Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, December 31, 1906, Page 2

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p it! disease, a re; y ¢ ¥ et disease; and Ayer's Hair Vigor, as made from our new improved for- mula, quickly and completely destroys that Hair Folls g5 e. The hair stops falling out, grows| THE BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEER PUBLISHED EVERY AFTERNOON, OFFICIAL PAPER---CITY OF BEMIDII BEMIDJI PIONEER PUBLISHING CO.! By A. KAISER. B et acataoaand Entered in the postofiice at Bemldji. Minn. a8 second class mavter. AR AAAAAARANNAN NSNS SUBSCRIPTION---$5.00 PER ANNUM Brother Barnard sacrifices the rich rewards of the newspaper business to become a meek and lowly lobbyist in the cause of drainrage. Itis seldom, indeed, that such rare self denial is found among country editrs — Hibbing Tribune, And all for a paltry $7,000 per. according to a bosom friend of the “Hon. A. G ,”” who has been in close touch with his doings in northern Minnesota, This is the season of the year when the newspaper man Spar- reth with the members of the board of county commissioners and marveleth exceedingly at the workings of matters p litical Anud soon the sign of the “double cross’’ appeareth and the other fellow getteth the printing; and there is much raging and gnash- ing of teeth and waste of space. Verily, the letting of county printing bringeth but strife and contention. A. R Butler, the editor of the Bagley Independent, has an “angel.” An ‘“angel,”’ dear reader, is one who gets you the money when itis most needed and sticketh to you like a leech in times of trouble. Mr. Batler says of his liberal friend: “Ole Erickson has our thanks for a nice box of ten cent cigars as a Christmas gift and $5 in cash for the Independent. Mr. Erickson has for several years past been one of our best sub- scribers and always pays $5 00 per yearinadvance. Would that there were more such as he.” The Battle of Redonda. Not far from St. Thomas, a matter of perhaps a hundred miles, was fought the most wonderful naval battle in all history. The Dutch admiral detected the enemy in the early morning, when the sea was covered with a thick mist, and his guns opened fire at once with- out warning. The fire was returned ‘with Interest, the ocean fairly quiver- Ing with spasms caused by the shock of frequent discharges. Somehow or other the enemy’s shots, which sound- ed like a bombardment, seemed to fall short or go wide of the mark, for not 2ven a splash of a ball was heard, and the Dutch ships remained unscathed. On the other hand, the Dutch could not see the terrible executlon their guns were doing until nearly the middle of the forenoon, when the fog lifted, re- vealing to their astonished gaze not the vessels of the enemy, but a great rock standing out of the sea. They had been firing at it for five hours, and the sound of the return shots they heard was the echo from the solid wall of granite. They named the place Redonda, which means sent, rolled or driven back, and Redonda It is to this day. Golt aud the Liver. Golf is the greatest of all games. It 18 the only recreation that is at one and the same time health giving and a complete preoccupation without being unduly physically exhmustive. But T am profoundly convinced that it is far better for a man’s liver that he should play a poor game than a good one. I know from personal experlence that It 18 far better for the liver to play a really bad game. Nothing stirs up the liver like the irritation, the excitements and the paroxysms of a really bad game.—London Graphic. The Rain In the Woods. The lamentable effects of the gener- al destruction of forests are now suf- ficlently recognized in all civilized i countries. - Such destruction Invites ! devastating floods in mountain streams and causes the surrounding land to dry up. Forests act like vast con- densing screens;, They preserve a moist atmosphere atout them, atten- uate the force of torrential downfalls, { promote a more gradunl melting of the snow In early spring and protect the soll agailnst too rapld evaporation, , And yet the manner in which forests ! act their beneficent pavt is not exactly. such as might be supposed. They pre- vent a large part of the rain that falls from reaching the soil at all. 1t is es- timated that in European climates the forests evaporate directly or transpire physiologically four-ifths of the rain that falls upon them. Thus the forest atmospliere is no less important than the forest soll in equalizing the cli- matie conditions of a country.