Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
The Bemidji ‘Daily Pioneer| TEE _3mann Fo ;g:g‘ Tus. oo Telaphone 31 8 Entered at the post office at Bomld}l- Mi a8 second-class matter under Act of gress of March 3, 1879. Published every afternoon except Sunday. No attention paid to anonymous con- tributions. Writer's name must be nown ‘to the editor, but not neceasar- ily_for publication. Communications for the Weekly Pio- | aeer should reach this office not later than TueSday of each week to insure publication in the current issue Subscription Rates ne month by carrier year by carrier . Three months, postage pi six months, postage paid One year, postage paid .. The Weekly Ploneer Eight pages, contalning a summary of the hews of the week. Published every Thursday and sent postage paid to any address for $1.50 in adva..ce., “HIS PAPER REPRESENTED FCR FOREIGN ADVERTISING BY THE GENERAL OFFICES NEW YORK AND CHICAGO ERAN IN ALL THE PRINCIPAL CITIE® When ‘citizens of Bemidji urged that the Northwestern Telephone company erect a new building here and establish a modern exchange it was with the hope that we be given a better phone service. We got the building and the modern equipment, but the better service appears to have been lost in transit. Plans for the participation of Min- nesota in the Panama-Pacific expo- sition are progressing in a satisfac- tory manner and the chief workers for the movement report that con- tributions are being collected in all sections of the state. Governor A. 0. Eberhart has named a commission to take general charge of the sub- seriptions and the erection of a Min- nesota building while the state im- migration department will aid ma- terially in providing a state exhibit. The commission consists of Cal E. Stone and Eli S. Warner, St. Paul, Thomas B. Walker and F. K. Sulli- van, Minneapolis, F. \. Murphy, Wheaton, and A. M. Chisholm, Du- luth. The Minnesota building will be erected on a site chosen by Com- missioner Stone in December, 1912. The site, which faces the Golden Gate, is a short distance from the United States government building and is said to be one of the best on the exposition ground: Warden Wolfer's Retirement. Henry Wolfer .leaves the warden- ship of the state prison at Stillwater July 1. The state and its people hoped to hold him for nearly a year longer, but he has earned the right to rest. He is a loss, as far as any man can be a loss to work that sur- vives indjviduals workers and gecs on when even the best stop. But he is less a loss, because his strong per- sonality has stamped upon work and workers in Minnesota a high stand- ard that decides and will uphold his successors for long. Warden Wolfer has been in charge of the state pris- on at Stillwater for more than twen- ty years. That period has seen the theory of criminology rise steadily until the prison methods and prac- tice of Minnesota stand in the front rank of the country. His part in this uplift need not be magnified. It is enough that he has for so long been 6né of the band that made the practice of penology in Minnesota a credit to the state and a service to humanity. His disciples and meth- ods permeate the correctional service of the state, says the Minneapolis Journal. A general uniformity of fitness for the high service brings a change in the wardenship of the Stillwater penitentiary without a jar. Superintendent Charles 8. Reed of the St. Cloud reformatory, who succeeds Mr. Wolfer, has been trained all his life in the same chool, and has continued in Minne- sota the firm and human practice that won him national reputation in penology. The attraction of Minne- ‘sota’s reputation brings to Superin- tendent’s Reed’s place in turn Ward- en Scott of New Hampshire, so sym- pathetically trained that scarcely a jar is likely in St. Cloud. KK KKK KKK KK KKK K * EDITORIAL EXPLOSIONS * TR KKK KKK KK KKK KKK Human life is not worth a pinch of snuff so long as any irresponsible person can purchase a gun as easily as he can an ice cream soda.