Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, July 16, 1907, Page 2

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A few doges 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 oramp colic and cholera morbus. It is equally successful for summer diarrheea and cholera infantum in children, and is the means of savirg 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 S1ZE, 50C. Barker’s Drug Store 20 years experience as a SPECIALIST ‘DR. REA Eye, Ear, Nose, Throat Diseases of Men; Diseases of Women; Nervous Dis- eases; Chronic Diseases. Coming to Bemidjt Thur’y, Aug 8 at Markham Hotel 9 a, m. to 3:30 p. m. One Day Only! Dr. Rea has made more re- markable cures in the Nor- thwestern states than any living man. All curable medical and su'[[{lcln diseases acute and chronic catarrh, and Special_Dis- eases of the Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat, Lung Disease, Early Consumption, Bronchitis, Bron chisl Catarrh, Constitutional Catarrh, Dys- psia, Sick Headache, Stomach and Bowel 'roubles, Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Sclatica, Bright's Disease, Diabetes, Kidney, Liver. Bladder, Prostatic and Female Diseases, Diz- ziness, Nervousness. Indigestion, Obesity, In- terrupted Nutrition. Slow groth in children, and all wasting dlsease in adults. Many cases of deafness, ringing In the ears, loss of eyesight, cataract, cross eyes, etc., that have been improperly treated or neglected, can be easlly restored, Deformitles, club feet, cur- verature of the spine, disease of the brain. oaralysis, epllepsy, heart disease, dropsy. ellingof the llmbs, stricture, open sores, OAln In the bone, granular enlargements and all long-standing diseases properly treated. Young.middleaged and old, single or married men and all who suffer from lost manhood, nervous debility. spermatorrhoea, seminal losses, sexual decay, failing memory, weak eyes, stunted developement, lack of energy, ed blood, pimples, impediments to marriage; also blood and skin diseases, Syph- flts. eruptions, hair falling, bone pains, swell- Ings, sore throat, ulcers, effects of mercury. kidney and bladder troubles, weak back, burning urine, passing urine too often, gono, rhoea, gleet. stricture, recelving treatment promp relief for lite. Cancers, Tumors, Goiter, Fisiula, Piles, varicocele and enlarged glards. with the sub- gutaneaus injection method, absolutely with- onozos-xn and without the loss of a drop of blood, is one of his own discoveries, and Is the most really sclentific and certainly sure cureof the twentieth century. Consulatlon ot those Interested, $1.00. DR. REA & CO ., Minneapolis, Minn. ‘Loutsville, Ky Ghe PIONEER;| Delivered to your door every evening Only 40c per Month STATE OF MINNESOTA % District Court, i i fteenth | Beltrami County Judicial Distrlct. Pauline B. Little, plaintiff, against Eugene Little, defendant.—-Summons. The State o Minnesota to the above named Dgfendant, You are hereby summoned and required to anBwor the complaint of the piaintiff in tho above entitled action, which complaint has been filed in the office of the clerk of said District Court at the clty of BemidJi, county ofBeltraml and stato of Minnesota, and to 8eTve & copy of your anwer to the said com- plaint on the subscriber at his office, In the clity ot Bemldjl, in the sald county of Bel- trami, within thirty days atier service of this summons upon you, exclusive of the day otsuch service: and If you fall to_answer the uld complaint within the time aforesald, the plaineltt in this action will apoly to the court or the rellef demanded In sald complaint together with plaintift's costs and dlsburse- ments hereln. Dated June 13th, A. D. 1907, OHARLES W. SORUTOHIN, Plaintif’s Attorney, Bemidji, Minn, 16 neer at hand when the kidneys are Al purify and strengthea .“:c'-;n%:-"u ‘normal &‘l—. 25 cents, thees ot Ow-l Drug Store. THE BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEER PUBLISHED NVERY AFTHRNOON, OFFICIAL PAPER---CITY OF BEMIDJI BEMIDJI PIONEER PUBLISHING CO. CLYDE J. PRYOR | Business Manager A. G. RUTLEDGE Managing Editor Entored in the postofice at Bemldji. Mion,, a8 second class master. SUBSCRIPTION---$5.00 PER ANNUM THE SECOND NAVAL POWER The proposed cruise of our battle ship squadron to the Pacific gives especial timeliness to the recent de- bate in the House of Lords on the admiralty returns. In the course of the criticism Lord Tweedmouth gave a summarized estimate of relative naval power, apropos of the classic British policy of keeping the empire’s fighting force equal to any two other powers. From this summary a very interesting comparison is made. Thus Lord Tweedmouth, in esti- mating the effective battle ship force of the powers, by eliminating ships over fiteen years of age and those of an obsolete type, credits Great Brit- ain with thirty-nine battle ships of the first class, the United States with eighteen, France thirteen, Germany eleven and Japan nine. Another method of comparison is by displacement, with the following results, based upon the above classi- fication: Great Britain’s thirty-nine ships have a total of 574,100 tons; the United States’ eighteen ships have 249,936 tons; France’s thirteen, 142,923 tons; Germany’s eleven, 126,- 035 tons; and Japan’s nine, 128,714 tons. The London naval correspondent of the New York Herald, which is something of a specialist in naval lore, declares that Lord Tweed- mouth’s methods and estimates are supported by notable naval experts. It is significant that Lord Tweed- mouth did not concern himselff with estimates of the cruiser and torpedo classes, the importance of which seems to be pretty generally discount- ed nowadays, as decisive factors, at least. It is the heavy ships that de- cide the day, according to the most recent wars. HOLDS STATUTE IS INVALID Attorney General Passes on Minne- sota’s Road and Bridge Law. St. Paul, July 1.—Attorney General Young, in an opinion to be given shortly, will declare the $200,000 road and bridge law passed by the last leg- islature to be in violation of the con- stitution. In anticipation of the opinion State Auditor Iverson, who has the distribu- tlon of the fund, made formal applica- tion for the opinion and he expects the answer in a few days. It follows on an application from Kittson coun- ty, which has just built a bridge and wants the state aid the law entitles it to. The new law provides for the dis- tribution of $200,000 a year from the state revenue fund among the counties for road and bridge improvements and it is here that the unconstitutional feature {s alleged. HIS CAPTORS INDICTED. Mexican Accused of Inciting Revolu- tion Set Fre Douglas, Ariz., July 1,.—Manuel Sa- rabia, the Mexican who was accused by the Mexican authorities with in- citing revolution and who was kid- napped from the Douglas jail on the night of June 30, is now a free man without the vestige of a charge against him. Mexican Consul Maza and three American officers have been held for trial by the grand jury of the territory on the charge of kidnapping. Sarabla, who has arrived at Naco, a border town near here, accompanied by Ranger Captain Harry Wheeler, ex- pressed himself as being profoundly pleased with the manner in which the people of this section came to his as- sistance. Governor Torres of Hermo- sillo expressed to Captaln Wheeler the greatest regret at the manner In which Sarabla had been treated by officers In'his department. h Hundreds of Americans and Mexl- cans gathered at the station here ex- pecting the return of Sarabla and were disappointed when it was learned that he had stopped off with Captain Wheeler at Naco. MONTANA MILLIONAIRE DEAD, Peter Larson, Once Penniless; Dies Worth Over $25,000,000. . | Helena, Mont., July 1 j—Peter Lar- {llness of two years. Less than forty years ago he landed on American shores penniless and unacquainted exception of former Senator W. A.| Clark, | ously estimated at from $25,000,000 to $50,000,000, all came through legiti- mate business Investments and as & rallroad contractor. During his connection with the con- struction of the Northern Pacific, as dian Paclific, Larson became interested | In other enterprises, such as mining, lumbering, brewing and the like, and all proved veritable gold mines, These interests are situated In Montana,| son is dead at his home here after an | with the language or customs of the| country. He died the wealthiest man | in the Northwest, with the possible|= Of Mr. Larson’s vast wealth, VB.I'!-‘ - well as the Gireat Northern and Cana- | General Strike to Be Ordered. Youngstown, O., July 17.—President McMahon of the blast furnace work- ers says that a general strike will be ordered in the Mahoning and She- nango valleys within three days. Me- Mahon declares that once a strike is In force it will be long and bitter. “We havs asked for a conference and our requests have been ignored,” he sald. Dragged to Death by Horse. Alma, Wis,, July 1%—While Chris Hopp was coming home for dinner, riding one of the horses which he had been using to cultivate corn for his nelghbor, William Habersaat, he in some way got tangled in the harness and the horse ran away, dragging Hopp about & mile. He was dead when found. French Parliament Adjourns. Paris, July 1j—Parliament has ad- journed for the summer vacation. As Premier Clemenceau finished reading the decree closing the session M. Sembat, United Socialist, shouted, amid laughter and applause from .his colleagues: “This is the raost wel- come day of your life.” Barnato Won the Bet. There is a legend of an amusing competition in connection with a dis- cussion regarding the financial value of literary genius. Barney Barnato, who was a genius, but not literary, began to chaff some financial jour- nalists. “You bloomin’ fellers don't know nothin’ about literature. TI'll back myself to write a little plece against any of yer.” The challenge was laughingly ac- cepted, and a referee appointed. The papers were thrown into a hat, and the referee, after analyzing them, said: “Gentlemen, I am bound to say that the palm must be awarded to Mr. Barnato. His piece is terse, faultless in form, irreproachable in matter. You yourselves shall judge.” And he read out the following essay: I promise to pay to Mr. X. the sum of £100 for his kindness in acting as refereo in this Interesting competition, B. I. BARNATO. The award was unanimously con- firmed by the competitors, and the check was duly honored.