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Atds Heal of tartar baking ists are in accord - BAKINGPOWDER ‘Prof. Prescott, of the Univers- ity of Michigan, explains why Royal Baking Powder adds healthful qualitiesto the food. Testifying before the Pure Food Com- mittee of Congress, the Professor stated that fruit acids were excellent articles of food and that of these cream of tar- tar, the acid of grapes, held rank with the highest both in itself and its effect in the process of leavening and baking. He regarded the results from cream able to health. Scientists and hygien- Royal is the only Baking Powder made from Royal Grape Cream of Tartar. powder as favor- ITALIANS PARDON FAMOUS COUNTESS (Continued from first page). moff, his rage spent, confused, help- less and remorseful, made only a ‘half-hearted attempt to escape, and was captured at Venice. Prilukoff was a witness of the murder. He had shadowed Naumoff to Venice, watched him enter the villa, and heard the shots. Sure that the deed was done he returned to Vienna. But the address of the Countess was discovered by the Vene- tian police in the rooms of the mur- dered man, and both Prilukoff. and the Countess were arrested. Nau- motf, broken in spirit, confessed his crime and told of his passion for the Countess after some vain attempts to shield her. Prilukoff sought to commit suicide, but the prison war- dens were vigilant and his life was saved. Only the Countess preserved an unshaken calm. The trial of the trio of conspirators took place in Venice and consumed nearly six months. All three were convicted. The jury found that Naumoff and the Countess were not fuly respon- sible for their‘acts. They were sen- tenced to three and eight years’ im- prisonment, respectively. Prilukoff was sentenced to ten years’ impri- sonment. BRUCE-BROWN ‘IS KILLED (Continued from first page). In 1910 he was third in the 500 mile race at Indianapolis. His two most brilliant victories were the Grand Prix race at Savan- nah in 1910 and 1911, The former he won with a° Benz car, and last season’s race with the same Fiat which he was to drive in the 1912 Vanderbilt cup event. In 1910 he was obliged to turn professional in order to drive with fast company. In spite of the fact that he has made a great deal of money in racing he drove principally for sport. 2 BULL MOOSE ENDS 5,000 MILE TOUR (Continued from first page). “Abyssinian had nothing to compare with the treatment accorded the Standard Oil company during the Roosevelt administration,” and Roosevelt had the greatest pleasure in the world some hundred times in advising his audience that if he got in again, and the Standard Oil didn’t behave, he’d administer the Abyssin- ian treatment once more. Always there was laughter and applause, and with this prelude the candidate would plunge into the serious and emphatic task of pleading for votes for the Progresive party. Through- out the Colonel avoided the “I” wherever possible. It was “we pro- gressives” mostly. Roosevelt never was an orator, but those who have been associated with him for years say that he mnever spoke before with the warmth, the conviction, and the ability he show- ed on his “swing around the circle.” It was his intense earnestness that held his audiences. Of all the recep- tions, he got only two or three that might be classed as tepid—and the two worst of these were at Oska- loosa, Iowa, and Pueblo, Colo. Most effective of all his appeals were those made direct to the veterans of the civil war—and the Colonel invari- ably chose one phrase “you who wear the button,” he would say—and spoke to Riim directly, appealing now and then for confirmation of his statements as to conditions in the sixties being comparable to those of the present day. Always was the candidate meeting either former Rough Riders, cowboy friends, or just acquaintances, and merely to show that he remembered perfectly all about them, he would generally recall some little incident. The cow puncher vote is solidly Bull Moose. ~ Dinner time on the Colonel’s pri- vate car—he had the Mayflower, gen- erally used by President Taft, while the newspaper cabinet, as he always termed them, were bunked in another private car next to his—was an in- stitution. Roosevelt likes a hearty meal, and he likes to linger over an after-dinner cup of tea and discuss everything under the sun from the making of wall paper to the habits of Ursus Americana. And in that discussion everybody joins. One joke the Colonel admitted was on himself happened at a Nebraska town. He was addressing an audi- ence of school children. “I can talk to the boys,” Roose- velt said, “but I've only one girl.” A newspaperman called the Col- onel’s attention later to the fact that the Roosevelt family actually includ- ed two daughters—Mrs. Alice Long- worth and Miss Ethel. “By George!” the Colonel ejacu- lated. “I