Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, April 16, 1912, Page 3

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to make. A. F. Anderson of this city, had sent his father and Mr. Erick-|% son, tickets for the trip and all ar- rangements had been completed. Mr. have left Minneapolis on May 8, sail- ing from New York on May 11. Miss Florence Smith has rcturned from Virginia where she has spent the past two months assisting T. J. Crane in the opening of his store at that place. Miss Smith has resumed her duties in the T. J. Crape and Z #. 8 QC(QJM%;ZOEQ * 0 Lng z Company store here. @ @| Troppman’s anniversary sale was @ Wednesday, April 17.—Bel- & |8 big success. The store was filled @ trami county development meet- |until after 10 p. m. The people were @ ing in the Commercial club ¢ |more than satisfied with the bargains ® rooms. ‘|and very much pleased with the en- © Thursday, April 18.—Lecture & |tertainment given. @ on South Sea Islands by Father | Mrs. W. B. Stewart returned Sat- @ Phillippi, city hall, at 8 p. m. & urday night from Chicago where she @ Friday, April 19—Senior class ©|had gone to take a post graduate @ play city hall at 8:30 p. m. @| course in piano, guitar and mandolin & Saturday, April 20—Old Sol- ®|in Crother’s School of Music. - Mrs. @ diers’ monument benefit at the ©|stewart has made a special study in @ Grand theatre. @ |technique for children. While in POPPPOOOOOOOOO®® Chicago Mrs. Stewart visited her Rev. Chas. H. Flesher went to Thief River Falls yesterday for a couple of days. Mrs. J. A. Colby of Foreman, N. D. who has been visiting her daughter, Mrs. M. E. Ibertson for sometime, re- turned home today. Go to Hakkerup for photos, Mr. and Mrs. H. Wilcox and Mrs. A. H. Nelson of Walker, were in the city for a few hours last evening, re- turning home on the late train. Persons owing twelve month on magazine cents a club please make a four month payment at Omich’s Curio Store at once. Mrs. Rogers. H. A. Leidenberg, deputy state creamery inspector of Fosston, was in the city yesterday. Mr. Leiden- berg left this morning for Akeley on business. Mrs. Sarah A. Speilman of Buena Vista, was in the city this morning en route home from International Falls where she has been the guest of her son, Clarence, for some time. Don’t miss Troppman’s Special Cor- set Sale Wednesday and Thursday. M. Hyde, of the Shevlin-Carpenter office of Minneapolis, was in the city this morning en route home from Fowlds where he has spent the past two days on business for the com- pany. Mrs. M. F. Cunningham, Mrs. Head and Mrs. M. Phibbs returned Satur- day night from St. Paul, where they had gone to attend the Sunday school convention which was held there last week. The Northern National Bank has since its organization, over 10 years ago, been a friend for and a true friend of the farmers, the merchants and the wage earners in this com- munity. A change has been made in the clerical force of the Markham hotel, James Klungress succeeding Edward Reirsgord at the cigar stand and Mr. Reirsgord assisting Ollie Neilson at the desk. The place to get your typewriter ribbons is at the Bemidji Pioneer Office Supply store. A ribbon for every make of typewriter and any grade you may want. Prices at re- tail, 50, 75 and $1. The ladies of the Baptist church will meet at the parsonage Wednes- day, April 17, at 2 p. m. A meet- ing of the mothers will begin at 3:30 and continue until 4:30 to which all mothers are most cordially invited. Most users of pencils are now writing with the popular “Bemid; They may be had at practically ev- ery first class pencil store in the city. The Woman’s Study club held one of their regular meetings yesterday afternoon in the basement of the Ii- brary. Mrs. C. A. Hoffman was leader and the following papers were given: “The Mohammedan Religion and Mosques,” by Mrs. D. L. Stanton; “Egyptian Mummies, Embalming, Burial Rites,” by Mrs. Geo. Camp- bell; and “Modern Alexandria,” by Mrs. H. A. Scharf. You can buy full letter head size, 8 1-2x11 carbon paper, the kind that will make as many copies as you de- sire, guaranteed to be equal to the best on the market or money back. The most interesting thing about it next to quality is the price. 