Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
SPORTS OF THE POPPPPOOOPOOOODO © Monday’s Baseball Results. ¢ PORCRCR R R R R R R R R CRORCR ) Toledo, Aug. 29.—Four hits in a row in the tenth sent across three runs for Minneapolis, winning a pitchers’ duel between Cavet and James yesterday. The Minneapolis pitcher allowed but two hits, while but three were made off James before the tenth. Cavet secured three singles. R H B Toledo . .0 2 3 Minneapolis e 3 7 2 James and Carisch; Cavet and Ow- ens. R. H. O Indianapolis . .6 12 3 Kansas City . ] 8 2 Link and Ritter; Powell, Altrock and O'Connor. National gne. Philadelphia, . 29.—Chicago won yesterday’s game by batting Al- exander’s delivery hard in the sixth and eighth innings. The game was twice stopped by Umpire Klem, who declared that Brown and Needham of Chicago complained that a spectator in the grandstand was using insult- ing remarks toward Brown. The po- lice refused to take action, and an official of the home club fearing that Klem would forfeit the game, ordered the man to be put out of the park. R. H E. Philadelphia 4 7 1 Chicago . .8 12 2 Alexander, Burns and Spencer, Carter; Brown and Needham. R. H B Brooklyn . ; 3 3 Cincinnati .2 9 1 Rucker and Erwin; Fromme, Ga- ser and McLean, Clarke. American Leagu o B St. Louis ..... . 5 1 New York eneod 6 0 Curry, Hamilton and Stephens; Caldwell and Sweeney, Williams. Chicago, Aug. 29.—Pape held Chi- cago to four hits while his team- mates bunched their hits off the lo- cals’ pitchers, and with the assist- ance of bases on balls and errors, won the second game of the farewell series. Outfielder Henricksen of the Bos- ton team, who was hurt yesterday, left last night for his home. R. H BE Chicago 1 4 3 Boston ceed 8 1 Baker, Hovlik, Benz and Block, Sullivan; Pape and Carrigan. Detroit, Aug. 29.—Philadelphia slaughtered Donovan and Willett and defeated Detroit in a featureless game. R. H E. Detroit ... 3 10 32 Philadelphia . .......12 138 : 4 Donovan, Willet, Covington and Stanage; Plank and Thomas. BTANDING OF THE CLUBS. National League. L. Pet. New York 44 .619 Chicago ¥ 43 .609 Pittsburg . . 48 .586 Philadelphia . 51 .B57 St. Louis ...... 55 .557 Cincinnati . 61 .465 Brooklyn . 69 .395 Boston . ..... 87 .250 American League. w. L. Pet. Philadelphia . ..77 41 .652 Detroit 48 .604 Boston . 57 .521 New York 59 .508 Cleveland 58 -504 Chicago . 60 .500 ‘Washington . ..50 70 417 St. Louis ......35 84 .294 L. Pet. Minneapolis 56 .579 Columbus e 59 .553 Kansas City .... 60 .538 Indianapolis . 67 489 St. Paul .... 67 .485 Milwaukee 67 .485 Toledo . ..ivoivs 72 .455 Louisville 5 .427 NO BOXING RULES IN EFFECT New York Law Now Makes Physical Fitness Imperative. New York, Aug. 29.—The regula- tions drawn up by the newly or- ganized State Boxing Commission to govern boxing contests in New York State went into effect today. The rules are of the most stringent char- acter and are calculated to place the sport on a higher plane than it has ever been before. Physical fitness of the participants in boxing bouts is to be insisted upon, betting is to be discouraged, liquors must nov be sold in places where contests are in progress, and care is to be exercised in the selection of club officials. Sun- day. exhibitions cannot be held un- der the new rules, and no person under eighteen years of age is to be allowed to participate in any boxing contest. No decisions are to be ren- dered except in amateur tourna- ments held under the rules of the Amateur Athletic Union. Baldwin vs. Ritchie. San Francisco, Cal, Aug. 29.— Matty Baldwin and Willie Ritchie have finished training for their fight here tomorrow night, The bout will take place at Coffroth’s club and will be a twenty-round affair. REGRETS HE TRADED KNIGHT Connle Mack Says He Is Sorry he Traded Clever Infielder for the Veteran Jimmy Collins. ‘When Connle Mack, manager of the world’s champions, allows a ball play- er to go after he has done service with the White Elephants it s a rare occurrence for that player to show anything like big league form there- after. Bris Lord drifted out and ‘came back” with Cleveland. Connie then realized that there was lots in Bris and landed him in a trade with Me- Guire. Of them all, there is only one that Connie Mack ever expressed regret at losing. Jack Knight of. the High- landers is this player. Connie taught Jack all he knew, brought him along Jack Knight. and made a finished player of him, only to part with him in a desperate attempt to bring the 1907 pennant to this city. “The only young ball player I ever regretted parting with was Jack Knight,” said Connie, when Jack was allowed to go to Boston for Jimmy Collins. Even after the local boy was shift- ed to the minor league by the Red .