Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
f Y buoklet nnd et us. tell you o EDITORS TO MEET FRIDAY [i2ieie v i are: yet;available = for the polltln.l mailihandled during the. nredflenthl ventlsing—M. G, Cutter, Thief Rives, c3mpaign, it is known that all rec- Falls News-Press. ords were broken. The abuse grows 12. Bvening—Banquet at Carter constantly in character and volu Hall, followed by smoker. Yet the privilege is considered ona 2 the legitimate additions to. the con- Saturday, Jan, 25. gressional salary which a grateful 1. - Display of job. samples and|Deople accords its representatives, discussion. and there is no disposition on the 2, Committee part of these gentlemen to forego the new president. gitt.—“The Coffgressman’s Honest 3. Trip through Watab - paper|Grafi mills. tan. HAS CLEARED HOMESTEAD (Continued from first page). (Continued from nrat page).: appointments by PAID ADVERTISEMENT. For This Series, $10.00 | 1 hereby announce that I am a candidate for the office of judge of yearlings. Both mares are now in|the municipal - court of the city of foal and Mr. Eickstadt expects to|Bemidji, at the coming city election! raise some prize winning colts for the|to be held on the 18th day of Feb- next fair. “I do not go in strong for|ruary, 1913. stock,” he says. “I'am a farmer and I respectfully solicit the support raise crops but what stock I have I|of the voters of Bemidji. want to be the best.” JOHN F. GIBBONS. | To Mr. and Mrs." Eickstadt have T { been born nine children: Emil, Paul, i Herman, Elsie (Mrs, C. L. Young who I"nlsEsTln" FIVE YEAHS is'home now on a visit), Ulrich, % Richard, Etta, Eyald and Ida. Mr. 5 3 Eickstadt was president of the local sm,,gt‘,?},‘,fi?flvg{ ‘Y,?ol{{se" a6 lodge of the Sons of Herman last|pends upon the nourishment and pro- year and will be the official represen-|per assimilation of food, and unless tative of the lodge at the grand coun-| digestion is good the whole body suf- cil in St. Cloud next week. Etta|forg, i Eickstadt is one of the girls who are| Mpe, L. D. Cook, Vineland N.J., attending the short course at the|says. “I was sick five years with in- High school. digestion. My stomach seenied -to| Those who know Mr. Eickstadt be-|have a heavy load in it and at other lieve that he should be rated as one|times it seemed to be tied in knots. of the best farmers in this vicinity | Nobody knows how I suffered. since he has made the farm with his “I tried a great many doctors and own efforts and unaided by capital|a great many kinds of medicine but from any other source. “What I have|nothink did any .good until 1 took made,” he says, “has gone right back|Vinol. It has helped me wonderful- into the farm. ly. I am improving fast, feel better| and am getting my flesh back again. Vinol has done me a world of good.” KK KKK * x . *I:E;;S]; i : -We know the great power of Vinol, xR R KRR K R K K KK K x| OUT delicious cod liver and iron tonic without oil, in curing chronic stom- F. B. Cook was in Bemidji Friday|ach trouble and building up all weak- on business. ened run-down persons, and that is Mrs. Frank Empting and baby|why we guarantee to return your Francis, were visitors of Mrs. New-|money if it does not help you, Bar- ton at Redby between trains Friday.|ker's Drug Store, Bemidji, Minn.— The daughter of Mrs. Newton of|Adv.: Redby, was a visitor of Mrs. F, Emp- ‘ting between trains Saturday. From all appearances our store- keeper is doing well, having just put in two new show cases and cash regis- ter. He has also increased his stock to where it looks like a new store indeed and where it is a pleasure to trade. P. K. Rustvold, wife and two chil- dren, left Saturday for Chicago on an extended visit. Who said there were no young peo-| powder, 1 tap. ple in Nebish? If you had-been with| C. cup; t, teaspoon; tap., - table us last Saturday evening at the dance| ®P008. All measurements level. flour in our storekeeper’s ‘warehouse, you Pm;:m wire” Coake would have seen about twenty cou- joooler, mixing bowl slotted wooden ples, just as busy as nailers dancing| epoon, measuring cup, teaspoon, table to the music furnished by Ed Gillman , eake pan, chopping, bowl, egg as first violin and Ed Dietel second.