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e — FIRST WISCONSIN CAVALRY, ON LYTLE HILL, CHICKAMAUGA PARK. CHATTANOGA, TENN. _ . _— . No Encouragement. “Gerald, have I ever given you rea- to think I would marry you?” “No. Gwendolen: you never have, and if you don’t want me to bother you any more I won't. Just give me my regular good night kiss and I’ll go. "—Chlcago Tribune. Inquisitive. Nell—I declare! That woman finds out everything. I never knew any one 80 inquisitive. Belle—That’s right. 1 believe she would even pump an or- -an.-~Philadelphia Record. Mother of Eighteen Children. “I am the mother of eighteen child- ren and have the praise of doing more work than any young woman in my town,” writes Mrs. C. J. Mar- tin, Boone Mill, Va. “I suffered for five years with stomach trouble and could not eat as much as a biscuit without suffering. I have taken three bottles of Chamberlain’s Tablets and am now a well woman and weigh 168 pounds. I can eat anything I want to, and as much as I want and feel better than I have at any time in ten years. I refer to any one in Boone Mill or vicinity and they will vouch for what I say.” Chamberlain’s Tab- lets are for sale by Barker’s Drug Store.—Adv. THE SPALDING EUROPEAN PLAN Duluth’s Largest and Best Hotel DULUTH MINNESOTA H ¢ i i More than #100,000.00 recently expended: on improvements. 250 rooms, 125 private baths, 60 sample rooms. Ever: Todern convenience: Luxurlous and delightful restaurants and buffet, Flemish Room, Palm Room, Men's Grill, Colonial Buffet: Magnificent lobby and public rooms: Ballroom, mnréuet rooms and privite dining_roomst Sun parlor and ohserva- | tory. Located in heart of fislneys se- | tloo but ovarlooklog the harbor ani fawe ¢ Superior. Coavenlent 1o »verythiny One of the Groat Hatals o Wy Reribensi | Hold! Don't throw away your old overcoat we can put it in' Stop! first class condition at: moderate price, new collar . and lining. i We do first class work of all kinds. PRESSING, REPAIRING, ALTERATION. Moderate Tailor Tailors 117 3rd St. at Bisiar Music Store Work called for and delivered. ! Phone 573 TIMBER SALE Sealed proposals, in duplicate, envelope marked “Proposals for timber, Red Lake Indian Reservation, will be received at the office of the Super- intendent of Red Lake Indian School, Red Lake, Minnesota until 12 o'clock noon, Central time, Thursday, Sep- tember 25, 1913, for the purchase of approximately 3,000,000 feet of pine timber on the Red Lake In- dian Reservation, Minnesota. This tim- ber is upon the S35 of the S} of Section 10; the S¥% of the SW1 of Section 11: the Wi of Section 14; all of Sections 15, 16 and 17; the Bl of Section 18; the %lé of the SE; of Section 7; the S‘A of the SW1; of Section 8; and fmnctlonnl portions of Sections 19 and 20; all which are in Township 150 North Range 33 West, in Minnesota. The tim- ber offered for sale is practically all white pine. Only dead or germanently 1nfurad timber will be' sold. However, all of it is of good quality and it is all accessible to a railroad or Red Lake. The minimum prices which will be ac- cepted are $6.00 per M. feet for white pine and $4.00 per M. feet for Norway pine, The umber must be cut under regulations prescribed by the Secreta.ry of the Interior, All timber must be cut and removed before June 1, 1914. With each bid a certified check on a solvent national bank must be submitted in the amount of $1,000.00. These checks will be returned to unsuccessful bidders, ap- plied toward the payment for timber if bid is accepted and retained as a for- feit if a bid is accepted and the bidder fails to comply with the requirements of his bid. The right of the Secretary of the Interior to waive technical defects in advertisements and bids, and to re- ject any and all bids, is reserved. Fur- ther information gs to the timber, and copies of the approved form of contract, may be obtnined upon request from Walter *Dickens, Superintendent of the Red Lake Indian School, Red Lake, Minnesota. ‘Washington, D C. August 12, 1913 nedg 5 UKE. 2d Assistant Comm s:ioner ot Indian ffairs. i! tor bankruptey frauds. 