Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
) T About The Ci_ty ’ R KEKHK KKK KKK KKK ¥ LEST WE FORGET * KRR KKK K KKK K KKK “In the Court of King Cole,” will be produced by honre talent in the near future. . The first outdoor band concert of the season will be given at the City dock Friday evening. . x s That news items telephoned to the Ploneer are appreciated both by the publishers and readers of the paper. Phone 31. .- A special train will leave Bemidji on every morning of the N. M. D. A. meeting at Thief River Falls, return- ing in the evening. . oo The Minnesota & International and Northern Pacific dairy, poultry and potato special will visit Bemidji on Thursday, June 11. o % 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 de- legation. o The Beltrami County Sunday School convention will be held in The meet- the Swedish Bemidji June 4 and 5. ings will be held in Lutheran chureh. . Ivery citizen interested 1in the progress of Bemidji should be in at- tendance at the Commercial club meeting this evening. The Irving proposition will be discussed and ac- tion taken For Wood Phone 129.—Adv. Mrs. Seth Smith of Becida was a Bemidji visitor yesterday between trains. Miss Edna Rock spent the part of the week with her- parents at Solway. Mr. and Mrs. Claude Kilbourn of So'way were business visitors in Be- midji yesterday. Girls for kitchen work wanted at once. Hotel Markham.—Adv. Henry Finch is moving to Fosston, Minnesota, where he will reside dur- ing the summer. Mrs. Harrigas and Mrs. W. Run- vyan of Northern transacted business in Bemidji yesterday. Mrs. Charles F. Rogers and daugh- ter of Willon transac business in Bemidji yesterday between trains. A complete line of field and gar- den seeds al W. G. Schroeder store. —Adv. Blsie Klinger, who has been Take Plenty of Time to Eat. T is saying that “‘rapid eat- ing is slow suicide.” 1If you have formed the habit of eating too rap- idly you are most likely suffering from indigestion or constipation, which will result eventually in se- rious illn unless corrected. Di- gestion begins in the mouth. Food should be thoroughly masticated and insalivated. Then when you have a fullness of the stomach or feel dull and stupid after eating, take one of Chamberlain’s Tablets. Many se- vere cases of stomach trouble and constipation have been cured by the use of these tablets. They are easy to take and most agreeable in effect. Sold by All Dealers, GRAND THEATRE Tonight Pictures De Luxe Fast Freight 3205 " (Kalem) The terrible struggle of a girl who is torn between love and duty makes this drama an unusu- al powerful railroad feature. The Idler - (Vitagraph) Tn this Vitagraph drama there is an absorbing story with a great moral. A Hot Time in Snakeville (Essanay) This comedy will make you forget you ever had the blues. - Come and have a good laugh. The first Kathlyn Series will be shown Wednesday and Thursday nights, teaching near Nebish this: year, was in the.city today enroute to her home at Pinowood. M. J. Daly, the prominent Perham attorney, well known in Bemidji, was in ithe city today enroute to Duluth on legal metters. Mrs. A. D. Bailey left this morn- ing-for St. Paul where she will spend some time visiting sher mother who resides in that city: Who does your Dry Cleaning? Hoganson Bros,, of course. Phone 537.—Adv. G Mrs. H. A. Brown came down from Turtle River this morning and spent the day in the city, the guest of her son, Whitney Brown. @ Mrs. Martin Kenfield went to Deer River yesterday, where she will join her husband, who is manager of the Deer River Manufacturing company. Miss Minnie Serume of Halstad, Minnesota, who has been teaching in the Blackduck schools this year, was in Bemidji yesterday on her way home to Halstad. One of these days you ought to ‘0 to Hakkerups and have your pic- wre taken.—Adv. Miss S. Postem of Thief River Falls, who has been teaching school near Island Lake, was in Bemidji yesterday .enroute to her home, hav- ing completed her term. Miss Margaret Rahmeder, who is in the employ of the Simmons Hard- ware company of - Minneapolis, is spending her vacation with her sis- ter, Mrs. A. Lindberg of Scribner. Mrs. C. W. Royer of Rushmore, Minnesota, is the guest of her sis- ter, Mrs. George Zea of Turtle River, for a short time. She stopped in Be- midji yesterday on her way to Turtle. Have your furniture repaired at the bargain store first class work at reasonable prices .