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r e ———— 2 EASY AND SURE WAY T0 GURE COLDS Dont’ Neglect a Cold, Ely’s Cream Balm Will Stop it in the Sneezing Stage. A cold generally attacks the weak- :st part, affecting the eyes and ears n some and producing nasal catarrh and throat troubles in others. A cold ‘s due to an inflammation of the membrane lining the air passages, ind may be promptly cured with a -ittle ‘Ely’s Cream Balm, which im- aediately relieves the inflammation ind all the distressing symptoms, such as sneezing, coughing, running at the nose and eyes, hoarseness, sore ~hroat, fever and headache. One rea- son why this pure, antiseptic Balm acts 'so quickly is because it is ap- olied directly to the tender, sore sur- ‘ace. Even in severe, chronic cases of ;atarrh Ely’s Cream Balm never fails 20 quickly and effectually check the soisonous discharge which clogs the 1ead and throat, causing the disgust- ng hawking, spitting and blowing of che nose. This remedy not only drives out the disease, but heals and strengthens the weakened mem- oranes, thus ending catarrh. Catarrh is a filthy, disgusting dis- :ase. Don’t put up with it another -day. Get a 50 cent bottle of Ely's;‘ Cream Balm from your druggist to- Sream Balm from your druggist and see how quickly you will be relieved. I% iz perfectly harmless. C. G. JOHNSON Lands Loans Stocks Office—214 Beltrami Ave. 2+ ’u i R. F. MURPHY FUNERAL DIRECTOR AND EMBALME Dtfice 318 Beitram! Ava Phons 318-2. A RS SEEE RN RNERE x HOW TO FIND * * The Northern Minnesota Devel- + opment Association Immigra- * tion Commission Quarters. 39-+ Third Street. South, Minne- *+ apolis. * — * For the benefit of the readers + of the Pioneer this notice will # appear in both the Daily and + Weekly Pioneer for the next six + month, + Onu lewving the ucion depot + turn to the left and continue up + Nicollet to Third street, cross- + ing that thoroughfare, turn to % the left and proceed half a + olock, toward the postoffice. + From the Milwackee 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 rigit. Daily Pioneer will be found + on file here. * IR EEREREERERE R (IR RS S EEEEEEEREEEEEEERESEENRS ] Not by an Old Hand. Mrs. Exe—It isn’t right to charge Willie with taking that money out of your pocket. Why don’'t you accuse me? Mr, Exe—Because it wasn't all taken—Boston Transcript. Not Used to It. Theater Manager—You are engaged for the box-office. All you will have to do is to receive money. “Thanks. I think I should like to have a few rehearsals.”—Meggendorfer Blaetter. Repentance. The mau who repents before he is found out is generally pretty sure that somebody has picked up the right clew. Real Need of the Age. We already have a thousand men who can make money to one man who can think and make other men think. —Century Magazinq. THE SPALDING EUROPE"N PLAN Duluth’s Larzest and Rest Hotel DULUTH MINNESOTA More than $100,000.00 rec-ntly expended on improvements. 250 rooms, 12 private baths. &) sample rooms. Every modern convenience: Luxurious and delighttul ! restaurants and buffetr, Flemish Room, Palm Room. Men's Grill. Colonfal Buffet; Magnificent lobbs and public rooms: Ballroom. hanquet rooms and private dining rooms; Sun parlor and observa tors Located in heart of business sec- tlon but overlooking the harbor and Lake § Superior Convenient 10 evervthing { One of ths Great Hotels of the Northwes ; —————————e e e | THE BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEER SYSTEM IS NEEDED IN THIS Operation of Spring Hquse Cleaning Seems to Cry for Reform, Says Mere Man. We have no desire to pose as one criticizing another’s method of work. Our notion is that a man who has spent his life running a hotel knows how to do it better than we do, who patronize hotels only for toothpicks, matches and writing paper. Our mot- to is: “Shoemaker, mind your own business!” and we adhere strictly to it. Ordinarily we let the lady who runs our house alone. If we think she is making a bed backwards, or putting too much baking powder in the his- cuits, we say mnothing. Bedmaking and cooking are her profession; ours is paying the bills. But with housecleaning time ap- proaching we pause a moment here to suggest that there is no overwhelming anxiety on the part of mere man to have a house cleaned from cellar to dome in a single day. Admitting that ‘we know very little about houseclean- ing as an art, we declare that it seems unnecessary to rip up every room in " | the house as a starter. We cannot see why it is necessary to take the rug off the back bedroom floor in order to get all the dust off the parlor pictures. ! We may be wrong, but it strikes us as curfous that she cannot clean behind the sofa in the den unless the down- stairs hall is barricaded with the din- ing room furniture. Why it is neces- sary to dump everything out of the front bedroom in order to clean the kitchen windows has never been made clear to us. ‘We realize that we are tresding on dangerous ground. But surely if there ever was anything in need of a little system it is spring housecleaning.-— Detroit Free Press. Ever Damn Your Face? From a “Helps to Housekeepers” | column: “For the woman who wishes to keep her face in good condition there are strong metal frames to be i had which make the darning easier.” No, it’s no new beauty treatment; the composing room did it with their lit- tle hatchet. It was her “lace” and not her face that the woman was to keep in good condition.—Detroit News. . Golden Rule. ‘Whatever I have tried to do at all, T bave tried with all my heart to do well. What I have devoted myself to, [ have devoted myself to completely. Never to put one hand on anything on which I could not throw my whole self, and never to affect depreciation | of my work, whatever it was, I find now to have been one of my golden rules.—Charles Dickens. ‘| David when Goliath is going to tackle | 8is under the name, “La Genezo,” The ! i book received the attention of many | Iquoted with approval in Portland. i erime is rare; and the latest step in We have also all kinds of seeds tha. are adapted for this climate. Special attention to cabbage seed. We have received a shipment of Danish cabbage seed direct from Denmark, and to all persons purchas- ill ing this seed from us, we will buy all their cabbage this fall and pay them cash. SEED CORN JUST ARRIVED Oldest Metal. A recent paper presented to the Royal Institution at London, in dis- cussing the question of the metals used by the great nations of antiquity, pointed out that gold was probably ' the first metal known to man because It is generally found native. i The oldest ‘metallic objects to which we can assign a probable date are thought to be thoseifound in a royal tomb at Nagada in Egypt, supposed to have been That of King Menes. In one of the chambers were some bits of gold and a bead, a button and a; fine wire of nearly pure copper. It the tomb had been properly identified these objects are at least 6,300 years old. Nearly all the ancient gold that has Dbeen examined contains silver enough to give it a light color. It was gathered by the ancients in the bed of the Pactolus and other streams of Asia Minor.—Harper's Weekly. ‘[ | Scriptures In Esperanto. ! Dr. L. L. Zamenhof, the inventor of Esperanto, the language which he calls a “world’s help,” began last year the translation of the Bible into Esper | anto and published the book of Gene- people who had previously shown nc interest in the “umiversal language.” It was believed that the work would stop with the initia]l book of the Bi- ble, but Exodus—“Eiliro”—has appear- ed, and the assurance has been given by Zamenhof that the whole of the sacred book will be translated. When Bravery Is Easy. General Marion Maus, apropos of bravery, uttered at a dinner at Van. couver Barracks an opinion that was “It i8 very easy,” said General Maus, “for a man to be as brave as some one else.” € Iceland Education. Icelanders are now famous for their high standard of education.. Every thild of ten in this remote little land tan read and write, neither abject pov- erty nor excessive wealth is seen, and the evolution of this remarkable peo- ple is the founding of a university at the capital. Large Finds of Pure Metal Unlikely, | Men-have found a mass of native copper weighing 420 tons and they have discovered a chunk of pure silver weighing one and one-half tons, but the largest nugget of gold that has yet been seen weighed only 190 pounds. And gold seekers are informed that larger finds in the future are unlikely, 'damp days, and the soot, , moved. FRIDAY, APRIL 19, 1912, /The Dingo. The dingo is a species of wild dog foupd in Australia, and is to that country what the wolf is to easterm Europe and the coyote to America, Hunting in packs, he is a perpetual menace to Australia’s chief indus- try, the breeding of sheep. Owinz“ to his cunning and swiftness the dingo is able to hold his own in central Australia, and is likely to do so for a long time to come, notwith- standing the faet that a generous price is set upon his head by the gov- ernment. Salt in Chimney. In building a chimney it is recom- mended to put a quantity of salt into the mortar with which the inter- course of brick is laid. The effect, says the Commoner, will be that there will never be any accumulation of soot in the chimney, for the reason that the salt in the portion of mortar which is exposed will absorb the moisture on becoming damp, will fall down from the walls of the chimney and may be easily re- _— Boating on Boiling Lakes. In the southern part of New Zeal ind there are hot springs where the Maoris go boating on boiling lakes. There are also little holes in the earth through which the steam spouts, ind the native women use these places instead of fires for cooking. B — Appropriate Title. “Farewell!” was the title of a poem sent to a certain newspaper, says the Laclede County Republican. “It’s a good thing the gifted authoress bade It good-by,” the editor remarked, *be- cause she will,never see it again.” Wise Philosophy. ‘When anyone has offended me, I try fo raise my soul so high that the of- lense cannot reach it.—Descurtes. CHECKERS FREE, The manufacturers ot Checkers, a Souvenir Pop-corn Confection, are run- ning a coupon in this paper, offering yon a package of Checkers absolutely free. You are not required to buy| anything, simply sign the coupon and the dealer will hand you a package of the checkers free. The manufacturers of Checkers are anxious to get a pack- age of Checkers in everybody’s hands and take this method of Qoing so, knowing that our paper reaches all the homes. Be sure and cut the coupon out and také it to the dealer. The coupor pays the dealer and you get a package IF WOMEN ONLY KNEW What a Heap of Happiness it Wounld Bring to Bemidji Homes, Hard to do housework with an ach- ing back. Brings vou hours of misery at lei- sure or at work. If women only knew the cause— that Backache pains often come from weak kidneys, ‘Twould save much needless woé. Doan’s Kidney Pills are for weak kidneys, Read what a Bemidji citizen says: Mrs. A. B. Wells, 103 Irvin Ave., Bemidji, Minn., says: “I got Doan’s Kidney Pills from Barker’s Drug Store and I have used them at differ- ent times when having trouble from my kidneys and suffering from my back. They have always proven beneficial. I consider them a valu- able preparation.” For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, New York, sole agents for the United States. Remember the and take no other. name—Doan’s— MACHINE SHOP We do general repair work of allkinds. Gasoline and steam ~ngines a specialty. OLAF ONGSTAD Shop—Rear of Pioneer Building AUT0- MOBILE INSURANCE' Huffman Harris & Reynolds of Souvenir Checkers absolately free. Before buying, Phone (44 N | We are now handling a complete line of FARM MACHINERY and we know that we could be of benefit ‘o you. Figure with us. B i Golden Dent, Minnesota 13, Pride of the North, Rustler thte Dent, and\Minne_sota White Dent. As . T— [l corn seed is very scarce, we advise you to order immedi‘atel'y as our supply is limited. ; | We Pay Cash for Your Produce; Why Not Deal With Us? | | i ki 1