Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, June 24, 1913, Page 4

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Don’t Envy the Cool Man You can be cool too Remember those hot day last summer? You won't forget how scorching hot the sun felt. You hated to venture outside. @ Do you remember that fellow who blew past, one of the hottest days? His col- lar was unwilted. He had a cool, satisfied look that made you feel cool to look at him, You found out afterwards that he al- ways wears WAITE CAT underwear. You can be cool all summer if you wear one of these new, light weight WHITE CAT Union Suits that we have just re- ceived from the manufacturer. They all have the genuine Kenosha Klosed-Krotch for oomfort. Let us show you these cool Union Suits that do not chafe, irritate, nor give you that clammy feeling. Priced at $1.00 to $2.50. GILL BROS. BEMIDJI, MINN. WILL CONSIDER NEW “GAS PROPOSITION (Continued from firat page). Fellowship in Advertis¢ments Thidr: We organize local com- panies and join with them in the management of the plant. Fourth: We take the franchise and conduct the gas business our- selves. One of our latest patents s dated May 13, 1913; No. 1,061,861, if you wish to investigate along that line. I hope within the next few days to either designate a man to see you or see you myself. I have been very busy here but in a few days I hope to be able to devote my entire atten- tion to the western office at St. Paul. I will notify you when I go . to take charge but if any immediate action is necessary, write me at 418 ‘West St., Wilkinsburg, Pa. Hoping to see you soon and that we may be able to take up the pro- position with your city, I remain, Very truly yours, H. E. ANDERSON. N. B. Understand that we have patents prior to the one enclosed also have others pending but the en- closed gives you the best idea of our process. IMMEDIATE ACTION ON CURRENCY BILL vertise. “That is their business,” themselves." marily for their own profit. vertising than that. ed a spirit - of fiiendliness stop to think. alent of a -dollar. haggling, haranguing, looked again at worth about 10 cents. Contrast such with shopping here today. their fair dealings. Merchants' and' manufacturers have certain articles they wish to - gell. In order to sell them they ad- you say; “they are doing it to bsneflt True, they are advertising pri— But -~ For the Best Results. there is more to present-day ad- —_— It has creat- 2 confidence and Many gardens in England owe their | between’ the seller .and the buyer that has become so much a part of our daily lives that we hardly realize it unless we Have you ever made a purchase in' the Orient? If so, you remem- bre how you have entered a shop, and after poking through confused heaps of articles, you have found something that struck your fancy. You asked the price and were told it was worth, perhaps, the equiv- Then ensued threats, imprecations, until finally at the end of half an hour you triumph- antly emerged from the shop, the articlg in your hand and 50 cents gone from your pocket. When you your purchase your good sense told you it was an experience You will appreciate as never before the value of The Pioneer’s advertise- ments, which lead you to firms known for their honest goods and GRASS WALKS AND STEPS ADD-T0 ANY CITY OR PARK Cloplfig Groynd Terraces N.n.ulry beauty in no small measure to the vel- vety grass steps and walks that link together one feature of the garden with another. Grass walks are pleasant to walk upon and are pleasing to the eye. (Continued from first page). bowed his farewell he was warmly greeted. The applause started on the democratic side, but was joined in im- partially by the republicians. Two minutes after he departed, the senate bad filed out and the house had ad-|yesterday for adnoids here. journed until today. atteak of rheumatism. GO TO BATCHELDER’S GOOD GROCERIES AND FRESH EGGS AND BUTTER BATCHELDER I. P. 117 Minnesota Ave. Lots on easy terms. vestment in Superior Lots will make you money. Information--Bradley Brink Co. (Ine.) 909 Tower Ave., Superior, Wis. K. K. ROE, Agent, Bemidji, Minn. SUPERIOR LOTS “The New Steel Center” ‘tonsils. a bad attack of stomach trouble. GENERAL MERCHANDISE the hospital Phone 180 ious operation Saturday. covering. Louis Daniels is confined in pneumonia. M. & 1. yards last week. No interest, no taxes. In- ment. eral days confinement. time. KEXHEHK KKK KK KK URGED BY WILsoN % ST. ANTHONY IHJSI‘IT‘A;L.‘Hl EEKERK KKK KR KKK KKK Mrs. T. J. Martin is confined here with a bad attack of heart trouble. W. P Kittle is suffering from a bad Five operations were performed The fol- lowing underwent the operations: Miss Josephine Parker, adnoids and|ways a pleasant feature, but such a tonsils, Baby Fullerton, adnoids, Baby |walk must be laid with care. Unlike Gilmore, adnoids, Thomas Burke ad-|gravel walks, which should have a con- noids, Margaret Burke, adnoids and|cave surface, grass walks and steps Jessie Vaughn is recovering from injuries received in an accident in the John McManus left the hospital Monday after - several days confine- Mrs. H. L. Spencer is recovering from a serious operation and will be|made. electricity and acetylene gas are able to leave the hospital in a short|being carefully tested on many farms Glori occasion. to go with the suit. The girl too, for her not forgotten that old suits just the thing to celebrate in. Fourth, so have provided flags, buntings, and ribbons for the occas- Hurrah for the ous Fourth Celebrate as only a patriot should, but be correctly dressed for the We are showing a very fine assortment of boys Norfolk Nifty things in blouses and skirts The boy can be dressed complete at this store, we have ready-to-wear dresses, waists, hose and slippers in a vast assortment of styles and prices. Decorations we have as well as young require decorations for the * GRASS STEPS IN ENGLAND. mony with the surroundings, whether it be trees, shrubs or herbaceous flow- ers. - A flower fringed grass walk is al- must be level, and this means perfect drainage—a most important item, for Alfred Persile is confined here With i¢ ‘bpdly drained a walk of this kind would be a source of inconvenience aft- John Long who was seriously in-|er heavy rains. On sloping ground ter- jured in an accident at Bena last|races are necessary. They require the week, is recovering but it will be sev- |same care that one would devote to a eral weeks before he can again leave well kept lawn, but no more, once the effect is secured. There are few steps of this kind in Mrs. M. Nichols underwent a ser-|,monoq put they abound in English She 18 re-|gardens. There 18 no reason why they would not remain green throughout the |the entire year in some sections of this hospital with a serious attack of |country, and they can be easily substi- tuted for the unsightly stone steps or ragged dirt steps-which are common. LIGHTING YARDS ADDS TO THE BEAUTY OF SUBURBS Mrs. H. F. Burke of Oklee will leave | llluminatihg’ Conveniences For the the hospital in a few days after sev- Home Should Be Picturesque. The use of kerosene, gasoline, home- and suburban estates, out of reach of public service corporations, for supply- ing lights. The common use of gaso- line generators, which have now reach- ed a high state of perfectlon, has brought them into prominence for out- door lighting, as well as providing bril- Hant lights for the house and for cook- ing purposes. ,Gasoline lamps for the entrance gate’ posts, for lanterns set permanently on stable walls and for use within the stables and dairy barns may be enjoyed at little cost when one of these practical. gasoline gas gen- erators has ‘been established for illu- minating the home and the grounds. ‘Without this' plant for general use the plainest types of gasoline lamps, filled and lighted the same as coal ofl lamps, may serve as the source of dependa- ble lights for yards and stables. Many practical and enterprising farmers-who are blessed with streams on the home grounds that can be har- nessed for the development of power are experimenting with homemade electricity with very satisfactory re- sults. By damming up the stream for satisfactory water power an inexpen- sive electrical plant may be thorough- ly practical wherever there is a stream of water of 'sufficlent size and fall to turn a water wheel. One of the most interesting fedtures In establishing this form of home illumination is the fact that the turbine used to furnish Hght ‘will also! provide power to run various sorts of farm. machinery, in- cluding the feed mills, the wood saws, corn shellers, ete. The subject of providing inexpensive and picturesqye- lanterns for - yards and stables, however, need -not depend upon - the fiostallation of extensive plants, or evén:the simplest of appara- tus for homemade gas and electricity. The cheapest form of steady burning kerosene lamp, et within a lantern’ of good type, and with a good reflector, Is within the’feach of every farm awn- er and renter. A pleturesque setting will cost- no more than a lantern position carelessly ‘selected. An ugly post set close beside the driveway, at a dark turn in the garden leading to carriage sheds and stables, will doubtless give just as sat- Isfactory results’in the mere form of Muminating as ‘the one set within a clump of flowering shrubs, or ever- green - hedges, -or- dwarf spruces, but there will be no comparison fn the fecorative valus Dumhoen Remedy. . - Every hmlly ‘without excepuon should keep this preparation at hand during the hof mer months, Ie Inrrhoeu Remedy 18 ‘worth mny times its/cost