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Miss Norah Johnson of Blackduck, is spending the day in the city shop- ping. M. Gappa returned this morning from Hines where he has spent the past week. Mrs. E. M. VanWest of Deer Riv- er, is spending the day in the city with friends. . Judge C. W. Stanton returned yes- terday morning from a few days bus- iness trip to the Twin Cities. Lililan Wells, the pianologue girl, a rare treat tonight and tomorrow night. Brinkman Theater. Wm. Norelius of Minneapolis, is in Bemidji for a few days on business. He is a brother of W. E. Narelius. Mrs. J. S. Scribuer of Moose Jaw, ask.. in the city yesterday en route to Walker where she formerly resided. E. D. Alger of Tenstrike, and J. C. Sullivan of Blackduck, attended the meeting of the board of equalization vesterday. F. A. Vanderpoel of Park Rapids, is transacting business in Bemidji today. #He will return home tomor- row morning. Miss Katherine LaFontisee left yesterday morning for St. Paul where she will be employed by a whole- sale millinery house. C Vandersluis returned this morning from Ten Mile Lake where he has spent the past week with his family at their summer home. Miss Lillian Woodmansee of Kan- sas City, Mo., arrived in the city last night to be the guest of her brother, C. J. Woodmansee, for about a month. Go to Hakkerup for photos. The Ladies’ Aid society of the Scandinavian Lutheran church will meet at the home of Mrs. Carl Nel- son, 523 Twelfth street at 3 p. m. Wednesday. Rev. J. H. Randahl went to Pine River this morning where he will attend the dedication of the Swed- ish Lutheran church which takes place there today. Mr. and Mrs. Louis Johnson and daughter, Valborg, of Shotley, visit- ed Rev d Mrs. J. H. Randahl yes- terday afternoon, returning home on the evening train. Among her guests Mrs. A. Lord has her sister, Mrs. Grace Noonan, of Billings, Mont. Mrs. Noonan ar-| rived here last night and will remain here @ month or six weeks. Lililan Wells, the pianologue girl, a rare treat tonight and tomorrow night. Brinkman Theater . H. H. Cominsky of St. Paul, is in the city as the guest of his brother, Chas. Cominsky. Mr. Cominsky ar- vived here yesterday morning and will remain for several days. Mrs. C. Anderson and daughter, Anna, of Guthrie, returned home vesterday morning after an over Sun- day visit in the city as guests of Mrs. Robert Brownlee of Mill Park. H. M. Hamilton of Cedar Rapids, lowa, is here for a few days looking over his land in this vieincity. Mr. Hamilton makes a trip to Bemidji once every year to look after his in- terests here. Mi The Baptist Ladies’ Aid will be en- tertained at the home of Mrs. Henry Miller, 914 Beltrami avenue, Wed- nesday, August She will be as- sisted by Mrs. Rice. Cordial invita- tion to all. M. B. Patten of Remer, A. 0. John- son of Turtle River, L. Latterel of Kelliher, and T. A. Cross of Black- duck, all merchants, were in the city yesterday to attend the meeting of the board of equalization. In addition to its Resources as a Guarantee Fund for the safety of your deposits, the stockholders of the Northern National Bank are indi- viaually responsible for their pro- portion of all the obligations of the bank. Mrs. Lydia Mahoney and daughter, Miss Margaret, of St. Paul. arrived| in the city Saturday night to be the guests of Mr. and Mrs. A. Lord for| tiently. a week or so. Mrs. Mahoney is an aunt of Mrs. Lord and Miss Mahoney a cousin. N. LaPointe of Baudette, is here for a few days on business. Mr. La- Pointe is connected with the Part- ridge Lumber company of Baudette and is here to attend the meeting of the board of equalization for the company. Rev. J. H. Randall conducted the funeral of Lars Larson of Hart Lake on Monday. Mr. Larson was born in Norway and wag sixty-nine years of age. Death was due to heart failure. Interment was made at Hart Lake cemetery. Mr. and Mrs. D. A. McFarlan left yesterday for the coast by way of Winnipeg. Mr. McFarlan has not as yet decided where they will locate but will travel throughout California looking over the lands in search of a satisfactory place. The Woman's. Misisonary Society of the Methodist church meets at the home of Reverend Flesher Friday afternoon at 3 o’clock. The ladies of the Methodist church are urged to be present and take an active inter- est in this meeting. “Were all medicines as meritorious as Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy the world would be much better off and the percent- age of suffering greatly decreased,” writes Lindsey Scott, of