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e Don’t Get Run Down. Weak and miserable. If you have Kidney or Bladder trouble, Dull head paios, D Nervousn Pains in the back teel tired all over. et a package of Mother Gray's Austratian-Leaf, the pleasant herb cur 1t never falls. We have many testi- monials from grateful people who haue used this wonderful remedy. As a regulator it has no equal .\>lf‘(&|r l\il%mrr Gl‘:)’l’ Auasli trallan-Leaf at Druggists or sent by m for 50 ets. Sampie FREE. Address, The Mother Gray Co.. Le Roy. N. Y. TOM SMART DRAY AND TRANSFER SAFE AND PIANO MOVING Aesidence Phone 58 618 Amerlca Ave. Office Phone 12 EW PUBLIC LIBRARY Open daily, except Sunday and Mon- dayll to12a.m., 1to 6 p.m., 7 t0 9 p. m. Snuday 3 to 6 p. m. Monday 7to 9 p. m. BEATRICE MILLS, Librarian. T. BEAUDETTE Merchant Tailor Ladies’ and Gents' Suits to Order. French Dry Cleaning, Pressing and Repairing a Specialty. 315 Beltrami Avenue M. MALZAXHN & CO. * REAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE FARM!LOANS, RENTALS FARMS AND CITY PROPERTIES 407 Minn. Ave. Bemidji, Minn E: : ; o NNIW "SITOdVANNIW ¥ 'OD AJL3NIHOVW ANV 1334S SITOCAVANNIA 5 90,4 91z ur doys aun(IDIY 990407 ¥ ] 23Wnsu0d Ay} O} JO0UP 'S3[1JANS NOISSIWSNYHL 104 1% PuB SIHILATD ‘OHILIVHS 'SHIONVH 37104 'SINIOND A¥ILS FuB 3N{108YD ‘S¥D ¥ Jo 520 o0 fmunpy HORSES We are ready at all times to fill your horse requiremeants and make a special feature of handling the logging trade. Fill your wants at the big Stock Yards market where a large swek is always or hand and where the best prevail for good stock. S0. ST. PAUL HORSE GO0, $0. ST. PAUL, MINN. “The House With a Horse Reputation.” Leave your orders for seasoned Birch, Tam- arack or Jack Pine Wood with S. P. HAYTH Telephone 11 250,000 10-cent vackages o1 Scbastian Kneipp.s CORN and BUNION Plasters have been sold in the last ten days in the state of Minnesota. WHY! Because this wonderful Father Sebastian Kneipp’s Corn and Bun- ion Plaster cured and relieved all pain in six hours or one night. For sale in the city of Bemidji, Minn. Up=to=date Shoes at BEMIDJI SHOE HOUSE JAMES VAN PELT, Prop. Wholesale and Retail Father Raw Furs Raw Furs Furs Repaired Highest market price paid for Mink, Skunk, Coon and Musk- rats and all kinds of Raw Furs. Ship direct to us and Save Fur Dealer’s profit. We use our own skins that's why we can 1Pay the Highest Market price for your skins. Send us 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 8t:St. Paul, Minn. Expert Fur Repairing Reasonable Price F. M. FRITZ Naturalist Taxidermist Fur Dresser Mounting Game Heads, _Whole Animals, Birds, Fish, Fur Rugs and Horns Decorative and Scientific Taxidermy in all its branches All Work Guaranteed MOTH PROOF and First Class in Every Particular Bemidji ‘ Minnesota CONDEMNED MAN RESGUED BY MOB Virginian Was to Be Exe- cuted Next Month. CONVICTED OF MURDER Mountain Friends of Prisoner to the Number of Seventy-five Descend on Jail, Storm the Buil<ing and Carry Him Back to the Hills—Feared Bloodshed Will Follow Any Attempt at Recapture. Lovingeton, Va., Oct. 22.—Mountain friends of John Moore, under sentence to be electrocuted for the murder of Frank Howl, descended upon the Ncl- son county jail, stormed the building and rescued the prisoner. It is sup- posed he will be taken to the moun- tains and liberated. A crowd of seventy-five men from the mountain section of the country, where the crime was committed, pro- ceeded quietly through the town to the county jail. Admission was gained and the guards did not attempt re- sistance. The cell where Moore was locked up was soon found and he was taken out. Precautions had been taken by the determined mcb to prevent an alarm being spread. Almost as quietly as they had entered the town they left it and started back to the mountains. It was not until some hours after the rescue that the news spread and soon several deputy sheriffs were on their way into the mountains to try to re- arrest the murderer. It is feared that bloodshed wil! result from any at- tempt of the authorities to recaptuie the murderer. Moore was condemned to pay the death penalty by electrocution at Rich- mond on Nov. 25. He had been con- victed of having murdered Frank Howl in Nelson county last May. Many of the mountaineer friends of the condemned man believe him in- nocent of the crime. Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy has become famous for its cures of coughs, colds, croup and influenza. | Try it when in need. It contains no harmful substance and always gives prompt relief. Sold by Barker Drug Co. RAILROAD TO QUIT POLITICS President of Boston and Maine Prom- ises to Stop Lobby. Concord, N. H., Oct. 22.—The Bos- ton and Maine railroad will not inter- fere in the politics of the state here- after, according to President Charles S. Mellen, who addressed the Wono- lancet club on “The Political Sitnation in New Hampshire.” Mr. Mellen said of the future policy of the railroad in this state: “We will not interfere in any way with the election of members of the legislature or of other public officers. “We shall not give or offer to any public officer, directly or indirectly, any consideration which shall tend to influence him in the performance of his public duty. *“We shall do away with the lobby, in the sense in which that term is commonly used. We must, however, employ the ablest talent we can se- cure to present to the legislature our views upon pending legislation affect- ing our company.” It is in time of sudden mishap or accident that Chamberlain’s Lini- ment can be relied upon to take the place of the family doctor, who can- not always be found at the moment Then it is that Chamberlain’s Lini- ment is never found wanting. In cases of sprains, cuts, wounds and bruises Chamberlain’s Liniment takes out soreness and drives away the pain. Sold by Barker Drug Co. WILL START FROM CANARIES Another Aeronaut to Attempt Trip Across Atlantic. New York, Oct. 22.—The next at- tempt to cross the Atlantic in a bal- loon will probably be made on a west- ward course—the opposite direction trom that attempted by Wellman. The expedition will be that of Joseph Brucker, formerly of Chicago, who has been engaged for a year in the pre- liminary plans for his airship trip. Brucker's dirigible, the Suchard, is approaching completion at Munick. The entire equipment will be' shipped to the Canary islands at the end of the year and the start westward is scheduled to be made from Teneriffe next February. Brucker’s first scheme was to start from Cadiz. The adop- tion of Teneriffe as a starting point will save him 700 miles of travel over the ocean. Former G. A. R. Chaplain: Dead. Phoenix, Ariz., Oct. 22.—Rev. Win- field Scott, former national chaplain of the Grand Army of the Republic. | died at his home in Scottdale, near here, following an aperation. —m— SPANISH WAR RELIC IS SOLD Mexico Acquires Collier Used by Dewey in Manila Bay. Seattle, Oct. 22.—The old steamer Zafiro, which carried the coal supply for the American fleet at the battle of Manila bay, has been sold to the Mexi- can government, a bill of sale made out to Mexican officials having been deposited in escrow by the collier’s owner, J. W. Zeeve of Seattle. The purchase price has not been given out, but it is believed to be comparatively small. Admiral Dewey acquired the Zafiro from her British owners in Hongkong just before sailing to attack the Span ish fleet. He needed a cargo of coal and the owners refused to part with it unless the collier was taken. Under the urgency of the occasion Admiral Dewey consented and bought the Zafiro and her cargo for $150,000. Hoarseness in a child subject to croup is a sure indication of the ap- proach of the disease. If Chamber- lain’s Cough Remedy is given at once or even after the croupy cough has appeared, it will prevent the at- tack. Contains no poison. Sold by Barker Drug Co. New York and the Surf. Few New Yorkers ever stop to think that one of that city’s chief attractions is the surt. Philadelphians must go fifty-six miles to the ocean. Though the folk of Baltimore and Washington live on tidewater, they must travel for surf bathing to the capes. Boston is the only other lurge town on the At- lantic seaboard besides New York that has the ocean at its back door. San Francisco and Los Angeles are the only Pacific coast cities within trolley ride of ocean beach. None of the Mex- ican gulf cities can be compared to New York as a seaside resort, and as to New Orleans, another Mecca of the pleasure seekers, that lies more than 100 wiles above the mouth of the Mis- sissippi. But, including Coney Island and Rockaway, a good many miles of Greater New York are bounded by the ocean. This fact, just to consider the money making side of it, means an enormous revenue to the metropolis from the inland parts of the country. It is an advantage other great world centers, such as London, Paris and Berlin, do not enjoy.—Argonaut. The Short Step Between. “l was on an ocean liner when skte ran on the rocks off the English coast some years ago.” said a traveling man. “and in the panic that ensued there is one incident that stands out in my memory, illustrating the slender thread between the tragic and the ridiculous We had a fellow on board who had managed to keep pretty well loaded all the way across, and when we struck the rocks he was in his usual condition. When everybody thought for sure we were going to the bottom he sat down at the piano in the saloon. and what do you suppose he began playing? ‘Home, Sweet Home." Some- body went to him and begged him to stop. Immediately he switched off from the doleful strains of the old song to the rollicking melody of ‘Down Went McGinty.! The absurdity of the thing seemed to strike everybody at once, and a general laugh followed. The tension was relieved, and there was good order after that.” The Restaurant Piccolo. Writing from Dresden. an American says: “There is at least one thing in a German restaurant for which one would look in vain in our country. That is the piccolo. You may think that I mean a musical instrument and that any orchestra in any country might have one of these. but you are wrong. =My piccolo, the one at the restaurant, is a human being. He is a boy twelve to fifteen years old, who assists the regular waiters. He wears the regulation waiter’s costume and looks funny in his spiketail coat. He is as solemn as a funeral. knows how to extract a tip and for the high priv- ilege of retaining his place and taking his first degree as a waiter must en- dure much abuse at the hands of the head waiter and his underlings. He is a funny little fellow. this piccolo, who because of his appearance could never prosper in our country.”—New York Tribune. Twice Declined. The invitation list of the governor general of Canada is made out strictly in accordance with precedent, but is not kept up to date always, the aid who has to send the invitations out— generally an Englishman or a Scotch- man—not always being au courant with changes on the list. The late Sir Antoine Dorion, chief justice of Que- bec, was once invited to some fune- tion, as was proper, but Lady Dorion, who was dead. was invited likewise. Sir Antoine accepted for himself, but declined for her ladyship, on the ground that she was in ‘the cemetery. The next year, however, the same mis- take was made, so the old judge wrote back to the aid-de-camp in waiting: “Sir Antoine Dorion accepts, etc.. but, her ladyship being still in St. Anne’s cemetery. Sir Antoine is com- pelled again to decline the invitation for her.” Your cough annoys you. Keep on hacking and tearing the delicate membranes of your throat if you want to be annoyed. But if you want relief, want to be cured, take Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy. Sold by Barker Drug Co. | less misrepresentation that is so prev- CROWD NEARLY ~ MOBS COLONEL New Yvork East Siders Anx- ious to See Roosevelt. POLICE HAVE HARD TIME Compelled to Fight a Way Through Twenty-five Thousand People Before Speaker Is Able to Enter the Hall. Man in Audience Heckles Former President by Constant Interruptions. New York, Oct. 22.—One of the most strenuous incidents of Colonel Roosevelt’s present stumping cam- paign occurred when he stopped at a hall in the upper East Side for a brief address. His appearance caused a riot, so enthusiastic were his auditors. Fully 25,000 persons had gathered in the narrow streets and through these the police had literally to fight a way for the colonel’s automobile. When he tried to alight for a dash into the hall the crowd surged about him and only a football rush, with fif- ty stalwart police reserves assisting, landed him inside the doors. There he THOMAS BAILEY FOR SHERIFF had to rest several minutes to regain : I hereby announce myself as a candidate for Sheriff}of Bel- fis breath before going on the plat- | trami County to be voted on at the general election Tuesday, On the way back to the automobile November, 8th 1910, an even larger crowd cheered and ap- plauded, but the police had been able to clear a narrow lane, through which he ran to the car. e A, Bustled and hustled as he was the |[fi from the persistent interruptions of a “THE LAND MEN" Thomas Bailey. man in an audience which he ad- dressed