Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, May 29, 1906, Page 2

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

Coughs that. best there is, always, for the best is none too good. ¢“Sold for over 60 years!” profit by it. We have no secrets! We publish the formulas of all our medicines! Ask your doctor his experience with Ayer's Cherry Pectoral in hard colds, hard coughs, bronchitis, weak throats, weak lungs. Then If he has anything better, use If he says Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral is all right, then use that. Get the Keep in mind this— fo dpes MARCONI WIRELESS TELEGRAPH: STOCK In the wonder of the age and I have made it a specialty, My priceis only $5.00 per share right now. It is bound o double shortly, so order to-day. R. B. HIGBEE, Broker Germania Life Bldg., ST.PAUL,ML.X. ‘National Bank References. o ing Business. nonunion employes. MEN AND WDMEH: strikebreaking business man from arguing views. He told or sent in plain wrapper, by express, prepaid, for $1.00, or 3 bottles $2.75. Circular sent on request. then MAYOR REFUSES TO INTERFERE. Says City Is Not in the Strikebreak Toledo, O., .May 2 —Manufacta:srs representing over $3,000,000 have ap- pealed to Mayor Whitlock for special police protection against threatened violence by striking molders against The mayor an- swered that the city was not in the there was no law that could keep a and giving his the manufacturers that if there was any violation of the law he would interfere, but not until S home. High wages guaranteed; Tapid promotion, T et you n sccuring & posiHion 45 s00m a8 COmpELEt. Trall particulars at once. Inclose stamp. - NATIONAL RAILWAY TRAINING SCHOOL, Inc. Boston BloCk, ~ - $80 TO S$I75 PER MONTH For Firemen and Brakemen, Experience unnecessary. Instructions by Send to day. Minneapoiis, Minn. Represents Today And Tomorrow In England the Conservatives represent ‘‘yesterday and today,”’ the Liberals ‘“‘today and tomorrow,”’ In train service between the Twin Cities and Chicago, The Pioneer Limited was the first train to break away from ‘“yesterday and to- day,’” and to give travelers the benefits of ‘‘today and tomorrow.” Its route is via the Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul Railway Leaves Minneapolis 8:00 p. m.; St. Paul 8:35 p. m.; arrives Union Station, Chicago 8:55 a, m. Equipmentincludes standard and com- partment sleepers with ‘“lenger, higher and wider berths,” library-buffet car, dining car chair car and coaches. Buy your ticket East from your local agent, but insist that it is over the Milwaukee Road between the Twin Cities and Chicago. W. B. DIXON NORTHWESTERN PASSENGER AGENT 365 Robert Street, St. Paul { | Flour! “Majestic” We handle a nice line of fruits, always fresh, as we receive daily shipments. First class timothy hay, a bale, 40¢ TEA: Green tea per pound, 2lc Strictly fresh Butter & Eggs a specialty at our store. Remember for good goods trade at the old Reliable Store. SCHROEDER & SCHWANDT, 314 Minnesota Avenue. Phone 65 Bemidji, Minn. Four! If you want good flour let us send you a sack of our . INVESTORS All Look To BEMIDJI! As the centre metropolis of Northern Min- nesota, and the activity in real estate is quite favorable. We still have a number of good residence lots left and a few desirable busi- ness locations. residence, business or summer resort property. Remidji Townsite & Improvement Company H. A. SIMONS, Agent. Swedback Bldg. Write us for information if you desire good -| The Daily Pioneer Official Paper City of Bemidii Bemidji Pioneer Publishing Co. By A. KAISER. Entered in the postoffice at Bemidjl. Minn., as second class matter. SUBSCRIPTION $5 PER YEAR Seyeral Minnesota papers are noticed as sending out a four- page supplement advertising the advantages of North Dakota, We received the same offer but treated it the waste-paper basket way, as we do all good advertise- wments coming from the catalogue houses, John H, Reid, who has been at the helm of the Hawley Herald for the past ten years, has leased the plant to Ray Colburn. Mr. Reid seeks alarger field and has accepted a position witn one of the Duluth papers. The new manager of the Herald is well known to the people of Hawley -|and will give them a gond paper. The Duluth Herald comes out strongly for the re-election of Governor Johnson and in the same editorial speaks a very kind word to the republicans .in be- half of J. F. Jacobson. The Herald is not the first paper friendly to the democrat gov- ernor who has boosted .Jacobson, and it looks as though there’s method in it. The question of whether one ever is justifiable in committing perjury, and if so, under what