—Man- kato Free Press. — Norway has 144 tree-planting so- cieties. The first was founded -in 1900 ana since then 260,000,000 trees have been planted, more than 200,000 having been set out last year. This is the correct way cf conserving our forests—Austin ‘Transeript. i Do you notice that the avefage boy wha graduates from one of our Min- nesota high schools does not join the loafers? He gets a job and in a shopt time has won promotion, or else he goes to college and prepares himself for a broader field of use- fulness.—Albert Lea Tribune. Now that the old Minnesota river threatens to resume-its flood habits, a glorious opportunity presents it- self to revjve the Minnesota River Improvement league. We must have ceased: to interest. It the valley can’t spring anything new we ought to revive one of our dead issues, last.—Belle Plaine Herald. ¢ S The breweries and their saloon al- lies seem to have more influence with the voters than the Democratic newspapers and politicians. Nearly every Democratic paper and the large ‘majority of the prominent men of that party advocated Hammond’s nomination, - It was largely a case of overconfidence on the part of Hammond’s friends. Prbbably the men who pulled the strings. for Law- ler is Dick ‘0’Connor ‘and Dick is a rival of Fred Lynch, who has posed as the Democratic. boss. It was Lynch who said when the Minnea- polis Lawler men issued their mani- festo, that they were Kkickers and there “were not enough of them to count.—St. Cloud Journal-Press. SR e Community music throughout Wis- consin is to be stimulated through sys- tematic effort recently organized by the state university. A bulletin of the something to be agitated over, and the scenic highway issue, which - o extension department of the university calls attention to activities shvwing how music “is becoming popu'nrized throughout the United State The bulletin iu vania Oberaunmergan’ where a local choir giv conceded to he the fine: “Tennsyl tethlehem, “what are entations ’| of Bach's work in th town of Lindsbor A particul given of the © at Anoka, Minn.. the idexa of the supervisor of c in the Minneapolis schools, whichi he carried out at practically no expense. He mounted a box and led a band and 5.000 people. who came from neighboring villages. in the familiar old songs which every one knows and loves. Efforts which ontrol strect music are also men- tioned. Tn some cities hand organs are supplied with music for the folk dances which children learn in the schools. In et instruments must have censored before they are The mmunu announces how the uni- through its extension division, ny community in the state. to rent at low cost music for choruses, bands and orchestras, and it is now a ing for “a course in music appre . consisting of rolls for mechanical piano players and disks for phonographs, together with a series of lectures or studies.” This material will be sent out in a way similar to that in which traveling sets of books or clippings are now put at the dis- posal of localities. The department will further assist in the forming of entertainment courses. Teachers of music will be provided for communities, and the plan will involve circuits of several neighboring small communities, each of which may thus obtain part of the service of a well equipped musician. IF BACK HURTS BEGIN ON SALT: Tlush the K)dneyu at once when Bac! achy or Bladder bothers—Meat forms uric acid. No man or woman who cats meat reg: larly can make n mistake by flushin, the "kidneys occasionally, says a well known authority. Meat forms uric acic which clogs the kidney pores so they sluggishly filter -or strain only pari o the waste and poisons from the blood then you get sick. Nearly all rheuma tism, “headaches, liver trouble, nervous ness, constipation, dizziness, sleeplessness bI'\dder disorders come from sluggish kid | neys: The moment you feel a dull ache in th kidneys or your back hurts, or if th urine is cloudy, offensive, full of sedi ment, irregular of passage or attende by a sensation of scalding, get about four ounces of Jad Salts from any reliabl: pharmacy and take a tablespoonful it a glass of water before breakfast for : fow