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A few doses of this remedy will in rariably cure an ordinary attack of diarrhoea. It can always be depended upon, ven in the more severe attacks of cramp colio and cholera morbus. It is equally successful for summer diarrhoea and cholera infantum in children, and is the means of saving the lives of many children each year. When reduced with water and weetened it is pleasant to take. Every man of a family should keep this remedy in his home. Buy it now. PRICK, 25o. LARGE SIZE, 50C. Barker's Drag Store THE BEHIDJI DAILY PIONEER POTUOBHBB SWRT ATTSRNOOIt. OFFICIAL PAPER-CITY OF BEMIDJI BEMIDJI PIONEER PUBLISHING CO. CLYDB J. PRYOR BtHtaMs Manager A. 0. RUTLBDOB Managing Editor. Entered in the poatofflce at Bemldjl. Minn., as second class matter. SUBSCRIPTI0N-S5.00 PER ANNUM A BUSINESS PARABLE. Once a farmer had 1,800 bushels of wheat, which he sold not to a single grain merchant, but to 1,800 different dealers, a bushel each. A few of them paid him in cash, but far the greater number said it was not convenient then they would pay later. A few months passed and the man's bank account ran low. 'How is this?".he said. "My 1,800 bushels of grain should have kept me in affluence until another crop is raised, but I have parted with the grain and have instead only a vast number of accounts, so small and scattered that I cannot get around and collect fast enough to pay -expenses." So he posted up a public notice and asked all those who owed him to pay quickly. But few came. The rest said, Mine is only a small matter, and I will go and pay one of these days," forgetting that, though each account was very small when all were put together they meant a large sum to the man. Things went on thus. The man got to feeling so bad that he fell out of bed and awoke and, running to his granary, found his 1,800 bushels of wheat still safe there. He had only been dreaming. Moral.The next day the man went to the publisher of his paper and said: "Here, sir, is the pay for your paper, and when next year's subscription is due you can depend on me to pay it promptly. I stood in the position of an editor last night, and I know how it feels to have one's honestly earned money scattered all over the country in small amounts." Exchange. Minnesota Sheriffs will be given a royal reception at Bemidji August 14 and 15, when their semi-annual meet ing will be held. Editors or their pals should keep away or turn over a new leaf. It will be an awful strain on Bro. Rutledge.Crookston Journal. Tut, tut, brother. The editor of the Pioneer has been a game warden for the past five years, and hob nobbing with sheriffs has been one of our chief duties. We'll assist in giving the visitors a good time how ever, with true Bemidjan spirit. The Unsociable Young Napoleon. At dinner during the voyage to Cor aica, to which my father Invited the passengers who Included some officers of his regiment and the two Gorslcans, he requested an officer, M. de Belloc, to call a young man who was wearing the uniform of the military school and reading at the end of the boat. The young man refused. M. de Belloc came back irritated and said to my father "I should like to throw the unsociable little fellow Into the sea. He has an unpleasant face. Will you grant me permission, colonel?" "No," said my father, laughing, "and I am not of your opinion. His face shows character, and I am sure that he will be heard of some day." The unsociable fellow was the future Emperor Napoleon. Belloc has related this scene to me at least ten times, adding, with a sigh, "Ah, if the colonel had only allowed me to throw him into the sea he would not be turning the world upside down today."From Memoirs of Comtesse de Boigne. Time to Quit. newly enlisted fireman of only Average pluck was serving at his first Are, and the chief rushed up to him and shouted: "Shin up that ladder to the eighth story, crawl along the cor nice to the fourth window, drop down three stories and catch that wooden lgn you see smoking there, swing yourself along to the second window that the red glare Is coming from, break the glass and go in and rescue those three old ladles. Well, what '^the deuce are you waiting for?" "For pen and ink, sir," said the new man. "I want to hand in my resignation." 