Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, January 23, 1907, Page 3

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\ — GhHe Model BakeryDairy and Confec- tionery Fancy Creamery btr. . 28¢c Fresh Eggs All kinds of poultry at the lowest market price. Don’t think because we are selling you dairy pro- ducts at wholesale prices that the quality is inferior Cream, Ice Cream, Milk THE MODEL 315 Minnesota Ave. Phone 125 THE CITY. Read the Daily Picneer, Ri21’s ssulio Hreolored work Bemidji Elevator Co., jobbers for Glod Medal flour. John W. Stewart of Cass Lake was a business visitor in the civy ; yesterday aft:rnoon and even- ing. Robert Brownlee, a commer- cial traveler of Grand Forks, N. D., well known in this city, was a visitor here yesterday. The Ladies Aid society of the Presbyterian church will give an entertainment at the city hall, Friday evening, Jan. 25. W. A. McDonald returned this morning from a trip along the north line of the M. & L., where he had been in the interest of his Model Bakery. Properly fitted glasses not only improve the vision, but preserve the eyes. Call on Drs. Larson & Larsor, 2n0d floor Swedback block. Mrs. F. O Sibley and little daughter came down from their Lome at Island Lake yesterday noon and spent several hours in the city, returning home in the afternoon. Kate—Outdoor life is good for nervous people. It occupies the mind pleasantly. Hollister’s Rocky Mountain Tea, cheers the heart and makes life worth liv- ing. 35 cents, tea or tablets. Barker’s drug store. The Leonard’s, better known as Mr. and Mrs. “Jimmie” Burns, joined the Henderson company yesterday and appeared in the show given at the .opera house last evening. Both are popular, and it is hoped they will remain with the Henderson’s. Jesse Smith, official tie in- spoetor for the Northern Pacific RiilWay company, came down this’morning from Northomeand other points along the north line of the M. & I, where he has been inspecting a large number of ties which the N. P. has pur- chased from the Martin Bros, of Duluth. How’s This? We offer one hundred dollars Read the Dailv Pioneer. Call at the Pioneer when you are in need of office supplies. The Pioneer at all times has in {stock office supplies of every description. 1 A. Kaiser, the Bagley banker, |came over from Bagley yester- {day afternoon on business, and returned home on the afternoon train. Pearl Davis left this morning | for Glenwood, in response to an 'urgans business telegram de- manding his presence at that | place. Ladies Aid of the Presbyterian ichurch will meet at the home of |Mrs. Knopke tomorrow after- {noon at 2 o’clock. All ladies are cordially invited: Anyone buying tickets for |entertainment at city opera house Friday evening may have them reserved by taking same to the City drug store. A. T. Hatcher, the logger, left |this morning fer his home at Anoka, where he will visit with his family and look after some private matters. He expects to be absent the remainder of the weelk. Its wonderful power goes to the seat of your trouble, vitalizes, strengthens every part of your body. That’s what Hollister’s Rocky Mountain Tea does. 35 cents, tea or tablets. Barker’s drug store. The north-bound passenger train on the M. & I. was four and one-half hours late last night, and did not arrive in Bewidiji until 10:30 o’clock. The delay was caused by a long wait av Brainerd for coanections with the main-line train on the North- ern Pacific railway. A. W. Layman, special agent for the U. S. general land office, and who has headquarters at Duluth, spent last nightin the city. Mr. Layman bhad been doing some special work at Brainerd and Motley, and came to this city on last evening’s delayed M. & I. train. He left for Duluth this noon. To my customers: I have moved my millinery out of O'Leary & Bowser’s store, You will find me on 4th, St., northof E. H, Winter & Co’s., grocery, I have more room and better light, also a waiting room for my customers, where you will find comfortable chairs and a couch. Youare in- vited to my millinery store to rest, while you wait. Mrs. J. J. Conger. M. B. A. Special Meeting. A special meeting of the M. B. A, will be held at the I. O.O. F. hall Thursday afternoon at three o’clock, = at which time it is requested as many members as can possibly attend to be there. ““Parson Poor’s Donation Party.” The city of Bemidji is soon to be honored by another local talent play. Some of the mem- bers and friends of the Presby- terian Aid society are preparing to produce ‘“‘Parson Poor’s Dona- reward for any case of Catarrhtion Party,” which will be given that cannot be cured by Hall’s caearrh cure. F. J, Cheney & Co., Toledo, O. We, the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney for the last fifteen years, and believe him perfectly honorable in all busi- ness transactions and financially able to carry out any obligations made by his firm. Walding, Kinnan & Marvin, Wholesale druggists, Toledo, O. Hall’s catarrh cure is taken in- ternally, acting directly upon the: blood and mucous surfaces of ! the system. Testimonials sent free. Price 75 cents per bottle. Sold by all druggists. Take Hall’s family§piils for constipation. [ :»t the city hall Friday evening of this week. HEvery member of the cast in the forthcoming pro- duction has had some experience in this work. From what has been accomplished at the re- hearsals, itis evident that the play will compare favorably with any play ever given here. If you want to enjoy a good enter- tainment, set aside Friday even- ing to attend this. ORCHESTRA MUSIC furnished for all occasions. Also Pianos tuued. Satisfaction guar- antocd. Box 235, Bemidit, Hinn, "T.SYMINGTON A Busy Store When you are out shopping come to the busiest grocery store in town. Why are we the busiest store? Because we have the best selected stock; our sales are large and in consequence we order often and get the very best in the market. No where else quality and prices so reasonal the store and try our goods t will you find such excellent ble. You have but to visit 0 be convinced. ROE @ MARKUSEN PHON E 207 e R A SRS HOT DRINKS! We have installed at our place of business, “soda fountain hot drinks.” THIS IS OUR MENU: Hot Chocolate with Macarons 15¢ Hot Clam Bouillon . . 10c Hot Chicken Bouillon .. 10c Hot Tomato Bouillon . . 10c Hot Conc. Ext. of Coffee . 10c Lakeside Bakery. Mrs. Clark of Floodwood was a visitor in Bemidji last night. For insurance against failure and disappointment on baking day, use Hunt's Perfect Bakin, Powder. . T. J. Britt, special agent for the Great Northern Railway company, was in the city today, on a special mission. D. H. Arbuckle, an uncle of G. A. Walker, was in the city yes- terday, attending the funeral of Mrs. W. A. Walker, and left this morning for his home at Deer Creek, Minn. G. R. Merritt, the hustling traveling freight agent for the Northern Pacific Railway, left for Brainerd this morning. after having spent two days in the city in the interests of the N. P. The medicine that sets the whole world thinking, the remedy on which all doctors agree, the prescription all your friends are taking. is Hollister’s Rocky Mountain Tea. Barker’s drug store. Rev. E. Spencer Murphy of Grand Rapids returned to his home last evening, after having acted as the officiating clergy- man at the funeral services of Mrs. W. A. Walker yesterday afternoon. The Ladies Aid society of the Norwegian Lutheran church will meet at the home of Mrs. George Anderson tomorrow afternoon at half past two. A cordial invita- tion is extended to all who wish to attend. John Graham, who is here from Minot, states that Thomas Moodie, formerly local editor of the Daily Pioneer, is now at Minot and is employed on the mechanical force of the Minot Daily Reporter. Mrs. Hatton of Jamestown, who has been visiting in the city for a fortnight, left this morning for her home at Jamestown. Mrs. Hatton is a daughter of the late Mrs. W. A. Walker, who was buried yesterday. Mrs. William Davidson of Wadena left for her home this funeral of her sister, Mrs. W. A, Walker, who was buried in Greenwood cemetery yesterday. Fred Jordan, the popular traveling salesman, is confined to his room with a very severe at- tack of Rheumatism that causes him much pain, His many friends hope he will soon get better of the disease and be able to be out again. Thomas Donald, traveling freight agent for the Milwaulkee Railway, was transacting busi- ness in the city today. He always bas a good word to say for Bemidji, as being one of the leading business centers in the north half of the state. W. N. Bowser has left the city on a trip that will include a stop in Cuba ere he returns. Mr. Bowser went from here to Du luth, thence to St. Paul and Chie- ago, and from the latter place started directly on a trip to the island of Cuba. He expects to absent for a month. Frank White, a former resident of Bemidji who conducted a general store on the corner where C. H. Miles now has his “Golden Club” saloon, was a visitor in the city today. Mr. White is now one of the hardy homesteaders in the vicinity of Big Falls, and he has an abiding faith in the future greatness of that com munity. He still owns property in this city, which he considers a -| valuable asset. T00 LATE TO = CLASSIFY. WANTED: Dishwagher, laun- dry girl, dining " room girl, chamber maid and two ‘bell boys. Inquire at Brinkman hotel, morning, after having been in|. the city yesterday, attending the | : ‘Weight of the Brain, There 18 just five ounces less amount of brain matter needed-to keep a wom- an from idlocy than there is needed for a man. The average weight of a man’s brain is forty-nine and one-half ounces and that of a woman forty-four ounces. When a brain falls below thir- ty-seven and a half ounces in a man idiocy usually occurs. A woman's brain has to fall to thirty-two aund one half ounces before she reaches the same condition. Man has a larger brain in proportion to his stature than woman, while, on the other hand, wom- an has a larger brain in proportion to her welght. The female brain begins to lose welght after the age of thirty; that of the man not till ten or fifteen years later. The loss in a woman lg slight, “owever, and she keeps up a high brain weight much later than a man. The Deadly Dull Bachelor. “It is always easy to see how long a couple have been married by noting whether the house is full of his friends or hers,” according to & writer In the London Ladies’ Field. “A man invari ably begins by Inviting all his bach- elor friends to his hcuse. He Is anx- lous to show off his wife, and he fond Iy imagines that they will like her and that she will like them, which rare. ly happens.” The writer then goes on to dissect the bachelor and concludes, “I don’t know why one's husband’s bachelor chums should, as a rule, be 80 deadly dull, but they usually are, and, as a matter of fact, It was prob- ably their dullness which originally drove him into matrimony, only he has not the sense to see it.” There would be fewer married if it weren’t for ths bachelors . — 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 even a splash of a ball was heard, and the Dutch ships remained unscathed. On the other hand, the Dutch could not see the terrible execution 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. Dandy's Wardrobe, 1714. The burglary of a dandy’s wardrobe meant a serious loss when it compris- ed, as In John Osheal’s case in 1714, “a scarlet cloth suit laced with broad gold lace, lined and faced with blue; a fine cinuaunion cloth suit, with plate buttons, the walistcoat fringed with a sllk fringe of the same color, and a rich yellow towered satin morning gown lined with a cherry colored satin, with a pocker on the right- side.”” There is something a little more manly perhaps in the dress of the gallant of 1600, pictured in one of Rowland’s epigrams. Behold a most acconplished cavaller, That the world’s ape of fashions doth appear, Walking the streets his humors to dis- close In the French doublet and the German hose, ‘The muffes, cloake, Spanish hat, Toledo ade, Itallan ruffe, a shoe right Flemish made. There seems to have been no foolish prejudice against foreign made goods In 1600.—London Chronicle. The Betel Nut. Chewing the betel nut in Slam, be- ing a common habit, at every little dis- tance as you go through the bazaar of Bangkok may be seen petty merchants busy making and selling the prepara- tion so universally masticated. The leaves in which the prepared mixture Is wrapped are from a vine known as the chavica betel. The nut Is from the arica betel palm, which reaches a height of about sixty feet, whose branches bear several large bunches of nuts which harden and redden as they ripen and which resemble somewhat the bunches of fruit on the date bear- Ing palm. The dealers cut up their green leaves into the proper triangu- lar form, crack the nuts and with ‘wooden spatulas work the tumeric stained juice into a paste. It is amus- Ing to see how skillfully they form the pleces of green leaf into pointed, cone shaped cups, into each one of which they place a portion of the ingredients, Temperatures of Flames, According to the results of experi- ments, the flame of acetylene Is per- haps the hottest known except that of the electric arc. The following figures have been glven: Bunsen burner, 1,871 degrees; acetylene flame, 2,648 degrees; i alcohol flame, 1,705 degrees; Denay- , rouze burner—half alcohol, half petro- leum—2,058 degrees; hydrogen flame in alr, 1,000 degrees; gas jet flame with oxygen, 2,200 degrees; oxyhydrogen flame, 2,420 degrees. These are all centigrade degrees. One degree cen- tigrade equals 1.8 degrees F. Too Fast. “The first day he went out with his new auto he got pulled.” “For golng fast?”’ “No; quite the opposite.” “I don’t ee”— ~ “For stopping fast. He had to hire a farmer to haul him home.”—Houston Post. RHEUMATISM WORSE FROM YEAR TO YEAR The cause of Rheumatism is an excess of uric acid in the blood, brought on by indigestion, chronic constipation, weak kidneys and a general slug- | gish condition of the entire system. The refuse and waste matter of the body is not carried out as nature intends, but is left to ferment and sour and generate uric acid, which is absorbed into the blood. The first evidence of Rheumatism is usually little wandering pains in the muscles and joints, or a tender, sensitive place on the flesh. These are often so slight that nothing is thought of them and they pass away; but with each recurrence the trouble becomes more severe, and from slight wandering pains and excited nerves, Rheumatism grows to be a painful aud almost constant trouble. The longer the poison remains in the blood the firmer hold the trouble gets on the sys- tem. FEach day the acid deposit is increasing and the disease grows worse from year to year. After awhile the joints become coated with a corrosive substance which seriously interferes with their working and movements and sometimes they become permanently stiff and useless. S.8.8. cures' Rheumatism by going down into the the salts S.S.S. PURELY VEGETABLE blood and attacking the disease at its head. It neutralizes the poisons and acidsand dissolves and irritating deposits, making the blood stream pure, fresh and healthy. 8.S.S is made entirely of roots, herbs and barks, and is therefore a safe remedy. - When the blood has been purified by S.S. S., the. pains and aches pass away, and the cure is permanent. Book on Rheumatism, and medical advice free. THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., ATLANTA, GAs Lawyers and Our Public Life. ‘Without stopping for statistics, which have been so often collated, it is enough to say that In the public life of this country the lawyer has been the conspicuous factor. The judiciary, of course, I3 altogether composed of mem- bers of the profession. In executive offices and I ative halls the law has predominated and still predominates over every business anl all other pro- | fessions. Yet the public life of this country has been of the highest char-’ acter. Acting for the public as the; lawyers have done in these various| fields of official labor, they have! proved true to their employment, and It may safely be said that the scan-! dals which have sometimes been found In official life have seldom attached to them., How can this be accounted for except upon the theory of a general personal Integrity? It Is no sufficlent explanation to say that, although the great mass of the profession Is cor- Tupt, there are a few who are reliable, { and they are the ones whom the public select for official life. The truth Is their very prominence in public life, their fidelity to the trusts therein im- posed, is evidence which cannot be ig- nored that the profession has and maintains a character for honesty and ; uprightness which attracts general ' confidence.—D. J. Brewer in Atlantie. Grent Combination, Suitor—I cannot boast of wealth, but I have brains. The members of my literary club will tell you that | you'd have the smartest debater in | town for a son-in-law. Father—And I | can assure you, my dear fellow, that youwd have the greatest lecturer m] the town for a mother-in-law. Anthorized by Shakespeare, Shakespeare has “sixt” for “sixth.” Doubtless he so pronounced it, for ha was credited with having written tha three parts of “Henry the Sixt,” and he certainly wrote “The Life of Henry the Fift,” as the old edition has it. And it Is worthy of notice that “fifta” and “siexta” are the Anglo-Saxon forms.—Professor Skeat In National Review. TEERA W ELOTHEG SYRUP 11ons of Mothers for oper Hiia v, and 15 the NT8 A “WTTI‘;.‘:;.. ’3 s Always Remember the Full Name | axative Bromo uinine Tablets Cure a Cold in One Day Cure Grip in Two Days C b “Parson Poor’s Donation Party ‘Will be given under the auspices of the L. A. Society of the Presbyterian Church, AT CITY OPERA HO?SE Friday Evening, Jan. 25th The play 1s all home Talent and will please old and yéfing. ‘,'I‘hve girls are all ancient and the parson quite real. The cast of characters being as fol}ows: CHARACTERS Parson Poor Mr. J. E. Lindgren Peter Poor (parson’s son) Clio Boyer ' Deacon Plunkett (a skinflint) Roy Prudden Willie Naylor Hovey Lord -Marvin Wright U....Phil Naylor Mrs. Marth Dusenberry ..Miss Olson Terzah Ann Tubbs.......Miss Nelson Mrs. Deacon Plunket Miss Brown Mrs. Sarah Jane Beebe...Miss Lydee ‘Widow Sharp Miss Harding . Madam Bradford....Miss Donaldson Mrs. Poor (parson’s wife) Miss Shaw Four boys visiting 1[ with donation party Lucy Poor (parson’s daughter) Olive Miller Dorothy Torrance ...Maud Naylor . ‘Lizzie Erickson +' Josie Clark : SCENE 1. Scene in Mrs. Dusenberry’s living room with a quilting bee about to meet. MUSICAL PROGRAM Male Quartette. A Messrs. Warfield, Lucas, Lindgren and Jerrard “‘So Long, Mary’’ Miss Blanche Boyer and Chorus Solo—Selected....... .. Vi siasiea b Mr. Alldis Male Quartette SCENE IL Parson Poor’s living room at time ' of donation party. You will see your aunts and vm‘.lc‘les ;of-" ’53 and children who donate their footin’s. It is worth your time and you 'wi'-l‘.‘ flje disap- pointed if you fail to see it. Price 35¢c e ONE NIGHT ! Children 25c¢

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