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SPORTS OF POOOOO0OOO0OO©GO O @ Friday's Baseball Results, < ©POPPOO0C000066600 St. Paul, Aug. 12.—Sullivan’s home run in the first inning, which bounded away.from Delehanty de- cided yesterday’s score in favor of Kansas City in a 1 to 0 game. It was a pitcher’s battle from the start with a big shade to Maddox, who pitched his third straight two hit game. Fast fielding by both clubs featured. R. H E St. Paul ST 0 2 0 Kansas City . AR S I Check and Land; Maddox and O’Connor. Minneapolis, Aug. 12.—Minneapo- lis won the first of the series from Milwaukee yesterday in a long drawn out and hard fought contest, a pass a double and Leverett’s wild pitch enabled Milwaukee to tie the score in the ninth. Two errors by Nichol- son and Alitzers clout over the fence, scoring the winning run with none which counted for a single only, out. R. H E Minneapolis . . .5 9 2 Milwaukee 4 4 2 Waddell, Leverett and Smith; Mc- Glynn, Nicholson and Marshall. R. H E Columbus . .08 130 Toledo . ... 3 8 3 Lessard and Walsh; James, West and Carisch. R H E Louisville .5 6 3 Indianapolis . .. .7 15 1 Long and Hughes; Merz, Kimball and Schlitzer and Ritter. National League. R. H .E. Cincinnati . ........ e 8 0 Pittsburg . ........... 5 6 0 Suggs and McLean; Adams and Gibson. R. H. o Boston veesdB 7 3 Brooklyn . | 5 1 Brown and Kling; Burke, Schardt, Ragon and Erwin. R. H BE New York ............ 6 11 0 Philadelphia . ...... 0011 5 Mathewson and Meyers; Burns and Madden. Rain at Chicago. American Le: o First game— "R. H E Philadelphia . ........ a2 Boston . . .. 6 12 4 Bender and Thomas; Wood, Mc- Hale and Carrigan and Williams, Second game— R. H. E. Philadelphia . ........ 3 10 1 Bogton' & ii.srieie s dn 4 8 1 Krause, Danforth and Thomas; . | Collins, Pape, Hall and Carrigan. First game— R. H. E. Washington . ..... .3 11 0 New York ........ eh 4 L Johnson and Street; Quinn and Sweeney. Second game— R. H. E. Washington . ..... 3 5 0 New York ........ .2 7 1 Hughes and Ainsmith; Caldwell and Blair. STANDING OF THE CLUBS. American Association. w. L. Pet, Kansas City ....63 48 .568 Minneapolis . ..64 49 .566 Columbus .61 52 .540 St. Paul .55 57 .491 Milwaukee .54 61 .470 Toledo . . 60 .469 Indianapolis . ..53 62 .461 .| Louisville . 62 .451 Watloual Tesgue, - . Chicago . .60 37 619 Pittsburg . .62 39 614 New York ..59 10 .596 Philadelphia . ..57 44 564 St. Louis .56 45 .554 Cincinnati . .45 54 ' .455 Brooklyn ..38 62 .380 Boston . .......23 79 .225 L i Pet. Philadelphia . ..68 37 .648 Detroit . ......66 39 .629 Boston . . .55 53 514 New York ..54 53 505 Cleveland . ....53 53 .500 Chicago . ..51 52 .495 Washington . ..44 63 .411 Bte. LiOWIS o s ocsrn o BL 73 .298 An ordinary case of diarrhoea can, as a rule, be cured by a single dose of Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy. This remedy has no superior for bowel complains. For sale by Barker’s Drug Store. WILD YOUTH CLOSE T0 FIGHT FOR LIFE (Continued from first page). i called for an’ investigation®by the coroner and after a long and quite sensational hearing the coroner’s jury gave the verdict that Mrs. Beat- tie had been shot and killed with a shotgun in the hands of her husband, Henry Clay Beattie, Jr. The latter was arrested and lodged in Henrico county jail, where he spent his time unconcernedly, smoking cigarets and strumming on his guitar. The Binford girl was arrested as a possible accomplice. Since his im- prisonment Beattie stuck to his orig- inal story, but his position became serious when Paul Beattie, a poor relative of the accused, confessed that he had bought for the prisoner the shotgun with which the murder had been committed. The state has succeeded in forging a strong chain of circumstantial evi- dence against Beattie. this state are put to death by elec- trocution. Murderers in Seemed to Give Him a New Stomach “I suffered intensely after eating and no medicine or treatment I tried seemed to do any good,” writes H. M. Youngpeters, Editor of The Sun, Lake View, Ohio. “The first few doses of Chamberlain’s Stomach and Liver Tablets gave me surprising re- lief and the second bottle seemed to give me a new stomach and perfect- ly good health.” For sale by Bark- er’s Drug Store. Notice to Policy Holders. Notice is hereby given that on the 8th day of August, 1911, the North- western National Fire Insurance Co. has transferred its Bemidji agency from V. L. Ellis to Huffman, Harris and Reynolds, successors to The T. J. Miller Co. All endorsements, and renewals will be promptly executed by our duly authorized agents; who solicit your patronage. Signed, Northwestern National Fire Ins. Co. Notice. There is money in the treasury to pay order No. 136 or school district 49. Interest ceased with date of pub- lication. 