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%r $ gfRflBH38 TOSDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1*15. F. R. Welsh left last evening for West Union, la. J. W. Naugle left today for Little Falls on business. Bulk apples at I. P. Batchelder's. Adv. 12dl021 Mrs. Belle Eck of Yola was a vis itor in Bemidji Monday. Miss Mary McKee of Deer Lake called on friends in Bemidji Monday. Bulk apples at I. P. Batchelder's. Adv. 12dl021 E. C. Carmon of Minneapolis, an attorney, is in Bemidji' today on busi ness. Mrs. G. H. Hansel of Bagley is visiting her mother, Mrs. H. W. Bailey. Bulk apples at I. P. Batchelder's. Adv. 12dl021 Mr. and Mrs. John Carlson of Kel liher were in Bemidji Monday on business. Attorney Thayer C. Bailey return ed today from St. Paul where he has been on business. One of these nice days you ought to go to Hakkerup's and have youv picture taken.Adv. tf Judge M. A. Spooner, who went to International Falls on business yes terday, has returned home. Louis Bordson, who has been em ployed at Nevis the past few weeks, is visiting friends in Bemidji. Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Raymond of Frohn were among the out-of-town shoppers in Bemidji yesterday. Attorney A. A. Andrews has re turned from International Falls where he attended ditch hearings. Chimney sweeping and furnaces cleaned. Prompt service by calling Tel No. 584-J.Adv. 6dl012 Mrs. John Puposky, who has been visiting at the J. H. Koors home, returned to her home in Puposky to day. Mrs. W. B. Morrison of Vancouver, B. C, is the guest of Mrs. Charles Blakeley of Turtle River for several weeks. Have your furniture repaired at the Bargain Store. First-class work at reasonable prices.Adv. tf Mrs. W. B. MacLachlan returned Saturday evening from a two weeks' visit with friends in St. Paul and Minneapolis. C. M. Bacon and wife and C. E. Battles and wife motored to Lake George today where they will spend the day hunting. The Hotel Radisson, Minneapolis, has recently opened an addition of 50 moderate priced rooms.Adv. M. E. Smith of Minneapolis, of the Smith-Robinson Lumber company, is in the city today. He will remain for several weeks. Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Brooks and Dr. and Mrs. E. H. Marcum have issued invitations for a dancing party at Birchmont Inn this evening. Hotel Radisson, Minneapolis, gives you more for the price you pay than any other hotel in the Twin Cities. Adv. Mrs. W. T. Blakeley of Farley, Mrs. C. S. Blakeley and Mr. and Mrs. W. P. Morrison of Turtle River mo tored to this city yesterday. Hiram A. Simons, who has been visiting relatives in Bemidji during the past week, returned to Beloit, Wis., today where he is employed. Car ofJonathan applet 65 cts. per Place your orders early sugar $5.65 per hundred. Phone 66. W. G. Schroeder.Adv. 6dl06 The Ladies' Aid society of the Methodist church will meet at the home of Mrs. A. W. Johnson, 613 Third street, Wednesday afternoon. Mrs. W. N. Powell, who has been visiting her daughter at Deer River, was a visitor at the T. C. Bailey When Baby Has the Croup. When a mother is awakened from sound sleep to find her child who has gone to bed apparently in the best of health struggling for breath, she is naturally alarmed. Yet if she can keep her presence of mind and give Chamberlain's Cough Remedy every ten minutes until vomiting is pro duced, quick relief will follow and the child will drop to sleep to,awaken in the moraiagias well as ever. This remedy has been, in use for many years with uniform success. Ob tainable everywhere.Adv. ~%ak lt#*i *II lit iMiiJnnliK home today, enroute to her home at Warren. When in Minneapolis be sure and visit the Hotel Radisson Roof Gar den and Silhouette Bsom. Famous show places of the Northwest.A4v, Mrs. F. W. Williams, who owns a summer home at Lakeside, has closed the house for the winter and will re turn to her home in Grand Forks this week. Mr. and Mrs. Will Church and daughter, Dorothy, and Mrs. Belle Eck and son, Earl, of Tola, were in Bemidji on business Monday. They returned to their homes today. "The Girl of the Golden West," a For Indigestion. Never take pepsin and preparations containing pepsin or other digestive ferments for indigestion, as the more you take the more you will have to take. What is needed is a tonic like Chamberlain's Tablets that will en able the stomach to perform its func tions naturally. Obtainable every where.Adv. ABSTRACTS OF TITLE SATHRE ABSTRACT CO. ABSTRACTER Schroeder Bldg. Bemidji, Minn. "THE NEW BEMIDJI" Sold in Bemidji At your favorite store Best nickle pencil on earth. ASK THE MAN BROSVIK, THE TAILOR Phone 938 BAKERS AND CONFECTIONERS KOORS BROTHERS CO. Manufacturers and Jobbers Ice Cream, Bakery Goods, Confec tionery, Cigars and Foun tain Goods 315 Minn. Ave. N. W. Phone 125 HEMP'S BRY CLEANIN6 HOUSE Clothes Cleaned and Pressed. We Call for and Deliver Promptly. Paramount Picture in 5 parts with an all-star cast, tonight only, at the' Grand.Adv. dl012 Rev. M. A. Soper returned yester day from Longville where he visited) for three days. At Longville he de livered several addresses at school houses near there and also attended a fair. Hair dressing, puffs, curls, doll wigs made from combings. Switches ?150. Mina. A. Meyers, 620 Bel trami A Telephone 760.Ady. 6dl012 The Ladies' Aid society of the Bap tist church will meet at the home of Mrs. Robert Chase, Ninth street and Park avenue, tomorrow afternoon at 2:30 o'clock. Everyone is cordially invited. Judge C. W. Stanton has returned from International Falls where he heard several ditch petitions and the habeas corpus proceedings relative to the granting of liquor licenses in Koochiching county. On arriving at Minneapolis, go di- Buy A farm Direct From Owner I have 240 acres of the best land in the county locat- ed on the "Divide" three miles east of Hines and four miles from Blackduck. Twenty-five acres in hay and crops and 60 acres seeded to clover and timothy. I Will Sell It In 40,8 0, O Up To 24fl Acre Tracts Will sell for part payment down and balance on easy payments. Have been a resident on same for 22 years and feel certain that anyone seeking a real bargain will buy on sight. All I ask is that you look at it be- fore you buy elsewhere. The state road runs 3-4 mile East of the land from Blackduck to Cass Lake and another road North to the county road. Can drive right up to farm with auto or team. Four forties drain to Mississippi on gradual slope and two forties drain to Red Lake. Three forties are still timbered. There is a fine Consolidated School at Hines. Buss calls daily for children. Interested parties are requested to write or call at the BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEER OFFICE for further information. W. VAIL. Owner BEMIDJI CLASSIFIED ALPHABETICALLY DRY CLEANING Ube Clothes Cleaners For Hen, Women and Children PENCIL SHARPENERS "The Boston" for $1.00 Lasts a life time. Phone SI. GENERAL MERCHANDISE Groceries, Dry Goods, Shoes, Flour, Feed, eto. The careful buyers bay here. W. G. SCHROEDER Bemidji Phone 66. PIONEER OFMCB -SUPPLY STORE Everything for the Office and Sehool Security Bank Building Phone Si GROCER FANCY AND STAPLE GROCERIES Holstead Goffiee Beacbnut Brand of Jams and Jellies Fresh Onions and Rhubarb CASE'S CASS STORE mmmm RHLIMATKM no matter how chrotrie TON'S IWBCMATIM REMEDY. A few doaea ast%4M4^4&ef cand' Afc^mP ,tostJto8y% bly effects a cure, tt contains no salicylic acid, no morphine, no cocaine, no dope or-oth er hormjCoJUdrofa. I want every person who Is sufferi ng with s$iff or .swollen joints* muscles, tendons or ligaments to try a pottya of my RHKPttATISlI REMEDY. If constipated, use Muayonr* Paw-Paw *"-7 MDNYON. Post- Xatatly PUls. For sale by office Corner. H3P5 E. F. Netger, .wu, rect to the Hotel Radisson. Ton will be pleased to recommend' it to your friends when you return home. Adv. The Presbyterian Ladies' Aid so ciety will meet in the church base ment Thursday afternoon at 2:30 o'clock. Officers advise that a com fort will be tied and request that members bring scissors and thimbles. You will find more of the leading ll.t.Li-.i.il.L inli...Un.i MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS W^iolesale^andmejtall Pianos, Organs and Sewing Maohines. 