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DOUBLE CAPACITY (Continued on last pa which the Crookston is using, the company will log summer as well as winter. The mill here has a capacity of about 40,000,000 feet per .year. The Weyerhauser timber comprises: approximately 300,000,000. Norway and white pine. The mill} here will be enlarged so. that it wm‘ saw about 70,000,000 feet a year. The payroll now numbers 500 men New Dry Cleaning House 117 Third Street In Rear of Bemidji Music House Cleaning, Pressing and Repairing of Ladies’ and Gents’ Clothing. ALL WORK GUARANTEED Prices Reasonable Give Us a Trial and Be Convinced J. BISIAR 117 Third Street Phone 573 e BEMII).II 510 SEE OF THE MILL HERE! : feet of | SR S s said by the agent here that the com- | pany is ready to rebuild the old Rex ias soon as the frost is out of the {ground. - Mr. Tibbetts says that he knows nothing-definite. of the ‘plans of the company but that the hotel will | be at least two stories high and prob- ably three, It will cost between'$40,- 1000 and $50,000. ‘Work will’start on the new Moberg {garage to be erected on Minnesota avenue between Fourth and - Fifth {streets as soon as the frost is out of {the ground. . Although the garage will not be larger than the one now |ocenpied by the Northern Automo- ibile company, it will cost more since |the -walls are to be built heavy |enough for a second story and the roof will be supported by steel beams. The new style of room does away with the necessity for posts on the floor of the garage. A. A. Wartfield is planning on lerecting a $4,000 residence on the Lake Boulevard, H. M. Clark is haul- ing material for a residence on Be- midji avenue, it is planned to finish the Methodist church this year, and other improvements which will total not less than $50,000 will be made} ;oo py o ocens steam plant will | during the year. Other buildings Will |y "py.0q to care for the output of probably be put up durlng the yearj, ., ;s g office force will be| so that the grand total will' be well increased by several men. At Spoon- over $350,000. 23 er the office and mill force will re- main unchanged for the time bemg TRY MRS. PAKKHURST A BUILDING BOOM ¢ (Continued - from first page) 700. Construction work on the new. mill will start sometim® in May and it will cost about §100,000. ~For Spooner, Minnesota, the deal means that probably Spooner will be connected with the southern part of the county and have a direct line to the cities. The Backus-Brooks peo- and International railroad. This road now has one terminal at Kelliher and'it is but fifty-eight miles straight north to Spooner. The road has been looking over the land with a view to building for some time and now that. the same interests are permanently located- in Spooner, it is believed con- struction; work will bé pushed in ord- er to give them an outlet to the south. If the Kelliher branch is ex: tended, it will cross the Minnesota, Dakota and Western, also a Backus- Brooks road, and will give Interna- tional Falls another outlet. The Bemidji mill will be practical- 1y doubled by the addition of new Would Leave Nature Alone. “When Nature has decided on the color of an eye, it is not for man to alter it,” remarked Mr. Plowden at ‘Marylebone in fining a man for black- ening another man’s optic—London Chronicle. Old Bailey Crowded Today as Best SPEC Telephone And Your AT SCHROEDER'S Seven Cans of Corn 950c | Sifted Peas, Per Can 12¢ Receive Careful Attention Known Woman in England Faced Magistrates, CHARGED WITH SERIOUS CRIME IALS By United Press. London, April. 