Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, September 26, 1910, Page 2

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THE BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEER |<er'es. mekiog = total of DARLINGB0Y Lawm o Lava - 775,240,000 apples. . V.| ; Laughter 15 the best of all tonlcs n PUBLISHED EVERY AFTERNOON EICEPT SURBAY BY It is also figured that:if the TAKING MEDICINE. " You want him strong, don’t you?| Bacilll are humorless folk and hate = wo THE BEMIDJI PIONEER PUBLISHING C0. | 2pples harvested in the United | myo ook is out of the bottle and the| Thenstop“doping him for fits, weak | be physical constiturlon that 1s | ailue A . - % he: p - ti xays vibrating with the ‘shocks of i M. DENU: States this year were coriverted in- |spoon is handy. Mr. Lorimer must take m,_ fever, mdvim cons dpation, i & rhis-in ol trulsm. bt servicéabla CARSON. to pies, the army of bakers re-|his medicine without delay.—Chicago || 'E?gaalvflml:i'ckw w':l:‘e Kx‘:l“:“f:i and likewlse worth: repeating are the Fatered « e Potafionat Bomil, Maovon, 30 sooent | QU1I7€d t0.do the work would turn | Record Herald. N Dl SO s r:gu_ plad oo Taughor o elireatiy : class matter. out 6,259,000,000 pies, which, HOW TO SUCCEED. lates bad bowels, tones up torpid ::fi":;f,;’,em‘fi,‘,’;',' of' l:“gfiee,._ ::s ;i placed side by side, would make a - livers and purifies .the blood. Price | some of them need formaldehyde. = SUBSGRIPTION---$5.00 PER YFAR 1N DVANCE ath alimost gos,000.. mileer of| L pwo ate Worhe fatioes: thou tie, fol 25c.; sold everywhere. There is-a kind, too, that needs bicar- w 5 h -?fls’ th th' lowing takasifrom, tho; dealo o] @y sucsos; bonate of soda as an antidote—an- e ear! i o pe- Ballinger is the John Dietz of the SRORE to. el : 339 {ul bysiniess mans Late o bed, “.fly,.m The: Lost: Umbrelta. other that calls for lithia tablets. But cabinet. He ref % times. The total weight of this|rise, work like hell and advertise."— “1 bave been comlag here for my |the Hight sort of laughter was stolen 3 G : * usestogiveup. - | suntain of pastry, including |Chishom Times Herald. Isch f6r yeurs, bt neves againe’ said t;om thedgadtsmby some wlse;; Pruime; (S:?Ill In an meDel?t 0111:' }éealltlfll)fl New lard and other ingredients, ; a man to the head waiter of a down. | theus.-and nothing can prevail agains! 1lverware o renc. Ta! attern 3 Among the also rans might be {iour, e g : YES, FIRST AND LAST. town restaurant recently. “Sorry,” be. | it In America there ls plenty of s B Y h fi h th mentioned that gold discovery near s estiiated at-, ;250,000,900 The Bemidji Pioneer riges toremark— | gan the waiter. “Sorry nothing. 1 |laughter, good, bad and indiffereit, but which we give away free with the B Bemidii, pounds, while the total cost:of the Juyy iq the time forall good men to] left the umbrella here not five.minutes | oS!y b e following cash purchases: ies, if sold at five centsa quarter, |come to the aid of their party.” Of| 8go, there was no one near our table, | 800d- 1t is one of our greatest nation- ] - ot 4 laced at $1,250,000,000. coutee Mr. Ploncer was the fiust man at | &nd the waiter -must. bave seen it |8l resources. May we conserve it al- i n as ale 1 sugar shell in lined box, - R is placed at $1, . . Pioneer wa: e ways. A people that laugh kindly wth 6 G h s I The Johnson-Jeffries pictures are sl 9. Lake'Ti If we find it"— “Find it? It 13| "2 X value 30c. all right. The newsboys of Duluth e & P— the wollat < Cate s found, I tell you, and I’ll bave it now nnod ,Z"ff,'mh un’::g‘l‘amwli:‘gsl'] tso‘f:;!;g._a saw them and’ th dict i 4 THE PRISON PAPER. wow! or you'll never see me here agaln.” gixga Tribune. . ' W'th 12 II s I 1 set sugar shell and butter ¢ verdict s umani-| - Tyere are more than 650 news- The man, finshed with excitement. o : | as 818 knife in box, value 60c. -_— mous. 5 N £ The voters -are to be congratulated for| wog walking away when he was: hail- ? papers P““‘fl‘":d l_“‘ _"’le d"“‘ O} turning down Wes Wright for county com- | ed by a man who bad entered by the e " as ale Choice of " Minnesota. e list includes every- | missioner. We want no more of the old | rear door: “Say. Krank, is this your The-Case-Altered. w h 318 c h s | Cigaret boxes are to be made ", ¥ oL 3 > —1s It correct to speak. of a 1-2 dozen Tea Spoons thing from the welcome “‘weekly”|days at Bemidji,-when:graft ruled the af-{ umbrella? I picked it np when we fin. Brown” s peal; smaller but boxes for those who| .t " presses of hamlet or|fairs of the county.—Baudette Rainy | ished lunch. Glad you were still here.” | Man a8 “of the male persuasion? 1-4 dozen Table Spoons use them will continue to be about| River Region. “Here, but not stlll,” the head waiter | Jones—Yes, If the subject is not mar- 1 Berry Spoon in lined box six feet long: village to the bulky bn'tchen ?f ads, 2 L whispered. *The umbrelia -has been rled Brs s 1 Cold Meat Fork in lined box crimes and. politics which daily pour “DOPE" BERG'SDEFEAT. ~ [ found. but our customer bas been lost | “Yhat has that to do with the mat- s S through the clattering machines in e S X for a few: days. He'll be asbamed to | eF?’ 1 gravy ladle m lined box A Panhandle train-made.100 miles | {27°"%" 2 The defeat of Albert Berg, former secre- o o "6 TV B 8 " New York “Why. when be is married bis wife value 90c an hour into Chicago. That's run-|°"F, &itie% tary of state, demonstrates again the | e 1 persuades him. " : | Butinall this ocean of printed|vote-getting ability of A. L. Hanson. _— . ; 1 Berry Spooa and 1 Cold ning almost as fast as Steenerson did . 3 Berg was pick in. M d His Weak. Point w “l 30 sh ale in li picked to win. Mr. Berg starte: is Weak. Point. on election dey: paper there is one little humble pub. Ber¢ waspicked towin. Me Bergstarted| | Hie Wesk Pow I a Meat Fork, each in lined lication which stands as a beacon P b Cod: b HoRsEs box, value $1.50 light to stir to their d i dAg e [ DL ez Lt thes Job yimaiiton mach :mnfii : erair, ”fu:‘sud :: (;plu- ; N S ight to stir to their deepest depths i idi on person:of quite n_poetic tem- Lt an o & i . It is said that James Gray, demo-| K1t t© 31 Pest ePINS| for him. Just how Hansondid it no ane |00 oF & Person o o are roads gl dmengo il your horse | | Choice of: ] % the emotions of all who read its|geems to know, but there are the votes,| P T¢ handling the Togging trade. -l your wants | as ae cratic candidate for governor, may s - b Ob, he's one of thoxe men who | at thobig Stock ¥ ards market where a 1rge 1-2 dozen Table Spoons 4 s sparkling pages, unmarred by a|and Mr. Hanson will occupy his old seat); — ™ o ot o the Infinite. and |Stock 1s always x hand and whero the beat publicly declare for county option. | . dverti in the Senate next winter.—St. Paul Dis- o d prices prevall for good stock . 1 dozen Tea Spoons It doesn’t much matter single advertisement. 4 patch di;lngs after meqlluf athomable, but |gp,sT, ,::..L »!'fu'lfi wg"a‘ auom‘n':bu‘lllil::w' NINK. 1 Berry Spoon s vay B This unique publication is known . who: never. pay cush. u % G. L. Hanson only walked.— Cass Lake Times. Thanks for the information. Thought maybe he hobbled. l According to the new directory Daluth has 83,000. She will con- tinue to have that population until the federal census figures arrive. l In Chicago parents are fretting because their children run to school. In Bemidji the word “from” should be substituted for the word “to.” Clarence Miller’s plurality in the eighth district is more than 8.000. McKnight was slightly in er.or when on the eve of election he said he would win over Clarence by 5,000. As the result of a liquor drinking bet Andrew Sehostrick of Whiting; Ind., drank one quart of whiskey and four bottles of beer. Then he fell over dead which was no safe thing for a man like him to do. A DISGRACEFUL GOVERNOR. Perhaps there was a time when a narrow minded individual with an enlarged hump of bigotry could publicly pose as a close friend to criminals and exert the power given him as the governor of a great state to pardon wanton murderers but if as the Prison Mirror. It 18 pub- lished from the state: penitentiary in Stillwater. Itis edited by a man who wears a convict’s garb; its type 1s set by fingers that have committed crime and its presses-respond to a prisoner’s strength. The pages are filled with good things from .men who, although: pay- ing the penalty of the transgressor, can pen, in their grated cells, poetry, literary discussions, humeor- ous compositions and bright news items. Here is a sample of the sunshine within the stone walls of that piti- able world: “Teacher: ‘Johnny, which is right, «a man lies easy or a man lies easily? Pupil: ‘Who’s the man?” Again, in the current issue, “G. H.” gives a graphic account of “Life in Uncle Sam’s Navy' and “D. M.” in an article on “Sternmess. of Military Demands” tells how a sol- dier obeyed orders even to the point of shooting his father. On the ditorial page, made bright by cheering comments, an appro- priate poem and laughable column under the heading “Yolly Yinglings, by Yens Yenson,” appears at the top of the column the following: The Mirror is a weekly paper published in the Minnesota State Prison. It was founded in 1887 by the prisoners andlis edited and managed by them. It aims to be a-home newspaper;. to encourage moral "THINKS McKUSICK SHOULD BE GLAD. sonally, that he met defeat. ability to fill the office of county attorney to the satisfaction of all,but others always.}| took delight inplacing obstaclesin hisway, and he tackled a well nigh impossible job in trying to do anything for the county. He ought to be glad to get back to pri- vate life and wash his hands of the whole business.—Rainy River Region. ‘ly because they lead. the:simple life. Chester McKusick should be glad, per- He has the His Final Plea. A Chicago map appeared at the White House one day during the Me- Kinley ' administration with a petition contalnlng 7,000 names recommending him for appointment as Brazilian min- ister. He was a picture framer; and when he was canvassing for orders:he: took along his petition .and asked everybody in the picture frame busi- ness to sign'it. Almost everybody did. The man was insistent and finally reached the: president. Always:gentle and considerate, President McKinley explained to the candidate that he would bave to consult the Illinois sen- ators and representatives about the matter before making the appointment. “You know.," said the president, “we have to select big-men: for -these: big places.” “Well,” asked the picture framer, MR. RENTER Have you ever stopped to think that every few years you p actically pay for the house you live in and yet do not own it'; Figure it up for yourself. Thecdore Roosevelt says: “No Investment on earth is:s0 safe, 80: sure, 0 certain to enrich its owners as undeveloped realty.” We will be glad to tell you about the City of Be- midji. and quote’you prices with easy terms of payment if desired on some of the best residence and'business property in that rapidly growing City. A letter addressed to us will bring you full particu- lars or if you prefer to eee the property, call on H. A. Simons, at Bemidji. The Soo Railroad will be running its freight and passenger-trains into Bemidji within a few months; investigate the oprortunities offered for business on a small or large scale. Bemidji Townsite & Improvement Co, 404 New York Life Bullding ST. PAUL MINNESOTA Ladle, each in lined box value $1.80. 1 Berry Spoon, 1 Cold Meat Fork and 1 Gravy Ladle each in lined box, value $2.40 Choice of: 1 dozen Dessert Spoons, 1-2 dozen Table Spoons and Butter Knife in lined box, value $3.00. 1 set Kvife and Fork in wnh 31 ufl GflSh Salfl lined box, value $5.00. W. G. SCHROEDER DEALER IN General Merchandise With $50 Cash Sal With $60 Cash Sale Subseribe for The Pioneer “won’t I be just-as big as any of them If 1 get the job?"—Philadelphia- Satur- day Evening: Post. Recipe For Longevity. People live longer in North Carolina than anywhere élse in the-world, chief- drink buttermilk and eat blackberries fresh In summer and dried in winter.— Raleigh News and' Observer. i i No Profit In It. == s0, that time is passing and with it x’:pfl:;::l‘:‘,:m::a;:;ifi:‘:;:w:lfifi “What.are you kicking about? She create our garments. ThCY are i - h N .| returned all your presents, didn’t she?" X goes Patterson, who as chief execu-| the true status of the prisoner; dessemi-| ™19 %l YO expressage: amouited h 1 Tail Th 1 tive for three years of Tennessee has | nate penological information and .to aid 1o m[,,e than the presents ‘were t € rea al OrsS. € small- granted freedom to 1,026 criminals, |in dispelling that prejudice which has| y,ptp: 2 H the most notorious of whom are the |SVer. been the bnf sinister to a .fal]en ShOp ploddcr 18 Only a TOI'eI’- Carmacks, father and:son, who. were | 28 Self-redemption. The paper is en- H hl ] LU k" . d ! h tirely dependent on the public for its finan- PEUHE WE KNow lg y Organlzed team wor = convicted of having shot hown a|cial support. If at any time there shall [] I " . 3 United States senator. accrue a s\.u‘pl'ux of {unds, the money.will & employ“']g a spec]al-lst on every Patterson says he has withdrawn | be expended in the interests of the prison from the race as a candidate to suc- | brary. . They -are Bemidji People, and What part of every garment and work- p ceed himself as governor, because of| And we can’t quit without pro- They Say is of Local Interest. 3 ] 3 1 political trickery. As a matter of |ducing the following: taken: from the ) mg n tallor-mg ShOpS that are L fact he is out of the race because an | Mirror’s local page: - l f s h outraged commonwealth wills:it. “Samson Brown says when he gets When an incident like.the: follow- marvels ¢ CqUIPant"-t us are e e e oug h: 1s going ;" investina ceaow—| ;o gccurs right lhere at home, it is perfect ClOthCS produccd, High- OLD LEADERS RETIRED. one that gives buttermilk. bound to carry weight with our read- 5 Of the older members of the state| “Quite a number of the local res-|ers. Somany strange occurences go Art Clothes. If youve been senate who failed to secure renomi. | idents are ’_“’“““ily waiting to be|the round of the press: are publish . % e = nation few have been more con-|Struck by lightning by the State|ed as facts, people become skeptical. wearing so-called Made-to- spicuous than F. H. Peterson of|Board of Pardons. On one subject skepticism. is-rapidly ” Moorhead and C. A. Johnson of| ‘“‘Narrow-souled people are the|disappearing. This is due to the Measure garmeflts under the \ St. Peter. Senator Peterson, who is in Be- midji at the present time, declares it will be a relief to lay down the cares with which he has found him- self burdened during the last ses. sions of - the legislature. He has served as a senator for eight years and was a member of the sub-com- mittee which drew the omtrbus: ap- propriation bill. Senator Johnson has also been in the senate for four terms and had the distinction of defeating the late Govérnor John A. Johnson when he sought re-election to the senate in 1902, $1,250,000 WORTH 'OF PIES. Some genius of Spokane with a taste for statistics has figured out that the crop harvested on com- | mercial apple orchards in the state of Washington this year would mean about eight apples, in an equal distribution, for every man, woman and. child: in' the United States, accordling to the estimate of the 1910 census, The yield is placed at 6,500 same as narrow-necked bottles— the less they have in them the more noise they make in pouring it out.” Mr. Franklin at the Bar. Among the state papers for the year 1536 may be read a letter from John Bartelet to Henry VIIL's minister, Thomas Cromwell, stating: that in a¢ cordance with the recent act:the mayor and aldermen had chosen Mr. Pryseley to attend the English parliament: as: the representative of Calais and that he had made certain arrangements about his passage into England. One Thomas Boyd was elected - as'his eolleague, and Calals continued to.send M. P’s to Westminster until, in the reign of Mary, we lost the stronghold we had held for over two centuries. This is the only instance in England’s history of anything like colonial rep- resentation at Westminster unless in- deed we reckon one or two exceptional occasions when colonial grievances have been voiced at the bar of the house of commons, as they' were so brilllantly by Benjamin Franklin, when Burke said the scene reminded him of “a master examined by a:par- cel of schoolboys.”—London News: @rman Legend. The Germans have a legend of Fred- erick Barbarossa that he is not dead, but in an enchanted sleep, sitting with his knights at a marble table in ‘the cavern of Kyffhausen, in the’ Harz mountains. Hig long red beard has ‘one whom you can see every day, ers from kidney complaint.” actual experience of the citizens, and their public utterances regarding them. The doubter must doubt no more in the face of such evidence as this. The public statement of a re- putable citizen living right at home, leaves no ground for the skeptic ta stand: on, Mrs. J. E. Cahill; 817 Minnelntl Ave., Bemidii, Minn., says; “I have never had any serious trouble from my kidneys but a few months ago I began:to suffer: from - pain “through the small of my back and other symptoms pointing to a kidney dis- order. I heard so ‘much about Doan’s Kidney: Pills that I con- cluded to give them a trial and pro- cured a box at the Owl Drug Store. I took them according to directions, was cured and have been in good health since. I am well pleased with the results that followed the use of Doan’s Kidney Pills in my case and have no hesitation ‘in recommending ‘them to other suffer- For sale by all dealers. Price 50 ST'ROUSE & BROS- BALTIMORE Shtisfaction Guaranteed impression that you could’nt be fitted otherwise, our Clothes will be eye openers to you in Style, Fit and Distinction. §.uits ‘and Overcoats $10 fo $30 Everything in wearing appar- el here for the up-to-date dresser. D & (0. cents. - Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, New York, sole agents for the United States, grown during this long enchantment and, covering the table, descends to the floor, and he sits. thus waiting the moment that will set him free. There he has been kept for long:cen- | turies. There he must stay for ages. carloads, which growers and buy- ers say is a conservative estimate, There are-630 boxes'in a'car ' and the average box contains' 192 One Prlce Clothlers NEEFECTIVE PACE

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