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3 THE BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEER FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1912. PAID A+ VERTISEMENT. $10.00 for Series ~ o ~ i ADNVULCE uyStad do Wit i publican candidate for the oifice of County Attorney for Bel- trami county. If elected I will be the attor- ney for the county. I will con- tinue to conduct the office eco- nomically, as a purely business one, and iu no sense as a politi- cal office. I solicit the active coopeia- tion of the people of this county in support of my candidacy. | GRAHAM M D J. EVAN CARSON Nonpartisan Nominee For Probate Judge. I respectfully solicit your support at the polls on Tuesday, Nov. 5, and if successful will use my every op- portunity to further the interest of the county and its citizens. WILL USE EXTREME CAUTION IN PROCURING BONDS, when needed, and the printing of official notices will be placed with a view to economy to those paying for same, and circulation among the pubile at large. Many of the expenses connected with this office are paid by those who have estates to settle and in many instances a saving can be made by the judicious handling of BONDS, PRINTING and LEGAL MATTERS. J. EVAN CARSON. PAID ADVERTISEMENT. This adveriisement, costing $10.00 ) for the paid , was inserted by A. R E son for Halvor Steener- son, of Crookston. | drogen. AS TO EARTH'S ATMOSPHERE Thecry That Has Long Been Held la Gaining Ground Among the Men of Scientific Mind. The idea that the earth’s atmosphere is distributed in layers, with nearly pure hydrogen at the top, has been | growing in favor in the last few years, and is now expanded by the assump- tion that a still lighter gas rests on the hydrogen. This hypothetical gas is called ‘‘geocoronium,” as it is at least similar to the coronium forming the sun’s atmosphere beyond the hy- Presently some of the evi- dence, Professor Wegener, a German physicist, states that twilight rays | seem to be reflected from a height of | gbout 46 miles, but that after twilight | he has observed a bluish reflection from a helght of about 133 miles. This " elevated reflecting surface is believed to be the boundary line between the hydrogen and the geocoronium. Smal meteors glow at heights between 100 nd 50 miles, indicating that thelr lu: minosity 1s due to collision with the ydrogen, and the sudden brightening of large meteors at a certain point may be caused by reaching a denser air lay- er. Other observations confirm the theory of an atmosphere of fairly defi- nite layers. It is calculated that at sea level the alr contains 78.1 per cent .of nitrogen, 4,939 of argon, 0.0033 of hydrogen, 8.0005 of helium, and only 0.00068 of geocoronium; at 25 miles, 88 per cent. of nitrogen and 10 of ox- ygen; at 62 miles, 67 per cent. of hy- drogen, 29 of geocoronium, and 4 of helium, and at 300 miles 33 per cent. of geocoronium and 7 of hydrogen, SAFE WAY TO CARRY SKUNKS John Burroughs Is Authority for Thls, If Any One Cares to Try Some- what Rash Experiment. “There is a saying among country folk that a skunk can be safely car- ried by the ta#, a saylng that some naturalists deny,” says Julian Bur- roughs, in telling of his boyhood days with his father, John Burroughs, in the Craftsman. “Father determined to try the question for himself, his courage being equal to the task. Every time that I caught a skunk about the house I let father have a try at him. First, we carefully shut up the dog, much to the latter’s dis- gust; then the skunk was gently lifted on a pole and dropped into an empty barrel, the trap being opened over the edge to liberate him. In a few minutes, or as soon as the skunk had become used to the barrel, father would reach in, clasp him firmly by his plumelike tail and then raise him aloft, always being careful not to let the animal get his front feet on any near object. This we repeated over and over without any accident, prov- ing without doubt that the skunks of Ulster county, at least, can be safely carried by their tails.” New Rose From Ulster. Time and unlimited patience, with years of experimenting, is the cost of i producing a new rose, but when this effort is attended with success the me. | ment arg, of should be, entirely satis. | factory. A new rose has made its de. | but at the National Rose society’s au. tumu show in London. “The color is |a flaming terra cotta, shading to prawn pink.” Such is the description, and the blooms have been obtained after four years’ persistent cross-fer tilizing by the cultivator, Mr. Me- Gredy, of Portadown, Ireland. There are only a dozen blooms of the new flower, but these are sold at $5.20 each. The grower's stock consists of forty plants, which he will not part with for $15,000, and not a plant will he pell until 1913. It is extremely difficult to produce a really good rose and in producing this one many hun. dred plants were condemned as use- less. | mureration and the glory of achieve. | THE SPALDING EUROPEAN PLAN Duluth’s Largest and Best Hotel DULUTH MINNESOTA More than $100,000.00 recently expended on improvements. 250 rooms, 1% private baths, 60 sample rooms. Every modern convenience: Luxurlous and delightful restaurants and buffet, Flem:ish Palm Room, Men's Grill, Colonial Buffet: Magnificent lobby and public rooms; Ballroom, banquet rooms and gflufi dining rooms: Sun parlor and ol 8- tory. Located in heart of business see- tlon but overlooking tke harbor and Lake Superior. Convenient to everything. Ons of the Great Hetels of the Northwest Pioneer Want Ads -2 Gent a Word Bring Results Copyright Hart Sohaftner & Marx Hart Schaffner & Mark clothes are far ahead of all other candidates. When all the votes are count- ed they'll be elected by a very large majority. SZ OURgvote forgPresident may and ought to be a serious matter to you on NovemberZ5th. Your man may win or he may lose. Which- ever happens, a month from that time you’ll be reconciled to the result and lcontinue to be a patriotic and happy citizen. Butiit’s different with clothes; your vote on that matter is directly in your on personal interest. If you vote right you win a good deal and if you vote wrong you lose. We want to see you votelfor our Hart Schaffner & Marx suits and overcoats; this is the polling HALVOR STEENERSON Congressman from the Ninth dis- trict. The candidate for the peo- ple to be voted upon at the general election, November 5. He is a man *who is with and for the peo- ple and opposed to the corporations. You make no mistake in supporting him election day. ‘ Chlld-Tralning, ' Tt is not fair to a small child for the parents or nurse to be careless about he little things that develop thought. ess, self-rellance and self-contro] in a child. Self-control is a character. istic absolutely essential to manhood or womanhood, and it is not learned in a day. It is the result of patient teach« ing and training through all the long years of babyhood and childhood. BEN SCHNEIDER, Pres. Overcoats $15, $20, $22, $25 This store is the homé of Hart Schaffner & Marx clothes Suits BEMIDJI, MINN. $15, $20, $22, $25 | place. Young men especially get in on the new Varsity overcoat models; great busingss in these '\smart styles. We're making a big hit with these goods and we want one of them to hit you. CHAS.ZCOMINSKY, Sec. and Treas, + S B