Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, July 25, 1912, Page 3

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Mrs. J. J. Conger has purchased four lots at Lavinia. Louis Bently, of Annandale, was ~ the guest of Mrs. George Markham yesterday. M. B. Nelson, a merchant of Leon- ard, transacted business in Bemidji yesterday. Go to Hakkerup for photos. A. P. Ritchie returned Wednesday morning from a short business trip to Minneapolis. J. W. Buss of Park Rapids, was in Bemidji last night en route to Inter- national Fills on business. Miss Pauline Markham has left the hospital where she was confined fol- lowing an operation for appendicitis. Moonlight excursions on the City of Bemidji. Boat leaves at 7:30. Just a few left while the moon lasts. R. C. Pinkham of Casselton, N. D., and V. W. Campbell of Hamilton, N. D.. are here for a few days visiting frineds. C. G. Johnson will leave for Shook Friday evening where he has timber on the ground to build a house on his claim. Certificates of depozit bearing 4 per cent interest and secured by its entire assets, are issued by the Northern National Bank. Mrs. J. F. Boss of Omaha, Neb., arrived in the city last night to be the guest of her nephew. E. J. Ren- ner, for a few days. Postmaster O. J. Tagley of Nymore, left this morning for Crookston to attend the postmasters convention which is being held there today. James Knight, of Big Fork, arrived from Big Falls last night and will visit his uncle William Knight for a few days before returning to his home. Buy your adding machine paper olls at the Pioneer Office and School supply Store. Single rolls 10 cents, 8 for 25 cents. Mrs. Howard Ingersoll arrived from Brainerd last night to be the guest of Miss Donna Lycan for two weeks. Dr. Ingersoll is expected up over Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. E. B. Wilson Miss Mabel Norton of Minneapolis, were ih Bemidji last night en route to Turtle Lake where they will camp for the next six weeks. The Zion Luther church will hold services in the Swedish Lutheran church tonight at 8 o’clock. The services will be conducted by Rev. A. A. Dahl of the Hauges Synod of Ada, Minnesota. Dr. and Mrs. A. Kahala of Erskine are spending the day in the city as the guests of friends. Doctor had to come down on professional business and Mrs. Kahala accompanied him.—- Crookston Daily Times. Miss Leah Berman returned this afternoon from Duluth where she has spent the past week as the guest of friends. Miss Berman was a mem- ber of the party who went down the Great Lakes to Buffalo. For soreness of the muscles, wheth- er induced by violent exercise or in- jury, there is nothing better than Chamberlain’s Liniment. This lini- ment also relieves rheumatic pains. For sale by Barker’s Drug Store. _ Mr. and Mrs. Francis Waldron of Montevideo, Minn., arrived in the ¢ Tuesday afternoon for a few days visit with Mrs. Waldron's parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Duffy. They will return home tomorrow noon. Postmaster J. E. Dade of Black- duck. was here yesterday on business, going on to Crookston for the post- masters’ convention. Senater S. D. Works of Mankato, came from Crookston last night and left this morning for points along the Soo0. A $4.00 dictionary in exchange for coupons clipped from the columns of the Pioneer. Read the big display ad in this issue and then look for the coupon. Six coupons with 98 cents secures this splendid modern $4.00 dictionary. Mr. and Mrs. E. F. Feed and children, Pauline, Max and Marga- rette, of Yale, Mich., and Mrs. Clake of Sarnia, Ont., arrived in the city Tuesday, coming by way of the great lakes, to be the guests of Mrs. Given McGhee. Mrs. Fead is Mrs. McGhee's sister and Mrs. Blake is her mother. Mrs. Joe McTaggert entertained a number of her friends Tuesday even- ing in homor of Mrs. W. A. McDou- ald and Miss Tina McDougal. Games and music were the diversion of the evening, at the close of which re- freshments were served. Mrs. Me- Donald was presented with a beauti- ful silk