Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, May 22, 1913, Page 2

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! ! = yOu see a IlWhenever “elephone, qmn snessennRNRegd P. J. WOLF. Agent Phone 63 BEMIDJI Try a Want Ad 1-2 Cent a Word---Cash MINN. ANOTHER CHANCE This week the demand for Cyclopedias by our readers, both in town and So large that we were surprised. And everybody that 8ot their volumes were delighted and thoroughly pleased. The Pioneer is going to do it again. -eountry, was very large. terms for Next Frlday and Saturday Every reader who presents a coupon at the office of The Pioneer will get a set of Everybody’s Cyclopedia (usual sell price $12 a set), at 1= for the Complete Set TR R R XK KKK KKK KK | * HORNET. ; ¥ HHHHEHHKKKKK KK KK K¥ Mrs. ‘Hugo Miller,, sister of Andy Ellis, is cooking at the Green camp. Mr. Kittleson of Blackduck, is a guest at the home of John Rasmusson. "R. F. Seymour, who has been em- ployed as sawyer at the Shaw Bros. sawmill, returned to his. home at Swatara on Friday morning. Eva Murray is ill with measles. Among those who went to Black- duck on Saturday were: J. E. and George Bogart, C. Peterson and Henry Plummer. KEKKK KKK KKK KKKKKK K ¥ * MALCOLM, * EREEK KKK KKK KK KKK John Stanley’s baby is very sick. Arthur Billet was a caller at the Benson hame last week. ? John Stangl is here frm South Da- kota points to spend a few weeks. Dr. Adkins had business in Spruce Grove township Saturday . Frank Hendrickson went to Grygla after a load of supplies for the Drain- age company Saturday. The roads are nearly* impassible owing to so much rain. The dredges will be welcome here. KKK KKK KKK KK KKK K * TURTLE LAKE. x KKK K KKK KKK KKK KKK John Carlson transacted business in Bemidji Monday. John Walters was. a ’l‘urtle aner visitor Tuesday. Correspondence Items of Interest Gathered by The Pioneer's Stlfi X of Correspondents in th Neighbnr Towns X _Puposky where he has engaged w _|Sunday. Grand . Forks; and has purchased - a|§ The offer is.repeated on the same Carl swedberg left Thursday !or' peel cedar ‘for Mr. Clark, Mrs. Arthur Sadler and mn, Myron, ot Buena Vista, visited Sunday 'with her-daughter, Mrs: George Butler. | Wm. Sheridan called. ‘on . his 0ld 1 friends.in -Bemidji Monday. . The Misses Inez and Alice Butler |% were Turtle River callers Tuesday. Mr. Mahar has finished laying a|f track from the Spur to Puposky, to|} be used in hauling-logs from lake Julia. \ § Mrs. J. W. Speelman opened her hotel in Buena Vista for this season Mr. Wm. Mahar has sold his prop- _: erty in Buena Vista to parties in farm in Durand, where he will move |} soon. Their many friends regret;to}3 seée them leave but wish them success | 8 in their new home: 1 Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Dickenson en- tertained Mr. and Mrs. Bartlet, Mr.|§ and. Mrs. J. Nelson and daughter and Miss Dilly last Sunday Mrs. Crandal called at the home of Mrs. Aggie Sadler Saturday. KX KKK KKKKF X * PINEWOOD * KRR KKK RKK KKK KKKR S. 0. Refstal transacted business in | Bemidji Thursday. 5. Mlss Marie Burke of Bemldn, spent tiie' week-end with the Sthols. ¥ Miss Ella Parker of Bemidji who has spent the past ten days with the Sthol’s returned home Monday. The ball game Sunday between theI 3 nei 25 N iin Buzzle and Pinewood teams was wit- for Wilton. Who graduates surely expects some- thing from you, and she has a right to ex- pect something. What willl lee : is your first ‘thought no doubt—Now don’t .let that worry you. - That’s just what We are in. business. for--- by We---we mean Whose Jewelry Store is the home of Graduation Gifts. More than that, it is the store that suggests what to give. When you’re at a loss of what to do and what to give, leave it to Barker, he’ll know. Telephone or Call in Person BARKER'S DRUG & JEWELRY STORE Bemidji, Minnesota : ssed by a large crowd, score, 15 to , in- favor of Pinewood. Miss Ella Klingbeil spent Thursday Bemidji. Miss Martha Klingbeil left Monday | “Learn One Thing Every Day” ~ { No. 4 WESTMINSTER ABBEY. - ] i -Copyright, 1913, by The Assoclated Newspaper School, Inc. Five Octavo Volumes Greatly reduced Illustration of the Five Volume Set SEE THE cvcl..OPEolA GOUPON ON/ ANOTHER PACE. EVERYB[IDY’S $12 Offered by The Pioneer Our Guarantee ; s s choiiedm tl:fig irely sa&usfm GLOPEDIA "A large crowd gathered Saturday at Fram’s hall to celebrate the 17th of May. A good