Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, December 13, 1911, Page 2

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i | | éuhlishad err{ afternoon, except Sun- day by the Bemidji Pioneer Publishing Company. E. X. DENU. & E. CARSON. F. A. WILSON, Editor. In the City of Bemlidji the papers are delivered by carrier. Where the deliv- 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 promptly. All papers are continued until an ex- plicit ‘order to discontinue is received, and until arrearages "are paid. Subscription Rates. One month, by carrier.. One year, by carrier... Three months, postage Six Mounths, postage pai One "year, postage paid.. The Weekly Ploneer. s Pight pages, containing a summary of the news of the week. Published every Thursday and sent postage paid to any address for §1,60 in advance. ENTERED AS SECOND CLASS MAT- TER_AT THE POSTOFFICE AT BE- MIDJI, MINN, UNDER THE ACT OF MARCH 3, 1879, attacks of hawks and predatory an! mals, at one time killing & large cougar, which went to the hennery in search of a choice morsel. . “Pat’s’ favorite son “Mike,” of a litter ¢ seven, declined to brood, problbl} holding that a blue-blooded” dog is above the poultry business. Both animals, however, do many little chores around the house. - “Pat” car- ries home the groceries-and newspa- pers and can hold his own with a pack of hungry wildcats. A PLEA FOR THE POOR AT CHRISTMAS. Do you know of any homes in your neighborhood where Santa Claus never comes? Is there a sick father, a father out of work, a widowed PPV POOOOO®P® O @ ® ¢|mother, an old and indigent persoxi? © THIS DATE IN HISTORY. ©| Charity, it has been said, begins o Sesoribee it @|at home, but it shouldn’t stay there. ecember 13. & X 1t she i high’ 1542—Mary, queen of Scots, @ Y Shogld &0 pab o lg. Mk & succeeded her father, |30 byways. Especially is this true @ James V. @|of Christmas charity, which should ® 1545—First session of Coun- ¢|be the highest kind of Christian ~\ cil of Trent, Whose de- | charity. 2 cisions _ are received as | your children will have toys and @ the standard of faith, ® 15 in abund Perha H morals, and discipline in @|SYeetmeats In abundance. ~Perhaps > the Roman Catholic ®|they will have more than is good for > Church. | them. It will make you happy to look & 1560—Duke of Sully, the chief ©|into their joyous faces on Christmas '\‘ ‘F"““‘SL" of Henry IV of @ morning when they inspect the treas- i 153’1‘“’ born. * Died in &}, 40 est “for them by Sanfa; Claus, & 1642—New Zealand discovered But there is a sort of happiness even > by Tasman, more to be desired than this. It is % 1784—Dr. Samuel Johnson, the @ noted lexicographer, > died. Born Sept. 15, » 1709. » 1816—First savings bank in the @ United States opened in ® Boston. ©® 1860—Tarl of Aberdeen, Brit- ® ish prime minister, died. & Born in 1784. & 1862—Tederal army of 100,- D 000, men under General 3 Burnside made a series - of desperate but unsuc- ® cessful attacks on Fred- 4 ericksburg, Va. % 1898—Sir William Vernon @ Harcourt = resigned the > leadership of the Liberal 3 party in England. # 1905—First elections held in @ . the Province of Sas- ® katchewan. R R R R RO RO R R ORCY PPV POPPPOOOPPDPOPOOOOOPIP O The lieutenant governor is giving an exhibition of that good old com- edy, “When the cat’s away, the mice will play.” Tn Minneapolis butter is selling at 46 cents a pound, and as a result oleomargarine is being admitted to some of the best homes in that city. ‘With the trial of the meat packers scarcely started in Chicago, it is ap- parent that these estimable gentle- men have made a sausage out of the public. It may be some consolation to men who face a batch of vagrant Havanas for Christmas that every year there also is a large bunch of useless gar- ters distributed. Oysters have been cleared of the charge that they spread typhoid but when mixed with parts of the shell they must still answer to the charge of spreading profanity. The report that an extra session might be called while Governor Eb- erhart is out of the state came like a bolt out of a clear sky and steel trust Duluth hasn’t received such a shock since the “Flirting Princess” was there. TEETH NOT A LUXURY. False teeth are a necessity, not a luxury, and a husband is legally bound to furnish them for his wife, if she needs them. This is not the opinion.of a medical or humane so- ciety, but the solemn’ verdict of the Supreme Court of Wisconsin. Un- less an appeal is taken to the United States Supreme Court, on the ground that this decision deprives the hus- band of life, liberty or property without due process of law and therefore unconstitutionally, this pronouncement will stand as the law of the land. The Journal of the American Medical association says that it is doubtful if there is any oth- er state which has thus safeguarded the rights of its feminine citizens. Married women in need of teeth should at once move to Wisconsin. “PAT.” “Pat,” a water spaniel, owned by Mr. and Mrs. William L. Wright, of Spokane, and winner of a bushel of cups and trophies at interstate bench shows, has served as a brooder for more than 200 orphaned chicks dur- ing the last 12 months. The animal has proved an excellent guardian for the chicks, but will have nothing whatever to do with ducklings and goslings.. “Pat’” does not desert his charges after they crawl out of the shells, but tends to them with all that which comes from remembering the poor at Chiistmas. Think of the little ones and the sick and aged who will have no San- ta Claus this year unless you become their Santa Claus. A very little gift to one who otherwise would receive none looms large in the eyes of the One of the wisest of the old Bay: ings i this: “It is b 0 than to receive’” This proverb. em: ¢ | bodies and exemplifies the Christmas| spirit, which is the Christian spirit reduced to the concrete.- s Remember the poor this Christmas. levooo00000000000 © WHAT OTHER PAPERS SAY © 000000660000 6669 Indeed, “Y” ‘Not? Why' not Sam Gordon for gover- nor? He’s clean and able and a man. whom-no interests can unduly in- uence.—Pine City Poker. 2 . So Say We All The Detroit News is worried lest the farmers take the matter into -their own hands and swamp us with “cheap foods.” ~Let ‘em ‘do their ‘worst!—Minneapolis Journal. It Wasn’t a Masquerade, Farmer (to son just home from college)—Look here, Bud, you shake out from under that shirt-tail hat, and slide them bull-dog lot-cut shoes into the attic, hang them pegleg. pants in the closet in the spare bed room and tuck that sweater with the big letter on it in the lower drawer of the old cherry ‘bureau and hide them sox where the neighbors won’t see ’em. You'll find your overalls hangin’ back of the smoke-house door and there’s a clean hick’ry shirt up in the hired hand’s room. You'll find ‘a pair of my old shoes in the |cellar-way. This ain’t no masquer- |-ade party we're runnin.’ It’s a farm. |—From an unknown Exchange. | The Lawyer and His Client. A correspondent writes us from Bainbridge, Ga., saying that some time ago he was ‘appointed by the Notice of Sale of Timber 14, 1911, at 9 o’clock in the forenoon, and liable to waste. Notice is hereby given that I will offer for sale at public auction at the Court House in Bemidji, Beltrami county, Minnesota, on Thursday, Decemher Following is a list of the lands upon which such timber is situated, and a statement of the estimated quantity of each kind of timber thereon that will be so offered, and of the appraised price of each kind of such timber, per M feet, or per cord, or per piece, as the case may be: SW NWY & SW1 SEY of Sec. 18, T. 151, R. 30:—10 M pine @ $7.00 Stumpage on State Lands. certain timber belonging to the State _acquittal, turned = home, ived a letter from his lient, a copy of which follows: “Mr. I is dyin with tyfoy fevr and T is sorry I cant pay yu no ‘muney for fennin me in cort. I no i wil go v killin my pore wife, I wish you well and hope to meet you in the' next.worl. yore tru fren, abe nelson.” Our correspondent wants it distinctly understood, how- ever, that he ig-living so that he won’t _meet_his client in the “nex worl,”—From -~ December “Law . Old Leather Bottles. Leather hottles, or blackjacks, were cotmon in Europe two centuries ago. The bottles were often made of one skin' doubled up and closely' stitched together, leaving an aperture for the neck. - The thick plece between was inserted for ihe slip. It was meant to be slung at the back, a leather thong passed ‘through ‘two loops placed on ‘either side of the neck, and it was suf- ficiently flat.at the base to-stand when ‘put down. The stopper was iade of ‘wood, horn or old leather. A good deal of care was required in the prep- aration of the leather, which had to be olled and worked with hammers to make it supple and then washed with a lye so that all the impurity was en- tirely removed, leaving the leather clean and dry. No moisture or air had any effect on it. Blackjacks were, in fact, flagons made in various sizes. They were sometimes pitched inside. A Hair Trigger Constitution. Some one has said that animals have a hair trigger constitution, says Orison Swett Marden in Success Magazine. They go off on the slightest provoca- tion, because they act from impulse. themselves. The animal instinct dom- inates. Self control is the first condition of all athievement. It is said that the first ‘sign of insanity is the loss of self control. When a person is no longer achievement is impossible to him. Every thought tends to result in an act, so that thought always leads. The mental attitude at any moment is the pattern which the life processes ‘weave. grotesque crazy quilts. the master of his own acts he is not { only in danger, but any degree of The lives of many of us are | per M; 10 M spruce @ $4.00 per M; 5 M tamarack @ $3.00 per M; 100 cords spruce @ $1.00 per cord; 500 tamarack ties @ 10c each; 1,500 cedar poles @ 10c each; 8,000 cedar posts @ 1c each. Si% NEY%, NWi; SWi% & SEY of Sec. 14, T. 151, R. 30:—70.M pine @ $7.00 per M; 10 M spruce @ $4.00 per M; 15 M balsam @ $2.00 per M; 350 cords spruce @ $1.00 per cord; 1,750 tamarack ties @ 10c each; 1,750 cedar poles @ 15¢ each; 6,000 cedar posts @ 1lc each. NEY% SE% of Sec. 15, T. 151, R. 30:—75 M pine @ $7.00 per M; 56 M spruce @ $4.00 per M; 40 cords spruce @ $1.00 per cord; 100 cedar poles @ 10c each; 500 cedar posts @ lc each. NWI; NE1 of Sec. 23, T. 151, R. 30:—30 M pine @ $7.00 per M; 10 M jack and spruce @ $4.00 per M; 300 tamarack ties @ 10c each; 100 cedar poles-@ 10c each; 1,000 .cedar posts @ 1c each. N NW1, N% NEY, SE% NE! & NEY SEY of Sec. 24, T. 151, R. 30:—20 M pine @ $7.00 per M; 20 M spruce (@ $4.00 per M; 40 M tamarack @ $3.00 per M; 10 M balsam @ $2.00 per M; 250 cords spruce @ $1.00 per cord; 2,250 tamarack ties @ 10c each; 1,000 cedar poles @ 10c each; 6,000 cedar posts @ 1c each. N1 SW of Sec. 1, T. 150, R. 30:—1 M pine @ $7.00 per M; 250 cords spruce @ $1.00 per cord; 200 tamarack ties @ 10c each; 800 cedar posts @ 1c each. SWis NW; & S% SEY% of Sec. 