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| in this three at . . for Pattern ing, per yard at ings, per yard BEMIDJI All-over Embroidered Vonle,’ 36 inches wide, per yard 45 in. wide All-over Irish Em- broidery, per yard, at 45 1n. Irish Embroidered Flounc- 27 in. Heavy Embroidered Flounc- of grades and patterns. Department days sale. 45 inch beautiful Embroidered Flouncings in all shades on white Silk Batiste, 5 yards to a pattern, for the pattern SL A large assortment in 8 and 10 inch Embroidery at 7¢ per yard. Many Bandmgs, Insertion and Edges at the same great saving. $4.25 Heavy Embroidered Voile with Banding 45 inch, 6 yards to the pattern $7.00 98¢ $2.50 35¢ Finest Venetion Embr01dery Bands and h Flouncings at 40¢ 50¢ 60¢ per yard. Just the thing for waists, collar sets, hat bands &c. 29 The Pioneer Want Ads OASH WITH 0OOPY /z cent per word per issue 15 cents. The ;Ploneer goes everywhere 80 your want ad gets to them ail. - HELP WANTED D STV U S ‘WANTED__First class painters. Call on R. Martin, 416 Irvine Ave. WANTED—Dining room girl at once. Palace i'otel, Blackduck. FOR SALE FOR SALE—Typewriter ribbons for every make of typewriter on the market at 50 cents and 75 cents ‘‘each. Every ribbon sold for 75 cents guaranteed. Phone orders promptly filled. Mail orders given the same careful attention as when Regular charge rate 1 cent per word per nsertion.. No ad taken for less than HOW THOSE WANT ADS DO THE BUSINESS " takes it and people wholdo not take ' the paper generally read their neighbor's 14 Cent a Word Is All It Costs Phone 31 80 that everyone has a neighbor who Phone 31. -The Bemidjl Pioneer Office Supply Store. you appear in person. rFOR SALE—Tie Bemldji lead ‘pen-. pencil (the best nickle pencil in the world) at Netzer’s, Barker’s; 0. C. Rood’s, McCuaig’s, Omich's, Roe and Markusen’s and the Plo- neer Office Supply Store at 5 cents each and 50 cents a dozen. |FOR SALEBreeding stock and eges for ‘hatching from the best flock of full - blood Barred Plymouth ‘Rocks to be had,~come and see .a/tRem at 706 14th. O, C. Simon- FOR SALE—Small fonts of type, several different points and in first class condition. Call or write this office for proofs. Address Be- midji Pioneer, Bemidji, Minn. FOR SALE—Oak dining table, dress- ers, beds, complete Universal range, nearly new, porch rockers, washing machine. 417-Irvine Ave. FOR SALE—Seven room house at 613 Irvine ‘Ave.; three room house at 1409 Beltrami Ave." Inquire at 417 Irvine Ave. Phone 416. FOR SALE—Large size 18-inch five as new, $20 takes it. Can be seen at 1212 Minnesota Ave. pot Royal Acorn base burner. Good | - RIUM Sale of Enbroidery and Dresses Friday, Saturday and Monday, three days to buy Embroideries at a saving of about one-half. Our entire stock of beautlful embroideries go Dresses In Numberless Assortment For this Three Day Sale all Lawn, Batiste, Gingham, Percale Dresses at $2.25. The regular value of these Dresses are $3.50, $4.00, $4.50. House and Afternoon Dresses, perfect fitting and daintiest make at 90¢ up. Fine French Serge, and Silk Dresses, trimmed in lace and braid latest make, $11, $12, $14, in this Fhree Day Sale at We show the largest assortment in Lingerie Dresses, Silk Marquisette, -Changeable soft Chiffon Taffetta and Foulard Dresses, exquisitely made in the newest midsummer styles. For this Three Day’s Sale we include our extensive line of 15¢ Gingham at 10¢ per yard. All figured and plain lawns regular 15 cents and 17 cents for this sale at This week we have received a large shipment of the newest in midsummer Fabrics in hundreds It will be time well spent to examine them before buying. Come to this Sale early while the assortment |s complete. Berman E mporlum the day of publication; it i1s the " paper to usg in order to get re- sults; rates one cent per word first insertion, one-half -cent per word succeeding insertion; fifty. cents per- line per/month. = Address the Courier-News, Fargo, N. D. st et WANTED—100 merchants in North- ern Minnesota to sell “The Bemid- Ji” lead pencil. Will carry name of every merchant in advertising columns of Ploneer in order that all receive advantage of advertis- ing. For® wholesale prices write or phone the Bemidji Pioneer Of- fice Supply Co. Phone '31. ~Be- midji, Minn.; WANTED—Every woman who wants to know howito get the best in this TOR SALE—Rubber stamps. The Ploneer will procure any -kind of « Tubber stamp