Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, December 13, 1912, Page 18

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% - A $125 Christmas Gift Willybe given to this Ghurch for 100 Yearly Subscriptions to the Bemidji Daily Pioneer. ! Other! ches are making the same effort. If this is the Church you wi h to help, turn in your subscription to any of the ladies . whose names appear below.. SR i ST. PHILLIP’S CATHOLIC CHURCH Members of Catholic Women’s Bands Band No. 1—Mesd: . J . Bur::, pres‘ijdent; 7. e(?. ;I::ls(er, p. J.| Band No. 2.—Mesdames J. Bisiar, & ident; M. Thome, Burgess, E. O’Leary, Ed Ebert, J. O. Harris, M.|Pres i » Tt W Bowser, 3. m,|Tavlor, A. B. Wells, M. A. Downs, U. Black, A. H. Jester, Thos. McCann, ge““- c?”'?be;“:‘i’ l.: Sulliva, L. C. Dempsey, Gougle. BImero, Jy JUnk, Roppie: Band No. 3. — Mesdames James Fullerton, president; Joe Moritz, Chas. Nangle, Fred Rhoda, John Ziegler, White, J. W. Murray, H. E. Stevens, E. H. Dea, John Gibbons, John Graham, Dan O’Connor, John McCormick, Joe Hughes, Ed Kaelble, Mrs. Frank McManus, Wm. Clish, Conrad La Jambe. What Subscriptions GCount One dollar cash will be paid to each Ladies’ Society for every yearly subscription, old or new, secured for the Daily Pioneer. ‘When a set of one hundred has been reached a special premium of $25 will be given. Thus for one hundred subscriptions the society securing them will have received a cash gift og $125. If a club secures but seventy-five yearly subscriptions, it will receive if but fifty yearly subscriptions, $50; and if only ten are secured a cash gift of $10 will be made. TFor one six months subscription to the Daily Pioneer, fifty cents will be paid, and for each additional six months subscriptions secured the rate will be paid the same. Thus, when two hundred of these six mounths subscriptions have been turned in an addi- tional gift of $25 will be given. A six months subscription counts just half of a yearly subscription for the Daily Pioneer. One yearly subscription to the Weekly Pioneer counts same as six months to the Daily, the only ditference being the subserip- tion price which is $1.50 a year. The Daily for six months is $2 and the Daily for one year is $4. Free Premiums will be given to every subscriber. Detailed information may be had by telephoning Number 31, or calling in perron at the Pioneer Office. EASY T0 GET Rch Es he could wake up in 250 years or 200 Years or a hundred years, according to : how rich he wanted to be, and would be a millionaire. Even if a person did IMPLY MATTER OF SLEEPINQ| Dot have a thousand dollars’to begin with he could in the end have a few WHILE MONEY ACCUMULATES. ! millions. Of course if everybody was | going to be rich it might not be so much fun, but we would get used to it Wome Difficulties In the Way, But 28 | after a while. There would not be ' Matter of Theory the Thing Is any trouble about getting somebody About as Simple as Can to stay awake and take care of the Be Made. | banks, ‘for a great many people have e i entirely too much money already and We’have heard much of “get rich|& &reat many.more would not take quick” schemes, but few of us have| chances of losing what they had even #ound them to be of practical value, | for, $20,000,000. . L "They are fine ideas, but they do not There 18 just one serious drawback l,,u,k_ Now, a nice “get rich slow”| to the scheme, and that may make it pcheme ought to succeed. A few days| impossible. What are we going to do @E0 a man gave a certain city a thou-| about the cost of living? Two hun- ®wand dollars and told that city not to! dred and fifty years is a long time use it for 250 years. At the end of and the cost of living would grow sc Rhat time it will be something. mora ;much in that time that . $19,000,000 | fi;n nineteen million dollars if the would look like 19 cents instead.of an who told the story figured it like a thousand dollars. And no pow: wight. There could not be an easier er on earth can ever put the_cost of way to be a millionaire than that. Just living to sleép.—New' York Times. shang around 250 years and the money is yours. ¢ Of course none of us could possibly | ‘wait so long for so much money un-' less we were asleep, and that is just| ;Domocrltic Eabyl {5l It'. l“.‘“‘" and 3 ;. its voluptuousness center in and are :‘:" e‘;‘;‘:“ior‘?";e""“ °“5“i‘ to “’;fl!