117 Third St. Bemidji. Phone 673-W J. BISIAR, Manager. OSTEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN DR. F. J. DARRAOH Specialist of Chronio Diseases Ftee^qoaeuttation. 20fttt SrdMBt., over Blooaton Store Day and Night Calls Answered SUPPLIES FOR OFFICE Typewriter tt&tmis, carbon payer, typewriter paper, clips, paper fasteners, punches, eyelets etc dsto. Get quantity prices PIONEER OFFICE STORE Phone 31 Security Bank Bldg. PHOTOGRABB^R Photos Day and Night N. L. HAKKURUP LOOK! LISTEN! If you have a piece of property or auto or most anything of value to exchange, see, people from Minnesota registe the Radisson, Minneapolis, th any other hotel in the Twin Cities A party consisting of Misses Lottie McDonald, Edith Mills, Izora Scott, Dorothy Carson, Marguerite. Stevens, and Roy Opsahl, Julius Miller, Glen Conger, Rene Bottiqg and John Gainey autoed to Pinewood Sunday, spent, the day hunting and shot five partridges. DAILY WAR ANALYSIS ,'r 'J -r By J. W. T. Mason. (United Pms Staff Correspondent.) Bulgaria's reluctance to begin her expected offensive against Serbia probably is explained by the protest Czar Ferdinand's government has ad dressed to Athens against the use of Greek territory by th:e Allies' troops. By this time the Bulgarian army should be prepared at least to send a supporting force into Serbia to as sist the Teutons and create a diver sion along the Bulgarian frontier. No hostile move, however, is yet reported from Nish. There is a possibility that this means Bulgaria may con sider discretion to be the*etter~part of its valor and may refuse to enter the war. i i? The Bulgars, like all the Balkan peoples, are on the outlook for the winning side, and their opinions fluc tuate constantly. The sudden land ing of an Anglo-French force in Greece has brought an unexpected element into the Balkan situation, which is unquestionably causing un easiness at Sofia. Under this new condition the Bul gars would run very serious risks by entering the war. With France and Great Britain pouring reinforce ments into Serbia,-there is certainly an even chance that the Serbs will be able to bring the new campaign against them to a deadlock. Bulgaria cannot throw her whole strength against Serbia, because parts of her army must be concentrated along the Rumanian and Greek frontiers to guard against possible attacks by those powers. If the Bulgar force, organized to invade Serbia, wastes its strength vainly against Serbian lines held by Anglo-French troops, Greece and Rumania may well take advantage of Bulgaria's weakness and attack her. Under these circumstances, Bul garia now has as much to lose as she has to igain by beginning hostilities. Great Britain, in particular, can pour a very large force into the Balkan area, as long as the road through Greece,., rjemain^, open* .The.r new Greek ministry shows no evidence of consenting to Bulgaria's demand that the road be closed. Bulgaria, therefore, seems to be developing typical Balkan caution once more. If the Austro-Germans will make easy progress through Ser bia, Bulgaria will probably begin hostilities herself but otherwise great pressure will have to be exerted at the last moment by German influ ences to send the Bulgars into the fray. FLANAGAN REFUSES TO ACCEPT PAROLE St. Paul, Oct. 12.Martin Flana gan, former chief of police, now serving an indeterminate sentence in the state penitentiary at Stillwater on a charge of accepting a bribe, has refused to accept a parole. It is said that he insists upon an unconditional pardon. Members of the Citizens' council who were instrumental in obtaining the conviction of Flanagan are said to be willing that the man be paroled so that he cannot leave the state. They will oppose the granting of a pardon. Flanagan