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IF KIDNEYS AGT FRIDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1913 BAD TAKE SALTS Says Backache mn.ngn you /havel been eating too mmfl; Tiedt which forms ufic aéid! When you wake up with backaclie’ and dull misery in the kidney region it generally means you have been eating too much meat, says a well- known authority. Meat forms uri acid which overworks the kidneys in their effort to filter it from the blood and they become sort of paralyzed and loggy. When your kidneys get slug- gish and clog you must relieve them, like you relieve your bowels; remov- ing all the body’s urinous waste, else you have backache, sick headache, dizzy spells; your stomach ‘sours, tongue is coated, and when the wea- ther is bad you have rheumatic twinges. The urine is cloudy, full of sediment, channels often get sore water scalds and you are obliged to seek relief two or three times during the night. Either consult a good, reliable physician at once or get from your pharmacist about four ounces of Jad Salts; take a tablespoonful in a glass of water before breakfast for a few days and your kidneys will then act fine. This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with lithia, and has been used for generations to clean and stimulate sluggish kidneys, also to neutralize acids in the urine so it no longer irritates, thus ending bladder weakness. Jad salts is a life saver for regu- lar meat eaters. It is inexpensive, cannot injure and makes a delight- ful, effervescent lithia-water drink. * Subscribe for The Pioneer LEARN TELECRAPHY Short Hours, Good Pay, Many Posi- tions Open. Living expenses low, may be earned. Qualify for positions as Railroad and Commercial Opera tors and Station Agents. Good sulary to start. Graduates assisted to posi- Address Dept. 3 Interstate Telegraph Institute 1410 Hennepin Ave. Minneapolls, Minn. FUNERAL DIRECTOR M. E. IBERTSON UNDERTAKER and COUNTY CORONER 405 Beltrami Ave., Bemidji, Mien. THE SPALDING EUROPEAN PLAN Duiutk's Lacgest and Besc Hosel DULUTH MINNESOTV A More than $100,000 00 recently expended on improvements. 50 rooms, 1% private baths, 80 sample rooms. Every modern convenience: T.uxurlous and delis mu restaurants and buffet, Flemish Palm Room, Men’s Grill, flolonhl Bu'?etl Magnificent lobby and public roOms; Ballroom. banguet rooms and private dining_rcomss Sun parlor and observa- tory. Locatedln heart of buslness sec- orlooking tke harbor aud Laks Couvenient to overytaing. Superior. One of the Braat Hotals of the Horthwest Ll STOVE WOOD FOR SALE BUNDLE;WOOD, 12—20 in. long Delivered to Bemidji, $2.25 to 7th St.; beyond, $2.50 Delivered to Nymore, $2.00 and BLOCK WOOD Delivered to Bemidji, $2.00 to T7th St., beyond, $2.25 Dellvered to Nymore, $1.75 and Telephone Orders Nc. 82 TERMS—CASH ON DELIVERY _—— Statement of the Ownership, Manage- ment, Ciroulation, Etc., of the, Bemidji Daily Pioneer published daily except Sunday at Bemidji, required by Act of August 24, 1912, Hditor, E. H. Denu, Bemidji, Minn. Mnnnglng Editor, Muyne Stanton, Be- midji, Minn. Business Managers, E. H. Denu and G._E. Carson, Bemidji, Minn, ‘Rublishers, The Bemidji Plonser Pub- 1ishing Company, Bemidji, M Owners, A. Kaiser, Bagley, Minn G. E. Carson, Bemidji, Minn.; E. H. Denu, Bemidji, Minn.; W. G. Schroeder, Be. midji, Minn.; Herbert Wood, Bemidji, Minn. Known bondholders, mortgagees, and other security holders, holding 1 per cent or more of total amount of bonds, mortgages, or other securities: Northern National Bank, Minn.; First National Bank, Minn. Average number of copies each issue of this publication sold or distributed, through the mails or otherwise, to paid subscribers during the six months pro- ceeding the date of this statement, 1339. G. E. CARSON, Publisher. Sworn and subscribed to before me this lst day of October 1913, Bemidji, Bagley, (SEA H. DENU, Nomry Public, Beltrami County, Minnesota. My Commission expi: Feb. 4,°1920. G i { Mlienists Offer Exmwm fl_ ' nummm it | dytng within the last eight years ex- pired jnst previous to the birth 0(! O R A S B S e — Minn. | § MINNEAPOLIS. WOMAN PROBABLY INSANE Minneapolis, Oot. 3-—Mrs. Ida Leckwald was al'raigned in vq}gce court, cl‘argsd wlth first degree mur- der of her daughter, Viola Leckv;old eged nine years. J Complaipt was sworn to by.Ratrol- jman Frank Brunskill, who picked up ‘the gossip of_ the neighborhood that led to the2 woman’s arrest an forced her confession. 7y An insurance policy for $140 on the life of Viola was found at the family home. It had mot been satis- fied. % The father, Ole Leckwold, said the two surviving children, l.hel and Willie, are also insured, and that he had recently dropped his insurance. “What’s more,” he says, “there will never be another cent of insurance on any member of my family.” leen to Every Reader of For only six Panama Certificates and a small ex- pense amount named therein (which covers the tory, checkmg, clerk hire and other necessary EXPENSE items.) No similar book ever lished has sold for less than $4, and it is only by manufacturmg in train-load lots that this splendld big volume can be presented by newspapers on the terms named below. ,wold was' reaponsihle for, the deaths The police theory that Mrs. Leck: of the other five children Wwas strong- ly supported by alienists_at the Uni- versity of Minnesota and Minne- apolis physicians. I ‘ey expresed the .| opinion that Mrs. Leckwold is suffer- ing of me ojeyangement peculiar to %he_ jeriod “befove 'and after cmld' re jhoh -ome: of ,me Leckwold qblldren another ¢hild. LEAD EMPLOYES ON STRIKE Superinbnflgnt Not Permitted to En- ter Plant at Granite City, Al St. Louis, Oct. 3.