Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, May 14, 1912, Page 4

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

i EVESSENN YOS — PNOTO BY PIUL THOMPSON Catcher Easterly of Cleveland. Manager Harry Davis of Cleveland Insists he will make one of the star catchers of baseball out of Ted East- erly. “Easterly doesn’t belong in the out- Beld, his place is behind the bat, and that is where I intend to play him,” says Davis. “Easterly in one of the best hitters I the American league. In this de- partment he is a natural ball player. He can be developed into a heady catcher. He is a fine thrower, and I have a great deal of confidence ‘in him. - . “I want Easterly to have confidence in himself. That is what I am going to try to instill in the player, and I am sure I will be successful. That much and my object of making him a leader in his department will be at- tained.” “ROOSEVELT AND OTHERS” ENDORSED (Continued from first page.) struct the delegations to vote as un- its, but this was voted down. The delegates go uninstructed but pledged to carry out the sentiment of the con- vention which declared for Roosevelt in its resolutions. Delegates were elected as follows: Thiéf River Falls, F. S. Lycan, J. E. Dade, J. J. Opsahl, Dr. Palmer, J. C. Parker, Joe Maloney, Gus Berg, 0. J. Tagley, E. J. Swedback, Nathan Head, and A. R. Erickson; to Min- neapolis, F. S. Arnold, Charles Gus- tafson, E. E. McDonald, R. F. Mur- phy, E. L. Oberg, Wm. McCuaig, John Guthrie, Charles Carter, F. A. Wilson, E. H. Denu, and Andrew Rood. Those ‘attending the convention were Charles Dickinson and W. H. Whelin, Alaska; A. B. Page and Charles Carter, Blackduck town; George M. Dening and John Wach- man, Durand; A. S. Ruskjer and P. L. Foucalt, Jones; C. C. Glidden and W. A. Worth, Northern; O. J. Tagley, T. J. Martin and Peter Wold, Ny- more; Gus Berg, J. E. Raymond and I A. Ungsted, Frohn; J. M. Guthrie and Albert Utech, Turtle River; J. E. Dade, Charles Hayden, E. L. Oberg, John McDougald and Bunn T. Wilson from +the village of Black- duck; Wm. Gerlinger and Odin Us- eth, Port Hope, Charles Gustafson, Tenstrike; Joseph Maloney, Spooner; E. J. Hushik, Wilton; N. J. Head, Red Lake; A. A. Haarkhau, Buzzle. The Bemidji delegation was unchang- ed with the exception that J. C. Park- er substituted for T. J. Burke in the Third ward. Harry Thaw a Father, New York, May 14.—Evelyn Nes- bit Thaw has arrived from Germany with a baby boy twenty-one months old. The child was born in Ham- burg less than a year after the last test of Thaw’s sanity in White Plains in July and August of 1909 when Thaw was given liberties in jail. This was the last time she saw her husband. The baby will be the heir to the Thaw millions. Mrs. Thaw states that she will go on the stage to support herself and the child. Care of the Eyes. One of the most important things to consider in connection with caring for the eyes is the bath, and this should preferably be of rain or dis- tilled water. A pinch of salt, well dissolved, adds value to an eye bath, end a most soothimg wash, which is @dministered in a little eye-cup that Iits over the open eye, is made by dis- tolving a level teaspoonful of pure horic acid in a quart of filtered or dis- tilled - water. Boric acld must be dissolved in boiling water, and then added to the rest in a quart bottle. Although everybody knows that one eye may often have an ailment not shared by the other, few remember to refrain from using the same cup for both eyes without washing it after the first has been bathed—Harper’s Ba~ gar, - Separating Lady’s Finger Tips. Many boys pride themselves on their muscular strength. Let a girl Pplace the tips of her forefingers togeth- er, keeping her elbows on a level with her shoulders, and challenge any boy to take hold of her wrists and sep- arate them by a steady pull. ' Unless she be unusually weak or he be very strong, he will probably fail—Wom. an’s World, i Successful Ladies’ Tailors in our clean, airy Shop. Our high class designersand makers work the year through, pro- ducing the newest '§ and most fashion- able skirts. Every yard of material used in Patrick- Duluth skirts is the of Quality.” F. A. PATRICK I il 1 The Keynote to HE hang of a skirt as much as the material it p is made of, marks the successful dresser. Patrick-Duluth skirts are made by expert very high- est grade. All the Northwest knows that Patrick-Duluth stands for the very finest grade in material, style and \ workmanship.” They know, too, that the Patrick trade-mark on dress goods, blankets, mackinaws, overalls, etc., is a guarantee of the best. Insist on your dealer showing y Don’t miss our style book, *‘Patrick-Duluth Book Goods Distributors at Wholenale.and Manufacturers of Garments|l For s Women and Chiitren. Saers of A1y Wasscoarin s Sumerss 2 Dressing Ladies’ Tailor ou Patrick goods. &, COMPANY, Duluth TOLD BY SENATORS Some Amusing Occurrences in the Upper House. DEPARTMENT CLERK’S NERVE How Foraker Shocked the Modesty of Platt of Connecticut—Morgan's Lit- tle Joke on Gallinger, the New Hampshire Reformer. By GEORGE CLINTON. Washington.