Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, April 24, 1913, Page 3

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XXX KK KKK KK KR ¥ RATLROAD TIME CARDS- R R EE TR L LTS MPLS, BED LAXE & MAN. 1 North Bound Leaves 2 South Bound Arrives. o b3y &e East Bound Leaves g::t‘ Bound Leaves Freight West Leaves at. Freight East Leaves at .. B MINNESOTA & INTERNATI 82 South Bound Leaves. B 81 North Bound Leav 84 South Bound Leaves. 88 North Bound Leaves. Freight 'South Leaves at Freight North Leaves at e LR R E R R R SR SR REEER] x PROFESSIONAL CARDS * KKK KKK KD Ruth Wightman L/Teacher of Piano Residence Studio 1002 Bemidji Ave. Phone 168 LAWYERS GRAHAM M. TORRANCE LAWYER Telephone 56t Miles Block JOHN F. GIBBONS ATTORNEY AT LAW First National Bank Building BEMIDJI, MINN. D. H. FISK ATTORNEY AT LAW Office second floor O'Leary-Bowser Blay PHYSICIANS, SURGEONS DR. ROWLAND GILMORE PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office—Miles Block DE. E. A, SHANNON, M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office in Mayo Block ‘Phone 896 Res. 'Phone 893% DR. C. R. SANBORN PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Ofiice—Miles Block DR. A. E. HENDERSON PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Over First National bank, Bemidji, Minn. Office 'Phone 36, Residence 'Phone 72 DR. E. H. SMITH PHYSICIAN AND SURGENN Office in Winter Block DR. E. H. MARCUM PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office in Mayo Block Phone 18 Residence Phone 211 EINER W. JOHNSON PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office over Security Bank DENTISTS JR. D. L. STANTON DENTIST Office in Winter Block DR. J. T. TUOMY DENTIST First National Bank Bldg. Tel. 320 DR. G. M. PALMER DENTIST Miles Block Evening Work by Appointment Only NEW PUBLIC LIBRARY Open daily, except Sunday, 1 to 6 p m., 7 to 8 p. m. Sunday, reading rooms only, 8 to 6 p. m. W. K. DENISON VETERINARIAN Phone 164 Pogue’s Livery TOM SMART DRAY AND TRANSFER SAFE AND PIANO MOVING es. 'Phone 658. 818 America Ave. Office Phone 12. o FUNERAL DIRECTOR M. E. IBERTSON UNDERTAKER and COUNTY. CORONER Bemidji, Minn, 495 Beltrami Ave. BREVIG Licenced detective. Bonded under { state Laws of Minnesota. Ten years i} ‘of experience. Good references. Write me. All business absolutely confi- dential. - Free consultations. P. M.BREVIC Nary, Minn.’ Lock Box 58 TPANAMA-PACIFICINTERNATIONAL EXPOSITION Copyright, 1915, by Panama-Pacific International Exposition. 5 ILCTION of the great central court, the Court of the Sun and Stars, designed by Messrs. McKim, Mead and White. |'inig eczema through the ‘bl 1 it Clentists; many~different | D This court, approximately 750x900 feet, will divide the main rectangle of exposition buildings. from north to south., Upon the east of the court figures-—elephants, camels, Arab warriors—symbolical of the Orient will surmount a huge arch, the Arch of the Rising Sun, larger than the Arc de Triomphe; upon the west of the court the story of the setting sun will be depicted; surmounting the arch upon the west prairie schooners and fig ures of pioneers who pushed across the western plains will be shown. LEGEND OF GARDEN OF EDEN Jriental Christians Believe Banana Tree Was the Source of Good and Evil. There exists a legend relative to the Christian inhabitants of the east that they believe the banana te be the tree of the source of good and evil, in a bunch of the fruit of which the ser- pent that tempted Eve hid itself, and they add that when Adam and Eve be- came ashamed of their nakedness, they covered themselves with the leaves of this plant. The origin of the banana is given as [ndia, at the foot of the Himalayas, where it has been cultivated since re- motest antiquity, says the National Geographic Magazine. Its origin in the new world is as doubtful as the origin of the American Indian. Na- tural to Asia and Africa, where more than twenty distinct species of the genus are known, it is said to have been brought first to America from Spain, early in the sixteenth century, and planted in the Island of Santo Domingo, whence its spread was rapid through the surrounding islands and the main land. This has never been authentically established, however, and some authorities include the ban- ana among the articles that formed the base of food supply of the Incas and the Aztecs before the arrival of | the Spaniards. i whole meridional America there is a strong tradition that at least two spe- cies of the plantain were cultivated long before the coming of the Euro- peans. Furthermore, it is singular that in all the languages indigenous to the region where the banana ap- pears, the plant has a special name, not proceeding from the conquerors, as was the case with the names of many other plants, animals and vari- ous articles introduced into America after its discovery. Grown over the entire extent of the meridian of the earth, the fruit of the banana today forms in large part the principal food of a majority of the peoples living under the tropical zone. HURRIED AWAY BEFORE THAW Traveler Left While the Conversation al Nuisance Was “So Cold He Could Hardly Talk. [n a country town in the English Midlands there is a man who is so noted for his conversational abilities that his acquaintances avoid giving him unnecessary opportunities to talk. One cold morning this man rode up to a hotel in the neighborhod just as the guests were finishing breakfast. He dismounted, walked in, saluted the landlord in his usual loud tomes, and declared that he was so cold that he could hardly talk. Just then a nervous traveler, who was present, stepped up to the land- lord and, taking him by the coat, said: “Mr. L——, have my bill brought as soon as possible.” “What is the matter, my dear sir?” inquired thé anxious landlord. “Has anything happened?” “Nothing, nothing. Only I want to get away from here before that man thaws.” Immunue From Whipping. Doc Shaw, officially known as Capt. C. A, Shaw, was in a reminiscent mood down town the other day, and his mind reverted to his equestrian trou- bles when he saw a fancy saddle horse g0 by. “I had a funny experience with sad- dles some years ago,” he re- marked to a friend. “I was rearing a nephew, Walter Watkins, in addition to my own family. He was full of life and action—too full, I fear, for his teachers at school. At any rate, 1 kept missing the skirts off my sad- dle. It was an awful vexation to start | out in the country from Somerville naked tree. My hostler convinced me after some difficulty that he was not stealing the leather. > A “Finally I found that the youngster, Walter, stripped the saddle to keep skirt against a whipping at school.— Memphis Commercial Appeal. _She Didny Intend To, A..middle-aged .couple, denly rich through “an unexpected turn of fortune’s wheel, were visiting Certain: it is that’ throughout the | and find my saddle stripped’ to " a|" the senator from their district a this | Washington residence. . At breakfast the first morning aft-| er their arrival, the woman, nervously ! trying to chip off the top of her egg| with her knife, attacked the problem | with so much zeal that the egg was knocked out of the cup and rolled un- der the table. Not knowing just what the proper thing to do under the | circumstances was, she nudged her husband. . “Hank! Hank!” she whispered, “I have dropped an egg. What shall I do?” ° ) “Don’t cackle,” came the matter-of- fact reply. Reducing Cost of Harvest. Grain is hereafter not to be reaped, but will be threshed in the field as it stands, saving the farmers something | like $200,000,000 a year. This is the| claim of Frank Morse, who describes | in the Technical World Magazine the recent invention of a Kansan, Curtis C. Baldwin. The machine has been used for three successive harvests, but proved its utility and practicability most conclusively last fall when it threshed from 25 to 30 acres of stand- ing grain in a ten-hour day. The in- ventor contends that it will reduce the cost of the harvest from 14 cents to 2 cents a bushel.—San Francisco Argo naut. Doctor Could Not Foretell Future. When . David Lloyd-George was - ‘a year old his life nearly ended. H was seized with croup one winter's night at Haverfordwest, where his par- ents lived, and his mother had to hur- ry through the snow to find a doctor. The physit;ian arrived when the baby was almost at his last gasp and barely succeeded in pulling him through the attack. Many years ldter at Cardift the same doctor. came up to the pres- @ ent chancellor of the exchequer, af:] ter a meeting, and told him of this in- cident, adding that.as he went home that winter’s night he had wondered whether it had been really worth | while to save the baby's life, since there was no prospect before the baby but the life of an agricultural laborer, Storekeepers in Difficulties. A number of shopkeepers were summoned at the Grimsby police court recently for contravening the closing order under the shops act. They com- plained that they had dimcqlcy in un- derstanding what they could and could not sell. One of the defendants admitted selling soap to a man who wag very dirty. “Thinking cleanliness was next to godliness, I let him have a packet,” said the defendant.—Lon- dop Mail. ] :_Since the old-fashioned theory. of cur- o) lood ‘has’ been ven up nl\?es gnve been. tried:for skin diseases. But it has Deen found that these salves .| only ¢log the pores and cannot:pénetrate to. the inner skil fge]ow the “epidermis where the eczema germ: re;lodged. This—the <. quality of -penetrating— probably explains-the tremendous suc- cess of: th, el known' liquid | eczema temedy, oik: wintergreen, thymol, gly- cerine, " etc., as compounded ‘ini-D.D.D. Prescription. Sl e P ‘We have s0ld other remedies for:skin - | this guarantee:—If you do not.find ‘) it takes away the'y;!-lch AT OIgC&'ht | troubles put none, that we can Tecoms. mend as highly as this for.we know .D.D; ‘stops the itch 'at- once. We want you to give D.D.D. a trial. heoe?ough to pr:“re ST 3 course - all ‘other druggists ha DD Preseription—go tot‘t‘him nhm"" us—bu G some; - ‘?i%ptralgl substitute .o o cPt son |~ Bu you come ‘to our ‘store, . 180 ceriain of what D.D.I). will do fvole ;:& at we' offer. you a’full size bottl ¢osts you not-a cen : : 3 .Barker’s Drug Stere. “The New Steel Center” Lots on:easy terms. No interest, no taxes. In- vestment in Superipr Lots will make you money. Information--Bradley Brink Ce. (Inc.) 909 Tower Ave,, Superior, Wis. K. K. ROE, Agent, Bemidji, Minn. GLOGGED NOSTRILS OPEN AT ONCE, HEAD COLDS AND CATARRH VANISH In One Minute Your Stuffy Nose and Head Clears, Sneezing and Nose Running Cease, Dull Headache - Goes. Try “Ely’s Cream Balm.” Get a small bottle anyway, just to try it—Apply a little in the nostrils and instantly your clogged nose and stopped up air passages of the head will open; you will breathe freely; dullness and headache disappear. By morning! the catarrh, 'cold-in-head or catarrhal sore throat will be gone. End such misery now! Get the small bottle of “Ely’s Cream Balm” at any drug store. This sweet, fra- grant balm dissolves by the heat of the nostrils; penetrates and heals the inflamed, swollen' membrane which lines = the nose, head and throat clears the air passages; stops nasty discharges and a feeling of cleansing, soothing relief comes im- meadiately. Don’t lay awake tonight strugge ling for breath, with head stuffed; nostrils closed, hawking and blow- ing. Catarrh or-a cold, with ita running nose, foul mucous firopplng into the throat, and raw dryness is distressing but truly needless. Put your faith—just once—in “Ely’s Cream Balm” and your cold or catarrh will surely disappear. Subscribe for The Pioneer - This N Mayl 1913 ish Teaspoons, or three Dessert or Sou Offer Expires Six Genuine Wm. Rogers Silver Spoons - Given for 100 Galvanic Soap Wrappers Madam, have you got yur free set of six superb Rogers Silver, La Vigne pattern, French Gray fin- Spoons? If not, don’t delay another minute. - This is posi- tively your last chance to secure a set of these splen- did A-1 Extra Plate Rogers Silver Spoons free in exchange for 100 wrappers from Galvanic Soap. Buy a Box of GALVANIC Soap The Famous Easy Washer Do It Today and Get Spoons Free ' Coupons from Johnson’s Washing Powder accepted same as Galvanic Soagr : Wrappers. Buya box of Galvanic Soap, 100 cakes, today from your grocer. Take the front panel only of these wrappers to our Branch Premium Dept. in the store of N. B.—If not convenient to to present:the at the above-named store, mail nm'ays‘inctl:o us, enc gn stamps to cover postage, and we will mail postpaid. B. J. JOHNSON SOAP CO., his trousers’ seat lined with a saddle|” All Six Given Free if You Act at Once! 2-gent 8poons direct to you,) Milwaukee, Wis. This wonderful free offer is made only for the purpose of getting you to try Galvanic Soap—and of course is far too expensive to continue. Housewives who have profited by our remark- able offer are delighted with the exquisite beauty of the spoons and amazed by their artistic merit and value. C. E. Battles Hardware Store 413-415 Beltrami Ave. e ——nn

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