was thinking about my lit- tle granddaughter, when I said that. Now look here, if you boys publish that and put me in bad with my fam- ily, why I'll just disown you.” One of the newspapermen had oc- casion to see the Colonel a moment, and found him engrossed with his mail and two or ‘three local commit- teemen waiting. Roosevelt - insisted he was extremely busy and hurriedly answered the reporter’s questions. Then the newspaperman happened to mention some little feature of teme- ment house work. “How very interesting” comment: ed the candidate, pushing his work aside. “Now tell me all about it. Yes. That’s good. That’s bully. Well, now I've known of such and such a case—" And fifteen minutes later George Roosevelt, his cousin, who acted as the Colonel’s secretary on the trip, would have come in and actually scold his chief to make him get down to work again. TURTLE RIVER. The Ladies’ Aid met on Thursday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Frank Latimer. Despite the inclement Wweather a large number of members were present. . A chicken pie supper, to be given Oct. 3, was decided upon. The Aid will be entertained Oct. 10 by Mrs. Peter Larkin. Mrs. Drury and - Miss Drury. of Minneapolis, are the guests of Mrs. D. G. Bridgham. . Mr. and Mrs. Henry Paquin and friends, s £l Rev. Pierce held services at th Bass. Lake schol house: on Sunday| afternoon and at Turtle River in the/ evening, 5 3 W. M. Woods of Cass Lake, spent several hours with friends Thursday evening, returning home on the late train. ARREST MILK DEALERS (Continued from first page). Carl A. Steel, formerly president of the Quaker Creamery company, and now reported paid secretary of the dealers’ organization. A. R, Ruhnke, president of the Minneapolis Milk company. J. C. E. Johnson, Model Milk com- pany. Samuel Johnson, Model Milk com- pany. . Oscar Erickson, president Minnea- polis Dairy company. 2 W. Al Page, president Creamery company. W. R. Cammack, Crescent Cream- efy company, St. Paul. The Minneapolis Milk company. The Minneapolis Dairy company. The Clover Leaf Dairy company. The Model Milk company. The Quaker Creamery company. The Crescent Creamery company of St. Paul. . Quaker . STATE FAIR MEETING. Minneapolis, October 2.—The fif- ty-fourth annual meeting of the Min- nesota State Agricultural society will be opened in Minneapolis Tues- day, January 14, and. will continue through Friday, January 17. The place of meeting has not been deter- mined upon as-yet, but will probably be in the auditorium at the court house. The committee on program and arrangement consists of C. P, Craig, of Duluth, F. W. Murphy, of Wheaton, President C. W. Glotfelter, of Waterville, and Secretary J. C. Simpson. Some of the leading agricultural experts of the country will be se- cured as speakers, and an entertain- ing program of educational value will be arranged to occupy the time of the delegates - during the four days’ session. The annual election of officers will take place on Friday morning. HORNET. Mrs. Frank Cossentine is staying with her sister, Mrs. Herman Thome. J. S. Tope went to Blackduck on Friday. George Bogart, Paul Peltier and George Trudeau went to Blackduck on Saturday. “ George -Bogart has the contract for digging a new well at the Mur- ray school. J. D. Bogart is building a new root house and intends making other improvements. George Trudeau has bought forty acres of Paul Peltier and is building a new log house upon it. Leave the Rest With God. By W. L. Wardell. Do your very level best, Then do you think it odd If you fail—just let it rest With a patient God. Perhaps you're brain, Perhaps you till the ¢ 1; Do your best, I say again, And leave the rest with G toiling with your Let this be your creed and plan, As through life’s way you plod: “I will do the best I can, And leave the rest with God.” —Missionary News. CATCHES GAME FOR QUARTER Bradley.- Kocher of Detroit Tigers is Called From Grandstand to Earn Munificent 8um. Had the manager of the Easton team of the now defunct Atlantic league refused to give Jack Kocher, now second catcher of the Detroit team, the 26 cents that he pald to witness a game at Easton in 1909 the Tigers would probably be without one of the best young backstops in the game. That was the only condition on which he would catch for Easton when he was picked out of the stand after the only catcher that team had ‘was crippled by a foul. It is the merest bit of luck that gave Kocher his start in baseball, It happened this way. Kocher lived at White Haven, near Philadelphia, and a short distance from Easton. A big, husky farmer's boy drifted inta Easton to visit his cousin, said boy being Kocher, on a day when the Easton team was playing a double- header against Sunbury, another At lantic league team., The cousin suggested that they spend the afternoon at the ball gamae and Kocher, who was