Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, March 15, 1907, Page 3

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G ——— You—— May ' Not Kaow That the wholesaler sells the merchant Creamery Butter at 33¢ No doubt you know that the merchant ‘sells it to you for 35¢ You are certaialy entitled toe know that our price on this is 32¢c Gre Model Everything that's good in the Bakery, Dairy and Contfectionery line 315 Minnesota Ave. Phone 125 BIJOU Automatic Drama—Vaudeville—Pop- - ular Concerts ............ 302 Third Street Every Evening 7:30 to 10:00 Saturday Afterncon 2:30 to 8:30; TONIGHT! EXTRA SPECIALS The Cameragraph TRIALS OF THE SUBPOE- NA SERVER ROBBERY OF A BANK IN THE SLUMS OF PARIS | Tllustrated Song g { MAPLE TREES ALL ABOARD THE VILLAGE CUT-UP Don’t Miss It. Pro yramme Changes Without Notice. Watch This Ad Daily. TICKETS 10 CENTS C. L. LASHER & SON, Props. | specially in hot alass of It has i at all times, aad weather, 1s a MOOSE BRAND life and body, Ly == A Refreshing Drink invigorating, it 3 tion and quenches thi friend you can find no beiter than MOOSiE BRAND BEBR. 1v'sgood beer, real lager beer, none better. We 'take special care to make it We deliver it to you Try ! that way. 3 { just as good as we rmake it, a case at your home? Duluth Brewing & Malting Co. J.P. SIGNAL Local Agent Bemidji - - Residence Phone 290, Minnesota Office Phone 220 Ghe PIONEER Delivered fo your door every evening Only 40c per Month | B! VNARANAAN The City [¢v AAARAAAAA | ]‘ Read the Dailv Pioneer, l St. Patrick pins and postal {cards at Peterson’s. i Tickets for the violin comcert |on sale at Barker’s drug store. | Theo. Gullickson was a busi- Iness visitor at Fowlds yester- | day. ;‘ Attend the violin concert at ‘the Presbyterian church this evening. J. T. Dolan, of Superior, was a business visitor in the city yesterday. Bemidji Elevator Co., jobbers ‘zfor Mascot Flour, also Cremo, Bar- !low’s Best and Gold Medal. Handkerchicfs! Linen hem- | stitched ones at that, and only 5¢ | each at O'Leary & Bowsers’. Ole Theobaldi, the violinist, [ will appear at the Presbyterian I church this evening. Tickets, 50¢. Mrs. Johun Larson who has been visiting in the city for the past few days returned to Fowlds today. B. Y. P. U. “Irish Social” in the Baptist church on Friday evening, the 22nd, Don’t be afraid of the Irish. Thomas Donard, traveling freight agent for the Chicago, Milwaukee railway company isin the city today from Minneapolis. Mrs. Peter Audet who has been visiting friends in the city the past few days, returned to hor ome at Big Falls last even. ing. Buy your supply of handker- chivfs now of O’Leary & Bowser. 100 dozen linen hemstitched hand- lkercbiefs for ladies now on sale Hor Se each. The ladies of the Episcopal church will hold a food sale at the store of Roe & Markusen to- morrow afternoon commencing at four o’clock. He had no coat upon his back, bus had one on his tongue, and Rocky Mountain Tea, it’s said, :pt him from being hung, (Bad breath.) Barker’s drug store. J. H. Whittlesey, of Minne- is is a business visitor in the the city today. Mr, Whittlesey is traveling freight agent for the Pere Marquete railway company. ‘The musical and dramatic en- tertainment to be given at the Methodist church Friday even- ing, March 22, has beeun post- poned until Monday the 25th. i This will be a musical treat. ! PILES CURED IN 6 TO 14 DAYS. PAZO OINTMENT is guaranteed to cure any case of Iiching, Blind. Bleeding or Protruding piles in 6 to 14 days or money refunded. 50¢ | iState 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 | ry case of Catarrh that can- Enrfl. 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, 75c. Take Hall’s Family Pills for constipation. Ghe New Stor If you read our ads you will know we have only pure food products to offer. Our aim is to give the lowest possible price the best quality at Fresh Eggs and Creamery Butter a Specialty ROE & MARKUSEN Phone 207 Subscribe For The Pioneer. At The Lakeside f ‘We have only good tales to tell of what,we put into our bread, ciakes and pies. The Nour we use as well as the other matarials] ave the best and the way we mix aud bake insures a high class product. _but to give usa trial in order to be convinced] PHONE 118 Call at the Pioneer when you are in need of office supplies. Mrs. G. A. Jones left today for a weeks visits with her parents. Tickets for the violin concert on sale at Barker’s drug store. Christ Olson returned this morning from a trip to Kelliber. Attend the violin concert at the Presbyterian church this even- ing. The Pioneer at all times has in stock office supplies of every description Henry Becker and M. Rygg of Spaulding were visitors in the city yesterday. Ole Theobalds, the violinist will appcar at the Presbyterian church this evening. Tickets, 50c. Professor Turner will render two selections at the recital to be given by Mrs. Foster, Thursday, March 21, Ducks and geese for sale: 12} cents per pound dress Saturday only. Bemidji meat market. Phone 24 J. Bisiar, of the firm Bisiar, Vanderlip Co., is spending a few days attending to the company’s business at Park Rapids, Mrs. R. E. Chase and family arrived inthe city from Lake Nebagowan, Mrs. Chase 1sa niece of Mrs. E. H. Munhall. A. Hagberg returned from Brainerd last evening where he went the fore part of the week to attend the funeral of an uncle. The ladies of the Episcopal church will hold a food sale at the store of Roe & Markusen to morrow afternoon commencing at four o’clock. Have you bought any yet? Read the Daily Pioneer, Bemidji Elcvator 1., jobbers ‘or Glod Medal flour. Hyucinths in bloom Lake Park green hovse. 