circumstances, is a problem of ethics which probably will al- ways bein dispute. Of course it isa crime, but the issue is whether acrime is not some. times excusable. If we are not mistaken, tha present king of England once boacted that he had “perjured himself like a gentleman” to save thereputation of alady, and probably Edward stands higher in the estimation of most people today for it. Not because he swore falsely, but be- cause he was willing to sacrifice himself to save a lady. A young man in Duluth the other day per- jured himself to save a ‘‘pal.” Probably he will be punished and ought to be, but there will be a world of sympathy for him, There is something of the heroic about it that appeals to the man of sentiment, Stick to Minnesota. Complaints are coming to this part of the state that those who give up good Minnesota farms for Canada lands are making a mistake, as crops in that section of the country are not always a sure thing and then not as good as they might be. The following from the Detroit Record is but a sample of what you may expect if you leave your happy Minne- sota home: Owners of Beecker county farms should consider care- fully before they abandon their farms here and go to the Canadian Northwest. A report from that section of the country this week says the prospects for the wheat crop in Alberta are very un- favorable and at some points considerable land has been plowed up and sown to other grains. A report from Cal- gary states that north of that city the crop will run only about 25 per cent. Around Claresholm and Nanton it is better and probably will go 50 per cent. In that vicinity re-seeding to other grains has been done considerably. In the Cardston district the crop is not expected to go over 85 per cent. In the " Pincher Creek district it is somewhat better. “Why any man should give up a good farm in the Park Regiou of Minnesota and remove to the barren plains of the Canadian Northwest is beyond under- standing. There he is a thousand miles further re- moved from market, and it is only within the past two or three years that there has been sufficient rainfall in that section to permit of growing crops successfully. Those who are best ac. quainted with conditions in that country predict great hardship for the thousands of farmers who have gone there recently. Beware of the attractive advertisements put out by land boomers. ~ + The Graduate. All over the country in a_week or so there willbe young men and women leaving our colleges and /| high schools to begin the fight for a livelihood, and the fact that very few of them realize now, or will for some time, just what kind.of a proposition they are up against has led us to wonder at times if our schools are fulfilling their full missior; thatis, if they are giving our youth the right kind of an education. It may be that the faultis not so much with the schools as with the young men and women them- selves; but the fact remains that graduates all over the Jand will begin the battle of life with the idea that because they have an education the world is theirs, top of the ladder in two or three strides. Ina yearor two when some of the allusion has been koocked out of them, they will learn that it is a slow process and that they will have to begin at the bottom and work up by slow, weary plodding; buv the point we are raising is whether the students could not and should not be taught this lesson before leaving school. We believe too much emphasis is laid on the value of book learn ing in our schools and not enough on the value of learning gained by rough experience. The stu dent is led to believe that when he has mastered geometry, Latin, chemistry and the rest of his subjects he is fitted for the fight for a living, when as a mat- ter of fact he is not fitted at all. It may be entirely impossible to teach the boy and the girl this while in school, but if it is pos- sible, educators would be wisé in studying some way for its doing. FORFEITS $5,000000 TO MAKKY. Heir to Big Fortune Refuses to Give Up Girl. Portage, Wis., May %~.