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ihe rea Other Baking Powders may but when it comes to t delicious biscuit, cakes and BAKING P proves its real worth, its much Trust Baking Powders. i test is in the haking. - CALUMET Thi reater leavening power and the strict purity of its mudn.n 5 It costs only a trific more than the cheap and big can brands and much less than the Received Highest Award ‘World's Pure Food Exposition Chicago, 1907. make broad claims, production of real pastry OWDER s because of DOINGS AMONG BEMID)I | GOUNTRY NEIGHBORS Continued from First Page traveling auditor for the L"nn(lnan’ No thern railway was looking over the books on Friday. The exercises on Lincoln’s centen- ary given at Beaudette were well tended. The pupils, as well as the| citizens did their parts well. Attorney Alec Fossmark of War-| road arrived Sunday to serve in the | capacity of taking proot in thei absence of United States (,ommn:» sioner Albert Berg. Mrs. H. C. Habstritt, of Spooner‘ entertains this evening at a valen- | tine party. The young people Ofl both towns are invited and a delight’ | ful time is expected. C. S. Leonard and C. F. Currie of Virginia were arrivals here oun Satur-| day. Mr. Currie was the mvmmble\ pitcher of the Virginia baseball team} last year. Spooner could not doj better than obtain the services of this gentleman if possible. The International Bridge Club| met at the home of Miss [nez Lynch | on Saturday which finished the rounds. The highest score during the seasons was made by Mrs. B. P. Eagan of Spooner and will bE\ awarded the prize. In honor of the | event Mrs. Eagon will entertain the | Club on Thursday. Redby. Feb. 15. E. H. Winter was down from Quiring Monday. J. H. Hayes is “passing ’em” this week, the cause being a new daugh ter at his house. J. N. Fairbanks, the popular violin- ist, went to Nebish to play for the dance held there Friday evening. Mrs. Newman and little daughter, Leo, will go to Island Lake Satur-| day for a visit with friends there. | They will return the first of ne\t’ week. | P. Cassin, proprietor of the Cassin hotel at this place, left the first of | the week for Wisconsin, where he | hopes to secure medical aid for al troublesome ankle. | Miss Stella Minton, who teaches} the Redby school, was called to her; home in Bemidji on business. Miss Minton left here Friday morning, | returning to Redby Monday even-! ing. | D. W. Carter has shipped part of! his stock, lately acquired in Detroit, | to Redby, and is waiting for the new building on Dakota avenue to be en- closed so that he can put the Eonds‘ into it. The new building will be aj large and convenient oue, and is to be used for general merchandise.” | The Frenchman Looked Innocent. | Some time since, in a Tremont street store in Boston, a nervous little Frenchman brushed against a pretty trifle of vase ware valued at about | $14 and succeeded in getting several score more picces out of it than had | gone into its maki The floorwalker led the abashed Parisian aside and politely explained that the broken vase ‘ must be paid for. sieur fetched a handful of small silver and copper, mostly foreign, from his pocket when he was told the value of the trifle. “Mon Dieu,” cried the Pa n, “70 franes!” At this he took out his bil) book and discovered a fifty dollar ex- press draft, which the floorwalker in- stantly seized upon, to the unspeak- able horror of its owner. After deducting the value of the vase the former handed the man his | shange and dismissed him with a floor- walker’s blessing. The express draft reached the bank in due time, with four others as fraudulent, but the vol- atile little Frenchman had departed southward with the swallows.—Bohe mian Magazine, An Order Not Obeyed. An exasperated Irish sergeant, drill- ing a squad of recruits, called to them at last: “Halt! Just come over here, all of ye and look at yourselves. It's a fine line ye're keepin’, isn't it?” The Resemblance. “I was always interested in airships and flying machines, so I bought a the ater.”” “Why did you do that?” “A theater has wings and flies.” All who have gardens know what a pest the green fly, or aphis, becomes. It seems to cover rose trees and other plants like magic. | F. E. McGovern, W. ! Hoyt and Jacob Rummell. STACKS OF PAID CHECKS SHOWN Inquiry Into Wisconsin Sen- atorial Primary. STEPHENSON ON STAND Aged Senator Tells of His Election Expenses and of the Payment of Various Sums to Workers in His Behalf—Declares Republican State Chairraan Edmonds Had Charge of His Campaign. Madison, Wis., Feb. 17.