Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, February 25, 1907, Page 3

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| | DBakeiy wuii- fectionery and wairy Store Dairy Products wholesale to the cousumer. Faney creame Bags. hL Cream, and Cheese. butte: Swest Cream, Milk Finest lineof Cak in the Northwist, s and Pastry The home of Snowllake B 315 Minnosota Ave. Fhone 12 ¢Mw-vmv¢mw v} The City } AAAAAMAAAAAA AR ARAA S Read the Daily Pineer Dr. Blakeslee resarnod this| morning from a visit at Black-| duck, William and Emaunel Plais of Breckenridge were visitois in the city today. B:midji Blevator Co., jobbers for Barlows Best, 2!s0 Guld Medal, Mascos and Cremo, J. A Branshaw of Leeds, D, was amorg the out visitors who spentlast n this city. N. Dick, Dou’tcomplain of spr fever, it's early. Take Barker’s Anti-Constipation Tat- lets. 35 fo J. P. Daugherty came d from Big Falls and spent today in this city, in company with his partaner, J. M. Dewpsey, of ro-polis. too Min- R. Stewart, general ; wr the Beltrami Land company, mana- Cedar 4 the city this morning nn 1 way from Blackducik to Brainerd | and Duluth, on a busi mis- | sion. J. M. Dempsey, the logger| and railroad contra Lor, ed through the city Siturday even- g, on his way to Big Falls, Mr Dempsey, with his pnfl‘»“ J. P. Daugherty, h'u the contracy | tn Huild the ex oo of the M. ta+ mnorth from Bg Falls to -nte national Fa d bis trip| p north was to ertain how! 1he work was progressi Eyeglasses fitted in latest; styles by Larson & Larszon, spe- cialists. block. Second floor Swedbaclk | A Refreshing Drink at all times, and especially in hot weather, is a foaming glass of MOOSE BRAND BeER. ~ 1t has life and body, too. Cool, healthful, mnvigorating, it stimula diges- tion and quenches thirst. For a friend you can find no better than MOOSIE BRAND BEER. 1t'sgood beer, real lager beer, none be We take special care to ma that way. We deliver it to you just as good as we make it. a case at your home? Duluth Brewing & Malling Co. J.P.SIGNAL Local Agent Bomidsi 8 g Minnesota Residence Phone 200, Office Phone 220 g M wn passed throug vh‘ Read the Dailv Pioneer, Rue & Marku- Btk ohiv Phone sen 4| K. H. Munnall went to Kclil her Saturday evening on busi ness. .;_ . C. Hale, the Blackduck at- torney, was a visitor in this city § today. Rev. Hall-Quest came down this morning from his home at | Blackduck, A. H. Pitkin, who has logging interests at Kelliher, came down this morning and spent today in this city. There will be no performance at the Bijou this evening, on ac- count of damage to machine. Will opon Wednesday, perhaps Tuesday. A man is never older than he 1[cu' s, “old man' if you’'ll take Barker’s Anti-Constipation Tablets, you’ll always feel young. 25 for 25¢. | Ed. Leavee, who has been visit- 'ing at Blackduck for several days \px scd through the city this ! morning ou his way to his home |in Minneapolis. W. B. Sherman, leatcher” for Ross Kelliher, came down | place this morning | today in the city. Dr. Henderson returned this morning from a professional vis- it to Northome, having gone to that place Saturday evening and | remained over Sunday. i 'Nuf said, when {you say that Hollister's Rocky ntain Tea is the greatest family remedy on earth. It does | yuu good going and coming. 33 cents, tea or tablets, Barker’s Drug Store. § .. G. Crothers, who was in- jnred at the fire which buruned the buildingson Minnesota ave- iunu, some three weeks ago, is again able to be about, although L alimp. He is able to look after his tonsorial powers, how- but, the “man- & Ross at from that and spent C. C. Hanson of Walker, the surance wan, was in the city {*udr\y havicg come down from orthome this morning. Mr. i U\mwn was here for the purpose loi paymg to Fred Scoft the ant of insurance on the hotel ch was recently burned at | Kelliber, Miss Sunol Warninger, daugh- terof Dr. and Mrs. Warninger, arrived in the city yesterday from Fosston, where she has been visiting with relatives for the past two weeks. She will remain here for a month, Miss Sunol spent most of the fall and | winter at Upham, N.D., where she was employed as bookkeeper for a business firm. i “ R. G. McCoy, the general man- {agur for the Grand Forks Lum- |ber company, came over from 