1. M. Foster, Treasurer. FAIRY TALES FOR CHILDREN Lady Tennant Argues Little Ones Need Sustenance for Fancies. “Let. children have fairy tales,” urges Lady Tennant in the London Times, on the ground that early childhood does not need instruction 50 much as shape and sustenance for its own thoughts and fancies. It is through the old stories and the works of great writers, she thinks, that children can best be put in posses- sion of their freedom, which, in the words of Jean Paul Richter, makes them citizens of the divine city of Romance. Reading aloud to children she regards as of far-reaching im- portance. There is the instance of a child of five years who has been hearing with absorbing interest the story of Jo- seph and his brethern. Some days after he was telling his mother a story and with glowing eyes he said: “And dreaming, I saw a king’s throne, and the king’s servant stand- ing beside the throne.” It was not difficult to trace the source of the impression that had led him to clothe his thoughts in such language. Let the children have the old books read to them. There will come days when they will prefer to read an ex- cellent modern detective story, or to buy a magazine. We must remind ourselves that possibly they would be prigs if they did otherwise; nor should we, I think, on any account check reading of any kind. But in the early days when they are still being read to, when they are so young that it lies in the mother’s choice what they shall be hearing, then, I say, let them hear the old books, or, if the choice fall on books of later date, let them be works of great writers. Domestic Economy. Doctor—It’s twins. Proudpop—And yet they say two can live cheaper than one. Blessed Poverty. It is a good thing for us in our col- lege days that we were all poor.— Justice Holmes t6 ‘Harvard Alumni. A well known Des Moines woman after suffering miserably for two days from bowel complaint, was cured by one dose of Chamberlain’s Colie, Cholera and Diarrhoea Rem- edy. For sale by Barker's Drug Store. Gorner Third Street and Minnesofa Avenue WHY LOANS ARE NOT LENT Exchange is Not to Relieve the Nec- essitious and the Improvident. Why is it banking houses always “loan” their huge sums of money, never by any chance “lend” them? “Lend” is the true verb, while “loan” was exclusively the noun. How came it about that “to loan” has uniformly supplanted “to lend?” The purists make a great fuss about this. They insist that stupid and untaught financial world has foistered upon the language a sub- stantantive verb when no new verb was needed; when Ythe ancient and established usage was fixed in the signification of “to lend.” But prior to the modern development of busi- ness enterprise, when money was lent it was bestowed upon the bor- rower either for temporary use with- out compensation, as a mark of favor or patronage, or by the professional money lender who, taking advantage of persons in extremities of need, de- manded usurious interest. This An- glo-Saxon verb today retains its ancient connotation. When it was coined the productive powers of mon- ey were unknown, and the wealth or rich men was locked up for safe- ty and kept out of ‘the channels of commerce. Nowadays, by devices of credit and rapid intercommunication, it is kept constantly working in pro- ductive enterprises. Immense loans are made, no longer to relieve the necessitous and the improvident, but to stimulate industry and to enable the borrower as well as the loaner to reap a profit in his transactions. Money is “loaned” in this sense. It is not lent. A Solomon Foreman. Friend (to juror)—Why did you acquit the prisoner when he actually owned up to the theft? Juror— Well, you see, the foreman argued that a man who would steal would also lie about it, so we didn't want to convict an innocent man. Conquor Self-Distrust. Self-distrust is the cause of most of our failures. In the assurance of strength there is strength, and they are the weakest, however strong, who have no ‘faith in themselves or their powers.—Bovee. If. If only the truth was put on tomb- stones all the dead would be in heaven. IN THE MATTER OF APPLAUSE Clapping the Hands Is a Poor Meth- od of Showing It. There is a place and time for man- ual acclimation, but it is not always in season or appropriate. It is at best a poor way of manifesting ap- proval. A thoughtful person who has just listened to a fine performance of a symphony of a stirring apostrophe from an orator must feel that to bring one’s hands together repeated- ly and noisily is a lame and impotent method of showing how deeply one has been affected. But no better method, as yet, has been devised. As a matter of fact, as there are “thoughts that do often lie too deép for tears,” so there are emotions roused sometimes by the perform- ance of music which seems to us to transcend any possible outward