Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, October 10, 1907, Page 2

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8 f | ! THE BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEER PUBLISHED WVERY AFTERNOON, OFFICIAL PAPER---CITY OF BEMIDJI BEMIDJI PIONEER PUBLISHING CO. CLYDR 3. PRYOR | . A Q. RUTLEDGE; Business Manager Managing Editor Wntered in the postoffice at Bemidjl. Minn., a8 second class matter. SUBSCRIPTION---$5.00 PER ANNUM FOR THE YOUNG HOUSEWIFE. By Doc Rutledge.l [t your triends In a bunch drop in some day tor lunch And yow've nothing at all on the shelves, Do not sadly despalr but leave them sitting there For a moment to talk by themselves. Take 8 fow scraps of maat and an old pickled oot And a handful or two of stale bread, Mix them all in a pan, let them toastto atan, And your friends will be splendidly fed, 1t your stove doesn’t burn, you've a lesson to learn; Take the poker and shovel and tools, Work the dampers and things and the lids and the springs As it says In the small book of rules; Take your time to do this lest a point you should miss, For perfection is ever your koal, It by none of these ways you can coaxup a blaze Then It may be the fire meeds some coal. Keep your husband's cravats and his shoes and his hats In a drawer in your chiffonier; It he kicks when his vest is in your linen chest Then your husband Is awfully queer; If his buttons fall off, at his pleadings don’t scoft But rise quickly and sew them right on— Any button will do, though the alr may be blue With his language as soon as you're gone. When he comes home at night be all smiling and bright And sit down for a nice, cosy chat: Ask the dear man to guess what you've pald for a dress— He Is sure to be tickled with that! When you make your first pie eat & plece on the sly; 1t it breaks off a tooth never tell— And when trying an egg. please remember we beg That you ought to take it from the shell. When a man has occasion to de- fend his actions he admits his weak ness. It is safer to judge a man by his daily talk than by his Sunday prayers. Most men find it easier to take two steps backward than to take one forward. —_— When a mother tells the truth about her children she whispers it to herself. Many a man would rather lie when asked for information than say “I don’t know.” —_— When a married man does not MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS Pianos, Organs, Violins, Guitars, Mandolins, Ac- cordians, Harmonicas, Violin Strings and all string instrument sup- plies. Sheet Music. Also the celebrated Singer and Wheeler & Wilson Sew- ing Machines. Supplies and Repairs for Sewir-g{Machines.. Mail Orders given Prompt Attention. Terms to Suit Purchaser Bisiar, Vanderlip & CO., an Minnesota Ave. Phoae 319 BENIDJI, MINN. Star Theatre Now Open Moving Pictures’ Illustrated Songs High - Class Vaudeville Acts Now Open GAR-GOL An absolute specific and l.nt,l-upfiq pnplnfirm for all kinds of SORE THROAT SIMPLY AEOARGLE TOI ll:‘l:AY‘ wure cure for Hoarseness, uicsy, i PURIFYING HEALING lo%rrm HARMLESS Ty Bl bo Revt 1 orery ot ¥*xrice 88 Cenis BERG MEDICIKE OO, Des Melses, Tas | home. find fault with his breakfast it's a sign that his wife is away from When a small boy refuses a sec- ond piece of pie it’s a sign there is something wrong with him—or with the pie. —— Wise is the man who can distin- guish between a womans laugh of amusement and the one intended to show off a dimple. DIED OF UNREQUITED LOVE Kansas Man Explaing Suicide of Young Woman, Tola, Kan,, Oct. s—Samuel F. Whit- low, a grain and feed merchant, has made' a- voluntary confession in the prosecutor and others that Miss May Sapp, the beautiful twenty-year-old daughter of J. N. Sapp, a prominent farmer of Moran, Kan., had committed suicide because of her unrequited love for him. - The girl was found dead In the yard of her:father’s home at Mo- ran on the night of Sept. 27, her throat slashed with a razor which was found close by. ‘Whitlow is forty years old and has a wife and three children. Miss Sapp was & nlece of Colonel Willlam Sapp, formerly chairman of the Democratic state central committee of Kansas. ‘Whitlow formerly. was a school- pupils. ' They had been friends for several years. Whitlow told the offi- cers that he and the girl had never been intimate. He sald the girl had become infatuated with him and had repeatedly urged him to leave his family and run away with her. He said that on the night of the tragedy he met her at the rear of her father’s house and told her that their relations razor across her ‘throat. Whitlow wrote a confession, evidently with the intention of committing suicide. . He lost the confession and decided to make it verbally before the officers He sald he would repeat his story be- fore the coroner’s jury. Whitlow attempted to commit sul- cide while being brought to Iola from Moran, drinking wood alcohol. - The members of Miss Sapp’s family insist that she did not commit suicide, ALMOST HURRICANE FORGE Furious 'Sh;rni Sw)eeps Over New York and Vicinity. most hurricane force which swept over New York during the day did venience both on land and water. Coming on almost without warning to withstand its fury. Sheets ‘6f blind- ing rain washed .out streets; under- mined embankments and fences, stove In plate glass windows and made navi- gation on the waterways ardund the city most hazardous for the tfme. The sound steamers got the full force of the ‘storm and several of them were hours late in reaching their pfers, Tho storm vented much of its fury on the Upper West Side of the city. Riverside drive from Seventy-second street to Grant’s tomb wis strewn with the debris of trees ‘and-broken shrubbery. ) In Harlem in three instances horses and wagons were: blown across One Hundred and Twenty-fifth street. Sev- eral immense advertising signs on high buildings at One Hundred and Twenty-fitth street were blown down into the street. The Keith & Proctor sign, composed of hundreds of electric lights, was demolished. Mrg. Kate Buckley was blown off. the pbrch of -her house in Madison l.vanhe and badly bruised. Creameries Fight -New Raz”. Chicago, Oct. \.—Arguments began during the day in the United: States cireutt court upon the demand bf four- teen creamery concerns of the;Middle West for an Injunction . resjraining | fourteen ' railways and flve ‘express companies ‘from* putting fatd effect rates which the creameries {declare ‘| are excessive and imposed for the spe- olfic purpose of driving the areamer- !wt_ot bu‘alpeal.. v & STUCK IN THE 'SOFT: MUD Battleship Kentucky Ashore Off Lam- berts Point, Va. - Norfolk,: Va;, - Oct. .—The -United States battleship Kentucky, which pasged-iti;the Virginia capes from the North on her way to the Norfolk navy- yard for repairs prior to the sailing of Admiral Evang’ battleship fleet on its long voyage around Cape Hern'for the Pacific coast, grounded . off Lamberts point’' while proceeding-up-the’ Eliza- beth river from-Hampton ;Roads en route to the navyyatrd. ‘The Kentucky, with her nose stuck in the soft mud off the Lamberts point flats, lies al- most directly:abreast the Norfolk and ‘Western * railway warehouse No. 2, near the long coal plers. Tugs. went immedlately to- the assistance of the hattleship. She' s-dn. no {mmediate danger and is expected to be floated at high tide without material inJury ENTIRE THAIN DES‘I’RDYED chrll I.lvu Lo-t In Wricl( on the Northern Pacific. Seattle, Wash., Oct. ..—Two tramps were ‘killed, Firoman Giibert Efnest of- Tacoma is missing and believed to be dead and Engineer’ F. N."*Myers of Ban Francisco and Brakeman Thomas were serlously | injured in a wreck near Weston on‘the Northeri Pacific. The train. was ‘a_frelght westbound consisting.of thirty cars of hay, grain and live stock, a. caboose gnd an en- -|glne. The" lntlre\tflln was® déstroyed, the wreckage catching fire soon after the smashup, 3 & Must Not Use Tchlng. '- Milwaukee, ‘Oct. \'~A resolution re- quiring preachers to quit smokin, presence of the sheriff,"the county’ teacher and Miss Sapp was one of his, must cease, Whereupon she drew a| New York, Oct. .—A storm of al- much damage and caused great indons|i' the gale found every one 'unpfepared-| , be licensed to” preach the gospel who used tobacco was introduced at the day’s session of the Evangelical gen- eral conference. No opposition ap- peared and the resolution was referred to the revision committee. Mra. Chadwick Is aptized. Columbus, O., Oct. {.—While lying on her bed in the hospital ward of the Ohio penitentiary during the day Mrs. Cassie Chadwick, who is serving a term in the Ohio penitentiary for wrecking the First National bank of Oberlin, O., was baptized in the Ro- man Catholic faith. PRy e Ghisage ‘A Boy’s Nearfeller, Overcoat is the most substantial garment made. It's warm and comfort- able; carefully tailored, and strengthened to withstand hard wear. The happiest, best appearing boys are those who wear ‘‘Wearbetter’ garments, because they know they are well dressed. We have many different styles of these overcoats on display. We can fit your boy accurately in a dressy garment at a very reason- able price. $4.00 to $10.00 0’Leary and Bowser | Ayers Pill formula for a liver pill. about using these pills. The Best of Everything NORTHERN each day. “North Coast Limited” daily in each direction—Steam Heated; Electric Lighted; Library, Buffet Baths and Barber Shop in its unique Observation Car. Northern Pacific Railway A. M. CLELAND. General Passenger Agent. St. Paul, Minn. LETE FORMULA, AYER'S PILLS Eaoh Pill Reprosents + % Gr.|Podophyllin . y% Gr. 4 Gr.|Gamboge . .y Gr. B 4 Gr.|OilPeppormint 5 Gr. Ask your dm what he thinks of this Uolocml.h Pulp § Gr.|0il Spoarmint viy Gr. Excipient —Sufliciont quantity. ‘We have no.goorots! Wo ublieh 4.0, Ayor o i tho formuins oC i1 our modioinon: PACIFIC Through Vestibuled Trains, each way between St. Paul Minneapolis, Duluth, and Superior and North Pacific Coast Points, carry the latest styles of through Pullman Standatd and Tourist Sleeping Cars, Dining Cars and handsome Day Coaches. i Cars run through and meals are served at regular hours Lumber and Building Material We carry in stock at all times a complete line of Lumber and Building Material, Dimensions, etc. Glass, Glass Glass We are clcsing out at cost our large line of glass and can give you good values. St. Hilaire Retail Lbr. Co. BEMIDJI, MINN. Now Is The Time To purchase a building site in Bemidji. We have a number of choice building lots which may be purchased on reasanable terms For further particulars write or call Bemidji Townsite and Im- provement Company. H. A. SIMONS, Agent. Swedback Block, Bemnid}i. Subscribe For The Pioneer. market today. going fast. NEECEATIVE DACQE he GhHe Maple Clermont is recognized as being the most beautiful as well as the strongest, best built and most dura- ble Wood Heaters on the prices on the Maple Cler- mont are as low as we can possibly make them. ‘We sell them as follows: 18 Inch for $14.00 22 inch for $16.00 ‘24 'inch for $18.00 28 inch for $20.00 Come early and get first choice. They, are ; Our leming Bros., = 516- Minnesota Ave. bt A Il.llll‘l!llllllllllll I llllllllllllll-lllll llllllllllllllllllllll | llllfillllllllllllllll Wave Brings Warm Prices Beautiful Nickle Plated Heaters At Prices to suit every Purse Before buying, compare our prices and see our goods, and we will con- vince you that we can save you from 10 to 15 per cent on a Heating Stove of any kind. Our stock is now com- vlete and we can sell you a heater at any price from $1.50 to $65.00. -Don’t fail to look over our line. It will mean money saved if you buy. iy , '+ 'Phone 57

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