parasol and Miss McDougal with a long pair of tan gloves. Did you ever before buy full size typewriter paper, the kind that goes with a guarantee at the rate of 500 sheets for 75 cents? We offer you AVON BOND paper put up in hoxes at the above price. If you wish a and |glways be depended upon. Thrilling,” Sensational, CAPT, SGOTT'S SOUTH POLE EXPEDITION Genuine Motion Pic:::e: :;:;e;:tg:i .Unseen'Wouders of 2000 Feet of Film Marvels of the Polar Regions “Miss This Great Show Admission 5¢ and 10c Wonderful Views of the Midnight Sun You Gannot Afford to Door Open at 7:00. First Sho 9:30. Come Early w at 7:30; Second 8:30; Third if You Want a Seat beavier grade paper we-have the same at $1.00 a box of 500 sheets. The Bemidji Pioneer Office Supply Store. Misses Leah Latendresse and Cora Paul of Red Lake Falls, Minn., were in the city yesterday for a few hours as the guests of Miss Latendresse’s cousin, Miss Ida DeRushia. They left this morning for Akeley where they will visit relatives for about a week after which they will return to Be- midji to be Miss DeRuhsia’s guests for a few days. Before returning home they will visit relatives and friends at Big Falls, International Falls and Warroad. Save the coupons from the Pioneer. One each day for six issues and bring them to the Pioneer with 98 cents and secure a fine leather bound dic- tiona Look for the big display an- | nouncement. This dictionary is a reg- ular $4.00 seller. Miss Jennie Moen and Miss Tina McDougal left this morning for Du- luth where they will visit for a few days. Miss Moen will return Sund- day and during her absence Mrs. M. | S. Gillette will take her place at the Bazaar store. Miss McDougal will not return to Bemidji but will go on to Sault Ste. Marie, where she will visit relatives and friends for two or three months. Miss McDougal will join her sister, Mrs. W. A. McDon-| ald, wherever they decide to locate in the west. During the summer months moth- ers of young children should watch for any unnatural looseness of the bowels. When given prompt atten- tion at_this time serious trouble may be avoided. Chamberlain’s Colic, | Cholera and Diarryhoea Remedy can For sale; by Barker’s Drug Store. Miss Olive Cunningham yesterday afternoon entertained sixteen young ladies at the Cunningham summer home down the river in honor of her guest, Miss Florence Finnegan, of Merriam Park, St. Paul. The Misses - |May Finnegan and Gertrude Cole, al-| so of St. Paul, came over from Cass| Lake where they are visiting. En- tertainment was provided by cards, informal dancing and fortune telling. Out of town guests were the Misses Alice Allen, of Minneapolis, and Mar- tha Williams, of Grand Forks, who are spending the summer at Lavinia and Lakeside; Miss Elizabeth Eaton,| of Proctorville, Ohio, who is the| guest of Miss Vera Backus; Mrs. Wal- ter Marcum, and the Misses Vera Backus, Gladys Stanton, Gladys Vye, Ivis Roberts, Bess and Lil Cochran, Dorothy Torrance, Gertrude Cole, Servia McKusick, May Finnegan and Florence Finnegan. Captain Me- Lachlan brought the party to Bemid- ji last night. Notice! $10.00 reward will be paid for the arrest and conviction of the person or persons stealing flowers from my premises, 409 American Ave. John C. Tennstrom. Notice. Owing to disappointment on a land deal T have for sale 4 horses, weight from 1250 to 1300 1bs., age seven to nine years; two set brass mounted harness; one new double boy farm wagon; one good buggy; household goods. Will sell very reasonable. Call at Sam Hoyths’ old barn, rear of post office. Tips as ‘Strike Breakers. Not a few men who are accustomed to give liberal tips were heard to ex- press themselves bitterly on the sub- Ject of the waiters’ strike. One of the managers at the Waldort was talking yesterday about hearing one of the best-known brokers in New York, known as one of the most gen- erous tippers about the hotel, declare emphatically that he had vowed never again to tip a waiter who had struck. Some doubt was expressed,.and the manager rushed away and ‘brought up the broker. “Yes, I sald it the latter agreed, | “and, furthermore, I mean it. In the course of the last twenty years I have given away thousands of dollars in tips to waiters—never less than a quarter, and sometimes as much as $5 at a time. Yet what did it count for me to spend a lot of money on-men fust for bringing. me a few plates of food? Hereafter I shall ask every man who serves me:whether he was & striker. 