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WO IS WHO “ (Continued from first page.) Judge Hallam has been called up- on to decide many.important. cases. the following are some of the more noteworthy: The Appleby will case, in’ which was sustained the validity of Mrs. Appleby’s will making large bequests to charity. The Great Northern stock case, in which the state asked an injunction restraining the Great Northern Rail- way company from making a pro- posed issue of $60,000,000 stock un- til it should secure the approval of the Railway and Warehouse Commis- sion as required By a statute of the state. Judge Hallam held the statute constitutional and granted the in- junction. The Western Union Telegraph com- pany tax case, in which Judge Hal- lam sustained the right of the state to tax the franchise of the company. The U. S. Express company gross earnings tax case, in which the state’s taxation of earnings on - interstate traffic was sustained. The St. Paul charter case, in which' Judge Hallam sustained the right of citizens to compel the charter com- mission to submit to a vote of the people amendments providing for a commission form of government, and ordered these charter amendments submitted at the last election. Justice Bunn appears to be Judge Hallam’s particular opponent as it is generally conceded that Justice Holt will be returned to the bench. Justice Bunn is an appointee to the bench and has never come before the voters of the state at an election. Stranded. A negro, with an old gray mule hitched to a ramshackle wagon, stood on the incline of Capitol hill, in Wash. ington, during one of the worst sleet storms in January. The old man huddled in his rabbit- skin cap, shivering; the mule was trembling with the cold. According to Everybody’s Magazine, two con- gressmen, waiting for a belated oar, were attracted by the strange outfit and wondered, as time went on and the negro made no effort to depart, what ailed the old fellow. One of the congressmen walked over and said, “Why don’t you move on, uncle?” The old negro pointed a trembling finger at his “team” and replied, ‘“’Cause dis yere mule won't go ‘les’ I whistle at him, and it's so ocold 1 oyarn’t whistlel” Ingenious Excuse. A teamster charged with overload Ing his horse was asked how heavy a load he had on his van. “About a ton,” he replied, “but it was all light stuff!” BEAUTIFUL HAIR AT SMALL COST A Simple Remedy Beautifies the Hair, Cures Dandruff, Stops Falling Hair. ‘What a pity it is to see so many people with thin, wispy hair, faded or streaked with gray, and realize that most of these people might have soft, glossy, abundant hair of beau- tiful color and lustre if they would but use the proper treatment. There is no necessity for gray hair under sixty-five years of age, and there is no excuse for anyone, young or old, having thin, straggling hair, either full of dandruff or heavy and rank smelling with excessive oil. You can bring back the natural color of your hair in a few days and ‘forever rid yourself of any dandruff and loose hairs, and make your hair grow strong and beautiful by using Wyeth’s Sage and Sulphur Hair Rem- edy. For generations common gar- den Sage has been used for restoring and preserving the color of the hair, and Sulphur is recognized by scalp specialists as being excellent for treatment of hair and scalp trou- bles. If you are troubled with dandruff or itching scalp, or if your hair is losing its color or coming out, get a fifty cent bottle of Wyeth’s Sage and Sulphur from your druggist, and no- tice the improvement in the appear- ance of your hair after a few days’ treatment.—Adv. VOTE FOR IT: Here is a fac simile of the good roads amendment as it will appear on the little pink constitution, establish: within this state. VOTE FOR IT! PAID ADVERTISEMENT. $10.00 for Serles. Remedy for Damp Walls. . Boll two quarts of tar with two|- ounool clean (kitchen) grease in an iron :saucepan of convenient size, for & quarter of an hour. To this mix- ture add some slaked lime and very finely pounded glass. which has been previously put through a hair-sieve. Two parts lime to one of glass and worked to the thickness of a thin plaster. Use; as soon as made as it 8oon becomes hard. One coat an inch thick will generally answer the pur- Dose, but if wall is very damp, two coats may be applied. Paint over the cement or plaster and, if wanted, it may be papered as any ordinary wall. GIVES INSTANT ACTION E.N. French & Co., report that A SINGLE DQSE of simple buckthorn bark, glycerine, etc., as compounded in Adler-ika, the German appendici- tis remedy, stops constipation or gas Phone Hotel Stechman, Tenstrike, or inquire 1215, Belt. avenue. . ‘WANTED—An office boy ‘winter. for the Inquire of Tom Smart. s s oo, FOR SALBE—Typewriter ribbons for every make of typewriter on the market at 50 cents and 75 cents ‘each. Every ribbon. gold ‘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 Ploneer Office Supply Store. FOR SALE—104 acres or nardwood timber land in section 31, township 148, north range 34, town of Lib- erty, Beltrami county. Price for Wwhole tract $1,! 