Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, June 16, 1911, Page 4

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©960060006606060 © LODGEDOM IN BEMIDII @ L OO O OB AR R IR AR C R R 3 —_— A. 0. U. W. Bemidji 277, Regular meeting nights—first and third Monday, at 8 o'clock. —at_Odd Fellows hall, 402 Beltrami Ave. B. ¥ 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. O T Regular meeting night every Second and Fourth Sunday evening, at 8 o'clock in basement of Catholic church. DEGREE OF HONOR. Meeting ¢ nights every second and fourth Monday evenings, at Odd Fellows Hall F. 0. E. Regular meeting nights every Wednesday evening at 8 o'clock. Eagles hall. G. A. RB. Regular meetings—First and third Saturday after- noons, at 2:30—at 0dd Fel- Hall, 40z Beltrami 1. 0. 0. F. Bemidji Lodge No. 119 Regular meeting nights —every Friday, 8 o'clock at 0dd Fellows Hall, 402 Beltrami. I O. O. F. Camp No. 24. Regular meeting every second and fourth Wednesdays at 8 o'clock, at Odd Fellows Hall. Rebecca Lodge. Regular meeting nights—first and third Wednesdays at 8 o'clock. —I. 0. O. F. Hall.\ T ALNIGHTS OF PHYTHIAS. Bemidji Lodge No. 168. Regular meeting = nights— every Tuesday evening at 8 o'clock—at the Eagles' Hall, Third street. LADIES OF THE MAC- CABEES. Regular meeting night last Wednesday evening in each month. MASONIC A, F. & A. M., Bemid}, 233. Regular meeting {7/ nights—first and third Wednesdays, 8 o’clock—at Masonic Hall, Beltrami Ave., and Fifth St. Bemidji Chapter No. 70, R. A. M. Stated convoca- tions—first and third Mon- days, 8 o'clock p. m.—at Masonic Hall, Beltrami Ave., and Fifth St. " Elkanah Commandery No. 30 . K. T. Stated conclave—se- comnd and fourth Fridays, § o'clock p. m.—at Masonic Temple, Beltrami Ave., and Fifth St. A O. E. 8. Chapter No. 171. YA\ Regular meeting nights— first and third Fridays, 8 o'clock—at Masonic Hall, Beltrami Ave., and Fifth St M. B. A. Roosevelt, No. 1523. Reg- ular meeting nights every second and fourth Thurs- day evenings ai. 8 o'clock in Odd Fellows Hall. M. W. A. Bemidji Camp No., 65012, 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. O. O, F, Hall at 8 p. m. P SONS OF HERMAN. Meetings held second and fourth Sunday afternoon of each month at 205 Beltrami Ave. T. BEAUDETTE Merchant Tailor Ladies' and Gents' Suite to Order. French Dry Cleaning, Pressing and Repairing a Specialty. 315 Beltrami Avenue Farm and Gity Loans Insurance Real Estate William C. Kiein ! » O’Leary-Bowser Bidg. 1 Phone 19. ‘Bemldjl, Lodge No., ., 'Wise or Innocent? § 5 He met her one-night at a-reception and asked her to go to the theater with him. She accepted. and. as they | liked each other, they went again later. Then it got to be a weekly occurrence. Finally he got to thinking that he was solid enough with her to go out be- tween the acts, and so he did. For several weeks he worked this and met with no rebuff. But she was thinking a lot, even though she wasn’t saying anything. . One evening she said, *“Why don't Yyou go to the smoking room to smoke instead of going to the lobby?” “15715' there a smoking room in- side?” he asked. “Of' course. . You always say that you are going out to smoke, and ! it seems so useless to have to take your hat and coat every time. And if you thought of it beforehand you could buy those cigarettes that you seem to like—the ones that smell like cloves, you know—before you come.” He is wondering if she is as wise as it seems or as innocent as it appears.— Boston Traveler. House Numbers. Before the advent of the house num- ber only business signs, coats of arms and house names marked the different buildings. Then, in London, for in- stance, one had to look for Mr. Jones, should he desire to call upon that man, in, say, “Whitechapel, not far from the Blue Boar.” It is thought Berlin in 1795 was the first city to employ the numbering system. The German innovators” did not put odd numbers on one side of their streets and even numbers on the other. They merely started from the Brandenburg gate and numbered straight ahead..taking no account of change of street. As they proceeded, therefore, the num- bers grew higher, the height to which they attained being limited only by the supply of houses. The first house they numbered was No. 1, the last the number that betokened the total num- ber of houses in -the city.