Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, January 12, 1912, Page 2

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Published every afternoon excépt Sun- 3:: by the Bemidji Pioneer Publishing mpany. . A. WILSON, Editor. n the City of Bemidjl the I'lll\el'l are aulvmd by carrier. here deliv- ory Is irregular please make TR 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. papers are continued until an ex- plicit order to discontinue is received, and until arrearages are paid. Subscription Rates. One month, by carrie One year, by carrier. Three months, posta; Six Months, postage paid One year, postage paid. The Weekly Pioneer. oo, Soisom 38585 pages, oontalning a summary | of lge news the week. Published every Tlmrsm\) and sent postage paid to any address for $1.50 in advance. ENTERED AS SECOND CLASS MAT- TER AT THE POSTOFFICE AT BE- MIDJI, MlN\ UNDER THE ACT OF MARCH 3 R R R R R R R R ORI ® THIS DATE IN HISTORY ¢ ® —_ 4 8 JANUARY 12 @ * 1743—La Verendrye, one of the ®| & early French voyageurs, & @ reached the Canadian ® # Rocky Mountains. & ¢ 1746-—Henri Pestalozzi, who & @ devised the Pestalozzian & o system of education, & @ born in Zurich, Switzer- @ & land. Died Feb. 17, @ ® 1827, @ < 1812—Edmund Chadwick, @ noted educator, reformer & @ and abolitionist, born & + in Middleton, H. H. & @ Died April 7, 1899, @ ¢ 1813—William Jones of Penn- ¢ < sylvania became secre- ® tary of the navy in @ & the cabinet of President @ & Madison. & ¢ 1816-—Boneparte family ban- & & ished from France. & + 1828—Boundary line between & & the United States and & - Mexico settled by treaty. & * 1842—Francois Coppee, noted ¢ ! poet and dramatist, born & in Paris. Died there, - May 23, 1908. @ ¢ 1858—British force under Sir ® & James Outram defended & & Alumbagh, a palace near & & Lucknok, against an at- & ® tack of 30,000 Sepoys. ® # 1861—Florida seceded from the & ® Union. @ + 1866—Aeronautical Society of & @ Great Britain establish- & & ed by the Duke of Argyll & @ and others. @ & 1911—President Taft asked & ) Congress for an appro- & o priation toward the & & fortification of the Pan- & < ama Canal. @ 8000000000000 0Q R ——— 9590000000066 000 & Do You Know -That @ PPOPPOCOPIPOOOPIOPO Sixty per cent of tie laborers in Kansas mines are Europeans. —y— Street car conductors in Sequit, Japan, make thirty-five cents a day. e R In 1850 but one woman worked to every 10 men; now the ratio is about one to four. —x— “Women - reformers of Germany have asked the Reichstag to wipe out the barmaid evil. — About 120,000 women are em- ployed by the French government and the number is growing con- stantly. S In England and Wales the aver- age weekly wages for skilled car- penters, masons, plumbers, painters, pattern-makers and printers does not exceed $9 a week. —x— The opening of the first co-opera- tive hat store in. this country, a productive enterprise founded along co-aperative lines, was celebrated recently by the Co-operative Leagues of New York city. —x — Minneapolis electrical workers' unions are making an effort to have that city chosen as the 113 meeting place of the international organiza- tion. The contest will be between Minneapolis and Boston. —_x — The Committee on Amusement Resources of Working Girls of New rork city has been incorporated re- cently to investigate and study and improve the general amusements of working girls and their vacation conditions. ——e Milwaukee cigarmakers’ union has proposed an amendment to the in- ternational constitution providing that on and after May 1, 1912, there shall be no more open shops under the jurisdiction of the International Cigarmakers’ Union. — Scottish miners’ representatives have made a demand for an individu- al district minimum wage to be paid in all circumstances to all men work- ing at the coal face; that the wages of all boys employed underground be standardized in accordance with the scale proposed. S S St. Paul and Minneapolis con- tractors will ask the carpenters to accept 47 1-2 cents an hour, begin- ning April 1 and continuing through the summer until September 1, when the rate of pay is to be increased to 50 cents an hour, the rate the union last spring: s g British postal workers have been [ for some time now moving. strongly i favor of better conditions. Mass meetings are taking place from week to weék all over the country and the seven or eight unions comprised in the Postal Workers' Federation are united in strong support of their common demands. Shar i The Labor Carpentership Associa- {tion now embraces 111 societies in Great Britain. The aggregate | capital of these workmen’s societies is approximately $10,000,000 and { theirtrade-amounts to nearly $22,- 000,000 a year. The last return shows that $131,395 was divided among the workers as their share of the profits. A — 1t is expected that some time dur- ing the present month the Employ- er's Liability Commission will pre- sent its final report to the two houses of Congress. The report will | embody a bill providing a graduated scale of compensation through government instrumentalities for in- juries to employees of railroads en- gaged in interstate commerce whether due to negligence or not. What He Remembered. ‘When a prospective voter in one ot Chicago’s election districts was asked the date of his naturalization he re- plied that he had taken out his pa- pers 80 long before that he could not remember just when he had become an American, The officer to whom this statement was ‘made was extremely thoughtfu! for a ‘moment. Then he added: “Can you remember who was the Republican candidate for president that year? “Sure, I don't remember who was running for prisidint,” was the re sponee, “but it was the same year Dog Drownder.” HEARD IN BEMIDII Bad Backs Made Strong—XKidney Ills Corrected. All over Bemidji you hear it. Do- an’s Kidney Pills are keeping up the .| good work, curing = weak Kkidneys, driving away backache, correcting urinary ills. Bemidji people are tel- ling about it—telling of bad backs made sound again. You can believe the testimony of your own townspeo- ple. They tell it for the benefit of you who are suffering. If your back erable, if the kidneys act too fre- quently, or passages are painful, scanty, and off color, use Doan's Kid- ney Pills, the remedy that has helped so many of your friends and neigh- bors. Follow this Bemidji citizen’s advice and give Doan’s a chance to do the same for you, Mrs. Almira Dehart, 1014 America Ave., Bemidji, Minn., says: “I can- not say too much in praise of Doan’s Kidney Pills and I strongly urge anyone afflicted with kidney com- plaint to give this remedy a fair trial. Doan’s Kidney Pills act promptly and effectively, leaving no doubt 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 name — Doan’s— and take no other. Woman's Sense of Honor. Much has been done by our own higher education and widening field of work, and & ‘woman now ’despises 'what used to be by repute her most & skillful appeal to the vanity of man. The writer .has often noticed’ the markedly greater breadth of view and the truer sense of honor among the present-day “girl students compared ‘with that which obtained when she herself was a student, and which is still largely that of women of her own age today. An even more strik- ing fact is that the majority of men do not seem to expect as keen a sense of honor from women as they do from themselves. This mental atmosphere has surely a deterrent effect upon the ‘growth of that sense—A Woman Teacher, in London Spectator. A FEELING OF SECURITY. You naturally feel secure when about to take is absolutely pure and contains no harmful or habit produc- ing drugs. Such a medicine is Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-Root, the great Kidney, Liver and Bladder Remedy. Swamp-Root is sci¢ntifically com- pounded from vegetable herbs. 