Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
. ), 4 THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER. 25, 1913. Merchants, (Contractors, Loggers And All Employers of Labor ATTENTION! The new Compensation Act goes into effect Oct. 1st., 1913. You cannot afford to take the risk. Let an “Aetna” Employers Liability Policy protect you. The Aetna Life Insurance Go., of Hartford, Gon. Accident and Liability Dept. CALL ENGLAND, Dist. Rep. Hote! Markham Bidg . Bemid)l,M nn Phone 264 o [SSene——— “HELP FOR THE DRINKING MAN SEGURED BY THE NEAL TREATMENT The man who drinks is often dis- |system. guested with himself. He vows he The “Neal Treatment” is a pure, will never drink again. But his self [harmless vegetable compound, taken “ereated habit” Is stronger than his|through the lips. No “hypodernfic_ in- “will power.” His many “good reso-|jections” are needed, and the patient Tutions” do not hold him. Why? Be-|is surprised to find the treatment so eause his body has become a sture-lsimple, mild and effective. The “Neal house for “alcohol poison.” This poi-|home” is also a “real home” where gom is constantly seeking to multiply |all the ccmforts of home are provid- itself, and the victim, in his lucid|ed. Private rooms. “Registered Phy- moments, longs and cries for help.|sician, Trained Nurse” and every- Now the best help for such a man is|thing the patient may require that the “Neal Help,” For in three days|is conducive to health and healing. the “Neal Treatment’ neutralizes| If you are interested for yourself the poison and removes it from the|or a friend, write, call or phone. THE NEAL INSTITUTE Corner Belknap and West Seventh Street. SUPERIOR, WIS, Voting Power and Subscription Price In the Schroeder-Pioneer Free Piano Confest DAILY Votes Price Three Months Subscription.. . 3,000 $1.00 Six Months Subscription . 6,000 2.00 One Year Subseriptian..... ..12,000 4.00 WEEKLY B One Year Subscription.................. 5,000 $1.560 Two Years Subecription .... ..10,000 3.00 Three Years Subscription ............15,000 4.50 MERCHANDISE BOUGHT AT SCHROEDER’S One Dollar’s Worth..................... 100 $1.00 Five Dollars’ Worth..................... 500 5.00 If you have a friend who wants to win that pjano, find out'her number and cast your votes for her. See to it that you get votes and receipts with your payments for merchandise and subscriptions. HELP DECIDE THE WINNER The American Adding Machine The Latest Adder Costs But $35 See ourexhibit---ask for 10 days’ trial Here is & new price on a competent Adder. On a machine that is rapid, Now we make this offer so that offices everywhere may learn what rull and infallible. this machine means to them. The very latest machine, built by men who know, in one of the largest T n y -I- It is an individual Adder to be placed on one’s desk, close to one's books and papers. To take the place of the central machine requiring skilled operators. It is also intended for offices and We will gladly place in any office one American Adder for a ten days' test. There will be no obligations, and charges will be prepaid. stores where costly machines are a Compare it with any non-lister— luxury. even the costliest. Let anyone use I it. See if any machine can serve The price is due to utter simplicity, better than this. and to our enormous output. Seven Just send us this coupon and we'il keys do all the work. . send the machine. . Each copied number — st . UG R RSN SR e s e L0 shown up for checking before the : addition is e, : Please send us an American Add- : The machine will add, sub- : ing Machine for ten days’ free trail, : tract and multiply. With very s slight practice anyone can pute a hundred figures a tai And the machine never mistakes. Countless offices, larpe and small, are getting from 'hese ma- chines the highest class of ser- vice. Manunfactured and Guaranteed by AMERICAN CAN COMPANY, CHICAGO Sold In Bemidji By 3 The Bemidji Pionser Office Supply Store bottles of Chamberlain’s Tablets and years. I refer to any one in Boone Mill or vicinity and they will vouch for what I say.” lets are for sale by Barker’s Drug Store.—Adv. Copyright, 1913, by The Darkness had fallen long before the men of Vermont came to the lakes. Through woods where giant trees reached upward and made the darkness impenetrable they had marched, stumbling along, feeling their way, often bumping into traes( or falling over logs. Now at the lake- shore they were ready to embark. silently they moved to and fro, and the only sound was the lapping of the water against the shore and the roar of the falls. Just a few boats could be found; but they were filled and rowed across in silence, brought back, filled again, and again rowed across. When dawn broke in the east, eighty-three American soldiers had been ferried over, and it was too late to wait for others. If the attack was to be a success it must be made without more delay. With' the utmost caution, therefore, the men moved forward and up the slope. The rumble of the falls help- ed them, drowning out all other sounds, They reached the sally port. There a sentry pointed his musket at the leader of the Americans and pulled the . trigger. The piece did not go off, and the sentry fled. In a few moments the little army of invaders had formed a hollow square within the fort, facing the barracks about them, their muskets ready to fire:~The' Indian war-cry was given; and Ethan Allen, who led them, made his way to the quarters of .the commandant, and demanded the sur- render of the fort. “In whose name,” asked the com- mandant. “In the name of the Great Jehovah and the Coniinental Congress,’ re- olied Allen. And the surrender was made. So easily and quietly did Ethan Allen and Benedict Aronald capture Ticonderoga from the Bri- tish on that early morning in May. 1778 without -the loss of a man or the firing of a gun, and the army of the colonres was enriched by many HISTORIC SPOTS OF AMERIC A Mentor Assoclation, Inc. precious cannon, muskets, and a large amount of ammunition for the struggle for freedom that had but started. g “Sounding waters” is the inter- pretation” given to the Indian name, Ticonderoga. Here, where the wa- ters of Lake George descend - tumui- juously into Lake Champlain, falling Ithirty feet in one sheer drop, where the voyagers from Canada to New England nad to leave their boats and portage their loads, a fort had been built by the French twenty years be- fore. Three years after it was put up Ticonderoga was attacked by six thousand British regulars and ten thousand provincials. The four thousand men of the French garrison repulsed the attacking army, and among the killed was Lord Howe. His memory is kept green by a tab- 'let in Westminister Abbey erected by the people of Massachusetts. ‘Three weeks after the repulse, when Montcalm had gone to Quebec to op- pose General Wolfe and only four hundred men were left in the fort. Lord Amherst, with eleven thousand English, besiged it. Realizing the hopelessness of their task, the garri- son blew up the fortifications and abandoned the place. It had been in English hands since that‘time up to its capture by the “Green Moun- tain Boys” under Ethan Allen. Two Years later, when Géneral Burgoyme descended from Canada, the fort fell into hig hands, the Americans re- treating with secarcely any resis- tance. But when Burgoyne surrend- ered, after the battle of Saratoga, Ticonderoga again fell into American hands. In 1909, on the three hundredth anniversary of the discovery of Lake Champlain, the owner of the ground on which the ruins of the fort stood began its restoration. The waters still roar at the falls as they did on the night Ethan Allen and his Green Mountain Boys made the bloodless attack upon the fort. GAYNOR ESTATE MAY REAGH TWO MILLIONS No Monetary Provision in Will for Widow. New York, Sept. 25.—The will of Mayor William' J. Gayner was read to his family by Michael Furst, the lawyer to whose custody Mr. Gaynor had intrusted it shortly before he de- cided to take the trip across the ocean in ‘the course of which he died. Should the document read to the family prove to be the last will and testament its contents will be a sur prise to many of the mayor's friends. According to its terms the entire es- tate of Mayor Gaynor, the value of which may reach $2,000,000, is divid-|] ed into seven parts, of ‘which Rufus and Norman Gaynor, the two 'soms, will receive each two-sevenths, and the Misses Ruth, Marion and Helen Gaynor, the three youngest daughters, each one-seventh. No monetary or other provision is 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 am now a well woman and welgh 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 Chamberlain’s Tab- | cept that the town house in Brook- 1yn is bequeathed to her. Whether Mr. Gaynor made adequate provision for her in his life could not be learn- ed. Something New in Massachusetts.’ Beverly, Mass., Sept. 25.—Massa- chusetts, for the first time in its his- tory, has sent a woman to a state political convention. She is Mrs. Louis Agassiz Shaw, daughter of Charles S. Bird, Progressive candi- date for govermor. Mrs. Shaw was elected in the primaries as a dele gate to the Progressive state conven- tion. Bvery vote cast in the ward was for her. Despondency. Is often caused by indigestion and constipation, and quickly disappears when Chamberlain‘s Tablets are tak- en. For sale by Barker’s Drug Store. —Adv. Thisisthe == T'S . different = from others because more care is taken in the mak- ing and the materials used are of higher grade, Black Silk Stove Polish Makes a brilliant, silky pollsh thatdoesnot | rub off or dust off, and the shine lasts four | times as long as ordinary stove polish. Used on sample stoves and sold by hardware dealers. Allweask Ja & triwl. Use it on your cook stove, #to! . ILyou 7 it ORBleck BUk Stove Falls. nsiet on: Made in liquid urwu—ofi'uulty,. BLACK SILK STGVE POLISH WORKS Si Minois ) e Silk Metsl Pelioh f he Cheerful Life 1t is the right of everyone to live and enjoy the cheerfal life. ‘We awe, ft to ourselves and those who live with us to li cheerful life. cannot do so if ill health takes hold of us, i i '\ The wife, mother and daughter suffering from hot flashes, nmm’ T headache, backache, d: lown feeling, other weakness 'uinnn les of fiuhlnfl-ofi.:n?