Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, April 8, 1907, Page 3

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-t SPECIALS This weelk at GhHe Model FRESH BUN TOAST only 50 per pound Old Fashioned Gum Drop § Mixed Candy Witle 1t lasts 5¢ per pound We will deliver goua 60- g gallon Rain Barrel for 50¢ Ghe Model The “Good Things To Eat” Store 315 Minnesota Ave. Phone 125 ‘\ MWVMVWWW § The City ‘nmmwm E. R. Farley returned to his home at Minneapolis Saturday evening. Extra copies of the Daily Pioneer may be had at the office every evening. Matt Sagness, the popuiar Cass Lake saloon man, was a vis itor in the city yesterday. Columbus had just landed. Meeting a great Indian chief with a pacizage under his arm he asked him what it was. “Great Medicine, Hollister’s Rocky Mountain Tea,” said the Injun. 25 cents, Tea or Tablets. Burker’s Drug Store. Gre BIJOU Automatic Drama— Vaudeville—Pop- - ular Concerts ............ 302 Thurd Street Eivery Evening 7:30 to 10:00 Saturday Afternoon 2:30 to 3:30 TONIGHT! EXTRA SPECIALS THE CAMEAGRAPH GETTING EVIDENCE or The Trials of a Private De- tective Policeman’s Raid Mysterious Decorations lilustrated Song — Coming Through the Rye The Step-Mother Travels of a Barrel Don’t liss 1t. Program Changes Without No= tice. Watch This Ad Daily. ADMISSION TEN CENTS C. L. LASHER & SON, Props. COPVRIGHT A Refreshing Drink at all times, and especially in hot weather, is a foaming glass of MOOSE BRAND BEER. 1t has life and bedy, too. Cool, healthtul, invigorating, it stimulates diges- tion and quenches thirst., For a friend yo can find no better than MOOS BRAND BEKR. It’s good beer, real lager beer, none better. We take special care to make it that way. We deliver it to you just as good as we make it. Try a case at your home? Duluth Brewing & Malting Co. J. P. SIGNAL Local Agent Bemidjl - - Minnesota Residence Phone 200, Office Phone 220 Read the Daily Pioneer, J. E. Black left this morning for Minneapolis. A. B. Palmer, the Solway livery man, is a business visitor in the city today. The|Pioneer at all times has in stock office supplies of every description John McKinnon came down from Kelliher this morning to 4 attend the Dahl trial. J. W. Feldman, proprietor of the Merchants hotel at North- ome, 18 in the city today. John Gilstad came down from Blackduck this morning to be in attendance at the Fournier trial. Clair Craig, manager of the Beltrami Cedar and Land Co., came down from Blackduck this morning. Combine good housekeeping with good citizenship, use Hunt’s Perfect Baking Powder-not made by a trust. The condition of Mrs. E. K. Anderson, mention of whose ill- ness was made some days ago, is reported very serious. Ed Bennett, who is operating a dray line at Big Falls, isamong those from the rorth country spending the day in Bemidji. Arthur Anderson of Black- duck is one of the special venire- men for the Fournier trial that came down on the north line train this morning. Lieut. O. H. Dockery, in charge of the army recruiting service in the northwest, was in the city from Duluth yesterday, inspect- ing the local office. The Pioneer’s numerous ’phones are all on the same line— No. 8[—and we will be pleased to print any items of a social nature that may be sent in over the ‘“hello.” Sergt. Eilek of the local re- cruiting station will ship six recruits to Fort Snelling tomor- row. The men were accepted and sworn into service by Lieut. Dockery Sunday. Children eat, sleep and grow after taking Hollister’s Rocky Mountain Tea. Brings rosy cheeks, laughing eyes, good health and strength. A tonic for sickly children. 85 cents, Tea or Tablets. Barker’s Drug Store. O. M. Skinvik returned Satur- day from Cass Lake, where he spent a couple of days looking up records in the land office. Mr. Skinvik has resumed active practice of law, and will make a specialty of land and probate practice. John Graham returned Satur- day from Minot, for which place he left last fall to establish a meat market in partnership with J. F. Hawkins, who re- turned some time ago. Mr. Gra- bam still has an interest in the business but will make his home bere, and expects to re-engage in business. Frank Summers, who played various positions on the Bemidji ball teum last season, arrived in the city from Duluth Friday, and is spending a few days here visiting friends. It is possible that he may be signed for the Bemidji team