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THE mmm DAILY rlom butions. known to_the for. cgmuunluuou for the Weekly Pion- neer should reach t| offfee. not later than Tuesday of each week to insure publication in the current issue. wul on- month by carrier carrier One year by Three months, vo-un on mnq.w-'ln Eight pages, nonulnln & su; f raday and sent pos addreas %or $1.50 in”advamenr o © 2V IS PAPER REPRESENTED 'FOR FOREIGN ADVERTISING BY THE A mp@m GENERAL. OFFICES NEW YORK AND CHICAGO BRANCHES IN ALL THE PRINCIPAL CITIES 's-snr: You Read ‘The Ads? Newspaper advertising is so gen- erally scrutinized, that some people will say thls suggestion is unneces- sary. Still there are some people left who would not discover a notice that $10 gold pieces were being given away, even if prominently printed in every newspaper. There are some who pay needlessly high prices, because tney do mot pay careful attention to newspaper trade anncuncements, suggests the Winona Independent. The publisher does not consider that when his readers have seen every news Item, they have by any means exhausted what the publication has to give them. One of the greatest services the newspaper renders is providing an avenue by which merchants and tradesmen can give information about their offerings. Only by keeping track of these offerings can the public know where the best values are to be had. This newspaper hopes that none of its readers are paying needlessly high for living costs, by failure to learn about the buying opportunities which these columns report from lssue to lssue. Sulzer may get a better job than the governor of New York. Uncle Sam might swap Mister Harry Kendall Thaw for Mrs Emma Pankhurst, pay a little to boot and still be ahead on the trade. “Slumless” Minneapolis insinuates Elbert Hubbard in the Paint and Varnish Record. It might be sug- gested that Mr. Hubbard visit Min- neapolic more often than once a Yyear. No doubt all the politicians of the state who appear on the surface will claim to be the only and orginal discoverer of the idea of “economy and efficlency.” That sounds like a catching slogan and they will adopt the same. —Stillwater Gazette. The day set for the special election by the mayor and city council is November 20. On this day the voters of Bemidji will be given an oppor- tunity to adopt or reject the propos- ed comission charter. The fact that our present charter is as good as none at all or worse is a source of encouragement to those who favor the adoption of the revised form of government. Its success in citles, where it is now in force is also a strong argument in its favor. One thousand copies have been placed in ' the hands of the city clerk for dis- tribution among the voters and every voter whether for or against the new proposed city laws should read them. The judges for the special election will be chosen at the next -council meeting night, November 3. LR R SRR SRR * EDITORIAL EXPLOSIONS % KRR K IR KKK If it is to be a fight between Eber- hart and Iverson we are for Adolph.| ~—Baudette Region. —p ] If John Lind gets back from Mex: 30,000 VOICES ! And Many are the Voices of Bemrid People. ‘Thirty thousand volces—What s grand chorus. And that’s the number | of American men and women who.are, publicly praising Doan’s Kidney Pills| for relief from backache, kidrey and’| biadder ills. They say it to friends: ‘They tell it in the home papers. Be- midji people-arein this chorus: Here's! a Bemidji case, 'W. H. Garrison, barber, 604 Third street, Bemid}i, Minn., says: “I had| pains across my loins and my back’ ‘was often so lame that it hurt me to steop or lift. The kidney secretions | were unnatural. I got Doan’s Kidney. Piils at Barker's Drug Store and they|| helped me 80 much that I can recom- mend them to anyone suffering in & similar way.” ¥or sale by all dealers. Price 50 esats. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, New York, sole agents for the United States. Remember the mo—Dun 's—and take no other. X WORTH KNOWING | gets $75,000 a year salary. The Emperar of Austria gets $4,. 500,000, The King of England, including the Queen’s portion, gets $2,500,000. ‘The King of Italy, $3,000,000. The German Emperor nearly $4,- 000,000. ‘The King of Spain nearly $2,000,- 000. The Sultan of Turkey, 000. { ‘The Czar of Russia from: $5,000,- $7,600,- monarch and what ruler has been on the throne longest? Can you tell who is the oldest value of private estates. See this space to-morrow. co in time for the election he will see a real scrap.—Baudette Region. —— “Bryan goes to Waterloo,” declares the headlines. Yes,, and he has gone there oft before.—Hibbing Tribune. —— that northern Minnesota developed.—Walker Pilot. —_—— wicked convention system. tighter.—Hibbing Tribune. —— stack of chips.—Walker Pilot. —— vertise.. —Austin Transcript. —— fourth-term auditor. He candidate won’t. The nominated Union. —_—— 8. @ Iverson, who for thirty five years has held an office at the state capitol and who has held the office lof State Auditor for lo, these many |years, has announced that he is a candidate for governor. Mr. Iverson is @ force in Minnesota politics that imust be reckoned with, but from this distance it looks as though Gov- |+ lernor Eberhart’s campaign for a istate wide utility law and his earn- lest effort to put the affairs of state lon a business basis with economy, ias the watch word, would lead the ipresent executive to another safe (victory.—Menahgo Journal. DN No man who makes a practice of (being dishonest and repudiating his (Just accounts, never amounts to a ihill of beens, says the Wilkin (County -Gazette. In the commercial world they never get to the quarter ipole. The successful business man ‘thinks more of his credit than he \does of his wife, for he knows if his ‘wife leaves him he stands some show of getting another, but if his icredit forsakes him he is up against it. He can have but one credit. It seems strange, with all this in mind, that young men will start out with beating little bills at the restauran(s and at the store. They will even borrow 50, cents friends and than rofuse to pay it back. That cless of fellow will wear a banner that can be seen all over town and everybidy is onto him, ‘When it comes to paying your debts, “honesty 18 the best poliey.”—Still- ‘water Gazette, STOCK GAMBLING. Short salcs constitute the great- est menace to industrial stabil- ity and financial strength now presented to the American peo- ple. Some time we must take up the problem of suppressing these gigantic gambling tremsactions, and this is the time to de it ‘We ought to employ the taxing power to put an end to the evil. If the tax is imposed next year there will be but a tithe of the gambling that has been flaunted in the face of the American peo- ple. - ¥t will not interfere with honest and legitimate business methods, and the market places of the country will be made more secure. ‘The stock exchanges are not now. places for the actual transfer of commodities. They are places where unscrupulous men balance their wits.—8ena- tor Cummins of lowa. RS SRR RS S S8 * MALCOLM * KA KK KKK KK KK Gilbert Benson - drove-to Carmel Wednesday. The company. rig is now at Henry Johnson’s. Leo: Jackly .went to Thiet River Wednesday, Annie Sversvsld has fimished an addition to her house -and is now building & barn. To much rain for EXRERKRRRKE KR KK KKK kiili**i”ifiilil The President of the United States 000 to: $12,000,000, according to the A state dynamite factory would soon explode the idea some folks have cannot he Curses, Adolph O. Eberhart sticks just as tight under the people’s pri- mary law system as under the bosses In fact, There would be less suffering in this world if some men would put the same amount of money into a cord of wood that they do into a A Missouri woman advertised -for a husband, She got one at the cost of $9.00. He afterwards enlisted and was killed at Manilla. She got $3,000 life insurance and will get a wid- ow’s pension as long as she lives. Yet some say it doesn’t pay to ad- A month or so ago the Union said that 8. G. Iverson would not be a for state Union now states that Hon. Henry Rines will be a candidate for state auditor next year; furthermore, he will be and elected.—Princeton of & lago the only way to get this mixture S| ANAEMIG SIIIGE Gllllllllllllll How Miss En_l.mel Regained Her Health symptoms are a pale face—colorless tion, and short breath, and more serious. diseases are easily contract- ed when in this condition. “What Vinol di@ for Miss Yvenne Holmes of Fall River, Mass,, it will do for every anaemic run-down per- Bon. She isays: “I have been weak and anaemic since childhood, always had ‘that tired feeling.’ Tonic aftsr tonic-wes tried with little or no re- sult until Vinol was recommended, and after taking three bottles, my appetite-and digestion have been im- proved. I do not suffer and more from insomnia, nor do I have dis- tressing headaches as formerly, and I am stronger than I have been for years.” ‘We ask every anaemic or run- down, weak person in this vicinity to try a bottle of Vinol with the ua- derstanding that their money will be returned if it does not do all we claim.—Barker’s Drug Store, Bemid- i, P. 8.—Eczema Sufferers! We guarantee our new skin remedy, Saxo. RECORD BREAKING SPEECHMAKING PLAN Suffragists to Talk Twenty-four " Consecutive Hours. New York, Oct. 22.—Women:.will talk for twenty-four hours continuous. ly in a public square of Brooklyn bor- ough as part of a big suffrage cam- paign being waged in that section this week. The record breaking speechmaking effort will take place under the aus- pices of the Women’s Political union, which will station spellbinders at the Junction of Flatbush and Atlantic ave- nues, near the subway terminal and Long Island railroad station, through which section great crowds flock to and from their work. The plan is to start the oratory at 7 o’clock Friday evening and to continue by relays un- tl 7 o'clock Saturday night. Four- teen women have been enrolled as spellbinders. Other features of the Brooklyn cam- paign are visits which the women are making to the United States coast ar- tillery garrisons near the harbor en- trance and to the Brooklyn navy yard. R T ) M 4 TWELVE THOUSAND PENNIES - +* PAID FOR SPITE. +* —_ . L 3 Oxford, Pa., Oct. 22.—Tax- + payers of Hopewell borough, <+ smallest borough in the point < of population in this state, < have hit upon a plan of re- + venge because the tax collec- tor, Samuel Russell, refuses < to accept their checks. Indig- < mant citizens carted 12,300 pen- nies to his house in payment -+ of taxes. He was told that < there were thousands more - pennies: to come as soon as he - counted these. k4 R ol e b ok el ke bbb e oo b che e bk KILLED WHEN OIL EXPLODES Dakotan Turns Gasoline in Tractor Tank Into Bonflire. Fargo, N. D, Oct. 22.—Martin Tor- gerson poured gasoline from the faa- cet of a traction engine tank upon a plece of burning waste. An explosion resulted, the engine was wrecked and Torgerson was killed. When the waste rag would not burn freely Tor- gerson had sought to hasten the blaze by adding more oH. LR L LT LT LT T Grave Disorders in Portugal, London, Oct. 22.—A Reuter dispatch from Madrid says that grave disorders again have broken out in Lisbon and other cities of Portugal. The royalists and anarchists ‘have been starting periodicel agitations ever since the Portuguese republic was established. AN OLD RECIPE T0 DARKEN -HAIR Common garden Sage and Snlj;hur makes: streaked, faded or gray hair dark and glossy at once. Almost everyone knows that Sage Tea and Sulphur, properly compound- «ed, brings back the natural color and lustre to the hair when faded, streak- ed or gray; also ends dandruff, itch- ing scalp and stops falling hair. Years was to make it at home, which is |mussy and tromblesome. (Nowadays we simply ask at any Adrug store for “Wyeth's Sage and Sul- phur Hair Remedy.” You will get a large bottle Yor about 50 cemts. Ev- erybody uses this pld, famons recipe; Because no one can possibly: tell that does-it'so natarally and evenly. You dampen a sponge or soft -brush with it and-draw this through: your hair, taking one smull strand at a ttme; by morniag the-gray hair diseppears, | and after apophar application-or two, | your hair begomes beautitully dark, It you are anaemic, you needimoref, iron in your blood, and the teR-tate lips, ashen finger aails, poor circula-| you have darkened your hair, as it | 1 “OASH WiTH GOPY _oent per word per lssue uhrdu#e te cent word per Il?l‘udnn. n';qi':mufmn lD&I WEDNESDAY OCTOBER 22, 1913 HELP WANTED B e U S AU B USSR, WANTED—Dining reem. girl want- ed at the Lake Shore hotel at once. WANTED—Dining room and kitch- en ginl at once. Erickson Hotel. WANTED—A well digger. Apply at the Olson employment agency. SEEETINEI Lo ae i o e WANTED—A woman. who-.can,.cook Pilsner hotel. WANTED—Girls at Hotel. the Pilsner e FOR SALE FOR SALB—Officlal 1913 autome- 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 Ploneer Office Supply Store. FOR ‘SALBE—Rubber- stamps. The Ploneer win procure any kind ot rubber stamp for you on short no- tice. A . FOR SALE—One pair brand new §6.00 “Congo” single tube tires for 26 inch boys-bicycle. Will sell for $2.50. Lawrence Harvey. Phone. 114. LOST AND FOUND LOST—10 Catholic- Bazaar tickets please return to Pioneer office. POSTAL AID FOR HIGHWAYS Good Roads Movements to Have Sup. port of Department. ‘Washington, Oct. 22.—Good roads movements throughout the country are to have substantial support of the postoffice department. ' First As- sistant Postmaster General Roper has rotified officlally postmasters of all classes that “it is the desire of the department that they co-operate with state and county authorities in the endeavor to improve the condition of the public roads.” Man Frozen to Death. Milwaukee, Oct. 22.—Wisconsin’s first cold weather victim was found when the body of Willlam Weis, sixty years old, was discovered frozen and rigid. It is believed that the man suf- fered from a strike, staggered to the porch of a house and there was frozen to death. oSl E s PREFERRED T0 TAKE CHANCES Man of Millions Who Conducted His Business as a Game of Chance The late John W. Gates was al- ways ready and willing to make a wager on every question that came up at any time or place. He was familiarly known to his intimate acquaintances as “Bet-a-Million” Gates. A friend once referred to him as a born gambler. ‘“Yes, I am,” sald Mr. Gates, “and so long as I win at least fifty-one percent of the time I'm going to continue to gamble.” 'He made many mil- lions of dolars in his varlous busi- ness of enterprises and it is said that he always - referred to them as games of chance. Since the days of old, life has ever been called a gamble. Small -enterprises succeed and large ones fail; first we are up and then we go down. It is estimated that the great Panama Canal ‘cost the emor- mous sum of $400,000,000. As a result of this mighty undertaking '@ book has been published, which under usual trade conditions would retail for $4. But a business chance caused the publishers to distribute this book through daily newspapers, and thus readers get it for the mere cost of distribution. Clip the Panama certificate tfrom another column of The Pioneer to- day .and ‘you will learn that there is no element of gambling entering in- to the distribution price asked for this $4 volume. The only chance for: you: to lose is in not taking ad- vantage of the offer. ~If the last change to get one tinds you without a copy- you have lost. Look into it to-day. ’M‘t throw away your ofd |overcoat we can put it in 'first class rcondition at moderate priee, new collar and lining. We do first class work of all kinds. G, REPAIRING, ILTEEATIW. miles between cities. Apply at|: WANTED—To buy Duck 'boat. Ap- ply at this office, FOR RENT FOR RENT—~Furnished frent room. 407 Minnesota ave. FOR RENT—A Piano. Phone 210. _———————————x— FARMS FOR SALE. FOR BALE—No, 21—260 acres. 40 acres under cultivation, 26 acres 65 acres fenced for pas- 9 room frame house with Large hip roof bara with hay fork. Granary. $1000 stock of mer- chandise. 1 team of horses, 6 cows. Complete line of farm machinery. Address H. B, meadow. ture. basement. building. Price $8,000.00. Reynolds, Bemidji, Minn, FOR SALE—The S.W. E.: forx(# and is on a mall, cream route. Price $20.00 per acre. Time given to suit purchaser interest 6 per cent. For further Kalser, Bagley, Minn. natural meadow, of saw log timber. been. removed. acre. terest made payable | nual payments. Hines, Mina. taken with ‘the timbe 600.00. 200.00. Cost Little —D0— PIONEER WANT One-half ce Phone 3i TRY A WANT AD THE SPALDING of the 8. of Sectlon 21-146-82. This has a falr house and barn and a few acres under cultivation telephone and T ADS EBUROPEAN' PLAN- ‘Duluth’s-Largest, and Best Hotel Btore particulars call on or address A. FOR SALE—150 acres good ‘heavy clay soil on & nice lake ‘with lots ot fish in, seven miles from Team- strike .on the M. & L railroad, and four miles from Puposky on the Red Lake railroad. This is an ex- eeptionally good piece. of land tairly level and mostly ‘hard land with some low that will make good ‘when cleared: About 1000 -eords nice Bireh tim- ber and about 158 thousand- fest Small clearing on the Lake shone -where there: bas been some. bulldingh which- bave Price $15.00. per One-fourth down and: bal- ance time will be given at 6% in- oqual an- Y. W. Owes, 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 mear 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 wagon road. fishing in these ‘lakes. Price; if on, #1,- $600.00 down and taken with timber reserved, $1,- $400: dewn and balance on time &t 6% imterest. Address V. M. Owen, Hines; Minn. Eaa—————————— Accomplish Much word-cash’ with' cepy DULUTH MINNESUOTA More than $100,00000 recently expended Qo tmprovenients. 250 roomi. 1 pHYate baths, 60 sample rooms. cenvenience: Luxn!!mm an Mh:nrfll its and b Ers G an mish 73 fied advertisers. advertising. succeeding insertions; Courler-News, Fargo, N. D. cents guaranteed. Store. furniture. * ¥ want ad. Phone 31. SRR RS R R R RS R R ADVERTISERS—The great state of North Dakota offers unlimited op- portunities for business to classi The recognized _ ailvertlsing medium im the Fargo ‘Dally and Sunday Courler-News| the only seven-day paper in the state and the paper which carries the largest amount of classified The Courfer-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 fifty cents per line per month. Address the FOR SALE—Typewriter ribbons for ~ every make of typewriter on the ‘market at 50 cents and 75 cents each. Bvery ribbon - sold for 76 Phone orders promptly tilled. Mail orders given the same careful attention as when you appear in person, Pohame 31. The Bemidji Ploneer Office Supply BOUGHT AND SOLD—Second hand 0dd Fellow’s dullding across from postoffice. phone 122. 3 o 2 If 'you have a room to rent or * want to rent one—you get the * * best choioe through a Plonm: Cost —Do— Ploneer Want Ads. Littie---Accompitsn Much One-half cent a word-cash with copy Phone 81 South St. Paul Live Stock. South 8t. Paul, ers, $4.30@7.25. Hogs— Sheep—Lambs, $5.00@6.50 $40004.25; ewes, $2.50@4.00. Duluth Wheat and Flax. Duluth, Oct. 21.—Wheat—On track -and ‘to-arrive; No. 1 hard, 843gc; No.1 Northern, 83%c; No. 2 Northern, 811y @81%¢; Dec., 823%c; May,86%@86%¢; Flax—On track and to arrive, $1.38%; $1- Oct,, $1.37%; Nov., $137%; 36%; May, $1.41%. Dec., " Chicago:Grain and Provisions: Citcago, Oct. 883%c; May, 88% @88%c. The Markets jese Oct. 21.—Cattle— Bteers, $6.50@8.00; cows and heifers, $4.30@7.00; calves, $5.50@9.50; feed- 21.—Wheat—Dec., Corn—Dec., 67%c; May, 69%c. Oats—Dec., 38%c¢; May, 41%c. $10.52. Butter—Creameries, 29%c. Fggs—25@26c. Pork—1Jan., $19.40; May, 28%4@ | o Poultry—Hens |ESTHER M. KOLSTE, VETERINARY SURGEON VETHRINARIAN Pheoe 164 Pegue's Livery DRAY LINE ' DRAY AND TRANSFER SAFE AND PIANO MOVING Res. Phone 58 818 Amerion Ave. ~ Office Phone 12. e —— MUBIC INSTRUCTOR TBACHER OF PIANO Pliona 528. —— DENTISTS AR A A A A, DR. D. L. STANTON, DENTIST Offiice .in Winter Blosk DR. J. T. TUOMY DENTIST First National Bank Bldg. I;R. G M. Pm- DENTIST ‘Tel. Miles Bleck BEvening Werk by Appeintment Only —_ LAWYERS GRAHAM M. TORRANCE LAWYER Miles Bleck JOHN F. GIBBONS ATTORNEY AT LAW First Nattonal Benk Building Bemid}i, Minn. Phone 5o 0. H. FISK ATTORNEY AT LAW Office sesond fioor O’Leary-Bowser Bldg PHYSICIAN, SURGEONS A A A A A DR, ROWLAND GILMORE PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office—Miles Block %|DR. E. A. SHANNON, . D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON ‘Office in Mave Bh(-k Phens 396 Phone 33i BR: C. R, SANBORN PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON ‘Offtice—Miles Black DR. L, A, WARD PHYSIGIAN AND SURGEON Over First National bank, Bemtdsi, Minn DR. A, E. HENDERSON PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Qer Eirat National bank, Bomigst, Miny Restance Phansys DR. E. H. SMITH PHYSICGIAN AND SURGEON Office In Winter RBlack DR. E. H, MARCUM PHYSICIAN AND BURGEON Office in Mayo RBlock Phone 12 Residence Phone 211 Eaae—————————1 KKK KKK KR KRR KK KKK ¥ RATLROAD TIME CARDS * KHKKKE KRR K IR KKK KK MPLS, RED LAKE & MAX. 2 North Bound Arrives 1 North Bound Leaves. 11 - asl d 3’2 Bart Bewnd Lanve 38 Baxt Bound ' Loeves: lD‘ South. Snllld Leaves. l"rei:fit West Leaves at. and springs, 13%c; turkeys, 17c. FH1HT ght ‘Bast wsavesat. . ... Chicago Live ‘Stock. fl-m & INTERNATIONAL Chicago, Western steers, $6.00@8.30; heifers, $3. 50@!.30 10.50. Hoge—Light, ed, $7.76@8.50; ‘Neavy, $7.85@8.40; calves, Oct. 21.—Cattle—Beeves, $6.76@9.56; Texas steers, $6.76@7.! 85; 70@8.40; mix- rough, $7. 850'] 80; pigs, $4.76@7.75. Sheep—Native, $3:85@4.95; yearlings, $5.00@6.00. Minneapolis Grain. Minneapolis, Oct. 21.—Wheat—Dec., 80% @80%¢c; May, 86%c. Cash close on ‘treck: No. 1 hard, 843%c; No: 1 Northern, 81%@83%c; to arrive, 813 @82%0; No..2 Northern, 79%@81%¢; No. 8 Northern, 77% @79%¢; No. 3 yel- low corn, 63@63%¢; No. 4 corn, 581 @61c; No. 3 white oats, 343% @35¢; to arrive, 34%c; No. 3 oats; 32%0“%». barley, 44@65c; flax, $1.38%; to Tive, $1.3844. - 82 South d P 3 Sk Bound Lo I PAY CASH For Hides, Furs, Wool, Gopper Brass and Rubbers. W. H. NEWTON Sth S BermtaN' Phone #19 UNDERTAKER - 3nd COUNTY CORONER] A ———