Temple, Ind For sale by Barker’s Drug Store. Mrs. F. G. Troppman and two daughters, and Miss Hannah Diest returned Saturday night from a two weeks’ automobile trip. From Be- midji they went directly to Fergus Falls where they visited a day or two and then went on to Minneapolis and St. Paul where they spent several days, returnign to Fergus Falls where they remained until Saturday morn- ing when they left for Bemidji. One of the most common ailments that hard working people are afflict- ed with is lame back. Apply Cham- berlain’s Liniment twice a day and massage the parts thoroughly at each application, and you will get quick relief. For sale by Barker's Drug Store. The Ladies’ Aid society of the Methodist church will meet at the church Wednesday afternoon at 2:30 o'clock. A lunch will be served to members and friends later in the af- ternoon. The men as well as the women are extended a cordial invi- tation by the officers of the society to be present. At this meeting the regular monthly calendar money which goes into the church building fund will be turned in. A vast amount of ill health is due to impaired digestion. When the stomach fails to perform its fune- tions properly the whole system be- comes deranged. A few doses of Chamberlain’s Tablets is all you need. They will strengthen your digestion, invigorate your liver, and regulate your bowels, entirely doing away with that miserable feeling due to faulty digestion. Try it. Many oth- ers have been permanently cured— why not you? For sale by Barker's Drug Store. Notice. There is money in the treasury to pay all warrants on the general fund registered prior to Dec. 1st, 1911, on the permanent improvement fund registered prior to Aug. 1st, 1912, and on the poor fund registered prior to Sept. 1st, 1910. Dated Aug. 1st, 1912, GEO. W. RHEA, City Treasurer. W. S. Gunsalus, a farmer living near Fleming, Pa., says he has used Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy in his family for fourteen years, and that he has found it to be an excellent remedy, and takes pleasure in recommending it For sale by Barker’s Drug Store, EE KKK KK KK KKK KR HOW TO FIND * P * 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. x Ou leaving the umion depot % turn to the left and continue up % Nicollet to Third street, cross- % ing that thoroughfare, turn to * the left and procved half a % block, toward the postoffice. * From the Milwaukee depot, % turn to the right on Washing- % ton avenue and continue to First % avenue, turn to the left and go X one block to Third street and % then one half block to the right. % Daily Pioneer will be found % on file here. * *E KK F KKK F KKK ddh kAR K kAR ok h ok k ok ok hkk D ko k ok ok ok ko One of the Family. Tibbie had been placed by her aunt In a situation as maid of all work in a | tamily of three. At the end of a week the aunt “stepped along in” to see how Tibbie was getting on. “Do you like your work?” asked the aunt. “ 'Tis fair,” said the laconic Tibbie. “And are they making you feel at home?” “Whiles they are, and whiles they aren’t.” “Now what do you be mean- ing by that?” asked the aunt, impa- “Aweel,” said Tibbie, “they bave na’ asked me to gang t’ kirk wi” them yet. but last night they went on wi’ a grand quarr’l they were having, all the three o’ them, wi’ me takking the dishes off o’ the table, jist as if I'd been one o’ the family.”—Youth’s Companion. $100 Reward, $100. The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that there is at least one dreaded disease that science has been able to cure in all its stages, and that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being foundation of the disease, and giving stitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting direct- ly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system, thereby destroying the foundation of the diease, and giving the patient strength by building up the constitution and assisting nature in do- ing its work, The proprietors have so much faith in its curative powers that they offer One Hundred Dollars for any case that it fails to cure. Send for list of testimonials. Address F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio. Sold by all Druggists, 75c. Take Hall's Family Pills for consti- pation. “CONFESSION OF FAITH” DELIVERED (Continued from first page.) of both is threaténed by the supremacy of the people of the United States: * * * If this country is really to go forward along a path of social and eco- nomic justice there must be a new party of nation wide and nonsectional