| Box Connie insisted that Jack would be back in the big show and be a star. As Connie predicted, Jack be- came a sta: of the first magnitude with the New York .Americans, and seems due to have the best year in his career, POOOOOOOOOOOOO OO © BASEBALL NOTES. © POOOOOPOOOOOOO OO ‘rne children of Washington have caught more files than its baseball team has. J. J. Callahan resents the imputa- tion that it takes a winning club to make him play his best ball. Pitcher Joe Hovlik, bought by the White Sox from Peoria, once had a trial with Washington, but was sent back. Jack Bliss, who is doing the heavy backstopping for the Cardinals in the abgence of Manager Bresnahan, is do- Ing creditable work. J. Ed. Grillo, Washington critic, is authority for the statement Manager Clarke Grifith of the Reds will lead the Browns next year. McGraw has a rule that no member of his team shall hit at the first ball pitched. Murray forgot the other day, and it cost him $20 for the little slip. The New York American league pall club announced that Pltcher Brockett had been released uncond!- tionally to the Rochester Eastern league club. Connle Mack thinks he 18 lucky if he can get Chief Bender to pitch a good game every fifth day. The In- dlan is not a glutton for work, like Jack Coombs. The National commission has fined the Brooklyn club $50 for permitting Pitcher Ragon to play in an exhibi- tion game with the independent team at Long Branch, N. J. George Davis, former White Sox ptar and last year manager of the Des Moines club, has given up the “won- derful game” at last. He_ has enter- ed business in New York. Johnny McGraw tried to farm out Henry Groh, the Decatur inflelder, to the Buffalo club, but Boston refused to walve on the youngster and the Giants may have to keep him. Keene, the youngster Fred Clarke tried out on first, did not look like & Konetchy or a Hal Chase, but he might have been a bit nervous to break into the limelight so suddenly. Victor Safer has developed into the sensation of the league as a first-sack- er. He already has his manager beat- en in digging up the hard bounders out of the dirt, and for making fancy stops that are several feet out of line. Cuts and bruises may be healed in about one-third the time required by the usual treatment by applying Chamberlain’s Liniment. It is an an- tiseptic and causes such injuries to heal without maturation. .This lini- ment also relieves soreness of the muscles and rheumatic pains. For sale by Barker’s Drug Store. DUMAS PIPE DREAM INSULT’ SAYS JANES (Continued from first page). should be printed,” sald Mr. Janes, ‘“creating the impression that a man can be sent to the penitentiary as a mere fneident in politics. It isn’t fair to an accused man and it isn’t fair to the state. The great danger lies in the prejudice that such publications might cause in the minds of men who are to serve as jurymen.” Mr. Janes admitted that Behan would come to Bemidji to-give addi- tional testimony and that the wound- ed bandit is much improved in health. Wanted—Good girl for general housework. Mrs. H. W. Bailey. A well known Des Moines woman after suffering miserably for two days from bowel complaint, was cured by one dose of Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Rem- edy. For sale by Barker's Drug Store. POOPROPORRPOOOOG®EC @ Plays and Players. * @ A R R R RO RO R R R Ol May Robson will have a new play the coming season. Elsie Ferguson will begin her tour in October in “Dolly Madison.” Henry Miller has made a hit in San Francisco with “The End of the Bridge.” A. H. Woods is to have a new thea- ter in New York to be called after Julian Eltings. Zangwill's play, in which Margaret Anglin is to appear later, is callea “The Next Religion.” Henry E. Dixey has been engaged for “The Greyhound,” by Paul Arm- strong and Wilson Mizner. Liebler & Company have engaged Maud Granger to support Margaret Anglin in “Green Stockings.” “The Spendthrift,” with Thais Ma- grane in the part she created, is hav- ing a revival in Los Angeles. “The Arab,” by Edgar Selwyn, will be produced without a star, the au- thor himself playing the principal role. Fanchon Thompson, the operatic prima donna, is to be featured in the leading role of “The Wife Hunters.” Hal Forde, an English comsdian, has been engaged by Joseph Gaites for a leading comedy role with Kitty Gordon. Fay