Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, November 21, 1911, Page 2

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PPOPPPOPP0 0009000000900 000000000000I OGO EHE BEMIDII DAILY FIONEER Published every afternoon except Sun- dc:y byn the Bemidji Pioneer Publishing mpany. G. E. CARSON. E, R. DENU. . A" WIL i, Baitor. ¥ In the City of Bemidji the papers are Qelivered by carrier. Where the delive ery is irregular please make immediate complaint to this office. Telephone 31. Out of town subscribers will confer a favor if they will report when they do not get their papers promptl: -~ All papers are continued unti ‘an ex- pllclt order to discontinue ‘is received, and until arrearages: are paid. Subscription Rates. One month, by carrier. One year, by carrier. . ‘Three months, postage pai Six Months, postage paid. One year, postage paid... BEight pages, containing a summary of the news of the week. Puhli.shed every Thursday and sent -postage paid to any address for $1.50 in advance. ENTERED AS SECOND CLA; " TER AT THE POSTOFF?CES.%TM]{\!T- chl!.‘r.v(gh‘igll\gll\r7 UNDER THE ACT OF 0000000000066 THIS DATE IN HISTORY. ¢ November 21. 1579—Sir Thomas Gresham, the founder of the Royal Ex- change, died in London. Born there in 1519. 1699—Russia and Poland signed at treaty of alliance against Sweden.- 1790-—Bryan. Walter Proctor (“Barry Cornwall”), the poet, born in Leeds, Eng- land. Dijed in London, Oct. 4, 1874. 1835—James Hogg, noted Eng- lish poet, died. Born in 1772. 1840—Princess Victoria Ade- laide, “eldest daughter of Queen * Victoria, born. Died Aug. 5, 1901, - 1856—Opening of the Sarnia branch of the Grand Trunk Railway, connect- ing the main line with the United States border. 1878—The Halifax award of $5,500,000 was paid to Canada. 1880—Rev. George K. Dunlop consecrated Protestant Episcopal bishop of New Mexico. 1886—A practical phonograph, invented by Thomas A. Edison, was announced. 1894—~Great massacre of Chin- ese "by the Japanese at Port Arthur. 1900—Fifty lives were lost in a hurricane in Tennessee. & R R RO ORISR Y @@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@ There is some cold comfort in the fact that shoveling snow is a health- ful exercise. They are going to-run John Burke a fourth time for governor of North Dakota. Looks as if John was in for life. Louis Hill is down for a talk on “Good Roads” at the St. Cloud con- Bemidji would like to hear Louis talk on Good Depots. vention. There are 3,000 bankers attend- ing the national association’s con- vention in New Orleans. Didn’t know that there were that many out of jail. Mary Garden says that no singer has anything on her when it comes to grand opera. No, and no one else has much-on her when she appears as “Salome. Postmaster General Hitchcock de- nies that he is to be married. Maga- zine publishers who now have to send their publication by freight, opine that he couldn’t get any woman to have him, anyhow. There are 150,000 working women in Minnesota. It might be well to add that from now on this number will_be increased. Those who work the old man for Christmas presents are now on the job, SEEING. THINGS. Because the Pioneer was gloomy over Governor Eberhart’s announce- ment that he would not call an extra session of the legislature, Editor Bell in the Roseau Times remarks: Don’t take it so hard Brother ‘Wilson, there will be no funeral. Eberhart will be our next United States senator' and very likely Sam Iverson will be our next governor. Can’t you see the handwriting on the wall, Broth- er? No, we can’t see 1@, and we have a suspicion that either Editor Bell's glasses are out of focus or the Times cider barrel is beginning to work. TIMES CHANGE. Once upon a time the. governor of North Carolina had as his guest the governor of South Carolina and, as you all know the governor of North Carolina said to the governor of South Carolina, “It is a very long time between drinks,” only he didn’t use just the word “very.” Now read what the present gover- nor of North Carolina has to'say: 1 dare-any man to demonstrate that strong drink blesses society, or the'home, or the state, and I reSt my case: on- the assertion that it creates 33 per cent”of the country’s ineanity; 50’ per. cent of the dlnbmty nmoxig vat- etan ‘soldlers that sends them to the old soldiers’ homes, 70 per cent of the dependents upon in- stitutional charity, 70 per cent of the criminals in the peniten- tiaries, 49 per cent of the idiots and epileptics, and 60 per cent of the unfortunate women of the streets. If strong drink is a friend of yours, to be tolerated by you, why do not