program was render- ed in the afternoon. The dance given Saturday evening was well attended. Music ‘was .furnished by the - Buzzle B orchestra. A good time is reported. Mr: and Mrs. Peach, and children of Minneapolis arrived here Tuesday. They spent a few days at the Miller hotel before leaving for their farm a few miles north of Pinewood. Miss Johanna Jamtvold who is at- tending school in Bemidji, spent Sat- urday and Sunday with her parents at Aure. Mrs. Dewey of Bemidji returned home Monday after spending the past week . .with her mother, Mrs. Beckon. Ed Larson of Wilton attended. the dance at Fram Hall Saturday also as- sisted the Buzzle nine in the ball game Sunday. Among those who came from Bem- idji to attend the celebration at Fram Hall were John Olson, Conrad Nelson and Helga Olson. Miss Maidie Sthol entertained a few friends at dinner Sunday evening in' hotior 'of thé Misses' Parker ~and Burke of Bemidji. “ Henry Bailey shipped a carload of box wood to Bemidji Tuesday. Health a Factor in Success ' The:largest factor contributing to a man’s ' Success ' is’ undoubtedly health. It has’ been ‘observed that a {man is seldom sick when his bpwels are regular—he is never well when they are constipated. For constipa- tion you will find nothing: quite so good as Chamberlain’s Tablets. They There is ‘an old legend about the founding 'of 'Westminster Abbey that places it as early as the beginning of the seventh century. When the in- habitants of Kent had been convert- ed by Saint Augustine, an influential and noble-born Roman, Mellitus, was consecrated .first bishop of London, iand he persuaded the king of the East Saxons to built a church to Saint Peter at Thorneye, the spot where the abbey now stands. to be consecrated on a Sunday early in 616. One Saturday night a fisherman ferried a strsnger, who' proved to be Saint Peter himself, told the fisher- mén 6 inform Mellitus that the'con- sec‘ration was complete, rewarded his pilot with a.miraculous-draft of; sal- mon; whlch ‘were' to be his lot iand that ‘his. posterity ever atterwhrd. In\returh; he- w}s to refrain from Sun- day Tishing and give a tlthe of what he caught!to -the church. '.l'he tion is i erestingv becat se it gives Westminster an. equal age with: Saint Paul’s; and becauw for many years the manh cla.lmed n portion of all fishcaught inithe Thames. this may be, the first ¢ sainted by the pope, beloved by the commons, a favorite with the monks, Edward the Confessor’s reign was looked" back upon as a golden age. Henry III. pulled down most of this church and built it anew. He chose his own burial place there, and it cam~ 1o be looked upon as a privilege to be buried near the Confessor. Ed- ward I. and his queen were buried their, as were lon'g lines of kings and queens. and members of the royal families. Chaucer was given burial This church was|there, and Spenser, and Ben John- son, and great men innumerable. Edward I., on his invasion of Scot- land, seized at Scone the sacred stone upon which Jacob pillowed his head. This he brought to Westminster, a chair was_ built about it, and each monarch of England from that reign to this has sat in it at his coronation. The Abbey begun by Henry III. was carried on by Edward 1., Richard IL, Henry V., and was completed by Henry VII. The western towers, towers, however, were not finished until 1740, so that the building of this beautiful edifice occupied five centuries. One of the, finest exam- ples ‘'of - early English and Gothic architecture, its interior is a hallow- ed_spot. On every hand are the monuments of putenta'tes and princes, statésmen, soldiers, the great men of English ‘letters, ‘It is' the Valhalla, the sacred burial place, of the nation, the spot where Fame puts a ladt touch upon the brow of him whose achievements have lent more luster to’thé honorof the nation. Every day'a different human inter- est story will appear in the Pioneer. You can get a beautiful intaglio' re- productien of the above picture, with five others;, equally. attractive, 7x9% inches in size, with this week’s “Men- tor.”. - In “'rlu Mentor” a well known a.uthorlty eoverl the subject of the pictures and ‘stories of - the week. ‘Readers of- tho Ploneer.and “The Men- tor” will how “art, ‘literature, his- tory, science, and travel, and OWn ex- . plctures. cromhlo boek own. Price ten cents. On_sale ‘at Aber-

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