—Youth’s Companien Tale of a Coat. The clawhammer, or evening coat, has many oddities of cut. These oddi- tles were once essentials. There was, In fact, a time when every ldiosyn- crasy of the clawhammer served some useful purpose. The cutaway front of the coat, for instance, was orlginally cut away so that the wearer when on horseback would not ha incommoded. The two buttons at the back were for fastening up the tails out of harm's way, each tail having in the past a buttonhole at its end. The sleeves, with their false cuffs, are relics of the days when sleeves were always turned back and therefore were always made with cuffs that unbuttoned. The col- lar, with its wide notches, Is a sur- vival of the old collar that was notch- ed in order that its wearer could turn It up conveniently in cold or stormy weather. The dress coat, in a word, is a patchwork of relics—relics once es- sential, but now of no use on earth— Philadelphia Bulletin. ‘Webster’s Fine Talk to & Fish, I had a chat once with old John At- taquin, then a patriarch among the few survivors of the Mashpee Indians. He had often been Mr. Webster's guide and companion on his fishing trips and remembered clearly many of thelr happenings. Tt was with a glow of love and admiration amounting to | worship that he related how this great fisherman, after landing a large trout on the bank of the stream, “talked mighty strong and fine to that fish and told him what a mistake he had made and what a fool he was to take that fly and that he would have been all right if he had left it alone.”” ‘Who can doubt that patient search would disclose somewhere in Mr. Web- ster’s speeches and writings the elabo- ration, with high intent, of that “mighty strong and fine” talk address- ed to the fish at Mashpee?—“Fishing and Shooting Sketches,” by Grover Cleveland. A Literary Tragedy. When Carlyle had finished the first volume of his great work on the French revolution he lent the manuscript to his friend John Stuart Mill. One even- Ing soon afterward MIill entered Car- Iyle’s door, pale as Hector’s ghost, with the dismal information, gasped out In almost Inarticulate words, that- with the exception of about four or five sheets the manuscript was completely annihilated. Mill had left it too care- lessly lying about, and a servant, think- Ing 1t so much waste paper, had burned it. Five months of steadfast, occasion- j ally excessive and painful toll utterly losltl For three weeks Carlyle could do' nothing but read Marryat’s novels, Then oné night, sitting talking %o his cook, hé;jdecided it should be written again and eventually finished “such a task as I never tried before or since.” Ruskin’s Opinion of Mrs. Carlyle. Ruskin spoke with scornful amuse- ment of such mistaken enthusiasts as ‘wished to enroll Jane Welsh Carlyle among the martyrs on account of her “man’s” bad temper. He admitted that |Oar1yle was frequently grumpy and [habltually melancholy—“but so am I"”: —and he was easily Irritated. “That clever shrew,” his wife, well knew this and by the very tones of her voice as she “rasped out his name” could set his nerves on edge in a paroxysm of febrile irritation.—Scribner’s. Typhoid, By bolling all the water and steriliz- Ing all the milk and thoroughly cook- ing all the vegetables and killing all the flies the average person may be- come fairly immune from typhold fe- ver. Bemidji Tow H. A. SIMONS, Agent. ON EASY PAYMENTS For the man or woman of moderate means we are offering lots in the third addition on easy monthly payments. The lots are nicely located and the price is within the reach of all. For further particulars write or call provement Company. nsite and Im-: Swedback Block. Bemidfi. Ow; soclal organization has devel- oped. to a stage where the old right- eowsness s not enough. We need an annual supplement to the Decalogue. Theo growth of credit lnstitutlons, the spread of flduclary relations, the en- meshing of industry In law, the inter- lacing of government and business, the " | multiplication of boards and Inspect- ors, beneficent as they all are, they In- vite to sin. What gateways they open to greed! What fresh parasites they fet in on