Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, May 11, 1911, Page 2

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

THE BEMIDJI DALY PIONEER IS BENE DRLY F10] Published.every afternoon except Sun- day by the Bemidjl Ploneer Publishing Company. G. B. CARSON. B X DENU. F. A. WILSDN, Mditor, In the City of Bemidji the papers are| delivered by carrier, ' %hara thl:! deliv- ery is irregular pleate make immedfute: 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- Dplicit ‘order to discontinueis’ received, and until arrearages are paid. Subscription Rates. One month, by carrier, ... One year, by ecarrler. ... Three months, postage paid, .. Six Months, postage paid. ... One year, postage paid... ... The Weskly Pionser. Right pages, containing a summary of the news of the week. Published every Thursday and sent postage paid to any 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, : g PPOOOPOOOOOOO® & HEALTH HINTS FOR TODAY © ® e ® No Set Rule for Sleep. ® The amount of sleep required ® varies so much with each indi- @ vidual that no rule can be given. © Some persons find six hours’ @ sleep enough to keep them inex- @ cellent condition physically and ® mentally, and others need ten © hours to get the necessary rest. @ One person can do the best work of the day during the early ¢ morning hours, and the next & person can accomplish twice as much by working from 6 to 12 » o'clock at night. It is well to ® accustom oneself to being in @ control of the brain action as DSOS @ far as possible and to avoid con- @ conforming to set rules, but per- @ sonal idiosyncrasies are not al- ® ways easy to overcome, and @ each one must be a law unto himself in such matters. If you @ feel brighter and more fit in the @ evening and can accomplish bet- ® ter work you had better arrange ® your affairs 'so you can give your individual your duties during the even- & > ing hours, @ OOV POPOOOPOOS DD DDDDDDDDD DO OO GG attention to HEART-TO-HEART-TALKS. Kick Where It Will Do Some Good. If there are things in the Pioneer that you do not wish to see or if you think that there are things which ought to appear, you would de- rive more satisfaction by dropping a line to the editor than by calling It is the aim of all progressive newspapers to print the kind of a newspaper the people want and the only way a pa- per can be sure of what the people do want is to have them speak up. Please understand also that the col- umns of The Pioneer are always open to any person who wishes to present views on any subject in a reason- able manner. Often readers will say “I'd like to be editor for a while and I'd give them a red hot shot” on this or the other subject of public interest. ‘Whenever you feel that sort of a spell coming on, just get out a piece of paper and write out your burning ideas and send them in. All communications must be signed but the name of the writer will not be printed, if a request 1s made for it not to be. The schools, proposed city improvements, suggestions of civic beauty, welfare of the munici- pality in general and the growth of the North are subjects upon which could the paper a “punk rag.” much of value and interest be contributed to the paper for the good of the community. Down at Albert Lea they have un- earthed the bones of some prehistor- ic animal. Perhaps they were those of a man by the name of Dunn who once was speaker of the Minnesota legislature. It is astonishing what a conflaga- tion a brush fire is by ‘the time it gets on the front page of a big city newspaper. It doesn’t matter so much if they do convict Deitz; if the carnage in Mexico: continues; reciprocity is passed or if the fish don’t bite, just 80 the favorite baseball team con- tinues to win. THE SCHOOL BOARD DID RIGHT. There is no question but that the success or failure of the new agri- cultural department of the Bemidji High' School depends to a large de- gree upon the kind of a man chosen to take up this special line of in- struction. sigh of satisfaction that the public learns that a young man peculiarly well trained for the place has been appointed to the position. At first glance, the thoughtless might hesitate to pay such an .in- structor $1,400—next to the' super- Therefore, it is with a| intendent the highest salary on the board of education pay roll—bui when one stops for & moment . to ponder, this thought quickly ‘turns to one of admiration for a set of men: who were big and broad enough.to realize that the préper sort of & man must be-given‘a-reasonable salary, 1t also should be remembered that in" this position a man.must. work every month in the year, while the instructor. of “regular .courses has a three months . vacation, and .. their longest vacation comes just at - the time when the agricultural instruct- or is busiest. ; The state gives $2,600 a year to aid in meeting the expenses of this new line of instruction, expecting the board of education to make the money go as far as it will, and in chosing Mr. Otto Bergh if he proves ‘as competent as his friends say h2 will, was a satisfying indication that the $2,500 is going to be spent to the best advantage WORSE THINGS THAN WAR. If fifty persons were to be killed in any one battle in the comic opera war now being indulged in down in Mexico, we should all throw up our hands in holy horror, but few digits are elevated because of the'way we annually celebrate the birth of the nation, although statisti¢cs show that more persons have been killed on the Fourth of July than in the big battles of the Revolutionary war. To make this fact clear, Mrs. Isaac L. Rice, the dearest foe of our bar- barous Fourth, has arranged two columns of figures side by side. The one is taken from Bancroft’s Hisfory of the United States and-shows:-the Amerjcan easualties in seven famous Revolutionary - battles. The other has been compiled by the:Journal-of the American Medical Association. It considerably understates the cas- ualties on seven recent Fourths. Killed and Battles ‘Wounded Lexington ......... .. 83 Bunker Hill .. s 449 Fort Moultrfe ...... 37 White Plains .... 100 Fort Washington .. 149 Monmouth ......... 229 Cowpens 72 1,119 Killed and Celebrations Wounded July 4,449 July 4,169 July 5,176 July 5,466 July . 4,418 July 5,623 July 5,307 34,603 Here we have in ghastly array the price paid for our “glorious celebra- tions.” As the national holiday ap- proaches, these things make good food for thought. DO IT AT DULUTH. There is a world of possibilities for Northern Minnesota*at the con- vention of the Northern Minnesota Development association in Duluth on June 1 and 2. Here will be an opportunity to formulate plans for future conquests that will exceed those of the past, and the history of the commonwealth since that first Bemidji convention contains than one notable triumph for the men who have lead the fight for nor- thern Minnesota. Reapportionment was lost, that is true, at the recent legislature, but a string of new.laws adorn the statute books that are more her own; they are transforming stump strewn tracts into flourishing farms, and most of these laws can be traced to that méfmorable conven- tion held in Brainerd December 1 and 2 of last year. There is every reason to believe that the Duluth gathering will be the biggest and most important from -every stand- point of any gathering.in the history of the Development association. POOOOOOCOOO OO O O & NEW- LAWS OF 1911. ® 9900000000000 6066 Are Your Fish This Big? “Section 1. That Section 48 of the General Laws of the State of Minne- sota for the year 1906 relating to game and fish, be and the same is hereby amended so as to read as fol- lows: A Section 48. No person shall at any time catch, kill or have in possession or under control any fish for any pur- pose whatever, except minnows for bait, rock bass, sunfish and bullheads that are less tham six inches in length; or any grey, black or Oswego bags less than nine (9) inches in length. Any person on catching such fish shall at once return same to the water from which they are taken with as little injury as pos- sible. No person shall take, kill, have in possession. for sale or. with intent to sell, offer or expose for sale, or have in possession or umnder com.rol. for nny p\u-wle whluopvor Al ake bringing Northern Minnesota into |/ wo pounds, half pounds, dressed weight, or any White fish of les thn two and a half pounds. undressed weight, or = two geon less than fift unds’ dressed' Welght, or any wall-eyed pike of: Iess than fourteen inches {n length or one pound round or dressed w&ghtr or anw muskallonges less than: Y- inches in length, or any blue pi e or saug rs of less than ten inches in length. -Measurement . in . each: case to be made from tip of the snout to the ferk of the tail.. Any such fish when caught shall be immediately returned to the water. Approved April 18, 1911. . All Four Men in Car: Killed: at Grade Crossing. 2 Shelby, O., May 11.—Four.men are dead as the result of a grade cross ing.accident.at the ‘Main street cross: ing of the Baltimore and Ohio rail- road, when: a ‘train. struck an automo- bile driven by James Hissong of Shel- by. Hissong, owner of the car, a saloon keeper; Samuel Winner of Shelby, an employe of Hissong’s; J. J. Holl of Bucyrus, brewer,.and ‘Mack- Esterline Shelby, an insurance agert, were the | victims. EXPRESS RATES ORDERED CU7 Legal Battle .May - Follow- ‘Action of South Dakota Board. Pierre, S. D.,, May 11—The state railroad de irtment is sending out no tices of the new express schedules fixed by the commission and it is ex- pected that. the different companies will at once go into the United State: court in a fight against the rates fixed. The general reduction, as fixed by the commicsion, is 30 -per cent below the rates which were in effect Jan, 1 1909. Backache Means Dying:Kidneys A Remarkable Treatment That Saves the Kidne How You May Cnn ourself: Quickly and Thoroughly. ‘With the progress of science comes ong remarkable: treatment for kidney diseases. It has been so thoroughly tested and its results have proven so revolllflonnry that a well-known firm in Michigan has undertaken its distrie bution into every part of the country. ‘Those who suffer from kidney trou- ble and the diseases resulting from it will be pleased ‘to know that every package of this treatment is thorough- ly guaranteed. This should assure at last a positive cure to every sufferer. Every man and woman should know that backache is usually a well-defined symptom of advanecing kidney disease which may end fatally unless treated in time; that rheumatism and bladder trouble are caused from nothing more nor less than kidneys that do not filter the poison from the blood; that dropsy, Bright's disease, diabetes and bladder- stones are caused by bad kidneys. Once they are made to work prop- erly, these diseases, should quickly dis- appear. This is done by the.new 'treatment, Dr. Derbys Kidney Pills. urge everyone who has pain in tha lmnl of the blck. rofuse or e bladder, or foul urine, net to lau to get lc age today of Dr. Derby's Kidney Pl s, and drop all other kidney treat- ments. Senator Stevenson, of lthnT ia: “There Is no question about the efficacy of :Dr. Derby’s Pure Kidney Pills in_curing kldmy tm} b)adder trouble. I know whereof I Dr. Derby s Kldney Pills are now sold at all drug stores—25 and 50 cents; or direct from Derby Medicine Co., Eaton Rapids, Mich. If you would like to try them first, ask your drugist for a free sample packgge. Then buy a package; you will not regret it. . M. MALZAHN REAL ESTATE RENTALS City Property and Farm Lands Listed and Sold 407 Minnesota Ave. Bemidjl, Minn BEAUDETTE Merchant Tailor Ladies’ and Gents' Suite to Order. Freach Dry Cleaning Pn-tl‘ and Repairing a S 315 Belh'lni Avnne REST AND HEALTH TO MOTHER AND CHILD.( MRS, WINSLOW'S SOOTHING SYRUP has bec: gsed for over SIXTY YEARSIy MILLIONS c. MOTHERS for_their CHIL TERTHING, with PERE SOOTH] SOET! ATPAVSan PAIN T CURNS WIND COLIC, anc is tlie best remedy’for DIARRHGA. _ it is ab- solutely harmless. Be sure and ask for * Mrs Winslow’s Soothing Syrup,” and take no other &ind Twenty-five centsa bottle, Order your AWNINGS Now Amarioan Tenl- & Awning Ce. 307-309-311 Washington Ave. N. MINNEAPOLIS, MINN. Teats, Stack Cevers ete. Ilew-casll Wani-Rate ',-Cent-a-Word ‘Where cash accompanies cop; will publish all “Want Ads” for alf- cent a word per insertion. Where cash -does not accompany copy the regular rate of .one ceuta word will beicharged. EVERY HOME HAS A WANT AD For Rent--For o nge --Melp Wanted--Work Wanted «=Etc.--Etc. HELP WANTED WANTED—For the United States army, ablebodied unmarried men between ages of 18 and 35; citizens of the United States, of good character and :temperate who can speak, read and write ithe English language. iOfficer, 4th St., and Minnesota ;Ave Bemidji, Minnesota. wm'mn—mn and wom.n Wwho' or undressed welght, or ‘one and one| pounds dressed weigl\t or any stur~ TRAIN CRASHES INTO AUTO|: WANTED—-G!H to ‘learn printing bn:lness._ -Apply, at this omee. W~AN1}E~D—H._&9 tosew. Mrs. M. F. Cunninghsm. - WANTED—20 salesladys at Tropp- man Co. FOR SALE PUSION 'FARM FOR SALE—Farm -contains eighty acres with good frame house and barn-and several acres under cultivation.” Small-lake and-brook on-land. 'Land deseribed as follows; NE 1-4 of SE' 1-4 and SE ‘1-4 of NE .1-4,. Section 14, Town 149, Range 35. Write Wm. Burce, Kelliher, Minn., for price, etc. FOR SALE—Case s'ands and.racks number 6, double news stand with rack for 8 full sized cases. Good as new. Sell regularly for $3:75. We bave 6 of these at $1.50 each. Bemidji; Pioneer. . Publishing . .Co. Bemidji, Mion. FOR SALE—]Job- type “sund -body | type. Fonts,of 6 point to 72 point, Prices furnished. . with proof sheets upon request. Ad- dress Pioneer Publishing Co., Be- midji, Mion.- St FOR SALE—Three. second hand typewriters. One Smith Premier at $40 00. One Smith Premier at $2500 ‘and one Remington at $2500 Apply: at this office. | FOR SALE—]Job cases, triple cases, quadrupple ‘cases and lead and slug.cases, 40c. each. Pioneer Publishing,Co. = Bemidji. FOR SALE—Rubber stamps. Th Pioneer will procure-any kind of : rubber stamp for you an shor notice:. FOR SALE—17 foot launch in first class condition. It quire of W. J Markham FOR SALE—Kitchen Cabinet almost new. See it at Music Store, 318 Minn. Ave. FOR SALE—16 ft. cheap. Falls & Cameron. FOR SALE—Household goods for sale 917 Minnesota avenue. Inquire at this- office. FOR SALE—Furniture for sale. 505 * America Ave. FOR-RENT SRl st A FOR RENT—One house ' on Lake FOR RENT—5 room cottage on 9th _ St.’ Inquire of C. D, Lucas, 902| TOR RENT—Modern unfurnished LOST or taken: by mlstake———ll‘d'lep LOST—Fur Mink Collar for reward ADVERTISERS—The great State launch for sale || on Tenth street and a!trAml A - Inquire at Stechman Cafe, ; Bemidji Ave. | R steam heated rooms. 221 Third} street. - L0ST AND FOUND silk umbrella from Masonic Hall Sunday.morning ‘at-M. E. Church services. Please return to this office. return to‘Mrs. J.. T. Toumy, 121 12th St. ™ MISCELLANEOUS . of North Dakota offers unlimited | _ resglt; Talk to ‘the people in prosperous North. Dakota through the columns of The Grand Forks Herald; read every day by 30,000 in 150 towns and rural routes in the northern half.of the state, ' for sale, halp» real estate.etc.; each insertion. ‘The 'Herald, Grand Forks, N. D. WANTED—About. June: 1st. seven room house, Not farther than 7th St. Address: Box 253, ferred. Family of four. Bemidji. Dakota pwblicmon- it is the paper;to use in ‘order to get ratesone cent per word first insertion, one-half cent per word succeeding insertion; fifty cents per line per month. Address the Courier News, Fargo, N. D. anted, -exchange, for. % cent a word |0 0000000000000 © LODGEDOM IN BEMIDJI ¢ like a all parts of the A 0. U. W Lodge No. Regular meeting ights—first and third #iMonday, at 8 o'clock. ' 402 Beltrami Ave. 3. ¥ 0. B Bemidjl Lodge. No. 1052, X\ Regular meeting . nights— first and’ third 'l‘lmrndnye. *'8 o'clock—at Masonic. hall, Beltrami Ave, and Fifth St. C. 0. » Regular meeting night _ every Second and Fourth .Sunday evening, ‘at 8§ “io'clock in basement of Catholic church, . Classified -ads, Send stamps to DEGREE OF NONOB. Meeting. nights - every ! second and fourth Monday ‘evenings, at Odd Fellows Hall, Six or modern pre- F. 0. B. opportunities for business tocl: fied advertisers. The recognized | advertising medium is the Fargo Daily and Sunday Courier-News, the only seven day paper in the POINT COMFORT—The finest sum- mer resort in Northern Minnesota. Lots for sale and cottages to rent. A. 0. Johnson, Turtle River, Minn. Regular- meeting " nights every Wednesday evening at 8 o'clock. Eagles hall. G A B JOHN G. ZIEGLER “THE LAND MAN™ Regular - meetings—First and third Saturday after- noons, at 2:30—at 0da Fel- Fire=: Life==INSUR A NCE-=-Accident = REAL ESTATE IN ALL ITS BRANCHES FARM LANDS BOUCHT AND SOLD Office--Odd Fgllow- Buliding Co to-Him for.-Farm:Loans 6 Through Flyers * Columbia River basin. Over which, for. 30 years; the Pioneer : and Prosperous Northwest. A GOOD-LINE TO TIETO G. A ST. PAUL Northern Pacific Ry. Lme' has been handling the traffic of the Fertile Walker, Agent Bemidjl A M. CLELAND, General Passenger Agent, 'Electric-Lighted Transcontinental East and West every day over the ‘‘Pioneer Line.” Service that sets the pace batween the head of the Great "“Lakes, Upper Mississippi Valley, North Pacific Coast and 6,300 Miles of Scenic Highway Through the Land of Fortune lows .Hall, 40z Beltrami Ave, 1. 0. 0. P, Bemidji Lodge No. 119 Regular meeting nights —every Friday, 5 o'clock at 0dd Fellows Hal, _ 402 Beltrami. I 0. O. F. Camp No. 24. Regular meeting every second and fourth Wednesdays at 8 o'clock, at 0dd Fellows Hall. Rebecca Lodge. Regular meeting nights—first and third ‘Wednesdays at 8 o'clock. —1I. 0. O. F. Hall. KNIGHTS OF PHYTHIAS. iy Bemidji Lodge. No. 168, Regular meeting nights— every Tuesday evening at 8 L o'clock—at the KEagles' Hall, Third street. — LADIES OF THE MAC- CABEES. Regular meeting night last Wednesday evening in each meonth, MAsONIC AT & AT M., Bemiajl, 233, Regular meeting Y/ nights—first and third Wednesdays, 8 o’clock—at Masonic . Hall, Beltrami Ave., and Fifth St. Bemidji-Chapter No.: 78, R. A. M. Stated conveca- tions—first and- third Mon- days, 8 o'clock p. m.—at Masonic Hall, Beltrami Ave, and Plifth St 'ch Pads About 8x12 inches, weigh nearly habits, | For in-} fformation apply to Recruiting | a pound. Buy them here at Cents Other pads, extra quality paper, various sizes soldgalso by the pound for 5 Cents tionery Store Security Bank Bldg i, Llkanah Commandery No. 30 K. T. Stated conclave—se- cond and fourth Fridays, 8 o'clock p. m.—at Masonic Temple, Beltrami Ave., and Fifth St. . I, S. Chapter No. 171, Regular meeting nights— first and third Fridays, 8 o’clock—at Masonic Hall, sBeltruml Ave, and Fifth t. M. B. A. Roosevelt, No. 1523. Reg- ular meeting nights every second and fourth Thurs. day evenings a. 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 0dd Fellows hall, 402 Beltrami Ave. MODERN SAMARITANS Regular meeting nights on the First and Third Thurs- days in the I. O. O. F. Hall at 8 p. m. SONS OF- NERMAN. Meetings held second and fourth Sunday afternoon of each month at 206 Beltrami Ave, OM' SMART DRAY AND TRANSFER SAFE AND PIANO MOVING Rosidonce Phone 58 018 America Ave. - Offies Phone 12 R.F. MURPHY FUNERAL DIRECTOR AND EMBALMER: Office’313 Beitrami Ave. Phone 318-2. Farm and Gity Loans Insurance and| Real Estate 000800060666 600 . William C. Kiein| = |

Other pages from this issue: