Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, November 2, 1906, Page 3

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. prescribed by one of the best HOME MADE GANDY DELICIOUS AND CHEAP Eat one of our CREAM CARAMELS and you will buy no other. Our assortment of Cakes and pastry is always the finest. Ices,Ice Cream & Sweet Cream: Party orders solici- ted. - ke Mhodel 315 Mlnnesota A v Phone 125 The home of \l\nwilake Bread. THE CITY. M. & M. Read the Daily Picneer, Come to the Bijou theater and have a laugh. Iu's the best ever. Bemidji Elevator Co.. jobbers for Cremo Flour, also Gold Medal, Mascot and Barlow’s Best. J. Bisiar left today on a busi- ness trip to Cass Lake and Bagley. He expects to be gone several days. EYES— Drs. Larson & Larson, specialists in fitting glasses, Office in Swedback Block. Moving pictures at the Bijou theater, Clean and humerous. Price is ten cents to all. Bring your wife or your sister or your ‘‘best girl.” The members of the Eastern Star lodge will give a pleasure and profit social at the Masonic hall, this evenming, for Masons and their families. Occasionally one has the for- tune to meet women who are ideal in looks and figure. Ninety- | nine times out of a hundred you will find she takes Hollister’s Rocky Mouatain Tea. Tea or Tablets, 35 cents. Barker’s drug store. Ben Ellingson, day operator at the t)wer, in south Bemidji, during the pist three years, left this morning for a vist with rela- tives and friends in Wisconsin. During his absence Operator Fieming will handle the wires during the days, and Alexander! Dougherty will see that all trains passing the tower are on the right track. Eastern Star Social. A pleasure and profit social will be given by the Eastern Star, this evening. Masons and members of the “Star” are cordially invited to attend this gathering. ment has been provided for the, occasioa and a good attendance is desired. Catarrh Cannot Be Cured by local applications, as they cannot reach the seat of the dis- ease. Catarrh is a blnod or con- stitutional disease, and in order t: cure it you must t tke internal remedies. Hall’s Catarrh Cure! is taken internally, and acts di- rectly on the !blord and mucous surfaces. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is not a quack medicine. It was physicians in this country for years and is a regular prescrip- tion. It is composed of the best tonics known, combined with the best blood purifiers, acting di- rectly on the mucous surfaces. The perfect combination of the two ingredients is what produces such wonderful results in curing catarrh. Send for testimouials free. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Props., Teledo, O. Sold by Druggists, price 75c. Take Hall’s Family Pills for constipation. A good entertain- | | Masons: Do not forget the social to be given by the Eastern | Star this evening. Typewriter ribbons of all standard makes, either record, copying or indelible, can be pro !cnred in the color:you wish at the Pioneer office. Misses Blanche Boyer and "Buelah Brannon have returned from a two weeks’ visit with friends at Winmpeg, Baudette and International Falls. Whenever yon hive any sym pathy to bestow, directit towards the young woman who never used Hollister’'s Rocky Moun- tain Tea or Tablets, 35 cents. Barker’s drug store. It costs only t2n cents for the jmoving picture show at the Bijou theater, and it is worth twice the price. Clean and humerous. A laugh every minute. Bring the ladies. EYE + Dr. Larson, the eve + specialist, will visit the followisg towns on dates as fol- lows: Kellibher, Friday, Nov. 9; Blackduck, Saturday, Nov. 10; Northome, Sunday aud Monday, Nov. 11 and 12. The peformance at the Buou theater begins at 7:30 p. m. There are three performances during the evening. Come any time. It costs you only ten cents. If you are late, you stay to the next performance free of i charge. Crookston Journal: J. C. Voubroke, who was at one time a resident of Crookston but who bas been employed in the offices of the Crookston Lumber com- rany, at Bemidji for the last two years, departed last evening for Spokane, Washington, near which city he has a claim. Mr. Vonbroke will live upon his claim for a year or more before going into business again. A laugh every minute at the Bijou theater. Come and see the moving pictures. A change of program every Monday and Thursday. Ten cents is the price of admission. National Bank for Walker. Walker will have a new nation- al bank, the comptroller of cur- rency at Washington baving ap- proved the application of E. I. P, Staedt, M. J. Quam, F. B. Davis, Charles Kinkele and H. Brum- mond to organize the First Na- tional Bank of Walker, with a capital of $25,000. “How refreshing Chocolate is in a Pu'kard Monogram Cup”’ PICKARD HAND PAINTED CHINA' The Stawdard for Quality the World Over These marks on pieces of china are signs of artistic and original designing, harmonious coloring, and, above all, serviceability. GIVE US YOUR ORDER FOR SPECIAL PIECES MONOGRAM SETS ARE THE DELIGHT OF OUR PATRONS Ask for illustrated booklets SEE OUR WINDOWS. GEO. T. BAKER & GO, LOCATED IN CITY DRUG STORE. UP-TO -DATE GROCERS We are headquarters for fresh and up- to-date groceries and invite the public