1—Mrs. Emmeline Pankhurst, dauntless leader of the militant suffragettes and perhaps the best known woman in England, today again faced the stern visaged, som- ber-gowned magistrates in Old Bail- This time the often-prosecuted and much-jailed chieftess of the bashi-bazeukesses, as she has been ri- baldly dvbbed by the crowd, faces fourteen years’ imprisonment. She is charged with inciting to ma- licious destruction_of property, and it is generally accepted that King George himself is behind the prose- cution. Mrs. Pankhurst was arrest- ed for alleged instigation of the bomb plot that partly wrecked the new country homeé of chancellor of the exchequer, David Lloyd George, -at Walton Heath, and her arrest came immediately after Home Secretary Reginald McKenna left a private aud- ience with the king. The trial that began today marks 65 or 390 Orders Will a crucial point in the battle for the $200, $5.00 down and $5.00 a taxes. Information--Brad SUPERIOR LOTS “The New Steel Center” A Snap on Two Lots One Block from Street Car Line. g 9089 Tower Ave., Superio K. K. ROE, Agent, Bemidji, Min_n. ballot waged by British women. - On its outcome depends their right of militancy. In deciding the fate of Mrs. Pankhurst, the magistrates of Old-Bailey indirectly will decide whether the women who blew - up Lloyd George’s house, burned down the, country seat of Lady White, de- molished Kew Gardens and smashed innumerable windows, were merely malicious miscreants in“the eyes of the law, or were honorable revolu- tionists fighting for their rights. 0Old Bailey perhaps never saw - a more intense crowd than that which month Without Interest and ley Brink Co. (lnc) r, Wis, Ice Prices| For 1913 One ton coupon books, $3.50 All books cash on delivery e ] b 2000 pounds and over put 1000 to 2000 pounds, per 300 to 1000 pounds, per ton. femamn e ool . Sl!]] gold cerfifictae 1.68 years; $20 gold certificate, 1.9 te. - Th PRICES FOR FAMILY ICE number.of pleces of United States pa. $12.00 for season from April 1 to November 1 P o) Monthly Rate S % period, which exceeded by . 6,218,415 April i b $1.00 AUg““”'"""':"""‘ $3.00 the number of pieces issued the pre- May:.................. 2.00 September............. 2.00 gedibe year,”. The-increadiie growii : s < 5 n redemptione is due primarily to the June........ . 300 October ... 2-% growth-In business activitles, the pub- e & licity given to uncleanliness and al- July... 3.00 'November leged insanitation of soiled notes; and R the consequent demand for cleaner Monthly service for families will include ice in box four times per week. for at the rate of 25¢ per 100 pounds. All accounts must be settled by the 10th of the following month or service will be discontinued. = . : L ] a G thronged the_ historic old courtroom today to see Mrs. Pankhurst tried. I the suffragette is convicted, it . will be out of her own mouth. The Crown’'s main evidence against her is hel uticrances at Cardiff, Wales, the day aftcr the Walton Heath explos- In her speech, Mrs. Pankhurst declared that she would gladly as- sume all responsibility for the bomb, and the police of Cardiff, at the be- hest of Home Secretary McKenna, made a stenographic copy of Mrs. Pankhurt’s remarks. 'QUEER FACTS ABOUT MONEY Average Lifetime of Varlous Denoml- nations of Paper Currency DIif- fers Considerably. The average lifetime of the differ ent denominations of Umited States paper currency differs considerably; that of the $1 silver certificate, for Instance, being a trifle over one year; the $5 silver certificate, 1.9 years; the $2.50 3.00 3.50 in box, per ton. ton.. per currency in circulation is gradu- -ally increasing and numbered 327,329,- 159 on June 30, 1912. There were 273,426,336 pleces of United States currency redeemed during the same money; the growing practice of pay- m 2nt of wages in factories, shops, ete., weekly and bi-weekly, as compared with monthly; and growing popular- Aty of paper money. in sections vhero silver was formerly in the greatest ‘do- mand, bte—Leslie’s Weekly. Extra ice will be -charged ple_own two-thirds of the Minnesota |ter: factory -whitewash' the inside of ‘the buliding, ‘Whitewash this factory,’ stormed the owner. “Why, I can't afford it; it will cost_me $1,600!° ““You_ will obey my Crdor, or I swear out a: warrant,’ n!d the inspec- “Tho bullmu was wlmewnhad. On his next visit, six months later, the owner greeted the inspector cordially. “‘You remember the row . we had about the whitewash?* “‘Yes, indeed.’ “ ‘Well, sir, that $1,500 was the best money I ever laid out): The building hadn’t been touched for ten years, and the whitewash makes it look like new. It is wonderfully cheerful and bright— and the girls have done so much bet- ter work that'I believe I-have already got my money back.’” Mr. Nearing's comment is thatevery improvement which makes a more'liv- able place pays. - It 18 to be questioned how many employers and owners of buildings would accept this statement, If-a large proportion of them would, the first big advance would be made lowsrd real social religion.—Buffalo Express: BEGAN GREAT CAREERS EARLY English and American Actresses Wha Showed P lon ‘ of Genius When They Were Chiidren. It has been said that seldom do in- fant stage prodigies fulflll the expecta- tions of the future. As a matter of fact, however, many of our leading actresses began their stage careers when they were children. Ellen Terry, for instance, made ‘her .| first appearance in “A Winter’s Tale” when she was eight; her sister Kate when she was seven; her niece Be- atrice when she was tem, and another >| niece, Minnie, when she was three; . while Marion Terry played Ophelia when she was seventeen. Winifred Emery (Mrs; Cyril Maude) made her first appearance on the stage in “The Green Bushes” when she was eight, and gained Ler first success ‘when she was seventeen. Referring to American actreases, one might mention Maud Adams; perhaps one of the most successful of Mr. Frohman’s “stars,” who first appeared on: the stage when she was a baby of nine months old, and was a favorite at the age of sixteen. Julia Marlowe made her first appearance in a juve- nile production of “H. M. S. Pinafore” when she was twelve; while Maud Fealy first played when she was three. Unclaimed Lottery Prizes. Many lottery prizes remain un- claimed. In- France atthe present time there ik said to be $600,000 in Iot- || tery money going- abegging for want of claimantsi» At the recent Brussels exhibition-ilottery,. the first prize -of $40,000 remained unclaimed for weeks but - the ‘owner of the winning ticket was,_discovered at. last. Just before the drawing ‘of the lottery a young Belglan miner- was killed by a fall, and buried, according to custom, in his clothes:: Not until he had been dead some time did the advertise- ments: for the lottery winner remind the young marn’s friends that he had bought & ticket, which might have been buried with him. They obtained permission ‘to exhume the body, and in a walstcoat pocket was found the ticket, which, had -he lived, would have made him rich. R Sickening Worship of Dog. Offiey Wee Blackle, champion Pom eranian, arrived at San Francisco in a private car-and immediately . disap peared, to be relayed along through three pairs of hands to a mysterious ‘woman, who paid $5,000 for him. The dog:weighs three pounds and four ounces, but the woman who want ed him would have paid more than the $96 an ounce that he cost had it been necessary, to get him. Offiey Wee's ticket from New. York to Chicago cost $595. Rather, his tick- ets cost that amount, because his cus- todian had to buy 17 of them at $38 apiece 8o that the dog might have a special Pullman car to himself. Balkan