—Adv. Mrs. H. G. Ingersoll of Brainerd is in Bemidji as the guest of Mrs. F. S. Lycan. Mrs. Ingersoll is enroute to her home from Grand Forks where she attended the Jackson-Wolff mar- riage. Mrs. E. E. Kenfield and daughter Anzonetta, left yesterday for various points in Michigan where they will be the guests of friends and relatives. They expect to be gone about three weeks. Miss Mona Flesher will leave to- morrow night for her home in In- dianola, Iowa. Miss Flesher has at- tended the Bemidji schools and was one of the graduates of the class of 1914, You can aid the work of preven- tion of crime by keeping your valu- able papers, jewels, etc, in one of the deposit boxes of the Northern National Bank.—Adv. Dr. Alex Dunlop of Crookston, one of the state’s most prominent phys- icians, was in Bemidji yesterday on s way to Turtle River where he has a cottage. Dr. Dunlop was accom- panied by his wife, John Bare of Wynne, Minnesota, was in the city yesterday on business. Mr. Bare is the man who drove up here all the way from Clearwater, Nebraska, with a team this spring. He has a farm near Wynne. Miss Edith Erwin has returned from Bemidji where she has spent the winter months teaching in the schools. She will spend her sum- mer vacation in Crookston with her mother.—Crookston Daily Times. Miss Josephine Mousley, who has been teaching in the Blackduck pub- lic schools this year, visited friends in Nymore yesterday.. She was on her way home to Litchfield, Minne- sota, where she will spend her vaca- tion. Mrs. H. Daniels of Becida was in Bemidji yesterday. From here she went to Minneapolis, where she will visit for a short time, before leaving for Barron, Wisconsin, and other points, where she will spend the summer, Miss Annie Hedman was in the city yesterday on her way home to Guth- rie. She has been teaching near Nebish this year. She was joined here by her sister Selma. ~They will both spend their vacation at home with their parents. There will be a meeting of the Order of Eastern Star tonight. This will be the last meeting of this order until fall. The Worthy Matron will| give her report of the Grand Chap- ter proceedings. Ice cream and cake will be served after the meeting. Tvery member is earnestly requested to be present. Mrs. W. P. Dyer, W. M. Among the state bankers who were in Bemidji last evening, return- ing to their homes from the Cass Lake outing were the following, to- gether with several Bemidji bankers who were seated at the Markham supper table: A. B.. Withington, man, G. H. Richards, C. D. Brown, Minneapolis; George Hanson of St. Cloud; J. K. Martin of Little Falls; A. G. Wedge, W. L. Brooks and R. H. Schumaker of Bemidji, R. J. Hill of Minneapolis and State Bank Ex- aminer-A. H. Turritin of St. Paul. Referee O. Dent has completed his work of looking over Judicial Ditch No. 6, located near Williams, and he has recommended that action be started against the contractor to properly. The referee claims the ditch in places is not as deep as the specifications call for, that there are stumps that should have been - Te- Imoved, that the road has not been Brainerd; A. O. Lindhjem, C. I. Nor- | ta; compel him- to complete the work| - HAR NESS = ONE DOSE of Wayr’s Wonderful Stomach Remedy Should Convince You That Your - > smfing Is Unnecessary. Recommended for Chronic Indlgestion and Stomach, Liverand Intes- Thousands of people, some right in your own 1 cality, have taken Mayr’s Wonderful Stomach iemedy for Stomach, Liver, and_Intestina \ilments, Dyspepsia, Pressure of Gas Arouna he Heart, Sour Stomach, Distress After Eat. ng, Nervoasne: Dizziness, Fainting Spells, Sick Headaches, Constipation, Torpid Liver, ste., and are praising and recommending i 1ighly to others so that they may also know the oys Of living. Mayr’s Wonderful Stomach Remedy is the best and most widely known emedy for the aboveailments. Ask yourdrug. gist for a bottle today. Putittoa test—one dose hould convince. It is marvelous in its healing sroperties and its effects are quite natural as if 1cts on the source and foundation of stomach iilments and in most cases brings quick