'Argonaut. &,UJ jfe5*..tis3 A$,,ha.4tMS&,4*t,ut 'm Toads' Hatching Places. Every tiny toad lays a stupendous number of eggs. A scientist received 11,545 eggs from one toad, a necessary fertility, since the chances of an egg developing Into a toad are less than one In a thousand. Within two weeks after the eggs are laid the young ta\l poles begin to appear and feed first on their gelatinous envelope. Next the slimy deposits common to ponds and swamps are attacked. Steadily grow the young wrigglers until their bodies enlarge to the size of thumb nails by the end of June. The long tall now Is absorbed and the legs develop. They begin to hop on the bank and disperse, never to return save In the breeding tseason. It is at the spring of the year that the toads awake from their win ter sleep below the rocks and scrub. They often have been literally frozen stiff, but they return to life as healthy as ever and on the first balmy night migrate toward the nearest breeding pond. Usually this Is the old home stead where they were bora, for the toad Is a domestic animal and will travel a mile or more for the sake of returning to the place of Us hatching. -Chicago Tribune. "Trying on" Furniture. When you go to buy a suit of furni ture nowadays in one of our depart* ment stores you don't have to specu late as to how it will look In your room nor whether it will fit In or not, As soon as the salesman sees that a par ticular suit has met your fancy he calls for a porter or two and turns them loose In one of several rooms fitted up around the main showroom, setting them at work removing all the furni ture In it. Then the suit that you seem id be hankering after Is placed in ap propriate positions in this room, and you can see at a glance just how the bedroom or parlor or dining room will look if you buy that particular suit There are a dozen of these smaller rooms around the main showroom, and as each one is decorated In a different manner It is easy to pick one out that approximates the scheme of your room at home. Like many modern ways of selling goods it Is expensive In the be ginning, but it pays in the end, for this plan of showing goods seldom fails of Its intended effectNew York Press. A Widow Who Was Calm. A lawyer was entertaining dinner guests recently with stories from his personal experiences. "A woman came Into my office one afternoon and said she wanted to see a lawyer on a rather important mat- ter," he said. "She was very prim and self possessed." 'What can I do for you?' I asked. "'Well,' she said In an easy tone, 'my husband was hurt in the wreck the other day.' "I noticed she was dressed in mourn ing, but from her indifferent tone i gathered that it had no connection with her husband's accident 'Was your husband badly Injured?' I asked. 'Yes,' she answered In the same quiet voice. 'He got his bead cut off.' "Kansas City Times. The Talmud. The Jewish Talmud has come down to us only through the heroic efforts of the Jews themselves and the In trepid service of John Reuchlin. Its reading was condemned by various edicts of emperors and kings its cir culation was prohibited by popes and theologians. Twelve thousand copies of this monumental work were burned at Cremona In 1569, and a similar, fate befell 5,000 copies of the Koran by or der of Cardinal Ximlnes on the taking of Grenada by Ferdinand and Isabella. Boston Post. Conquered St. Peter. A Boston clergyman tells how a wit ty Irishman stood before the gdte of the other world, asking for admission, says Lipplncott's Magazine. St. Peter refused him, however, telling him he was too great a sinner to enter there, and bade him go away. The man went a little distance from the gate and then crowed three times like a rooster. St. Peter at once threw open the gate and cried out:. "Come in, PatI We'll let bygones be bygones!" Don't Wabble. There is one sort of man that there is tib place for In the universe, and that Is the w.abblerthe man on the fence, who never knows where he stands, who is always slipping about dreaming, apologizing, never daring to take a firm stand on anything. Every body despises him. He Is a weakling. Better a thousand times have the repu tation of being eccentric, peculiar and cranky even than never to stand for anything.Success Magazine. Kipling's Response. The Cantab, the Cambridge univer sity weekly, once asked Rudyard Kip ling to contribute to its columns. In response came the following reply: There once was a writer who wrote, "Dear SirIn reply to your note. Of yesterday's date, I am sorry to state It's no good at the prices you quote." The$ Both Pltoh. Which is the greater marvel, the crack baseball pitcher or the circus man? The baseball star, to be sure, pitches a ball with wonderful facility, but the circus man pitches a tent Boston Globe. Never Touohed Him. "I hate work," said Languid Lewis. "I don't see why," rejoined Humble Harry. "It's a safe bet dat work nev er done youse no harm." Chicago News. Mount Morgan, Queensland, Aus tralia, is practically a hill of gold bear ing mineral. She Wanted a Book. A fashionably dressed foxmg woman came hurrying Into a bookstore re cently and approached a salesman with the statement "I want to get a book it's a red booksot very thick! No I don't know thejbame of it or what It Is about because*I haveh't react it. It has'a picture lathe middle of the cover at least I think It Is a pictureIt is something round, done in gilt. It may be the name. "I wish you would hurry and hunt