when need- ed and {s almost certain to be needed 'hetore the -umfiqr ig'over. It has no. superlor’ for th{fimrpoaes for which lru intended. Buy it new,. Forsale Moreover they'‘enter into perfect har-’ Chambenlain’s * Colic, Cholera and| THE TRUE BOOSTER. It you like the old town best ‘Tell 'em so. If you'd have her lead the rest Help her grow. ‘When t\wnx anything to-do Let the fellows count on you. - . - . You'll feel bully when it's through, Don't you know! If you want to make a hit Get a name. 1If the other fellow’s it ‘Who's to blame? Spend your money in the town ‘Where you pull the sheckles down. Give the man who kicks a frown. That's the game! It you're used to giving knocks Change your. style. ’l‘hrnw bougquets instead of rocks For awhile. Let the other fellow roast. Shun him as you would a ghost. Meet his hammer with a boast And a smile. ‘When a stranger from afar Comes along Tell him who and What We-are. Make it strong. Needn't flatter; never bluff. ‘Tell the truth, for that's enough. Join the boosters—they're the stuff! ‘We belong. —Cincinnat! Commercial Tribune. CITY MANAGER PLAN NOW GROWING IN FAVOR 8Sumter, 8. C., Delighted With Success. Other Towns Favor It. Hvery large corporation employs an expert in Its various departments. If a banker needs an expert on credits, it spares no expense in employing such & man, no matter where he may live; if a cotton mill needs a superintendent it employs the best; if a newspaper needs an editor, if a railroad needs an engineer or if a factory needs a man- ager, it gets the best man possible without asking where he resides. Sumter, 8. C., a city of 10,000 people, employed an expert to manage its city affairs, look after the parks, finances, streets, sewers, police department, fire department and all other municipal businesses. Sumter did not ask this city manager where he lived; he was not elected by the. voters and hence the office was tiken out of municipal politics. The mayor and councilmen employed the best man they could find WANTED—Competent girl for gen- WANTED—Floor manager for bow- WANTED—Girl for general house- Find aab‘uyer for the Second-Hand things which you no longer need—Through a “For Sale” Ad. OASH WITH 00PY oent per word per issue Regular charge rate one cent per word per irs<rtion. No sd ‘taken for less than 15 cents. Phone 31 Answer by Oorrespondence All Blind Ads using a number, box or initial for address. Do not ask this office who the advertisar is. We cannot tell you. Don’t waste time, but write to the address printed in the ad. Phone HELP WANTED. 160 feet of garden hose. 778. eral housework. Mrs. R. H. Schu- FOR REN1 maker, 608 Bemidji avenue. == FOR RENT—Three furnished rooms with use of bath. 703 Minnesota avenue. FOR RENT—Furnished roows. 1011 Dewey. Phone 649. LOST AND FOUND ery dance two days, July 4 and 5. Enquire 209 Minnesota avenue. work., Mrs. Vandersluis, corner of 10th and Bemidji avenue: to him and expected results just as the manager of a factory must get results. The outcome was far more satisfactory and turned over the affairs of the town | WANTED—Competent girl for gen-| FOUND—Bunch of keys onyroad to Jester farm. Owner can have same by proving property and paying for eral housework. Mrs. W. H. Don- ovan, 811 Bemidji avenue. than even the most sanguine had hop- ed for. Expenses and leaks were re- duced and efficiency promoted. Now Whittier, Cal.,, and Hickory, N. C., are preparing to .vote on the ques- WANTED—GIrl for housework. 910 WANTED—Experience this ad. Beltrami avenue. Phone 570. MISCELLANEOUI sales ladies| -~ TS ADVERTISERS—- Yhe great state ot at Troppman’s store. tion of adopting the city manager plan. Morganton, N. C., adopted it soon after the success of the Sumter Chambermaid wanted at the Brink- portunities for business to classi- fied advertisers. The recognized man hotel. advertising medium in the Fargo Okla., there is an amendment on foot which would discard the commission plan of government and substitute a council of nine members with a city manager. The city manager plan is also favored in Douglas, Ariz. These are small communities, it Is true, but it shows the trend of sentl- ment in the direction of Introducing experts into municipal government. YEAR BOOK SHOWS GREAT DAMAGE CAUSED BY FLIES Government Publication Arouses Pub- lic to Destroy Breeding Places. Flies of every species and the annoy- ances they cause man and beast as well as their capacities for spreading disease are described in detail in the year book of the department of agri- culture. Horseflies, gadfiles and earflies, the botfly, the hornfly, the housefly and the stable fly have been made the sub- plan became known. In ElI Reno, | WANTED—Bell boys, FOR SALE-—160 acres good farm FOR SALE: Markham| North® Dakota offers unlimited op- hotel. Daily. and Sunday Courler-News, the only seven-day paper in the state and the paper which carriea s the largest amount of classified advertising. The Courier-News covers North Dakota like a blank- et; reaching all parts of tne state tbe day of.publication; -it 18 the paper.to use In order to get re: sulls; rates cne cent per word first Insertion, one-half cent per word succeeding 1insertions; fifty cents per line per month. Address the, Courler-News, Fargo, N. D. BOUGHT AND SOLD—Second hand 'ypewriter rivbons for furniture. Odd Fellow’s building, every make of typewriter on the| aéross from postoffice. phone 128. market at 50 cents and 76 cents| &7\ g e o " | WANTED—Work nursing or house- each. Every ribbon sold for 70 cleaning. Hattie Mosley, colored, cents guaranteed. Phome orders| . 54 g1a Fifth street or phone promptly filled. Mail orders given 548. the same careful attention as when = you appear in person. Phone 3).| WANTED TO BUY—Boy’s good sec- The Bemidji Pioneer Office Supply ond hand bicycle. Call at this of- Store. fice or phone 639. FORE SALE land, clay soil, hardwood timber, Birch, Oak and Maple, 10 acres under cultivation, a fing spring of good pure water on the land, % miles from raflroad station. This land is worth $20 per acre; will gell for $13. Half cash, balance three years at 6 per cent interest. Address Bemidji Pioneer, Bemldji, Minn, ject of careful study by the department of agriculture experts and are certain to be mdre feared by citizens when the damage which they are capable of caus- ing is better understood and appreciat- ed by the public. To the group of insects known as horseflies, gadfiies and earflies is at- tributed the transmission of certain blood diseases of live stock. Among the most important of these is the FOR SALE—Mitchell, 30 horse, 4 FOR SALE—Small fonts of type, sev- | WANTED—Clean cotton rags at the eral different points and in first| Ploneer office. No buttous,. class condition. Call or write this office for proofs. Address Bemidji Pioneer, Bemidji, Minn. deadly disease known as anthrax., Bottlies burrow into the flesh of horses and cattle, while the hornfly, one of the most injurious insects in the country, also confines its attack princi- FOR SALB—Rubber stamps. The cylinder automobile in fine condi- H tion. - A bargain for someone. B. E. Ionear anl ’ s Wideman, Pine River, Minn. I 2 c »' w d 2 Ploneer win procure any kind ot rubber stamp-for you on short no- o Bring Results pally to live stock. The losses sustain- ed are entirely due to the worriment and irritation produced by the bites of the fly and by extraction of blood. The stable fly, a close relative of the housefly, is distinguished from the lat- ter by its prominent piercing mouth parts. All animals, including man, are attacked by this insect. The best way to prevent the stable- fly, the government authorities point out, i to destroy the breeding places of the insects. Refuse should not be allowed to collect” in stables, - while structures in which horses and cows are housed should be screened the same as dwellings, it is stated. Vacant Lot Gardening In Toronto. Toronto has joined the ranks of the cities in which there is an active va- cant lot gardening movement Over thirty parcels of vacant land in the business section of the city have been loaned to the Playgrounds association and prepared for gardening by the Plowmen’s association of York town- ship. The start of the new ventureé was celebrated by a dinner to the plowmen on the evening of that day. Seeds and implements have been prom- ised so that the children’ will have ev- erything necessary. for successful gar- dening. Tulips Bloom More Than One Year. Some authorities contend that tulips In local ‘gardens’ have no value and give no returns after-the, first year of planting. This dependflnrnly on con- 48 ‘made by the planter. ‘If put down deep enough in ideal sofl it is | tertain ‘good flowers may be obtained the -second ' and perhaps succeeding years. 3 tize and'as long of stem in the second .year as they were the first year. ~The : aumber of bulbs - aoweflnt )l ‘some- 'hlt Ie- however. FOR SALE—Good horse. FOR SALE—A business lot, or will FOR SALE cheap If taken at once. For work or single, 1300 pounds. St. Hilaire Ask tha M'n wlln Has Triad Them Retail Lumber Company. trade for residence property. See Rube Miller. Great Book Bargain Five Big Volumes, $1.98 Regularly Selling at - $12.00 CLIP THIS COUPON. @i@fi(‘ii‘ EEGGEGGGEE&(’“G% The Bemidji Pioneer ® Evg’rybody s Cyclopedia E - DAILY COUPON [ This coupcn, if presented at the main- office of * The Bemidll m ' Pioneer ANY DAY THIS WEEK will - m A » F) lepl byman but out- or lown readers can have them for the sm the set to besent by express, ahipmg x:lm-ge‘ hg A

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