us! How Iidle in our new situation to Intone the old litanies! ‘The reality of this close knit life is not to be seen and touched; It must be thought. The sins it opens the door to are to be discerned by knitting the brows rather than by opening the eyes. It takes imagination to see that bogus medical diploma, lying advertisement and fake testimonial are death dealing Instruments, 1t takes Imagination to see that savings bank wrecker, loan shark and Investment swindler in tak- ing livelthoods take lives. It takes imaglnation to see that the business ot debauching voters, fixing jurles, se- dueing lawmakers and corrupting pub- Itc servants Is like sawing through the props of a crowded grand stand—E A, Ross In Atlantic. e, Living In Coral Hounen. The church bullt of coral 1s one of the curlosities of the Isle of Mahe, one of the Seychelles islands, In the Indian ocean. The Seychelles Islands, which are supposed by many to be the slte of the Eden of the Old Testament, form an archipelago of 114 Islands and are sltuated about 1,400 miles east of Aden and 1,000 miles of Zanzibar. They rise steeply out of the sea, culmi- nating In the Isle of Mahe, which is about 3,000 feet above the level of the ocean and s nearly the center of the group. All these lIslands are of coral growth. The houses are built of a species of massive coral hewed Into gquare blocks, which glisten like white marble and show themselves to the utmost advantage in the various tinted green of the thick tropical palms, whose Immense fernlike leaves give pleasant and much needed shade. These palms grow as high as 100 feet or more, overtopping both the houses and the coral bullt church. They line the sea- shore and cover the mountains, form- ing In many places extenslve forests. The Horing of Glass. Strong glass plates are bored through by means of rotating brass tubes of the necessary diameter, which are filled with water during boring. To the water there is added finely pul- verized emery. It is said that thinner glass can be perforated with holes in an easler manner by pressing a disk of wet clay upon the glass and making a hole through the clay of the widths desired, so that at that spot the glass Is laid bare. Then molten lead is poured into the hole, and lead and glass drop down at once. This method is based upon the quick local heat- Ing of the glass, whereby it obtains a circular crack, the outline of which cor- responds to the outline of the hole made in the clay. The cutting of glass tubes, cylinders, etc., in factories is based upon the same principle. Moderation In Exercise. It Is better to be lazy than dead, and 1t 1s probably just as comfortable. For ! ease of Itch obvious reasons the prescription to take moderate exercise is misleading and unsatisfactory. Most of us are consti- tutionally incapable of exercising mod- erately. We begin violently and end quickly. And what is moderate exer- cise? One philosopher who tried it for twenty years arrived at this conclu- slon: “Keep a pair of Indian clubs in your bedroom. Look at them frequent- ly. Exercise by their suggestion.” This has the merit of moderation. It Is the same as to walking. Smell the morning, look down the long way that separates you from your business. Then take a car.—Detrolt Free Press. Anticipating Him. “Katharine,” said Bob as he brought his club chums down to the -depot platform, “these are all my friends.” “Glad to meet you, gentlemen,” re- plied the bride sweetly, “and I am 80 sorry that you are going to be sick.” “Siek?” echoed the crowd in aston- ishment. “Why should you think we are golng to be sick?” “Oh, because soon after the honey- moon a married man always finds a great many sick friends to sit up with.”—Columbus Dispatch. o 4 Not of Much Account. The lord chief justice of England used to sing in the choir of a parish church. A woman once asked the verger to point out Sir Richard Webster as he then was. The verger replied, “Well, ma’am, that’s the vicar and them’s the curates and I'm ‘the verger, but as for the choir, as long as they does thelr dooty we don’t inquire into their hante- cedents!” Stupid. “I wish 1 was half as beautiful ags ; Miss Brown,” remarked the fair Bdith to Mr. Green. “Well, you are, you know,” replied Green, thoughtlessly. Then he wondered why she suddenly rese and left him. 5 Peculiarities of Napoleon. Napoleon’s father was a toper, a man utterly lacking in moral sensibility, and his sisters were immodest and hys- terical. According to Dr. Cabanas, Pauline was particularly so. Napoleon himself was exceedingly sensitive to atmospheric changes, was headachey and had auditory illusions. He had twitchings of the arms, the shoulders and the lips. He was at times the most irritable of men, often being un- approachable. His mania for destruc- tion was such that he whittled pleces of furniture, broke articles presented to him, pinched babies while pretend- Ing to caréss them and took keen de- light In shooting Josephine’s rarest birds. The slightest opposition threw him Into a paroxysm of rage. But in & campalgn all weaknesses vanished. His pulse ranged ordinarily between thirty and thirty-five beats a minute and never went above fifty-five. The usual pulse rate is about seventy-twe A minute. PILES CURED IN 6 TO 14 DAYS. PAZO OINTMENT s guar: to cure any igedin B R R G T § M Juchal,sdns 8 & town with no horses | a1d no wheeled vehicles. In traveling about one either drives in a sledge or 18 carrled fn a hammock, The streets and adjacent ronds are paved with emall and curlously smooth cobble- nes,.and from the first it was found that runners were better than wheels both for speed and comfort. For in; stance, when you come to a hill the oxen draw your sled to the top and are then unhitched. Your driver then proceeds to toboggan your conveyance gently down the other side, while the team trots on behind. Horses are not avallable in Funchal,-as the nature of the cobblestone roads would soon ruin their feet. This is why the ox, with " his flexible hoof, 18 the draft animal of Funchal. For expeditions into the country the hammock i8 used. This is slung on a pole, carried on the shoul- ders of two men, and 1s perhaps the most comfortable conveyance in the world—no jar and no need to guide it. A City on the Cliffs. Preclsely why the town of Bonifaclo, In Corsica, 18 bullt to the sheer edge of the cliff which forms the sea front- age of that part of the Island is a ques- tlon always asked by the traveler who views Bonifacio for the first time, and he relterates his question when he ob- serves, upon visiting the environs of the place, that there Is plenty of room for the town to have spread out In an inland direction. The early Corsicans apparently thought that farm land was ‘worth more than city real estate and 80 crowded their dwellings to the dizzy edge of their 200 foot precipice. One’s first impression is that these houses, with their walls on a vertical plane with the cliff, were purposely so situ- ated that the body of a victim of a dark vendetta murder might be con- venlently dropped out of the window Into the sea beneath, with no one the wiser. Certainly there is a suggestion of romance and mystery in the aspect of thetown. It forms, at any rate, one of the oddest sky lines in the world. Bear Hunting. Bear hunting, with the assistance of guides supplied with a well trained pack of hounds, may be satisfactory if merely the killing of them is desired, but it certainly is no sport and de- serves not even to be ranked with trap- ping bears, as In the latter case the hunter must possess at least some knowledge of the quarry’s habitat and habits. Unlike a fox, a bear, when once found by the hounds, stands no chance whatever of escaping, and there would be just as much sport in shooting the anintals in a park or pen as to kill a run to bay bear. And, while this truth applies to mountain lions also, there is not even the ex- cuse of the animal's destructiveness, which is applicable as far as the lat- ter is concerned.—Field and Stream. The Poodle, ‘Why is a poodle, so called? Some one says: “Probably the natural an- swer would recall the old lady who said that no credit could be given to Adam for naming the pig, since anybody would have known what to call_it. ‘Poodle’ seems so obvious a name for this dog. And, in fact, this | is not far from the truth about the origin of the word. It is quite recent in English, not being found before 1864, apparently. It is the German ‘pudel,’ which comes from the Low German, ‘pudeln,’ to waddle, and the dog must have been so called, as Skeat says, either because he waddles after his master or because he looks fat and clumsy on account of his thick hair.” Coldness of Ice. It seems strange to think that some ice is colder than other ice. The term “4ce cold” always seems to signify a definite temperature. All water under similar conditions freezes at a.certain definite temperature. But when the thermometer falls below that it con- tinues to affect the ice, making it hard- er and colder. The test has been made by placing a piece of ice from the north and a plece of ice formed in the vicinity of New York near a stove to- gether. The former took much longer to melt than the latter.