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. i ENTERED AS SECOND CLASS TER AT THE POSTOFFICE AT BE- MIDJI, MINN,, UNDER THH ACT OF MARCH 8, 1879, ; 3 aifversa T et s PP 850 ivered or. . Whi @ deliv- ory is ur-nl:")&‘lmIn-n immediate complaint to this office.” Telephone 31. Out of town subscribers will confer s favor if they ‘will. report when they fio not get thelr papers promptly. Every subsctiber to the Daily Ploneer ‘will recelve notice about ten days be- fore his time expires, . epportunity to" make ‘an advance. pay- ment before the paper is finally stopped. Subscription Rates. One month. by carrier. One year, Ig.um:‘r . . ‘Three months, postage ‘pal Bix months,’ postage. paid. One year, postage paid. ‘The Weekly Pionser.. Bight pages, containing a summary of mnT:ewl of t? week. , Published overy ursday and sent d to any address for 1.50 in m'.'f:..w Published every afternoon except Sun- day by the Bemidji Pioneer Publishing Company, s & E. CARSON. E. . DENU_ EAROLD J. DANS, Bditor. e —_— How About It?- Emil Seidel, Socialist candidate for vice president, in an address in Omaha recently declared that should | his party cpn.xe into power the govern- ment would assume control of all the farming land of the country, either by confiscation, purchase, or taxa- tion. voters appreciate that kind of politi- cal argument.—St. Hilaire Spectator. One wonders how the farmer |- The Supreme Court Case. The Crookston Times hits the nail on the head with the following edi- torial: “There is apparently great agita- tion in some quarters regarding the supreme court,situation. Before mak- ing coment let us look at a few pri- mary election results. For chief jus- tice of the Minnesota supreme court the vote was as follows: Charles M. Start, present in- cumbent, .. .. .. .. .... 61,126 Judge C. W. Stanton, Bemidji 54,710 E. A. Stewart, Minneapolis .. 46,119 “Justice Start and Judge Stanton were thereupon declared the non- partisan nominees. “Chief Justice Start then with- drew as a candidate, believing the people of the state did not appreciate his service of twenty years and this moved Stewart into the running. “Then friends of Associate Justice Calvin L. Brown nominated him on petition 3s a candidate for chief jus- tice to succeed Justice Start, and the St. Paul Dispatch, and some other papers, and a number of indviduals are now taking up cudgels for Judge Brown. “Now, without discussing the mer- its or detriments of any of the can- didates, we Want to see how any man or newspaper who eternally harp ‘let the people rulc’ ean have the con- summate gall to deliberately take it upon themselves to undo what the people have done. “The people of Minnesota, at the recent primary election, voted for whom they chose. They nominated certain men, not only for the su- preme court, but for all state offices. “The Fergus Fall Journal, in a long editorial, advocates the election of Judge Brown as chief justice, and incidently remarks: The result of this first effort to have the judge nominated by a popular vote, shows how ig- norant people are in regard to the men who serve upon the bench. “Now that is really too bad! The people knew what they wanted when it came to everything else, but when it came to chief justice they can not be trusted to nominate the man they want and straightway the self con- stituted advisory committee to the ignorant people, petition for a fit candidate, “We do not know a great deal about F. A. Stewart, but 46,119 peo- ple voted for him,or only 15,000l]ess than voted for Justice Start, and it is to be presumed that they voted for him because they wanted to. “Qf Judge Stanton we do know & great deal, and he is fully capable of filling the position on the supreme bench. He may not suit all the at- torneys, and we do not care Whether he does or not; he evidently suits the Deople pretty well, for he received only about 6,000 votes less than Chief Justice Start. “It is the same old argument. The primary ballot is & grand: thing in the hands of the people, because it gives the people a chance to pick out their own candidates. But twice in a while the inner council of the wise 8guy club discoyers that the people made a tremendous 'mistake that must be righted and they.at once get out a petition to accompish some end that the people as & whole voted not to accomplish, and:the result is that a nice small majority is assum- Bread made with phosphate powder: Bread made with alum powder: - AbsolutelyPure - [Fmfi a series of velaborate chemical tests.] Comparative digestibility of food made with different baking powders: An equal quantity of bread (biscuit) was made with each of three differ- ent kinds of baking powder—cream of tartar, phosphate, and alum—and submitted separately to the action of the digestive fluid, each for the same length of time. The percentage of the food digested is shown as follows: Bread made with Royal Cream of Tartar Powder: 99 Per Cent. Digested 67} Per Cent. Digested 2 67 Per Cent. Digested 'Royal Baking powder raised food is shown to be of greatly superior digestibility and healthfulness. ° names signed to a petition as it is to borrow from a neighbor, even if you know they do not care to lend—all that is required is gall. “Viewed from any angle, there is no consistency in crowing over the satisfactory ~resuits of the pri- mary law in one breath and advocat- ing the election of a man the people did not nominate, or charging ignor- ance in a specific instance and prais- ing the wisdom of the people in an- other. “The people nominated certain candidates, and the Times can see no reason why the men nominated should not be supported by all ad- vocates of the primary. “Of course, there - may be those who have special reasons for sup- porting some one else. We haven’t. Never Is Elected. 7 “Dubbs must be in politics for his health.” “He's always running for office.” “I know it, but all he ever gets for his pains is the exercise.” PAID ADVERTISEMENT. $10.00 for Series. I announce myself as the Re- publican candidate for the office of County Attorney for Bel- trami county. If elected I will be the attor- ney for the county. I will con- tinue to conduct the office eco- nomically, as'a purely business one, and in no sense as a politi- cal office. i I solicit the active -eoopera- tion of the people of this.county in support of my candidacy. GRAHAM M. TORRANCE, Bemidji, Minn. PAID ADVERTISEMENT. $5.00 for Series, J. C. THOMPSON Candidate for County Commissioner Fifth District. At -the urgent request of a com- mittee of citizens I hereby announce myself as an Independent Candidate for the office of county commission- er from the Fifth district. 1-have lived in this county twenty years and if elected ‘will fill the office to Absolutely 1diotlc, “There goes & crazy man,” sald the theatrical “producer.” - “I. @idn’t ‘notice - that -he’ looked crazy,” replied the press agent. “He wanted to get me interested wasn’t brought over from Berlin or Vienna.” PAID ADVERSISEVENT. $10.00 for Series. Having been nominated for the office of Representative for the sixty- first district I solicit ycur support at the poils Nov. 5, 1912. I stand for the development of | NORTHERN MINNESOTA and if|5 elected, I pledge you my earnest sup- port to all measures coming before the legislature, to that end. A. P. RITCHIE, Bemidji, Minnn. NOSE STOPPED UP - WITH CATARRH A Common Sense Treatment for Colds and Catarrh, Gives Instant Relief. No matter how miserable you are with catarrh or a cold in the head, nose stopped up, throat sore, eyes run- ning, dull pain in the 'head, dry cough, fever, foul breath, Ely’s Cream Balm will give you instant relief. It gets right at the root of the trou- ble, cleanses, heals and strengthens the raw, sore membranes, stops the nasty discharge so that you are not constantly blowing the nose and spit- ting. In a few minutes after applied you can just feel it doing its work of ‘clearing' the head, the pain and soreness are relieved, the breathing becomes natural and the stuffed up feeling is gone; THis cleansing, heal- ing, antiseptic Balm contains no' mer- cury, cocaine or other harmful drugs. It is easy to apply, pleasant to use; and never fails to give relief, even in the worst cases. e Never neglect a cold, and don’t suf- fer the miseries of catarrh-nor dis- gust your friends with your hawking, spitting and foul breath.. Get a 50- cent bottle of Ely’s Cream F I your druggist, and start the treai the best of my ability and will-en- ing a sort of mild form of dictator- ship, as ‘it is just ‘as easy 0. get deayor to give the county & good made.