100 sheets put up in neat hoxes for $1.00 Bemidji Pioneer Office Supply Store. This morning at 10:30 at the Bap- tist parsonage occurred the marriage of Chas. Jacobson to Miss Alma Pem- ble, Rev. C. W. Foley officiating. The bridal pair were attended by Miss Doris Pemble, a sister of the bride, and Leonard Radschweit. Both par- ties are from Tenstrike where they have made their home for a number of year. Mr. and Mrs. Jacobson will return to Tenstrike at once where they will go to housekeeping. You can buy full letter head size, 8 1-2x11 carbon paper, the kind that will make as many copies as you de- sire, guaranteed to be equal to the best on the market or money back. The most interesting thing about it next to quality is the price. 100 sheets put up in neat boxes for $1.00 Bemidji Pioneer Office Supply Store. A. F. Anderson, father of Anton Anderson of this city, and August Erickson of St. Hilaire,- Minn., had engaged passage on the ship “Titan- ic!” for the second {rip that ship was| daughter, Miss Elsie, and was joined there by her sister, Mrs. George H. Nicholson of New York. Miss Elsie returned to New York with Mrs, Nicholson and will be her guest for ’|some time. Why He Was Late. “What made you so late?" “I met Smithson.” “Well, that is no reason why you should be an hour late getting home to supper.” “I know, but I asked him how he was feeling, and he insisted on tel- ling me about his stomach trouble.” “Did you tell him to take Cham- berlain’s Tablets?” “Sure, that is what he needs.” Sold by Barker’s Drug Store. . Special Corset Sale. i At Troppman’s Wednesday and Thursday, 50c¢ corsets only 19¢; 75¢ and $1 corsets, only 49¢; $1.25 and $1.50 corsets only 98e. For rheumatism you will find noth- ing better than Chamberlain's Lini- ment. Try it and see how quickly it gives relief. For sale by Barker’s Drug Store. ALL HAD STARVED TO DEATH Fishing Colony In the Far North, Left Without Provisions, Suc- cumbed to Last Individual. The Russian minister of marine re- cently received advices of a terrible occurrence in the far northern island of Nova Zembla. Some time ago the head of an Archangel firm fonnded & fishing colony in Nova Zembla, the members of which were employed to fish solely on his account. A steamer was recently dispatched thither, but when the crew landed they found not & single living person. No provisions ad been supplied for the ten months furing which communication with the fsland is impossible, and the entire colony had perished of hunger. The luckless fisherfolk, ‘to judge by pen- ciled notes left by one of the victims, & man named Chenoff, underwent ter- rible experiences before death over- took them. Chenoff seems to have been the last man left alive, and saw all his companions dle one after the other. This is his own account of his impressions: “We #re at the end of our provisions and we can get noth- Jng, not even the tiniest fish. A ship appears; it is a fresh delusion, for she does not come our way. It is ter- rible to see our children dying -of hunger. Driven by necessity, we are taking the wool of our clothing and eating that. . . . The children are ell dead. Only four fishermen and two women are left alive. We are suffering = horribly. Two fishermen ate the flesh of the dead, and they have died as the result. . Chenoff, am the only lving pemm remaining, and I am tracing these lines.. My hands shake, my eyes are growing dim, and I feel that the end I8 near.” Forelgn Hothouse Grapes. Exportation of English hothouse grapes from Liverpool to the United States, in which there was formerly e fair trade, has been greatly reduced by Belgian competition. The chiet hothouse grape producing regions of England are Sussex and Kent. Thence the fruit is sent to the Wwholesale dealers at Covent Garden market, in London, and thence to the Liverpool dealers. The season ex- tends from April to December, fluring which time