Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, October 6, 1911, Page 7

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OPpredu v vurest 1 VUBLUUL LUl VP a1 Cassiss ———— — The Whole Structure of Western Civilization. i i | i { i ~MAY COPYRIOHT BY UNDERWIOD 8 ONDE TRUEEN.VICTORIA! FPhotograph of King Alfonso by American Press Association. Nearly every country in Europe is menaced by interval disturbances. The situation of unrest recalls the 1848 period. when half the monarchs lost their thrones. Conditions are perhaps worst in Spain, where the labor move- ment has assumed revolutionary proportions and martial law has been invoked. Extraordinary precautions have been taken in Madrid. and the policemen have been armed with carbines. There is fear of a monarchist rising in Portugal. The assassination of Stolypin has thrown Russia into a ferment. England has many local strikes. while the Irish railway systems are at a standstill. There has been much rioting in Budapest. The situation in Vienna is 50 serious that business is paralyzed and trocps patrol the streets. An anti-militarist agitation prevails in Norway. THE SPALDING [ EUROPEAN PLAN | ‘ Duluth’s Largest and Best Hotel { | JOHN G. ZIEGLEER “THE LAND MAN® Fire=- Life- INSURANCE DULUTH MINNESOTA || More than £100.000.00 recently €xpended on improvements. 250 rooms, baths. 60 sample rooms. Ever: dern f i convenience: Luxurious and delightful || restaurants and buffer, Flemisk Koom, \ private ==AcCident Palm Room, Men's Grill. Colonial Buffet: Magnificent lobby ard public rooms: Ballroom. banguet rooms and private dining reoms: Sun parlor and observa tory. Located in heart of business sec- tion but overlooking the harbor and Lake Superior. Convenient to everything. REAL ESTATE IN ALL ITS BRANCHES FARM LANDS BOUCHT AND SOLD Co to HWim for Farm Loans One of the Great Hotels of the Northwest | | | | Office--Odd Feliows Building [ | | the Key—What Happens? ) Your most delicately sensi-| ) tive nerves direct the most| ’ 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 |stood the test and stood it | What better proof of the merits of | States. Hemember the name-—Doan's—i aré take no other. | { | THEY ATE LEATHER. ' | their mothers’ kiichens may ask bow | | sliced it in pieces. | to render it by these means supple | i and ten { the hair and roasted or broiled it upon | | cut it into smail morsels and ate it. | pleased you. of Gascony.”—Cri de Paris. | brated walking match which was got | | milldam toward Newton Center. Iu | Massachusetts Jemmy. | ants at the Parker House. in Boston. Bemidji People Are Given Convine- ing Proof. No better test of any article can be made than the test of time and this is particularly true of a kidney Doan’s Kidney Pills have | medicine. well. this remedy could you demand, than‘ the statement of a Bemidji resident | who has been cured and has stayed cured? Read the following: Mrs. Ella Barett, 723 Irvine Ave., Bemidji, Minn., says: Doan’s Kidney Pills cured me three | vears ago I have been as free from | cidney trouble as if I had never had | My system was filled with uric% poisor that my kidneys failed to re-: 53 “Since and at times I was very ner- | I had dull pains in the small of my back and I knew that I was in need of a kidney medicine. n B TOu. Inaj Lort time after I begun using Doan’s tdney Pills, I improved and it aid| not take them long to restore me to| good health.” For sale by all dealers. Price 50 Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, Ney York, sole agents for the United " cents. The Way Morgan’s Pirates Prepared Their Tough Food. The infamous Captain Morgan an:d kis piratical crew were sometimes in tight places at Panama and on one occasion were reduced to eating their leather bags. “Some persons.” says one of the com- pany (Exquemelin. whose narrative is | reproduced in ~The Buccaneers In the | West Indies”). “who never were out of ! these pirates couid eat, swallow :mu! digest these pieces of leatber. so huard | end dry. unto whom 1 only answer | that could they once experience whil ! hunger—or. rather. famine—is they l would certainly tind the manner by | their own necessity, as the pirates did. | “For these first took the leather aud | Then they beat it | between two stones and rubbed it.often i dipping it in the water of the river; der. Lastly rhey scraped oif | be fire. And. being thus cooked. thev | belping it down with frequent gulps of water. which by good fortune they had right at band.” Coguelin Made the Audience Wait. | The architect Binet was a friend ot | the elder Coguelin. He delighted 1o | speak of a performance of “Cyriuo | de Bergerac” in which he went 1o praise the genial actor in his dressing room between acts. “l admire you above all,” he said to the actor, *in the couplets of the ‘Cadets of Gascony.'"” | At that moment word came to Cogue- Hn that the curtain was rising for mel mext act. “Wait. wait!" exclaimed Coquelin. ! “Leave me here alone with Binet.” “My friend.” he said to the arcnitect, “ft is with pleasure that 1 am now going to repeat the passage wnich has | For me yuur approva- | tion is worth more than the plaudits | of the whole house.” And while the audience waited be | gave anew for Binet alone the “Cadets | A’ Famous Walking: ‘Match. Thomas Bailey Aldrich .was one of the characters made notable in a cele up by Dickens during his second visit | to America. The match was a streteh | of about six miles over the Boston the articles of agreement the sign tures were stated to be: The Boston Bantam... ...J. R. Osgooa ames T. Fieids The Gadshill Gasper.......Charles Dickens At the dinner given by the contest after the fatigues of the match weve | over there were present besides the above: H. W. Longfellow . R. Lowell ‘W. Holmes B. Aldrich Hibernation. In the state known as “hibernation™ MYl GEwvEsan Market Day News A. E. Webster Will Give to the Bride 12 American Beauty Roses Grotte’s Variety Store A SPECIAL DISCOUNT will_ be made to the farmers on Market Day, October 12 This store jwi'l alsof give to the bride ard groom a fine blue and_white enameled - DISH PAN "IGrottes Variety}Store s 320 Minnesota Ave. - W. GXSCHROEDER Will pay the market priece for potatoes. We want to load and ship several cars that day, avd will pay market price for good clean stock. well assorted. No scabby ones. Fourth Off on men's and women’s Jef: ferson shoes Market Day. W. G. SCHROEDER A. A. D. RAHN oy One will give $5.00 in cash to the farmer driving the furthest distance to the Market Day. The Henrionnet Millinery Parlors | respiration practically ceases. Diges- | tion seems to follow respiration, and | the waste of tissue is reduced to the i smallest possible limit, the circulation {1n the meantime being only just sufi other writing machine, is easiest for the operator and most ad- * vantageous to the machine. Both wear longer. will give a { clent to sustain life. It has been as- certained that animals can endure the loss of tissue until it-amounts to 16 per_ cemt of their normal weight. Should the weight be reduced beyond HANDSOME FALL HAT to the farmer’s wife who brings lthe stored up fat within the body of Send for descriptive literature L C. SmitH & Bros. TYPEWRITER CoMPANY 420 Second Ave. S., Minneapolis, Minn, = the hibernating creséhres that sus- in the mo“; eggs Market Day tains them during the ‘many months of col@ weather. . o l—

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