‘gw to be found only' in-the huge hotels || ‘would 'put usotéaslr;:rnl::isfl:‘e “thhc)g, and magnificent cafes: that bave, in would be done. That should not be the space of a score, of years;:transi i . { formed metropolitan life. In thie difficult. Such a thing must have been | b | :[democratic babylon no question is idone at one time, because we all know | - Athut a whole kingdom was asleep for Band No. 4—Mesdames John New- man, president, Helin, L. F. Johnson, Ganey, Thos. Stewart, Kittelson, Joe Blondo, Bowser, Albert Halvorson, J. A. McDonald, Eures, Winkleski, Sherwood, Fenton, DeRushia, Jas. Cahill, Len Jewett, Auger, Poulette, Miss Irene Lappin. Only Have to Have Money. asked, whether a man is wealthy or “Yes, real old oak!” Mrs. purred. “‘Of course, it cost a great - deal; but still & good hallstand~> |- 7 ¢ : e : But just as Mrs. P—— was coming | 5 to the thrilling part of the description she was interrupted. In the drawing- room, where she and her lady friends were sitting, burst Freddy, the five- year-old son of the house. His face was flushed with - excite stttz | Netzer’s Pharmacy - “Freddy,” his mother said in gentle Post Office Corner reproof, “what did I buy the new hall- stand for?” For an instant Freddy was aston- ished, amazed. “Well,” he jerked out at last, “you bought it for two dollars off the old second-hand man. But—" and Freddy looked annoyed—“you told me not to tell anybody about it!”"—Exchange. "In Praise of the Kimone. Among the details of the wardrobe < which ‘have apparently, though trans- ported from afar, come to stay with us for good, there may be noted the kimono, thin and light and graceful. In silk it rolls conveniently into little or no space, and so it is most con- venient when traveling, for it can find & little corner in the dressing case. On arrival at a hotel or a friend’s Don’t overlook this Xmas shopping center when you are ready to buy. We have presents for everybody, Rt 4ok s b i G young and old. | make a comfortable toilet without the ¢J trouble of getting the big trunk open, as one would have to do with a heavy dressing gown of the ordinary variety . B @ i Simone: thare avs e Cut Class Community Silver Hand Painted China Combs, Brushes, Mirrors Purses and Hand Bags Stationery Xmas Cards, Calendars and Novelties Insatiable Ambition. i “I hope our ambitious friend is sat; isfled,” said the philosophic observer. | “He has prospered so that he can do| as he pleases.” “Yes. But that doesn’{ content him. While he is doing as he! pleases he wants everybody to quit work and applaud him for doing it s¢| nicely.”—Washington Star. | Perfect Compliment. | ‘We please ourselves that in you we meet one whose temper was long pince tried in the fire, and made equal te all events; a man so truly in love with the greatest future that he can- not be diverted to any less.—Ralph Waldo Emerson. i i Died While Decorating Grave, A Dpainfully sad occurrence took place recently in the Belfast Cty cemetery, when an aged man named Charles Kildea, who was engaged in decorating a grave, suddenly became 111, fell to the ground, and expired in 'S FURNITURE STORE & few moments. Headquarters for useful Christmas gifts for the house--- gifts that the entire family will enjoy the year round Library Tables Smoking Tables Extension Tables China Closets Buffets Writing Desks Pedestals Chairs Foot Stools Dressers Chiffoners Beds “Push The Button-and Rest” ¢ THE ROYAL COMFORT GHAIRS easily adjusted with foot rest and magazine rack, $14.75 to $24.50 Nothing will be more appreciated than a “HOOSIER CABINET” all white enameled in- side. Only $30.00 THE HOOSIER SPECIAL. SAVES MILES OF STEPS with the new automobile seats 3 ; :‘:R i ‘:BET $8.75 to $13.50 1 “Way’s Sagless” Springs o ; s e . : ““The best all iron spring on the market. Guarante Stearns & Foster Felt' Mattresses iy 2gS°y_et:rs ; .t' e 30 nights free tri;l \ AR $7.00 . 9.50 to $16.50 ¥l ‘ : ,$ 4 ) ~ Cole’s Hot Blast Heaters , Kltchen“(‘?’bmets $13.50 to $26.50 : . in all-styles : $10:50-to $35.00 ‘Rugs, 9x12, $5.00 to $55.00 Rockers ever so long, and might still be asleep §f a foolish youth had not wakened Beauty, and nobody else would stay msleep after Beauty'was awake. And even in our own time, or at least much wloser to it, there was Rip Van Winkle, | ‘who slept for 20 years. If he had not been so shiftless, and had put a little ‘mongy in the bank before he went to sleep he might have been comfortable for the rest of his Jlife. And so, if everybody who had a thousand dollars would put it in the dank and take some _sleep generator has ‘power. Whosoever will may .come, be he.possessed only ofenough money to pay for obe night’s enter- tainment—and the nscessary tips for the waiter. Students of society may well take into account, in summing up the conditions of modern American life, this phase of New York, for it must be remembered that the patrons of these luxurious hostelries and res: taurants are not only New Yorkers, but that they are everybody, from everywhere, who can raise the price for an annual visit to the metropolis. :Wnahln;ton (D. C.) Times. New York, the modern Babylon, lll Steel Ranges, $20 to $56.50 Small Rugs, 75¢ to $10.00 Wallace Nutting’s Gelebrated Hand Retouched Pictures Are Now On Exhibition. Come In When Shopping A Fine Place to Rest When Tired Phone 178-2 Picturs Frames Made to Order A Good Place to Buy 323 Minnesota Ave. ~Bemidji, Minn. i - we “u i N o

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