—Two hundred and fifty pressers, trippers and laborers employed in the keg plant of the Na- tional Lead company at Granite City, I, have refused to go to work ‘and warned an equal number of machin- ists and other employes not to enter. The pickets would not permit the su- perintendent to enter the plant. The strikers are demanding a wage increase of 3 cents an hour, but the superintendent says no demands have been presented to the company. gomg fast, get yours to-day. It Is Entertaining 4 From this book you get a § standing of the PEOPLE 4 the Canal—their personal appearances, their industries, their sports an about the strange natives that. inhabit the g central part of ‘the great American conti- § nent. It is both entertaining and education- “ al, written in an' intens sely chatty style, # which immediately gains and holds your fi interest throughout its entirety. Daily News countries Presented By From the provinces of Canada to the of South America train- loads of these books are being dis- tributed to newspaper readers. More Than to et “Panama.. and pverpem.l insanity, a form; 4 ! i ‘ternal revenue ud;}'nltfil Efites TAKEN FROM M CIVIL SERVICE Deputy Unlhd States Marshals and |’ Revenue Collectors. J Washington, Oct, 3—A new provi- uty “Unfted “States —imrl]l deputy collectars g1 Ani Phite ott | nl,,dhaiprot@t{fln Sfhe fivil y@rx {|4ce Pns been added to ex urgent, d .nclem‘.y ropriation billshy ate commft e on appropriat It pmvldes that ~col shals ghall -haye power to ‘appoint (deputy, & Jbond, and .;lml have power to re voke the appointment of any subprdi-{} nate umcer An ammriauon 0f .. $7,000 for. tne purchase of a new automobhe for Nxce President Marshall and its care|and ] loperation for one year was also added ] to the measure. Society Woman Loses Jewels, Atlantic -City, N.-J., Oet. 3.—Mrs. Sereno ‘E. Payne, Jr., daughter-in-law of Congressman Payne of New York, who helped to draft the Payne-Aldrich tariff bill, was robbed of a jewel case. Her room was entered and a handbag containing the jewels was cut open ana the valuables stolen. sion that would take practically all nce to Help'Yvo‘fir Fav- ite Contestant COOD FOR 100 VOTES Cast these votes for No................... 3 This coupon when neatly cut out, brought or malled to the W. 'G. Schroeder store on or before February - 14th, 1914, will count as 100 votes for the person repre- i _sented by the above number. The Bemidji Pioneer Pub Co. Every Subscriber Should Clip This And save it for one of the girls who are desirous of win- ning the $400 Piano in the Schroeder- Pioneer Conteit. Cut It and Keep It For Someone ¥ o T -3 items of the cost of packing, express from the fac- - pub- They're It Is Educatlonal complete under- - The great knowledge to be gamed by of Panama and d pastimes; all reading this volume will forever after be a valuable asset to every man, woman and -child, for this great waterway is destined to become a mighty factor in times of peace and war. It will revolutionize shipping throughout the entire world; it will bring about changes in the trade and commerce of all the earth; it will open new avenues of business and establish new relatlonshlps be- tween the various countries of the globe. For the Benefit papers This Greatly Reduced Illustration Shows the Large Volume, Which is 9x12 Inches—Double the Dimen- sions of the Usual Size Novel. Of Our Readers There is a world-wide interest in the Panama Canal and information on this timely subject is of rare value to all who wish to advance. Call Get (Busy and Present Your Panama Cert:f:cates T oda, almost uncivilized natives w THE $4 VOLUME (see illustration) is printed from new ‘type, large and clear, on special paper; bound in tropical red.vellum cloth; title stamped:in gol’d. with inlaid color panel; contains more than 600 magnificent illustrations, including beautiful pages reproduced from water-color studies 'in- col- 2 orings that far surpass any work of a similar character. Six Certificates of consecutive dates lnd only Sent by Mail, Postage Paid, for Sl 39 and 6 Certificates 1% 'THE $2 VOLUME Re gular’ octavo size; text matter practically the same as the $4 volume; bound in blue vellum cloth; contains only 100 photographic reproductions, and the color plates are omitted. Six Certificates of consecutive dates and only Sent by Mail, Postage Paid, for 67 Cents a.nd 6 Cerh.fioates n artist, who spent months in the study of Canal scenes. agmficent color the Canal in Picture and Pmse” Clip and Present Six Panama Bortificates, Printed Daily, with the Expense Amount St Opposite the style Selected MONEY REFUNDED IF NOT SATISFIED Any Day and Examine These Beautiful Books UNDRED llustrations INCLUDINC RARE AND BEAUTIFUL WATER COLOR STUDIES E Interwoven with the beautiful word pictures in this 1 traying the scenes described in the text. tourist—views of the jungle—of the known outside of their own little world because of the difficulty i only in this volume. Beautiful large colored plates abound throughont the book. water color studies made by E. J. Read the well-know: character contains such a \\ealth of m arge volume are hundreds of photmraphxc reproductlons, accurately por- Many of these pictures represent scenes far - removed from the path of the -ordinary ho reside within the borders of the Zone, but who are quite un- in reaching them. Such pictures are rare and are to be found These are reproduced in splendid full pages from No book of similar Almost MAIL ORDERS ADDRESS THE PlONEER, BEMIDJI, MINN. = :