—Ady, - ment at once. You will-find that it Wwill be the best {nvestment you ever, in' the production of a piece = that | Natural_Hesitation, “Now that your parénts have put You through college, why are you ‘waiting before you pick out a career?” “Why,” réplied the sweet girl grad- uate, “I'm waiting to Bee if some on won't pick me out.”—Judge. 5 A COMPROMISE. Mr. Oldwed—Well, my boy, who's the speaker of the house, you or your wite? i Mr. Newwed—Why, er—er—we 00~ cupy the chair together. . Cautious Fear. 4 *“All of the party were weighed but Mabel, and she would not go on the seales.” “Well, you know she is trying to get up-a reputation for losing flesh, and I guess she was afraid the scales would give her a weigh” FAMOUS DOCTOR'S PRESCRIPTION. TIMBEN SBALE. Sealed pn}‘pnsula in duplicate, each en- velope marked “Pre for Timber, Red Lake Reservation,” will be received at the office of the Superintendent of the Red Lake Indian School, Red Lake, Minnesota, until 12 o'clock noon, central time, Friday, November 1, 1912, for the purchase of approximately 10,000,000 feet of pine timber on the Red Lake Indian- Reservation, Minnesota. This timber is upon portions of areas desig- nated as tract 1, comprising sections 11, 12, 18 and 14, township 150 north, range 36 west; sections 7, 8, 9, 10, 15, 16, 17 and 18, township 160 north, range 34 west; ct 2, comprising sections 28 and 33, township 161 north, range 33 west; and tract 3, comprising lots 1, 4, , and 8, section 31, township 151 north, range 32 west, lots 5, 6, 9 and 10, sec- tion 6, lots 2, 3, 6 and 7, section 7, lots 2, 8, 6 and 7, section 18, all in township 160 north, range 32 west, and sections 1 and 12, township 150 north, range 33 west, and the e¥% of the e% of section 36, township 151 north, range 33 west. The timber offered for sale consists of v Wway pine, as follows: tract No. 1, 7,000,- 000 feet; tract No. 2, 500,000 feet; and tract No. 3, 2,600,000 feet. Only dead or fire-injured timber will be sold. How- Tego &t Philadalphia, and as one of the Pl had & - e I e e S | {quite uniikely that I would be able to do-any more than had been done, but I prescribed what seemed to be the best thing under the.circumstances. He went away and in a week he re- | turned saying he was no better, that he He § S. B. HARTMAN, M. D. - In 1860 I was practicing medicine in Millersville, Pernsylvania, a thriving farming community. A praominent citizen of that locality called at my office one day in a very feeble condi- tion. So much 80 he had to be assist- ed in alighting from his wagon. I found on questioning him that he had been affifcted for about two years. He had oonsulted various doctors, among them a specialist from Philadel~ phia. They pronounced his disease_to ‘e Bright's disease of the kidneys. He was gradually falling in strength, los- ing flesh rapidly, and altogether pre- sented a very pitiable spectacle, the remnant of a once strong and happy man. - I had been treating a meighbor of his successfully. This mneighbor had highly recommended me and thus it was he had come to me. He told me that the doctors had practically given up his case as hope- less and he felt free to consult any ‘other physician: I hesitated to take the case, as I felt sure I could not do anything more than the other phy- siclans had done. I told him so, yet he tnsisted upon my prescribing. I was & graduate of the Jefferson Medical Col- ‘was. still losing ground. that he had taken the same medicine before. ‘No doubt he had. But:he ‘wished me to prescribe again, I did so. ‘This went on for about two'months, the patient failing all the time, and 1 | was becoming thoroughly discouraged with the case. 2z i One day the patient said to me, “Doctor, why ‘don’t you give me the medicine you gave my neighbor? We all thought he would die, but your medicine cured him. This was why I came to you. Why not give me the same medicine you gave him?” “But,” I said, “your neighbor did not have kidney disease. It was a bowel complaint that I preseribed for in his case. I remember I gave him the Neutralizing Mixture that I make a great deal of use of in bowel dis- eases.” “Well, ¥ want some of the same medicine you gave him. It worked wonders with him and I believe it ‘will with me.” “But,” I said, “this is not a medi- cine for kidney disease.” “Well, 8ince you seem td be like the rest of the doctors, you cannot help me; why not try the medicine that helped ‘my neighbor?’ - After some hesitation I concluded to glve him a bottle of it. In ten days he returned. He at once began to be- rate me in no complimentary words, saying: ° : “You knew very well this medicine ‘would help me. “You held it back merely to get' more fees for treating me. From the first the medicine has helped me and I have made rapid im- provement. If I could have had this medicine a year ago I should have been saved a great deal of expense and loss of time.” 5 T replied that I was glad the medi- cine had helped him. I was somewhat confused by his brusque manner and rough speech. I gave him another bot- tle of medictne. Did not see him again for about three weeks. Once more he called at my office for another bottle of medicine, which was his last call A month or ®o afterwards a neighbor of his called and got a bottle of the same medicine, saying that my patient lwas practically a well man, attending |to his quties about his Jarge farm. I°had _given him the Neutralising Mixture Which was a remedy that I had used before only for howel dis- eases. The same remedy that has since (been sold under the name of Peruna. I could not quite understand how it 'was that Peruna should operate so beneficially in such seemingly:different diseases. I had not yet grasped the correct’ philosophy of disease. I did not then clearly comprehend that catarrh may affect the kidneys as well as the bowels. Nothing of that.sort 'was taught in the books in those days. It took me years before I clearly com- prehended that catarrh a disease liable to attack any organ of the body. Catarrh is a disease of the mucous ‘membranes. The mucous membranes line every organ, duct and,cavity in the body. Thus it ic catarrh may set- tle anywhere where there is a mucous membrane. Peruna is my remedy for all these cases. I insist upon it, however, that Peruna is pot.a cure-all. I use it for Just one disease, catarrh. But as catarrh is liable to affect so many dif- ferent places, disturb so many differ- ent functions, derange so many differ- ent organs, it does seem to many peo- ple as if I regarded Peruna as a cure= all. ‘The above narrative is simply one of the many cases in my early practice that brought me to comprehend the wonderful efficacy of Peruna. in such & variety of diseases. The kidneys may be affected by other diseases than catarrh, but the average case of kid- ney disease is catarrh of the kidneys. All cases of Bright's disease begin with catarrh of the kidneys. This being true, and it also being true that Peruna is a catarrh remedy, it follows that a great many cases of kidney disease would be benefited by Peruna. PERUNA SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS. SPECIAL NOTICE — Many are making ~inquiries for the. old« time Peruna. To such would .say, this formula is now put out under the pony = AT s 3}10. Write them and they will be ——_. ever, all of it is of good quality, and it is all accessible to a railroad or Red e. The minimum prices which will be accepted are $4.00 per M. feet for Norway pine and $6.50 per M. feet for white pine. Bids may be mmade for the timber on one or more of the tracts, but each bid must cover one tract only. The timber must be cut under regulations prescribed by the secretary of the in- #erior. All timber must be cut and re- moved before June 1, 1914, and prior to June 1, 1913, the. following amounts must be paid for’ and remoyed: from t 1, 5,000,000 feet; from tract 2, .| trac! a3 300,000 feet; from tract 3, 1,500,000 feet. ‘With each bid a certified 'check on & solvent national bank must be submit- ted; with the bid on tract 1, the check must be in the amount of $2,000; on tract 2, $300.00; and on tract 3, $1,000. These checks will be returned to unsuc- cessful bidders, applied toward the pay- ment for timber if bid is accepted, and retained as a forfeit if a bid is accepted and the bidder fafls to comply “with the requirements of his bid. The right of the secretary of the interior to waive technical defects in advertisements and bids, and to reject any and all bids, is Teserved. — Further information as to the timber, and coples of the approved tm of contract, may be obtained upon reduest from Walter F. DicKens, Su- perintendent of the Red Lake Indian School, Red Lake, Minnesota. ‘Washington, D. C, August 20, 1912. & C."F. UKE, Acting Commissloner of Indian Affairs. | Special Sale of School and Other State Lands - _Improved by the State Heclaml_aliun Board State of Minnesota, Office. = St. Paul,_ September. 30, 1912. Notice is hereby given that on No- vember 18, 1912, at 10:30 o'clock a. m., in the office of the county auditor at Be- midji, Beltrami County, in the State ot Minnesota, I will offer at public sale a tract of state land, twenty acres of which has been cleared of all trees, brush, stumps, grubs and dead timber, and -well plowed to a depth of six in- ches, in conformity with Chapter 367, General- Laws of Minnesota for 1911, as_follows: SEY of 8EY Sec. 36, Twp. 150, Rg. 31 Surface undulating; soil, clay; road on south and east; burned over; ap- praiged. value ‘of land $400. Cost of clearing and plowing 20 acres $700, a to- tal apprajsal of $1,100, or $27.50 per acre for the entlre tract. I will offer also at the same sale the NE% of SEY, appraised value $9.00 per. acre; the NW% of SE% appraised value $7.50 per acre, ‘and the SW¥ of SEI, ap- praised value $9.00 per acre, all in said Section 36. Terms: State Auditor's TFifteen_per cent of the pur- chase price and interest on the unpaid balance from date of sale to Junme 1, 1913, must be paid at the time of sale. The balance of purchase money is pay- able in whole or in part on or before With you forty years from date af sale; the rate of interest on the unpaid balance is four per cent per annum, payable in advance on June Ist of each year, provided, the principal remains unpaid for ten years; but if the principal is paid within ten years from date of sale, the rate of in- terest will be computed at five per cent per annum. Appraised value of timber, if any, must also be paid at time of sale. All mineral rights are reserved by the laws of the state. Not mare than 320 acres can be sold or contracted to be sold to any one pur- chaser. - : Agents acting for purchasers must furnish affidavit of authority. Apprais- ers' reports, showing quality and kind of soil, are on file in this office. Lists of lands to be offered may be obtained of the state auditor or the state commissioner of immigration’ at St. Paul, and of the county auditor at Bemidji, Minn. SAMUEL G. IVERSON, State Auditor. 41051026 New This di lishers of Webster’s 1912 rounded; beautiful, strong, durable. color plates, numerous subjects by at this office SIX Consecutive The M It is ctly the s ‘the $i00 b&al;%‘i i - edges sl.fl* Bomus of Consecutive Coupons wnd the S1C Carload of Pears Here Why- pay the transient fruit peddler fancy prices when your home dealer will sell you better goods at much lower prices? PEARS, per bushel APPLES, per bushel . Carload of apples on tl"u; way. Or,cief now ~ W. G SCHROEDER - s ’ 1 The Like illustrations in the announcementsfrom day to day. $4.00 (ke Mostrations In Mo publiehed by the Bty dav) successors. It is the oNLY entirely NEw compilation by the world’s freatest authorities from leading universities; is bound in DICTIONARY ull Limp Leather, flexible, stamped in gold on back and Himstrated sides, printed on Bible are maps and over 600 subjects beautifully illustrated by three- educational charts and the latest United States Census, Present Azy Book by Mail, 22¢ Extra for Postage leased to send you a free booklete William C. Kiein INSURANCE Rentals, Bonds, Real Estate First Mortgage Loans on City and Farm Property 8 and 8, O’Leary- Phene | | Bemidjl, dictionary - or their iper, with red edges and corners esides the general contents, there i monotones, 16 pages of |gones The $2.00 Is in pisia el ting. Y i Bleck s hae ssone 1912 e bt of the col ored plaies |Eaveng 48¢ and charts are omitted. ~SIX . $1.00