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g : itor. isith ti-saloon | 5on, and while my position has not al- THE BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEER sioes sud ool on cor i there| Voungdal, f the Anibsaloon 1, 8, ey sk b ot to represent the journalistic world. |league. And itis my opinion that{ wy) geny taat the people of this as Despite their training, two lawyers |in return for Mr. Gray’s taking this{ well as otlLer states have given me 2 A 2 stion | thelr confidence and accorded me have been ¢nt!:ered. in :n: twoi bnnki slt:nd :n th: cmnt:y ?tmn dql:; 2% | most ind -and considerste treatmont ers are making instead: twiue of |t n».t e aforesal oungdahl ‘and | g54 ohich Fam sincerely gratetul.. But change. Rachie have contracted to deliver | no: receptton has ever touched- me so The most popular crime appears to be grand larceny in the second |candidate.—St. Paul Times. degree, 194-men being sentencedon |- PUSLIBHED EVERY AFTEAROON EXEEFT SUaBAY 81 THE BEMIDJI PIONEER PUBLISHING €0, E. H. DENU. Q. E..CARSON. " 1he Postetfies st Bomid}, Mianoseis. 23 class mattor, e PRI ST S Y ; UBSCRIPTION---$5. FIR | il Su ;——M this charge. Forgery in the second Will Support Stanton,-and Why. degree trails along. a poor second| The Region is one paper that has with a_delegation of 52 members, | no intention of supporting the Re-| discuss the questions pending in this] Murder in the second degree: is a|Publican. ticket as a whole in the Btm:!, :nd make clear ::y position ! ! gt . . inne. | With reference thereto. That promise closethird with a band of 50 while | coming elzcuo'n: Nnrlhzru' Minne-| ;"0 ere to fulfill tonight, In mak. 40 men received a prison. sentence | sota is our politics, and we intend to| ing' such statement I shall - speak instead of being sent to the gallows|support only candidates who ' are| frankly and-without evasion, believing for murder in the first degree: favorable to the northern tier of flrmlly !hs::lrlght 1s might and that the . “ ican” and “Di people will choose the right. There are at the present time 97 | counties. “Republican” an: emo- Progressive Platform. prisoners serving life sentences; - one | crat” make merely names these days.| Firet, ‘I stand squarely upon the serving a 32 year sentence; ten, 30 [Support MEN not political parties. pllt!omtx'ndopm by the Republican o i g in | Party of this state. This platform is The Cubans are to hold an elec years‘. and three, 25 years. h.An: on? o t:e ve.ry h"thc‘:e clear, definite; comprehensive, and tion in a few weeks and already Crimes are more frequently com-| Which we intend to jump the traces| gistinctly progressive. No Republican aLioE mitted by persons between the ages|is in the election for district judge.| candidate need offer any apology ‘ei- folks there are beginning to hold s ther for its contents or for the man- i of from 30 to 40 years, the total" for Judge Stanton, the non-partisan can- m; their breath. . s % id . 7 £| oer ‘of 1ts adoption. It is an admitted for this period being 227 to 125 be. | didate for that office,who is & man of { fact that all shades-of opinion were tween-the ages of 25 ‘to 30 'years,|such brilliant - mind and so many flveltlll,mxuam deal by that convention " s the selection of a committee ‘on and 152 men between 2(? and 25| sterling’ qualities tln.t the .vnters Fosalntions tHACATl See pnt it years. Of those sent to prison dur:| would make a grave mistake if they| po heard on the floor of the conven. ing the past year, 457 were single;|failed to support him. If any office| tion and that no improper interest:of 198 married; eight divorced; 36 |should be kept out of politics, the widowed and 17 -separated. judgeship is the one, and we hope There are 278 Catholics, 116|the voters in Judge Stanton’s dis- Lutherans, 47 Methodists; 22 Bap- | trict will take into consideration his tists; and 174 gave their religion|great record as a lawyer and a judge fellow townsmem