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In the Off fitflldfll the papers are delivered by cartier. Where the deliv- ory is irregular jplease make immediate somplaint to this office. Telephone 31. Out of town subscribers will confer a tavor if they will report when they de not get their papers promptly. Every subscriber to the Daily Pioneer will receive notice about ten days be- fere his time expires, giving him an epportunity to make an advance pay- ment before the paper is finally stopped. Bubscription Rates. One month, by carrier. One year, by carrier . Three months, postage paid. 8ix months, postage pafd. One year, postage paid. ’ The Weekly Ploneer. Eight pages, containing a summary of the news of the week. Published every Thursday and sent postage paid te any address for 1.60 in advance. Published every afternoon except Sun- day by the Bemidji Pioneer Publishing Company, @. N. CARSON. E. X. DENU_ plated and Just the t people who Perfection or other room. EAROLD J. DANE, BEditor. Do Your Advertising Early. Early Christmas shopping will take care of itself if the goods are advertised early. It will not pay you, Mr. Merchant, to wait until December 15 before you start your holiday advertising. Advertise early and the early shopper will come to your store. Merchandise and sales- manship will complete the sale. If you have not already done so, call at the Pioneer office and arrange for your advertising. Moon Wants a Recount. C. 0. Moon has decided that he will ask for a recount of the votes cast for register of deeds in the past election but has not yet filed such a notice. Mr. Moon was defeated by five votes according to the offi- cial count and believes that a re- count will put the excess in his favor. Holden Leaves Iowa. Prof. Perry G. Holden, the man who “made” the Iowa Agricultural College at Ames, has accepted a posi- tion with the International Harves- ter company’s service bureau and will assume his new duties at once. Professor Holden will be at the head of a bureau which will have a mill- ion dollar fund at his command and his field will be the entire country rather than one state or section. There is probably no man in the agricultural field today who is better known or who has done more for the farmers than Halden. The Pioneer expects to print, from time to time, articles prepared under his super- vision concerning various phases of farm work and life. Professor Hol- den is well known to the progressive farmers of Iowa and Southern Min- nesota and before many months will probably be familiar writer to the farmers of this section of the coun- try. Brains on the Farm. The farmer who is a money maker studies his profession, is up-to-date and like the man from “Missouri,” you have to “show” him. For the successful farmer learned long ago that “two heads are better than one,” and that a careful com- bination of his own “brain force” with that of others in his own line will do more for him than he can hope to achieve alone. In other worde, he judges success by results attained. ) If you have a theory on rotation of crops, fertilization, breeding of live stock or a method of soil prepar- ation, you will be plied with ques- tions and demand made that you prove your assertion by weight and measure. If you claim a better variety of grain the farmer will not hazard a crop by planting his field until he has first put it to the test, and if the test is satisfactory, he will not be slow to adopt it. The farmer may be from the coun- try, but he no longer has “hay seed in his hair;” unless by test it has proven to be of a specially high grade and fertile variety. It you claim a certain breed of hog wiil grow to a larger size, pro- duce more bacon, grow larger hams and yleld a larger profit to the breed- er, you must first “show him.” If you have a distinct type of horse with the necessary qualities that make it worth while to raise and Wwhich is certain to command a good price on the market, you can win the farmer by .proving results and in no other-way. If you say a certain kind of cow will give more and richer milk, yield a larger percentage of butter fat and produce more profit on the same ratio of feed, it's up to you to produce re- sults. Why? 5 Because the farmer of today con- comfort wherever you wa it in cold weather. A gallon of kerosene w; last 12 hours. Price on black Price on blue enameled Stoves. 