something of a catcher in White Haven, agreed to 2o along. In the seventh inning of the first game Catcher Barret was put out with a banged finger and the game was about to be called off when the cousin tipped the manager off to the fact that Kocher could catch. Kocher didn't want to catch a game that he had paid to see, and 80 informed the manager, making the proposition that he would catch if he received his quarter back. An agreement reached, he put on Bar- ret’s uniform and caughteleven in- nings of star baseball. The follow- ing day Lave Cross, the old Athletic -and Washington third baseman, came to Easton with his Mount Carmel team. Kocher threw to all the bases yith such speed and-ease that Cross told Connfe Mack and Kocher o8, Champion Red _Another Pennant. Steve : Yerkes, second baseman of four years old. He started playing at Mercerburg, Pa.. He was signed by Boston in.1909, but farmed to Worcester. . He helped that city win a pennant in the New England league. He rejoined the club as a util- Ity player in 1910 and last year played . Steve Yerkes. pt shortstop when Wagner was in- jured. He bats and throws right hand- ed. He is § feet 9 inches in height end weighs 170. Attendance Records. American League attendance rec- ords in Boston were broken on Aug. ust 31 when 32,000 fans saw the Red Sox beat the Mackmen. In other years attendance figures given out were larg- er than these, but it is said they were padded and that the largest crowd that ever saw a ball game In Boston before numbered 28,000, that being at & Detroit-Boston double header. Rent Paid in Roses. A bouquet of red roses was handed to the warden of St. Olave's gram- mar school. Tooley street, London, England, ‘at the prize distribution, the other day, as the rent of a piece of land leaged to trastees in 1656 for the benefit of the poor «f the parish. The lease was for “a term of 500 years et the yearly rent cf a red rose pay- able at midsummer if lawfully ' de- manded.” Highest and Lowe:t Points, The highest point in iie United States is the summit of Mount Whit- ney, California, 14,501 feet above the sea level. From this spot one may look down -upon the lowest point in the United States, only nnety-two miles distant, but 276 feet biiow the sea level, a difference in altitude of 14,000 feet. This lowest point is in Death Valley. Women’s Fineness of Touch. Electrical engineers number young women among their workers, and Edi- son is said to prefer women machin- ists for their fineness of touch. Mrs. Ira Tott of Long Beach, Cal., founded and managed an entire electrical plant successfully. Belng an expert engi- neer, she superintended the buflding of her plant and bought and installed the machinery. The Pioneer WILL PRESENT THIS ~ DICTIONARY © ILLUSTRATE ' REDUCED ILLUSTRATION OF THE $4.00 VOLUME This Dictionary is pot published by the original publishers of Webster’s Dictionary or by their successors. It has b mpion : Boston Red Sox, is Depar tment The Pioneer Want Ads OASH WITH 0O0PY % oent per word per lssue 15 cents. 80 your want ad gets to them all. HELF WANTED D STV USRS WANTED—Strictly competent girl for family housework. Mrs. M. E. Smith, 413 Irving Ave. WANTED—Table waiter at Lake- shore hotel. 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 you appear in person. Phone 31. The Bemidji Pioneer Office Supply Store. FOR SALE—The Bemidji lead pen- cil (the best nickel pencil in the world, at Netzer's, Barker's, 0. C.| Rood’s, McCuaig’s, Omich’s, Roe & Markusen’s and the Pioneer Office Supply Store at 6 cents each and 50 cents a dozen. = FOR SALE—104 acres of hardwood | timber land in section 31, township | 148, north range 34, town of Lib- erty, Beltraml county. Price for whole tract $1,600. Apply at Pio- neer office. . 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—80 acres good farm land in town of Liberty, section 25. A snap if taken this fall. Write or call on Tom Smart or G. E. Carson. FOR SALE—Household goods, stoves, beds, kitchen utensils, etc. Sale at the house all week. Carl L. Hef- fron. s FOR SALE—Rubber stamps. The Pioneer will procure any kind of rubber stamp for you on short no- (s .revised and brought up to the PRESENT DATE in accordance with the best authorities from the greatest universitics, and is published by the well known SYNDICATE PUBLISHING CO. of NEW YORK CITY. $4.00 DICTIONARY/| TO EVERY PUPIL ‘who complies with the conditions explained in the coupon printed elsewhere. No other book is so useful—for the entire family—at home; -at school; at the store; at the factory—of daily use for everybody that THINKS. The $4.00 volume is bound in genuine Lmp' leather, printed on Bible paper—new type—a -durable,{: tice. Regular charge rate 1 cent per word per nsertion.” No ad taken for less than HOW THOSE WANT ADS DO THE BUSINESS The ;Ploneer goes everywhere so that everyone has a neighbor who takes it and people who do not take the paper generally read their neighbor’s 15 Cent a Word Is All It Costs Phone 31 FOR RENT FOR RENT — Desirable furnished room for one or two gentlemen. T. J. Welsh, 1121 Bemidji Ave. FOR RENT—After Nov. 1st, six room house, 805 Minnesota Ave. In- quire 802 Minnesota Ave. FOR RENT—Small furnished house. Centrally located. Enquire Pio- neer office. LOST AND FOUND LOST—Amythist rosary with E. C. F. on back of cross. A4 Brinkman Theatre or on ‘Beltrami avenue. Please return to Pioneer office. MISCELLANEOUS ADVERTISERS—The great state of North Dakota offers unlimited op- portunities for business to classi- fled advertisers. The recognized advertising medium is the Fargo Daily and Sunday Courier-News, the only seven-day paper in the state and the paper which carries the largest amount of classified advertising. The Courier-News covers North Dakota like a blank- et; reaching all parts of the state the day of publication ;it is the paper to use in order to get re- sults; rates one cent per word first insertion, on-half cent per word succeeding insertions; fifty cents per line per month. Address the Courier-News, Fargo, N. D. WANTED—100 merchantg in North- ern Minnesota to sell “The Bemid- J1” lead pencil. Will carry name of every merchant in advertising columns of Pioneer 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. 402 Beltrami Ave. Y + B.POE Bemidji Lodge No. 1052 Regular meeting nights— first and third Thursdays 8 o'clock—at Masonic hall Beltrami Ave, and Fiftk st _— ©. 0. 5. every second and fourth Sunday evening, at § o'clock in basement ot Catholic church. Meeting nights _ every second and fourth Monday evenings, at 0dd Fellows Hall. ». 0. B Regular meeting nights every 1st and 2nd Wednes- day evening at 8 o'clock. Eagles hall. G AR Regular meetings—First and third Saturday after noons, at 2:30—at 0dd Fel > Ave. ¥ L O.0. F. Bemidji Lodge No. 110 Regular meeting nights —every Friday, 8 o’zlock at Odd Feliows Hall, 492 Beltrami. 1.0. 0. F. Camp No. 34 Regular meeting every second and fourth Wednesdays at § o'clock at Odd Fellows Hall ~ Rebecca Lodge. Regular meeung nights — first wnd third Wednesday at 3o’clock. —L 0. 0. F. Hall. XNIGHTS OF FYTEHIAS Bemidji Lodge No. 168. Regular meeting nights—ex- ery Tuesday evening at § o'clock—at the Eagles' Hall, Third street. LADIES OF THE MAC- CABEES. Regular meeting night last Wednesday evening in each month. MASONIC. A. F. & A. M, Bemi 233. 'Regular muet.‘lun: nights — first and third Wednesdays, 8 o'clock—at Masonic Hall, Beltrami Ave., and Fifth St. Bemidjl Chapter No. 70, R. A. M. Stated convocations —Airst and third Mondays, 8 o'clock p. m.—at Masonie Hall Zeltrami Ave., and Fifth street. Elkanah Commandery No. 30 K. T. Stated conclave—second and fourth Fridays, 8 o'clock p. m.—at Masonic Temple, Bel- trami Ave., and Fifth St. O. E. S. Chapter No. 171, Regular meeting nights— first and third Fridays, 8 o'clock — at Masonic Hall, genram! Ave., and Fiftb t. M. B. A. Roosevelt, No. 1523, Regular meeting nighta Thursday everings at 8 oclock in Odd Fellows furniture. Hall. BOUGHT AND SOLD—Second hand M w.a 0dd Fellows building, Bemidjl Camp No. 5013. Regular meeting nights — across from postoffice, phone 129 POSITION WANTED—By trained nurse by day or week. Apply 503 cor. 5th St. Miss. Ave. Phone 718. = NEW PUBLIC LIBRARY. Open daily, except Sunday, 1 to 6 p m., Tto m. Sunday, reading rooms only, 8 to 6 p. m. Pioneer Want Ads I-2 Gent a Word Bring Results Ask the Man Who Has Tried Them ¥ >~ William C. Kiein INSURANCE; Rentals, Bonds, Real Estate First Mortgage Loans on. City and Farm Property 6 and 6, O’Leary-Bowser Bidg. Phone 19. Bemldjl, FUNERAL DIRECTOR 8ad & 10b evar sinoa ~Ibeautiful, USEFUL book in every respect: - - AND EMBALMER first and third Tuesdays at 8 o'clock at 0Odd Fellows Hall, 402 Beltrami Ave. MODERN SAMARITANS. Regular meeting nights on the first and third Thursdays in the 1. O. O. F. Hall at § . SONS OF NEEMAN. Meetings held thira Sunday afternoon of each month at Troppman's Hall, YEOMANS. Meetings the first Friday Who Sells It? Here they are all in a row. They sell it because it's the best nickel pencil on the market today and will be for many days to come. The Bemidji Pencil stands alone in the (five cent world. It is sold on your money back basis. A store on every street and in surrounding cities. Here They Are: Carlson’s Variety Store Barker’s Drug and Jow- elry Store : W. @. Schroeder 0. 0. Rood & Co. E. F. Netzer’s Pharmao; Wm. McGualig S J. P. Omich’s Cilgar Store Roe & Markusen F. Q. Troppman & Co. L. Abercromble The Failr Store Gould’s Oonfectionery Store Chippewa Trading Store Red Lake Bemlidjl Ploneer Suaply Store Retailers will receive immediate shipments in gross (more or less) by calling Phone 31, or addressing the Bemidji Pioneer Supply Store, Bemidjg Minn. ]