2, T. 150, R. 30:—10 M pine @ $7.00 per M; 5 M spruce @ $4.00 per.M; 200 cords spruce @ $1.00 per-cord; 600 tamarack ties @ 10c each; 2,100 cedar poles @ 15¢ each; 6,500 cedar posts @ 1c each. NEY, SEY & SW3 SEY of Sec. 3, T. 150, R. 30:—10 M spruce $4.00 per M; 5 M balsam @ $2.00 per M; 700 tamarack ties @ 10c each; 800 cedar poles @ 15¢ each; 2,000 cedar posts @ 1c each. T NEY, NE¥%, NE}% NW¥% & NW1 SEY of Sec. 11, T. 150, R. 30:—5 M pine @ $7.00 per M; 5 M'spruce @ ‘$4.00 per M; 5 M balsam @ $2.00 per M; 176 cords spruce @ $1.00 per cord; 1,100 tamarack ties @ 10c each; 200 cedar poles @ 15¢ each; 1,500 cedar posts @ lc each. Wi, NW1 of Sec. 12, T. 150, R.-30:—5 M pine @ $7.00 per M; 100 cords spruce @ $1.00 per cord;.200 tamarack ties @ 10c each; 100 cedar poles @ 15¢ each; 500 cedar posts @ 1c each. SE, SEY% of Sec. 25, T. 150, R. 3 10 M pine @ $7.00 per M; 50 cords spruce @ $1.00 per cord; 200 tamarack ties @ 10c each; 100 cedar poles @ 10c each; 2,000 cedar posts @ 1lc each. g SEY NEY & SW SEY of Sec. 33, T. 149, R. 30:—1 M pine @ $7.00 per M; 100 cords spruce @ $1.00 per cord; 450 tamarack ties @ 8¢ each;- 100 cedar poles @ 10c each; 1,000 cedar posts @ 1¢ each. Wis NWi, SEY NWY & N1% SEY, of Sec. 34, T. 149, R. 30:—20 M pine @ $7.00 per M; 10 M spruce @ $4.00 per M; 200 cords spruce @ $1.00 .per cord; 1,200 tamarack ties @ 8c each; 100 cedar ties @ 10c each; 300 cedar poles @ 10c each; 5,500 cedar posts @ 1c each. SE¥% NEY of Sec. 5, T. 148, R. 30:—10 M pine @ $7.00 per M; 50 cords spruce @ $1.00 per cord; 1,500 tamarack ties @ 8c each; 500 cedar poles @ 10c each; 1,000 cedar posts @ 1c each. ¥ NEY, NWi & SE% NEY of Sec. 12, T. 148, R. 30:—35 M pine @ $6.00 per M; 10 M jack @ $4.00 per M. Lots 1, 2 & 3 of Sec. 24, T. 152, R. 31:—20 M pine @ $6.00 per M; 5 M spruce @ $4.00 per M; 100 cords spruce @ $1.00 per cord; 5,000 cedar poles @ 10c each; 12,000 cedar posts @ 1c each. SWi NE} & NE¥% SW¥ of Sec. 25, T. 152, R. 31:—25 M pine $6.00 per M; 10 M spruce @ $4.00 per M; 20 M tamarack @ $3.00 per M; 5 M balsam @ $2.00 per M; 50 cords spruce @ $1.00 per cord; 2,000 cedar poles @ 10c each; 5,000 cedar posts @ 1c each. e Lots 1, 2, 3 & 4 of Sec. 2, T. 151, R. 31:—5 M pine @ $6.00 per M; 70 M jack and spruce @ $4.00 per M; 5 M balsam @ $2.00 per M; 100-cords spruce @ $1.00 per cord; 750 tamarack ties @ 8c each. EY¥% NEY%, SW¥% NEY%, Lots 1, 2, 8, 4, NE% SW1, S SWY & SE1% of Sec. 16, T. 151, R. 31:—3,200 cords spruce @ $1.00 per cord; 5,000 tamarack ties @ 8c each; 4,900 cedar poles @ 10c each; 16,000 cedar posts @ 1c each, ‘Wiz SBY of Sec. 20, T. 151, R. 31:—5 M spruce @ $4.00 per M; 200 cords spruce @ $1.00 per cord; 3,000 tamarack ties @ 8c each. NW1; NW¥ of Sec. 21, T. 151, R. 31:—250 cords spruce @ $1.00 per cord; 750 tamarack ties @ 8c each. Wi NEY & NWY; SE¥% of Sec. 29, T. 151, R. 31:—5 M spruce @ $%4.00 per M; 225 cords spruce @ $1.00 per cord; 500 tamarack ties @ 8c each. SE% NW1; & SW SEY% of Sec. 14, T. 148, R. 3! 35 M pine @ $6.00 per M; 10 M spruce @ $4.00 per M; 700 tamarack ties @ 8c each; 3,000 cedar poles @ 10c each: 10,000 cedar posts @ 1c each, NW1; NEY of Sec. 23, T. 148, R. 33:—10 M pine @ $6.00 per M; 35 cords spruce @ $1.00 per cord; 500 tamarack ties @ 8c each; 5,000 cedar poles @ 10c each; 10,000 cedar posts @ 1c each. This sale is to be held pursuant to the provisions of Chapter 204 of the General Laws of Minnesota for 1905, as amended by Chapter 476 of the General Laws for 1909. & Timber estimated and appraised per M feet will be offered and sold per M feet; timber estimated and appraised per cord will be offered and sold per cordy all cords to be single cords; and timber estimated and appraised as tie or pole or post timber will be offered and sold per tie, or pole or post; and sale’will be made to the party bidding-the highest price for all the several kinds of timber advertised on'the lands in the different sections." None of the timber can be gold for less than the appraised prices as given herein, and any bidding over and above the said appraised prices shall be by “per centage,” the per cent bid to-be added to the appraised price of each kind of timber advertised on the'land. No bids of less than 5 per cent will be entertained or accepted. * Purchasers of any of said timber at said sale must pay down in cash at time of sale 50 per cent of the appraised value of timber, based on the estimated quantity, and must give bond to the State in an amount at least double the appraised value of the timber, conditioned upon cutting all of said kinds of timber that there may be upon the land (be it-more or iess than the~ estimate) clean, acre by acre, and paying the State the balance that may be due therefor, and for the faithful performance of all the terms and condi-: tions of the law governing Such matters. ‘Permits. will be issued to the purchasers, good up to and to expire on June 1, 1913, for the cutting and | removing of such timber, and the law allows the Timber Board, by unani- mous vote, to grant one extension of time, of not more than one logging season, if good reason is given for not having been able to complete the - cutting and removing of the timber within the original time 1imit of the Permit. All timber. cut is to be scaled or counted on the Iand where cut by a regular State Land Examiner, and is not to be removed from such land until it has been so scaled or counted, and final settlement is to be based’ oa such gcale and count. 5 Dated at St. Paul, Minnesota, this 18th day of November, 1911, --Lung Capacity of Corset Wearers. The lung capacity, of the average woman who does not wear corsets is about 2,800 cubic centimeters, or 171 cubic inches; of one who is in the hab- it of wearing corsets only 2,200 cubic centimetets, or 134 cubic inches, so that the capacity of the normal and unrestricted lungs is about 27.8 per cent more than ‘that of those which Makes delicious hom baked foods of m: I ‘quality ‘at minimum -cest. ‘Makes home baking a pleasure - The only Baking Powder made from Royal Grape Cream of Ta.rtar No Alum — No Lime Phosphates The Troubled Professor. “The professor is so dreadfully ab- sentminded.” “Yes?” | “He pald marked attentions to a | pretty girl who lived near the college | and was afraid she might get some | a love letter with invisible ink.” | “Clever idea. Yes?’ | “Then he made a typewritten copy | of the letter for his own protection | and finally sent the girl the typewrit- ten copy.” “I see. Poor old prof.” “And he didn't find out his mistake | until the ink had faded, and now - he wonders what in Tophet he wrote!"— Cleveland Plain Dealer. From the Fountain. Nell—Maude always uses a fountain pen. Belle—Her . letters are rather gushing, aren’t they? — Philadelphia Record. HAVE YOU READ IT. The Adler-ika book, telling how you can EASILY guard against ap- pendicitis and get INSTANT relief from constipation or gas on the stom- | | | ach, is being read with much in- terest by Bemidji people. It is given away free by E. N. French & Co. have been compressed by the corset.— | Scientific American. | Odious Uomparison. Drill Sergeant—I . Smith, have you any -idea how slow and stupid you are? DPrivate Smith—I don't know. Drill Sergeant—Of course you don’t, but let me tell you that an Egyp- tian mummy is frisky compared witk s | you.—London Tit-Bits. They do not know how to control | legal hold on him, and so he wrote her | Kokomo. Kokomo, in the language of the In- dians who at one time inhabited that section of Indiana, signifies “a young grandmother.” PILES CURED IN 6 TO 14 DAYS Your druggist will refund money if PA- ZO OINTMENT fails to cwie any case of Itching, Blind, Bleeding or Protrud- ing Piles in 6 to 14 days. 50ec. R. F. MURPHY FUNERAL DIRECTOR AND EMBALMER | Office’313 Beltrami Ave. Phone 319-2. . for a boy is a years - ng. To get try, wireless, aviation, 'poultry, pets, camping, trapping and Boy eouts dept. Keeps 52,000 boys interested now. Sent to three homes a whole- year for $i. Remit to THE NATIONAL YOUTH, 32 Kedzie Building, Chicago, IIL To Prepare a Tasty, Tempting and Appetizing Dish of Macaroni or i, you must have a Durum Nptcd-fl. MOTHER'S MACARONI has a THE SPALDING EUROPEAN PLAN Duluth’s Largest and Best Hotel DULUTH MINNESOTA More than $100,000.00 recently expended on improvements. 250 rooms, 125 private baths, 60 sample rooms. Evars ‘modern convenience: Luxurious and delightful restaurants and buffet, Flemish Room, Palm Room, Men's Grill, Colonial Buffet: Magnificent lobby and public rooms; Ballroom, banquet rooms and private dining rooms; Sun parlor and observa- tory. Located in heart of business sec- tion but overlooking the harbor and Lake Superior. Convenient to everything. One of the Great Hotels of the Nerthwesi BRICK * FACTORY We make brick and can fill all orders promptly. Build your house of brick made by FOLEY BROS. Bemidji, Minn. First —Mnrtgage LOANS ON CITY ANDsFARM PROPERTY I Real Estate, Rentals Insurance | William ©. Kigin 1 O’Leary-Bowser Bldg. Phone (9. | ! Bemidji, Minn. Chris Rochester Nickel Plat- and Ebonized Handles Rochester Copper and Brass Alcohol 33 ou Flagon...........c.ccoovvviiveeenininiiiireerenn. OV Rochester Silver Plated Ebonized Handle $3 25 TOBBLOL....vrevvesonssnoasivheivsssnnnnissi vy Sinai s OOH Rochester Nickel Plated Ebonized Handle 31 75 Cutlet Tray:. s i 08w duwssin OIS Coffee Spoons,set $2.26 gffi;’égfig:s;fitg?fig Tea Spoons, set $2.60 Berry Spoons,set $5.00 Bouillon Spoons $4.00 | pi. Forks, set...$4.60 Ivoroid Handled and Forks.. Reliance Plated and Forks........., Ivoroid: Handled Knives and Solid Forks, set,... $2l25 Carving Sets i Forraten oo orer 86,00 and $7.50 Coffe Pots Coffee Percolators Tea Pots Boilers . Tea Kettles Phoene 57 el Ghafing Dish Rochester Copper Chafing Dishes, Brass Trimmed 58,50 and- $12.50 BEMIDJI, MINN. mas Presents For Mother, Wife Or Sister Roches'tjer Copper Ebonized Handle, Spoons Farka:. i . $1.00 and $1,75 Rocbes‘tier Ramakins, Set of Six, Copper Holders TEYcters v sirnssin o es ... 59.50 Electric Coffee Percolators $8.50 each Electric Toasters 4.00 each : Electric Heaters $3.00 each Community, Triple Plated, Silverware, Guaranteed for 80 Years, Louis XVI Pattern Hollow-Handle Knives, Solid Forks, $10.00 Per Set Hollow Handle Fruit Knives, set.... $6.26 Hollow-Handle Carving Set, set.........$10.00 Knives Sfi. nn Landers Fine Stag Handles, Sterling Ferrules.......ccccococeiniinine. Hollow Handle Community Triple Plated SilversZ iul st . Other Useful Gifts to be Found ‘Here are: Food Choppers Roasters Sewing Machines Sci :Wognen-;hpnreciate useful gifts. Come in and see these articles. It is a pleasure to show them, and Forksfil.?.t.e.fi‘.flf‘.,ffi $4l|m Knives 84‘50 Plated Knives and Forks sz “0 ‘ ] Salad Forks, ea. $2.50 Cream Ladleea. $1.28 Soup Ladle, ea. $1.50 Oyster Ladle ea. $3.80 $4.00 and $4.50 $10.00 Big 3 Washing Machine $14. The best Washer made. Bissel Carpet Sweeper $3.50 & $4 issors ven Hardware Co, | sceour Windows e 316 Minnesota Avenue L' ks

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