principles, a party where the titular national chiefs and the real state lead- ers shall be in genuine accord, a party in whose councils the people shall be supreme, a party that shall represent in the nation and the several states alike the same cause, the cause of hu- man rights and of governmental effi- clency.” The reassertion of the states’ rights doctrine of the Democratic party cripples and forecloses any real or gen- uine relief to the people. It reduces thelr promises to hopeless and empty phrases. The mission and spirit of this progressive movement will thrill the republic from-end to end. The Right of the People to Rule. “The actions of the Chicago conven- tion and to an only less degree of the Baltimore convention have shown in striking fashion how little the people do rule under our present conditions.” In order to assure this popular rule Mr. Roosevelt urged the adoption of presi- dential primaries, popular election of senators, the short ballot, efficient cox- rupt practices act, qualified use of the initiative and referendum and recall. The recall should be applied to admin- istrative officers. Mr. Roosevelt asserts that the adop- tion of these new methods of political administration is not antagonistic to representative government. “All I de- sire to do by securing more direct con- trol of the governmental agents and representatives of the people is to give the people the chance to make their representatives really represent them whenever the government becomes misrepresentative instead of represent- ative. I have not come to this way of thinking from closest study or as a mere matter of theory. I have been forced to it by a long experience with {the actual conditions of our political life.” The Courts and the People. Under this head Mr. Roosevelt strongly emphasizes the necessity of the sovereign people preserving a check on every branch of public service. Un- der this head Mr. Roosevelt reiterates his now well known views regarding the courts. “The American people and mot the courts are to determine their ‘'own fundamental policies.”” This does mnot mean that the people are to inter- fere in cases which involve merely questions of justice between individu- als except that “means should be de- vised for making it easier than at pres- ent to get rid of an incompetent judge.” ‘But when a judicial decision involves ko interpretation of what the people mean by the constitutions which they have framed and laws passed by the people are nullified because the courts say those laws are contrary to the peo- ple’s will as expressed in their consti- tution there must be a ‘“reference to the people of tke public effect of such decisions under forms securing full de- liberation,” to the end that the people may rectify this alleged defect in their constitution by a popular vote having all the force of a constitutional amend- ment. “Our purpose is not to impugn the courts, but to emancipate them from a position whenever they stand finally in the way of social justice. * * * I am well aware that every upholder of privilege, every hired agent or beneficiary of the special in- terests, including many well meaning parlor reformers, will denounce all this as ‘socialism’ or ‘anarchy’—the same terms they used in the past in denoune- ing the movements to control the rail- ways and to control public utilities. As a matter of fact, the propositions I make constitute neither anarchy nor socialism, but, on the contrary, a cor- rective for socialism and an antidote to anarchy.” Constructive Control of the Trusts. In addition to punishment for wrong- doing by the trusts, the imperative de- mand is effective and complete regu- lation. The views of President Van Hise of the University of Wisconsin in his scientific work on trust regulation are in harmony with the program of the National Progressives. “The pres- ent conditions of business cannot be accepted as satisfactory.” The reason for thisis explained, in Mr. Roosevelt's opinion, by the fact that “those dealing with the subject have attempted to di- vide into two camps, each as unwise as the other.” One camp has fixed its attention only on the need for pros- perity—“prosperity to the big man on top, trusting to their mercy to let some- thing leak through to the mass of their countrymen below, which, in effect, means that there should be no attempt to regulate the ferocious scramble in which greed and cunning reap the largest rewards.” The other camp has so fixed its attention upon the injus- tices of the distribution of prosperity, i “omitting all consideration of having something to distribute, and advocates action which, it is true, would abolish most of the inequalities of the distri- bution of prosperity, by only the un- | fortunately simple process of abolish- ing the prosperity itself.” The ten- dency of those now in control of the Republican party is to give special privileges to “big business” and to cor- rect the evil of such a course when they become crying by sporadic law- suits under the anti-trust law. The tendency of the Democrats, judged both by their record in congress and by the Democratic platform, is to abol- ish all business of any size or effi- ciency, on the ground that all bigness is badness and littleness and weakness a sign of virtue. “What is needed is action directly the reverse of that thus confusedly indicated.” There should be applied to all indus- | trial concerns engaged in interstate commerce in which there is either monopoly or control of the market the principles already adopted “in regulat- ing transportation concerns engaged in such commerce. The anti-trust law should be kept on the statute book to ‘be invoked against every big concern tending to monopoly or guilty of anti- social practices. At the same time a national industrial commission should ‘be created which should have complete power to regulate and control all the -great industrial concerns engagedl in in- =—— fefstate business — which practically means all of them In this country. This commission should exercise over these industrial concerns like powers to those exercised over the railways by the interstate commerce commission and over the national banks by the comptroller of the currency and addi- tional powers if found necessary.” The commission “shonld have free access to the books of each: corporation. and power to find out exactly how it treats its employees, its rivals and the gen- eral public. * * * Any corporation voluntarily coming under the commis- sion should not be prosecuted under the anti-trust law as long as it obeys in good faith the orders,of the commis® sion. The commission would be able to interpret in advance to any honest man asking the interpretation what he may do and what he may not do in carrying on a legitimate business.” When cor- pofations not submitting themselves to the regulations of the commission or clearly evading or violating its orders are prosecuted under the anti-trust law and convicted, the commission should have the duty of seeing “that the de- cree of the court is put into effect com- pletely.” Only in this way can there be avoided ‘“such gross scandals as those attendant upon the present ad- ministration’s prosecution of the Stand- ard Oil and the tobacco trusts,” a pros- ecution which has merely resulted in increased prices to the publie, injury to the small competitor and actual finan- cial benefit to the trusts themselves. “The Progressive proposal is definite, it Is practicable. We promise nothing that we cannot carry dut, we promise nothing which will jeopardize honest business. * * * Our proposal is te help honest business aetivity, however extensive, and to see that it is reward- ed with fair return, so that there may be no oppression either of business men or the common people. We pro- pose to make it worth while for our business men to develop the most effi- clent business agencies for use in inter- national trade, for it is to the interest of our whole people that we should do well In international business. But we propose to make those business agen- cles do complete justice to our own peo- ple. Where these concerns deal with the necessaries of life the commission should not shrink, If the necessity is proved. from going to the extent of ex- ercising regulatory control over the conditions that create or determine monopoly prices. “It is imperative to the welfare of our people that we enlarge and extend our foreign commerce. We are pre-emi- nently fitted to do this because as a people we have developed high skill in the art of manufactu: ga7; our business wen are strong esecu.:ves, strong or- ganizers. In every way possible our federal government should co-operate in this important matter. Any one ‘who has had opportunity to study and observe first hand Germany’s course in this respect must realize that their pol- icy of co-operation between govern- ment and business has in comparative- 1y few years made them a leading com- petitor for the commesce of the world. It should be remembered that they are doing this on a national scale and with large units