Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, May 15, 1913, Page 3

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Lewh Colllnn of Aitkin is in Bem- iaji on” business. M. J. Rawn of Princeton spent yes- terday_ in Bemidji. B. H. Courtney of Grand Forks was in Bemidji yesterday. Go-carts retired at the second hand store.—Adv, R. W. Roberts of Brainerd spent yesterday in Bemidji. D. Theriault of Akeley is in Bem- idji today on business. W. H. Foster of town of Liberty was-in the ecity today. » A thrilling romance of Old . lliustrated Somg: il : -lqlm Buma.v. In ¢ - Faney apples $1.50 per box at Schmitt’s store.—Adv. W. A: Currie was an International Falls visitor Tuesday. lodge. J. Bisiar returned yesterday from a business trip up the line. L. F. Deur and wife of Tenstrike millinery parlors.—Adv. spent yesterday in Bemidji. 0. A. Carlgon, of England, North Dakota, arrived in Bemidji yesterday. Troppman’s special _embroidery sale ends Saturday.—Adv. Ralph Dickenson of Buena Vista was in Bemidji Wednesday. A. G. Wedge, Jr., went to Black- duck last evening on business. afternon and ‘will be the guest of 'weeks. B. Wynne and James Wynne, all J. 0. Achenbach was a business caller at International Falls Tuesday. Go-carts repaired at’ the second hand store.—Adv. Iver O. Myhre of-town of Liberty, was in the city today between trains. day on business. J. B. Wynne postmaster at Island Lake. Closing out merchandise auct! 0. C. Rood and Co.—Ady. Mr. and Mrs. Andy “Dr. J. Warningre went to Cass Lake on. professional business yester- day. A. E. Schusser went to Red Lake Falls today where he will visit his mother. : Wall is Mrs. Clark's sister. / Special coat and suit sale at Tropp- man’s Saturday and Monday.—Adv. Nels Thompson ~of Grand - Forks H was a business. visitor _in Bemidji \ yesterday. [ W. ¥. Finnigan of Bemidji, was a business caller at International Falls | ‘Wednesday. Free souvenirs to all the ladies present-at 2 p. m. sharp at 0. C. Rood and Co.—Adv. A. B. Ellison and F. D. Coleman of Bemidji transacted business at Inter- nntlonal F lls Wednesday. Miss Edna Brink of Crookston, who ‘has been employed in Bemidji for some time left:yesterday for her home. One of these nice days you ought to go to Hakkerups and have your pic- ture taken.—Adv. Miss Lillian Lauritzen has resign- o ed at the Northwestern Telephone of- fice.and has accepted a position at the - laundry. Mres. Stillings’ of Brainerd, who has been visiting friends in the city for some time, will leave the latter part of the week. tional Guards, of which company Spanish-American war. Go to “Abercrombie’s” for music. Big hit. Knut Jorstad and daughter, or more in Bemidji have returned their home.. re idji hospitals while here. Auction sale starts daily at 2 p. Rood and Co.—Adv. g Work in the third rank in the large attendance is expected. 613 Fifth street.—Adv. Only a small number appeared 'minstrel practice last evening but the weather conditions were not sent were excused. Another rehe: Abercrombies for popular music. sal ‘will be held tomorrow night. new and up-to-date at only 10 cents per copy- —Adv. closing out auction sale.—Adv. Mrs. Klungness, on, Park avenue, entertalited the Ladiés’ Aid of - the First Scandinavian Lutheran church Wednesday afternoon. this morning from Owatonna, Min: apolis and St. Paul. ~ daughter Miss Ruby Henrionnet, Pillsbury hall, Monday Mrs. Lester H. - Monte, who has been spending the past ten days visit- ing in Minneapolis, St Paul and Du- luth, arrived home this afternoon. line of mid-summer millinery. Ladies spring coats worth to $10, only ‘$5; " values: to 620. only $10; value to 330 only 315 “at Troppmans an account there.—Adv. Mrs. James H. - Foster. Brinkman Theatre wnm Evmlmdy Bnas Pleture Program Iudial Blood mmm[ Bigon Feature In Two. Parts.. Theough His; Daughter . Wana, the Dying Chief Beseeches His College | Bred Son to Uphold the 'l'radmonl of : - His-Tribe. Liberty where -they- will spend Toughs is his sister copy at Alwrcrombie s, —Adv. Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Witting, Koch and Vaudcvule Program ', P Gity Trio Thiee Male Harmony ' Singing and Mausical Playing, Brass: Instruments. This 1s One of the Bmmonhamm ting car ;Sunday either today or tomorrow. They, we the same: evonlns‘. «Fpriond John’ ( Lubm) A strong dr,nma featuring Arflmr «The Two Brathe . 4] Know You Are mhm Lov- | e : - ««The College Chaperon’® (Sclig) A college comedy chuck full of. fun. - $ W QOoming,; Next Monday and den.y Papers.” Postmaster J. E. Dade of Blackduck wag. in the city today on his. way baek: from -St. Paul, where he went as a delegate to attend the Grand All patrern hats are being sold at a great discount at the Henrionnet brother T. A. Carlson for a couple of |18 Carl Winger, William Winger, J. Island Lake were in Bemidji yester- sale is now going on in full blast at Wall and daughters Vera and Vivian, of West Hope, North Dakota, are the;guests of Judge and Mrs. M. A. Clark: Mrs. E. A. Barker went to-Minneapolis Tuesday where he will attend the banquet given by the Minnesota Na- was a member at the’time of the your “Trail of the Lone- some Pine,” 10 cents a copy.—Adv. Gully who have spent the past week Miss Jorstad received medical treatment at one of the Bem- iz Levening sales at.7:30 p. m. at O: C. P. lodge at Blackduck will be con- represented at’this meeting, and a Wanted, Carpenter work, odd jobs of any kind. Address O. H. Nichols, favorable as was expected those ab- Goods are tertainly:selling at your own price at 0. C. Rood ' and Co.’s Mrs. A. P. Henrionnet arrived home. At Owatonna she attended the recital given by her evening: While in thecities she selected a new The fact that ‘the Northern Na- tional Bank:is-owned and: controlled |, by well known local business men is one of many reagons you ghould have and Mrs. George Burroughs of Lanchester, Ia., are in- the'vity today and are on their way to Hazel Wood farm in: town of summer asthe guests of-Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Foster. Mrs.. James. Foster is Mr: ‘Foster’s mother and Mrs. Bur- * “Down in Dear Old New.Orleans,” “Take me to that Swanee Shore,” l«you Great Big Blue :Eyed Baby,” “I’ll Get You’, and 100.more late and popular pieces at only 10 cents ‘3 . Freeburg of Blackduck, who went to Minneapolis in the Wit- will ‘arrive home down to attend the K. P. convention and made the tripiin ‘one:day. They foft here early in the.morning and arrived in Minneapolia at 8 oclock m 'Flolnvlnk opening them and her han Ware.nof released until the riext morning: wh 2 blacksmith broke- the lock. Bad Colds, his | permanent - cure, " a Dleasant = to take, "a that containg nothing Chamberlain’s. Cough Remedy meets all these requirements. It = Acts of 3 on nature’s ‘plan, - relieves is a healthy condition. - .This remedy: has a world wide sale and use, and can always be depended upon.” by Barker’s Drug Store.—Adv. VARIED LENGTH OF INFANCY: Perlod of Helpiessness Seems to Coln, clde with the Size of the Animal. lon it formerly was, This seems. to be in- evitable, owing to the higher state of| society. In.a_general way the more; highly developed an animal- is longer an apprenticeship it will have to serve before.it is ready to cut loose he shift for tself. of| Two interesting books haye recently; been brought out, which treat of thi matter in infancy as.applied to the va- rious animals. - The period of infancy :| varies very widely. Mice have prace tically no infancy, but at six weeks a ‘| parents. of more mice. Human beings are helpless at birth -and for years after. The.horée 18 | thiree yeuss; while -th quires seven or eight times that length | K.|of time to develop fully. . Thus: the elephant is . just entering wupon ' life | when_the horse 18 ready to dfe of old age. E bel In' a general way, to m. ferred upon ten candidates tonight. Bemidji and other: lodges will finder, the. length of infancy tends to run parallel with the relative bulk of the animal—the larger animals re. quiring more time to grow.and devel-; op thelr full vigor. In some cases low- er ‘animals attain maturity only by a fon of a crab when once hardened cannot 28| grow gnd. the crab is. forced.to molt or as| cast’off his outgrown sbell from tim to time and grow & new oue a little larger.” ‘A crab when growing this-new ‘shell is known. as. soft shell or “soft” crab, and at.such times:he is.: of: course,ies- pecially subject attack from.: his enemies, as the shell, which-1s the nat- ural armor, is wanting. there are exhibits of as many:as four ars ne- one just d size larger than- the last. Most: Prompt’ and Effectual Cure for moul enemies. When you, haye:a.bad cold you want a remedy that-will-not only give rellef; but’ éffect- ‘a ‘prompt “and remedy - that remedy, injurious. | the. lungs, alds expectoration,: opens the} secretions and restores the ‘system to: Sold* the| from parental and other restraints and; ays the Path- | " successlon of .curious atafeq. The shell | In museums -teen castoff shells.of a single.crab,-be. ginning with a very tiny one and each bout him: & body" of tnrlu “young men; pledged to obey him and highly In order to give them courage for their villainous work, they were taught: Four little ships—battered, storm driven, their rigging coated with ice —struggled along a narrow, tortucus strait.fringed by snow-clad moun- taing. Up-and down on the deck of the' foremost vessel, ~the Trinidad, Spain, ‘there to managed to persuade king that:his plan_was possibie. 1519, the little fleet of August 10, to make 'use’ of hasthish, the' drug. called': chang .in' Indli. derived - from: the leayes of the ‘common hemp plant, ‘which s/ terribly: intoxtcating. In Ara-: bic'they were called haschischin from, _ These. men_followed. their instruc- tions 1n-every: country, as.is shown by the fact that all the Elropean nations have. the word in:their languages, strode a thin, haggard man, peering ahead through the mist ;with anxious eyes.. Beside him walked another man, bearded, talking in short, sharp sentences. Louder and louder grew. ‘his words; fiercer and fiercer ‘his ges- tures; but the haggard man said nothing, only shaking his: head stub- - | bornly. gassinen. in . German, French, aesino in Spanish, assassino 4n_Portuguese. and . Italian, etc. But; they flourished especially in the east, ‘Wwhere. they..also used the terror of their name for blackmailing, purposes. The Knight Templars in the time of Richard Coenr_de Lion, fought. them openly,- the leaders of the. crusades.| having suffered seriously- from. their designs, and also spréad the knowl- edge of them and of their leader, :{ known to them as the:*“Old Man of the i i{ Mountains,” It i8 often remarked that the infancy; of human beings today is.longer than; throughout. christendom. The Mongols massacred the. Persian vranch of the. order in: 1256, and the Sultan’ Beliars tried. to extirpate the Syrian branch in 1270, Neither attack | Was - thoroughly " succepsful, however, and the order is believed to exist to this day in Persia, and.to be not with- out influence in spme.}ggsurn. affairs. Not even Persia had more lorrible assassinations.than had France at the time.of the revolutmn,‘ and there was awful rightfulness.- in%.the: words in ‘which the . tyrant. Robesplerre - ad- dressed the national convention, when he. was refused permigsion to.make.a defense ‘againiat the fate to which he had consigned sa many, and which' elldent of As- > §EYd [He depose , “for: the last tinie I'ask lierty m “speak,’ but & murderer who spills-life blood: for my other than a purely:peM¥onal Why:the Spoor: | The Rew: Fred.T. Paton, famous Dr: Paton, who. !ollow(ng up his father's' work ‘a8 missfonary-to the New .- Hebridew, * posgesses - & spoon ‘whigch: i manner-in which:the sgoon-eame into his; possesaian is-intergsting. He was ambushed one day-! tribe of sav- a.eq, -who-became exeBQdinsly friendly. n-learning: thet-he was unarmed. The chiqt. even; told him that he iwas .out to. shoot - W men; but-as he; could &at them .when he-wanted they; could wait while hé entertained his.guest: . Before: heleft that tribe‘they made him:a pudding:which'was:thirtéen.feet round.: It wes-.an :inch _thick ‘at:the some fowls, whioh were wvend with at Shellfish haye their ‘skeletons out-| je4ve5 and baked on“top l.nd below side them in the form of their Ihel]l waste of material is involved in & sys- tem which requires them to manufgc- ture a new skq\qmn every. new moon to to hhn, when a1 tive. told hlm 50 thing - which". spoon hul e T ) BT on the conditiona that are to surround tumml ft'to ‘which -are. born: the foes..- Thus in a measure each ed:to its surroundings; e Evorybody Knew. Light- Brigade,” themduring infancy: ‘Youns ‘rabbits, At a social gathering a little girt l know: ‘recited: “The: Charge.-of the | Reaching. the::line “Into the jaws of death, into: the ] Disorders of cousip to the rabbit, is_born. with ita eyes open and covered with' fur;, and avolded by the this because it is born above ground, | where. {t 18 exposed both.to ‘the. In: | CUres: lave heem. efected by -these clemency of the:weather and.predatory tablets. > Som“hyBofl 'a"Drug:Storel, uit ‘—'M'u s ; 2 : [Tablets. . = Man; mouth .of——," she pansed.and. look- [}~ Dr.| ing around added: uncle-to. ‘o Iast night.” Sat ngtlmo Made lu Mrs. Henrlorinet has just return- ad from the cities where she has pur- chased s new line ot plnm “ratine “Where papa, told Ona day my mother ‘eut, hurm asgassin - in | - This was:Magellan; the first man with ‘the courage to attempt to sail entirely round the world; pushingon, as He said, “‘even if' we had to eat the leather of the rigging.” That was: the brave commander’s last day of doubt, however, for on the mnext day, the twenty-eighth of November,-1520, his little fleet rounded the Cabo Deseado, the ““desired” western end of - the Strait of Magellan, and sailed = into the peaceful ocean named “Pacific” by Magellan himself. Ferdinand Magellan had an excit- ing life. He'was born _in Portugal about 1480. . He was only twenty- four when he made his first voyage {0 India, where'he was wounded in bat- tle. A few years later he fought bravely against the Malays at Malac- ca ,and received as a reward.for his many: services the rank of captain: He continued to “distinguish himself on many subsequent voyages ‘and campaings. _ But he was not content with” the honors he had won. - Like Columbus 08t of the adventurers of that ilme, Magellan dreamed always of a il or!er route to the East by sailing {westward. Hig idea was that at the extreme: south of thera was. a strait. E About this time he-got into trouble with Manuel, king of Portugal, and renounced his nationality, going to South = America five ships started fon their. hazard-| ous voyage, which ‘only one of them ever completed. - To equip this expe- dition cost over $250,000. After many months of struggles and-disappointments’a western: pas- discovered-—now | - er his-services'to Charles V. Finally: with the @id of several- powerful friends at court he " the Spanish 'iili(!ffiiq;;p *. - PROFESSIONAL CARDS * EXRKERE KRR KRk Ruth Wightman ‘Teacher of Piano Residence Studio 1002 Bemidji Ave. . Phone 168 LAWYERS SRAEAM'M. TORRANCE “LAWYER. Sl e iles Block JOHN F, GIBBONS ATTORNEY AT LAW First National Baok - Building - BEMIDJI, MINN. 0. H. FISK sage was at last ATTORNEY AT LAW called ‘the Strait of Magellan. But| s second ficor O'Leary-Howser Blay even when the little fleet-had:man- aged to get:through this into “the cdlm waters: of: the Pacific, habited. and a little -while Philippines. - From these islands Mageljan- never came away. Fighting on the side ‘of one of the native chiefs against a hos- & tile tribe, e was killed ‘on April-27, 1521, Th8 Victoria managed to mund the Cape of Good Hope and reach” Spain otice-more. But only ‘thirty-one men returned to Seville in-the first vessel that ever made the' tour of the earth. Every day a different human inter- est story will appear in the Ploneer. You can get a beautiful intaglio re- production of ‘the above picture, with five others, equally attractive, Tx9% inches in size, with this week’s “Men- tor” a well known he subject of the pictures and stories of . the week. Readers of the-Ploneer and “The Men- tor” will know art, literature, his- tory, science, and’'travel, and own ex-|_ quisite’ pictures. On sale at Aber- “Price ten cents. for,”” In “The authority cover crombie’s book store. Breotlie Freely! Clear Stuffed-up, Inflamed Nose and Head and Stops. Catarrhal Discharge. Cures _ Dull Headache, Try “Ely’s Cream Balm.” - . Get'a small bottle anyway, Just to try, it—Apply a little in the nostrils and instantly your clogged mose and stopped-up; air passages of the head will open;: you will- breathe freely; dullress: and: hem’laehg din.npem‘. =y AT ONGE! GLOGGED NOSTRILS OPEN, NEAD GOLOS AND CATARRH VANISH rant balm dissolves by the’ heat ot the nostrils; penetratcs and heals the inflamed, swollen membrane which ‘head and. throat; clears the air passages;- stopa nasty ) discharges and a feeling of cleansing, | soothing relief comes immediately. Don’t lay awake tonight struggling | T 7 t0 8 B m._Sun for breath, with head stuffed; nos- trils. closed, hawking = and blowing. Catarrh ‘or' a cold, with it’s running nose, foul mucous dropping imto the throat, and raw dryness is distressing lines the mnose, but truly needless. Put your Adv. : Accompany the Great Explorer from ‘°f View Norway to the South Pole and back. faith—just once—in “Ely’s. Cream Balm” end your cold or, catarrh will, surely disappear.— 9R. ROWLAND GILMORE PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON . Office—Miles Block 9R. E: A. SHANNON; M- D. -PHYSICIAN' AND 'SURGEON Office in Mayo 'Bh) k. es. 'Phone 351 Fhone Hi OR. C. R. SANBORN PHYSICIAN ‘AND SURGEON Office—Mtles ' Block JR. A. E. HENDERSON PHYSICIAN. AND SURGEON Over Pirst National bank, Bemidsl, Minn. Ofice: *Phone-36, Residence 'Phone 73 9R/.E: H: SMITH PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON ~ Office in Winter Block DR. E. H. MARCUM PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office in Mayo Block Rea Phone 18 idence Phone 311 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 Natlonal Bank Bldg. DE. G. M. PALMER DENTIST Evening Work by Appointment Only ‘Tel. 230 NEW PUBLIC LIBRARY b 3 1 to & Onauyuuvtui;ndu mm’; ly, 3 to 6 p. m. W. K. DENISON _ VETERINARIAN Phone 164 Pogue’s Livery \ TOM- SMART DRAY AND TRANSFER l’lace Your Business With Us We Specialize In Real” Estate, Rentals, etc., Fire, Life, Heslth aad ‘Accident Insurance;” Bonds and General Brokersge "Offics Above Palace Moat Market - m.hl.An. Phone 602 rurmmu; DIRECTOR M E. lBERTSON IJNDIR’MKER and: COUNTY CORONER Telephone 668 > v BT e ,l HYSICIANS, SUR(.D()I\&}A‘ troubles: were - only beginning. - For ninety-éight ~days’ they -erossed’ this sea, only twicé- sighting ‘land—two bare little islands; sterile and unin- Sewdust ‘and rats’ became | coveted food. But'at ldst, in’ March, 1521, the Ladrones were' discovered, afterward the

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