Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, September 26, 1912, Page 2

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akmg Powder ! . For this is the | ' baking powder that“makes the ] ] baking better,” l It lzavens the ‘ . food evenly ‘ . lhroughout Fufl’s it up to airy light- l . ness, makes it de. lightfully appetiz- H '. ing and wholesome, 1 l\emember, Calu- 3 . met is moderate in l nncg_hlghest in quality. "W Ask your grocer jor ' Calumet. Don't take a ‘ substitute, . RECEIVED HIeLiEst AWARDS, ‘s Pure Food Exposition. | ] is Exposition, i TRY A WANT AD X R R E KK KKK K KX NN\\YY FOOLs *E KK KKK KKK If you are particular in what * you eat, call and let us show * you one of the cleanest and most % modern bakeshops in Northern * Minnesota. IR T EE R E R R R Who Sells 1t 2. Here they are all in a row. They sell it because it's the best nickel pencil on the market today and will be for many days to come. The Bemidji Pencil stands alone in the five cent world. It is sold on your money back basis. A store on every street and in surrounding cities. Here They Are: Carlson’s Variety Store Barker’s Drug and Jew- elry Store W. G. Schroeder 0. C. Rood & Co. E. F.Netzer’s Pharmacy Wm. McCuaig J. P. Omich’s GCigar Store Roe & Markusen F. Q. Troppman & Go. L. Abercrombie The Fair Store Gould’s Confectionery Store Chippewa Trading Store Red Lake Bemldji Ploneer Suuply Store Retailers will receive immediate 2] shipments in gross (more or less) by calling Phone 31, or addressing the Ben idjiPioneer Supply store, Bemidji, Minn. ——————————————————————— F ok ok de ok kb bk k% % % | CAPTURING BEARS IN and Said to Be Always Successful. Four or five sturdy men are armed, are smeared with bird lime. | along the base of the hills with the the plains below. Should the h\mtep be lucky it is not long before the flerce dogs wind | cles hunt silently, their straining on i { the game is nigh. | The dogs are slipped and disappear In the semidarkness. Soon their roar- |ing and growling indicate that they have found the game. The hunters run up to the spot where the bear is fight- ing with the dogs. The men with the limed poles poke | the bear in the ribs and adroitly twist the ends In its long hair, thus holding | |lt fast on each flank. The spearmen complete the operation by repeated spear thrusts. | It is said that a party of experi- i enced men with good dogs never fail to secure the bear in this way. TOOK AEROPLANE.FOR ENEMY French Birds Investigated Etranpo crelture of the Air and Appear Satlsfied, S An extraordinary instance of the in- itellige_pce of birds forms the subject of a letter recgived by the French spector’ o( orest], . Bogs fimie ag8 the Inspecior te- celved complaints from sportsmed | that %Uau and paftridges had become scarce in certain districts. On exam- Ining the matter he found the birds had deserted the regions in which aerodomes had been installed. Seem- ingly they took the monoplanes and biplanes for enormous bhirds of pey. Finding after some time, however, that their ranks were not thinned by the strange creatures hovering over- scouts to the aerodomes to examine the air craft at close quarters. The result of the investigations of these teathered envoys was evidently reas- suring, for the birds returned to their i former haunts and the preserves { around Le Mans and Rheims aye now s well stocked as formerly, Mothers-in-Law. got a letter the other day from a cor- respondent who asked, “What mourn- ing, if any, should be worn for a mother-in-law?” This questign is freighted with meaning. The longer you look at it the weightier it be- comes. The editor answered that it all depends on the mother-in-law, and immediately we have an answer qQuity as weighty as the question., In the funny papers and in fiction no mother- in-law was ever takeh seriously. In real life we not only take them seri ously but we sometimes take them with a great deal of affection and re- spect. The mother-in-law joke should have had its day, and yet out of a clear sky—well, as I say, the woman wants to know what mourning—IF ANY!