Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, January 18, 1912, Page 2

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THE DAILY PIONEER Published every afternoon uce);l Sun- Aay by the Bemidji Pioneer Publishing Company. @ X. CARSON. =. X. DENU. F. A. WILSON, Eaitor. In the City of Bemidji the papers are Jelivered by cavrier. ~Where the deliv- ary is irregular please make immediate complaint to this office. Telephone 31. Out of town subscribers will confer u favor if they will report when they o not set their papers promplly. All papers are continued untll an e: plicit order to discontinue is received, and until arrearages are paid. Subscription Rates. One month, by carrier. One year, by carrier, 5.00 Three months, post 1.25 3ix Months, vostage paid L 280 One ‘year, postage paid.. 5.00 The Weekly Pioneer. es, containing a summary of the week. Published every day and sent postage pald to any address for §1.50 in advance. ENTEREN AS SECOND CL TER AT _THE POSTOFFICE S MA AT B! MIDJL MINN. UNDER THE ACT OF ARCH 8, 18 POOPOOOOOOIODO® ¢ © THIS DATE IN HISTORY ¢ ® _— q - JANUARY 18 > + 1706 - Benjamin Franklin born . in Boston. Died in - Philade'phia. April 17, ¢ - 1790 + 1771 —Charles Brockden . Brown, a pioneer Ameri- & . can novelist, born in @ . Philadelphia. Died there < . - Feb. 22, 1810, . ©1781 -Americans under Gen. . Morgan defeated the . British under Col. . Tarleton in battle of . Cowpeus, in South » Carolina. ® + 1810--Masquerades and masked & . balls were prohibited in @ . Philadelphia. & + 1848-—Milwaukee received its ® . first tclegraph message @ . from Chicago. 8 + IS54—A mob of women des- | . troyed the railroad E bridges and crossings at . Brie, Pa. . ~John Tyler, tenth Pr . dent of the U. S.. died . in Richmond, Va., Born . in Greenway, Va., . March 29, 1790. . -Vietor Emmanuel Il * king of Italy, buried in & the Pantheon in Rome. & + 1885 —The British defeateq the & @ Mahdi's troopsi n battle © & of Abu Kilea. & » 1901-—Kingdom of Prussia * celebrated its bi-centen- : ary. + 1911—Charles Johnson e elected United States 2 senator from Maine. DOPPVOPOPRIOOOP® OO Il the people wili only keep awake, the peanut politican won't amount to shucks. “I love the public drinking cup,” murmured the man killing microbe, “hut, oh, you beer mug Frost on the hard coal stove may | °rnor Eberhart by requesting that| be pretty but is apt to be more or T 1ggravating at 6 a. m. At last” the secret 1is out. The railroads must charge three cents a mile in order to pay the expense of wrecks, Former Mayor Dunne of Chicago has the gubernational bee and will attempt to make Governor Deneen's name Dennis. Almost chilly enough last night to cause a couple of thinks about going down to the safety deposit vault to get another chunk of coal If it is true that Wodrow Wilson requested Harper's Weekly supporting him, one Bryan may be expecting a letter by any mail now. * Climbing chimneys 104 high is the| business of a man at Hibbing who has a wooden leg. He is apt not to have any leg at all if he keeps at that work long. The moon is 225,000 miles from the earth and when last seen the price of butter was eight miles the other side of the moon, singing “I Don't Know Where I'm Going but I'm on My Way.” AS TO MR. GEORGE STEIN. Most men have a busy day now and then, or oftener, but every day is a busy day for the city clerk of Bemidji. Modest George Stein, who has held that office, for the past year. knows this to be true, al- though he has little to say about it. But Mr. Stein doesn’t need to talk. Facts speak than “His (meaning the same said G. S.) books are pretty as pictures; the rec- ords of the city are in splendid shape and he always is obliging and cour- teous,” expresses the general opin- ion of Mr. Stein and as a result it is not likely that he will have any op- position at the coming city election. plainer words. HOW ABOUT NORTH DAKOTA? With the assembling of the party leaders in Fargo ' is expected that before the end of the present week " [present week the Jlong the >| than to slopi Mr. W. J. some line may be drawn on the probable choice of the Democrats of North Dakota for the presidential nominaiion. From the fact that North Dakota will be the first State in the Union to declare its presi- 1 choice this year, the eyes of both parties are naturally turned in this The primaries will be Iheld Mareh 17, when both the Re- publicans and Democrats. will vote at | | den direction. {the same precincts as in a general !clection and will declare their pre- | ference for the presidential nomina- | tion. by name. ‘The Progressive Re- | publicans have been actively at work for some time in the interest of the La Follette candidacy, but until the Democrats have little activity. As North ‘[Dakou\ is one of the strongholds of | | shown the “progressive’” movement it is | thought likely the Democrats of the [ State will incline more to Woodrow | Wilson than te Judson Harmon, {though the Ohio governor has many warm admirers. - AN INNOVATION. For just one year let's cut out | sitting along the curb and looking | wise; let’s us hump ourselves and do i our knitting and keeping our homes supplied with pies. Let’s try to better onr conditions by honest work for honest pay, and let the howling politician go on his windy, useless way. Let’s worry less about the measures our congressmen -im- {teng to thrash, and give our wives and Kids such pleasures as come to Let's do jawing i folks who have the cash. less worrying. and o'er [things a thousand miles away. and t our woodpiles do some sawing, barnyards. clean to- v . By fussing round we make life's Dliss turn and make our da to streams of sor- row, deep and wide; let’s paint the bary and clean the cistern, and let the good old nation slide. ! netion's we've =cul‘|'led. we carnest, patriotic men; ithe patient, cares toil worn girls we 1married should be considered now siand then. P'd rather lug a pail of water into the kitchen for my Jill to go to congress with a ¥|swatter and knock the stuffing from “|a bill.—Walt Mason. [P9000200000D065 66 & COMMUNICATIONS. @ R R R R R RS {Boost More; Knock Less, Says Koll. | M. N. Koll of Cass Lake sent the | following to the Duluth News Tri- 1bun(‘: | “The Northern Minnesota Develo- | pment association at its St. Cloud | convention failed to cmbarrass Gov- | he do his duty and call an extra ses- | sion for reapportionment, and H. J. | Maxfield of \Vadena. then president {of the association, used all his in- [fiuence to that end | “Governor Eberhart has appointed {as immigration commissioner, H. J. Maxufield, of Wadena, late president {of the Northern Minnesota Develop- ment association. “But of course no politics was as- | sociated with the throttling of the extra session demand at St. Cloud” {—Duluth Herald. | On Tuesday, Oct. 24, 1911, the Maxfield in his aforesaid H. J. capacity as president of the North- ern Minnesota Development associa- tion, stopped off at Cass Lake to con- | sult with me, a member of the execu. |tive committee of said association, xpecting to find Secretary Macken- zie here also, in order that the pro- gram for the St. Cloud convention might be talked over. At that time {Mr. Maxfield telephoned to the Be- midji Pioneer the following inter- view concerning his attitude toward {an extra session of the legislature: “The association has not since the legislature adjourned advocated amr extra session. At its Duluth meeting in June the committee on resolutions discussed the advisability of urging an extra session and decided that it would not be advisable. The asso- ciation decided at St. Paul at a meeting o fthe executive committee in the closing days of the sesion not to call on the governor for an.extra session? It is a quesction whether a bill could be passed at present. However, if the sentiment at the next meeting in St. Cloud is infavor o fthe movement I shall submit to the wishes of the majority.” The tenor of Mr. Maxfield’s notion of having of not having a special session resolution is plain. He was against it. Now the point I am try- ing to make is that at the time Mr | Maxfield gave out that interview, Former Immigration Commissionér BEMIDJI PEOPLE SHOULD TRY THIS. E. N. French & Co. states that any one who -has constipation, sour stomach or gas on the stomach, should try simple buckthorn bark, glycerine, etc., as compounded - in Adler-i-ka, the new German Ap- pendlcitis remedy. A SINGLE DOSE i brings relief almost INSTANTLY and Bemidji people are surprised how QUICKLY it helps. This simple remedy antisepticizes the digestive organs and draws off the impurities | B. N. French & Co. Too | Welsh had not died, nor was he even yet sick so far as we knew. Mr. Maxfiela did not change his line of actioh after Welsh' died, but went forward along the same lines. Impression that there was an under- standing between the - appointive power—the governor and others— that Maxfield was to receive the ap- pointment? The former commis- sloner was not dead nor even sick when Mr. Maxfield took his position in the matter-—in fact Mr. Maxfield \took his position ingthe closing days of the last legislative session when the executive committee met and kept it all the way along and it looks t ome like mighty poor taste for a big newspaper to attempt Maxfield got his appointment. as politics, it is very evident that he did wnot set his said to catch the passing breeze, and if he got it after being consistent, he cannot be blam- ed in the least. At St. Cloud the association adopt- ed a resolution asking that an im- migration commissioner be appointed ence and conversant with conditions in those sections where state lands are lccated.” Mr. Maxfield is such a {man. Many others could have been !named who would also have answer- ed that description, but inasmuch as a man who answers the description has been appointed, the development association members should be satis- fied and get ready to cooperate with him to the extent that we may get the largest possible benefit from his efforts. « Another thing that comes to my mind is that !nhangeg that come to the Cass Lake | Times table 1 notice that quite a large proportion of those which ex- press dissatisfaction at the way the St.Cloud meeting resolved, are edit- ed by men who were not there, nor even in the most instances ever at- tended a meeting of the association. If sentiment in their respective {localities was so different, as they would have us believe, why didn't they come to the convention and help to mould sentiment? It seems to me to be mighty poor boosting {for northern Minnesota for news | papers to use their space in finding {our faults only, instead of giving us |a little pat on the back for the good we have accomplished. An honest difference of opinion is to be respect- ed, but a rule or ruin policy, never. M. N. KOLL, Member of executive committee, of the Northern Minnesota opment association. {the palm five, and the fingers 14. | The speed of air currents increas- creases. DON'T PULL OUT - THE GRAY HAIRS ! A Few Applications of a Simple Rem- | edy Will Bring Back the Na- | tural Color. “Pull out one gray hair and a doz- en will take its place” is an old say- ‘ng which is to a great extent true, if no steps are taken to stop the cause. When gray hairs appear it is a sign thiat Nature needs assistance. It is Nature’s call fur help. Gray hair, dull, lifeless hai-, or hair thar {is falling out, is not necessarily a sign of advancing age, for there are thousands of elderly 1.2cple with per- fect heads of hair hout a single streak of gray. When gray hairs come, or when the hair seems to be Uieless or dead, some good, reliable hair-restoring treatment should be resorted to -at jonce. Specialists say that one of the | best preparations to wse is the old- fashioned “sage tea" which our grandparents used. The best prepa- ration of this kind is Wyeth’s Sage and Sulphur Hair Remedy, a prepa- jration of domestic sagv and sulphur, scientifically compounded with later discovered hair tonics and stimulants, the whole mixture being carefully balanced and tested by experts. Wyeth’s Sage and Sulphur is clean and wholesome and perfectly harm- less. It refreshes dry parched hair, removes dandruff and gradually re- stores faded or gray hair to its na- tural color. Don’t delay another minute. Start using Wyeth’s Sage and Sulphur at once and see what a difference a few days’ treatment will make in your hair. This preparation is offered to the public at fifty cents a bottle, and is recommended and sold by all drug- gists. INSURANCE 3 'iluf'tman Harris & Reynolds emid)l, Minn. Phone 144 Is it then fair to try to create the | to make | politics out of the appointment. If| who “is well qualified from experi-| in watching the ex- Devel- i The wrist contains eight bones, es as distance from the earth in-! BAKING POWDER | That Makes the Baking Better Tailures are almost impossible with Culumet, We know that it will zive you better Tesults. We know (hat the baking will bo pures —niore wholcsome. We know that it will be more.evenly raised. We know t! have put the seen it tried ¢ Have you tried i1? ! Caluinet is highest in quatity— moderate in pri Received Highest Award— | i Bagng poWD- CHiC ABD i | | Try a Want Ad ! 1-2 Cent a Word-=Cash | THE SPALDING EUROPEAN PLAN Duluth’s Largest and Best Hotel DULUTH MINNESOTA More than $100,000.00 recently expended on improvements. 250 rooms, 12 private bavhs. 60_samplo rooms. Every modern convenleite: Luxurions and delighiful restaurants and buffot, Flemish Room, Palm Room, Men's Grill, Oolonial 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 barbor and Lake Superior. Convenient to everything. Ono of the Groat Hotels of the Norfhwest | thing beyond all bellet, she sprang from | Interested. TO THE WAYS OF THE WILD Timid Doe Finds There Is Some Good After All In the White Bipeds | of the City. The heart of a deer, 2 poor, timid, pretty little doe, must have been near to bursting with gratitude a few ! days ago. Somewhere up among the | pines in the moonlight she must sure- ly have found a way, dumb brute though she is, to tell her companions of the antlered tribe how good after all .are the white bipeds of the city when the hunting season is over. Out of the maelstrom of queer sights and scenes of snorting, pufing monsters that ran on wheels and ut- tered terrifying metallic sounds in which she found herself she was trans- ported back to her native environ- ment—in a motor car, Poor, little trembling creature. She shook and cowered and looked as though she were gazing upon the end from her great liquid eyes. ' They took her back to the mountains, loosened their hold upon the soft neck and said to her: “Go, little girl"” | She hesitated a minute, then, realiz- | Ing what to her was doubtless- some- the tonneau of the motor car and In three bounds was out of sight. ‘Whatever caused the animal to stray Into the city from some one of the nearby canyons no one knows—Los Angeles Times. Promoting Pleasant Impressions. | “What Is leave to print?” inquired the lady who has the art of seeming | “Leave to print,” replied Senator | Sorghum, “is something that enables | a man to pretend that he has deliv- | ered a speech, and which also enables | his friends to pretend that they have made themselves familiar with its contents.” Telephone Dr. J.A. McClure your horse troubles. No charge to answer Phones, No trouble to show goods. Veterinary Remedies for sale. Dr. J. A. McClure, Phone. 105. MUSIC LESSONS]| MISS SOPHIA MONSEN Teacher of Piano and Harmony , At Residence of Mrs. G. Crone 519 Minnesota Avenue . Engagements made Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday THE ORIGINAL EAS TH!S SIGNATURE ATTEINTION ufomobile Owners Our repair shop is opened and running full blast Now is the time to get your auto- mobile over-hauled and ready for spring work. A little attention now, may save a big break later on. Will estimate your work and guarantee a thorough, first=class job. Northern Au tomobile Go. sizes. ‘Blank Books Ledgers Journals Day Book Record Books Cash Books ‘Have You opened a new set this month? At this store you can buy them at a big saving. From 10 to 33 per cent 0ff 1912 Diaries " from 25 cents to $1.00. All kinds and all ¢ Get in on your pick early. The Bemidji Pionger S 8000020060000 000 » LODGEDOM IN BEMIDJI @ 2000000000006 66 4. 0. U. W. Bemidji Lodre No. 277, eular meetin; nights—first and Monday, at 8 o'clock, —at_0dd Fellows hall, 402 Beltrami Ave. T B. P. 0. E. Bemidji Lodge No. 1052, Regular meeting _m-hts. first and third Thursdays, 8 o'clock—at Masonic hall, Beltrami Ave., "and " Fifts c.or every second and fourtn Sunday evening, at & gelock in basement of Catholie church. DEGREE OF HONOR. Meeting nights __every second and fourth Monday gyenings, at 0dd Fellows F. 0. E Regular meeting _nights every 1st and 2nd Wednes. day “evening at § o'clock. Eagles hall. G. A. B. Regular meetings—First and third Saturday after- noons, at 2:30—at Odd Iel- lows " Hall, 402 Beltram Ave. 1 0.0 F. Bemidji Lodge No. 119 egular meeting nights Sievery, Friday, 8 o'clock at 0dd Fellows Hall, 402 Beltrami. L 0. O. F. Camp No. 24, Regular meeting every second and fourth Wednesdays at 8 o'clock, at 0dd Fellows Hall. Rebecca Lodge. meeting nights — first and third Wednesdays at 8 o'clock 0. O. F. Hall. Regular ENIGETS OF PHYTHIAS. Bemidji Lodze No. 168, Regular meeting nights—ev- ery Tuesday evening at 8 o'clock—at the Eagles’ -Hall, Third street. . LADIES OF THE MAC- CABEES. Regular meeting night last Wednesday evening in each month. A. F. & A. M., Bemidji, 233, Regular meeting nights — first and third Wednesdays, 8 o'clock—at Masonic Hall, Beltrami Ave., and Fifth St. Bemidji _Chavter No. 70, R. A. M. Stated convocations f5—tirst and third_Mondays, § k p. m.—at Masonic Hall Beltrami Ave., and Fifth St. slkanah Commandery No. 30 K. T. Stated_conclave—second aid fourth Fridays, , 8 o'clock § p. m.—at Masonic Temple, Bel- trami Ave., and Tifth St. 0. E. §. Chapter No. 171. Regular meeting nights— first and third Fridays, 8 o'clock — at Masonic Hall, Beltrami Ave., and Fifth St M. B. A. Roosevelt, No. 1523. Regular meeting nights every second and fourth ‘Thursday evenings at o'clock in Odd Fellows all. M. W. A. Bemidji Camp No. 5012. Regular ‘meeting nights — Lrst and third Tuesdays at o'clock at Odd Fellows Hall, 102 Beltrami Ave. MCODERN SAMARITANS. Regular meeting nights on the first and third Thursdays in the I 0. O. F. Hall at 8 p. m. SONS OF HEEMAN. Meetings held third Sunday afternoon of each month at Troppman’s Hall, 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 Office’313 Beitram! Ave. Phone 319-2. William C.. Kigin INSURANCE Rentals, Bonds, Real Estats First Mortgage Loans on City and Farm " Property O’Leary-Bowser Bldg. _Ph‘o_no 9. - —— a P

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