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ROE & MARKUSEN “The Quality Grocers” Phones 206-207 A FEW SUGGESTIONS Peanut Oil (Delft) made in Holland. Matchless for mayon- naisse and other salad dressing, per bottle 50c« Temco Preserves in peach, strawberry, raspberry, apricots, plum, per bottle 25¢. Marmalade (Imported) James Keller & Son, Dundee. Per stone jar 38« Walnut Qatsup (Crosse & Blackwell’s,) for steaks. chops, hashes, made dishes, ete. Per bottle 25¢» Chili Sauce (Sniders) pure and wholesome, contents over 16 oz Per bottle 25¢« East Indian Chutney (Heinz) excellent with hot or cold meats, oysters, welsh rare- bits. Per bottle 400« Stuffed Olives very fancy, 11 oz. bottle. Per bottle 356s Sweet Relish in bulk (Heinz). Per quart 40ec» Condiment Sauce (Beech- nut Brand) fine for hot or cold meats. Per glass 256« Bar-Le-Duc Jam (French) pure fruit and sugar. Per glass 30c¢. Beets small, fancy, in glass quart jars. Per jar 35ca Apples fancy, different var- ieties both for eating and cook- ing, $1.80 per box. Oranges one lot, while they last at 68e a peck. Grape Fruit very fine, 2 for 250, FOR SATURDAY Ripe Tomatoes, Celery, Lettuce, Onions, Cucum-~ bers and Strawberries. We are Headquarters for Fancy Cheese, and will have a shipment of Blue Label and Pimento for Saturday’s trade. Phone; 266-207 THE SPALDING EUROPEAN PLAN Duluth's Largest and Best Hotel DULUTH MINNESOTA More than 2100,000.00 rccently expended on improvements. 250 roows, 1% private baths, 60 sample rooms. Every modern convenience: Luxurious and dullfihl(\ll urants and buffet, Flemish m Roor, Men’s Grill, Uolonial Buflel* b unlfieem lobby and public rooms; Ballroom, Lanquet rooms and private dining_roon s; Sun parior and observa- tory. Located In heart of business sec- tion but overlookiny the harbor and Lake Superior. Convenient to everything. One of ths Grsal Hotels cf the Northwest FUNERAL DIRECTOR M. E. IBERTSON UNDERTAKER and COUNTY CORONER 405 Beltrami Ave. Bemidji, Minn. Subscribe for The Piomeer TWO ALLENS ARE DEAD (Continued from first page). kuow any law, save ‘God’s and their own. So when a jury found Victor Allen guilty, the clan made good its boast. There was a flash of steel, a volley and when the shrieking specta- tors who had fled cringed back again they found Judge Massie dying, Sher- iff Webb dead and Prosecuting Attor- ney Foster mortally wounded. SENIOR PLAYS . TONIGHT (Continued from first page). been provided. Only a few reserved {seats remain and judging from the ‘hcket sale one of the largest aud- iences will attend that has ever at- tended a Bemidji class play. R/Euffnns n Cooking b;hon) M gar * Whenmuffins are on the breakfast table, nobody cares for meat or eggs and they would” be served more often if this meal were not prepared so hurriedly that there is no time to make them. If K C, the double-raise baking powder is used, the batter may be stirred up the night before, put in the pan ready for baking and noth: ing to do in the morning but bake them. One-Egg Muffins 2 cups flour; 2 slightly rounded tea~ spoonjuis K ¢ Baking Powder; 1 tea- spoonful salt; § cup sugar; & cup melted butter or lard; 1 cyg; 1 cupwater ormills, Sift dry ingredients together threc times. Add to this the urbeaten egg, melted shortening and water or milk. "T'hen be cther until perfectly smooth. muffin or gem pans and have oven slov. until the mutiins come to the top of the pan,’ then increase the heat to bake v and brown the muffins. This recipe makes 12 large muffins. Raisins or currants may be added if desired. Graham Muffins 1 eup graham flour; 1 cup astry flour: 2 level teaspoonfuls K T Batiing "Powder; 1to 2 level tablespoonfuls sugar; 3 teaspoonful salt; 1 egg; 1 cups mille or water; 2 t0 8 tublospaunfit s melted but- ter; miz and bake as One-Egg Muffins, Graham batter should always be quite soft t~ insure light and moist muffins. To get 88 other recipes as good as these, send us the certificate packed in every 25- centcan of K C Baking Powder, and we will send you ‘“The Cook's Book™ by Mrs. Janet McKenzie Hill. Handsomely illus- trated. Jagues Mifg. Co., Chicago. The Most_popular overalls among f the Northwest. You will like k-Duluth Overalls because they w5, roomy el ,1 MMM )nu\ hardesl work won’t ? Overalls Are Made in Sanitary, Well-Lighted Factories Common, every-day overalls are made in dingy “sweatshops” A whereemployeesare A worked like slaves! #) Patrick-Duluth 748 Overalls are made in -fine, big, new, modernoverall fac- WYtories. Contented U skillful employe \ Pproduce the most {[gperfect garments. § Your Dealer Wil [Show You Patrick- H Duluth Overalls - Them with common orer: alls. .See the vast differ- . Buy a pait today. F.A. Patrick& Co Duluth Origiuators and Mamfact: ersot SR\ anl All - Wool Clothsy ) Blankets and KnitGoods, GO TO BATCHELDER’S GOOD GROCERIES AND FRESH EGGS GENERAL MERCHANDISE AND BUTTER I. P. BATCHELDER Phone 180 . 7 Minnesota Ave. WHEN HAIR FADES AND TURNS GRAY USE A LITTLE SAGE TEA TO RESTORE GOLOR A MIXTURE OF SAGE AND SUL-| PHUR PREVENTS DANDRUFF AND FALLING HAIR. When you darken your hair with Sage Tea and Sulphur no one can tell, becaues it's done so naturally; so evenly. It is also splendid to remove dandruff, cure itching scalp and stop falling hair. Preparing this mixture, though, at home is a mussy and troublesome task. For about fifty cents a bottle you can buy at ank drug store the ready-to-use - tonic - called, “Wyeths Sage and Sulphur Hair Remedy. Some druggists put this mixture up themselves but make it too sticky, so insist you want “Wyeth’s” then there will be no disappointment. Ynu Just dampen a sponge or soft brush with “Wyeth’s Sage and Sul- phur” and draw it through your hair, taking one small strand at a time. Do this at night and by morning all gray hair disappears and after another ap- plication or two becomes beautifully darkened and more glossy and luxur- fant than.evér. You will also.dis- cover dandruff is gone and hair has stopped falling. Gray, faded hair, though no dis- grace, is a sign_ of old age and as we all desire a youthful and attractive appearance, get busy at once with Wyeth’s Sage and Sulphur and you’ll look years younger. Inquiry shows all pharmacists in town sell lots of it. —Ady. .|and a chance to fight for their lives. WORSE THAN SAN || FRANCISCO HORROR | (Continued from first page). day. He was taken to the Hickory street school with his wife and baby, who was ill from exposure. Conners and his wife were found holding to the rafters of their home in the attic Where they had taken refuge. Christopher Emerick rescued his wife and two small children from their home at 110 Buckeye street by carrying them on his shoulders through water reaching above his waist Thursday morning. “We were marooned in our home || by the high water,” said Emerick. “Patiently we waited for rescuers. Then I saw Thursday morning that both my wife and children were near- 1y exhausted- from exposure. We were starving. I knew it was up to me to get them out of the flooded house and to safety. We could see persons be- ing rescued from their homes further down the street Wednesday night.” ”Wnrkhouse Prisoners Fight, Dayton, March 28.—All but a few of those hundreds of persons who have been marooned in the down- town section of flooded Dayton since Tuesday morning are safe. Chief of Police - J. N. . Allaback, himself marooned, who has been directing the rescue work, gave the|[} first intimation as to the situation in what heretofore was the water-bound district. Except for a possible loss of life on the north side of the river there can not be more than 200 dead in Dayton according to Allaback’s es- timate after he had been given in- formation ‘as to the situation on the south side. The worst condition found near the center of the flood was in a work- house where sixty prisoners had not had a drop of water nor bite of food since Tuesday. The men revolted Tuesday night and demanded liberty Since then the workhouse has been a mad-house according to Superinten- dent Johnson. The prisoners repeat- edly fought with Johnson and threat- ened to kill both him and his family. Johnson asked for a detachment of national guardsmen be sent to help handle the men. He declared the men will have to be shot if they es- cape from their cells. No word has come from Mayor Phillip and the chief of police is un- able to get near tne Phillip house and does not know whether the mayor is dead or alive. North of Burns ave- nue, as far south as Fourth street the water is from three to six feet deep. Beyond Fourth the water has reced- ed in many places so as to make it possible to proceed on foot. Conditions at Dayton last night follows: Dead—Accurate estimate is impos- sible but it is believed to be much lower than was generally reported. Seventy thousand are marooned. Fifteen thousand residences are submerged. One hundred and twenty miles of streets are inundated. Five thousand are provided for in rescue stations. Five hundred horses have been killed. One thousand automobilés are dam- aged. 2 These are tentative figures, which has placed Dayton’s loss at $25,000,- 000. Estimates are made by persons who have explored a part of the flood arear. Where Is Your Washing Done? The Woman’s Anti-Tuberculosis so- clety of Knoxville is conducting a vig- srous campaign against family wasl Ing being done where members of the { family are afflicted with the dread “white plague.” It has had a commit- tee of women, accompanied by a nurge who 1 familiar with conditions among the poor, visiting homes where this disease has taken hold, and, through the medium of the press, has been trying to arouse interest in a fund to establish a tuberculosis hos- pital for the treatment of such cases. fn many instatices the committee found homes where the mother and daughter of the family made’a meager living by taking in washing. ‘The dan- ger of contagion was impressed upon newspaper readers by photographs, showing the washing laid _out . on chairs, beds, etc., in many instances In the very room in which a patient GHEERFUL NEWS For Feeble Old People As one grows old the waste of -the system becoms more rapid than re- Dpair, the organs act more slowly and less effectually than in youth, the cir- culation is poor, the blood thin and|{. digestion weak. Vinol, our delicious cod liver and iron tonic without oil is the ideal strengthener and body-builder for old | ele- |~ folks, for it contains the very ments needed to rebuild wasting tis- ues and replace weakness with strength. Vinol also fortifies the sys- tem against colds and thus prevents pneumonia. A grand niece of Alexander Hamil- ton over-eighty years: of age once remarked: “Vinol is a god-send to old people. - Thanks to Vinol I have a hearty -appetite, sleep soundly, feel active and well. It is the finest tonic and strength creator 1 have used.” If Vinol fails to build up the feeble, old people, and create strength we will return your. money.— Barker’s | Drug Stor : ever|* \WENTY-FIVE dollars. What s the price of a good suit of clothes? You can bu§ our clothes for less than i that---$20, $18; you can pay more than that---we have very fine clothes at $30, $35, $40. But $25 is a good average price; most men are w1llmg to pay as much as $25. Hart Schaffner & Marx suits- at $25 will surprise you; particularly if you've been accustomed to going to a custom tailor to have clothes made to measure; more par- ticularly if you've patronized the so-called low-priced tailor; most partic- ularly if you're getting what you think are made-to-measure clothes at- $25 or less. who ‘appreciate good quality and style in clothes, good tailoring and fit You'll get all-wool fabrics; trimmings, linings and other materials of a hxgh grade; tailoring of a very high order—the things that make a suit wear well, and keep shapely. You'll get the value of best style standards and originalty of design; you'll get clothes that fit you well. And you'll gain from $10 to $20, either in greater value at the price; or lower price for similar value, Better see how true this is; $25 is a price you can afford, and you'll say so when ‘you see the clothes. Money - : Cheerfully - Refunded:- - BEN. SCHNEIDER * President &2red. Co. Better come and look at the new spring styles A Guarantee With Every Purchzse CIHAS. COMINSKY cc. and Treas. BEMIDJI, MINN. All Mail Orders Sent by Parcel Post Paid. Women Will:Not. “Check” Bablet Ai-large number-.of modern appli- ances and devices are in reality-qutte useless—merely. cumbersome- and ex- pensive—but persons have the courage .to #0." The mothers of a Methodist parisk in Evanston, Iil., ran.against ope. of-these useless de- vices-the other day, and said so.. They went. to a serviee and found that ar- rangements hed:been-made for check- Ing babies in an.anteroom. They were willing to have..the babies cared for during the méeting, but they told the attendants thaticheeks were not need- ed as each one was perfectly capable ‘of recognizing her own child.—Spring- ‘field Republican. Good Suggestion. .- Patlent (gloomily)—"“I don't seem to be gaining very fast, doctor.” Doc- itor (cheertully)—*You can’t expect to get well at one jump. You will have ‘to regain your health gradually, day | ‘by day—sort .of on the installment ‘plan, as it were.” Patient (brighten- ing up)—*“Well:¢doctor, if this thing keeps on much’ionger, I'm afraid that you will have to collect your bill in the samé way.”—Tit-Bits. Classified Department HELP WANTED. WANTED—Representative in your County to handle summer sanitary necessity. Many satisfied users in your county. Some. capital needed. Security given for same. No scheme, . no :fake. . Minneapolis firm. References given and asked. Opportunity for hustler. P00 Box 461, Minneapolis, Minn. WANTED—Bright young man to} help in store ‘and on delivery wag- on. Model Manufacturing company. WAN'EED—GM for general house- work. Mrs.; Richardson, 910 Bel- trami avenue. Phone 570. WANTED—Chamber . maid, - Brink- man Hotel. 3 y s WANTED—Bell ‘hop at Markham Hotel. FOR BALE ECSUER U T uituSurriUUPUUVIL VPPES 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 gulrlmeed Phone orders promptly. mlad. Mail orders given the same Careful attention as when you appear-in person. Phoné 31. The Bemidji Pioneer Office Supply Store. 7 FOB BALE—'I‘he Bem1dji mlfl pencil ““(the best mickel pencil in the world, at Netzer’s, Barker's, 0. -C. Rood’s, l!chal 's, Omich’s, Roe & and the Pioneer office | i Supply Store at b cents uch and §0-cents a dozen. 3 R SALE—Smal1 fonts of type, sev- eral different polnts and in first __class condition. Call or write this office for proofs. Address Bem!d)! | v TiDPosition to work in priv- one near Puposky and one in the! town of Grant Valley. Write or| phone 296-7. Matt Mayer. ‘ FOR SALE CHEAP—_A first class gas- oline motor boat. In good condi- tion. Inquire Brinkman hotel | o Geo. Robinson. | FOR SALE—Six room house and closet, good location at a bargain | if taken at omce.” 821 Minnesotal avenue. FOR SALE—Small house and lot,“ Fourth building north of Cameron’s feed store. M. A. Soper, Northome, Minn. L . FOR SALE—Rubber stamps. The Pioneer will procure any kind of) rubber stamp for you on short no- tice. FOR SALE—Young henms, Rhode Island Reds. J. G.- Williams. FOR REN1 FOR RENT—Rooms—also light “house keeping rooms. Over Model ‘Bakery. FOR RENT—Furnished rooms, - in- quire corner Sixth and Lake Boule- vard. FOR RENT—Three upstairs rooms, unfurnished, 517 Irvine avenue. LOST AND FOUND FOUND—Pair of new kid gloves. Owner can have same by calling at the Pioneer office, proving prop- erty and paying for this ad. LOST—$65.00, wrapped in small bill fold. Liberal reward if returned to Markham hotel. ADVERTISERS—The great state of * portunities for business to classi- fied advertisers. The. recognized " advertising medium in the Fargo North Dakota offers unlimited op- . Daily and Sunday Courier-News, the only seven-day paper in the state and the paper which carries the largest amount ofclassified advertising. The Courier-News covers North Dakota like a blank- | et; reaching all parts of the state| thé 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. 'WANTED—100 merchants In North- - ern Minnesota to sell “The Bemid- 11 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. 2 BOUGHT AND SOLD—Second hand furpiture. Odd- Fellow’s building, across from postoffice. phone 129 Our GROCERY store is the place to buy your candies. - Why? Our GROCERY store "turns" money fast and we can afford to sell AWAY-UP, superior CANDY for an AVAY-DOWH price. Ours iz the Store where {ic HUSTLE is. This means that we move goods fast and that you get fresh, pure. FTALTHY things to eat from us. Roe & Markusen Phones 206-207 This space reserved by the Bemidji Townsite & Improvement Co. For Price of Lots, Terms, Etc., INQUIRE OF T. C. BAILEY, Bemidji; or write BEMIDJI TOWNSITE & IMPROVEMENT CO. 520 Capital Bank Bullding 8T. PAUL MINNESOTA THE CANADIAN LANDS CORPORATION LIMITED |ncorpnrned under the lnws of Sasketchwan AUTHORIZED CAPITAL STOCK $250,000.00 The Canadian Lands Corporation, Limited, offers a simple, safe, sane method of taking advantage of the wonderful investment opportunities available AT SASKATOON Only 80 shares left of the first issue. mation gladly furnished by Any infor- THE L. H. COLWILL CO,, Ltd., Fiscal Agents B 323-325 Willovghby Summer Bik. IAIKATDON SACGK. ‘(This will appear in one issue orfly) ate hmfl:, Inquire Ploneer office,