55-0 316-318 Minn. Ave. RAYO LAMPS Give Lots of Light They burn kerosene, are nickel Price $2.25 Kerosene Heaters keep frost from the cellars and take the chill off a bath In fact bring Stoves.....c.......... $4-00 GIVEN HARDWARE CO. YOUR MONEY BAOK IF YOU WANT IT BEMIDJI have a 10-inch shade. hing for students and read. nt ill Phone 87 ducts his business with good hard- headed business judgment and not by guess work. This is not selfishness, it’s com- mon sense applied to a theory which has “made good.” : The farmer of today has ample fa- cilities for getting accurate infor- mation and he is taking advantage of it to get results that pay. Wanted to Know. Mother—Freddie, haven’t I told you that if you mock at the peculiarities of others you may grow just like them. Freddie—Say, ma, do you suppose if I mocked at the elephant long enough I'd ever get s0’s I could pick up ap- ples over the fence with my nose? In Sufirage Bays. Pretty Girl—Will you be entitled to & vote before long? Handsome Friend—No; but I hope to have some one whose vote I can direct pretty soom. | times the sore would heal, but it al- | ways broke open again. A Noble Character, Who never takes umbrellas ‘That don’t belong to him, Deserves to dwell in heaven Among the seraphim. IOWA MAN STUCK WITH PITCHFORK A farmer living in the Northern part of lowa stuck himself in the leg with a pitchfork. The wound would not heal and for two years he had a running sore. He tried all the com- mon salves and liniments and some- Finally he healed it up to stay healed with Allen’s Ulcerine Salve. Thiy 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 ul- cers 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 cAom& ry d an ¢ mon salves and liniments take. it heals burns and scalds without a scar. Sold at Barker’s Drug Store. —Adv. For Every Baking CALUMET BAKING POWDER Best—because it’s the purest. Best—because it never fails. Best— because it makes every bakinglight, fluffy and evenly raised. Best —because it is moder- ate in cost—highest in quality. At your grocers. RECEIVED HIGHEST --AWARDS World’s Pure Food Expo- sition, Chicago, lIL Paris Exposition, France, March, 1912. ADDITIONAL SOCIETY Over 100 people took advantage of the excellent skating weather yes- terday and the ice on Lake Irvine was crowded. Although the lake is not frozen all of the way across the ice for several hundred feet from shore is safe. Last night’s snow spoiled skating for a few days but as Lake Bemidji has not started to freeze yet there will be several days of good skating. Saturday afternoon a thirteen year old boy was found intoxicated by boys who were skating on Lake Irvine. The boy was unable to walk 80 was carried home by two of the boys. An investigation was made as to where he had obtained the liquor and it was found that a local boy who was employed in a drug store in this city had taken the whiskey down to the lake and dared him to drink it. The boy was discharged from the drug store but will not be prosecuted as the parents of the boy who became intoxicated wish.to have the matter dropped. “The Money Kings” or “A Mission In Diplomacy.” j Special, special! Three reels of modern life. A story of Wall street conniving to circumvent the govern- ment, defy the people, grasp them and throttle with its tenticles, the cry of peace. The octopus of avrice defeated by a quick-witted girl and a daring avitor. He flies to the rescue in his hydro-aeroplane, far out over the sea. He carries a message to a young diplomat on his way to Hauge, and the establish- ment of Universal Peace. Majestic theatre tonight and tomorrow night. —Adv. Much Like Human Life. - A tree does not die of old age." It accumulates infirmities with the years and