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iiii"iw" "CTwjU'j ft? Mi mriik* LEGISLATURE MAY CHANGE PRIMARY (Continued from first page). taining "State Rural Highways Minseral rights reserved in lands used for other purposes would be taxed under a hill introduced by Sen ator Johnson Tax levies for police pension would be raised by Senator Denegre's bill introduced yesterday. More time for legeslative "fresh men" to get on to their jobs is want ed by Representative Anderson of Badger. He wants to put off the session until later in the term or have annual sessions. Senator Nelson has introduced in the senate an act which will really limit saloons to one for every 500 inhabitants. It applies to old sa loons as well as to new ones. DOMAAS. P. Sarff was pleasantly surprised Monday evening January 20, at his home near Domaas, the occasion be ing his forty-sixth birthday. The following were present: Mr and Mrs A. Saxied, Osta Saxied, Gad scak Saxied, Mrs. O. J. Norman, Hilda Norman, Petrina Ruskfer, Mrs Olson, Andrew Lundgren, Oliver Johnson, John Challson, Ole Chall son, Gust Challson and Carl Norman At a late hour a dainty lunch was served and all departed for their homes. SAUM NOTES. Mrs. Brede Auhe returned from Bemidji Saturday. John Anderson brought from Kel liher a big load of household goods for Mrs. Aulie. Christ and Jens Beck and Dennis Bowe, of Otto, attended the play giv en by the Saum students at Kelliher John Wolden who has been to Fosston and other points during the past week, returned yesterday with a fine team of horses. The Saum high school class pre sented their play entitled "At the Village Postomce" at the Pastime theater in Kelliher, Saturday eve ning to a crowded house. Mr. and Mrs. J. Jerome, Mr. and Mrs. E. P. Squires, Mr. and Mrs Haley and Mr and Mrs. Daley of Battle River attended the play at Kelliher NOBTHERN. There has been quite an epidemic of grippe going the round scarcely any one escaping and quite a few of the pupils having to be absent from school from one to three days Mrs Reynolds has been quite sick, but is slowly improving John Noel did not escape the grippe, but is some better Clarence and Lee Worth spent Saturday evening with Merlin Rey nolds The coasting party Wednesday evening was quite enjoyable The party was small, only seven or eight out, but the most precious things aie done up in small packages" Coasting was grand Mrs Ora Whiting and children, and Mrs Amy Anderson and little daughter, weie the guests of Mrs Biich Whiting Friday Geo Day, spent Sunday evening Mailing A Whiting and family Mrs Noel and Miss Webster were entertained at dinner Sunday eve ning by Mrs Grover Ora Whiting and E Anderson were among those who visited Be midji Friday Mr Nelson, professor of agricul tuie and Dane, Pioneer editor of Bemidji, were the guests of A Whiting Sunday, securing pictures of tne store, etc and gaining other in foimation concerning the co-opera ti\e success of the Farmers' club in thus \icinity They seemed to be very favorably impressed with the farmers' plan, a united effort We have Professor Nelson's prom ise to meet with the Farmers' club at Mr. Reynolds the first Wednesday in February There will be a meeting of the saw mill company at the school house Wednesday evening at 7 30 Flowers Quickly Wilted. The case had been concluded, and the attorney who had defended a man on a charge of assault rose to make his final address to the jury which was to decide his client's fate. He was a flowery talker and his argument ran something like this "It was a beauti ful evening. All nature was smiling at rest The birds twittered their fare well to the sun, knowing that the moon would soon be up. And just at this time, gentlemen of the jury, in this peaceful environment, the prose cuting witness came out from behind a billboard and. called my client a liar. The jurors laughed and convicted. OhI Prunes! In a certain home the wife cooked a dish of prunes, which appeared to find no favor with members of the family The prunes "went begging" for a day or two, until the husband, tired of seeing them, decided to finish 'them up to get rid of them. When he got home the next evening he found a big dish of prunes at his place. "You liked those other prunes so weU." said his wife, "that I thought I would cook some more." Mmimmm I i Gifts for Children. Sometimes we nnd it necessaiy to give gifts to small children, who have practically everything one can thins of Perhaps this plan, that has helped me, may help others For a little boy three or four years old, one may make a book of thin cardboard with a gay cover, and his name on the cover. Paste an envelope on the in side of the cover and fill it with bright and pretty pictures cut from magazines The little fellow can paste them in the book as his fancy dictates For a little girl of the same age, make a winter outfit for one ol her dolls She will enjoy clothes thai have buttons, and that may be taken off and put on at her will. In giving It, enclose It in a cardboard bos covered with pretty cretonne. For an older child a good game often gives much pleasure.Mother's Maga* nine. Popular Girl. The most popular girl in the school will generally be a girl who excels in games, and outsiders often wonder why this should be the case. The reason is that to play most games well a girl must be unselfish she must "play for her side," and not for her own honor and glory, and' she carries this out unconsciously in her daily life. Tou do not find her think ing that no one else is of any use in the world, or putting on airs because she happens to be better looking than her companions, says Home Notes. She is simple and natural, and con tent to "give and take," and is as strict In her code of honor as her brother in a public school. Such girls will always win, be rich in friends, and wherever they go they carry with them a breezy spirit of joy and good fellowship.Exchange. Dress Goods Just in time, when you're figuring on your Spring Dresses. The saving of one-fifth on these goods is ample inducement to make your selection right now. Corsets i%?Mi% Warner's Rust Proof Corsets in all the late models at 20 per cent Discount. This is an extraordinary opportunity as the cele- brated Warner's Rust Proof Corsets are sel- dom offered at a reduction. New Goods Arriving Come and see the new shipments of new Spring Goods and Spring Dresses. We re- ceive shipments of these new Spring Goods daily. His Whole Life One of Work. Seventy-eight years' service in the same family was the record of a la borer named Daniel Gumbull, who died at Redhill, England, a few days ago. He entered the service of Mr, James Trower, in the reign of William IV., and was in the employ of Mr. Trower's grandsons a few months ago, when failing health compelled him to cease work. For 50 years he never had a holiday, except a half-day when he was married. He had 12 children, and leaves about 120 descendants. Gumbull was an interesting character. He was quite illiterate, but he had a wonderful memory, and could de scribe with minute detail events that happened 70 years agQ. He remem bered when a boy, attending the lo cal festivities in honor of Queen Vic toria's coronation. Worthy Fad. if somebody is anxious to invest In a really new fad there is one ready to hand Let us have a cult of tak ing your time. To faddists it has the obvious advantage of being wholly strange and revolutionary. We are all convinced in these days that the proper thing to do is to rush. We are exhorted from a thousand plat forms to act and not to think about it, to reform everything and not to be continually debatingas if the im