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— S —— e TR ' THE BEMIDIL DAILY PIONEER [% % % % ¥ % X &K X X K & X & e B owrs Publish Tel.ex)hone oo 1ered at.the post office at Bemidji sccond-class matter under Act ress of March 3, 1879, qozu:nn PUB. GD uad. Proprietors F; ILinn., as of Con Prblished every afternoon except Sunday No attention paid to anonymous con- tributions. ~ Writer's name must be known to the editor, but not necessar- ily_for publication. T eaies ; 25,000 Communications for the Weekly Pion- neernslglould reach this offlfie tnog later | All Europe has only ahout 180 000 | than Tuesday of each weg o insure vublication in the current issue. BEAZI], .00 piste L5058 St e 13,000 T H o Rt . South Africa ............. 7,000 ubscription ates ¢ s 4,000 One month by carrier . Afgentina ............ 14, Onhe year byI carfler; g Japan 5,000 Three months, postage 5 % Six months, postage 00 | British India 30,000 vear, postage pald .. i 4500 LOHRARR st ool TeTLeb 25,000 The Weekly Ploneer Eight pages, containing a summary of the news of the week. Published every Thursday and sent postage paid to any address for $1.50 in advance. 7THIS PAPER REPRESENTED FOR FOREIGN ADVERTISING BY THE GENERAL OFFICES NEW YORX AND CHICAGO HES IN ALL THE PRINCIPAL CITIES Merry Chistmas— Do your Christmas shopping early. Conquering The Stump The Country Gentleman under date of the October 18 prints the first of a series of articles on “Conquering The Stumps’” The article is written Ly Charles E. Gapen, who during the past summer spent a day in Be- wmidji and vicinity. He gives a gen- eral description of existing condi- tions in this section of the state. Dreams Come True Suppose that every schoolhouse was a real social center. Suppose that one of its functions was to serve as a sub-station of the city health de- partment. Suppose that doctoring, in- stead of being done'on a fee basis, with the doctor not called until the disease had laid firm hold, were wholly or largely on a salaried basis, with the public paying the bills; sup- pose every doctor were thus by right a public health inspector, whose duty it would be to nip ail- ments in the bud. Suppose that it were both your privilege and your obligation to go to the school center regularly, to be looked over by the kealth inspector for that district. And suppose, further, that the stand- ard of a doctor’s success were not how big or how many fees he could get, but how few sick folks there were in the territory for which he was especially held responsible. ‘Wouldn’t that be a way? A dream, you say? But dreams have come true.—Ex. KKK KKK KK KKK KX KKK * EDITORIAL EXPLOSIONS * EE RS S S ESS SRR L SRS James J. Hill denounces the pro- posed currency bill. This may in it- self be proof that the bill is a good one from the viewpoint of the people. ‘That which is of the greatest good to the people never did and never will Jook good to big financiers and spec- ial interests.—Red Wing Eagle. - Bemidji will soon have a normal school among its other attractions. Tf the government should ever want to transfer the Carlisle Indian school thre are 57 reasons why Bemidji should get it.—Duluth Tribune. The court which is nearing an end at Bemidji had a very small criminal calendar compared to population, "Phe incentive to crime in Beltrami eounty is negligible. The population #s composed of a splendid class citizens too busy boosting their glorious hertiage to run amuck.