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O R R R & COMING EVENTS. « Thursday, April 4.—C. A. @ Russell will speak in the city « hall, « Sunday, April 7. — Knight © Templar services, 4 p. m. in the » Rirst Methodist church. @ Monday, April 8—Crookston @ mill starts sawing. @ Friday, April 12—Band min- v strel show city hall. ¢ Saturday, April 13—Band © minstrel show city hall. PO QCOOOOCPOOOES® POV PPELOOPOOOO®@ Sam Simpson is here from Bena today. Matt Fisher was down from Funk- ley yesterday. C. W. Conway, the city today. F. 8. Lycan has returned from a trip to Minneapolis. of Blackduck, is in Ike Black, of Duluth, is spending.a few days in Bemidji. Miss Mabel Wheeler is triends at Warren this week. visiting A Kaiser, of Bagley, was ‘in the city a fe whours at noon today. S. E. Thompson, the merchant, Tenstrike is here today on business. Go to Hakkerup for photos. Attorney E. P. Town of Duluth, i in the city today on professional bus- | iness. Al Jester, former manager of the Rex hotel, came in today from his summer home on Lake Plantaganet. B. J. Hinkle of the Pine Tree Lum- ber company of Little Falls, is in the city today in the interest of the com- pany, Rev. J. H. Randahl left yesterday afternoon for Quiring where he will conduct Swedish Lutheran services on Friday. Mrs. Thayer Bailey has gone toj Crookston to be the guest of her par- ents, Mr. and Mrs. N. P. Stone, until after Easter. Attorney Geo. H. Spear of Grandl Rapids, spent yesterday afternoon in Bemidji on legal business, returning home last night. Mrs. H. T. McClernon left yester- day morning for an extended visit with friends and relatives in Minne- apolis and St. Paul. Mrs. Barry of Kelliher, arrived in the city this morning and will be the guest of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. B. 0. Todd, for a week. Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Long of Wallker, were in the city last night en route from Crookston to Pine River where they will visit relatives. Say, will the cream you have been getting whip? If not, get some that will. Phone Meadow Dale Dairy Farm, 5 2, A. P. Ritchie, Prop. bonnet at the Get your Easter Henrionnet millinery parlors, 309 Minnesota Avenue. They have a new assortment of patterns to select trom. Chas. Hayden, Lee French and At- torney B. T. Willson, of Blackduck, were in Bemidji yesterday on court business. They returned home last night. Miss Nell Shannon and Miss Ethel Moorhead vacation. Moorhead Getchell are home from Normal for their Easter They expect to return to next Tuesday. Go to R. Martin for your wall pa- per and all interior decorations. White back wall paper in all latest styles from 5c up per roll. 462 America avenue. Phone 519. Miss Jessamine Gould arrived in the city yesterday from St. Cloud where she is attending normal school AMUSEMENTS GRAND THEATER Complete Change of ' Pictures Tonight e K K KR KKK RER K KRR x HOW TO FIND * ¥ The Northern Minnesota Devel- * opment Association Immigra- * tion Commission Quarters, 39 % Third Street, South, Minne- * . apolis, * For the benefit of the readers % of the Pioneer this notice will % appear in both the Daily and % Weekly Pioneer for the next six & month. On leaving the union depot ¥ turn to the left and continue up * ing that thoroughfare, turn to-* the left and proceed half a & block, toward the postoffice. * From the Milwaukee depot, ¥ turn to the left on Washington * avenue and continue to First avenue, turn to the left and go one block to Third street and then one half block to the right. Daily Pioneer will be found on file here. LR R R E RS EEERESES AKX AKXKAAAKAAAAKAKRA KR AL RN KA KK A A * ok odok ok ok ok and will be the guest of her father and sister during her Easter vaca- tion. Every big fire and every report of a burglary should bring home to you the necessity of keeping your pa- pers and other valuables in the fire- proof Safety Deposit Vaults of the Northern National Bank. J. W. Latreille, Geo. W. Curtis, D S. Moran, Ben Gerken, A. Schroeder, and M. Teller of Lennox, S. D., are in Bemidji for a few days looking up the Crookston Lumber company’s lands. The place to get your typewriter ribbons is at the Bemidji Pioneer Office Supply store. A ribbon for every make of typewriter and any grade you may want. Prices at re- tail, 50, 75 and $1. Charles Alexander and family of Thief River Falls, arrived in the city this morning and will make Bemidji their home. Mr. Alexander will scale for the Bemidji Lumber com- pany. ) 0. J. Weekly and Son of Gully, Minn., have some fine bargains in