dem- onstration: we are so deeply moved that we are silenced. This result is not to be confused—as may easily happen—with a failure in apprecia- tion. It is quite the contrary. Applause, spontaneous and un- forced, is a great inspiration to one who appears in public and through any medium is attempting to make his cause prevail or his message heard. The applause of a hired claque, the prolonged artificial en- thusiasm when a standard-bearer is nominated at a political convention, is a very different matter. Applanse means nothing if it is inspired by any other motive than appreciation and the desire to indicate cordial and disinterestéd approval. CAUGHT THE LION'S “BLIND”EYE Hypnotism a Failure As Proven to “Zoo” Visitor. A middle aged man stopped in front of one of the lion cages in the Central Park menagerie and gazed intently at the head of the old animal that was lying down near the iron bars, prefaces the New York Sun. | After keeping his eye on the inmate |of the cage for several minutes he made passes with his hand toward it. The lion's head gradually went down onto his pays and he appeared to be asleep. - “Great is science!” the visitor said. “The books say one can hypnotize any wild beast if near enough to | hold his eye while casting the spell, !and I believe I have succeeded.” “Hypnotize nothing! That old lion has been blind in his near eye for years,” the keeper said. For, Sprains, Strains or Lameness Always Keep a Bottle In your Stable HANFORD’S Balsam of Myrrh For Galls, Wire Cuts, Lameness, Strains, Bunches, Thrush, Old Sores, Nail Wounds, Foot Rot, Fistula, Bleeding, Etc. Etc. ‘Made Since 1846, Atk Anybody About It, Price 25c, 50c and $1.00 All Dealers g i, . New-Gash-Want-Rats ',-Cent-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 he charged. IVERY HOME HAS A WANT AD For Rent--For Sale--Exchange --Help Wanted--Work Wanted --Etc.--Etc. HELP WANTED WANTED AT ONCE—A man with & team for steady and agreeable work throughout the year. A residence and good barn will be furnished. Apply to phone 366. WANTED—Girl or woman for gen- eral house work on farm. Inquire at W. G. Schroeder’s Store. WANTED—Competent girl for gen- eral house work. $5.00 per week. 608 Bemidji avenue. WANTED—Girl for general house work. Inquire at 602 4th St. DUTCH AUCTION BEGINS MONDAY AFTERNOON AT 2 P.M. August 14th, 1911 We'’re Forced to Take This Radical Means of Disposing of Goods | & as Our Stock must be out of the way to lay new floor and make other changes A Souvenir Free To Ladies Present Monday 2 P. M. Dutch Auction Sale Will Be Held every Afternoon at 2 P. M. We’ll Cash Your Checks . We’ll Cash Your Checks TaerMAN €8 BEMIDJI - MINNESOTA [ Rsldonce Phone 58 WANTED—Dishwasher once. Rex Hotel. WANTED—Girls for kitchen work. Hotel Markham. wanted at FOR SALE " FOR SALE—Case stands and racks number 6, double news stand with rack for 8 full sized.cases. Good as new. Sell regularly at $3.76 We have 6 of these at $1.50 each. Bemidji Pioneer Publishing Co., Bemidji, Minn. FOR SALE—Good sound team of young, well broken horses of med- ium weight. Also buggy and har- ness. Good bargain. Address F. A. W, Pioneer Office, Bemidji, Minn. FOR SALE—New offering of lots at Riverside, on north bank Missis- sippi. Ask F. O. Perrin or A. G. Rutledge. FOR SALE—Rubber stamps. The Pioneer will procure any kind of a rubber stamp for you on short notice. FOR SALE—Job cases, triple cases, and lead and slug cases, 40c each. Pioneer Publishing Co, Bemidji. FOR RENT ———— Furnished rooms for rent.—Modern. 320 Minnesota Ave. Over Grottes ~Variety Store. FOR RENT—House at street. 511 Third George Ostrander. MISCELLANEQOUS POINT COMFORT—The finest sum- mer resort in Northern Minnesota. Lots for sale and cottages for rent. A. 0. Johnson, Turtle River, Minn, Dressmaking. Good work at reason- able prices. Mrs. -Robinson, 320 Minnesota Ave; upstairs; phone 285 BOUGHT AND SOLD—Second hand furniture. 0dd Fellows building, across from postoffice, phone 129. First class table board at 516 Be. midji Avenue. OM SMART DRAY AND TRANSFER SAFE AND PIANO MOVING 18 Amorica Ave. Offica Phons 12 T. BEAUDETTE Merchant Tailor Ladies’ and Gents' Suits to Order. French Dry Cleaning, Pressing and Repairing a Specialty. 315 Beltrami Avenue THE SPALDING EUROPE'N PLAN Duluth’s Largest and Best Hotel DULUTH MINNESOTA More than £100.000.00 recently expended on improvements. 250 rooms, 125 private ' baths, 60 sample rooms. Every modern convenience: Luxurlous and delightful restaurants and buffet, Flemish Koom, Palm Room. Men’s Gri “olonial Buffet : Magnificent lobby ard public rooms: Ballroom. banguet rooms and private dining rooms: Sun parlor and observa tory. Located in heart of business sec- tlon but overlooking the harbor and Lake Superior. Convenlent toféverything. One of the Great Hotels of the Northwast