1 each | Bardwell, forty years old, a tinsmith, Later, | ! advices received here. IN AN UNOFFICIAL CAPACITY How Manuel Zamacona Is Coming to United States. Washington, Sept. ;—The declara- tion by Frederico Gamboa, Mexican foreign minister, that Manuel Zama- cona is coming to the United States in an unofficial capacity is interpreted by officials here as meaning that the latter will not be invested with pow- er to represent the Huerta govern- jment until the United States indicates its willingness to receive him. The view prevails that to receive Zamacona, would not conflict with the negotiations being conducted by John Lind, President Wilson’s personal en- voy in Mexico. cials were inclined to the opinion that if Zamacona were received the par- leys here would supplement those car- ried on by John Lind. QUITS NEW HAVEN AGENCY J. P. Morgan & Co. Serves Notice - Upon Company. New York, Sept. —J. P. Morgan &_Co., served notice upon the New York, New Haven and Hartford Rail- road company of its intention to end its conmection as fiscal agent of the, road. This notice was made public by the New Haven’s executive commit- tee. The committee authorized the president to install, without stint, safety appliances and signals to in- sure the safety of passengers. No reason -was- given 'by -officials of the New Haven system for the withdrawal of J. P. Morgan & Co., as; fiscal agent. SEES INFLATION OF CREDITS Chicggo Banker Notes as Legal Tender. ‘Washington, Sept. —George M. Reynolds, a Chicago banker, told the senate banking committee he believed there would be a violpnt inflation of credits if treasury notes were made legal tender and held as part of na- Administration offi- l Opposes Treasury , tional bank reserve funds, as proposed | by the administration currency bill. Mr. Reynolds believed strongest favorable feature was that it would provide for proper elasticity in credits and currency. He believed the bill would ‘“do great good to the extent that it helps in the mobilization of reserves,” but he did not think it went far enough. Sentenced for Bankruptcv Fraud. . Seattle, Wash, Sept. .—Daniel Fuhrman, a merchant tailor, was sen- tenced to fourteen months’ imprison- ment for concealing $9,000 from his creditors after he went into bank- § ruptcy a year ago. This wea the first conviction in the Pacific Miwthwest Violent Sneeze Breaks Rib, Green Bay, Wis.,, Sept. Bert sneezed harder than usual. having an acute pain in his side, he consulted u physician, who discovered Bardwell had cracked a rib. Mrs. Pankhurst Sails Oct. 4. New York, Sept. ».—Emmeline Pank- hurst, the English militant suffragette leader, has arranged to sail for the United States on Oct. 4, according to She will speak In Madison Square Garden on Oct. 2} $100 Ksward, $100. The readers of thls paper will be ‘pleased to learn that there is at least one dreaded dismease that science has been able to cure in all its stages, and that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure now known ‘to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being foundation of the disease, and giving stitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting direct- 1y upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system, thereby destroying the foundation of the diease, and giving the patient strength by building up the constitution and assisting nature in do- the bill's: ing its work. The proprietors have so much faith in its curative