Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, May 5, 1911, Page 9

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FRIDAY, MAY §, 1911 ROOOOLOOOOOOSESS L lp'l h. N We are tol by Peter ‘Farley. who @« @ LODGEDOM IN BEmDn‘ | wrote as an eyewitness, that in Au- GG B €8.0:0.9 06 P &S O gust, 1835, the airship Eagle was of- o ‘ticially advertised to sail tfrom London A. 0. U. W o, | With government dispatches and pas- 27?*'"‘512{‘23“'[;’3%208‘}“'; sengers for faris and to establish di- nights—first and third | rect communication between the capi- Monday, at '8 o'clock.| (aly of Kurope. This early type of air- —at_0dd Fellows hall } ghi, s 160 feet long. fifty feet high A i and forty teet wide, and she. lay io the dockyard of the Aeronautical so- i ciety in Victoria road, near Kensing- | ton gurdens, then quite a rural spot. Built to bold an abundant supply of 3 ‘1"0“’“'.‘-‘,‘\“ A”“:“m“' 4 gus, she was covered with oiled lawn fle rrami Ave. | and carried a frame seventy-five feet ——— | long and seven feet high. with a cabin secured by ropes to the balloon, - An Regular meeting night immense rudder and wings or lius-un every Second and Wourth | each side for purposes of propulsion Sunday evening, at 8! completed her tittin The deck was o'clock in basement of | guarded by netting After all. this Catholic church. prepavation and advertisement the Ea- = =R gle never got beyond Victoria mud.ffor Count Lennox and his tants fail- DEGRER. OF HONO®. ed to provide the nec ary motive Meeting power.—London Standard. second and fourth Monday | evenings, al Odd Iellows Hall, B. P. 0. E. Bemidji Lodge No. 107 Regular meeting night first and third Thurs el [} H nights every Carrying a Stretcher. The bearers of a stretcher should be | = as near the same height as possible, F. 0. E. { If there is any difference the taller l:egulzn‘.r meeting uights | and stronger man should be at the every Wednesday evening | head. A stretcher should be carried at 8 o’clock. HMagles by the hands or suspended by straps B | from the shoulders. Never carry a . stretcher when louded upon the shoul- G. A R. ders. It trightens the patient. and he might fall off very eusily, especially it one of the bearers should stumble. The . 80—at Odd Fel- bearers should not keep step. but break LU R R G, step. the one in front starting off with lows Hall, 402 his right foot and the one behind with Ave. his -left. The injured should be car- ried feet first. In going up a hill or up- stairs the head should be in front and s the reverse in descending, except in Bemidji Lodge No. 1 case of a broken thigh or leg. when E‘”:,“;llf‘; 1;;}%?;,{'*; ;5:.’[0 \; | the feet should be first in going up and at Odd Fellows llall | last in coming down to keep the 402 Beltrami. weight of the body off the injured - T | limb.—*“First Aid to the Injured.” Dr. 0. 0. . Camp No. 24} H H. Hartung, in National Magazine. Regular meeting every s 2 and fourth Wednesda) ) o'clock, at 0dd Ieliow Regular meetings and third Saturday after- Beltrami 1. 0. O. F. Coming In Out of the Wet. There is av amusing story by Atbe- 15 which suggests the possible ori- &in of the phrase “He does not know enough to come in ont of the wet.” Ac- % : . 4 cording to the entertuining grammarian thind Wed"es‘;:yi a8 Ol eterred 10,8 town in i‘reocp under — 0.°0. . Hall. o= | Stress of evil circumsiances borrowed i money from a rich man. who took as ! security for the loan a mortgage on the = handsome portico which surrounded i the market place. He was pot an un | l Rebecca Lodge. meeting nigh firs1 KNIGIITS OF PHYTHIAS. Bemidji Lodge No. 168, /. Regular meeting ni every "l'uesday evening o OLk—-(ll the Ragles’ street. generous creditor, for when it rained ! he caused the town criers to announce { tThat the citizens had permission to i take refuge uoder the colonnade. Strangers visiting the town who fail- ed 1o have the ma“ter properly explain- ed to them were so impressed by the . extraordinary circumstances that they | spread abroad the report that the peo- SRR . ple were so stupid that they bad to be told when to come in out of the wet. i LADIES OF THE MAC- CABEES. Regular meeting last Wednesday wvening in each month. mep ==y e 1ie E ‘s f:():\md\f k”'“':':"l“ When a Dog Chokes. s o thira . Dozs frequently choke. A bone, aj o'clock tiuail or a picce of tin gets in the Beltvaani | ihyont, snd there is great danger of death before the arrival of the surgeon. lcnnd[l Chapter No. 70, Many of them do die, but there is no 1 A M. ted: wotmwy “reason for this, for it is easy, without first and third Mon- ' the slightest danger of getting bitten. fo put the hand in the mouth of a dog A mic Hall, Beltraimi and to draw out or push down the ob- T Bvey "{"“ Fifth St struction that is choking it. A bandage 9\\\‘“"/0» Glkanah Commandery N -2 handkerchief or towel will do—is & % K. Stated concluve passed between the teeth and over the % ::1.:::‘ I'umlp fo:‘:wh ‘l' rid upper jaw. and in a similar way anoth- ko p. L~ ,%”' nple, Beltrami Ave, ritth St . 8 o'clock p. m-ar ar bandage is passed between the teeth and over the uonder jaw. One person, holding the ends of these two band- ages, keeps the dog’s mouth wide open. A second person can then with perfect O. B. S. Chapter No. 171 Regular meeting 1 first and third F o'clock—at Masonic | L ease and safety put his fingers down ‘\("‘“'“"“ Ave,and KT e animal's throat and relieve it. M. B. A, e A Snake Story. Roosevelt, N This story is rold of the late Dr. ular meeting Jj second and rourth lay evenings at 8 o'clock in Odd Fellows Hz: ¢ Imil Reich. One day whben traveling | he lay down to rest in the shadow of a bush and fell asleep. He awoke with _ & A start to find that night.was coming M. W. A. "on and that rain bad begun to fall. emidji Camp No. 50120 Quickly snatching up his umbrella, he "il"n’;l ’{’;’i‘;zl‘"}l{“ niglhits— . tried to open it and. finding it woriked $ o'clock at Odd Slows ¢ SUMy, he pressed the spring vigorous- hall, 402 Beltrami Ave. 1 'y, Suddenly there was a sound of| e *+ ripping and rearing and a snake fell to gmonmm SAMARITANS the ground split in two. The reptile lh:‘?‘::i‘; g):g'l:!f“:‘xghl“”;11 Emd ult]mneulAly swallowed the umbrel- days in the I 0. O. F, Hall a¢ '@ s far as it could! § p.om. —_— = = Original Era of Good Feeling. The phrase applied to the administra- Meetings held second and | 100 :fi Alzmxfes‘ Moorae, the et of Gich month at 205 Bellami | ¢ July 10, 1317, From that time until | the present hour the two administra- —— tions of Monroe—a period of eight EW PUBLIC LIBRARY | years, 1717 to 1825—are referred to in N the terms of the newspaper paragraph Open daily, except Sunday and Mon-; "bich so aptly expressed the public dayll to 12a.m.,1t0 6 p.m., 7 to 9 p. m. | sentiment of the day.—Magazine of Snuday 3 to 6 p. m. Monday 7to 9 p., American History. @ BEATRICE MILLS, Librarian. ! SONS OF HERMAN. Equivocal. Cholly Softboy—I suppose I looked veway augwy at the zoo today when that nawsty Dick Dandy said when I stood by the big monkey’s cage how much I was like it. Candid Friend— You certainly looked beside yourself.— Exchange. 1 have the best of connections with southern and The Lesson. He—Yes, it's very true, a man doesn’t learn what bhappiness is until he’s mar- ried. She—I'm glad you've discovered that at last. He—Yes, and when he's married it's too late.—Dorfbarbier.’ eastern capitalists whereby I can fix you out with money on short notice. Make a loan now and stock up your place. You will be surprised fat how quickly you will make it back. iNo Sympathy. ‘“Here, waiter, thers’s = 85 ln my soup.” “Serves the brute right. He's been buzzin’ round here all the mornin’.”— V. L. Ellis|™ Life is no dream, but life is nothing Postoffice Block, without its great dreams. Apply now to Bemidji om You Your Groceries Unless you are a stranger it is no use to speak of the qualm of our groceries. ‘ The quality of our provisions," the extra low prices we offer and our ex- perienced salesmen to wait on cus- tomers are the three reasons people flock to this the leading store for table delicacies. K. K. ROE C. MARKUSEN Convincing valuesin fine groceries. Our customers appreciate the splen- did values we have been offering in highest class groceries and pure food products. They know they get pure, fresh goods at prices which enable them to save money. Get our canned meats for your picnics or outings, you'llfind them delicious. Roe & Markusen . The Quality Grocer Bemidji, Minn. Fourth Street Emancipation The Regal Shoe Company refuses 1o be bound any longer to the hoary old tradition of the Shoe Trade that standard shoes must necessarily be built to fit certain arbitrary prices—$3.50, $4.00, $4.50, $5.00, and so on. It refuses to believe any longer that a shoe that can be sold at, say, $3.85, must be “built up” to sell at $4 00, or else “skinned down” to sell at $3.50. It has announced that every Regal Shoe made hereafter will be priced at Cost, Delivered to the Customer, Plus 5 Per Cent. Commission This may figure out in “even money” or it may not, just as it happens. But, however it figures, the amount will in- variably be verified by certified public accountants and stamped on the shoe at the factory, and that will be the price you pay. In justice to yourself you should not be asked to pay more. In justice to the shoe it should not be “skinned down” to cost less. Regal Prices Are Now $33 to $58 In Regal Shoes You G et All That You : Want at the Lowest Price That Can Buy It SHOES FOR MEN 1T

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