Templeton will be the Little Buttercup in the forthcoming revi- val of “Pinafere” at New York dur- ing the coming week. Otis Skinner has been selected for the role of the beggar in “Kismet,” the big spectacular oriental romance by Edward Knoblauch, which had such a success in London. Franz Lehar, composer of “The Merry Widow,” had. an operetta called “The Fun Marriage” produced in Buremberg, but it is said to have proved a complete disappointment. W. H. Turner, who has starred in “David Harum,” “Father and the Boys” and other plays, has been en- gaged for the part of Hill Avery, the old offender in “Alias Jimmy Valen- tine.” Emily Ann Wellman, who plays the role of the wife in Louis Mann’s new play, “Elevating a Husband,” first attracted attention by her work with Cyril Scott in “The Prince Chap.” According to late announcements, Robert T.. Haines has decided to go into vaudeville in “The Coward,” a playlet by Mr. Haines and George H. Broadhurst. He will have a com- pany of four. It has been decided that Mme. Na- zimova will make her first appear- ance as a star under the management of Charles Frohman, Sept. 21, in “The Other Mary,” a new drama by Algernon Boyesen, a son of the late Prof. Boyesen of Columbia Univer- sity. The case will include Brandon Tynan, Malcolm Williams, Frank Goldsmith, William Hasson, Lucia Moore and Grace Reals. Wanted—Good girl for general housework. Mrs. H. W. Bailey. ORIGINALLY COLOR BEARERS Word Formed on the Idea of the Dis- play of Insignia, Ensign is a word formed on the idea of the display of insignia, badge or device and was formerly much used where we now employ the word colors. The company officers in a | reginment who were, until late years, termed ensigns were, at a still earlier period, more correctly termed “ensign bearers.” Tender Feet. When the feet become tender from excessive use so that standing or walking is an affliction, a footbath of strong salt water will prove bene- ficial. Bathing the soles of the feet and ankles with toilet water is re- freshing. Go to Him for Farm Loans JOHN G. ZIEGLER “THE LAND MAN" Fire-- Life—-IIN SUR A N C E-—Accident REAL ESTATE IN ALL ITS BRANCHES FARM LANDS BOUCHT AND SOLD Office--0dd Fellows Buliding For tender face and neck after shaving, “for pimples, black heads, dandruff or any skin or scalp disease use ZEMO and ZEMO SOAP. ZEMO is guaranteed to relieve all soreness and itching. The soap is part of the treatment,—best for all toilet purposes. Sold by druggists everywhere and in Bemidji by the City Drug Store. COMPOSITION OF PRECIOUS GEMS Opalescence of Moonstone Caused By Planes of Separation in Stone, The iridescernce of the opal is due to the amount of water in its com- position and contraction fissures in the stone, but similar characteristics are found in other stones wherg films cause diffraction. The opalescence of the moonstone is caused by enor- mous number of planes of separation in the stone, light being totally re- flected from these planes. Foundation Tmportant. Every triumph of life leads back by various paths to earlier prepara- tion.—Blake. 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. THE SPALDING EUROPEAN PLAN Dulut’s Largest and Hest Hotel DULUTH MINNESOTA More than £100,000.00 recently expended on improvements. 250 rooms. 125 private Daths. 60 sample Tooms. Evérs modern convenience: Lnxurious and delightful restaurants and b lemish_Room, Palm Room, Men's Grill, Colonlal Buffet: Magnificent lobby ard public rooms: Ballroom. banguet rooms and private { dining rooms: Sun' parlor and observa: tors. Located in heart of business sec- tion but overlooking the harbor and Lake Superior. Convenlent to eversthing. One of the Great:Hotels of the Northwest Your Gem Wants can be Supplied Her We Have the Largest and Best Selected Stock in Northern Minnesota. You are offered the advantage of QUALI ASSORTMENT N2 PRICE Quality, Assortment, Price = Swz We carry in Diamonds the better and higher grades. Jagers, Wesseltons, Crystals, and Silver —— — Gapes are to befound in_our stock. 