—The sgenate of the United States is reported generally as the staidest kind of a body. It is sel- dom that any jokes are cracked om the floor of the upper house, but occa- sionally there is an approach to -hu- mor, or an attempt at humor on the part of some senator in a speech, and then there are likely to be smiles, but there is never anything approaching qven the giggle which precedes laugh- ‘ter. [ In the quiet of their committee rooms senators occasionally tell sto- ries and a good many of them have to do with men whom they have known in public life but who are dead and gone. Other storles have to do with their experlences as senators in their dealings with their constituents, espe- clally such dealings as are had through correspondence. . Senators and representatives both are a willing lot, but occasionally there is a limit. A senator from Michigan told some of his committee room com- rades the other day that he had re celved a letter which he thought ap proached the extreme of assurance. This letter, he sald, was from a clerk in one of the departments and it vir tually ordered the senator—the order being based on the ground that the man who issued it hailed from the state of Michigan—to call upon the superintendent of the division in which the letter writer was a clerk, and tell him to have the clerk’s desk moved so that he could spend the time when he was not at work in looking out of the window. The senator vouched for the truthfulness of this story. Platt’s Modesty Shocked. The other day a member of the up per house told a story of Senator For aker of Ohio and ex-Senator Platt of Connectlcut who died some years ago Mr. Platt was known as the most mod- est man who ever had a seat in con: gress. He was modest to the shrink ing point.” The story ran like this: “When Senator Foraker was making his speech against the proposal to ad- mit Arizona and New Mexico as one state he quoted from arguments made by Senator Platt, who years ago on the floor of the senate declared that Da- kota was too large to be admitted as one commonwealth and that it should be split in twain. The Ohio senator started in thus: ‘The senior senator from Connecticut, Mr. Platt — “At this instant the main door of the senate chamber opened and Sena- tor Platt appeared and started slowly down the center aisle. He had not heard his name as it fell from the lips of Senator Foraker. Senator Foraker continued: ever held membership in this body—' “Senator Platt had advanced tem feet. Every eye was upon him. Sen- ator Foraker continued: ‘A man known,to the country for his distin- guished services—a man known for the fine quality of his mind—' “Senator Platt was now within ten feet of the front row of senatorial desks. The eyes were still upon him, and in them and below them was sf lent laughter. “Senator Foraker went on: ‘A man whose opinion upon questions of mo ment carries weight always and convie tion nearly always. I go not astray when I seek the words of the eminent senior senator from Connecticut —’ “Senator Platt had been listening without suspicion. His name heard, he fairly folded his towering form, fell into a seat and there sat shivering from the shock to his Connecticut mod esty.” Morgan Had Fun With Gallinger. Another story was told of Senator Gallinger of New Hampshire who is still in the senate and Senator Mor gan of Alabama who died not long ago at an advanced age. The bill to admit Oklahoma a8 a state was under dis- cussion and Senator Gallinger had in- troduced an amendment providing that -no intoxicating liquor should be sold in the new state for twenty-one years. Then the Alabama senator rose in his seat and solemnly proposed to Mr. Gallinger's amendment—an amend- ment to the effect that no one should sell or give Intoxicating drinks to the inhabitants of the new state, “ex- cept wines which were made in the United States.” Senator Gallinger, who is the head and front