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5 The Bemfl]i Daily Pulonefir TEE BEMIDJI PIONEER PUB. 00, TFublishers and Propristors: Tolephone. 31. _Entersd at_the post office at Bemidjl, Afinn, as gecond-clas¥ matter under Act .ot Cangress of March 8, 1879. Published every afternoon except Bunday No attention paid to anonymous con- tributions. Writer’'s name must be .~ kmown to the editor, but not necessarily for publication. " ‘Camimunications for the Weekly Plo- neer should reach this office not later ..than.Tuesday of each week to insure publication in the current issue. Subscription Rates. Three months, postage paid. Six months, postege pai One year, postage paid.. The Weekly Ploneer. Eight pages, containing & summary of the news of the webk. iblished every Thursday and ‘dent postage paid to any addresa for $1.60 in advance. o e o e ——— el tHIS PAPER REPRESENTED FOR FOREIGN . ADVERTISING BY THE MEWIC)\Nd GENERAL OFFICES NEW YORK AND CHICAGO BRANCHES IN ALL THE PRINCIPAL CITIES ———————re———e—— Our Slogan: “Bemidji 25,000 Population in 1925” The Race Lives On. ‘With his wife and the child Ziegler was out in a motorboat on the lake, which is four miles southwest of here. The child * fell overboard and Ziegler jump- ed into the water. He held the child up until the boat could be turned and returned, about 10 minutes. Mrs. Ziegler pulled the child into the boat, but her husband was so exhausted he sank at once.—Dispatch from Bemidji, Minn. Only a little paragraph in the rush of great news events of the day, merely another drowning accident, we say, as we hastily read along, what is the life of a single human being when tens of thousands are being wasted day by day? Yet be- neath the story told by that para- graph lies the whole history of the upbuilding of life, the conscious, self- sacrifice of the individual in order that the race and his kind may live on. In order that a little four-year-old daughter might grow to womanhood and become a parent in her turn, the father holds her aloft until she is saved and then sinks to rise no more. Think of the countless ages of in- stinct that lay behind that quick, voluntary plunge to rescue her at the cost of himself! Still he lived to know that her mother had the child safely in her arms, and that the duty of his life had been met and fulfilled. He had carried out his part of the promise of parenthood, and in those ten long minutes he had the satisfaction of knowing that he had mot lived in vain. Which of us ever knows as much, or more. iSeen coldly, this man’s act was simply the working of one of the lit- tle cogs in the machinery of exist- ence. ‘We get so used to the machin- ery that we cease to appreciate the wonder -of its mechanism. And then of ‘a sudden, a bit of supremeheroism makes one realize that it is the tiny cogs which turn the huge fly wheels of:fate, and that through them the race lives ol -Minneapolis Journal. P ERE S SRS EL SRS S S LSS +* EDITORIAL EXPLOSIONS * SRS REL RS SRS RS S H-W. E. Lee has serious intentions of beeoming a candidate for governor of Minnesota on the Republican ticket again next year, he must be sorely disappointed over the way his pro- ‘posed: candidacy -is being received throughout the state.—EXx. —_—— The, other day, over at Zumbrota, & quiet logking man jumped and looked about in .a startled manner. [ When asked:what troubled him, he replied that a.few-weeks ago a fel- low .eloped ‘With his wife in an.auto- mabile .and -every- time: he heard a horn;toot he was afraid the man: was bringing her back.—Zumbrota Falls Enterprise. —— Most -of the smaller, cities of the _state ;that have. tried the plan have -found that the. existence of gpod roads lgading into their borders from the outlying country have bgen an incentive to draw trade in their di- reetion. -Good roads-leading into; an industrial center prove an able com- petitor against the catalogue houses. And this an argument for goed road building that can-be applied to every community.