—For two hours Senator Isaac Stephenson an- swered questions put to him by Chair- man Marsh and members of the in- vestigation committee of the legisla- | ture. He had as an audience his rivals in the primary campaign, S. A. Cook; H. Hatton, M. A. From the opening of the hearing Attorneys E. M. Hyzer and W. E. Black sat close to the aged senator and they aided | him in answering questions. They had with them stacks of paid checks and statements of campaign expendi- tures and were free in turning them |over to the committee as different items came up. The majority of Chair- man Marsh's questions were based on items taken from the statements fur- nished by Stephenson’s attorneys. At several points in the questioning the senator became a trifle excited and gesticulated. After the first hour, during which he exhibited some un- ISAAC STEPHENSON. easiness, he grew more at ease and before the adjournment he indulged in witticisms that caused genéral laugh- ter. The examination brought out the fact that Republican State Chairman E. A. Edmonds had entire charge of Mr. Stephenson’s campaign and that J. H. Puslicher, a Milwaukee banker, was employed “only as banker.” Mr. Stephenson testified as to the payment of various large sums of money through his agents and of the payment of smaller sums to various others in his employ who circulated nomination papers. He said that the primary expense account was pre- pared by Mr. Edmonds, who had all the details. Stephenson Lacks Four Votes. Madison, Wis., Feb. 17.—United States Senator Isaat Stephenson re- ceived 59 votes out of 125 cast on the eleventh ballot for United States sen- ator in joint assembly of the Wiscon- sin legislature. He lacked four of a majority. TAFT AT THE WHJTE HOUSE Confers With President and Board of Engineers. ‘Washington, Feb. 17.—President- Elect and Mrs. Taft arrived here and went immediately to the residence of Miss Mabel Boardman, which will be their home during their stay here Mr. Taft.visited the White House a short time after reaching the city and had a conference with the presideut and the board of engineers who' ac- companied him to Panama. Illinois Deadlock Continues. Springfield, 1ll, Feb. 17.—On the thirty-second ballot the total vote of the joint session for United States senator was: Hopkins, 67; Foss, 15; Stringer, 49; Shurtleff, 14; Mason, 4; McKinley, 1; Lowden, 1; Sherman, 2; Peter Reinberg, Chicago, 20; M. J. Kennedy, Chicago, 1; no choice: con- stitutional majority of joint assembly, 103; majority of those Dpresent and voting, 88. Arrested for Bank Robbery. Milwaukee, Feb, 17.—Jimmy Mor- gan, \velr known b(\nk thief, just nut of Joliet, was arrested at Racine charged with having taken $3,800 from a local department store messenger in the First National bank. Morgan con- fessed to the police that he had four accomplices, but they escaped. About $600 was recovered. Americans Head the List. Winnipeg, Man., Feb. 17.—The an- uual report of the interior department of Canada shows that 73,000 people settled on 30,000 homesteads in West- ern Canada last year. Americans headed the list, making 8,000 entries, 2,700 coming from North Dakota and 1,600. from Minnesota. ON VERGE OF COLLAPSE Head of Fish Trust Affected by Sen- sational Disclosures. Chicago, Feb. 17.