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JESSSSR Great Northern No. 33 West Bound Leaves at 3:30 p. m No. 34 East Bound Leaves at 12:08 p. m No. 35 West Bound Leaves at 3:42 a. m No. 36 East Bound Leaves at 1:20 a. m No. 105 North Bound Arrivesat 7:40 p.m No. 106 South BoundLeaves at 7:00 a, m Freight West Bound Leaves at 9:00 a. m Freight East Bound Leaves at 3:30 p. m Minnesota & International No. 32 South Bound Leaves at 8:15 a. m No. 31 North Bound Leaves at 6:10 p. m No. 34 South Bound Leaves at 11:35 p.m No. 33 North Bound Leaves at 4:20 a. m Freight South Bound Leaves at 7:30 a. m Freight North Bound Leaves at 6:00 a. m Minn. Red Lake & Man. No. 1 North Bound Leaves at 3:35 p. m No 2 South Bound Arrives at 10:30 a. m PROFESSIONAL CARDS ARTS HARRY MASTEN Piano Tuner Formerly of Radenbush & Co. of St. Paul Instructor of Violin, Piano, Mando- lin and Brass Instruments. - Music furnished for balls, hotels. weddings, banquets, and all occasions. Terms reasonable. All music up to date. Phone N. W. 535, or call at 213 Third Street, upstairs. HARRY MASTEN, Plano Tuner LENN H. SLOSSON PIANO TUNING Graduate of the Boston School of Piano Tuning, Boston, Mass. Leave orders at the Bemidji Music House, 117 Third St. Phone 319-2. Residence Phone 174-2. RS. T. SMART DRESS MAKING PARLORS All Work guaranteed to glve satistaction. I have summer quilts, also dress patterns, tallored waists, underskirts, corset covers, trimmings, etc. Bring Your Orders to T. BEAUDETTE Merchant Tailor Cleaning and Pressing a Specialty 314 Minnesota Avenue PHYSICIANS AND SURCEONS R. ROWLAND GILMORE PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office—Miles Block R. E. A. SHANNON, M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office in Mayo Block Phone 396 Res. Phone 397 R. C. R. SANBORN PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office—Miles Block A. WARD, M. D. *® Over First Nativnal Bank. Phone 51 House o. 601 Lake Blvd. Phone 351 R. A. E. HENDERSON PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Over First National Bank, Bemidji, Minn. Office Phone 36. Residence Pone 72. R. E. H. SMITH PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office in Winter Block R. E. H. MARCUM PHYSICIAN AND-SURGEON Office in Mayo Block Phone 18 Residence Phone 211 DENTISTS R. D. L. STANTUN DENTIST Office in Winter Block R. J. T. TUOMY DENTIST 1st National Bank Build's. Telephone 230 R. G. M. PALMER DENTIST Miles Block Evening, Work by Appointment Only LAWYERS RAHAM M. TORRANCE LAWYER Telephone 560 RANK A. JACKSON LAWYER Bemidji, Minnesota E. McDONALD ® ATTORNEY AT LAW Office—Swedback Block, Bemidji, Minn. H. FISK . ATTORNEY AT LAW Office over City Drug Store | OM SMART DRAY AND TRANSFER SAFE AND PIANO MOVING Residence Phone 58 818 America Ave. Office Phone 12 EW PUBLIC LIBRARY Openloa. m. to 8 p. m, daily except Monday; 2 p. m. to 6 p. m. Sun- day. Miss Beatrice Mills, Librarian. M. MALZAHN & CO. * REAL ESTATE. AND INSURANCE FARM LOANS, RENTALS FARMS/AND CITY PROPERTIES 407 Minn. Ave. Bemidji,Minn Miles Block Items phoned or handed in. for this column -before noon will be printed the same day. The more 1t 13 washed the harder 1t gets— Mound Ottv Floor Paint. W. M. Ross. Born—To Mr. and Mrs. Chester Snow, of Bixby avenue, a ten pound girl. 210 J. P. Cronemiller, of Council Bluffs, Iowa, was a visitor in Be- midji today. Miss Theresa Beaumont left yes- terday for St. Paul to work in the Strong & Warner wholesale millinery house. E.]. Miller and wife, and Miss Johnson, came down from North- ome this morning and will spend the day in the city. Mrs. A. W. Leonard, of Wilton, came into the city yesterday morn- ing and spent the day with friends. She returned on the afternoon train, Look this up. A $400.00 Piano for $275.00; a $350.00 Piano for $225.00. Snap if taken at once. Bemidji Music House, J. Bisiar Mgr. Miss Mabel Ellingston, who has been visiting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Rasmussen, will return to her home in Hawkins, Wisconsin, tomorrow. The Norwegian Ladies Aid will meet at the home of Mrs. Hans Erickson, 904 Mississippi avenue, Thursday afternoon at 2:30. All the ladies are cordially invited. Mr. aod Mrs. A. P. White re- turned from the cities last night after having beeraway for a week. They made a trip down and back in the machine and spent yesterday at Lake George. Dr. and Mrs. Starkey, of Beaver, Towa, who have been visitors in Be- midji for the past two days, left yesterday for Blackduck. They are traveling through this state with a view to locating here. The M. E. Aid society will meet with Mrs. J. B. Minnick, 1013 Irvine Ave., Wednesday afternoon, at 2 ojclock. Society will be entertained by Mesdames Minnick and Whitney. Come prepared for work. The charming comedy “A BACHELOR'S HONEYMOON” under the management of Gilson and Bradfield is to be at the Armory opera house on Thursday August 18, Don’t miss it, for it is one continual laugh from start to finish. Mr. and Mrs. S. A. Shupe, of Watertown, S. D., and their daughter Clare, are spending a few weeksat the home of H. C. Wood, of Eckles. Mr. Shupe reports the crop around Watertown very good, considering the unfavorable season. He also states that there are good invest- ments in farm land in this couaty and expects to invest in some small tracts before returning to his home. INITIAL SHOWING of Fall Suits and Coats Palmer Suits‘ $22.50t0$35.00 Palmer Coats $10.00 t0 $35.00 0’Leary-BowserCo| l Suits Made to Order ]it *| court at-Bagley. The advice and the use of the credit of the Northern National Bank will aid in developing the business of worthy patrons. Judge M. A, Spooner is attending: Mrs. ‘Engellung, of Northome, was in thecity over night. Pat Lynch is down from Inter- national Falls for a.day or two. Robert L. Given left last night for Minneapolis on a business trip, Jobn A. Clark is here from La Fayette, Indiana, for a day or two. Francis H. Woods left last night for Watertown South Dakota, on a vacation trip. Harry E. Reynolds, secretary of Commercial club, returned this morn- ing from Duluth. Mrs. E. A. Barker and children will leave tomorrow for Minneapolis to join Mr. Barker. Mrs. Gilmore, the Misses Marks, Parker and Gilder went to Cass Lake today for a day’s outing. Charles E. Taylor, of Big Falls, came in last night and left on the Great Northern this morning. E. M. Sather, of the Crookston Business college, was in the city yesterday looking up new business. John C. and Thomas Russell of Minneapolis, who have been at the P. J. Russell home, left Sunday for their home. Oscar Knudson and familey came from Grand Forks last night and- to day are visiting'friends at the head of the lake. Miss Bertha Goddard and Mrs. S. P. Hays of Red Lake, arrived over the Great Northern last night and left for their home this after- noon. J. N. Ricards, Mrs. Ricard and her daughter arrived from Walker last night, They left for their home in Emarado, North Dakota, last night, 2 Andrew Peterson, I, and Oscar Johnson, and John Mark, of Grand Forks, arrived from the north last night and went to Grand Forks early this morning. Mr. and Mrs. G, A, Smith, Mr, and Mrs, W. S. McKee, and Mr, and Mrs. Carl B. Pray, all of Des Moines, came up from Pine River yesterday to spend the day in Be- midji, - They have been staying at Pine River for several weeks and returned last night. Mrs. E. L. Wightman and Mrs. Masters went to Minneapolis last to find a new home. Mrs. Wightman ‘A checking -account promotes| g | credit and establishes relponliblliq.i ! For Health and TE"S 0F “m“s an Pure Food ARE HOMEI'ESS Hunt’s Perfect Large Secton of Tokio Gon-Baking Powder p'e'e'y s“hmargsd' Ask for Hunt’s Perfect Flavoring JOHN LIND. FIGHT THE FIRES Two Additional Companies Sent to Montana, RESCUERS ARE MAROONED s S ‘May, Refuse the Nomination for Governor of Minnesota. Toklo, Aug. 15.—The waters of the Riyer Sumida are still rising and the Honjo and Fukadawa wards ot Tokio are nmearly completely submerged. Tens of thousands’ of persons are homeless and starving., One of the three more important embankments guarding Tokio has broken.. Should the: second and third dykes break half the capital would be submerged. Thousands of homeless people are being sheltered in the temples and schoolhouses, at which relief stations the most deplorable sights are seen. The victims of the flood are wholly dependent on public relief. Thonsands more have been unable to find shelter, owing to the insufficiency of boats to convey them to places of safety and they are exposed to the rain and hun- ger. Every available boat is being employed in the work of rescue and to convey food where it is most needed. The question of feeding the strick- en people is causing apprehension. The vegetable and fish supplies are twenty horses and a force of men are | ———————————————————| failing and the stock of biscuits al- marooned somewhere in the Clear- ready is nearly exhausted. There is water country. Their exact location NO WORD FROM NOMINEE no fear, however, for the supply of cannot be ascertained. : g R rice. The water of the Sumida river The Kootenal forest Is threatened | John Lind Silent as to Candidacy for| i almost washing the bottoms of the by a blaze having a twelve-mile front. Governor of Minnesota, bridges: The climax of the inundation A bad fire has broken out in the St. Paul, Aug. 15.—John Lind has| is expected soon. ua ar use" returned to Seattle from his trip to The mountain flood in the neighbor- Phones 206-207 Bitter Root forest and the state mili- tia may be ‘called out if the situation | Alaska, but he has refused to discuss|hood of Kauizawa has destroyed the grows more acute. his nomination for governor of Min-| Mikasa hotel. Many foreigners were nesota by the state Democratic con-|stopping there, but fortunately no vention. The conviction is growing| fatalities have been reported so far. - that Mr. Lind will refuse the nomina- = WO O D Leave your orders for seasoned Birch, Tam- arack or Jack Pine Wood with tion and John Jenswold of Duluth may S. P. HAYTH be selected to fill the vacancy on the Telephone 11 Force of Men and Horses Surrounded by Flames Somewhere in the Clear- watér Country—Loss In the - ‘Pacific Northwest as Result 'of Fires Will Amount to Many Millions of Dollars. Butte, Mont., Aug, 16.—As a result of extensive forest fires in Western ‘Montana two more companies of sol- diers will report to Supervisor Bunker of the Flathead National- forest. One will be stationed at Gary and the other at Poala. The condition at Wallace no longer I8 believed to be dangerous. A forty-acre fire is reported from the Crazy mountain portion of tha Ab- saroka forest. The situation there is not serious, but on the Cabinet forest Treserve conditions are grave. Forestry officials have a report that Coffee No experiinent— the result of FORTY YEARS <t study and— experience— “The Finest Grown” Delivery Hours Mornings, 9-10-11 Afternoons, 3-4-5:15 Explosions Bring Rain. Spokane, Wash., Aug. 16.—At Wal- lace, Ida., hundreds of pounds of dyna- mite hung to the limbs of trees on the high points surrounding the city and exploded in the hope that the effect might produce rain to check the for- est fires is sald to have a result, for at midnight rain began falling for the first time in two months. The fall has been heavy. How'’s This? Weoffer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by et ca U“ HENEY & CO., Toled 0 s e Pz ‘oledo, We, the w d igned, h: i F. CHOKES TWO MEN TO DEATH | oite, e, indprsiened, hiuve Jnown ¥, 3. perfectly hononblle in all business transac- Athlete Makes Rsv-:;t Work of Alleged | ¢iohs, and fnanclally able to carry out any obbers. s s & waagme olesale D . Tols Marine, IIl, Aug. 16—John Burton, IS an amateur wrestler of Alton, IlL, |3cting directly upon the blood and mucous head of the ticket. Loss Will Reach Millions. Portland, Ore., Aug. 16.—Until a Hall's Oatarrah Oure is taken internally, surfaces of lhe system. Testimonials free. general rain comes to break the long choked two men to death with his bare | Price. 7oc per bottle. Sold by ali Druggists: dry-period it is evident that the forest | hands, following a quarrel. Burton "Take Halls Pamily Pils for constipesion, fires now raging in a score of districts | had come here to engage in a contest. all over the Pacific Northwest will re- | He is under arrest, but claims that his: main a serious menace. The loss at | two victims attempted to rob him. present can be counted only in mil- Gus Wentz and Lewis Weibrecht are lions, but how many can scarcely be | the men whom Burton killed. The guessed. The forecaster gives no hope | latter is a powerful man, six feet for rain. three inches in height and weighing R T T IE A 220 pounds. Brush Fi Checked by Rain. . . A Sefl::'l: 'j;;;h_ ‘Zu‘; { 4 _"}'I'em Does not necessarily mean a discussion rains which fell through Northwestern of mysterious and fearful things. With Wl:sl}l‘lnhgton hchenk;a tihe brush flrcles us medicines are seriously practical, ab- ‘whic! ave been burning since early in the summer and the rangers be- solutely plain, truthful and reliable compounds, the merits of which have been found adquate and trustworthy. Your physician knows what your need is; he also knows the results that should be accomplished when his prescription is honestly prepared, and when we can assure you that our prescription depart- ment makes a specialty of dispensing THREE “CHILDREN DROWNED Raft on Which They Are Playing Is Capsized. Marinette, Wis.,, Aug. 16.—A raft on which five children, the eldest fourteen years, .was playing at the expects to return the last of the week and then she and Ruth will go down to make Minneapolis their home. Ruth expects to study music this winter. Dysentery is a dangerous disease but can be cured. Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera and = Diarrhoea Remedy has been successfully .used Outlet river resort, near Lake Nopue- bay, twenty miles north of Marinette. tipped and three children were drowned. They were Hazel Lind- holm, fourteen years old; Eva Dorothy Rengren and her brother William, twelve and ten years old. Two other children were on the raft, Ruth Olsen, eleven years old, and ‘William Lager, ten years old. The Lager boy swam ashore. Ruth man- aged to get into shallow water, al- though she could not swim. An effort lieve there will now be little difficulty Parke, Davis & Co.’s Pharmaceutical Products ‘you need have no doubt; your physician will assure you that when we prepare your medicine no better could be pro- cured. Our phone and messenger ser- vice make it easy for you to give us in nine epidemics of dysentery. It has never been known to fail. Itis equally valuable for children and adults, and when reduced with water and sweetened, it is pleasant to take. Sold by Barker Drug Co. BEMIDJI COUPLE RETURN. In last evening’s Pioneer we pub- lished an item stating that Mr. and Mrs. Otto Peterson returned from their honeymoon trip through the east. M-s. Peterson will be remembered by her numerous friends in this city as Josephine Ovri. Miss Ovri has been- connected with the Ber- man Emporium for the past seven years, having formerly lived at Fergus Falls. - She was very popular among her associates and the patrons of the store. Mr. Peterson is the representative of the L. K. Deal Lumber company whose offices are in the 'Security State Bank building. - He is- widely known in Bemidji and the surround- ing country having held this trust- worthy position tor a number of years, The couple were murrled at the home of the bride’s sister in Minne- apolis, July 21, and returned to the city after an extended trip through- out the eastern part of the United States. The announcement of their mar- riage came as a surprise to their Bemidji: friends and ‘acquaintances wish of their local friends. Ladies Can Wear ‘Shoes one sizesmaller after nsing Allen’s Foot: E: the antigaptic bowder to bo shaken'fht e [t makes tight or new shoes feel Q“’ wlvaslnsum‘. vellet to' cons: and. bun Ehisfg ansuey e, Speinklo Rilen’s Ho0E noticatho aifforence. 11 the sreatess Com gl);l&wkm address Allen .Olmated, ie and a happy future is the united: atest. com- | ¢ afmdlmveryo! the age. Bold ‘everywhe) Accept any nnbnlmu Fg FRI your patronage. The Gity Drug Store Where Quality Prevails at rescue was made by Mrs. England, proprietor of the summer hotel, but she fell into a deep hole and.was her- self nearly drowned. MISS ADDIE MOORE LR Flute Soloist, Navassar aborer Shot in Quarrel. * A5 Antigo, 'Wis, Aug. 16—Rudonpn | Ladies’ Band, at the State Valek, a laborer, was shot through the | Fair, Sept. b to 10. heart.. Frank Tomashek was arrested in connection with the crime. The men had quarreled over money and threats were passed. GRAIN AND PROVISION PRICES Duluth Wheat and Flax. Duluth, Aug. 16.—Wheat—To arrive and on track—No. 1 hard, $1.16%; Sept., $1.13%; Dec., $1.13%; May, $1.- 17%. Flax—Sept.,, $2.46; Oct., $2.- 36%; Nov., $2.35%. F you want to build a cottage or a bungaloo, call and let me figure with you. Minneapolis Wheat. Minneapolis, Aug. 15—Wheat— Sept., $1.1134; Dec., $1.121@1.12%; May, $1:16%@1.16%. On track—No. 1 hard, $1.14%; No. 1 Northern, $1.- 12% @1.185%; No. 2 Northern, $1.07% @1.10%; No. 3 Northern, $1.04%@ 1.10%. 8t. Paul Live Stock. St. Paul, Aug. 16.—Cattle—Good to choice steers, $5.256@5.75; fair to goad, $4.75@5.25; good to choice cows and ‘heifers, ‘$4.00@4.50; veals, $5.50@6.75. Hogs—$7.50@8.45. ' Sheep—Wethers, $3.75@4.00; - yearlings, $4.25@4.50; spring lambs, $5.25@6.00. ‘T have some nice lots that are suitable for a fine home, either large or small. Chicago Grain and Provisions. Chicago, Aug. 15—Wheat—Sept., $1.023%4@1.02%; - Dec,, $1.0514; May, $1.10%. Corn—Sept, 633,.@63%c; Dec., ' 60% @61c; May, 63%@63%e¢. Oats—Sept., 36%c; Dec., 38%c; May, 41%c. Pork—Sept., 821 571% @21.60; Jan;, $18.52%. Butter—Creamerles, 25 @29c; dairies, 23@26c. Eggs—10@ 20c. - Poultry—Turkeys, 20c; chickens, 12%c; springs, 15c. Building Contractor and Real Estate Broker - ROOM 9, O’LEARY-BOWSER BUILDING | Office Phone 23. fouse Phowe 3(6. “Bemidji, Minn. Chicago Live Stock. Chicago, Aug. 15.—Cattle—Beeves, $4.55@8.20; Texas steers, $3.50@5.70; Western_steers, $4.00@6.70; stockers and feeders, $4.00@6:20; cows and heifers, $2.50@6.35; calves, $6.50@8:- 50. Hogs—Light, $8.45@8.95; mixed, Tough, o 7.80; good to choice heavy, $7- 80@8.45; ' pigs, @9 Sheep— Native, §2.25@ ‘veurhnp $4.00@ .50. s oot 2SS | [ BELes