Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, October 1, 1910, Page 8

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[ [ ? 4‘ | { { | | ¥ 1 GASS LAKE SENDS FRANTIG APPEAL TO THE GOVERNOR [Continued from First Page] ive of government have intimidat- ed our citizens, destroyed property and in other ways made them- selves obnoxious. «The limit has been reached. We are going to fight. If one of these alleged agents attempts to spill any liquor here on Oct. 135, and refuses to submit to arrest, and resorts to weapons, he will never leave Cass Lake alive. «] am going to protect the cit'zens and property of this village, “I shall swear in all members of the fire department and other men as special officers. It has been agreed that in case of danger we shall ring the fire bell. As special officers the men will lawfully be en- titled to arm themselves.” Attorney Charles Argall, who porsecuted the Sero and Davis as- sault case, while admitting that Cass Lake is passing through a perilous period, hopes that hostilities may be avoided. “We favor arbitration,” he said, “rather than open revolt. We hope 10 learn within the next few days that our request for an extension of the closing order has been granted to a date later than Oct. 21, when the Sero-Davis matter comes up be- fore the federal court in Minneapolis, at which time the right of the civil courts as against the federal author- ity will be settled.” Within two years Cass Lake has seen her twenty saloons diminish until now she has but three. The Tedford place, 2 modern buf- fet with mahogany fixtures, French amirrors and other expensive equip- ment, continues to place orders for liquors as tnough there was no dan- ger of its being put.out of business. ‘The other saloons are doing likewise. Charles ‘Tedford, proprietor of the Tedford place said: “We ain’t going to close. We ‘never had no orders to close. The mayor got some sort of a notice, but it don’t amount to much. Why, the whole business is all bull con. Be- lieve me, you will hear the glasses clanking here Oct. 15 same as they are now.” Special Agent Jetley, who was sent to Cass Lake several days ago by W. E. Johnson, who has charge of enforcing the saloon closing order, is “in bad” with his department and has been suspended from ser- vice, He 1s presumed to have been intoxicated. High departmental officers are expected in Cass Lake within the next few days. “There is one thing I should like to make plain,” said Mayor Dumas, “that we are not trying to mix Be -midji in our troubles. I have been misquoted by the I'win City papers along that line.” INDIANS ATTAGK SETTLER'S HOME The Wife Carried Away But Child Escapes. A band of Huron Indians attacked the home ol John Hayes, a settler, unfortunately selecting a time when Mr. Hayes and his friends were :away from home. What was- the rest of the story? Weli, a visit to ‘the Majestic Theatre tonight will tell the rest. Another very amusing film is entitled “The Forbidden Novel.” One of those stories that make you laugh and grow fat. The illustrated song, entitled “‘The Same Old Way,” is also particularly catchy PHTHISIS SHOW ~ MONDAY Life Saving Exhibitat Opera House Next Week. Free The Anti-Tuberculosis Exhibi- tion given under the auspices of the State.Board of Health opens at the Armory Opera House Mon- day afternoon and continues until Tuesday evening The hall will be open z]l day so that all may look over the exhibit during the day. Programs of ad- dresses and stereoptican lectures are to be given afternoon and even- ing. The exhibit consists of a large number of photographs of Sanatoria, out door-camps, tents, sleeping porches and also numerous statisti- cal charts showing plainly just how serious a drain upon the state tuber- culosis is. Several striking placards are shown which point out important truths. Besides this window tents are shown as in actual use, and materials to be used by consumptives so as to prevent spreading the di. sease o others. No diseased speci- mens of any sort are shown. The addresses and lectures are not technical but are given in terms which anyone can understand. On Monday lectures will be given in the public schools bv A. R. Blakey and Rev. S. E. P. White. On Tuesday afternoon a meeting of the Bemidji Improvement associ- ation will be given in the public library and will be addressed by anti-tuberculosis speakers. 