— Baudette Region. o —G—= Mr. Bush is a youngster, and ne beat the Giants Thursday. Mr. of Mathewson is an old, decrepit ling-iof American men and women who are erer on the stage, being past 35. He|pyplicly praising Doan’s Kidney Pills beat the Athletics on Wednesday. Mr. Bender is so advanced in years that he ought to have gray hair. He beat McGraw’s men twice. M. ‘Wiltse is a pitcher long beyond his prime. He played first base in Phila- delphia with amazing skill. Mr. Schang was so nervous in his first world series game that he did not palng acrose my lotns and my. back make a mistake of any kind, and in his second he knocked a home run. BEMIDJI DRUCGIST HAS VALUABLE AGENCY WORTH KNOWING X KR H KKK KKK KKK KKK KK The length of railroads of the United States i3 250,000 miles. Mile-| age for certain foreign countries is as follows: U »d Kingdom of Great Britain .... 25,000 Germany 37,000 Russia 36,000 ‘The United States has about as many miles of railroads as all other countries combined. ‘What do you know about the great tunnels of the earth? See this space to-morrow. The cherished ‘“‘dope’” basebail is a great York Sun. proves that game,—New —_—— ‘Waseca Herald: The consensus of opinion of the Minnesota press is that Congressman Sidney Anderson made the mistake of his life when he resigned from the ways and means committee. For the sake of a cheap notoriety he threw away a chance to be a real benefit to his district and state. Mr. Anderson was peeved be- cause he was not allowed to assist in framing the new tariff bill. Even a novice in politics ought to know that a member of the minority party would not be expected to outline a tariff bill for the majo'rity party. But that is the only instance where the committee would draw a strict party line. On other matters Mr. Ander- son’s counsel and advice would be sought by his committee associates and he could have a part in framing many measures of interest to the peo- ple of his home state. It is to be re- gretted that he failed to realize his opportunity. This district is too im- portant to be served by a man of Mr. Anderson’s caliber.—Inter Lake Tr1~ bune, SOCIAL EVIL DRAMAS, When a writer’s purpose is sin- cere, when he honestly essays to better existing conditions, then, and then only, he may say what he will. Tf his medium is the stage, very well. The drama can only gain by it. Of course cer- taln questions were far better discussed in the intimacy of the home than in public. A mother’s words to her daughter about the things of life which girls should be taught or warned against, it seems to me, must carry more weight and dignity than the pic- ture lessons, as it were, of the stage. 1 know there are few mothers who have enough prac- tical knowledge to be of service to their daughters in that respect. And there are even fewer, I am afraid. who can bring themselves to speak frankly to their chil- dren. Yet it is necessary that girls should know many things about which they have been kept so long in ignorance, and there the drama may rightly step in. But it tukes a very high and clean mind to deliver the mes- sage usefully. A man like Brieux succeeds with themes of the most difficult sort precisely because of his high mindedness and the big- ness of his purpose.--Miss Ida Tarbell. 30,000 VOIGES ! And Many are the Voices of Bemidji People. Thirty thousand voices—What a grand chorus. And that’s the number for relief from backache, kidney and bladder ills. They say it to friends. They tell it in the home papers. Be- midji people are in this chorus. Here's a Bemidji case. ‘W. H. Garrison, barber, 604 Third street, Bemidji, Minn., ‘says: “I had ‘was often so lame that it Liurt me to stoop or lift. The kidney secretions were unnatural I got Doan’s Kidney Pills at Barker's Drug Store and they helped me 86 much that I can recom- mend them to anyone suffering in a similar way.” For sale by all dealers. Price 50 E. N. French, Bemidji Minnesota:|cents, Foster-Milburn Co., Buftalo, agency for the simple mixture of New York, sole agents for the United buckthorn bark, - glycerine, known as Adler-i-ka, the remedy which became famous by curing ap: etc.; | States. Remember the name—Doan 's—and take no other. “When Your Back is Lame—Re- oendicfllts This simple remedy has member the name.”