earlier in the evening. The man insisted on his right to ask ques- tions “as an American citizen.” “Put him out,” yelled the crowd, and for a moment the hall was full of noise. “I challenge you, Mr. Roosevelt,” persisted the interrupter, “I challenge you on your own record.” Roosevelt Asks for Hearing. “I want to hear that man,” shouted Mr. Roosevelt, waving his arms to command silence. “I recite to you, your first message to congress,” retorted the man on the floor. “You went to Pittsburg on the Fourth of July before that message and, speaking to 250,000 people, you told them that special legislation to control the trusts had become a neces- sity. And then in your first message to congress you said that the men who constructed our railroads across the continent, built up our commerce, our manufactures and our industries should not be tampered with at that time. You, the same colonel who is here tonight.” N “You have asked your question, now sit down,” said the colonel. The crowd wanted to hear more. “He has had his chance and now I shall answer him,” said the colonel. There was some jeer- ing, but the colonel demanded silence and got it. “I am delighted he asked the ques- tion and delighted to answer it,” said Mr. Roosevelt, “because it so well il- lustrates the absolutely conscience- Go to them for quick action if you want to sell or rent your property Farm Lands Bought and Sold ZIEGLER & ZIEGLER Co. SCHROEDER BLOCK Surprising Prices FOR MADE-T0-ORDER GLOTHES \ S?OUR choice of scores of stunning \ \' styles in suits, coats, skirts, dresses and capes, and 268 fabrics. We have them all on show. The garments wil be made to your individual measure by the American Ladies Tailoring Company, Chicago. They will be made under the personal direction of their tamous designer. Our fitter will take all the measure- ments. We wil see that you get all the man-tailored effects. We will ourselves guarantee the fit, the workmanship and materials. SEE THIS EXHIBIT This is a remarkable exhibit—these styles and fabrics of these famous Chicago tailors. Please don't fail to see it. If you see what you want we will quote you a surprising price—almost as low alent. The trouble with this gentle- man and others of his kind is that they do not draw anmy distinction between rendering honest service and swin- dling. We stand, ‘Harry’ Stimson stands, for the honest business man, be he big or little.” CALLS ROOSEVELT A LIAR Cornell Professor Bitterly Attacks Former President. Ithaca, N. Y., Oct. 22.—Twice in a speech here Professor E. H. Woodruft | as ready-made prices. Yet the garments will be made to your order. T. BEAUDETTE 315 BELTRAMI AVE. of Cornell university called Theodore Roosevelt a liar, once an “unmitigated liar.” His attack, made at a political rally over which he presided, threw the house into an uproar. Professor Woodruff opened up the Bellamy Storer episode, which Colo- nel Roosevelt only recently declared was closed. He charged that when the colonel denied sending Bellamy Storer to the Vatican he was “an uu- mitigated liar” and there were letters in his possession, said the professor, to bear him out. The uproar had bare- ly subsided when the professor took up his cudgels again. Roosevelt was twice a liar, he said, when he denjed that the late E. H. Harriman had sub- scribed to a' corruption fund to be used for Roosevelt’s election to the presidency. PITTSBURG FACES GAR‘STHIK‘E Men Vote for Walkout Unless Organi- zation Is Recognized. Pittsburg, Oct. 22.—By a vote of 1,024 to 325 the street car men have || voted to empower the executive com- mittee of their union to call a strike against the Pittsburg Street Rallways || company, if the company persists in what the men declare to be a discrimi. nation against union men. No action will ‘'be taken until conferences are Bad with officials of the company. Bandit Robs Eight Persons. Osage, Okla., Oct. 22.—A lene rob. ber held up and robbed eight persons in the Missouri, Kansas and Texas passenger station here. Later, he robbed the clerk of a local hotel. The || robber escaped. The amount of his booty is not. known. This village is in an isolated section of the state. | 30 City lots will be given away free. These lots are in a fine location. Watch this space and I will tell you the date. H. E. REYNOLDS Building Contractor and Re'all ;state Broker Room 9, O’Leary-Bowser Building J Office Phone 23 House Phone 316 Bemidji, Minn