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1 | BAGTIME AT HIS. FUNERAL | con GuRE ' OF PNEUMONIA Loulsville Barber Provides Funds to Make l:&cc;:::a"“ doliity _Camphor In- Pragtice i | Since 1908, ki Basing h! beliet on the argument;| ;. 9 “The only weaping that should be done | There Navé '”t‘“ and AL ate meny over a man should be ‘wept’ at his varieties of treatment for pneumonia. Birthi,” Frederick G. Burgbatdt, ‘bat. | A Ion8 list would be requlred to ndl 1 : § cate all the medicaments which have ber, living at 211 South Shelby street, | been employed agatnst it. Some even consider that this affection is an afl- Physiclan Tells of Sustessful Use of has made his will, wherein he provides i funds for the hiring of a brass band to | { ment which has a definite cycle. play only ragtime tunes at his funeral, | They are of the opinion that no medi- auother sum of money for the serving | oyion ghould be adopted which might of & lunch and accompanying drinks, | act on it and disturb its developnient, and an additional sum for his under- | o O LS b O L Ing one taker, who Is to place him face down | . BUMEE CURE (8 RS BERG OO0 In the casket that “he may rest COm-|peauijque armee more particularly de- fortably.” His body he wants covered signed to combat cnmpllénthn. WithhyRelnths aqd yosebuds: Dr. Serbert, in the Muenchner Medi- Burghardt does mot look upon the | yiyicone Wochenmsehrift, descrives the pro visions of his will as being humor- | remarkable results which he obtatned ous. On the contrary he declares he |y ¢ treatment of serious cases of 15 50 serlous that he has frustrated the | oo on* pe€oe SO0 ees secretary of the Barbers' Aid to sev of camphor. He first had occasion to aside the benefits accruing to him |, oo it in 1906 in a case of double from that organization for the pur- | pneumonia, where the patient was poses outlined. Asked for the rea:|ggo-suffering from typhoid fever. He son for his unusual desires, he sald: | tperefore practiced a subcutaneous “I don't see anything unusual about | ypjection of 12 centimeters of cam- them. A wlill, as I understand it, gen- phorated oil (20 per cent.) recently erally is the last wish of & men, aud | gterjlized. The results obtained on it T cannot do as I wish, what is the | the pulse and respiration and gen- use of mdking 2 will? eral condition were extremely satis- “For a number of years before be- | actory. He renewed this dose every coming a barber,” he contlnued, “I was | 12 hours, and he found after three employed by undertakers. I saw SO |gayg the trouble had disappeared. many dead persons that I became hard- | . Serbert has since emploved the ened. I wondered why people cried at | game treatment in 21 cases. one of funerals, for I always have Insisted | which was extremely serious. since it that as we don't know whether the |wag a question of double complicated dead person is happy or otberwise; his | pneumonia in a woman seventy-two friends should ndt cry over him. I|years old. All these cases recovered. | have witnessed the passing of fourteen | It seem certain that the camphor pro- members of my family and while my | duced these eftects, since there was feelings were sorrowful, not a tear {no real crisis, the cure being gradual have I shed. In fact, I cannot recall jand slowly effected.— Philadelphia the time when I did cry. I have no |North American. one in the world to whom I should | leave my little insurance money and | 1 think T ought to be allowed to do wEALTH OF THE NATIONS as I please.” Unl(ed States Does Not Make Tre- BUTCHER'S SON WAS A KING';' mendously Good Showing in World’s Financlal Column, But Orellus Antony 1. Did Not Ruln‘ Long Over Araucanla in i South America. For all its vaunted wealth the Unit- | ed States, in so far as per capita ratio goes, does not make such a tremen: M dously good showing in the world's The death of “Princess” Marguerita, | fnancial column. The wealth in the daughter of “King Orelius Antony L.” | rpited States in 1910 was estimated In a poorhouse on the Danish island | ¢ 155 000,000,000, by far the greatest of Reyagade brings to light a romance | yyount credited in bulk to' any one known to few, and half forgotten even ' o univy. Yet the per capita wealih by these. ] | was only $1.359. Great Britain in 1909 , King Orellus Antony I” was the |was worth $88.725,000.000, each person, €on of a French butcher who lived at | according fo the census. thus getting Perlgord. the clty of ples. His name |4 973 Irance, with $83,000.000.000 