—New York Tribune. Viewing the Remains, It had been a strenuous afternoon for the devoted teacher who took six of her pupils through the Museum of Nat- ural History, but her charges had en- Joyed every minute of the time. “Where have you been, boys?”’ asked the father of two .of the party that night, and the answer came with joy- ous promptness: “We've been to a dead circus.” Rubinstein on Piano Playins.. ‘When a pupil happened to ask Rubin- stein how certain passages should be construed, he invariably showed them. But if a pupil asked, “Shall I play thig in this manner or that?’—both equally correct—Rubinstein invariably replied: “Play as you feel. Is the day rainy? Play it this way. Is the day sunny? Play it the other way.” Cutting. A certain photographer is exhibiting in his window the photograph of a young man with the following inscrip- tion attached to it: “This is the man ‘who put his hair in curls to have his photograph taken and then can’t pay for them.” Usefal TPewan, Many different reasons are assigned by people for their unwillingness ‘to submit to the extractlon of teeth. But it was no fear of pain which was up- permost In the mind of Miss Mehitable Lamson of Willowby when told by the dentist that she would be much bene- fited by the loss of two of her prom- Inent teeth. “You say they can’t be filled,” she sald, in evident distress, “and you couldn’t get any others in for me for more’n a fortnight?” The dentist admitted reluctantly that 1t was so. i “Well, then, I suppose I'll have to get on as best I can.”. And Miss Me- hitable seated herself in the torture chalr. “But I don’t see how I shall make out. Here I am, chambermald to the Willowby inn during the sum- mer, and it's chock full of folks, with lots o’ transients coming and. going. and those are my pillowcase teethi™ ! AECECEATINE DANE Bome wasps i upon honey, ‘which they collect from the most open petaled flowers, and tius to & very moderate extent they may be regarded the light of flower fertilizers. Kirk- nd says in the first volume of the American Naturalist that “the paper hornet (Vespa maculata) often enters my nucleus hives when I am rearing Ttallan queen bees and captures the Yyoung queen jn the midst of her little colony, usually just after she’has com- menced'’ her first laying. I have seen thig depredator-enter the small -hive, drag out the queen and fly away with her to the woods” (page 52). Some of. the :species of the genus polistes store up honey which is poisonous, from the fact that it has been collected from polsonous flowers, They are found in South Amerlca, where also specles of the genus chartergus occur—wasps that make a very remarkable and tough nest, with funnel shaped combs Inside, arranged one Inside of another, nest fashion, but not In contact ex- cept at thelr polnts of suspension. At the apexes of these cones occur the apertures of entrance for the Inmates to pass up among the conlcal tlers. Steering’ the Ship. The work of steering a great ship, even with the aid of modern machi ery, Is much more delicate than one would imagine. The larger and faster the ship the greater is the difficulty. It 18 not enough to hold the wheel In the same position to keep the ship on her course, for the wind and waves and the. currents of the ocean tend constantly to knock the ship off her course. The great wall of steel (for the hull may be 700 feet long and sixty feet high) offers a broad target for the wind and waves. The art in steer- ing is to humor the ship to these forces and when she is deflected bring her back quickly to her course. If you could watch the binnacle, especially In bad weather, you would see the needle of the compass constantly shift- ing from side to side, which means that the great steel prow is not going forward in a perfectly straight line.— Francis Arnold Collins in St. Nicholas. New York’s Cab Drivers. A driver has to have a license. That mysterious official, the mayor's mar- shal, grants one upon the payment of 25 cents and two written testimonials of honesty. A man may come out of Sing Sing, whither he has been sent for highway robbery or stoning the minister’s cat or any other crime, if he presents two greasy letters—one of any Jones and the other of any Smith— stating that he is an honest fellow he will get a license. No inquiry is made. His references are never looked up. Indeed, if you are a desperate criminal —gullty of murder or failure to pay alimony—you can do no better than take out a license and hide on top of a cab. So Into the business drift all sorts and conditions of rogues. Under the aegis of the law (the aegis being a twenty-five cent badge) they rob you and me.—Vance Thompson in Outing Magazine. The Hesslans Played. It is a matter of record that upon the first officlal celebration of Inde- pendence day by the Continental con- gress music was secured for the occa- slon by forcing the Hessian band, ‘which had been captured by George ‘Washington at Trenton in the previous December, to play In the public square all day, to the great delight and amuse- ment of the people. It is also stated that these involuntary celebrants were obliged to practice appropriate airs for three weeks previously in order that they could not plead Ignorance as an excuse. Curious Colneidences. ‘When the Ring theater, in Vienna, was burned, with great loss of life, || one of the other. playhouses of the Austrlan capltal was playing Paille- ron’s “Le Monde ou lon S'Ennule;” when the Stadt theafer, in Vienna, was burned another theater in that city.| was playing “Le Monde ou I'on S’En-| nuie,” and on the evening of the day when the fire In the charity bazaar In Paris took place the Theatre Francals was announced to play “Le Monde ou I'on S’Ennufe.” Jealousy. “That word ‘communist,’ my dear,” observed the young husband, correct- Ing her, “has the accent on the first syllable.” “How do you know?” “The dictionary says so.” “1 mever saw a man as prejudiced In favor of dictlonarles as you are!” exclalmed the young wife. “I wish you had married a dictionary!” Origin of the Balloon. The word balloon means “a large ball” To Montgolfier of Annonay, France, the invention of the balioon is credited. It is sald that he was led to turn his attention to bulloon making from the following incident: A French laundress, wishing to. dry.a petticoat quickly, placed it on a basket work frame over a stove. To prevent the heat from escaping by the opening at the top of the petticoat she drew the belt strings cldsely together and tied them. Gradually the garment dried and became lighter,.and as the stove continued to give out heat and rarefy the air concentrated under the basket work frame the petticoat began to move and finally rose in the air. This 8o astonished the laundress that she LAWYERS. B.MATTHEWS ATTORNEY AT LAW Practices before the United States Supreme Court—Court of Claims—The United States General Land Office—Indian Office su gross. Speclal avention given to_ Lau tests—Procurement of Patents and Indian Olaim | Reter o the membors of, the Minne: egation in_GCrongress. 7 New Yorit Avenue. Wachiugton, .6 D. H. FISK Attorney and Counsellorat Law Office opposite Hetsl Markham. P.J. Russell Attorney at Law BEMIDJ, - - - - . MINN. E. E. McDonald ATTORNEY AT LAW Bemidy, Minn. Office: Swedback Block PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS. Dr. Rowland Gilmore Physician and Surgeon les Block WM. Office: DR. WARNINGER s V’IB"I"I‘E’=INAI§V SldsflEON Third_S¢., one block west of 15t Nat't Bank DRAY AND TRANSFER. Wes Wright, Dri d Phone a0, "7 "™ ‘ransfor. 404 Beltrami Ave Zl FRIEND TO FRIEND ‘The personal recommendations of, p ple who have been cured of coughs and colds by Chamberlain's Congh Remedy. have done more than all else to makeita ™ staple article of trade and commerce oy er N = a large part of the civilized world. P e 8 St S S i e B T WANIS ONE CENT A WORD. No Advertiseinent Accepted For Less Than 15 Cents. { Cash Must Accompany All Out Of 1 Town Orders h Tom Smart Dray and ""_::g" Safe and Plano moving. Phote No. | 618 America Ave. DENTISTS. Dr. R. B. Foster, SURGEON DENTIST PHONE 124 MILES BLOCK DR. J. T. TUOMY Dentist First National Bank Build’g. Telephone No, 230 DPAY?, F. C. CHASE DRAY AND TRANSFER Wood Sawing Prompily Done Phone 351 NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION. Department of the Interior, L: Cass Lake, an..Ngvn" rlg\‘:L A mee support of his claim, viz: No. 22887, made March 26, 1902, for the neX ection 32, township 145 N., range 34 W., 5th P, M.. and that said proof will be made before Register and Receiver U. S. land office, at Cass Lake, Minn,, January 11, 1807. He names the following witLesses to prove his continuous residence upon, and cultiva- u%n oz. éll;e }(-%i.;iz: er Tk, . Shaw, H, W, McDougall of Maltby. Minn., and Frank Tabor of Sehool craft, Minn, E. 8. OAKLEY, * Register. EAST BOUND. No. 108..Park Rap. s Line..7:10 &. m. (Connects with Orlental Limited at Bauk Centre, arrives Minneapolis at 5:15p. m, St. Paul at5:45p. m.) 34....Duluth Express....12:27p m 36 12: ‘WEST BOUND. No- 83......Fosston Live..... No 107...Park Rapids Live...7:5 p m IFULL INFORMATION FROM E E CHAMBERLAIN.i Agt. Bemidji, Minn. TIME 'I‘AB.EE MINNEAPOLIS, RED LAKE & MANITOBA RY. CO. Dally—Except Sundays. Between Redby and Bemidji In effect December 31, 1906, Ly Bemidjl p.m |Lv Redby... Ly *Werne: p.m.|Ar Nebish . Lv Puposk m | Lv Nebish. - Ar Nebish. .m |Lv Puposky. Lv Nebish. Lv *Werner. Ar Redby. [Ar Bemidji.. 1! m pm * Stop at Werner only on signal, ‘W. G. MARSON, Gen’] Mgr. Want Ads HELP WANTED. j e U S WANTED—For U. 8. army able- bodied, unmarried men be- { tween ages of 21 and 85, citi- zens of United States, of good character and temperate b habits, who can -speak, read : and write English. . For in- o formation apply to Recruiticg i Officer, Miles block, Bemidji. i Minnesota. WANTED—For the U. 8. Marine { Corps; men between ages 21 and 85. An opportunity tosee ) the world. For full informa- tion apply in person or by letter to 208 Third street, Be- midji, Minn. ! WANTED: Dinicg room girl at Lakeshore Hotel. Wanted—Girl for general work at Bemidji Steam Laundry. i WANTED — Laundry girl and dishwasher at Brinkman hotel. | WANTED—Competent girl for { general house work. Berman Emporium. FOR SALE. A AN AN A A FOR SALE—Magnificent moose head, mounted; will be sold cheap. Inquire at this- office, 'FOR SALE— Rubber stamps. ! The Pioneer will procure- any kind of a rubber stamp . for —von on short notice,, = FOR SALE—Housebold goods from a completely furnished house. Also baby carriage. ) Joseph Schisel, 905 Irving ave, ] FOR RENT. FOR RENT — Furnished room ~ - with bath. Inquire 609 Be- - midji avenue. MISCELLANEOUS. PUBLIC . LIBRARY — Open * Tuesdays and Saturdays, 2:30 to6p, m. Thursdays7 to 8 p. m. also. Library in base- ment of ‘Court House. Miss Mabel Kemp, librarian. HICHESTER'S ENGLISH NYROYAL PILLS THE DIAXOND BRAND. your i Lodlest Ask Druggist f: ‘hi.ches.iors’ Pills 15 d Gold metallic boxes, seal ith Blse Ribbon. Takeno othors WBuy of your Drugpist and sk for CHTCHES TERS. ENGvasiy, %y DIAMOND RRAND PILL: {ars regarded as Best, Saiest. Always <Al sold by Duuggists © r Chemiral Co- P} Mionesota & International In Connection with the ..Northern Pacific.. Provides the best train passenger service between Northome, Funkley | Blackduok, Bemidji, ‘Walker and intermediate points and Minne apolis, St. Paul, Fargo and Dulutk and all points east, west and south. Through coaches \:emmn Northome and ‘the. Twin Cities. © No change of cars. Ample time at Brainerd tor dinner. TIME CARD iEffective June ith., 1005, Dally except Sunday STATIONS ran to her neighbors and asked them | to come and witness the strange sight. Montgolfler was among those that came in. The petticoat suspended in midair suggested greater things to him, and he returned home with “gomething to think about.” He at once began studying works on differ- ent kinds of atmosphere, and the in- vention of the balloon was the result. A Weather Stone, A writer tells of & curious stope that i8 to be found In Finland. It is a natural barometer and actually fore- tells probable changes in the weather, It I8 called a semakuir, and its 1 farity is that it turns black proaching rain, whil . it is. mottls Y, the s BRERIBILEHE S0 s FOR RENTING A | PROPERTY, SELL- .| ING A BUSINESS - | OR OBTAINING HELP ARE BEST. Pioneer PIANOS, ORGANS SEWING MA- CHINES FURNITURE AND HOUSE FUR. NISHINGS. fionght on Easyf‘:: Payments at BISIAR,VANDE LIP & COMPAN 311 Minn. Ave.

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