for the coming season, but no ball organization has yet been formed. Patrolmen John Cline and Tim Quinn Friday passed a subscrip- tion list and raised $I5. with which they purchased a baby carriage for the infant boy of Miss Petra Leines, the story of whose sad death was published in this paper some time ago. The carriage was presented to :Mrs. Rensfjord, in whose care ~~~~~~~ the child is. “WHITE using our celebrated It is bound to strike you there is better flour than you have been sing—once you see the results obtainable by using White Jacket—less flour and more and better bread is the cause of your changing and Be sure and ask for White Jacket. ROE & MARKUSEN Phone 207 SOLE AGENTS TACKET" brand. Subscribe | At The Lakeside | We haveonlylgood tales [to tell of what,we put iato our_bread, cakes and pie . The four we’ uselas well ag the other materialsi.are the best and’the way we wmix avd bak insures a high] class_product. You have but to give us a trial in order to be convinced PHONE 118 Read the Dailv Pioneer, Reed Studio for colored work. Call at the Pioneer when you are in need of office supplies. Mrs. J. H. Carter is the guest of her sister,! Mrs. H. Rebedew. Matt Jones the popular North- ome saloon man, is in the city today. Frank C. Hale, the well known Blackduck attorney, is in the city today. R.E. White,theKelliher logger, was in the city today on his way to Duluth. Extra copies of the Daily Pioneer may be had at the office every evening. WANTED—Girl for kitchen work. Good wages, steady work Hotel Markham. The Viking Boat Co., are mak- ing a number; of improvements to their boat house. Editor J. Evan Carson of the Shevlin Advocate, spent Sunday and today in the city. Bemidji Elevator Co., jsbbers for Mascot Flour, also Cremo, Bar- low’s Best and Gold Medal. P. W. Roark and wife came down from Kelliher, and are spending the day in the city. A. E. Smith, the Puposky banker and merchant, spent Sunday with his family here. The Ladies Aid of the Presby- terian church will hold a Merka- Festa at the city hall April 20. Ww. Munch, the Crookston game warden, spent Sunday here and will return to his home today. Asst. Supt. McGinnis of the railway mail service, is here from Washington, D. C, on a tour of inspection. Ex-Commissioner John King of Cass county came up from Walker Saturday and spent Sun- day here on business. The Eastern Star Thimble Bee will meet at the home of Mrs. H. W. Haines,2 p. m.,Tuesday. All members cordially invited. Miss Elizabeth Mielke, who has been the guest of her sister, Mrs. C.J. Pryor, returzed to ber home at Wadena this morn- ing. H. A. Langord, one of the old- est residents of Beltrami county, is down from the township north of Blackduck named Langor after him, Clarence Welch left this morn- ing for St. John’s college at Col- legeville, where he will resume his studies after spending the Easter vacation with his father, W. P. Welch. A number of witnesses and jurors on the regular panel, took advantage of Sunday to spend the day at home. The jurors on the regular panel are excused until Wednesday. The young people of the Metho- dist church will give a social at the home of Mrs. Brannon on Wednesday evening, April 10. A cordial invitation is extended to everyone to be present. Commissioner Hugh MecIntosh of ‘Koochiching county, passed through the city this morning on his way from Northome to Brainerd, where he goses to look § |after a farm he owns 1n that vi- cinity. Fred Dudley, the Minnesota B |avenue hotel and saloon man, is 3| having plans prepared for a new structure on that side of the rc- cent fire, and work of clearing away the debris will be begun in a short time. Take me back to old Wisconsin, Where the sugar beets and tobacco grow, Where the farmers are healthy, happy and bright— They all take Rocky Mountain Tea at night. - i Barker’s Drug Store. - with melted sugar into little cakes, and Webster's W Most men of weight (i e frail gilt and satin chairs which accidentai- | 1y fall to thelr lot in a crowded draw- ing room. They were In use In Mr. | Webster's tim; At an evening 1 | tion glven to some wes soon after the a Tyler and the dls Harrison's cabinet \ attorney general, was his bashful friend, Mr. Leonard, who immediately retived to a corns selected this gilded trifle place. In order to with ther from not 1 structure backw smashed into a dozen picces, and Leou- | ard the embarrassed was Leonard the | observed by all. Mr. Webster imme- diately rushed to the rescue of his un- fortunate guest and raised him from the floor with the reassuring remark, “Why, my dear Mr. Leonard, you should have remembered that no cabi- net work would hold together here.” ccompanied by | Down it went, Boomerang Testimonials. The oriental point of view is an in- structive one, as is shown by the fol- lowing: At Allahabad, India, there has just been issued the report of the Hospital For Women, and the Pioneer of that city prints a couple of graceful letters quoted in the report. The first address- ed the lady at the head of the institu- tion thus: Dear She—My wife has returned from your hospital cured. Provided males are allowed at your bungalow, I would like to do you the honor of presenting myself there this afternoon, but I will not try to repay you—vengeance belongeth unto God. Yours noticeably. The second was in a strain of even more punctilious courtesy. It ran: Dear and Fair Madam—I have much pleasure to inform you that my dearly unfortunate wife will be no longer under your kind treatment, she having left this world for the other the night of the 21th ult. For your help in this matter I shall ever remain grateful. Yours reverently. When Every One Is Beautifal. It has been said in cold print that men and women are growing more and more beautiful and that the progress of civilization, the better understand- ing of the laws of health, is to bring a time when all of us will be of abso- lutely perfect beauty—or, rather, not us, but our ultimate remote descend- ants. Itis a little difficult to feel envy, hatred and malice for one’s descend- ants, but this news is enough to in- duce that evil state of mind. However, the prospect affects one writer quite otherwise. After all, says she, our lovely descendants will not have so gay a time. For if every one is good looking, what on earth is the good of being good looking? So, after all, there are some advantages in living now- adays. Few of us have no dear friends uglier than ourselves. What is the use of a friend if she is not a little—well, plain? Tea In All Forms. “Pickled tea is a Burmese delicacy,” said the sailor. “A Burmese girl once gave me some. It wasn’t bad; sweetish and spiced; a cross between pickled and preserved. “Tea ain't only drunk. Down Siam way they chew it. It is stuck together every Siamese carries one of those cakes in his pocket. A plug of tea; you might say a plug o’ chewin’ tea., “Some folks smoke it. An English girl once gave me a cigarette. I fin- ished it. But such a headache! “Stewed tea.ls the national dish of the Tibetans. Tea, fat, salt, flour and milk are cooked together to the thick- ness of oatmeal and eaten cold.”— Pittsburg Dispatch. The Bark of the Sequoias. California’s giant trees, the sequoias, thousands of years old, have been pre- served to this day because of their enormously thick bark. From time to time in the course of ages forest fires have swept through the big tree lands, destroying everything, yet only scorch- ing for a couple of inches’ depth or so the almost fireproof bark. The flames, having carbonized that much of the bark, could not penetrate farther, for the carbonized portion formed an ab- solutely fireproof covering for the re- mainder of the interior bark, The Retort Courteous, The essence of all fine breeding is the gift of conciliation. A man who pos- sesses every other title to our respect except that of courtesy is in danger of forfeiting them all. A rude manner renders its owner always liable to af- front. He is never without dignity who avoids wounding the dignity of others.—Lord Lytton. ‘What Interested Him, “What interested me most in my travels,” said Henpeck, “was the mum- my of a queen I saw in Egypt.” “Wonderful, eh?” asked his friend. “Yes, it's wonderful how they could make a woman dry up and stay that way.”—Philadelphia Press. Lesson Learned In War. The importance of removing all un- necessary objects from the decks of men-of-war was emphasized on board the Japanese Mikasa, on which twen- ty-three men were killed or wounded by the fragments of an optic telegraph that had been hit by a bomb. The Serious Part. Friend —You appear to think that your responsibility is greater than that of the proprietor. Drug Clerk—It is. Friend—How do you figure that out? Drug Clerk—If I make a mistake I lose my job. : His Point of View. Nurse—See, Charlie, the stork has brought you a nice little brother. Char- lie—Yes, that’s the way! Just as I'm getting on in the world competition be- gins!