1Grand Forks, N, D,, yesterday land remained inthe city until | the night train departed for the }w@at. Mr. McCoy was here for the purpose of consulting with |G E. Crocker, the local repre- | sentative of the Grand Forks |company. Mrs. McCoy accom- panied her husband. Lievtenant O. H. Dockery of Duluth came in yesterday after- {noon from the “Zanith City” and | remained here until the night train going east, The lieutenant who has charge of the army re- cruiting offices for this district jof Minnescta, asserts that he is | well pleased with the work being done m Bemidji by Sergeant Eilek, who has charge of the local |station, and he reiterates the | statement that this city is one of the best recruiting points, con- sidering its size, of any in the entire country. A T TS o e White J aclffii Flour The Perfect Flour is a scientific product of the most approved milling meth cuits, cakes and pastriesit ¢i ——the kind that combine pu highest nourishing values. You get this flou ods. The bread, rolls, bis- elds are genuine health foods rity and deliciousness with r at our store. ROE @ MARKUSEN PHONE 207 At The Lakeside We have only good tales to tell of what we put into our bread, cakes and pies. The flour we use as well as the other materials are the best and‘ the way we mix and bake insures a high class product. You have but to give us a trial in order to be convinced PHONE 118 Eric Ives left yesterday after- noon for a visit at Crookston, Oranges. The best in the city at Roe & Markusen. Phone 207. Mrs. J. W. Johnson of Cass Lake was a visitor in the city yosterday. We have the best cheese in the city; try it. Roe & Markusen, Phone 207. Chief of Police S. C. Bailey went to St. Paul this morning on a business mission. Miss Olson,-teacher in the Be- midji public school, returned yes- terday afternoon from Cass Lake where she visited with relatives for two days, The east-bound passenger train on the Great Northern was an hour and forty-five minutes late yesterday. The train was held at Grand Forks for other trains on connecting lines. ‘Why don’t you get into line with the other girls, Mary and use Parisian Secret. It’s the greatest complexion cream ever marketed.”” 25c at Barker's Drug Store. They scowled and look sour from morn till night, They never would agree; Now they are healthy, happy and bright, They both take Rocky Mountain Tea at night. Barker’s Drug Store. Miss Amy Hall of Iron River Wis., visited with Mr. and Mrs. McCauley, at 1013 Dewey avenue, the latter partof last week. Miss Hall was on her way to Rugby, N. D, to assume charge of the postoffice at that place, Erton Geil came down from Fowlds Saturday noon and re- mained in the city for an over- Sunday visit with relatives and friends. Erton is working in the Bank of Fowlds and is giving excellent satisfaction. He re- turned to Fowlds this afternoon. Great investment, absolutely safe, brings returns, giving sur- plus earning power of youth till old age, securing comfort and health in your declining years. That’s what Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea does. Barker’s drug store. Louis Eatrup, the rotund, gen- ial representative for the Elicl- German Drug company «£ Minne- apolis, was in the city yesterday. “Louie” is still the same good fellow as of yore, and always gets his share of the business in bis “nack of the woods.” Miss Helen Walker arrived here Saturday and has taken charge of the millinery depart- ment at The Berman Emporium. Miss Walker is an artist in her profession and has trimmed for Gage Bros. in Chicago, Sioux City, Iowa., and in the largest Ill. towns. All of the latest creations of the millinery ar- tists for spring wear will soon be on display at Berman Empor- ium, State of ' Ohio, City of Toledo, Lucas County, ss. Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he is senior partner of the firm of F. J. Cheney & Co., doing business in the city of Toledo, county and state aforesaid, and that said firm will pay the sum of one hundred dollars tor each and every case of Cutirrh that can- not be cured by the use of; Hall’s Catarrh Cure. FRANK J. CHENEY, Sworn to before me and sub- scribed in my presence, this 6th day of December, A. D, 1886. (SEAL) A. W, GLEASON, Notary Public. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Send for testi- monials free. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, Ohio. Sold by all Druggists, 75¢. Take Hall’s Family Pills for constipation. B. G. Norlan of Akely Sun- dayed in Bemxd]l Mrs. I. W. was a visitor in thy civy day. C. G. Davis of Long Prairie was an over-Sunday visitor in the city. Mrs. Gibbs of Farley was do- ing some shopping in the city Saturday. G.N. Gould of Solway wes transacting business in Bemidji, Saturday. The Pioneer at all times has in stock office supplies of every description Every lady desiring ‘a friend for beauty’s sake” may_calli at Barker’s Drug Store for & sample bottle of Parisian Secret, No can of Hunt’s Perfect Bak- ing Powder has ever been con- demned by Jany pure food de- partment—they don’t condemn purity = and wholesomeness— that’s why. Skip Knouff, who had been scaling at Teastrike for the sur- veyor general, came down from that place this morning and went to Cass Lake (his home) this noon, having received word that his son is seriously ill, Advice to mothers. Don’t let your children waste away. They can be strong, healthy and vigor- ous with Hollister’s Rocky MountainTea. It's a swift winged messenger of health. 35 cents, tea or tablets, Barker’s Drug Store. At the regular meeting of the Odd Fellow lodge last Friday evening, the sisters of the Re- bekah lodge took advantage of the occasion to surprise the “three-linkers,’’ and came in on them without warning, at the close of the regular lodge session, Aa enjoyable social session en sued, during which 1 nice lunch was served and a geod time had all who were so fortunate as to be present. Shaw of Black o k PILES CURED IN 6 TO 14 DAYS. PAZO OINTMENT is guaranteed to cure any case of [tching, Blind. Bleeding or Protruding pilesin 6 to 14'days or money refunded. 50¢ Mark Twain's Ant. “Mark Twain in one of his amusing books of travel attacks the ant,” said a nature student. “He ridicules the idea that the ant is industrious and wise. He devotes three or four pages to an account of an ant making its way homeward with a burden. He shows the ant climbing grass stems instead of going round them, doing a hundred silly things, taking in every case the long and foolish instead of the ghort and sensible way home. And hence, naturally enough, he concludes that the ant's wise industry is over- rated—naturally enough, I say, Mark Twaln’s ignorance being granted, for he was unaware when he wrote that long and interesting passage that many kinds of ants are blind. He did not, for all his close obscrvation, take up his little aft subject, look for its eye sockets and find them absent. It was a blind ant Mark Twain studied, and he didn’t know it.”—Cincinnat! En- quirer. A Trio of Husbands. The traveled girl was explaining the strange looking locket she had about her neck on a thin gold chain. “It is a Buddhist charm,” she sald, “to keep off bad luck. A swarthy lit- tle woman in Tibet gave it to me. She took a great fancy to me. It is hand- some if the back is of tin. The face is of turquoise. They make them like that in Tibet. The little woman’s hus- bands came up to her one by one, beg- ging her to go home with them, but she wouldn’t till she had finished talk- ing to me. I felt very much flattered. Oh, yes, she had three husbands. The ‘women are very scarce, you know, in Tibet. It was lovely to see them dancing attendance on her. Tall fel- lows there were, too, and handsome. She asked me how many husbands I had. It was very humiliating to have to acknowledge to her that I hadn’t any,” she sighed.—New York Press, Captured by the Students, Some years ago the selectmen of the town of Hanover, N. H., decided, in their wisdom, to collect a poll tax from every Dartmouth student of legal age. The boys said nothing to this, but quietly decided that if they paid taxes they would also vote. So they turned out in full force at the annual meeting. Having strength enough to secure con- trol, in less than five minutes they had elected students to the positions of moderator and clerk. Thirty minutes from the time the meeting was called to order the town of Hanover had gone on record as having voted to build a brick schoolhouse 500 feet long, ten feet high and two feet wide and to build a plank walk from Reed Hall in Hanover to Lebanon, in which town was a female seminary. The tax col- lector did not trouble Dartmouth stu- dents for many years after that. The Universal Language of Clothes. The top hat represents the universal language of attire. It wails and weeps against the walls of Jerusalem, and it turns up In the solitudes of the desert. Bven the loneliest mountain penks are not safe from its democratic simplic- ity. Once I met a silk hat, probably rescued from some benevolent dust bin, milking a cow in a London park, The hat nearly caused a riot. Each and every passerby turned and stared in- dignantly. The eccentrlc cowboy -in the top hat finished his allotted task, and in company of his cow and the milk pail he ambled placidly out of sight. 8till one can’t help asking in ‘uuole‘nt acs atnr- i the Interest of personal liberty, Why ' | milk a cow? g0 why should view. My most rema each of t havinv: 1 vior may be gleaued f om the fact that the smallest of (e seven i3 tw four feet high, seventeen feet long and twelve feet wide. Travelers who have carefully examined them are of the opinion that it took centuries of work to carve these graceful edifices from native rock. Hard Drilling. A Dbit of the kind of American humor that has thrived since the days of Ben- Jamin Franklin comes from a Montana mining camp. Said one miner, “The rock down in that shaft is so bard that they used six barrels of drills the other day and barely scratched it.” “Ugh!” said another. “I saw ’‘em working on a ledge once where tue rock was so hard that after they had used nine barrels o' drills on it the hole stuck out six inches.” He Liked School. A bright litlle four-year-old boy was taken to school for the first time. Aft- or he had been given a desk and set to work he suddenly put up his little hand. “What do you want, Fritz?” asked the teacher. “I should like to know when the holi- days begin,” said Fritz—Die Muskete. No Great Loss. “Ob, I am in despair,” cried a poor woman, “my son has swallowed a cent!” “Do not be too much distressed,” sald her friend. “After all, a cent is not a great sum.”—Scacciapensiert. Up and Down. Stranger—What are your terms? Ho- tel Clerk—Rooms a dollar up. Stranger —I'm a poet, and I want— Clerk—Oh, in that case our terms are a dollar down.—Boston Transeript. Empty men are the trumpets of their own deeds.--Massinger. Gold and Silver Gospels. “The Gold and Silver Gospels” ig the name of a very peculiar book now pre served in the Upsala library In Swe- den. It is printed with metal type on violet colored vellum, the letters being silver and the initials gold. When it | was printed, by whom or what were \ the methods employed are questions | which have great interest for the curi- 9us, but have never been answered. Not Needed. “I have here a neat and pretty litile! fetter opener,” began the agent. “So have I at home,” said the busi ness man sadly. “I'm married.” word for a snow squail in h.\e Winter of 1850-81, it fs said to have heen known {0 the west in that sense nearly twenty years earlier. From an Ing- |lls!l writer of 1834 this sentence is { quoted: “A gentleman at dinner asked me for a toast, and, supposing he meant to have some fun at my ex- pense, 1 concluded to go ahead and give him and Lis likes a blizzard.” Here blizzard might well mean a metaphor- lcal volley, which would square with the evidence of a correspondent of an American paper who recalled that in the forties a blizzard was a particular kind of volley—a rattling one, fired n quick succession, as opposed to a si- multaneous “broadside”—affected by sportsmen on the Atlantic coast who shot at flights of migratory birds from behind screens. A Savage’s Sense of Duty. Although the Australlan aborigine has his vendetta, it Is not always re- venge that he seeks. Darwin tells of a native servant of a west Australian magistrate . ho went one day to his master, saying that one of his wives had dled. - He must go away therefore to a distant tribe and spear a woman to satisfy his sense of duty to the dead woman. “If you do, I'll send you to prison for life,” said his master. For a year the man hung about, look- ing wretched and ill and complaining that he could neither eat nor sleep, as the spirit of his wife haunted him because he had not taken another life for hers. At last he disappeared. A | year later he returned in high condi- tion. There was no legal evidence against him, but it was known that he had gone to a distant tribe, had speared a woman to death and so, as he thought, appeased the spirit of his departed wife. Leigh Hunt. This famous Englishman has two dis- tinct claims to fame. Not only was he a brilliant poet, essayist and critie, but much that we know of Keats, Shelley, Lamb, Byron, Moore, Coleridge, Dick- ens and Carlyle has been derived from the knowledge of these celebrities which Hunt gave to the world. Pos- sessing a happy spirit and genuine scholarship, Leigh Hunt's writings sparkle with wit and cleverness, while his translations are among the choicest of their kind. His pecuniary difficulties | his Dbest at times, but after he was | granted a pension amounting in all to! £320 per anmum the improved com- fort and augmented leisure enabled him to make his mark on English lit- erature with essays of remarkable power.—Pearson’s Weekly. Could Have Saved His Wood. { A number of years ago a village in the eastern part of the town of Middle- undoubtedly prevented Hunt giving us! | | I 1 ! the Introduction of a musical fnstru- ment in its church service. At the final meeting when the matter was to be settled excitement ran high. One man whose reputation for honest deal- ings was not always above suspicion le a fiery speech in opposition. A nelgnuol whose back yard joined the speaker’s could hardly walt for the close of the remarks. Then, jumping to his feet, without waiting to address the chairman, he said: “Gosh, sir, if T bad known the gentleman was @0 afraid of an organ I should have had one hung on my wood pile years ago.” —Boston Herald. District Attorney name? Prisoner- . trict Attorney -\ I sent to about you the same man aie prison for five years Prisoner—No, sir. D! niey—What? Not the same man l sent on for burglary six years ago? Prisoner—No, sir. Dis- trict Attorvey (turning to jury with a “got him dead to rights” leer, then turning to prisoner)—Your name is James Bruce of Boston, Mass., isn't it? Prisoner—Yes, sir. District Attorney— And do you stand there and solemnly swear I never sent you 1o state prison? Prisoner—Ob, yes, you sent me to pris- on for five years, but I have not been the same man since. A Chinese Chair of Repentance. The knife chair is an instrument of torture used in certain Taiping reli- gious ceremonies, which takes the form of a straight backed armchair furnish- ed with long blades wherever the body and limbs touch the chair. On the back the knives are placed horizontally; on the seat, as well as at the base for the feet to rest upon, vertically, while each arm is made of a similar blade, along the edge of which the sitter's arm rests. These blades are sharpened with a whetstone before us.—Wide World Magazine. She Well Knew. Gayley—You haven't had occasion to accuse me of pl ng poker for two years. Mrs. Gayley—Three years, my dear. Gayley—Iow do you know it's three years? M Gayley—Because T've worn this dress that long, and I got it the last time I caught you.— Catholic Standard and Times. Most Famous Saying. “Whet is the most famous saying ever made by man?” an editor asked. Some thought that Caesar, some thought that Socrates, some that Lin- coln, some that Nelson, had said the most memorable thing; but finally the palm was awarded to Euclid, the mathematician. Buclid went te Alexandria to teach Ptolemy Soter, the king of Egypt, mathematics. Ptolemy plodded at his problems a week or two, and then asked Luclid impatiently if there svas not some special, shorter way by which be could be taught. “Sire,” Euclid answered, “there is no boro was very much wrought up over | royal road to learning.” Books Beginning the New Year nearly every business will need new sets of books. The Pioneer carries a full line of books and an in- spection of the stock will show that we earry all sizes, # styles and bindings of books. We have the two, three, our and five column day books and journals. A good line of cash books; a well selected stock of ledgers, single or double entry, one hundred to eight, hun- dred pages.

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