—Coral Ray- mond Fuller, twenty-one years old, who has been toiling on a farm for wages to such good effect that he managed to save enough to establish a little home of his own, now has to choose between Miss Cora Tilden of Detroit, whom he is to marry in the fall, and $10,000,000. He says he will take the girl. The fortune was left to him by his grand uncle, Coral de Raymond of Paris, on condition that he shall not marry before he is twen- ty-six vears old on pain of forfeiture of fourfifths of the estate. Young Fuller says he will wed the girl at once and try to get along on $2,000,000. PLUMBING! TIN AND RE- PAIR WORK. You get the best services on the shortest notice. Doran Bros. TELEPHONE NO. 225 [~ % cune For- | RHEUMATISM GUARANTEED MATT J. JOHNSON'S “6088” Is by Far the Best Blood Purifier and Rheumatism Cure Ever Offered. People suffering with RHEUMA- TISM, KIDNEY TROUBLE, CA- TARRH OR ANY OTHER BLOOD TROUBLE will find Immediate re- lief In “6088” YOUR MONEY REFUNDED If you are not satisfied on taking half a bottle. Could anything be fairer? g ° Sold and Guarenteed by Barker’s Drug Store. For a clear complexion take ORIND Laxative FruitSyrup Pleasant to take Orino cleanses the sys- tem, and makes sallow blotched complexions smooth and clear. Cures chronic constipation by gently stimulating the stomach,liverand bowels. Refuse subatitutes: Price 800 - Barker’s Drug Store. and that they are going to the. Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescripfion Isa gower!nl, invigorating tonic, impart- ing health and strength in particular to the organs distinctly feminine. The local, womanly health is so intimately related to the general health that when diseases of the delicate womanly organs are cured the whole body gains in health and strength. ¥or weak and sickly women who are “worn-out,” *run-down” or debilitated, especially for women who work in store, office or schoolroom, who sit at the typewriter or sewing machine, or bear heavy household burdens, and for nursing mothers, Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription has proven a priceless benefit because of its health-restoring and strength-giving powers. As a soothing ane strgngtheninF nerv- Ine. “Favorite Prescription” {s un- equaled and is invaluable in allaying and subduing neryous_excitability, irritabil- ity, nervous exhaustion, nervous prostra- tion, neuralgia, hysteria, spasms, chorea, or St. Vitus’s dance, and other distressing nervous symptoms.commonly attendant upon functional and organic disease of the womanly organs. It induces refresh- ing sleep and relieves mental anxiety and despondency. Cures obstinate cases. “Favorite Pre- ositive cure for the most seription” is a complicated and obstinate cases of “fe- male weakness,” painful periods, irregu- larities, prolapsus or falling of the pelvie organs, weak back, bearing-down sensa- tions, chronic congestion, inflammation and uleeration. Dr. Pierce’s medicines are made from harmless but efficient medical roots found growing in our American forests, The Indians knew of the marvelous cura~ tive value of some of these roots and im- ?n:rtedAtlmt knowledge to some of the riendlier whites, and gradually some of the more progressive physicians came to test and use_ them, and ever since they have grown in favor by reason of their superior curative virtues and their safe and harmless qualities. Your druggists sell the *FAVORITE PRE- SCRIPTION ” and also that famous altera- tive, blood purifier and stomach tonic, the “GOLDEN MEDICAL DISCOVERY.” Write to Dr. Pierce about your case. He is an experienced physician and will treat your case as confidential and without charge for correspondence. Address him at the Invalids’ Hotel and Surgical Institute, Buffalo, N. Y., of which he is chief con sulting physician, Guaranteed to stop itching scalp, dandruff and falling hair Macnab’s Vegetable Hair Tonic & Dandruff Cure. Special Sale now going on at ENFrench&Co’s City Drug Store, Bemidji, Minn. Typewriter ribbons of all standard makes, either record, copying or indelible, can be pro cured in the color you wish at the Pioneer office. American Academy of Medicine June 2-4, 1906. National Association of U, S. Pension Examining Surgeons Joune 4-5, 1906. American Medical Association June 10-17, 1906. Tirst Church of Christ Scien- tist June 10-17, 19006, Boston, Mass, Account the above meetings at Boston, Mass., the Duluth, South Shore & Atlantic Ry., will have tickets on sale, May 30 to June 9 to Boston and’ return at rate of $26.00. Tickets can be extended for re- turn passage until July 15, 1906, Combination rail and lake routes available with these ex- cursions. For full particulars and sleep ing car accommodation, apply to A. J. Perrin, General Agent, 430 Spaulding Hotel Block, Du- luth, Mian, Pianos Just Réceived Kimball Pianos and Organs, Singer Sewing Machines, Rugs and Art Squares, TFurniture and Furnishings. Bisiar & Vanderlip 315 Fourth St. Bemidji, . Minnesota PROFESSIONAL ..CARDS.. LAWYERS. D. H. FISK Attorney and Counsellor at Law Office opposite Hotel Markbam, P. J. Russell Attorney at Law BEMIDIL: - - - - . NN, B. E. MNcDonald. C. A. Pitkin. McDonald & Pitkin LAWYERS Bemld, Minn. Office: Swedback Block PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS. L. A. Ward, M. D, Physician and Surgeon. Diseases of the Eye a specialt; Glasses fitted. ’ Dr. Rowland Gilmore Physician and Surgeon Office: Ililes Block DR. WARNINGER VETERINARY SURGEON Telephone Number 209 Third St., one block west of 1st Nat'l Bank DRAY AND TRANSFER. Wes Wright, Dray and Transfer. 