-,hmmblbwds:nhh but to her loved ones. There is a remedy. Forty years experience has proven unmistakably thet, DR, PIERCE’S o Favorite Prescription will restore health to weakened womankind. For 40 years 1t/has sirvived g:indica. envy and‘malice. - Sold by dealers in medicine in' lh':i(;‘ur 'Ab;lt Toren, . Pierce's Favorite Prescription Tablets can be had of druggist or maiiod. m:le n{{ o{:,e-unt stamps—for '$1.00 or 0c size. ‘Address R. V. Pierce,'M., o, N. Y. .. Plerce’s Pleasant Pellets regulate a vigorate Pt:md:, ll:e.l' and bowell‘.“ Sil‘-m-eozfited,.?‘lfiy";ra-ul-. KE KK KK KKK KKK KKK KKK AKX KRR AKX KKK K] Nomination Blank * W. G. Schroeder, 4 * *x Bemidji, Minn. * %« I hereby nominate........... sne avs ove sual'sva o-s sve eiv s 'ava ara ereiere BB 1 W x : * * contestant in the Schroeder Piano Contest and ask that you place % * her name on your numbered list.’ *® x... Not Necessary to sign % iiiiiii*iki’iiiiiilliiiiliiiiiiii*i‘ll 30068 Free Cut out the above coupon, and t 1t at this office with.the ex- Ficri Of the ‘cott of Dackiny arprors froms th foesom L cowers tho Lire and_other necemary EXPENGE ltems), and Feceivo 7our m’n&"h‘ - - - - This beautiful big volume is written by Willis J. Abbot, a writer of international renowm, and is the acknowl~ edged standard reference work of the great Canal Zone. CAN AL 1t is a splendid large book of almost 500 pages, 9x12 inches in size; printed from new type, large and clear, , In Picturs and Press on special paper; bound in_tropical red veilum cloth; ILUSTRATED title stamped in gold, with inlaid color panel; contains 34 " EDITION - more than 600 magnificent illustrations, including beau- ; tiful pages reproduced from water color studics in col- orings that far surpass any work of a similar character. Call b ;zmd"sce this' beautiful-book ‘that .would sell for $4 under usual AND THE ‘conditions, but whicn is presented to our readers for SIX of the ‘above Certificates of consecutive dates, and only the Sent by Mail, Postage Paid, for $1.39 and 6 Certificates __ Sent by Mail, Postage Paid, for $1.39 and 6 Certificates - Regular octavo size; text matter practic Panama and ure; ousd i bive vl coth coneineomy 10Dt | gy B uc tes the' Canal Emué. Thia mkao'fig::!lfiunfln;nggfi Amouni of ions, but {s presen our readers for L 2 D5TAUS above Certificates of consecutive dates and ouly the A8C < Sent by Mail, Postage Paid, for 67 Cents and 6 Certificates FREE TO YOU 'MR. FARMER MEND YOUR HARNESS WITH THE SPEEDY STITCHER ‘We want every reader of the Pion- eer to _have one of these Speedy Stitchers = Absolu Free. ‘The Speedy Stitcher is the latest invention and the [ most _effective of anything in the needle for tapping shoes. It also. contains a large bobbin from ‘which e thread feeds, of which are enclosed inside the handie out of the way. This ‘Awl hax Its FREE to hu™.r for:ll: os n?l A:toi %'l:s’ilten your gmfiz. c Sewin| W es valuable :Elar oflemd,g Its Those Who Are Pro'“pt feature.il you will i city makes it a thoroughly -tmbl?n.\ywnl kt'or any ?ndnfll ""‘3‘.’ 0 r worl even n han of :?lfiumut unskilled. = With this Awl you can mend harness, shoes, tents, awnings, pulley belts, carpets, saddles, suit cases, or any heavy terial not find in any $1.00 Awl. ‘We will give one of these excellent Speedy Stitchers absolutely_ free anyone who will send us ¢1.50 for one year’s subscription to The Week- 1y Ploneer, or $2.00 for six months subscription to the Pioneer. If i:u are gt present a subscriber, send t e .Mt'): amount {;‘5 l-enun.l.d lend- y use the coupon below: ant sure with a set of diamond pointed to send your %gdar in today before grooved needles including a special = you forget it. BEMIDJI PIONEER PUBLISHING GO., Bomidji, Minn. USE TEIS COUFON ma ; The Speedy Stitcher is provided Bemidji Ploneer Pub. Co. 2 5 . Dear Sir—BEnclosed find $..,... for one year's subscription to The Weekly Pioneer, or six months to the Daily Pioneer. For my promptness send me postpald, free of charge your Speedy Stitcher. My name is. .. seeseess sreeseusieiacsesianenioen Postoffice ...... S P B R R P O Rural Route. . BURLD . 5iuisass 485 5o deion vaissise siaiesion H § 1) | i