—should be worn.—New York Press. Insect’s Call Means a Death. There is a superstition connected with the death watch whieh, like most superstitions, 1, based upon the the- ory of probabilities. The death watch year and a superstition runs to the ei- die within the year. Persons who are superstitious are never very striet in the interpretation of the predictions and therefore, whenever a persoan dies in the house or out of it, in the same room where the death watch was heard, or across the Atlantic, so that there be some kind of a relationship, or even acquaintance, between the pergon who hears the omen and the person dying, the event is sure to be connected with the prophetic soundr of the insect. Safe Deposit Vaults. can idea, and was developed at the time of the Civil war. Bank robberies | were so frequent at that time that banks refused to take care of their customers' valuables. An instituton referred its clients to the porter as willing to take the risk. For a small sum he took charge of the boxes and safes and made a fortune. From this arose the modern safe deposit, which {8 now part of every bank. The Eng- lish, ever slow and cautlous, did got take quickly to the idea of storing their valuables in public vaults, when the idea was introduced in London, and it was 25 years before safe de- posit vaults were widely established. Infinitesimal. Visitor—Your rival town, Bunkvills, is quite a town, isn't it? Uncle Eben—Bah! That town isnt big enough to get a metropolitan daily’s scarehead on “The Eyes of the Entire Country Are Turned on Bunk« ville Today” when they hold a Presk dential preference srimary. INDIA Plan for Destroying Animals Is Novel A curious method of capturing wild fi;ea.rs is employed In certain parts of | India, the New York Herald remarks. two with long spears crossbarred on the handles close to the sharp two edged blade, and two or three with ; ten foot bamboos, of which the ends Thus equipped and leading several | yowerful dogs, the hunters sally forth an hour or so before dawn. They pass fresh morning wind blowing up from the bear, and, though dogs of this spe- | the leash informs their owners that tinistty o agnq.uiture from an in- | “ Particularly Clean head, partridges and quail dispatched | The editor of a woman’s magazine | is usually heard in the spring of the | fect that some one in the bouse will | The safe deposit vault is an Amerf- | THUESDAY: SEPTEMBER 26,1912, Keep Sweet WHAT’S IT MAKE YOU THINK OF ? c A ”DY TO BE SURE. Yes, we're selling candy and lots of it—lots of it, because it’s the best that’s sold in Bemidji. To intro- duce our candies to the public we’ll conduct a “Candy Day” Saturday and sell Barr's Saturday Candy . Put up in neat pound boxes, the kind that sells regularly at 50 cts For 29 Cents At this CANDY SALE Our Fsales have Jmeed into the lead because we have a particular H We sell only package goods and our leading line is LIGGETT’S candy that is | Particularly Well Cooked Particularly Fresh Particularly Pure ' Particularly Moderate In Price Half Pound to Five Pound Packages See Our Window }“ Barker’s Drug & |- Jewelr_y Store KEKKKK KKK XK KKK KN ¥ RAILROAD TIME CARDS, * KKK KHK KK HEKK KKK 800 RAILROAD 162 East Bound Leaves .. H 168 West Bound Leaves 5 186 East Bound Leaves 2 187 West Bound Leaves ......10: GREAT NORTHERN 38 West Bound Leaves 34 East Bound Leave 35 West Bound Leave: 36 East Bound Leave: 106 North Bound Arrive: 106 South Bound Leaves Freight West Leaves at .. Freight East Leaves at MINNESOTA & INTERNATIONAL 82 South Bound Leaves . 81 North bound Leaves 84 South Bound Leave! 33 North Bound Leaves Freight South Leaves at Freight North Leaves at MINN., RED LAKE & MAN. 1 North Bound Leaves . 