1f he was, I shall not give him a cent, and I cam tell you ¥ have | that system of things out of which we | Hcates, “Yes, yes; I'm just as intelll- GETTING .CLOSE TO NATURE of the Country. To take the birds out of my life ‘were the lopping off so many branches from the tree; there is that less sur- face of leafage to absorb the sunlight and bring my spirits in contact with the vital currents. We cannot pursue any natural study with love and en- thusiasm without the object of it be- coming a part of our lives. - The birds, the flowers, the trees, the rocks, all become linked with our lives and hold the key to our thoughts and emotions. I certainly have found “good in ev- erything”—in all natural processes |8 came and which is the source of our health and strength. It is good that fire should burn, even if it consumes your house; it is good that force & it is good that rain should fall, even if it destroys your crops or floods your land. Plague and pestilence attest the con- stancy of natural law. They set us pature. disease and death prevail. Death is & phase of life, a redistributing of the type. Decay is another kind of growth. | The show and splendor of great | | houses, elaborate furnishings, stately palls, oppress me, impose upon me. They fix the attention upon false val- nes, they set up a false standard of | beauty; they stand between me and the real feeders of character and thought. A man needs a good roof pver his head winter and summer, and # good chigney and a big woodpile in winter. The more open his four walls are the more fresh air he will get, and the longer he will live—John Bur- roughs, in the Century. English Journal Commentg With Some Sharpne: nd Admiration, of Time was—and not so very long 120, either—when the. only distinc- jively American expression known in Ihis country was “I guess.” To say "I guess” and endeavor—not always with success—to speak it through our nose, was the recognized way of personating an American. It was 1lways sure of an appreciative and un- ferstanding laugh—the laugh that in- gent as you, and know exactly what and forlorn about him: He watched the panorama ‘which unfolded before NS o time = of my life right now.” As One Who. Understands It, John Bu hs- Writ t He had been a farmer all his. life. rroug! es of the Beauty For he had city,” said he. “My boys send me $5 a week and I make enough more by odd Jobs of this sort to keep me. - And, say! my life! you. There's a man living down at the lodging house where I get a 25- cent room every night who used to be and products—not the “good” of the | Btorles of his life. Bunday school books, but the good of | W Who says he's natural law and order, the good of |like one, anyhow—and there’s a major in the English army, and a sea capigin and a professor who got fired by his university—they say for cheating at cards—and a man they say used to be chould crush, even if it crifshes you; |Bight fellows like that come in and there’s always something happening. It’s exciting—and I spent all my life hard at work on a hill farm. I'm twen- ty years younger than I was when I came to town and as long.as I get & to cleaning our relations to outward | couple of meals a day and a place to Only in a live universe could |8leep, I'm happy. What do I want with a $12-a-week job, Mister? I wouldn’t change places with the ma~ yor.” man who has tasted life in a lodging house,” sald he. - “Excitement is in the air. Every newcomer has a life history that is more interesting than fiction. Little wonder they will mot ‘come back.’ ” | cause he wears an outrageous tie. It /might be & present from = rich aunt.