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FUNERAL DIRECTOR Office’313 Beltrami Ave. hone 319-2. 1] 1 I 1] R me— 1T e Ry M.IT...._...,......;..— P —— P — 3y . - . — o ] i ) he 1y ; S JANUARY 5, 1912. THE BEMIDJI DASLY PIONEER > — $ He Let Her SI LES CUBED IN 6 TO 14 DAYS : - BA‘LR“‘“ T'ME G‘Hns I GuNFIHMED IESTIM"NY Some years ago a Swarsea vessel ggpgldn;\gfigfi;u} l:etumi money if PA- (] . l L 3 was caught in a terrible gale. The ails to cute any case BRIGK FA T captain had bis wife on board, and ;?]fglt égg;nn.ll?g,lllalzfil.n.: :;&P“’"“d‘ i S00 RAILROAD when the wind was still rising be told 1 ? 162 East Bound Leaves 9:54 a. m. R R ' her to go down below and sleep. for T W s g = 163: West Bound Leaves 4:37 p. m. |The Kind Bemidji Readers Cannot{all was well. He remained on tbe - ef[lllltlke lll)l'wké!nd 186 East Bound Leaves 2:45 p. m. Doubt, bridge till the mate came up and said: || THE SPALDING can I a % Oraers ¢ g “We've done all we can. Hadn't you ' FUROPEAN.PLAN promptly. Build your Y 187 West Bound Leaves 10:38 a. m. s i otel 5 P tell the chaps to get out the ‘Duluth's Largest and Best H I better ps to g ho f brick made b GREAT NORTHERN boats?" DULUTH MINNESOTA use 0. Ck made by ) 38 West Bound Leaves 3:30 p. m. “Yes ! - More than $100,00000' recently expended : ! . » . yes. my lad, if you think so.’ e 00 expel 34 East Bound Leaves 12:08 p. m. : ’303“ s Kidney Pllls have stood the| 519 tne captain. who knew the oniy || S5 “E;%’::“:‘;ié'.?o“m:f”x“‘é‘gr'{i;fi'a::.‘: FOLEY BR os. 35 West Bound Leaves 3:42 a. m. |test. ' |cholce left was whether to go down convenienco: Luxurious and delightful — 36 East Bound Leaves 1:16 a. m.| The test of time—the hardest test with the ship or in n small’boat, which {:“.”f.:“fi%.‘,ifi‘é‘.’.-s"é‘fi‘if: &fi:fi‘:’uun;" Bemidji, Minn. 105 North Bound Arrives 7:45 p. m, |of all. couldo't live ten seconds In tbat sep. | | Lagnificont lobby “and public rooms: 106 South Bound Leaves 6:30 a. m Thousands gratefully testify. The engineers came up with the newd || dining rooms; Sun parlor and observa: L K that the fires were all out. “Very tory: Located in heart of business sec- ! Freight West Leaves at 9:00 a. m To quick relief—to thorough, i o tlon but overlooking the harbor and Lake ! 2 : lasting cures. well, my lads.” said the captain quiet: Superior. Convenient to everything. Frelgh? Tee Loanex e 8:.30 P Bemidji I:EBd TS can no I r ly; “save goureelves (f you can.” 0 the Great Hotols ‘of the Northwast Minnesota & Internatiomal cacel ongel “Won’t you fetch the wife on deck. 7 ¢ 33 South Bound Leaves 8:16 a. m.|doubt the evidence. sir?" asked one of the men. —~ 31 North Bound Leaves 6:20 p. m.| It's convincing testimony—twice-{ “No" was the calm reply; *let her 34 South Bound Leaves 11:45 p. m.|told and well confirmed. sleep, poor old girl. I am going down 33 North Bound Leaves 4:30 a. m. Bemidji readers should profit by|to have a smoke’ And. smoking by b Freight South Leaves at 7:30 a. m. |these experiences. the bedside of his sleeping wife. be Freigat North Leaves at 6:00 a. m.| Samuel Collard, 1024 America|¥ent down with the ship. Minn. Red Lake & Man. Ave., Bemidji, Minn., says: “I wil- = . 1 North Bound Leaves 3:35 p. m.|lingly confirm all I have previously| ,,Not to Be D;“W'fi- S - 2 South Bound Leaves 10:30 a. m. |said in a public statement, regarding|, +JOhD." she asked after she had fin- L) PROFESSIONAL CARDS LAWYERS GRAHAM’M. TORRANCE LAWYER i Miles Block Telephone 560 H. FISK . ATTORNEY AT LAW Office over City Drug Store { HARRY MASTEN] Piano Tuner ermerly o Radenbush & Co. of 8t. Pau Instructor of Violn, Piano, Mando- Ln and Brass Instruments. Music farnished for balls, hotels, weddings, banquets, and all occasions. Terms reasonable. All music up to date.f§ HARRY MASTEN, Plano Tuner Room:36, Third floor, JBrinkman Hote) Telephone 535 PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS DR. ROWLAND GILMORE PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office—Miles Block R: E. A-SHANNON, M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGECN Office in Mayo Block Phoene 396 Res. Phone 397 R. C. R. SANBORN PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office—Miles Block A. WARD, M. D. ® Over First National Bank. Phone 5! House No. 601 Lake Blvd. Phone 351 DR. A. E. HENDERSON PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Over 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 i PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office in Mayo Block Phone 18 Residence Phone 21, INER W. JOHNSON PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office over Security Bank. i — DENTISTS R. D. L. STAN1TUKN DENTIST Office in Winter Bleck DR. J. T. TUOMY - DENTIST 1st National Bank Build’d. Telephone 230 DR 6 M. PALMER . DENTIST [Miles Block Evening Work by Appointment Only EDUARD F. NETZER, Ph, C, RECISTERED PHARMACIST Postoffice Corner Phone 304 - Personal attention to prescriptions M SMART DRAY AND TRANSFER SAFE AND PIANO MOVING Realenco Phone 58 618 Amorica Ave. C. 6. JOHNSON Loans Stocks Lands Box 736, Bemidii, Minn. Office—Room No. 15, Bacon Block Doan’s Kidney Pills. This remedy never fails to relieve me when I take it. For months 1 suffered from se- vere pains in the small of my back and my limbs and joints were stiff and sore. I was unable to work and there was always a feeling of lan- guor present. I tried medicine of various kinds, but did not get relief until T took Doan’s Kidney Pills. The good work they did firmly convinced me of their merits.” For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, New York, sole agents for the United States. Remember the and take no other. name—Doan’s— Gautier's Superstition. Theophile Gautier, the critic, novelist and poet, llke many another great man, was superstitious and believedl in the evil eye. Offenbach was his aversion, and in this respect a Paris contemporary tells us that one day the son and father were walking together The son, for wickedness’ sake, start. | ed'a conversation about Offenbach, and his father gave him to understand that the subject was disagreeable. Noth- ing daunted, the lad led Gautier to a shop window where was exposed a| photograph of the composer. As they resumed their walk the son ' observed, “Well, you see, father, after | all, nothing has happened through looking at the photograph.” At that moment they were turning the corner, and ‘the son preceded his father. In full view of the passersby Gautier ad- ministered to his tormentor a paternal kick, observing, half in anger and half in humor, “Well, something has hap- pened.” Tight Collars. ‘Writing in the Hospital, London, Dr. ‘Walford warns everybody against tight collars. He considers it remarkable that uv one seems to have noticed or, at any rate, to have laid great stress on the fact that such slight obstacles to the free circulation of the blood through the vessels of the brain may adversely influence the health of those who are in the habit of wearing tight- Iy fitting neckcloths. “The fact ap pears to be well known to veterinary surgeons, who tell us that neck con- striction through badly fitting harness is a causative factor in ‘staggers’ in horses,” says the writer. It seems to be equally well known that dogs suf- fer a great deal through having to wear tightly fitting collars. Is it too much, then, Dr. Walford usks, to argue that those of us who wear our own collars too tightly buttoned may find in that practice some explanation of symptoms ascribed to other causes? Tiny Republics. Klein-Alp is a diminutive republic tucked away between Switzerland and France. Only in summer is the re- public inhabited and then by miners and cowgirls. There is one hotel, closed during the winter. Another little re- public is in Tyrol, between Austria and Italy, and in long gone years was under the jurisdiction of first a king and then an emperor. But in the ad- Jjustment of frontier lines the state of Val di Ventino was in some way over- looked, and it promptly organized it- self into a lilliputian republic. It Las now about 2,000 inhabitants living fu six villages. Neither Val dl Ventino nor Klein-Alp bas any taxes. ‘There are no officials or compulsory military services. The only industry of Val di Ventino, aside ‘from the farming of small fields, 18 charcoal burning. His Tribute of Respect. The freckle faced boy who was about to be emancipated from high school thraldom was writing his grad- uating essay. “I suppose I ought to wind it up,” he reflected, “with ‘something touching and sentimental about the leather headed, snub nosed, squeaky voiced. conceited old snoozer that runs tle shebang.” Thereupon he wrote, “And now, our dear and honored principal, we turp to you,” etc.—Chicago Tribune. The Translation. Toole, the great English comedian, was once greatly tickled at finding in a French provincial town a poster an- nouncing a translation of “Walker, London,” the farce which he himself bad made famous. The adapter had translated the title as “Londres qui se promene,” or “Zondon which goes ouf for walks.” ished packing her trunk, *will you re- member to water the fiowers in the porch boxes every day?” “Yes, dear. I'll see that they are properly moistened regularly.” “And the rubber plant in the dining room. You know .it will have to be sprayed about three times a week.” “I'll remember it.” “I'm afraid you’ll forget the canary and let the poor little thing starve.” “Don’t worry about the bird, dear. I'll take good care of him.” “But 1 feel sure you’ll forget about keeping the curtains drawn so that things won't all be faded out when I get back.” “Don’t give yourself a moment’s un- easiness about the curtains. I'll keep the house as dark as a tunnel.” “John, I'm not going. You have some reason for being anxious to get rid of me.”—Chicago Record-Herald. The Druids. The Druids were evidently of very great antiquity, for there cannot be much doubt that it was one of their customs that Virgil had in mind when he wrote in the “Aeneid.” vi, 142, that the “only means of access for a living mortal to the world of spirits was the carrying of a golden twig which grew in a dark and thick grove.” The re- semblance of the story to the Druidical rite is perfect. The Druids practiced their rites in dark groves. If a mis- tletoe was discovered growing upon an oak a priest severed it with a knife. and a festival was held under the tree at which two milk white bulls were offered as a sacrifice. This was a sac- rifice to the sun god. and the mistletoe, from its pale greenish yellow tint, was regarded as a kind of vegetable gold, and was accordingly looked upon as being a fit offering to the sun.—New || York American. s GRAY HAIR MAKE Y0U 100K 01D A Simple Remedy Brings Back the Natural Color—Dandruff Quick- ly Removed. g How often one hears the expres- sion, “She is gray and beginning to look old.” 1t is true that gray hair usually denotes age and is alwalys as- sociated with age. You never hear one referred to as having gray hair and looking young. The hair is generally the index of | age. If your hair is gray, you can’t blame your friends for referring to you as looking old. You can’t retain a youthful appearance if you allow your hair to grow gray. Many per- sons of middle age jeopardize their future simply by allowing the gray hair to become manifest. If your hair has become faded or gray, try| Wyeth’s Sage and Sulphur Hair Rem- edy, a preparation which a chemist by the name of Wyeth devised a few years ago. It is simple, inexpensive and practical, and will banish the gray hairs in a few days. It is also guaranteed to remove dandruff and promote the growth of the hair. It is a pleasant dressing for the hair, and after using it a few days itching and dryness of the scalp en- tirely disappear. Don’t neglect your hair. ing Wyeth’s Sage and Sulphur today, and you will be surprised at the quick results. This preparation is offered to the A public at fifty cents a bottle, and-18| recommended and sold by all drug- gists. Acciden INSURANCE Huffman Harris & Reynolds Bemid)l, Minn. Phone 144 Start us- Ladies Suits,Coats; SKirts and Furs. | Men’s and Boys Suits and Over_coats. Mens, Womens ~and Childrens Sweaters. AND EMBALMER e