|/beater and floyr shifter. They kept it up until 3 a. m. Sunday.| CBop the raisins or cut them into The guest of homor, Mrs. E. M.|@mall pleces. Beat the cream until Tscheope, Was to overcome by the|Y®rY Hght, then add the sugar and ibeat very well again. - Put all the dry present of a beautiful silver cake ’ dlents together into the sifter; plate in honor of her birthday, t0| i(using a Nttle of the flour to mix with enjoy the dancing, but did enjoy the|the raiains). Add the molasses and lunch—at least it looked that way.||butter melted, and beat well. Mix the Everybody reported a good time. raisins well through the dough. Line Miss J. Pendergast, the Island Lake| the cake pan with greased paper, turn school teacher, went to Bemidji Sat- ‘:M';' m ;;! xnmm- paper Nl‘ urday to consult the doctors in regard oL Che Wiré s ‘to her arm . She fears blood poison :M"::rl' ‘.:)l:";‘.',“:: ‘:::dh‘o“i; tg: s getting 1n, top, and the cake tried with a tooth- Mrs. Charlie Grunewald and child- plck or clean straw. Remove from ren, who were visiting her brother,| the oven, tear the paper oft the top A. Edwards, went to their home at|@and allow the cake to cool on the cake Minneapolis Wednesday. Mr. Martin, the St. Croix cedar in- ‘eooler. - Fruits—Oranges, grape truit, grapes, spector, who has been here i ing| *PPles, lemons, T otoTs wito has heon here Inspecting| Ty o petables—White and sweet pota- 5 or home Monday. | ¢ .0 H , Hubbard squash, turnips, white There will be a big basket social| gngq -yellow carrots, white and red at the Pete Sunday school in Hagall| cabbage, parsnips, onloms, lettuce, town Saturday, Feb. 1. Everybody|oyster plant. . welcome. Everybody come. Extras—Tomatoes, fancy melons, A. P. Reeves, a Nebish farmer who| Brussels sprouts, string beans, rad- is employed at Lepper’s camp, was in| 1shes, wax beans, egg plant. town Monday visiting friends, and CRANBERRY SAUCE AND JELLY having his horses shod by the Nebish blacksmith. Best Way to Prepare Them for Those Who Like This Condiment With Thelr Birds. FOR FRUIT OR SPICE CAKE Young Housewife May Be Interested In-This Confection, Which Js Really Dellclous, Materials—Brown sugar, lc.; mo- dasses, i4c.; pastry flour, 3%c.; THEIR HONEST GRAFT. The tenacity with which congress holds on to its many perquisites and privileges has been shown again dur- ing the present session. Though the postmaster-general has pointed out in an emphatic statement the abuses of the franking privilege, there is not, at this wriiing the slightest indica- tion that there will be any curtail- ment of abuses. During the fiscal year ended June 30, 1912, the postal serv- ice handled 61,377,000 pieces of franked mail. Postage at the ordin- ary rate on this matter would have netted the government nearly $20, 000,000. About one-sixth of this was political matter, sent by congressmen to their constituents and to the gen-| ;ioq or until the jelly thickens on & eral public. During the primary cam- saucer. Then pour in molds and paign of April, May and June an ex-|}et it stand till firm, Cranberries are in the market now, And there are many who prefer their fart sweetness to any other sauce with birds, says a New York Sun writer. They are best when jellled, ‘and should never be sent to the table in any form without being strained free of skins, An excellent way to Jelly these berries so that their deli- oacy and crisp flavor shall be pre- served is the following: and wash two quarts of put them in a saucepan with cold water. Stew the fryit over A slow fire until it may be pressed through a fine sieve. To each pint of the pulp add a pound of fine white sugar; then place over the fire to boll, stirring briskly for about fifteen mis *.in the February Metm‘»oll-‘ | world next May. T May to Italy from Swit- Delghboring countries. opened to the trafic of the pine raflroad has been y | constructed in the face of formidable |/ that he felt no pain or fear, " that his only sensation. ‘Was one pl intense curlosity as to what portion p“lobodythounnwoulduhnm T e upon him by & bear during & t in-the east. The beast tore off & bit of the Turk’s hand, a part of his fered nelther pain nor fear, but that Do felt the greatest indignation