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ADDITIONAL LOCALS : Miss Maude Murln‘ of Crookston is vvl,’slung pt the Jordan home. e Mrs. A. D, Simpkins: of Turtle River transacted business in Bemidji yestorday. i 7 Mrs. James Flynn of | Puposky passed yesterday in the city the guest of friends. ¢ Miss Pearl Wheeler of Bass Lake was a between train visitor in the city yesterday. Mrs. Casper Napp of Becida was among the business visitors in Be- midji yesterday. Misg Orpha Miner of Grand Forks, N# D, i8'a guest at the Mike Downs hqme for a few days. ‘Mrs, §. ‘Annette and daughter métored to ‘Park ‘Rapids yesterday and passed the day with friends. " Miss Edith Schmitt left this morn- ing for Brainerd where she will visit friends before going to Minneapolis and St. Paul on a visit. - - Mrs. John Schon of Solway came _to Bemidji yesterday to bid her son, Walter, good-bye. He enlisted in the military and left yesterday for Jeffer- son barracks, Mr. and Mrs. Emi] Lashfelt of Big Falls, who have been visiting friends at Cloquet for a week, are the guests of friends in Bemidjl while en route to their home. Mrs. “Ole Erickson and daughter, Claudia, returned last evening from International Falls, where they spent the past three ‘months. They will spend the rest of the summer in Be- midpi. Mrs. Inez Gillette of = Glasgow, Mont., is visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Geil, for three weeks. Mrs. Gillette reports the crops are not very good in Montana this year on account of the draught. RED CROSS NOTES . June Subscrintion Report, 0. “young.men: for: war."- ‘But:this war | Solway for May. and June. Carr Lake, June ...... Donations, Fleming .. ‘W. J. Stynest .... Total ....... Included in the above are also the ‘following donations: F. M. Al- len, 25¢; Frank Anderson, $1; W. M. Johnson, $1. @ Circus Helps Reéd Cross. Virginia Witting and Catherine McGee gave a circus. The price of admission was one cent and the two little girls gaye the proceeds, which amounted to 50 cents, to the Red Cross. ENTERPRISE AUTO CO -Auto Livery and Taxi Service Day and Night Service Office Remore Hotel, Cor. 3rd St. & Beltrami Ave. Office Phone 1 .. ... Residence Phone 10 - WM. M’CUAIG, ; - -+ Manager b H. N. M'KEE, Funeral Director PHONE 178-W or R TURK FIGHTS WITH FISTS Story of a Gallipoll “Scrap” That Speaks Well for the “Un. speakable.” There is a tale of Gallipoll that} deals with a fight in the open and ex- hibits the “unspeakable” Turk as a fair and worthy enemy. This is the story. - : 7 A youngEnglish officer, doing ob; % servation work alone, was suddenly confronted by a Turkish offieer, simis) larly engaged. The Turk was as sur-{: prised as the Briton, but came forward | revolver in. hand. ' The Englishmg had no revolvers. He stood his ground, s his hands in the large pockets of his | tunie: ‘ 3 Seeing. that his ‘adversary was un- armed, the Turk, much to the surprise of the Briton, threw down his gun and put up his fists in approved prize ring style. ~ The ' Englishman put himself on guard, and the next moment the Turk flung himself on him, and the pair began to fight desperately. > The men were about the same age, the same welight and had adequate knowledge of the art of boxing. They; - fought withont stopping for about ten minutes. By that time each was ex- hausted, and.then paused for a brief| rest, only. to continue their little private accounting when they had found thelr breath. Round after round the fight went on, while out in the Gulf of Saros the| ships fired automatically, and back of each of them the fleld artillery thundered. Neither seemed t6 be able to get any declsive advantage over the other, and at last Turk and English- man rolled over on the ground and laughed and laughed, 2 Just then the Fnglishman’s hand touched something. It was the Turk's pistol. He picked it up and handed it to his enemy. Then the two young men shook hands and each returned to his own lines. 