—W. Vernon Booth, head of the so called fish trust, social leader and polo expert, has all but collapsed physically under the flood of sensational disclosures in connection with the failure of the firm of which he was the head, A. Booth & Co. Mr. Booth’s condition is described by his attorney, Henry S. Robbins, as verging closely on nervous breakdown, eomplicated by a severe attack of grip. Against the protests of his law- yers and doctors alike, however, Mr. Booth remained in communication with his office by means of a telephone at the head of his bed. “Mr. Booth is a very sick man,” sald Mr. Robbins. “He is fighting his ailments nobly, but worry is prevent- ing an improvement in his condition.” Meanwhile it is expected action will be taken by the Cook county grand jury in connection with the alleged falsified statements said to have been presented to the banks by the Booth company. A decision of the creditors whether to wind up the affairs of the company in the bankruptey court or continue the receivership is expected soon. NOT PREPARING FOR WAR Big Austrian Loan for Project Sanc- tioned by Delegations. Vienna, Feb. 17.—The report cur- rent here that Austria-Hungary was | about to issue a loan of §70,000,000 to prepare for any contingency with re- gard to Servia is untrue. It arises from the fact that the gov- ernment is considering the placing: of a portion of the monetary issue al- ready sanctioned by the delegations. EARTHQUAKE IN ASIATIC TURKEY Thirty Dead and Others Injured in Town of Sivas. Constantinople, Feb. 17.—A number of houses and government buildings at Sivas, the capital of a vilayet of the same name in Asiatic Turkey, collapsed as the result of an earth- quake. The loss of life has not been ascertained, but reports say thirty persons have been killed and others injured. Many of the inkmbitants are without shelter. Sivas, sometimes spelled Seevas, has a population of about 6,000 families. Budapest, Feb. 17.—An earthquake shock lasting for ten seconds was felt in the districts of Keeshemst, Nagy Koros, Czegled and Felegymaza. The inbabitants fled to the country. The walls of a number-of houses were cracked, but otherwise there was no damage. BLIZZARDS COME IN SERIES Chicago Swept by Second Storm in Forty-eight Hours. Chicago, Feb. 17.—After a lull of several hours Chicago was swept by another blizzard, which continues with all the severity of the storm of forty-eizht hours ago. A violent wind drifting the loose snow in high banks against the sides of buildings has made the present storm the worst of the winter. Transportation, telegraph and tele- phone companies which had made a desperate flght against the storm lost practically all they had gained when the blizzard renewed its fierceness. Telegraph companies reported the storm was the most disastrous they had experienced in many years. Ev- erywhere the wires are down or work- ing badly and in Northern Ohio it will probably require weeks to get the tan- gled wires straightened out.. The rallroads running west appar- ently were encountering little delay, the storm falling heaviest on east- bound roads. CAUSED BY BROKEN RAIL Four Killed and Twenty Injured in Illinois Wreck. Murphysboro, IIl, Feb. 17.—Illinois Central train No. 205, southbound from St. Louis to New Orleans, was wrecked six miles east of here. An official report gives the number of dead as four and the injured as twenty. The dead are: Mrs. Perry, Carbondale; Sheriff Alden and Mrs. Alden of Union county, IIL, and John Brinkley of Carbondale. 5 The train was a local. The accl- dent was caused by a broken rail over safely, but the remaining four cars turned over. A. E. Cleft, divi- sion superintendent at - Carbondale; left for the scene of the wreck twc miles distant on a special train with doctors and nurses, Bomb Dropped From Train. New York, Feb. 17.—The neighbor- bood of Second avenue and One Hun- dred and Sixth street, which is large: ly inhabited by Italians, was thrown into confusion by the explosion of a bomb dropped to the street from a passing Second avenue elevated train. The explosion wrecked the windows of a number of small stores on Second avenue and caused slight injuries to passersby, who were struck by flying fragments of broken glass. | The engine and express car passed | CARRIES BONB AND REVOLVER Desperate Man Attempts to Secure §7,600. OVERPOWERED BY RUSE Enters Home of Wealthy Kansas City Merchant and Threatens. to Blow Him Up Unless His Demands Are Complied With—While Leaving for the Bank to Secure Funds Quick Action Leads to Arrest. Kansas City, Feb. 17.—Armed with a revolver in one hand and a dyna- mite bomb in the other a man appar- ently about forty years of age entered $he home of Lawrence M. Jones, pres- fdent of the Jones Bros. Dry Goods company of this city, and demanded $7,000. By a ruse Mr. Jones over- powered the man, who was arrested. When the man appeared at the Jones home he was shown to the li- brary. Mr. Jones, who was in another part of the house, upon entering the library was confronted by the in- truder’s revolver. The man told Mr. Jones to be seated. He then drew from under his overcoat a dynamite bomb. . He explained to Mr. Jones that unless: the latter gave him $7,000 he would immediately blow him into atoms. In an endeavor to calm the man Mr. Jones talked with him over a half hour. Mrs. Jones, feeling ap- prehensive on account of her hus- band’s long interview, entered the li- brary at this point. The intruder or- dered her to be seated. The conversa- tion was resumed. Chester I. Jones, secretary of the Jones company, a son, followed his mother and he, too, was ordered to be seated. Mr. Jones then suggested that as he did not have the necessary funds in the house the man accompany him to the bank. This was agreed to. As the pair were passing through the lower hall Mr. Jones stepped suddenly back and, placing his foot in front of his vis- itor, hurled him to the floor. Mr. {Jones and his son then overpowered the man and, stripping him of his weapons, called the police. The bomb did not explode when the intruder fell. Mr. Jones is one of the best known dry goods merchants of the South. He is reputed to be worth more than $1,- 000,000. At the police station the man said | he planned, after securing the money from Mr. Jones, to take him to Inde- pendence, a suburb, where he would have chained him up in a house he had fitted up for the purpose. He said he had been planning the scheme for several months. ELEVEN SHIPS TO BE LAID UP Admiral Sperry Announces Plans to Be Followed After Arrival. Washington, Feb. 17. — Admiral Sperry sent by wireless telegraph to. the navy department the names of the battleships of his fleet which will® remain at anchor in Hampton Road until after March 4 in order to sent battalions from their crews to the in augural parade in Washington. These vessels are the Connecticut, Virginia, Louisiana, Wisconsin, Geor gia, Illinois, Kearsarge and Kentucky, the last three of which will be placed out of commission on their arrival their home navyyards. The remaining eight battleships, which have completed the cruise around the world, will leave Hampton Roads for their home navyyards for repairs immediately after inspection by the admiral, which will take place as soon -as practicable after the re view by the president. BILL PASSED BY THE HOUSF Grants Separate Statehood to New Mexico and Arizona. Washington, Feb. 17.—The struggle of Arizona and New Mexico for sepa- rate statehood was rewarded insofar as the house of representatives is con- cerned when that body, under suspen- sion of the rules, unanimously passed the bill granting separate statehood to the two territories. Youthful Murderer Electrocuted. Dannemora, N. Y., Feb. 17.—Leslie Coombs was put to death by electric- ity in the state prison here for the murder of Harry Hosmer in St. Law- rence county §ept. 28, 1008. Robhery was the motive of the crime. Coombs was nineteen. years of age and less than a week before the murder he had been released from Clinton prison, where le served a term of one year and six months for burglary. Berlin Outrages Continue. Berlin, Feb. 17.—The vicious attacks on women on the streets of Berlin continue and the criminal has not yet been arres Two new cases oc- curred during the morning and both women were slightly wounded. This Prings the aggregaté since the begin- ning of these “ripper” outrages up to twenty-two. Astronomy. If there were any money to be made in astronomy everybody would be studying it. About all we can see is figures, and these are so big that they stagger the understanding. Every child In the United States knows how to find the north star (Old Polaris) from the pointers . of .the dipper, but no child can appreciate the statement that this star is distant from the earth 210,000, 000,000,000 miles—two hundred and ten trillions! The Twentieth Century Lim- ‘ited, traveling at one mile a minute, | would have to run- without stopping for 479,000,000 years in order to trav- erse this distance. If light really travels 187,500 miles a second, a ray from the north star would be thirty. six years in reachlug the ‘earth.—New- York Press. 3 Will Lead Inaugural Parade. San Francisco, Feb. 17.—The Philip- pine constabulary band, comprising more than eighty members, which is scheduled to lead the parade in Wash- ington on the occasion of the inau- guration of President Taft, has arrived here on the army transport Buford. Special Rule Necessary. ‘Washington, Feb. 17.—By a vote of 1728 to 117 the house passed the bill removing the bar to Senator Knox’s eligibility for the office of secretary of state. A special rule making a majority vote sufficlent saved the measure from defeat. An Old Time Quack. In the right bhands it is a poor root that will not work both ways. An old quack doctor, according to the Wash- Ington correspondent of the Boston Herald, was once called to see a boy who had chills and fever. “He procecded to scratch the bark off a root and put some in one glass of water and some in another glass of water. “Give the medicine in this glass for the chills,” he then said to the lad’s mother, “but give this in the other glass when the fever comes on.” “But, doctor,” the mother protested, “it is exactly the same in both glass- es”” ““Oh, not at all,” declared the quack. “But I saw you scrape the bark off the same root and put it in each glass.” ) “Yes,” admitted the quack smoothly, “but you didun’t see how I did it, my dear lady. This for the chills I scrape up on the root, and that makes it high cockalorum. This for the fever I serape down on “the root, and that makes it low cockahighrum.” Tobacco and Tin Foil. General Winfield Scott was responsi- ble for tin foil being wrapped around tobacco. That fact came out in the legal contest over the will of the ec- centric millionaire tobacco dealer, John Anderson. Early in the forties of the last century Mr. Anderson kept a pop- ular cigar store on Broadway. Felix McClosky, for many years the tobac- conist’s salaried companion and agent, testified that one day, in 1843 he thought, General Scott came into the store and asked Anderson if he couldn’t devise some way of keeping tobacco so it would not be affected by age and changes in climates. Ander- son thought about it and shortly after hit upon the pian of wrapping cigars and chewihg tobacco In tin foil, there- by keeping the tobacco moist for a long time. His tin foil covers became popular, and his preserved tobacco was much in demand during the Mexican war and the California gold rush, swelling his business to enormous pro- portions and soon making him a multi- millionaire. A Comprehensive Word. The word “vermin” seems to have become exceedingly comprehensive in scope now that the society which is devoted to -the destruction of such creatures has included not only rats, mice, cockroaches and such small deer among them, but even cats, dogs, spar- rows and canaries, on the ground that all these transmit disease to man. By derivation (Latin “vermis”) vermin ought to mean only worms and the like, in which literal sense Tennyson writes of the ”vermin in a nut.” But the term has constantly been loosely applied to all sorts of -objectionable animals, from crocodiles to foxes. Purchas told of the people of Java how they “feed on cats, rats and other vermins,” and Izaak Walton denounc- ed “those base vermin, the otters.” He used the word exactly in the tem- per in which a naughy little boy is berated as a “young varmint.,”—Lon- don Chronicle, The Nine Tailor Saw. The tailor—he was a cutter at a big salary—sighed as he looked about his luxurious apartment. “She refused me,” he said. “Why? Because she didn’t love me? No. Be- cause of that old saw about its tak- ing nine tailors to make a man. And that saw is a mistake. It is a cor- ruption of ‘nine tellers mark a man.’ It doesn’t signify that tailors are ef- feminate, It simply shows that man- kind is liable to error. The toll of a bell in the olden time was called a teller, and in the olden time the church bells tolled nine times for every man’s funeral; hence the saying ‘nine tellers mark a man’ In our stupidity we have corrupted that into ‘nine tailors make a man’ or ‘it takes nine tailors to make a man.’” The cutter sighed. “This rank error,” he said, “dooms me to bachelorhood.”—New Orleans Times-Democrat, Suicidal Flying Fish. The Indian ocean is singularly de- void of fish and bird life, but one night dozens of flying fish flew on board a vessel there. They were attracted by the lantern on the foremast, against which they dashed and fell stunned to the deck. In appearance they are very like a sand mullet. The wings resem- ble an extended dorsal fin and open and shut like a lady’s fan. Not only are they edible; they are a dish for an epicure.—Sydney (N. 8. W.) Freeman’s Journal. He Enjoyed the Rest of the Game. “Now, that is what is known ds a safe hit,” volunteered the escort, “and entitles the runner to take his place on the second baze.” “Yes,” responded the damsel, "nnfl it that duffer had the base running abil: ity of an ice wagon he’d have stretch- ed that bingle into a three bagger.’— Louisville Courier-Journal, The Duchess’ Philosophy. The old Duchess of Cleveland invit- ed-a relative to her husband’s funeral and told him to bring his gun, add- ing, “We ‘are old, we must die, but "the pheasants must be shot.”—Sir Al- gernon West’s Reminiscences. No Resemblance. “Woman and cats,” said the youth- ful boarder, “are alike.” “Wrong, young man,” said the cheer- ful idiot. “A woman can't run up a telegraph pole, and a cat can’t run'up a millinery bill.” Ho;v many peoplelive on the reputa- tion of the reputation they mlzht have made~Holmes:= . = - b 3 : Stella’s Dignity. “Glenn paid me a dandy compliment last night, mother —one that will please you, too,” sald Stella Harding. “He was talking about the girls in this block and how disgusted the boys were getting with them. He said the trouble with the girls round here was that they had positively no personal dignity, and he never seemed to take into account that I lived in the block myself. But he made up afterward for forgetting. He sald not much, he guessed, he didn’t mean me; that I was noted for my dignity with all the fellows, and he’d often heard them speak of it. What do you say to that?” _ Mrs. Harding was listening with motherly satisfaction. “How did it happen to occur to him that you might be applying it to yourself?” she asked. “I put it to him straight. I just walted until he -stopped for breath, and then I said, ‘Well, jiminy, Glenn, is this a slam?” “Stella, what'a speech! dignity about that!” B “Oh, toot, mamma!” was the laugh- ing response, made without the slight- est intention of disrespect. “That’s Just the way we all talk. Things like that don’t count on dignity one way or the other—not in our bunch. It's how you act, don’t you know?’'— Youth’s Companion. Foxes’ Scalps and Salvation. Some years ago at a session of the legislature of Kentucky an effort to repeal -the law offering a bounty on foxes’ scalps was made, but was de- feated by the appeal of a member from a mountainous and sparsely set- tled region. “Do the gentlemen want to deprive my constituents and me of the benefits of hearing the gospel preached?’ he demanded, with indig- nation in his tone and overspreading his rugged countenance. “We are all Methodists up my way, and our preachers won’'t come without we can give ’em chickens, I know. We can’t raise chickens unless the foxes are killed by somebody, that’s sure, and there ain’t anybody that can afford to spend their time hunting foxes and get nothing to pay for it. So, gentlemen, if you repeal this law youll be de- priving my constituents of the benefit of hearing the gospel preached; that's the way it looks to me!” The law was not repealed at that session.—Ar- gonaut. There’s no A Safety Match. “Papa, what is a safety match?” Mr. Henpecked (looking carefully to see if his wife is within hearing)—A safety match, son, is when a bald- headed man marries an armless wo- man!