Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, May 9, 1913, Page 3

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

S P3 “Under a Merry Widow Hat” : . .Sung by Miss DAISY FAIR In the Season’s Vaudeville Hit “THE BLONDE TYPEWRITERS " ‘By EUGENE LESTER. e = ;E‘E‘“ 1. All the songs you heur,—lt hid, A shad-y bhow- al - most seems this year,—Are of some country home ‘and fields of new mown hay; 2. 'Neath this mer -ry 1id where real true love is er you can bet ain't one two three; 5 mny be nice, but none for mlne, Bova Jjust take this qui - et lit - tle i s now can bill and coo, Af - ter you've been there like me lmlixy_;g CHORUS. _rv‘ You can have your lit-tle cot-tage b_y the sea to love, you can play love's game, rus - tic bench and brook,— Ev- 'ry scene is sit-u - a- ted far a - way. Mis - ter Moon may peep at night but can-not see. There’s the lover with his sweetheart at the gar-den gate, Ev -'ry lad can hold his own and whisper tales of love, In Oth - ers spoon be-neath a cher - ry tree, a tru- ly con - fi- dent- ial way, Bal - co - Un - der Copyright, McMix, by MURRAY MUSIC CO., New York. No. 69, ANSWER THE CALL Bemidji People Have Found That This is Necessary. A cold, a strain, a sudden wrench, A little cause may hurt the kid- neys. Spells of bachache often follow, Or some irregularity of the urine. A splendid remedy for such attacks, A medicine that has satisfied thou- sands. N. Y. Is Doan’s Kidney Pills, a special kidney remedy. ‘Many Bemidji people rely on it. Here is Bemidji proof. Mrs. A. B. Wells, 103 Irvin avenue, Bemidji, Minn., says: “I got Doan’s Kidney Pills from Barker’s Drug Store and I have used them at dif- ferent times when having trouble from my kidneys and suffering from my back. They have always proven beneficial. I consider them a valu- able remedy.” If your back aches—if your kid- neys bother you, don’t simply ask for a kidney remedy—ask disintely. for Doan’s Kidney Pills, the same that Mrs. Wells had—the remedy backed by home testimony. 50c all stores. Foster-Milburn Co., Props., Buffalo, THE SPALDING EUROPEAN PLAN Duluth’s Larxest and Best Hotel DULUTH MINNESOTA More than $100,000.00 recently expended on improvements. 250 rooms, 125 private baths, 60 ssmple rooms. Every mode~n convenience: 'Luxurious and delighifal restaurants and buffet, Flemish Palm Room, Meco's Grill, Ooloufal Bul Magnificent Jobby avd publle room: Baliroom. hanyuet rooms and private dining_roous: Sun parlor and observa vory. Locared tn heart of business sec- t10a but overlooking the harbor 2..d Lake | Eupericr. Couvenient o evervehing Dos of the Breat Hotels of ths Horthwast | R. F. MURPHY FUNERAL DIRECTOR g AND EMBALMES T OfNce 313 Batrami Ave GOOD TIMES. OF THE PAST Peddler Laments Fact That Easy Liv- ing Has for Him Been Left Far Behind. He came towards me over a shoul- der of the lonely South Downs, a little old man with back bent beneath the weight of the pack he carried. There was a square box strapped to his shoulders in military fashion and a; large satchel hung beneath his arm. In one hand he bore a basket, in the' other a large umbrella. He seemed to be nursing a griev- ance, for there was an indignant scowl athwart his weather-beaten, red good-humored face, and the little white whiskers about his ears seemed positively to bristle with annoyance. “Mornin’, mister,” he remarked. “She”—with a wave of his arm towards a distant cottage—*“she called me a ‘awker!” “Oh, indeed?” said I, rather at fault, for a hawker was exactly what I took bim to be, “A ‘awker!” he repeated, as one who strives against incredulity. “And me a peddler, with my father a ped- dler afore me, and ’is father afore im!” “But what is the exact difference between a_hawker anG a peddler?’ I asked. “All the difference!” he snapped. “Why, I'm known as a peddler in a’most every South Down village be- tween ‘ere and ‘Eastbourne. I covers this ground reglar, winter and sum- mer, year in and year out. I peddles. —I don’t ’awk!” ¥ “Peddlin’ ain’t what it was though,” he went on, good temper returning to him as he spoke of his woes. “Now, in my father’s time, there was good money to be made—’'specially if you was at all friendly with the smugglers, like ‘e was. But now,” he added sar castically, “what with edjication what helps folks to 'write direct to shops | for what they wants, and what ‘with advertisements in the papers, and the pos’office and moty cars—why, it's lucky for me I ain’t got _no family to keep, that’s all.”—Answers, London. Without a doubt the toughest and most durable finish made. BEST FOR FLOORS AND ALL WOODWORK Easily applied, drie8 over night GIVEN HARDWARE CO, YOUR- MONEYBAGK'IF YOU WANT 1T 316-318 Minnessta Ave. BEMIDI, MINK. Phene § ORDERED ON LAVISH SCALE The Late John Pierpont Morgan Ob- Jjected to Wasting Time Looking for His Eyeglasses. A story of Mr. Pierpont Morgan, illustrative of the scale of his domes- tic affairs, reaches me. My corre- spondent was in a London optician’s shop when another customer entered, and, striding up to the counter, brusquely inquired, “Can you make me another pair like that?’