—Little Falls Transcript. — We-noticed. in one; of the Crosby papers, last. week that a large. taran- tula had been captured in one.of the grocery .stores in Crosby that had ©coms on.a bunch of bananay, and.that _ the big:spider:is mow on:exhibition, preserved in a bottle of aleohol. Un- doubtedly the:.combination of spider, and alcchol draws lots of spectators, Although we find tarantulas quite frequently in Jenkins, we can't find anything to preserve them. in.—Jen: kins Independent. REAP HARVEST FROM LOVES By ALICE ROHE. Rome, July 16.—(By mail. )—n. Moonlight in Rome, the sound of a deeds of war, of love, of partings, of: promised returns. In ancient pal- aces heads are silhoutied against yel- low quares of light. In the Piaaza; a crowd gathers about the singer. Yes, this is- twentleth” century Rome and -the singer -is no medieval| troubador. But he is quite as pie- turesque, quite as romance-laden as; though he had lived hundreds of years .ago. For he is.an improvisa- tore and he represents a custom as old as the ancient palaces under whose broad portals he is singing. His name is Sor Capanna and he is known from ome end of Rome to the other for is he not the composer of that modern satiracal song, “Big William,” He is:singing it now and for one solda you.may buy the same poetic narration of the improvisa- tore’s estimation of the kaiser. Sor Capanna is one of the many improvisatores in Rome today for the entrance of Italy into the war has brought them all out again like mushrooms—or perhaps one should say flowers after a rain. They sing, most of them, songs of love, fare- wells of soldiers departing to the war, admonishing their sweethearts to be brave and true during their absence. Many of them sing the compositions of Sor Capanna, peer of improvisa- tores, but the majority of them im- provise. All improvise the music so that the words you hear sung under your window at night may be the same you heard in the morning in the | piazza but the music is altogether different. Sometimes a group of improvisa- tores, with harp and violin and a singer, recount the sorrows and the yearnings of the departing soldiers. But Rome stops to listen. The ser- vant girl, brushing a tear from her eye, surreptiously buys a copy of the touching ballad for a penny, Others crowd forward to listen to the words. From morning until night you may run across them, these sing- ers in the squares, beside the Spanish steps, near the churches. the improvisatores strumming their plaintive tunes on the guitars use ballads of other days brought up to date. And if the improvisatores col- lect a couple of lires from one con- cert and the sale of librettos they are more than satisfled. One of the songs heard most fre- quently in Rome has a highly Eu- genic flavor—even in its dialect. “Lo scarto di Vittorio nen lo voglic “Quando rivie il mio amore le mo piglio.” ‘Whieh is to say— “Those’ refused by Victor Emmamlel I do not want; “When 1y love returns from the war I will marry him.” Other famous songs beloyed of :im- provisatores and populace “Addio, mia bella, addio,” which unpoetically —_—— Infants. ::; Invalids HORLICK’S THE -ORIGINAL MALTED MILK The Food-Drink for allAges | Rich milk, malted grain, in powder form. Forinfants, invalids ad growing children. Gnu- Inior\lum and erica First Expositions. via Glaeier National Park! By overland trains across Rocky and Cascade Mountains via Spokane: to Seattle, Tacoma and Portland— enrotteatourof Glacier Nationsl Ptk aboard ney steamships "Great Nosth- ern” and “Northern l?mfiu“ down the Pacific to San Fi rancisco— . going or remmmg, travel this “Great Northern way.” Law,Raund Trip-Fares Daily. guitar, a singer’s voice declaiming{; rows of soldiers’ sweethearts. Some of | 7 translated from poetic Italign ballads of the people s “'Good by, my love, good by. The army is departing and it I did not depart I would be a vil- lan. But I amunot leaving -you alone; I'am leaving. you a little son who will console you, the son of our firat love.” So.that Italy is commemorating its war_babies.in ballad form. Another ballad which brings tears to,the eyes of the girls left behind is ‘““Ti-saluto, amorosa, mia.” salute you my love. I am goipng, away but will return. 