to call on us for creamery butter, fresh eggs, excellent canned goods, the best brands of tea and coffee. Our stock is always neat and fresh. Phone 207. ROE @ MARKUSEN Good Photos at Reed’s studio, | Last chance for peaches at §1.15 per crate Oysters - Oysters - Oysters We have just received from Baltimore, at our store, shipment of these select oysters which can be had at the right price. If you are in need of any- thing in the bakery line or fruit line, call up Phone 118 and it will be delivered promptly from the '.l‘hera are held here many ‘confiden: tlal weddings,” as ‘they are called when the ceremony 18 kept unusually quiet. But sometimes they are too con- fidential to please the relatives of the parties, The coerclon of prospective brides under such' clrcumstances Is a proceeding well authenticated in fact and fiction. A kldnaped bridegroom; however, I8 unusual, though he hap- pened at St. George's not long ago. He was a gentleman. of position, and he wished to marry a lady who had nursed him through an iliness. There was no cause or just lmpediment save social rank. The gentleman was de- termined, and the lady seconded his plans admirably. But the day and the Lakeside Bakery. Read she Daily P o 1eer. Come to the Bijou theater to- night. Program changes twice a week, Thursdaysand Mondays. Funny, clean, and the admission is only ‘“‘ten cents, a dime.” The Beach and Bowers Dra- matic company will appear at the opera house Monday and present a highly dramatic play, a produc- tion of Bertha Clay's novel, “Dora Thorne.” One of the splendid results of physical beautifying is it’s tendency to create an ambition to be beautiful in every way. When a woman gets a good start by taking Hollister’s Rocky Mountain Tea she is alright. Tea or Tablets 35 cents. Bar- ker’s drug store. Hollday Crowds. For some men it is sufficient recrea- tlon to have no work. The moment that the “knapsack of custom” fails from their backs they are happy. Not to awake in the morning with the thought of what must be done In the day Is In itself a sufficlent recreation. Naturally, they have no very definite taste in holidays. They go where it suits their purses or their wives or thelr children. To such men, though they may spend all their working days in the thick of a town, the sight of na- ture never becomes a necessity. It Is a luxury, an agreeable augmentation of the sense of doing nothing. A holiday maker of this type very often goes to a watering place, one of those resorts which it 1s now the fashion for culti- vated people to despise. Such con- tempt is affectation. A number of hap- Py people create, no doubt, an exhilarat- ing atmosphere, Well behaved pleas- ure seekers make an agreeable and ever changing picture. A well kept public garden, a good band and a fine view form attractions which no con- tinental affects to despise, and English people do not despise it either if only the brightly dressed crowd should hap- pen to talk in a foreign tongue.—Lon- don Spectator. The Englishman Abroad. An English observer says that he finds the American abroad both civil and genlal: “I climbed to the top of Notre Dame in Paris and found there a party from across the Atlantic enjoy- ing lunch. The day was hot, and a young man in the group offered me a refreshing drink. At the top of the lacework in marble which is the spire of Milan cathedral three English speak- ing men met accidentally—an Amerl- can, an English clergyman and myself. He who hailed from the land of the stars and stripes offered me his field- glass; the other did not even return our good morning salutation. In a beer garden at Lucerne I followed the custom of the continent and asked per- mission before sitting at a table of those already seated there. The only one who did not raise his hat and re ply was an Englishman, and the only one to make excuses for him was a young man who prefixed his words with ‘I guess.’” Parchment, Parchment Is the skin of sheep or other animals prepared in sheets ta render them fit for being written upon. The heavier parchment, used for drumheads, is made from skins of asses, older calves, wolves and goats. All thesé are similarly prepared. The skin, being freed from the hair, is placed in a lime pit to cleanse it from fat.” The pelt is then stretched upon a frame, care being taken that ‘the surface is free frem wrinkles. The flesh 15 then pared off with a circular knife. It is then moistened and whit- Ing spread over it. ' The workman then with a large pumice stone rubs the skin, He next goes over it with an fron instrument and rubs it carefully with pumice stone; without chalk. The skin is gradually dried, tightening be. ing occasionally required. A Literary Prise. The largest amount ever offered as a prize for a literary contribution I8 1,500,000 rubles, which s still open for competition and will be awarded at 8t. Petersburg on Dec. 1, 1925, to the writer of the best history of Alex- ander I. of Russia. Araktcheief, found er of the military colonies of Nov- gorod, left a fortune of 50,000 gold ru- bles to provide for this unique prize. The prize giving day is the centenary of the Czar Alexander's death, by which time the money. will, it 1s estl- mated, have increased to 2,000,000 ru- bles. One-fourth of it will be used to defray the cost of publishing the work which wins the prize. At Which Aget An amuring discussion recently took place between an artist and an author as to which period of her life a woman was the most fascinating., Ac- cording to the artist a woman should not be painted between the ages of the greatest transition perlod of her life. The author, on the other hand, declares that she s at the height of her fascination and beauty between the ages of thirty and forty. The ques: tion is still unsettled.