Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, May 16, 1913, Page 8

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i’fliil*l*ifl%#f RAILROAD TIME CARDS ~ * KEEXRXKRRK KKK XS | MPLS, RED LAKE & MAN. 1 North. Bound Leavea. 8 South Bound Arrives. 800 RAILEOAD 162 East Bound .Leaves.... x £ x 1388 187 West Bound Leaves GREAT NORTHE 88 West Bound Leaves 34 it Bound Leaves 35 t ] d Leaves 36 E::t ound Leaves 105 North Bound Arrives. Freight South Le-vu at. Freight North Leaves at E5EESE KX KK XXX KKK KD % PROFESSIONAL CARDS KRR KKK KKK KKK Ruth Wightman Teacher of Piano Residence Studic 1002 Bemidji Ave. Phone 168 > LAWYERS GRAHAM M. TORRANCE LAWYER Telephone 6560 Miles Block po 88" BEEEREEE JOHN F. GIBBONS ATTORNEY AT LAW First National Bank Building BEMIDJI, ‘MINN. D. H. FISK ATTORNEY AT LAW Office second floor O’Leary-Bowser Bldp PHYSICIANS, SURGEONS DR. ROWLAND GILMORE PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office—Miles Block DR. E. A. SHANNON, M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office in Mayo Block ‘Phone 396 Res. 'Phone 381 DR. C. B. SANBORN PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office—Miles Block DR. A. E. HENDERSON PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Over First National bank, Bemidji, Minn Office ‘Phone 86, Residence 'Phone 72 DR. E. H. SMITH PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office in Winter Block DR. E. H. MARCUM PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office in Mayo Block Phone 18 Residence Phone 811 EINER W. JOHNSON PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office over Security Bank DENTISTS | OR. D. L. STANTON DENTIST Office in Winter Block DR. J. T. TUOMY DENTIST First Natlonal Bank Bldg. Tel. 230 DR. G. M. PALMER DENTIST Miles Block Evening Work by Appolntment Only NEW PUBLIC LIBRARY Open daily, except Sunday, 1 to 6 p m., 7 to 9 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 Res. 'Phone 58. 818 America Ave Office Phone 13. Place Your Business With Us We Specislize In Real Estate, Rentals, etc., Fire, Life; Health and Accident Insurance, Bonds and General Brokerage “the service. Office Above Palace Meat Mirket 312 Mina. Ave. Phone 602 Roberts. Moore and Titus, Props.. FUNERAL DIRECTOR | - M. E. IBERTSON | » UNDERTAKER and ‘ COUNTY CORONER e " ant Upas of creation, can bnt per- ‘Mighty in his stolen power, yet he A SIS S (Cons cials BIBLE HAS LONG HISTORY " That Used in thé Supreme Court Prob- ably the Oldest Connected With the Government. It is a tiny little book, only five and one-half inches long and three and one-half inches wide. It is bound in bright red Morocco leather, with the word “Bible” printed in diminutive gold letters on the back. But one does not see that red Morocco cover unless he removes the little black leather slip which protects it. Long, long ago the little red Bible began to show wear, and then the black leather slip was made to pro- tect it—so long ago, in fact, that 15 of those covers, made to protect the ven- erated little volume, were worn out in It is without daubt one of the’ oldest Bibles, if not the very oldest Bible, connected with the gov~ ernment, and is certainly the mosy historical. It is the book upon which since 1800 every chief justice—with th single ‘exception of Chief Justicg Chase—and every member of the Suy preme court has taken the oath of allegiance when accepting his appoint, ment to our highest tribunal. Morq than that, every attorney who hag practiced before the Supreme court since that date—1800—has pledged his allegiance over the little volume. All, with one exception also, and that ex- ception was Daniel Webster. It is told even yet of the Supreme court of that day th&t Mr. Webster’s fame as an orator had so preceded him that on the occasion when he came to argue his first case before the court the clerk, Mr. Caldwell, in his eager- ness to hear the great speaker, forgot to administer the oath.—Christian Herald. HISTORIC SPOT IS UNMARKED Location of Nation’s First White House, in Philadelphia, Known, but That Is All Excepting for a few months, Wash- Ington lived in Philadelphia during his entire administrations as presi- dent of the United States, and John |- Adams did likewise during his term. There was no White House, but a brick house, and, as quite generally known, it stood on the south side of Market street between = Fifth and Sixth streets. The house itself long since disappeared, and it seems strange that Philadelphia has never taken the trouble to make in a suit- i able way the spot where the nation’s executive mansion stood when occcu- pied by the Father of His Country. When Washington came