for you on short «otice. LOST AND FOUND FOUND—Pair dark glasses in case. Owner can have same by calling at this office and paying for ad. FOR RENT FOR RENT—5 room cottage on 9th St. Inquire C. D. Lucas, 523 14th St. 3 FOR RENT—Two furnished rooms lt 415 Minnesota Ave.” | FOR RENT—Six room house. Phone 519, MISCELLANEOUS ADVERTISERS—The great state of North.Dakota offers unlimited op- portunities for buainess to classi- fled advertisers.. The ' recognized ‘advertising medium is the Fargo Daily and Sunday - Couriér-News, . the only seven day paper fn:the the largest amount- of = class! advertising. . The . Couri _covers North Dakota: like tjt g ,et, relchlng all-parts of P YV -2 - Y W el ~ or any other city in up-to-date dress goodg and made-to-measure - tailoring to address 108 6th St., or phone 227. WANTED—Men who want the best in tailoring, ;also custom shirts, to address 108 qth St., or phone 227. BOUGHT AND SOLD—Second hand turniture. Odd Fellows building, across from' postoffice, phone 129. Department of the Interfor, Office of In- dian_Affais ashington, D. C., April d__proposals, utside of the sealed en- velope: - “Proposgls for Day School Plant, ‘White Earth ‘Reservation, Minnesota,” tand addressedito the Commieuloner of Indian Affairs, 'wuhington, A wil be received ntj(he Indian Office untik 2 o'clock p. ‘June 6, 1912, for fur- nishing matefl}l and labor for: the erection.of a frame school building and frame quarters'at the Twin Lakes Day School, White Harth Indian Reservation, Minnesota, in strict accordance with the plans, specifications and instructions to bidders, which may-be examined at this office, the: ‘offices ‘of the Supervisor of Conatruction, - Denver ,Colo., - the Im- Bi U. 8. Indian state and the paper which carries|Mo. d PROPOSALS FOR FRAME BUILDINGS. |- plainly| “Minneapolis, Minn. | ton,. Minn., the Pio-| Wool Taffetta, regular value $6.98 9¢ MINNESOTA. Technlcally Explained. A Rockford (IlL) boy, while at the table the ' other day asked what & gpinster was. Before anyone else had time to explain his ten-year-old broth- er condescendingly said: “Huh! Don't you know? A spinster is a woman who ain't married to her husband.® Work for Hair Dresser. Sir Edward Sugden, a celebrated English lawyer, who was elected to parliament in 1835, having heard that he had been turned into ridicule for be- ing the son of a hairdresser, replied: “So I am, and I come into the house to give a dressing to the Whigs.” ~ Snalls a Plague In Ceylon. The region about Bernwala, in Cey- lon, was not long ago afflicted with & veritable plague of snails. Though these animals are extraordinarily pro- lific, they do not often appear in suffi- clenfly large numhers to make them~ selves obnoxio Fundamental Truth, A thing that is morally right ean. Bever be economically wrong. crn.'nol FOR mfl ON FINAL ACCOUNT AND FOR DISTRI- BUTION. G Estate of Truman Senear. State of Minnesota, County nl Bel- trami, in Probate Court. - In the Matter of the Estate of Tru- man Senear, decedent. tribution of the estate of said decedent: The representative of the above named decedent, having filed in- this court his final account of the administration of the estate of said - decedent, together with his petition nnyln‘ for the adjust- ment and allowance of sald final ac- count and for distributfon of the resi- due of sald estate to the persons there- unto entitled; therefore, you, and each of you, are hereby cited and required to show cauge, if any you have, before this court at the probate court rooms in the court house, in the City of Bemidji, in [the County of Beltraml, State of Min- nesota, on the 1st day of June, 1912, at ten o'clock a, m., why sald petmon d. | should mot be gran “Witness, the judge of sald ?;lr& and BASEBALL | Pittsburgh Brooklyn - . : H. Chicago. . * . 10 11 Boston . . Cincinnati . Philadelphia . . Foaaloe® ' 8t.“Louis ‘. New York . oo P elo et - = o [y St, Louis, May 9.—Umpire Owens was hit by a thrown ball and knocked unconscious for a few moments. His wife who was in the stand, fainted. In every walk of life are using The Bemidji Special Watch It is the most Popular Watch in this _community today. Being practical, mechanically perfect and a dependable time piece. 