of-business, while the Dem- ocrats would have us believe that we should do it with'small units of busi- ness, which would be controlled not by the national government, but by forty- eight conflicting state sovereignties. Such a policy is utterly out of keeping with the progress of the times and gives our great commercial rivals in Europe —hungry for international markets — golden opportunities of which they are rapidly taking advantage.” Social and Industrial Justice to the Wageworkers. Referring to the opening sentence of his address, namely, “that we are now in the midst of a great economic revo- lution,” Mr. Roosevelt presented an ad- vanced and comprehensive plan to in- sure the rights and better coaditions for labor. He gives it the paramount place in his speech. “The first charge upon the industrial statesmanship of the day,” he said, “is to prevent human waste. The dead weight of orphanage and depleted craftsmanship, of crip- pled workers aud workers suffering from trade diseases, of casual labor, of insecure old age and of household de- pletion due to industrial conditions are, like our depleted soils, our gashed mountain sides and flooded river bot- toms, so many ‘strains upon the na- ticnal structure, draining the reserve strength of all industries and showing beyond all peradventure the public ele- ment and public concern in industrial health.” He proposed several specific methods for preserving and improving “our human resources, and therefore our labor power.” Wage scales and other labor data should be made pub- lic; all deaths, injuries and diseases due to industrial operation ihould be re- ported to the authorities; wage com- missions should be established in the nation and state to determine the min- imum wage scale in different indus- tries; the federal government should investigate all industries with a view to establishing standards of sanitation and safety; there should be mine and factory inspection according to stand- ards fixed by interstate agreement or by the federal government: national and state legislation should establish standards of compensation for indus- trial accidents and deaths and for dis- eases clearly due to industrial condi tions; for the adoption by law of a fair standard of compensation for casual- ties resulting fatally which shall clear Iy fix the minimum compensation in all cases: the monetary equivalent of a living wage varies according to local conditions, but should be sufficiently high to make morality possible and to provide for education, recreation, prop- er care of the children, maintenance during sickness and reasonable saving for old age: excessive hours of labor should be prohibited for all wage work- ers, and night labor of women and children should be forbidden; one day of rest in seven should be provided by law: continuous twenty-four hour labor should be divided into three shifts of eight hours by law; tenement house manufacture should be entirely pro- hibited. and labor camps should be sub- Ject to governmental sanitary regula tion; all industries employing women and children should be specially sub- Ject to government inspection and reg ulation: insurance funds against sick- ness, accident, invalidism and old age should be estabiished' by a charge eithier in whole or in part upon the fn- dustries; the suffrage should be granted to women if for no other reason to enable working women to combine for their awn protection by the use of the ballot. “As a people we cannot afford to let any group of citizens or any indi- vidual citizen labor under conditions which are injurious te the common welfare. Industry, therefore, must sub- mit to such public regulation as will make it a means of life and health, not of death or inefficiency. The Farmer. “The country life commission should be revived with greatly increased pow- er; its abandonment was a severe blow to our people. The welfare of the farmer is a basic need of this nation.” The country school should be brought in touch with country life. For this reason the Progressives approve of gov- ernment co-operation with the farmer to make the farm more productive. Co-operative associations of farmers both for the production and the selling of agricultural products should be en- couraged. “So long as the farmer leaves co-operative activities with their profit sharing to the city man of busi- ness, so long will the foundations of wealth be undermined and the com- forts of enlightenment be impossible in the country communitles. “In every respect this nation hus to learn the lessons of efficiency in pro- duction and distribution and of avoid- ance of waste and destruction. We must develop and improve instead of exhausting our resources. It is en- tirely possible by improvements in production, in the avoidance of waste and in business methods on the part of the farmer to give him an increased Income from his farm, while at the same time reducing to the constmer the price of the articles raised on the farm. Important although education is ev- erywhere, it has a special importance in the country. The couyntry school must fit the country life. In the coun- try, as elsewhere, education must be hitched up with life. The country church and the country Young Men's and Young Women's Christian asso- ciations have great parts to play. The farmers must own and work their own land. Steps must be taken at once to put a stop to'the tendency toward ab- sentee landlordism and tenant farm- 1ng.” The Tariff. On the tariff he says: “I believe in a protective tariff, but I believe in it a8 a principle approached from a stand- point of the interests of the whole peo- ple, and not as a bundle of preferences to be given favorite individuals.” He belleves the American people favor the principle of a protective tariff, but are In rebellion against the wrongdoing and unjust application of that policy and the abuses in past legislation. “It is not merely the tariff that should be re- vised, but the method of tariff making and of tariff administration.”” “The first step should be the creation of a permanent commission of nonpartisan experts” of “ample powers” to secure “exact and reliable Information.” “The present tariff board is entirely inade- quate in point of powers reposed in it and scope of work undertaken.” The tariff commission in Germany affords a splendid model. This commission must scientifically determine “the dif- ference in the cost of production here and abroad,” the effect on “prices to the consumer,” insure full justice to the pay envelope of the wage earner. The commission must not attempt to en- croach on the tariff making power of congress. It shall report with full pub- Ucity and promptly. The tariff shall be revised schedule by schedule to avoid the “staggering blows to business” in- cident to former general revisions. The effect will be to wipe out the “log roll- ing and vote trading” secured by spe- cial interests in the past. “Only by this means can tariff be taken out of politics.” “The substitution of a tariff for revenue only. as proposed by the Democratic platform, would plunge this country into the most widespread in- dustrial depression we have ever seen.” The revision shall be downward and not upward and secure a square deal not merely to the manufacturer, but to the wage worker and to- the general consumer. The High Cost of Living. “The cost of living,” says Mr. Roose- velt, “has risen during the last few years out of all proportion to the in- crease of most salaries and wages.” ‘What is first necessary is “fearless, in- telligent and searching inguiry into the whole subject, made absolutely by a nonpartisan body of experts with no prejudice to warp their mind, no pri- vate object to serve, who shall recom- mend any necessary remedy heedless of what interest may be hurt thereby ind caring only for the interests of the people as a whole.” The Republicans promise such an inquiry, but their rank dishonesty of action at the Chicago convention “makes their every promise ‘worthless.” It is hopeless to turn to the Democratic party for relief, be- cause first the Democratic party “af- fects to find the entire high cost of liv- ing in the tariff,” ignoring the patent fact that the problem is world wide, equally pressing in free trade England and in highly protected Germany. Moreover, if the Democrats are sincere they must take all duties off the prod- ucts of the farmer, and we “certainly (Continued on last page.) STOP SNEEZING AND_SNIFFLING For Hay Fever and Rose Cold Try Ely’s Cream Balm. It Give In- stant Relief. “Balm” is just the word for this soothing, healing, antiseptic cream. Its effects in cases of Hay Fever and Rose Colds are almost magical. You just grease the nostrils with a little of the cream, inhale the pleasant, aro- matic fumes; and in a few minutes your head begins to clear, the sore- ness is relieved, and the sneezing, sniffling and weeping stopped. Peo- ple who have suffered for years with Hay Fever and Rose Cold can be free from all the distressing symptoms by simply using Ely’s Cream Balm morn- ing and night during the Hay Fever season. Hay Fever is due to an irritated, inflamed condition of the mucous membrane (inside skin) of the nose and throat. Strong powders, snuffe and sprays simply aggravate the trou- ble, but B'y’s Cream Balm soothes, heals and strengthens the raw, sore membranes, and iu this way not only relieves the trouble but prevents its return, All armge sell and recomm>nd it. Get a fifty cont bottle today—use it according to directions—get. yonr money back if you are not satisfied FUNERAL DIRECTOR M. E. IBERTSON ' UNDERTAKER and COUNTY CORONER 405 Beltrami Ave. Bemidji, Minn. OWN A HOME Everyone has a desire to own his own home sooner or later. Now is the time to secure it, while lots can be bought very cheap. No Interest. No Taxes " Falrview Addition offers the best advantages for the people of moderate means to secure their own homes. These lots are nice and level; located on Irving avenue. The proposed street car line is laid out along the east side of Fairview addition. Lots at $25 to $60 each. Payments 50 cents per week. During June and July only we will give you one lot Free if you buy five lots. REYNOLDS & WINTER, Agents M. Phibbs OR W. C. Klein Cat out the above coupon, with five athers of consecutive dates, and present of Dictionary selected from the factory, checking, hire and receive your choice of these three books: The $4.00 (Like illustrations i S New 'WEBSTERIAN 1912 lishers of Webster’s This dictionary is NOT published by (which covers the items of the cost of packing, express elerk and other necessary EXPENSE items), the announcements from day to day.) the original pub- dictionary or_by their ’ 3 successors. It is the ONLY entirely NEW compilation by the world’s greatest authorities from leading universities; is bound in 2 > DICTIONARY/ull Limp Leather, flexible, stamped in gold on back and sides, printed on Bible paper, with red edges and corners & Hilustrated Q rounded; beautiful, strong, durable. are maps and over 600 subjects beautifully illustrated by three- plates, numerous subjects by educational charts and the latest United States Census, Present at this office SIX Consecutiva Dicti @ color The New ICTIONARY. ith o ry Hiutrated _ Jdgcs and ith SIX x| New Besides the general contents, there © Bonus of Is in phin eloth bind. black; same monotones, 16 pages of jonary The $2.00 1912 o | i oned nm-.l._., KRR KR KKK KRR RERRN ¥ RAILROAD TIME CARDS. & KX E KRR RRRRRR KKK 106 South Bound Leaves Freight West Leaves at Freight East Leaves at Freight North Leaves at MINN., RED LAKE & MAN. 1 North Bound Leaves . 2 South Bound Leaves * * CITY OF BEMIDJIL. * AR E R TN EREE R 2 Fast Mall and Passenger Boat. Leaves Bemidjl Por East Bem!dj!..6:30 a. m. and 6:30 p. m. Fare 10c. Grand Forks Bay and Down River . ... €F .+ iienennn tecserseeceesd B oW Fare 26c. All Points on the Lake........1 p. m. Fare 26c. All Summer Resorts..7:30 and 8:30 p. m. Fare 26c. Down the Mississipp! River to the Dam 22 mile trip and 1 hour stop at the dam. Boat leaves 2:30 p. m., retura- ing at 6:30. H CAPT. W. B. MacLACHLAN. _ KKK KKK KKK KKK KKK * PROFESSIONAL CARDS. * KREKX KKK KK KRR KKK RUTH WIGHTMAN TEACHER OF PIANO Leschetitsky Method Residence Studio 917 Minnesota Ave. Phone 168 MUSIC LESSONS; MISS SOPHIA MONSEN TEAGHER OF PIANO AND HARMONY Studio at 921 Beitraml Avenue LAWYERS GRAHAM M. TORRANCE LAWYER Telephons 568 Miles Biock D. H. FISK ATTORNEY AT LAW Office over Baker's Jewelry Store PHYSICIANS, SURGEONS DR. ROWLAND GILMORE PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Offlee—Miles Block DR. E. A. SHANNON, K. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office in Mayo Block Phone 356 Rea. 'Phone 307 DR. C. BR. SANBORN PHYSICIAN ANB SURGEON Office— Miles Block DR. A. E. HENDERSON PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Over First National Bank, Bemidji, Mins Office ‘Phone 36. Reaidence 'Phons 78. DR. E. H. SMITH PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office in Winter Block DR. E. H MARCUM PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office Phone 18 EINER W. JOHENSON PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office over Securtly Bank DENTISTS DR. D. L. STANTON DENTIST Ofiice in Winter Block UR. J. T. TUOMY DENTIST at National Baok Bldg. Tele. 230. OR. G. M. PALMER DENTIST Miles Block Evening Work by Apointment Only NEW PUBLIC LIBRARY. Open daily, except Sunday, 1 to 6 p. [OM SMART DRAY AND TRANSFER SAFR AXD PIANO MOVING Res. 'Phone 53. Office R. F. MURPHY FUNERAL DIRECTOR AND EMBALMER Oflice 313 Beivrami Ave. 'Néne 3i0-3.