up the book, becaui* I am taking a train to New York and I want it to read on the ,$rlp. saw some one reading It on the train the" ofber day and laugh ing ower it, afl that's why I want it. "Of course I am not expected to know-what It 51s, but I should thluk any one who knew books and was handling them alii the/time ought to know! "No, I don't {think It was either of those books^-lt \was thicker than that one and mare om. the cerise shade than that one. "Well, 1/ can't I,wait any longer for you to hpnt it up As the young woman passed out of the shop site turned to ber companion and remarked [audibly: "Strange how stupid some of tthese clerks are! Well, I wasn't going tto really get It anyway. I just wanted to find out what it was!" Youth's Companion. Cakes and Sausages In Germany. "Germany is the land of variety in sausages and cakes," said William George Bruce. "When I made my visit to that country recently I took occa sion to eat at restaurants in practical ly every city I came to. I am not stretching It a bit when I say that In one restaurant In Dresden there were 200 varieties of sausages on the bill of fare. "The same holds good of cakes. You enter a restaurant or a bakery in which coffee Is served. The obliging waiter will set before you a spocially designed cake holder on which the several va rieties are placed In convenient tiers, so that you pick out any kind you want without disarranging the whole. "There Is another feature of restau rant customs In Germany that struck me as out of the ordinary. While per haps a dozen cakes are set before you to choose from, you only pay for the exact number you eat. When you are done with your luncheon the waiter will count up what Is remaining and charge you for the difference,"Mil waukee Sentinel. Incidental Music P#ne afternoon a couple from an ad joining town presented themselves to a Boston divine and asked to be mar ried just as he was about to enter the pulpit to conduct an afternoon service. The minister repJJed that he regretted that he could not at that niqraent com ply with their wish, but that immedlr ately upon the conclusion of then servr tu Ice he would take pleasure In perform? lug the ceremony. The after demurring, seated t.h9m8lovers, i ^lve rear of the church. When the minister had finished the service he made the following announcement: "The parties who" are to be joined in matrimony will present themselves at the chancel Im mediately after the singing of hymn 415, 'Mistaken Spu)s That Dream of HeavenV A Rhyming Will. Perhaps the most peculiar will ever written was probated in England at doctors' commons, July 17, 1789. It ran as follows: I give and bequeath, When I am laid underneath, To my two loving sisters, most dear, The whole of my store, Were It twice as much more, Which God's goodness has granted me here. And that none may prevent This my will and Intent, Or occasion the least of law racket, With a solemn appeal I confirm, sign and seal This the true act and,deed of W1U Jacket. Chicago Record-Herald. A Wonderful Creature. The polyp is the most remarkable creature on earth. If cut transversely or longitudinally into several parts, each will become a perfect animal. Trembly turned them inside out and they ate and enjoyed themselves as much as ever. He slit two longitudi nally, placed the halves together and united them into two animals. He divided two transversely and created one with two heads. He pushed one down the throat of another, a third down the throat of the second, and thus formed a creature with three heads. Paternal Duties. Modem life with its haste and hustle leaves too little time for the joys of fatherhood. One father comes home late from business, tired and peevish, and cannot devote much time to his children, even if he would. An other has had enough of the cares and worries of the day and seeks dissipa tion outside the home. Yet fathers can give their children something bet ter than money they can give them selves.Deutsche Monatschrlft A Little Mixed. SportsmanI wonder what's become of Mike? I told him to meet me here. DriverAch, -iis no use tellln' him anything! Shure, sorr, ut just goes in at wan ear and out at the other, like wather off a duck's back!London Tit-Bits. Cruel. "Thought you said you were a mind reader?" "So I am," replied the professor. "Well, why do you hesitate? Why don't you read my mind?" "I'm searching for It!" Which Did He Mean? Slysoke (introducing friend, to his private closet) Now, mind, not a breath of this before my wife!Puck. Flying Kites For Luck. On the ninth day of the ninth month, according to the Chinese calendar, all the Celestials,'old a*i young alike, be take themselves to the hills behind their towns and amuse themselves by flying kites. But amusement is not the sole reason, for this ceremony. It comes from an old Chinese legend, and If a Chinaman did not fly his kite on the given day he would rest uneas ily for the remainder of his life in fear that misfortune would overtake his family. The legend runs that many years ago a certain Chinaman was warned in a dream that a misfortune would come to his home on a certain day. Accordingly on that day he re paired* to an adjacent hill and amused himself and his family by flying a kite while he was waiting for the dis aster. In the evening, upon returning to the valley in which his house was situated, he found that it had fallen In and burled his pigs beneath it He and his neighbors joined in thanksgiv ing for his narrow escape, and in memory of the event every year sees the flight of millions of kites in China. New York Tribune. DEFECTIVE-PAGE RK EASIER Bemidji People Pleased to Learn How Is Done It's pretty ha to attend to duties With a cons ntly aching back With annoyii urinary disorders. Doan's Kidn Pills make work easier. They cure ba: cache. They cure evs kidney ill. Frank Howe-, engineer on the Milwaukee R. I 3011 Cedar Ave., Minneapolis, nn., says: "I used Doan's Kidney ill in the fall of 1899 with bene cial results. Like most railroad mi i, continual jar and jolting brought kidney trouble, bad pain in myi back and loins. I doctored withon sucess until I pro cured Doan's Ki iney Pills at a drug store. They si cured me and there has been a sign of return." For sale by a! dealers. Price 50 cents. Froster-! [ilbnrn Co., Buffalo, New York, sole jents for the United States. Remember nameDoan's and take no qfh=r. WtLUUMfcH THE TITLE. Governor Cummi is Does Not Resent Being Called an Agitator. Plainfield, 111.,, uig. /.Governor A. B. Cummins of Iowa welcomed the title of agitator ip a Chautauqua^lec ture here, declaring that Noah also was an agitator a^nd that he was will ing to take^ his place with the, com mander of the ant. "There are distinguished politicians in these parts wh proclaim that every man who dares upt stand pat on the tariff is an agitator and a demagogue," the governor ibeljired. "I am willing to be called an agitator. Noah was one. He went around predicting the flood and his friends laughed at him and called him a demagogue. Had they listened to liim \hey might have been sayed/' The governor condemned the over capitalization of railroads strongly. He placed the Chicago and Alton and the Rock Island railroads in the class with Standard Oil for questionable business dealings, declaring that the manner in which the. stock of these roads was watered was no less than a crime. 1 ,T "Four years ago the capital stock of the Rock Island was $75,000,000," said Governor Cummins. "Since that time earnings have increased and instead of giving the public the benefit of the profits which it had heaped up for the road the capital stock was watered until today it has reached the gigantic sum of $412,000,000. Jn the. gamjTman ner the Alton stock has been watered from $33,000,000 to $113,000,000. When we learn of such business tactics it does not take any great mental acu men to see that-we must call a halt." lKIBESMtN HAVE RETIRED Na- Defeated In Bloody Fight With tives at Casa Blanca. Tangier, Morocco, Aug. ".The lat est advices from Casa Blanca say that most of the hostile Moorish tribesmen surrounding the town have retired after a bloody fight with the natives Inside. Signals have been arranged by whipb. the French cruiser Galilee rill bombard the native quarter of Casa Blanca in the event of a renewal of the attacks on Europeans. The French cruiser Du Chayla has gone to, Mazagan, oft the west coast Df Morocco, in answer to the appeals of Europeans there, who reported that the natives were greatly excited and that it was feared that there would be duplication of the recent massacre at Casa Blanca. Advices from Rabat, west coast of Morocco, under the date of Aug. 1, were received here during the day and reported the situation there as being disquietening. The neighboring tribes were moving around the town and the French residents declared that unless a warship was sent to Rabat they would leave that place, as the number of troops guarding the town was inadequate. BKIEI- BTTS~DF NEWS. It is announced that the surveys for the proposed canal from Lake Erie to the Ohio river have been completed. At Baltimore Mrs. Christine' Nena dal, aged twenty-four, strangled her two small children during a fit of In sanity. Despondent over financial troubles Louis M. Levy, a retired merchant and one of the most prominent "He- brews In Little Rock, Ark., blew his brains put. Alonzo Greene Smithy former lieu tenant governor and attorney general of Indiana and one of the best knowA, Democrats in the state, is dead at Indianapolis. The fourth annual convention of tffe Teamsters' International union, which opened in Boston Monday, had more delegates in attendance than any pre vious gathering of the organization. John H. Lozier, known as the "fight ing chaplain," is dead at Mount Ver non, la., at the age of seventy-eight years. He was popular as an orator and was the author of several war songs. Thomas Myler, who claimed that he^ hoisted the Stars and Stripes over Santiago de Cuba during the Spanish American war, was drowned off Cour tow, Ireland, while practicing for an attempt to swim St. Georges channel. The struggle of the Lithographio Artists, Engravers and Designers' league with the National Association of Employing Lithographers, whleh began In August, 1906, has4been end ed as a result of'thenbandonment of the fight by the union. Augustus St. Gaudens, LL.