Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, September 14, 1911, Page 3

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THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1911 QraTe OF OHIO, C1TY OF TOLEDO, ?“ Lucas COUNTY. o Frank J. Chener makes oath that be is senior partner of the firm of F. J. Cheney & Co.. doing bu iness in the City of Toledo, | County and State aforesaid, and rhn aaid\ firm will pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED | DOLLARS for each and every case of | Catarrh that cannot be cured by the use ()f Hall's Catarrh Cure FRANK J. CHENEY. efore me and subscribed in my s 6th day of December, 1886, | A. W.GLEASON. ’\OTAR} PuBLIC Sworn 1o b presence, t Co.. loledu v, rugg] | T R B or consttpation | T. BEAUDETT & Merchant Tailor | Ladies' and Gents' Suite to Order. Frenct Dry Cleaning, Pressing and Repairing & Specialty. 315 Feltrami Avenue | MISS CLARA ELIZABETH FISK Teacher of Elocution and Physicial Culture Res. 1013 Dewey Ave. Phone 181 Erickson Rest & Lunch Room 205 Beltrami Ave, Open Day andNight Meals at All Hours | with no rebuff. But she was thinking | instead of going to the lobby ?" . could buy those cigarertes that you ' Boston Traveler. | and pumbered straight ahead. taking | no account of change of street. As Wise or Innocent? | He met her one might at a recepflunl and asked her to go to the theater’ with him. She accepted. and. as they | liked each other, they went again later. | Theu it gol to be a weekly occurrence ‘ Finally be got to thinking that be was | solid enough with her to ge out be- | tween the acts, and so he did. For| several weeks he worked this and met a lot, even though she wasn't saying | anything. | Ope evening she said. “Why don't | you go to the smoking room to smoke “ls—is there a smoking room in side?” he asked. “Of course. You always say that| you are going out to smoke, nnd' it seems so useless to bhave to take| your hat and coat every time. And| it you thought of it beforehand 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.— House Numbers. Before the advent of the house pumn 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 frow | the Blue Boar.” It is thought Berlin | in 1795 was the first city to employ the numbering system. The German | innovators did pot put odd numbers | on one side of their streets and even | pumbers on the other. They merely | started from the Brandenburg gate | they proceeded, therefore, the num bers grew higher, the height to which | they attained being limited only by | First Mortgage| " LOANS ON CITY AND FARM PROPERTY | Real Estate, Rentals Insurance William 0. Kiein O’Leary-Bowser Bldg. Phone 19. Bemidji, Minn. rope? | farewell with *“Beso a V. la mano” (1 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. | the mere economy of space. THE BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEER . MODERN OCEAN LINERS. Their Double Hulls Defy Hidden Rocks and Derelicts. Ip the bands of a skiliful marine | urchitect much more bas been accom- plisbed with steel construction than The safe Ly of vessels at sea has beeu enor- ! mously increased until in the highest type of modern ocean liners the ele- | went of danger is virtually eliminated The marvelous ingevuity displayed throughout this great fabric of steel in guardiug against every possible con- tingency ot the sea comes to the av. erage landsman as a surprise. A great liner of 50.000 tous may be coutrolled by a single hand. The complicated machinery for safeguarding the ship {8 practically automatic. The bottom of the great hull of the liner is doubled, the innper shell being strong enough to float the ship even if the outer bull be completely torn away. It Is exceedingly unlikety that water would ever reach this inner shell through accident to the main hull n should strike a hidden object it will provs absolutely invulnerable, The shipwrecks of the past caused by run ning upon hidden rocks, derelicts and fcebergs are thus completely eliminat led =M B Cea In Cassier's Magazine. When Parasols Began. Parasols when they first came info use must have been cumbersome. Henri Estienne, writing in 1578, speaks of a parasol as capable gener- ally of sheltering four persons from the sun. And when they Jdiminished in circumference the material still re- mained of the heaviest. Red velvet parasols, with beavy gold fringes, were carried by ladies of fashion in the days of Louis XIV. At that time it was possible when crossing a bridge in Paris to hire a parasol at one end and deposit it at the other, the charge for the accommodation being a sou. Under the regency fashion went to the other extreme. Men's parasols folded into the shape of a three cor- | nered hat and could thus be carried Where Every One Is a “Majesty.” Who are the politest people in Eu- 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 kiss your hand) or “A los pies de V.” (1 am at your feet). The Usted. short- ened to V.. with which you address | high or low, is a corruption of “your majesty.” The love of abbreviations | is a curious trait in a people with | such leisurely ways: thus a row or cabalistic letters ends a letter: 8. S. ‘ Q. B. §. M. which means that your correspondent kisses your mmd—"r seguro servidor que besa su mano." | Babel.— elegantly under the arm. Ladies’ par- asols were hinged, so that they could slip into the pocket, for ladies had pockets then.—London Spectator. Longest Indian Word. The longest Indian word on record is the following, that was printed in an Indian Bible in 1661: Wutappesittukqussunnoohwehtunk- quoh. It signifies *‘kneeling down to him.” When the Rev. Cotton Mather, primi- tive Boston’s Puritan pastor, first saw this consolidated phrase it prompted him to jestingly observe that the words of the language must have been growing ever since the dispersion at New York Telegram. W0 FOR FIVE 2 Pencils For 5 Cents ®D CABER Two nickle pencils, pencils that are not only as good as any you ever bought for 5 cents, but they are better. They contain a fine grade of lead, you can sharpen SPEGIAL FOR SCHOOL We have been trying to secure an excellent value for school purposes, that would meet every require- We now believe we have it and in order to introduce them we will sell them to the ment of the stude and won'’t break off. “The Scholastic”’ nts. trade at 2 for 5 cents. BEMIDJI PIONEER SCHOOL SUPPLY STORE the | kind that ©'Connell’'s Wonderfu/ Oratory. Daniel O'Connell, the lrish orator, i spoke in Covent Garden, London, many Yyears ago, and John Coleman, an old English actor, pictured him as fol- lows: *“The audience hung spellbound on the words of the great orator. His | resonant and magnificent voice, flavor- ed with its rich Hibernian accent, beld both soul and sense captive. As for me, my Celtic blood took fire, my heart throbbed with pussionate indig- nation or melted into tears as he dwelt upon the wrongs of my. belove« country. Never, surely, was such . born orator! Stern men cried one | moment and laughed the next. As he approached the end of his ora- | tlon, carried away by his theme, he| took his wig off (a brown ‘jazey’) pm it in his hat and mopped his beauti- | ful baid brow with a great flaming! JOHN G. ZIEGL.EER “THE LAND MAN® INSUR A NCE-==Acident REAL ESTATE IN ALL ITS BRANCHES FARM LANDS BOUCHT AND SOLD Co to Him for Farm Loans Fire=- Life- R o P Office--Odd Fellows B-ilding YOUR OWN HOME? 1" not let us build you one on monthly payments crimson bandauna. peared so that no one seemed to think it absurd | | OF even incongruous.” | but the precautiou is taken so that i% | - . “What constitutes a first class socfe ty drama?” “Three acts, six gowns and nine epy Strange to say, they never laughed in the wrong place, though once at least he afforded them a unique opportunity. i grams "—Louisville Courier-Journai = The action ap:| or we will pay off your old natural and appropriate The Whole Show. Be Iraml Go. Saving and Building Association . LAHR, Pres. W. C. KLEIN, Secy. | | o"lces Rooms 5 and 6, O’Leary.BOwser Block | | This store will close at 12:30 tomorrow and will remain closed the rest of the day. FAIR - BARGAINS Thursday Friday and Saturday We offer a large collection of merchandise at a nominal price. We need the room so practically give the goods away. 100 pairs of Ladies $3.50 and $4.00 Pingree Shoes, limit, one pair to a customer, to close at a 98 i o o BE + d cdof Sl & oo b C 200 pair of Girls’ Shoes, values up to $2.50, $l 19 sizes 11 to 2, to close at a pair Children’s Hoeds, values up to $1.50, to close greaeh . 2 s 5 4w @ s 15¢ 39¢ 51 Dress Goods, 500 yards 50c, 60c and 65¢ Dress Goods to close at a vard Dress Prints, 1000 yards best dress prints to closeatayard . . . . . . . 1-2 Price Remnants 1-2 Price 2 Coat Bargai‘ns $9.50 Ladies’ Black Caracul Coat Ladies’ Brown Cloth Coat $8.60

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