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R R e e T e T ¥ LEST WE FORGET KX X KKK KRR KR KKK KR The next meeting of the board of county commissioners will be held May 26. .s That news items telephoned to the . Pioneer are appreciated both by the publishers and readers of the paper. Phone 31. e The next convention of the N. M. D. A. will be held at Thief River Falls on June 3, 4, 5, and 6. Be- midji is expected to send a large do- legation. * s e May Stewart and her distinguished company will appear here next Wed- nesday evening in “Lucrezia Borgid,” and In a matinee the same day when “Romeo and Juliet will be produced. The entertainment will be given un- der the auspices of the Athletic elub. QLOCAL BREVITIES Oscar Thyrne, of Kelliher, spent today in the city on business mat- ters. B. J. Swedback left last night for Minneapolis and St. Paul on busi- ness. We repair pipes. Co.—Adv. Mrs. C. R. Sanborn has returned from St. Paul, where she spent sev- eral days. Miss Olga Larson has accepted a position with the O’Leary-Bowser company as saleslady. Bell boys wanted at ham hotel.—Adv. Frank Patterson and daughter, Ar- villa, of Wilton, transacted business in Bemidji vesterday. Rev. J. H. Randahl, pastor of the Swedish Lutheran church, went to Hart Lake today on business. Geo. T. Baker & once Mark- Two dishwasher wanted at once at Markham hotel.—Adv. T. Dahl and daughter, Bagley Olive, of transacted business in the city vesterday between trains. C. W. Jewett, manager of the Northern Auto company, left last night for Minneapolis on business. Reman Meal, 25c¢ a package, ot Roe & Markusen's.—Adv. William of Kelliher, GRAND THEATRE TONICHT The Price of a Necklace (Edison) Lennon, a This is an interesting two-reel offering, illustrating the thought- less selfishness of a banker’s wife who forgets others to gratify her own whims. Marian Nesbitt and Eharles Ogle are shown_at their est. Mrs. Maloney’s Fortune (Vitagraph) This comedy is very amusing and interesting. Come in when you can stay as long as you like P Atbletic Club Theatre Wednesday Matinee & EY S E. M. Sathre left last evening for Kelliher and Funkley on busainess. He will return to Bemidjl in a cou- ple of days. > Roman Meal, 25c/a package, st Roe & Markusen’s—Ady. Mrs. S. E- Wilson spent the week end with her daughter, Mrs. I. M. Covey of Solway. She returned to Bemidji yesterday. Mrs. Frank Patterson of Wilton entertained the birthday club Satur- day at her home. There were eight- een members present. Roman Meal, 25¢ a package, at Roe & Markusen's.—Adv. Attorney A. A. Andrews, who last week filed as a candidate for the state senate, returned to Bemidji this morning from International Falls. Miss Lillian French will take the civil service examination this week. While in Bemidji, she will be the guest of her mother, Mrs. George French. Umbrellas, repaired and re-cover- ed. Geo. T. Baker & Co.—Adv. Dr. and Mrs. M. D. Fuller left last evening for Minneapolis where they will visit for some time. They have not fully decided yet whether they will go further east. Miss Mercedes Morrison, who has been employed at the Fair store, has resigned her position with that firm, and has accepted a position at the Bemidji Candy Kitchen. A complete line of field and gar- den seeds at W. G. Schroeder store. —Adv. Mr. and Mrs. John -Ziegler re- turned this morning from Minnea- polis, where they have spent the past several days. Mr. Ziegler pur- chased a load of second hand farni- ture while there. Mare Day, who is employed by the land department of the state, and who now makes Bemidji his head- quarters, returned last evening from Park Rapids, where he has spent the| past week attending to his duties. | Clocks, called for, repaired and de- livered. Geo. T. Baker & Co. Phone 16.—Adv. Mr. and Mrs. Thayer Bailey, Miss | Minnie Bailey and Miss Lydon spent | Saturday and Sunday at Bagley, | where they went fto attend a party| given by Mrs. Hansall of that city. | They returned to Bemidji yesterday morning. Judge C. W. Stanton returned this| morning from Minneapolis and” st.| Paul where he has spent the last| couple of days. While in St. Paul, the judge heard arguments in sev- eral cases which had been set for| hearing before him. i One of these days you ought tof 20 to Hakkerups and have your ple- ture taken.—Adv. . Judge J. C. Nethaway, of St. Paul, assistant attorney general of the state of Minnesota, was in Bemidji today on legal . business. Judge Nethaway wrote the opinion recent-| 1y made public by the attorney gen-| eral’s office, sustaining the action of the city council in reducing the sal- ary of W.. N. Weber, clerk of the municipal court, from $75 to $35 each month. Henry Logan, ‘who formerly was in business here, but who during the past year has conducted an employ- ment office at International Falls, arrived in Bemidji last evening and spent the day here visiting his daughter, Miss Irene Lagan, who is employed in the office of County Au- ditor George. Mr. Logan will go from Bemidji to Grand Rapids where he still makes his home. Have your furniture repaired at the bargain store first class work at reasonable prices .—Adv. Miss Mary Johnson of Heart Lake and Erick Gideon-Rhen of Neving, were united in marriage Sunday af- ternoon at the Swedish Lutheran parsonage, Rev. J. H. Randahl offi- ciating. Miss Amelia Rhen, a niece of the groom and Miss Mabel Thorre of Bemidji were bridesmaids and the SALTS FINE FOR -~ AGHING KIDNEYS Night, May 13th The supreme event of the season —J. E. Clein presents America’s foremost legitimate actress of the younger class MAY STEWART and her distinguished company in Victor Hugo’s powerful play Lucrezia Borgia Sarah Bernhardt’s recent and greatest success Special Matinee 3 p. m. Romeo and Juliet Shakespeare’s immortal love il tragedy BEAUTIFUL SGENERY MAGNIFIGENT GOSTUMES Special Prices Night 25¢, 50¢, 75¢, $1.00 = Matinee 25¢, 50, 75 Seat sale o] on a. m. at Netzer" ‘We eat too much meat, which clogs Kidneys, then Back hurts and Bladder bothers you. matic twinges, id liver, acid stomaeh, sleeplessness it ot bladder dis- | orders. You simply must keep your kidnevs active and clean, and the moment you Twenty of the teachers and- cers of the Methodist S\mdll hoo! planned a pleasant surp; " Matt Phibbs Iast evening. Phibbs will leave next week for an' extended visit with friends and rela- tives in Illinois and may also go’ to Ohio, her former home. A. T. Carl- son, superintendent of the Sunday school, presented her with-a large| ‘bouquet of American beauties, in be- ‘half of those present. Wanted—To buy a house. Will pay cash. Give location and price. Address -“Pioneer.”—Adv. ¥ O. L. Dent, of this city, district referee of judicial ditches, returned this morning from the twin cities where he has spent several days on business. During the past week Mr. Dent has visited International Falls, Baudette, Spooner, and other points in the district investigating work which is being dome on the various ditches. Mrs. Dent will arrive in| Bemidji the latter part of the week, and they will make their home at Grand Forks Bay during the sum- mer. You can appreclate the dollar you save. If deposited in the Northern National Bank it will grow con- stantly day and night and Sunday— Adv. Mrs. I. G. Hayeraft entertained at a surprise party last evening in ‘honor of Miss Jessie Dodge, a mem- ber. of the high school graduating class of this spring. Those present were the Misses Fern Robertson, Ina Robertson, Esther Fleshman, Verna Pugh, Ruth Winebrenner, Zenda ‘Bell, Mabel Plummer, Lillian Booth, Izetta Fisher, Alice Neeley, Alma Loitved, Hill, Titus and Edward Grydbak. Mrs. Haycraft was as- sisted in the serving by Ratchel Ger- linger and Mabel Booth. Arrangements are being made by the Athletic Club for a real first class negro company to appear here. Near- 1y everyone loves the old plantation melodies and the negro camp meeting songs and no onme can sing them like the real Southern negro. We hope they can complete the plans and get the Alabama Jubilee Singers to come here.—Adv. Yesterday was the last meeting of the Woman’s Study club before the annual banquet, which will be held May 25. The reports of the secre- taries were read and the year’s work reviewed. All the present officers were re-elected for next year. Presi- dent, Mrs. E. E. McDonald; Vice President, Mrs. L. H. Bailey; Record- - 915 rifles of voluntary disarmament in that dis- trict began. £ that he would hold-open for another day at least the depositorfes of arms opened under the disarmament order issued by Secretary of War Garrison. Union leaders urging’ their fol- lowers to give up their arms, but it is believed several hundred rifles have been withheld by the men. The mill- tary officers will not state what meas- ures of forcible seizures will be adopted. - 3 “As soon as the disarmament work is finished the soldiers will police all the coal camps’ in"Southern Colorado. Strikebreakers wha were in the state before. the recent violence will be.al- lowed to resume work, it they desire, ‘| but new strikebreakers may mnot be {mported. Bolivia is the world’s second lar- gest producer of #in, the main sup- ply comming from the Malay straits. Your Stomach Bad e JUST TRY ONE DOSE of [Wayr’s Wonderful Stomach Remedy | ther and Be Coavinced That You Can You are not asked to take Mays' fal Stomach Remedy sefore 3 illy re a receive any benefit—one dose is usu- equired to convince the most skeptical sufferer of Stomach ‘Ailments that this great ‘emedy should restore anyone So z00d_heaith. Remedy has ‘been taker by man seople throughout the land. It health and happiness to sufferers who had des- saired of ever being restored and who now pro- afflicted Mayrs Wonderfal seomn‘i’; 'y thousands of has brought ing Secretary, Mrs. E. H. Denu; Cor- |‘laim it a Wonderful Remedy and are urgmg responding_Secretary, Mrs. H. A. Scharf:Treasurer, Mrs. B. W. Lakin. | The_banquet will be- held at Hotel ;h%ketforthe ratic Hore to_convince the ‘most skeptical suffe ‘han tons of other medicines. ons Markham. The next series of meet- ings will commence the first Monday in October. AMERICANS LANGED ON LOBOS ISLAND S For sale m Bemidil, Mian., oy Bark er’s Drug Store and Druggists every- where. Huerfa Protests Against Selz- are of Lighthouse. ‘Washington, May 12.—That the oc- cupation of Lobos island by the Unit- ed States forces under Admiral Bad- ger was justified by the rules of in- ternational procedure is the conten- tion made in answer to protests filed in behalf of Dictator Huerta. It is learned that the state depart- ment so stated to the mediators who transmitted a protest from Huerta that such occupation was a violation of the implied agreement that no hos- tile movement would be undertaken pending the outcome of the media- tion negotiations. Lobos island lighthouse is ome of the navigation marks between Tam- pico and Tuxpam. It was seized by ‘Admiral Badger because he had re- ceived information that it was to be destroyed by Mexicans. The United States takes the posi- tion that this was not an act of ag- gression. Huert's pretest, however; has dem- onstrated that the dictator is”deter- mined to take advantage of every op- portunity to accuse the- United States of bad faith before the medintors. By 8o doing officials here believe Huerta will-be able to accuse the mediators of discriminating against him should he decide Tater to withdraw from the conferences. - B 00 S . T e o S T o T X S EDISON PUTS BAN ON CIGARETTES. _ West Orange, N. J., May 12. —‘Cigarettes not tolerated. They dull the brain,” was the order that met Edison com- pany emploves here. There is poison in the papers, the in- ventor asserted. Lo CONSUL COMMITS -SUIC United Ststes Official at Harbin, Man- churia, Ends Life. Harbin, Manchuria, May 12—South- | ard P. Warner. United States cousul ! e h ¥3s underz ing treatment.. =1 <Mr. Warner had held the appaint: -|{ ment here since August, 1912, but been in fhie American gonsalar serv: fce since 1904. He was born-in Wash. ington, D €., im 1891 :arrh and bile accretions, and. = e an ool ol b ol IDE sthers who may be suffering with Stomach, Liver and Intestinal Ailments totry it. Mind 100, Mayr's Wonderfal Stomach Kemedy 50 s iifferent than most medicines that are put on stomach ailments—it will do Tose 1atural, as it acts on the sotirce of these ailme S ents, remioying the poisonous .Ca. a the nnder. ing chronic inflammiition in the alimentas testinal St Coicagn, SCHOOLBOY WANTED FOR steady, summer, +A part-time, easy work. Must be bright, neatly dressed and under four- teen years of age. Give - references and mention day and hour when par- ent will come with boy forinterview. Good pay. plendid training. Write to Box 31, City. -| following an extended iliness result- 2 Batavia, Java, May 12—Mme. Lil-| Han Nordica, noted singer, died here ing from the nervous shock and ex- went aghore fn the Gulf of Papua Dec. 29 last. 3 e Mme. Nordica suffered from nervous paeumonia. The body will be brought to America for burial at her old home in Maine. % Mme, Nordica was an American singer “of worldwide fame.- Her ad- mirers ranged from the people of the’ Bowery section of New York, where she had often sung at mission meet- ings, to grand opera’s most criti followers. B Her voice had delighted the world since .the day she first appeared at Grace church in Boston forty years ago. She is perhaps best remembered in the part of Elsa in “Lohengrin.” Quarter Million Fire Loss. Deming, N. M., May 12.—Fire start- office wiped out a half block of the business district, valued at $250,000. The Victoria hotel and the Denning i National bank were badly damaged. ‘There Is more Catarrn in this section of the country than all other diseases | put together, and until the last few | v posed Cure manufactur- by F. J. Ch!ne¥ & Co., Toledo, Ohio, is the only Constitutional cure on the market. It Is taken internally in doses from fen drops to & teaspoonful. jacts directly on the blood hundred dollars for any case it fails te cure. Send for circulars and testimon lals. Address: O. F. J. CHENEY & CO., To o, Seld by Druggists, 76¢. Take Hall's Family Pills for const} vation. = ATHLETIC THEATRE Matipge an_d Night Wednesday MAY 13 SPECGIAL PRICES 25, 50,75, $1.00 25,50 md 15 | i ' | prostration, which was followed by| ing in the Western Union Telegraph | “Romeo & Juliet” Shakespeare’s _ greatest play posure- when the steamship Tasman| - : THE GOOD JUDGE AND Y‘ OU feel better, get more comfort from a small chew of “Right-Cut” than you ever did from twice the size chew of your old kind, It’s the Real Tobacco Chew. ~ You don’t have to grind it. chew. Short-shred, cut fine so the Seasoned and sweetened just enough. Rich, sappy, mellow tobacco. bodied that less than a qu chew keeps you comforted It's a ready flavor comes. So pure and full- arter. your old-size and tobacco satisfied. The Real Tobacco Chew B—=~ 10 Cents a Pouch = ASK your dealer today. If he doesn’t sell “Right- Cut,” send us 10 cents in stamps. We’ll send pouch. :Vcnmuitta e pure chewing tobacco and betts ter than the old kind. you a _ WEYMAN-BRUTON COMPANY 50 Unien Square, New York s~ READ THE DAILY PIONEER Special Engagement the younger class “MAY STEWART |and her company, including the distin- guished Solo Dancer ~ MISS MARION EVENSON in complete and elaborate productions of “Lucrezia Borgia” WANT ADS Kansas City Journal—It ‘was in the play of Lueresia Borgla” that Miss Stewart made a decided hit. Her re- ceptlon in the third act amounted to almost an ova- tion.” America’s foremost legitimate actress of Wichita Daily Eagle— “Miss Stewart’s Jullet in the balcony and garden scemes was excellent. Her potean scene was wonderful.” Telegram. from Manager, Clinton ~ (Iowa) Theatre, “best company that has played in my house.” Victor Hugo’s dramatic triumph 9 a. m. Monday at Netzer's Drug Store ! Special Matinee 3 o'clock_ Night 8:30 Gurfaln Telegram from Masager, < compaxy aad produetion.” ~ The Rex _ TONIGHT at Harbin, commifted suicide in af | hospital here. where he THE NEW THIRD STREET THEATRE Under the management of Fred Brinkman AT THE REX The new Third Street Theatre _ Under the management of Fred Brinkman - TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY nights and niatmeles daily May THE TRAFFIC N SOULS or, At The Brinkman Tonight THE HARRY ST. GLAIR -~ ST0cK C0. My Dixie Girl A beautifal Southern comedy * drama in which Miss-Connie Hallett stars in the Soubrette role of Dixiana, the Colonel’s