— jn which case he is very much the CURIOSITY OF MODERN SLANG reverse of imsane. American Slang. Eeums 300 barrels an hour by wash- them several yented. “When my wife died I came to the I'm living for the first time im T'm enjoying myself, I tell bank burglar, and he tells me the And there’s a fel- count—he talks minister and killed a man. Every A clty misslonary heard the story. “That 8 why you cannot reform a Canny Mr. Man. A man s not necessarily insane be- Barre! Cleaning Made Easy, A machine which thoroughly g them inside and out and rinsing times has been in- Brinkman Theater Tonight ou intend” Nowadays, we don’t 'w why, our common speech is well Bavored with transatlantic idioms. Not Nlways slang, we mean. American Mang has its uses, though the only one Fe can think of at the moment is that 't saves trouble. When one has clas- tified one’s friends and acquaintances 18 “the lmit” and “the goods,” ome pas been spered much labor of char- jcterization. Otherwise the argot of the Bowery is more curious than beau- Mful. But we go further. “We fix things up.” Instead of finishing a task Marron- and: Darrell Glassy Vaudeville Program - Eccentric Entertainers, fea- turing Gypsy Darrell, an act that pleases. Dick Herman Singing Comedian. Fe are “through with it.” We do not begin, but “start in” This habit is jpreading like a canker through all tlasses of the community—even to fhose conservative gentlemen, the framatists, who name their new pro- fuctions “The Glad Eye” or “Looking lor Trouble.” No doubt we shall be jold by apologists for the habit that all fhe expressions we have noted are to de found in Shakespears or Milton. That may- be, but we doubt if Miss Co- relli’s predecessor at Stratford-on- Avon ever caused one of his heroines io be called & “lallapalooza.”—London Blobe. No Hesitancy at All. As & matter of fact, a woman doesn’t hesitate a minute between marrying for money or brains. She is plways willing to furnish the brains. — Chicago News. Alkali Bests Broncho Billy The Sacrifice Vaudeville, Moving Pictures Picture Program A rip roaring western com- edy. All laughs.. Essanay. Drama. Lubin. The Dumb Moving Gomedy By Bannister Merwin. Edison. and Illustrated Songs. Children 10c | Aduilts 15c and 20c 400 Sheets of Up to Classical Songs talked with hundreds who feel juBt the same as L"—New York Sun. BRAND NEW MUSIC «Jdust as the Ship Went Down’’ Dedicated to the Titanic = “That Haunting Rag Time Strain’ “Mr. Rag Time Whip-poor-wilP’ “Down in Melody i..-c’" 3 lfmhm’ty.fl-obob.hm we-can order it Date Popular and -Just Received Ever_ythlny fludy to Wear 207 Third Street : : A Tremendous Sellng Movement | ~ Should Follow our In Which Our Entire Stock of Sum-~ | mer Dresses are oflered at Reductions from 33 % to % 60 , Extraordinary dress bargains await ‘you here at this ““July Bargain offer’’ Knowing as you do the reputation of - our establishment for selling stylish, de- pendable garments only; you cannot fail to appreciate this exceptional offer. NOW ... ivsinmidanmmsmsimanm i P A D th $12.00 to $16.50 Dresses worth $1200 0 91650 .0 Q5 Silk Dresses Worth $20, $25 and $30. Including Sa- tins, Soft Taffetas, Crepes, Voiles, and other soft silks. July Clearance Sale of | July Clearance Sale of Tub Skirts Summer Waists ] $175, $1.50 Lingerie Waists...... 98¢ 33‘130 Tub Skirts now 31-85 $3.75 Lingerie Waists........ .$2.85 $4.50 Lingerie Waists......... $3.75 $2.25 Tub Skirts, now $5.00 Lingerie Waists.......... $3.85 only$'l'5 $7.50 Lingetie Waists..........$5.75 July Glearance Sale of Suits, Our En- -~ fire Stock at 1-2 Price July Glearance Sale of Mis- 868’ and Children’s Dresses 75c and $1.00 Lawn and Gingham . Dresses. crvenrreeeeeeennnnn. B C '$1.50 and $1.75 Lawn and Gingham $2.50 Lawn and Gingham Dresses $1.65 $450 and $475 Lawn and Gingham Dresses........: $3.15 Infant’s Dresses, 75c to $1.25 values, now.. ....50¢ $12.75 $12.75 R $1.75 and $1. 50‘Gowns and Undergarments ,now 95¢ All Leona Garments at Om-Fourfll Reduction

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