be- cause the bear grunted with so much n while munching him. - Grant Allen, whose scientific habit pt thought gave weight to his words, says;that $n his boyhood he had a nar- rvv escape from drowning. ‘While skating ‘he fell through thin foe ‘over & place whence several blocks the day before been removed. He carried under the thicker‘icé be- d, and when he came to the sur- face tried to break through by but- ting his head against it. The result ‘was that he was stunned, then numb- ed by the cold, and so waterlogged that artificial respiration had to be employed to restore him. These are the impressions as recorded by him with reference to the pain he suf- fered: “The howlodn that I have thus ex- perienced death in my own person has Bbad a great deal to do with my utter physical indifference to it. I know how #t feels. I had only a sense of cold, damp, and breathlessness, a short struggle, and then all was over.” “I had been momentarily uncom- fortable, but it was not half so bad as breaking an arm or having a tooth drawn. In fact, dying is as painless as falling asleer It is only the previ ous struggls, the sense of its approach, that {s at all uncomfortable. Even this is less unpleasant than I should have expected. There was a total ab- sence of any oraven shrinking. The sensation was merely the physical one of gasping for breath.”—Harper’ ‘Weekly. 3 Treacherous Memory. The lawyers got a tartar when, in a _Feoent trial in a southern oity, they ‘summoned to the stand an aged darky ‘who had been an eyewitness of a fight that occurred between a number of persons.’ “Tell us what you know about thig fight,” said -oounsel when old Mose had been placed upon'the stand. “Fight?” asked Mose, ‘p'umfly greatly surprised. “What fight?” ¢ “Yr'u know very well what fight ia m Lut,” sald counsel. 12y “1 don’t know mnothin’ “Tell us about about na fight,”" insisted the wll.uau “When was §t?” “See here, Moses!” exclaimed the iawyer; “no trifiing! The’ fight ‘day ‘before yesterday. You know all about it. Tell us—" Oh, de fight day befo’ yesterday,” said - Mose. “Well, suh, you see I'se slept since de day befo’ yesterday, and I never kin Haknllm anything: after T'se been asleep. And that was all they oallld et tmm him.—Green Bag. Sorrows of Johnny. Little Johngy was small of stature and looked rather pale and out of sorts, which led his school fellows to tease and- cross-question him. “Who's your family doctor?” asked & big boy, with a.bullying and swag | The average locomotive in Chicago gering air. “Haven't got any doctor -Johnny, “How Jolly fine!” replied the other, | overthe conditions recorded by the “You don’t have to take any medl |city smoke commission three years oine, then?"” “Oh,” don't alL” sald “I never see one.’ I replied Johnny. “That’s all you know about it!I' My father's a dentist, my mother's's hom. | formance to worst possible perform- eopathic, my eldest sister has joined'|ance; that is, if & locomotive emitted the ambulange olass, grandmother [dense black smoke all the time this o | difculties, and will' 'be numbered among the most moteworthy feats of rallroad engineering in modern: times. ANl the forces of elemental’ natura were mustered to oppose the task of | laying = raflroad line. through one of the wildest mountainous districts in .| Burope. A nine-mile-long tunnel had to be plerced through the heart of the mere bagatalle compared with the dif- flculties e:countered in constructing track through the precipitous and valanche-swept country on efther pide of this. The line, which forms a short cut to the Simplch and obviates the wide de- tour: hitherto necessary, is only 48 miles in length, but has occupied more:| than ‘six - years in building, owing to the -obstacles which had to be sur- mounted. . Mighty embankments had to ‘be constructed along the edge of 'dizsy precipices, = granite via- ducts and steel bridges thrown across wild ravines, and huge walllike ban riers erected high up the mountain lopes to dissipate the force of the de- structive avalanche. The railroad traverses a country rich in points of interest and- second to none as regards scenic magnifi- e /ing Berne, the Swiss capl- tal, the line proceeds by way of quaint, medieval Thun to the beautiful lake of that name; here the eternal snows of the Jungfrau, Schreckhorn and ‘Mat- terhorn come into view and form a striking -background to the changing colors of the lake. Thence the line continues’ through the charming Frut- Jgen and ‘Kandersteg valleys, with their typical Swiss -pastoral scenes, and arrive ‘at Kandersteg, the north- ern portal of the Lotschberg tunnel, surrounded - by - fantastically shaped rough the tunnel, the line emerges in one of the most wildly plc. | turesque -valleys of Switzerland, and, one hitherto practically inaccessible to the tourist—the Lotschen valley. The teep, pine-clad slopes of this uninhab- ted region are soon exchanged for the smiling pastures of the Rhone valley, and the line gradually descends from Jts high mountain ledge to Brigue, where the Simplon. railroad is joined. New Baggage Check. A new baggage check that fs. ex- pected to-lessen the number of errors and complaints has just been placed into. the service on an eastern line. - The duplicate portion of the new check is provided with spaces, in which are printed a number of the principal “bad order” conditions in which' the baggage is frequently. re- ceived for checking. A check, on be- Ing delivered to the passenger, will be : | perforated to-show whether the plece of baggag: a trunk, sult case or valise, fiber case or tool chest. .An. other perforation will show the cond}- tion in which. thé baggage was -re- ceived at the office. In this way the duplicate check will contain a full de- scription of;the baggage when it was brought to the company for shipment. The number on the tag portion on the check fs placed at the bottom, while on the- duplicate portion' it is printed - at the top, so -that the two can be easily matched when the bag- gage is delivered. It 18 expected that the new cheak will’ minimize the matching of num- bers wrongly and will greatly Teduce. the number. of claims.—Trade and Transportation, ‘Smoke: Is_Less Dense Now. st the present time is making smoke the density of which is 14.92 per cent. This shows a decided improvement 2go, when the average density wass- reported at 233 per cent. The per- centage gives the ratio of actual -per tries every patent medicine adver |record would be reported at 100 per tised, my uncle is a veterinary. sur-|cent. If it gave out no smoke at all tears, “t.l:s_y ol practice on mel”—" Bita, Acted on the Advice. geon, and—and,” he added, almost in | the percentage would be zero. The fig- ) ‘Tit- “De‘l" the results of many obeer- vations covering the entire city. ‘Queer Accident Caused by Deer. A well-to-do business man of Arkan-| mngineer -A. O. Morrisette of the sas City tells a unique story of how he | yiiwaukee, ‘residing at got started in lite. ‘When & young|waal man, without much money, he struck Malden, .18 in the company hospital at Bt. Joe ns the result of a freakish ac- New York City. While walking down cldent. the street he saw a sign which read: ‘We will tell you how to get rich for | tunnel No. 37 about 15 miles east of $1,” says the Kansas City Journal, He went in and planked down a dol- | One of them, a large buck, hit the em- Iar and ' received instructions in &|pankment ‘When- train No. 63 emerged from Bt. Joe, the, engine struck two deer. rolled back through the sealed envelope. Going out “on the | angine cab, striking Morrisette on the street he opened the' envelope and|nhead and ocking out several teeth, found a slip of paper reading: “Work | the antlers puncturing his chin and like the devil and save your money.” Did he have the outfit arrested for|frst nportad that his jaw was broken. swindling? No, indeed! He took their pruising him about the face. It was at traordinary quantity of this matter This jelly is also an ideal accom- was distributed. It comprised every | paniment for the brofled or planked kind of document thought to be use- | #pring turkey or guinea fowl. The leoe and today he is worth more| - than $100,000. - Chief of mallest Rallroad. Richard O. Cheney, president of the South Manchester (Conn.) -Railroad ful for molding public opinion, and|Pirds are at thelr very best now when even included a complete political | theY are small and youns. They phould be well buttered and bits of campaign book which had been made Dacon pinned over them for efther planking or broiling. Very hot plates All Appefll to Wives And plenty of best quality b-m.., tes You know the terrible affliction that comes to many homes from the result of a- drinking husband or son. You know of the money wasted on ‘‘Drink’’ that is needed in the home to purchase food and clothing. ORRINE has' saved thons- ands of drinking men, It is a home treatment ‘and can ‘be given . secretly. ‘Your money will be refunded if, after a trial, it has failed to benefit, = Costs only $1.00 a box. Come in and get a4 free | the ‘good cny Dru‘ § » Béltram} Avenus. E " Filted Out. . ocompany and widely known as a capl- “Skirts are to be fuller next ses: | talist, is dead, aged 71. His railroad #on,” remarked Mrs. Hillside. © - It I am any judge,” said Hillside, Rt extending from South Manchester (FOR SALE—Small fonts of type, sev-| WANTED—100 merchants In North- 15 said to be the smallest in the coun- tllllhneonl twg Bernese Alps range, but this was a| Sulphur Hair Remedy’’ for about fifty cents a bottle, - If is: the most populu HAIR Sfln IUXUHAM ‘because. nobody. can: dlswver it ‘has| The old-time mixture of Sage Tea/been applied. Simply. da/m»pen a soft and Sulphur’ for . darkening Bray, ibmah or sponge with J‘Wyeth s Sage streaked and faded hair is coming injand Sulphur” and draw this through C ain, = says - a well-known| your hair, taking one small strand at. down-town ' druggiet. It 'was our|a time. grandmother's teatment @nd hun-|morning the -gray hair disappears and again ‘using it to keep. their ‘hair aled to its natural color. 7 'good, even color: which is quite sen-| “What delights the ladies with sible, as we are living in an age when \Wyeth’s Sage and Sulphur is that be- a youthful appearance ds of - the|sides beautifully darkening the hair greatest advantage, ¢ they say it produces that soft lustre Nowadays, though, we don’t haveland appearance of abundance which the troublesome task of gathering the|is so aftractive: besides - prevents sage and the mussy mixing.at home.|dandruff; ‘itching scalp and falling, All drug stores sell the ready-to-use|hair. Here, you gray haired folks, get Do this tonight, and by|- ‘dreds’ of women and men t0o, -arelafter another application it is restor-|- oo every second and fourth Sunday evening, at § o’clock tn basement of Catholic church. DEGREN OF EONOR Meeting nights every second and fourth Monday Iei?mnu. at 0dd. Fellows 1L : broduct called “Wyeth’s Sage . and|busy; look years younger.—Adv. PAID ADVERTISEMENT. For This Series, -$10. THE SPALDING I hereby announce that I am a can- Dalai, LOPEAN gIfiA a0 didate for.sudge _of the Municipal Duw‘-‘.‘.,: g ':,,NG:B;":,TA Court of this City, which office is to be filled at the coming city election, and I respectfully solicit the support of the citizens of Bemidjl. HERBERT J. LOUD. More than IIN‘MN recently exundad on {mprovem: 1% p) baths, 60 sample rooms. Eve! modorn convenience: - Luxurious and fleu htfal nlll\n’lnu and, bnfler Flomish m, Eoom, Men's Grill; Colonial Bufl Klm‘m‘nt lubby and public rooms; banquet ‘rooms and nnvne rooms: Sun parlor snd obs . Lota beart of business lic— tion but overiool .0 harbor and Lake | Superior. Convenis everything. O of the Braat Hetels of the Narthwast PAID ADVERTISEMENT. For This Series, $10.00 I hereby announce that I am a candidate for the office of judge of r. 0.3 Regular meeting - nights I every 1st and 2nd Wednes- day evening. at $ o'clock. Bagles hall. G AW Regular . meetings —First and third Saturday after noous, ut 2:30—at Odd Fel lows Halls, 40 Beltrami Ave. L 0.0 7 Bemidjl Lodge No. 116 Regular meeting nights 402 Beltrami. the municipal court -of the city of T B o * Bemidji, 'at the coming city election SR Ve tobe held in and for said city on the Rekuiar mseting wyery ecens 18th day of February, 1913, and fourth Wednesdays at § 1 respectfully solicit the support Sielock ;et-0aa. Fellows ‘Hall. of the people of Bemidji. JOHN L. BROWN. Rebecca Lodge. Regular a R meeting nights -- first and third Wedness R. F. MURPHY —1. 0. 0. . Hall PILES CURED IN 6 TO 14 DAYS s OF FYTHIAS S S, e, | “MERAL DEECUOR | o Y 0 cure any case LMES ge No. F siliping it Shnipd SRRIUEIR] - e e wonmen o Regalar mesting nighis—r. Prore Ataa ery Tuesday evening at 3 as o'clock—at thg Baglew Hall, Third street. LADIES OF THR MAG. CcABEES. Regular meeting nighy last Wednesday eveming i each menth. MASONTC. A. F. & A. M, Bemiay 233, Re:uh.r mnth‘.‘ nights — first and third Wednesdays, 8 o'clock—at Masonlc 'Hall, - Beltrami and Fifth St. Bemldji Chapter No. T K. A. M. Btated convoalln"l —first ‘and third Mondays, § » oclock p. m—at Masente Hall Zeltram{ Ave., and. Fifth street. - " . . : Elkunah Commandery No. 8 ) 5 K. T. Stated conclave -aesong - and fourth Fridays, 8 o'clock epartmen b S 3 trami Ave. and Fifth 8t - O. £. 8. Chapter No. 171, Regular ‘meeting nigi u- first and third Fridays, § The Pioneer Want Ads gk Manic it Beltrami Ave, snd Fifeh OASH WITH OCPY o aa 14 oent per word per Issus Roosevelt, ~ No. 1888, < |5 ek Pt el O T R R Regular meeting nighta ~ Regular charge rate 1 cent per word per insertion. No ad taken for Thursday everings at § % less than 15 cents Phone 31 ?lgl‘«;ck in 0dd Fellowa HOW THOSE WANT ADS - m—— : DO THE BUSINESS pbemian Gamp Mo, saia 3 E r meeting =~ The Pioneer goes everywhere so that everyone has a neighbor who flnfi and third fm;:d'": at takes it and people who do not take the paper generally read their .8 o'clock at Qdd Fellows neighbor’s so your want ad gets to them-all. Hall, 402 Beltrami Ave. MODERN 14 Cent a Word s All It Costs Regular meeting nights ea the first and third Thursdays in the L O. O. ¥. Hall at § HELP WARTED LOST AND FOUND 2. 10 DO YOU WANT HELP—The Asso-| FOUND—Gold case watch, Northern SOMS OF NERMAN. ciated Charities will be glad to get| National Bank corner. Owner can Meetings held thire a list of those who are in need of| have same by paying for this: no- Sunday afternoon of esch servant girls or women to work by | tice. -Call at Erickson Hotel be-| 'H"""“' at Troppman's the hour and will help any girls| tween six and seven p. m. . -or women who want work with a family or other employment to ob- FOR RENT untm:'::mflnt a tain 1, Call or telephons M. T | o R ENTTive room sotage 110 oyeung o the menth® J. Welsh, Phone, 282. 1121 Be- midll Avenue. Twelfth street. Inquire Dr. 4. T. Tuomy. WANTED—Competent girl for ‘gen-|ROOMS FOR RENT—Also eral housework. Inquire 700 Be- midji avenue. Tight house keeping. Model Bakery. FOR RENT—Furnished frout room. Inquire J. E. C., care Pioneer. WANTED—Dishwasher at Nicol- let hotel. MISCELLANEOUS ADVERTISERS—The great state of North Dakota offers unlimited op- portunities for business to classi- fied advertisers. ~The recognized advertising medium in_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, one-half cent per word succeeding insertions; fifty cents per line per month. = Address the Courier-News, Fargo, N. D. FOR BALE FOR SALE—Typewriter ribbons for every make of typewriter onthe 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 pencil (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 5 cents each and 50 cents a dozen. eral differont points and in first class gondition. - Call or write this office: for proofs. - Address Bamldjl ; Pioneer, Bemidji, Minr FOR SALE—Rubber stamps. The Pioneer will prociire any kind of :;xc:bar stamp for you on lhftrl no- o6 BRpo1s/ B\ Phone’ a1, Be 5 > 2| ‘midji, Minn. For fresh milk. or eream,-call up LS ' DT BOUGHT/ AND SOLD—Second "hand furniture. 0dd Fellow’s building, ern Minnesota to sell “The Bemid- 31" lead pencil. Will carry name of every merchant In advertising columns of- Pioneer in order thal all recelve advantage of advertis: “ing. . For wholesale prices write _or phone the Bemidjl Ploneér Of- | Who Sells 1t? the home of Mrs. H. F. sSchmidt, 306 Third street. | 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 Sfive] Jcent world. It is sold on your money. back basis. A store on every street and in surrounding cities. Hera They Are: Oarison’s Varlety Store Barker’s Drug and Jow- olry Store W. @. Sohroeder 0. 0. Rood & Oo. E. F. Notzer’s Pharmaoy Wm. MoOualg J. Omioh’s OI.ar‘ Roo & Markusen " Retailers will meelve lmmedlam shipments in gross (more or les) by calling Phone: 31, or addressing the