3 WORK OF OLD MEN IN WAR Genluses Who Did Not “Lag Super- fluous on the Stage” During the Present Conflict. .. “0ld men for counsel,” is the:saylng; rather falsifies the old adage, “At sev- enty-gevemn: (Ulemenceau:iof France re- mains so energetic that he still de- serves his cognomén of the “tiger.” Joffre was an old man when he won the battle of the Marne. Lioyd George is not exactly young. Woodrow Wil- son is past sixty. But none of them seems to require the Osler method of being chloroformed out of existence, says the Spokane Spokesman Review. These veterans do not “lag superfluous on the stage.” Cato learned Greek at eighty. Chaucer composed his “Can- terbury Tales” at sixty. -Goethe toiled to the end and his “Faust” was not completed till he had overlived eighty. Simonides won a prize for poetry and Sophocles wrote “Oedipus” ‘when each had passed fourscore. Theophrastus outdid them all,. for he was- ninety when he commenced his “Characters of Men.” i 8py System Originated by Itallan. Secret service organizations and spy systems, as well as detective bu= reaus as part of municipal police forces, were originated by the Mar- quis D’Argenson;-a-native ‘of- Venlce who :wents to-France in 1637 and be- i came;head.of the police department. - - D’Argenson ‘first achieved fame #s a state secret agent in Venice. In Paris he organized a municipal secret agency that would now be called a de- tective bureau. After he had trans- formed the Paris police force from a disorderly band into a highly efficient body of gendarmes, he turned his at- tention to internatlonal affairs and in- augurated a system of esplonage in foreign nations likely to be at war with France. Carl Stieher organized the Prussian spy system on the model furnished by D’Argenson’s force and sent thousands of men into Austria and France be- fore the wars against those countries, ~ FRESH BUTTERMILK DALY 10 CENTS GALLON. THE CREAMERY - *DOINGS OF THE VAN LOONS ° REFUSE TO ACCEPT CHARITY Japanese and Chinese Are Hardest - People to Induce to Take Public Ald. Pasadens, Cal.—When fire :de- stroyed half of the Chinatown of this city the Pasadena welfare bureau dis- covered that Chinese and Japanese are the hardest people in the world to get to ‘accept public- aid. . The' bureau tried for a week to glve away a good wuit of men's clothes. The sult was offered to at least a dozen worthy Orl- entals who had lost everything they possessed. Each refused to -accept it gratis, but several offered to buy it. A Real Compliment. i . /Bflly Sunday has had many compl mients, but the one he prizes , most dearly came to him, ‘oddly enough, from a criminal’s lips. - ; It was in Philadelphia. Sunday had visitéd Moyamensinog prison. There he had talked with a hbusebreaker so convincingly that the man had prom- ised to lead, on his discharge, a Chris- tian life. This housebreaker, discussing Sun- day with a guardian afterward, said: “He come in here, Sunday did, and he fairly turned me inside out—made me sick of meself; that's what hé’done h, he's a winner. g tlink he's ’oixe et us know.” Of Course. . A young author said to William Dean Howells at a reception in the latter’s honor in Miami: E “That was Astorbilt who just asked you for your autogrdph, sir. You don’t seem much impressed.” R: “I can never -understand,” said Mr. Howells, *why” people should be im- pressed by ‘mj:lionaires. My own ex- perience has been that whenever. you lunch with them they always let you pay.” i gt S The young author laughed gaily. “That, of ¢ourse, is how they become millionaires, isn’t it?” hessaid. Up In the Al visit to Paris an air rald’was‘in prog- ress, and as he observed the Parisians, all intent on the Taubes, he said to his companion : “There’s one fine thing about this air stuff.” “And that is-—2" “It keeps you looking up.” “(Roply deleted by censor.)”—Car- toons Magazine. ., LSS How’s This? ‘We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall's Catairh Medicine, Hall’s Catarrh Medicine has been taken by catarrh sufferers for the past thiriy- five years, and has become known as the most reliable remedy for Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Medicine acts thru the Blood on the Mucous surfaces, expelling the Poi- son from the Blood and healing the dis- eased portfons. After you have taken Hall’s Catarrh Medicine for a short time you will see a great improvement in your general health. Start taking Hall’s Catarrh Medi- cine at once and get rid of catarrh. Send for testimonials, ' free. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, Ohio: Sold by all Drugeis WE WikL BE. WELL. AEPAID COING. THROUGH THESE LONG o= WHEN WE CoME DPREARY COUNTRY To “THA'T WONDER FUL SCENSRY' me' -0 the “gang—-reformed, yor: ‘| cent a word per issue. : ; NOTICE ‘'Adverusements In this ' column cost half sent a word per issue, when paid cash in advance. a 11 be run: for less than-10c per issue. . Ads charged on our books cost.-one No- ads: Fup’ sor less than 26¢. - Y ‘| FOR SALE—Ford runabout. ‘Inquire SERVE A HOME GUARD at: Drs. | offiee, FOR SALE—Very cheap, 1690 of land’ 2% miles gsoutheast o midji. For particulars address C. €. Howe, 4808 Farman St., Omaha, . Neb. Sat. tf FOR SALE—Shattock double bed trailer, slightly used. Cost $250. Cash’ sale $125. Complete - for camping. Velion, Birchmont B:a}clhd Gilmore * & ° Mr;C;nn's e e ST L AU P D | FOR SALE—Two new:cottages, one Looking Through'a Tunnel. . The little circle of the world you see when you are looking through. the length of a tunpel is always beautiful by contrast. ‘No matter if it is only a stretch of track with a few ‘scrubby trees and an arch:of blue sky above {t, you, looking from the blackness of the tunnel, think it a picture worthy an artist’s: brush.” ‘To the sick good health seems happiness enough, and those who are in trouble ask nothing better than a mind free from e¢are. But sensible people do not need to be deprived of life’s blessings -in order to appreciate them. > Strange Bequest. A gtrange bequest was madarhy s retiréd’ ‘soap: manufacturer Urecenitly. He' left the sum’ of ‘4’ litile ‘more’ than eleven hundred 'dollars; to found ‘a home for “homeless cats and dogs,” but stipulated that the money is not to be touched until the year 2163, by when the donor estimates it will have increased to two hundred million dol- lars, =9 | 5 g ; S B fi. A it for Life It has been £i0% or die for many of ag in the past and the lucky persons 21e those .who are now well because they hecded nature’s warning ‘signal in time to correct their treuble with-that won- derful new: discovery of ‘Dr.: Pierce’s, called “An-uric.” You should promptly heed these warnings, some of which are dizzy spells, backaclie, irregularity of the urine or the painful twinges of rheu- matism, sciatica or lumbago. To delay may make possible the dangerous forms of kidney disease, such as stone in the bladder. _To overcome these distressing condi- ns take plenty of cxercise in the open r, avoid a heavy meat diet, drink frecly ‘of water, and: at’cach meal take Doctor Pierce’s Anuric’ Tablets (double strength) . < “You willy in’ d" short- time, find that yout are onc of the firm indors~ ers of Anuric. y ‘S";i P{A'JL, LéilNN(.l——“I;or k{;:rs I suf- ered from disordere i back ached terrib- . eys. My ly, also my head. 2 I let it run on un= and having known 7 of Dr. Pierce and \§ of his other medi—‘l\ cines, I decided to try out this An- uric. I have been greatly * benefited by it, and certainly advise everyone suffering as I did ¢ take the Anuric Tablets.”—Mzs. F. E. MARSHALL, 1007 Gaultier "Street. Step into the drug store and ask for Anuric, or send Dr. V. M. Picrce, Buf- falo, N. Y., 10c for trial pkg. Anuric— many times more potent than lithia, eliminates uric acid as hot water melts sugat, g ' pocEOBWALD TONDE | Acute and Chronilc Diseases handled with great success. 