17 jewels adjusted-carefully on our own regulating rack. *~ We do not allow a Bemidji Speclal to leave our store until it has been proven by thorough tests to be an accruate timepiece. Five Years Guarantee We give a 5 year }uamntee witheach BemidJl Speciai watch—because _they give us LR R AR R R R R R R R R R R @ Calendar of Sports for Today. ¢ 0000006000000 00 Opening of first annual show of the Aero club »f America at New York. Annual Canadian amateur boxing championships open in Toronto. Pacific Northwest amateur boxing and wrestling championships open in Portland. Joe Mandot vs. Ray Temple, twen- ty rounds, at New Orleans. Opening of invitation golf tourna- ment of the Birmingham (Ala.) Country club. Opening of the season of the new Central International Baseball league. Central-Kansas Baseball league op- ens its season, with Junction City at Newton, Manhattan at Lyons and Sa- lina at Great Bend. the least trouble fn making good our guarantee. Bemidji Special move- ments are now being fitted in the new style 25-year case with the safety bow, the only bow that cannot pull or twist out. This is8 a very popular model znd_ retails for, watch complete, $25.00. Geo. T. Baker & GO0, 116 3rd Street Near the Lake | Minneapolis Pitcher Injured. Minneapolis, May 9.—Horace Lev- erett is out of the game for at least a month as a result of an injury sus- tained -~ Tuesday afternoon - when throwing a curve ball for a third strike on Hulswitt in the tenth in- ning of the overtime battle. The throw snapped a tendon in the right elbow. Leverett was unable to use his arm after the accident and left the game, Comstock replacing THE SPALDING bt Dul n:' L.maymzn .f's“h tel uluth'’s and Best Ho! Leverett gave great promise as a |l nyy Ty MINNESOTA pitcher. He joined the Millers in the summer of 1911. He was not in the best of health at the time, but grad- ually rounded into form and gave some excellent pitching exhibitions More than $100,000.00 recently expended on improvements. 250 rooms, 1% private baths. 60 sample rooms. Kvery modern convenience: Luxurions lnfl l‘lel htful restaurants and buffet. Fle: Palm Room, Men's Grill, Uolonh.l Buffet; Magnificent lobby and public rooms; Ballroom. banquet rooms and private before the season closed. Minnneapo- || dining. m% Sun parior and observa- lis fans, and those of St. Paul, too, || {57, Locatedln heart of business sec- will not soon forget Leverett’s pitch- || Superior. Convenient to everything. ing skill in the two games in which || Que of the Great Hetels of the Nerthwest he defeated the famous O’Toole. This year Leverett looked better than ever. Increased weight and strength made him appear as one of the promising hurlers of the associa- tion. He got away to a bad start when Louisville defeated him, 8 to 1. Then he was beaten at Columbus, 3-2, in a game he should have won. Last Saturday he blanked the Sena- tors, 6-0, allowing but three hits, and pitched well yesterday in the over- time game. Leverett is twenty-four years old and lives in Selma, La., when he is home. * R. F. MURPHY FUNERAL DIRECTOR AND EMBALMER Office 313 Beitrami Ave. hone 318.2. 0900000000000 0606 < BASEBALL NOTES. @ 0000000000066 0.0 Vitt, who is making quite a hit in the Detroit outfield, was a star with the San Francisco team last sea- son. Pitcher “Flame” Delihi, of the White Sox, comes from the Pacific Coast league. He gets his nackname from the color of his hair. The reorganized Washington State William C. lein INSURANCE Rentals, Bonds, Real Estate league will have teams in Aberdeen, First Mortgage Loans Hoquiam, Chehalis and Centralia. The on Cit,y and Farm season opens May 2 and closes Sept. S < 5 Property Two-years ago Johnny Evers sent Rollie Zieder a postcard after the Sox player had made five errors in one game. Rollie got even recently when the little Trojan booted five in_ one afternoon. Several New York papers call the Highlanders “Pilgrims.” ‘Wonder what the Plymouth colonists would call them if they could see the base- ball played by the Yanks so far this season. 3 Evidently a change of management has helped Providence and Jersey City in the International league. The “Clam Diggers” and the “Skeeters” have been going as fast as a scared “dinge” in a graveyard. 6 and 6, O’Leary-Bowser Bidg. Phone 19. - Semidji, Minn. No End to It. x Dubley—It's too bad the average nan can’t be satisfied with a good Hv- ing and not be fnunr hungering for more money. - Wise—The average man is satisfled Bacon Sandwiches. ‘Wisps of breakfast bacon, delicately brofled, make the most appetizing of sandwiches, especially it put between o 2t