and neighbors here tonight, and no:city could possibly con- fer greater honor upon“a son “than| Mankato has:done -on'this occasion: In accepting the nomination 1 stat: Mr. Hayner has decided to “‘stick” it out. Remember, it is still your duty to swat or otherwise harass the fiy. James Gray will be with us to- morrow night. We’ve a right to ex- pect a Jim dandy talk. The new fall gowns are to be worn longer and if the high .cost of living continues a good many of them will be worn still longer. l If John Dietz only knew it, he is getting his name in the paper, but owing to work about the farm ‘John doesn’t get to town for his mail very regularly these days. Judge Pendergast, who knows something about Uncle Sam’s ability to suppress rebellions, expresses the belief tha' the government ultimately will triumph at Cass Lake. An aviator flew 3,000 feet straight up in Chicago. At that point his aeroplane was held fast by the stock- yards odor and he had a high old time getting the thing pried loose again, Governor Haskell of Oklahoma re- fuses to attend the reception to be given Theodore Roosevelt in Little Rock next Monday. As the colonel dearly loves to mingle with crooks— ask Lorimer—the absence of the governor may “spile the day.” NO, KATHERINE Every once in a while some man or woman makes a bid for notorie- ty by advancing some sort of a strange or daring doctrine, Dr. Katherine B. Davis of the Uni- versity ot Chicago is the latest, This is Katie’s way of breaking nto the newspapers: “I advocate polygamy as a national institution, open and recognized, if the identical stand- ard of morals is impossible for both men and women.” “‘The cause of the crimes com- mitted by the great majority of women is the fact that there is one set of morals for men and. an entirely different standard for women.” “In the New York state re- Democratic party stands for nothing -butcriticism;.;has no other-aim than but negation, is capable of nothing but criticism, has no other ‘aim’'than to get office and makes no higher bid for public confidence than the promise to carry out Republican policies better.” So ‘much for the platform. Mir. Lind declined the: nomination . and- the Governor A. O. Eberhart, Repub-| chairman of the Democratic st.te cen- lcan candidate for governor, deliv-|'tral committee: carried~his “lctter of ered his keynote speéch-at Mankato | declination: in :his:inside rpocket:for before an audience including many ;l:bl;:e:vl::a vm:‘::':hsl::rl:g:’:::gm:‘: § s a1 i ::;’dnent members of the party. He 1ses. - During “this’perfod the Demo: On the 21st day of last June thers | frors, c::;?dizgl:flh'fi'n;fi;fi::;::r WHAT OTHER PAPERS SAY || assembled at St. Paul one of the| pey to the boss, new. to the candidate most - important and memorable con- and new to the party, whose policy ventions ever held. by the Republican | apg action he seems to control in' this party in Minnesota. It was important | jngtance. because held at a time when the Democratic party, then in ‘control of the state patronage, was bending every | ‘The nominee -of the Democratic effort to revive the forgotten strife of | 8tate central committee says that he prior campaigns in the Republican | Will do more ‘than sign a county' op- party and to place new-obstacles in | tion bill if pagsed by the legislature. the way of harmonious action.: It was | He will, .if elected governor, recom- memorable. because more truly repre: | mend It to the legislature. Without sentative, fair and deliberative than | 8ttempting to minimize the force and County Option. OUR FRIENDS BEHIND THE BARS. On August 1, according to the six- any kind was allowed to influence the convention or its committee in the adoption of that platform. takes advanced’ ground upon all the public questions of the day and has been used as a model in other states. simply as Protestant. There are|and re-elect him by a handsome|It wastes mo time in mere denuncia- . Tority —Ral 5 5 tion, but offers specific remedies for nine Jews. majority.