prices range from 16 to 36 cents a pound. Fresh grapes first appeared as a separate item of declared export from Brussels, Belglum, to the United Btates in 1908, at which time the ship- ments of fresh grapes totaled $18,632. In the following year these shipments rose to $48,761, and in 1910 to $565,757. The exports in 1911 were valued at $48,427, Quick, Watso, the Hook. No man likes to be called a prune, & lemon or an unripe persimmon, but there are few who have any objec- tions to belng named as a candled date—Denver News. Making Marriage a Failure. Marriage is nearly always a fatlure Where the wife lives in curl papers and the husband lives out of paper sacks.—Galveston News. “My little son had ~ very severe cold. I was recommended to try Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy, and before a smail bottle was finished he was as well ‘as eyer,” writes Mrs. H. Silk, 29 Dowling Street, Sydney, Aus-|. tralia. _This remedy: is' for- sale by i Barker’s Drug Store. Anderson and Mr. Erickson were to| iy * For the benefit of the readers * of the Ploneer this notice will ¥ * * * * * * * * ¥ Weekly Ploneer for the next six % +* month. * ¥ Ou-leaving the union depot % * turn to the left and.continue up + ¥ Nicollet to Third street, cross- % * ing that thoroughfare, turn to % *:the left and. proceed half a % % block, toward the poatoffice. * % From the Milwaukee depot, & ¥ turn to the left on Washington * avenue and continue to First % ¥ avenue, turn to the left and go * % one block to Third street and % *_then one half block to the right. % * Daily Pioneer will be found *.on file here. * liiiiiik!il’iii You will look a good while before you find a better medicine for coughs and colds than Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy. It not only gives relief— it cures. Try it when you have a cough or® cold, and you are certain to be pleased with the prompt cure which it will effect. For sale by Barker’s Drug Store. 00D FRIEND OF THE FARMER Valuable Work Done by Humble Earthworm Has Not Been Suf- ficiently Appreolated. The humble earthworm is: one of man’s best friends. The farmer and the gardener could not. spare -him, Dr. J. Newton Friend tells.about him in Sclence Progress. From Dr, Friend's observations it appears that worms aerate the soil in a variety of ways. In burrowing through -the soil the worms render it more porous and per- meable to gases, not merely by virtue. of the air spaces formed, but by rea. son of the fact that the-soil is thus) continually kept in gentle motion, Again, the soil passing through tha bodies of worms is excreted in a finer condition, being ground by attrition, through the intestines. Darwin estl- mated that no fewer than fifteen tons of soil annually pass through the bodies of worms for every acre. Further, worms breathe in oxygen and exhale carbon dioxide, and the latter gas, as is well known, readily dissolves in water, forming an acid solution which will render alkaline earths and metallic oxides—e. g., iron —soluble, Worms materially aid in producing|] soluble salts of iron in the:sofl when other agencles—e. g., dilute mineral acids—fail. The iron is eventually given back to the soil in a more sol- uble condition, and presumably in one which - can be directly absorbed by plant roots. CLEARLY NOT AN IMMIGRANT Parrot's Proficiency In Amerlcan Pros fanity Settled the Question of Admission. Mrs. Filippa Cartorio walked down the chute from the Italian steamer San Giorgio the other day. She had some Easton, Pa., clothes on, a Wilkesbarre bonnet and a parrot in a. cage. The immigration inspectors held her up as a matter of form. She had related upon her manifest that she had lived in the United States for 24 years, un. til she returned last summer to visit her aged mother. They put an idle question to her. “No splk Angleesh, meester,” said Mrs. Cartorio. “M—m-=nah, nah, nah.” She shook her head violently to and fro. “That,” sald the inspector, “Is very odd—very odd, indeed: You say you lived in this country for 34 years, and all the American talk you have .is that you don’t spik da Angleesh?” Mrs. Cartorio shook her head more violently and in her excitement she kicked over the cage in which was the parrot. “Mey, you,” burst from the indig: nant bird, “watta hell? Cut it out, xid” Mrs. Cartorio smiled. She took the cloth off the cage and & large green parrot scowled evilly at the inspector. “Beat it,” said the parrot, with ris ing inflection. “Rotten.” The inspector said that he’d ‘have to admit the smiling ‘Mrs. Cartoria (He did not think it was ‘possible to || teach a parrot that sort of English'in Sicily.—Cincinnati Times-Star. Mercy an Arab Showed. Abd-El-Kader,- who died in 1883, 1s one of the noted patriots of Algiers, In 1833 when ‘the-Arabs rose up and tried to free themselves - from the French Abd-El-Kader as sultan led his Deople against the French armies. For fourteen years the war was waged, and though he had: but few followers, his methods of attack and ingenious ~maneuvers, together with the wonderful power he held over his | people, made it necessary for the French to send one hundred thousand soldiers into that country before they could conquer it. Before Abd-El-Ka- der's time the Arabs killed their pris. oners. He treated them kindly, as guests, sending them ‘money, clothes and ‘food. ‘Some women Wwere once captured and brought to him, and-as || he set them free he exclaimed: “Lions attack strong ‘animals; jack- als fall upon the weak.’ Majesty of Time. That great mystery of Time, were there no. other; the illimitable, silent, never resting thing: called Time, roll- Ing, rushing on, swift, silent, like an| all-embracing ocean tide, on which we and all the universe swim ltke exhala- tions, like-apparitions which -are, and' then are not; appear in both the Daily and | SM-‘E REMEDY ENDS ‘ Gives Instant Relief, Cures and Pre- vents Catarrh and Cold in the Head. The quickest, best and safest way to cure catarrh or a cold in the head is by using a remedy that will “touch the spot” ‘and do its work quickly without leaving any bad effects, ;Bly’s Cream Balm, which is applied to the nos‘_}flls or rubbed on the throat or chest gets right at the root of.the trouble and instant- ly relieves: - even the:worst case of catarrh or cold. A few ‘minutes after -applied you' can feel a loogen- Ing up in the head,: the pain and soreness are gone, the:gense of taste, smell and hearing come back, and you feel like a different person, Ely’s Cream Balm icleanses, heals and strengthens the ‘inflamed mem- branes, takes away that stuffed up feeling and dull paid in the head, relieves the throat sorgness and stops the nasty discharge Qwhleh is the cause of the disgusting hawking, spitting, blowing o fthe nose, and foul breath. Hay fever victims who are made miserable by fits of sneez- ing, coughing and wheezing get in- stant and permanent relief by the use of this simple remedy. Don’t suffer another minute. Ely’s Cream Balm will relieve you imme- diately, and a 50 cent bottle will more than likely work a complete cure. All druggists sell it. ' The ! xwant ad. NEECEATIVIE DAAE 'GATARRH MISERIES these co%umns SPECIAL—FOR THE CHILDREN. Children all over the city have adopt: fection. The crispy, tasty bits of good-! pry ness have won thelr hearts and stom. achs, They like “Checkers”—they like the way this confection 18 packed—in triple-sealed, air-tight, dust-proof box:| = es—always kept fresh and clean, ‘They like the mixture of finest, tender- st _pop-corn, the added peanuts and the coating of pure Louisiana sugar and’ molasses. 1In every package'they find a souve- nir, worth nearly 5 cents if bought separately. ‘The souvenirs are imported princt- pally from Germany and the other for- eign countries and, owing to the mil Hons imported, the manufacturers are 4 Lt BEAUDE’I"I‘E ‘Merchant Tailor “Checkers" as thelr favorite con Ladies' and Geats' Sits hod- Freach Dry Clesning, Pressisg asd Repairing » 318 I Avease ‘R. F. MURPHY enabled to furnish unusual value'in a| FUNERAL DIRECTOR little gift in addition to the high class confection with which it is packed. But the confection is the thing chi) dren want—and the souvenir come: as pleasant “extra value” Don’t miss it—you can’t mistake the red and white checker board box Ask-any. storekeeper-and don’t be sat- isfied till you get ‘“Checkers”--only 6 cents. THE 'SPALDING EUROPEAN PLAN Duluth’s Largest and Best Hotel DULUTH MINNESOTA More znmm‘:»oo recently expended on ‘npm‘“nn 260 rooml. 