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morrss . o L PO wespene MUCH APPENDICITIS IN BEMIDJI Many people in Remidji have chronic Ap- pendicitis and mistake it for stomach or bowel trouble. If you have wind or gas in the stomach or bowels, sour stomach or con- stipation, try simple buckthorn bark. gly- cerine etc., as compounded in Aldar- .. the new German Appendicitis remedy. A SINGLE DOSE will relieve you—you will be surprised at the QUICK action. E. N. French & Co.. Druggists. EW PUBLIC LIBRARY Open daily, except Sunday and Mon- dayllto12a.m., 1t0o 6 p.m., 7 to 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. Dry Cleaning, French Pressing and Repairing a Specialty. 315 Beltrami Avenue M. MALZAHN & CO. * REAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE FARM[LOANS, RENTALS FARMS AND CITY PROPERTIES 407 Minn. Ave. Bemidii, Minn HORSES ‘We are ready at all times to fill your horse requirements and make a special feature of handling the logging trade. Fill your wants at the big Stock Yards market where a large stock is always or: hand and where the best prices prevail for good stock . S0. ST. PAUL HORSE CO. S0. ST. PAUL, MINN. ““The House With a Horse Reputation.” WOOD'! Leave your orders for seasoned Birch, Tam- arack or Jack Pine Wood with S. P. HAYTH Telephone 11 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 pay 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 conviace. PIONEER FUR CO. 1183 Beech St::St. Paul, Minn. Expert Fur Repairing Reasonable Price The Snug Fitting Coat Collar— It’s Clothcraft! HE coat collar is one of the things that make a hit with you when you wear Clothcraft. [t sits up to your collar as if molded to it. But it is only one of the Clothcraft points of superi- ority. There’s the style— the shape—the non-breakable coat front—the non-sagging pockets. And there’s the guaranty of the maker—and ourselves —that Clothcraft is pure All- Wool—nothing else. Yet you get your Cloth- craft suit at $10 to $25. Wouldn'’t it be foolish to take a chance with ordinary clothes—when you can get Clothcraft with the guaranty —for the same or less. Prgy, CA%othcrafi'l ‘Wool Clothes d to $25 S IN THE AR LESS THAN TWO DAYS Hawley and Post Landed on Afternoon of 19th. FAR FROM CIVILIZATION Spent Four Nights Out Doors, With the Ground for a Bed and Their Army Blankets for a Covering. Made 1,355 miles, at an Average of About Thirty-five Miles an Hour. Chicoutimi, Que., Oct. 28.—Alan R. Hawley and Augustus Post, the new holders of the world’s balloon cham- pionship, show little ill effects from the thrilling experiences which have been theirs since they left St. Louis ten days ago in the America II. They were fatigued, but the trip had been tboroughly worth while, they said. “Tell our friends that we are well and very happy,” was the message which they sent from their rooms in the hotel. The two aeronauts reached here at 10 p. m. and retired shortly before midnight—as soon after their arrival as they could get away from the wel- coming and congratulating citizens They had driven forty miles over rough country from St. Ambroise and were “tired to the bone,” as one of them expressed it. A flood of tele- graphic messages from the United States which awaited them on their arrival went unanswered, and, for the most part, unread. Both airmen agreed that the most welcome sight in all Chicoutimi on their arrival was the bathtub in their rooms at the hotel. which they had been denied for nine days, every one of which had been spent arduously. Four of the nights had been passed out of doors, with the hard ground for a bed and their army blankets for a covering. Their balloon, the America IIL, is still at Lake du Banc de Sable, this being the title of the township where they landed. It is believed that Jo- seph Pednaud and Joseph Simard, the two trappers who brought the balloon- ists in a bark canoe to St. Ambroise, will go back and see what can be done to get the big bag from its cache on the side of the mountain to the rail- road here. Messrs. Hawley and Post landed about forty-six hours after their de- parture from St. Louis. The balloon basket touched earth at 3:35 o'clock on the afterncon of the 19th. They probably flew, in all, about 1,600 miles, although the direct dis- tance between the two points, on which the international race is decid- ed, is only 1 miles. This would make their average rate of progress; about thirty-five miles an hour. WARM WELCOME PLANNED New York Preparing to Greet Hawley and Post. New York, Oct. 28.