portant thing were to do something new without having made the.small est attempt to discover whether it will be in the least better or worse than what we have always been doing. Classified Department J^fJHMP WASTE iS#ia WANTEDCompetent girl for gen- 0.J THE BEMIOifl DAILY PIONEER %&&& nvS$ \M Ou Whit Sal Offers special opportunities to provide your wants for SPRIN AND SUMME at immense savings. Don't miss this chance. Coat and Suits Any one of our beautiful Coats or Suits at about HALF THEIR REG- ULAR VALUE. This is a splendid opportunity to buy one of our late Suits at this big saving. Do Your Shopping during the next Three Days While this Sale lasts, at the BERMAM EMPORIUM eral housework, midji avenue. Extra Special Bargain in all our de- partments during the last three days of a most remarkable CLEARANC E cALE $4 and $5 Shoes at $3 and $3.50 Shoes at Inquire 700 Be- tice. WANTEDDishwasher at Nicol let hotel. WANTEDCook Hotel. at the Erickson WANTEDCook at Lake Shore FOB SALE FOR SALETypewriter ribbons for every make of typewriter on the market at 50 cents and 75 cents each. Every ribbon sold for 75 cents guaranteed. Phone orders promptly filled. Mail orders given the same careful attention as when you appear in person. Phone 31. The Bemidji Pioneer Office Supply Store. FOR SALEThe Bemidji lead pencil (the best nickel pencil in the world, at Netzer's, Barker's, O. C. Rood's, McCuaig's, Omich's, Roe & Markusen's, and the Pioneer Office Supply Store at 5 cents each and 50 cents a dozen. FOR SALE6 30 foot launch, 3 years old, 18 h. p. 3 cylinder Gray motor, with canopy top, seating ca pacity 25,jspeed 10 miles. A sac rifice sale if taken at once. Ap ply to L. Orrvar, Sauk Centre, Minn. FOR SALESmalt fonts of type, sev eral different points and in first class condition. Call or write this office for proofs. Address Bemidji Pioneer, Bemidji, Minx FOR SALERubber stamps. The Pioneer will procure any kind of rubber stamp for yon on short no* Silk Petticoats Silk Petticoats, regular values to 01 OK $3.50, at tpLOO Dresses, Skirts end Waists We have still an unusual variety of the very latest makes from which to select. The saving amounts to from to Shoes Furs Every set or single piece in our Fur De- partment can be bought during the sale at a saving of J. FOR SALE Sixteen inch seasoned jack pine and tamarack wood.J. E. Swanson, Phone 684-7, Farm. FOR SALE Sixteen-inch wood. Tamarack, ipopple and jack pine. Call 498. A. J. Holden. FOR SALEDry poplar wood at $2.Bo -per cord delivered. Inquiry Nicollet hotel. FOR SALEHay meadow, from town. Falls & phone 374. =P Six miles Cameron, FOR SA*A*JI-Five-room bungalow, 1207 Minnesota avenue. Phone 526 or 93. FOR SALE*Seasoned pine wood* $1.50. Phone 374. Falls & Cam eron. FOR BERT FOR RENT5 room house 516 Bel trami avenue. Apply to J. E. Mc Ginnia, East Bemidji. LOST AOT FOUND LOSTLadies' gold watch and fob, between Security State bank corn er and Irvine avenue South. Find er return to this office. Reward. LOSTPurse containing about $2.50 between court house and Beltrami and Eleventh street. Return to Pioneer office for reward. LOSTIrish crocheted handbag. Black lined with red, containing bank book. Finder pleaae leave at Pioneer office. j?*w rv $2.89 $1.89 '7 ^gm^ j&y r"^" 0 *ivy.m V'J sss^w JANUARY 28, ISIS. I $10, letter, and trunk key. Finder leave at Pioneer office or 910 Bel trami and receive reward. MISCELLANEOUS ADVERTISERSThe great state of North Dakota offers unlimited op portunities for business to classi fied advertisers The recognized advertising medium in the Fargo Daily and Sunday Courier-News, the only seven-day paper in the state and the paper which carries the largest amount of classified advertising. The Courier-News covers North Dakota like a blank et reaching all parts of the state the day of publication