1% private TOOmS. modern eonunlmc- Luxurlous. nnd delighttul restaurants. md buffet, mish Palm en's G!fil. Oolunlfl Buffet: Magnificent. lobb! and public rooms; fi \mt rerlooking the harbo: nndLnk o I?:e o'flon nnnoovury'zh!u 3 Ono of the Great Hotols of the Northwest suits. Lot 1 yellow ticket Suits.........eeuee e 5 Lot 2 green tickets SUILs i e it Lot 3 red tickets... Lot 4 white tickets.... 52 suits must be closed out this month. We have divided them into 4 lots, each lot is marked with differ- ent colored tickets and includes Misses and Women's Lots 2, 3 and 4 consist of the nifty Spring styles. Part of lot 1 is .composed of suits not quite up to the minute in style, but good serviceable garments that sold but a few weeks ago at $25 to $35 a suit. AND EMBALMER Otfice 313 Beitram! Ave. Phone 319-2. INSURANCE! Huffman Harris & Reynolds Bemidjl, Minn. Phone $21.95 Coats Have Not Escaped Every coat in the store, be it Women’s, Misses or Childs’ has received a terrible cut in price. antee goes with every garment. alterations, no telephone orders. you wish to secure genuine suit and coat bargains. House Cleaning Bargains in room size rugs Bemi ant “Ads” These little fellows are const;ant warkers Buyers and sellers are constantly ‘watching 1_-2 cent a w d pays a Our guar- No approvals; no Come in person if EVERYBODY READS Daily Pioneer 800 RAILROAD 162 East Bound Leaves 163 West Bound Leaves 186 East Bound Leaves . 187 West Bound Leaves . GREAT NORTERERN 33 West Bound Leaves . "84 East Bound Leaves 35 West Bound Leaves 36 East Bound Leaves 106 North Bound Leaves 108 South Bound Leaves . Freight West Leaves at . Freight East Leaves at . MINNESOTA & flm‘mm 32 South Bound Leaves ...... 31 North Bound Leaves . 34 South Bound Leaves . 33 North Bound Leaves . Freight South Leaves at . Freight North Leaves at . MINN., RED LAKE & MAN. 1 North Bound Leaves . 2 South Bound Leaves . { PROFESSIONAL CARDS | RUTH WIGHTMAN TEACHER OF PIANO quchetltsky Method Residence Studio 917 Minnesota Ave. Phone 168 MUSIC LESSONS MISS SOPHIA MONSEN TEACHER OF PIANO AND HARMONY Studio at 921 Beitrami Avenue MRS. W. B. STEWART Teacher of Fiano, Guitar and Mandolin Graduate of the Northeastern Conservatory in Boston and a pupll of Dr. William Mason of New York. Studio, 1003 Dewey Ave. LAWYERS GRAHAM M. TORRANCE LAWYER Miles Block Telephone 560 D. H. FISK ATTORNEY AT LAW Office over Baker's Jewelry Store PHYSICIANS, SURGEONS DR. ROWLAND GILMORE PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office—Miles Block DR. E. A. SHANNON, M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office. in Mayo Block . ‘Phone 396 Res. ‘Phone 397 DR. C. BR. SANBORN PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office— Miles Block DR. A. E. HENDERSON PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Over First National Bank, Bemidji, Minn Office 'Phone 36. Residence 'Phone 73. DR. E. H. SMITH PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office in Winter Block DR. E. H. MARCUM PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office in Mayo Block ‘Phone 18 Residence Phone 213 EINER W. JOHNSON PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office over Securtly Bank DENTISTS DR. D. L. STANTON DENTIST - Office in Winter Block DE. J. T. TUOMY. Miles Evening Work by MG—I Only NEW PUBLIC LIBRARY. Open daily, except Sunday, 1 to 6 p. m., 7to 9 p. m. Sunday, reading rooms only, 3 to 6 p. m. TOM SMART DRAY AND TRANSFER SATE AND MOVING Res. "Phone 68. 818 America Ave. Office *Phone 12 EDUARD F. NETZER, Ph. G. RECISTERED PHARMACIST Postoffice Oorner Phone 304 Personal sttention to prescriptions

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