1t is not a stimulant and is taken in teaspoonful doses. It is not recommended for every- thing. It is nature’s great helper in re- lieving and overcoming kidney, liver and bladder troubles, A sworn: statement of purity is with every bottle of Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-Root. - If you need a medicine, you should have the best . . If you are already convinced that Swamp-Root is what you need, you will find it on sale at all drug stores in bottles of two sizes, fifty-cents and one-dollar. | Samplo Bottis of Swamp-Rost Free by Mail | Send to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Bing- hamton, N. Y., for a-sample bottle, free by mail—it will convince any- one. You will also receive a booklet of valuable information, telling all ‘dbout the'kidneys. . When writing be ;u‘re lhd mention the Bemldjl Daily lonee carpenters of loth citles struck for that Stuffy McGinnis was appointe¢ ! Lacres, if you feel lame, sore and mis- || formidable ‘weapons—a lle, tears and| you know that the medicine you are |’ ous has a slight fou ddation i human flesh, . GRAY HAIR MAKES "YOU LOOK 0LD Use Wyeth’s Sage and Sulphur lnd Your Gray. Hair Will Quickly Van Gray hair is a mark of age, and nothing that can be said as to its beauty will offset the disadvantages of this mark of age set upon your brow. Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Hair Remedy darkens thehair and restores it to its youthful beauty. Our grand- mothers and their grandmothers be- fore them used sage and.sulphur for darkening their hair. Nothing has ever been found more -effective for| this purpose than these two time- honored remedies, but Wyeth, a mod- | ern chemist, has combined the two with other ingredients, which makes a delightful dressing for the hair, and which not only removes every trace of dandruff but promotes the growth of the hair. It also stops the .hnir from falling out, and makes lt | beautiful. All druggists aré authorized to re fund the money if it fails to do ex- actly as represented. Don’t neglect your hair-and. don’t resort ‘to old-time hair dyes. Get a| bottle of Wyeth’s Sage and Sulphur from your druggist today, and notice the difference in your hair after a few days’ use. i This preparation is offered to the public at fifty cents a bottle, and is recommended and sold by all drug- BRICK FACTORY We make brick and can fill all orders . promptly. ~ Build your house of brick made by FOLEY BROS. Bemidji, Minn. THE SPALDING EUROPEAN PLAN Duluth’s Largest and Best Hotel -DULUTH MINNESOTA More than $100.000.00 recently expended on improvements. 