—Fliegende Blatter, Plenty of Practice. “I met your friend Dubley today.” “Yes?” I haven’t seen him for a long time. I suppose he stutters as badly as ever?” “Oh, no! He's quite an adept at It now.”—Philadelphia Press. He Helped Relieve It. “I suppose ‘you saw a great deal of poverty in Burope.” * - b “Yes, a great deal. In fact, I came home for fear I was going broke my- self.”—Cleveland Press. B The Story of a Brock, = To lovers of outdoors there are few things in the wide world which are more cnchanting, more altogether de- lighting, than just such a brook, whose course—whose life, so to speak—I have been trying to bring to the mind of those who know all its turns and whims and caprices in summer and in winter, in spring and in autumn, when much rain bad maddened it and when none L 1 warped thing of nature without form and v We may be hundreds of miles from the Lrg vhich we know best, but we know it is flowing just as it used to do, und there is ever the thought that if we cannot see it in its ¥ moods there are others who may do so. And, no matter the name of the peaceful valley through which it flow- ed or where that valley may be, it was the brook of our childhood, and there is a brook, or ought to be, away back somewlere in the mind of every one whose heart and memory take him- back to the scenes where at least some younger days were spent.—Outdoors. Wants and Needs. The mowent the wmonthly salary crosses the bare necessity line, that moment the horizon of wants begins to widen, soys Harper's Bazar. For every dollar the salary increases the imagination finds a place for $2, $3, $4 or $5. A great part of the demands existing in the world today are ro- mantic. How shall the imagination be schooled, where shall the line be drawn? It should be considered a part of morality to live within the income, but on every side there seems to be an atiempt to stretch the $1,000 income to a §2,000 scale, the $2,000 income to a $3,000 scale, $3,000 is made to do duty for §5,000 and $5,000 is thinly stretched to the breaking point to stimulate a $10,000 incoime. With every added dol- lar the horizon of wants will widen unless the imagination is wisely school- ed. Sadly do we need training to draw the line between wants and needs. Tall Wives, Short Men, Big men are usually shy and difident and lacking in self assurance. The wo- man who appeals to them is. usually some sparkling, vivacious, fairylike cre- ature with kittenish ways and roguish glances. The little man, on the con- trary, is seldom burdened with humil- ity. He is a being of great aspirations and stupendous ambitions. He be- lieves in himself, which is the reason | why he generally can get the woman of his choice to smile upon him. The dainty, Titania-like woman has no charms for him, says Woman's Life. The five foot six or seven man likes a ‘woman to be one or two inches his su- perior and thoroughly mature. He dreads any trace of the bread and but- ter schoolgirl. His ideal resembles the strong, heroic women Shakespeare has | pletured, full of character and spirit, with a fair spice of temper. The Penang Patrol Wagon. Writing of the local patrol wagon the Penang correspondent of the Straits Tlmes, Singapore, says: “It forclbly calls to mind at first sight a four wheel- od baker's cart, bar the fact that it is drawn Dy about the slowest pair of bullocks in {he settlement. There is nothing grim at all about it, for it is rcommanded by a sleepy Malay con- st: I icd on the box; its roof and sides are formed of white canvas, and it has no door to close at the back, but merely an opening in which another Malay constable half slumbers. Two or three otlier constables ride inside sit- ting on the benches with the prisoners, who seem to be too struck with novelty of the ride to make any attempt at es- cape. I should say that an escape from this prison van would be as easy as falling off a log.” A Dinner. The bosom of a mallard duck stewed down until there are no juices going to waste, a. balied potato about the size of a goose egg, two slices of Boston brown bread right out of the oven and spread h butter that has no athletic reputation, a spoonful of raspberry jelly, a cupful of Young Hyson of mod- erate strength, a piece of pumpkin pie, man'’s size, and you have a dinner that ought to keep you in a good humor un- til curfew rings.