—St. Louis Republic. An Author’s Odd Aversion. The “stolc” meal had attractions for Edward Fitzgerald, who, among his other peculiarities, hated to see peo- ple enjoying their food. On one oc- casion, after a man had finished a glass of wine in his company and gone out of the room, Fitzgerald remarked, with disgust: “Did you notice how he took up his glass? I am sure he likes it Bah!” Fitzgerald himself, accord- ing to his biographer, Mr. A. C. Ben- son, “lived practically on bread and fruit, mostly apples and pears, even a turnip, with sometimes cheese or but- ter and milk puddings. But he was not a bigoted vegetarian. To avoid an appearance of singularity he would eat meat at other houses and provided it in plenty for his guests. But the only social meal he cared to join in wag ‘tea, pure and simple, with brear and butter. " Where Every One Is a “Majesty.” ‘Who are the politest people in Eu- rope? If common speech is any crite- rion, surely the Spaniard must carry off the palm. The author of *“Heroic Spain” tells of many high flown phrases still in common use. You bid farewell with “Beso a V. la mano” (1 kiss your band) or “A los ples de V.” (1 am at your feet). The Usted. short- ened to V.. with which you address high or low, 18 a corruption of “your majesty.” The love of abbreviations is a curious trait in a people with such léisurely ways: thus a row of cabalistic letters ends a letter: 8. 8. 8. Q. B. 8. M., which means that your correspondent kisses your hand—*“s" seguro servidor que besa su mano.” A King Who Could Change the Wind. King Erricus of Sweden publicly confessed that he was a sorcerer and magician. He was the owner of an enchanted cap, which he pretended en- abled him to control the spirits and change the direction of the winds at pleasure. So-firmly did his subjects believe in the supernatural powers of their ruler that when a storm arose they would exclaim, “Ah, the king 's again wearing his magic cap!"—Lon- don Mail. Not Carrying It. An Irishman met with an accident, but was only away from work two days. *“Why didn’t you stay home for a week?’ a friend asked him. *“Yor were carrying an insurance policy, weren’t you?”’ “I was not.” said the Irishman. “The day of the accident I left it home ir the bureau drawer.” Synonym. “Say,” asked Coakley, looking up from the letter he was writliig, “‘do You know any expression that means the same as ‘talking shop? * “Well,” replied Joakley. “there is ‘“tonsorial emporium’ and likewise ‘hair cutting parlor.’ "—Catholic Standard and Times. Explaining It. Mrs. Posey—Mercy, -Hiram! Them awful society women dress like they was goin’ swimmin’. Mr. Posey—O’ course, Jerusha. Hain’t you heard th't in th’ soshul swim th’ wimmen try to outstrip each other>—Milwaukee News. As Usual. Jokely—I got a batch of aeroplane Jokes ready and sent them out last week. Boggs—What luck did you have with them? Jokely—Oh, they all came fiying back.—Lippincott’s. Sensitive. Stranger (in Pittsburg)—Do you have aldermen at large in this city? Native (irritably)—Oh, try that stoff in vaudeville!