Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, June 26, 1907, Page 2

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i IARR iz REMEDY & A few doses of this remedy will in- variably cure an ordinary attack of diarrheea. $ It can always be depended upon, even in the more severe attacks of cramp colic and cholera morbus, It is equally successful for summer diarrheea and cholera infantum in children, and is the means of saving the lives of many children each year. When reduced with water” and sweetened it is pleasant to take. Every man of a family should keep this remedy in his home. Buy it now. PRICE, 25C. LARGE SIzE, 50C. Barker’s Drug Store PROFESSIONAL ..CARDS.. LAWYER . # WM. B. MATTHEWS ATTORNEY AT LAW Practices before the United States Supreme Court—Court of Clalms—The United States General Land Office—Indian Office and Con- gress. Special attention given to Land Con- tests—Procurement of Patents and Indian Claims. Reter to the members of the Minne- sota Delegation In Oromgress. Offices: 420 New York Avenue, Washington, D. O D. H. FISK Attorney and Counsellor at Law Office opposite Hotel Markham. E. E, McDonald ATTORNEY AT LAW Bemidji, Minn. Office: Swedback Block PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS. Dr. Rowland Gilmore Physician and Surgeon Office: Tiies Block DR. E. A. SHANNON, M. D. Physician and Surgeon Office in Mayo Bloek Phone 396 Res. Phone 397 DR. WARNINGER VETERINARY SURGEON Telephone Number 209 Third St., one block west of 1st Nat'l Bank DRAY AND TRANSFER. es Wright, Dray and Transfer. 404 Beltrami Ave. Phonre 40. DENTISTS. Dr. R. B. Foster, SURGEON DENTIST PHONE 124 MILES BLOCK, DR. J. T. TUOMY Dentist rst National Bank Bu 14'g. Telephone No. 230 14 In the United ¥ patterns. This ls o8 iy, : , Hand: premis o BT R T 520 frves “Riima THE MoCALL €62 Row Yo and TRADE-MARKS_ promptly obtained in all countries, or 1o Toer W obiuin PATENTS THAT PAY, advertiso them thoroughly, at our expense, and fielp you to succosa. SUR- PASSING REFERENCES. for free Guide Book on Profitablo Patents write to S503-505 Seventh Stroet, WASHINGTON, D. C. D-SWIFTSE. Ghe PIONEER Delivered to your door every evening Only 40c per Month THE BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEER: PUBLISHED EVERY AFTERNOON, oF ! FFICIAL PAPER---CITY OF BEMID. A AAAAAAAAAAANAAIAAPPN NN BEMIDJI PIONEER PUBLISHING CO., UTLEDGE " || & 0 CLYDE J. PRYOR e | [ A Business Manager M Entered In th& postofiice at Bemidii. Miun., a8 second class matter. SUBSCRIPTION---$5.00~PER ANNUM COMBINE 1S ALLEGED. Milwaukee Jews Declare War {'on “Kosher” Butchers. Milwavkee, June 26.—Excitement reigns throughout the Jewish -ghHetto on account of an attempt of a dozen “kosher” butchers to increase the price of meat. Two mass meetings have been held by people who refused to pay the new pricej a boycott has been established, would-be purchasers have been intimi- dated, fights over meat have occurred in the streets, an angry crowd has picketed the markets for two days and several rioters have been arrested. Last week the price of kosher beef was 7 to 10 cents a pound at retail, this week it is 9 to 13 cents. Market wmen say they increased the price be- cause the wholesalers did the same first. The people of the Jewish district say that there is a well organized combine among the “kosher” market men and the “shoshet” (holy men ap- pointed by the rabbis to kill cattle and poultry) to keep up the price of meat. NORTHERN NEGROES BARRED Not Wanted for Teachers In South Because of Their “Notions.” Nashville, Tenn., June 26.