2 South Bound Leaves .. _ EEKEKKK KK XXX KKK x Lake Bemidji Time Table x | * CITY OF BEMIDJI. by KKK KKK KX KKK KK | Past Mail and Passenger Boat. Leavss Bemidjl For East Bemidji..6:30 a. m. and 5:30 p. m. Fare 10c. }Au Points on the Lake........1 p. m. Fare 26c. All Summer Resorts..7:30 and 8:30 p. m. i Fare 2bc. {Down the Mississippl River to the Dam 22 mile trip and 1 hour stop at the dam. Boai leaves 2:30 p. m., returm- ing at 5:30. Fare, Round Trip, 6dc. | chilaren Half Pare. Phone 343 | CAPT. W. B. MacLACHLAN. KR HKKEKKKKK N X HK KKK ¥ PROFESSIONAL CARDS. * REEE S EE RE R TR R RUTH WIGHTMAN | TEACHER OF PIAND Leschetitsky Method Residence Studio 1002 Bemidji Avenue Phone 168 MUSIC LESSONS MISS SOPHIA MONSEN TEACHER OF PIANO AND HARMONY Studio at 921 Beltraml Avenue ALDEN M. REMFREY Teacher of Lost Its Tongue. The Paul Revere bell in the city hau Ver} ? at Bath, Me., lost its 15-pound tongue | the other day and became silent for | the first time in over 100 years. The | bell first hung in the steeple of the | North church at Bath. The people of | MUST HAVE ONE when the curfew did not ring at nine ! o’clock. i State of Ohio, City of Toledo, | s, | Lucas County. Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he |= senior partner of the firm of F. J. Chen- \ ey & Co., doing business in the City of ! Toledo, County and State aforesaid, and | that said firm will pay the sum of ONE | HUNDRED DOLLARS for each and e ery case of Catarrh that cannot be cu by the use of HALL’S CATARRH CU FRANK J. CHENEY. Sworn to before me and subscribed in | my presence, this 6th day of December, | A. D. 1886. o | (Seal) A. W,_ GLEASON, Notary Public. Hall’'s Catarrh Cure is taken internal- ly and acts directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Send for testimonials free. J. CHENEY & CO,, Toledo, O. fiold by all druggists, 75c. Take Hall's Family Pills for constipa- | tion. THE PSYGHOLOGICAL | MOMENT In which to buy real estate. Thatmoment | usually arrives when prices are low| That moment is REDUCED ILLUSTRATION OF THE $4.00 VOLUME This Dictionary is not published by the original publishers of Webster's Dictionary or by their successors. It has been revised and brought up to the PRESENT DATE in accordance with the best authorities from the greatest universities, and is published by the well known SYNDICATE PUBLISHING CO. of NEW YORK CITY. Here Now wt ecmmminossae mnwis PIOINEER'S $4 DICTIONARIES nerve, the man with confidence in his judgment will profit by it. An oppor- tunity accepted is;an opportunity gained. Take our advice and buy now before it is too late to get a good location in Fair- view Addition. REYNOLDS & WINTER AGENTS The Great Fundamental Work of Our Language The book that is just as essential to school success, as it is to the success of business men, clerks, stenographers and other office employes. Subscribe for The Pioneer Bath knew that something was amiss | Do not let there be ONE school pupil in this city, but what has|aies Biock had presented to him by a watchful parent, guardian or friend, one of the Violin, Piano and Band Instrumeats PIANO TUNING LAWYERS GRAHAM M. TORRANCE LAWYER Telephone 3§34 | i | D. H. FISK ATTORNEY AT LAW Office second floor O’Leary-Bowser Bidg. PHYSICIANS, SURGEONS | DR, ROWLAND GILMORE | PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office—Miles Block DR. E. A SKANNON M D. | PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON | Office in Mayo Block Phone 396 Res. 'Phone 337 | DR. C. R. SANBORN PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office— Miles Block DR. A, E. HENDERSON PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON ! Over First National Bank, Bemidji, Mina | Office 'Phone 36. Residence "Phone 71. DR. E. H. SMITE PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office in Winter Block DR. E. H MARCUM PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office in Mayo Block | Phone 18 Residence Phone 313 EINER W. JOHNSON PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office ever Securtly Bank DENTISTS DR. D. L. STANTON DENTIST Office in Winter Bleck DR. J. T. TUOMY DENTIST tst National Bank Bldg. Tele. 833. DR. G. M. PALMER DENTIST Miles Block Evening Work by Apointment Oaly TOM SMART DRAY AND TRANSFER SAFYE AND PIANO MOVING Iau. ‘Phone 68. 818 America Avs Office ‘Phene 13

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