was denied a pardon last January. Since that time efforts have been made to have his name placed on the calendar at more re cent meetings of the board" of par dons. This cannot be done unless two of the three members of the board consent. Recommends Chamberlain's Cough Remedy. "Last winter I used a bottle of Chamberlain's Cough Remedy for a bad bronchial cough. I felt its bene ficial effect immediately and before I had finished the bottle I was cured. I never tire of recommending this remedy to my friends," writes Mrs. William Bright, Ft. Wayne, Ind. Ob tainable everywhere.rr-Adv. FLOCK OF DETECTIVES ON TRAIL OF BANDITS -Wheeling, W. Va., Oct. 12.Every effort is being made by United States officers and railroad, detectives, to track the pandits who held up and robbed Baltimore & OhiOL passenger train No. 1 at Central station. The haul made by the robbers is esti mated at from $100,000 to $500,000, Unsigned money. YOL' BLOOD church which sees its aged workers cared for, can face "the.world, the flesh and the devil." Fergus Palls, Minn.The controL of the First State bank of New York Mills has been taken over by a com- Where Everybody Goes ,_ is: the canal of life hut it becomes a sewer if clogged up. All life cpnsjata of buyog.v^* ^r down and just in the same manner that the hJoo^'earaBS to the various parts of the body the food that the cells need for building up, so it ia compelled to carrv away the waste material that's ^torn down. These waste materials are '^onou%^andndest]$y-U mtoas the liver and kidneys are stimulated nita refreshed and yi^rou^lile, DR PRICE'Sfielde*Medica Discovery is tiie balancing powera vitalising power* It acts on ^etatomach and organs of digestion and rrn^ 'tionon the purifying filters which clean the blood. Thus feesh vitalized blood feeds ihe~nerves, heart -and brain. This well known alterative relieve* catarrh of the. ttofnadi^and headaches accompanying same, and has been successful for more than a gen- eration as a tonic and bodybuilder. It builds up the rundown system.' Yon Wed it-T-if yon axe.ataaya "catching cold"or have ca&rEh of the 11049aad- SMoat. The active medicinal principles of American-Native-roota ate erfrtetod withou* alcohol and you can obtain this tonic in liquid or tablet form at any drug store or send 60.centa4n 1-centstamps fortrialboxof tablet*, .Stwrf St onm*emnt mtamtf to pay oa of-mailing and wrapping For from copy of ThmCommon Sens*. Mmdical pom. Addromo JWVAWOS^HOlrr^, Cifi%Jty. Jesse L. Lasky presents All Star Cast in "The Girl of the Golden West" World's most famous western drama in 5 parts by David Belasc0 Seldom does a play gain such widespread fame as "The Qirl Qf The Golden West" has done, First as a drama it became popular, then an opera, and now as a film drama it is oneofthe BIG pictures that have been produced. A Red Blood Drama of Love and Adventure PARAMOUNT PICTURES ARE BIST Shows start at 7:15, 8:30 5cAdmissionlQc Coming Thursday: [Paramount Day] Margaret Clark in "TtlE CRUCIBLE" Today, Tuesday Only World's Film Corporation, William A. Brady Ptetut* Plays Inc. presents Jose Collins in 5 parts "TBI IMP0STER" with Alec B. Francis Webber and Field* in a comedy picture "HOUSEKEEPIN UNDE COVE Admission 10c and 20c First show 7:20, secojid 8:46 fgrtShi ?#&' pany of farmers of that neighbor hood. The Pioneer is the place to bujf your rolls of adding machine papfjr for Burroughs adding machines. 0%| roll, a dozen rolls or a hundred roU PLEASING PHOTO PLAYS Tojn^feMt Goo Program 5c and 10c Richard C. Traveis in Essanay's two part "TISH'S SPY", by Mary Roberts Riaehart. Hazards of Helen story "A WILD RIDE", featuring Helen Holmes, the railroad girl. Vitagraph comedy, "WELCOME TO BOHEMIA" GRAND THEATRE The House of Quality Tonight Only Paramount Day Wednesday and Thursday Francis X. Bushman and Beverly Bayne an Ess anay Feature Matinees 3:00, Evenings 7:80, Admission, Matinees 10c and 20c, Evenings, Any Seat 26c. 4i .MM u. ju,.J WHI OJ$ i u,i i i tf^mePP" 3 When Eviryiejii t 31