—London Telegraph. Delicately Put. “A footman,” said a banker, “called his master up by telephone and said: “‘I regret to Inform you, sir, that your house is on fire and fast burning down.’ ‘““‘Oh,’ cried the master, ‘what a ter- rible misfortune! But my wife—is she safe? “‘Quite safe, sir. the first.’ “‘Are my daughters—are they all right? ‘“‘All right, sir. They’s with their mother. “There was a pause. Then: “‘And what about my mother-in-law, James? * ‘That, sir,’ said the footman suave- 1y, ‘was what I wished to speak to you about, sir, particularly. Your mother- in-law is lyin’ asleep in the third story back, and knowin’ your regard for her comfort, sir, I wasn’t sure whether T ought to disturb her or not, sir.’”— Los Angeles Times. She got out among Which Is Your Shortest Hour? “What is your shortest hour In the day?’ asked a business man of an ac- quaintance. “Don’t say you have none. You have, although you may not know it. Everybody has. Of course, reckoned by actual measurement, each hour is composed of sixty minutes, yet notwithstanding that chronological ex- actness the hours vary in length. My shortest hour is from 2 to 8 o’clock in the afternoon. I find upon inquiry that this Is the fleetest perlod for many people. In my case so swiftly do those, sixty minutes hurry by that I try to crowd into them as many of the disagreeable, yet inevitable, things of life as I possibly can. If I have to Interview a bore, I see him then; if I have to visit the dentist, I do it then. That hour is bound to slip away quickly, no matter what happens; therefore the agony of disagreeable scenes seems of shorter duration.”— New York Sun. . Naked Truth. An encounter of wits once took place between the late Eugene Field and a New York woman. It was at dinner, and the woman was In evening dress, which was rather decollete. After a skirmish between the two relative to the respective merits of a well known author it would seem that Fleld came off second best. “Oh, Mr. Field,” exclaimed the wo- man exultantly, “you must admit that you- are fairly beaten at your own game!” Field bowed politely and, with a smile, promptly rejoined, “At any rate, Miss: Blank, 1 have one consolation— you can’t laugh at me in your sleeve.” ~Lippincott's. Legend of the Violet. A Latin poem of the sixteenth cen- tury ‘has a pretty legend of a violet that, in mythological days, was a malden called Ianthis, one of Diana's the use of P Conde corved et Patine British Columbia, Idaho and Wash-! ington. < nymphs. She atfracted the atténtion of Apollo, whose admiration she did not return, and, flying from his pur- sult, she implored Diana to destroy the beauty which occasloned her so much trouble. Diana granted her request and turned her face to a dull purple. Ianthis, however, soon regretted -the loss of “her beauty and was pining away with grief, when the goddess had pity on her and changed her into a flower, which still shrinks from Apol- lo (the sun) and hides her modest head In the shade. At Regular Rates. ,Miss Matilda Owens hung on the arm of the editor of the Laneville Bu- gle, to whom she had been engaged for three years, and endeavored to turn his gaze toward the sky. P ‘“Just notice the moon, William!” she sald in a melting volce. “At the usual rates, Matilda, I shall be happy to do so” he replled.— Youth's Companion. Too Strenuous. “My son tells me you've discharged him,” sald the office boy’s mother, “and I think that’s strange. You ad- vertised for a strong boy, and he’s cer- tainly”— “He’s too strong, madam,” Interrupted the employer. “In the single day he was here he broke all the rules of this office and some of the furniture.”—Catholic Standard and Times. Endurance. Ethel—How long can a human belng ltve without food ? Jack—I don’t know about human be- Ings, but I know poets who have been writing for years.—Judge. It has become necessary to modify the old saying, “Life is what we make 1t” Life is what we make In it.—Los Angeles Times. - Confuslon at These Dinners. In his dining room Sir Joshua Rey- nolds constantly entertained all the best known men of his time, including Dr. Johnson, Goldsmith, Garrick, Burke, - Sterne, Hogarth, Wilkes, Allan Ramsay and a score of others, who formed the brilliant literary club of which the great painter was the founder. There doubtless, in the familiar lines of the author of “Re- taliation,” When they talked of their Raphaels, Cor- Teggios and stuff, He shifted his trumpet and only took snuft. At these dinner parties, according to Malone, though the wine and the dishes were of the best, there seemed to be a tacit agreement that mind should predominate over body. The table, we are told, though set only for seven or eight, often had to accommo- date double that number. There was usually a deficiency of knives, forks and glasses, and the guests had to bawl! for more supplies, while the host calmly left every one to shift for him- self, though he lost not a word, if he could help it, of the conversation.— London Spectator. Gulf Stream Fruit. The superiority of certain English fruits has its origin in a cause little suspected. It is the blessed gulf stream which does it. Foreign grow- ers are every bit as acute as the Eng- lish, it may be, but they have not the right atmosphere. The gulf stream imparts a beneficent humidity to our atmosphere which results in_our fruit having the thinnest and finest skins of any in the world. The English straw- berry Is without equal for flavor. .The English grape, though it may not have the fine flavor of the Spanish, has the best skin. The French tomato is as thick skinned as the BEnglish fleld grown. The English apple eclipses its rivals because of its thin skin. Every fruit according to its climate. Grown In a different atmosphere, the English apple would shrivel in a day; here, helped by the moisture from the gulf stream, It ripens within the thinnest of jackets and is as much superior to the foreign or colonial apple as a peach Is superior to a parsnip—St. James' Gazette. > A London Fog. Nothing has such a bewlildering ef- fect as fog. Only animals which find their way by scent can get about iniit with any certainty. Birds are entirely confused by it. Tame pigeons remaln all day motionless and half - asleep, huddled up, elther in or just outside their. pigeon houses. Chickens remajn motionless for hours during heavy fogs. No bird sings or utters a call, perhaps because it fears to. betray its where- abouts to an unseen foe. During one very thick fog a blind man was found wandering about a certain district of London. This man was in the habit of carrying notes and parcels; and had scarcely. ever lost his: ‘way . before, Asked why he had gone astray,(for he was quite blind, and it was supposed that weather would have made no dif- || ference), :he sald that In a fog the ground: “sounded quite differently.’— London' Chums, They. Quit Right There. The .late. Andrew .J. Dam, & well Improved Wheat | Food Whils would starve if obliged to live on white bread :lm life ‘and health could be supported by " WHEAT FLAKE OELER it there was'not’ another article of diet obtainable. '/ Make: a meal of this food, with cream and sugar, .and you will find that you can go longer without the feelings of hunger than by any other article of diet known. Made under the supervision of a physician and chemist whose name h: fo ot aven for a fow miastess or cook s bollieg milk: - All Grocers 'fi:’."":',,*‘:"‘. : 9“%&/ 108 known hotel man of New York, was, as beeft a household word coming up every day from a suburb, || At the time of the clvil war, proprietor of a hotel in New Bedford. A num- ber of colored citizens interested in the formation of a military company called upon him and Informed him that they would be glad to form the company and dllow him to suggest the name, provided he would pay for the equip- ments, “Congressman T. D.. Blliott has fitted out a company of white men, and throughout the war they will be known as the Elliott Light Guards,” sald the spokesman of the colored men, ““Well,” sald Dam, “If I am to equip and organize this colored company, I shall insist that they be known as the Dam, Black Guards,” The company was never organized.— New York Tribune. A Kind Examiner. 8ir John Stalner was dearly loved by the students when he was professor of music at Oxford, “As an examiner he was most considerate;” said one who studied under him, “and would always do his best to get you ‘through.’ I re- member his asking me a poser In a viva voce examination. He walted pa- tlently for the answer; but, partly through my nervousness no doubt, 1 could not think of it. At length he exclaimed testily, ‘Dear me, how stuffy this room Is, to be sure,; and he wen! and began tugging at the ventilator cord. It was quite two minutes be- fore he got the thing open, and by the time he had sat down again and rear- ranged his gown I had the answer ready. Comparing notes later in the day with a man who was examined quite soon after me, I told him_how the ventilator had Served me, ‘How remarkable,’ he replied. ‘Why, when 1 was stuck be said, “How extraor- dinary drafty this place Is,” and spent quite two minutes In shutting the ven- tilator.’ ”—Manchester Guardian, A High Place. Sweet Singer—DeHammer says he has a high place in the next show he! goes out with. Comedian—Well, I should say it is- high. He sits up in the flles and tears up paper for the - snowstorm scene.—Chicago News. B Mourning. i “The Parkers have all gone into deep mourning for a.very distant relative. Don’t you think it's a sign they're rich?” “No. It's a sign the distant’ relative was rich.”—Life. “The beer with a snap to it.” Made to taste good, ’ Tastes as though it was made good. Makes good everywhere. - Made in LaCrosse. ‘ G. HEILEMAN BREWING CO. Order from Agency at Crookston Sold Everywhere. dress of type. N Daily Pioneer For New_s That the Pioneer Gets and Prints the News Is Appre- reciated .Outside of Bemidji. Tribune, published at Akeley, :ays: Read what The Bemidji Daily Pioneer Started the week in a brand new The :Pioneer is 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 Pays for the Daily» the * Akeley <

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