250 rooms, lenxlvne ths, 60 sample rooms. Ever: convenience: Luxurious and dcll hL( \ festaurants and vuffet. Flomish Palm Room. Men's Grill, Colonial Buffet: Magnificent -lobby . and _public* rooms: Ballroom, ‘banquet . rooms. dining_ rooms; Sun pan tory. Located in l.nn of business sec- llnn ‘but overlooking the harbor and Lake Superior. ' Convenlent to eversthing. Ons of the Great Hotels of the Northwest Ancmem Heahh INSURANCE Hufiman. Harris & Reynolds Bemld)ji, Minn. Phone 144 Geel i ;gur Iflnu:.ln ‘will refund money if PA Thelr skins secrete an_actd fluld, | ¢ yeanin g, nd, Bleedihg or Prntrud- Which " 18 very ~Iréithting {0 the|ing Eilos o ¥ s 500, gists. T D Trademark n.....m, ;:E- Kaife I Yor ‘Everythmg’ but But you can be sure he remembered Kellogg’s. The crackling, filmy flakes are far tco delicious to ever forget. A delightful taste of purest white corn . flaked and then toasted in the inimit- ° -able Kellogg way. Have Kcllogg s for to— morrow’s breakfast a delight the fa:m!y, I 6 70 14 DAYE | ENT fails to oure any ca: your horse troubles. to 14 davs. WANTS A ROUND OAK Base Burner ori Range. She surely ought to.have one in this kind of weather. You'll biirn less coal and can maintain a more uniform temperature in your home with a Round ‘Oak than with any other make of stove. We Are ‘Not ‘announcing a January clearance sale, but we give you the clearance sale prices at this time. Everything in our large general Hardware stock will interest you as to price, Come in and see what we have to offer. A. B. Palmer ‘The price of "Sunklst' % Oranges—-lhe finest fruit grown—is no higher than that which you have paid for oranges of much less qual- ity. Madam, merely ask for “Sunkist”’ and insist that each orange you buy is wrapped in a tissue paper, marked ‘‘Sunkist.” For | every wrapper is valuable. They identify the best oranges in the world By savmg these | premiums at but a trifling additional expense. Many wide-awake women are furnishing their dining tables by this means. Read care- fully particulars below. Seedless, Tree-Ripened Navels The choicest crop of 5,000 California groves. They [“are orfinges with no seede ‘They are solid, n/wml on #1¢ trees and picied by gloved Jands. Juicy and delightfully sweet. e most healthful ¢f all fruit, Vou will get gemlme “Sunkist" Or- anges with the valuable wrappers by 7nsisting on them. Your family deservesthis most health- ful and economical fruit. Get This: Splendid ‘Rogers’' Orange Spoon Save 12 “Sunkist" orange or lemon wrappers;or trademarkscutfrom wrappers,andsend them tous, with 12c in stamps to help pay charges, packing, etc.,and we willsendyotl thisgenuine Rogers'silver orange spoon. For each additionzl spoon send 12 wrappers or trademarks and 12c in stamps. Not responsible for cash sent through the mails. Fruit Knife for 24 Wrappers and 20c in stamps, Excellent quality—genuine Rogers. 14 “Sunkist” Premiums ) Send for full description, mumber of wrappers and amotint of cash Bosessary to secure each article, Child's ster Fork Feult Kai o Fork Dodlln-s Seon o,....d‘ Eork - Tenspoon o ablcapoos " Silad Fork . Buter Speender This-Skinned, Juicy “Sunkist LEMONS—OF the same supetb guallty as the oranges. Economical becnuse s 50| nhm-.?:lnned and extra julcy. Wrappers same valve 85 -Sunkist” Orange wrappers. Recipe Booklet frc| upon request. (121) iCALIFORNIA FRUIT GROWERS" mHANGE 182 North Clark Street, Chicago, Ill, rgot Telephone Dr. J.A. McClure No charge to answer Phones, No trouble to show goods, Veterinary Remediesfor sale. Or. J. AMcClure, Phone. 105, | Freight West Leaves at 9:00 a. 800 RAILROAD 162 East Bound Leaves 9:54 a, 168 West Bound Leaves 4:37 p. 186 East Bound Leaves 2:45 p. 187 West Bound Leaves 10: 38 a. GREAT NORTHERN 53 West Bound Leaves 8:30 p. 34 East Bound Leaves 12:08 p. 356 West Bound Leaves 3:42 a. 36 East Bound Leaves 1:16 a. 105 North Bound Arrives 106 South Bound Leaves BEBE BEEEEEBEE Freight East Leaves at 3:30 . Minnesota & International 32 South Bound Leaves 8:15 a. 31 North Bound Leaves 6:20 p. 34 South Bound Leaves 11:46 p. 33 North Bound Leaves 4:30 a. “reight South Leaves at 7:30 a. ¥reigat North Leaves at 6:00 a. Minn. Bed Lake & Man. i North Bound Leaves 3:36 p. m. 2 South Bound Leaves 10:30 a. m. PROFESSIONAL CARDS LAWYERS GR_AHAM:M. TORRANCE : LAWYER Miles Block Telephone 560 H. FISK . ATTORNEY AT LAW Office over City Drug Store HARRY MASTEN Piano Tuner ormerly o Radonbush & Co. of 8t. Pau Instructor of Vinlm. Piano, Mando- in and Brass Instruments. Music furnished for balls, hotels, weddings, banquets, and all occasions. Terms reasonable. All music up to date.; HARRY MASTEN, - Plane Tu R00m36, Third -floor, ;Brinkman 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 °hone 396 Res. Fhone 397 R. C..R. SANBORN PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office—Miles Block L A. WARD, M. D. ® Over First National Bank. Phone 5! House No. 60 Lake Blvd." Phone 351 DR. A. E. HENDERSON PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Jver First Nationel 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 . Office over Security Bank. OQOOCOOO?QOOQOOO i aovw Bemidji ‘~Lodge No. LR el nday, at 8 o'clock, MR8 Tia *Petlows hak: 402 Balt.!‘lllll Ave. B. P02 Bemidji Lodge ‘No. 105: Ae‘ulflr‘u mn m~‘-u—" first _and ursdays, 8 o'elock—e.t Hmnle -hall, c.0. 7 eve&mond and fourta evening, at 8§ oClocl i basement of Clthulic church. ] DEGREZ OF NONOR. Mosting nignts ev » second and rmfrth uund‘:; gflnlntl. at 0dd Fellows == r. 0 = Regular meeting _nights every Ist and ShA WWeamen day“evening at 8 o'clock. Eagles hall. G A B gular meefln‘l—Flrll ang’ Shira saturdn poons, at 2:3 o Hall, 402 Bcl!rlml L O O ¥ Bemidi! Lodge No. 118 5‘;‘“‘" mesti] n’ B ‘& 8% Feliows * Halk: 1] 402 Beltr; lfi O. ¥. Camp No. 24. Euflfi‘l; meatln every lmfl ourth eadays oclock. at Odd Fellows Hall. Reb: Lod, meetln n‘l hts -~ first and third ¥ Bflne!dl aat’s oelock KNIGHTS OF PEYTHIAS. Bemidjl Lodge No. 168. Reguhr !na:eun:“ zhu—cv ery Tue ning nclock—u he Eagles’ Hul. Third street. LADIES OF THE MAC- CABEES. Regular meeting night last wednesday c‘ven ng in each month. ‘MASONIC. A. F. & A. M, Bemi 298 ™ St Bemidl o ool el nesdays, 8 o' “Hall, Beltrami nnd Fifth St. — —Bemlld‘.fl Chunur No. 170, R, A. tated um —first nnd third %fl‘y o'clock p. m.—at MAMT! Bel{rfl.mi Ave.. and Fifth St [ { nlkamh Commandery No. 30 R. T. Stated conclave—second aLd tourth Fridays, 8 oclock . m.—at Masonic Tem; Bel- Bralii Aven and FIfHRE. nS ‘E s'm‘i'“’u' No.hl'll. ar ts— firgt and tmrdni‘nd: s, 8 o'clock — at Masonic . Beltrami_ Ave." and Fi Roosenlt, Na. 1528. Regular meeting: nights Syary second ana_fourth giclook in *'G80 heltows M. W. A Bemldjl Blmp No. 501’. Yot wna i sty at s af 'cloc] Odd F' lows k. Hall. 402 Heltrl.ml ?.f Rights on "\e firax nnd '-h in"the" 1", - ThantasTs & DENTISTS EDUARD F. NETZER, Ph. C. Postoffice Corner Revidonse Phons B8 Lands ~av Meeti; R. D. L. STANIOR Sunday atternoon. of sath DE 1 fl:lr;th at Trolllmmntl Office in Winter Bleck DR' J' T' TUOMY Mutln:l’ the first Frida; DENTIST * ,:x:nl:: of otfiw month l{ Ist National Bank Build’s. Telephone 230 Schmidt, 305 Thisa atrser " R. G. M. PALMER DENTIST PMiles Block Evening Work by Appoistment Only RECISTERED PHARMACIST Phone 304 Personal attention to prescriptions OM SMART 3 DRAY AND TRANSFER SAFE AND PIANO MOVING 010 Amoriea Ave. - Bffics Phone 12 .C. 6. JOHNSON Loans - Stocks Box 736, Bemidii, Minn. No. 15, Bacon Block EW PUBLIC LIBRARY ZOpen daily, except Sunday and Mon- flwlzn.m..lm‘:p.m..'lmfi%m. ‘| Sunday 8 to 8 p. m. m. mm'fim.mu R. F. MURPHY FUNERAL DIRECTOR AND EMBALMER Office’s13 BetramiAve. Phone 319-2.. William C. Kisin msu‘nmcl'-: Rentals, Bonds, Real Estate First Mortgage Loans ‘on_City and Farm - Beltraml _Ave, and. Fifts.~

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