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[ TUESDAY, JULY 2, 1912. fHE BEMIDJI DATLY PIONEER AWAY WITH CATARRH A FILTHY DISEASE A Common Sense Treatment Quick- ly Relieves All Distressing Symptoms. If you have any symptoms of ca- tarrh, such as stuffed up feeiing in the head, profuse discharge from the nose, phlegm in the throat, causing hawking and spitting, dull pain in the head, or ringing in the ears, just anoint the nostrils or rub the throat or chest with a little Ely’s Cream Balm, and see how quickly you will get relief. In just a few minutes you will feel your head clearing, and after using the Balm for a day or so the mnasty discuarge will be checked, the pain, soreness and fever will be gone, and you will no longer be offensive to yourself and friends by your con- stant hawking, spitting and blowing. Shake off the grip of catarrh: be- fore it impairs your sense of taste, smell and hearing and poisons your whole system. In a short time you can be cured of this distressing dis- ease by using Ely’s Cream Balm. This healing, antiseptic Balm does not fool you with short, deceptive relief, but completely overcomes the disease. It clears the nose, head and throat of all the rank poison, soothes, heals and strengthens the raw ,sore membranes, and makes you proof against catarrh. One application will convince you, and a fifty cent bottle will generally effect a complete cure. Get it from your druggist and start the treat- ment at once. William G. Klein INSURANCE Rentals, Bonds, Real Estate First Mortgage Loans onf] City] and Farm Property o"#nd 6, O'Leary-Bewser B Phere 19. Bemldjl, ABELL’S LUNCH ROOM | ties of heart and head. Phone 364 HE PUT IN THE COLOR NOTE How the Artist Turner Changed One of His Pictures From Failure to Success, Thomas Shrewsbury Parkhurst, the Toledo artist, is in Milwaukee to visit the Milwaukee Art society where an exhibition of his paintings is being held. He has found Milwaukee a busy place and has been whisked from one home to another of the principal mem- bers of the art society and others who are Interested in art. In his round of dinners and teas he has established 'a reputation for story telling—not mean- ing to imsinuate, of course, that he ever departs from the strict letter of the truth, Many of his stories are of other painters. One he tells of Turn- er. Turner had exhibited a new paint- ing in the Paris salon and on the opening night a number of his friends spoke derogatorily of his work, He said nothing, but the next morning he invited the same friends to view the painting again. The criticlsm had been directed to- ward the grayness of the scene, which represented a dead gray sea upon which was anchored a somewhat dead- er gray ship. From the background a gray fog rolled in. When the crities arrived the next morning a vermillion buoy floated upon the gray waves and the iron hawser that anchored the boat had taken on a red tone. The picture sold immediately and is now known as one of Turner’s best. Mr. Parkhurst told this as an illus- tration of what forcing a color note will do to & picture.—Milwaukee Wis- consin, ORATOR’S TRIBUTE TO WOMEN Robert G. Ingersoll’s Eloquent Descrip- tion of the Beauties and Virtues of the Gentler Sex. It takes 100 men to make an en- campment, but one woman can make & home. I not only admire woman as the most beautiful object ever created, but I reverence her as the redeeming glory of humanity, the sanctuary of all virtues, the pledge of all perfect quali- It is not just nor right to lay the sins of men at the feet of women. It is because wom- en are so much better than men that their faults are considered greater. The one thing in this world that is constant, the one peak that rises sbove all clouds, the one window in which the light forever burns, the one star that darkness cannot quench is woman'’s love. It rises to the greatest heights, it sinks to the lowest depths. It forgives the most cruel injuries. It 18 perennial of life and grows in every climate. Neither coldness nor neglect, harshness nor cruelty can extinguish it. A woman’s love is the perfume of the heart. This is the real love that subdues the earth; the love that has wrought all miracles of art; that gives us music all the way from the cradle song to the grand closing symphony that bears the soul away on wings of fire. A love that is greater than pow- er, sweeter than life and stronger than death.