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_____ THE BEMIDJ DAILY PIONEER = o \ s b Pioneer Want Ads -2 Gent a Word ing Results Ask the Man Who Has Tried . Them Ancient and Modern Words, “The word appendicitis was consid ered too rare and obscure for inclu- slon in the Oxford Dictionary. Scullery is not related to scullion, nor gentinel to sentry, while cipher is the same ! word as zero, and jilt is identical with ‘ Br Blind People From Old People’s Home. ' 10 TeII The Truth Jullet. Bunkum and spruce are geo- graphical names, but brazil wood is Dot named from Brazil. A hearse was once a rake and a wafer a honey- combh.”—The “Romance of Words,” by Prof. Ernest Weekley. in one's advertisements begets the confidence of the advertiser. This has always been arker’s 1 - 280 This is.a group of old people kept by | have for years tried to get a hospital " motto. The Y’“h ic has come to know this, {the government at White Earth|established for the treatment of this & - which accounts for the continued inerease in | Agency. They aré blind, or nearly so, | and other diseases among the Indians, as the resuit of trachoma. Trachoma is 2 disease of the eyelids, which eventually results in total blindness, if not given proper treat- ment. It is very common among the but have always met with the opposi- tion of the Indian Bureau at Washing- ton. Such a hospital is now being es- | tablished, however. Nore of these diséases could possi- the patronage of this store. When asked, “What makes business good ?” Mr Barker re- plied, “Doing things and selling things as we " promise.”’ store. We won’t are lowest even 1f 8 7 Barkar Drug Talks Worth Heeding We want every one in this city to know that our prices cannot be beaten by any drug but you must always take into consideration one thing—quality—and that is our long snit— we mnever have but one quality of drugs in our store because in such a vital matter as treating the human ‘body we helieve the very hest is none too good—don’t you? drug business and see Fow we can please you. s Orig & Jowely Store THIRD STREET be undersold. Our prices we do not publish them— Bring uaall your INSURANCE Huffman Harris & Reynolds | Bemidli, Minn. Phone (a4 WOTICE OF MO2RTGAGE SALE. 5 uit @ be: made 1ted and pril 23, 1912, ister of Deeds office for Beltrami Coun April 29th, 1907, Book 6 of N Page 508, which said mortg: reafter duly as- signed by mortgagee to Harold S. Julsrud, trument in writing dated *April 13th, 1912, and recorded in said Register of Deeds office April 24th, 1912, at 9 o'clock A. M., in Bovk 19 of Mort- gages, Page 86. There is claimed to be due and is ac- tually due on said mortgage at the date of this notice the sum of $515.07, as principal and interest, and the sum of $203.19, as taxes for the years 1907, 1908, 1909, 1910 and 1911, paid by said assignee, and made a part of the debt secured by said mortgage, making a total amount actually due and claimed to be due 2t the date of this notice of seven hundred eighteen and 26-100 ™($718.26) Dollars, for principal, interest and taxes paid. Now, Therefore, notice is hereby given that under the power of sale therein contained, said mortgage will be fore- closed by 2 sale of the premises de- scribed in, and conveyed by said mort- sage, to-wit: All that tract or parcel of land lying and being in Beltrami County, Minnesota, viz: | The Southeast quarter (SE%) of Section six (8), and Northwest ‘quarter ¥NW1%) of Northeast quarter (NEY%) of Section seven (7), all in Township one hundred' forty-six (146) Range thirty- five (35), according to the government survey thereof. ‘Which'salé’ will be made by the Sherift of said Beltrami County, 'Minnesota, at the front door of the Court House, in the City of Bemidji, in said County of Beltrami and State of Minnesota, on June 15th, 1912, at 10 o'clock A. M., at Public Auction, to the highest bidder for cash, to pay said debt, interest and taxes if any, on said premises, $25.00 attorriey’s fees' and the disbursements allowed by law. ; Dated May 1st, 1912, HARALD 8. JULSRUD. ¢ . - Assignee of Mortgagee. EDMUND INGALLS, : SEo the condi- | .| schools. What Do Students Know? Another professor joins the ranks ot the critics of college students with the statement that he has found many students who do not know that France is a republic or think that Portugal is a city, who have no knowledge of the chief industries of a great country or are ignorant of the difference be- tween latitude and longitude. Recent- Iy a Harvard professor complained instructors have lamented the ignor- ance of the Bible and English litera- ture. Poor college does he know? Yet somehow he ig is graduated from it. The number of deteriorated with numbers? There are still scholars, doubtless, but what ig the average student? If such criti- cisms continue, indignant graduates of mature years may demand an inves- tigation to determine what has hap- rened to the colleges and preparatory The public already may well ask: What is education, anyway?— Chicago Record-Herald. e Art of Listening. There is some ground for the com. our modern manners are bad. lieve that they must listen 10 wisdom of mamma and papa without interrup- tion or criticism, were in a fair way to become pleasanter company than a generation of people who want always to hear themselves talk. The art of listening is not now understood. It does not consist in suffering bores gladly; in sitting like a cistern for;| “the dull drip of desultory declama. tion.” It involves some capacity for directing and managing the stream of talk. Almost everyone has some subject or other on which they can say things worth hearing. * No doubt | it 13 generally “shop.” But it you have no capacity for - being interested in other people’s shop, you had better re- tire to a hermitage. ———— T, o Exercless . 'boots . buttoned without bending your 'tnees?” * Mrs. ‘Bocker—*Certalnly; I 'make ‘my husband do it."—Harper's Basar. _Regretted Womanly Limitaticng, - 7| Bhe’ gavé’an‘envivus: thought ito the happler lot:of men; 'who are always free to plunge into:the: healing wa- ters of action.—Heary James. Attorney for Assignee of Mortgagee, [ ‘ol 504-506 Torrey Bldg., i Duluth, Minn. May 3, 10, 17, 24, 31, June 7, 1912. that not a student in a class of 100 . B knew anything about Aristotle; other |§ student—what | admitted to the college and eventually college students has greatly increased | & {in the last few years—has the quality | & plaint that in the matter of listening | 3 T The children who were brought up to be- | { the dumb animals. full-blood Jndians, and there are a few cases among the mixed-bloods. The existence of this sickness has been known for twenty years past to the Indian Bureau. Congressman Steener- | petence of son, agents at White Earth and others Washington. - = — ——— "3 About the Dog. . The love of man for the dog is only second to his love for humanity. He who is brother to his fellowman, in whose heart swells the inspiration of human love, can never close his heart to the mute appeal of the dearest of Our soclety, as it grows finer and more sane, does mnot love the dog less, though part of it loves him, often, less wisely. The fad- ism which fawns on the dog, and causes him to displace affections which have a higher place, has no con- sideration here. It is the honest, sin- cere, appropriate relation between the human and the canine, that affection brought down to us from a cruder age, when the dog was really a guide and guardian, as he is now, when occasion arises, which deserves and must hold our earnest admiration, The dog in his place is a member of the social order not yet to be dis- pensed with. As our population bly be due to any land legislation, but is partly due to the ignorance and un- cleanliness of the full-blood Indians themselves and partly to the incom- the Indiam Bureau at crowds and our Iife grows more com: | plex, our friendship for the dog costs us something. Not alone for our own sake we have passed laws restricting and protecting him. It remains our duty to see that these laws are sensl- bly and ‘humanely enforced. The dog is likely to be with us, a part of our economics, for a long time to come.— New Haven Register. i Fast Time on Motor Trip. A well-known European motorist, stopping in Cairo, Egypt, performed a record feat by driving his car from Cairo to Alexandria, the other day, In ten hours. The distance is 140 mines, and considering that time after time the driver had to zig-zag backwards and forwards across the railway line, there being no proper rodd, the per- formance was considered wonderful. The return journey was covered in 8 —Get This Box FREE! ' Tear out the coupon below. Take it to the mearest l store and get a regular Sc box of Checkers. It’s the finest, most delicions, most healthful taffy- coated ‘popcorn confection ever made.” W% know it and will pay for your first box to prove it to you. Ineach box;you’ll find a nice souvenir. .Let the children have it—let them eat Checkers. Fill in the coupon now and-take-it: to your dealer. ENFEEEEREEON I. ] To Dealer— Please give bearer one box of Checkers Free. We will ro- - West Adams St., Chicago, Ill. deem this coupon for 5 cents in cash. Shotwell Mfg. Co., 1021 Name n Address %)ealer’s Name id RO ST Copyright! Hart Schaffaer & Marx way, we'll refund sogd priced;” ey CHEENFULLY REFUBDED Benj. Schneider, Pres. NP> oS aammig ) e — ‘Boy’s clothes that are 5 SRR hours, the following day. ; X B | they want in clothes before they start to get it; and most - of them know that this store is the headquarters for it, if its anything expressly for have all the the best in New High Nothing in The Variety of new shades and Colors, new patterns, new weaves, created unique and striking. 4 young business man; $75, $20, $25. sterling value of our Hart Schaffner and Marx Suits; best fabrics, best tailoring, best styles, $15, $18, $20, $22, $25. We've decided on a bold stroke in extreme value giving; something that will interest not only Bemidji == men but good dressers every where in this county. We’re selling at $75 the best suit ever made for the price; it's a good $85 better than the price. We'll send samples and style book anywhere in this county; - We'll pay express charges to you; and if the suit doesn’t satisfy you in every the money and pay express charges back again. do you think of that? We know what a value this is at $15, , clothesthat are “25 per cent better and 25 per cent lower That's about the whole story. and color; $3 up to $70. KNOW WHAT real stylish. young men,is amazing. We best things, selected from America, in styles that are school styles, new things for the alert men’s clothes can compare with the What Every good style, every good weave