Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, May 16, 1913, Page 5

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_ “MANILLA DANCE” (As played by America’s Premier Trombone Soloist and Bnnd Muter ARTHUR PRYOR AND HIS CONCERT BAND = C. FISCHER'S EDITION | EMIL ASHTON Mo’{ersto. e e s =y ot ] [ : ] Copyright by CARL FISCHER. New York City . ; B 6 cents in stamps for cu-zont msue ot Musscal Observes ~ Ask your music dealer for “INA GARDEN OF MELODY~ ® Piano solo or send 12 cents in stamps to Carl Fischer. Cooper Sq, N. Y Used by Permission MURRAY MUSIC CO.. New York Ne.27d - ey i3 o 1 e STATE OF e FRECKLES Don’t Hide Them With a Veil; Re- move Them With The Othine Prescription. This prescription for the removal of freckles was written by a promin- ent physician and is usually so suc- cessful in removing freckles an_d giv- ing a clear, beautiful complexion that it is sold by your druggist under an absolute guarantee to refund the money if it fails. Don’t hide your freckles under a veil; get an ounce of othine and re- move them. Even the first few ap- plications should show a wonderful improvement, some of the lighter freckles vanishing entirely. Be sure to ask the druggist for the double strength othine; it is this that is sold on the money-back guar- antee.—Adv. THE SPALDING EUROPEAN PLAN Duluth's Largest and Best Hotel DULUTH MINNESOTA More than §100,000.00 recently expended on improvements. 250 rooms, 125 private # { baths, 60 sample rooms. Everfi modern elight fal restaurants and buffet, Flemish m, Palm Room. Men's Grill, Oolonial Buffet; Magnificent lobby and public rooms; Baliroom, bsnquet rooms and private éining_rooms: Sun parior and observa- ry. Located in heart of business se¢- 01 bt overlooking the harbor and Lake Snoexjor. Convenient to everything, One of the Braat Hefels of the Nerthwast convenience: Luxurlous and, NOTICE . X! APPLICATION TFOR g LIQUOR LICENSE. INNESOTA, COUNTY OF Beltrami, City of Bemidji. 3 M NOTICE'IS HEREBY term commencing on June 1st, 1913 and terminating on June ‘1st,: 1914, by the following persons, and’ at the following p]ac(:is, sis s{atedl,tln said applications, re- spectively, to-wit: ¥ E. K. ANDERSON at and in the front room ground floor of that certain two-story brick building lo- cated on lot 11, block 17 original town- \ on Monda; 19%. at Byo’elouk P. M., o ITNESS m; Bemidji this 'Iti day of May A. D. 1913 GEO. STEIN, S City Clerk. 59-16. SRy TRY A WANT AD World’s Greatest Whirlpool at June- tion of Two Great South Amer ican Rivers. In the Wide World Mr. W. O. Symon gives am interesting ac- count of his experience in South America. In regard to the junction of the Madre de Dios and Inambari river Mr. Symon says: Just before the junction of the lat- ter river divides into two arms, with an island some two miles long in between. The right arm, which is usually the safer for navigation, was at the time of our arrival, impassable, owing to the recent and - excessive drought that had formed thé forma- tion of periloas rapids. We had, in i consequence, to take the wide left arm, down which the main volume.of the river was flowing. The reader ‘can imagine the enor- mous force of water that was being _shot into the Madre de Dios when he realizes that the Inambari at its left arm projection was 300 yards wide, perhaps 30 feet in depth, and flowing at six knots an hour. This great mass of water met the Madre de Dios, itself 400 yards wide here, at a right angle. The current of the Inambari being faster than the Madre de Dios, the former river cut its way through the latter, right across to the farther bank. There the = Inambari was thrown back, and surged around in a huge circle 200 yards in diame- ter to join up: again with the water flowing to the’bank: . The whirlpool thus formed was probably one of the largest in the' world. (I have pur posely used past tense in this descrip- tion, as ‘the course of the: Inambari is ‘constantly ‘changing' {ts . 'mouth.) The circles of #eething water curled Inward and downward, screw fashion, totheir center, which appeared as a great hole, at'least'six/feet below the level of the outer rim. NEWEST IDEA IN EDUCATION Cinematograph Films Are to Be Put to Use in the Higher German Schools. - According to official information re- cently received by the United States bureau of education, the use of mov- Ing pictures in education has had & significant impetus in German govern- ment circles. - The Prussian ministry of education is now considering the teasibility of employing - cinemato- graph films in some of the higher edus cational institutions, as applicable to /certain’ ‘coursea’ of instruction, and a number of film manufacturers have ‘peen’ given an ‘opportunity to ‘show the authorities what films they have MIGHTY SWIRL OF WATERS| that are _ that veils are also a friend to homel} 0868, A well known philanthropist has re- cently donated two full equipped mov- ing picture machines to the schools of Berlin, one to be used in the Continua- tion Institute for Higher Teachers and the other in the high schools of Great- er Berlin. Moving picture films are now available in Germany for anato- mical, biological and bacteriological courses, and it is belleved there that an enormous field for them will be opened up when educators fully realize heir value. Monarchs Well, Protected. Though the days have gone by when the monarch was protected during the hours of slumber by an attendant sleeping in a bed drawn across the door of his chamber, King George is by no means left unprotected during the night. Not only is the outside of the palace guarded by soldiers and detectives, but' several night watch- men pace up and down the corridors through the hours of darkness. They are shod in thick felt slippers, so as not to wake the réyal sleeper, and one of them is always near the king's room till his majesty 1s called by his valet in the morning. 2 Every door and window in the place is frequently examined and -it would be impossible for any intruder to get in without his presence being discov- ered in a few minutes. Thus the king is as well protected as the czar of Rus- | sia, who has a guard of armed. Cos- gacks outside his room, or the king of Spain, who 1s watched by a squad of specially picked soldiers, who keep the keys of all the doors during the night. 5 : Cat Saved the Canary. A lady had & tame bird which she was in the habit of letting out of its cage eyery. day. was picking crumbs of bread carpet; her pet cat, who always! showed. great kindn selzed it on' a 'suddem, and j with it in*her:mouth u 3 lady was much alarmed‘for the fate of her favorite, but on turning about instantly . discerned the cause. The door had been left open, and a strange cat had just come into the room! Af- ter turning it out, her own cat came down from:her place of safety, and, dropped the bird: without having done it the smallest injury. 3 Good Work for the Vel “Vells are'a foe to beauty,” ssys s London physician. But ‘i mnu;fl your opinion do not overiook the': One morning ;n it for the bird,) | oricun’ college crews for the am examining the papers sent in by boys of ten or eleven for a Scripture examr ination sends. a few of the choicest efforts: (B One day David- saw teti’ leppards, and they were calling out unclean. One of them turned back and started to come towards him and he was clean. . A Pharisee and a publiccon wen{ up into a temple to pray. One liked it, the other did not, so one stoped and the other didn’t. This teaches us to be kind and not unkind. A. giant named Goliath, the man of the Phyistins, was going to fight Israinel. ~ A ‘young boy mame divid herd him. He said to himself, “I'll have a go at him.” He went to the Israelits’ camp. -He said, “I'll have a go at him.” B % The Pharisees are frods and donot keep the law. The Publicans are the tax corlectors. They do not take what they haft too. They made there selves more money. :That learns us not to thief. Expensive Boat Race. . A writer in Bailey’s Magazine of England has been figuring on the cost of the annual boat race between Ox- ford: and Cambridge, and says the ex- pense .to each crew may be approxi. mately. estimated at '$3,000 for each. He then says that as the contest rare- ly takes more than ‘twenty: minutes, the cost: works out-at about $300 per minute, ori about $8' every ‘time the oars dip into the water. The cost of the boats is placed. at $250, and the oars at $70, the rest of the money go- ‘Ing for preparation from October un- til the day of the race.. The writer. seems to think that $3,000 g deal of money to spend on, crew (observes: the New -York Eve:| ning: Post). - It would: be: interesting| to know what he would think of ‘many times® that ‘amourt spent upon the nuat races. : Z Future Clothes: to ‘/Paper clothes wera’ Japanese troops during the war Russia,” and ' they were found: to ‘Paderewski’s head of hair by twelve.” - Little phone users in the world. The daily average of talks over the telephones last year was over 26,000,000. There are 70,000 places, towns, cities and hamlets from which telephone mes- sages may be sent. This is 5,000 more than the number of our post- offices, 10,000° more than the number of our railroad - ‘stations and three times the number of telegraph' offices in the country. There are nearly 7,500,000 telephone stations in the Bell system—an increase last year. of over 800,000. These are the facts re- ported by thé American Telegraph & Telephone company in ' reference to the Bell business. It earned last year nearly $43,000,000. . Will it ‘be be- lieved that the majority of its shares are owned by women and less than seven per cent. by brokers?—Leslie’s, ‘Cushlon Stuffed With Love-Locks Among- her personal friends, Miss Loie Fuller, the famous dancer, num- bers Camille Flammarion, the great French ‘astronomer. “I shall never forget,” -she’ says, in “Fifteen Years of a Dancer’s. Life,” the impression that Camille Flammarion made upon me the first time the Countess Wol- 8ka took me to. his house, Rue Cassini. nel, edged with red lace. He had a wveritable forest of hair, which formed, as it were, a bonnet around his head. This was so remarkable that I could | ; not repress an exclamation. - Mme. Flammarion then told me that she frequently had to cut some of the locks, for her hnsband’s hair grew ‘with such vigor that was tormented by it. Then she showed me a cushion on a divan, and remarked: - ‘There is where I put his hair after cutting it.’ _+“To_give an accurate idea of Ca- mille Flammarion’s style of wearing his hair,” you - have only ‘to multiply Practical Boy. =~ L ¢ Harold, aged five years, was visiting his aunt. Whileat dinner the grown-ups were talking and, paylng little ‘or no attention to: little Harold. sért, and to attr : others’. atten- tion he said: “Please, A_int Mame, li: A that pie an.ornament?” He wore a lounge jacket of white flan- |. Bewurendyandwufln;!qrhl_l’m, adated; to educational. pur-. Latest About David. Hello Nation. # A London teacher who has been Hello! We are the greatest tele- 30' 000 volcEs ! And Many are the Voices of Bemidji People. Thirty thousand voices—What & grand chorus. And that’s the number of American men and women who are publicly praising Doan’s Kidney Pills for relief from backache, kidney and bladder ills; They say it to friends. They tell it in the home papers. Be- midji people are in this chorus. Here's a Bemidji case. W. H. Garrison, barber, 604 Third street, Bemidji, Minn., says: ¢I had pains across my loins and my back ‘was often so lame that it hurt me to stoop or lift. The kidney secretions were unnatural. I got Doan’s Kidney Pills at Barker’s Drug Store. and they helped me so much that I can recom- ‘mend them to anyone suffering in a similar way.” ; For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster-Milburn Co., ‘Buffalo, New York, sole agents for the United States. £ Remember the name—Doan’s—and take no other. : i yan [Z6 Wifhaut a doubt the toughest and most durable finish made. ‘BEST FOR. FLOORS AND ALL WOODWORK Easily applied, dries over night GIVEN HARDWARE GO0 YOUR MONEY BAGK IF YOU WANT IT 1316318 Misnesata Ave. -BSEMIDVI, MINK. Phons 67 R e acn—_—

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