Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, November 6, 1911, Page 4

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

SPORTS OF THE DAY Poees00c000008 |4 LODGEDOM IN BEMINI & f0000000006060060060 ¥ AIR RISKS BRING SMALL PAY Than $75 a Week. B R R R R RO R R RO ORCY A.0.U. W. TN : : . "OASH WITH o0PY WOMEN AT FOOTBALL GAMES pular supposition that avia- Plenty of Bemidji Readers Have This £ The 14 cent per word per Issue © Calendar of Sports for the Week, tion isa sort of Klondike where peo- 2 ; —_— DA T R o $:0.09890 98909990 ucurtss shotld Exiioss Enthisistsn | 515 910 have s oertain hndiae of Experience. Redular charge rate 1 cent per word per intertion. :No ad taken forles than nighte_sirst and .1 : . MONDAY. at Gridiron Contests, S8ay Some daring can go and snatch up a for-| . 13 cents. B : S LEB ‘Elelk:vwa? hall, Opening of Territorial Fair race meeting at Phoenix, Arizona. Meeting of the Virginia League of Baseball Clubs at Petersburg. Annual trials of the Independent Field Trial Club, at Hutsonville, II1, Annual- trials of Orange County Field Trial Club, Middletown, N. Y. TUESDAY. Annual bench show of the Bulldog Club of American, New York City. Meet of the Meadow Brook Steeple- chase Association, Belmont Park, New York. WEDNESDAY. Annual bench show of the San An- tonio Kennel Club, San Antonio, Tex- as. THURSDAY. Annual field trials of the National Beagle Club of America at Shadwell, Va. Opening of annual autumn golf tournament of the Country Club of Lakewood, N. J. Track meet of the Maricopa Auto- mobile Club at Phoenix, Arizona. Track meet of the San Antonio Au- tomobile Club, San Antonia, Texas. Edpcators. A few days ago'Miss Ida Comstock, dean of women at the University of should not cheer at football’ games. It {8 unwomanly. They should con- fine themselves to the singing .of col- banners.” . s Opinions on the subject from col- lege authorities and others of :coedu- cational institutions vary. In some instances the contention of Miss Com-, stock is upheld, in others opposed, and in others no speical opinien fs ex- pressed. The coeds of Butler coly lege, in Irvington, don’t believe it un- womanly to give vent to their feel- ings at a football game. One girl, who evidently expressed the feelings of a majority of them, exclaimed: “Go to a football game and not have a right to cheer! Why you might as well try to hold & sewing circle and tune is decidedly mistaken. read reports of big prizes won by aviators in Minnesota, following a- football game granted that it all goes to the flyers. at which the co-eds made considerable | That IS wrong; with few exceptions demonstration, declared that “women |the win. big cong seldom~exceeding $75 per week, the lege songs and waving of thelr colleB® | ysial arrangement being from $25 to $40 per week salary and $50 per day when they fly at meets. even where the very best American and foreign fiyers are concerned, in- flyer amy. better. the flyers of big concerns continuous improvement - of their which must, of course, always be of the very best—Iis necessary. with the: cost of the aeroplane, of People contests and take for do not get the prizes they are employed to fly by ns who pay them a salary, This is true ch celebrities as Brookins, ly and others. the lot- of the independent To keep up with machines— ‘What ‘yell’ at a football game, much of the girl who didn’t. attempt to keep the women from talk- ing. We girls can’t help it when we We couldn’t fi b B :::f s’:“;n:gee:n'f et we gimied | expenses are deducted. The fact that I can't running-it, keeping it in good condi- tion, salary of mechanic, and general- expenses, the prizes the aviator gets become rather small by the time the prizs are now given only to winners You tax the' kidneys—overwork them— 5 They can’t keep up the continual strain, £ g w The back gives out—it acres and pains; : G : Urinary troubles set in. Don't wait longer—take Doan’s Kidney Pills. Bemidji people tell you how they act. Mrs. Henry Revor, 808 Bemidji Ave., Bemidji, Minn., says: “I con- sider Doan’s Kidney Pills by far the best kidney ‘medicine I have ever known of. -For weeks at a time I suffered from backache and it seemed that I could. get nothing that would helieve me permanently. Doan’s Kidney- Pills however, acted differ- ently than any other preparation I had ever tried, making me feel like another person. I feel certain that this preparation has completely driven kidney trouble from, my sys- tem.” 5 For sale by all dealers. Price 50 WANTED—For U. S. WANTED — Dinilng room girl at WANTED—Bell boy at Rex Hotel. FOR SALE—Two These Want Ads work while you wai - They bring the “Buyer and Seller” together. They get what you want when you want it. ; They get rid of wkat you want when you want -it, > ., You may have something right now that you may wish to get rid of. Think it over, then act. s HELP WANTED Army—Able- bodied unmarried mev between ages of 18 and 35; citizens of the United States, of goo¢ character and témperate habits, who .can speak, read and write the English language. For information ap- ply to Recruiting Office at Scroe- der Building, Bemidji, or 217 Tor» the largest amount of classified Bemidji Lodge No. 1052, Regular meeting = m-nts— first end third Thursdays, 8 o'clock—at Masonic hall, Beltrami Ave. and " Fifts advertising. The: Courier-News covers North Dakota like a blank- et; reaching all parts-of the state the day of publication; it 18 the paper to use in order to get re- sults; rates one cent per word first C. 0. F. second and fourta Sunday evening, at 8 o'clock in basement of Catholic church. eves insertion, one-half cent per word succedding insertion; fifty cents per line per month. Address the Courier-News, Fargo, N. D. rey Building, Duluth, Minn. Lakeshore Hotel. Apply at once. FOR SALE good heating Talk to the people in prosperous £ DYH, DEGRLE OF HONOE. Meetink nights eves ¥ second and fourth Mondg 3 evenings, at Odd Fellows > Hall == North Dakota through the columns of the Grand Forks Herald; read every day by 30,000 in 150 towns and rural routes in the northern half of the state. Classified ads, for sale, help wanted, exchange, real estate, etc., for 1-2 cent a word each insertion. Send stamps to . The Herald, Grand Forks, N. D. stoves. One a large one for store F. 0. E. Regular meeting nights every Wednesday evening at 8"o'clock. Eagles hall. G A B Regular meetings—First cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, WANTED TO TRADE—What have and third_Saturday after FRIDAY. of contests makes the prospect none Players of the New York National league team sail for Cuba on barn- storming tour. Battling Nelson vs. Tommy Moore, 10_rounds, at Buffalo. SATURDAY. Close of the autumn race meeting of the Latonia Jockey Club. Harvard-Carlisle” Indians football contest at Cambridge, Mass. Yale-Brown foothall contest at New Haven, Conn. Princeton-Dartmouth football con- test at Princeton, N. J. Pennsylvania-Lafayette at Philadelphia. Army-Bucknell football contest at West Point. Navy-West Virginia football con- test at Annapolis. Cornell-Michigan football contest at Ithaca, N. Y. Chicago-Northwestern «<ontest at Chicago. Illinois-Indiana football contest at Indianapolis, Ind. football football FAMOUS TRACK MAY BE SOLD Gravesend Property ls Too Valuable to Lle Idle Until Racing Is Restored In New York. A statement made the other day bj one of the foremost turfmen of New York indicated that the associations which conducted horse racing there- nbout until this season had about giv- en up hope that the game. would ever again be even half way legitimatized. “Phil Dwyer, president of the Brook- lyn Jockey club, sald: £ “There will be a meeting of our club shortly, which shall decide whether we shall hold the Gravesend track, which we own, or shall give it up and allow it to be cut into build- ing lots. “I shall advise the Jockey club to sell the track, for, in my opinion, hosse racing cannot come back inside of two or three years. And I think we'd be better off getting some return from the track by way of a sale, rather than letting it lie idle.” Mr. Dwyer and other turfmen who were with him seemed very much de- pressed over the fact that the Gittins bill (which might have allowed racing to go on by exempting its directors from personal prosecution) had not been passed by the session of the legislature which concluded a few days ago at Albany. LEFT HALF-BACK GILBERT, One 6I‘wllcnnuln'u 8hifty Players. DON'T LIKE FORWARD PASS Violation of Elementary Principles of Football, Says “Mike” Murphy of Pennsylvanla. “Mike” Murphy, the veteran football trainer, is convinced that the forward pass s poor football. = “The point I make against the for- ward puss,” -sald Murphy, “Is that it 1s.a violation of the elementary prin- ciples of football. It never was or will be anything but a haphazard play, and it disorganizes any team’s defense. “I have always contended that what football spectators like to see 1s the ball moved down the field by a series of - well-executed -plays, cleverly de- signed and operated. The basketball feature In which the ball is thrown all over the fleld and passes back and forth from one team to another -is certainly not good football, 5 “I wouM like to see & return to some of the principles of the old | see how It can be construed unwom- anly to cheer at a game.” , PETE FRANCIS, too attractive.; Aviation does hold prides for ambitious young men. but very few of the kind imagined by the outside” public. In fact, there is a slough of despond awaiting the un- wary who venture into aviation with no other intention than to make mon- ey quickly.—From “Aviation for the Average Man” in the November Met- ropolitan Magazine. PILES CURED IN 6 TO 14 DAYS Your druggist. will refund money if PA- 70 OINTMENT fails to cure any case of Itching, Blind, Bleeding or Protrud- One of Yale's Best. Ty Cobb Despairs. Yet there must be moments when the great Ty Cobb despairs of mak- ing a winning baseball team all by himsslf. JPor XY/ e Too many coaches at Princeton? “Chick” Evans continues to golf it. He whom a paragraph offends 1s in deed of tender skin. ‘While the other coaches were shout- ing Stagg was thinking, When the frost is on the pumpkin ;; 15 also on the famous game of base- all. Occasionally a football coach varies the monotony by displaying a gleam of optimism. Football promises to kill more in its few short weeks than baseball did an summer long. Evidently Pennsylvania does not be- lleve in shutting out her football rivals-this year. Death has begun garnering his 1911 crop of football players. No country can afford this kind of waste. Even more excruciatingly funny than the review of football is an English- man’s review of baseball practice.’ ‘When bowling, semi-pro ball, foot- ball and a few others all come at once, what chance is there for wrest- ling? . “Doc” Roller says the outlook for thig year in the mat game is better than ever. He does not claim to be an optimist. One would have to go a lot further than eight judges to find a dissenting voice in the matter of Cobb’s suprem- acy in the American league. A-great critic comes out with the announcement that Stagg is coaching his team so that it can score on oppo- nents. First time in the history of the game. Ursinus is making a holler that a-| referee’s mistake cost them the Penn- sylvania game. The little college with only 200, students defeated the Red end Blue last year. Coach H: ett is said to be con- templating the use of lights at North- western. It was thought Hammett was troubled with too many lights and wanted a few heavies. CARELESS ABOUT APPENDI- CITIS IN CITY OF BEMIDJI. Many Bemidji people have stom- ach or bowel trouble which is likely to turn into appendicitis. If you have constipation, sour stomach, or gas on the stomach, try simple buck- thorn bark, glycerine; etc., as com- pounded in Adler-i-ka, the new Ger- man appendicitis remedy. E. N. French & Co., Druggists, state that A SINGLE DOSE of this simple rem- edy relieves bowel or stomach trou- ble almost INSTANTLY. -~ 2 S ing Piles in 6 to 14 days. s0c. Three Vaudeville Acts New York, sole agents for the Unit- ed States. Remember the name—Doan’ heating purposes and the other a good big wood heater. Apply at this Office. and take no other. YERTOAE 180 MODERN ROOMS HORSES FOR SALE—1 have 16 head heavy logging horses and harness. FOR SALE— covors for (ypewriters | oo AND SOLD—Second Tand you to trade for new standard pia-| no? Call at‘second hand store, 0dd Fellows Bldg. Weighing from 1400 to 1600, young and sound. Tom Smart. iron with handle. Bemidji Pionneer heavy sheet Apply at the Supply Store. WANTED—For engine or boiler re- pairing call or phone G. F. Robin- son, 320 Minnesota Ave. Phone 285. furniture. Odd Fellows building, across from postoffice, phone 129. Located in Heart of Business District $1.00 SINGLE RATE $1.00 EUROPLAN. RATE FOR TWO PERSONS $1.50 PRIVATE BATH AND TOILET EXTRA EVERY ROOM HAS HOT AND COLD RUNNING { WATER, STEAM._KEAT, GAS AND ELECTAIC LIGHTS, PORCELAIN ' LAVATORY, PARQUET FLOOR, AND TELEPHONE SERVICE TO OF- FICE AND CITY. ALL BATH ROOMS ARE FINISHED IN WHITE TILE WITH OPEN NICKEL PLATED PLUMBING. SEVEN-STORY FIRE- PROQF ANNEX NOW COMPLETED. _Opening at Brinkman Theatre To-night 1—The Latonss Comedy Novelty Comiqnes A Scream A Roar A Laugh. * 2—While There’s Life There’s Hope Feature Film (Imp) 3— Clarke & Temple The Man, The Maid and The Telephone 4—A Cow Boy For A Day (Bison) Big Feature Film 5—Rouse Smith, Comedian Comedy Novelty Act 6—Song—As The Train Rolled Away. 7—Overture—Louisiana Rag Three Vaudeville Acts Admission Children 10c Adults 25¢ Show Starts 7:10 EXTRACTS & SPICES and the famous TURKISH RETEDIES Place your order " with GHRIST M. JOHNSON Box 56 Nymore, Minn. Telephone 537 | Huffman Harris & Reynolds Bemidji, Minn. i Phone 144 Offers complete facilities for the Transaction of every form of Legitimate Insurance. Your Patronage Invited Real Estate, Loans,Bond$ and Rentals " For quick results list your property with us, The MODEL Dry Cleaning House 106 Second St. French Dry Cleaning Pressing Repairing ds Called For and NOTICE OF APPLICATION FOR TRANSFER OF LIQUOR LICENSE STATE OF MINNESOTA. County of Beltrami }ss Uity of Bemidil. Nouice is hereby ‘given, That application bas been made in writing to the city councll of satd cigy of Bemjdi and fled in my” office. praying for the transfer of a location of & | license 10 sell intoxicating liquors for the term terminating on Jany. 24ch 1912, by the following person. and at the following place | as stated in said application, respectively to-wit: THOS. McCARTHY Atand in the front room ground floor, of that certaln three-story frame bullding locatedon lot 18, block 13, orieinal townsite, Sald application will be heard and deter mined by _said Olty council of the City of Bemidji at the .councfl rooms in _the city hall In said City of Bemldjl, in Beltrami _county and State of ‘Minnesota, on Monday, the 15th day of Nov. ‘1911, at § o'clock . m ul"wu day. handand 1 tness my hand 'and seal of City of Be- midji this 30th. day of Oct. 1911, GEO. STEIN, Uity Clerk. 2 Mon. Oct. 30 Nov. 6. FOR " SALE—Rubber FOR SALE—Round 0ak Heater. Mrs. | FOR RENT—Two furnished rooms, FOR RENT—6-room house on Amer- stamps. The Ploneer will procure any kind of a rubber stamp for you on short notice. Geo. Kirk, 1109 Lake Blvd. P FOR RENT steam heat. 415 Minn. Ave. Mrs.| W. A. Casler. | FOR RENT—3 unfurnished rooms for housekeeping. 709 Irvine Av- enue. | ica Ave. So. Inquire E. J. Sweed- | beck. | FOR RENT—2 furnished rooms, $10 | a month. 1111 Lake Boulevard. FOR RENT—2 unfurnished rooms.| 320 Minnesota Ave. MISCELLANEOUS ADVERTISERS—The great ctate of North Dakota offers unlimited op- portunities for business to classi- fied advertisers. The recognized advertising medium is the Fargo Daily and Sunday Courier-N€ws, the only seven day paper in the state and the paper which carries WANTED- -vate family. Tnquire baggageman at Union Depot. Mrs. R. H. Patno, dress and_ Cloak maker. 811 Irvin Ave. Oh! Look Who’s Here THE ORIGINAL HAS TH!S-SIGNATURE leading chefs of London. useless. The Sucess of this system of cookery, on the care with which it is carried on. and pans in cooking and save time and 1 and rudimentary knowledge which is always necessary to success in Cooking. alike to rich and poor, to those who coo cooking of others, and for these reasons: COOKING REVOLUTIONIZED Did You Ever Cook in a Paper Bag? Well, that’s what we’re all Coming to, sooner or later A WORD ABOUT PAPER-BAG COOKERY THE SOYER METHOD IS NOT AN EXPERIMENT, BUT A PROVED SUGGESS.- In England the Method Has Had an Immense Vogue. All over England it has been tested, and has proved a triumphant success, Already it has had the endorsement of epicures, THE BAG Do not attempt to cook in any other than Union Cookery Bags, the only authorized American Bags for Soyer Cookery. Ordinary bags are worse than ADVANTAGES OF THE SOYER METHOD The advantages of the method—there are no disadvantages—make it a boon k themselves and those who enjoy the “1. It makes the dish more savory and nutritious. 3 2. Itis economical; the food weighing practically the same > when drawn from, as when put in, the oven. 3. It islabor-saving—no cleaning of pots or pans. 4. Itis hygienic—mo germ-haunted cooking utensils. 5. No smell of cooking. The Union Cookery Bags are made in the following sizes, at the prices given: Pkg. A, containing bags 6,x9 inches, 25¢ Pkg. B, containing bags 9x14 inches, 25¢ Pkg. C; containing bags 11x19 inches, 25¢ Pay. D, containing bags 15x20 inches, 25¢ Pkg. X, assorted A,B and C, 25¢ A Book of Directions and Recipes with Every Package. | Sold by ROE & MARKUSEN. of experts in cookery, and of the as of all others, depends entirely up- Union Ccokery Bags replace pots abor, but they do not replace the care Room and board in pri- noons, at 2:30—at Odd Fel. l‘o:;.s Hall, 402 Bellra?llfl L 0.0 P Bemidji Lodge No. 119 R meeting nights every, Friday, 8 o'elock egular at Feliows ~ Hall, 402 Beltrami. “ L 0. O. F. Camp No. 24. Regular meeting every second and fourth Wednesdays at § o'clock, at Odd Fellows Hall, ¢l Rebecca Lodge. Regular (5B3\ meeting nighls — first and third Wednesdays at 8 o'clock ) —L 0. O. F. Hall. * ENIGHTS OF PHYTHIAS. Bemidji Lodge No. 168. Regular meeting nights—ev- ery Tuesday evening at o'clock—at the Bagles' Hall, “vhird street. ,,1’»“:"\ LADIES OF THE MAC- "f fi;‘ CABEES. (\ 3 Regular meeting night last Wednesday evening Z in each month. MASONIC. A. F. & A. M., Bemidji, 233, "Regular = meetin; nights — first and thirg Wednesdays, 8 o'clock—at Masonic “Hall, Beltrami Ave., and Fifth St. Chanter No. 70, . Stated convocations “rirst and thirdMondays, 8§ o'clock p. m.—at Masonic Hall Beltrami’ Ave,, and Iifth St. Bemidji . A. M. . «lkanah Commandery No. 30 K. T. Stated conclave—second aLd fourth Fridays, 8 o'clock p. m.—at Masonic Temple, Bel- trami Ave., and Fifth St. O. E. 8. Chapter No, 171. Regular meeting nights— first and third Fridays, 8 o'clock — at Masonic Hall, Beltrami Ave., and Fifts M. B. A. Roosevelt, No. 1523, Regular meeting nights every second and fourth Thursday evenings at 8 ficlock in " 0dd “Fellows all. M. W. A. Bemidji Camp No. 5012, Regular ‘meeting nights — urst, and ‘third o'rues%g;ils at clock _a el Hall, 402 Beltrami Ave, "~ MODEEN SAMARITANS. Regular meeting nights on the first and third Thursdays in the L 0. 0. F. Hall at 8 @ SONS OF HERMAN. Meetings held second ¥% and fourth Sunday after. %% 7noon of each month at 205 ,E Beltrami Ave. 1 YEOMANS. Meetings the first Friday evening of the month at the home of Mrs. H. F. Schmidt, 306 Third street. R. F. MURPHY FUNERAL DIRECTOR AND EMBALMER offic Beitrami Ave. Phone 319.2. First Mortgage| LOANS ON CITY AND FARM PROPERTY Real Estate, Rentals i Insurance William C. Kiein O’Leary-Bowser Bidg. Phone 19. Bagnldjl, 4/ & . [ "ta &), A -3 P ’7 [ r | e

Other pages from this issue: