Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, December 20, 1912, Page 11

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The ters. Copyright 1912 The House o f Kuppenheimer here. > his present. or after Christmas. - |Buy a Man's Gift At a Man’s Store HETHER it’s during the hbliday rush or not, we promise you satisfac- tion; that’s our first principle. The prices as well as the goods must be right for you; no mat- ter how crowded or rushed we are, we want to serve you with the same courtesy and prompt- ness, without unseemly haste. the crowd, the greater our efforts in these mat- Bring back anything that isn’t just what’s wanted, before Make your gift practical and useful by selecting it Our huge store is filled with gifts of a practical, ' || useful character of genuine worth; gifts the happy recipi- | ent will remember through many years of service. It’s a fine way to show your appreciation of your men friends good taste by coming to a man’s store for What's the Use? " Tam cedsing to criticise—I use the m in its present, degenerate sense of hnlbflndlng—becnlue my com- ‘plaints ‘have not been pro&uct!vo of one iota of good. Manover they have always been ungraclously received either by the person whose good I sought or by the person upon whose sympathy I was depending. Those whose good I sought. have net listened to me. “Minnie,” said T to my maid, whose stupid looks had become a trial to be endured no longer in silence, “do you know that you go about with your mouth open?” “Yes'm,” answered Minnie stolidly. *I opened it.” 1 have been rudely treated when my motive was purely unselfish. “Madam,” said I to a stranger in & eity shop, “your belt is unfastened.” “That,” answered the lady, “is the way I wish it to be.”—Atlantic. Haiti's Navy Out of “Hock.” Halti has acquired a bankroll and has taken its navy out of “hock.” The mavy—the cruiser Ferrier, Admiral Willaim Watt—has been quartered at the League Island Navy Yard since fast summer. The admiral of the navy has stayed with it because he couldn’t collect any money and the navy has remained be- tause it couldn’t get away. Its boilers wouldn't let it Orders were received that the navy should be towed to the yards of the Philadelphia Ship Repalr Company to be refitted at a cost of $75,000. The srders came from the Haitian minister At Washington. To Exchange Speakers. Mrs. Alex. Tweedie of London and Mrs. Percy V. Pennybacker, president of the General Federation of Wom- en’s clubs, were at-a-luncheon in Chi- cago last week and agreed that it would be good for both countries if an pxchange of speakers could be made. The taking of the first step was left lo the Chicago Woman's club at the mggestion of Mrs. Pennybacker. The Danger. “It may seem a trifiing matter,” says a writer in the Observer, “but I think that the man who wears his ‘IOVOI seems to be smarter than the man who carries his gloves in his hands.” Surely it is no trifiing mat- ter. One might meet the Observer writer any day, and then if one were earrying one's gloves instead of wear- ing them, what an outsider one would feel.—The Bystander. Just a Hint. Some morning just make belleve you are company in your own home; your family will not be more astonish- ed at your conduct than you are youn selt—The Universalist Leader. Anger a Sign of Weakness. Annrh.lw-n-llno!vnb ness. It is our frritation at our own impotence. It is the fire of the spirit blazing up against the inevitable. ‘When we know we are superior, when ‘we know we are conscious of greater power than our adversary’s, we are al- ways calm, His Kindly Heart. “Really,” began the collector, *I can | lings not understand why a man of your re- sources will refuse to pay his honest debts.” “Then I'll tell you,” said the well-to-do citizen, confidentially, “if I paid up I'd throw you and several others out of work, and I haven't the heart_to do it.”—Satire. Everlasting Fame. “We must go to Stratford.” “What's the use. We can buy Stratford post- cards in London.” “My friend, one travels for something more than to send postcards. I want to write my name on Shakespeare’s tomb."— Louisville Courier-Journal, ENDORSED AT HOME Such Proof as This Should Convince Any Bemidji Citizen. The public endorsement of a lo- jcal citizen i the best proof that can be produced. None better, none stronger can be had. When a man comes forward and testifies to his fellow-citizeéns, addresses his friends and neighbors, you may be sure he is thoroughly convinced or he would not do so. Telling one’s experience when it is for the public good is an act of kindness that should be appre- ciated. The following statement given by a resident of Bemidji adds one more to the many cases of Home Endorsement which are being pub- lished about Doan’s Kidney Pills. Read it. P. M. Dicaire, Prop. grocery store, 1101 Irvine Ave, Bemidji, Minn,, says: “The statement I gave about Doan’s Kidney Pills some years ago holds good. The benefit they brought me has been permanent. I took this remedy for the pains in my back and other symptoms of Kkidney trouble and it proved its merits by making me well.” For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, New Yory, sole agents for the United States. Remember the name—Doan's— and take no other.