—Bremen Zeltung twenty-five and forty, as she was in ! detalls leaked out, and before the time fixed the bridegroom’s male relatlves deployed strategically through Mad- dox street and surrounded the church. He drove up in a hansom cab. With his eyes fixed on the expectant bride, he prepared to alight. An athletle un- cle and a brother sprang forward, thrust him back, with a “Glad to meet you, old fellow” manner that decelved the cabman, who obeyed the quick di- rection he heard and drove the three away, The lady, with tears in her eyes, went Into the vestry. “There will be no wedding,” she sald. “They’ve run away with him.” Apd that was the last St. George’s heard of them.—London Mall. Forestw’ Unnatural Death, The life of nearly all forests is cut short Ly fire or by the hand of the lumberman. When a spruce forest is entirely destroyed by fire young spruces do not at once spring up and cover the burned area. The seed bear- ing cones have been burned, and the spores and seeds of other plants which are readily carried by the wind find thelr way in first. The task-of prepar- ing for the forest is begun agaln, but this time it is to be a shorter one. The first year after the fire mosses and often tiny flowering plants appear. These are replaced by the fireweed and other flowers whose seeds are pro- vided with hairs so that they reach such places quickly. These are soon |- Joined by raspberries, roses and other bushes. Among these the young seed- lings of aspens appear in a very few years. The latter grow rapidly and in a score of years form a low sunny for-.| : est. An aspen forest makes a brilliant contrast with the dark green forests of spruce.—St. Nicholas. Origin of Ascot Races. When did Ascot races begin? They are mentioned in the first “Racing Cal- endar,” published in 1727, and the usual statement is that they were founded by the Duke of Cumberland, uncle of George III. But an entry in the accounts of the master of the horse In 1712 suggests that they were found- ed by Queen Anne on Aug. 6, 1711, The truth, no doubt, is that Ascot races, like many other august Institutions, gradually developed from a germ, so that it is difficult to say when they really began. At any rate, they were quite the sort of thing that enthusiast of the turf, Queen Anne, would have founded. She was a thorough Stuart In this passion. It was her great- grandfather, James I, who encouraged, if he did not establish, horse racing in Scotland and populari: it in Eng- land.—London Chronic] Keen Sense of Humor. “There is nothing like a sense of humor,” said a naval officer, according to the Philadelphia Bulletin. “In a ‘woman, in a soldier, in a sailor, in a clerk, a sense of humor is a help and a blessing through life. At the same time even a sense of humor may exist in excess. I, for my part, shouldn’t care to have so great a sense of humor as a British soldier I once heard about. This soldier was ordered to be flogged. During the flogging he laughed con- tinually. The lash was laid on all the harder, but under the rain of blows the soldier laughed. “‘What are you laughing at? the sergeant finally asked. “‘Why,’. the soldier chuckled, ‘I'm the wrong man.’” An Arab Fishing Yara, A fishing yarn from Algiers: “Some Arabs were fishing from a boat with lines off the coast when a dolphin sev- enteen feet long, eleven feet in circum- ference and weighing four tons swal- lowed one of the baited hooks and dashed off at a tremendous speed. The fishermen paid out as much line as possible and then made it fast. This brought the dolphin up sharply, but the strain snapped the line. The mon- ster then attacked the boat and cap- sized it, filnging the fishermen Into the ‘water. Other Arabs ashore waited till the dolphin was clear of the men and then killed it with rifies.” The Logical Question. A little Philadelphia boy was taken by his father for his first visit to the zoo. Stopping before an inclosure, he asked, “Papa, what animal is that?” Reading the sign tacked up to one side, his father responded, “That, my. son, is a prong horned antelope.” “Kin he blow his horns?’ was the question that promptly followed. Distinguished by Movements. Observant and far sighted persons distinguish at great distances a man from a woman, not by dress, face or figure, but by movements. The mo- tions of the most graceful of men are ungainly when compared with the sinu- ous lines that' most women instinctively assume. It often happens that a single motion of a distant figure, and especial- 1y a motion of the arms above the head, will instantly determine fav a trained observer the sex of the person. If any one doubts this let him note the awk- ward, windmill-like performance of a man arranging his hair and the grace- ful curves and deft touches with which a woman accomplishes the same thing. Turtles ay Gardeners. The peddlers with carts who supply the occupants of villas in the environs of Payjs with cherries and other small fruits frequently carry for sale a few . small turtles.. They are purchased by , the inhabitants of the villas to be plac- ‘ed in their gardens, where they are be- lleved to serve as very effective aids to the gardener by preyenting the rav- ages of the insects and other small creatures which are accustomed to do much damage to the flower beds oand , borders.