Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, July 14, 1911, Page 6

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For.a Galled Horse Try It After Others Fail 9 HANFORD’S Balsam of Myrrh For Galls, Wire Cuts, Lameness, Strains, Bunches, Thrush, Old Sores, Nail Wounds, Foot Rot Fistula, Bleeding, Etc. Etc. Made Since 1846, Ak Avbedy } » [Price 28¢, 50¢c and $1.00 All Dealers o.g usri.co. 800 No. 162 East Bound Leaves 9:54 a. No. 163 West Bound Leaves 4:37 p. No. 186 East Bound Leaves 2:45 p. No. 187 West Bound Leaves 10:38 a. Creat Northern No. 33 West Bound Leaves at"3:30 p. No. 34 East Bound Leaves at 12:08 p. No. 35 West Bound Leaves at 3:42 a. No. 36 East Bound Leaves at 1:20 a. No. 105 North Bound Arrivesat 7:40 p. No. 108 South Bound Leaves at 6:30 a Freight West Bound Leaves at 9:00 a. Freight East Bound Leaves at 3:30 p. Minnesota & International No. 32 South Bound Leaves at 8:15 a. No. 31 North Bound Leaves at 6:10 p. No. 34 South Bound Leaves at 11:35 p. No. 33 North Bound Leaves at 4:20 a. Freight South Bound Leaves at 7:30 a. Freight North Bound Leaves at 6:00 a. Minn. Red Lake & Man. No. 1 North Bound Leaves at 3:35 p. No 2 South Bound Arrives at 10:30 a. 8888 gs888888 8883888 PROFESSIONAL CARDS ARTS HARRY MASTEN Piano Tuner ermerly o Radenbush & Co.of St. Paul ; Instructor of Violhn, Piano, Mando- ' lia and Brass Instruments. Music furnished for balls, hotels, weddings, banquets, and all occasions. Terms reasonable. All music up to date. HARRY MASTEN, Plano Tuner Room 36, Third floor, Brinkman Hotes. Telephone 535 M. COOK L2 CIVIL ENGINEER Room 9, O'Leary-Bowser Bldg. Phone 23 E. REYNOLDS ¢ Architect and Realestate Broker Offices—Room 9, O'Leary-Bowser Bldg. Phone 23 PHYSICIANS AND SURCEONS R. ROWLAND GILMORE PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office—Miles Block R. E. A. SHANNON, M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGECN Office in Mayo Block Phone 396 Res. Phone 397 R. C. R. SANBORN PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office—Miles Block A. WARD, M. D. ® Over First National Bank. Phone 51 House No. 60 Lake Blvd. Phone 351 R. A. E. HENDERSON PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Over First National Bank, Bemidji, Minn. Office Pbone 36. Residence Pone 72. R. E. H. SMITH PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office in Winter Block R. E. H. MARCUM PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office in Mayo Block Phone 18 Residence Phone 213 INER W. JOHNSON PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Residence 1113 Bemidji Ave. Phone 435 Offices over Security!Bank. Phone 130 EW PUBLIC LIBRARY "Open daily, except Sunday and Mon- dlylltalZa m.ltofip.m..7w8p m. Hmepm Monday 7to 9 p. TRICE MILLS, Librarian. WOMEN TO SAVE BIRDS Byron Williams Urges Movement to Protect Harmless Feathered Tribes of Country. WANTS WOOD MUSIC PRESERVED By BYRON WILLIAMS. NCLE SAM has us all on the carpet. He is lecturing us, especially women. He wants the fair sex to exert its in- fluence against the extermination of our birds. Three American game birds already are extinct, and unless women teach their boys to respect and pre- serve the birds we will soon be with- out fourteen others. ; In the movement now under way three great associations have banded together. They are the Wild Life Pro- tective assoclation of New York, the National Assoclation of Audubon So- cletles and the League of American Sportsmen. Women are especially ap- pealed to and requested not to wear millinery bearing bird ornaments. Mothers are requested to begin a sys- tematic effort to educate the boys of the country away from a desire to make collections of birds’ eggs or to destroy birds whether in nest or full grown. The birds’ egg collection habit among boys is especially to be regretted. A boy is a natural born collector. He will collect anything from itch to to- bacco tags, and he does his work thor- oughly. When he starts in to acquire a collection of birds’ eggs he blots out the life of at least one bird of all the kinds of birds in his vicinity. And the craze does not die out with the generations. Our grandfathers had the collection habit. So did our fa- thers. We now have it, and our chil- dren will follnw the tendency. I recall distinctly the time I had the craze to collect birds’ eggs. 1 was getting along nicely and had quite a medley of eggs when one day I climbed a tree In our yard to secure a bluejay’s egg from a newly made nest. That was one of the many mis- takes of my life, but because of the many it has not been forgotten be- cause as compared with some of the others it stands out in bas-relief, like a fat woman in a polka dot dress at a Shakers’ picnie. The bluejay . were after me. By the time I fully realized what had hit me 1 bad been attacked from the north, AREYE R THE -BLUE JAYS WERE AFTER ME. south, east and west, and, so far as boxing the compass was concerned, those blamed bluejays could do it up side down and backward. They hit me from every conceivable angle un- til, howling with pain, I fell rather than slid down that tree trunk and disappeared in my mother’s arms. If all bird were as scrappy as blue- Jays mothers would not need to teach their boys to be thoughtful and to protect the feathered songsters. But they are not. The meadow lark, with her nest beneath a gooseberry bush, will felgn lameness and, with cries of distress, will limp away, enticing you to pursue her from the vicinity of her nest, but should you desire to despoil it she will exhibit her sorrow merely In cries of distress. And most birds are Inoffensive or nonretaliatory when you rob their nests. Hence boys must be taught to pro- tect the nests and to love the birds. The good women of this land who think, who love home and nature and all the things that are worth while will be strong in their resolve never to wear bird feathers upon their hats and by this action influence more friv- olous feminine creatures to follow their example. Do not argue that the blrd upon the hat is dead and you might as well buy it and wear it as any woman. Rather think that the purchase of this bird hat will give place for another like it. Tell the milliner you do not ap- prove of such bhats trimmed with feathers and bodies. She will take the hint and quit buying trimmings of this character. Don’t let it be said of you that “she wore a dead bird on her bat.” ‘When woman learns to control her- gelf even against her own pride, even against her love for self decoration and display, then it no longer will be profitable for hunters to kill birds for milliners. Aigrets, that leave a bird to die of a slow and awful death, will no longer be jauntily worn by -women who would have the world belleve they are jnnocent and pure and unde- filed. A EOPEFUI. SEEBSAGE TOWISI%ASLP 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. DENTISTS R. D. L. STAN'1UN DENTIST Office in Winter Bleck DR. J. T. TUOMY DENTIST 1st National Bank Build’g. Telephone 230 R. G. M. PALMER DENTIST [Miles Block Evening Work by Appointment Only OUR TYPEWRITERS To Sell Every One a Big Snap 1.—Wide Carraige Smith Premier No. 7314— Model 8. o T84 $25.00 2—Smith Premiers—Model 2—and Model 4 $2 5 00 L & I Subscribe For The Pioneer Spreads at Foster at your choice at AN AFTER INVENTORY SALE| The Bazaar Store We have just completed our Inventory and are ready to resume our regular work. Among the many | bargains we have to offer are the following: L Bed Spreads Regular $1 25 and Another shipment of Lingiere Tail- i ored and Middy waists re- $l OO gular $1.25 waists at. . Misses Muslin Drawers Regular 65¢ Grade iegt]lar 35¢ G.raée 2 5 c anals . 1 lot purses values to $5 00 $l OO Fancy Ribbons Handsome ribbons in Checks, Floral Designs, Stripes, Pursian etc. Regular 35¢ at 250 Ribbon lacers $1 00 $l OO Waists Wash Silk Lacers for ngerle 10 in White, Blue, Pink at ¢ Cords | Trimming cords in colors at % per yard . . . S 50 ‘ o(c¢ 1 lot Turkish Towels *l 1 lot Turkish Towels () S (o Porch Furnishings |ac' "ot Tt | Colored Burlaps at at . . Fancy Tickings, Khaki cloth' and tapestry. THE b Striped Porch Awning ~..15¢| Curtain Nefs - |- 250 White and Ecru Nets, excel- 50 ¢ lent value 72 in at Also laces and bands for trimming same. H— BAZAAR STORE| Next Door to Security Bank i B | SO S

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