7~ SN PEARLS, in' Sweet Water. // NN Mississippi, Boutonetc. OPALS /// |\\\\ in Hungarian, Austrian, and £ MeRican Fancies. Oriental Garnets, Sapphires, Amethyist, and Rubies. Semi precious stones we buy Direct from the Importers in quantities which enables ns to procure the finest grades. \ In Diamonds we carry all sizes from 1-64 of a carat to 81-2. Rubiesfrom1-16 to 5 carat. Opals, Garnets, Sapphires, Amethyist, To- paz, Matrix, Amatris, Lapis, Moonstone, Blood stone, Agates, Sardoniz, Thompson- ite, Isle Royal Green Stone, and a great variety of Imita- tion Stones, many of these we cut and polish in our own work- shop. .. Diamonds we buy dizect fromthe Cutters and Imporfers in origi- nal packets and in the same way as the jobbers and larger Jewelers in the big cities which is about 20 per cent less in price than the regular wholesale price. p: PEARLS we procure from the. clamers, pearls are largely found in the Mississippi River and its Iribufaries, many- fine specimens being found in the vicinity of Bemidji. Semi-precious stones, we buy in large quantities direct from the Imporfers same as the large Manufacturers most of these gocds were bought before the recent advance and our prices are corre- spondingly low. We hav= not the heavy expensesso common to the Jewelers in the /arge cities which enables us 1o sell on a small margin of profit. WE WILL BE PLEASED TO HAVE YOU VIEW OUR DISPLAY GEO. T. BAKER & CO. MANUFACTURINCG JEWELERS " 116 Third Street . Near the Lake Subscrite for The Pioneer Come On All You “School Kids Dainty School Blotters Free at the Pioneer Supply Store We are going to keep evel'y'thing you want and may need in the s:ho I supply-line. You don't have 1o go to-a dozen different places to get a'l the teacher asks yah to get. All you have to do is come to the Pioneer Supply Store on Fourth street back of. the Secarity State Bank and jask for what you want. Here js th+ picture of the store. Walk right in. Fis Tl Thumb Tacks Pencil Boxes Prangs Paints ‘Compasses Penny Pencils Crayola Dictionaries De Voe’s Paint |Tablets Paint Gups 2 for 5¢ Pencils{Art Gum Here’s the Best Thing We Have to Offer You The Royal Line of Tablets All made from good ink paper. They come in regular tablet size, composition book size, note book size, rpe'ling tablet rize and various other ftyles and sizes. We have some 1n one of the windows. 1In the other window we have displayed the hig examination paper tablet for the older children under the rame of “The Pioneer Special” with a picture of Chief Bemdji on the cover. This tablet we made ourselves especially for the school trade and it sells for 10 cents. Bemidji Pionser School Supply Store Security State Bank Building V1 00— Every scheol boy or girl who comes to this store and asks for a “Free Blotter” will he given one whether he buys or not * | Scissors Paint Brushes Drawing Paper Gomposition Books Erasers Rulers Crayons Skeich Boards Bemidji, Minn. = | WANTED—Two girls .HANFORD’S Balsam of Myrrh For Galls, Wire Serwis, Bamehe Thrush, Old Sores, Nail Wounds, Foot Rot Fistula, Bleeding, Etc. Etc. Made Since 1846, Atk Anbod) About It. . Price 25c, 50c and $1.00 All Dealers e.gftirinis oo Now-Gash-Want-Rate ',-Cent-a-Word ‘Where cash accompanies copy we will publish all “Want Ads” for half- cent a word per insertion. Where zash does mot accompany copy the regular rate of one ceuta word will he charged. EVERY HOME HAS A WANT AD For Rent--For Sale--Exchange --Help Wanted--Work Wanted ~-Etc.--Etc. HELP WANTED WANTED—Cook wanted for party of four men on Red Lake survey. Good salary to right man. Work to last until Nov. 1st. Apply C. J. Emerson, Rex Hotel. WANTED—Competent girl for gen- eral housework. Inquire at Wm. McCusick's Store. Phone No. 1. WANTED—Girl or woman for gen- eral house work on farm. Inquire at W. G. Schroeder's Store. WANTED—Good girl for general housework. Mrs. H. W. Bailey. for kitchen work. Apply Hotel Markham. WANTED—Girl for general house work. Inquire at 602 4th St. WANTED—Girl wanted at McDer- mid’s Hotel. 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 RENT - FOR RENT—Three front rooms un- furnished. 320 Minnesota Ave. Upstairs over Grotte’s Variety Store. Phone 285. FOR RENT—House. Inquire of O. J. Weekly, 1207 Beltrami Avenue. Phone 498. FOR RENT—7 room house. of A. Klein. Inquire LOST AND FOUND FOUND—Long enameled bar pin. Owner can have same by paying for this ad. % MISCELLANEOUS A e e AR POINT COMFORT—The finest sum- mer resort in Northern Minnesota. Lots for sale and cottages for rent. A. O. Johnson, Turtle River. Minn. Two good reliable boys 16 and 18 years old want places to work for board while attending school. Ad- dress or phone Dr. E. H. Smith. BOUGHT AND SOLD—Second hand furniture. Odd Fellows building, across from postoffice, phone 129. Huffman, Harrig & Reynolds Successors to The T. J. Miller Co. Fire Insurance Real Estate Bonds & Loans 209 Beltrami Ave. Bemidji Minn. Farm and (Gity Loans Insurance Real Estate William C. Klein o'I.aary-Bo'v‘n.q Bldg. . “Phone 19, - | Bemidji, £