this community. If you are looking for a home you should call on him before you decide to buy. Land of heavy clay soil at $10 per acre and up. Both timber and prairie. Call at 1207 Beltrami Ave. Bemidji, Minn. For rheumatism you will find noth- ing better than Chamberlain’s Lini- ment. Try it and see how quickly it gives relief. For sale by Barker’s Drug Store. Busy Chinese Hens, It would appear that the hens of China find life more real and earnest than- enjoyable, for, it is said, when pot hatching out broods of their own kind; the additional and novel task of hatching fish eggs-is thrust upon them. Chinese owners of hens col- lect fish spawn, introduce it into empty eggshells; hermetically seal them and place them under the de- ceived and conscientious hen. In due time the shells are removed and the spawn, now warmed into life, is pmptied into a shallow pool. Here the fsh which appear are nursed and guarded until strong enough.to be turned into a lake or stream, and sub- sequently add to the edible resources of the people. You will look a good while before you find a better medicine for coughs and colds than Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy. It not only gives relief— it cures. Try it when you have a cough or cold, and you are certain to be pleased with the prompt cure which it will effect. For sale by Barker’s Drug Store. “Big Seller” of 1768, Tn more hardy days than these snuff was used as an eye liniment. “The Compleat Housewife, or Accomplish- td Gentlewoman’s Companion,” which had run into 16 editions by 1768, extols Its virtues. Accomplished gentlewom- en who find their sight failing with ad- vancing years are advised to rub “the right sort of Portugal snuff into the pyves night and morning, and take it plso through the mnose.” This treat~ ment, it is asserted, “cured Sir Ed- ward Seymour, Sir John Houblon and Judge Ayres, so that they could read without spectacles after they had psed them for many years.” Some people would prefer spectacles. “My little son had a very severe cold. I was recommended. to try Chaiberlain’s Cough Remedy, and before a small bottle was finished he was as well as ever,” writes Mrs. H, Silk, 29 Dowling Street, Sydney, Aus- tralia. This remedy is for sale by Barker’s Drug Store. Venetian Palace Where Wagner Died. Apropos of the return from her chateau in Styria of the Duchesse della Grazla to her palace in Venice, a Paris contemporary gives an interesting ac- count of Vendramin, which is not only one of the most beautiful resi. dences on the canal, but it 18 closely assoclated with the history of the. clty of the doges. It was bullt in 1441, German princes occupled it at first. Then it passed into the possession of the duke of Mantua, who purchased it for 50,000 ducats of gold. It was the scene of | great social events under the Arch- duke Charles Ferdinand of Austria and his wife, Anne de Medicis, in 1652, and through them the palace has come into the possession of the pres- ent owners through marriage. It was here that Richard Wagner died in 1883. The desk at which he wrote “Tristan und Isolde” is cafefully pre- served. Some years ago a plaque was mdon with the nut ‘composer,” Nicollet to Third street, cross- ¥ |- aflxed to the-palace showing its con- |1 Extensive Demand for Praduel- in Newly Settled Reglons—Develop- ment Urgently Needed. “In much of the west cattle ralsing for beef has long been the principal business,” said Secretary Wilson, “but dairying is comparatively new. Therl I8 an extensive market, however, for dairy products; and especiaily in the newly settled regions:it 1s:found that the dairy industry fills such & place In agricultural economy that its de- velopment is urgently needed. “In ‘additior, a special enterprise has been undertaken with creamery patrons in Iowa, the object being te determine whether it will pay cream- eries to carry on the same sort of work among their own farmer patrons for the sake of getting a better qual Ity of cream as material for making butter. Here, also, record keeping has been introduced, along with other Improved methods, and the effort ia made to discover the leaks that re- duce profits. “In the older states of-:the-north, where dairying is already an estab- lished industry, the work of the de- partment outside. of advice to individ- uals upon request, consists chiefly in the propagation of cow-testing asso- clations and the improvement of city milk supplies. Cow-testing associa: tions are societies for co-operating in the keeping of herd records by en- gaging a man who goes from farm