Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, September 5, 1910, Page 6

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POLITICAL ANNOUNCEMENTS [Continued from Page 7] A. B. Hazen Candidate for Sheriff. I hereby announce myself as a candida‘e for the republican nomin- ation for sheriff of Beltrami county at the primary election to be held September 20, 1910, and I solicit your vote at the polls. A. B. Hazen Sheriff of Beltrami County. County Surveyor. I hereby announce myself as candidate for the republican nomi- nation for County Surveyor of Bel- trami county at the primaries Sep- tember 20th. Rov Bliler. Announcement. I hereby announce myself as candidate for the Republican nomi- aation to the office of county at- torney at the primaries to be held September 20. If chosen, I will do my best to fill the office to your satisfaction. ] Chester McKusick Announcement. T hereby announce myself as can- didate for the nomination for sheriff on the republican ticket at the pri- maries held Sept. 20, 1910. A. N. Benner. Candidate For County Commissioner Third District. I hereby announce myself a can- -didate for the republican nomina- tion for the office of County Com- missioner of the third commissioner district of Beltrami county. I respectfully solicit the support of the voters of the third district. L. O. Mhyre. The Mississippi of Streets. A street is like a river, with its hu- man current carrying all manner of drift between its banks of residences or shops on either side. And if this simile be appropriate then New York's Broadway is the Mississippi of streets, Probably no other avenue in the world Presents so many contrasts in the flot- sam and jetsam it carries from Har- lem to the Battery. Every type of hu- manity—uprooted saplings from farms and orchards, proud hulled eraft in silks and satins—may be described in the surging mass. Banker and boot- black, the swaggering swell and the draggled derelict, walk shoulder to shoulder—rush, rather, for Broadway is a maelstrom, the embodiment of New York's bustle and hurry, the place where wothing can stand still. Rich- ard Harding Davis once said that everybody “seems to be trying to reach the bank to have a check cashed be- fore 8 o'clock.” — George Seibel in Pittsburg Gazette-Times, Optimistic. “l was pinched for being too opti- mistic.” “Aw, come off.” “Fact. I thought the stock I was selling would be worth something some day.”—Washington Herald. It Covers the Land. “We shall never see that great American novel. It can’t be written.” *“Why not?”’ “We have too many dialects." “Write it in baseball vernacular.”-. Washingtou Herald. The Sting of a Bee. An eastern fable tells of a potentate who demanded that there should be brought to him the stings of a thou- sand bees killed because one of their colony had dared commit lese majesty by stinging the hand of royalty. When they were brought in a tiny golden thimble the king was so amazed to find that a thousand of the hypoder- mic points made such a little mass that be issued n manifesto to the ef- fect that thereafter no person within the bounds of the kingdom shonid complain at the sting of a bee. The lesson of the fable is that petty an- poyances hurt because they are exag- gerated in the mind: that when they are seen ip rheir actual proportions = they are so slight as to merlt only contempt. How much comfort would come to the majority of persons if they could but see the tiny size of the bee stings that lead them to acts of petulance. words of anger, expressions of reproach. The bee sting annoy- ances have caused lifelong breaches of friendship. They have broken up fam- Ilies and caused anger and resentment to take the place of love and tealty.— Baltimore American, In South America. Foreign Correspondent - And who are those two men under the tree? Gen~ eral Paprika—Oh. that's the second battalion of the royul guards. - Chicag News. - Nonroyal Heaagear. One of the attaches of the American embassy at London tells a story where- In Michael Joseph Barry, the poet, who was appointed a police magistrate in Dublin, was the principal figure. There was brought before him an Irish American charged with suspicious con- duct. The officer making the arrest stated, among other things, that the culprit was wearing a “Republican hat.” . “Does your honor know what that mean$?" was the inquiry pu't to the court by the accused's lawyer. “It may be," suggested Barry. “that ft meuans a hat without a crown.”— Harper's Magazine CLOSING OU SALE Having decided to go out of business in Bemidji we will sell out our entire stock consisting of Dry Goods, Shoes, Furnish=| - ings and Clothing AT GOST AND BELOW These goods must be sold at once and the people of Bemidji and vicinity are cordially invited to come in and take advantage of the ACRIFICE S THE ENTIRE STOCK IS NEW Our reason for holding this Big Cut Sale is that we are COING OUT OF THE MODEL DRY CLEANING HOUSE HOGANSON BROS., Proprietors Telephone No. 537 108 Second Stree Dry Cleaning of Ladies’ and Gents’ Clothing, Rugs, Carpets, Household Furnishings, etc. Also Sponging and Pressing on Short Notice. BUSINESS MELBY BROS. 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