404 Beltrami Ave Tom Smart Dray and haggage. Safe and Piano moving. Phone 40. Cough Remedy The Children’s Favorite ---QURES.- Ooughs, Colds, Croup and ‘Whooping Cough. This remedy {8 tamous for its cures over alarge glrl of the civilized world. It can always be depended upon. It contains no oplum or other harmful drug and m ven as oonfidently to & baby &8 (0 an. Price 26 cts; Large Size, 50 cts. Barker’s Drug Store WANIS ONE CENT A WORD. No Advertiseinent Accepted For Less Than 15 Cents. Cash Must Accompany All Out Of SURGEON DENTISTS PHONE 124 MILES BLOCK. Dr. C. M. Smith, DENTIST Office over E. H. Winter's Store. W. R. Baumbach. President. C. W. Baumbach, Vice-President. W. L. Brooks, Cashier. LUMBERMENS STATE BANK OF BEMIDJI. Respectfully Solicits Your Business. FIRE INSURANCE written in the Best Old Line Companies MAURRAYSYANILLA WORTH _A DOLLAR =~ A DROP =~ SOLD BY ALL GROCERS Mellooy's Sivery! OPEN DAY AND NIGH “Good Rigs and Careful Drivers LIVERY HACK IN CON- NECTION. Night Calls Promptly An- ‘THE COMFORTABLE WAY. EAST BOUND. No. 108..Park Rapids Line..5:00 a. m. (Connects with Oriental Limited at Sauk Centre, arrives Minneapolls at 1:45 p. m, St. Paul at2:15p. m.) No. 34....Duluth Express.. « 35 - . WEST BOUND. No. 33......Fosston Line.... No 107...Paik Rapids Liue FULL INFORMATION FROM E E CHAMBERLAIN. Agt. Bemidji, Minn. Minnesota & International In Connection with the ..Northern Pacific.. Provides the best train passenger service between Northome, Funkley Blackduck, Bemidji, * Walker and intermediate points and Minne- apolis, St. Paul, Fargo and Duluth and all points east, west and South. Through coaches between Northome and the Twin Cities. No change of cars. Ample time at Brainerd for dinner. TIME CARD Effective June 4th., 1905, Daily except Sunday STATIONS Northom: _Funkley.. Blackd:cl Phone No. 38 | 18 America Ave. Town Orders DENTISTS. HELP WANTED. Dr. R. B. FOSEET, |emomirmi e Dr. Phinney WANTED--For the U. S, Marine Corps; men between ages 21 and 85. An opportunity to see the world. For full informa- tion apply in person or by let- ler to U.S. Marine Corps re- cruiting offlce, cor. Beltrami and Second Aves., Bemidji, Minnesota. WANTED—For U. S. army able- bodied, unmarried men be- tween ages of 21 and 35, citi- zens of United States, of good character and temperate habits, who can speak, read and write English. For in- formation apply to Recruiting Officer, Miles block, Bemidji, Minnesota. WANTED TO RENT— From July 1to 15 or August 1, furnished cottage on the shore of Lake Bemidji. State pumber of rooms and rent. [, L. Griffin, Grand Forks, N. D. WANTED—Girl for ceneral housework. Inquire Mrs. Conger’s Millinery store. WANTED—Good girl for general housework. 609 Bemidji Ave. FOR SALE. FOR SALE-—Magnificent moose head, mounted; will be sold cheap Inquire at this office, FOR SALE—House and twenty- five-foot lot. Will sell cheap if taken at once. W. A. Ferris. FOR SALE— Rubber stamps. The Pioneer will procure any kind of a rubber stamp for you on short notice. FOR SALE—Seven room house with lot 70 by 100 feet. Cen- trally located, Apply D. C. Breneman, No. 9, Righth street. MISCELLANEOUS. PUBLIC LIBRARY — Open Tuesdays, Thursdays and Sat- urdays, 2:30 to 6 p, m. Thurs- day 7 to 8 p. m. also. Li- brary in basement of court House. Mrs. H.E. Reynolds li- brarian. Notice For Bids For County Funds Notice Is hereby given that the Boar n and for Beltrami coun: \'“l ditor’s of meet at_the aud sd tatute provided. ompanied by a statement t and kind of boud to he d he paid on such funds or any part f deposited for any certain length of ti Dated at Bemidji, Minn., this 22nd day of May, 1906, JORN WILMANY, County Auditor. DeWitt’s Y Saive For Piles, Burns, Sores. A e o B o o § Webster @ Cooley ] 4 Wall Paper & Paint Store ; ‘ One door south of old P. O. 1 building. Telephone No. 283. WO W New Haven, Conn., and Return $26.00. Account the Conyention of the 3 | “Knights of Columbus,” the Du- luth, South Shore & Atlantic Ry., will have tickets on sale June 1st to 4th to New Haven, Conn., and return at rate of $26.00, Tickets can be extended for i4C | return passage until June 30th, 1906. Several very desirable routes offered. For full particulars and sleep- ing car accommodation, apply to A. J. Perrin, General Agent, 430 W. Superior St.,Duluth, Minn. — o~

Other pages from this issue: