Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, October 24, 1910, Page 4

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KNOWN VALUES PUBLISHERS _CLASSIFIED ADVERTIS- ING ASSOCIATION PAPERS ‘WE ARE MEMBERS Papers in all parts of the States and Canada, Your wants supplied—anywhere any time by the best mediums in the country. Get our membership_ lists—Check papers yon want. We do the rest. Publishers Classified Advertising Assoclas tion, Buffalo, N, Y. New-Cash-Want-Rats ',-Cent-a-Word Where cash accompanies copy we will publish all “Want Ads" for half- cent a word per insertion. Where cash does not accompany copy the regular rate of one ceuta word will be charged. SVERY HOME HAS A WANT AD For Rent--For Sale--Exchange --Help Wanted--Work Wanted --Etc.--Etc. HELP WANTED. WANTED—VYoung men to prepare for positions as automobile repair- men, chauffeurs, salesmen. We make you expert in ten weeks by mail; assist you to good position. pay big, demand for men great. Free model of automobile with course. Sampie lesson and par- ticulars free. Write today; terms reasonable. Empire Automobile Iustitute, Rochester, N. Y. WANTED—Good girl for general housework. Mrs. W. W. Brown, 700 Minnesota Avenue. WANTED—Dishwasher at the Nic- ollet hotel. ! WANTED — Chambermaids and laundry woman. Rex hotel. FOR EALE, FOR SALE— A second hand piano as good as new. Cheap for cash if taken at once. Inquire Harry Masten, 213 Third St. or Phone 535. FOR SALE CHEAP—150 cords of sound, dry Tamarack, at Funk Lake Spur. H. W. Squier, Lum- ber Exchange, Minneapolis, Minn. 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 s rubber stamp for you an short notice. FOR SALE—Buggy, single harness, baby cab, tent, Eighth and America. FOR SALE—Five room cottage on Beltrami Ave. 1309. Phone 446. FOR SALE—Heavy horses for log- ging purposes. Tom Smart’s barn. Choice Guinea Pigs for sale, $1 per pair. St. Anthony hospital. FOR RENT. FOR RENT—Furnished house or two front rooms. 208 Irvine Ave. FOR RENT—Four rocm house. New. 1014 American avenue. LOST and FOUND LOST—Gold watch 17 jewel, Hamil- ton with M. W. A. fob. Return to C. W. Barden, at Rex hotel. Reward. MISCELLANEOUS WANTED—To let the cutting stamping and ranking in -medium sized ranks made soft from fire all the wood on my place N. E. %4 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 La Keirlee Minn. Our | like our ice, gives universal satisfaction. ~Every custo- mer is pleased at receiving each day a full weight of hard, clean and clear Water in the solid state. Itis all important to have what can be used for Summer drinks without hesitation. Our sup- ply was harvested from an uncontaminated body of water. SMART & GETCHELL Phone 12. AERONAUTS TELL OF PERILOUS TRIP Chased by Wolves in the Wilds of Canada. AWFUL DROP OF CONDOR French Balloon Fell From Height of Ten Thousand Feet to Within a Short Distance of the Waters of Lake Michigan—Two of the Contestants In International Cup Race Not Yet Heard From. New York, Oct. 24.—Remarkable stories of the thrilling adventures of those who seek supremacy in the sport of long distance ballooning are told by four distinguished Frenchmen who have just arrived in New York after flights for the international cup. The four aeronauts are Jacques Faure and Ernest Schmolck, who left St. Louis in the Condor, and Alfred Leblanc and W. de Mumm, who started in the Isle de France. The story of the Isle de France's flight, as told by De Mumm, is as fol- lows: “We sailed over Lake Michigan for six and a half hours and then over Lake Huron into Canada. We found ourselves soon above a wilderness of a Canadian forest. Below us packs of wolves raced growling and snap- ping and looking all too anxious for prey. For two hours we were lost in that great wilderness. At 4 o'clock Wednesday morning we sighted a rail- road track and knew we were on the highway to civilization. “We were 1,500 feet in the air and as we started our ride downward moose, elk, deer and many other ani- mals raised their heads and scam- pered off as our monster looking craft appeared to descend on them. “We came to a farmhouse, where we got food and drink. “We asked for aid in getting our balloon and the next day the farmers accompanied us into the woods, where we packed the parts together. The task of getting them out of the forest looked impossible and we came away after offering $500 to any ome who would get the balloon to a railroad.” Dropped Nearly Two Miles. The most thrilling feature of the Condor’s flight was a sensational drop from a height of nearly two miles to a point less than fifty feet above the surface of TLake Michigan. M. Schmolck told of this experfence as follows: “It was late on Monday night. We were at a height of something over 10,000 feet when suddenly we struck a zone of air where the temperature was close to zero. The gas in the bal- loon began to condense rapidly and we started falling. “We were within a hundred feet of the surface of the great lake when we discarded our shoes and coats and clasped our life preservers to our bod- ies, believing that in an instant we would be plunged into the water. Then, just when we felt ourselves lost, the balloon was halted in its downward flight. We were only forty- five feet above the surface of the water. “Our attempt to descend was fraught with new perils. The ‘balloon sailed three miles over the rough coun- |, try at express train speed, dragging the basket in its wake. The basket was dashed against fences, farmhouses and three chimneys during the om- slaught. “Finally a stout barbed wire fence caught us and held long enough to throw M. Faure and myself headlong into a marsh filled with muddy water. We half swam and half waded to terra firma and found we were in Two Riv- ers, Wis.” TWO BALLOONS ARE MISSING Believed to Have Landed in Canadian Wilds. St. Louis, Oct. 24 —The America IL and the Dusseldorf II, contestants in the international balloon race, are still missing and it is believed they have descended in the wilds of Northeast- ern Ontario. 1f they are not heard from shortly, searching parties will be dispatched for the missing aeronauts from Toronto. The Germania, which landed at Latuque, Que., about 1,200 miles from St. Louis, will, it is be- lieved, prove the winner of the contest. The Swiss entry, the Azurea, landed thirty-two miles northeast of Biscotas- ing, Algoma, Ont., and the aeronauts, Emil Messnar, pilot, and Leon Givau- dan, were three days walking through woods to reach a telegraph station. Man Killed by Live Wire. Oskaloosa, Ia., Oct. 24—William Bowen, formerly master mechanic of the Crescent Coal company of this place, was killed instantly at What Cheer. Bowen bought the light and power plant al What Cheer three weeks ago. He was killed by grasp- ing a live wire carrying a voltage of 1,100. Depends on Coming Report. ‘Washington, Oct. 24.—A report by Commissioner of Corporations Herbert Knox Smith, soon to be presented to President Taft, largely will govern the administration in determining whether It will prosecute the United - States Steel corporation on charges of viola- tion of the Sherman anti-trust law. Her Answer. In inculcating the idea of truthful- mess a teacher asked the question. “What is the best thing in the world to do and sometimes the hardest?" A little girl raised her hand timidly. “Well, my child?” *To get married!” Too Fond of Them. “Is he fond of outdoor sports?’ “Yes. His wife complains that he even invites them home to dinner.”— | Oleveland Plain Dealer, —— WILL NOT CALL EXTRA SESSION Carroll May Appoint Suc- cessor to Dolliver. V. S. KENYON MENTIONED Rumored That lowa's Governor Will Appoint Special Assistant Attorney General, Classed as a Progressive. Was Formerly a Railroad Attorney and a Cloza Personal Friend of the Late Senator. Des Moines, Oct. 2¢.—Governor Car- roll will not call a special session of the legislature before the November election to submit the question of a successof to the late United States Senator Dolliver. He may call a ses- sion afterward and provide for a spe- cial primary election on the question. It is rumored in political circles that Governor Carroll will appoint W. 8. Kenyon of Fort Dodge to succeed the late Senator Dolliver. Governor Car- roll is in Jefferson and refuses to comment on the situation. Mr. Kenyon was one of Senator Dolliver's closest friends. He was for- merly an attorney for the Illinois Cen- tral railroad. It is claimed by some politicians that the appointment, if made, will be for the purpose of establishing har- mony in the Republican party in Iowa. Mr. Kenyon has always been classed as a progressive, but was appointed to a position in the department of justice by President Taft. Governor Carroll is a standpatter, but it is feared in some quarters that he will have a hard fight in order to be elected. The fact, therefore, that Kenyon is strong with the national administration and also was a staunch friend of Senators Dolliver and Cum- mins gives the rumor greater weight in political circles. Not Seeking Dolliver's Seat. Council Bluffs, Ia., Oct. 24.—Repre- sentative Walter I. Smith of the Ninth district announced that he is not a candidate to succeed the late Jonathan P. Dolliver in the United States sen- ate. Mr. Smith has been mentioned by the regular leaders as being good timber to fill the vacancy now existing from this state. PARENTS FEAR KIDNAPPING Son of Oberlin (0.) Banker Missing Several Days. Cleveland, Jct. 24—The police of Cleveland and other Northern Ohio cities have been notified to keep a sharp lookout for Dewey Johnson, fif- teen years old, son of E. P. Johnson, president of an Oberlin (0.) bank and a trustee of Oberlin college, who dis- appeared Friday afternoon. The boy’s parents believe he may have been kidnapped, as shortly after he left home to attend a football game he was seen with a strange man driv- ing away from the center of the town in a buggy. The father spent all night scouring the neighboring country in an automo- hile. The Fat Woman's Ring. The womau showed a fat finger in whose folds of flesh was imbedded a plain gold ring. “How much will you let me have on this ring*” she said to the pawubroker. “I can’t tell until you take it off so I can weigh it,” he said. She tugged at the ring. It wouldn’t come off. “Can't you get it off for me?" she asked. The pawubroker threaded a needle with strong linen thread, soaped the needle and slipped it head first under the ring toward the band. Then he wound the long end of the thread tightly and evenly around the finger almost to the pail. That done, he took the needle and unwound the thread from the base of the finger out, and as be unwound the ring slipped off. He weighed the ring. “Two dollars,” he said. “That won't do me any good,” said the woman. *1 can get $3 any place else.” He returned the ring. “She didu't really want to pawn it,” be said. *“She just wanted somebody to take the ring off. A jeweler would bave done it the same way, out he would bave charged something.”