—Adv. powerfnl action and drains such sur- prising amounts of old matter from lieves sour stomach, gas on the stom- ach and constipation almost IM- MEDIATELY. The QUICK action of Adler-i-ka is astonishing. monm WANT ADS One-half cent & word-cash with copy Phone 31 GALSH WITH OO0PY oent per word per issue HELP WANTED WANTED—Cook and kitchen at once. Erickson Hatel. WANTED—A woman who can cook Pilsner hotel. WANTED—A dishwasher Pilsner hotel "FOR SALE FOR SALE—Official 1913 automo- bile guides showing 500 Red Line trips connected including maps and instructions indicating roads, crossings, guide posts, etc. Book has 500 pages showing distance in miles between cities. Apply at Pioneer Office Supply Store. FOR SALE—Rubber stamps. The Ploneer , winl procure any kind of rubber stamp for you on short mo~ tice. FOR SALE—One pair brand new $5.00 “Congo” single tube tires for 26 inch boys bicycle. Will sell for $2.50. Lawrence Harvey. Phone. 114. OPPORTUNITY—To buy eighty dol- school course cheap. Some snap too. Address F. E. R. Pioneer. FOR ‘SALE—One wood stove nearly new cost $30, $20 takes it. Apply at 320 Beltrami ave. FOR SALE—Rooming house furni- ture. Enquire Mrs. N. W, Helmer, Swedback block. CoW FOR SALE—Also quantity of oak plank. Mrs. B. J. Neely. FOR SALE—Base burner coal stove $5.50. Phone 195. CHICHESTER S PILLS Lndlesl Ask your lj ageia for Chi-ches-ter s Diamond Bran Plils in Teed and Gold metallic boxes, sealed, vith Blus Kibbon, Tako po other. Ling of .OINES-TER 8 (OND BRAND PILLS, for 25 years known as Best, Safest, Always Relinble S0LD BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWIIERE at the The MODEL Dry Cleaning House HOGANSON BROS., Props. Dry Cleaning of Ladies’ and Gents' Glothing, House- hold Goods, ete. Telephone 537 106 Second St. ‘FOR SALE—The S.W. 1/ Office, FARMS FOR SALE. girl FOR SALE—N:\ 21260 acreu. 40 acres under cultivation, 25 acres meadow. 65 acres fenced for pas- ture. 9 room frame house with basement. Large hip roof vbarn with hay fork. Granary. Store 'building. $1000 stock of mer- chandise. 1 team of horses, 6 cows, Complete line of farm machinery. Price $8,000.00. Address H. E. Reynolds, Bemidji, Minn. of the S. BE.1/, of Section 21-146-32. This forty has a fair house and barn and a few acres under cultivation | and is on a mail, telephone and cream route. Price $20.00 per acre. Time given to suit purchaser interest 6 per cent. For further particulars call on or address A. Kaiser, Bagley, Minn. FOR SALE—150 acres good heavy clay soil on a nice lake with lots ot fish in, seven miles from Ten- | strike on the M. & I railroad, and |- four miles from Puposky on the Red Lake railroad. This is an ex- ceptionally good piece of land fairly level and mostly hard land with some low that will make good natural meadow, when cleared. About 1000 cords nice Birch tim- ber and about 150 thousand feet of saw log timber. Small clearing on the Lake shore where there has been some buildings which bave] been removed. Price $15.00 per acre. One-fourth down and bal- ance time will be given at 6% in- terest made payable in equal an- nual payments. V. W. Owen, Hines, Minn. FOR SALE—T75 and 30-100 acres on famous twin lakes, one of the best locations in Minnesota for a sum- mer home or resort, having lake front and nice high banks with fine grove of Norway pines near the water. Good level clay land about 100,000 feet of good pine timber and 100,000 feet of hard wood timber on the land. Only six miles from Hines and Tenstrike and on good wagom road. Fine fishing in these lakes. Price, if taken with the timber on, $1,- 600.00. $600.00 down and |if taken with timber reserved, $1,- 200.00. $400 down and balancs on time at 6% interest. . Address V. M. Owen, Hines, Minn. WANTED. WANTED—Washing to do at my home. Mrs. Malone 707 13 St, Phone 428. LOST AND FOUND LOST—Sheepskin lined coat near Schroeder block. Finder kindly re- turn to “N. H.” Pioneer office. Hold! Stop! Don’t throw away your old overcoat we can put it in first class condition at moderate price, new collar and lining. ] 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 HENRY LANE WILSON TALKS Asserts Huerta Government in Mex- ico Is Legal. Spokane, Wash., Oct. 20.—"The government of Proviswna.l President Huerta of Mexico is just as legal as the government of Roosevelt when he succeeded to the presidency after the assassination of President McKinley,” declared Henry Lane Wilson, former United States ambassador to Mexico, in an address on the Mexico situation deliverad at a banquet tendered him here. “If President Wilson does not get behind the Huerta government, chaos {8 going to come, and we will have to go down and take care of the coun- try. We would have to supervise the election and then the new presiden: would be labeled ‘the gringo’ presi- dent. As soon as our soldiers had left the country the Mexicans would get out their knives and we should : ‘| have to- go back again. That would the body-that JUST ONE DOSE re:| 008t Litls n‘“"n mplish Much, mean controlling the country apd all the .countries to the Panama ' “Intervéntion would 'be all right if we stayed there all the time, but it would be bad for our mnnll and pocketbooks.” = LOST—Two mares between Bemiiji and Cass Lake Thursday night one mare color strawberry grey weight about 1150 by, one mare color bay, weight about 1000 lbs. both had halters on finder please notify, J. P. Pogue, Bob Jarvis, Cass Lake. Bemidji or ‘R.F. MURPHY ‘UMNERAL DIRECTOR AND EMBALYEN titton 318 Beltran: Ave THE SPALDING EUROPEAN PLAN- ° Duluth’s Largest and Best Hotel DULUTH MINNESOTA More than $100,000.00 reeenuy emndsd on improvements. 250 roo) El vate baths, 60 sample rooms. ’5 convenience: Luxurious lnd o] mluunu and buffet, ‘Room, Men's Grill, Oalmuu Bnflau M:fnucent lobby and public roomll lroom, bln%net rooms’ and dining_rooms; Superior. Ona of the lml lllhlt ll the Ill‘lhlll FUNERAL DIRECTOR ¥. E. IBERTSON UNDERTAKER and COUNTY CORONER] 405 Belirami Ave. BemidjMina. i Defective Page and Factory Phone 31 Home insertiol MISCELLANEOUS ADVERTISERS—The great state of North Dakota offers unlimited op- portunities for business to classi- fied advertisers. The recognized advertising medium in the Fargo 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-News covers North Dakota like a blank- et; reaching all parts of the state the 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. | {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 guaranteed. Phone orders promptly filled. Mail orders given the same careful attention as when { Yyou appear in person. Pohne 31. The Bemidji Pioneer Office Supply Store.‘ i BOUGHT AND SOLD—Second hand furniture. 0dd <Fellow’s building across from postoffice. phone 122. | KK KR KK KE KKK KKK KK ! | * If you have a room to rent or ¥ * want to rent one—you get the * * best choice through a Piomeer * * want ad. Phone 31, * i*i‘)"? K"‘i*‘l%**{(ifi* ;Results Are Most | Always Certain When you use a Pioneer want ad. It costs a half cent a word to find out. Phone 31" - South 8t. Paul Live Stock. South St. Paul, Oct. 18.—Cattle— Steers, $6.50@8.00; cows and heifers, $4.30@7.00; calves, $5.50@9.75; feed- ers, $4.30@7.40. Hogs—$7.50@8.00. Sheep—Lambs, $5.00@6.50; wethers, $4.00@4.25; ewes, $2.50@4.00. . Duluth Wheat and Flax. Duluth, Oct. 18.—Wheat—On track and to arrive, No. 1 hard, 84}c; No. 1 Northern, 83%ec; No. 2 Northern, 81% @81%c; Dec., 813 @81%c; May, 86c. TIlax-—On track and to arrive, $1.36%; Nov., $1.35%; Dec., $1.34%; May, $1.39%. Chicago Grain and Provisions. Chicago, Oct. 18.—Wheat—Dec., 82%c; May, 87%c. Corn—Dec., 66% @663%c; May, 683%c. Oats—Dec., 37% @373c; May, 4lc. Pork—Jan., $19.47; May, $19.57. Butter—Cream- eries, 28%@29%c. Eggs—25@26c, Poultry—Springs, 13c¢; hens, 13c. Chicago Live Stock, Chicago, Oct. 18.—Cattle—Beeves, $6.85@9.55; Texas steers, $6.80@7.90; Western steers, $6.20@8.30; stockers and feeders, $5.20@7.65; cows and heifers, $3.50@8.30; calves, $7.00@ 11.00. Hogs—Light, $7.75@8.35; mixed, $7.850@8.45; heavy, $7.75@ 8.45; rough, $7.75@7.90. Sheep—Na- tive, $3.90@5.00; yearlings, $5.00@ $6.00. Minneapolis Grain, Minneapolis, Oct. 18.—Wheat—Deec., 805, @803 c; May, 86. Cash close on track: No. 1 hard, 83c; No. 1 North- ern, 803, @82%c; to arrive, 80% @ 813c; No. 2 Northern, 783 @80%c; No. 3 Northern, 763%@783%c; No. 2 yellow corn, 631 @64c; No. 4 corn, 60 @62c; No. 3 white oats, 341, @34%c; to arrive; 343c; No. 3 oats, 32@33c; barley, 44@68c; flax, $1.36%; to ar rive, $1.3634. 3 STOVE WO0D FOR SALE BUNDLE;WO0OD, 12—20 in. long Delivered to Bemidji, $2.25 to 7th St.; beyond, 82.50 Delivered to Nymore, $2.00 and BLOCK woOn Tth St.,elzeyo:l’, $2.25 9.t Delivered to Nymore, $1.75 and o Tolephone Orders Nc. 82 TERMS—CASH ON DELIVERY FTL{. Regular charge rate one cent per word per MONDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1913 n. No ad taken for less than i0c. VIITERINARY SURGEON W. K. DENISON VETERINARIAN Phooe 164 Pegue’s Livery DRAY AND TRANSFRR SAPE AND PIANO MOVING Res. Phone 58 318 Ameriea Ottice Plione 12 Ave. _—— e MUSIC INSTRUCTOR ESTHER M. KOLSTE, TEACHER OF PIANO Graduate of Chicago Musical College Phone 523. _ DENTISTS PAAAAAAAANAAAAAAAAAAANAAAAA DR. D. L. STANTOK, DENTIST Offiice in Winter Block | | | l DR. J. T. TUOMY DENTIST First National Bank Bldg. Tel. 236 DR. G&. M. PA;.MER DENTIST Miles Block Evening Work by Appointment Only _— LAWYERS B e A A A A A A A s GRAHAM M. TORRANCE LAWYER Miles Block Phone 60 JOHN F.' GIBBONS ATTORNEY AT LAW First National Bank Building Bemidji, Minn. 0. H. FISK ATTORNEY AT LAW Office second floor O'Leary-Bowser Bidg PHYSICIAN, SURGEORS R, ROWLAND GILMORE PHYSICIAN AND SUR@EON Office—Miles Bisok DR. E A SHANNOK, X, D, PHYSICXAN AND SURGEBON ceinup,ynmm Phens S0u Phone 39 G DR. C. R. SANBORN PHYSICIAN ANP 3BRGBON Offiice—Miles Block DR. L. A. WARD PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Over First National bank, Bemidjt, Mian DR. A. E. HENDERSON PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Over First National Benais Office” Phone ssou iankd.“ g’:, DR. E. H. SMITH PHYSICIAN AND SGRGEON Office In Winter Block DR. E. H. MARCUM PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office in Mayo Bloek Phone 12 Residence Phone 211 _—_—— KHKK KK KKK KK KKK KK ¥ RAILROAD TIME CARDS * kfk***fif'fif**i**** MPLS., RED LAKE & u: North Bound Arrives. 1 North Bound Leaves GREAT NORTHERN ’ Freight West Leaves at “reight East Leaves at. xmz ry INESOTA & mmnunolam outh Bound Leaves.. 31 North Bound Leaves $4 South Bound Leaves. 33 North Bound Leaves Freight South Leaves nt. T'reight North Leaves at. 33 West Bound Leaves. : 34 East Bound Leaves ‘o3 pm 36 West Bound Leaves 23 ua 36 East Bound Leaves. 32 am 106 North Bound Arrives. 40 pam 06 South Bound Leaves. 30 am am vm I PAY CASH For Hides, Furs, Wool, Copper ' Brass and Rubbers. "W. H. NEWTON Sth 8t. Bemidji Phone 839 Try a Want Ad 12 Cegt a Word-—Cash