—A taclt conclusion was reached by the Nash- ville board of education that only ne- groes born, bred and educated in the South need apply for election as teach- ers in the colored public schools of this city. This action was taken, the board says, for the reason that ne- groes from north of Mason and Dix- on’s line have “notions” and “are not familiar with Southern traditions and sentiment.” Manual training is to be introduced into the negro schools. BRIEF BITS OF NEWS. The gradual abandonment of Fort Assiniboine, Mont., as an army post is contemplated by the war department. At Canton, Miss., W. I. McAllister, a former member. of the legislaturs, Trish Church Bolls, It was about the time of St: Pat- rick, In the fifth century, that bells began to be adopted in the Christian |«church, though their use in other di- rections was long anterior to Ohris- tlanity, as Mr. Layard records having found some in the palace of Nimroud. The first Christian bells, like Patrick’s, welghed only a few ounces and from that day gradually increased till the gugatest weight was reached at Mos- cow With 198 tons' of beautifully en- riched work, asstrange contrast to the humble “Clog-an-eadhachta Patraic,” or “bell of Patrick’s well,” sometimes referred to as the bell of Armagh, with | its diminutive dimensions of six inches high by five inches broad, four inches ed iron, bent into a four sided form, fastened. with' rivets and brazed or bronzed. -This bell is at once the most authentic and the oldest Irish relic of Christlan metal work teat has de- scended to us, writes W. J. Fennell in the Belfast Gazette, and is mentioned In the “Annals” under the date of 552 The Puffed Out Chest. “The puffed out chest is .a_delusion which has succumbed to scientific knowledge of the human body,” said aj drill officer. “It came into existence purely for show reasons or from false analogy. It was seen that men deep in the chest were strong men, and the old drill sergeants probably imagined that by making men throw out their chests they would make them strong, ' as well as make them look strong, which Is & complete mistake. Instead | of strengthening a man, puffing his, chest tends to weaken him, as it throws a strain upon the heart. We | now tell men to be sure and not puff out thelr chests, If you puff out your ' chest and do dumbbell exercise you | are to hold the breath. That strains the heart. Any exercise tbat prevents breathing freely is bad, Knotted mus- cles are also wrong. You see a man with imimense chest muscles and per- haps you think he is really an ideally ; trained man, but such Inuscles simply bind the chest and tie the heart down.” —Reader Magazine. ~ A Catch Question. 5 Of Bishop Short, who held the see of St. Asaph, many curious stories are told. Occasionally he put questions to candidates for ordination that appar- netly bad no connection with the dis- charge of their parochial duties. They tested probably their wit or tact, two necessary qualifications to public men, but nothing more. One such question proposed by the bishop was the fol- lowing: “Which has the greatest num- ber of legs, a cat or no cat?”’ As might be expected, this created a titter, but the bishop would not take a latgh as the answer, and consequently was fatally shot by Dr. S. 8, Walker. The difficulty grew out of a lawsuit. ‘William M. Ayres of Portland, Ore., one of the best known bookmakers in the West, was killed by an interurban car as he was leaving the Seattle race- track. Stephen Turner, aged about ninety- five years, 1s dead at Portage, Wis. It has been claimed that he was the first negro to cast his vote under the fifteenth amendment. Two hundred and forty-seven young women from all sections of the United States received the degree of bachelor of arts at the twenty-ninth annual commencement at Wellesley college Tuesday. W. R. Abbott, president of the American National bank of Fort Smith, Ark., and one of the largest in- dividual timber land owners in that state, is dead of heart failure, aged forty years. » The Venezuelan cabinet has re- signed owing to the action of congress in condemning the policy of the min- ister of finance. The heads of the de- partments are transacting the govern- ment business. Delegates to the number of 1,800 he repeated the question and desired some one to solve the problem. Atlast one of the candidates, smiling, said, “I should think, my lord, a cat.” “No,” retorted the bishop; “there you are wrong, for a cat has four legs, and no cat has five,”—London Telegraph, A Thing of Many Names. The Thames has been the cause of much controversy. Its name has been varfously stated as Tameses, Tamese, Tamises (at the juncture of the Isis and Tame, near Dorchester), Tamisa, Tamesa, Thamisla, Thamesis and final- ly Isis (where it flows between the Ox- fordshire and the Buckinghamshire shores). Thus at Oxford it is still of- ten called the Isls until it receives the shallow river Tame just below Doches- ter, fromy which point it is called Thames. Historians trace this error to an early attempted division of the Latin word Tamesis into two words, Tame esis or Tame isis, suggested per- haps by the existence of the Tame in Buckinghamshire. The Saxons called it the Thames, ancient maps and docu- ments designating it Thamesis Fluvius. —From “In Thamesland.” from every state in the Union were present at Louisville, Ky., when the twenty-fifth annual conventlon of the | Natlondl Association of Master Plumb- ers was called to order. Giving as a reason that labor trou- bles had stopped thelr source of in- come the officers of the New Steel Foundry company, located at Chester Park, near Cincinnati, have asked Judge Warner to name a recelver. Two hundred and twenty-five dele- gates from all parts of the United States, Canada and Mexico are in at- tendance at the annual summer meet- ing of the Association of Transporta- tion and Car Accounting Officers at St. Paul. MARKET QUOTATIONS. Minneapolls Wheat. Minneapolis, June 25.—Wheat—July, 97% @97%¢c; Sept., 97%c. On track— No. 1 hard,- $1.00% @1.00%; No. 1 Northern, 99% @99%¢c; No. 2 North- ern, Y7%@97%c; No. 8 Northern, 94 @95¢. Duluth Wheat and Flax. Duluth, June 25.—Wheat—To arrive and on track—No. 1 hard, 99%¢; No. 1 Northern, 98%c; No. 2 Northern, 97%c; July, 983c; Sept., 99%c; Dac., 97%ec. Flax—To arrive, on track and July, $1.22%; Sept., $1.22%; Oct., $1.- 20%. St. Paul Union Stock Yards, St. Paul, June 25.—Cattle—Good to choice steers, $6.60@5.75; fair to good, $4.00@5.00; good to choice cows and helfers, $3.60@4.75; veals, $4.256@5.25. Hogs—$5.50@5.80. Sheep—Wethers, 5.00@8.50: good to cholee- lambs, $6.25@6.50; spring, $6.50@7.00. Chlcago Graln and Provislons. Chlcago, July 25.—Wheat—July, 91%ec; Sept., 94% @94%c. Corn—July, 52%c; Sept., 52%@53c. Oats—July, 42%c; Sept., 3T%ec. Pork—July, $16,- 05; Sept., $16.25. Butter—Creameries, 19@24c; dairies, 17@22¢c. Eggs—18% @14c. Poultry—Turkeys, 110; chick- ens, 11%c; springs, 20@22¢c. Chicago Union Stock Yards. Chicago, June 25.—Cattle—Beeves, $4.65@7.00; cows, $1.76@4.75; heifers, $2.60@5.35; calves, $6.00@7.00; good to prime steers, $6.70@7.00; poer to medium, $4.60@5.65; satockers and feeders, $2.90@5.15. Hogs—Light, $5.80@6.07%; mixed, - $6.78@6.05; heavy, $56.55@6.00; rough, $5.66@56.75; plgs, $5.40@5.95; good to cholce heavy, $5.90@86.00, Sheep, $4.60@6.20; lambs, $5.76@7.25. Harvard Then a College of Children. In 1685, when elected president of Harvard, the Rev. Increase Mather re- fused to resign the pastorate of the North church in Boston for the sake of “forty or fifty children.” Therefore he used to ride back and forth from Bos- ton to Cambridge, charging to the col- lege the cost of shoeing and baiting his ; horse and mending his saddle. Many of these students were but twelve or thirteen years old,—“Individual Train- ing In Our Colleges,” by Clarence F. Birdseye. Naming the Baby. They were choosing a name for the new baby. “I think Esmeralda is too sweet,” sald one of the infant’s aunts. “Alfreda is better and more uncom- ~mon,” sald gpother. “How would Alvina do?’ asked a third. “Hardly,” said the fond father. “You seem to be getting away from the idea that this is'a baby and not a new kind “of cigar.”—London Graphic. 2 The Epitaph of Mary Lyon: In the grounds of Mount Holyoke seminary, overlooking the beautiful valley through which the Connectiéut flows seaward, Is a monument to Mary. Lyon, the Massachusetts teacher who but that I shall not know and do all my duty.” « Still a Dream. Dolly — Molly Wolcott told me a month ago that her new gown was going to be a dream. Polly—Well, that 1s all it is so far. Her husband won’t give her the money for it—Somerville Journal. A rash- man provokes trouble, but Wwhen tlie trouble comes is no match for it.—Chinese Proverb. [ deep, made of thin sheets of hammer- | It Was His Dog. =i An automobile dashed along the country road. Turning a curve, it came ‘uddenly upon a man with a gun on his shoulder and a weak, sick looking old dog beside him. rectly in the path of the motor car. The chauffeur sounfled his horn, but the dog did not move—until he was struck. After that he did not move. The automobile stopped and one of the men got out and came forward. He had once paid a farmer $10 for killing a calf that belonged to another farmer. This time he was wary. “Was that your dog?” “Yes.” “You own him?” “Yes.” “Looks as if we'd killed him.” “Certainly looks so.” “Very valuable dog?” “Well, not so very.” “Will §5 satisfy you?” “Yes.” “Well, then, here you are” He hand- ed a §5 bill to the man with the gun and added pleasantly, “I'm sorry to have broken up your hunt.” “I wasrr't going hunting,” replied the other as he pocketed the bill. 4Not going hunting? Then what were \ you doing with the dog and the gun?” “Going down to the woods to shoot the dog.”—Youth's Companion, Story of a Clever Jackdaw. In a small cottage in Herefordshire there lived a family who owned a very large but clever jackdaw which was noted for its very witty sayings. One day the jackdaw saw the lid of the stewpot partly off, so thinking he should like a meat dinner hé went out and caught a frog and put it in the boiling water in the stewpot, which had in some pieces of beef. After this the jackdaw went quletly back to his perch and waited till dinner time. All went well till the cook began to share the dinner out before the family. Every time she pulled a piece of meat out of the pot the jackdaw said, “That’s not mine; that’s not mine,” till at last the cook pulled out the frog, when he exclaimed in a very triumph- ant voice, “That’s mine; that’'s mine.” The shock nearly made the guests faint away, but nevertheless the jackdaw got his meat dinner, while the others did without for a change.—London An- swers. An Agricultural Surprise. “BEastern visitors to the west are generally prepared for any phenomenal showing in' the line of . agriculture, stock raising and the like,” says a Col- orado man, “but once in awhile they are taken by surprise. A New Hamp- shire man who was spending his vaca- tlon on a ranch of a relative in Colora- do went out one morning to inspect a large incubator in which the young chicks were hatching. In one corner of the Incubator a neglected peach seed encouraged by the warmth of the at- mosphere had burst, and a tiny sprout several inches long was growing out of it. “‘Suffering Caesar! exclaimed the New Hampshire man as this caught his eye. ‘Do you hatch out your peach- es in this country? ”—Kansas City In- dependent, Legend of the Moss Rose. A German tradition gives the origin of the moss rose as follows: An angel came to earth in mortal guise. He sought a place of shelter and repose after his labors of love, but every door was shut against the heavenly visitor. At length the angel, being very weary, sank upon the ground and over him a rosebush spread Iike a tent. It caught upon its outspread leaves the falling dew which would otherwise have drenched the messenger of love. Wak- ing, the angel said to the rose: “Thou hast yielded the shelter that man denfed; A proof of my love shall with the abide.” And the green moss gathered about the stem ‘While the dewdrops shone like a diadem, Crowning the blushing flower, 1 —Cirele. Story of a Greek Saint.” A member of the Royal Geographical soclety gives this Ilittle story of a Greek saint: “Our good St. Blazios gave us the phrase ‘drunk as Blazes,’ for this saint was pleasantly done to death by having his flesh torn off by wool combs, and so he became the pa- tron of the English wool combers, and as a high feast was kept up on his day and the people who frequented the feast were called Blazers so the saying grew Into the English tongue and re- mains there fixed and useful.” CATARRH PREPARES THE SYSTEM founded the colloge. On it I8 inscribed a sentence of her own, “There is noth- ing in the universe that I am afrald of The dog was di- | - Always Pure 'Housewives cé_n better afford to buy | piPACE - OELICIOUS = Flavoring vamms EXtracts sk for they are pure and reliable! flavors; have always in purity] and strength conformed to the Pure Food laws. Incidental Music. One afternoon a couple from an ad- joining town presented themselves to a Boston divine and asked to be mar- ried just as he was about to enter the | pulpit to conduct an afternoon service. The minister replied that he regretted that he could_not at that moment com- ply with thelr wish, but that immedi- ately upon the conclusion of the serv- ice he would take pleasure {n perform- ing the ceremony, The lovers after demquiring seated themselves in the rear of the church. When the minister had finished the service he made the following announcement: “The parties | who-ure to be joined in matrimony will present themselves at the chancel immediately after the singing of hymn ! 415, ‘Mistaken Souls That Dream of Heaven! "—Exchange. Point of Resemblance, Stella—Dqes her auto match her gown? Bella—Yes, they are neither of them paid for.—New York Sun. AGuarantee |- What better sign of faith in this RHEUMATISM Catarrh, Backache, Kidney Trouble CURE can I Five than to guarantee that if one- half of the first bottle of Matt J. 60 88 Johnson’s does not give satisfactory results you can return the- half bottle and I will refund your money. Prepared at laboratory of Matt J, Johnson' Co., St. Paul, Minn. - Guaranteed under the Food and Drugs Act, June 30, 1906, No. 2029. For Sale and Guaranteed by Monday, July 8 Gollmar Bros.” Shows l Barker’s Drug Store | The Only Big-Sh(;w Coming to. ' - Bemidji This Year; : All New Performance This Season it Circus, museum, hippodrome and million dollar menagerie ; } sl Half mi’e h ppodrome track Herd of ponderous elephants - ?{ 50 dens of wild animals 100 arenic feature acts 250 performances 300 blooded horses 30 world-famed clowns 3 great bands of music Monster black hippopotamus Family of eastern bactrains $5,000 32-pipe steam calliope = Mysterious vlack vark Acres of waterproof canvass. 2 performances daily, doors open s—— l.and 7 p. m. Big free street parade at 10 a. m. You want to see the best show and pa- rade. It will pay you to wait for : MONDAY, JULY 8 : | ‘While Catarrh in its first stages usually affects the head, it does not FDR CONS UMPTIDN stop there if the trouble is allowed to run on. The contracting of a cold is generally the commencement of the unpleasant symFtoms of ringing noises in the ears, mose stopped up, mucus dropping back into the throat, hawking and spitting, etc. The inner skis or mucous membrane of the body becomes inflamed and ecretes an unhealthy mat- ter which is absorbed into the blood, and Catarrth becomeswa serious and. dangerous blood disease. Every day the blood becomes more heavily loaded with these poisonous secretions, and as the poisoned blood constantly passes through the lungs they become diseased, and often Catarrh terminatesin Consumption. Sprays, washes, inhalations and such treatment do no real good, because they do not reach the poison-laden blood, where the real trouble lies. ‘The only way to cure Catarrh is to purify and build up theblood. §.8.S. has been proven the remedy best suited for this purpose.. If goes down to the very| [ B [} @ tottom of the trouble and removes every PURELY VEGETABLE fieshens this lifestream and, as thishealthy. blood goes'to every nook and corner of the gystem, Catarrh is driven out and a lasting cure made, . The inflamed me branes and tissues heal, the secretions cease, the head is cleared Bnd the entire system renovated and put-in good condition by the use of S. S. S. for free book which contains valuable information about Catarrh and ask forany special medical advice you desire, without charge, ? THE SWIFT SPEGIFIC GO,y ATLANTA, GA. trace of impurity from the circulation; || Write e dress Daily Pioneer That the Pioneer Gets and Prints the News Is Appre- reciated Outside of Bemidji. Tribune, published at Akeley, : ays: The Bemidji Daily Pioneer Started the wéek in a brand new giving excellent news services. The increased advertising pat- ronage and °circulation is evi- . dence that the paper is appre- _ciated by the public. 40 Cents per" Month For News = Read what the Akeley of type. The Pioneer is Pays for the Daily

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