Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, June 2, 1911, Page 2

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R THE BEMIDJI. DAILY PIONEER PR S S L L ke gy Published overy afternoon except Stin- day by the Bemidji Pioneer Publishing Company. @. B. CARSON. B H DENU. ¥, A. WILSON, Rditor. In the City of Bémidjl the s are delivered by carrier.- Where rfil‘: delty- 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 paid. Bubscription Rates. One month, by carrier. One year, by carrier. .. Three months, postage paid 8ix Months, postage paid One yeur, postage paid... The Weekly Plon Eight 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, Turpentine For Seed Warts. Common turpentine is said to be a sure cure for the worst cases of large and so called “seed warts.” Have a botle of it with a small camel’s hair brush through the cork and touch the wart with it, if possi- ble, morning, noon and night. For a time nothing seems to happen, but all of a sudden the warts will be looked for and will not be there, they go so quickly. No special care is re- quired, as turpentine is harm- less. It should, however, be carefully kept away from lights or fire of any kind. PPOCIDPOOPOOOO® DOPPPPPIIPPPPOOOOOOOOOGO PCOOPPOROOPIPPVOVOOOO OGP CAN YOU SPELL THEM? In the examination given pupils taking the state high school tests during the past week, the following list of words was given: parallel, physiology, Phoebe, Ppoisonous, caterpillar, analysis, fiber, amethyst, chickadeee, chronic. cholera, pistillate, scientific, Merrimac, Philippine Isl- alkali, ands, Eskimo, isthmus, scissors, cupboard, envelope, chloroform, weasel, If you think you can spell them all, have some one read them to you and if you get through the list without making a mistake, we will give you a year’s ‘subscription to The Pioneer beginning June 31. —————— WHEN TO ADVERTISE. “The best time to advertise is all the time,” say the men who have studied the advertising subject thoro- ughly. Constantly 'keeping your merchandise and your ware before the public is bound to gain recog- nition. The majority of retail store cus- tomers, before starting out on shop- ping forays, study the newspaper ad- vertising. This habit is a great time saver. The shopper escapes fruitless visits to many stores, and needless bother- ing of clerks, by learning in advance where she is lkely to find what she wants. She gives very little atten- tion to the places that fail to inform her as to their offerings. Many women, too, having become personally acquainted with the store people, dislike to enter their places of business unless they feel fairly sure of buying. They avoid this em- barassment by learning in advance through the newspaper where they can probably supply their needs. Thus it is that many sales are practically made before the buyer leaves her home. It has been proved over and over again, that the trade « will pass stores with a main street location that fails to advertise, to hunt up poorly located shaps on back streets that are well advertised. A merchant might as well close his shutters in business hours as to fail to meet his competitors in the fleld where they are doing the heart of their business—the daily paper advertisement. The foregoing are expressions that experts on the subject' have made after every conceivable experiment. news- TO SAVE THEBABIES. ” Tie death-rate among infants and young children has been one of the cerying disgraces of civilization. Herod’s slaughter of the innocents, the story of which has served to horrify the world for twenty cen- turies, merely hastened the death of many of these bables, as probably the greater part of those whom &is ruthless order condemned would have died within a few years from infantile aflments and zymotic. dis- eages, Through the middle ages and up to the present day, the death-rate of infants has had an unknown, but undoubtedly an enormous influence in 'keeping down the average, while the fnfant mortality ahong savages andl barbarous nations is too dreadful || to eontemplate. It has remained for the present generation to realize that “race suicide’ as a nationall peril is not to be compared to, “child murder” by removable social. and enonomic causes. One of the most important pro- blems confronting us is that of child conservation. A movement for the salvation of ‘the child is of far great- er importance than the efforts to save our forests, rivers and mineral deposits from spoliation. This is so