Kinge Speak English. A peculiarity of the three Balkan rulers, King Ferdinand, King Peter and King Nicholas, is the admirable manner in which they all speak Eng: lish. That King Ferdinand, a Saxe Coburg and a kinsman of our royal family, .and King Peter, wha has spent most ~of ' his life in - the capitals of Europe, should be conversant with our lan guage is not, after all, astonishing, but it is_curious that King Nicholas, who has reigned over his Iittle nation of herdsmen and shepherds for five and forty years, and ‘seldom crosses hia own frontier, should be the most per fect- English scholar of the three— London Letter in New York Sun. ‘Recover Stolen Tombstone. A stolen: tombstone was unearthed during excavations following a recent fire in a shop in Girvan (Ayr). The workmen dug out a tombstone in an excellent state of preservation, bear- Ing the following inscription: “By An-| thony Campbell, Saddler, in Memory of His Daughter, Jean. Died July 1st, 1826, Aged-18 Years and Six Months.” It is believed that the stone was stolen _trom_the ‘old Girvan churchyard and converted into a hearthstone, a quite common occurrencé in the early- days :&IL““’ nlneteen'.\ c-nhlry.—landor Dogs Haul 1mm Miles. : More. than $1,000,000 in gold was £ Harmful Confidence. Much of the charm of life 4s ruined posa from Cordova, Alas | o more than two ;monthl sty]es full of life Made special by coats, smart new colormgs, that will delight the young fellows. Hart Schaffner & Marx This store is t};e home of Hart Schaffner & Marx clothes and snap, thlngs, ~G00D GROCERIES AND FRESH EGGS 7 Minnesota Ave. GO TO BATCHELDER’S GENERAL MERCHANDISE AND BUTTER I. P. BATCHELDER Phone 180 Department - Bemlidji Lodge No. 1053. Regular meeting nights— 3. o'clock—at Masonic hall :.ltnl\i Ave, and Fifty ©. 0. ¥. : every second and fourth _ Sunday evening, at Catholic church. DEGRER OF NONOR Meeting ; nights every second and fourth Monday gyenings, at 0dd Fellows r. 0. = Regular meeting nights every 1st and 2nd Wednes day evening at & o'clock Hagles hall Regular meetings —Firs: and third Saturday ufter. noons, ut 2:30—at Odd Fet lows Halls, 402 Beltram! Bemidji Lodge No. 110 - Regular meeting nights —every Friday, 8 o'clock at Odd Fellows _ 402 Beltrami. Hall. 1 0. 0. F. Camp No. 8¢ Regular meeting every secoud and fourth Wednesdays at » o'clock at 0dd Fellows Hall Rebecca Lodge. Regular meeting nights -- first sus third Wednesday ut 8o'cloca —1..0. 0. F. Hall XNIGETS OF PYTHIAS Bemidjl Lodge No. 163 Regular meeting nights—ex- ery Tuesday evening at 8 o’nlqck—.t the Hagles Hall, ‘Third street. LADIEE OF THE MAC- CABEEXS. Regular meeting nlght last Wedneasday evening ie each month. The Pioneer Want Ads \ “OASH_ WITH cePY % cent per word per Issue {] - less than 15 cents neighbor’s so your want ad gets HELP WANTED. WANTED—Bright, young man to help in store and on delivery wag- on. Model Manufacturing company. ‘WANTED-—Good, strong boy to work after school hours and Saturdays. Apply at this office. WANTED—Girl for work. . Mrs. Richardson, 910 Bel- trami. . Phone 570. WANTED—Girl for general house work. Mrs. S. E. P. White, FOR SALE A RS AN FOR SALE—Typewrlter ribbons for every make of typewriter on the market at 50 cents and 75 centd each. Every ribbon sold for 76 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.. R R P e e S FOR SALE—Single comb, White Of- pington eggs for hatching. Flock headed by: second prize winner in ‘Wisconsin State Poultry show, hens just as good. Also S. C. R. I. Red eggs. Have two Orpington Cocker- els and One Red for sale. D: R. Burgess. FOR SALE—The Bemidji 1ead pencil (the best nickel” pencil in "the world, at Netzer's, Barker’s, 0. C. Rood’s, McCualg’s, Omich’s, Roe & Supply Store at 5 cents each and 50 cents a dozen. FOR SALE—Small fonts of type, sev- eral different poiuts and in first class eondition. Call or write this office for proofs. ' Address Bemidji Pioneer, Bemidji, Minr. 5 FOR SALE—Six room cottage corner Sixth and Irvine. Cellar, pantry, closets and water in. See D R. Bur- gess next door. FOR SALE‘SIx room. house and closet, good-location at a bargain if taken at once.