—Rainy River Region. evils complained of. In the language T . of Theodore Roosevelt it favors— IMPRESSIONS OF A STRANGER: “Frace” Says Cass Lake Voice. | gnong other tings— Tariff ‘Question, the fluent lecturer on socialism who | Weekly newspapers, ‘interviews with| “The policy of providing for a dis- recently visited Bemidji and other |our€ood mayor, which states, that| ) o high' elass ‘commission: of towns in Beltrami and adjoining|he has determined to call out a| experts which will treat each schedule counties, has returned to his'home | SPecial constabulary, if Mr. W. E.| purely on its own merits, with a view . o e, o 3 both to protecting the consumer from where he has put in writing- his- im- |Jobnson, the ’o'tyh,d Chist:..specialf & Catie prices and- to securing the pression of northern Minnesota in |officer of the Indian Department, | American; producer; and especially the the following language: should undertake to spill the spiritu: [-American wage-earner, what will rep- 0, . resent the'difference of cost of produc- “I have been on a lecture tour}ous le malt goods of our citizens, [P e as cirpascd with Via bost of through Northern Minnesota. I [after'Oct. 15th Anno Domino 1910:| production in: countries-where. labor iles th its | We'do not know if the Mayor has have walked :formiles, throdgh ita The foregoing quotation from his i s 3 .¢| Bpeech -delivered at the Republican with homesteaders in their shaaties, | have such a vivid imagination, but if | gtata convention in New York, Sept. That is a wonderful country with | true, and if he meant it, we presume | 27,"is almost identical with the lan- P . i iti i guage of our own platform adopted| great possibilities. The land- js|he will open a recraiting station at| e -wonths bétore and certifies that very fertile, and no finer grass for [an-early date ashisforces may-come| 410" Republicans of Minnesota were cattle can bé found anywhere, yet]in conflict with -the United' States] alive :to the intereats of the people, 5 3 2 and were progressive in fact long be- there are comparatively few settlers. M."Sh'“ and.hls deputies, or even‘ fore some of our critics had come to I talked with dozens of these settlers| With the United States army, no{-appreciate the significance of the word. and they agréed as to the reason for/| time should be lost -in getting the! The declaration of the Minnesota Re- the country not being better settled. | municipal guards into military shape. :slon 18 characterized by my opponent . i .1y | @88 pure “Bunco,” but he probably was opened for settlement, not one|and revolver practice, "‘""'_"h drill,} wrote nis speech before he read Roose- in fifty who rushed in to take up the | Rattling gun practice, and it would| velt's speech at.Saratoga. - Under the % i i i leadership of Theodore Roosevelt our lands intended to make a home up]bea good n;len to obtain ;he services| o itc F;' SRtig . Dew pieth ot there. Lumberjacks filed and did as|of an aeroplane so as to drop bombs | freedom. - The ‘power of ‘the people little as possible to improve the land|on-the - heads of 'the - invaders. | was never-exerted as it is today.. Pub- s s i | lic conscience has been quickened and and sold it for a few hundred dollars|-However we' have no l_de,' thit "he‘ boss r:{:: i th:BR:;uh%:a‘ix ep:rty at to the lumber companies. Others|Octoberraid will materialize. ~ Thel| jeust, 15 a thing-of the past. Ex-| from all callings of life did the same, | Clostag -order is a farce from the/ ceptional means of education and. in- scores of school teachers owning | beginning to the end.—Cass Lake erage standard of intelligence and the voters of today are full ‘of knowledge farm. and keenly alive to -all the Tights a.mf Lawyers, “d octors,. 4nd vdn and ' duties of citizenship. This has mlmaters,‘ as well as business men, been frequently demonstrated. The re-i did likewise, and now much of the " cent action of the ‘New York Repub- land is held by speculators. i ¢ lican: state’ convention: in accepting! “pp d y:5pel 1 - E IssuEs 0F Theodore Roosevelt’s leadership is the! e roads arepoor;” almost:‘im-| | best evidence that the rights of the/ passable most of the year. The set-| . people ‘are ‘safe in the charge of the' tlers have to work three and four THE c AMP AIGN Republican: party: : The political erook: weeks a year to keep the roads open, | ' and. pretender must be banished from formatory, of which I have charge while the speculator goes free. The — public office men must render real i g settler is taxed often higher than D service for the'people. 'This is right. and in which there are between era ot Ts rth 31002 Keynme sPeecn m “m Hep“b_ No man should be elected to public 300 and 400 women, there are few | Where 1 . i acre. 2 office Who s incapable or unwilling to who are not the victims, primarily | There is constant fear of fire through lm‘a“ uanmdam ml‘ Gu'_ serve ‘the’ people, honestly, fearlessly, or solely, of this double standard. |the carelessness of railroads and all the time: ernor a‘ Man.kam. Political Bossism.* . o Party bossism is not:entirely extinct: ed with the complete tt?lerance,.xf The_ reme'dy suggested by ome AT A in Minnesota.. When the Democratic! not the approval of society, while|settler is: Fu.st, let the government party assembled in Minneapolis on: woman go to a rumn from which |refuse to permit any person to file sTA“flS 0" Hls REflan s et 2 8 1 or govermor,~after” adopting a plat- they can ra-rely be reclaimed and|on flfe land unless he goes to work AS ST TE EXEGUTWE | form¢ upon which he‘refused to stand.: our foundling asylums are filled [and improves at least fifteen - acres, A ' Comimenting ‘upon thistplatform :the! with defective children. and puts up a house worth $200 or Minneapolis Tribune said: “And so, I say emphatically if jt|$300, as he would have to in Canada. is impossibie for men. to live by Allso, letdthe '“;le follow ' the “"‘7 ny Heasflfl m Experlenm 's standards which civilization requires { Fules, and not sell except to actual of its women, then let us establish | Settlers; change the tax laws so' that Better: Fitted-to: Serve in man be married to as many wives as | $hall bear the greater burden of the Future Than.n Past, - he can support. Let these women |t3Xe8: and the ‘homesteader: go-al- not be the outcasts of society, and | MOst free. This, he claimed, would let their children be given the love |Pring in ’I[‘:al farmers, ‘l‘gt 1:‘"’ and care and opportunity that every | tramps. e ‘state should under- = Z take at once to build good roads buman being born .mto the w?rld and assess the cost to the land.” deserves. Would this not be infi- nitely better than our present system and its moral rottenness?” Nope, Katherine, one wife at the plenty. - You are on the right track| Under the new football rules, it is but your feet slip when you come |said. the quarterback is free to to offering a remedy for existing|search for mushrooms - during: the evils. game.—Minneapolis Journal. Extraordinary! Miss. Mary Meehan has been a teenth biennial report of Warden [domestic in a New York family con- A fleon;enflon' in reoenti‘yea:fi. m: ::;‘i;”:!f::;“l": ":‘:‘:m"m:;'; 3 . o o chiefly because, as is univers: ‘ad- lousne: Wolfer, Beltrami colxnt.y had .14 tmunnsly.for thirty-nine -years. - No mitted, it was- absolutely free yfrom this state, that it you do not elect prisoners in the penitentiary at Still: | cause assigned for the rash act.