500 Apply at Plo- 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 solicit the active coopera- tion of the people of this county in support of my candidacy. GRAHAM M. TORRANCE, Bemidji, Minn. Adv. - month. ply at tl JUMPS ON RUSTY SIDEWALK NAIL. While working on a well digging machine a Minnesota man jumped upon a rusty sidewalk spike. The nail drove part of his black woolen sock far up into his foot. He remov- ed as much of the sock as he could, put on Allen’s Ulcerine Salve, and kept right on with his work. The salve drew out parts of the sock and all other poisons and in a week his foot was healed up. This salve is one of the oldest rem- edies in America and since 1869 it has been known as the only salve powerful enough to cure chronic uleers and old sores of long standing. Allen’s Ulcerine Salve acts by drawing out the poisons and healing the sore from the bottom up. It is so powerful that it heals new cuts and sores in one-third the time that common salves and liniments take. And it heals scalds and burns with- out a scar.—Adv. DRUGLESS HEALING Marvel of the Twentieth Century Comes fo Aid Suffering Humanity WHY NOT GET WELL? Dr. Lawrence M. -Isgrigg is perma- nently located at Bemidji, and is able to do in the Healing Line what many doctors cannot do, his methods of healing the sick are entirely different from anything used or practiced byany oth- er Doctor in the Northwest. Dr. Isgrigg practices the famous Weltmer system of Suggestive Ther- apeutics which is positive, sure, and permanent in its results ‘when prop- erly applied to a diseased body. He easily succeeds where the average medical man fails. Diseases pro- nounced hopelessly incurable by the 01d School practitioner readily yield to this common sense treatment, and if you have tried -every- thing recommended or prescribed by your family physician with- out being benefited or obtaining the desired results, call and Dr. Isgrigg will cure you.of chronic stomach, liver or kidney trouble; rheumatism. constipation, paralysis, consumption or female trouble; diseases of the eye, epilepsy, asthma, cancer, eczema, nervousness or any organic weakness, in fact most chronic dis- eases. Offices 411 Minnesota ave- voted, at the election on the 5th day of November: STATE BALLOT Constitutional Amendments to be voted for by the people FIRST—Amendment to section (16) of article nin® ing the road and bridge fund, and authorizing the legislature to levy an annual tax for the purpose of constructing and improving roadsand bridges If you vote for any candidate at the election and fail to vote the little pink ballot your vote counts against the amendment, for it requires a mBaox'ny ot all the votes cast at; the election to adopt the amendment. nue, 3 doors north of City hall.—Adv. WORK FOR IT! ballot, and as it shquld be WORK FOR IT! R. C. Dunn, Princeton, Minn., Oct, 14, 1912. on the stomach INSTANTLY. Many Bemidji people are being helped. Classified Department HELP WANTED WANTED—Good girl house work. -Wages $16. 00 per Lake Agency, Employment till December 1st. Ap- neer office. FOR SALE—Sman fonw: 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—Rubber stamps. ~ The _ Ploneer will procure any kind of rubber stamp for you on short no- tice. FOR SALE—Kitchen range, bed and dresser. Inquire 1018 Bemidji avenue, FOR SALE—Good driving horas for tamily use. - Apply Bemidji Brg. Co. FOR RENT FOR RENT—Store building on Bel- trami avenue, second door from the Bemidji Steam Laundry. Suitable for land office, flour and feed store or clothing store in con- nection with employment office. Room includes one story and full basement. Inquire at the Grand Th,entre. 9 FOR W RENT—Rooming house, 12 rooms partly furnished. "Good lo- cation. Inquire 309 Minn. Ave, or Phone 210. FOR RENT-—The Heffron house, 903 Eléventh St. Inquire at First National Bank, Bemidji, Minn. FOR SALE—80 acres good farm land in town of Liberty, section 25. A snap if taken this fall. Write or call om Tom Smart or G. E. Carson. for = general Superintendent of Red Lake, Red Minn. FOR SALE—One good team, two cows, one automatic seperator, one cultivator. ' C. Cassler, phone 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 Opportunity for arming in Northern innesota Has No qual in All America! the largest amount of classified | #' advertising. The Courler-News covers North Dakota like & 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 ingertion, on-half cent per