3,000 FEET OF REEL AT THE BRINKMAN Showing the U. S. Military Tournament, General F. D. Grant Commanding as Seen in Toledo. Manager Brinkmar. has succeeded in procuriag the great moving pic- ture film of the United = States Military tournament, held under the direction ot Mayor General Fred- erick D. Grant of the United States Army. This film is over 3,000 feet in length, portraying the first and only congress of 4,000 Uanited States regulars in the most thrillinz pres- entation of actual warfare. The pictures open showing Gener- al F. D. Grant and his entire gstaff. It was taken from actual scenes of the big tournament held on the field near Toledo, Ohio. Splendid views of the full dress review, squad drills, guard mount, the firing of the sun- down gun, the lowering of Old Glory to the inspiring strains of the ‘‘Star Spangled Banner,” a drill of the machine gun platoon, the wireless Telegram in operation in which the observer can see the the sparking of the instruments when the operator is sending or receiving mesages. It is impossible to adequately de- scribe this most wonderful set of motion pictures and we are ‘of the firm belief that wben experts pro- nounced them the greatest feature ever presented in the world of Cene- metograph that the truth was only spoken. This film alone is easily worth the price of admission. The great Her- schoff’s troupe, a strictly foreign act, is meeting with extreme success and is packing the hm,se nightly. Hoarseness in a child subject to croup is a sure indication of the ap- proach of the disease. If Chamber- lain’s Cough Remedy is given at once or even after the croupy cough has appeared, it will prevent the at- tack. Contains no poison. Sold by -and well rendered. If you see this :program you have the personal guar- antee of the management that you will be satisfied that you could not have spent ten cents to better ad- vantage. The pleasant purgative effect ex.’ perienced by all who use Chamber- fain’s Stomach aund Liver Tablets, and the healthy condition of the body and mind which they create, makes -one feel joyful. Barker Drug Co. Sold by Barker Drug Co. The Soft Question. Mrs. Nuwed, Sr. (to son after fam- ily jar)—Don’t forget, son, that “a soft answer turneth away wrath.”” Mr. Nuwed, Jr.—Well, I know a soft ques- tion of mine brought a lot of it.on me.—Smart Set. Generous. Tattered Terry—There goes a kind man. The last time I went to him I didn’t have a cent and he gave me all be could. Weary Walter—What was that? Tattered Terry—Thirty days.— Puck. % S, P sty ORDERS NEW DITGH SURVEY Judge Stanton Acts Following Largely Aflen(led Meeting. At an open hearing before Judge C. W. Stanton here last night and attended by twenty-five settlers from the affected district, a survey ofa new ditch east of North Red Lake was ordered. Harry Provo, chairman of the boad of supervisbrs and Nels Nelson, a member ' of the board, spoke in behalf of the delegation and urged the construction of the' ditch. The drain would be expected to reclaim a large area, sending the surplus water into the Tamarack and Shotley rivers and Red lake- Those who attended the hearing said that a ditch road and could be completed at a small cost. Weird Magical Ilusions. For the last few years Germain has given most of his attention to the tricks of the old Hindoo Fakirs such as, the rejection of the astral body, the materialization of bodies from the air, etc.,, and his perfor- mance Friday night wiil be replete with demonstrations of the wonder- ful power of magically producing ob- jects from the very air and again making them return from whence they came. = Not only will he cause various objects to vanish before your gaze but will turn a real Egyptian mummy into a living, breathing per- son who in turn will completely dis- appear into the air and all before your very eyes. Sometimes the re- sults of the experiments border so nearly on the supernatural, appar- ently, that they are most startling. Yet Germain laughiogly tells you that itis all trickery, saying that he is merely a tricker who has mastered the art, and is amused at your in- ability to see where the trick lies. His performances are weird, uncanny, bewildering, yet withal so mystifying as to be of supreme interest. Itisa performance that is without doubt the most important event of the local theatrical season, in that Germain is the greatest living exponent of the magical art. Drugs and Sickness. It is not tou much to say that the medical profession today no longer be- lieves that any drug (with a few escep- tions, like quinine in wmalaria, mer- cury and the antitoxins) will cure a disease as such. All that it will do is so to modify conditions as to belp the body in its tight aguninst disease. We are uno louger content, in the will help one patient will harm another, and what may be beneficial -in the early stage of a disease will be useless or _even injurious in a later stage. In the language of Captain Cuttle, the effect of a drug. like “the bearin’ of an observartion,” “depends on the ap- plieation op it." 1t is neither rational nor safe blindly to swallow down a drug which is highly recommended in a certain disease and expect it to “do the rest.” There is no such thing as a universal cure for a disease uor even a remedy which cap be relied upon as “a good thing to take™ at apy and al' stages of it.—Dr. Woods Hutchinson in Delineator, Gagadig Gigadab. There was a quaint old man in Man. chester, Eugland, who for many years went by the unique name of Gagadig Gigadab. His original name was John Smith, and for many years he brooded over the possibilities of mistaken iden- tity involved in it. The name tigured frequently in criminal records, and be becume -abnormally apprebensive lest he might be confused with some of the bad John Smiths. At last what he feared so much actually bappened One morning.the papers reported the arrest of an accountant in a bank for embezzlement, and through some blun- der of the reporter the identity of the embezzler was confused with the sub- Ject of this article, who was also a bank accounrant. Then and there ne determined to assume a pame like unto no other ever borne by mortal man. And in Gagadig Gigadab most people will agree that he succeeded in 8o doing.—New York ‘Iribune. . Good Luck. Mr. Juggins—A black cat came to our back fence last night. Mrs. Jug- gins—Did it bring you good luck? Mr. Juggins—That’s what it did. I hit it the very first time I fired. Her Pet Name. Judge—What is your name? Young Wife—Carolive Augusta Emma. Judge —And how are you generally called? Young Wife (bashfully)-My sweet ducky. P LV S PO e, sl = biting phrase of Voltaire, to *pour gdrugs of which we know little into | bodies of which we know less.”” What Robbed of Har Happi 5 “You are not looking well, Mrs. Wil- lington.” *“No: I haven’t slept well lately.” “What's the trouble? Has the weather affected you?” “Oh. no, it isn't that.” “I'll tell you what it 1. You ought to give up the practice of drinking coffee at night. I know a lot of people who toss awake all night after they bave been out to a late dinner and fin- fshed with coffee. 1 had to quit it myself." “I'm sure that Isn’t the cause of my trouble.” “Have you seen a doctor?” “No. A doctor couldn't help me any.” “But how-can you tell until you go to one and let him examine you?’ “Well. if you must know, I'm worry- ing about my husband. He hasn't kicked-at the size of the bills lately, and lbe's been so kind and even tem- pered right along for a month or two that I feel almost sure he must be leading a double life. Ah, if he would only get:to grumbling and making it disagreeable around the house again!” —Chicago Record-Herald. The Normans. The Normans were Northmen or, to be more precise. the descendants of Northmen, who had been expelled from their native Norway in conse- quence of an effort on their part to subvert its institutions and to make its lands hereditary instead of being divisible amoug all the sons of the former owner. A band of expatriated; outlaws and robbers, they won and beld the fair province of unorthern France, which they named Normandy, after their native land. When they Invaded England they were French- men only in the sense that they had lived for some generations on French soil. In blood they belonged to the great "Germanic breed, along with the Anglo-Saxons, Danes and other Scan- dinavian and German peoples.—New York American. Why She Was Silent. A very silent old woman was once asked why it was she had so little to say. She replied that when she was a young girl she was very ill and could not talk for a long time, whereupon she made a vow that if speech were given her once more she would never again say anything unkind of any- body. And rhus she was as they found her.—Exchange. Vain Mathematics. Absentminded Professor—My tailor bas put one button too many ou my vest. 1 must cut it off. That’s funny. Now there’s a buttonhole too many What's the use of arithmetic?—Sourire Mostly Before. Prosperous “Publisber - Do you write before or after eating? Poet (faintly: —Always before unless 1 have some- thing to eat.- Judge. What men want is_not talent, it Is purpose: not the powers to achieve, but the will to labor.- Bulwer-Lytton. All the Worse. Willis—So Skinner’s mining scheme broke you? I thought you got in on the ground floor? Gillis—I did. That’s the reason 1 was buried so deep when it fell in.—Puck. New-Cash-Want-Rate ',-Gent-a-Word SVERY HOME HAS A WANT AD For Rent--For Sale--Exchange --Help Wanted--Work Wanted --Etc.--Etc. HELP WANTED. ,_'Kaye & Carter Lumber Co., at . Hines, Minn., have a large tract of Cedar and cordwood to cut. Men wanted.” WANTED—Good girl for general housework. Mrs. W. W. Brown, 700 Minnesota Avenue. WANTED—Strong boy to work evenings and go to school. In- quire at M. & I. Rest. Nymore. WANTED—S5 carpenters at once. Inquire of H. E. Reynolds.O’Leary Bowser building phone 23. WANTED—Good girl for general housework. = Good wages. 903 Beltrami Avenue. WANTED—Girl to wait on table and go.to school. inquire at M. & I. Rest. Nymore. BLACKSMITH to run shop in Bemidji. W. S. Chap- man. FOR SALE. FOR SALE—Household goods. On account of breaking up housekeep- ing, will sell at low figures, in whole or in part, all our furniture and household goods complete, as contained in the modern ten-room house at 700 Bemidji Ave. Speci- ally attractive for those wishing complete sets in quality goods, if calling before sets are broken. J. Peterson, Jr., 700 Bemidji Ave. FOR SALE—A new house 26x40, 7 room, down stair, hardwood floor and decorated in first class drugs. wasted. & your prescription to us: . YOUR DOCTORS - RESCRIPTION must be filled with care and with pure He expects this when he prescribes,’and unless the prescription is properly filled the money you pay both the doctor and for the prescription is worse than You do not go to'a doctor unless the matter is pretty serious, so not only for the sake of getting something for your money, but from the far greater standpoifit of good health should you bring BARKER’S DRUG STORE 217 Third Street, Bemidji, Minnesota e\ Hot and Cold drinks. 19 Egg Nogg, 20¢ 80 Egg Bouilion, 15¢ 81 Egg Coffee, 15¢ it 82 Egg Ghocolats, 15¢ 83 Egg Lemonade, 15¢ 84 Egg Phosphafe, 15¢ il 85 Egg Malted Milk, 20¢ 87 Malted Milk Punch, I5¢ 88 Royal Nectar, 15¢ | shape. A snap if taken at once. Inquire of R, Martin, 414 Irvin Ave. FOR SALE—1 heater, 1 gasoline stove, 1 aheetifon stove alSo some almost new furniture, John Wilmann, Seotinel build- ing. FOR EXCHANGE—$1,000 stock of General Merchandise. Will exchange for Bemidji property or farm land. J. H. Grant, FOR SALE—Large piano cased organ; cost $135. Will sell for $50 if taken at once; easy terms if desired. M. E. Ibertson." FOR SALE—160 acres of good clay land three miles from Bemidji if interested call on Frank Hitchcock 714 13st. Bemidji Minn. FOR SALE—Rubber stamps. The Pioneer will procure any kind of a rubber stamp for you an short notice. FOR SALE—Glass Ink welis— Sample bottle Cavter’s Ink free with each 10c ink we .. Fioneer office. FOR SALE—Cheap, No. 18 Jewel hard coal burner. Inquire J. Fuller- ton, 1417 Irwin Ave. FOR SALE—Buggy, single harness, baby cab, tent, Eighth and America. FOR SALE—Five room cottage on Beltrami Ave. 1309. Phone 446. They'reAll Flocking to the Bemidji Candy Kitchen these days for Hot Stuff and see what you would like. .Hot Drinks 86 Coffee Egg Malted Milk, 20c Bemidji Candy Kitchen | | Look over this list of 89 Turkish Punch, 15¢ 90 Lemonade, 10¢ 91 Cocoa, (0c 92 Chocolate, 10¢ 93 Beef Tea, 10¢ 94 Claret Punch, 15¢ 95 Glam Punch, I5¢ 96 Clam Boullion, 10¢ 97 Tomato Boullion, 10¢ FOR SALE—Coal stove base burn- er for sale cheap. Inquire of Jos. Bisiar. " FOR RENT. FOR RENT—October 1st, seven- room house, 1111 Lake Boulevard. Inquire H. Stechman, 1215 Bel- trami avenue. FOR RENT—Furnished room in private house. Ladies preferred 513 Fourth Street. FOR RENT—Four 1135-Dewey Ave. A. Klein. FOR RENT—One furnished room. * 515 Bemidji. J LOST and FOUND LOST—Between Owl Drug Store and Miles’ corner, $2.50 gold piece in pin form. Return to Abercrombie’s confectionary store { f LOST—Baritone mouthpiece. Leave at Pioneer office for reward. J MISCELLANEOUS f WANTED—To let the cutting stamping and ranking in medium sized ranks made soft from fire all the wood on my place N. E. i{ Sec. 34 Town of Eckles Beltrami Co. Minn. Also the piling and burning of slashings and other rubbish that may be on the ground. \» Address M. J. Lenihan LaKeirlee Minn. room house <. [ L\

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