—Nebraska State Jour- nal. The Black Watch, The title of “Black Wateh” conferred on the Forty-second regiment, now the Royal highlanders, originated in the time of the Jacobite risings in Scotland in 1730, when companies of the loyal clans were set to watch the highlands, forming a corps of military pelice un- der the title of the Royal Highland Black Watch, the color having refer- ence to the dark tartan worn by the men.—London Standard. A Bitter Taunt. The other day at cards two London ladies quarreled long and arduously over a payment of the gigantic sum of 15 shillings. At last the loser flung the money down on the table, saying, with concentrated venom, “There, that will pay for your next dinner party.” Not What He Meant. Judge—You are accused of having beaten this person cruelly. The Ac- cused—Well, I had to beat him to make him do his work. He is an idiot. Judge (severely)—You should remember that | an idiot is a man like you or me, One Phase of Life. “So they live in the same hotel, eh?” “Yes; he has a room on the second story.” “Ard she?” “Oh, that's another story.”—Chicago News. The saddest part of all our accumu- lating catastrophes lies in the walting welcomes that are never claimed. Love on Earth and In Heaven. The difference between love on earth and love in heaven is not to be con- veyed in words, but in tranquil and pure moods it may even on earth be apprebended by the sight of the spirit. Love In heaven has realized all that earthly love aspires to, and from that goal its progress begins, never to cease, The sky toward which it yearned in the world has become the ground on whick 1t stands here, but now another sky is above it. We forecast heaven as re- pose and peace, the fulfilling of the heart’s desire, the immortal presence with us of beauty and happiness. But man is not so poorly content. We leave behind us on earth the obstacles of the body, and in heaven we labor not for Dbread, raiment and shelter; hearts are not parted by space and time; we deceive not, strive not one against the other, scheme not to outdo others for the gain of our own name and fame. Yet in heaven are labor, emulation, ambition, love’s holy fear and humility deeper than hell is deep below the heavens. Tears we have also and awe of that want which only the divine fullness can supply.—Julian Hawthorne in Century. The Young Heron. Of a heronry. a naturalist says: “It s not, to put it mildly, a savory place. On the island in question nearly every available building site was occupied. The nest is a roughly put together plat- form of sticks and does not strike one as being at all a safe nursery. Baby herons are, if possible, uglier than the ordinary run of nestlings, their appear- ance Leing rendered most grotesque by patches of long hairlike feathers stud- ded over the body. I took down one young bird in order to have a good look at him. While handling him a whole frog, fully two inches in length, drop- ped out of him, and, judging from the distension of his ‘corporation,’ there must have been several more inside him! I tried to return the frog to him, and most ammusing were the attempts he made to swallow it, but I lacked the skill of his parents and in the end was obliged to cut up the frog and force it plecemeal into his gullet.” Hats In Korea. The traveling hat of the monks in Korea is a large, umbrella-like frame- work of cane, a foot and a half in di- ameter at the brim and closing to a sharp point at the top. The whole is covered with smooth rush matting, bound at the brim into a hexagon by a narrow edging of white cotton and fit- ted inside with a circle of cane to clasp the head. Nuns may often be seen trudging along, staff in hand, and their hats are even more striking—a wisp of fine, flexible straw, elaborately bound at one end, cut sharply off at the other, 50 as to make if.a foot long, and quaint- 1y dumped on the crown of the head. The courtiers also have their distine- tive hats. They are of huge dimensions, In some cases two or more feet in di- ameter, and are made of clay—“Far Eastern Impressions,” by E. F. T. Hatch, M. P. 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 carry 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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