days and your kidneys will then ae fine. This famous salts is made fron the acid of grapes and lemon juice, com bined with lithia and has been used for generations to flush clogged kidneys and stimulate them to activity, also fo neu tralize the acids in urine so it no longer causes irritation, thus ending bladder dis- orders. Jad Salts is inexpensive and can- uot injure; .makes a delightful efler- vescent lithia-water drink \\'Iuc)l all reg- ular meat eaters should take now and then to keep the kidneys clean and the hlood: pure, thereby avoiding serious kid- 1ey eomplications. D.D.D. ~—for t3years— The Standard Skin Remedy Instant Relief % Skin Troubles The Guaranteed Remedy - Barker’s Drug Store 217 3rd St Bu midji Minn. Whooping Cough. “I have used Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy ever since I have been keep- ing house and I consider it one of the best medicines I have ever used. My children have all used it and it works like a charm for colds and whooping cough. In fact, I cbn- sider it good for any kind of a throat or lung trouble,~and do not think any household complete without it,” writes L. C. Haines of Marbury, Ala. You- will look a good while before| you find a better preparation’ than Chamberlain’s Cough - Remedy for colds and whooping cough “in chil- dren. It contains no narcotic and is Dleasant to take. For sale by All] Dealers, e : They. are very amusing while they] account is have been made to | Nervous," ~ aids digestion and purifies “the blood. As a Beq) “ the stomachi and liver raturn to their normalane heulthy ‘condition. Nervousness and . biliousness ,800n" disappear. l‘he entire system takes on new life. For over forty. has ““made good” —and nevernore enjoying a greater sale all over the years this famou old medicine "BL‘“ today, any other doctor’'s prescription. rid ‘than o For sale at all druggists ‘in liquid or tablet form, or you can send fifty' 1c n:ampn 62_; trinl bo rcmiiteiints’ DR R% V. PIERE NOSE AND HEAD STOPPED UP FROM GOLD OR GATARRH,OPEN AT ONGE My Cloansing, Hesling Balm Inc stantly Cleass N % et —Stase. Moy Hasd Discharges. Dull Hendache Goes: Try “Ely’s Cream Balm.” Get a small bottle anyway, Just to try it—Apply a little in_the nostrils and instantly your clogged nose and stopped-up air passages of the head will open; you will breathe freely; duliness and headache disappear. By morning! the catarrh, cold-in-head or catarrhal sore throat will be gone, End such misery now! Get the small bottle of “Ely’s Cream Balm” at any drug. store. This sweet,| fragrant balm diesolves by the heat of the nostrils; pemetrates and heals the inflamed, swollen - membrane which lines the nose, head and throat ; clears thie air passages; stops nasty “discharges and a feeling of cleansing, soothing Telief comes im- mediately. Don’t lay awake to-night strug-’ gling for breath, with head stuffed; nostrils closed, hnwkl.ng and blowing. Catarrh -or a cold, with its running nose, foul mucous -dropping into the throat, and raw dryness is distress-" ing but truly needless. ° Put your faith—just once —in “Ely’s Cream’ Balm” and your cold or catarrh will surely disappear. o BB of output. plete with equipment. culars from NORTHERN BEMIDJI, . Jord 7 THF UNTVE Think of the Company behind the car—and you'll realize why Fords and Government bonds are bought with equal Strongest financially —world- wide in scoop—largest in volume We build our reputa- tion into the car and guarantee service afterwards. $500 for the ruaabout; $550 for the touring cor and $750 for the town car—f. 0. b. RsAL can Y assurance. Detroit com-- Get catalog and parti- AUTO €O, MINNESOTA. We have now moved into our new building, 309 Third Street, where we will be pleased to see all our customers. Hoganson Bros.. ° Model Dry CI saning House Koors Bros. Co. Buccessors to Model Manufacturing Co. Incorporated = F‘ Mauuuuun nd Jobbers = lce Cream, Bakery Qoods WaLOY Foser 315 Minnesota Ave. ‘Bemidji, Minnesota PICTURE FRAMING Confectionery and Fountain Supplies STORAGE v —— — FURNITURE REPAIRING N. W. Telephone 125 FURNITURE NEW AND SECOND HAND HUGH A. WHITNEY, Prop. Bemidji, Minn. PHONE 223 0DD FELLOW BUILDING 402 BELTRAMI AVE. SECOND HAND GOODS' BOUGHT AND SOLD YOUNG'MEN AND WOMEN, MAKE USE OF YOUR TALENT AND 1 will be at Bemidji every ‘purpose of giving instructions in Piano and Anyone- interested please write e in care ‘of this paper, a private homes. more pupils. ~ My factlon guarante LEARN MUSIE Thursday and Friday for the usic in in lenx-m' ing music will ‘can atf EEEKEKKEKE KK KKK KK % One-half cent per word per ¥ +* issue, cash _with copy. * 4« Regular charge rate one ¥ # cent per word per insertion. No ¥ % ad taken for - less than .10 % * cents Phone 31. % S KRR RN KKK E KK KX KRR KRR KKK K X ' One-half cent per word per ¥ * issue, cash with copy. * * Regular charge rate onc ¥ ¥ cent per word per insertion. No % ¥ ad ‘taken for 1less than 10 ¥ * cents Phone 31, LA S ER R EE SRS EE S HELP WANTED WANTED—First class position open to competent stenographer. Apply Ditch Referee, court house build- ing. WANTED—Pianos and Furniture to refinish and polish. Leave orders at Bemidji Music House. WANTED—Experienced sales ladies. ‘Apply at “The Paris” Wednesday morning. 202 Third St. WANT E D—Dishwasher. Dairy Lunch. WANTED—A cook: " Mayer Pilsener Hotel. FOR SALE—I have the following farm machinery to exchange for live stock, one two horse corn cul- tivator, one, one horse corn culti- vator, one potatoe sprayer, Two farm wagons, Two one horse bug- gies, one garden drill, one, two horse Kentucky-single disk harrow and other farm machinery. W. G. Schroeder. FOR SALE—Rubber stamps. The Pioneer will procure any kind of rubber stamp for you on short no- tice. FOR SALE—One ha\t;-blooded Jersey heifer, just fresh. Apply A. E. Rako, Bemidji, Minn. FOR SALE—One team work horses. Ruehl Bros. on Sutlif farm. Ad- dress Bemidji, Minn. FOR SALE—Oak water barrels 76 cents-each delivered to your home Model Mtg. Co. LOST AND FOUND LOST—Gold locket. Name engraved on same. Finder to Pioneer office for reward. FOUND—Side “Edna’ return curtain for Dproperty -and paying for this ad. Mrs. Westinghouse Stricken. Lenox; Mass., June Mrs. (leorge inventor, is suffering from a paralytic shock at her"home, Erskine Park. Be- cause of her advanced age her condi- tion is regarded as critical. A shell shaped reflector has been invented for diffusjng the light from electric reading lamps. The Markets Duluth Wheat and Flax. Duluth, June 22.—Wheat—On track and to arrive, No. 1 hard, 92%¢; No. 1 Northern, 91%c; No. 2 Northern, 89%c. Flax—On track and to arrive, $1.60%. South St. Paul Live Stotk. South St. Paul, June 22.—Cattle— Steers, $6.00@8.50; cows and heifers, $5.00@17.75; calves, $6.00@9.00; stock- ers -and feeders, $4.25@7.60." Shorn | sheep—Lambs, $3.50@9.00; Wethers, $4.50@5.55; ewes, $2.00@5.25. Chicago Grain and Provisions. Chicago, Jume _22.—Wheat—Jjuly, 823 @82%c; Sept, 81%c; Dec., 84%c. Corn—July, 68%c; Septs 6lc; Dec, 58%c. Oats—July, 39%c; Sept., 38% @38%e; Dec, 39%c. Pork—July, $20.07; Sept., $20.17. Butter—Cream- auto. | Owner can have same by proving ‘Westinghouse, widow of the famous R FOR RENT FOR RENT—Summer cottage fur- nished at Lavinia on Lake Be- midji. ‘Reynolds & Winter. FOR RENT—Over Model. Bakery, rooms for light housekeeping: FOR. RENT—Two modern 1121 Bemidji Ave. FOR RENT—Furnished house, 1018 America Ave. WANTED. WANTED TO BUY—Good second hand range. Apply 520 Beltrami Ave. WANTED—Second hand household goods. M. E. Ibertson. Fums FOR SALE. FOR SALE—120 acres farm.land about 500 cords wood half hay land on good stream one mile from a town terms llberal price 12 1-2 pr. acre. W. G. Schroeder. SCELLANEOU! ADVERTISERS—The great siate of North Dakota offers unlimited op portunities for business to classi- fied advertisérs. The recognized advertising medium in the Fargc Daily and Sunday Courier-News the only seven-day paper In the state and the paper which carriee the largest amount of classifiec advertising. The Courier-New: 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 fo every make of typewriter on the market at 50 cents and 76 cents each, Every ribbon sold for 7¢ cents guaranteed. Phone ordere promptly filled. Mail orders given the same careful attention as when you appear in person. Pohne 31 The Bemldji Pioneer Office Supply Store. - HARNESS We want to sell a few Work Har- nesses Cheap to advertise them. Call in and see them. Ziegler’s Second Hand Store rooms. MCIVER & O'LEARY FURNITURE AND _ UNDERTAKING H. N. McKEE, Funeral Director Fire Insurance _ LET US WRITE Phibbs & Cross Markham Hotel Bldg.. eries, 26% @27c. - Bggs—16@18c. Poul- try—Fowls, 14c. Minneapolis Grain. Minneapolis, June 22.—Wheat—July, 87%c; Sept., 82%c; Dec., 84c. Cash close on track: No: 1 hard, 92¢; No. 1 Northern, 89@91c; to arrive, 89@90c; No. 2 Northern, 87@89c; No. 3 Narth- ern, $5%@87¢; No. 3 yellow corn, 612@67c; No. 3 white oats, 3T%@ 87%c; flax, $1.60%. Chicago Live Stock. Chicago, June 22.—Cattle—Beeves, $7.556@9.25; steers, $6.80@8.15; stock- ers and feeders, $6.10@8.10; cowsand heifers, - $3.60@8.80; - calves, $7,00@ 10.26. Hogs—Light, $8.10@8.40; mix- ed,=$8.10@8.45; heavy, $3.00@8.42%; Tough, $8.00@8.1 pigs, $7.25@ 8:00. . Sheep—Native, - $5.30@6.4 yearlings, $6.40@7.50. 5 v‘ ’ 7 - 2 New Feed Mill We grmd feed of all kinds. Also handle - | Flour, Feed & w&ad EXTRA! 4s an American citizen you are muruua in the outcome of WAR lupinl lntelllnntly informed than by reading the St Paul Dispatch (Bventng Illd Sunday) st. hnl Pioneer Press 5 n(ornlu and Sunday) - - of war, furnished. by Assocuted Press, greatest news sathering service “of -world; special ‘correspondemts on the ground, staft photographer; etc: end for sample coplise and spe- Cielal mll Mptltfi offer. T . DRAY AND TRANSFER * 'BAPE AWD_PIANO MOVING Res Phone 58 818 America Ave Office Phone 12. ¥ DENTISTS DR. D. L. STANTON, DENTIST Offiice in Winter Block DR. J. T. TUOMY DENTIST Gibbons Block - Tel North of Markham Hotel LAWYERS FRAHAM M. TORRANCE LAWYER Miles Block TOHN F. GIBBONS ATTORNEY AT LAW Gibbons Block North ot Markham Hotel Phone 83 D. H. FISK, Court Commissioner _ ATTORNEY AT LAW iice second floor O'Leary-Bowser H T LOUD LAWYER Office with Reynolds & Winter Opposite Markham lotel PHYSICIAN, SURGEONS OR. ROWLAND GILMORE PUYSICIAN AND SURGECN Otflce—mflcs Block DB E A SHANNON M D PHYSICIAN ANP SURGEOR Office in Mayo Block Phone 396 Res. Phone 13 DR. C. R, SANBORN PHYSICIAN AND SURGEGN Offiice—Miles Block DR. L. A. WARD PHYSICIAN AND, SUKRGEON Over First National bank, Bemidji, Mix DR. A. E. HENDERSON PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Over First National bank, Bemid3l, Miut Office Phone 36 Residence Phone 8¢ DR. E. H. SMITH PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON - Office Security Bank Block DR. E. H. MARCUM PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office v Mayo Block “hone 18 Residence Phone 11 OR. EINER JOHNSON Physician and Surgeon Bemidji, Minn. A. V. GARLOCK, M. D. Practice Limited EAR NOSE Glasses Fitted Office Gibbons Bldg., North Markham Hotel. Telephone 105. EYE THROAT MISS MABEL HYLAND Teacher of Voice Residence 621 Bemidji Ave. Phone 74 Bemidji Minnesota KX KR KRR KRR KRR KR X % * RAILROAD TIME CARDS + IR R R MPLS, RED LAKZ & MAN. 2 North Bound ‘Arrives 1 North Bound .Leaves. B00 RAILROAD 162 East Bound Leaves. am GREAT NORTHERN 88 West Bound Leaves 34 st Bound Leave: 35 West Bound Leaves 36 East Bound Leaves. Freight West Leaves at “rejght East Leaves at. MINNESOTA & INTERNATIONAL 82 South Bound Leaves 81 North Bound Leave 84 South Bound Leaves. 83 North Bound Leaves Freight South Leaves at. Freight North Leaves at.. NEW PUBLIC LIBRARY Open daily, except Sunday, 1 to § » m. 7 to 9 p. m. Sunday, resding reem oniy, 3 to 6 p m. Northern Minnesota Homestead Land Do you want a valuable timber or a fine agricultural claim, with an abundance of running water? For particulars write _Cook & Bailey, Loocators, Redby, Minn. FUNER! L. DIRECTOR y. E. IBERTSO UNDERTAKER and VCOUN'I'Y CORONER 405 lelln-l Ave. - Bemidji, Minn. STOYE WOOD FOR SALE BUNDLE WOOD, 12—20 in. long mwa to Be-ud; $z.;$rf sz‘l)elivu'edfi T to Nynon,? $2.00 nq BLOCK WOOD Delivered to- Bemidji, SZMh 7&5!.5«1.-!82.