Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, April 10, 1907, Page 4

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SPECIALS This week at GhHe Model FRESH BUN TOAST only 5c:per pound Old Fashioned Gum Drop Mixed Candy Wiile it lasts 5¢ per pound We will deliver youa 60- gallon Rain Barrel for 50c Gre Model The “Goed Things To Eat” Store 315 Minnesota Ave. Phone 125 ;«vamvmw The City Read the Dailv Pioneer. Regular club dance at Masonic hall Thursday evening. Call at the Pioneer when you are in need of office supplies. Mayor Hoffman of Fowlds, was a business visitor in the city yes- terday. A. P, Blom, who operates a hotel at Fowlds, was in the city on business yesterday. Children eat, sleep and grow after taking Holiister’s Rocky Mountain Tea. Brings rosy cheeks, laughing eyes, good health and strength. A tonic for sickly children. 83 cents, Tea or Tablets. Barker's Drug Store. Ghe BIJOU Automatic Drama—Vaudeville—Pop- ....... ular Concerts .. 302 Third Street Kvery Evening 7:30 to 10:00 Saturday Afternoon 2:30 to 8:30 TONIGHT! EXTRA SPECIALS THE CAMEAGRAPIL The Mystsrious Accordion . Nobody Works TLike Kather in His Dreams Illustrated Song-—When My Sweetheart May W hispered Yes The Phial of Poison The Stolen Child Don’t Mliss It. Program Charges Without No= tice. Watch:This Ad Daily. ADMISSION TEN CENTS C. L. LASHER & SON, Props. N P, A Refreshing Drink at all times, and especially in hot weather, is a foaming glass of OSE BRAND BLER. 1t has life and body, ton. Cool, healthful, invigorating, it stimulates fdiges- tion and quenches thirst. For a friend you can find no better than MOOSK BRAND BEER. 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 Be midji B - Minn esot Residence Phone 20, Office Phone 220 Reed Studio for colored work: Regular club dance at Masonic hall Thursday evening. Extra copies of the Daily Pioneer may be had at the office every evening. For painting, papering and kal- somining, place your orders !early with J. A. Hoff. To leaven is to make light. To lighten the trials of baking day, use Hunt’s Perfect Baking Pow- der. If you are hungry and want to ve filled, remember the men’s supper is the place to be accom- modated. Work of surfacing the Wilton & Northern railroad from Fowlds to Island Lake will begin new week. For your wall paper, alabas- tine, and paints, call at Hoff’s paint and wall paper store, 317 Miunnesota Ave. The Ladies Guild of the Epis- copal church will meet at the home of Mrs. J. P. Riddell Thursday afternoon. J. P. Signel, the local repre- sentative of the Duluth Brewing Co, is confined to his home with an attaci of neuralgia. A. Gilmour is down from Blackduck today, being one of the witnesses subpoenaed for the state in the Flournier trial. First number of the “Monthly Church Bell,” edited by the Presbyterian ladies, on sale at the Merca Festa April 20th. Allan McGraw, who was an important witness in the Wesley case, returned to his home at Waterloo, Iowa, this morning. F'rank Beaton came down from Big Falls the first of the week, and will spend some time here taking a course of Turkish baths. Sheriff Bailey is expected to return home Saturday from the south, where he has spent the greater part of the winter for his health. Clerk of Court Rhoda this morning issued a marriage license to John Baker and Dora Peck. Both parties reside in town of Langor, P. T. Deveraux, one of the re- presentatives of the Red River Lumber Co., was in the city last night looking after some busi- ness here, and returned to Ake- ley this morning. Asst. Deputy Warden Back- land, of the state prison, who has been here ia charge of Fred Foote, who testified in Wesley case last week, returned with Foote to Stillwater last night by way of Duluth, Nels Sorenson of Jones, who is serving as a juror on the regu- lar panel this term of court, took advantage of the Fournier trial to spend Sunday at home, and rcturned, ready to resume his duties, yesterday. | M. F. Wilson, who travels out of here for Armour & Co., spent Sunday with his parents at Min- neapolis, He says there is more talik about the Dahl case in the cities than here, and as much in- terest is shuwn in the outcome. Columbus had just landed. Meeting a great Indian chief with a package under his arm he asked him what it was. “Great Medicine, Hollister’s Rocky Mountain Tea,” said the Injun. 325 cents, Tea or Tablets. Barker’s Drug Store. Barnard & Gorder, the well- known railroad and logging con- tractors, who have been logging near Mallard for the past few years, have secured a 25-mile contract in the vicinity of Royal- ton and Little Falls, on the Soo extension from Glenwood to Duluth, “WHITE JACKET” It is bound to strike you there is better flour than you have been vsing—once you see the results obtainable by using White Jacket—less flour and more and better bread is the cause of your changing and using our celebrated brand. Be sure and ask for White Jacket. ROE & MARKUSEN Phone 207 SOLE AGENTS Subsecribe For The Pioneer. At The Lakeside ‘We haveZonlyjgood tales to tell’of what_we put into our”bread, ' cakes and pie . The flour we uselas well as the other materials]-are the best and the way -we miz_ ard | bak insures a high? class™product. You have but to give us a trial in order to be convinced - e PHONE 118 Read the Daily Pioneer, Visit the ladies’ bakery on the 20th. Regular club dance at Masonic hall Thursday evening. Henry Larson is in from Wil- ton today attending the Fournier trial. Pan cakes and maple syrup at the men’s supper on F riday even- ing, Apru 12. 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. W. L. Hilliard of Bagley,passed through the city this morning enroute to Pine Biver. Mrs. E. H, Cornwall, who has been on the sick list for some time, is slowly improving. Bemidji Elevator Co., jobbers for Mascot Flour, also Cremo, Bar- low’s Best and Gold Medal. Ladies—let the mwen provide the supper for you and your families on Friday evening. Sheriff Walsh, of Koochiching county, was in the city last night on his way to Northome on busi- ness. Mrs. Dora B. Carter arrived in the city Monday evening for an extended visit with her son, A. A. Carter. Thome & Mayer will open bids for their new hotel building on April 17. Several bids have already been filed. J. P. Lappen, one of the best known Crookston Lumber Co’s. cruisers, is spending a few days in the city with his family this week. F. M. Dudley has a forceof masons at work rebuilding his hotel and saloon. The new struc- ture will be a two-story brick 40 x60 feet. St. Philip’s Aid will meet at the home of Mrs. A. Danaher, on Minnesota avenue, Thursday afternoon at 2:30 o’clock. Visitors cordially invited. Rev. N. H. Holm, formerly pastor of the Scandinavian Lu- theran church of this place, now of Desrwood, Wis., will preach in the church this evening at 8 o’clock. 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.” J. P. Pogue returned last evening from a week’s busi- ness trip to the twin Ccities. While away, he purchased four new carriages for his increasing livery trade. The Ladies’ Aid of the Episco- pal church, will meet at the home of Mrs. W. C. Kline, Thurs- day afternoon, instead of with Mrs. J. P. Riddell, as stated in yesterday’s paper. S. C. Dailey is in receipt of a letter from Mickey McKay, who is well known to all the older residents. Mickey is now locat ed at Havre, Mont., where he is doing a mixologist stunt. J. J. Hahn, one of the repres- entatives of A. Guthrie & Co., the railroad contractors, was in the city yesterday making arrange- ments with the local employ ment offices to hire men for construc- tion work on the Messaba range 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. : Rarker’s Drug Store. ‘Don’t forgét. the men’s supper Friday evening,in the Schroeder building on Third street. |.. Ham and eggs, flap jacks and |muple syrup at the men’s’s tppe on Friday 6vening. i SALESMAN FOUND DEAD; HAD BEEN OK LONG SFREE D. E: Wehber, Representing Duluth Con- cern, Found Dead This Morning _in’ Hotel Endion. Cass Lake, Minn., April 10.— (Special to Pioneer.)—D. E. Web- ber, a traveling salesman for the Peterson: Granite Company, Du: luth, was found dead this fore- noon in'a room in the Endion Hotel at Cass Lake. 8 Webber, who is well known in Bemidji, had been in Cass Lake since Saturday, and had been drinking heavily. He was last seen 5 o’clock yesterday, when he went to his room in a high state of intoxication. Examina- tion developed that he had died during the night from heart failure. Webber was a married man about 45 years of age, and his family, who live at Walker, will go to Cass Lake toright and take charge of the remains. Goes After Indians. Deputy U. S. Marshalls Frank Tuffss and H. A. Rhider, were in the city last night on their way to Red Lake reservation, where they go after a bunch of Indians for whom they have warrants for various charges. The offenders against the peace and digmty of Uncle Sam will be taken to Walk- er tomorrow for arraignment be- fore U. S. Commissioner DeLury, Most of the charges are for sell- ing aud introducing liquor on the reservation. Men’s Supper. Tbe men of the Presbyterian church will give their annual supper in the Schroeder buaild- ing, opposite = Brinkman hotel Friday evening the 12, from 4:30 to 8, All will remember the great spread they gave last year, and will welcome their return of the affair. Men will do all the cook- ing right before your eyes, and serve you a supper