relief and permanent results. This highly successful Remedy has been taken by the most prominent seople, and those in_all walks of lifé, among :hem Members of Congress, Justice of the supreme Court, Educators, Lawyers, Merchants. ‘iankers, Doctors, Druggists, Nurses, Manufac- wurers, Priests, Ministers, Farmers, with lasting senefit and it should be equally successful in rour case. Send for free valuable booklet on Stomach Ailments to Geo. H. Mayr, Mfg Chemist, 154156 Whiting Street. Chicago, Ill For sale m Bemidji, Mian., oy Bark- er’s Drug Store and Druggists every- where. > properly graded and he claims there are other things that should have been done and which the contractor neglected to do. Part of the con- tract money is still in the hands of the county treasurer, and Mr. Dent recommends it e withheld until the ditch is completed according to speci- fications.—Baudette Region. Charles Scheers, editor of the Akeley Herald-Tribune, has the fol- lowing to say_concerning the visit of the Red Lake Indians girls to Be- midji last week: “A group of a dozen or more Indian ladies of the Cross Lake Indian school on the Red Lake reservation, chaperoned by their teacher, spent Wednesday in Be- midji and. were guests at the Mark- ham hotel. They were neatly clad, graceful and dignified in appearance and commanded the admiration of all at the tables, especially Congressman Lindbergh, who was in the dining room at the time. Supt. Walter Dickens, the agent, has taken great interest in the Indians and his labors are producing wonderful advance- ment among these people. . A square deal is all the Indian needs to make him peer of any other American citi- zen.” HELD FOR SLAYIKG LOST WINTERS GIRL Missing Chili’s - Parenfs and Boarder Rearrested. Newcastle, Tnd., June 2—Dr. W. A, Winters und Mrs. Bird Winters, his wife, and W. H. Cooper, boarder at the. Winters home at the time Cath- erine Winters, aged nine years, dis- appeared March 20, 1913, have been rearrested charged with conspiracy to commit murder and burn the body of Catherine Winters. Warrants for the arrest were issued on the affidavit of Prosecutor Walter R. Myers and of Rebert I1. Abel, a de- tective, who has been investigating the disappearance of the little girl. * Dr. and Mrs. Winters obtained their release on- bonds of $1,000 each. Cooper already was in jail in default of bonds. Artist Philp Is Dead. New York, June 2.—William Philp, formerly a well known artist of this city, is dead at the home for disabled soldiers at Kearny, N. J., of Brights disease. Hewas eighty-seven years old. SRR * & 4 CUT OUT HIGHBALLS; BUY . ICE FOR BABIES. -+ S= “ Chicago, ~June 2.—“Fifteen -k cents will buy a highball for a =« sport who does not need it or fifty pounds of ice for a tene- ment baby who will die with- < out it,” reads an ad for dona- - tions to a free ice fund. <+ ok b L R R RS There Is more Catarrn in _thls sectlon of the country than all other diseases put together, and- until the last few years was supposed to be incurable. For a great many years doctors pronounced it 'a local disease and prescribed local remedies, and by- constantly failing- to cure with local treatment,” pronounced it incurable. Science has graven Ca- rrh to be a constitutional disease, and therefore requires constitutional treat. ment.. Hall’s Catarrh Cure manufactur- ed by F. J. Cheney & Co.. Toledo: Ohio is the “only Constitutional cure on the market. It 1s taken internally in doses from ten drops to a teaspoonful. Tt acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the sérslem. They offer one hundred dollars for any case it fails_tc gure. Send for circulars and testimon als. | Address: F. J, CHENEY & CO. To ledo, O. i Sold by Druggists, 762, 3 Take Hall's Family Pills for consti- oation. T i We want to sell a few Work Har= nesses Cheap to advertise them. Call in and see them. - 3 % BAD STOMACH? s fi;«\r,nooi~ LosT Mou:‘v{is * oo ole ole ofe cle ofe ofe oo ol ol ook L NEW YORK MAYOR < the late William J. Gaynor lost <. money while mayor: of New &+ York city his friends declared 1 shown in reports that execu- - tors of his' will have arranged to pay a state inheritance tax on :only about $750,000, when it was geherally thought the estate would total a million dollars or more. -Mayor Gay- nor was a liberal entertaine and while acting as the city’s chief . executive gave. costly functions in honor of guests to the- city. B R TO ARBITRATE DIFFERENCES Strikers at Wakefield, Mass,, Vote to Resume Work. & ‘Wakeffeld, Mass., June 2.—The gix weeks’ strike -at the rattan factory of the Beywood Bros. & Wakefield com- pany is at an end, the 900 strikers having voted at a mass meeting to return to work. g The settlement, brought about through the efforts of the state board of conciliation and arbitration, pro- vides for the appointment of commit- tees to confer with the company on questions of hours of labor, overtime work and day, hour and piece work. There has ‘been much disorder about the factory since the strike began. URCH English Ediice Bullt in the| Year 1538 Is Bured. Henley, Eng., June 1.—An arson squad of militant suffragettes destroy- ed the historic parish church of St. Mary’s at Wargrave, three miles from here. All that remains of the church, which. was built in 1538, is a portion of ‘the scorched stone walls. Inside the ruins the firemen found a hammer and a heap of suffrage lit-|" erature with a placard: “Stop perse- cuting women.” The only property saved was an ancient register and a few church ornaments. These were rescued by the vicar, Rev. Basil S: Batty, who rushed through the flames to get them. < The church contained many price- less treasures, including some- bells four centuries old, which melted in the flames, and a monument to Thom- as Day, author of “Sanford and Mer- ton.™ ‘Windsor Eng, June 2—A fire, which the police say was started by suffragettes, destroyed a mansion near here. The house formerly was the residence of the Duchess of Suth- _distinctly. feminine. confidence. It is because of some derangement or disease Write Dr; R. ‘Faculty at Invalids’ Hotel, Buffalo, N.Y. - Consultation is' free and advice is strii;tiy in Dr. Pierce’s JFavorite JPrescription * restores the health and spirits and removes those painful symptoms mentioned above. It has been -V. Pierce’s sold by druggists for over 40 years, in fluid form, at $1.00 per poitle, giving general satisfaction. now be had in tablet form, as modified by R. V. Pierce, M.D. Sold by Medicine Dealers or trialho: an on receipt of &6c in stamp:] Y It can New that we are right in the midst of housecleaning time, it.is no won-| der that so many men are perfectly willing and almost anxious to go to Mexico to “fight.—Winnebago City Snterprise. Can’t Keep It Secret. The splendid work of Chamber- lain’s Tablets is daily becoming more widely known. No ~such grand remedy for stomach and liver trou- bles has ever been known. For sale erland. = ¥ by All Dealers. > Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera and ‘Diarrhoea Remedy. Every family without exception should keep this preparation at hand during the hot weather of the sum- mer months. Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea 'Remedy is worth many times its cost when needed- before the summer is over. It has no superior for the purposes for which it' is intended. Buy it now. For sale by all Dealers. Note carefully the man who owns a soft,persuasive voice. "Some Of These " New Fangled foods - Are Mighty Good. People are sometimes -slow to change--- even in summer---from the old-time heavy breakfast of fried bacon or ham and eggs. But the “world moves,” and in thousands of homes a wise change has been made to the new-time breakfast--- - Post Toasti These sweet, flavoury flakes of corn, toasted crisp and ready to eat direct from the package, are “mighty .- good” from every angle. Labor saving—nourishing—delicious! Sold by Grocers everywhere €S —with cream The new Third St. Theatre :: " Under the management of Fred Brinkman TONIGHT Warner's Features presents The Road To Ruin A gripping story Riches and Poverty ‘With many scenes of intense dramatic power - Matinees_‘paily, Except Sunday pat First Show 7:00 NICHT TIME CARD. Second Show 8:30 Thi -+ Ziegler’s Second Hand Store _ June 4, for one night - Admission (Oc, 5¢ - e N |ui Show 9:56—,_ = : ShOW starting . Brewister's Millions| ‘good NG THURSDAY: Some in the line of acts THE BRINKMAN ~ TONIGHT Special Universal Feafure KING BAGGOT ~ ABSINTHE Admission jBé = at 7 continuous thing -