—A grand wel- come home is being planned for Alan R. Hawley and Augustus Post, the bal- loonists who broke all records in the America II, who for several days were either thought to be drowned in one of the Great Lakes or perished in the wilds of Canada. Cortlandt Field Bishop, president of the Aero Club of America, said: “The splendid feat of these men de- serves the welcome we will give them. It will be the largest celebration of its kind New York or any other place in the country has ever seen. A big din- ner is already being arranged. Every aviator now in the city will remain to welcome the returning champions of the air.” UNDERGOES AN OPERATION Elmyra Deitz Suffered From Abscess Caused by Bullet. Ashland, Wis, Oet. 28—Elmyra Deitz, daughter of John F. Deitz of Cameron dam, who was wounded by a posse under Sheriff Madden, who fired on her and her brothers near Winter, Wis., a few weeks ago, under- went an operation at St. Joseph’s hos- pital. The operation was made nec- essary by an abscess that had formed in the wound in the girl’s back. The surgeons, following the opera- tion, said that they had found the poison due to the bullet, which had perforated one of the vertebrae of the spinal column. The wound was drained and dressed. The chief dan- ger, it was said, was that the inflam- mation might extend into the spine and cause a grave complication. SENATOR WEEPS IN COURT Alleged Grafter Breaks Down as Coun- sel Pleads. Springfield, 111, Oct. 28.—While At- torney Emery Andrews of Mattoon was making an appeal to the jury in be- half of the defendants in the Pember- ton-Clark legislative conspiracy case Senator Pemberton broke down amnd tears streamed down his cheeks. Andrews pictured the defendants as honorable men who had reached the turning point in their lives before the finger of suspicion had ever been pointed at them and declared the only testimony tending to prove the state’s case was that given bp perjurers ant self-confessed bribers. This was a luxury | Technically Gentlemen. There is only one strictly technical definition of gentleman—a man entitled to bear coat armor. In the seven- teenth and eighteenth centuries it was used with this significance, and the secondhand booistall bunter will oc- casionally find *So-and-so. ‘*‘gentle- man,” written on dusty and stained fly leaves. But this definition has dropped out, for now any one may use arms who chooses to pay for an arms li- cense. The inland revenue takes your guinea or two guineas without inquir- ing as to your right to bear arms. And, though the heralds’ college has the right to grant arms to those who can afford to pay the necessary fees, it cannot prevent people from using arms to which they have no right.— London Chronicle. Mzde Her Pay Well. A certain queen of Ilanover once upon a time when traveling stopped at an inn called the Golden Goose. She remained two days to rest herself and retinue and receive such entertain- ment as was needed and for the same was charged 300 thalers. On her de- parture the landlord besought her with obsequious deference to favor him with her patronage on her return. “If you desire that, my dear man,” replied her majesty., *you must not again take me for your sign.” Very *“Respectful.” The villagers used to make love in a solid, stolid fashion. *“I’'m sure, m’m.* said a servant to her mistress, *nobody could have had u respectfuler young man nor what Thomas has been to me. We've been courting two years come Martlemas: nd he'’s never yet offered to kiss me!"—From *“Recollections of a Yorkshire Village,” by J. 8. Fletcher. A Similarity. “He’s quite wealthy and prominent now," said Mrs. Starvem, *“and they say he rose from nothing.” “Well, well!™ remarked Mr. Border. “That's just what I rose from—at the breakfast table this morning.” An Anecdote of Bach. The Duke of Saxe-Weimar once in- vited John Sebastian Bach, the Nestor of German music, to attend a dinner at the palace. Before the guests sat down to the feast Bach was asked to give an improvisation. The composer seated himself at the harpsichord and straightway forgot all about: dinner and everything else. He played so long that at last the duke touched his shoul- der and said. “We are very much oblized, master, but we must not let the soup get cold.” Accuracy | Experience l Stock Bach sprang to his feet and followed | the duke to the dining room without uttering a word. But he was scarcely seated when he sprang up, rushed back to the instrument like one demented. struck a few chords and returned to the dining room. evidently feeling much better. “I beg your pardon, your highness.”” he said, “‘but you interrupt- ed me in a series of chords and arpeg- gios on the dominant seventh, and 1 ~ould not fee]l at ease until they were sesolved into the tonie. It is as if you had snatched a glass of water from the lips of a man dying of thirst. Now 1 have drunk the glass out and am content.” A Lawyer’s Paradise. Naples. under Spanish rule in the eighteenth century, was overrun with, lawyers. Of their profusion Joseph Addison had this to say: “It is incredible how great a multi- tude of retainers to the law there are at Naples. It is commonly said that when Innocent XI. had desired the Marquis of Campio to furnish him with 30,000 heaéd of swine the mar- quis answered him that for his swine he could not spare them, but if his boliness had occasion for 30,000 law- yers he had them at his service.” It seems to have been a golden age for lawyers, for. as the author says, “there are very few persons of con- sideration who have not a cause de- pending, for when a Neapolitan has nothing else to do he generally shuts bhimself up in his closet and falls a tumbling over his papers to see if he can start a lawsuit and plague his neighbors.” —Dietetic and Hygienic Ga- zette. COAL I am ready to receive your orders for your winter’s coal and you can save money by buying coal early of C. E. BATTLES 413-415 Beltrami Ave. Full Line of Hardware, Stoves and Sporting Goods Phone 21 Goffee Is Going Up The demand for gcod coffee has increased so f_. much during the past few montbs that pro- ~ duction has not kept pace with 1t. As a result prices jare] advancing all along the line,| SEAL BRAND, the 40 cent Coffee that is being usedgby [so§ many people in Be- midji, is gaining in populanty axd the price is the same on it as {when it first was put on the market. It takes more skill now to keep any coffee up to a high standard, but the Chase & Sanborn people, producers of Seal Brand, are doing it and that is the one reason for its growing popularity. Always the same—smooth, rich and satis- fying. Let us send you a pound, ground to order on our electric mill. Roe& Markusen The Quality Grocers Phone 206 Phone 207 I know that absolute Accuracy, I wide experience and a compre= Al hensive drug stock are absolutely essential to the perfect despensing K that of prescriptions. some drugs decrease in therapeutic value, while others gain in strength if allowed to age. That 1s why I buy such preparations which I do not myself compound in quantities calculated to guard against old stock, AND I do not stock my prescription case with the products of one manufactoring house, but buy the best from the leading houses. COLD SODA HOT SODA Geo. A. Hanson A. D. S. DRUG STORE Postoffice Corner Bemidji, Minn. The Daily Pioneer 10c per Week JTHE “STOTT BRIQUET” is a solid chunk of pure anthracite screenings securely welded together by a newly discovered process THE «STOTT BRIQUET” is about two inches square--it is the easiest fuel to handle, the best in heat giving results Money Saved "In Your Coal Bill If You Use StoTT BRIQUETS THE IDEAL ECONOMY FUEL Used in open grates, in furnaces, surface burning stoves, kitchen ranges, laundry stoves and hot water heaters, they ESTABLISH A NEW STANDARD OF FUEL VALUE. L4 Ask your fuel dealer about Stoit Briquels---if he does not handle them, write us and we will direct you to a dealer who can supply you. Be Sure to get Directions for burning from the Stott Booklet--at your dealer’s Stott Briquet Co Superior, Wisconsin