—New York Sun. Mythical Creatures of Japan. The Japanese believe in more myth- ical creatures than any other people on the globe, civilized or savage. Among them are mythical animals without any remarkable pecullarities of con- formation, but gifted with supernat- ural attributes, such as a tiger which 18 said to live to be a thousand years old and to turn as white as a polar bear. They also believe in/a multitude of animals distinguished malnly by their size or by the multiplication of their members. Among these are ser- pents 800 feet long and large enough to swallow ‘an elephant, foxes with eight legs, monkeys with four ears, fishes with ten beads attached to one body, the tlesh of which Is a cure for boils. They also believe in the exist- ence of a crane which, after It has reached the age of 600 yeaurs, has no need of any sustenance except water. The Two Occasions. At a Scotch temperance meeting an old man, scarcely celebrated for his so- briety, arose and after addressing the audience upon the desirability of mod- eration in all things, remarked; “My friends, there's just twa occa- sions when I tak’ whisk There was a chorus of "*Ahs!” in the audience, when he continued. *I only tak’ whisky when 1 hae haggis for dinner, and the only other occasipn when 1 tak’ whisky is when I bae po baggis for dinner.” - 2 ANOT Mape gy THE TRUST ALUME TIEGLER & ZIEGLER CO. Go to them for quick action if you want to sell or rent your property Farm Lands Bought and Sold ZIEGLER & ZIEGLER Co. one Sedlitz Powder. but it is not CALUMET is absolutely free from every impurity. i no Tartaric Acid, Rochelle Salts, Alum, Lime or Ammonia, [Itis chemically correct. CALUMET is the only high-grade baking powder sold at a moderate price. Do Dot confuse it with the cheap and big can kinds, or the high-priced Trust brands. It stands alone. Do you know that Baking Powder undergoes a chemical reaction in the process of baking which entirely changes the nature of the original substance? It'safact. One of the greatest authorities on Chemistry in the. country found that a loaf of bread made from a quart of flour, leavened with Cream of Tartar Baking Powder,_ contained 45 grains more Rochelle Salts than is contained in Remember, this drug was not in the can. It was formed by the chemical reaction that took place in baking. That is why so many baking powders which produce impurities in the baking can be advertised as ‘‘absolutely pure.” It may be pure in the can, ssarily pure in the food. Food leavened with it contains Ask your Grocer for and insist on having Jewelry Manufacturing and Repair Department is fully equipped to take care of any work in our line you wish to give us Promptly Because we have the work- men and the material. REASONBLE PRICE BCC&UBES our expeanses are light. We are the only manufac- tures of this class of goods in Northern Minnesota— others who have not the same facilities cannot compete with us in quality, weight and price. We can more fully guarantee the quality of gold and give our customers the benefit of buying at first cost as we charge only for the gold and a small profit for Received highest award World's Pure Food Ex- position, Chicago, 1907. “THE LAND MEN”’ SCHROEDER BLOCK N High Quality Clothes WE HANDLE a line which gives you every desirable feature of up-to-date style, and is dependable for good service and shape-holding. of clothes, we would have it—nothing but the highest clothing values are up to the standard of this store, and for that reason we feature Clothes This well-known line offers styles attractive and suitable alike for the young man, who wants the more pronounced styles, and the more mature business or professional man, who is more ‘subdued in his preferences. The best of style, good taste, and values; are what we offer in this well-known line of clothes: Let us show how per- fectly we can fit you. The ‘0’Leary- Bowser Co. : i\uwl If there was a better line Kl making same. GED. T. BAKER & C0. Manufacturing Jewelers 116 Third Street Noarthe Lake HORSES We are ready at all times to fill your horse | requiremeats and make a special feature of handling the logging trade. Fill your wants at_the big Stock Yards market where a large stock is always or hand and where the best prices prevall for good stock. $0. ST. PAUL HORSE C0. $0. ST. PAUL, MINN. “The House With a Horse Reputation.” 30 City lots will be given away free. These lots are in a fine location. Watch this space and I will tell you the date. H. E. REYNOLDS Building Contractor and Real Estate Broker - Room 9, O’Leary-Bowser Building Office Phone 23 House Phone 316 Bemi Goffee IS Going Up The demand for gcod coffee has increased so much during the past few months that pro- duction has not kept pace with it. i, Minn. Asa result prices are advancing all along the line. SEAL BRAND, the 40 cent Coffee that is being used by so many people in Be- midji, is gaining in populanty ard the price is the same on it as when it first was put on the market. It takes more ekill now to keep any coffee up to a high standard, but the Chase & Sanborn people, producers of Seal Brand, are doing it and that is the one reacon for its growing popularity. .Always the same—smooth, rich and satis- fying. Letus send you a pound, ground to order on our electric mill. 'Roe& Markusen - The Quality Crocere Phone 206 Phone 207 ——

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