Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, March 13, 1907, Page 3

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You—= May Not Know j That the wholesaler sells the merchant Creamery Butter at 33c No doubt you know that the merchant sells it to you for 35¢ You ave certainly entitled to know that our price on this is 32c Gre Model | Everything that's good in the Bakery, Dairy and Confectionery line 315 Minnesota Ave. Phone 125 FIJOU | Automatic Drama—Vaudeville—Pop- ............ ular Concerts ............ 302 Third Street Every Evening 7:30 to 10:00 Saturday Afternoon 2:30 to 3:30 i i | | TONIGHT! EXTRA SPECIALS The Cameragraph Tdk LAW OF PARDON A MAGIC FLUTE ! Illustrated Song THE GIRL YOU LOVE THE MISCHEVIOUS BOYS' THE DOG SMUGGLER Don’t Miss It. Prorramme Changes Without Notice. Watch This Ad Daily. TICKETS 10 CENTS C. L. LASHER & SON, Props. ""'""""I"ll!&i%‘,‘g“""‘,}fl 7 A Refreshing Drink at all times, and especially in hot weather, is a foaming glass of MOOSE BRAND BuwER. 1t has life and body, too. Cool, healthful, invigorating, it stimulates diges- tion and quenches thirst. For a ! friend you can find no better than MOOSE BRAND BEER. It’sgood beer, real lager beer, none better. We take special care to make it that way. We deliver it to you just a~ good as we make it. +Iry ac <e at your home? Duluth Brewing & Malting Co. J.P. SIGNAL Local Agent Bemidf - - Minnesota Residence Phone 200, Office Phone 220 GhHe PIONEER Delivered to your door évery evaning Only 40c per Month $ The City AAAAAAAAA Read the Dailv Pioneer. Bemidji Elevator Co., jobbers Efor Barlows Best, also Gold Medal, ! Mascot and Cremo. Handkerchiefs! Linen hem- stitched ones at that, and only 5¢ |each at O'Leary & Bowsers’. D. N, Winton, the Thief River . Falls lumberman, was a business ! visitor in the city yesterday. | Call up Roe & Markusen, they 'have some thing especially in. lteresting to you. Phone 207. | City Attorney J. F. Gibbons returned yesterday afternoon ifrom a business trip to Duluth, ‘ Mrs. Fred Luken came up ,from Brainerd last evening and iis attending to business matters here today, Rev. F. E. Higgins, superin- tendent of missions of the Pres- byterian church, arrived in the city last evering. Another of the club dances will be held at the Masonic hall tomorrow evening. A delightful time is promised for this oc- casion, Buy your supply of handker- chiefs now of O’Leary & Bowser. | 100 dozen linen hemstitched hand- kerchiefs for ladies now on sale for Sc each. The Episcopal Guild will meet at the home of Mrs. George French, corner of Tenth street and Dewey avenue tomorrow afternoon at 2 o’clock. Pure food laws condemn adul- | terated or unhealthy food pro- ducts—Hunt's Perfect Baking Powder is approyed by the pure food laws everywhere. Noneed to be short on linen handkerchiefs while O'Leary & Bov'ser are selling 100 dozen linen hemstitched handkerchiefs for ladies at a nickle apiece. He had no coat upon his back, but had one on his tongue, and Rocky Mountain Tea, it’s said, kept him from beizg hung, (Bad breath ) Barker’s drug store. William Varner, of Turtle Riv- er is a visitor in the city today. The musical and dramatic en- tertainment to be given at the Methodist church Friday even- ing, March 22, has been post- poned until Monday the 25th. { This will be a musical treat. Wrinkles are age-tellers. Drive them away by taking Hollister’s Rocky Mountain Tea. It’s bet ter than cosmetics. It does the business. 35 cents, Tea or Tab- lets. Barker’s drug store. 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. 50c State of Ohio, City eof 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 huzdred dollars for eachand every case of Catarrh that can- ot be cured by the usefof Hall’s Catarrh Cure. FRANK J. CHENEY. Sworn to before me and sub- scrived in my presence, this 6th day of December, A. D. 1886, 1(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- moniz1s free. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, Ohio. Sold by all Druggists, 75¢. Take Hall’s Family Pills for constipation. If you read our ad: Our aim is to give the lowest possible P The New Store] have only pure food products to offer. Fresh Eggs and Creamery Butter a Specialty ROE & MARKUSEN Phone 207 s you will know we the best quality at rice. At The Lakeside ‘We have only good tales to tell of what we put into our bread, cakes The flour we well as the other materialsjiare the and pies, use as 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 Call at the Pioneer when you are in need of office supplies. John Dale, of Turtle River, is a business visitor in the city to- day. Call up Roe & Markusen, they have something especially inter- esting to you, Phone 207. John Thoren and Andrew Lar- son, of the town of Lammers are in the city today from Solway. William Lawhead, engineer for the Red River Lumber company, is spending the day in the city. John F. Mogun, cedar buyer for the Crookston Lumber Co., is in the city today from North- ome. R. W. Rako left yesterday afternoon for Canada. While there he will take up a home- stead. Miss Anna Jacobson, chief operator of the Northwestern Telephone Co., is on the sick list with a severe attack of ’grip. They’re such good bargains too! Those 100 dozen specirl linen hemstitched handkerchiefs for ladies at O'Leary & Bowsers. 