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| About The City (S E LSS SRS R RS R 88 * LEST WE FORGET * R R R e R R R B The fall term of court for this county begins September 8. s ‘The great Minnesota state fair will _be held September 7 to 12. e The Red Lake Indian fair will be held on September 3, 4 and 6. R The Beltrami school officers will meet in Bemidji Wednesday, July 15. +1ominent educators will take part. s s e The Independent School District of Bemidji school board election will be held in the Central-building July 18. Three members are to be elected. s e '7 That the state meeting of the Uni- ted Charities association will be held here Sept. 26, 27, 28 and 29. The state commissioners will meet here at the same time. DR That the 1914 fair of the Beltrami ounty Agricultural association will be given Sepiember 16, 17 and 18. A'any features have been secured and the exhibitiou is certain to be a greater success than ever before. o That the readers and publishers of the Pioneer appreciate it if you phone 31 when you go somewhere, if your friend goes, if a friend comes home, it a friend visits you, if you glve a party, if you go to a soclal gathering, if you have a wedding, it there is a birth or death in your family, or an event of special in- terest in your neighborhood. Tell us. It helps to make the paper more interesting to you and to others. t 1 C. G. Johnson of Shooks, formerly of Bemidji, spent the day in the city. The Boat. Phone 93.—Adv. Albert Kaiser of Bagley was a Be- midji business visitor yesterday after- noon, For Wood Phone 129.—Adv. Mrs. M. D. Patterson of Frohn transacted business in Bemidji yes- terday. Two girls for kitchen work wanted at Hotel Markham at once.—Adv. Dan DeLury, the Walker attorney, was in Bemidji last evening on busi- nsss before Judge C. W, Stanton. A complete line of field and gar- den seeds at W. G. Schroeder store. —Adv. Dr. L. L. Culp, the government physician at the Red Lake Indian reservation, was a Bemidji visitor to- day. “Let the Model do it.” ters for Dry Cleaning. —Adv. Miss Nellie Wilson, who-is attend- ing training school in Bemidji, spent Sunday with her aunt. Mrs. William Heddin, of Wilton. All waists up to $3.95, special Tuesday and Wednesday, $1.75, The Paris. —Adv. O. R. Gravelle, John Morrison and Nat Head of Red Lake were in Be- midji today for the purpose of attend- ing the Indian congress. Qne of these aays you ought to &oto ‘Hakkerups and have your ple- ture taken.—Adv. Misses Jessie and Ruth Smith ef ‘Washburn, Wisconsin, are the guests of their sister, Mrs. J. M, Richards, 909 Lake Boulevard, for several days. The Hotel Radisson, Minneapolis, is the finest hotel in the Twin Cities. Popular prices.—Adv. * Mrs. William Fellows and daugh- ter Aileen, Roland Fellows and Miss Minnie Hass of Tenstrike autoed to Bemidji Sunday and spent the day with friends. Have your furniture repalred at the:bargain store first class work at reasonable prices .—Aav. Mrs. Selma Howe of this city was called to Appleton, Minnesota, yes- terday, having heard that her brother Emil Johnson had met with a se- rious accident. Any silk petticoat valued up to $1.98, special Tuesday and Wednes- day, 98c. The Paris—Adv. Helic Clementson of Clementson, a member of the board of county com- missioners, arrived in Bemidji this -morning and will remain here during the session Wwhich began yesterday .morning. Hotel Radisson, Minneapolis, gives ) “you more for the price you pay than :amy other hotel in the Twin Cities. ——Adv. Mesdames W. H. Roberts and -A. ‘G. Wedge entertained at three tables t S t t! Headquar- 309 3rd St. or of Mrs. R. H. Schumaker. The party was given at the Roberts home, €09 Lake Boulevard. All $20.00 silk dresses in Crepe de Chene, etc., special for Tuesday and| Wedneaday, .$9.95.—The Paris. Adv, night, for members only. All persons who received invitations for the.open- ing are considered members.—Adv. attorney of Cass county and chief of the Chippewa Indians, arrived in Be- midji last evening and presided at the congress when it convened this morning. - Rogers is well Bemidji. rect to the Hotel Radisson. You will be pleased to recommend it to your friends when you Teturn home.— Adv. : Stromsburg, Nebraska, will arrive in the city this evening and will be the guests of their uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. A. T. Carlson, for several weeks. to Bemidji. Florence of Minneapolis will arrive in the city this evening on the o’clock train, and will be the guests of Mr. and Mrs, A. G. Wedge, 605 Lake Boulevard, for a few days. Mrs. Knight ‘and Mrs, Wedge are sisters. - people from Northern Minnesota reg- istered at the Radisson, Minneapolis, than at any other hotel in the twin cities. city today. winter, at which place they have They expect to return to Oregon as soon as they have sold their farm near Becida, for the Virginia Enterprise, was pain. fully injured this morning in a fall from a bicyele while riding from his home to the office of the Enter- prise. will probably be incapaciated for sev- eral days.—Virginia Enterprise. tion of crime by keeping your valu- able papers, jewels, etc., in one o’ the deposit boxes of the Northern National Bank.—Adv. men, Wisconsin, will arrive in Be- midji tomorrow and will join F. A. Megroth and family on an auto trip points in Wisconsin. leave Bemidji Thursday morning and will be gone two weeks. F. A. Megroth are brothers. are members of the Northern Minne- will attend the Baudette-Spooner out- ing are Mr. and Mrs. George E. Car- son, Judge C. W. Stanton and F. A. Wilson and wife. wife will be guests of the editors on time president of the state associa- twin cities, Chicago, Kansas City and other points. Hays enjoyed their trip to this part of the country very much, as this was their first trip into a timber country, the logging camps, saw mills, and other places of interest, Minnesota, died at her home July 2, at 11 a. m. ducted by Rev. Ira Cook at the home of the deceased and interment was made in_the Puposky cemetery, Mrs. Pierce was twenty-six years of age, and was born in Minnesota. was married to George Pierce on Oc- tober 26. 1905, Rev. S. E. P. White of Bemidji performing the Mrs. Nellle Lunseth of Leonard, whohas been visiting friends in Foas- |Slie leaves her husband ton for the past several days, re-|Walter, age seven, and Edward, age. turned to her home yesterday. Mrs.{five, besides a number of other rela-|" | Lunseth says the cropsiaround Foss-| ton are exceptionally fine this'year: tives and friends s to mourn death. - Dance at the Country Club Friday = Cure for Flies. creamery’ aays: Edward Rogers of Walker, ‘county | oyvos Rancid the‘animal with the hand or & cloth. known in Tesults be sure the lard is rancid Care ‘should be taken not to put in too much ‘kerosene as it is liable tp take the hair off.” On arriving at Minneapolis, go di- Misses Hannah and Jennie Lind of _torlc Old Church. London, July 14.—When Annie Bell, the- militant suffragette, was arraign: This will be their first visit | Sy o8 0 destroy Archdeacop . St. John'ithe Evangelist, Westminster, Mrs. William Knight and daughter 1 regret is that the beastly thing did not go off.” ~ P ‘The prisoner expressed intense pride in her aet. She congratulated the, woman worshipper who had de- tected -her setting fire to the fuse tached to a can of gunpowder and sald her smartness was worthy of a better cause. She advised her to be- come a militant suffragette. “I meant the bomb to go off and blow up the church right enough,” sald Miss Bell. “Goodby, you paid bully,” was Miss Bell's farewell to the magistrate when he remanded her. 6 You will find more of the leading —Adv. Mrs. E. Howe of Becida was in the Mr. and Mrs. Howe came o Becida from Coquille, Oregon, last ived since. leaving this vicinity. PROBABLY FATALLY HURT Monk Close to the Czar Stabbed by Woman. St. Petersburg, July 14.—Detalls reached here in a dispatch to the Courier of a probably fatal attack on the lay monk, Gregory Rasputin, whose influence over the emperor i8 #ald to be very great. Rasputin, who has been one of the most prominent figures in Russia in recent years, was visiting his native village, Pekrovksy, in the province of Tobolgk, Siberia, when a woman, a stranger to the locality, approached him, pretending to be a beggar. After accosting him she stabbed him in the abdomen ‘with a long military dirk. The assailant was arrested and con- fessed she had waited two weeks for the opportunity. IPOISON ENDS TWO LIVES J. Evan Carson, linotype operator He was badly bruised up and You can aid the work of preven- T. W. Megroth and wife of Meno- 0 the twin cities and to varions The party will T. W. and of Death. Pittsburg, July 14.—Charles Wag: Among the Bemidji persons who ota Editorial association, and who to death, dfed in a South Side hos: pital. Mrs. Thornton, with whom Wagner was infatuated but could not marry, chose the polson, believing her chances-were better than if she were killed at once. She died after six days of suffering. J. J. Opsahl and he trip. Judge Stanton was at one foh: hopchekobh bk bbb ddd The Hotel Radisson, Minneapolis, : HOT WAVE CAUSE OF TEN :. shows an interest in your comfort | DROWNINGS. o+ and welfare that extends beyond | T — * merely providing a place to eat and ¥ New York, July 14.—The sleep and gives you better accom- | first hot day of the summer modations and service than any other| ¥ drew thousands to the water. - hotel in the twin cities. Popular|s Side for relief, with the result * that ten drownings were re- prices;—hdy, “ ported to the police. Two Misses Lois Williams and Nellie|4 young boys dled within, sight Hays of Osawatomie, Kansas, who | of thousands in Prospect Park < | have been visiting friends ‘at Kelli-|% lake, Brooklyn, “through the -+ her, started on their return trip yes-|% capsizing of a boat. * terday. Enroute they will visit the * : EE XSS X PR L EE LR Y] Misses Williams and French Remedy for Stomach Troubles While here they visited for y a prescription of vege- table oils for chronic stomach trouble -and constipation that-acts like a charm. One dose will convince you. Severe cases of yeers’ llndlng areoften greatly benefited within 24 hours. 8o many- people are getting surpriving results -that we feel -all persons suffering from constipation, lower bowel, liver .and stomach troubles should try Mayr's ‘Wonderful Stomach Remedy. It is now sold here by u Mrs. George J. Pierce of Fowlds, The funeral was con- She ceremony. | where. Grand Theatre THE HOUSE OF QUALITY " _TONICHT ONLY Daniel Frohman presents America’s most famous film actress - MARY PICKFORD Tess of T.ha-v’§t&rm*cnumr_¥ In Flve Parts The drama of a woman's unconquerable faith, written ot bridge yesterday afternoon in hon- {by @ woman who knows her sex, will appeal to the entire Mary Pickford as “Tess,” the ragged| willful, _saucy, but feminine population. little squatter girl, dirty but beautiful, wil noble, renders a portrayal of inexhaustible fascination: First Show 7:20 ‘her. Manager Stiles of - the Bemidji| “A good preventa- tive for files is the following mix- lard and - kerosene. mixed in equal parts-and applied to 1t this ‘mixture s applied every 2nd or 3rd day after a rain it will keep files and'mosquitoes off. To get good EXPRESSES PRIDE IN ACT ‘Suffragette Attempts to Blow Up Hlis-: ‘Wilberforce’s .famous old church ‘of ‘with a bomb, she sald “the only thing Infatuated Lover Gave Woman Choice | § ner, who on July 6 gave Mrs. Susan Hil Thornton. the alternative of drinking | slow poison with him or_ being shot |§ The leading doctors of France have | For sale in Bemidji Minn., by Bark-| er's Drug Store and Drugglsts every- — Belfast, Ireland, July 14—The in- alatent demand of the Protestant por- tion of the.province-ofi Ulster for ex- clusion from the operations of the Irigh home rule bill lent added inter- et to the celebration bt the anniver- 8ary of the battle of the Boyne. 8Sir Edward Carson, the Ulster Unioniat leader, rode at the head of some 5,000 Orangemen, accompanied by the.usual fife and d¥tm bands and including a sprinkling of brethren from the United States and the Brit- ish colonies. They marched through the city of Belfast to Drumberg, ‘'where .a great. open alr meeting was addressed by Sir-Edward Carson and other leaders. T - The Nationalist quarter of Belfast was carefully avoided by’ the demon- #trants and on no occasion during the processjon ‘did the rival factions come Into. contact. So little did the au- thorities expect trouble that they de- pended entirely on the local police force to keep order, but all the mili- tary ‘were confined to barracks, as is usually the case during political dem- onstrations. Washington, July 14.—In the belief | that ‘the ‘metliods used in exploiting | timber resources:and the restoration of normal and'healthy conditions in the industries ‘which convert timber | into usuable products vitally. concern the public, Secretaries Redfield and Houston have'completed plans for a Joint study by their departments of tlle supply and exploitation of the country’s timber. - One of the conditions which make| the study of immediate fmportance 18 the fact that the standing timber, es- timated at ‘about 3,000,000,000,000, being reduced to its stumpage at the rate of ‘approximately 60,000,000,000 feet annuaily. In spite of this limited timber sup- ply lumbermen are said to be unable to'market much of the poorer grades. 1t 18 estimnted that from one-third to one-half of the material in the trees s left in the woods or burned in lum- ber mills. ‘Some of this waste is be- lieved to he preventable. ence, A Good Investment., W. D. Magli, a well known mer- procession and to hear the speeches, which were a prelude to resolutions calling on ‘the Ulster leaders to take what steps they considered neces-| mary to prevent Ulster coming under | the authority of the Dublin parlia- ment. 80 a8 to be able to supply them to his customers. After receiving them | he himself was taken sick and says| that one small bottle of Chamber- lain’s Colie, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy was worth more to him than the cost of his entire stock of these medicines. For sale by All Dealers. will Results are most aiwaya certain when you use a Ploneer want ad. Jne-half cent a word. Phone 31. ‘Women are gradually supplanting men in the silk mills of this coun- try. Women will be allowed to compete . Hot: flashes—dizziness, fainting spells, headache, " feeling and ills of & kindred . The female disturbance or irregularity back of these calls for help, | - “should have immediate care and attention. Otherwise the delicate .> female constitution soon breaks down. ; w> Dr. Plerce’s FaVfil'lte Dr. Plerce's gV =% sands of women year-after year throughout it long life. _ particalarly to the organs distinetly feminine. Nerves are refreshed, The vatale”, overwprke motherof & family__all will gain stre g 40 yoars has demonstrated its effectiveness—i Advertisers who want the best always patronize The Pioneer. an advertisirg medium. CLOGGED NOSTRILS OPEN AT ONCE, In: One Minute Your Stuffy Nose and A great crowd of tourists, including |chant of Whitemound, Wis., bought| ~Head Clears, Sneczing and Nose | of the nostrila; penetrates and heals % 2 W28k it he | the inflamed, swollk many Americans, came to see the|a stock of Chamberlain’s medicine | &',‘:“"' Conres’ Doll; Headache which lines thew;b:: l‘lne:luli‘ I.ll; 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 dullness and headache disappear. By. morning! the catarrh, cold-in-head or catarrhal sore throat will be gone. End such misery now! small bottle of “Bly’s Cream Balm” at any drug store. Danger Sig; t —are nature’s d-;h:. Bl for more than 40 years hs been lending its health restoring aid to thou- - ‘This wonderfully successful remedy imparta strength to the entire business woman; the run-down Hiouse-wife, and the weary care-wora ' | famous prescription which d i id o tablet form. SOLD EY DEALERS IN MEDICINES. s Dr. R. V. Pi ¢ the Invalids’ Hotel— Bt D R vzt e dids” HL- Spe: Confiden Dr. Plerce’s Pleasant Pellets regulate and invigorate stomach, liver and bowels. Sugz--coated tiny granules—easy to take as Candy,” results They know, by experi- that it has no equal in this section of the country as - HEAD GOLDS AND GATARRH VANIGH fragrant balm dissolves by the heat throat ; clears the air passages ; stops nasty discharges and a feeling -of cleansing, soothing rellef comes. im- mediately. Don’t lay awake to-night strug- gling for breath, with head stuffed; nostrlls closed, hawking 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. open: you will breathe freely; Get the This sweet, in the next Olympic games. PAUL | Yellowstone Par THIS YEAR SEASON 1914 June 15 to September 15 No where ¢lse in all the world is there a place so rich in natural phenomena. Pullman Standard Sleeping Cars daily direct to Gardiner Gateway This is the natural_and logical route through the Yellowatone. You sce it oll—the painted terraces and. bison at “Mammoth;” the paint and geysers, in regular order; Yellow- stone Lake, a mile and-a half above the sea; the Grand Canyon, the climax of the tour. Through regular Train Service daily, with Pullmans direct to the Park boundary and North Pacific Coast Points. Send for illustrated literature. A. M. Qeland, G. P. A, St Paul, Mimn, or call and see phone central. piece goods for dressers. will be added as I will appreciate Ticket Agent Union Depot Bemidji, Minn, THIRD STREET P -Patific International Exposition Bt~y 7 i i The Rex _Under the management of Fred Brinkman s %77 it The new Third St. Theatre MONDAY AND TUESDAY Lucille Love In two parts -In addition to Lucille Love, Warner’s Features presents A Daughter of Old Ireland In three parts. Featuring the noted artists of the silent drama, Gene Gauntier and Jack Clark. - Prcduced in the Killarney district of Ireland. Three splendid reels of truly fascinating Irish'drama. The castle of an aristocrat and the cottage of a peasant, the love of a charming coleen-and an English nobleman, intrigue, treason, im- prisonment and justice, all blended icturesque and| e ik el tic life of the Irish ‘eature players have here: iyed the roman ) i nts? so_artistically tmt. this feature'is bound'to be one of the st of their series of true Irish drama. = . o:mving:r’l‘he Perils of Pau!ine: _ Matinees Dally, Except Sunday T NICHT TIMECARD econd Show 8:30 Third Show 8; TA I will open my tailoring quarters for the in- spection of the public about July 15th, on the “second floor of the old Lumberman’s National Bank Building, formerly I will have a complete line of new fall woolen be in a position to cater to the most particular Five men will be employed at the opening in my tailor shop, and all first class men; more PAUL New Bill i S\t‘nrtlfig, 7:10 Continuous BROSVIK ILOR occupied by the tele- suits and overcoats and will - businéss warrants. an opportunity to serve you. BROSVIK BEMIDJI, MINN. i AT HE BRINKMAN THEATRE onight i 38c ~° Admission 25c and