1st Nat: Bank Bldg. Phone 406-W Hours 10-12 a. m.; 2-6 7-8 p. m. has bath and water. :Shore lots, finest location on ' lake. ““Velion Birchmont Beach, -near tennis - court: ! Tate model. | - CC. W Jewett Co, S FOR SALE — Indian — motorcycle. Phone 75-J. 6-76 et e S A0 M Bt oin D TOR SALE—Good hand made stake _'wagon. . Ford with Form-A-Truck attachment. Paper baler. Prices agked. Koors Bros. Co. 628tf FOR SALE—Five-room cottage with city water and sewer. Lot is ©80x160 feet and runs out to the lake, Inquire at 1204 Dewey Ave. or call 276. : batt WANTED WANTED—Two girls at 0. K. Res- taurant. v 2-76 WANTED—Two kitchen girls. Hotel Markham. 3 4 (174 WANTED—Girl. for general house- work. 1019 Beltrami Ave. Phone 305-7. T6tf WANTED—Girl for. general house- work. -Two in family. Call at 518 Beltrami Ave. or Phone 231, z 15tf WANTED—Girl at Lavinia. H. B. McDonald. 'Phone 9- Office Phone 376-W | Oftice in Mayo Bloek Phone 39€ /Res. ' DR.L A WARD PHYSICIAN. AND SURGHON. Bemidii, Minp. . " DRS, GILMORE & McCANN PHYSICIANS AND SURGHO! Oftice—Miles Block '~ AND SURGHON Iberteon Block. ~Office Phone 153 DR. EINER JOANSON PHYSICIAN AND: SURGEON - . Bemidji, Minn, A, V, GARLOCK, ¥. D EYE EAR NOSB THROAT Glasses Fitted. - = >~ DENRTISTS D %, EREICE Office, O’Leary-Bowser -Bldg Rea. 376-R DR. J. T. TUOMY DENTIST Sl North of ‘Markham Hotel - . : Gibbons Block 3 1 Tel:280 | PAINTBRS WANTED—Call at b “g Beltrami Ave. 'C..F. Hicks. FOR SALE—Boat and boat house on Lake Irvine, Inquire 413 Park Ave. = 6-78 . WANTED—Bright girl who Is rapid and accurate with a typewriter, one who would be willing to learn || dictaphone. to operate from a 628tf Koors Bros. Co. WANTED—Woman cook at Great Northern Restaurant. 614tf O0LD FALSE TEETH WANTED DONT . MATTER: IF = BROKEN We pay up to 15 dollars- per set. Also cash for 0ld Gold, Silver and broken Jewelry. 'Check sent by re- turn ‘mail. ~Goods “held 10 days for sender’s approval of our offer. Ma- zer’s Tooth Specialty, Dept. A, 2007 S, 5th St., Philadelphia, Pa. . Sat tf FOR RENT FOR RENT—Four-room_house; fur- nished or unfurnished, on Minn. Ave. - Phone 700-J. Mrs. Merry- man. 2-76 FOR RENT—Furnished - five-room modern flat. Call 11-F-3. 71t 'OR RENT—Five-room modern flat. Call 11-F-3. "1t FOR RENT—Two._ furnished rooms! at 1302 Phone -~ 452-W. LOST AND FOUND LOST—White Angora kitten. Return to 420 Minnesota Ave. 3-79 LOST—Red and black rug, on road to Birchmont. Finder.return to Geo. Cochran, Sr., for reward. 2-78 LOST—Purse. containing $10 bill, change-and receipt for third Lib- _ery Loan bond. Return to Pioneer office.. £ . 8-79 LOST—Pair of gold bowed glasses in aluminum case. Return to Frank H. Smith, 209 9th St., for rewards. T 3-7 ECONOMY The creamery has fresh buttermilk daiyl. Try your grocer first—a num- ber of them handle buttermilk. The Oreamery. 528tf Bemidji - Ave. b e 4 DRY CLEANING Clothes Cleiners for Mett; Women and Children ‘§25tt || IAWYERS GRAHAM M. TORRANCE - LAWYER . Miles Block Phone 560 CHIROPRACTOR VETERINARIARS ; J. W ER VETERINARY RGEO! Office and ‘Hospital 3 doors west of Troppman’s. - Phone No. 209 3rd ‘St. and Irvine: Ave. BUSINESS I OB—T—leght_ D. MuiA arae < WE CAN - = Anything Anywhere Oftices 3 Security Bank Bldg.—Tel. 747 Insure GENERAL MERCHANDISE Groceries, Dry - Goods, = Shoes, -~ Flour, é"eed. etc. i - Bemldjy]' g:b m?»m’%on. (14 yoBe T < o TOM SMART - DRAY AND:TRANSFER Res. Phone 58 18 America ©ffice Phone 12 Land, Loans; Ins nee and City Property Troppman- Block Bemiaji Pianos,- Organs, Sewing Machines 117 Third St:, Bemidji Phone 578-W MUSICAL, INSTRUMBNTS | J. BISIAR, Mgr. FUNERAL. DIRECTOR ey 405 Beltrami Ave., Bemidji, Minn. N. L UP. -PHOTOGRAPHER “Photos Day and Night Third St. --Bemf{dji PHOTOGRAPHS For the Boys'in France Sittings Made Day or Night HAKKERUP STUDIO Defective