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Calumet Baking Powder The only high-class Baking Powder sold at me price. ¥ New-Gash-Want-Rate ',-Gent-a-Word Where cash accompanies copy we will publish all *Want Ads"” for half- cent a word per insertion. Where cash does not accompany copy the regular rate of one ceuta word will be charged. EVERY HOME HAS A WANT AD For Rent--For Sale--Exchange --Help Wanted--Work Wanted --Etc.--Etc. HELP WANTED. WANTED—Young men to learn automobile business by mail and prepare for positions as chaffeurs and repair men. We make you expert in ten weeks; assist you to secure position. Pay big; work pleasant; demand for men great; reasonable; write for particulars and sample lesson. Empire Automobile Institute, Rochester, N. Y. WANTED—Girl for general house work. Mrs. A. L. Molander, 1118 Bemidji avenue. WANTED—Girl for kitchen work. Markham hotel. WANTED—Girl Bemidji Avenue, FOR SALE. FOR SALE—Hotel furnished complete, with 42 rooms, office and bar, and three lots, in Kelliher, Apply Craig Hotel, Kelliher, Minn. at once. 313 $5,500.00 residence property in Bemidji for sale on easy terms or will TRADE for good farm land. Apply to Carl L. Heffron, Bemidji, Minn. Best of farm land for sale on easy terms; some improvements; $10.00 per acre. Timber enough on the land to pay for it. Address Carl L. Heffron. FOR SALE—Own a $600 home. $200 cash and $10 per month. 6- room house, acre land. 6 minute walk to P. O. Address XXC, Pio- neer. FOR SALE—Snaps in nice south- east corner lots; nice Lakeshore residence; nice lakeshore acre lots. Inquire T. Beaudette, 314 Minne- sota. FOR SALE OR TRADE—Choice Nymore Lots; for price and par- ticulars write to —J. L. Wold, Twin Valley, Mian. I have 20 first-class residence lots in Bemidji which I will trade for good farm land. Carl L. Heffron, Bemidji, Minn. FOR SALE—Rubber stamps. The Pioneer will procure any kind of a rubber stamp for you an short notice. MISCELLANEOUS WANTED—To buy good, clean rags, no buttons, no pins. Will Pay 5 cents per lb. for same. ‘Telephone 31. WANTED—Laundry work. I guar- antee firstclass work. Phone 497. WANTED—Boarders! Call at 208 Irving Avenue South. Want Ads FOR RENTING A PROPERTY, SELL- ING A BUSINESS OR CBTAINING HELP ARE BEST. Pioneer BLACK HAND AFTER GOL. THEO. ROOSEVELT'S LIFE Detectives Find Him a Hard Man to Guard and Permit Him to Carry Revolver. It is reported that anarchists are after the life of Theodore Roosevelt. it said, is made today by a man high in the Italian secret police who had much to do in the protect- ing of the famous American while he was in Italy. The cause of the statement was the result of the reported arrest of an anarchist at Chiasho, Switzerland, under suspicious circumstances. Word was recently received to the effect that anarch- istic emissaries had left Khartum for the purpose of doing harm to Mr. Roosevelt. : The secret police were requested to take every possible precaution. Every possible watch is being placed over Mr. Roosevelt while en route to the United States. He seems perfectly fearless and while in Italy took chances which gave those to whom was entrusted the task of looking after his safety many an un- easv hour. Both Mr. Roosevelt and his son carry automatic revolvers and in case of trouble would no doubt give a good account of themselves. A statement, is Daughter of W. G. Schroeder IIl. The 19-months-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. G. Schroeder is critically ill at her home. Little Margaret was taken with the measles and later a complication of fever and pneumonia set in and the little one is making a strong fight for life. The parents are very much con- cerned as to its condition and prob- able recovery. A Mail Order Kid. Here is a pretty good one. A man who patronizes the mail order houses when he has cash, allows the children to play with the big cata- logues. One morning the nurse came out and told them that there was a new baby in the house. “Who brought it?” asked the children. The nurse replied that it just came. “Oh, I know,” said one little tot, “it’s a Sears Roebuck baby, and I’ll bet it’s adulterated, just like the the pepper and the strawberry jam was; and papa will have to keep it because he sent the money in advance.” ATTENTION. Bids Wanted.—Contract Work. Sealed bids will be received by the undersigned at his office in the City of Beminji, Minnesota, at 10 o’clock a. m. on the 14th day of may, 1910, for clearing and stumping for culti- vation the following described land (mostly drained swamp); NE¥% of SWX, SE¥4 of NWX4, SWY of NEY and NWX% of SEX Sec. 8, Town 146, Range 33, or any part thereof, according to plans and specifications on file in said office. A certified check for 10 per cent of the amount of the bid, payable to Carl L. Heffron, might accompany each bid. I reserve the right to reject any and all bids. Carl L. Heffron. HAYFIED EDITOR USES GASOLINE TO BUILD FIRE R. B. Russell Taken To Rochester in -, Pitiable Condition.—He May Recover. Rochester, Minn.,, April 18.—R. B. Russell, editor of the Hayfield Guard, has been brought to this city in a most pitiable condition for medical attention, and fears are entertained that he will not recover. Mr. Russell’s body is one mass of burns, and is the result of an attempt to start a fire in his office with either gasoline or kerosene, While pouring the oil on the fire the can slipped into the stove and exploded, and his entire body was engulfed in the flames. Mr. Russell went to Hayfield from Howard Lake about four weeks ago. The building and machinery of the Guard office were damaged, but not entirely destroyed. McCabe’s Georgia Troubadours Coming. The William McCabe Georgia Troubadour Minstrels will give a performance in the City Opera House Monday night, April 18th, The company comes with good advance notices, among which is the following, taken from the Young America (Minn.) Eagle: “McCabe’s Georgia Minstrels, colored organization, showed at Singer’s hall here Tuesday and Wednesday evenings. The company is a good one in every respect and both entertainments were attended by large crowds. The members of the company are blessed with tumne- ful voices and their jokes as a whole are new.” SAWS HIS THROAT WITH A SPOON; FELL DEAD A Butte Miner, Who Shot His Wife, Commits Suicide in Jail. William Powers, in jail for having shot and wounded his wife when she attempted to leave him after a few words, committed suicide tonight by sawing through his neck with the jagged edge of a broken soup spoon until he reached an artery. There was a gush of blood and he fell over dead. Powers was a well-known miner. Creamery Makes Big Gains. The annual meeting of the stock- holders of the Thief River Falls Co-operative Creamery company was held in this city January 29. An interesting report was presented by Secretary Peter Englestead. This report shows that the gross receipts in 1909 amounted to $6o,- ooo approximately, all of which was secured from the sale of butter; that the business increased 37 per cent during the year, while the cost of the manufacture of a pound of butter was materially decreased. SEVERE STORM IN PARTS OF SOUTH Traffic Interrupted and Crop Damage Is Immense, New Orleans, April '18—Jackson, the capital of Mississippi, is complete- i{ly cut off from the world so far as wire communication is concerned as a result of the violent storm that swept through Mississippi, parts of Tennessee, Eastern Arkansas and.as far up as parts of Kentucky. Hundreds of miles of telephone a=d telegraph wires are down and the alarming reports ' brought in have aroused the greatest apprehension. Communication with Memphis is bad- ly interrupted, all wires in this sec- tion being badly crippled. Five inches of rain fell throughout Tennessee, Mississippi and Eastern Arkansas and in some places is still - 3 falling. The wind reached the veloc- ity of a cyclone and heavy hail storms prevailed near Jackson. Hardly & railroad escaped without one or two washouts and schedules are badly in- terrupted. At Como, Marigold and Jonestown, Miss., houses were blown down, many unroofed and others lift- ed from their foundations. The damage to crops has been im- mense. Thousands of acres of cotton have been inundated and truck farms flooded. All streams are far out of their banks and the lowlands flooded. Reports say thousands of head of cattle and other live stock have been destroyed. Roads are impassable and. bridges of all kinds have been washed out. EGGS CAUSE TUBERCULOSIS Tests Made in Oregon Result in That Conclusion. Portland, Ore., April 18—Tests ‘made with the albumen of eggs laid by hens infected with tuberculosis show that the “white plague” is com- municable by this means, according to a report by W. H. Lyttle, state vet- erinarian, filed with the Oregon state board of health. Lyttle states, how- ever, that eggs moderately cooked, even though previously infected, are not dangerous as an article of diet. Also the tests have shown that the yolks of eggs fail to inoculate. Money Cheerfully Refunded. here. Mora Hats at $3.00 Here only. BEMIDJI Best hats in the market right Mallory cravanetted and Nothing better at the price. clothes. Copyright 1910 The House of Kuppenheimer Chicago rics Shirts such as you want; pat- terns and colo; 75c values at want; weaves and fine making such as you want. $1.00 and $1.50 New patterns in neckwear, 50c You'll find, when you come here for clothes that you get something more than just the garments you pay for; you get a security of quality and a per- manence of satisfaction guaranteed, which is worth more than any price you can pay. One of the best evidences of our high quality and the assurance of getting the right thing here, is the great array of KUPPEN- HEIMER and SOPHOMORE Suits and Overcoats, ‘specially made, of selected and exclusive fabrics; {the best values in clothes ever shown, Mail Orders Promptly Filled. $15.00 to $30.00 New colorings, new patterns, new models and fashions, smart designed Suits and Overcoats; a splendid showing of strictly high grade College models, high school models; made for the young fellows of ultra tastes in dress as extreme as you like; or as quiet; new fash- ions in suits and overcoats. Suits and Overcoats $12.00, $15.00, $18.00, $20.00 Young Men’s .New Styies ) | ’ Young Men’s $25.00, $30.00 Bring your boys to us for clothes; for styles that are mighty artistic and in beautiful fab- to $7.50 $3.50 rs such as you Wilson Bros. GILL BROS. The Popular Priced Clothiers Shoes of the best sorts. setts and Douglass shoes for sale here exclusively. $3.50, Here's the ideal shoe store for boys’ school and dress shoes - $1.50 to $3.50 Cros- $4 and $5.00 MINNESOTA ar® Wi —