Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, November 14, 1910, Page 4

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New-Cash-Want-Rate ,-Gent-a-Word Where cash accompanies cop; will publish all “Want Ads" for{nalf- 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—Two bright young ladies to represent us in magazine work in Bemudji. A splendid chance for the right parties. References required. Communicate with Northwestern Magazine Bureau, 504 Sykes Block, Minne- apolis, Minn. WANTED—Active man to repre- sent us in the sale of our Safes and Vault Doors in Bemidji and vicinity. Liberal terms offered. Address, with full particulars, Mitchell Safe Co,, Manufacturers, Minpeapolis, Minn. WANTED—Competent girl for gen- ] eral housework. Good wages; steady position. Mrs., Wm. Mec- Cuaig, 903 Bemidji avenue. FOR SALE. FOR SALE—BARRED PLY- MOUTH ROCK COCKERELS —I still have a number of fine full-blooded cockerels for sale. These are from stock secured of Prof. A. J. McGuire of the N. E Experiment Station, and of my flOLk Prof McGuire has recently said “your chickens represent the most careful selection and breed- ing from the best stock for a period of six yea-s that I have been able to do and are as good as found anywhere.” He has already se- cured his cockerels here for next year. Choice cockerels at $2 each. Hollis R. Scott, Two miles west of Bemidji on Old Naugle Farm. WANTED TO EXCHANG E—Good “Well, well! Have you calf brains?” “If I did you wouldn't order them, for you have an oversupply now.” “My, but you are getting good for the matinee! With the high price of meats eggs come in handy these days, don’t they 7’ < Lnneh Roor Repartes. The young man with the iron cheek entered the quick lunch room and seat- ed himself at the third table. “Belinda,” he called familiarly, “you look fresh this morning.” “Not half as fresh as some others,” retorted the pretty waitress, with an Th elevation of her nose. BAKING POWDER That Makes the Baking Better } Failures are almost impossible with & Calumet. - ‘We know that it will give you better results. ‘We know that the baking will be purer —more wholesome.. ‘We know that it will be more evenly raised. And we know that Calumet is more economical, both in its use and cost. ‘We know these things because we have put the qualit; 0 it—we have seen it tried out in v way. It is used now in miilion: mes and its sales are growing It is the modern baking powder. * i ; they come in crates.” . u“' Did you ever hear the story | of the incubator chick? It's not out i yet.” | “That will do, sonny. Did you ever hear the story of the cold porridge% 1+ Well, it's on you!” i There was an unexpected tilting of i a dish, and the young man with the iron clhieek was showered with oat- meal.—Boston Post. Consolation, A little girl of thirteen or so found herself one day possessed of a new emotion—a desire to be pretty. She struggled with it. but finally went to the long mirrer in the hall and for the first tune in her life looked at herself critically from bead to foot. She saw what most. girls see at thirteen—a lanky creature, mostly legs and arms hands and feet. It hurt her, and shc went out of doors to.think it over. Thought resulted in tears, and in tears she was found half an lour later by her particular chum, a boy near her own age. Anxious inquiry as to why she was crying induced her to speak. “Ob, Hareld.” she wailed, “I've just looked at myself in the glass, and I'm 80 homel, < The Doy was puzzled, but sympa- thetic, and made an effort at consola- tion. IIe looked at her a minute, then awkwardly patted ler, saying sooth- I ingly: | “Not homel ing.”—New Yo Calumet is highest in quality— moderate in price. Received Highest Award— ‘World's Pure Food Exposition. NOT MapE ay THE TRUST ALUME ice: just funny look- mes, Doesn’t Know Her Age. | There is a glaring phase of unfair- ness in the position of the two sexes, despite all our struggles for the suf- frage. A woman still dveads to tell her age. no matter how youthful she i may look. while as long as a man | looks yonuthful he is generally willing to admit and even to boast of how many milestones he has passed. There WOULD MAKE AIR FLIGHT | is ut 1east one father who understood this problem in time and who gave CHICAGO $30 Columbia Phonograph with twenty records for a good Kodak. Enquire at once at 517 Oak St. 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—Very cheap, piano and pianola player with music, Apply W. A, McDonald, Model Bakery. FOR SALE—Household furniture at reasonable prices. Inquire at rooms 4 and 5 Postoffice block; FOR SALE—Driving horse, buggy, Cutter and harness cheap if taken at once. H. Sweet, Nymore. FOR SALE—Good team work horses, at Pogues barn. H. T. Thursdale. FOR SALE—Large coal stove. Can be seen at Tom Smart’s stor- age house. Millionaire Offers $5,000 for Three | his daughter a chance in life by Hundred Mile Trip. never letting her know how old she Wheeling, W. Va., Nov. 14—R. F. | was. He realized at her birth that a Scott, millionaire of Cadiz, O., and a | time would come when she would not candidate for congress in ‘the Six- [ want to tell her age, and he spared her teenth Ohio district two years ago, has | the humiliation of living to prevari- announced that he will give $5,000 to | cate, so she was never told either her any aviator who will carry him from | age ov the place where she was born. Baltimore to Wheeling in an aero- | and there were no birth records pre- plane. i served in the family.—New York The distance from Baltimore to; World. Wheeling is about 300 miles. Mr. Scott claims the distinction of having been the first man to run an automo- bile f Baltimore to Washington and wants to be the first man to fly over the route. Stuck to His Bargain. Exasperated Purchaser—Didn't you guarantee that this parrot would re- peat every word he heard? Bird Dealer—Certainly 1 did. “But he doesn't repeat a single e word.” Fire at Nebraska University. “He repeats every word he hears, Lincoln, Neb., Nov. 14.—A short cir- | but he never hears any. He is as deaf cuit in the anatomy laboratory of the | as a post.” state university college of medicine caused the explosion of an alcohol tank and a consequent fire loss of | It was at a Fourth of July meeting about $15.000. The city fire depart- | in a little ¢ity The mayor, William ment checked the flanies before they | Swmith, rose and at dignified length read Aid much damage to the rooms below, | the Declaration of Independence. There was a pause: then from one Givas Him No Chance. of the mayor's old . schoolmates came “Were yoi with you | the loud whisper: “Bill never writ that. wife when 1 I heard you| He ain't smart enough"—XNew York Detected. FOR SALE—Buggy, single harness, baby cab, tent, Eighth and America. talking loud Times. “No. When we're querreling she's the one that talks’—Cleveland Lead- Unapproachable. er. Tall Stadent—Your father is touchy, isn't he? Short Student—No. That's Grief is crowned with consolation~ | the trouble You cau't touch him at Shakespeare. all—Chicago News, FOR SALE—Secend hand wood stove, cheap. Model Bakery. FOR SALE—One heater cheap” Jobn Wilmann. FOR RENT. FOR RENT—Four room cottage at $8.00 per mo. Inquire of H. M. Young. FOR RENT—House 1103 Miss. Ave. Inquire of H. M. Young. House for rent, Frank Lane. WILLIAM BEGSLEY ~ BLACKSMITH Horse Shoeing and Plow Work a Specialty All the work done here is done with a Guarantee. Prompt Service and First Class . Workmanship, rukt s. NEW BUILDING sewial, . LOST and FOUND LOST—Pocket book between Red Lake Depot and Brown’s restaur- ant, finder return to this office. 3 MISCELLANEOUS A AR SN RNN WANTED—Man with years of ex- perience and good bank and other references wants work in store or office. Speaks German. Call or write 900 America Ave. F. M. FRITZ Naturalist Taxidermist Fur Dresser Mounting Game Heads, Whole Animals, Birds, Fish, Fur Rugs .-.. and Horns Decorative and Scientific Taxidermy in all its branches All Work Guaranteed MOTH PROOF and First Class in Every Particular Minnesota Bemidji NEFECTIVE PAGE Do not fail to care for your notes promptly the day they are due, anddo not overdraw your account. A Home For the Future Most every young man has the hope and ambition to some day have a home of his own. Such an ambhi- tion is commendable, yet of itself, 1t will not bring re- sults Energy and purpose, together with ambition and a savings account will bring him to the desired goal almost before he knows it. There is no better plan of saving for a home than the savings account. We will open an account for one dollar. We pay three per cert interest. Interest is compounded twice a year. We treat all our deposxtors right. We will do the same by you. Let us help you realize your lzopes of a home of your own. The First National Bank 0f Bomidji, Minnesota Presg, it £ UP TO THE SUPREME COURT Full Crew Railroad Laws to Be Passed Upon. ‘Washington, Nov. 14—The constitu- tionality of the so called “full crew” railroad laws of Arkansas and Indiana was submitted to the supreme court of the United States after oral argument. By the Arkansas act, an engineer, a fireman, a conductor and three brake- men were required of all railroads of more than fifty miles in length on freight trains of more than twenty-five cars. By the Indiana law an engineer, a fireman, a conductor, a flagman and a brakeman were required on certain trains in freight, passenger and postal traffic. ' In the latter state the litigation arose over the application of the law to a postal train carrying no passen- gers, and running from Ohio into In- diana without a brakéman, but with a flagman. aASTRONOMIC Jov. ™ Old English. Recipe For the Famous Soupe a la Crecy. In the “Illustrated London Cookery Book,” by Frederick Bishop, late cui- siner to St. Jumes’ palace, Earl Grey, the Marquis of Stafford. Baron Roth- schild, Earl Norbury, Captain Dun- combe and many of the first families ot Great Britain (1852), we find this recipe for soupe a la Crecy: “Cut halt’a pound of lean ham in dice, three onions, four turnips, twelve carrots (the outer side red only), a head of celery, a fagot of sweet herbs, two blades of mace, six cloves, a bay leaf and half a pound of salt butter. Fry all down in a stewpan until they get a little brown: then add some second stock and stew until all the roots are quite tender: then rub it through a tammy sieve or tammy cloth with two long spoons. If very thick add more stock. Season with cayenne and black pepper and salt and a good bit of sug- ar. Send up on a napkin some nice fried bread cut in small dice and not greasy.” This is far less elaborate than It sounds and Is, indeed, in the main the recognized recipe for the royal soup The spice is, if anything, a trifle over- done, and the carrots want to be well chosen, as the slightest stringiness de- stroys the homogeneity of the com- pound, The bread dice are important and should be fried in the very best butter or superlatively good olive oil.— Pall Mall Gazette. CORDITE. Made of Two Powerful Explosives Kneaded Into Paste. Cordite is the outcome of the strange paradox that if you mix together two powerful explosives the result is a smokeless slow burning powder. Ni- troglycerin and gun cotton mixed to- gether with a little petroleum jelly make cordite. It Is curious to see the two deadly explosives being kneaded together. into a paste by women with the same unconcern as dough is knead- { ed for bread. Indeed, machines simi- lar to those used in bakeries take up the work and knead the buff colored cordite paste for seven hours. Then It is forced through molds and issues in long cords—hence the name cordite— the thickness of which is varied ac- cording to the weapon in which it is to be used. Tor big guns cordite is half an Inch thick and cut into lengths of thirty- seven inches. Rather more than a thousand of these cordite sticks pack- ed in two bundles make up the car- tridge for a twelve inch gun. For the rifle cordite is pressed into a very thin string, like the finest macaroni, and sixty of these strands one inch and a balf long make the neat little bundle which lies inside the cartridge case. For some European armies cordite is made in flat thin, strips like whale- bone. Kept away from fire, cordite can be handled “with impunity.—Lou- don Graphic. NEVER SAW WOMEN SMOKE Miss Stevens Denlen Habit Is Increas- ing Among Fair Sex. Baltimore, Nov. 14.—Drinking and cigarette smoking are not increasing among the women of America, accord- ing to Lillian M. N. Stevens, presi- dent of the national Women's Chris- tian Temperance union. Addressing the annual convention of the organiza- tion here she said in part: “In the course of my travels in Eng- land and America I have never seen a woman with a cigarette in her mouth, except in certain localities in New Mexico, where the surroundings were at all pleasant to contemplate.” FAVORS FREIGHT ADVANCES Manufacturer Believes It Would Stim- ulate Business. New Orleans, Nov. 14—In an ad- dress George W. Simmons of St. Louis, cne of the largest manufacturers in the country, endorsed the application of the railroads for increased freight rates at the closing session of the an nual meeting of-the American Asso- ciation of Freight Traffic Officers. Mr. Simmons took the ground that the advance in freight rates would result in a general stimulation of busi- ness and the manufacturers as well as the railroads would share in the increased prosperity. Man Cremated in Box Car. St. Paul, Nov."14.—While asleep in a box car partly filled with potatoes. Lewis Thomas, twenty years old, Riv er Falls, Wis., kicked over a small oil stove and set fire to the swraw on which he was lying. When found by dead from burns and suffocation. Moving--- “‘Not Yet, But Soon” Mountains of Moab. Most travelers who visit the Holy Land content \heqselves with a visit to that restricted part west of Jovdan. The mountainous regions of Moab as seen by them from Jerusalem are lost in a purple haze that constantly hangs over them, and the great stretches be- yond are covered in mystery. This is true. partly because of the fewer historical incidents connected with the eastern regions, but mainly on account of the great abyss of the Jordan val- ley that has always acted as a barrier. Few who descend into the valley 1,300 feet below sea level undertake to climb the hills beyond, which rise to a height of 3,000 feet. Though its glory is far outshone by that of western Palestine, still, both in the old and the new dispensations, it has a history of its own and from an economic stand- point will always enter very largely into the life of Palestine.—Christian Herald. We'll invite you all when we settle in our new quarters on Bel- trami Avenue. You'll Like Us better and we’ll like to have you come better and oftener than ever before. Victor Hugo’s Double. Victor Hugo had a real double in flesh and blood, who exploited his physical resemblance to the man of genius. He cut his beard like Hugo's, copied the master's dress in its small- est details and so for eighteen years divided with the master the admira- tion of the public. His especial ‘de- light was to pose in a poetical attitude in front of a Punch and Judy show. He did this at a particular spot every Thursday afternoon for years, thor- oughly enjoying the murmurs of curi- osity and applause proceeding from the gaping crowd which he deceived. We do not hear that he reaped any other reward but his pleasure. Gity Drug Store ( Where . Quality Prevails) Didn't Like the Suit. “Sir,” said the young man as he en- tered the library for the purpose of in- terviewing the father of the only girl, “I am in love with your daughter. Have you any objection to my suit?” The old man lookéd the y. m. over from head to foot. “I sure have,” he replied. “Why, I wouldn’t wear a misfit suit like that to a dog ifight. - Why don’t you try some other tailor?”—Chicago News. From His Pa's Side. “She doesn’t know where the baby gets his bad temper.” “That’s strange.. Most young moth- ers can place that sort of responsibil- ity in a jiffy.”—Louisville Courier- Journal. Another Definition. Little Willie—Say, pa, what is a co- quette? Pa—A coquette, my son, is & girl who gets more admiration than proposals.—Exchange. Anger begins in' folly and ends in Watch repentance.—Pythagoras. Sameness: of Opinion, “I suppose,” said the.young man with the soiled collar and baggy trou- sers. as he sat down beside a stranger on one of the park benches, “you would ‘Dot take e for a,member of a million- aire's family, would you?” “No,”. answered the stranger after sizing him up; “!runkly speaking, I wouldn’t.” : “Neither. would the millionaire,” Joined the young man sadly. “I uked him last night.”—8t, Paul Plonecer Northern Pacific switchmen he was; Only Three Days More be- fore the Great Day. "THE MODEL DRY CLEANING HOUSE HOGANSON BROS., Proprietors phone No, 637 106 Second Stree . Dry Cleaning of Ladies’ and Gents’ Clothing, Rugs, Carpets, Household Furnishings, etc. Also Sponging and Pressing on Short Notice. TWO HOUSES FOR RENT GOOD LOCATION Call or Phone I'ly Office H. E. REYNOLDS Building Contractor and Real Estate Broker Room 9, O’Leary-Bowser Building Office Phone 23 House Phone 316 Bemidji, Minn. My pa says the new ROUND OAKk BASE BURNER is the“CANDY” N the' New Round Oak Base-Burner we ask you to notice particularly the three-flue construction —also the #wo new flues, which give greatly-increased heat from the same fuel. Note the superiority of the circulating flue—LARGEST, MOST EFFICIENT, ever placed in a base- burner. Makes it the STRONGEST double heater ever pro- duced. See the depth of fire pot, the perfect magazine. Observe the combination grates—on rollers—and the workmanship, the careful, perfect fitting of the doors, drafts and joints,—the Round Oak kind—and then its clean and handsome appearance, from the beautiful urn to the nickel-plated base—a modern, up-to-date base-burner. Distinctly superior on account of new features. We guarantee it to give more heat—with less fuel—than any stove on the market. ‘A. B. PALMER Your Hardware Man Subseribe for The Pioneer the Boyer Build- ing Closely

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