5c apiece. G. R. Merritt, traveling freight agent for the Northern Pacific, is in the city today from Brain- erd attending to business matters for his company. Clark Clinch, William Snyder and Robert Steinert left yester- day afternocon for South Africa, where they intend to work in the woods getting out mahogany timber. It flows like fice through your veins; 1t does the work. If you're wasting away day by day, take Hollister’s Rocky Mountain Tea. 85 cents, Tea or Tablets. Barker’s drug store. Call up Roe & Markusen, they have something especially inter- esting to you. Phone 207. Have you bought any yet? Why, from the 100 dozen linen hemstitched handkerchiefs for ladies on sale at O’Leary & Bow- se’r for a nickle each. FIVE THOUSAND MEN OUT. Longshoremen’s Strike at Hamburg in Full Swing. Hamburg, March 13.—As a result of the refusal of the longshoremen to bind themselves to do night work and otherwise submit to the rulings of the shipowners the lockout, which began Monday, 18 now in full progress, about 5,000 men being aftected. Up to the present there has not been any dis- orders. Over 1,300 imported long- shoremen have arrived here to take the places of the locked out men. The Shipowners’ union and the Har- bor Traffic union held meetings dur- ing the day and again resolved not to employ any longshoremen who refuse to sign the agreement to do both day and night work. Several vessels Wwhich were to have unloaded here have been ordered to Altoma, where there is no trouble with the longshore- men. ON MOTION TO DISMISS. Case of Moyer et al. Comes Up at Caldwell, Ida. Calawell, Ida., March 13.—The case against Moyer, Haywood and Petti- bone, officials of the Western Federa- tion of Miners, charged with complic- 1ty in the assassination of former Gov- ernor Steunenberg, came up during the day on motion to dismiss. Judge ‘Wood of Boise has been called to pre- side. Failing to have the case dismissed counsel for the defense planned to make a motion for a change of venue. The state will fight the motion vigor- ously. Ruef’s Attorneys Continue Fight. San Francisco, March 13.-~Abraham Ruef’s attorneys have applied to the state supreme court for a writ ot habeas corpus. The application was laid before the justices when court convened. Courts of Love. “Courts of love” were established in the middle ages, when chivalry was at 1ts height and love the serlous occupa- tlon of life among the higher class of soclety. The first “court of love” was established in the south of France in the twelfth century and was composed of knights, poets and ladles, and their decislons on subtle questions connected with affairs of the heart were given with great formality. Had Had Proof. “Do you really think that one can tura gray in a night?” “Of course. My wife turned blond in an hour.”—Caricaturista. % HOLDS BRIEF SESSIOY SENATE MEETS AT NIGHT BUT TRANSACTS VERY LITTLE BUSINESS, BILLS AFFECTING RAILROAD AND TELEPHONE COMPANIES INTRODUCED. —_— St. Paul, March 12—The senate held a brief session at night, Little business was transacted, only two measures of importance being intro- duced. The house was not in session. A Dbill introduced by Senator L. O. Thorpe of Willmar prohibits the sole of intoxicating liquors within one mile of any United States military reserva- tion within the state. The soldiers at Fort Snelling now can get a drink by simply crossing the bridge at the en- trance to the reservation, but under this bill they will have to go a mile for one. A similar bill has been introduced In the house. All conveyances of real estate made by separate deed of husband and wife within the past five years are legalized by a bill introduced by Senator S. F. Alderman of Brainerd. The convey- ances are declared legal and valld and the records of such conveyances here- tofore made or within sixty days after the passage of the bill, actually rec- corded, are declared to be in all re- spects legal. To Prohibit Discrimination. A bill to prohibit diserimination by telephone companies between persons and localities in rates and telephone rentals and incorporating the long and short haul principle of rallroad rates as applied to telephone service was in- troduced by Senator H. E. Hanson of ‘Windom. The bill makes it unlawful for any company to establish any rate or rates for the transmission of a message over its line, or rentals there- of, which are unreasonably low or in- adequate, for the purpose and with the intent to prevent any other person or company from continuing in such business or with intent to injure or Impair the business of any other com- pany. It also prohibits giving, for the purpose of injuring or impairing the business of another company, any preference or advantage In rates to any town or locality, person or corpo- ration, or to give in any manner to any person or company or locality any