Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1911. THE BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEER (Copyright, 1811 FASHION'S LATEST CREATION | RAILROAD TIME GARDS | GRAY HAIR MAKES SO0 RAILROAD 1€2 East Bound Leaves 9:4 162 West Bound Leaves 4:3 1 East Bound Leaves 2:4 est Bound Leaves 10:38 GREAT NORTHERN Bound Leaves 3:30 p. Bound Leaves 12:08 p. st Bound Leaves 3:42 a. t Bound Leaves 1:20 orth Bound Arrives 7:4 h Bound Leaves 6:3 m. m. m. 5 a. 7 p. 5 p. a. West Leaves at 9: BEHEER R th Bound Leaves 8:15 th Bound Leaves 6:10 h Bound Leaves 11.35 Bound Leaves 4:20 outh Leaves at 7:30 North Leaves at 6:00 Minn. Red Lake & Man. orth und Leaves 3:35 p. m. 23 nd Leaves 10:30 a. m. a. a. D a. a. D innesota & Internationmal a. p . a. a. a | PRCFESSIONAL i CARDS | S | ARTS MISS GLARA ELIZABETH FISK Teacher of Elocution and Physicial Culture Res. 1013 Dewey Ave. MRS, J. A THOMPSON 317 America Avenue will care for chil- up to 10 years of age. Rates able. Telephone 545. Phone 18! HARRY MASTEN Piano Tuner crmerly o Radenbush & Co.of St. Pau Instructor of Vioin, Piano, Mando- in and Brass Instruments. Music furnished for balls, hotels. weddings, banquets. and all occasions. Terms reassnable. All music up to date. HARRY MASTEN, Plano Tuner Room 36, Third fioor, Brinkman Hotex Telephone 535 DENTISTS R. D. L. STAN1UKN DENTIST Office in Winter Bleck R. J. T. TUOMY | DENTIST | Ist National Bank Build’g. Telephone 230 ? i DR. G. M. PALMER 1 DENTIST | Miles Block ! Evening Work by Appointment Only | | R. J. F. PETERSON | DENTIST ! Office in Miles Block [ LAWYERS RAHAM M. TORRANCE LAWYER Telephone 560 Miles Block H. FISK i ATTORNEY AT LAW Office over City Drug Store YOU LOOK OLD Use Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur and Your Gray Hair Will Quickly Vanish. Gray hair is a mark of age and nothing that can be said as to its beauty will offset the disadvantages of this mark of age set upon your brow. Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Hair Remedy darkens the hair and restcres it to its youthful beauty. Our grand- mothers and their grandmothers be- fore them used sage and sulphur for darkening their hair. Nothing has ever been found more effective for this purpose than these two time- honored remedies, but Wyeth, a mod- ern chemist, has combined the two with other ingredients, which makes a delightful dressing for the hair., and which not only removes every, trace of dandruff but promotes the growth of the hair. It also stops the hair from falling out, and makes it beautiful. All druggists are authorized to re-, fund the money if it fails to do ex- actly as represented. Don’t neglect your hair and den't 're-sor( to old-time hair dyes. Get a bottle of Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur from your drugg today, and notice the difference in your hair after a few days’ use. This preparation is offered to the public at fifty cents a bottle, and is recommended and sold by all drug- gists. PHYSICIANS AND SURCEONS R. ROWLAND GILMORE PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office—Miles Block | with safety breaks. runs before each | DR E A SHANNON, M D passenger train, carrying an inspector PHYSICIAN AND SURGECN Office in Mayo Block | ’hone 396 R. C. R. SANBORN PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office—Miles Block A. WARD, M. D. ¢ Over First National Bank. Phone 51 House No. 607 Lake Blvd. Phone 351 Phone 18 Lands 'TYR. A. E. HENDERSON PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON | Jver First National Bank, Bemidji, Minn. | | Office Phone 36. Residence Pone 72. R. E. H. SMITH PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office in Winter Block DR. E. H. MARCUM PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office in Mayo Block Residence Phone 21: INER W. JOHNSON PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON | Besidence 1113 Bemidji Ave. Phone 435 Offices over Security/Bank. Phone 130 C. 6. JOHNSON Loans Box 736, Bemidji, Minn. Office—Room No. 11, Bacon Block Res. Phone 397 | ap altitude of 15,665 feet. Stocks | VALUE OF A PAINTED DOG. The One Sir Edwin Landseer Put Ir His Brother’s Picture. The late Charles Landseer, the broth- er of Sir Edwin, gained his election as academician with a picture called “The Eve of the Battle of Edge Hill.” A curious and interesting story attaches to this picture. When it was nearly finished Edwin Landseer was asked by Charles to come »nd look at it and remarked that it tas a very good picture, but “how nice a spaniel would look in that corner.” Charles said. “Will you put it iu. then?" at which the master took up the brush and at once painted in a fine old English spaniel with some leather dispatch bags Iying on the ground bs him. The picture was duly exhibited and admired, the spaniel especially. but the dealer who bought it, being a sim ple man of business, bethought him that Sir Edwin's dog would be worth more than the whole picture. So he coolly cut it out and sold it. filling the place by a common dog copied from it. Beveral years afterward the owner of the picture showed Rir Edwin, with some pride, the picture in which he had painted the dog. but the great mas ter “declared he'd be hanged if ever he did that dog.” The picture was ex- amined more closely. and then the trick was found out.—Loudon Tatler. HIGHEST RAILWAY. This Cloud Piercing Road Crosses the Mountains of Peru. To the question. *“Which is the hizh est railway in the world?’ the answery is—the Central Railway of Peru. In other words. the highest point reached by any railway line is touched by this road, where the altitude of the raiix reaches 15.865 feet above sea level. To reach this point from sea level th. line passes through fifty-seven tunneis over a dozen principal bridges anc utilizes thirteen switchbacks, but bLa~ no gradient up to 4% per cent, nor | does it resort to rack propulsion. A hand car started at Ticlio will run unaided to Callao, the seaport. and. a~ a matter of fact, such a car, equipped | on the lookout for fallen rocks or othet | dangers. Ticlio, above referred to. i- | the highest station in the world, wiil | The next highest line in the world i~ that from Antofagasta. Chile. to Orurn jand La Paz, Bolivia. This line has | also the distinction of being the nar !rowest gauge line (two and one-half feet) for such a long distance. The highest point is at Collahuasi, where | the altitude is 15,809 feet, fifty-six feet lower than the Peruvian line.—New | York Press. | Ancient Tales of the Law. Of law and the “law’s delays” these | ancient tales are recorded: A woman vainly pleading her case | many times before Philip of Mace | donia received at every refusal the re | DIy that he “had not the time.” At | last her patience gave out and she said | to him. “Then cease to reign”” The | monarch, feeling that he had deserved i this rebuke, immediately listened to | her and rendered the justice that her | { case merited. | Anacharsis, the Scythian philosopher. speaking of the laws of Solon, said. | “They were like the web of a spider— | very good for holding the weak, but | allowing the strong to escape.” i A petty thief was being led to prison. Diogenes said to him: “Fool, why didn't you rob on a grand scale? Then it would have been you that would be sending 1 others to prison.” 1 Forgot His “First Aid.” “But how does she know that he doesn’t love her?” “She fainted away the other evening, and he didn't kiss her ‘before he hal- lered for help.”—Houston Post. NETZER’S PHARMACY Although we specialize on prescriptions ; and Pure Drugs we carry a line of sun- dries, Rubber Goods, Leather Goods and | Toilet Articles that are guaranteed to be of the highest grade, During Market Day we will have a special display that we will sell for half price. Remember this will be for one day only. | | i | | 1\ ;i Make this store your meet- ' ing place while in the city ! E. F. NETZER DRUGGIST Post Office Corner Phone 304 WE SERVE ALL KINDS OF HOT AND COLD DRINKS | gORENMACEN Shygy, _ We guarantee that Copenhagen Snuff is now and always has been absolutely pure snuff, that it complies with the laws of every State and all federal laws. American Snuff Company, 111 Fifth Ave., New York. When Your Finger-Tip Taps the Key—What Happens? \ Your most delicately sensi- @ tve nerves direct the most B delicately responsive mech- anism of the L. C. Smith & Bros. Typewriter (BALL-BEARING, LONG-WEARING) Key-lever, typebar, carriage (and shift, if you write capitals)—really all essential operating parts of the typewriter—leap into action and perform their functions with the perfect ease, smoothness and abso- lute precision of ball bearings, made and adjusted with scientific exact- ness. The nerves of this typewriter are sensitive to the nerves of your finger tips, and just as instantly responsive as the finger tips are to the brain. This immediate, smooth, sym- pathetic action, duplicated in no other writing machine, is easiest for the operator and most ad- vantageous to the machine. Both wear longer. Send for descriptive literasure L C. Sumn & Bros. TrPEWRIER CompaNt 420 Second Ave. S., Minneapolis,” Minn,