'When I Te- turn I will bring you a flower. live love. When I return I wiil bring you a flower. Long live love and he who knows how to love.” It 1s needless to say that this song is one of the hits of the day, and always gets many a damp eye from the listening throng. And there are many others quite too tragic and love laden to degrade through inferior translation. As for the improvisatores, they reap their small harvest off the loves and.sor- Despondency Due to Indigestion. “About three months ago when T ‘was suffering - from indigestion which caused headache and dizzy spells and made me feel tired and despondent, I began taking Chamberlain’s Tablets,” writes. Mrs. Geo. Hon, Macedon, N. Y. “This medicine proved to be the very thing I needed, as one day’s treatment relieved me greatly. I used two bottles of Chamberlain’s Tablets- and they rid me of this trouble.” Obtainable everywhere.— Ady. iii##i*ii{il#lii# ECKLES * 'liiiifi*kiiifiifi‘ The Eckles Farmers’ club met last ‘Wednesday at the home of J. C. Me- Ghee. Besides the members, the fol- lowing guests were present: Prof. B. M. Gile and Attorney A. A. An- drews of Bemidji; C. F. Schroeder of Sunnyside farm, E. E. Schulke, wife and daughter, Florence, of Ten- strike; Miss Baker and Mrs. Mon- trose, sisters of Mrs. Schulke, of Montevideo, Minn., and Stanley Knott of Spur. Much interest was taken in the canning demonstration- which was given by Misses Frances and Anna Bowers. The question: “Re- solved, that there is no such thing as luck,” was interestingly discussed for the afirmative and H. E. Bowers and Leon Gould for the negative. The SPECIAL NOTICE TO BEMIDJI FOLKS We wish to announce we are ex- clugive Bemidji agents for the sim- ple mixture of buckthorn bark, glye- erfne, etc., known as Adler-i-ka. This remedy, used successfully for appen- dicitis, is the most THOROUGH bowel cleanser we ever sold. It is so pow- erful that ONE SPOONFUL relieve almost. ANY CASE. of sour or gassy stomach. Adler-i-ka INSTANT action is surprising. French & Company, Druggists. LIST § tlon to ‘make Final Your city property with Glayton G. Cross Markham Hotel Building Good Service Reasonable Commission (05917) DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR, Land Office at Cass Lake, Min- ne-ou. July 6, 1916. by J. C. McGhee and Stanley Knott] constipation, | never gripes, is safe to use and the FOR SALE OR RENT | flu-.rmgv consists of bflldm down :and: imanaer thatihe hlood urnel to_the various parts of the body the food that the cells need for building it is compelled- IIR. PIERCE'S Golden Medieal mseovery' a vitatisi er. It acts on the s ngpow n-~-on the purif: fluu Long{* l"u. * Address. INVALIDS® HOTEL, Bn judges decided-in favor ot'the affir- mative by a vote:of 'two:to one. The next meeting will be held at the home of Leon Gould, September 1. Miss Frances Bowers gave a can- ning demonstration at the Hall school last Friday and Miss Anna; Bowers at the Smith school on Saturday. Robinson Bros. and Leroy Samp- son have purchased automobiles, there now being five in this town. the growth of the .corn which, the good crops of small grain Webster home .in Bemidii the. chautauqua. The tame hay has all been cut|noon. The proceeds will go towards |[FOR .SALE—Typswriter ribbons for and the crop was the best that has|building a Catholic church in ‘Wil-| -every make of typewriter on the)gyANTED—Boarders and roomers, ever been produced in the town of |ton. .market &t 50 .cents and 76 cents| gentiemen preferred, at 1110 Be- Eckles. H. E. Bowers and sons.are building. each. .Hvery ribbon sold for 75 midji Ave. The dry weather is lowering the water in the meadows which will enable the farmers to get out most ‘woodsheds, putting in pumps getting the’ buildings . ready way ths waste material that’s torn - of the hay and the heat la' h\irry%ng potatoes, give a splendid prospect. Mrs. J. .C. McGhee. visited at .the, Friday. and Saturday while attending She was accompa- nied home by. Miss. Bertha Webster. An ice cream social will be held at Tom Brennan’s next Sunday after- school which ‘opens September 