1242 Doud Av . Phone 166 3. They’re sucli ool h:rgains too! Those 100 doz2n specirl linen hemstitched handkerchiefs for ladies at O’Leary & Bowsers. ¢ apiece. [Copyright, 196, by Homer Sprague.] I had chosen Weymouth, on the south coast of England, as the spot Wvhere I was to “lay off” for a month and recuperate. The three or four men who had boats to hire soon had them all out. I had planned to fish that day, and as I took my boat out T passed at least a dozen others. There was something of a sea on, and only one boat followed me out. Its occupants were a man and a wo- man. The man had charge of the sall, and I soon had cause to wonder that he had been permitted to take a sail- boat out. It was clear that he knew preclous little about the management of such a craft, and after awhile 1 brought my boat up Into the wind and walted for him to come up that 1 might give him a warning. ‘When he came along he was within an ace of cutting me down, and I cried out to him that but for the woman in the craft I should like to see it bottom side up and he hanging on for dear life. He gave me some impudence in reply, and the woman stood up and held her arms out to me pleadingly. It at first seemed to be a case calling for interference, but on second thought | I changed my mind. The woman; whom I took to be the man’s wife, had not demanded my aid except by signs. The man had thus far escaped disas- ter and might carry the boat back. He was sailing straight out into the channel, but he might turn at any mo- ment. To interfere was certain to bring on a row, and I even might be landed in jail over it. I resumed my course, bearing away from them, but as I watched the other craft she suddenly vanished from sight like the snap of your finger. A fog A Government to Kick About. “We kick about our own govern- ment,” sald a reformer, “and it Is doubtless pretty bad, but what would ‘we think If It took the taxpayers’ mon- ey to pay every year a pension of $50,- 000 to the Goulds, another of $75,000 to the Astors and another still .of $25,000 to the Vanderbilts? That is what goes on in England. The English doctor, the English druggist, the English car- penter, all sorts of hardworking Eng- lishmen, are taxed $200 or $300 a year, and the money goes to pay the huge pension of some ducal loafer who is already too rich. Charles IIL, for in- stance, granted an eternal pension of $95,000 a year to the Duke of Rich- mond and Gordon. In all the years since Charles IL’s time that pension has been pald out of the taxpayers’ pockets. To this day it is paid. The present Duke of Richmond and Gordon settles for his dinners at the Ritz in London or at Ciro's In Monte Car ‘with money earned by English butch- ers, bricklayers and blacksmiths,”—Ex- change. The Lion’s Mouth, The use of the lion's mouth as the vent of a fountain is so common that it cannot be regarded as accidental. As a matter of fact, the custom (like so many customs—not forgetting the foun- taln pen) came from Egypt, which adopted it because the annual inunda- tion of the Nile takes place when the sun is in the constellation Leo—the lon. The allusion is too obvious to need pointing out. The oldest fixed date (4241 B. C) can be traced to BEgypt, where the calendar was intro- duced in the middle of the forty-thlrd century. And the history of modern shipbuilding began in Egypt, where it can be traced to about 3000 B. C. The most recent discoveries give to the land of Egypt a clean run of about 11,000 years without any admixture of foreign races. “Egypt, land of hidden mysteries, great mother of science and art, what thinking mind has not dream- ed of thee!”—New York Press. Husband Would Settle. From India comes a story of the dis- comflture of a very distinguished sol- dier. It happened at a big dinner, where he had taken in a pretty Amer- fean globe trotter, who asked him to pass a dish of almonds and raisins. “With pleasure,” replied the gallant son of Mars, “but do you know that ‘what you have asked for is called in the vernacular kissmiss and that the penalty of a kiss attaches to the re- rolling in had hidden her. The other boat was half a mile away when she was blotted out. The tide was setting in, and I knew that she would drift back toward me as soon as the breeze fell. It was perhaps a quarter of an hour before I heard voices and ten minutes later before I could make out words. They came from the other boat, which was drifting slowly in. The man was cursing and threatening and the woman begging and praying. “I will leave you, I will go away, if you will spare my life,” pleaded the ‘woman. “You promised once before and then lled to me,” came the voice of the man, “But It will be murder, murder, mur- der! Obh, Richard, you don’t mean to kill me!” “But I do. You have been In my way for years. Curse you! Why did I ever run across your face? You have Why, from the 100 dozen linen hemstitched handkerchiefs for ladies on sale at O’Leary & Bow- se’r for a nickle each. L. 8. Briggs, formerly clerk of court at Princeton, Mille Lacs county, passed through the city yesterday on a business mission to Big Falls. E. D. Alger, manager of the T. M. Partridge Lumber Co., of Tenstrike was a business visitor in the city last evening, retura- ing home this morning. No need to be short on lincn handkerchiefs while O’Leary & Bowser are’ selling 100 dozen linen hemstitched handkerchiefs for ladies at a nickle apiece, It flows like fire 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. This is the day of “pre-digest- ed” foods. No food comes so near being easily digested as good home cooking—whenHunt’s Perfect Baking Powder is used (in biscuit and cake). G. R. Merrit, freight agent for the N. P. R. R. Co,, and M.R, Brown of the C. B, Q.Q, who have been in the city for the past few days, left on the south bound passenger train this morning. A pleasant social gathering was held at the home of Mrs. E. N French last evening. Abcut twenty friends were invited in to spend the evening. The evening was pleasantly spent in games after which an excellent lunch was served. There will be spiritulist lect- ures at the court house, Friday Saturday and Sunday evenings by prominent speakers and test mediums from the state associa- tion. All friends of liberal thoughts and seekers after t-uth are especially invited. Al are welcome, Wrinkles are age-tcllers. Drive them away by taking Hollister’s Rocky Mountain Tea. It's bet ter than cosmetics. It does the business. 85 cents, Tea or Tat- lets. Barker’s drug store. stood between me and happiness long enough.” “But I'll go this time. I promise you before God I'll go. Richard, I have been a good wife to you, but if you have come to hate me I'll go.” “Hate you!” he growled, like a savage animal, “Why, I hate you to the death. T'd have murdered you a dozen timps over in the last two years if I'd had a falr show. You are going to die now.” “Oh, my God, don’t do It, Richard! Dor’t kill me!” I knew their boat was close to me mnow, and I gently raised my anchor 80 ag to drift In company with it. -1 might have cried out, but I did not. Had I struck my hand on the rail of the boat they must have heard me. I ‘was sllent, but why I cannot tell. I heard the man move. I heard him tug- ging and breathing hard as he picked the woman up in his arms. She whimpered and gasped and tried | § to scream, but he gave her a fling over the gunwale of the boat. She falnted away, but did not go under the surface. With the boat hook I reached as far out as I could on' the port side, and presently I had her and was pull- Ing her in. The two craft were not ten feet apart, and yet no human sight could plerce the fog between. I held the woman's head out of the water for ten minutes. Then I some- how knew that the other boat had drifted ahead of me, and with the ut- most care I hauled the unconscious wo- man into the boat and laild her on the bottom. I walted seven or eight minutes, and I then out with the long oar and by compass guided the boat to reach the shore at Bridport, to the west of Weymouth. Before we struck the beach I had forced some brandy down her throat, and she had regained confclousness, but I did not explain matters to her until we were on the sands and the fog had rolled away. She had begged for her life like a weak woman, and I expected to find her hysterical. heard me through without interruption, and then her eyes snapped, and she set her jaws. I got a farmer to drive us over to Weymouth, and during the Journey she did not speak five words. Her husband’s boat had not made har- bor yet. The fog had disappeared, but the breeze was yery weak. ‘We went to the house where the boat had been hired and waited. When the boat drew near the woman hid hergelf. Her husband came ashore with pale face and bloodshot eyes. The doat owner sald nothing of a woman having gone with him, and the man was about turning away when the woman stepped out and took him by the arm. He gave one look and groaned out and sank down, and when he opened his eyes he began babbling. The pair were at the hotel for long weeks after I left, but so far as I could keep track of the case the man had not recovered. He could walk around, but he smiled and babbled In a silly way, and his mind was that of an /idiot. And, stranger than all, the wo- ‘man never thanked me for what I had 'done or made mentlon of the affalr though I saw her three or four times She | § quest?” “Is that so?” answered the woman calmly. “I must consult my husband,” and she called across the table to him and told him of the request. “Quite 80, he replied, “according to the custom of the country it is a just debt and must be paid, but is the gen eral aware of the arrangement made when we married that I must settle all my wife’s liabilities?” Submerged Aristoorats, Some curious letters are quoted by Mr. Percival Bickerstaffe the pedigree searcher, In an Interview witha rapre- sentative of the London Tribune. One runs: work. My stummick is empty, but in my art is *he blud of noble burth, * * * I claim the family title and tenements which I will not be denyed the same.” A city clerk wrote: “I have long suspected that 1 am of high birth. People tell me that I have manners above wmy station of life. My photograph herewith shows that I have an aristocratic cast of face and will perhaps be a clew to my ancestry. 1 do not ask for fortune, but I aspire to the pride of race.” Beans to Separate Bones. Anatomists, when they wish to sep- arate the bones of a skull, sometimes ‘resort to a very peculiar procedure. They fill the skull with small beans ! and place it in a vessel of water. The i beans swell and rend the skull apart at the sutures. The well known Ger- man physiologist, Grehaut, measured the force which the beans are capable of exerting under these conditions and found that it indicated five atmos- ipheres, equal to the average pressure ! in tae boiler of a steam engine, Put on More Than the Saddle. A cookery s giving a les- son to a class of children and ques- The neck, shoulder, leg and loin had been mentioned. “Now,” said the teacher, “there is another joint no one has mentioned. Come, Mary, I know your father is a horse?” unexpected answer. — Cassell’'s Satur- “I am a plumber and gasfiter out of tloning thew ou the joints of mutton, | groom; what does he often put on a . i “A dollar each way, miss,” was the | Where It Snows In Summer. Snow, it appears, only falls in the antarctic in summer and on those rare occasions at other seasons when the wind blows almost due south, and, strange to say, these south winds are warm winds, raising the temperature to 50 or 60 degrees F. They seem akin to the snow melting Foehn winds of the Alps. Fully Posted. “Could you do the landlord in ‘The Lady of Lyons? ” asked the manager of a seedy actor. “Well, 1 should think I might. have done a good many landlords.” L Not a Dog. 01d Lady (to —I want a box {of canine pills. Chemist—What's the | matter with the dog? Old Lady (in- dignantly)—I want you to understand, sir, that my b 14 is a gentleman. (In profound silence the chemist put | up some quin Loodon Queen, Name, “Who is that long haired fellow?” “Uriah It Peiggs. He's ! making quite n name for himself.” | I shot e would. If my H ! paren ‘0 me a name like his *d to make one for my- ; A Good Example. i Father — W did you run away, Franz? Franz—Bec e mamma was 80 unkind. Father—That s no reason. Do I run away?—Wiener Caricaturen. The Universal Tyrant. Everybody condemns the silk hat, everybody finds it absurd—and every- body wears it.—Par’s Siecle. day Journal. expense. builds up every part of the system PURELY VEGETABLE POISON CURE YOURSELF AT HOME Most persons who are afflicted with Contagious Blood Poison hesitate to go to a physician for several reasons. a heavy, and they know that the inevitable treatment will be mercury and potash, strong minerals that act with disastrous effects on the delicate parts of the system, and which do not, after all, really cure the disease. they want is a safe, reliable treatment that can be taken at home and a per- fect cure made of this loathsome disorder without unnecessary exposure or Such a remedy is S. S. S.—it is the only medicine that goesdown to the very bottom of . the trouble and drives out the last trace of the poison so that there are never any signs of its return. : i of mineral in any form, and after removing the disease from the circulation In the first .place the expense is ‘What Itdoesnot contain a particle by its fine vegetable tonic properties. . attacks the trouble at its head and not only permanently cures the disease fof the one afflicted, but so purifies the blood thaf, future offspring is insured against infection. S.8.8. home and a perfect cure made of this hateful and loathsome trouBle. those who are curing themselves with S. S. S. we have prepared a special book on Contagious Blood Poison which contains instructions of great value to all blood poison sufferers. 1 to send a copy of this book free, and if additional instructions or advice is wanted, our physicians will furnish it without charge. THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., ATLANTA, GA» may be taken in the privacy of your For the assistance of We will be glad 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.8 a day for two weeks. M. QUAD.

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