of every reform movement which reaches the senate, looked with absolute horror at his friend from Ala- bama. The New Hampshire senator had in front of him in imagination a pleture of the five civilized tribes lay- ing in a season’s supply of California con and Missour! champagne. He astened to tell the senate that Indians could get-drunk on the American prod- uct-as rapidly and as completely as they could on the product of the vine- yards of France, and that there were as many warpath possibilities in a bot- tle of one as in a bottle of the other. The amendment to the amendment was voted down, and there was just @ suspicion of a movement of the body of the Alabama senator to suggest that he was laughing. Two or Four Kinds of Women. Someone—probably one of those (Frenchmen whose life job it was to ake epigrams—once sald that there are but two kinds of women: good women and bad women. Ever since ;then problem playwrights have been jputting that fiction into the mouths of wronged husbands'.and bullding ‘their “big Bcene” around it. But don’t you believe it. There are four Xkinds: good women, bad women, ‘good /bad women and bad good women. {the worst of these {s the last.—. THE BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEER ‘One of the most virile' minded, one of the ablest senators who' AR R REREEERER R HOW TO FIND : The Northern Minnesota Devel- * - opment Association Immigra- * tion Commission Quarters, 89-* Third Street, South, Minne- apolis, x x '. * * x £3 ® ® % For the benefit of the readers * of the Pioneer this notice will % appear in both the Daily and ¥ Weekly Ploneer for the next six * month, ¥ Ou leaving the union depot % turn to the left and continue up * Nicollet to Third etreet, crose- ¥ ing that thoroughfare, turn to % the left and procced half a ¥ block, toward the postoffice. ¥ 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. KKK KKK KKK KXY KK Ak kA kA A AN AKX \ Lame back is usually caused by rheumatism of the muscles of the back, for which you will find noth- ing better than Chamberlain’s Lini- ment. For sale by Barker’s Drug Store. Mind and Muscle. As"the volume of controllable mus- cular and mechanical energy at his command has increased, man has found it necessary to use his own muscular energy for purposes of the control thereof, and even to supple: ment it for this purpose rather than 0 use it in-the actual performance of the tasks themselves. Hence we have the large number of officials in the armies, organized both for warlike and peaceful purposes. In all of these, however, the dominating idea, so far, has been that of increasing the amount of muscular-and mechanical energy controlled by one .master mind. . It is true that many individ- uvals are employed in transmitting di- rections, in recording operations, et but the central idea permeating every- thing is that the controlling individ- ual is, or should be, able of himself to initiate every movement and make every decision relating thereto. It has always been a problem of supple- menting muscle rather than of supple- menting mind.—Cassier’s Magazine. Cook’s "Accidental Discovery. One of the best ways of cooking po- tatoes was accidentally discovered through the unpunctuality of a train. When the line from Paris to St. Ger- main was opened the first train car- ried an official party for whom lunch ‘was ordered. The meal was fixed for moon, and shortly before that hour the potatoes were put on to fry, A few minutes sfterward a message came that the train would probably be delayed for an hour, so the potatoes were taken oft the fire, but left in the pan. Then came a second message. “Train just arriving,” and the potatoes were hur- riedly put back to fry again. ‘When the party sat down to luneh wae potatoes were brought on with the steak. Each chip was then found to be blown out like a small,. crisp, gold- ey balloon, to the delight of the pnjests. The cook, without knowing it, hud invented pommes de terre souf- fides, Poor apyetite is a sure sign of im- paired digestion. A few doses of Chamberlain’s Stomach and Liver tion and improve your appetite. Thausands have been benefitted by taking these Tablets. Sold by Bar- ker’s Drug Store. T. BEAUDETTE ‘Merchant Tailor Ladies' and Gents' Svits to Order. French Dry Cleaning, Pressing and Repuring s Specialty. 315 Belt:ami Avenve want ad. Depar tment The Pioneer Want Ads 5 cents. 