has many diseases. It may starve or die of thirst; caterpillars may eat its foliage, scale bugs suck its juices, beetles tunnel under the bark, scab, rust, molds, rot, blight, may prey upon it. Peeling the bark of the birch does not kill it. The lumbering season is over when the sap begins to stream up- ward, as wood cut “in the sap” is lia- ble to decay. A sugar maple in three weeks yields of its life’s blood to the extent of 25 gallons (70 drops falling every minte), which boils down to a little less tran five pounds of sugar. The trees are not injured if properly I-2 Cent a Word-==Cash treated, nor exhausted by being bored | too much or at the wrong time, S22 8RS S8R &1 The wind is also £a enemy. | 3 K Cispure. 'K Cishealth- ful. It really does make lighter, nicer t:iscuih, cakes and pastry than the old fashioned single acting baking powders. y d you only a fair price for i fi: bzkingp;zwdeg sfiould sSII for mort KKK KKK K KKK REMEMBER The Fair Store Sells Postage Stamps At Cost R. F. MURPH “UNERAL DIRECTOR AND EMBALMER Oftira 213 Settrimi Ave. i Bhane preus. ti'fi*********i: KKK KKK KKK KK KK HOTEL RADISSON MINNEAPOLIS FINEST IN THE NORTHWEST LOCATED IN THE CENTER OF THE RETAIL DISTRICT, NEAR THE LEADING THEATERS, CON- VENIENT TO EVERYTHING. RATES ROOMS WITH RUNNING WATER $1.50 PER DAY. ROOMS WITH TOILET $2.00 PER DAY" ROOMS WITH BATH AND TOILET $2.50, $3.00, $3.50, $4.00 PER DAY. GIRGULATINGIGED,WATER e — MERCHANTS WHO WANT YOUR BUSINESS It matters not where you reside or what you want, the merchants below can it get for you at a price that will defy competition. n«cfiifii«flxflw&;fl««flt«: WE RETURN 12223 Today pictures made from % the films you send in this % morning. * Enlarging, Framing, Copying. ¥ ***tt**i*ii* * * HAKKERUP * « Third St. Bemidji. & - * R K FREREFRIR IR KK * Do you want THE BEST GROCERIES found in Bemidji Come right here and get them, as we pride ourselves on having only the best money cam buy. SCHWANDT &Anu.m Beml%]llnne!oumi'neiuon. FARRRIGRIIRIR AT KKK KKK KKK KK L2222 222222223 L2 22222222222 2 * Let us prove to you that our % Variety store leads in * SERVICE, VALUES AND VARIETY. It will cost you nothing to be convinced. ook dedk ek ok B g EE < ] Bemidji, b KKK KKK KKK KKK KKK HRARRRRRIRRR RN K Kk ko ko kkkkkk kK E B * iifikfii&i&*filfi!’lfiifiifi!{: * We strive to sell. THAT’'S NATURAL. % But we strive harder to please. THAT’'S SERVICE. % Courteous attention ¥ won over many jewelry * tomers to us. * ok ok *A ok % George T. Baker & Co. i L2 22222232222 T * | IR R * *x x ALBERT KLEVEN * x * - i MoOUAIG * x % Northern Minnesota Lands ¥ & GENERAL MERCHANDISE % %« for aale. Information re- ¥ & * ly given. 0es, * x % and Provisious. * ¥ Security State Bank Bldg, % & * * % ¥ Third St. Bemidji & * Bemidji, Minn. *x * * * * FRREERIRERR AR Every merchant is reliable and will give you the best value for your money. il*i{lllfllk{flflkll’l{il{#: NORTHERN GROCERY COMPLNY eessssssevee ‘WHOLESALE GROCERS Ed 2222222222 2" s 23222222222 AR EEKKERK KKK KKK KKK * SCHOOL SUPPLIES Buy your needs for the Sehool in Bemidji at the BEMIDJI PIONEER SCHOOL SUYFLY STORE e J e o o ke ok o ek ba 222222222222 x KKK R KR KKKKKK P S 3 3 R s da A i * $s S Usn $$8 x : SAVE YSO Y] ¥0‘ ! : * Res“?-rly and systemati- & % cally. If you receive your pay ¥ * weekly, lay some aside each ¥ ¥ week, if monthly do it month- ¥ + ly. The dollars will pile up * « surprisingly. * * TRY IT. * ¥ Now is the time to open a % ¥ bank account with the ¥ SECURITY STATE BANK : * OF BEMIDIL FRIIIAEFIIIIIFRAHFIEE :Cil&llflknfiilt’lfilfli: :flt}t‘ifii‘i‘tfilfit‘i&‘!: * * NO NOR! NA ¥ * BT NATIORAL TI * : nu oLD, STRONG AND 2.1,-: * CONSERVATIVE. * B _x ERORRNE BANK RakRRKKE % Our local merchants and % the officers ms- stockhold- : x ERREEREEEARREEEERE R RN faas eSS S S St S SRSt S il Sty *x * ek x % FOR GOOD THINGS TO BAT - G0 TO ROE AND MARKUSEN “THEY BEAT.” 207 Fourth street, Bemidji. Phone 206. W% Fed ok gk ok ko LR 22222222 FAFRIIR IR Bdaaaa g 38 332 S8 S 88 08 T8 0 0 JOHN @. ZIEGLER. 