never to be forgotten. See menu in tomorrow’s Pio- neer. Applies for Pardon. Ben Nelson who was convicted at the fall term of court 1905, for taking improper liberties with a girl under the age of con- sent, and sentenced to serve seven years in state’s prison, has made an application for par- don. The girl’s mother, Rachel Cleveland, and a negro, were convicted at the same time as accessors, and all are serving sentences. ) Will Adjourn Court. Jud ge Spooner today excused the jurors on the regular panel until April 29. After conclud- ing the Fournier case an adjourn- ment will be taken until that date. This action was taken on account of the spring term of court for Cass county, which convenes next Tuesday, and over which Judge Spooner is due to preside. Curious Effects of Frost. An egg expands when ‘it is frozen §0 much that the increased bulk breaks the shell. Apples, on the con- trary, contract to such an extent that a full barrel will shrink until the top layer will be a foot below the chime. When the frost has been slowly and carefully drawn out they again as- sume their normal size and appearance. Apples can be transported when the mercury is 20 degrees below zero. Po- tatoes once touched by frost are ruined. An Easier Trip. “The president of this road,” remark- ed the man in the corner of the smok- ing compartment, “is one of those old fashioned railroaders. He began as a brakeman. Instead of riding over the line in a private car to inspect it, he walks over it.” “I don’t blame him,” declared the man who was making his first trip on the road.—Cleveland Press. A Lasting Impression. “Well, Bertha, I hear you met Mr. Cooke yesterday. Did you like him?’ “Do you know, dear, ie made an im- pression upon me that nothing will ob- fterate.” “Really! How—what did he say?®’ “It wasn’t what he said; it was what he did. He spilled a cup of tea over my new white silk dress.” Succeeded. “She married him to reform him.” “Did she succeed?” “Sure! He used to be a spendthrift and now he has rothing to spend.”— Houston Post. Chinese Swine. cestors, which a few centuries ago con- stituted one of the chief sources of Britlsh wealth, The improvement In the race is'largely ‘due to the introdue- tlon of the Chinese and Neapolitan breeds. The crossing of the former up- o the Inglish hog has resulted in the on of the Berkshire, Essex, Po- 1, Hmall Y ire and -Suf- folk breeds. " The Chinese Hog is re- markably prepote is shown by the tendency of the mod breeds to re. vert to the original type. This is doubt- less owing to the many centuries of in, Lreeding which have so firmly fixed its tharaeteristi One of the most im- portant of these is its propensity to stances. This superabundance of fat prevents the flesh of this breed being highly esteemed in this country; but it has had a most valuable effect in modi- fying the lean, gaunt hogs of England, while the Neapolitan has added dell cy of flavor. The original Chinese hog i3 a very peculiar shape. It has. a long body, with short legs, very heavy Jowls, small prick ears, short head, neck and snout and the eyes wide apart. In color it is white or black or dominating. b Ant Communieation. &0, James Boyle, the great Irish nat- urallst, always contended that ants had a language of their own, by which they made known their wants and fears to others of their kind. One day he en- countered a colony that was evidently moving to new quarters. All appeared in the very best of spirits, and when- ever two met the naturalist noted that they put their heads together as though chatting very earnestly. To settle the matter in his own mind as to whether they were really talking or not he killed one of them to observe the effect it would have on the others. The eye- witnesses to the murder hastened to the rear and halted every one of the advaneing column by laying their an- tennae together. The column instant- Iy separated to the right and the left, none of the marchers afterward pass- ing within less than six feet of their dead companion, though the remains of the insect were directly in the beat- en path. The Snowy Owls, Every few years, especially along the seacoast and the larger rivers and lakes, there is a wave of those splendid day hunting rascals, the snowy owls. They are great fishermen, the only owls to make this sort of hunting a practice, and may sometimes be seen sitting, silent and motionless, like a block of ice, at the edge of the open water waiting for a chance to nab an unsuspecting fish. Of course this is not a very paying way to get a living, and they also catch field mice, musk- rats, hares and even large birds like quail or grouse. But there are only two other birds of prey in our country that habitually eat fish, and one of these seldom catches its own, preferring to fatten under the most adverse circum- ' a mixture of both, with the white pre- | ; The American: swine of today are | o { very different from ‘their English an. pirate osprey.