powers that they offer One Hundred Dollars for any case that it fails to cure. Send for list of testimonials. Address F, J. Cheney & Co., Toledo. Ohio. Sold by all Druggists, 75c. Bohemia's Rocky The Rocky maze ‘of Prachov,- near Jacin, in northern Bohemin, is a veri- table natural curiosity. It bas been well described as a gigantic “freak in stone.” To enter the labyvinth with- out a guide is a perilons proceeding, for an unwary adventurer would prob- ably speedily be lost in the tortuous windings of the maze. where the paths are s0 narrow antl e cliffs on the side plorer soon | en of locality, In days of fiery perserution the Mora- vian and Bohemian breihren’s secret prayer mee used to Le held here, | just as the Chr s assembied to worship in the ombs, The cliffs are honeycombed with cells, and at the far ond of the m is a rock castle. where in the old days a robber baron lived nnd took toll of all way- farers, o3 e of some of the rocks is very curious. There are, for instance, the "hishop and miter,” the “Madonna and the child® and many others.—Londen Sketch. Portugal’s Frison of Silence. Entombed in a grim castle on the outskirts of Lisbhon are some of the most miserable men on earth. These are inmates of Portugal’'s “prison of isilence.” In this building everything | that human ingenuity can suggest to | | render the lives of its prisoners a hor- rible, maddening torture is done. The corridors. piled tier on tier five stories high, extend from a common center like the spokes of a huge wheel. The icells are narrow, tomblike. and within each stands a coffin. The attendants creep about in felt slippers. No one is ‘allowed to utter a word. The silence i1s that of the grave. Once a day the cell doors are unlocked. and the half thousand wretches march out. clothed {1in shrouds and with faces covered by masks, for it is part of this hideous punishment that none may: look: upon the countenance of his fellow prison- ers. Few of them endure this torture for more than ten years.—Manchester News. Blooms From Split Bulbs. A novel experiment is that of grow- ling two hyacinth bulbs together, Two bulbs are selected which are known to flower about the same time, al- though in other respects the more di- verse they are the better. Each is cut from the crown to the base with a sharp knife in such a way that the central shoot is exposed but not injur- ed. The two larger portions of the bulbs are then tied together, the cut portions facing one another. The dou- ble bull is then potted in the usual way. If all has gone well a single stem comes up. wkile the flower may be blue on one side and pink on the ! other, according to the colors of the bulbs, The result is highly mystifying lto gardeners who are not ‘in . the know." The experiment is often’car- ried out by the Dutch growers and rarely fails if carefully executed.— London Strand. whnn ‘the Plow Handlu Fight You. A city man was driving in the conn— rry and stopped to ask the way. of a farmer who was plowing in a fleld. Noting the perspiration beading the farmer’s forehead the city man in- quired: “Plowing pretty tough sort of work, ain't it?” *“Nope.” 'said the - farmer. *Only ’long in the middle of the afternoo: when the plow hnndles get to fightin’ a feller.” “What do you do then?" “Oh. just fizht back.” As the city. man drove on he thought that a farmer's work is a good deal like that of anybody else. There' are times in every business when the plow handles fight the man that holds them: —Farm Machinery and Power. Command or Entreaty. Speaking of epitaphs, there is in an old Kentucky cemetery a tombstone in- scribed to the memory of one Sarah Cole. long known to her husband and the other citizens of her community as “Aunt Sally.” During her life there were floating rumors to