evident that it is necessary only to demonstrate the facts to secure ins stant - public . response. ' Learning from previous efforts that _publie education and the arousing of popur lar interest must precede all at- tempts to improve conditions, thosé behind this most important crusade have wisely inaugurated a system of public exhibits in the larger cities. The Child Welfare Exhibit held in New York was open to the public for a month and was visited by a quarter of a million people, an average of 8,000 per day. The second Child Welfare Exhibit, just held in Chi- cago, was viewed, during the first ten days in which it was open, by over 265,000 people, or about 26,- 000 per day. This enormous attendance is at- tributed by the local papers to the energy of the Chicago managers and to the activity of school teachers and others in spreading the news of the exhibit throughout the entire city. Yet these methods would have been futile had-it not been that the public was ready to take an interest in the subject. In no other way is || it possible to account for the spon- taneous outpouring of people of all classes. An account of some of the more striking features of the exhibit ap- peared in THE JOURNAL last week. It is difficult, however, to convey an adequate idea of the graphic character of this exposition, while it is impossible for any description to do justice to the crowds of eager people who poured through the || Coliseum which contained the ex- hibit. Mothers - from the slums with babies in their arms and with num- erous offspring trailing behind, wealthy women of well-known fami- lies, eager to acquire information, business men,, workingmen, phy- sicans, scientists, politicians, clergy- men, trained nurses—all visited the exhibit and all came away impres- sed with the enormous and un- pardonable waste of child life and with the crying need for better methods of prevention. , It is impossible to overestimate the value of such educational ex- hibits. Steps should .be taken to render such collections permanent for use in other cities, or at least to utilize some of the valuable material for further education. Since the one educational short- coming of such an exposition—is that it is too vast and complex to be readily grasped and understood in all parts, it would be of great value if single features could be placed on display so as to enforce a single lesson at a time. If these special exhibits were shown in much-frequented ' places, such as public libraries, the waiting rooms of railway stations and the rest-rooms of department stores, they would be viewd by thousands who never enter a museum or ex- postition, The presentation of the Child Wel- fare Exhibit, admirable as it is in itself, should be regarded merely as a starting-point in the education of the public along these lines. A HOPEFUL MESSAGE TO SCALP SUFFERERS AND MEN WHO'S HAIR IS THINNING. Dandruff now—bald later. The same ‘is true of scalp diseases. In fact baldness is a scalp disease. The trouble with the greasy salves and lotions, the so-called dandruff and scalp cures you have tried so far is that they don’t do anything but tem- porarily relieve the itching and cake the dandruff so it doesn’t fall until its dried out again. Nothing can cure—really cure such troubles but a real scalp medicine that will kill the germs causing dandruff and scalp disease. Learning from leading fellow druggists throughout America that they had found a whirlwind cure for dandruff, eczema and all diseases of the skin and scalp the City Drug Store on proving to the laboratories compounding the treatment that it is the most prominent drug store in this city secured the agency for the remedy. This remedy is ZEMO, the clean, liquid. preparation that kills the germ of disease and ZEMO SOAP to wash the scalp or skin clear and clean of the dandruff or scale and by its antiseptic qualities soothe and heal. Sold and guaranteed by druggists everywhere and in Bemidji by the City Drug Store. M SMART DRAY ‘AND TRANSFER SAFE AND PIANO MOVING Nasidonce Phone 58 018 Amarion Ave. _ Offiee Phone 12 ~Kickapoo' Worm Killer makes playful - children. They like these delicious candy tablets and tease for them. Healthy child- ‘ren are always playful. When a child does not want to play it is sick; give 1t Kickapoo Worm Killer and it will soon be happy. Price, 26¢c., sold by druggists everywhere. Farm and Insurance Real Estate William C. Kiein O’Leary-Bowser Bldg. Phone 9. Bemidji, Minn. Copyright Hart Schaffner & Marz ™ . 5 ] : Special Young Men’s Dept. Young men have learned that this store is their chief and most reliable source of supply for the smart lively models they desire. row padded shoulders; the best - American college ideas, broad chested, taper waisted, with life dash, vim in them, this store is the only place, $9.75, $15, $20, $25, $30, $35. Boys’ clothes at $3.95 and $5; that’s the special point here: better bring your boy to us.- The full cut all wool fabrics, the unusual tailoring and the altogether best-for-boys features that we’ve put into these suits mean everything that ex- pert clothing knowledge ought to mean, double: breasted and Norfolk suits $3.95 and $5.00. Fine Straw Hats You will find instant comfort when you remove the weight of winter and wear a light weight straw on your head. You will find our line of 1911 straws the best in the city. A full line of Equadorian Panama hats to fit all faces at $5.00, $6.50 and $8.50. Light weight India Bangkok are very popular $5. Domestic straws in yachtsand soft rolls, including the novelty shapes for young men, Mackinaws, Sennits and Milens $1.00, $1.50,-$2.00 and $3. Money Cheerfully Refunded (1st, 1911, understgned to be operied before the City Councl of the City of Bemidji, at a regular meeting.to be held in.| the council room in City Hall on ‘Monday, June 5th, 1911 at 8 o’clock ] L E (1] e Completing the fill on Beltrami avenue, between Second street and the Soo Depot, approximately 2700 cubic, yards, Specifications are on file in the of- fice of the City Clerk and the City Engineer, where ' further informa- tion can .be obtained: City Council reserves the: right to reject any or all bids: Dated at Bemidji, Minn,, June GEO. STEIN, City Clerk. Notice to Contractors. I will receive bids for the construc- tion of a basement under:the. side- walk at the laundry to:be built ac- cording to the plans and specifica- tions of the city-engineer. J. J. TRASK, Proprietor Bemidji Steam Laundry. you. Great and shade; and deservedly so. dual styles, tailored expressly for us. Sworn proof that -simple buckthorn bark, glycerine etc., as compounde Adler-i-ka, the new. German Appendi tis remedy, really does cure Aj "x'h'{'fhmx';‘ omrlulnn can now right in Bemidji af French & Ca.," dri DOSE ' of this simple remedy will- re- lieve wind or. gas in the stomach or bowels, sour stomach or constipation and otaer symptoms of chronic Ap- pendicitis, v you. and be convinced. New Tailor Shop Rear of Music V2 GUARANTEE OF QUALITY AND PURITY bitter and acid of natural leaf tobacco. AMERICAN SNUFF.COMPANY, 111 Fifth Avenue, New York, N. Y. Come Saturday and we will show you Values in Hart Schaffner the sort of values people want $20 and $25. Now is the time. webby cool union suits of lisle at $1.25. B. V.D.at 50c. Shirt comfort is vital too; soft collars with soft french cuffsin silky soisette $1.25. New French wash silk panel ties 50c. New silk lisle “leather” and ox- ford color hose, step into them, 25c. New English types with nar- Shoes For Every Occasion From outing to full dress. Every right tan and proper gun metal in the new high arch shapes that areadding to the popularity of walk-over Oxfords $4. . Lighter Underwear You'll like the .cob- Special Saturday Walk-Over sample Oxfords in tan and black leathers $4 values_special $1.965. Quality Goods | - at Low: Prices The Price! Hundreds of men ‘are buying these fine, high grade suits that were featuring at$9.75, $15 and 20. Remember two things about the suits we’re offering in these remarkable groups: 1--They're the finest tailored products from our best regu- lar makers, presenting the latest in style, fabric 2--that the values presented are without doubt the most exceptional that have ever been offered so early in the season. So many particular well-dressed men are taking advantage of this opportunity, we believe that you will too, when you realize what it means to SEE US Yeca ‘give you the latest in style. The best of work. A fit to please And best of all, Satisfaction. Give usa trial 318 Minn. Ave - Copenhagen Snuff is made of the best, old, rich, high- flavored leaf tobacco, to which is added only such in- gredients as are component parts of natural leaf tobacco and absolutely pure flavoring extracts. The Snuff Pro- cess retains the good of the tobacco and expels the & Marx Suits The most reliable clothes; generally popular, Smart creations in indivi- They are

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