80 your want ad gets to them all. CLASSIFIED CHICKEN AND EGG % DEPARTMENT. FOR SALE—Breeding stock and eggs for hatching from the best flock of full blood Barred Plymouth Rocks to be had, come and see them at 706 14th. O. C. Simon- D e VU WANTED—A reliable representative in Beltrami county for a co-opera- tive secret service company. Ad- dress 445 First National Bank Building, Chicago, IlL WANTED—Experienced fitter and saleslady. T. J. Crane and Co. Tablets will strengthen your diges- FOR SALE FOR SALE—Typewriter ribbons for every make of typewriter on the market at 50 cents and 75 cents each. Every ribbon sold for 75 cents guaranteed. Phone orders promptly filled. Mail orders given the same careful attention as when you appear in person. Phone 31. The Bemidji Pioneer Office Supply Store. OASH WITH 00PY % oent per word per issue Regular charge rate 1 cent per word per msertion. No ad taken for less than 1! HOW THOSE WANT ADS DO THE BUSINESS The ;Ploneer goes everywhere so that everyone has a neighbor who takes it and people wholdo not take the paper generally read their neighbor’s 15 Cent a Word Is All It Costs Phone 31 FOR RENT FOR RENT—Four acres of cultivated land in city limits for rent cheap. . Inquire John T. €ibbons. FOR RENT—June 1st, 2 office rooms. O’Leary-Bowser Bldg. FOR RENT—Two furnished rooms at 415 Minnesota Ave. LOST AND FOUND LOST—A string of gold beads Thurs- day afternoon. One dollar reward will be paid for their return to 521 Minnesota Ave. MISCELLANEQUS 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 insertion, one-half cent per word succeeding insertion; fifty cents per line per month. Address the Courier-News, Fargo, N. D. ‘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 all receive advantage of advertis- ing. For wholesale prices write or phone the Bemidji Pioneer Of- fice Supply- Co. Phone 31. Be- midji, Minn. FOR SALE—The Bemidji lead pen- pencil (the best nickle pencil 1 the world) at Netzer’s,. Barker’s, 0. C. Rood’s, -McCuaig’s, Omich’s, Roe and Markusen’s and the Pio- neer Office Supply Store at & cents each and 50 cents a dozen. FOR SALE—Small several different 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 of « rubber stamp for you on short fonts of ' type, points and iIn =otice. BOUGHT AND SOLD—Second hand furniture. 0dd Fellows building, across from postoffice, phone 129. THE SPALDING EUROPEAN PLAN Duluth’s Largest and Best Hotel DULUTH MINNESOTA More than $100,000.00 recently expended on improvements. 250 rooms, 12 private Dbaths, 60 sample rooms. Every modern convenience: Luxurious and delightful restaurants and buffet, Flemish Palm Room, Men's Grill, Uolonial Buff public rooms; Magnificent lobby an Ballroom, banquet rooms and private dining_rooms; Bun parior and observa- tory. a heart of business sec- tion but overlooking the harbor and Lake Superior. Convenient to everything. ditison e cinus | 162 East Bound Leaves 163 West Bound Leaves 186 East Bound Leaves 187 West Bound Leaves . GREAT NORTEERN 83 West Bound Leaves . 84 East Bound Leaves 35 West Bound Leaves 26 East Bound Leaves ... 36 East Bound Leaves . 106 South Bound Leaves ... Freight West Leaves af Freight East Leaves at ...... 3: MINNESOTA & INTERNATIONAL 32 South Bound Leaves .... 31 North bound Leaves . 34 South Bound Leaves . 33 North Bound Leaves . Freight South Leaves at . Freight North Leaves at . 1 North Bound Leaves . 2 South Bound Leaves . { PROFESSIONAL, CARDSS | RUTH WIGHTMAN TEAGHER OF PIAND Leschetitsky Method Residence Studio 917 Minnesota Ave. Phone 168 IMUSIC LESSONS MISS SOPHIA MONSEN TEACHER OF PIANO AND HARMONY Studio at 921 Beltrami Avenue MRS, W. B. STEWART Teacher of Plano, Guitar and Mandolin. Graduate of the New England Conserva- tory in Boston and a pupil of Dr. Wil- liam Mason of New York. Studio, 1003 Dewey Avenue. T. W. BRITTON Up Stairs over Grand Theatre. 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. R. 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 313 o of the Groat Hotels of the Northwest EVERYBODY READS The Bemidji Daily Pioneer - Want “Ads” The‘sé little fellows are constant workers. Buyers and sellers are constantly watching these columns. 1-2 cent a word p EINER W. JOHNSON PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office over Securtly Bank DENTISTS DR. D. L. STANTON DENTIST Office in Winter Block DR. @. M. PALMER DENTIST Evening Work by Apointmens Oaly NEW PUBLIC LIBRARY. Open daily, except Sunday, 1 to € p. m., 7to 9 p. m. Sunday, rooms only, 3 to &~p. m. TOM SMART DRAY AND TRANSFER C. 6. JOHNSON Lands Loans Stocks Office—214 Beltrami Ave. ays a[NELSON & CO.

Other pages from this issue: