Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, June 9, 1913, Page 2

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PIONEER FUB. CO. i ”mn ny somt | DUTCH MA! TERPIECES ‘g‘.;.,in' i o a mnceml ‘at u;a at-office ot Bemidil atter under Act *E or March B 58, = Published every afternoon except Suidsy No attention pald to anonymous con- tributions. Writer's name . must - be known to the editor, but not necessar- 1ly_for_publication. Communications for the Weekly Pion- eer should reach this office not later than Tuesday of each week to insure publica- tion in the current issue. Subscription Rates. One month by carrler One year, by carrier . There months, posta; Six months, postage pald One year, postage paid . The Weekly Ploneer. Eight pages, containing a summary of the news of the week. Published every Thursday and sent postage pald to any address for $1.50 in advance. rHIS PAPER REPRESENTED FCRR FOREIGN ADVERTISING BY TH GENERAL OFFICES NEW YORK AND CHICAGO BRANCHES IN ALL THE PRINCIPAL CITIES “Taxing Your Income” What would you think of an in- come tax equal to the amount of money you waste each year by careless buying? The sum would startle many of us who are not considered extrav- agant in the common acceptance of the word. And yet we go along in the even tenor of our way, happy that we have enough to live on and a little to spare, perhaps. But, aside from extravagances as such, are you taxng your in- come more than you should in your every-day purchasing of the necassaries of life? That is the important question. 1t is so easy for us Americans to indulge in careless buying that it Dbehooves all of us to pay attention to what we buy and where we buy it. We must make our dollars work for us 100 per cent. or we are taxing our income constantly. The Pioneer and other good newspapers will help you in your buying if you will but study the interesting and instructive adver- tising presented daily. ALWAYS BOUND TO DISAGREE Acvording to Gossips, Cy Kilgore Had Bump of Combativenecss in a Remarkable Degreo. “It seems to me,” opined Mr, Caleh Peaslee, “that Cy Kilgore gets more fisagreeable the older he grows. He won’t agree with any pusson on airth —not if he can find out tust what the pther man thinks. Ain’t that so, Ly- nndsr?" Lysander Winchope, thus ap- pellsd o, stroked his “ellum”-cane re- flectiveiy, and eyed his quicker-spedk: Ing friend with placid, ox-like eyes. “He scurcely ever thinks sameé as me about things,” he admitted, at Jength, “Scurcely ever!” snorted Mr. Peas: lee, with impatience. “Did he ever agree with you about one single nam- able thing if he had a chance to find out ahead what you thought? Did he?” “M-wal,” replied Mr. Winchope, thoughtfuily, “answerin’ that question direct, I dunno’s he ever did.” “No, sir,” afirmed Mr. Peaslee, warmly, “and he wouldn’'t! I “get kinder out of patlence when I‘get ta talkin’ about Cy Kilgore. He's just been into my house, and he took ‘casion to show some of his cross grain there. “My wife spoke about Mel Deer ing’s last sickness while Cy was there,” Mr. Peaslee went on, and she spoke very feelin’ about what a great sufferer Mel was in his last days—you know how women tallk and sympa: thize—and Cy Kilgore sot there and listened to her talk, and all the time he was lettin’ that bias, three-cornered temper of hisn curdle up on him. At last, when she got done talkin’, he got up and started for the door. He dassent set in the chair and say it—he knew what kind of a temper my wife's got—but when he got to the door he turned round, sour as a crabapple, and he says: ' “‘Folks made an awful touse over Mel = Deering’s sickness, says he, ‘Huh! He wa'n’t ‘more'n ‘half as sick as folks thought he was.” ) “Mel Deering was sick encugh ta {ile,” concluded Mr. Peaslee, “and 1 flon't Dbelieve even Cy Kilgore ever paw any one much sicker than that!" —Youth's Companion. SHOWS POSSIBILITY OF HASH “Cook Book of Left-Overs” Outlines Twentleth Century Variety of This Common Dish, Twentleth century hash, like ‘mosi modern inventions, is a’long step from the past. Indeed, as it i8 described in the “Cook Book of -Left-Overs,” it doesn’t sound like hash at all, but like one of those famous dishes _ thal Frenoh chefs invent when thelr thritty souls rebel at throwing away left overs. See if it doesn’t: Have baked six medium-sized pote toes. With a spoon tarefully remove the potato, leaving rest of skin un: broken. Season the ‘potato with one tablespoonful” of ‘butter, ‘one“tdble epoontul of ‘cream or 'milk, one-table spoonful of ‘salt-and & little pepper, stirring lightly. with a fork, but do not mash the potato.. Add one cup of any kind of well-seasoned chopped beef that has been moistened with & gravy, stock or Worcestershire saiice. Fill the' skins with this ‘mixture,” let: ting it tise a little above the top. ‘Pui & plece ot butter on each and-heat iz oven. Grated cheese may be used i stead of meat, 8till ‘a’'Chance. 2 “What’s the matter?” “She has re- jected me again. -Slhe says this is final.” “Did she say how final?” in< quired the older and more experlenooi man—Washington Herald. No- 1. ‘When Rembrandt painted the most famous of all his works, the picture commonly known as “The Night Watch,” which hangs in the Royal Museum at Ansterdam, it caused him: a vast amount of trouble. There are upwards of a score of portraits in.the big canvas, and each man contributed {|the same amount to pay for it. Nat- ||urally each wanted to be quite ‘as prominent as his fellows, and those who are shown in the background made a tremendous row because the artist dared to group his figures with the thought of art composition, rather than of their- importance. . Really it is not a night scene at all. Sir Joshiia Reynolds is responsible for this misstatement, being deceived by Rembrandt’s originality in -handling light and shade. It shows the gather- ing of the eivie guard of Amsterdam at-the sound of the drum calling them to practice. 7 Rembrandt was one of the few masters of painting who had an op- portunity to be extravagant. He spent lavishly, and gave away money with equal indifference. He paid outrag- eous prices for pictures, when he should have paid his debts. Like most geniuses of art, he died poor and neglected. His real name was Rembrandt Harmanzoon van Rijn, and he was born at Leyden in 1607, the son of a well-to-do miller. He was his own teacher. In his early days in Leyden, Rembrandt painted ‘and etched the people about him, seeking character and the pic- turesque, whether he found it in dis- tinguished folk or, in beggars and cripples. He constantly used his mo- ther as a model. He painted between fifty and sixty portraits of himself; not from vanity, but to master every form of” expression, to learn how to represent the human face from with- in. His methods were origfiinal during his whole career. Sometimes he would take the handle of the brush and drag it over the fresh paint to give the touch he wanted to the hear or the beard. Sometimes he would scoop up thick layers of paint with the palette knife and stick them on the canvas; Rembrandt developed slowly; but at twenty-five he painted the wonder; ful “Lesson in Anatomy,” in which is shown the anatomist Tulp and his seven associates, life size. He was .then recognized as the foremost portrait painter of Amster- dam. - When he was twenty-seven Rem- brandt married a rich and beautiful Best Bark for Tanning Leather. Quebracho bark, one of the chief ex. ports of the Argentine, will tan leather at least three times as fast ag the bark of the oak or the hemlock, and in less“than ten years fortunes liave ‘been- made by “speculating in quebracho’-lands. Nearly & ' million tons of the wood or the dry extract are sent to-this country-and -Europe | annually. The growth of the tree ja of the slowest, and it is. estimated that a thousand years is required w reach maturity. g CRYING FOR HELP Lots “of It in" Bemidji, 'But'Daily Growing Less. The kidneys often cry for help. Not another organ in the whole body more delicately constructed; Not one’ more ‘inmportant to'health. The kidneys are the filters of the blood. When they fail the blood becomes foul and poisonous. There can be no health where'there is’poisoned blood. : Backache is one of the frequent in- dications of kidney trouble. It is often the Kkidneys’' cry ~ for help: “Heed it. Read” what - Doan’s ‘Kidney Pills have done for overworked kidneys. Read what Doan’s have done for Bemidji people. Mrs. L. Kane, 615 Fourth St., Be- midji, Minn., says: “Doan’s Kidney Pills have been satisfactory to me. I have no reason to change my opinion of them, which I expressed some years ago. For years I had kidney trouble and rheumatic pains. My health was poor and my system was filled with uric acid. ~ Doan’s Kidney For salé by all dealers. Price-50 cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, New York, sole agents for the United States. < Remember the nune-—-Doan s—and #|take moother. “Learn One Thing Every Day” “THE NIGHT WATCH,” Copyright, 1913,:by The ABsod! Pills have benefited me wnoderfully.” | - BY REMBRANM ted Newspaper School, Inc. fair-haired Friesian girl named Sas- kia. = For eight years his wife was the center of Rembrandt’s life and art, and her face appears on imany of his canvases. - These were happy years for Rembrandt. He entertained lavishly; but in spite of many dis- tractions he worked with great ener- gy. No fewer than 700 of his paint- ings and etchings have been catalog- ued. After the death of his. wife evil days came. When he was forty-nine years old everything that Rembrandt owned was sold to meet his debts. He was turned out of his house, without friends, with little more than the clothes on his back. . He whom the world had called the “King of Shad- ows” en‘tered into the gloom of pov- erty. But still he worked until he died at the age of sixty-two, alone and neglected. “The Gilder,” painted in 1640, was sold in Paris in 1802 for $1,000. In 1888 it was sold to M. H. Havemeyer of New York for $80,000.. P. A. B. Widener paid $500,000 for “The Mill,” because he believed it to be a Rembrandt, although some authori- ties doubt its authenticity. Recently H. C. Frick of New York paid $250,- 000 for Rembrandt’s “The Merchant.” Every day a different human inter- est story will appear in the Pioneer. You can get a beautiful intaglio re- production of the above picture, with five others, equally attractivey 7x9% inches insize, with this week’s “Men- tor.” - In “The Mentor” a well known authority covers the subject of the pictures and stories of the week. Readers of the Pioneer and “The Men- tor” will' know art, literature, his- tory, science, and travel, and own ex- quisite picturés. On sale at Aber- crombie’s book store. Price ten cents. GOOD- GROCERIES AND FRESH EGGS 117 Minnesota Ave. *| poems; GO TO BATCHELDER’S GENERAL NERCHANDISE I.. P. BATCHELDER Taught In the Lo . .ehooll of fl-rmlny. ‘The Glrlunl fi! flonl for thelr Freiichi §nd Eoglish*1at ¢onifMon. con- versation without .diffioulty... The-se- ‘cret of this mster,y."wh(ch 18 %0 un- | .. An American delegate to an educa- tional conference abroad last summer {:found: & ‘elass'of girle’nine years'old busy with two French urbl, and us- ing them' in ‘all variéties ‘of form in translating from-Gérnian’into French, In a class ten years old they were using all- the regular verbs and the common -parts of way, analyzing, constricting ‘and giv- ing the rules-in-French. At eleven years. they were using the’ irregular verbs, me zing” French. ‘writing ' ‘¢ompositions in French, and-all the-conversation -of the classroom was in French.. From this" they-pass to the higher French literature, thhiking andtalking: wholly in French. A similar course.is:pur sued in English. ‘Baking . Helps ‘Eeornts Regulate the Heat ‘of “ Your Oven DyMrs. Janet McRenzie Hill, Editor of the Boslon-Cooking School’ Magazine ‘There is just one way to make your cakes rise high and kecp an even surface. ‘Have ‘your oven moderate at first, until the.cakeis fully rizen; .then increase the heat, so as to brown. it -over guickly. Tixtreme heat stiffens the dough. If you stiffen the outside-of the cake before the rising is complete, you stop the rising process. Then the leavening gas; forming inside, will bulge up- the center, where the dough is still soft, and spoil the shape of the cake. 38 Norr—Biscuits or - other: pastries made from stiff dough, that are cut into shapes for the oven, bake in a hot oven. This is because the cut surfaces of the dough do mot sear over, but -rather leave the pores open, allowing the leavening gas to escape and the heat to penetrate readily. Small ovens cool quickly; therefore they should be made several degrees hottér than a larger oven, and the less the door is opened the better. Do not attempt to, bake bread -and pastry together. Bread re- quires prolonged, moderate baking— pastry the reverse. Have a strong underheat for baking. powder preparations, especially pastry. Thesc are only a few of the many baking helps found in the K C Cook’s Book— a copy of which may be secured by sending the colored certificate taken from a 25-centican of K C Baking: Pow- der to the JAQUES MFg. Co., Chicago. AND BUTTER pect "Phone 18 ‘Lots on easy terms. SUPERIOR LOTS “The New Steel Center” y No interest, no taxes. vestment in Superior Lots will make ‘you money. Information--Bradley ‘Brink Co. (Inc.) 909 Tower Ave;, Superior, wu INQUIRE ‘OF 5620 cnplnl 8T. PAUL Bomidji Townsite-& lmumvam il 6o, : For Price of Lots, Terms, Etc., Bemidji, or write : BErDJI' TOWNSITE ‘& IMPROVEHENT Co ‘T.