— | domination by any clique, faction, in- | & legislature ‘in favor of county option water, Itasca had 33, Clearwater and | Chicago Tribune. terest -or corporation, freé to express | & recommendation of the, governor will h AEEs of candidates and the adoption of & Promises like this may sound good total prison population of 706. Quite a Contract, if Made. platform. I received the unanimous dflflnsfi: campaign, but‘lnyn; are based ic-state | nomination of the convention for the | upon the will of the people-as exer: Next to the laborers, of whom Ahhn.nuh the ; democratic t. Ofioa! ot euerast adiT ot e ke bt e ettt there are 221, the farmers make.the convention repudiated cou.nl? oPton | sopc realizing fully the dutles and The' Republican declaration 1s as fol worst showing, 55 being convicts. [by an overwhelming . majority Mr. responsibilities “involved, and pledged i 2 ith 34, then“come | Gray sees fit to defy his party and | myself to the faithful discharge there-| ~ “The: Republican party ‘stands for Cooks comelnext with (S i yh e e byl ;| of, feeling justified in believing: that | the. strict. regulation and control of railroad men, 22; teamsters, 21;|to take up this ssue, presumably 18| the unanimous nomination: tendered | the liquor traffic. All the restrictive painters-19; clerks, 16; porters:14;|the hope of catching a few: county|'me was an evidence that my services | and regulative :provisions relating to d barbers, each '13;|option" votes. It is certain- that W carpentcrs.ant 4 2 i : oy | the state,. -~ | tne state are the.fruits of Republican butchers, engineers and firemen are U the time-his opening speec More than a year has passed since I The blican party represented by a dozen: each and|was .in the process of preparation| was called to the'officé of govermor | E The Minnesota Republican platform Rev. David Morgan- of St. Paul,| We have noticed in the daily and interested revision of tariff schedules is less liberally rewarded.” woods, between lectures, and - stayed | been‘reported correctly, for reporters publicans in favor of a tariff commis-| “In the first place, when this land{ They should speedily commence rifle tercommunication have raised the av- homesteads and not intending to| Voice. public life. To deserve the honor of Because of it men escape unscath- [lumber companies. July 28 last it nominated John'Lind: an open system of polygamy. Let a | the speculator, like in New Zealand, present high cost of living is a great New Pleasures in Football. Red Lake, one each. There was a — the will of the people in:the seleetion | DOt secure the passage of the law. s k had been satisfactory to the people of | the:same now-on' the statute books of there are ¢ight'bakers. Thereisbut [that:Mr. Day held . frequent copfer:| upon the ‘death iof my ‘brilliant’ and the county option vote to Mr. Day’s| d6eply as the one accorded me by my | ;.. tiis statement/with the langusge | ed:that at the proper time 1 would{- the representatives of the people, elected by the people, may in. their wisdom enact; and we pledge the party to a fair, full and free consid- eration of all legislation pertaining to the liquor traffic ‘and-its regulations.” This'is a straightforward ‘statement and may be understood byall. Com- i of the Democratic platform, which my opponent says justifies him in declar- ing for county option. “We hold ‘that ‘all questions affect- ing the moral, political and economic welfare of the people should be direct: ly subject ‘to" the ‘conscience and will of the' people.” Could the audacity of ignorance go farther’ than ‘tostate that the lan- guage 1 have justiquoted commits the Democratic party to county option? Add to this, the undisputed fact that the county option resolution was voted down in the committee on resolutions by'a vote of 18 to“3-and ‘when- offered on- the floor of the convention, the mover was refused a hearing, we may fairly infer the-real attitude' of the Democratic party on this' question. Under all the circumstances the sud- den conversion of the Democratic boss and ‘his nominee-to county option calls to mind the old verse: “The devil was sick, the devil a saiutl would be, The devil was well, the devil a saint was he.” Several' months ago 1 -met the friends of county option in their state convention and defined my posi- tion. If a county option bill is passed ‘while 1 am