Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, April 8, 1912, Page 4

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PLAYED BASEBALL EVEN IN HIS DREAMS PHOTe 3y pave THOMPsON, N ¥ Joe Benz, New White Sox Pitcher. ‘White Sox players say that Joe Benz, the new pitcher acquired from Des Moines, “dreams” baseball and “Buck,” the White Sox trainer, tells the story that confirms it. “Buck” says shortly after Benz Joined the team and when on his first trip, the train was approaching the end of the journey and the trainer went through the Pullman to arouse the players that they might dress. He came to Benz's berth and found him gnoring loudly. “Buck” took him by the shoulder, gave him a shake and yelled loudly in his ear: “Get out.” Benz pushed him away, rolled over on his side and bellowed so it could be heard all over the car: “What do you want to take me out of the game for; ain’t I pitching good ball? Leave me in and I can beat ‘em.” = It took a few more shakes by “Buck” to awaken the sleeping pitcher and then he rubbed his eyes and said: “I thought it was the boss sending me to the bench; guess I was dream- ing.” R A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A PP AP AP PAINANAAPPS POPPVOPIOOOOOOOGO @ Calendar of Sports for Today, ¢ PPOPPRIOOVPOOOO® Opening of spring meeting of Jamestown® Jockey club, Norfolk, Va. Opening of national duck and can- dle-pin tournament at Lawrence, Mass. National boxing championships of A. A. U. begin in Boston. Opening of annual show of Oswego (N. Y.) Automobile Dealers’ associa- tion. . Sam Langford vs. Sam McVey, twenty rounds, at Sydney, Australia. Paddy Lavin vs. Jeff Smith, ten BRINKMAN THEATRE TO-NIGHT VAUDEVILLE AND MOVING PICTURES Vaudeville Program REFINED NOVEL The OzaYs Comedy Talking Burlesque novelty act. Wells Brothers Singipg and Musical Comedians. Marietta Craig Vodevilles Classiest Entertainer Picture Program 3000 Feet of Latest Motion Pictures One a Pathe. One an Essanny. One a Vitagraph. ENOUGH SAID. Save your Number for the Brass Bed rounds, at Albany, N. Y. Ernie Zanders vs. Lee Barrett, ten round, at Madison, Wis. i Hard spring work makes horses sweat and is apt to cause galls or sore shoulders. Hanford’s Balsam of Myrrh is especially recommended for such cases and one can keep on working the horse without loss of time. MINCE PIE FINDS CHAMPION Barring of Delectable Dessert From Female Seminaries Held to Be Libel on Pastry. Mince pie has endured from generas tion to generation and is not cast down. It has suffered long from the attacks of critics for whom it is strong meat, but it still 18 kind to those who love it and whom it loves. It gives and needs strength. We note without despondence the attempt in various New England colleges for girls to give this delectable dish a new bad name and hang it. “It 18 ruinous for the complexion,” Bays one preceptress. And another prates of technicalities of digestion. But at good old Wellesley they have mince three times a year “for the girls who cannot go home for 'the holidays,” and there you have the whole case for the libeled pastry in a sentence. Mince pie is the home pie. It spells Thanksgiving and Christmas and a happy New Year and back-to- the-farm and good-for-the-old-folks and gll sorts of things that keep together the families in which the nation is great. Complexions! Why, the country ‘was full of them before any food critia drew the hot air of life. And it will be full of them still when the last fos of mince pie falls under the crust that mother makes. As for the girls’ col- leges—well, if the higher education is raising a parcel of daughters that cannot stand mince ple, it surely is not bringing up a band of sisters en- |ler. titled to flu bnl!ah-va Ynl‘l World, ‘lan appropriation TRAVELED AS YOUNG LADY Miss Six-Year-Old Fully Consclous of the Dignity That Henceforth Was Hers. Looking much like a firetty picture-| in colors that had stepped right out of e fashion plate a dainty little miss gtood -on a street crossing In Yonkers, and signaled a motorman to stop his car. He brought it to a halt so the child would not have to walk in the muddy street and the conductor hélp- ed her up the high step, for the small traveler was alone. More than that, he refrained from jerking the bellrope until she was seated, so she was not thrown off her feet at the gudden turn- 1ng on of électric power. But she was short of stature and was obliged to it on the edge of the seat to let her legs hang down, for otherwise they would have stuckeout straight. Se- lecting a nickel from a tiny purse she extracted from her white fur muff, she extended it to the conductor when he came along. He gave her 2 cents change. “You'll soon be a young lady and pay full fare,” he said, with an at tempt at gallantry. Up went a little hand, holding the two pennies between finger and thumb. The conductor was puzzled, until the child spoke. “I don’t want any changd,” she ex- plained. “Mamma says I'm a young Tady now, ‘cause I'm 6 years old to- day.” ‘With an indulgent smile the conduc- tor took the coins.—New York Press. SPANISH JEWS IN NEW YORK Ten Thousand of That Race and Faith Known to Be Residents of the Metropolis. Almost unknown to the general community is the steadily increasing immigration into New York of Spans ish speaking Jews from the Orient It is estimated that these descendants of the Jewry expelled from the Iber {an peninsula over 400 years ago now number about 10,000 in New York city. Others are spreading abroad throughout the country, and a body of these Jews who have vlung so faith- fully to their Spanish tongue held re- liglous services according to thelr own minhag last Rosh Haghona so far west as Portland, Ore. In New York they are at least numerous enaugh to swpport two newspapers printed in Ladino-Spanish in Hebrew, characters, one, appearing weekly, entitled L'America, edited by H. 8. Gadol, the other a daily paper entitled El Aguila, edited by Mr., Miz- rahi. This immigration has become so ocnsiderable that the Hebrew Shelter- ing and Immigration Aid society has recently been compelled to form an Oriental bureau, through which the immigrant Jew speaking Spanish, Greek, Turkish, Arabic or Sephardic Hebrew can receive proper care. Comedy in Maryland’s Senate. “Down at Amnnapolis the other day the legislators had a bit of comedy furnished them that does not ordinar- ily enter into the deliberations of a legislative body,” remarked Charles Hamilton of Baltimore at the Ra- leigh. “It seems that Senator Blair Lee, who was a candidate for the guber- natorial nomination last year, started to dress in evening attire to attend the reception given by Governor Goldsborough. He was impatient, the story goes, and in attempting to fasten his collar lost his only collar button. He looked around his room for an hour, and when he recowered the lost button it was mashed so that it could not be used. The senator had tred on it. He finally succeeded in borrowing one, but when he got to the governor’s reception most of the guests had departed. . “One of Senator Lee’s frlends heard of the occurrence, and he rose in the senate and with the severest dignity offered a resolution. It provided for sufficilent to pur- chase a gross of collar buttons for Senator Lee ‘that he might in the fu- ture be in time at officlal functions.’” ~—Washington Post. Speaking Conscientiously. Senator La Follette during his re- cent visit to Philadelphia said to & reporter, apropos of a flagrant plede of hypocrisy: “Why, the man’s as bad as a New- port groom I heard of the other day. “This groom stood beside his mas- ter while a veterinary examined a costly cob. The veterinary, at the end of his examination, pronounced the cob incurable and took leave. Then the master, sighing heavily, .turned to the groom and said: “‘Well, James, what am I to do with the poor beast now?’ “‘Conscientiously speakin’, sir,’ the groom replied, ‘I think you'd better part with him now to another gentle- man, sir.’” On the Job. Representative Hamilton of West Virginia paid a tribute to Republican Leader Mann that is a gem in its way. “The gentleman from Ilinois,” sald Mr. Hamilton, “only eats on Sundays and never sleeps at all. If he had been “a marshal under Napoleon at ‘Waterloo the battle might have re- sulted differently, because he would have discovered the absence of Grou- chy at the proper time and suggested the absence of a quorum. And, if nec- essary, he would have halted the hosts of Wellington by a well-interposed de- roand for the veas and nays.” Daily Thought. ‘We live in an ascending scale when we live happily, one thing leading to another in an endless series.—Robert Louls Stevenson. Making the Home. A house is no home ppless it con- taing food and fire for the mind as well as for the body.—Margaret Ful- BUILDING ROADS (Continued from first page). level his places ana to nave material to fill up ruts or reduce bumps or open ditches under the direction of the resident engineer and the county commissioners. 1t would be the be- ginning of ‘the solution of the “good road” problem. “Mr. Cooley, the state engineer has tried the experiment and it has worked out entirely satisfactory, making the roadbed a “thing of beau- After studying all the good breeds I |ty and joy forever.” We would like finally decided on the Anconas as-com- |t0 have it tried in Beltrami county Ing nearer to Sheppard’s standard of (and anything you can do to have the perfection than any other. county begin a patrol on any road at This noted breed of chickens, im-|any place where it will be an object ported from Europe byt a few years |lesson that all may see will be high- g0, has gained great prestige among |1y appreciated by the highway com- ;‘“'“" in America, and yet mOre|,egion e are anxious and wil- a8 it found a place in the estima- 1i ng to co-operate in any way pos- sible for the benefit and-improve- ment of the roads and highways throughout our beloved state. Yours sincerely, Charles A. Forbes. NOTED BREED OF CHICKENS Fowl Imported From Europe Few ' Years Ago, Has Gained Much Pres- tige Among American Fanclers. Ancona Cockerel, tion of those who look upon the utili- tarlan side alone of this beautiful, ac- tive and ever alért bird, says a write? In an exchange. Its attractcive color, beautiful form and graceful carriage at once give it a place among tke prime fayorites of the coop, in the competitive show, as well as on the table of the preacher, and the crates of the egg producer. I have known pullets to lay an aver- age amount of 259 eggs each per year for .the entire flock, and this in the Depar Classified efvilization is the daytime sleep-walk- n AnKENs THE H AIR and vice versa is responsible for him. with somnambulistic tendencles are Removed. to their regular duties a vigilant pa. Eor, seerationd Sasesend Salohnr likely to choogc for & promenade. No- the value of such a combination for nd him strolling about the hotel in{and falling hair, and for promoting treatment of a nocturnal somnambu- | ¢pjg iind was to make it in the home, Just s0. In the case of a midnight|. apth-date QrigEist can SapDiy in broad daylight and see what hap-|duct. sxillfully prepared in perfectly how gentle the attack, most of them is Wyeth’s Sage and Sulphur Hair remedies for scalp troubles and thin, for a few days, you will notice the will soon be gone, and in less than Don’t neglect your hair if it is of Wyeth’s Sage and Sulphur from druggists sell it, under guarantee sented tment cold climate of the northern states. They are active and hardy and with- out doubt flourish best in close con- The Pioneer Want Ads ONDAY, APRIL 8, 1912. sald a hotel clerk. “The New He 18 particularly likely to haunt ho |Gives Color, Lustre to Faded and frequefitly numbered among our trol of halls and corridors which the have ieen weedfor bl And ccalp body seems to know just what to do|k<eping the hair a good even color, a state of subconscious activity. the growth of the hair. Years ago Vst Speak to him softly, touch Bim | piih wag troublesome and not al- sleepwalker that usually works, but an: Pens. Daytime somnambulists seem |equipped laboratories. have to be escorted back to .thelt|Remedy, in which Sege and Sulphur weak hair that is losing its color or color gradually coming back, your a month’s time there will be.a won- full of - dandruff, losing its color or your druggist, and see what a few that the money will be refunded if Try a Want Ad finement of any known breed. Their eggs hatch the largest per cent. of all breeds, because of their superior har- diness. The chicks run forth from in- cubator or brooding hens as alert as matured songbirds. Young cockerels often crow at the early age of six weeks. Pullets will frequently lay when 4% months old 5 cents. 80 your want ad gets to them all. Ancona Hen. when properly cared for. It is my firm belief that on account of their phe- nomenal growth they will produce more meat by the end of ten weeks after hatching than any other breed of this class, and even some of the larger breeds. WINTER CARE OF THE DUCKS Feed Any Green Stuff That Happens to | FOR SALE—Rhode Island Reds. Be Handy—Not Much of Any One First prize winners at county fair. Plant Given at Time. Mated with stock from first prize stock at three large poultry ex- hibits. I can spare a few more settings. Will book others ahead. $1 for 13 eggs; $6 per hundred. Geo. T. Baker, 907 Minnesota Ave. CLASSIFIED CHICKEN AND EGG DEPARTMENT. During winter I feed my ducks any preen stuff that I happen to have bhandy. Turnip, parsnip and carrot tops, cabbage leaves, beet leaves, on- fon tops, purslane, pigweed, tender OASH WITH OOPY % cent per word por issue fegulm charge rate 1 cent per word per insertion. No ad taken for less than HOW THOSE WANT ADS DO THE BUSINESS The "Ploneer goes everywhere so that everyone has a neighbor who takes it and people who do not take the paper generally read their neighbor's 15 Cent a Word Is All It Costs oupimn smnamsates. | OLD-TIME REMEDY “The latest product of our complex ka habit of turning night into day tels and lodging houses. Night hawks Gray Hair—Dandruff Quickly guests, and maids and porters now add daytime sleep-walker would be most troubles. Almost everyone - knows with & person whose daylight slumbers | for curing dandruff, itching scalp “There are prescribed rules for the|the only way to get a Hair Tonie of gently, lead him back to his room. ways satisfactory. Nowadays, almost just try it on a man parading around his patrons with a ready-to-use pro- unusually high-strung, and no matter An ideal preparation of this sort Tooms In's bystetical oofidition.” are combined with other valuable coming out. After using this remedy scalp will feel better, the dandruif derful difference in your hair. coming out. Get a fifty cent bottle days’ treatment will do for you. All the remedy is not exactly as repre- 12 Cent a Word-—-Cash = THE SPALDING 'UROPEAN PLAN Duluth’s Largest and Best Hotel DULUTH MINNESOTA More than $100,000.00 recently expended on improvements. 250 rooms, 12 private baths, 60 sample rooms. Every modern convenience: Luxurious lnd flellg\nflll restaurants and buffer, Flemish Phone 31 tlon ‘but overlooking the harbor and Lake Superior. Convenient to everything. One of the Great Hotels of the Northwest several different points and in first class condition. Call or write this office for proofs. - Address Be- midji Pioneer, Bemidji, Minn. fOR SALE—Rubber stamps. The Ploneer will procure any kind ot < rubber stamp for You on short «otice. FOR SALE—Restaurant on Soo line, doing good business. For particu- lars address B. F. Joslyn, Bemidji. F(-R SALE—House at 916 Minneso- {a Ave. Terms to suit purchaser. Enquire of C. W. Vandersluis. FOR SALE—One $25 baby cab, as good as new. Bought new last summer. - Phone 187. R. F. MURPHY FUNERAL DIRECTOR AND EMBALMER Office 313 Beltram! Ave. Phone 2. FOR RENT FOR RENT—Nicely furnished rooms Call 520 Beltrami Ave. FOR RENT—Vacuum cleaner, $1 00 per day. Phone 486. The MODEL Dry Cleaning House Telephone 537 106 Second St. crab grass, lettuce, radish, mustard, cut fine, all make good bulky feed. These are dried in the shade during the summer and stored like hay. When I want to feed them a quantity is boiled for 12 hours and mixed with finely cut roots, such as potato, turnip, parsnip, carrot, onion and beets. Ap- ples are also used, says a writer in the Orange Judd Farmer. These are all cooked. Not much of one kind of | FOR SALE—Breeding stock and eggs plant is given at a time. Four meas- for hatching from the best flock ures. of any one with four of corn of full blood Barred Plymouth chop, to each os wi,h:lafi tbrnn, red| Rocks to be had, come and see wheat shorts and boiled fresh meat h 6 14th. O.C. are fed as a mash—all the ducks will them BEA08 14 0,0 Stmongot, eat up clean in few minutes. If any of the mash is left, it is at once re- moved to avold its getting sour. This feed is given twice daily during the winter and three times in spring. It has always proved satisfactory. GREEN FEEDS YEAR AROUND —_— Nothing Better Than Well Cured Clo- ver Rowen or Second Growth Clo- ver Hay—Bran ls Substitute. FOR SALE — Thoroughbred Ply- mouth Rock, Rhode Island Red and Buff Leghorn eggs. Telephone 686-2, J. H. French. 'FOR SALE—Full blooded Golden Wyandotte eggs for breeding. E. S. Woodward, 507 Irvine Ave. (By J. F. SCHUREMAN, U. 8. Depart- ment of Agriculture.) There is' nothing better than . well cured clover rowen or second growth clover hay. This should be cut up fine and steamed. Clover is not only HELP WANTED AR oo r oo oo WANTED—Good girl for general LOST AND FOUND LOST—Emerald rosary between St. Philip’s church and Baker's Jew- . elry Store. ~ French Dry Cleaning Pressing Repairing MISCELLANEOUS ADVERTISERS—The great state of North Dakota offers unlimited op- portunities for business to classi- fied advertisers. The recognized advertising medium is- the Fargo, Daily and Sunday Courier-News, the only seven day . paper in the state and the paper which carries the largest amount of classified advertising. - The Courier-News covers North Dakota like a 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 first ingertion, one-half cent per word succeeding “ingertion; fifty cents per line per month. Address the Courier-News, Fargo, N. D. Goods Called For and Delivered AUT(- MOBILE ‘WANTED—100 merchants in North- ern Minnesota to sell “The Bemid- Ji”” lead pencil. Will carry name of every merchant in advertising columns of Pioneer in order that hens they will keep in better laying condition and the production of eggs will be increased. Where clover hay cannot be secured, bran is a very good substitute, though not so rich in mineral matter. Vegetable food should be supplied the year around, such as cabbage, po tatoes, beets and turnips. Very Emotional. “Ever see one of these barefoot dancera? Thieir steps are symbolic; every step means something.” “I saw one of ’em land on a tack one night. Her steps were fufl of meaning for the next few minutes.” Spirit of the Times. It 18 an age of artificial devices. Rare indeed is the man, and rarer still the woman, in whose physical make- up there is not something false, efth- INSURANCE! Ms:l“?fl:::""mm;:-e db‘ll)t "tl;h l:“n:"‘l‘;: housework. Good wages. Phone| all receive advantage of advertis- % Droviding sholle for thy oges - Asige| ©OF Write. Mrs. G.H. Nelson,| ing. For wholesale prices write Huffman Harris & Raynnms from alfalfa there is no other food | Walker, Minn. : 3 ;: D‘;’“ ’m;:"m::‘nmo;;e &5 g: Bemidji, Minn. that can take the place of clover. By s Supply Co. one 31, allowing a ration of scalded clover to | WANTED—Cook at Lake Shore Ho-| midji, Minn. Fhous 182 tel. FLORIDA LANDS—I have parties ‘who will pay cash for Florida fruit land contracts if price is right. J. FOR SALE FOR SALE—Typewriter ribbons for every make of typewriter on the market at 50 cents and 75 cents| WANTED TO RENT—Launch for Daugherty, 908 Andrus Bldg., lfln- neapolis: William C. Kiein each.. Every ribbon sold for 75| summer. State size and power, cents . guaranteed. Phone orders| and price. M. Quad, care of Plo- 'NSURANGE promptly filled. Malil orders given| neer. the same careful attention as when you appear in person. Phone 381. ‘The Bemidji Pioneer Office Supply|’ Store. BOUGHT AND SOLD—Second hand furniture. 0dd Fellows building, across from postoffice, phone 129. Rentals, Bonds, Real Estate ——————————————————— |FOR CHEAP rates in western Cana- First Mortgigé Loans the world) at Netzer's, Barkers,| Scveriment agent, Wadens, Minn. Property WANTED—Delivery horse, weight about 1200 1bs. J.'B. Hanson and Co. Store. 0. C. Rood’s, McCuaig’s, Omich’s, Roe and Markusen's and the Pio- neer Office Supply Store at 6 cents each and 50 cents p dozen. - 6 and 6, O’Leary-Bowser Bldg. Vv £ o

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