* D., L. H. D., America's famdus sculptor, Is dead at Cornish, N. H., after a long Illness. Death was due t6 a general break down of thesystem, oaused In part by a form of nervous dyspepsia with which lie had longfbeen troubled.. ffs?^- I A Crestfallen Inspector. When former Minister Wu Ting Fang left this country he was accompanied by an extensive retinue and attended to the steamer by a delegation of lo cal Chinese merchants. The customs officials, who then were also immigra tion inspectors, carefully took the names and count of the local Chinese as they went on board. This precau tion was to prevent some' deported or otherwise not welcome Celestial from effecting a landing by joining the mer chants as they came ashore after tak ing a ceremonious farewell of their dis tinguished countryman. Half an hour or so after Wu and bis friends had gone on board one of Wu's secretaries arrived on the dock and was hurrying up the gangplank when a customs in spector seized him by the arm and pulled him back on the wharf. "Washamalla you, John? I no takee name, you no can come back. Who you belong?" said the inspector, smil ing at some girls with whom he had been talking. The Chinese Shook loose the inspect or's hold on the loose sleeve of his silk robe and with quiet dignity re marked: "This violence is unnecessary, sir, and my name is a matter of no inter est to you. I am a member of his excellency's suit I go on board this steamer to leave this country never again, I hope, to return." That customs inspector is still on the force, but never since has he tried to be funny with a Chinese gentleman. -San Francisco Call. Where Hat 8trw .Comet From. In Italy to raise straw employed In making hats the wheat Is sown as thickly as possible in order that the growth of the plant may be impover ished as well as to produce a thin stalk having toward the end from the last knot the lightest and longest straw. The wheat blooms at the be ginning of June and is pulled up by the roots by hand when the grain Is half developed. If allowed to remain in the ground a longer time the straw would become brittle. About five doz en uprqoted branches the size of the compass of two hands are firmly tied together Into little sheaves and stowed away in barns. Then the straw Is again spread out to catch the heavy summer dews and to bleach in the sun. After additional bleaching the straw is put Into small bundles and classified. Finally it is cut close above the first joint from the top and again tied up in small bundles containing about si-x^ ty stalks each and delivered to women in almost every private dwelling of the poorer classes. John Was Huffed. In the olden time a woman in the north of Scotland went to visit her husband, who was condemned to be hanged upon the following day. The. man began to give his last instructions to his wife preparatory to bidding her farewell, when all at once she broke in on the conversation and exclaimed, "By the bye, John, whaur will I plant 40 the tattles this year?" The unfor tunate man, as may be Imagined, grew exceedingly indignant at the indiiBer ence of his wife and exclaimed angri ly: "What need I care whaur plant them? I'm no likely to need ony o' them." "Hech," replied the woman, turning to the warder, with a wag of the head, "poor John's huffed because he's gaun to be hanged In the morn!" and marched out of the cell. Didn't Irritate Him. Here is a glimpse of the seamy side of life in Cornwall from the Cornish Magazine: "I'm afraid, Jenny, you Irritate your husband with your long tongue." /Aw, no, my dear Miss Vivian, I'd never say nawthen to en. T'other day I was 'ome waitin' for'n to come 'ome to supper. Eight o'clock come, an' no Jan 9 o'clock come, an' no Jan 10 o'clock come, an' no Jan. I put up me bonnet an' shoal an' went to every kiddly wink in town thout Dyke Wlnsor's. When I come there, there wor Jan. Says I 'You ugly murderen veilan, theest killed thee fust wife an' now theest want to kill me, too,' an' he up an knacked me down." Saved Him Trouble. He was about to start on a week's trout fishing. Rods, reels, gaff, creel everything was in readiness. But his wife, smiling joyously, hurried into the room, extending something toward him. "For goodness' sake," he exclaimed, "what on earth are you doing with those old fly papers?" "I saved them for you from last summer," she answered. "You said you always had to buy files when you went a-fishing."London Answers. The Speedier Term. EnglishmanIn England we "stand" for parliament but in America you "run" for congress. AmericanThat's because you are slower than we are. New York Press. In Ptolemy's time any one killed a cat was put to death. Daily Pioneer For News That the Pioneer Gets and Prints the News Is Appre- ciated Outside of Bemidji. Read what the Akeley Tribune, published at Akeley, tays: The Bemidji Daily Pioneer Started the week in a brand new dress of type. The-Pioneer is giving excellent news services. The increased advertising pat ronage and circulation is evi dence that the. paper is appre ciated by the public. IfiF^OFFICIIlL j" *H who OFFICIAL Bemidji. Minn.. July 26.1907. At a called session of the city council the following proceedings were had and done to wit: Council called to order by Chairman Gould. PresentAldermen Bowser. Smart. Mc Cuaig. Erlckson, Washburn. Mayer. Brink man, Gould. AbsentMcTaggart. The Chairman read the Mayor's call uader which this session took place, and It was moved and seconded the committee on streets be instructed to obtain terms for right-of-way for road to be opened from M. & I. R. B. track east to the ppor farm, and that thecity engineer furnish route and numbers and both committee and engineer report to next meeting of council. Carried. Moved and seconded the matter of side walks referred to in Mayor's call be laid over till next regular meeting. Carried. Moved and seconded the use of the streets be denied the Carnival Co. mentioned in Mayor's call and that the Mayor be requested to so inform said Carnival Co. Carried Moved we adjourn. Adjourned. Thos. M_aloy, City Clerli A. Gould. Chairman. Bemidji. Minn.. July 23.1907. ^Council met at City Hall in regula? meet "I'alled to order by Vice-President Bowser. Present-Bowser, McCuaig, EricksoK,I1CKB00'n Smart. Washburn, and Brinkman Absent-Gould. McTaggart, Mayer. Minutes of last meetinffg amendedd bvfchang ing Washburn's vte to no" instea -'ave on award of sewer contract to Jerrard & Co As amended, approved. The following bills on motion and second were allowed, vtz: *-wu J. A. Ludington mdse. for city park 16.85, mdse. for street Supt. S5.30 12 15 Street gang, teams and labor side walk grade......, 105 00* F. A. Mayo 1 lb. formaldehyde for lockup 100 E. F. Kellogg rig for Supt. streets... 2 00 St. Hilaire Lumber Co. lumber for bridge and dock sundrytimes 171 H. B. Trask Justice's costs city vs Nelson 2 00 W. S. Chapman 84 bridge bolts 5 04 Wes Wright engineer's estimate grade around block 18, 750 yds 34c 255 00 Applications of Frank Lane and Frank Jiogers for liquor license was on motion and second granted. Request of Earl ell and .T.J. Doran for a deed to Mrs. Carlisle of lot in cemetery with out cost was granted'. Report of street committee on cement crossingsordered filed. Mayer took his seat Resolution, offered by McCuaig, seconded oy Smart, whereas. Robert Clark was duly elected to the office of Justice of the city of Bemidji at the last city election and duly qualified and entered upon the duties of his said office, and whereas the said Robert Clark has changed his residence from the city of Bemidji Minnesota and has absconded from the state of Minnesota for a period of two months. And. whereas said Robert Clark has failed and neglected for over a period of two months to attend to the duties of said office of city justice. Now therefore be it resolved that the said Robert Clark be and he hereby is ousted from the office of city justice of the city of Bemidji. Ayes"-Bowser. McCuaig, Erickson, 8mart. Brinkman. Washburn. Mayer. "No's"none. AbsentGould. McTaggart Petition of D. H. Fisk and other attorneys asking for the^ppolntment of H. A. Simons as city justice to fill vacancy was accepted and filed and it was moved and seconded^ we proceed to appoint a city Justice by ballot. Carried. H. A. Simons received 4 votes. T. J. Miller 1 vote and A. M. Crowell 1 vote. H. A. Simons was declared duly appointed Justice of Jhe Peace of the city of Bemidji. He to give surety bond in $500, Moved and seconded the Lumbermana National Bank be permitted to build a cross ing from in front of the bank across Third St. under supervision of Street Supt. Car ried. Moved and seconded the city proceed to build, cement side walks abutting** in front of lots 11 and 12 in block 2. lots 1 and 2 in block 5. lots 3 and 4 in block 4 and lot 9 in block 11 oity of Bemidji. Carried. Moved and seconded the Street Supt. build plank crossings on north side 3rd St. from Irvine Ave. to Bemidji Ave. and on south side of 3rd St. from Minn. Ave. to Bemidji Ave. Carried. Moved we adjourn. Adjourned. Thos. Maloy, City Clerk. W. A. Gould Chairman. lent) an rranlns CataUfM per Month Pays for the Daily On* A