmith, Another proof that the doctor’s gen- erosity was not always regulated by discretion was at a time when, after much delay, a day was fixed to pay the £40 due his tallor, Goldsmith pro. cured the Tmohey, but a frlend callig upon him and relating a piteous tale of his goods being selzed for rent, the thoughtless ‘but benevolent author gave him all the money. The tailor called and was tokd that if he had come a lit- tle sooner he could have had the money, but! that he had just parted with every shilling of it to a friend In distress, adding, “I would have been an unfeeling monster not to have re- lleved trouble when in my power.” Heart Protectors. Many persons are *mzzled to know why policemen wear thelr badges so low on their coats instead of on the flap made for that'purpose. As a mat- ter of fact the badge or star, as he calls it, of -many a policeman Is right next to his heart. Some of the blue- coats~can thank thelr “stars” for belng allve. This little metal shield has de- flected the bullet of burglar or high- ‘wayman, and at times, too, has stopped the knife\thrust of would be assassins. During the last twenty or thirty years there are many cases on record show- ing that the little badge has been a life saver, Even bullets fired at close range, as a rule, cannot penetrate the shield. That’s why a bluecoat always feels safer in keeping the star at a vital spot. When off duty some policemen wear their stars on thelr vests, but al- ways directly over the heart. They are 80 accustomed to the little protector that -they feel uneasy without it.— Philadelphia Record. Scott’s Wise Dog. BSo veracious a man as Sir Walter Scott had a wise dog, a bull terrier. Said the novelist once: “I taught him to understand a great many words, in- asmuch that I am positive that the communication betwixt the canine spe- cles and ourselves might be greatly enlarged. Camp once bit the baker, who was bringing bread to the fam- fly. I beat him and explained the enormity of his offense, after which, to the last moments of his life, he never heard the least allusion to the story in whatever tone of voice it was men- tloned without getting up and retir- ing to the darkest corner of the room, with great appearance of dlstress. Then if you said ‘the baker was well pald’ or ‘the baker was not hurt, after all;’ Camp came forth from his hiding place, capered and barked and re- Jolced.” The Wealthy Angler’s Tackle Outfit. The wealthy angler who wants the best of everything has a special six foot oblong case or trunk for his fishing rods, which, being the best, cost about $30 each. He has a heavy surf casting rod, a lighter bay casting rod and a set of fly rods for fresh wa- ter fishing. His reels, of which he must have various types, cost §75 each and upward. For his fishing tackle there Is-a special trunk, in which are the best Irish linen lines, hooks and flies of all descriptiéns, sinkers, swiv- els, squids, spoons, spinners, floats, ar- tificial bait, etc. Such fishermen gener- ally carry duplicate tackle and several duplicates of pole tips and such things as may be most likely to break. The total cost of a wealthy ‘angler's tackle outfit ranges from $250 to $1,000.—New York Tribupe. Fire and Water. ‘Water will extinguish a fire because the water forms a coating over the fuel, which keeps it from the air, and the conversion of water into steam draws off the heat from the burning fuel. A little water makes a fire flercer, while a large quantity of water puts it out. The explanation is that water is composed of oxygen and hy- drogen. When, therefore, the fire can decompose the water into its simple elements it serves as fuel to the flame. A Hard Drinking Bout. Among the songs of Robert Burns is one upon a whistle used by a Dane ‘who visited England in the retinue of Anne of Denmark.. This whistle was placed on the table at the beginning of a drinking bout, which was won by whoever was last able to blow it. The Dane conquered all comers, says the story, until Sir Robert Lawrle of Max- welton, “after three days and three oights’ hard contest, left the Scan- dinavian under the table.” Clever Girl. Mother—What's that I hear? Franz actually kissed you at the railway sta- tlon? And what did you do, pray? Daughter—Well, so as to make every- body think he was a relative and so prevent a scandal I kissed him too.