to farm periodically, makes observations, and keeps records for the herds of all the members of the assoclation. By this means records are secured with- out the trouble or expense involved when each man keeps them for hjm- self; and in various other ways the co-operation of the farmers is produc- tive of profit. The primary objects are to detect and weed out inferior Individual cows, and by the use of purebred bulls to perpetuate and in. the cows that are found to be good ones—thus raising the average qual- Ity of the individual cow and the to- tal productiveness of the herd. There are 85 cow-testing associations now in B0 states, comprising 45,000 cows. “The records of one of these asso- ciations show that the profit was doubled after four years’ work. For [nstance, a man with eight cows found, the first month of keeping rec- ords, that he was losing five and one- half cents per cow, or 44 cents on his berd for that month. After three ‘months’ testing he was' making a profit of $32 a month on the herd, and at the end of the year his profits had Increased to $50 a month. This not- able increase was due largely to the sale of five of his poorest cows, and the purchase of as many well-produc- Ing ones to take their places. In addi- tion, there were changes made in the methods of feeding which conduced to the result.” LANTERN HANGER FOR BARNS Bafe and Handy Way to Use Light in Stable Is Shown in llustration— Won’t Turn Over. The hanger shown in the sketch makes a safe and handy way to use a lantern in a barn or stable. It is con- structed of an old grooved pulley with ® U-shaped hanger made of sheet iron. The U-shaped hanger, says the Popu- lar Mechanics,is madeof ascrew eye Lantern Hanger for a Barn. cut off and riveted in place, the hook being formed of heavy wire. The puls ley is"run on a_ wire stretched over. head from one end of the barn to the other. Thé lantern can be easily moved from place to place, and, as it Is out of the way, it cannot be turned pver, DAIRY NOIES Palatability is an important feature of good dairy rations. Facilities for handling milk are giv- Ing an impetus to the market. Don't let the cows out in the storms to stand around. It doesn't pay. It Is rather a difficult task to dry up & cow When in full flow of milk. If & cow has a habit of side-stepping while milking, examine your finger pails, A cow producing average testing milk should yield from 7,000 to 8,000 pounds of milk in a year. * Gentleness and pauence with the heifer that has calved for the first time will win out every time. Just after the cow has freshened she should have the same feeds she has been given previous to calving: To feed cows profitably without some home grown:gort of protein, such as the leguminous:hays, is difficult. Sweet corn is one of the very best .| crops to grow to feed as a soiling crop to the dairy cows in summer. It is best to ‘reduce the milk pro- ducing food, so that a-mature cow will dry ‘and rest for'a month'to six weeks before calving: Be good to the cows. These most useful animals are a safe investment. They do not go off into a fence ‘corner and die of cholera. Successful dairying is largely a mat~ ter of securing cheap feed, as well as good cows. The silo is one method ot economizing ‘on feed Overculture or No Culture. Overculture, even if it borders on | Bffectation, is better than no culture. | at alL hear her converse in common Eng:-. contains quite a few words. Anyway WILSON ON_ DAIRY INDUSTR\ ; tensify the valuable characteristics of | :persons,” to individuals It is less offensive to hear a |f woman talk with grand, airs than to || lish of the streets, with all its slang || and cheap wit. The English language | there are enough to furnish one. with [ ioi, 2 7777 /filmu%ga///}//% Z ///lllltlll g 05 nmmwmu&nl"”,,”m ”J / b —«/////// h}”,,,., i lll)mmnnfi% f ANSWER One—the flat, sad, sickly looking one—was baked with poor baking powder; possibly the high-priced kind—possibly the cheap, big can kind. It denotes a lack of leavening gas, or an uneven distribution of same—or both, The other—the large, light, fluffy one—was prepared with. Calumet Baking Powder, and denotes the never-failing, delicious baking that always results from its use. Calumet does not cost as much as the high price baking powder, but it is very much su- perior in every way—it is purer—more reliable—more healthful. Here are the reasons: All baking powders undergo a chemical change in the process of baking. You do not take it into the stomach in the same form as it is in the can. For example: When you