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EE KK KKK KK KKK KK ¥, LEST WE FORGET * lii*iiii’{llliil# Band concert every Friday nighf at the city dock, e v The fall term-of court for this county begins September 8. s The great Minnesota state fair will be held September 7 to 12. s The Red Lake Indian fair will be held on September 3, 4 and 5. s The next meeting of the county commissioners will be held on Tucs- day, August 18. .. 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. The adjourned meeting of the General Conference of Chippewa In- dians of Minnesota will be held in Bemidji August 11. and Chippewas will be represented. . s That the 1914 fair of the Beltrami County Agricultural association will be given Sepiember 16, 17 and 18. Many features have been secured and the exhibition is certain to be 2 greater success than ever before. o0 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, if a friend visits you, if you give a party, if you go to a social gathering, if you have a wedding, if 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. r——— R. G. a Bemidji pusiness visitor today. Chisolm of Minneapolis was Mrs. T. Wienreich of Funkley vis- ited friends in Bemidji yesterday. The Boat. Phone 93.—Adv. Dr, Frank Gunn 6f Kellier, was in Bemidji today on business mat- ters. Mrs. J. A. Martin of Puposky was a business visitor between trains yes- terday. For Wood Phone 129.—Adv. ‘Mrs. Ralph Ripley and Mrs. Chas. Carnes of Rosby transacted business in Bemidji yesterday. B Mrs. A. McRae of Nymore returned yesterday from Puposky where she has been visiting friends for a few days, “The Master Mind.” A Master Film at the Grand tonight.—Adv. Miss Margaret Rood of this city is spending the week in Crookston, the guest of her cousin, Miss Mil- dred Strander. D. D. Miller, the Bemidji insurance man, returned to the city last even- Twelve thous- |, eMlh’ys They, expect to return t Bemidji by au Mrs. F. Arnold, Pproprietor. ot the| She returned to Hher: home in the even: ing, e “Liet the Model do’1t." Hmd\ll ters for Dry Cleaning. 309 3r —Ady. : Mrs. M. E. Guthrie and daugh Lennle, and Mrs. Guy Simpkins of Turtle River and Mrs. Arthur Glid- len of Northern were Bemidji visit- ors yesterday. Mrs, M. Young and daughter Lu- cile and Miss Mary MeCallister re- ‘urned yesterday from Grant Valley where they have been visiting friends for a short time. One of these days you ought to i0 to Hakkerups and have your pic- ure taken.—Adv. Misses Ethlyn and Blanche Rath- man of Jamestown, North Dakota, are the guests of their grandmother, rs. H. W. Bailey. They will re- main here a month. William Everets made a trip to international Falls Sunday to meet adis-wife, who has been visiting her mother at Port Arthur, Canada. They both returned Sunday. The Hotel Radisson, Minneapolis, is the finest hotel in the Twin Cities. Popular prices.—Adv. Misses Annie and Vera Hedman of Guthrie, Minnesota, were in the city yesterday enroute to Becida, where they will visit their sister, Mrs. George Maltrude, for two weeks. W. L. Wyman of Park Rapids, of- lcial court reporter for Judge B. F. Wright, was in Bemidji last evening :nroute to Spooner where the spe- cial term of court reconvenes tomor- row, Have your furniture repaired at he bargain store first class work at ‘easonable prices .—Aav. Misses Emily Erickson and Myrtle Lindberg of Duluth, who have been the guests of Miss Erickson’s sister, Mrs. O. H. Manaugh, for the past three weeks, have returned to their home. Mrs. F. Waldron of Montevedio, Minnesota, and Mrs. J. Thoney of Groton, South Dakota, are the guests of their parents, Mr. and Mrs, H, S. Duffy. They: expect to remain a month. Hotel Radisson, Minneapolis, gives you more for the price you pay than any other hotel in the Twin Cities. —Adv. ~ Miss Gene Johnson of Minneapolis arrived in Bemidji this morning and will spend vwo weeks in Bemidji, the 3uest of her sister, Miss Anna John- son, and her uncles. John and A. O. Hoganson. » E. E, Kenfield and family and Mis- ses Carldson of Minneapolis and Black of Sioux City, Towa, who are guests at the Kenfield home, will spend the week on Norway Beach, Cass Lake. On arriving at Minneapolis, go di- rect to the Hotel Radisson. You will be pleased to recommend it to your friends when you return home.— Adv. Mrs. W. J. Coleman and her moth- er, Mrs. H. Berger, left this morn- ing for Sault Ste. Manie and other points in that vicinity, where they will spend a month visiting friends and relatives. D. H. Derifield of Montrose, Min- nesota, was in Bemidji yesterday en- route to-his home from Turtle River, where he attended the funeral of his ing from Minneapolis, where he spent yesterday on business. A complete line of field and gar- den seeds at W. G. Schroeder store. —Adv. Mr. and Mrs. Lee Allen LaBaw left last evening for the twin cities where Here l-s“Good New—s for Stomach Victims Some very remnklblc results are being - obtalned treating stomach, liver and iptestinal troubles with pure vegetable oils, which exert-a cleansing, soothing and purifying action upon the lower bowels, removing the obstructions of poisonous fecal matter and gases and reventing their absorption by the blood. Tt done, the food is allowed free sage from the stomach, fermentation coute and stomach troubles quickly dis- Gzor e H. Mayr, for twenty years a lezdmg Chicago druggist, cured himself ot Pt of womach liver and intestinal troubles of years’ standing by this treatment, and so-suc- cessful was the-remedy he devised that it has since been placed in the hands of druggists all over the country, who have sold thousands of bottles. Though absolutely harmless, the. ef- fect of the medicine is sufficient to con- vince any one of its remarkable effect- iveness, and within 24 hours the sufferer feels like a new person. - Mayr’s Won- derful Stomach Remedy is now sold here Y - Barker’s Drug Store and Druggists everywhere. DEAFNESS CANNOT BE CURED. by local applications, as they cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear. There 18 only one wav to cure deafness, and that is by constitutional remedies. Deafness is caused by an inflamed co dition of the mucous lining of the Eu tachian Tube. When this tube is in- flamed you have a rumbling sound or {mperfect hearing, and where it iz en- tirely closed. Deafness is the reault, and unless the Inflammation can be:tak: en out and this tube restored to its nor- mal condition, hearing will be, destroyed forever; nine cases out of ten are caused by Catarrh, which is nothing but an in- flamed condition of the mucous surfaces. We il give One Hund(rld qnpsmr- for case ess AU ca- tu-rh) that cannot be cured by H-n.u rrh Cu for ofwulnn, free. , Toledo, Oufo. | winl hold services at Diamond Point | son-in-law, John N. Guthrie. The funeral was held Sunday. You will find more of the leading people from Northern. Minnesota reg- istered at the Radisson, Minneapolis, than at any other hotel in the twin cities.—Adv. The Swedish Lutheran church Sunday at 11 a. m: A picnic lunch, ice cream and lemonade will be served: ‘A choir and ladies’ quar- tette will sing several songs. Mrs. E. B. Mitchell of Lawton, Ok- lahoma, will arrive in the city this evening and will be the guest of Mr. and Mrs, O. H. Manaugh, 1219 Lake Boulevard, for a week or ten days. Mrs. Mitchell is Mr. Manaugh’s sis- T E “The- Master Mind,” a deluge of vivid “heart-stopping climaxes ma- | jestically unwinding in fascinating continuity to the most sensationally realistic denounement in film annais. At the Grand tonight.—Adv. ‘Mrs. G. M. Carson returned from Texas Sunday night, where she has spent the past ten months. Her sis- ter, Mrs. C. Carson of Carthage, Mis- souri, accompanied her -home, and will spend the balance of the sum- mer here. John Doyle-and Mrs. MecGlade of Thompson, North Dakota, who have been the guests of Mrs. J. M. Cushner for the past month, returned to their home yesterday. Mr. Doyle is Mrs. Cushner's father and Mrs. McGlade is her Sister. When you have an account with the Northern National Bank no one will have knov/ledge of the fact or know the amount of your deposit. That' is a matter of confidence be- tween yourself and the bank.—Adv. M. H. Kelsey, the boat buildes, formerly of Bemidji, has been‘in the city the past several days, moving Dam, fto whlch city the last of his lumber and machin-| Water drink omen i ‘soy wiil bo .I.n Bemidji for & tw flwl . [longe Wflqi. retumed to thelr homes this morning, after having spent ey eral days in Crookston the guests of Mrs, Jones’ gister. - Mr. Jones is fore- “|man of the Crookston Lumber com DDB’!’ ards at Bemidji.—Crookston Daily Times (July 20.): The Hotel Radisson, Minneapolis, shows ‘an- interest in_your comfort and: welfare that :extends ‘beyond merely providing a place to eat-and -|sleep ané gives you -better accom- modations and service than any other hotel in the twin cities. Popular prices.—Adv. Judge C. W. Stanton, of this:city, left this morning for Walker, where he will spend.the remainder of July and_August. Judge Stanton has & 3 In five parts. A mwterful produclxon with a master artist, that cottage at Glengarry, where he will mry as one. of Lasky o hest—whwh e Producer of Brewster’s Mxlhons hold chamber sessions during the summer. Already he has a large] number of ‘cases set for ~ hearing there. He was accompanied to Walk- er by his daughter, Mrs. C. R. San- ‘born, who will spend the day there. T0 BE CONVOYED BY CANADIAN CRUISER Steamer With Hindu Immigrants Must Leave Vancouver, Vancouver, B. C. July 21.—Within forty-eight hours the steamer Koma- gata Maru and- its Hindu passengers will "have to ‘get out of the -harbor. The likelihood thén is that the Cana- dian cruiser. Rainbow will be ready to cross from Esquimalt and convoy the Japanese vessel beyond the three- mile limit, if not further. A pitched battle between immigra- tion inspectors, special police and the | Hindus took place on board the Ko- magata when the ship’s officers asked shore aid in handling their belliger- ent passengers. The Hindus, it is said, used force in preventing the of- ficers from getting the ship under way. i The Komagata has been in the har- bor three months, during which the Hindus have displayed ugliness, and this has been intensified since the Dominion government decided that they are undesirable aliens and not entitled to entry. The expense of the trip to Van- couver was borne by Burdit Singh, a wealthy Hindu, who chartered the ves- BUTTE LABOR WAR 15 THE CHEF TOPIG Western Federation of Miners in Session at Denver. Denver, July 21.—The receni dis- sension in Butte in the ranks of the ‘Western Federation of Miners, which resulted in several serious riots, was the principal topic of discussion when the annual convention of the federa- || tion was called to order here by | President Cl. 'les H. Moyer. President Moyer was summoned to Butte last’ month as soon as the trouble began and remained in Mon- | tana during the exciting days which | followed. It is expected he will make | a personal report. In past conven-|| tions the Butte delegation has been | nearly the largest in attendance. i The Calumet copper strike will also | be discussed at length. President Moy- | er and Auditor C. H. Tanner will re- port on the final outcome of the] trouble, with especial reference to| their experiences at Hancock when. they were deported by a mob.: i One hundred and fifty delegates. are | here. The convention will last twn‘ weeks. i In West Virginia there are 70, 321» men employed in the mining indus-j try. Of this number 36,612 nrej Americans, 14,000 -are negroes and| 23,709 are -foreigners, the majority of whom are If,ahans EAT LESS MEAT IF BACK. HURTS Take a glass of Salts to flush Kidneys if Bladder bothers you—Drink lots of water. \ Eating meat regularly eventually pro- | duces kidney trouble in some form or Amg a's, ‘will go down in C the pinacle of perfectmn. i e Jease b Las‘lgg presems First Shoki720 Second 8:40 ; Mlsolnn- 10¢c and 20c Third 9:_55 HUERTA NOT FEARING REBELS Fugitive Smiles at Idea of -Attack on Puerto Mexlco. Puerto Mexico, Jufy 21—General Huerta : shrugged his.;shoulders and smiled contemptuously. -at. the . idea that the force of. Constitutionalists known. to ‘be a- short"distance from || bere would dare to attack this cit: The military companies of the fugi- tive former dictatcr, however, do not display the same degree of-confidence and, an extended line jof oufposts is maintained to prevent the. Constitu. tionalists from appréaching nearer. General Huerta continted to pass most of his time in the,railroad car in Since his arrival herer en an hour’s exereise. Ploneer wants—oae n&lf cent word cash. ] Read the Want Azs e has not tak- DISTANCE TELEmuN‘ The Glrls M’ The : Swm}hlmflf Those young women whose voices you hear calling ‘‘Number?”’. arg -important personages in telephone af- fairs. It is the paties courteous “Central” girl who' makes it possible to increase ‘the joys of living, facilitates the. activities of .business and who summons help in cages of extremity. A Human Element It is the operator who ap- plies intelligence to @ machine that never stops—the Human Element that acts” to control the wires as they summon aid in times of disastgr, calls the doctor in illness or.accident, or connects ~ subscribers for a friendly, social chat. COur‘tAesy and consideration in - dealing: with$these girls will make t easier for them to ' “give. petter- seryleg to all. - m Ilnml' stern - other, says a well.known authority, be- | cause the uric acid in meat excites the kidnegs, they become overworked; - get| eluggish; clog up and cause all sorts of distress, part:culafly backache and mis- ery in the kidney region; rheumatic twil ges, severe headaches, acid stomach, con- | stipation, torpid liver, sleeplessness, Bladder and urinary irritation. ¢ moment. your ‘back hurts or kid- neys ;aren’t acting'.right; or. if bladder bothers you, - get- about four ounces of ad Salts from any good pharmacy; take a tnblespounful in a glass-of water before breakfast for a few days and your kidneys will then act fine. This fnmmm salts is made from the acid of and lemon juice, combined with' ‘hthn, and has. been used for. generations to flush clogged hdnyl and shmulm them "to normal activity; also o nentralize the ‘acids ‘in the urine 8o it‘no longer irri tlm, thus ending bladder disorders. . Jad -Salts cannot injure an; makea & delightful effervescent lmu hich- millions, of men an ke take an Matjnees First Show 7:00 which he arrived from Mexico City. | In two parts Dally. Except Sunday 1:30 9 4:30 I‘iGHT T CA ' %m‘% Second 8| \REBELS CAPTURE ROSARIO :Eight Hundred Soldiers Drive Fed- erals From Town. On Board U. S. S. California, La iPaz, July 19, via Wireless to San ,Dxego, Cal, July 21.—Eight hundred Constimuonahsts landed at Tosario, . near La Paz, Lower California. The ‘Carranista governor of Lower Cali- fornia demanded the surrender of the jcity and upon being refused began a successful attack. The fighting last- :ed six hours, there being much fight- (ing from housetops. The federals ! retreated toward Triumfo. | Three federal officers were execut- jed. | Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy. Mr. W. S. Gunsalus, a Pennsylva- nia farmer, residing near Fleming, P. O, Pa., says: “For the past four- teen years I have used Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Reme- dy in my family and have found it to be an excellent remedy. I always have a bottle of it in my house and take pleasure in recommending it to my friends.” For sale by All Deal- The old-time inkwell used to _give up many fearful and wonderful blobs. Carter's Inx have had a leading part in making blobs a rec- ollection of the inks of olhet days. | Carter's Pencraft Combined Office and Fountain Pen Try “Ely's Cream Balm.” Get a small bottle anyway, Just to try 1t—Apply ‘a little In the nostrils ‘and Instantly your clogged nose and stopped-up air passages of the head will open; you duliness and headache disappear. By morning! the or catarrhal sore throat will be gone, isery now ! g Endsuch mi small bottle of at any drug iMy cl-luh' Hnfl Baln l--trma!;tbn!mdm stantly - Clears su:,' .nln ;n:l of the nostrils; Iivz:h‘:y M‘ asty. tarrhal | the infiamed, swollen 1 Hml.d.- Goes. | which~ lines “the' nose, hea throat; clears the air passages & gl::tnys h;ig!fichurges umi a . teeu.nx of - ) 8oothing. megioat 2 relief enmpg—lnk n't lay awake to-night strug- gling for breath, with head" stuffed ;’ nostrils cloged, hawking and blowlnx X Catarrh or a cold, with its.ronning. ' nose, foul mucous dropping into the throat, and raw dryness 1s“distress- ing but truly needless. - Put your faith—jist once— “Ely’s Cream Balm” and your celd or catanrh will surely disappear, . /. will “breathe freely; catarrh, cold-in-head Get the "Ely's Cream Balm” store. . This sweet, You lasts. Mui has such compoun: times as make a hundredt paper or When neat copi loss that w “a” and Ink isthe'newest member of the Carter’s Inx family. It is for fountain Ppens: andinkwelluse. PencraftInk writes, a dark blue and dries a jet black;: Our quick offering of this new ink is but ,another indication of our policy—to serve,’ our customers the newest and best dwl”., BEMINT PIONEER Phone 31, With One Sheet of MultiKopy Carbon: Paner HEY will ALL be clesn, clear, non-smudging, | non-fading and With ordinary carbon paper most of the carbon comes off the first few times it is usei!,while economical carbon paper: legible copies are constant insurance against the _ cheap, unreliable carbon paper. . Star Brand Typewriter Ribbons are guar- anteed-to make 75,000 irnpressions of the letters show on the paper. BEMIDJI PIONEER PUB BU Can Miake 100 Letters legib a as long as the ‘paper . {iopy Carhon Paper 1 8.. ooth surfa and is so scientifically. ded, that it gives off a film two to -five thin as other carbons. Just enough to sharp, distinct impression on even the h copy. Yet never enough to soil the the hands. Multlkopy will thus make a hundred_-. es from one sheét, it is obviously the most Morever, its lastingly. Y follows faded or illegible copies made by - rite for FREEZ Sample Sheet ‘e” without closging the type so as to Phone 31 N You can’t afford to. miss the course. of justice with}" captivating Dorothea Farley in the leading _role. Apowerful drama in three parts - TH EATRE 4-: SEALED ORDERS, a modern photodrama in seven pprts, now ‘hwm Lorralne & Cameron The Top-notch Scotch Comedians ~ Complete Change of Pictures -Admission: et VAUDEVILLE - BIG REELS =- 4 Startmg 7:10 Continuous Children 5c; Adults 18c- Coming Wednesday test legitimate theatres of the country. 3 ystery will consist of 22 episodes to appeat_ vely f%ZZ weeks commencing July 25 and end)p& 3 Decembe T