—Short Stores. Couldn’t Lose. “Things seem to be coming your way of late.” “Couldn’t be any softer if I was the hero of a poker story.”—Kansas City Journal, Steadiness of national character goes with firmness of foothold on the sofl.— David Starr Jordan, AGTUAL STARVATION. Barker’s Store Give Facts Regarding Dyspecsia. Although Indigestion and Dyspep- sia are so prevalent, most people do not thoroughly understand their cause and cure. There is no reason why people should not eat anything they desire— if they will only chew it carefully and thoroughly. Many actually starve themselves into sick- ness ‘through fear of eating every good-looking, good-smelling and good-tasting food, because it does not agree with them. Dieting cannot cure Dyspepsia. If we refuse every article of food that disagrees with us, before long we have nothing left, and find our- selves chronic dyspeptics. We can cure Dyspepsia. We are so confident of this fact that we guarantee a cure, and promise to supply the medicine free of all cost to everyone who will use it, who is not perfectly satisfied with the re- sults which it produces. - We expect ne promises, and put no one under any obligation whatever. Surely, nothing could be fairer. We are located right here in Bemidji, and our reputation should be sufficient assurance of the genuineness of our offer. We want everyone in Bemidji who is troubled with Indigestion or Dyspepsia in any form to come to our store and get a box of Rexall Dyspepsia =~ Tablets. Take = them home and give them a reasonable | trial, according to directions. They are very pleasant to take; they soothe the irritablestomach, strength- en and invigorate the digestive organs, promote a healthy and natur- al bowel action, immediately relieve |nausea and all stomach irritation, produce perfect and healthy digestion and assimilation, and promote nutri- tion. A 25c. package of Rexall Dyspep- sia Tablets furnishes 15 days’ treat- ment. In ordinary.cases, this' is sufficient to produce a cure. In more chronic cases, a longer treatment, of course, is necessary, and depends upon the. severity of the trouble: For such cases, we have two larger sizes which sell for 50c. -and SI.OO El- Barker’s Dmg Stm v HAMILTON WATCHES Our stock of Hamilton Watches is: large and complete. We also carry a large line of all the cheaper makes of watches. Mail orders receive prompt attention. Prices given on any. make or grade of watch upon request. Ask to see the Bemidji Special, the finest watch made for the money. Fine and complicated watch repairing, diamond setting, hand engraving. Jewelry re- Paired and manufactured. Watch Inspectors M. & l.and B. F. & I. F. Rys. GED. T. BAKER & CO. Located in City Drug Store. Near the Lake 16 Third St. ONE CENT A WORD. HELP WANTED. WANTED—ALt International Hotel three steady girls—for dining- room, second cook and dish- washer. Wages $20 per month. _Write or apply at International Hotel, International Falls, WANTED—Gitl for restaurant and lunch counter. Good wages. In- quire Box 692, Blackduck, Minn. HELP WANTED—Experienced cook. Inquire at Park Hotol. S s s e | FOR SALE. A A A AN, FOR SALE—Rubber stamps. The Pioneer will procure any kind of a rubber stamp for you an short notice. FOR RENT. MISCELLANEOUS. Ao~ eeee AN PUBLIC LIBRARY—Open Tues days, Thursdays and Saturdays 2:30to 6 p. m., and Saturday evening %30 to 9 p. m. also. Library in basement of Court House. Mrs. Donald, librarian. WANTED—Balsam lath bolts. Will pay $3.00 per cord for Balsam lath bolts delivered at our mill. Douglass Lumber Co., Bemidji. YOU OWE it to your family; a means of instant, certain and i mexpens:ve communication wita the outside world. Order the Northwestern bought, lnvenlon Mention this paper. ‘Write in Swedish or Norwegian if you prefer, Manufacturers of [ m GASOLINE and m‘l ENGINES, PULLEYS, ) S, SHAFTING, CLUTCHES and all POWER mlill”lfll NM.IEI. direct fo the consumer, Largest Machine Shop in the West - MINNEAPOLIS STEEL AND MACHINERY CO. MINNEAPOLIS; MINN. DR.KING'S NEW DISCOVERY Will Surely Stop That Gough. Dr.King’s New LifePills . The best In the world.