to. Phila-| delphia to attend the continental con- [ gress before taking command of the army, he lived in the swellest board- ing house in the city. It was kept by. Mrs. Triste, at the southwest corner of Fifth and Market streets. But while more tashionable, the house has been far less famous than the hore modest one, two blogks farther west, .at the southwest corner of Seventh and Market streets. It was in the lat- ter that Jefferson boarded, and on the = second floor, cornmer room, in which he wrote. the Declaration of In- dependence, " S ‘According to John Adams, who could have quallned as chief gosslp at any ‘quilting ~party, Philadelphia ' was then away ‘ahead of Boston ‘and New York as a fashionable 'center. The great patriot told his impressions in those voluminous letters to: his wife. He was quite awed by the lo “cal splendor.—Philadelphia: Ledger. s Truth ‘and El'ro. Verfly there i8 nothing so true that is a creature and a subject; not a maker of abstract wrong, but a spoiler of concrete right. - The fiend hath not a royal crown; he is but a prowk ing robber, suffered for some myste- rious end to haunt the king's highway. And the keen sword he beareth once was a simple plowshare. His pano- ply of error is' but a distortion of the truth. = The sickle that once reaped righteousness, beaten from ‘its useful surve, with ax, and spike, and. bar, headeth the marauder’s halibert. Seek not further, O man, to solve the dark riddle of sin; suffice it that thine own bad heart is to thee thine origin of evil—Martin Farquar Tupper. Little Lesson in Efficiency. A woman who has been studying the science of household efficiency com- ments that the obvious things that every woman ought to know about con- gerving time and energy in the doing of the daily household tasks are the ones that seem to make no impression upon the average household. stance, ‘she says, always have. the draining pan when washing dishes | upon the left of ‘the dishpan. You naturally. wash the dishes with -the right and hold them in the left, “Then set. them down on the left ‘without Sounds sensible doesn’t it? State Dinner in chln:. If- you think that you are unable t¢ stand a dinner which lasts for three o1 four ‘hours ' because of - the frightfu boredom of it . all—keep away from China. For there at a fashionable din ner you might be called, upon to fe main at the table anywhere from 20 tc 30 hours. . For they do have dinner there that sometimes reach tha length. ; Unique Symbol on Gravestone. The gravestone between Kennebun- isport and Cape Porpoise of one Tris- tram Tapley exhibits an uncommon to_the stone in a silver case 1is ' in- closed an old-fashioned daguerreotype of the young man, portected from the elements by a cover. One with such a name ought certainly to have been a lover -of books. Currant. Growing a Greek Monopoly. Many. efforts ‘have been made to grow so-called Greek currants in other countries, but always without success, and these very small, very sweet and seedless grapes continue to be a monopoly of certain districts’ in Greece, where they constitute the chief agricultural industry. The yield in an average year is about 160,000 -tons, - Literary. Evanlnfi. The, man was one. of. the. sort that thinks it is & grand thing to educate his. financee by rewns poetry. aloud to her. The girl was one of the sort—wfll 3 L That s, baying de cided ‘that sfie was for the man, she taste; nay, evem tried to keep up an interest-in it. So, well, the other eve ning he Was reading Tennyson to’her. He read this line: “Of love that never fimd his .Il!l‘.ll- 1y clos—"" When the girl lnterrnm H “Isn’t Tennyson' just grand? You| can always learn ‘something ‘from, him. ' Now, for the first time I under stand why. Cupid.is llvm represent- the damps of error have n warped it [ - ‘Verlly, thi unomgmn;:em: vert the good, but may not create the evil He destroyeth, but cannot build; for he is not an antagonistic' deity. — . R e I e For in- |: using energy to reach across the right | and yet most sensible idea. Affixed’ Going Down. “This high cost of living problem is getting to be something terrible,” ob- served Mrs. Nutley. “Everything is getting higher,” “Oh, I don’t know,” replied her husband, soothingly. “There’s your opinion of me, for in- stance, and my opinion of you, and our mutual opinion of our neighbors, and the neighbors’ opinion of both of us.” Historic Relic in English Church. The church of the-little village of Tken, Suffolk, England, possesses what is probably the rarest alms dish to be found in England. Inlaid in the cen- ter of the woodwork is a piece of the bell metal which was saved from the great fire at York Minster, when