use Cream of Tartar Baking Powder you get Rochelle Salts in your food, because the Cream of Tartar - during this reaction turns into Rochelle Salts. This, as you know, is a drug, and should be taken only under doctor’s orders. v . Calumet is so carefully and scientifically prepared that the neutralization of the ingredients is absolutely perfect. That it is ahsolutely pure and of highest quality is proven by the fact that BAKING POWDER Reccived highest award World's Pure Food Exposition, Chicago, 1907 A TREAT. Barred From Hamburg Bourse. It is pure, clean, wholesome, deli- The public rossis of the Hamburg | clous. It is packed by automatic ma. bourse, subject to very mild rules con. | chinery—it never comes in -contact ducive to good order, are open to all, | With human hands until you open the| with very few exceptions. Their use | box. The box itself is hermetically is definitely forbidden “to all female | Sealed, so its contents are kept abso-| who have | lutely air-tight, moisture-proof, dust- been deprived of their civic rights, | Proof. No matter where you get it or who are under some form of judicial | When, it is always fresh. restraint, who have been adjudged ! It costs only a nickel. guilty of fraudulent bankruptcy, per- | I8 @ souvenir you'll like. sons adjudged to be in simple bank- This confection is made from a se- ruptey, those unable to meet -thelr | lection of the tenderest pop-corn and obligations, and such as are forbidden | €ach’ grain of popped corn is coatcd the use of the bourse through the de- | With crispy candy, made from high- ision of the court of honor. grade Louisiana sugar and molasses. i This, blended with well roasted No. 1 A R e Virginia peanuts, makes a combina- Don’t be surprised if you have an | tion that can’t be beaten for taste, pur- attack of rheumatism this spring. | ity and wholesomeness. Just rub ‘the affected parts freely This confection is called “Checkers.” with Chaimberlain’s Linfment and it| You can get it at any store. It costs will soon disappear. Sold by Bark-| but 5 cents. Try a box today, sure. er’s Drug Store. In each box INSURANCE] Bemid)l, Minn. Phone 144 GREAT NORTEERN 33 West Bound Leaves . m 34 East Bound Leaves . 1 :nl 35 West Bound Leaves am 36 East Bound Leaves am 105 North Bound Leaves pPm 106 South Bound Leaves pm Freight West Leaves at am Freight East Leaves at . pm MINNESOTA & INTERNATIONAL 82 South Bound Leaves 31 North Bound Leaves 84 South Bound Leaves 38 North Bound Leaves Freight Bouth Leaves at . Freight North Leaves at ../ MINN. RED LAKE & MAN. -1 North Bound Leaves , 2 South Bound Leaves . PROFESSIONAL CARDS RUTH WIGHTMAN TEAGHER OF PIAND Leschetitsky Method Residence Studio 917 Minnesota Ave. Phone 68 T (PPN MUSIC LESSONS MISS SOPHIA MONSEN TEACHER OF PIANO AND HARMONY Studio at 921 Beltrami Avenue LAWYERS GRAHAM M. TORRANCE LAWYER Miles Block Telephone 560 D. H.FISK ° ATTORNEY AT LAW Office over Baker's Jewelry Store PHYSICIANS, SURGEONS DR. ROWLAND GILMORE PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office—Miles Block DR. E. A, SHANNON, M. D, Huffman Harris & Reynolds You Use a Lead Pencil? We All Do If you knew just where you could buy the Best Cent Pencil In the World you would 7do it without much coaxing—wouldn’t you? dealer to sell “The - (The best nickel pencil in the world) Sold now at ‘Barker's Drug and Jawelry Storg 0. G, Rood & Co. E F. Netzer ‘ Wm. McGuaig | B [lmmh’s Cigar flore . Arrangements are being made with every first class ” | | I Bemld 1 Roo & Markusen. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office In Mayo Block 'Phone 396 Res. 'Phone 397 DR. C. BR. SANBORN PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office— Miles Block DR. A, E. HENDERSOR PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Over First National Bank, Bemidfi, Minn Office "Pho 6. Residence ‘Phone 73. DR. E. H. SMITH PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office in Winter Block DR. E. H. MARCUM 3 PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office ‘Phone 18 EINER W. JOHNSON PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office over Securtly Bank DENTISTS DR. D. L. STANTON DENTIST Office in Winter Block DR. J. T. TUOMY DENTIST 1st National Bank Bldg. Tele. 230. DR. G. M. PALMER DENTIST Miles Block Evening Work by Apointment Only NEW PUBLIC LIBRARY. Open daily, except Sunday, 1 to 6 p. m., 7to 9 p. m. Sunday, reading rooms only, 3 to 6 p. m. ‘TOM SMART DRAY AND TRANSFER es. ‘Phone 58. 818 America Ave. Office "Phone 12 EDUARD F. NETZER, Ph. G. RECISTERED PHARMACIST -