—Youth'a Companion. If you like model—a little “Woman” is the name of a new magazine for women. The first number is just issued. Your newsdealer has It. You can get it from him, and it is worth your while getting it. - There is nothing startling about this magazine. should be nothing startling about a decent magazine for ‘women and the home, ‘unique among all the so-called publications for women. You 'might not like it a little bit, and then, agam, it might hit your fancy good and hard. both serials and short stories—you will like ** Woman.* In fact, fiction is the big feature of the magazine. All the.other magazines for women are cast on the same - chit chat, some wise advice, a fashion department and a smattering of general miscellany. look any more like this conventional model than a yellow dog- looks like a race horse. ) _ strictly woman’s publication. To know what it is like you will have to get a copy of it. tell you all about it in this advertisement. The price of “WOMAN” is TEN CENTS A COPY, and the magazine is a very big one—192 pages. By the way, two rattling good serial stones begin in this first num- ber and ‘it contains a big lot of other good things. do well to ask your dealer for it before his supply is exhausted. THE FRANK A. MUNSEY COMPANY New York. There But this particular magazine is fiction —good, wide-awake, snappy stories— bit of fiction, a few articles, more or less “WOMAN” doesn’t It is built on new lines for a It would cost too much to You would A good social gathering for| Masons and members of tha' Eastern Star will be given at the' Masnnic hall this evening. Club Room Popular. 1 The readiog room which was recently established cn:the first! floor of the Masonic block by the| Crookston Lumber company, is| proving a very popular resort bo“ the employes of the company. The com pany has subscribed ; Want Ads l FOR RENTING A I PROPERTY, SELL- ING A BUSINESS | charge OR OBTAINING HELP ARE BEST. Pioneer for, and has always on file, the principal magazines, and daily and weekly papers pnblished throughout the country, and the| matter of inst:lling bathsin the rooms are always well heated|rooms, for the use of its em- and lighted, and are very cosy. | ployes. 'MAL There are paper, pensand ink and every convenience, The company is considering the AN INSIDIOUS FOE TO HEALTH Malaria is an atmospheric poison which we unconsciously breathe intg ourlungs through the impure air arising from low, marshy places, stagnant ponds damp cellars, sewer pipes, improperly ventilated houses, decaying vegetable matter, etc. Day after day these germs and poisons are taken into the lungs, and as the blood passes through them it becomes infected with the poison and in its circulation distributes the microbes of disease to all parts of the body. Malaria is a very insidious disease;; it gives no warning of its coming until the circulation is filled with the poison ‘and this foe to health has the system at its mercy. The blood becomes polluted, thin and weak and its slow, irregular circulation fails to properly nourish and strengthen the body. Then the entire system is attacked, and if the germs and pmsonsol Malaria are allowed to remain the strongest constitution will break-down. No one can feel well when the system is in a malarial condition; the vxthy is_weak, the appetite poor, digestion deranged, the complexion grows sallow and the entire ‘body feels the effects of the poison. Malaria must be removed from the system through the circulation and the only medicine that can accomplish thisis S. S. S. ' It not only cleanses the blood of all mfllu}thy, morbid matter, but destroys the germs, cures Malaria and restores this vital ‘blood free of all poisons and the system in to the entire lystzm Book on. the blosd and_any niedical advice without flnid to a strong, healthy condition. S. s s s perfect condition. While destroying’ the THE SWIFT CO., ATLANTA, €A is made of roots, herbs and barks mmbln;u purifying and tonic properties which keep the germs of Malaria and building up the weak, PURELY VEGETABLE. polluted blood S. S. S. gives tone and vigot & MACKINAWS Any length you 'desire. Com- pare our prices with the other fellow’s and you will be con- vinced that our_merchandise is what you want. WOOL SOCKS| The biggest bargain in men’s -60¢ all wool socks. Try them. _anberman's star rubbers, !yien’s 'women's and children’s | overshoes and rubbers. The ‘most’ complete atock. ~ The ‘most reasonable pnoes HEAVY: WOOL PANTS ‘We are 'showiong a line from h:zrgf)t(:o b:fiz » t%m%wg guarantesd | ;or wofiey cheerfully refunded.

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