rate not established or published as a rate for the same message for the same dlstance in any other locality, or to charge a telephone rental in any locality greater than charged for the same service In any other locality. A Dbill substituting a petition to the rallroad and warehouse commission for a petition to the district court by rallroads desiring to abandon a part of their lines, and making other amendments to the present law relat- ing to the abandonment or closing to traffic of railroad lines, was introduced by Senator Frank Clague of Lamber- ton. Amends Sections of the Code. The bill amends the three sections of the 1805 code relating to this sub- Ject, the first of which is section 2088, which provides that no railroad com- pany shall cease operating a line the construction whereof has been helped by public aid or local subscription ex- cept as provided in section 2039. The amendment covers all railroads and specifically includes in its prohibition against abandonment “any sidetrack, siding, spur or other track of any kind which has once been opened and used for business.” Section 2039 provides for a petitlon to the district court and a jury trial on the petition in order to authorize a company which has received such pub- lic aid to abandon a part of its line. The amendment proposed In this bill provides that any company desiring to abandon “or close for trafic” any portion of its line shall first make ap- plication ta the raflroad and ware- house commission. The commission shall fix a date for public hearing on the questlon, and if satisfled that the abandonment or closing of the line or siding will not result in any substan- tial injury to the public, the commis- sfon may allow the petition, otherwise it shall be denied or the commission may grant it in a modified form. Shortens the Time. Section 2040 provides that when any company shall have abandoned, taken up or ceased to operate its lines for sixty consecutive days without having complied with the provisions of the preceding section, any town, municipality or indivilual which has fssued bonds or given promissory notes or other things of value to such railroad may recover the same or its value.in an action in the district court. The bill amends this section by includ- ing the closing of any portion of the line for thirty days within the causes which will enable the recovery of the amount of aid given the road, and adds a provision that the aid must have been given as an inducement or in aid of the construction of the line ceased to be operated or closed for traffic. The joint investigating committee, of which W. A. Nolan Is chairman, heard testimony in behalf of lumber manufacturers and also coal dealers. The gist of the testimony was to the effect that there is no combine to control prices of efther coal or lumber. Shipbuilders’ Strike Spreads. Detroit, March 13.—The shipbuild- ers’ strike spread during the day to the Wyandotte yard of the American Shipbuilding company, where 300 men went out. No change in the situation Is reported from the other Michigan yards. Improvement Continues. Washington, March 13.—The im- provement in Arehie Roosevelt's con- dition continues. “He is doing nicely,” said Dr. Rixey, after his visit to the patient at the White House. | than tha Plaster of Paris Bananas. Bunches of bananas that are abso- lutely unfit for food hang out in front of the wholesale produce commission houses. Some of them Have rematned there until they have grown rusty with age. “Couldn’t get a finer looking bunch d one of the dealers even If it is plaster of the other da, parls. We used to put out the real article for a *izn. but the peddlers who came @ 4d u way of pulling one or two out of the bunch that hap- pened to be hanging there on the Look. The small boys, too, had a way of making a grab for a banana or tywo. By ti the bunch was on duty under (he awning for an hour it was ble to the aesthetic sense. 8o we to cultivate the make believe which 1s not quite so palztable, but just as good for advertising. youngster In bis haste will grab plas- | ter of paris fruit and get away with it before he realizes that he has made off with something bad for his diges- tlon.”—New York Herald. A Meal of Locusts. In the West Indies the negroes eat freely of the big grub found In palm trees. The fat, white morsel, which they call “grugrn,” I8 net cooked or salted. The aborigines of Auatralia live almost entirely on a butterfly known as the bugong. The flies ap- pear in batches on the rocks, and the natives smothor them with smoke from fires built below. It is said that a Hot- tentot, with an appetite made sharp by the simple life, can devour 300 fat locusts at a sitting and feel better sat- !sfied than if he had paid $8 for a ten course dinner. The Arabs dry the lo- custs and pulverize them into flour for breadmaking purposes. The Moors make a stew of them, and after boiling in water for a few minutes they are eaten with salt, pepper and vinegar. The locusts found in Central Africa are enormous, and the native negroes cut them in two and fry them in fat and find them not only appetizing, but nourishing. A flight of these big lo- custs is a matter of tribal thanksgiv- ing. Snakes With Twe Heads. I bave lately been assured by mere than one of my friends that they have seen in northern India snakes with two heads—I. e., without a tail, but with a second and perfectly formed head im the place where the tall ought te be. They assure me that there are speci- mens in northern India museums and that these freaks of nature are fre- quently found by the natives. The rid- er is added that the natives declare that each head lives and performs ac- tive service for six months in the year in turn. The snakes are said to grow to abouf three feet in length. I my- self have killed a small snake with two lheads, but these were both at the same end of the reptile, a very differ- ent matter, which is, I believe, a well known freak and in the same category with two headed calves.—Pioneer. Man and! His Dress. The well dressed man wears clothes that no one ever notices; at business, except in the very warmest weather, usually dark. No one ever notices , clean linen, while linen soiled ever so | slightly is very consplcuous. No one | { ever notices a hat unless it is of ultra | | shape, dirty or shabby. No one ever notices shoes unless they are loud or need blacking or are run down at the heels or shabby. No one ever notices clean finger nails, while those needing | man should not be lost sight of by the conspicuousness of his clothes, either from being overdressed or shabbily dressed.—Batten’s Wedge. The One and the Naught. { Oliver Wendell Holmes once sent two poetical letters to the “postoffice” of an | one of them the first stanza was: Fair lady, whosoever thou art, Turn this poor leaf with tenderest care d hush, oh, hush, thy beating heart. i The one thou lovest will be there. On turning the “poor leaf” there was found a dollar bill, with some verses begioning: Ffi’ lady, Uft thine eyes and tell this is not a truthful letter. | This s the one (1) thou loveth well, And naught (9) can make thee love it better (10). Qooultism, It is notewerthy that supernatural- other side of the globe among the ab- of the Mpaniards had been prophesied to the Mexicans by their caciques, and the prophecies were sung amid loud lamentations at their festivals.—Lon- doa Onleoker. The Hot Wind From the Desert, “Khamsin” I3 the hot wind from the desert which blows eut of the Sahara upon Hgypt. The word means fifty, from the idea that it lasts for fifty days. The “khamsin” is terribly hot and dry, and semetimes brings pes- Hleace with it. attention are always conspicuous. The | And-iever at thab. somieLl Episcopal fair at Pittsfield, Mass. In | imm prevailed just as strongly at the | origines of the new world. The coming ' “How Shall Ye Escape?” The Scriptures may be a dangerous ‘weapon to put into the hands of those who pervert their meaning, either in- tentionally or through want of under- | standing. Every one has heard how Lorenzo Dow, having resolved to preach a sermon against women's tall bonnets, took for hig text the words I“Topknot, come down,” which he kad | Ingeniously perverted from the lines, “Let him which is on the housetop not come down.” Less artful than this, but quite as amusing, was the unconscious error made by a young student of theology at Wilbraham seminary, whose case was related by an old divine. The student went out one Saturday to 1 preach his trial sermon. When Le re- | turned Monday the venerable Dr. X. | sald to him: “Well, how did you get along?” “Oh, very well, I thought.” | “Glad to hear it. What was your text?” | “‘How shall we escape if we neglect | o great salvation? “Very good text, very good text. How did you handle it?” “Well, first I showed them how great this salvation was”— “That’s right. And then?” “And then I told them how they i might escape if they neglected it.” If City Nolses Jur You. | Get some spermaceti, roll a wad large enough to fill the ear orifices, put it in a piece of fine cotton cloth tied with | thread and insert into ears on retiring, pressing it quite firmly therein so that the ball of spermaceti will closely fill | up all the air space in the ears. You will find it quite effective for barring | nofses, and hence inducing “mature’s 8weet restorer, balmy sleep,” to get in its good work. This ear plug s harm- less and cheap. It helped me out great- ly years ago amid the city’s din, my sense of hearing being intensely keen and temperament neurotic. It is worth a trial, and I have ne patent em it— New York Herald. = If you have 1epair work Cash Registers, Slot Machines, Typewriters Sewing Machines, Electric Work - or work on modern machinery we are in a position to do your work. We call at your residence or place of business and do your work promptly. Our company gives good refer- We have followed the business for the past fifteen ences. years. = Expert Machinists in the line of repairs on PARTRIDGE BROS. PHONE 39 dred pages. Blank ‘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-

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