it is the paper to use in order to get re sults rates one cent per word first insertion, one-half cent per word succeeding insertions fifty cents per line per month. Address the Courier-News, Fargo, N. WANTED100 merchants hi North ern Minnesota to sell "The Bemid ji" lead pencil. Will carry nam* ^of every merchant in advertising columns of Pioneer in order that atfl receive advantage'of advertis log. For wholesale prices write or phone the Bemidji Pioneer Of flee,Supply Co. Phone 31 Be In midji, Minn. BOUGHT AND SOLDSecond hand furniture. Odd Fellow's building i across from postoffice. phone 129 WANTEDYoung lady wants room ^BB* modern home. Inquire K, care ^Pioneer. WAV ra LOSTVelvet handbag containing ejutoe Pioneer office. Potlt m '$, I *"SS office. In- LODGEDOM IH BESOM. llpw B. T. O. B. Bemidji Lodge No- Ifft. Regular meeting nights-* drat and third Thursdays 8 o'clockat Masonic hall Beltrami Ave., and Fifth St. C. F. every second and fourth Sunday ovening, at o'clock in basement ef Catholic church. BBO: or xoaTOm Meeting nights every second and fourth Monday evening*, at Odd Fellewe Hall v. o. m. Regular meeting nights every 1st and 2nd Wedass day evening at o'clock. Bagles hall. O. A.B Regular meetingsFirst and third Saturday after* noons, at Z:S0at Odd Fai lows Halls. 402 Beltntast Ave. x. o. o. r. Bemidji Lodge No- U Regular meeting sights every Friday, a/else* at Odd Fellows Halt. 402 Beltrami. I O O. F. Camp No l Regular meeting every sec )^y and fourth Wednesdays at o'clock at Odd Fellows HalL Rebecca Lodge. Regular ranting nights first as ^fsjg^g/ third Wednesday atfto'eJeeh, *W& __i. o. O. F. Hall. KKZOKTS OF Bemidji Lodge No, 1st Regular meeting nights os ery Tuesday evening at o'clockat the Bagles* Malt Third street. X.ADIXS OF OAJU *g*Sagg Regular meeting night last Wednesday evening in each month. CASOsTXa A. F. A A. M., Bemidji.' 222. Regular meettng nights first and third Wednesdays, S o'clock--** Masonic Hall. Beltraast Ave., and Fifth St. Bemidji Chapter Ne. J*. R. A. M. Stated convocations first and third Mondays, I o'clock p. m.at Msseaie Hall Zeltraml Ave., and Fifth street. EJkanafi Commander^ Net. S* K. T. Stated conclave aeoapd and fourth, Fridays, e'etesf p. ra.at Masonic Temple, SeV traml Ave., and Fifth 8 O. EL 8. Chapter Ne.^tiT, Regular meeting night* first and thira FriajrB| o'clock at Masonic Hall, Beltrami Ave^ and Fifth St Roosevelt. No. list Regular meeting algsA Thursday evertngs at o'clock tn Odd Fellaws HalL Bemidji Camp No. fill. Regular meeting nights first and. third Tuesdays'** 8 o'clock at Odd Fellews Hall, 402 Beltrami Ave. Mopgnar waifgWAsm Regular meeting nights an the first and third Thnrsevtfs In the I. O. O. F. Hail at p. m. SOXI OP MMMMAM. Meetings held this* Sunday afternoon ef eass month at Troppsaasrs HalL Meetings the first Frias* evening of the meaih alt the home of Mrs. H, w. Schmidt, tf Third street, Who Sells It? Here they are all in a row. Tne/ sell it because it's the best nickel pencil on the market today ao will be for many days to come. The Bemidji Pencil stands alone in the gfivel roent world. It is sold on your money back basis. A store on every street and in surrounding cities. Here They Are: Cartoon'* VmHsty Simf Barken'* Drug Mmd Jmw^ eff*y Store W. O. Sohroeder Om O. Rood A Oo. E. F. Netzor'm Phmrmmoy Wm. MoOmmta J. P. Omioh'm Olgmr Store i Roe Si Mmrkumon F. O. Troopmmn & Oo, Aberoromble The Fmlr Store Mre. E. i Wood* Ohlppowa Trading Store Rod lake a midji Pioneer teejpfjr Store ^Retailers wiir receive immediate shipments in gross (more or lees) by calling Phone 31, or addressing the Bemidji Pioneer Supply Store, Bemidji% Minn/ ~"*E0 SB Bemidji Ledge) !fe. g*T 277. Regular meeting Wf' nightsUnit and tatrf jfvf1 Monday, at ft e'cleek, at Odd Fallows ball. Hfe.401 Beltrami Are. ^%8 4 vspoi