word -succeeding insertlons; fifty cents Der line per month. Address the Courier-News, Fargo, N. D. WANTED—100 merchants in North- ern Minnesota to sell “The Bemid- 31 lead pencil. Will carry name of every merchant in advertising columns of Pioneer in order that all recelve advantage of advertis- ing. For wholesale prices write or phone the Bemidji Pioneer Of- ‘fice Supply Co. Phone 31. Be- midji, Minn. WANTEDAT ONCE—To rent 4 or 5 room cottage, furnisned, until May 1st or two or three furnished rooms for light house keeping, or » will buy furnishings complete of four room cottage if price is reas- onable—A. T, Carlson, Carlsons Store. WANTED—OId cotton rags, clean, free from buttons. No silk cloth, gunny sack or wool cloth accepted. Pioneer Office. BOUGHT AND SOLD—Second hand furniture. 0dd Fellows building, across from postoffice, phone 129. You've only to investigate and you will enthuse over the possibilities---climate that’s unexcelled---right near a great market and blessed with everything that makes farming enjoy- able and profitable. * With the fin- Long, cool summers---crisp delightful winters tempered by a myriad of beautiful lakes. est soil that’s possible, you've got a combination here that makes this the real “land of epportunity.” home---no drawbacks. and railroads. “‘Easy terms,” please note. It's a place for a The best of schools, churches, stores 14,000 Acres of Perfect Farm Land on Easy Terms Up From $12.00 the Acre There's a great demand for fuel wood throughout this section and you can pay for your farm from the standing maple, birch, ete. Buy now when land is cheap. Think of it! - You canbuy here in Beltrami today at $12 to $20. Out on the cold, dreary plains of western Canada they want twice these prices, and the soil is not the equal of this. Why not make your home here in beautiful Minnesota? . Lands We spent months, years, traveled thousands of miles. How We Selected These Fine We took soil and timber experts with us. We tramped over the properties, and selected only such land as A " was equal to the best that is, And now we offer it to you at unbelievable prices that will make you money and make you happy Fill out the coupon, or better, come and see us. MELGES BROTHERS 37 South 3d St. MINNEAPOLIS MAIL THIS COUPON TODAY. - MELGES BROS., Gentlemen; e Minneapolis, Minn. I would like free literature on your lands. 1 emuld go and visit the properties about............ i LODGEDOM IN BEMIDA. o 9000000000000 B. P..0. B. © O . Catholie church. DREGRER OF HONOR . Meeting nights _every second and fourth Monday evenings, at Odd Fellows Hall. r. o= Regular meeting_nights every 1st and 2nd Wednes- day evening at 8 o'clock. Eagles hall. eanm Regular meetings—First and third Saturday after §( noons, at 2:30—at Odd Fel j\, lows Halls, 402 Beltrami = Ave. L 0.0 > Bemidji Lodge No. 110 Regular meeting nights —every Friday, 8 o’slock at Odd Fellows Hall, 402 Beltrami. L O. O..F. Camp No. 34 Regular meeting every second and fourth Wednesdays at § o'clock at Odd Fellows Hall. Rebecca Lodge. Regular meeUng nights —- first and third Wednesday at $o’clock. —L 0. O. F. HalL XNIGETS OF FYTHIAS Bemid)i Lodge No. 16s. 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 R A. M. Stated convocations —first and third Mondays, § o'clock p. m—at Masonie Hall Zeltraml Ave., and Fifth, street. MASONIC. A F. & A M, Bomiay 283 " Reguiar * meeting nights — first and third Wednesdays, 8 o’clock—at Muonic _Hall, Beltrami Ave and Fifth St. Bemidji Chapter No. 70, ® Elkanah Commandery No. 3¢ K. T. Stated conclave—second and fourth Fridays, 8 o'clock P. m.—at Masonic Temple, Bel- trami Ave., and Fifth St O. £. 5. Chapter No. 171, Regular meeting nights— first and third Fridays, 8 o'clock — at Masonic Hall, Beltrami Ave., and Fifeh M. B. A. Roosevelt, No. 1528 Regular meeting nights Thursday everings at 8 oclock in OJdd Fellows Hall. M. W. A Bemidji Camp No. 6018 \ Regular meeting nights first and third Tuesdays at 8 o'clock at Odd Fellows Hall, 402 Beltrami Ave. MODERN in the L O. O. F. Hall at 8 p. m. SONS OF NERMAN. Meetings held _ thiré Sunday afternoon .of each month at Troppman's Here They Are: ' Qould’s Oonfectionery Store : Who Sells It? The Bemidji Pencil the home of Mrs. H. ¥. Schmidt, 306 Third strect. 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. stands alone in the ifive] cent + world. Itissold on your money- back basis. A store on every street and in surrounding cities. Oarlson’s Varlety Store Barker’s Drug and Jew- olry Store W. Q. Sohroeder 0. 0. Rood & Oo. E. F. Netzer’s Pharmaocy Wm. MoOualg J. P. Omioch’s ©O l.ar Store Roe & M-rk—an . F. @. Troppman & Oo. L. Aberoromble The Falr Store shipments in gross (more or less) by calling Phone -31, or addressing the Bemidji Pioneer Supply Store, Bemidjy, |