the famous bell there was enflrsly de stroyed some years ago. *The Power behind the Dough” ~—in the bowl INQUIRE OF ST. PAUL HAIR FADING, TURNING IT’S GRANDMOTHER'S _RECIPE FOR DANDRUFF AND RESTOR- ING COLOR TO HAIR. Almost everyone knows that Sage Tea and Sulphur, properly compound- ed, brings back the natural color and lustre to the hair when faded, gtreak- ed or gray; also cures dandruff, itch- ing scalp and stops falling hair. Years ago the only way to get this mixture was to make it at home, which is mussy and troublesome. Nowadays skilled chemists do this better than ourselves. By asking at any drug store for the ready-to-use product—called “Wyeths’ Sage and Sulphur Hair Remedy”—you will get a large bottle for about fifty cents. 25-30 1. P, with pump, it with other cars of that price. glance. ' erosity of its equipment, etc. But the greater part of it—that the Krit famous as a car of super-excellent. serv!ce pretended. to ““ in_with his literary : and durability—is hidden from the ‘eye : 1t 18 in the materials used; in the mpo!mnlcal de sign; it results from the. productlon of every ‘essen- thl part by the Krit's own factory organization. Instead of buying the motor parts: ,or the motor. transmissi wmpleu. -the on; the Krit Company makes them. Not only can they put Dbetter matu dnto them. and the saving goes into the - ‘the body and the equlpmnt., Qunck Money Making Opportumty For Good Live Agents onéhnutthllterrltory Sonso!thebuttommlflllm Wehannmonllbsnlpropodflonm Hne of cars qmmnyeiuuptoszaoutnpm i nmtmundlmmm“mhomnmrwnhhm " but they save money; » car, the npholsterhlc, The size of the car; its beauty and style' the geri- . We are now placing: mneiu t Some druggists make their own but Model “E” Five Passenger Touring Car—Completely Equivned—Full Nickel Trimmings—$900.00 Equipment includes three 911 lamps, two gas lgmps, Prestolite Gas Tank, mohair top with side curtains and top cover, windshield, horn, de- mountable rims with sparerim, tool kit with jack and tire repah‘ outfit Model “K-R” Roadster—Same equipment, also trunk and rear tire Liolders.. . Model “E-D” Delivery Car, enclosed body—completely equinied Model “M-C-C” Six Cylinder, 40 H. P. Touring car—Gompletely equipped The K-R-I-T is an Entirely New , and Bigger $900 Automobile Value ‘Simply because the price of the Krit happens to be $900, don’t make the mistake of clusltying The value made possible—the character and individuality put into the car by the K-R-I-T manu- facturing methods—set it apart from and above the average $900 production. Part of this vllue will be apparent to you at first an accessory. which has-made axles, ete,, the This space reserved by the Bemidji Townsite & Improvement Go, For Price of Lots, Terms, Etc., APPLY A LITTLE SAGE TEA AND SULPHUR And et us say right here that the equipment is | complete—the car:as you buy, it is ready for an hour’s run or a week’s tour without the addition of An inspection of the Krit will reveal much to | you; and a demonstration of its silent and gener- - ous-power and its easy riding and comfort on the: _road will more than satisfy you thnt you will be’ " right in choosing the Krit. Remember that we, the Northweaterfi Distrib i tors, have sold automobiles since 1900, have han- dled a larger number of automobiles than ‘any two distributors in this territory urefuil. e ove m-ybemslnsht.yetyouwfll lnvea.fnilu.re{ and make it light, digestible, wholesome. G&')(o% baking v:zhdou! gooddl;:hnlls powder u—&‘:td ?{, the iy g b gbalititon Lat Take no chmcuoffclun-nuxc and have mdlu all Groce: muludonbl “mrytmn. T. C. BAILEY Bemidji, or write BEMIDJI TOWNSITE & IMPROVETENT CO. 520 Capital Bank Suilding MINNESOTA GRAY, FALLING? it’s usually too stick, so 1insist upon getting “Wyeth’s” which can be de- perided on to restore matural color and beauty to the hair and is the best remedy for dandruff, dry, feverish, itchy scalp and to stop falling hair. * Folks like “Wjeth’s Sage and Sul- phur” because no) one can positively tell that you darkened your hair, as it does it so naturally and evenly, says a well kiown downtown druggist. You dampen a sponge or soft brush and draw it -through your hair,-tak- ing one small strand at a time. This requires but. a few moments, by morning the gray hair disappears and after another application or two is restored to its matural color and 100%s - even more beautiful and glossy than ever.—Adv. - gut togetuer, and that we couldn’t afford’to back up’every ¢laim made f the K-R-I-T unless we had thoroughly satisfied our= * serves, affer a most searching lnveotintlon, that lt was the best car in its class, :

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