—Puck. ng Y ‘Remember always to arch the throat; amost as a borse does. If a woman talking to some one turns her shoul| ders slightly from him and then glances back the line of the throat is always good. For myself I have at all times thought the delicate line from. the. tip of a womans ear to the tip of her shoulder one of the most exquisite of | . the feminine body. Many artists; 1 believe, would agree with me. So re- member what I say, dear ladies—do not spoil or hide ‘that lovely contour with high linen collars or boning. Wear low collars, or if these are mot becoming to you at least dress your throats comfortably. Always carry the chin high. If while you are still quite young you can remember to thrust the chin upward and forward—not to an absurd degree, of course—you will not with advancing years have to fear those soft rolls of flesh above the col- lar that add so much to a woman’s ap- parent age.—Anna Pavlova in Har- per’s Bazar. Power of Words. “Ifor me,” writes Lafcadio Hearn in the ‘‘Japanese Letters of Lafcadio Hearn,” - “words have color, form, character. manners, gesticulations; moods. humors, eccentricities; have tints, tones, personalities.” P, A good instance of this power ap- pears in a description of Patti’s sing- ing: “There was a great dim pressure, a stifling heat, a whispering of silks.‘ a weight of toilet perfumes. Then came an awful hush—all the silks stop- ped whispering. And there suddenly sweetened out through that dead, hot | they have they air a clear, cool, tense thread gust of | melody- unlike any sound I ever heard before save—in tropical nights—from |3 the throat of a mocking bird. It was ‘Auld Lang Syne’ only, but with never |} a tremolo or artifice, a marvelous, au- daclous simplicity of utterance.” Human Fack Horses. “A Chinese coolie,” said a mission- ary, “will carry 107 pounds forty miles a day over difficult and mountainous roads. His pay will be threepence per day, and on this he will live well enough, eggs, for example, costing only a penny a dozen in inland China. “There is no porter on earth equal to the Chinese coolie. The coolies who carry Szechuen tea into Tibet travel over snow choked mountain passes 7,000 feet above the sea with loads of 432 pounds of compressed tea on their patient backs. “Salt, coal, calico, copper and ter. are carried by coolies thousands of miles. The express coolie, with his light load of 107 pounds, swings along at the rate of forty miles a day. The accommodation coolie, with 160 pounds, does thirty miles. The various freight coolies, loaded - respectively with 200 pounds, 300 pounds and 400 pounds. do twenty, fifteen and ten miles.—Pear- son’s Weekly. < y An Oyster Gormandizer. “When should oysters be eaten?” Our question would have received a ready answer from a certain seven- teenth century worthy. Henry Has- tings, second son of the Earl of Hun- tingdon, was the man. An invitation to his parlor and the guest would have met an oyster table where his host ate oysters twice a day—wet or fine—from Jan, 1 onward to Dec. 31. In other respects he might be called “eccen- tric.” His great ball, for instance, was strewn with marrowbones and full of hawks' perches, hounds, span- fels and terriers,” and all his old hats— and here 1is a use for the old hat—were stuffed with pheasant eggs. When he died in 1650 he had missed his century by one year. Oysters three times a day and he might have achieved the distinction. He was a sportsman.— London Chronicle. ONLY ONE “BEST” Bemidji People Give Credit Where Credit Is Due. People of Bemidji who suffer with sick kidneys and bad backs want a kidney remedy that can be depender upon. The best is Doan’s Kidney Pills, a medicine for the kidneys only, made from pure roots and herbs, and the only one that is backed by cures in Bemidji. Here’s Bemidji testi- mony: Mrs. Henry Revor, 808 Bemidji Ave., Bemidji, Minn,, says: “I con- sider Doan’s Kidney Pills by far the best medicine I have ever known of for disordered kidneys. For weeks at a time I suffered from backache and it seemed that I could get noth- ing that would relieve me perma- nently. Doan’s Kidney Pills how- ever, acted differently than any other preparation I had ever tried and made me feel likeanother person. I feelcertain that this preparation has completely driven kidney trouble from my system.” 3 For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, New York, sole agents for the United States. Remember the naem—Doan’s— and take no other. . @ORENVINGEN g GUARANTEE OF QUALITY A'i!b PUR 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 bitter and acid of natural leaf tobacco. AMER]CAN SNUFF COMPANY, 111 Fifth Avenue, New York, N. Y. They have faces, ports, |3 Get the Pioneer For Nothing - HOW? Save l. 0. U. Notes These notes or trade marks will be accepted for their listed value in payment for the Pioneer. If you are unable to pay the full amount with these 1. 0. U. notes or Trade Marks, you may pay the small differ= ence in cash. i : The labels and wrappers on these goods are the same as money to you. Look Here! We’ll Do More For $5.00 in wrappers and labels and I. Q. U. notes we’ll give you a receipt for the Daily Pion- eer for 1 year and a . $1.50 cash order on any merchant who adver- tises in the Pioneer. Cut out the Coupon, fill in your name and send it to us. It’s the Coupon you’ll find in another place in this paper under the head==-- EXTRA SPECIAL. . DO IT NOW A partial list-==More to follow STOLLWERCK BROS. * Cocoa, (Old round can), 30c sige Save front of wrapper.........3-4¢ Cocoa, (Gold brand), 25c size Save front of Wrapper........5-8¢ Cocoa (Milk) 26¢ size Save front of wrapper........5-8¢c Chocolate (Goldbrandckng) 25csize Save front of ‘Wrapper Chocolate (Princess) 26c size Save front of wrapper Chdcolate (Maltese Cross) bc size Save front of ‘wrapper Chocolate (Maltese Cross) 10c size Save front of wrapper. . Chocolate (Gold brand sweet)5csize Save front of wrapper Chocolate(Gold bd. Sweet)10c size Save fron: of wrapper. . Chocolate(Gold bd. sweet) 15¢ size Save front of wrapper...... ..3-8¢ Chocolate(Gold bd. sweet) 25c size Save front of wrapper........5-8c Chocolate(Gold bd. milk)5c size Save front of wrapper Chocolate(Gold bd. milk) 10c size Save front of wrapper Chocolate(Gold bd. milk) 15c size Save the front of wrapper. Chocolate(Gold bd. milk) 25c size Save front of wrapper. . Chocolate (Silver bd. sweet) 5c size Save front of WIapper........ Chocolate(Silver bd. sweet)10csize Save front of Wrapper........ Chocolate(Silver bd. sweet)15c size Save front of wrapper........ Chocolate (Silver bd. sweet)20c size Save front of ‘Wrapper...... Chocolate (Silver bd. milk) 5c size Save front of ‘wrapper Chocolate (Silver bd. milk) 10c size Save front of ‘wrapper Chocolate(Silver bd. milk) 15¢ size Save front of wrapper........ Chocolate (Silver bd. milk) 20c size Save front of ‘wrapper. . W. F. McLAUGHLIN & CO. (XXXX) 15¢ size Save front of package..... (Blue Shield) 30c size Save band from packagc......1-2¢ E. S. BURNHAM COMPANY ¢ 3 size Save back of packoge.... Clam Chowder 10c size Save wrapper Clam Chowder 25c size Save Clams 10¢ Clams 25e Bouillon 10c Bouillon 25¢ Bouillon 50¢ Wine and Iron 25c¢ Wine and Iron b50c ...1-8¢ Coffee Coffee oo ie 1-2€ Jellycon 10c Canned Canned Canned Canned Clam Clam Clam Beef, Beef, Wrapper. .. ... size Save wrapper.... size Save wrapper.... size Save front of carto; size Save froat of carton.. ... size Save front of carton... 2 1-2¢ size Save label from bottle..........1 1-4¢ size Save label from bottle..........2 1-2¢ 1) THE CELLULOIDSTARCH COMPANY Celluloid Starch (laundry 5c size Save front of box.. Celluloid Starch (laundry)1l0c size Save front of box \ ANGUS WATSON & COMPANY Skipper Sardines (In oil) 15c¢ size Save complete side label on can.3-4c Skipper Sardines (In sauce)15csize Save complete side label on can.3-4c Sea Queenbd.(DressedCrab)lécslze Save complete side label on can..lc Ssn\. Herringlets(in sauce)20¢ size save‘ complete side label on can..lc Herringlets (In olive oil) 20c¢ size Save complete side label on can.:1lc¢ . THE KAISER MANUFACTURING CO. LTD. Kaiser ‘Wax Padandcleaner10csize Save top Of DOX.. .:esse eio oo o10 oxe 1-2€ &

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