—Robert G. Ingersoll. Russia’s New Naval Base. Reval, which Russia proposes to make into one of her strongest naval bases, has under a variety of owners, been a fortified town for many cen- turies. The Danes were the first to occupy and strengthen it in the thir- teenth century. Then came the Han- seatic league, which made it one of its leading ports, and then in 1561 it became Swedish territory. Bombard- ments by the Danes and Russians failed to reduce it, and it was still an Important fortress when it surrender- ed to Peter the Great in 1710, and since then it has been greatly strengthened by Russia. Perched on a hill within a huge circling harbor, Reval still retains memories of its checkered history. A year or two ago I found about half a dozen droshkies on the stand in the quiet market place. Between them the drivers chattered in German, Swedish, Russian, F ench—and one of them could bargain only in the lan- guage of Lithuania. —London Chron- lele. 8ix Years to Construct Clock. A clock constructed throughout of glass is the result of six years’ work on the part of a Bavarian glass polish- er. The plates and pillars which form the framework are of glass and are bolted together with glass.screws. The dial plate, hands, shafts and cogwheels are of glass and glass wedges and pins are used for fastening the various parts of the running gear together, says Tit-Bits. Like the clock itself, the key by which it is wound is of glass. The construction of the remark- gble timepiece was a matter of infinite pains. Some of the parts had to be made as many as 40 times before a clock that would go could be pro- ! duced. Make a Lasting Epitaph, Live for something. Do good, and leave behind you & monument of vir- tue that the storm of time can never destroy. Write your name, in kind- ness, love and mercy, on the hearts of thousands you come In contact with year by year; you will never be for gotten. No, your name, your deeds, will be as legible on the hearts you leave behind as the stars on the brow of evening. Good deeds will shine as the stars.—Chalmers. WAS SAVED BY THE DOCTORS Victim of Robbers Recovered Because the Physicians Didn’t Probe for the Bullets. The expert medical witness had just descended from the stand when a re- cess was announced in the criminal court and so he paused for a few mo- ments to chat with Judge Ralph S. Latshaw, who dearly delights in twit- ting the medicos. “Whenever I see a doctor on the stand,” related the judge, “I am forci- bly reminded of an experience when I was an assistant prosecuting attor- ney many years ago. “A storekeeper on East Ninth street ‘was shot by robbers when he refused to open his cash drawer. Four bullets found him as their mark and when of- ficers arrived on the scene he was ly- ing on the floor, dead to all outward appearances. Doctors, who had hur- ried to the store, took a look at him, shook their heads and went away. Not one of them offered to probe for the bullets. “And do you know,” smiled the Judge to the doctor, “that was what eaved him, The storekeeper recovered and is in business to this very day. He still carrles the bullets, one of them in his head. Now what would have happened to him, doctor, if they had probed for the bullets?” But by this time the expert was gone.—Kansas City Journal. Blllions in Exports of Manufactures. The estimate that a billion dollars’ worth of manufactures will be export- ed in the current fiscal year, made by the Bureau of Statistics, Department of Commerce and Labor, seems likely to be justified. The official figures ghow for the nine months ending with March $730,000,000 worth of manufac- tures exported, these flgures being $74,000,00 in excess of those for the corresponding period of the preced- ing year; and as the exports of manu- factures in the year ending June 80, 1911, were valued at $907,000,000, the fizures at hand seem to clearly indi- cate that the total for the current year will pass the billion-dollar lina If you are a housewife you cannot reasonably hope to be beautiful by washing dishes, sweep- ing and doing housework all day, and crawling into bed dead tired at night. You must get out into the open air and sunlight. If you do this every day and keep your stomach and bowels in good order by taking Cham- berlain’s Tablets when needed, you should become both healthy and beau- tiful. For sale by Barker's Drug Store. A Big Turkey Dinner WILL BE SERVED AT WM. E. ABELL, Proprietor. JULY FOURTH All the New Fruits and Vegetables of the Season at all times of the Day or Night. SPECIAL LUNCHES PUT UP FOR FISHING AND PICNIC PARTIES healthy or, LEADS THEM ALL g If you want Q\lah{)(i Punity and Service — order b Beer THE PERFECT BREW AGENCIES EVERYWHERE THEO. HAMM BREWING CO. ST. PAUL MINN f | i f o A o T J. W. LANCDON, Local Agent, Bemidji, Minn. OWN A HOME > Everyone has a desire to own his own home sooner or ater. Now is the time to secure it, while lots can be bought very cheap. No Interest. No Taxes Fairview Addition offers the best advantages for ! the people of moderate means to secure their own homes. | These lots are nice and level; located on Irving avenue. The proposed street car line is laid out along the east side of Fairview addition. Lots at $25 fo $60 each. Payments 50 cents per week. During June and July only we will give you one lot Free if you buy five lots. REYNOLDS & WINTER, Agents M. Phibbs or W. C. Klein APt i R o - 307 Beltrami Avenue