--821 Minnesota avenue. - . [ FOR SALE—Rubber ‘stamps. The| Ploneer ‘will: procure any kind of * rubber stump for you on short mo-{ “ general house-’ Markusen’s, and the Pioneer Office| Eighty aqre : Regular chnrge rate 1 cent per word per insertion No ad taken for Phone 31 ’ HOW THOSE WANT ADS DO THE BUSINESS - The Pioneer goes everywhere so that everyone has a neighbor who takes it and people who do not take the paper generally read their to them all. 15 Cent a Word Is All It Costs | FOR REN1 & A. M., Bemidj:, egular meeting first and - third Wednesdays, 8 o'clock—at Masonic. 'Hall, Beltram! Ave, and Fifth St. Bemidji. Chapter . No. - 76, R. A. M. ‘Stated convocations —first and third Mondays, § oclock p. m—at Masonic Hall Zeltram! Ave., and Fifth street. Elkanah Commandery Neo. 3¢ K. T. Stated conclave—secon& p. m—at Masonic Temple, Bel- trami Ave., and Fifth St. O.£. S. Chapter No: 171, Regular meeting nights— first and thira Fridaye, & o'clock — at Masonic Hall, Beltrami Ave., and Fifth S FOR RENT—Two rooms partly furn- ished- for light housekeeping. 511 Third street. quire corner Sixth and Lake Boule- vard. 1 LOST AND FOUND LOST-—Geographic Magazine. Return to Pioneer Office. MISCELLANEOUS 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 of classified advertising. The- Courier-Newe covers North Dakota like a blank- “ et; reaching all parts of the state the day of publlcation 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 .mercnants In North- ern Minnesota to sell “The Bemid- 3i” lead pencil. Will carry name of every merchant in advertising columns of Pioneer in order that all receive advantage of advertis ing. For wholesale prices write or phone the Bemidji Pioneer Of- fice Supply Co. Phone 31. Be- midji, Minn. BOUQHT AND SOLD—Second hand furniture. - 0dd Fellow’s building. across- from postoffice. phone 129 WANTED--Light wagon for delivery purposes. I P. Batchelder, .I!innea’r Want Ads +2 -Gent a Word “H: Brakke. Brmg Results' M. B. A Roosevelt, No. 1522. Regu- lar_ meeting nights, second and fourth Thursdays of each month at eight ¢’clock |FOR RENT—Rooms—also light in"0ad Fellows Hall. house keeping rooms. Over Model M W. A e o o i Bemidji Camp No. G012 |FOR RENT—Furnished rooms, in- Hogular Tectiog Rights — first and third Tuesdays at 8 o'clock ut 0dd Fellows Hall,” 402 Beltrami Ave. MODERN. Regular meeting nights oc the first and third Thursdays ip the 1. O. O. F. Hall at 8 p. m. SOMS OF NERMAN. Meetings held thire Sunday afternoon of eachk month at Troppmaw's Hall. L0W YEOMANS. Meetings the first Friday evening of the month at the home of Mrs. H. F. Schmidt, 306 Third street. Whu Sells 1t ? Here they are all in a row. They sell it because it’s the best nickel pencil on the market teday and will be for many days to come. The Bemidji Pencil stands alone in the ;five] [cent world. It is sold on your money back basis.” A store on every street and.in surrounding cities: Here They Are: Carlson’s Varlety Store Barker’s Drug and Jew- elry Store W. G. Schroeder 0. 0. Rood & Oo. E. F.Notzer’s Pharmacy Wy McOualg “de P. Omloh’s Clgar Store Roe & Markusen Z. F. @. Troppman & Co. L. Abercrombie. The Fair Store Mrs. E. L. Woods Dhluawa_fradl-y Store lmldll Plonom- Suuply Store Retailets will receive immediate 'gmas (mum or Iess) by. first and third Thursdays o'clock in basement of and fourth Fridays, 8 o'clock .