— Berlin Journal, Just the Other Way. “I am delighted,” sald the old frlend who had called, ““to find that you agree with your husband in everything, Mrs. Henpeck.” “Indeed!” answered that estimable lady. “If you will take the pains to in- vestigate our domestic -relations, sir, you will find that it 18 Mr. Henpeck who agrees with me In everything.” The doke Was on Her. A woman member of the bar in New York gives to our correspondent the following correspondence with the res- ervation that no names shall be quoted. “I am one of the few women,” she says, “who can see a joke even if aim- ed at myself. I do not feel that in this case I came off first best,” The first letter was from a man law- yer and was as follows: Dear Miss Blank—We agree to the com- promise as proposed in your favor of this date. Not bocause your client has a just right to such gettlement, but from the fact that we do not care to open a con- test with a woman lawyer. 7 To which this reply was sent: Gentlemen—I note yours agreeing to a settlement, although I cannot congratu- late you on your gallantry in begging the Qquestlon. Like the orlginal Adam, you seem inclined to hidé behind a woman's Dpetticoat. And the following letter closed the correspondence; Dear Miss Blank—If you will turn to the early pages of Genesis you will discover that Eve did not wear a petticoat. ~Cleveland -Plain Dealer. A Bad Outlook. Mother—Dorothy, I have to be scold- Ing you all the time! Dorothy—Well, ' all I can say, mamma, Is I'm sorry for the man who gets you for a mother-in- law.—Smith’s Magazine. A lazy man goes far, and he who'! shuns labor labors doubly. — Greek” Proyerb, G i wiaye T Too High For the Barber, “I heard something new in the bar- bering business this morning,” sald the gray headed man. “I am occupy- ing a room on the top floor of a sky- scraping apartment hotel. This morn- ing I sent for a barber to come up and shave me. He came, but when he saw to what an altitude he had attain- ed he looked uneasy. 7 “‘Would it Inconvenlence you to come down to the regular barber shop? he asked. “I answered that it would not par- ticularly put me out, but that I would like to know the reason for his re- quest. “‘The fact is, he said, ‘I neyer like to shave anybody at this distance above the ground. No barber likes to. We seem to be particularly sensi- tive to height. It makes us nervous. Most barbers will not undertake a job above a certain number of feet in the air. Of course if you insist I will shave you here, but you would prob- ably get a better shave ten floors be- low this one. “Well, just out of natural cussedness I refused to humor the fellow’s whim. As a consequence he nearly cut my throat. Whether he did it through nervousness, as he claimed, or pure cussedness of his own I don’t know. ‘Whatever it was, that 18 a pecullarity of barbers that I'd like to have ex- plained.”—New York Sun. T Disappointed. An aged colered man who had busi- ness in the News office ambled into the editorial rooms—yes,, ambled is the word. He sat for several moments gazing at the pneumatic tube stations set up llke horns of an orchestrion at the desks of the city and telegraph editors. There was a buzzing sound as a copy boy pulled a lever, and the old man smiled as if expecting something pleasant, then took on a look of dis- appointment. A few minutes later the boy sent another plece of copy whirl- Ing upstairy, and again the visitor's ex- pression passed from anticipation to disappointment, then bewilderment. T'inally he accosted the telegraph ed- itor. “’Scuse me, suh, but mout I ax yo’ ‘what dem things is?” Certainly he might and was enlight- ened. “Well, I ’clah t' goodness!” he ex- claimed. “I thought dey was some sort o’ music box t’ entertain yo’ gem- mens whilst yo’ worked!”—Baltimore News. A Plain Hit. An elderly gentleman on his way to a quiet watering place In Scotland met in the railway carriage an old worthy who turned out to be a native of the place and, wishing to have a talk and at the same time learn something of the coast village, accosted him thus: Elderly Gentleman—I suppose the air is very bracing where you live? Village Worthy—Graun’ an’ healthy, 1 should think sae. B. G.—Then it's considered one of the healthiest quarters around here? __V. W.—1I should think sae. There’s no muckle seekness there, s B. G-I should think not. Have you never been sick? V. W.—Neever! B. G.—How do you account for that? V. W.