the effect that she kept “Uncle John,” her husband. in that somewhat circumscribed space known to tae knowing as “under her thumb.” in any event, his fellow townsmen like to tell that it svas on the 31st of May that Uncle John’s mar ble memorial was erected. bearing the juseription. “Sleep on. Aunt Sally, till the resurrection worn!” and that it was ou the 1Ist of .June that Uncle Jobhn was married to Miss Vi Davis, the village dressr xchange. Made Things Cheerful “Have you done your share toward making life more cheerful for any- som. “1 bave. | gave a crowd of people the time of their.lives' this morning. My bat blew off and 1 chased it two blocks.”—Washington Star. Suspicious. At the Ancestral Castle—Old Retain- er (confidentially)—Yes, sir; most of us in the servants’ ‘all get any forty years® back wages out of me.—Puck. No Need to Show. “You ought to brace up and show your wife who is running things at your house.” “It isp’t necessary. She knows.”— Houston Post. Home Vaudeville, “What's the trouble’ now?” “Dispute between our parlor maid liner of the household.”—Washington Take Hall's Family. Pills for consti-|Herald. pation. body ?" asked the genially serious per- |] 'as been in the | hearl’s family for forty years. The | Earl's Father-in-law (from Chicago)— | Well, I'm sorry for you, but you can't | and our cook as to which is the head- || Bills of $2,500,000 Face Value Cut Out 43 ‘by Government, 3 treasury department in Wa,shlngton $2,500,000" in currency was partly de- stroyed at the United States sub- treasury here. Iloles big enough to put a finger through were punched into the notes and they were then di- .| er cutter. nomination. { 000 were sacrificed. W. D, Vandiver, States treasurer, said the reason for culation. Varying the Old Story. “I had ‘him right up to the side of (the boat—a beauty—the biggest one 1 lever hooked—was just getting my landing net under him—he gave a flop, and”— *“Yes. I know the rest. He gave a flop—broke his hold—and away he went, and"— “He gave a flop—cleared the landing net—and landed plumb in the boat.”— Browning’s Magazine, Diarrhoea Quickly Cured. “I was taken with diarrhoea and Mr. Yorks, the merchant here, per- suaded me to try a bottle of Cham-| berlain’s: Colic, Choléera and Diarr- hoea Remedy. After taking one dose of it I was cured. It also cured oth- ers that I gave it to,” writes M. E. Gebhart, Oriole, Pa. That 18 not at all unusual. An ordinary attack of diarrhoea can.almost invariably be cured by one or two doses of this rem- edy. For 'sale by Barker’s Drug Store. —Adv. DESTROY FORTUNE IN NOTES vided lengthwise by an electrk: DOW- The notes were gold and silver cer- | tificates of the $5,000 and $10,000 de-{ About $1,500,000 of the|§ $5,000 notes and $1,000,000 of the $10;- assistant United |38 { destruction was that the notes, which | are new, are too large for general cir- |# EREE R KRR KRR R K RRK KKK R K K A — x ; ‘ COUPON' * x GOOD fO't 6 VOTES x ® 1 :Cast thesp VOtes FOTeNO & 4sisi,s i imecvn v ves et ik * This coupun when neatly cut out, brought or mailed to the W. G. & x * Schroeder store on or before February 14th 1914 will count as five % % votes for the person represented by the above number. * The Bemidji Pioneer Pub. Co. & TR~ F KKK KK Ky XK KKK KKK KKK KKK KK A L RO IR O A el e S SN 0 B right. Automohile Accessories and Supplies Big stock of tires, all sizes. thing for the automobile or gas engine, we can supply your wants and our prices are positively We Handlo the Following Lines of Cars: Ford, Studebaker, Over- land and Cadillac 1914 models ready for delivery. used cars for sale, cheap. Northern Automobile Co, If it is some= We have some A Etnivaiondl) 38 find READ THE PIONEER WANT ADS (Merchants Who Want Your Business It matters not where you reside