—Adv. New Way to Make Appla Dumplings luvd With Hard Sauce or Cream ¥ and Sugar By Mrs. Janet McKenzie Hill, Editor of the Boston Cooking School Maga:su Here is a new way to make apple dumplings that will surely plemeeva—y housewife, for it is not n have whole apples, andthe jmcemnnot run out and burn as with apple dump- where the apple is placed in the center and the dough turned up around it. The biscnit part forms a crispy shell that holds the apples and juice. K C Apple Dumplings One and one-half cups sifted flour; ¥% Lgooflful salt; 3 level teaspoouful: Baking Powder; ¥ cup shovien- ing; about % cup milk; apples. Fill the cups of a buttered muffin pan with pared and sliced apples, sprinkle with salt and turn two or three table- spoonfuls of water into each cup. Sift together, three times, the flonr, saltand baking powder; workin the shortemng and mix to a soft dongh with the milk. Drop the dough from a spoon with the apples in the cups, givingita smoothex- terior. Let bake about twenty-fivemin- utes. Invert the pan on alargeserving- dish. Put aspoonful of hard sauce above the apple in each dumpling and finish with a grating of nutmeg. Thisisonly one of the many new, delicious and appetizing recipes contained in the K C Cook's Book. which may be obtained frea by md.ml the colored certificate packed in every can of K C Baking Powder to the JAQUES um Co., Chicago. Be sure to get the Z5-cent size— smaller cans do not contain Cook's Book cer- tificates William C. Klein INSURANCE Rentals, Bonds, Real Estate First Mortgage Loans on City and Farm Property 5 and 6, O'Leary-Bewser Blag. Phene (9. Bemid]jl, TRY A WANT AD Smokingr Jackets, Bath Robes, Vests, Hats, Ties, Handkerchjef and Hosiery Sets, Under- wear, Shoes, Overshoes, Mackinaws, Belts, Sweaters, Suit Cases, Slippers, etc., etc. Come to the logical Xmas store for Men’s Gifts GILL BROS. The Dependable Clothing Store " To Write a iLetter. The gart of letter writing i{s quite simple if you will take it in all sim- plicity. All you have to do is to con- jure up a vision of the person to whom you are writing, pick up your pen, and—talk. When you can pio- ture a face you like, adorned with a pipe whose shape you know well, it {8 no difficult matter to find what to say and how to say it. A letter is a chat and the pen can be as effective as the tongue. ” THi L\l\F!S\LL‘) And you must not forget that the more we build—the better we build them. Ford value today is infinitely greater than it was when the volume was Maine’s Needle Rock. In Blue Hill Bay, Maine, there is a pinnacle rock of only six feet in diam- eter at its top, which projects to with- in seven feet of the surface of the wa- ter and rises nearly perpendicalarly out of a depth of 78 feet. The exist- enoe of this rock i an evidense of the dificulty, even i wellknown walers, smaller—and price higher. The demand is big. Don’t miss your chance—order to- day of demonstrating that no isclated . Tocks. are lylng fa wait for heedless victims.—Harper's Weekly, Every third car is a Ford. Nearly 180,- 000 have been sold and delivered. New prices—runabouts $525—Touring car $600—deiivery car $625—to.wn car $800—with all equipment £. o. b. Detroit. Get particulars from Northern Auto Com- of danger, or desiring to do mischief. pany, Phone 474 —or from Detreit factory. The quick motion of the eyeball in op- e k posite directions exposes an unusual- 1y large surface of the white, which thus becomed an evidence of the tem- per of the animal. Danger Sign in Horse. The appearance of “white” in the eye of a horse indicates a vicious na- ture, besause a high tempered horse constantly looks about, apprehensive A $125 CHRISTMAS GIFT Will be given to this Church for 100 Yearly Subscriptions to the Bemidji Daily Pioneer. Other Churches are making the same effort. If this is the Cburch you wish to help, turn in your subscription to any of the ladies whose names appear below. METHODIST CHURCH Members of Methodist Women’s Band Mesdames Charles Flesher, presi-: A. Larson, E. C. McGreagor, O. Minor dent; T. J. Andrews, C. Alexander,!J. B. Minnick, A. W. Mitchell, J. W. F. R. Bishpam, Emma Botting, W. T . Searrot, C. W. Shannon, Coleman, J. C. Courtney, S. A. Cutter, : th, H. B. Southworth, Mrs. Dennis, Sr., E. H. Denu, W. P % vens, T. Symons, H. J. Un- Dyer B. Getchell, Grinols, J. L. Kemp |ruh, D. Wilcox, P. A. Young. WHAT SUBSCRIPTIONS COUNT Orie dollar cash will be paid to each Ladies’ Society for every yearly subscription, old or new, secured for the Daily Piomeer. Waien 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 of $125. ‘If a club secures but seventy-five yearly subseriptions, it will receive $75; if but fifty yearly subscriptions, $50; and if only ten are secured a cash gift of $10 will be made. For one six months subscription to the Dafly Pioneer, fifty cents will be paid, and for each additional six monflm subscnphons secured the rate will be paid the same. ’l'hus, when two hundred of these six months subscriptions have been turned in, an addi- tional gift of $25 will be given. A six months subscription eounts 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 difference. being the subscrip- 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. Detailel information may be had by telephoning Number 31, or calling in person at the Pioneer Office. e e e P vl ST eI o o 0 S Mt 000 i . oL T S - oS = = ST M = S e m T 2

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