Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, February 11, 1913, Page 4

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[§ to all others. for finest food.” — United Cooks and Pcstry Cooks Association of the United States. E recommend the Royal Baking Powder as superior It is indispensable" DIED WHILE TAKING -A BATH Chicago, Feb. 11.—Guards in the Bridewell forced Johh- Smith, a prisoner, sixty-two, to take a bath today. While in the tub he died. Heart digease was the cause. ~NATIONAL COMMITTEE TO MEET . New York, Feb. 11.—Chairman W. F. McCoombs of the Democratic national committee, yesterday after- noon issued a call for a meeting of the national committee, March 5 in the Willard hotel, Washington. This will be the first meeting since the election. DID CUTLER EVER STUDY. The Chicago Daily News says that Charlle Cutler, the Bemidjl wrestler, | studied psychology in the University of South Dakota. While we have no reason to dis- believe this, still we do and sort of cling to an opinion that if Big Charles ever saw the University of South Dakote he slanted it as he flloated down the Missouri on a log drive, river-riding having been one of Charles’ accomplishments in the early days of his career, if all reports are true.—The Minneapolis Journal. KEKKEKRK KKK KKK KKK * ST, ANTHONY HOSPITAL. ¥ KKK KK KK KKK KKK KKK Martin Anderson of Island Lake, was taken to the hospital Saturday with a badly bruised knee. Verna Winker, two years old, left the hospital today after several week’s confinement with a complica- tion of diseases. Hatton Sellner left the hospital this morning after a five week’s con- finement with typhoid fever. Irene Ellickson, of Island Lake, was taken to the hospital yesterday where she will be treated for gall stones. H. C. Hanson of Nebish, is con- ned in the hospital with tonsilitis. James Cliffton of Remer, is in a critical condition wth a severe at- tack of pneumona. J. Blondo of this city, was taken to the hospital Saturday where an operation was performed on his leg. It Makes All the Dif{erz ence In the World That’s what you say when you tell your friends about your shopping expeditions. It may be the principles of the store, the service it offers or the quality of the goods it sells that you are discussing. But the difference to you means your satisfaction or disappointment. You will find when you deal with the merchants who advertise in THE PIONEER that the difference stands always for .satisfaction, Each store values its reputation too much to risk disappointing you. Each wants your good will. So they and give you the best values. direct every effort to serve you best By reading the advertisements in THE PIONEER closely and con- stsnt{y every night you will become acquainted with the reliable stores which are worthy of your patronage, (Copyright, 1913, by J, P. Fallon.) ADDITIONAL LOCALS. A son was born to Mr. and Mrs. Louis Beroud Sunday. Joe Blondo has an operation per- formed on his leg recently and is said to be recovering satisfactorily. Among Bemidji’s out-of-town visi- tors yesterday were J. C. Sullivan, of Blackduck; E. W. Windsor of Black- duck; Miss Estelle Whipple of Grand Rapids; Wm. Lennon of Kelliher; Sam Chern of Little Falls; E. R. Montgomery of Crookston; W. M. Wood of Cass Lake, and Mrs. M. E. Knappen of Tenstrike, Miss Elsie Schmitt left this after- noon for Thief River Falls, where she will visit her sister Miss Edna, who holds a position as stenographer in one of the banks there. She will also attend the teachers’ institute at Thief River Falls Thursday and Fri- day. Miss Karna Anderson will also attend the teachers’ institute and will visit Miss Inez Patterson, a for- mer Bemidji teacher, at St. Hilaire. Hedgehogs Milk Cows. A sporting incident on a farm at Uftculme, in Devonshire, England, has revived the question whether or not hedgehogs under certain circum- stances abstract milk from cows. A farmer and his friend were shooting rabbits when théir spaniel bustled out of the hedge with a hedgehog in its mouth. “Kill the brute,” called out the farmer. “Hedgehogs have been a per- fect pest this year. They have been milking my cows.” The dog returned to the hedge, where it caught five other hedgehogs in quick succession. Many Devon farmers are convinced that hedgehogs take milk from cows when they are lying down. They have been known to kill fowls and such innumerable eggs. Diplomatic. Mra. Benham—"“Did you cischarge the cook?’ Benham—"“No; I requests 84 _her resignation.” Oy~ ; {The Spring Styles Are Now On Display A new style peroid is at hand. You will find ourdis- play interesting from the standpoint of value particularly, but authentic as to the dictates of fashion. Ladies’ Spring Dresses They are particularly attractive and will interest every woman in this vicinity. We show a fine assortment in silk, serge and white Dresses. The Dress shown here is black velvet, price $15.00. February Sale On Suits and Coats . containing poison, buy & dozen Ladies’ Suits, Half Price. Ladies’ Coats, Half Price. Girls’ Coats, Half Prigce. Ladies’ Silk Waists, Half Prioe. Little Girls Dresses We offer a lot of Little Dresses, sizes 1 to 5, made from a good quality of percales and ginghams, just like mother would make them. Price 480 each. : eents HAT REALLY. AN ORNAMENT Rnglish Men and Women of Times Past Wore Wonderful and I - e e Ladies probably did not begin to ‘wear hats until- about the tenth ocen- tufy, if 5o early, and then it was the lofty headdress draped with some ma-| - terial, which it must have been most trying to keep on indoors, and quite impossible to wear in & wind. According to. the “Anatomy of Abuses,” written in Queen Elisabeth's time, ladfes' hats were very nearly z’mlu!n: then as they are to- “These fashions bé rare and strange, 80 is the stuft whereof the hats made divers also; for some are silke, some of velvet, some of taffeta and some of wool, and which is more curious, some of a certain kind of fin¢ baire, these they call beaver hats.’ In the reign of Henry VIIL, hats as- sumed a “great richnesse and beau- tle,” but in the time of the first James they became even more ornate, jewels of price and occasionally small mir Tors being used in their adornment. At times of revelry the gallants wore feathers in their hats, which were sald to be one of the “fairest ensigps of their braverfe.” ° - But for adornment men’s hats were in their zenith in the days of Charles. The big ftelt hats with the long feath- er .gaucily curled around them, fast- ened with a buckle often of great value, gave a dashing alr to the cava- Hers, which absolutely cast. the tall solemn hats of the Puritans and “Psalm singers” into the shade. ‘The monster hats of the time of the empire were almost as big as “the Merry Widow” of modern fame, and in shape today they were positively unique. Men's hats have suffered great changes since the .tlme of Charles, and it 18 more than doubtful it they will ever again become ornate. Indeed, save in very remote parts of Wales where the old women still— some of them—wear the high-crowned steeple hat, there is nothing especially peculiar about. the headgear of the English peasantry. 2 French Cinema and Actdrs, Rough seas were sweeping over.the beach at a Normandy resort, as they did all last summer. Into the break- ers plunged two men and a woman, and lookers-on were aghast at their te- merity. They swam in the huge waves safely until the lady suddenly sank. The beach cried with horror. The two men dived for the drowning woman. The beath watched the res- cue breathlessly. At last-the lady was brouglit ashore by her two sav- fors, and, first aid having been ap- plied, she revived and went to her box to dress. The names of the he- roes were ascertained. They were two Paris actors, one of whom, M. Plerre Magnier, has often appeared by the side of Mme, Sarah Bernhardt. The lady they had saved was an actress, also. Throughout the thrill- ing rescue a cinematographer had been operating. The scene had been arranged beforehand, and the three rash bathers had received a fee for their services. ‘It is to be hoped it was a handsome one. Performing for the up-fo-date cinematographer is no safe job.—Parls Correspondence Lon- don Telegraph. Chinese River Boats. The rivers of China are notable for the queer unrigged craft that throng their reaches in the neighborhood of towns. The handsomest of these is the Hwa Ting, or flower boat. Many of the pretty craft form the resort or dwelling place of China’s sing-song girls, while others are held for hire, as are our houseboats and yachts, for pleasure excursions. These are pro- pelled by long oars, or poles, in the hands of servants who tread a nar row . gangway running along their length. These river boats are the homes, of- fices and shops of those whose lives are spent aboard them. Moored along the bank with the bow fastened to a long hawser, extending for perhaps a | thousand feet up or down the stream, they rise and fall with the tide or with the swell of some passing steamer, year in and out. They only leave for the time necessary to pur- sue some call of trade in another part of the harbor, theén return fit into their accustomed place. Canton, alone, the boat city of there are said to be 84,000 of “chop-boats,” as they are called. Warning Against Polsons. To prevent accidents with botties bells, and -every time & bottle poison is brought to the house tie -bell to the neck of the bottle. Hven in the dark the bell will tinkle its thereby know the cotnents. Plants can be left on the window sill at night in very cold weather it & newspaper is placed between the window and the plants. ‘The plants will not freeze is this is done. A successful way to restors pearl buttons to their original brightness npd beauty is first rub them with a little olive ofl, to'take away the blurr ed _look; then sprinkle with nafl pow- der and rub well with chamois skin. To preserve stories or articles from magasines, do not cut or tear out the pages. Take the entire magaszine to pleces by removing the wire clasps and separating the pages. This will leave neat, wide margins on the sto- you save ‘and will facilitate re g them. Economy Duse to Sclence. When sugar was made from beets 1t took about. twenty tons of beets to produce one ton of sugar; now.it requires but six tons, due to scientifie breeding of the beets. Pay Big Price for Water. ‘Water ‘is sold by the ton at Per nambuco, Brazil. It is piped from springs eight miles out trom the city, and is furnished to ships at elghty-one within, the harbor. 000000v00000000 ¢ LODGEDOM IN BEMIDR, o 0000000000060 00 —_——— troubles hut none that we can rccom- [Jend, > highiy as ¢his for we know that .D.D. stops the.itch at once. We just want you to give D.D.D. a trial. That will be enough to prove it. Of ‘course all other drugsists pave D.D.D. Prescription—go to them it you can’t come ta us—but don’t accept some Since the old-fashioned theory. of cur- ing eczema through the-bicod has been given up by sclentists, many diffcrent salves have been tried for skin diseases, But it has been found that these salves only clog the pores and canot penctrate to the inner skin below: the_epidermis Where the cczema germs are ‘lodged. This—the _quality of -penetratine—| big profit substitute. probably explains the tremendous. suc-| “But if you come to our store, we are cess of the woll known liquid eczemago certain of what D,D.D. will do for you remedy, oil of wintergreen, thymol, €1y-| that we offer you a full size bottle on gerine, ete. _ax -compounded in D.D.D {his garantce=1¢ vou do mot find E'.h'l: rescription. it takes away the cl ‘We bave sold other remedies for skin|costs you mot a cent: : Drug Store. Barker’ You'll get yours-==if ’you’plaoe . an early order. Every day adds A 0. U.'W. Ledge Catholic church. llo;fln‘:‘ tu’um" Monday secan Svenings,at" OM Fallews @ay ovening at § o'cleck. Hagles haill. to the aiready unprecedented de- mand for -Ford cars. - In spite of the greatly enlarged production-— late buyers are almost sure tobe disappointed. ~Get yours today. “Everybody is driving 2 Ford’’—more than 200,- =000 in service. New prices—runabout $525— touring car $600—town car $800—with all-equip- ment, f. o. b. Detroit. Get particalars from Northern Auto Co., Phone 474, or from Detroit factory. ean Regular meetings —First and third Saturday after noons, at 2:3¢—at Odd Fel lows Halls, 403 Beltramt L o.0. > _Lodge Ne. 110 3 ts ‘Bemidj! Regular —every Regular meeting every sscead and fourth Wednesdays at § )5 o'clock at Odd. Fellows Hall fl:‘; Rebecca Lodge. ~“Regular meeting nights -- first amd third Wednesday at Seo’elosh. —1I O. 0. F. Hall. ENIGETS OF PYTEIAS Bemidji Lodge Ne. 108 Regular meeting nights—es- ery Tuesday evening at o'clock—at the Bagles’ Hall ‘MASONIC. Department A . F. & A Bemidjt, 238, nunlu" Chapter Ne. 18, Stated convocatiens —first and third Mondays, § o'clock p. m.—at Maseale Hall Zeltram! Ave., and Fifth street. - ] The Pioneer Want Ads OASH wiTH coPy % oent per word per issue Regular charge rate 1 cent per word per insertion. No ad taken for less than 16 cents Phone 31° HOW THOSE WANT ADS DO THE BUSINESS . Elkanah Commandery Ne. 30 K. T. Stated conclave—secend and fourth Fridays, $ e'clock p. m.—at Masonic Temple, Bel- trami'Ave., and Fifth St O. £. 8. Chapter No. 171, Regular meeting nights— ® Beltraml Ave., and Fifth St. g The Ploneer goes everywhere 8o that everyone has a neighbor who takes it and people who do not take the paper generally read their neighbor’s so your want ad gets to them all. 14 Cent a Word Is All It Costs o B A Roosevelt, Ne. 1888 Regular meeting nights Thursday everings at § at:ll:ek in ~Odd Fellews . HELP WANTED WANTED—Cook at Svea Hotel. ADVERTISERS—The great state of North Dakota offers unlimited op- portunities for business to classi- fied advertisers. The recognized advertising medium in the Fargo —_— WANTED—Cook, Erickson hotel. ' FOB SALE 0! 5 Regular meeting nights ea the first and third 3 in the L. O. O. F. Hall at ¢ FOR SALE—Typewriter ribbons for ~every make of typewriter on the market at 50 ceats and 75 cents * each. - Every ribbon sold for 76 cents -guaranteed. Phone orders promptly filled. Mail orders given the same careful attention as when you appear in person. Phone 31. The Bemidji Pioneer Office Supply Store. FOR SALE—The Bemidji tead pencil (the best nickel pencil in the world, at Netzer’s, Barker's, 0. C. Rood’s, MoCuaig’s, Omich’s, Roe & Markusen’s, and the Ploneer Office Supply Store at § cents each and 60 cents a dozen. FOR SALE—SW 1-4 Sec. 8-149-29. seven miles east Blackduck. Seven dollars . per ‘acre, $300 down and balance in three years. Liberal discount for all cash. C. A. Pech- in, P. O. carrier No. 113, Seattle, Daily and Sunday Courier-News, the only seven-day paper in the state and the paper which carries the largest amount of classified advertising. The Courler-News covers North Dakota like a blank- _et; reaching all parts of the state the day of publication; it is the paper to use in order to get re- sults; rates one cent per word first insertfon, one-halt cent per word succeeding - insertions; fifty cents per line per month. Address the Courier-News, Fargo, N. D. WANTE] 00 merenanss In North- ern Minnesota to sell “The Bemid- 31 lead pencil. Will carry name of évery merchant in advertising columns of Ploneer in order that all receive advantage of advertls- ing. For wholesale prices write or-phone the Bemidji Ploneer Of fice Supply Co. Phome 81. Be- ‘midji, Minn. Bandages Wanted—By the Asso- ciated Charities. - Everyone who has any kind of white cloth, such as old table cloths, pillow . cases, cheese cloth or sheets which they are will- ing to donate please notify Mrs. E. H. Smith, by phone or mail-her a ‘Wash. | FOR SALE—Smali fonts of type, sev- eral different ‘poluts and in first class condition. Call or write this office for proofs. - Address Bemidji Pioneer, Bemidji, Minn. \Who Sells 1t? . - 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] fcent world. It is sold on your ' monoy back basis. A store on’ évery street and in surrounding cities. Hers They Are: E R SALE—A ten-acre tract within city limits,- corner Fourteenth street and Norton avenue. Address B. F. Joslyn, city. FOR SALE—Rubber stamps. The ‘Plopeer will procure any kind of rubber stamp for you on short no- tige. : FOR SALE—Dry poplar wood atl § $2.50 per cord dellvered. Nicollet hml:. FOR SA...—Five-room bungalow, Inquir card. Cloths will be called for. - —_—me o T BOUGHT AND. SOLD—Second hand furniture. 0dd Fellow’s building across from postoffice, phone 129 Oarlison’s Variety Store Barker’s Drug and Jew- olry ll.rc_ : Omiob’s 0O lgar Roe & Markusen 1207 Minnesota ayenue; Phone 526 93. 5 - FOR SALE—Good wosk horse. Call on Anderson, the drayman. FOR RENT—Three = steam-heated IRECTOR ND EMBALME? shipments in gross (more or less) by calling Phone 81, or addressing.the Bemidji Pionser Supply-Store, Bemidjy. |

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