7. erwise. WANTED—Haymakers, by the day, on shares or by the ton. Inquire ‘ot-A. P. Ritchie at-the pestoffice. WANTED—Dining room girl, good wages. ' Telephone ~Lumbermen’s Hotel, Bena, Minn. WANTED—Kitchen gir ham hotel. Apply at once. with and | last MAYBE YOU'LL FIND IT HERE Department These ads. bring certain nesults. One-haif cent a word per issue. cash with:copy, ic a word oth- Always telephone No. 31 FOR RENT—Cottage e FOR RENT—Two office rooms. Ap- e B e T FOR RENT—B—runm house. A. Klein. at Lavinia. Rent - reasonable for balance of season. Inquire A. L. Shideler, Opsahbl’s office or Mrs. Shideler at Layinia. ply W. G. Schroeder. WANTED—Girl for general. house- work. _ 512 America. Ave. FOR SALE. A A A A~ A A A A A WANTED TO- BUY—We .pay cash WANTED. for -cast. off :suits .and shoes. Zieg- ler's Second Hand Store. and for, cents ., . - Phone. orders: promptly filled. Mail orders given the same careful attention s when THE RAILWAY PREPARATORY SCHOOLof Minneapolis DO YOIJ HAI“‘ PERMANENT EMPLOYMENT, A POSITION OF -TRUST 'I'HA'I' GIVES . YOU HBIGH STANDING. AMONG YOUR. BUSINESS ASSOCIATE! The Rlflwlv PreplnmrySchwl of Minneapolis offers exc ‘ambitious men of good character to learn railr THERE IS A BIG DEMAND FOR STATION AGENTS SOME OF THE SUBJECTS WE TEACH - ld:m‘p‘l‘gv )(Cnmmm:i-l and Train Des-| log an patching). t, including Acce , ivery, 1 and. Aecounting of Passenger Tickets, | Colluctions, Billvof Lasng. cit )Rdil:u(e. Baggage and Miscellaneous | Interpretation of Freight Tarif i’l everacs. The school has a large faculty of competent instructor branches of the railroad business. Endorsed by ‘l"ctm-ntnt positions guaranteed to graduates. full particulars, terms, etc., address A. C.'DELANO, President, 1707 Nicollet Avenue, Minueapolis, Mina. ‘WHEN IN BEMIDJI STOP AT MINNESOTA AVENUE European Plan Strictly Modern Rooms 50c up WM. J. DUGAS, Prop., Bemidji, Minn. NEW. AND SECOND HAND Cook Stoves, Ranges, Combination Coal and Wood Heaters, Self Feeding Hard Coal Stoves. Anything you want in a stove Stove Repairs A Specialty e Billing and Accounting for Movement of tions, Interstate Commerce Commmuion Compilation and Basing.of Passenge Rates. | Rulings, etc. Policing of Special Transit Privileges, includ- | Inspecting, Marking and Packing of ding Milling of Grain in Transit. Frei , qualified to teach all the various the most prominent railroad offcials. all course opens September 15th. For The Grand Central .Hotel Meals 25¢ up Wholesale Stove Dealers ~Wood Heafers, All makes and all sizes. you appear in person. Phone 31. The -Bemidji- Pioneer Office. Supply ‘WANTED—Couple of men to board e e WANTED—Second hand household and room. 1110 Bemidji Ave. goods. M. E. Tbertson. i Stor |FOR ‘SBALE—At a bargain, 200,000 feet of dressed -and undressed lum- ber ‘at mill or will deliver orders for 1,000 feet or more. Strow- bridge & Martin. Phone 7-F-110. . Call after six o’clock in evening. FOR SALE—120 acres farm FARMS FOR SALE. land, about 500 cords wood, half hay land on good stream, one mile from a town, terms liberal, price $20.00 per acre. W. G. Schroeder. FOR SALB—At new wood ymrd, wood all lengths delivered at your door. Leave all orders at Ander- son’s Employment Office, 206 Min- nesota Ave. Phone 147. Liazle Miller, Prop. ; FOR. BALE—S8everal good residence lots on Minnesota, Bemidji -and Dewey avenues. Reasonable prices; easy terms. Clayton C. Cross. Of- fice over Northern.Nat'l Bank. FOR SALE—Second hand Smith & Barnes plano, walnut case; good condition. Terms given. Price $150.00. Ziegler's Second Hand Store. FOR SALE CHEAP—Automobile on easy terms, one Case roadster. First class condition. Call Pio- neer. _—————— ESTRAY—Two cows strayed away from my pasture on Park Ave, Friday. Palace Meat. Market. Let 2 want ad help you. Miles Black AN A A AN A AP PAAAS LOST—Gentleman’s gold watch on = PRI b s ormrrurir e PP UP VPP ADYERTISERS—The great state of Business and Professional DR. ROWLAND GILMORE s LOST AND FOUND. the beach between 12th St. and Diamond -Point. .Please return to 1121.Bemidji Ave. for reward. MISCELLANEOUS North Dakota offers unlimited op- portunities for business to.classi- fled advertisers. The recognized advertising. medium in the Fargo Daily and Sunday Courler-News the only seven-day paper in the state and the paper which carries the largest amount of classified advertising. The Courler-News 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- sulth; 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. PHYSICIANS, SURGEONS PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office—Miles Block D. H. mx Court Commissioner TTORNEY AT LAW Office nmnd floor O'Leary-Bowaer Bailding. —_——a VETERINARY SURGEON W. K. DENISON, D. V. M, VETHRINARIAN Phone 3 403 Irvine Ave. nglm Secnnd Hand Store ; zoq Minn. Ave. (CE is hereby given that, Clinton [| NOTI [F. Sines of Benfidji, Minnesots, wi on April 8, 1912, made H. E. No., Serial No. 06917, for W% of N’W%, ‘Section 10 Township 147 N. Range 34 W., 5th Meridian, has filed Sofize of ihten: Three Year Proof, to . establish r_la_im to the land above described, before F. W. Rhoda, Clerk of the, District Court, Beltrami County, at Bemid}i, Minnesota, on the 14th day of August, 1915, Clajmant. nam Barney Gibney, ‘t&n!op Anderson, of Bemidji, es as witnesses: of Bemidjl, Minne- Minge- sota. "George Brennan, of Bemid)i, Minne- ~"Jess F. Sines, 8 P A. G. SWINDLEHURST, Register. 6td 78-812 (04092) DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR, Land Office at Cass Lake, Min- ne.lnta. July 6, 1915. NOTICE is hereby given that, Linzay | Cyrus: of Pinewood, l\fll‘mamfl.&:1 ‘who, on mad ‘hippewa H. B. 2, tol' NE% SW%. Section 34, Townlhln 148 N., Range 35 W, sth P! Moridian, has flled notice of intention to make final Five Year Proof, Act of March 3rd, 1891, to establish claim to the land-above .de- scribed, before F. Rhoda, Clerk of |the District Court, Beltrami County, at Blnim lnl;ssntn. on the I4th day of A-ll t names as witnesses: Fr‘nk Klingbeil, of Pinewood quon Dodge, of Pinewood, Minne- 80 aadvu_.rfl Spencer, of Pinewood, Minne- s ? Dodge, of . Pinewood, Minne: of Pinewood, Minne- || mnne- { Whether those records are the best for the business or not is sel- dom considered—*“We've used:them for years and they've served their purpose.” And there the mat- ter dropa—but we don’t intend to let you drop it until we've had a chance to prove to you that there. is an exmPemmBook made expressly to fit the needs.of every " depart- ment of your business. Made to save money for: you—made to" keep your records at a minimum of cost nnd a maximum ofmum:y. M is an m{-Pu_aoak for . Every Business.and Profession Information in.detail for the asking Eflmflfi Pionger Office Supply Store Secumy Bank 13rdg Phone 31 Bemidji, Minn. DR. G HOEY GRADUATE VETERINARLAN DR. E. A, SHANNON, M, D. i Phone 388 DR. C. R. SANBORN" e DR. L. A. WARD. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON i Office in Mayo Block 2 Res. Phone 397 PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office—Milés. Block PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Over First National Bank Bemidji, Minn. Call ‘Pogue’s Livery—164 DRAY LINE SMART DRAY AND TRANSFER 2 Safe and Piano Ru. Phone §8 818 Ameriea Ave. Office -Phone 12. T Glbbou,Blnck Tel. $3¢ North of Markham Hotel ETESREERSE RS 8 S 8 %:. RAILROAD TIME CARDS ¢ AR A A KA AR KD DR E H. DR. EINER JOHNSON A. V. GARLOCK, M. D. EYR SMITH PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office: Security Bank Block PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Bemidji, Minn. . i SPECIALIST i Practice Limited EAR NOSE Glasses- Fitted THROAT Office m Wlltflr Block Office Gibhons Bldg. North of Markham Hotel. Ph 105. IR. 3. 7. TUOMY, St i el i IST HILMA M. NYGREN CARTER BROS. AUTO LIVERY GRADUATE NURSE Phone 317-R Barn 8th St. and Irvine Ave. Phone 447-W LAWRENCE CARTER, Mgr. NRW PURLIC LIBRARY. Open, dally, except Buncay, 1 to 6 p. ~ CARRON, PAPER Any Color 108 Sheets to Box PRICE $3.00 Fr#! from Nowth Bemior: *Daily. All ot.l-n ly except Bunw FUNERZL DIRECTOR M. E IBERTSON | UNDERTAKER m, 7 to 9 p. m. -Sunday, reading room only, 3 t0 6 p. m. Hufimn & O'Leary FURMITURE AND : UlflEHTIKIIlG