you get a drunken barber to shave you of a Saturday night? Verily, as the world moves along, times—and governors—do change. DANGERS IN SPARKLING WATER. Because water looks good and is cold and sparkling is no proof that it is'not dangerous to take into the hu- fman system, as.is shown by, the fol- lowing warning from John F. Nichol- son, bacteriologist of the state uni- versity experiment station: “The water: supply, being easily contaminated by underground cur- rents coming through soil-impregnat- ed with waste material; cannot be too closely guarded at this time of the vear. Because the water looks clear, and is cold and sparkling, there is no assurance 'that it does not contain agents of a deadly nature. “Enough-germs of typhoid fever could be present to cause grave trou- ble and yet, without having a’tech- nical analysis made of it, a person could not detect them. The only safe Wway is to be assured that the water does not catch any surface or under- ground drainage where there could be any question of contamination. | “It is impossible to be assured on these grounds, a simple process of purification can be used in the home. Practically all of the diseases pro- ducing bacteria, including typhoid, are killed at a moderately low degree of temperature. “A boiling temperature will destroy them almost immediately and there is no excuse for water to become dan- gerous so long as the housewife has in her hands such a simple and eftec- tive means of protection. ‘The boiling of the water may slightly change its palatibility but 1f‘: it is allowed to cool in two-thirds full bottles and the bottles are shaken vigorously it will regain its avor. - At any rate the safety of the health should take precedence over any small item like a lack of palatibility.” 0000000000006 00 ® What Other Papers Say. . © O R RO R R R R RO R R R ) Referred to Governor Eberhart. Did you ever take note of how much easier it is to butt in than to back out?—Ada Norman County Her- ald. Fails to Enthuse. The Independent never did- have much respect for Governor Eberhart, and his sneaking away from the St. Cloud meeting N. M. D. A. doesn’t heighten our regard for him.—Grand Rapids Itasca County Independent. Dumas at Last Guilty. At last they have been able to find Dr. Dumas guilty of arson. It has been discovered that all the money in the state fire marshal’s office has been burnt up in an attempt to con- viet him.—Walker Pilot. Man or Mouse, Which? ~ The fight for an extra session of the legislature waxes warm and the number of its advocates are increas- ing. Will the governor be the man or the mouse—the man the people hope he is, or the mouse scared out of sight by the corporation cat?— Holt Northern Light. We Have One in Bemidji. The St. Paul Pioneer Press says: “a hale and vigorous man walked in- to the office of the state free em- ployment bureau at the state capitol building and asked Mrs. L. A. Rosing, in charge of the woman’s; section, if she couldn’t find a position for his wife where she could do washing.” That fellow must be a counterpart of the lazy.hulks' in Mankato who are living off their wives’ earnings over the washtub.—Mankato Free Press. Precious Documents. The Bemidji Pioneer has made one of the most important discoveries of this degenerate age and: its able editor spent many strenuous hours elaborating a theory, which if feas- ible might bring a festering condi- ollection of a document similar to the one you mention, it was conceived in the brain of manhood something more than a hundred years ago, written ‘with a quill plucked from the wing of. the bird of freedom, dipped in the blood ‘of the Patriots, of Bunker Hiil and Yorktown and embellished by the names of a score of patriots, lovers of freedom and the right. This, once sacred -document is still in a glass cage in the archives of state at Wash- ington, but its magnetism and healing heeded or respected.. There is a sim- ilar document in the archives of the state, though not so elegantly em- broidered by great names nor pos- sessed of ‘so-lofty a conception as the one at the great capital of the nation, tion to a head. We have a faint rec- || power is gone—its dictates no longer | in its labored editorial, and which, if ‘we are mindful of duty must be Te- spected and obeyed. We dare not attempt to outline he cause of this reglect and wicked con- tempt for the buttress of American liberty and manhood's freedom,—if ‘we might barely suggest'that person- 2l greed and political preferment en- tered largely into the case we might be criticised and called a “muck-rak- er.” ridiculed too as the: old docu- ments have been. * Our brother has perhaps forgotten that patriotism is ne-longer ‘a catch-word to sway the feetings of the' multitude; that fdm- pulse‘ passed out of the mind of the average American-when the desire to amass dollars, no matter how or how many, entered his purturbed brain. The dollar is the supreme deity now and with dollars power is sweet and consoling especially to one without conscience and principle. - We shall survive the shock of the loss of real Tuanhood and emerge from the wreck ‘with renewed vigor, but the renascent republic will not be the handiwork of the ~present day politician.—Cass Lake. Times. G PPOPROODOEPOOOH O © Politics and Politicians, POOOOOOOOOOCOOO O Senator LaFollette will address the Progressive Republicans in Cleveland next month. ,%More than 150 cities of the United States are now under the commission form of government. it is rumored in Illinois that Gov- crnor.Deneen will not be a candidate fcr re-election, but instead will try for the United States senate. Alvah H. Martin, who is the Re- publican national committeeman from Virginia, has been re-elected clerk of the circuit court of Norfolk county. William V. Allen, once United States senator from Nebraska, failed in the recent election as a candidate for judge of the district court in that State. Nehemiah D. Sperry, who has just died at his home in New Haven, onn., was the oldest member of the national house of representatives at the time of his retirement a year ago. | In announcing that he would be a candidate for a third term, Governor Tonaghey of Arkansas declared he would make the liquor question the paramount issue of his campaign. Political experts of the two leading | parties are generally agreed that the battle ground for the presidential ‘ls this document. the Ploneer ra(ers to : (OSLER RIGHT; YOUTH o) an, Cl.lltornla New Jersey, New York, Minnesota, Massachusetts, Kan- sas, Towa and Indlana. - The session of - -congress to begin noxt moj 1ll be the last long one of ‘that body. to’be held: under the apportionment of the census of 1900. The next long session will be that of a house of representatives made up under an apportionment according to the census taken in 1910. ‘When thé Prohibition national ‘committee . meets in Chicago mext month it will have no lack of appli- cants from which to select theé meet- ing place for the presidentiali nomi- nating convention -of next year. Among' the cities that would like to entertain the convention are Milwau- kee, Boston, Detroit, Los Angeles, Seattle and Portland, Ore! 2 “Danny”’ Dunn, a former newsboy, Wisconsin, Oh! SUCCEEDS AGE Gray Hair is° First Sign of Age, Harmless Remedy Restores: to Natural Color. Osler isn’t the only man who turns down old age. In the business world the “young man” is always the one who'pieks the plums. It is an age of “new thought,” “new talent,” etc. and the old man is passed by iu the race. One of the first signs of coming age is -the -appearance of gray bairs. When you see them, act promptly. Wyeth’s Sage and Sulphur Hair Rem-~ edy will correct this sign, which so often deceives people into thinking that age is really upon them. It is a well-known fact that Sage and Sul- phur will darken the hair. Sage and Sulphur will darken the hair. Wy- eth’s- Sage and Sulphur combines these .old-time remedies with other agents which remove dandruff and promote the growth of the hair. The manufacturers of this remedy authorize the druggists to sell it un- der guarantee that the money will be refunded - if it fails to do exactly as represented. Don’t look old before your time.| Get a bottle of Wyeth’s Sage and Sulphur today, and see what an im- provement it will make in the ap- pearance of your hair. This preparation is offered to the public at fifty cents a bottle, and is recommended and sold by all drug- campaign of next year will be in the gists. 18 pretty sure ent job as mayor of - Wmlmlnfic, Conn. but he appears to be very popular With the Republicans as well. When the Republican ¢ity: convention met the other day it named fifty candi~ dates to run for mayor, and all de- clined the nomination.. The conven- tion adjourned without nominating an opponent to Mayor Dunn. _.“I am pleased to recommend Cham- berlain’s Cough Remedy as the best|h thing T know of and safest remedy: for coughs, colds and bronchial trou- ble,”” writes Mrs. L. B. Arnold of Denver, Colo. “We have used it re- peatedly and it has never failed to give relief.” For sale by Barker’s Drug Store. WANTED Ladies we are employing agents to sell our fall line of shirt waists. We pay salary and commission. Write at once for full particulars to L. B. Bridges Co., Boston Block, Minne- apolis, Minn. HIGH Mayor Dunn {s a Democrat, |lets retalning his pres-| 1 mzm(o ‘Quinine Tab- d money 1f it fails ; FROVE'S signature is on each box. zsc. NOTICE 0l" APPLICATION FOR TRANSFER OF - LIQUOR LICENSE STATE OF HINNEBOTA Pels e = of Beltram{ (myo Bemidjl. iven, ‘That -aj Rt s ting to the city council ¥ _co of said cicy n! Bemid;l l‘l filed in my office. Draying for thi ©Of business location of license to- num ll.lnt liquors granted to M. Thome for’the“‘em mrmlnl ting on Aprli 2185, 1912, by _the follor Son, and ag the following. nhce. as Mlud aid ap- Plication, respectively, to-wit: MAT. THOME At and in the front room ground floor, of that certain tw mry frame building locsted onlot 13, "block 11 original townsite. id application will be heard " and deter- mined by said City eolmcfl of the City of Bemidii &the couneil room in the city hall ln n!fl Clw of Bemldnfljfiétn Balnlml wlln]';{ mh du ot Nov. B0, At 8 ocloek . m of that day. Witng baud and sesl of City of Be- ‘midji thl.s leh day of Nov. 19} &0, STELY, ity Clerk. First-Nov. 14 Last-21. GRADE (OFFEES ROE & MARKUSEN BEMIDJI'S EXCLUSIVE GROCERS Fourth Street . Bemidji, Minn. ( Netzers Dr yet it claims'to be the basis of organ- | ic law of the commonwealth, and it{ W\ ug Store INE YIT 2 WELL YOUD BETTER GET BUSY Daily Pioneer Proposition $1.25 PAYS FOR 3 MONTHS AND _SECURES YOU 1 CARBON PICTURE $2.50 PAYS FOR 6 MONTHS AND SEGURES YOU 2 CARBON PICTURES $5.00 PAYS FOR 12 MONTHS AND SEGURES YOU 4 CARBON PICTURES Weekly Pioneer Proposition $1.50 PAYS FOR 12 MONTHS-—-1 YEAR---AND SEGURES YOU 1 CARBON PICTURE $3.00 PAYS FOR 24 MONTHS---2 YEARS---AND SECURES YOU 2 CARBON PICTURES What Are These Carbons Li They are on display at the Pioneer Office and in a dozen stores about the city. They make appropriate Xmas gifts. THE FOLLOWINGC PLACES SHOW THEM: The Bazaar Store Geo. T. Baker & Co. O’Leary-Bowser Co. Barker’s Drug & Jewelry Store ‘Berman Emponum . Bemidji Pioneer Supply Store Given Hardware Co. Schneider Bros. Roe & Markusen g? Gill Bros. lication| 800 RAILROAD 162 East Bound Leaves 9:45 a. 163 186 East Bound Leaves 2:45 p. m. 187 West Bound Leaves 10:38 &, m. GREAT NORTHERN 33 West Bound Leaves 3:30 p. m. 34 Bast Bound Leaves 12:08 p. m. 85 'West Bound Leaves 3:42 a. m. 36 East Bound Leaves 1:20 a. m. 105 North Bound Arrives 7:45 p. m. 106 South Bound Leaves 6:30 a. m. Freight West Leaves at 9:00 a. m. Freight East Leaves at 3:30 p. m. Minnesota & International 32 South Bound' Leaves 8:16 8. m. 31 North Bound Leaves 6:10 p. m. 24 South Bound Leaves 11.85 p. m. 43 North Bound Leaves 4:20 a. m. #retght South Leaves at 7:30 a. m. Freight North Leaves at 6:00 a. m. Minn. Red Lake & Man. 1 North Bound Leaves 3:35 p. m. 2 South Bound Leaves 10:30 a. m. PROFESSIONAL CARDS ARTS MISS GLARK ELIZABETH FISK Teacher of Elocution and Physicial Culture Res. 1013 Dewey Ave. Phone 181 HARRY MASTEN Piano Tuner ermerly o Radenbush & Co. of 8. Pau Instructor of V'uflm, Piano, Mando- lin and Brass Instruments. Music reagsonable. All'music up to ‘date. HARRY ‘MASTEN, Plane Tuner Room(36, 'Third floor, Brinkman Hotel. Telephone 535 PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS R. ROWLAND GILMORE PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office—Miles Block DR. E. A. SHANNON, M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office in Mayo Block Phone 396 Res. Phone 347 R. C. R. SANBORN PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office—DMiles Block A. WARD, M. D. * Over First National Bank. Phone 51 House No. 60i Lake Blvd. Phone 351 R. 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 R. E. H. MARCUM PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office in Mayo Block Phone 18 Residence Phone 21> EINER W. JOHNSON PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Residence 1113 Bemidji Ave. Phone 435 Offices over Security!Bank. Phone 130 DENTISTS R. D. L. STAN'TON DENTIST Office i Winiter Bleck DR. J. T. TUOMY DENTIST ist National Bank Build'd. Telephone 230 R. G. M. PALMER DENTIST [Miles Block Evening Work by Appointment Oaly LAWYERS (GRAHAMM. TORRANCE LAWYER Miles Block Telephone 560 H. FISK o ATTORNEY AT LAW -Office over City Drug Store F. JOSLYN, s, TAXIDERMIST Office at Reed's Studio Bemidji - Minnesota . EDUARD F. NETZER, Ph. C.. RECISTERED PHARMACIST Postoffice Corner Phone 30¢: Personal attention to prescriptions G, 6. JOHNSON lgndsw Loans Stocks West Bound Leaves 4:37 p. m.

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