in was Antolne Tounens. He studled 1aw, | 1910L had a per capita wealth of but having a taste for adventure, set |32 070: (fermany had $63.500,000,000, out for South America. That was In ' wijth a per capita of $1,000. Russia’s 1861. total wealth was $60.000,000,000, but His wanderings took him to Arau-|its enormous population dragged the cania, where he persuaded the inhab- |per capita down to $400, while Swit- Itants to set up an independent mon- |zerland, with a total wealth of only archy and make-him king. This did $3,030,000,000, has a per capita rating not sulte Chile, which sent a force of |of $866. The per capita division in troops to Araucania. King Orelius An- | Sweden amounts to $402 out of a total | tony I. was put in prison and remain of $2.197,000,000. Switzerland. in the ed there until the French government |last few years, made a 20 per cent. obtained his release. His efforts to be {gain in national wealth. The average reinstated on the vacant Araucanian |per capita wealth in the 25 cantons throne were futile and the former |ranges from $1.885 in Geneva to $279 | king returned to France and obtalned ‘In Tessin. Switzerland thus stands employment as a walter in Asuleres. Iver)' high. The population in 1821 He died there in 1878, iwas 1.885.229, so that in 90 years' While her fat¥er reigned in faroft | time it has not deubled. France, it Araucania the Princess Marguerita, an | will be noted, stands at the head of only child, was supported by revenues |the nations with a ver capita wealth from the Araucanian treasury. It was |of $2.070. That the United States, | & generous supply of money that was | with its enormous tctal. does not rank sent to her and she had many suitors. ,higher is because ¢f the rapidly in- Eventually she married a Danish of. |creasing population. France, on the | ficer, who had saved her life in a ship- | contrary, has reported a diminishing | wreck. or at the most a very slowly increas- | Just before King Orelius Antony I |ing population, so that the money ad- was deposed the consort of the prin-|vance has become greater than the cess committed suicide. The princess | birth rate. | went to live In Denmark, and, her sup- : plles having ceased, she Was obliged H to seek refuge in the almshouse,! The Crewless Ship. where she dled.—New York Sun, | The German Naval league has just tested the work of an inventor of Nu- " remberg; a ship to run without a crew. Something Missing. The transmitter with a mast similar to Life guards at a Jersey -seaside re- |that used in wireless telegraphy com- xort tell with great glee of an incident | mands the ship, which works systemat- that happened there last summer. A |jcally during a period of hours. The German, with his boy of ten, was |ship turns to right and left, backs and standing at the rail of one of the piers, | comes to a stop as if run by a2 man in quite at the end thereof, when sudden- |the engine room. Multicolored lights Iy the youngster toppled through into |show the maneuvers to the men the water. As no life guards were out |ashore. This practical invention is now that far at the time a well dressed {under study in the German navy. Pri- young collegian on the pler, without |marily destined for use in connection waiting to divest himself of shoes or |with the discharge of torpedoes, it is tlothing, jumped in and after battllng now under expert consideration as a with the waves for some minutes got | medium for the control of dirigible bal- the half-drowned boy to the beach. In |loons. Kites provided with phosptoric Ihe meantime the father had hastened |apparatus and steered by Hertzian from the pler. waves will be a new accession to the The parent, however, bore himself |German army. nith great coolness. As the rescuer placed the dripping lad at his parent’s | leet, the German calmly inquired: “Many tanks, but vot haf you done nit his hat?” Chance for One-Armed Man. ! “I'm looking for a one-urmed man,” 8a1d the patron of & New York restau- rant. “If you know of a man who h«s only a right hand I can make him a good business proposition—one thut will save him a lot of good dollars and save me the same amount. His right hand, however, must be a No. 7%. “It’s this way: Several months ago 1 sprained my ankle and for many months was obliged to lean heavily on a cane. To protect my left hand I wore a glove on that hand, but did not use one on the right. The result was that I wore out dozens of left gloves, but the right hand ones I nev- er put on.” Brinkman [4: Complete Change of Program Sunday Night High Class Vaudeville and Moving Pictures 5- - - PEOPLE IN CAST - Presenting the extremely funny farce One From Papa. “Papa,” asks the litle boy, “why i 5 do they say a woman is ‘setting her cap’ for a man when she wants to marry him?” “Because, my son,” explains the father softly, “if she sets her bonnet for him she knows blamed well the price of it will scare him to delth." Judge's Library, “The Coming Man” 3000 feet of -Films shown on that Marvelous Gold Fibre Screen. The Only Vaudeville House in the City and Playing all Union Acts and Pro- tected by the White Rats of America. MONDAY “Buffalo And Pawnee Bill” Moving Picture of the Wild West and Far East exactly as presented in the open arena. 4 reels. . Deceives No One. “The expectation that you actually can be one thing ana appear to be another is doomed to disappointment. Hypocrisy 18 the saddest fallacy in the world. The disgutses of the pre- tender are so thin that the simplest see through them. . What . you are speaks.go loud as to drown altogether any declarations you may make of what you wish men to think you are. The dgcelver deceives no ome but msssion Sc, 10c and 15¢ | coat, and dispense the hospitality of |marked the father to Willie's mother i New York Herald. I_a_lg;-:m '—Henry F. Cope. York Telegraph. TEST OF TRUE HOSPITALITY Army Ofticer Tella ¢ His Best Lesson In Cooking and Conduct as a H Z The old army officer, distinguished alike for hia character and his high position, had sald to his fellow guests at the little mountain camp that he re- garded a ksowledge of cooking as & necessary accomplishment for a gen- tleman and a soldler. X “Let me tell you,” 'he continued, “where I received my, first and best lesson in cooking, and in conduct at the head of the table. “While I was yet a very young man I had the good fortune to attract the- notice of an old French gentleman who, with the remnant of his for- mer large fortune, had come to the neighborhood of Petersburg, Virginia, and established himself in a small cot- tage. “In this little home the dining-room and kitchen were separated by a par- tition that extended only five feet above the floor. As monsieur was too poor to afford a waiter or cook, he himself performed the duties of both. “He often honored me with an in- vitation to diner, and as I sat in the dining-room, waiting for the meal to be served, I could see the old gentle- man’s head bobbing up and down as he tended his stew-pans in the kitch- en.” “How awfully funny!” sald some one, with a giggle. “It never seemed in the least lu- dicrous-to me,” the old officer quietly responded. “Aftgr placing the dishes upon the table, my old friend would remove his apron, put on a rusty dress his house with the grace and dignity of a prince.” “I understood! Noblesse oblige, and all that sort of thing,” murmured the glggler, contritely. “All - the same, your old gentleman, ministering at hidden altars and practicing mysteri- ous rites behind that low partition, must have been something of a char- acter.”” 5 The old officer gravely assented “One that it was a privilege to know,” he sald—Youth’s Companion. VICTOR HUGO’S ACACIA TREE | Planted in Childhood by Author, It | Has Just Been Saved From De- | struction In Paris. An acacia tree, supposed to have been planted by Victor Hugo in his childhood has just been saved from de- struction in Paris. The tree stands in the Boulevard Raspail, and its tall, cufved trunk has long been familiar to the inhabitants of that quarter. A short time ago a certain M. Charuin bought the plot upon which it grew for the purpose of erecting a mansion. The whole quarter was disturbed at the news that a tree of such traditions was about to disappear. ‘When, however, M. Chaurin heard that his new mansion was likely to de- molish the object of a veneration with which he sympathized, he altered his architectural plans spontaneously, and bullt a semi-circular frontage to his house, just inclosing the acacis within the railings. The association of it with Victor Hugo fs disputed by authorities on that poet's life, but one may feel gratified that a tradition retains suck vigorous life and that the marking of places connected with famous men I8 not yet purely municipal in Paris. Gift for Business. ‘Willie’s father conducts a boatrent- Ing business on the Jersey side of the Hudson. “I'll give you adollarif you'll bail out the boats, Willle,” sald the father one morning after a rain. There were 256 boats and Willle wasn’'t keen. So he was non-commit- tal. A little later his friend Albert came over. “I'll give you a quarter if you'll bail out the boats,” said Wille to Al- bert. “Gee! What d'ye take me for?” re- turned Albert as he surveyed the fleet of rowboats. “It’s worth 35 cents, any- way.” “Well, all right, 856 then,” said Wil- lie. Albert got busy and did the bailing, while Willie looked on and, Tom Saw- yer-like, dossed the job. The work donme, Willie collected, paid Albert and pocketed 65 cents. “That boy’ll be a business man,” re- later, but not in the boy's hearing.— o Profession, Tras Has Its Own Tuhnlell A Jokes. L There is hardly. a professioi, trade or’ industry nowsdays that does not have a perlodical or organ of ita own. And few, indeed, are the publications of this Kind that do not devote a week- | ly or monthly page to the “lighter side” of the branches of human activ: ity to which they are devoted. This technical humor has & twofold interest for the layman, that of the jokes and anecdotes he can appreciate on the one hand and that of those which are incomprehensible to him on the other. He finds no difficulty, for instance, in-the famillar anecdote of the bank president’s daughter who, on being informed that her account was over- drawn, severely told the paying teller “not to-let it happen again or she ‘would have to speak to papa about it;” but he would very likely be unable to see the humor of a banking story ‘whose point lay in some detail of the routine of the clearing house. And yet the latter might be by far the better of the two. The fun of the story of the new boy in the machine shop who 1s told to fetch a bucket of steam from the engine room is obvious enough, but that of an anecdote turning on scme technical point of machine con- struction will appeal only to the ini- tiate. Medicine has its strictly pro- fesgional anecdotes of ckroom, con- sulting' room and operating room, many of which would be grisly to the layman if he could grasp their meaning; but it has also, for his amusement, its tales of the amazing misinterpretations. of ‘medical direc- tions by the unsophisticated patients, chiefly of Irish and German nativity. The church and the law, the arts and the sciences all have this double form of humor. No doubt even the under taker’s shop has its fund of anecdote One willingly takes it for granted. with progress and development in all the professions, trades and industries, The humorous columns of their or- gans are there to prove it, No doubt aviation has already developed a fund of technical anecdotes of its own. IT WAS ON THE WATCHMAN Thought Belated Husband Needed a Drink After Test Handed Out By Wife. The new night watchman tiptoed cautiously over the. grass, and diving forward, caught the little man by the coat tail and jerked him down to a seat on the lawn. “Come along, me foine feller,” he said. “It's up the river for yours. No housebreakin’ goes on my beat.” “Oh, let me alone!” exclaimed the little man peevjshly. “I'm not house- breaking. . This is-my own house, and { I'm trying to get in. Mind your own business.” “Likely story,” grunted the watch- man; “enterin’ yer own house be the windy at one o’clock in th’ mornin’. Tel that-to the Judge.” “I tell you it {s my house. My wite locked me-out, and I was trying to get in this way when you interfered. The front door is bolted. There’s thé key, if you want to'try. Or you go and ring the front door bell and see what happens.” The watchman, still keeping tight hold of his prey, walked slowly “and quietly up to the front door, then sud: denly gave the bell a vicious ring. A second floor wlndow opened with a snap. “William,” said a voice so chilly that the watchman shivered down his back: bone, “can. you say ‘six thousand six hundred and sixty-six separate satel lites scintillating sparks slowly and ‘Wwith respect to sibilance? ” The watchman, still grasping the shuddering Willlam, made his way noiselessly to the gate, then whispered to the little man: “Say, come down to the corner and get & drink to warm you up after that. I guess it's on me!” Don't Forget to Exercise. No man of affairs, however impor tant or overdriven, can ever be too busy to take time for exercise, unless he wishes to apply for his long vaca: tlon a decade or two earlier than is necessary. The place where the mummy of the Egyptians should be carried round at regular. intervals, with a reminder that he has been dead for 10,000 years, is not at feasts, but in our business of- fices, workshops, counting houses and studios. There i8 where men are Large Enterprises Essential. “Large peérsonal fortunes acquired legitimately are in themselves an hon- orable testimony to talent and to toll; and, without large aggregations of capital, whether personal or cor- porate, great enterprises, are not pos- eible. And without great enterprises will the country show the marvelous growth which we deem an essential characteristic of American life, and will the masses of the people have the opportunities now so abundantly set before them to find employment and to develop their own fortunes, however relatively small those may be?"—Archbishop Ireland. 83 and 78 on a Lark. Mr. and Mrs. James Stead Biddell came into New York from their home in Passalc, N. J, yesterday to cale- brate the fifty-fourth anniversary of their marriage. “We always go for a lark on our wedding anniversary,” laughed Mr. Biddell in their home last mnight “We've never missed it.” Mrs. Biddell stood close to her hus- band and it was plain they were stll sweethearts. As ln,tllked she *cok his hand. “We've alvays bun hlpny." he gald. “We nevet had a single quarrel.” Then they laughed. Mr. Biddell is ‘eighty-three .and his wife seventy-five. They were married in Flushing, L. I, but moved to Pas- really killing themselves, instead of in their sports, their luxuries, or even in their vices. Commerclally slave-driving your body and brain may sometimes be a necessity, but the unbiased blologist of the twentfeth century is beginning to suspect that the praises of indus. try, like those of a sacrifice, are sung most loudly and insistently by those in church or state who hope to profit by it—in others!—Woods Hutchinson, In Exercise and Health, Wholesale Burning of Books. The French should win Edmund Gosse’s commendation for the whole sale manner in which they have de stroyed books, 'They liave even gone to the extent: of coining a special word, “bibliolytle,” to donate “la de- struction volontaire des livres.” The greatest date in the annals of biblio- 1ytie is 1790, when church property was confiscated by the revclutionary government. During that year, in Parls alone, 808,120 volumes taken from monasteries and convents were { burned, and throughout the whole country the total destroyed is said to have amounted to 4,194,400. Defects That Cause Failur “Failures which a man mal in his life are- due almost always to some defect in his personality, some weakness 3f body, mind or character, will or temperament. The only way salc half a century ago, when it was a small village. They look murh younger than they He_ Tetired from business 16 years to overcome these fallings is to build up his personality from within. Itis only. tho . The body of humor keeps close step | How_ ‘the Kind-Mearted and - Gifted " Rosa Bonheur Helped Youn. Wife. /*We are not’ mthurl tor nothlnl, Rosa Bonheir once wrote in jesting | affection to her brother:Isidore; and dn truth the wonderful, quaint, boyish little woman, with her bright - eyes, cropped curls and breezy ways, W almost more a brotherly chum than & sister to the "Dodore” whom she 80 dearly loved. Much of the time .on her country estate, in her studio and among her animals, “wild and . tame, she wore the masculine 'costume ‘which her manner of life required, to wear which she had—with one other ‘woman, a famous explorer and arche- ologist—received express permission from the French government. Yet this very mannish little person was far from unwomanly in_her sympa- thies; and her latest blography re- cords a pretty incident related by her friend, Joseph Verdler, the landscape painter. “One evening she was dining with me and some friends. Among the friends was a young lady recently mar- ried, who gave us an account of the turnishing. of her house. All the Tooms were furnished except the din- ing room; for this last her husband could not yet give her the money, and she was compelled to hold her little re- ceptions in her sleeping room. “After dinner Rosa asked me for & large sheet of drawing paper, and while we were talking she sketched 8 delightful hunting scene, which she signed with her full name. Then, un- der cover of a general conversation on music, while tea was being served, she approached the young wife, and sald to her: “‘Take this picture to Tedesco on your return to Paris and he will give you at least 1,500 francs for it. . . . Then you will be able to furnish your dining room.’ "—Youth’s Companion. WAS VERY HARD TO - PLEASE Broker's Wife Would Appear to Be One of Most Unreasonable of Women, A prominent broker remarked the other day that he thought his wife wag the hardeet woman fo please in the World. She was alwayg agking him for money when he had none. “John,” | she would say, “give me 47 cents, The grocery boy is here with a bill” “I can’t give you 47 cents,” he would say, “but here’s half a dollar.” “Oh, you're the funniest man. You never have the right change.” A dozen tiimes 8 day she would ask for a few odd Dennies. . Finally the broker went into the gub-treasury and obtained $100 worth of bright new pennies. There were 10,000 pennies and he packed them in a suit case and lugged them home. Then he went to & blacksmith shop and had an irom tripod made, and upon this he hung the suit case filled with pennies. The next day the butcher came with his bill. It amounted to $5.67. “John,” sald the wife, “give me $5.67.¥ “You will find it on the tripod,”- he explain- ed. "The wife returned in a moment in & great rage. “Why, John,” she cried, “I'm not going to count out 567 pen- nies for this man;. I'd be ashamed. If's & wonder you can never have the right change.” e —— TRADE IN- .woonsu SHOES lclrol\y of Willow Wood Has Stead- jed Market, Which-Was_Unsettied g by ovprpnduulvm ] Last yeat was unllvonhle to the wooden shoe manufacfgirers in ‘Hol land owing to the keen competition o' the Belglans and a decided over- production here. This year’s pros -pects are somewhat brighter. The scarcity of willow wood, from which those shoes were formerly made, has caused the market to steady up a little. Poplar and some Rusglan woods are also being used more extensively than heretofore. The cost of the wod from which the shoes are made is about $6 per cubic meter, out of which 100 pairs of ordinary size ‘can be made. The wholesale price of these shoes is 12 cents. One workman g able to make 12 to 15 pairs in a day, from which it can be inferred how. narrow; i8 the margin of profit in the industry. Relatively few wooden shoes are produced by machinery for ‘export, but with this exception all the wood- en shoes gre made by hand in Hol- land. About twenty different tools are required in the operation. A year or so ago several German capitalists started factories in ‘this country to make wooden shoes by machinery, but failed. Machine-made shoes, it is sald, are not well finished, and some handwork is always mnecessary to make them satisfactory. GRAY HAIR MAKE YOU LOOK OLD A Simple Remedy Brings Back the Natural Color—Dandruff Quick- ly-Removed. How often one hears the expres- sion, “She is gray and beginning to look old.” It is true that gray hair usually denotes age and is always as-| sociated with age. You never hear ione referred to as having gray hair jand 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 bair 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. Tt is also promote the growth of the hair. 1t 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. o public at fifty cents a bottle, and is recommended and sold by all drug- gists. The Pioneer Want Ads OASH witH ooPY | % cent per word per Issue 15 cents. ad_gets to them all. Regular charge rate 1 cent per word per insertion. No ad taken for less than Phone 31 HOW THOSE WANT ADS DO THE BUSINESS They tell what you-have 1o sell to-everybody in Bemidji. The Ploneer goes everywhere 80 that everyone has a neighbor who takes it and people whojdo not take the paper generally read their neighbor’s so your want 14 Cent a Word Is All It Costs Can’t Lose Much by Taking a Chance HELP WANTED WANTED—For U. S. Army—Able- bodied unmarried men between ages of 18 and 35; citizens of the United States, of-good = character and temperate habits, who can speak, read and write the English language. For information ap- ply to Recruiting Office at Schroe- der Building, Bemidji, or.217 Tor- rey Building, Duluth, Minn: WANTED—Girl for housework, Mrs. A. A. Richardson, 910 Beltrami Ave. Phone 570. FOR SALE FOR SALE—One 10x14 foot refrig- erator. We are remodling our shop and it must be sold before February First. A snap for some- one. Graham & Doran, Palace Meat Market. FOR SALEComplete household outfit, including almost new fur- -.niture and a full set of dishes and kitchen utensils. Phone 408, call| 2. FOR SALE—Rubber ewamps. The Pioneer will procure any kind of a rubber stamp for you on short notice. FOR SALE—Tamarack wood, either 4 foot or 16 in. Farmer measure. Telephone 420. PIANO—One slightly useq Piano for sale at a bargain. Telephone 317-2 FOR BENT —— FOR RENT—Eight room house, cor- ner 9th_and Irvine Ave. Inquire ot Wes Wright. IFOR. B.ENT——Nudy furnished room i Inquire Wm. Barnes, 315 America Ave. LOST AND FOUND FOUND—Bunch of keys containing one marked G. N. Ry. Owner can have same by paying for this ad. Keys can be had at the Pioneer office. LOST—Pocket Ledger, leather cover night of fire. Return to Pioneer Office or E. K. Anderson. MISCELLANEOUS o e e s ADVERTISERS--The great state of North Dakota offers unlimited op- portunities for business to classi- fled advertisers. The recognized advertising medium is the Farge Daily and Sunday Courier-News, the only seven day paper in the state and the paper which carries the largest amount of classified advertising. Tne. eourler-News covers North Dakota like & blank- et; reaching all parts of the state the day of publication; it is the paper to use in order to get re- sults; rates one cent per word firat insertion, one-half cent per word succedding Insertion; fifty cents per line per month. Address the Courier-News, Fargo, N. D. WANTED—Dining and sleeping car conductors, $75-$125. Experience unnecessary, we teach you, write Dining Car World, 126 W. Van Buren, Chicago. WANTED TO TRADE—What have you to trade for new atandard pia- no? Call at second 0dd Fellows Bldg. for_rent. 513 Minnesota Ave. FO! VfiNT—Modam 5-room ouse, taraituce: 0dd | guaranteed to remove dandruff and| 1rm= | Start us- This preparation is oflered to the| Golden Seal, the root of the above plant, is a very usefnl medicine. Many people gather it in our rich woodlands during the summer. Few people know how valuableit isin dyspepsia, catarrh. and as a general tonic. Many thousand pounds of this root are nsed each year in the famous catarrh everybody uses Peruna for catarrh. Tfy a Want Ad 12 Cent a Word---Cash THE SPALDING EUROPEAN PLAN - Duluth’s Largest and Best Hotel DULUTH MINNESOTA More than £100,000.00 recently expended gn improvements, 210 rooms, 12 private baths, 60 sample rooms. Every convenience: Luxurious and dPHi{htful restaurants ‘and buffet, Flemish Palm Room, Men's Grill, Colonial Buif Magnificent lobby and public room: Ballroom, banquet rooms and priva dining rooms: Sun parlor and observa- tory. Located In heart of business sec- tion but overlooking the barbor and Lake Superior. Convenient to everything. One of the Great Hotels of the Korthwest INSURANCE Huffman Harris & Reynolds Bemidji, Minn. Phone 144 T TS IR T ST TR 1 Love My Jam But Ch, You=- THE ORIGINAL HAS TI:S SIGNAT © NOTICE OF APPLICATION —FOR— LIQUOR LICENSE STATE OI' MINNESOTA County of Beltrami, |ss Uity of Bemidji, Notice is bereby ziven. That application bas been'made in writing to the city council of said Clty of Bemidji and filed in my office, Ipraying for license to sell intoxicating liguors for the term commencing on Febraary and terminating on January 31st. 130503 8 forow e person, and at the 'fol- lowing place, as stated in said application, respectively, to-wit: GEORGE McTAGGERT Al tire first floor of that certain two story frame huilding sitnated on north end of lots 17and 18, block 13. original townsite of Be- i . 310 Beltrami Avenue in oy woplication will be heard and deter- mined by said city council of the City of Bemidjl at the council room in the City hall in sald Oity of Bemidiji in Beltrami County. and State of Minnesota, on Monduy the 20th day of January. 1912, 'at 8 o'clock D, 0. of O SR%: my hand and ness my hand and seal of City of Be- midjl this 20th day of Janusry. 1013, (Seal) GEO. STEIN, Gity Olerk. Jan. 20and 27 NOTICE OF APPLICATION FOR LIQUOR LICENSE STATE OF MINNESOTA unpy of Beltrami, City of Bemidji. Noucs is hereby given, that application made in"writing to the City council ol’ Sllll Cmy of Bemidji and filed inmoy office. praying for license to sell intoxicating liquors for the term commencing on Jan. 3 1912, and _terminating -on Jan. 3ist. 191: by the following persan, and at the follow- Ing place, asstated in said application re- spectively, to-wit: M. GUSTAVSON at aud in the front room ground floor of that certain two _story frame building, located on Tot 4. block 18, orlginal townsite. Said application will be heard and_di By said City Couneil Of the cm' ot Remidjl at the Council rooms in the City &'“ in sald City of: Bemidji. in Beltrami un d State of Mlm\eam.a y mhazm ay of Jun. 1912, OnMonday at8o'clock p. m. of atd ness my handand seal- of City of. Be- = ay. = = i BOUGHT AND >—seppnd hand w n msmhdayog Jan. jgd remedy, Peruna. Thisfactexplainswhy _