—St. Nicholas. Blowers, rings, and; it sidered 1o u three riugs of smol second inboth bet “ot’ rings thus made, but words dnd senfences Gelpled Juggler, it 18’ declared, proposed: to is COMParatively: unknown author,”, said wife by forming the characters. repre-, “‘fi literary editor of a Chicago paper. senting ‘his avowal of love through a ' You expressed my idea of it éxact- thin streain of smoke. ordian Knot, dius, Phrygia. -Wh this knot, the ends of wi able, the oracle déel er of Peigia,, . Al away the kuot with his sword until he found- tlie ends of it, and ‘thus)in a military oracle, 830 B; C, The Two Moons, She—When' I v 0ld Billyuns -and his wife at Njagara a couple of years ago she was billing and cooing with him in a way to ‘make you tired. ‘He—="! That was the hon won. She—And I saw where the other day in court she had him forced t ¢ to pay her the best :part: of his ‘income’ as ‘alimony. | He—That’s: {he -harvest. moon.—Balti- | Malay constable half slumbers. more American. A Strange Survival, It is illegal to sing, hum or whistle the “Dead March” outside of a church or a cemetery. At oné time this law" was very strictly enforced, and ‘even today a soldier found guilty of singing or other rendering the famous march other than at a ‘military funeral would Dbe :severely ' censured.—London Household. Words. His Art. k Mrs. Syille— My husband 'takes ' a deep interest in art. . Mrs, Oldar—You surprise me, Mrs, Syille—Well, it was a surprise to me, but I heard him tell- ing Jack Rownder.last night that-it was a good thing to study your hand before you draw. Assistance Not Necessary. “Help! Help!” cried the man who was being robbed. “Calm yourself,” said the highway- man. “I don’t need any assistance.” Between two evils choose neither; be- | tween two goods choose both.—Ed- wards. All the world likes a lover, because he is usually such a good joke.—Den- ! ver Post. e it from the real fisherman, the Really Worth- Res: . At certain times in the year, and particularly ‘a. month or two before {’the ‘Christmas holidays, new 'books {eperts on' smoke’ SOme. into newspaper offices for review d in'Japan it i - i Lupicfi toslfig?\' read and review them with justice el- n'succession, the ouizh e’ fivst and -BY Some rstage redited yith becoming smoke blowing that they ¥ ‘alde 16 multiply the num- forgets all about-them. uall; set:mug expressed his gratification at the way One Japanese 1 had written“up a new novel by a faster than any one man can possibly ther..to himself or the books. He ces through them hastily, unless . are by noted authors, gets a salient point here and there and “‘writes them: up” ‘as best he''can. Then ‘he “A friend came to me one day and ly,’-he said. ‘It is'one of the remarka- ble books of the year. -The plot is ab- solutely unique, the treatment of it is an knot was said to have Pold and original and the ‘dialogue “been made of {honis useéd as’a harness CHSP and delightful. king of great hit.’ It will. make a “Well! 1 said, ‘If it is as good as ere mot dlséover, - @11/ ®¥hat ‘TII read it! "—Youth’s Corn- ared should be rul- Panion. lor the Great et sy The Penang Patrol Wagon. ‘Writing of the local patrol wagon the svilse at least, interpreted the - Penang correspondent of the Straits .4 Times, Singapore, says: “It forcibly | -calls to mind at first sight a four wheel- | ed baker’s cart, bar the fact that it is ;'drawn by about the slowest pair of | bullocks in the settlement. There is | nothing grim at all about 1t, for it is commanded by a sleepy Malay con- stable perched on the box; its roof and sides are formed of white canvas, and .1t has no door to close at the back, but merely an opening in. which another Two or three other 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 baked potato about the size of a goose ‘egg, two slices of Boston brown bread right out of the oven and spread with butter that has no athletic reputation, a spoonful of raspberry Jelly, a cupful of Young Hyson of mod- erate strength, a.plece 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. P The Black Watch, The title of “Black Watch” 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 police 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. dred pages. 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 tbe two, three, our and five column day books and journals. A good line of ¢ash books; a well selected stock of ledgers, single or double entry, one hundred to eight hun-

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