or what you want, the merchants below can get it for you at a price that will defy competition. Every merchant is reliable. and will give you the best value for your money P33 33333338388 el MeCUAIG GENERAL MERCHANDISL Dry Goods, Shoes, Groeeries and Provisious. Bemidji W% i ko e * ) 2 6 2338222 2'2°2 3°2°3 4 *k 4 .fl«i«fl«fl«h««k«flfl«: $388S s * ;SA X0 ! : Regularly and systemati- % ; cally. If you receive your pay ¥ ¥ weekly, 1ay some aside each % « week, 1f monthly do it month- % * ly. # surprisingly. ® TRY IT. * f # Now is the time to open & # %« bank account with the * * $EC STA E BANK ' * ‘ SRR X «a«iflr«nr AR AR AKX Rad S8 888822222223 32288088 d 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 mot know how well we can please you in quality and satisfy you in quantity. w. G ICKBOEDEB iffl'i**tk'fi**'fi * B midji, B x FRERIHHRRKKREK KKK K KRR IR KRR KRR KRR **ttt********* = R d : BEMIDJI MUSIC HOUSE : %« 117 Third Street, Bemidji. % § ® ; x < ‘Wholesale and retali Pia- =« 4 + nos, Organy and Sewing * 4 * 2fachinea. * q x « Phone §73. * 1 « * ® * 3 x J. BISIAR, MANAGaR. * * * RS 33333 38233 S8 oS a sl iiili*i***i*ii*: E E : g B § 2 5 -3 é'f £ ] 1 Phones 431, 376. Bemidji, Minn, AR R RRKK u«t«nfluflu«uflfl ok Kkhkkk R K “ THE CROOKSTON LUMBER COMPANY Wholesale LUMBER, LATH AND BUILDING nnm 1232383282822 s aR22 2 2e s PO P e i ;E ,Mifimi*«i{_ii’ifii{ii’i 3 The dollars will pile up : 3 AR KRR KK Do you want THE BEST GROCERIES found in Bemidji Come right here and get them, as we pride ourselves on baving only the best money can buy. OTTO0 G. SCHWANDT Bemlfii“ mt‘l%l'neflllfltl. TR o Baaaiataa e s g S8 R 8 Get Your HOUSEHOLD UTENSILS snd FARM IMPLEMENTS C. E. BATTLES The Hardware Merchant Bemidjl, - Minn. bbb g s S S SRR AR S8 2SS S R s 2 28 ST EEITgeraeresey STORAGE For a dry and safe place to tore your Household Goods, tc., see us. Rates Reason- ble. JOHN G. ZIEGLER. Office. 0dd Fellows Building. Phone 129, IR KA :ifiifiifiifi*fil«k*fl*{!fik«*fii Tededk deddkokkok koo ok Kk ko k kok ek Fee ke dede B ok R ok ke ok e ek s s v de o e ok e o ok X 31 e e e ok de ok de e ok ek e L2323 8232883222 4 % All kinds 'of building ma- % terial, as much or as little ac * you Hke at the IT. HILAIRE RETAIL LUM- BER COMPANY, KhkhxAK % Coal and wood also for sale : Minnegota Ave. and R. R. S. ddkdrkkk dkkkkd RS 3333223 SS S8 880008805 APPSR KK BARKEE‘! DRUG JEWELRY STORE ‘Wholesalers and Retailers Bervice and satisfaction. Mail Orders given that same ser- vice you get in person. B '8 Third St. Bemidji, Mina. B T T e T :%iii!i*i*i*i*i: I e ok ok ok o ek ok ok ke AR dh ok kkRk ok k ok % Call and see me, * * Batchelder's General Store. : BEMIRY-. MINN, i KKK K xS x & KK :ii*fiifikfii{%fiiifik&{*fiifii We strive to sell. THAT’'S NATURAL. * * % % But we strive harder to please. : THAT’S SERVICE. has eus- ek et v o o o e e e ok % *« : George T. Baker & Go. Iiiflifi;liflfllflli{gkiifin e s T NORTHERN GROCERY COMPANY Sesscssessnense » WHOLEBALE GROCHRS L2 8328222222423 L2238 22232232 AR KK :{&*{*lkfi%fl&#{ifl&*fiififi »* 3 = g =] 8 3 3 2 3 <] 5 ROE AND MARKUSEN “THEY BEAT.” . 207 Fourth street, Bemidji. « Phone 2086. *E A A AKX AR AEL Je ek ok e ok ek RS A Badaaa s SSSS S S el S el 2 We ll;e gobborl' of PIN TICKETS and GUMMED LABELS No need te send outside of Bemidji for them. The Pioneer Supply Store Can Save You Money 1223333822222 5 : : L2223 232822222 FRAIHHRIIRRRIR R KKK FARHHRIIIHRIRIKRRR KRS FURNITURRE 5 1. P. LANR Furaiture, Rugs and Stoves, Undertaking. Phone eall 178-2, 323 Minnesota Ave. AR KKK | KKK KEKKKKKK KKK KK 1322432332332 2] L 823822228383 % 4 COMPANY Manufacturers and Jobbers Ios Cream, Bakery Goods -Confectionery and Foun- tain Supplies, fliitiiiiiiiili R X K Kk k Ak kkkk 'k*‘* * KRk AhAN kR ke gu‘_{,mr i 1 i -+ !