-C. -BAILEY MIXED wiTH SULPHUR MAKES HAIR ‘SOFT, ‘LUSTROUSAND CURES DANDRUFF. ‘rhe use of Sage and Sulphur for re- storing faded, gray haif to its natural color dates back- to grandmother’s time. “She kept her hair beautifully darkened, glossy. and abundant, wii a brew of Sage Tea ‘and- Sulphu | Whenever her hair fell out or took on that dull, faded or streaked ‘appear- sle mixture was applied home i3 mussy and out-of-date. ists do/this better than:ourselves. By sking at any drug ‘store ‘for tie ready - to:-u: | ‘product - alled “Wyeth’s Sage and Sulphur Hafr NIlBflIlY CAN TELL THAT YOU DARKENED | _'YOUR FADED, GRAY: HAIR- WITH: SAGE TEA Nowadays skilled chem-o; fcr abmxt fiMy cents. Some. dr\lgghu {make their own, ‘which isiusually toof sticky, ~'eo0 " ihsist npo. “getting “Wyeth’s” ch-+can-be depended upon tor«reumre natural' color ‘and splendid for parlament; is stoppitg atwlodalihotel. “The other-day,” sald Sir Donald, “] witnessed nny ‘scene in & re- freshment room of the Canadian Pa. cific station in Montreal, 'An. English. ‘man was “Bitting-at ‘one’ of ‘the*large,| tables, and next to-him a man who seemed to belong to the hmnblar wall of lite. “‘Please. pass_me those. potatoes,’ said the man to the ‘elegant gentle. man. The latter islowly focussed hie eyeglass on the speaker and haughtily ndrvidu al tlookmg ackage D addmonal smokes in- | de-—20 for 15 cents. - M‘ asked, ‘Did you think I was one of the|.. & waiters? - I expected: to see our: poor friend shrivel up, but he turned and beckoned to a walter: “ ‘George, come ‘here, please.’ “‘What is it, sir?” asked George. “‘I want to apologize to you. You see, I mistook this party for you, but 1 hope you won’t be offended at it. And now pass me those potatoes.” “That’s what you call a boomerang, |:as eh, ‘what?” laughed Sir Donald.—New York Press. Definition of a Gentleman. A kindly heart, a quiet voice, -polite words and manners, a hand open ‘to help, attention to little things for the comfort of others, freedom from ‘an- ger, boasting, and patronizing; toward che strong, courage; toward the weak, chivalry; toward all men, fairness. ‘Pew ‘men ever see one in a mirror.—~ Lite, chance after this big book bargai There’ll never. be another ‘such 5 : Printer’scDevil’s:;s Prayer. i O Lord, I pray;thee, -make me a -good priuter. . Make.me a8 Wise as.the Dproof reader, who carries a dictionary in each of his vest pockets, and as honest as Bill, the pressman, who bor rowed a quad last spring to use as a feed guide and returned it yesterday, good ‘as new; make me to be as faithful as Jerry, the stone-man, who comes .down to.the shop every Sunday and . cleans, up_the pi .he has made during the week; as industrious as Old Tom, ‘the comp., who has not missed a day at his frame since he ‘came to' work'‘for ‘the firm -twenty years. ago; and lastly, O Lord, make me, as:patient as the poor boss, Whay has put up with my- deviltry for three ‘mortal:years, and. paid me, good, hard icash for the privilege!—Roscoe = H. ‘Haynes, in the National Printer-Jour nalist. withdrawn. - It'is'the opportunity of a'litetime, which-all should grasp. ‘this big book bargain soon. ‘THE PIONEER'S BARGAIN Tell the boys _about it—that ev- ery known fect needed for daily use is contained in’ this : five-volume set the true road to sccess. l=2v Cent a chd-asCash IR Adgain last Saturday the sets went like “hot cakes.” just about completed the original order and. The Pioneer will be forced to withdraw ‘Readers are-urged to present.the coupon this week. Clip the Cyclopedia-coupon.from another page of this-is- sue, present at this office as explained therein, and get This $12.00 -Set -of -Modern -Reference -Books with beautiful colored plates, full page and double page engravings, text illustrations, educational cham. etc. Regularly selling at’$12; néxt Friday and | Saturday, complete Greatly Reduced Illustration ‘of the Five Volume. Set RYBODY'S $12.00 CYCLOPEDIA " Forithe boys and girls‘at school-=for: the “grown-ups” too—for every man, woman and child’ that thinks; talks and reads, ' = be m every hmne school and place of busmess, for - daily use But the publishers have: Thisset should itively: 2 fund tl{:m nmns“:d‘dnm W > finds’ reader~ Wi e LS

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