governor, 1 will approve and enforce it. My opponent cannot GO THE NEW SHORT LINE| (SOO LINE) % S MILWAUKEE - CHICACO DULUTH (TWIN PORTS) SUPERIOR [Continued on Page 3] HIDDEN DANGERS. Nature Gives Timely Warnings That No Bemidji Citizen Can Afford to Ignore. DANGER SIGNAL NO. 1 comes from the kidney secretions. ~ They will warn you when- the kidneys are sick.. Well kidneys excrete a clear, amberfluid. Sick kidneys send out a thin, pale and foamy, or a thick, red, illsmelling urine, full of sedi- ment and irregular of passage. DANGER SIGNAL MO. 2 comes from the back. Back pains, dull and heavy, or sharp and acute, tell you of sick kidneys and warn you of the approach of dropsy, diabetes and Bright’s ‘disease.. Doan’s Kidney Pills cure sick kidneys and cure them permanently. Here’s Bemidji proof: Mrs. L. Kane, 615 Fourth street, Bemidji, Minn,, says: “I was a sufferer from kidney complaint for a number of years. - Doan’s Kidney Pills have given me the greatest re- lief and I am willing-to recommend them, as I am confident anyone who uses the remedy will receive benefit. My trouble‘seemedto be of a dropsi- cal nature and I suffered much from rheumatic - pains': throughout " my ‘body. - My system . seemed to be filled with uric acid and I felt gener- ally miserable. I at last procured Doan’s Kidney: Pills at: the Owl Drug Store and - throughi . their use received marked benefit.” For -sale by all dealers. 'Price 50 cents... -Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, New ~York, sole agents: for the United: States, Remember: the name — Doan’s— fand take -no other. ““As represented-by its platform, the | Masujucturers of GAS. GASOLINE and STEAM ENGIRES: PULLEYS ~| MANGERS, *SHAFTING, CLUTCHES ad al’ PUNER “TRANSWISSION ‘SOPPLIES, direct 10 the ‘consumor it Largest Mackine Skop i the: West 4 MINNEAPOLIS STEEL’AND MACHINEPY CO: b MINNEAPOLIS, MINN. |Raw Furs . Raw. Furs Furs Repaired 1 Highest market price paid for Mink, 8kunk, ‘Coon'and Musk- ‘rats and -all kinds of Raw Furs. hip direct to us and Save Fur Dealer’s profit.: ‘'We use our'own skins that's why we can xpay the Mighest Market price for your skins. Sendus your horse and'cow hides to be made into Coats and Robes. One trial shipment of Raw Furs will convince. PIONEER FUR CO. 1183 Beech 8t1'8t, Paul, Minn. Expert Fur Repairing Reasonable Price Defects QUICKLY y GDRIIG"I'III of the Plastic TWIN PORTS EXPRESS DAILY ON AND AFTER OCTOBER 3, 1910 7100 p. m. Lv. DULUTH Ar. 7:30 p.m. Lv. SUPERIOR T:18 a. m. Ar. MILWAUKEE L 50 p. m. 9:00 a. m. Ar. CHICACO Lv. 7:00 p. m. A NEW TRAIN ELECTRIC LICHTED, VESTIBULED, VACUUM CLEANED There are a few choice lots left in Brandborg’s Addition = If you want onecall at once. Prop- erty is continually changing hands. If you want a nice home ranging from $900 to $5,500 I can supply you. — ~ H. E. REYNOLDS Building Contractor and Real Estate Broker Room 9, O’Leary-Bowser Building el Office Phone 23 House Phone 316 Bemidji, Minn. A Bunch of Grocery J Dollar Stretchers For 20¢ we can put on your table 40 cups of excellent coffee—rich, mellow and fragrant. - Chase & Sanborn brand has hosts of friends in Bem'dji. Won’t you try it? Dozens of the best bakings in the city today were produced from our White Jacket Flour. > Hundreds of people eat bread made from it every day. $1.75 a sack. = Just get acquainted with the merits of our ¥ Temco brand of Sweet Corn and Peas, 18c a % can and worth every cent of it too. It People would use more Olive Oil they would — have emaller doetor bills. Heinz Olive Oil keeps the skin clean becauss 1t keeps the blood pure. $1.285 per quart can. Our Premium Brand Creamery Butter is the finest butter you can put on your table. Di- rect from the creamery three times a week. 356c a pound. Each ot these items goes into your house with our guarantee behind it, and if it isn’t just what we claim for it you can get your money back: Roe & Markusen ~ The Quality Crocers Phone 209 ’ Phone 2@1’