—Weel, ye see, it's like this: The doctor’s kept me a’ my life, an’ he jist lets me alone—Illustrated Bits. How He Got a Drink. An Indlana traveling man told a story the other day of -an incident on the road. He was in the smoking car of an express train reading his paper when a man rushed in from the car behind the smoker, evidently in great aglitation and sald: “Has anybody In this ear any whisky? A woman In the car behind has fainted!” Instantly dozens of flasks were produced. The man who had asked for it picked out the largest one, drew the cork and put the bottle to his lips. With a long, sat- isfied sigh, he handed the flask back and, remarked, “That did me a lot of good, and I needed It, for it always makes me feel queer to see a woman faint away!”—Cleveland Plain Dealer. Faithful to the End. The flames crackled ominously, the water bubbled in the great pot, and seated in the shade of a palm the naked savages began to sharpen their cruel knives. “Is there no hope?’ murmured the doomed commercial traveler. “None,” hissed the ebon chief. “Then,” sald the young man, point- ing to his sample case, “if you are de termined to cat me, at least let me ask you, as a last favor, to try our brand of mustard with the feast 1 am convinced that one trial will secure us your permanent patronage, and I"— But strong arms seized him here, there was a splash, and all was over. Los Angeles Times. Sensible Preference. In one of Miss Mulock’s storfes she says that “a cheerful heart seeth cheer- ful things” and gives this incident in proof of it: A lady and gentleman were In a lum- ber yard situated by a dirty, foul smell- Ing river. The lady said, “How good the plne boards smell!” “Pine boards!” exclaimed the gentle- man. “Just smell that foul river!” “No, thank you,” was the reply; “I prefer to smell the pine boards.” No Reform Wanted. “I hope he'll reform when you are married.” “I don’t! 'hy, he spends every cent he earn: “I know it, but Le spends it on me.” —Houston Post. Caustic Criticisra. Sculptor (to his friend)—Well, what do you think of my bust? Fine piece of marble, isn't it? Friend—Magnifi- cent. What a pity to have made a bust of it. It would have made a love- ly mantelpiece.—RBon Vivant. ' 20 years experience as a SPECIALIST DR. REA Eve, Ear, Nose, Throat Diseases of Men; Diseases of Women; Nervous Dis- eases; Chronic Diseases. Coming to Bemidfi Thursday, Sept. 12 at Markham Hotel 9 a, m. t0%3:30 p. m. One Day Only! Dr. Rea has made more re- markable cures in the Nor- thwestern states than any living man. All curable medical and su-gical diseases scute and chronic catarrh, and Spectal Dis- eases of the Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat, Lung Disease, Early Consumption, Bronchitis, Bron chial Catarrh, Constitutional Catarrh, Dys- psia, Sick Headache, Stomach and Bowel roubles, Rheumatism, Neuralgla, Sciatica. ht’s Disease, Diabetes, Kidney, Liver. Bladder, Prostatic and Female Diseases, Diz- ziness, Nervousness, Indigestion, Obesity, In- terrupted Nutrition, S8low groth in children, and all wasting disease in adults. Many cases of deafness, ringing in the ears, loss of eyesight, cataract, Cross eyes, etc.. that have been improperly treated or neglected, can be sasily restored, Deformities, club feet, cur- verature of the spine, disease of the brain, paralysis, epllepsy, heart disease, dropsy, swellicg of the limbs. stricture, open sores, pain in the bone, granular enlargements and all long-standing discases properly treated. Young, middle aged and old, single or mar- ried men and all who suffer from lost man- hood. nervous debility, spermatorrhoea, sem- inal losses, sexual decay. failing memory, weak eyes, stunted development, lack of energy, impoverished blood, pimples, impedi- ments to marriage; also blood and skin dis- ease, Syphilis, eruptions, hair falling, bone pains, swellings, sore throat, ulcers, effects of mercury, kidney and bladder troubles, weak back, burning urine, passing urine too often, gsnorrhoea, gleet. stricture, receiving treat- ment prompt relief for life. Cancers, Tumors, Goiter, Fistula, Piles varicocele and enlarged glands, with the sub- cutaneaus injection method, absolutely with- out pain and without the loss of a drop of blood, is one of his own discoveries, and is the gl}osttfi;e:llyénsfiieflflflc n{ld cer%lo(nlglsm'ie cure wentieth century. Con: those interested, $1.00. i Bt DR. REA & CO., Minneapolis, Minn. Loutsville, K5. dress of type. Daily Pioneer For News That the Pioneer Gets and Prints the News Is Appre- reciated Outside of Bemidji. Tribune, published at Akeley, cays: Read what The Bemidji Daily Pioneer Started the week in a brand new The :Pioneer is giving excellent news services. The increased advertising pat= ronage and circulation is evi- " dence that the paper is appre- ciated by the public. 40 Cents per Month Pays for the Daily B the Akeley