Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, May 10, 1911, Page 2

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THE BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEER Published every afternocon except Sun- day by the Bemidji-Ploneer Publishing Company. G. B. CARSON. = ‘'m pEwu. P.“A. WIBSON, Rditor. In the City of Bemidji the papers are delivered by carrler, “‘Where the deliv- ery is irregular please make immediate complaint to this office, . Telephone 31. Out of town subscribers will confer a favor if they will report. when ‘they do not get their papers-promptly. All papers are .continued until an ex- plicit order to discontinue is received, and until arrearages are pald. Subscription Rat: One month, by carrie One year, by carrier. .. 5.00 Three months, postage pald. +1:26 Six Months, postage paid . 2.50 One year, postage paid 5.00 ‘The Weekly Hon“r. Right pages, containing a summary of the news.of the week. Published every Thursday and sent postage paid to uny address for $1.50 in advance. ENTERED AS SECOND CLASS MAT-| TER AT THE POSTOFFICE AT'BE- MIDJI, MINN,, UNDER THE ACT OF MARCH 3, 1879, 0000000800000 60 HEALTH HINT FOR TODAY @ —_— ) Deep Breathing for Drooping © @ Shoulders. i & © Full and deep breathing iwill @ do more to straighten drooping > shoulders than the wearing of braces, and if every one would @ take special pains to lift and @ hold the chest in its proper posi- ® tions round shoulders would-dis- @ appear. Lifting the chest does @ not include any other exercise @ and is one of the simplest when @ once it is understood, but' for” @ some reason is one of the hard- ® est ones to comprehend. @ sists simply in the muscular @ movement of lifting up 'the @ chest, as thought you were try- @ ing to lift it high enough to @ touch the chin. The arms and @ shoulders should be left in their @ natural position, and on no ac- ® count should the shoulders be lifted at the same time you are lifting up the chest. Try the exercise. Stand perfectly easy and relaxed. Avoid tense mus- > cles or any undue exertion, and > see if you can accomplish the @ feat. You will readily under- ® stand that when the chest is no longer hollow, but is well up in its normal position, the shoul- & ders cannot be rounded, but will & @ naturally settle into their nor- & mal place. @ LR O R N RO BRI R O v @@ @ @& R R ® 09 It con- & @ ® 9D SP 2 e 08 ® @ >0 ® Cl Ol @ HEART-TO-HEART-TALKS. “Errors.” Ot course there are errors in the newspapers and they go to form one of the principal amusements of a certain number of persons in every community who otherwise have no outward signs of mental weakness. These persons take keen delight in ferreting out a mispelled word, proper grammar or awkward struction. Like a boy catching his first fish, they yell with delight when they find something wrong, although many of them if put to the small test im- con- of writing a personal letter would make more mistakes than a blind Chinaman trying to learn to set type in English. A newspaper may try ever so hard to get the news for the public and really attain success in that line and it may, from a general standpoint be comparatively free from mistakes, and still some steal- thy spectacled sleuth, who usually is found on the shady side of the street, will dig up an error and dang- ling this choice morsel before the eyes of all whom he can attact, hold the paper up to ridicule. The rain was as welcome as five pay days in one month. Colorado’s legislature adjourned without electing a United States senator, but it might have done worse, The Boy Scout movement frequent- 1y turns into the Boy Scoot movement when mother calls for more wood. The city has found it necessary to chain the chairs to the park but so far it hasen’t been obliged 'to chain the park to the ground. The Chicago Federation of Labor has resolved that every aged work- man should have a pension, but it still takes more than resolutions to get groceries. Mrs, Carter Harrison is 'a writer of fairy tales which caused the Pio- neer Press to remark that her hus- band does not write them, but telvl'g. them during the campaign. i - Telegraph wires bring ‘the infor- mation that at Fort Worth, Texas, where a strike is on, women have donned -overalls and are painting. Up here the women do not paint, honest, ‘they don’t, and if they did they would not“wear overalls. BEING GOVERNOK I8 NO SNAP. It is'pretty fine to think of sitting at a mahogany desk in & marble palace with high honors and $7,000 a year thrust upon you, but: the gentle art ' of being ' governor of a great ‘state like' Minensota has its drawbacks. A communication to Mr. Eberhart a few day ago from a | woman who signed herself “A Moth- er,” and who wrote as follows, is an illustration: “God pity you if -you allow -our. Sabbath days longer to be desecrated with baseball and theaters. = With, hell and the devil let'160se, what 11 fluence can a’ mother have when you stand there as our govérnor’to: help destroy the state? ' ‘What good will the observance of one'Sunday as a ‘Mothers’ day do?” The “A Mother’ directly. blames the governor for -Sunday basgbtjl when as a matter of fact the state statutes make legal ‘that'recreation, and it is a recreation forthousands of city men, at least, who spend six days in the week’ at ‘grinding work that their employers may have mon- ey‘enough to build churches’in which those who' take offense at :>Sunday baseball can properly worship. ' While it is-a violation of the strict letter of the law to permit theatrical performances on Sunday, the: Gov- ernor ‘would have:a bigger- job ‘on his hands, if he were to try-to-enforce it, than he has in getting rid of Sup- erintendent ‘Whittier, and there i$ a limit to what any man,-even'a gov- ernor, can do. . AN INSULT TO MEN'WNO WORK. A bnok glnuuer went into'a bar could sell bim an encyclopedia. “What's umr' asked the barber. nhject 1#%ne world. ‘a victim fuithe cHifr, “Qum, 1sn't it, that- {nueril » a lover of dogs?” i f JWhat 18 there qiieer about 167" M‘—hndow‘!domph. e w.xku—No-knluxé\wvbzmmbm it Sr s «its ‘Ponalty. “Artist- (Indignantly)—You <talk lldl - it rpainting an ugly’ woman's-portrait-for rmoney was a crime. “Friend—F believe it I.«fgenmlly ‘l, Banging matter.—~Baltimore American;, S T T 5 i FAINENCRANGE A" New Back for an’'01d One—How- 1t «* *4y' Done"In Bemidji. indescribable feeling,»“making you ‘weary aid’ restless; shoot-across the ‘region of-the: kid- meys, and again the Ioins are-s0 lamé to stoop-in ‘agony. apply a’plaster to-the back in-this condition. You cannot reael “the’ cause. - Exchange the bad back for a new and*'stronger one. Neither Samuel Gompers nor any|example of this Bemidji citizen. other man has a right/to pledge the support of the union men of America to the McNamara brothers, held on the heinous charge of having dyna- mited the office of the Daily Times at Los Angeles, California, when sev- eral persons were killed. And when anyone does seek to use the name of the unions in freeing these men with- out an impartial trial they are fling- ing the rawest kind of an insult in the faces:of-the workingmen, for no man who is right wants to be held up as the defender of arch criminals. Coincident with the arrest of these men, without a moment’s hesitation, Gompers and other labor ' leaders, jumped into print with flat state- ments that the MeNamaras are not guilty and that they have been made the victims of a plot hatched up by ‘capitalists. Theodore Roosevelt, in his ~ Qut- look article, calls attention to the absurdity of such a claim. He ‘points to the long, honorable and 'brilliant career of William Burns, the detec- tive who effected the capture of the men now held for the ~ California crime. He calls attention to the work ‘done by Burns in riding San Francisco of its municipal throwing such men as Abe Ruef in- to prison. . Someone must have blown up the Times building. Burns and his men have collected evidence -which they believe will show that the McNamaras knew something about it. 2 If these men are guilty of crumb- ling a building in which half a hun- dred innocent persons were toiling upward in the night, as part of a plan to “get” an objectionable pub- lisher, should they not be compelled to answer for their crime? And is this premature verdict of “not guilty” going to add strength or dignity to the unions. It is quite in keeping with the asinine proposal of Moyer that a gen- eral strike take place on the day set for the McNamara trial. These men should by all have a fair and impartial trial by'a fair judge before a fair jury and if this is done, the unions above everys- one else should be satisfied with the| d,, verdict. If innocent these men have nothing to fear, Lightning Rods. There were-no lightning rods in an- clent -times.. The first one that the world ever saw was set up by our own' {llustrious ‘countryman Benjamin Franklin -shortly ‘after the year 1752. He bad just had his celebrated experi- ment with the kite, in which he dem- onstrated ' ‘the ' identity 'of lightning with- electrieity, and was therefore prepared for the construction of the rods for which the ‘world had walted B0 long. It is 'mot. generally known that Franklin was as distinguished in [ sclence as he was in |utenmnuhlp and diplomacy.—~Exchange. MUSSY' GHILDREN Kickapoo ‘Worm ‘Killer makes . children regular; stops mussy habits; ‘makes thelr bowels act | naturally; stimulates the liver; clears out malarial symptoms. | Acts as'a safe-tonic and health-|g, builder. It is the best - .wor! medicine known, and also finest general tonie ‘for ‘chil “Price, 25c., lold hy drnz lepers, | trami_and filed in._ my office. means | 13 _? luzmt Uounw. Samuel Collard, 102%-. America Ave., - Bemidji, Minn,; -says: “I willingly conform all I have pre- viously said in-a-public-statement, regarding Doan's Kidney Pills. -This remedy never fais to relieve {when I take it. W¥or months I suf- frrea from severs pains in the sma.l of my back and my limbs and joints ‘were stiff and sore. At times I was unable“to work- and there was al- 'ways -a feeling ‘of-languor in evi- dence. I tried medicine of various kinds; ‘but 'did ‘not -get relief until I _took Doan’s Kidney ' Pills. The good work they did firmly convinced me, of their merits.” For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster-Milburn Co.,' Buffalo, New York, sole agents for the United States. . Remember the name—Doan’s—andj: uke 10 other. NOTICE 'OF “'APPLICATION —for— STATE OF MINNESOTA, } County of Beltrami. 88, Notice'is “héredy wlven‘ that lnnllclflon hasbeen made in writiug (o the llo_u County Commissioners of sald County of pruying lor license to sell “Intoxicating llquon for the term commencing on h 1011, and . ter- nlnmnwon May 19th, 1912, Iry the ‘following FSon, lndflz the followlng place, as stated nld ‘appiication’respectively, to-wit: JOHN A. O. LINDSAY 3! in the one story bullding, situated on Lot No. Two (2).' v Block one (1), in the Towns u Df Olementgon. as appears from the &Ilt the of, now ouifile in vha ffice of -thie Regluter of Deeds in said Count Satd lnllllelflan wlll be heard 4nd deter- mined by sald Board of Oounty Commission- ers of the County of: Beltrumi./at the-A: l.il‘ll rl OMLE in the Court House in the Cit; il'in Beltrami Oounly.stlbfi at Ih on Wednesday th o«even!ee&n' day o Sew a Ioliat two o'elock p.m Witness my hand and seal of s -m Behnml County- his vna ‘day r M-:JA Auditor of Beltrami So: 2t Wed. Nay 3-10. = ———— - NOTICE OF APPLICATION “—FOR— 3 «SLIQUOR-LICENSE ‘| STATEGF MINNESOTA. ) County of Beltrami. otice s hereby given, that npplication hll b{' -de‘f: WERING 30 the Bobrat usioners of said: ‘Heltli.;‘ ly;')ol Mlnnmu “and filed In my of praying for - Intoxicating "llqlwn for” the term commencing oD Il’ .’ 1911, and < bx u-s Ltlow- tol wing pl ace, a8 “ud 1o said lxmllcnlou Mmtlvaly.~to- it + CHRISTOPHER ROGERS o On board the boat "shoz]ay'” ‘nly betwaen ehdgoru ‘of Otw ‘on’ Shotley C ak and Wuhk! li‘ = River Sopiicatio lfll“l:ndh GuRe Sad dovar: spplication eard & ml v SN ty ‘Commitssioners of the °°“Bo"" Belnuml At the Auditors office In [ouse i W ‘of -Bemidji, lll Minnesots ; o1 esday the 17th dly ot Muy 1911, ae 1% o’ clock p. . of thal Witness my hand nnrl seal ai nld l!slmm County this 3rd day of Ns Anditor of llelrnmi county. 2t Wed. - First May 3. Last May 10. —_—= NOTICE OF - APPLICATION —tor— EIQWR LICENSE. BTATE OF‘ H[NNEBM‘A } trami bss (le fll Bsmld:ll Notice' is heieby iven.: That: application a8 heen made in writing m the city: Wuncll of sald c;v,yfit Belnl‘«y:e" m-u iu my fl raying for irs fm:’ 'd‘la“':é%-‘_:mu on'! % and terminat on. folowing) '8 Ildll fi ace, as stated Rx‘ sald- lpPHc;vlon.“ mn;"- Bively. vo-wit: LOUIS ANDERSON T T T n ry frame bu on o block m.r original w"'nwmuu. :application will be heard. '? %8 'b'}nma"my“ council "o 1 Bemidji 11 i) ".ia 1n safd nxty'cr %oe“\cdj m:nll-'lrnml umj mfi Blin) Monday, ths sy 19! 1. :i 8 o'clock hand ‘i'[fl senl dxolti ‘Be- :n(lg’il. this »'h'(f day huhop 8nd asked the proprietor it he 3 Be put in féebly, “He adden't deed _m.,, : become attached to the fee-line spe- |- heard' it. fail—London "Tit-Bits. 2 Tire back aches at titnés with a dull, piereing paihs|* No use'to rub or-’ Follow the i my’ LIQUOR LICENSE - \apon a bereaved parent who: has car- ed wdthe’.’inn a mar¥ageable .ng:fi‘:;.xm‘flln e Ot a year and “¥our 'eon s sure to want a rwifé® 'll"kive“you’ my daughter, and you shall deliver to me the marriage portlon in'return.” A friendly offer of “this- description-1s-never- rejected, and Ahe ‘pattied moon come to!terms as to ‘the \n\t ot the, lowry, ‘which possessed by - uu tlrl ‘in her lifetime. Cases have been known where the .| young maw’s father has.given as much a8 thirty cows to secure & dead wife for his dead son. CuriovsTransference bf Heat. A” worknian in the observatory at Toulolise Mas invited attention t0 a sin- ' gilir-phienomenos: A" bar of iron is thken byithe end, and the other end fu plungedinto a firehedtibg it strong- 1y, but” rot’ so much that the hand caniiot ‘retain its hold.: “The heated énd i# thien plunged iato 'atpail of cold 'water:) immediately the‘other end be- rwm- ‘w0 hot" that it is ‘tipossible to hold it. {This phenonienon} familar to workmen'in iron, is Ascrilied by them to ome'répellent action they suppose ttre sidden cold-exerts-upon! the heat eofitdined ‘in the iron, which is thus driveni to'the opposite extremity.—Chi- cAgo Reécord-Herald. e S Bully, 1An Irishmsan and'bis English friend were ‘out” ribbit shooting.: They bad tbeen''very uifuccessful and ‘were re- tdrnihg downhearted when they saw & have'dart out’ of the hedge. ¢ Mike¥in smazement, failed to shoot, andithie hateSescaped. “Why--didi’t -you shoot®it?" asked Englishman. ‘*ghure,"-satd Mike, “I didn’t see it "1t was out of sight”” - London Ideas. = 'Men's Clothes. Sfnce 1825 the clothing of men has grown simpler and simpler, and if the | course of evolution ‘hds taken away from the picturesqueness of the’crowd ' 1thds added to the dignity of the man. —Men’s Wear. Unreasonable. ‘“T ‘say, old 'man, you've never re- tirned that ‘umbrella’ I lent you last week.” “‘Hang it all, old man, be reasonable. It's been raining ever since.”—London Punch, ' A ‘fFdith Cure. Bl that“Spendér'sicase was really a faitb { cure? Brown—Yes. You see, the dbc- tor and-the druggist both trusted him —Medford Drum. F..M. MALZAHN REAL ESTATE RENTALS clty Property and Farm ~ Land: Listed and Sold 467 Minn midll, Minn YE ‘Mefl:haflt “Tailor Ladies’ and Gents' Suits to Order. ' Freach DIV Closaillg, > Prenslag 4 Towne—Do 1 understand you to:say. |. its causes, and the posslbxlmes of its’ reducnon. But little has been ‘said about the most costly .- leak: the false economy exnstmg today in nearly ‘every household. L 14! Much foodstuffs are'bought with but one: point ““irview:*‘How cheap canl get it?" without a ‘i‘thought of quality or “after cost.” One of the most ‘ ~*gerious is baking powder. By the use of perfect baking powder the house- ‘wife can derive as much 'economy as from any other article- used . in baking and cooking. In . selecting the baking powder, therefore, care should be exercised to purchase one' that retains its -original strength and always remains the same, thus making the food sweet and wholesome and producing sufficient leaven- ing gas to make the baking light. Very iitfle of this leavening gas is produced by the cheap baking powders, making it necessary to use double the quantity ordinarily required to secure good results. You cannot experiment every time you make “a cake or biscuits, or test the strength of your baking‘powder tofind out how much of it you should use; yet with most baking powders you should do this for they are put together so carelessly they are never uniform, the quality and strength varying with each can purchased. Calumet Baking Powder is made of chemically pure ingredients of tested strength. ‘ Experienced chemists 'put it up.- -The proportions of the different materials rémain always the same. Sealed in air-tight cans, Calumet Baking Powder does not alter in strength and is not affected by atmospheric changes. In using Calumet you are bound to have uniform bread, cake or bis- cuits, as Calumet does not contain any cheap, useless or adulterating ingredients so commonly used to increase the weight. Further it pro. duces pure. wholesome food, and is a baking powder of rare ‘merit; there. fore is recommended by leading® physicians and chemists. It complies with pure food laws, STATE and NATIONAL. The goods are moderate in price, and any lady purchasing Calumet from her grocer, if not satisfied with it, can return it and have her money refunded. The manufacturers of Calumet Baking Powder have just prepared a new edition of their handsome Cook Book, and will gladly mail - it Free to anyone who sends for it. In writing address the Calumet Baking Powder Co., Chicago, and ask for Cook Book *‘D.” 0066.660606660606 © LODGEDOM IN BEMIDNI & B Rl R R ORISR I 3 . A0 U W st Bemidji ‘Lodge No, 277, Regular meeting nights—first and third “Monday, at 8 o'clock. —at 0dd Fellows hall, 402 Beltrami Ave. — B. P. 0. B, Bemidji - Lodge No. 1052, ~ Regular meeting nights_ first and third Thursdays, 8 o'clock—at Masonic hall, Beltrami Ave, and Fifth St C. 0. ¥ Regular meeting night every/Second and Fourth Sunday evening, at 8 o'clock in basement of Catholie church. Dof . DEGREE OF HONOR. Meeting nights every second and fourth Monday evenings, at Odd TFellows VL Han, F. 0. B. Regular meeting nights every Wednesday evening at 8 o'clock. Eagles hall. G. A R Regular meetings—First and third Saturday after- noons, at 2:30—at 0dd Fel- lows Hall, 40z Ave, Beltrami 1 0. 0. F. Bemidji Lodge No. 119 Regular meeting nights —every Iriday, 8 o'clock at 0dd Fellows Hall, 402 Beltrami, I 0. O. I. Camp No. 24. Regular meeting every second and fourth Wednesdays at 8 o'clock, at 0dd Feliows Hall, Rebececa Lodge. Regular meeting nights—first and -third Wednesdays at 8 o'clock. —I1. 0. O. F. Hall. ENIGHTS OF PHYTHIAS. (=10 Bemidji Lodge No. 168. Regular meeting nights— every Tuesday evening at § o'clock—at the Eagles' Hall, Third street. Operating the Magnificent New Steel Steamship* MINNESOTA : A 2000 mile, one week’s'Lake Trip, leaving' Duluth, Minn., every Tuesday, 10:30 p.m., to Chicago, IIl., and Mllwaukee, Wise., via Lake Superior and Lake Michigan, stopping at Intermediate Ports $36.00 ROUND THIP MEALS AND BERTH INCLUDED 3 fast steel Freight and Passenger Steamers, semi-weekly service between -Chicago, Ills,, Milwaukee, Wis., Duluth, Minn., and the Great Northwest. Freight service effective April 15 to Dec. 1. Passenger service effective June 16 to Oct 1. Route your shipment via C & D Line and save 15 per cent on your Freight Bills. Enquire J. H. McFADZEAN Local Agent General Agent C. & D. Line or Soo R. R., Great Northern R. R. Duluth, Minn. M.&LRR -GHICAGO & -DULUTH TRANSPORTATION CO. LADIES OF THE MAC- CABEES. Regular meeting night last Wednesday evening in each month. MASONIC ATF. & A M, 233, Regular nights—first Wednesaays, Masonic all, Ave., and Tifth St. “Bemidji, meeting midji Chapter No. 70, R M. Stated convoca- tions—first and third Mon- days, 8 o'clock p. m.—at Masonic Hall, Beltrami ve, and Fifth St. i Elkanah Commandery No. 30 4, K. T, Stated conelaveser cond and- fourth Fridays, 8 o'clock p. m—at Masonic i v | ; . a pound... Buy -~ Pioneer Stationery Security Bank Bldg ads i < About 8x12 inches, weigh nearly them here at - ~Qther: pads, extra quality paper; ‘various ; . sizes soldjalso by the pound for Temple, Beltrami Ave., and Fifth St. 0. . Chapter No. 171. Regular meeting nights— 7 first and third Iridays, 8 o'clock—at Masonic Hall, Bfnr'\ml Ave, and TFifth M. B. A. Roosevelt, No. 1523. Reg- ular meeting nights every second and fourth Thurs- day evenings at 8 o'clock in 0dd Fellows Hall, M. W. A. Bemidji Camp No. 5012, Regular meeting nights— first and third Tuesdays at 8 o'clock at Odd Fellows hall, 402 Beltrami Ave. MODERN SAMARITANS Regular meeting nights on the First and Third Thurs- days in the I. 0. O. F. Hall at 8 p. m. Meetings held second and fourth Sunday afternoon of each month at 205 Beltrami Ave. TOM SMART DRAY AND TRANSFER SAFE AND PIANO MOVING Residonce Phone 58 618 Amorica Ave. Offics Phese 12 R. F. MURPHY FUNERAL DIRECTOR AND EMBALMER Office’313 Beitrami Ave. Phone 319-2, Farm and Gity Loans “Insurance and| Real Estate | William . -Kiein - O’Leary-Bowser Bidg. | - Phone 19. Bemidji

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