—present- ing spectacles of the “goggles” type in tortoise shell rims and gold frames. “Yes,” said the optician, “I can.” “Send them up to my. place as soon as they’re ready. You know who I am,” were the laconic instructions given as the customer strode out of the shop as quickly as he had entered. The opti- cian explained that that was Mr. Pier- pont Morgan. The spectacles were delivered, and my friend, making in- quiries in the matter, heard the end of the affair from the optician. Pier- pont Morgan returned to the shop, and, speaking more effusively, than on the first occasion, said: “Those spec- tacles were very good—very satis- factory indeed. .I shall want some more "of them. I'm always missing my ‘specs’ after a change of clothes. Let me see (pausing and looking down. on his waistcoat as if to inter- rogate it); I've eleven waistcoats— yes, eleven. Better make me a dozen pairs!” So a dozen tortoise shell rim- med and gold framed spectacles were supplied to the millionaire, much to the satisfaction of the optician and rimmaker, who, between them, pock- eted sixty = guineas.— Manchester Guardian. DISPUTED, BUT KEPT-TEMPER How General Wolseley and War-Cor- respondent Conducted Acrimonious Quarrel in the Newspapers. One or two of the notices of Lord Wolseley’s career mention the pro- tracted dispute between Wolseley and Sir William Russell as to the behavior of the troops in South Africa in 1879. i | -Russell bad accused the troops of; tain ‘terms. Wolseley defended his men with generous warmth, ‘but the manner in which both Wolseley and Russell kept their regard for each oth- er, each well knowing that thé other spoke in sincerity, was a model of how a dispute of principle should be conducted between public men. e Sir John Tenniel in Punch charm- ingly -hit off this polite -yet furious|of quarrel +in; a eartoon. The cartoon|¢r. was headed, {/The.: and undemuth ‘were fl:e words: - drunkenness and looting in no uncer-|; ;of Politeness,”’ °fi -:& You'can have your shady lane and moon-lit sky a - hove, Your bam-boo hut out -in i a_for-est’ glade." Talk a- bout your lit- tle €o - zy corn - er built for two, Rave of love with-in 2 steam heat flat, - If you Under a Merry Widow Hat. 2 pp—ad p. g J = and transparent untruths. Doctor Russell—l‘ur;lvc me, my daz- zling young general, for mentioning thst you are a pig-headed ignoramus and don’t know what you are: t:lkinl about.—Manchester Guardian. Suffrage Conditions. in Belgium. The Belgians must have grown weary of the “college man in politics.” A Relgian who is a graduate of a uni- versity, or-holds ‘a diploma from one of the great technical schools, has two “supplementary votes.” This is a grievancé to the Belgian masses, who insist on manhood suffrage. The spe- cial privilege of the learned is omly one of the many peculiarities: of the Belgian system, as the family man has two votes to the bachelor’s: one, and there are property qualifications be- sides. If the proposed social strike for manhocod suffrage, only one vote per voter, is carried into operation Belgium may present scenes worthy of ils stormy past. The Belgians have a genius for organizing disorder. Twenty years ago when they com- pelled » broadening of the suffrage, it Was noted that the rioters were singu- larly well handled and fought with an intelligence that puzzled the military. The explanation was that the rioters ‘were disciplined and directed by “re- servists” who instead of “joining the <olors,” joined the revolt. In the Channel Rip. The Gull lightship swings, year im, year out, between. the treacherous Goodwins and the Kentish coast. On either side the ship a nevabcanin‘ stream of ocean’s guardians :and. of ocean’s trade sweeps by. - Cruisers and scouts dash past at utmost speed, set- ting the lightship rolling heavily upon the swell they leave behind. Great steamers of the Orient, P. and O.,and other lines are there; schooners. and sailing craft of every build;down to French fishing smacks and heavily- laden: barges with their decks almost |- s-wash.—London Globe. NOTICE I.IIOI AFPPLICATION FOR UOR LICENSE. STATE OF MINNESOTA, COUNTY OF Beltrami, City of Bemidji. SS. NOTICE IS HEREBY: GIVEN, term commencing on June 1st, 1913 terminating on June 1st, 1914, .by ‘the following persons, and.at the following places, as stated in said applications, re- Spectively, to-wit: E. K. ANDERSON at and in the front room ground floor of that certain two-sto:ky ‘brick hulldlng lo- cfited on lot:11, block 17 oris!nu town- site. Said applications will be; i termlned by said city council.of the cicy |l ‘{ tthe g)unell ‘room 4n’ he | | ‘Bei city hall in said eity of Bemidji in (.‘,o\mtgil ;ns I dflch Beml ] 59-16 t«:&i’ “f-m'i“ o GO TO BATCHELDER’S 600D GROCERIES AND GENERAL NERCHANDISE FRESH EGGS AND BUTTER I. P. BATCHELDER 117 Minnesota Ave. Phone 180 This space reserved by the - Bemidji Townsite & Improvement Co. For Price of Lots, Terms, Etc., INQUIRE OF T. C. BAILEY, Bemidji, or write . BETIDJI;TOWNSITE & IMPROVETENT CO. - 520 Capital Bank Bullding 8T. PAUL MINNESOTA Feed Economy is a step toward greater profits. Itisn’t the amount caten that counts, but what u‘:ri:zzsk% and turned into marketable products. Animal Regulator puts llonu. cows and hogs in prime condition and insures perfect . digestion. That pays! Ask the men who useit, or test at ourrisk. 2S¢, 50c, $1. 25-b, I’lil. 33-50 * Your money back if it w Healing Ointment (or Powder) cures sores and wounds. 2Sc, 50c. Sample free, Get Pratts Profit-sharing Booklet FALLS & CAMERON SUPERIOR LOTS) “The New Steel Lenter” “Lots on -easv terms. No mterest. no taxes. In- vestment in Superior Lots will make you money. Information-—Bradley Brink Co. (Inc.) 909 Tower ' Ave., Superior, Wis. K. K. ROE, Agent, Bemidji, Minn.

Other pages from this issue: