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SCOOP, 25:28 By “HOP" Skin On Fire? > SR GoT SUSY ONE. PARTY' T Haveny a TVOTRY AGAN AND WAITING Y0 SEE THE. THAT MucH Just the mild, simple wash, the well 2 9 i 2 Wi 7 GET AN WTER~ PRESIDENT, AHEAD oF | %.‘:3‘123&’3&.”&3;?5"“’“"“ for Eczemd P & ¥ ;9 s e, i BOYAL VIEW WITH Jou SR, - JUST HAVE. A trial will prove it, Al WILEON on WIS P oheng tioubla bat Bone. Ihasmedies for skte 1A’ e - y P\.u:\s fow_ : WM tee as we can the nAg.DF ox‘-’eme%?“?t &y p s Millinery Opening Hetland & Fallon March 7th and 8th, 1913 125 PATTERN HATS | MISS ELEANOR BROWN Manager and Trimmer [ All the Latest Shapes and All the Newest Trimming G g (O 1431wtk 53D BALB-MD, GAVE PLACE TO THE MOTHER Good Nature and Humorous Tongue. In a village of about five thousand FINALLY GOT DOWN TO FACTS| | cal purposes. i solutely i hundreds of degrees higher than is | possible with glass; Wili MAKE 1RON BOIL SCIENTIFIC MEN SUCCEED IN PRO- DUCING FIERCE HEAT. Granulated Aluminum‘ Mixed With Oxide of Iron Resulted In a Tem- perature of 3,000 Degrees Cen- tigrade, the Record. For some years past scientific men have been striving to produce heat fiercer than any temperature of which we have experience in ordinary life. The greatest heat ever developed by the agency of man was obtained by Sir Andrew Noble, who exploded cord- ite in closed vessels, so that a pres- sure of 50 tons to the square inch was registered and a degree of heat never previously recorded. The highest temperature reached in fuel furnaces for practical pur- poses is between 1,700 and 1,800 de- grees centigrade, and at such a heat fire clay and porcelain are melted. Then we come to the flame fed with and coal gas; by these means a temperature of 2,000 degrees centi- grade may be obtained. A new indusiry solely dependent | i upon the employment of great heat is that of melting quartz. This min- eral, fused by the oxy-hydrogen flame, is converted into tubes and flasks and other vessels for chemi- inert, and may be heated they may also be plunged at such heat into cold water without injury. It has been discovered that by whirling a centrifugal wheel at high velocity in the combustion chamber of a furnace the nitorgen is cast to one side, while the oxygen is con- These vessels are ab- | WAYS OF CLEVER ATTORNEY introducing Evidence by Dramatioc Methods Is One of the Chief Means | of Influencing a Jury. Many devices have been 2mployed in the courtroom productive of an ef- fect far more telling upon the Jury than mere words., H A suit was brought some years ago by the people of a certain quarter of ! Montreal against a manufacturing company. The vile odors of the chem- icals used in the works, they alleged, had made the neighborhood untenan- table and seriously lessened the value of their property. | The judge and the jury were dis- | posed to turn a deaf ear to the com- | plaint, says the Green Bag. The com. pany was rich and powerful and “an alleged smell,” as their counsel de- clared, “was too intangible a griev- ance to grasp.” One of the opposing counsel was seen to go out and not long after re- turned with two glass retorts. “Here,” he said, “are the cffending subjects of our contention.” He pass- ed them to the judge and then to the jury, who smelled them and smilingly declared them pure and odorless. “But,” said the counsel, “the com- pany mixes them.” He suddenly poured the contents of one of the re- torts into the other and the nauseous fumes of hydro-sulphuric acid or sul- phuretted hydrogen filled the air. | Judge, jury and spectators choked for | breath. It was necessary to adjourn court until the next day, when heavy damages were at once awarded to ! the plaintiffs. In a murder trial before a western court the prisoner was able to ac- court for the whole of the time ex- | cept five minutes on the evening when the crime was committed. His coun- the first regular size $1.00 hottle does not do exactly as we say, it will not cost you a cent. Barker’s Drug Store. How You Can Be An Easy Talker By JOHN D. FALLON Doubtless you have often envied the man or woman to whom talk- ing seems so easy, especially if you find it hard to start a conversation. You can make this art yours. THE PIONEER will help you. Read its pages closely and constantly- You will find a hundred subjects for conversation—the affairs of the nations, great philanthropies, news of literature, art and sport. You will always be well informed, for the newest is ever presented in THE PIONEER. Then there are the advertise- ments. Everybody is interested in them—especially when the cost of living still soars. They contain the latest merchandise news from the most reliable merchants in Bemidji. Read THE PIONEER closely and constantly every day and you will never beat a loss for interesting conversation. Read its advertise- ments every day and you will al- ways be posted on where to pur- chsse to best advantage. Thisisthe | Stove Polish T’S different others becaus T . care is taken in the mak- R ing and the materials used are g of higher grade Black Silk Stove Polish Makes abrilli: thatdoesnot = inhabitants in Tioga county, New centrated, and in this way a bright- |8el argued that it was impossible for | & {uu: f,“,'{‘ bine lasts {p\’l: 8t. Peter's Careful Computation of | York, a modest fortune has been| Were What the Attorney Was After | er flame and greater heat are ob-|him to have killed the man under the "Vsed on, oves and sald by Benefits Conferred Resulted in | amassed by a man who at the age of but, at That, He Was Not Par. tained. A similar appliance used | circumstances in so brief a period, hardware deale Defeat of the Spinster. St. Peter, at his gate, perceived two forty-five left the navy without even a trade to fall back upon and no as- sets except a humorous turn to his ticularly Pleased. It doesn’t always pay a lawyer te during the combusion of coal in a furnace enabies a firm of paper- makers to save 27 per cent. of their and on' that plea largely based his defense, the other testimony being against his client. Allwe usk 13 a tri it on your cook stove, J sour parior stove cr your gas range. Ityou dowtiud e the best stove pollsh you ever uted, your deaier Is authorized torefund your money. Iuxist on Black Silk Stove Pollsh. Made 1o lquid or paste—one quality. fadies approaching. He rose to greet | tongue. be stern with th_e opposing witnesses | coal "~ bill by the elimination of | When the prosecuting attorney re- B G[LACK sxug s;rliCVEll {_’O!JSH WORKS em. Having done some cobbling when a whgn cross-examining them. They ard | hydrogen gas formed in combus- | plied he said, “How long a time re{:lly Uidnissishy MI‘,_‘D"‘:" i SR “Names?” young man, he entered a shoe store often as clever as the attorney, and | tion . is five minutes? Let us see. Will'his Festers, store-pipes ents rustiog. | “Mary Smith, widow,” sald one. for a tlme'and later set up a little the following anecdote illistrates how But most remarkable of all the [honor command an absolute, silence brass. " 5¢ lias 00 6qual fOF use o Automobiic. “Jane Jones, spinister,” replied the sther. *QOccupation?” “Suffragette speaker,” said Jane. “Just a mother,” answered Mary. St. Peter looked troubled. “I've only room for one just now,” shop of his own for repairing shoes. That was ten years ago. His good na- ture and industry won him the trade of the town; a newly acquired habit of thrift promted him to buy on. the installment plan the little shop and house in which he lived. one witness ‘“put one bright young lawyer. “Sir,” said the lawyer sternly, “you need not state your impressions. We want facts. Now, henceforward, an: swer me categoricallly. You say you live next door to the defendant?” over” on a phases of the utilization of extreme heat is the discovery of the welding material known as thermit. The inventor discovered that aluminium is very much attached to oxygen, and lolds ‘it closer than a brother. Therefore he mixed granulated alu- in the courtroom for that apace?” The judge granted this request. There was a clock on the wall. Ev- ery eye in the courtroom was fixed upon it as the pendulum ticked off the seconds. There was breathless silence. We all know how time whica | THE SPALDING EUROPEAN PLAN 1 | pe said. “It’ll go to the better of you fi rick buildi ig re-| Yes” “To the north of him?” winjum with oxide of iron, for the|is walted for creeps and halts and Duluth’s Largest and Best Hotel fvo." Dl::l;‘;g:ytl:e ::o&nconeu;:&ntgh;scob-l “No.” “To the south?” lighter metal wants oxygen, and the|at last does nos seem to move at all. || DULUTH MINNESOTA Jane looked pityingly at Mary. bler himself may give up his' last it “No.” “To the west, then?” | quantity of magnesium filings was | The keen witted counsel waited until M&nthn “““-,:WW recently expended “I,” she said, “have been a success- | ho wishes. But that he has no dis- “No.” i placed on top of the mixture and a|the tired audience gave a sigh of re- | 9uimprovements. 250 rooms, 1% private ful speaker for my cause. I have stirred women up till they got the #ote. Owing to their having the vote Ihey have accomplished the passing of certain bills. These bills have ben- sfited some two thousand human be- Yngs. I'm afraid that ‘just a mother’ here can't total anything to equal that!” “I'm afraid I can’t,” sighed the like for it is evidenced by his recipe for success, which is: “Just keep pegging away.” Chronic Stomach Trouble Cured. There is nothing more discouraging than a chronic disorder of the stom- ach. Is it not surprising that many “Ah,” said the lawyer sarcastically, “at last we are likeiy to get down to one real fact. You live to the east of him, do you?” “No.” “How is that, sir?” said the aston- ished attorney. *“You say you live next door to him, yet you live neither to the east, west, south nor north, What do you mean by that, sir?” storm-match applied, and immedi- ately a mass of molten iron was seen boiling at a temperature of 3,000 degrees centigrade — much higher than any temperature in or- dinary use. Handicap in Golf. An unusual golf handicap was play- ed on one of the local links recently, lief at the close of the period and then ! quietly asked: “Could he not have struck one fa- tal blow in all of that time?” | Dramatic effects, however, are haz- | | ardous agencies to use, as it is not | impossible to spoil them as an anti- climax, as a member of the English parliament found when at the close of a flery adjuration to the govern-! baths, '60 sample rooms. convenience: Lux: and del restaurants and buffet, Flemish Palm Room, Men's Grili, Colonial Buffet; Magmificent lobby and ic rooms: %ll m, bu%nst rooms and te ning rooms; Bun parlor an - tory. Located in heart of business sec- tion but overlooking t.e harbor and Lake Superior. Convenient to everything. One of the Great Hotels of ths Nerthwest < mother. “I never did a thing except |gyser for years with such an ailment| 1 thought perhaps you were com:|the proponent of the same winning|ment to declare war he cried out. | ] bring up my seven boys. Theyturn- |y .. o Dormanent cure is within | Petent to form the impression that we| hands down. One of the rules of golf| “Unsheath the sword!” and drawing ' h , ed out well, but—that only makes | - ph Pl b live in a flat,” said the witness, “but| is that one must not talk to a player| a dagger threw it on the floor. 0 e s ' { seven human beings I've benefited.” | ‘1@ W et M i I see I must inform you that he lives | when he is about to make a drive, nor| “Ah!” coolly said an opponent. | . i She turned meekly away. trifie? *“About one year ago, SaY8| next door above ‘me.” must others discuss any subject in his| “There is the knife, but where i8 the | Here they are all in a row. They 1 “Hold on,” said St. Peter. She turn- |[P. H. Beck, of Wakelee, Mich., “I hearing. It might take his mind oft| gork?” sell it because it's the best nickel ed back. “What about those sons? |bought a package of Chambgrlain’s éh the Empress. the game for just an instant and that| A ghout of laughter was the result. p..ncu on the market today and What have they done for their |Tablets, and since using them T have Wh Dot“h A e;x.;ress of Japan t | might be fatal. will be for many days to come. kind?” : s recent | in K; ity 1 k 3 = The mother's eyes ahone. i any et of aieront meat. | 1, AS0 Nazo7e on the ocenlon o) vty et vous et enamian Ha| Sodphe Seen by Vout and Ase | Yhe Bomii Pangil “One discovered a new anaesthetic. | 4 " che one hundredth day memorial er¥-| g yoon 11 the habit of beating a fat| , Old Age is more relig ol cines, but none of them were of any| jna at the tomb of Mein Tenno, she Youth. I do not speak of the emotion- | ; One secured the passage of & bill o W and phlegmatic friend until the latter S men ' stands alone in the ;five] ‘cent which did good to hundreds. The lasting benefit.” For sale by Bark-| expressed a wish to purchase a Chin tred of it al crises-that come upon young sl other established a home for blind |er’s Drug Store, Bemidji, Minn.—| log, for which.breed of animals Na-| " # s 5 : and young women in early youth; | world. Itis on your money i Tl tell you what I'll do,” the friend losely related children.” lAdv‘ oya is rather famous. Five were !: sald not long ago. “I'll play you eight those crises seem too :odse yl oty back basis. A store on every ty’s inspecti, I i th evelopm i ing citi St iPeter penclled down’ soms (fig: ::fi:d&::e&n:;ie;g:c&ipzfik: x:nn:" een holes if you will give-me a handt :; ::y:el;:l:‘lofi?rn th:nnme fle:u in | stocet and. i sumvuncing cities. | ares. Quite Good Interest, Mstingulshed guests they were intro.| ©2P-” ] wlilch old age is religlous, writes H. ‘The fourth led his regiment past a danger point and saved them all. The fifth is a parson, who lives what he preaches. The sixth is.an artist, who bas delighted hundreds. The . sev- Mr. Andrew Carnegle tells the fok | duced to the presence one by one. lowing story with great relish. When his father was leaving his native country to settle in America he bor rowed twenty pounds from a relative. Number three, which 18 blesesd with ‘he name of Mame, or “Beans,” over- looked the deference due to royalty, and dashing across the room, made “Done,” ‘said the nervous player, “Name the handicap.” “Three times during the game, and not more than three, I am to be per mitted to stand behind you and say D. Sedgwick in the Atlantic. That the emotional crises of youth may bear as truthful witness to the realities of the universe as the temperate religion of old age I do not deny. The God Here They Are: Oarlson’s Variety Store Barker’s D, and Jow- olry m:. enth—well, he’ s busy bringing up : . ‘Boo’ while you are preparing to lght of its W. @. Sohrooder The family had an uphill battle on l'°n° spring on her majesty’s. lap, s that youth sees by the light of ::set::l‘]’s’. His wife s & 8uf-iy " iver side of the ‘Atlantic, but,{ where he curled himself up and bark. drg:;ry time it was the nervous man'a | SOtoal fires m.w ‘:h:rredigor;. g-‘ :'"‘mm‘: g:;’-u' ! 1 | f ans E. F. “Come right In” sald St. Peter. when the tide ‘of prosperity -turned | ed shrilly at anyone who tried to re- but that image o » Was. MoOualg J. P. Omioh’s Olgar Store Roe & Markuosen “Your list totals two thousand and eleven!”—New York Times. $100 Reward, $100. The readers of this puper will be pleased to learn that there is at least one dreaded disease that science has “been able to cure in all its stages, and that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being ‘foundation of the disease, and giving stitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh is taken internally, acting direct- "1y upon the blood and mucous surfaces . of the system, thereby destroying the foundation of the diease, and giving the patient strength by building up the ;. eonstitution and assisting nature in do- with the son, he remembered his| move him. The dog having thus ex- father’s indebtedness, and determined | pressed its willingness to join the to clear it off, together with its ao |suite, the empress bought him for 100 cumulated interest. He started by re | yen, and he returned to Tokio in the mitting the sum of twenty pounds, and | \mperial cortege. for several years sent the same amount—a dividend equal to exactly 100 per cent. Returning to Scotland, the Pittsburgh ironmaster met his old relative. “Well,” sald Mr. Carnegie, “having paid up a good deal of the interest, 1 o The Forty Year Test. An article must have exoceptional merit to survive for a period of forty Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy should like now to clear off the prin. | W2 first offered to the public in 1872. cipal” From a small begining it has grown “Ah, ay, Andi-ev&, dinna ye fash|in favor and popularity until it has fersel’ aboot the loan! feotly satisfied with the interest.” - A’'m pain [attained a world wide reputation. play his fat friend walked up and just stood behind him. Never once during the game did the fat man say “Boo!” or anything else. But the anticipation of the expected “Boo!” was fairly nerve-shattering, and the fat man won hands down.—Kansas City Journal. Outside of the Ordinary. A smart Philadelphia woman has studied law successfilly, to avoid legal expenses. But most people who have legal expenses are too busy doing the things ithat cause them. to study such law.—Topeka. Journal. It appears in fire and too often disap- pears in smoke. The image of God that appears to old age. is a more abiding image; it reveals itself to ex- perience and to reason instead of to the sudden and brief conviction of vision. Old age finds God more in its own image, calm, infinitely patient, not revealed merely by the vibrant Intensity of passion, but in the famil- lar and commonplace. To old age the common things of life declare the glory of God. Retailers will receive immediate shipments in gross (more or less) by calling Phone 31, or addressing the % T » i sy s Judging. by the Sound. Ohszberlain's Tngi:‘ for Constipe Asked to expl 5 meaning . : vis-a-vis, a b:;pa:'lnm;h ;om::n ,m;: For constipation, Chamberlain’s | Tablets are eyxcel,lent. Easy to take. ing its work, The proprietors have s0 much faith'in its curative powers that they offer One Hundred Dollars for any case that it fails to cure. Send for list of testimonidls. R 4 + Addresy F, J. Cheney’ & Co., :Toledo, Ohio. . . . Sold by all Druggists, 76c.” ¢ ] ‘Take' Hall’'s ‘Family Pills for consti- P T T 5 : . 4 “able g . il You will find mnothing better for a “Ah, but ‘I'm rich enough now, 1lcough or cold. “Try it and you will think, to. clear ‘off ‘the principal!” relunderstand ‘why it'is a favorite after pq?&:': :g‘;o:;éfim Ak |8 perfod of ‘moré” than ‘forty 'years. sald the: relati ',v‘l"lfi v’:r§ '.“'""";’ It not ‘only gives relief—it cures. For vested as it 181" . - . .7 |sale'by Barker’s Drug Store, ‘fien‘ikdjj, .| Mipn—Adv. ' Bemidji Pioneer Supply Store, Bemidjs,