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} Ab(;ut ;l"vheb C&y ’ #RKKKK KK KKK KKK KK ¥ LEST WE FORGET - * R R T R ] Phone 31 about it. < “na General election November 3. day, Tuesday, Band concert every Friday night at the city dock. « . and Minnewta. will entertfln the Episcopal Guild tomorrow afterrnoon at 2:30. -“The New Bemidj,” ‘get one. For sale, by All Dealers.—Adv.- Mrs.”John N. Rauen of St. Paul, a sister of Mrs. John D. Lunn, arrived Monday night for a visit at-Shore Acre farm; Mrs. L. H. Gibson of Wilton was'in Bemidji yesterday. She brought her little girl in to have a gnat removed from her eye. Board and room. Lady preferred. 1011 America avenue.—Adv. Bert Wheaton of Cass Lake, who The fall term of court for this|has been visiting at the E. E. Ken- county begins September 8. o5 e 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 5. ERE Y The next mecting of the county | commissioners will be held on Tuas- day, August 18. xx . Annual rally of the Beltrami Coun- ty Christian Endeavor association will be held in Bemidji September 4, 5 and 6. P The duck and prairie chicken hunting season opens Monday, Sep- tember 7 Hunting partridges is legal alter October 1. . e 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. R .S That the 1914 fair of the Beltrami County Agricultural association will be given Sepiember 16, 17 and 18. Aany features have been secured and the exhibitice is certain to be a aLreater success than ever before. s e Realizing the value of bright and interesting local columns in making a paper welcome in the homes of its subscribers, the Pioncer asks its readers to assist by phoning all news items to 31. Tavors of this kind are appreciated by the publish- ers. Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Scott of La- Porte were between train visitors Monday. -+ 4 mart, who has been ill with , is able to be up and Tom penumo around again Wood Phone 129.-—Adv. lorn to C. G. An- derson, on —\l“(}”("l avenue, Sunday morning, a daughter, For B. L. Warren, the well known Fed- eral Dam merchant and -hotel owner, was in Bemidji today. Two girls for laundry work. Apply Hotel Markham.—Adyv. M Johy m of Leonard was in Pemid Tuesday vis relatives and attending to business matters. Mrs. N, D. High, on Fourteenth Titfemores Shoe Polishes nu:sl‘ Quauity “GILT EDGE," the only ladies’ shoe dre!l!u that positively contains Oll, - Blacks, Polishes and Pre- serves Iadies’ and children’s akmcs, slflnu ‘without rubbing, 25c. “FRENCH GLOSS," “DANDY” combination for cle:mln g and g all kinds of russet or tan shoes, 26¢. "STAR” size, 10c. “QUICK WHITE" (in liquid form with sponge)quicke Iy cleans and whitens dirty canvas shoes. 10c. &20c. “ALBO" cleans and whitens BUCK, NUBUCK, SUEDE, and CANVAS SHOES. In ronnd white cakes packed in zinc boxes, with sponge, 10c. In hand- some, jarge alaminum boxes, with sponge, 26c. Ifyour dealer doe mot keep the kind you want, send us tho price in stampa for full size package, charges paid. WHITTEMORE BROS. 4 CO. 20-26 Albany Street, Cambridge, Mass. ! The Oldest and Largest Manufacturers of Shoe Polishes in the World. field' home since Saturday, returned to his home today. Mrs. George C, Berglund will en- tertain the Swedish Lutheran aid to- morrow afternoon at 2:30. All are cordially invited to attend. One of these days you ought: to 70 to Hakkerups and have your pic- ture taken.—Adv. W. R. Greenwold arrived yesterday morning from Chippewa Falls, Wis- consin, and will be a guest at the P. M. Dicaire home for a few weeks. Mrs. B. 0. Bekke of Portal, North Dakota, is visiting her sister, Mrs, Joe Bek of Schooleraft. Mrs. Bekke expects to buy a farm and locate here in the fall. - The Hotel Radisson, Minneapolis, is the finest hotel in the Twin Cities. Popular prices.——Adv. Rev_ C. W. Gilman left this morn- ing for Hawley, Minnesota, where he will officiate at a wedding. Mr. Gil- man will return Friday evening on the 6o’clock train. George Forte of Eckles was in Be- midji yesterday for binder repairs. He reports Mrs. Forte, who sprained her ankle some time ago, is now able to be around again. Have your furniture repaired at the bargain store first class work at reasonable prices ,—Aav. Mr. and Mrs. Ellicon Fletcher and two children of Peotone, Illinois, will be guests at the E, E. Kenfield home this week. Mrs, Fletcher and Mrs. Kenfield are cousinsi. Mrs, A. O. Paddock, Lucy Powell, Charles Powell, Mrs. J. “H. Sheets and Miss Fern Paddock = of Plantaganet were in Bemidji yester- day calling on the local trade. We've been waiting, so have you, Get one. For <ale by All Dealers.—Adv. and Mrs. Oscar Triteh of Alma, consin, arrived in Bemidji yes- morning ‘and will visit at the W. S. Duffy home for a couple of weeks. Mrs. Triteh is Mrs. Duffy's niece: Mrs. Hattie Wall and Mrs. Allie Wall of Westly, Montana, arrived in Bemidji this morning to be present at the funeral of their father, J. T. Brennan, whieh took place this af- ternoon. Hotel Radisson, Minneapolis, gives you more for the price you pay than any other hotel in the Twin Cities. ~—Adv. Bert Jamison of Walkef, judge of prebate of Cass county, was a Be- midji business visitor today. Mr. Jamison isi secretary of the Central division of the Business Men’s Treaty committee, John Goodman and Thomas Swin- | father, C. |zon autecd to North Cormant yestor- lday where they attended to business matters. Mr. Goodman says that the roads in that territory are in bad gon- | dition. North Cormant is about seven ‘ums-s from Kelliher. LARGEST VARIETY | e e | Another advantage in dealing with the Northern National Bank is that you are not too small for the bank nor is the bank too large for you.— Adv. Mrs. Effie Senear and son Orville left yesterday morning for Minnea- n0lis where they will visit friends and relatives.From there they will %9 to Buffalo, Minnesota, where they will be the guests of Mrs. Senear’s F. Masher, for some time. s Mande Solue of Stillwater, nnesota, who has been visiting her brother, who is an attorney at Ray, North Dakota, was in Bemidji yes- terday enroute to her home. While 1ere she was the guesit of Mrs.” Au- st Jarchew. Mrs. Jarchow = and Miss Soule were old schoolmates. On arriving at Minneapolis, go di- rect to the Hotel Radisson. You will be pleased to recommend it to your (Grand Theatre‘ THE HOUSE OF QUALITY TONICGHT Three Bags of Silver The Adventures of Kathlyn. No. 6 Having rescued the stolen elephant, Kathlyn and her party are captured by brigands and held for ransom. Kathlyn, marvelous escape. lashed to the cage of a famished tiger, makes a Pat Casey’ s‘Case (Essanay) A live and amusing farce comedy COMING Saturday Only: “ War Is Hell i H " beautifully hand colored. A great war drama eantitled .n- A = A W B 7 Au;umm._u / YIRS ‘—MA“ S A s s ;‘v,m,l,& HATE 18 it that soap suitable AR nm- 13 A . toilet? Isit not mildness, purlt%qmck lathermg, easy rinsing, freed alkali? Ivory Soap excels in all these\ quali- It 1s not sold on the theory that it is a good toilet soap. for It 1s sold on the:fac that it is the best soap for todet% use that can be made ties. 5 cents. at.any price. IVORY SOAP IT FLOATS ¢ from friends when you Adv. News reached Bemidji last evening telling of the death of Robert Clark of Brainerd, which' occurred in that city yesterday. He was twenty- three years old and was one of Brain- erd’s most popular and prosperous young business_men.. He was well known in Bemidji and had many friends here. return home..— Hundreds have asked for them be- fore they arrived and hundreds are daily being satisfied with a New Be- r:idji. For sale by All Dealers.— Adv. . Mrs. E. M. Sullivan and her bro- ther, J. H. Hogren, of South Dakota, have gone tc Bemidji where they are to spend a week. ~Mrs. Sullivan will also visit with friends and relatives in Breckenridge and St. Paul before returning. She plans to be gone two weeks.—Crookston Daily Times, (August 11.) 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. Mrs. W. R. Mackenzie and daugh- ter, Miss Gladys Mackenzie, who have spent the past several weeks in Be- midji, * returned to ~ Minneapolis last evening. - The Mackenzies formerly resided in Bemidji, but have made Minneapolis their home since the Northern Minnesota Development association opened its office in the Mill City, Mr. Mackenzie being sec- retary of that organization. See. our window filled with the “New Bemidji” pencils. Numbers 2 and 3. There is no better pencil maile to sell for a nickel. Sold oy All Dealers.—Adv. Fred. Carlson and family returned to their home in Minneapolis today. Mr. Carlson is a member of the Hoag- lund Brothers contracting company and had charge of the Markham Hotel Annex construction. The carpenters who Have been working on the build- ing also left today. Painters are now at work completing the decor- ating and it is believed that the an- nex will be ready for occupancy Au- gust 20. An ice cream social, for the bene- fit of St. Philip’s church will be held on' the parsonage lawn Thursday ev- ening. In case of rain it will be held in the basement of the church.—Adv. It isn’t an uncommon sight now- adays to see two or three loads of future settlers headed out some morn- ing to lcok over the-lands in this vicinity. This week Robt. ApRob- erts brought up a large number from the southern part of the state and was showing them over the lands along Judicial Ditch 13. The Bau- dette Realty and Development com- pany also sold several pieces. of land. —Spooner News. The Hotel Radisson, Minneapolis, shows an interest in your comfort and. welfare that extends beyond ==] merely providing a place to eat and sleep and gives. you better accom- modations and service than any other hotel in the twin cities. Popular vrices.—Adv. H. A. Clark and family. of Prince- ton, Illinois, are visiting-at the A. Norris summer home on the banks of the Mississippi river. They have also visited the Charles and Andrew Warfield families of this city, the Clarks and Warfieldd being cousins. Mr. and Mrs. J. Thompson and daugh- ter Ruth of Springfield, Illinois and Miss Stetson of Princeton, Illinois, are also guests at the Norris home. Mr. Norris is from Princeton, 1lii- nois, but for the past seven years has spent ‘his summers here on the Mis- sissippi river. Amor ‘clad automobiles; except at the driver’s seat, have bheen porting valuables. enclosed | - adopted by French bankers for trans-| '~ Brussels, via Paris Aug. 12.—Reports - as German troaps appear foibe reorganis- ing in front of Liege preparatory to begiiining a fresh forward movement south toward France. Their advance guards are on the banks ‘of the River Ourthe. i An official ‘statement says that at Houffalize, in Belgian Luxemburg, a french patrol attacked‘a squadron of German cavalry with sabers. 3 Troops on Dutch Frontier. _ London, Aug. 12.—A~dispatch from Brussels to the Times says it is. ru mored there that the Germans are massing * frontier. Replying to;’ Dutch minister to Belgium declsred that whatever -happened . Holland would maintain her ‘Heutrality un- swervingly. MEAT GALSE.0F uestions the hurts or Bladder bothers—Meat forms uric acid. 1f you must have your meat every day, eat it, but flush your kidneys with salts occasionally, says a noted authority who tells us that meat forms,urie acid which almost paralyzes the kidneys in their ef- forts to expel it-from the blood. They become sluggish and_weaken, then you suffer with a dull misery in the kidnc; region, sharp pains in the back or headache, dizziness, your stomach sou:s tongue is coated and when. the weathc i8 bad you have rheumatic twinges. urine %ets cloudy, full of sediment, tl channels often get sore and irritated obliging you to seek relief two or thre. timo during the night. : To. neutralize these irritating acids cleanse the kidneys and flush off body’s urinous waste get four ounce: Jad Salts from any pharmacy I take a tablespoonful in a glass ° water before breakfast for a few and your kidneys will then act fine. famous salts is made from’the acir grapes-and lemon juice; combined v Iithia, and has been used for gene; to flush and stimulate sluggish k also to neutralize the acids in u 80 it no longer irritates, thu: bladder weakness. | Jad Salts is inexpensive; cx Jjthia-water drink. The new Third St. Theatre :: The Perils First Show 7:10 “Let a want ad help you | gang plank. +++++++++++++++++ + GERMAN SPIES SHOT IN + 3 BELGIUM, b - . Sl kol | Brussels, via Paris, Aug. 12. + —That 600 German spies have < |4 been arrested in Belgium is < + stated here. ~One hundred < % were shot Monday and the < + “others are imprisoned. * 3 £ ok R ++++++~r++++'l large forces on the Dutch | HIONEY TROUBLE Take a glass of Salts if your Back jure, and makes n delightful cfferves. ..c - Under the management of Fred Brinkman Showing Tonight Only In two parts An episode shown here every two weeks. - to The Perils of Pauline Warner’s Features presents THE CONFESSION In‘three parts A p,owe[ful melodrama with a storyofvital interest. Matlnees Dally, Except Sunday 1:30 to 4:30 TIME CARD Second snow 8'50 Third show 9l so 7. New York, Aug: 13 —FEeaders inthe financial wolld are more cheerful. The two wesks’ report on idle” frejght cats Teveals a’decrease of 80,000;| bringing’ the number. of unemployed cars_down to the smallest since April. The Dnited States Steel corpora- tion’s’ monthly report shows that the amount of business on hand is the| largest for. five months. Progress has been made towarq clearing up the tangle among stock |. ‘exchange houses and their customers | caused by. the closhag of the market. GERMAN RESERVISTS FIGHT TO BOARD SHIP New Yerk, Aug. 12.—The Rotter- dam. sailed for Plymouth from the Hoboken dock, bearing hundreds of Dutch, English and French reservists. Passage ‘money was ‘refunded to the German passengers, who were not allowed to sail. Foreign horn passen- gers were compelled to produce their ! citizenship papers. so. that the line might effectually bar all Germans from-the ship. - Some of the German reservists, pre- vented from going aboard, fought the police in a vain attempt to climb the Liner Lusltanla Is Safe. New York, Aug. 12.—The Cunarder Lusitania, which left here at 1 a. m. Aug. 5 for a dash across the Atlantic, has reached Tastnet, approximately 300 miles from Liverpool. Cunard line | officials announced they had received | cable advices from Liverpool to. this | effect. It was an epoch in the ‘world’s history when the Bell System opened a long distance line between New York and Chicago, ,in 1893, and demonstrated that speech could -be’ transmitted 1,000 miles. = Today the busi- ness man in Den- ver sends his voice clear and distinet into the office of the New York mer- chant, 2,000 miles distant. of the g'ugt Bell route from New York to San Francisco,” and trauscon- tinental convmumn oy--- .~ er the Bell 8ystem will be one of the wonders usher- ed in by the Panama-Pa- cific -Exposition next spring. Last. year the - first- 900-mile 'tele- Ehone line was in- Europe, - where practically — all telephone systems are government owned, two decades after a thousa.qd mile line had been in syc- oessful operation in the “United States. A small army of skilled ~telephone workmen in the Rockies are now building the home stretch Z Bell Telephone Service Has Set the g = Standard for the Rest of the World. NORTHWESTERN TELEPHONE 'EXGHANGE COMPANY - Koors Bros. Co. Successors to ‘Model Manufacturing Co. Incorrorated Manufacturers and Jobbers Ice Cream, £ akery Goods Confectionery and Feountain Supplies .315 Minnescta Ave. N. W. Telephone 128 emidji, Minresota quny e ) ol RE’AF‘ THE DAILY PIOREER WANT ADS agamst any reduct Town [In Further we will be ~ sales departments ers share from $40 every retail buyer Buyers to Share in Profits Lower Prices on Ford Cars Effective from August 1, 1914 to August 1, 1915, and guaranteed 3 Tourmg Cor i Runabout = F. O. B. Detroit, all cars fully equipped factory production, tween the above dates. And should we reach this production, we agree to pay as the buy- ust 1, 1914 and August 1, 1915. For further particulars regarding these low prices and profit-sharing plan, see the nearest Ford Branch or Dealer. Ford Motor Company Northern Auto Co.; Distributors ion during that time: $490 440 Car s o8 < 690 the United States of America only] able to obtain the maximum efficiency in our and the minimum cost in our purchasing and if we can reach an output of 300,000 cars be- to $60 per car (on or about August 1, 1915) to who purchases a new Ford car between Aug- Bemidji, Minnesota MPwMe; In addition T - AT THE BRINKMAN THEATRE ETHEL ALTON PLAYERS WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY In the Beautiful Southern Romance . RIDCE FOLKS Ethel Alton and Players who opeued at the Brinkman Monday night have proven to be one of the best companies ever seen here. Under the direction of Dick Lee there is nothmg owitted’ in the production of the play and the unanimous- verdict of all who saw this company was - =5 : —_— .ithat Miss Alton; the little leading-lady is the best actress _Satfiulda'yunatinee, and night, The Million Dollar Mystery that has ever played here. The rest of the company is very well balanced. . Thss company is here for three weeks, changing Monday. Wednesday and Friday, with “A Country Store” Fnday night. Four reels of Umversal 5 pxctures. 4 Fu-st show 5, second show 8:50