0DD FELIOWS BUILDING. FAFIIIIIIIIIIII IR K :«n««nfl«nflflflflfl: * OUR * %« merchandise sales are always & * on the increase and each & % month has been better than & % the last. If you are not al- & * ready a customer, you do not % * know how well we can please & ¥ you in quality and satisfy &« : you in quantity. * * * @ s;cnomm;flm x * * * x X seasssse X § MONEYTOLOAN & * $383338S * * i x % ONFARM LANDS. X * * * * x * * * x : * Bemlzl, * * FRRRIIRIHRIRIRIARRR KK :«nnnn«m&nmu: ;mumnnnwmoo.: * 20060009%00 * S mamowarz & & * (4 * 000000000 * +* Phone 67 316 Minnesota Au: RRREERREEE KK R R KKK KK KKK KKK KK * 2 223322 x * MODEL MANUFACTURING * : COMPANY : x Minnesota Avenue * : ‘BEMIDJI, MINN. : : MODEL BREAD : * ‘Wrapped in Wax Paper. * ¥ Bottled Milk and Cream. + x ~ WHOLESALERS * * and RETAILERS x KEKEKKKRKKKRKR KKK K ARSI IR *x * : TOM SMART : : Dray and Transfer * * : SAFE AND PIANO MOVING + * * * % Res. Phone 68 * * * : 818 America Avenue * * x Office Phone 12 % *x * Bl il T T :umnnnunuunn * ¥ All kinds of buflding ma- & % terial, as much or as little as % * you like at the ST. HILAIRE RETAIL LUM- BER COMPANY. b2 2222 ¢4 hhkkk kokok ¥ Coal and wood also for sale & ¥ Minnesota Ave. and R. R. §. & x * AR KKK :fiifli’fiififiifiifiilfii{i’i{: : BEMIDJI MUSIC HOUSE : % 514 Minnesota Ave., Bemidji & Wholesale and retail Pia- nos, Organs and Sewing Machines. Phone 673 J. BISIAR, MANAGER. FEEEEEERIIIRIIREREEE I K :&l’ifll’*fifii&lfi&l’i’l{i * b2 2 22222823 b2 s 2 2222224 MACHINE SHOP We do general work of all kinds. Gmrno and steam engines a specialty. OLAF ONGSTAD : Shop—Rear of Ptoneer Bldg. E 822232222 282 2222222223 x RIS R AR KKK RUDOLPH W. KOEPP Blackemith and Horse-Shoer All kinds of Plow and Woodwork. Satisfaction guaranteed. 304 Irvine Ave. Bemidjl. 2282283222222 Fekdkdrddh ok hod ok R i § i i Jaaaaast S S22 S 3t Tt e e IR IR R x * * AVOID SPECULATION : FURNITURE : * Invest in Land : ¥ _ At only $10.00 per acre & * J. P. LAHR ¥ % You have the choice of 12 all 4 : : :Th . clJoinlng 40's. * © land 18 easily cl. * Furniture, Ruge and Stoves, ¥ X is gradually ‘lci“n:reeix:;: : * ¥ % about 80 acres of rolling land & : Undertaking. : : around a emall lake. Good : Phone call 178-2. L suu;‘;.m‘d' Ll : * % : 323 Minnesota Ave. ¥ X F. M : * &M jta A L —— paaATe. Ly Ra st S S e iy Baadaas s S eSSl Sl S35 % TE o lalaad a2 528 TIR U * unm'g DRUG JEWELRY STORE WO00D SAWING Small or large jobs given our prompt attention. GIVE US A TRIAL, CHAS. JOHNSON Phone 385, ‘Wholesalers and Retailers Service and satisfaction. Mall Orders given that same ser- vice you get in person. KER’S Bemidji, Minn. TR Baaad s d a2 S TS S8 S8 08 T ey b2 2222222223 L2222 222222222 AXOKOKONOORO K BAR; % Third St. * AAOXROAOKOO KO ko FFIIIIIAIIIIAIIR KK :iiiiiifll*fllfll FRRH KK « * * : MAKER OF SHOES TO & % x *x x x ORDER. % % L P ECKSTRUNM e ® *x % Repalr work neatly done. * & Plumbin team % % First class shoe shining ¥ * Water Hu'fi:‘ s.::: E:;: % parlors for Ladies and Gen- * & Water conum:)nl. * % tlemen. * X * : o : * Phone 555-309 * WM. AKIS, * % 310 Minnesota Ave. *x *x tram! x Bemidjt, Minn. & 330 Beltraat Ave. i *x % liiii’*fl*i&ii&ifilfikfl: :lillfii{i*flifiii!fl’t’*i Rl s SS S o3 SRS 2 et il e :l’iiililiflii{l’l’l{ifii * : BUILDING ASSOCIATION & : Get Your : * 3 * ¥ BELTRAMI COUNTY SAV. ¥ * HOUSEHOLD UTENSILS ¥ ING AND BUILDING ¥ % : : ASSOCIATION. : : and FARM IMPLEMENTS & ¥ is & home {nstitution, and * ¥ of : : hw.l:hm”g .t: loan to build : : x or y & Rome. C. E. BATTLES * * W. C. KLEIN, Secretary % & Hardware % ‘Rooms 5 and § 3w Ferskant 23 : "Leary-Bowser Bldg. : : Bemidfl, - Minn. £ 3 AP R titli*ii*i*’lfi*k’ifi*fi’*: fasaaaandas s aias s ad s s Sl S IS S 22 S 1 TN T RT TRy x * * i Th. that tr e THE CROOKSTO! MBER : * 6 store tha 'eats you & * % RIGHT. * X ¥ LU, : * * * Crockery, Glasswi-s, House & & COMPANY ty % hold Necessities used every ¢+ & x % day. Then come to the store & ‘Wholesale * & that saves you money. * * * X o * ; LUMBER, LATH AND * * CARLSON’S V. RE * * * ';!h H’ * ¥ BUILDING MATERIAL & x> 2 * ¥ * * * & * RREEIEREEEEERIEEERREREEE SRS