Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, September 11, 1913, Page 4

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3 [HE BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEER L T P P e R P R R R R R R e R R R R e R R ] * COUPON : ; * x GOOD FO% 5 VOTES * * Cast these votes fOF NO .....cvnomimecscscennenss ¥ 4« This coupon when neatly cut out, brought or mailed to the W. G. % -+ Schroeder store on or before February 14th 1914 .will count as five ¥ 4 votes for the person represented by the above number. * * The Bemidji Pioneer Pub. Co. ¥ PR F AKX KKK KT KK KKK KRR KKK KKK KKK KK Carbon Paper. We have an assortment of high grade paper fully guaranteed, in all colors 8 1-2 x 11 and 812 x13 . At $1 and $1.25 a box (Can you beat it?) Yes, there are 100 sheets in each box. and if the paper does not satisfy you know where you bought it—your money returned if you want it always. Beware! Special agents call on the trade about the city from time to time: They may offer you enticing looking bargains—but—what if you're not satisfied? It may be a case of throwing it into the waste basket. WeBuy on a Guarantee and Sell the Same Way. BemidjiPioneer Supply Store Phone 31 o o Copyright Hart Schatfacr 85 Marx BOUT the best thing we can say friends that we are Hart Schaffner suits to our right now is ready with our & Marx fall The new models are especially interesting; some of the new features are certain to give you a thrill. of interest; and of course there’s a ‘very unusual lot of beautiful fabrics to draw from. and overcoats. Young men are sure to like the smart new styles designed for their special and particular tastes; new ideas in the shap- ing of coats, new features in the waistcoats. We want you to see them soon: ‘they’re unusual clothes. Special values at $25; and others at $18 and $20; and up to $35 | This Store is the Home of Hart Schaffner & Marx Clothes READ THE PIONEER WANT ADS 2 Temperature of the Body. § The heat of the body varies at differ ent ages and different times of the day. Except when you are suffering from fever you are never so hot as when you are born. The temperature of a newborn baby is about 102 de- grees, but during ‘the first day it rap- idly goes down to 9734 degrees, rising again to a little above the' average temperature of ' a grownup person, which is about 08% degrees. The heunt of your body varies as much as two degrees in twenty-four hours. , The minimum is reached about 4 o’clock in the morning, when your vitality is at its lowest, and the maximum about 4 in the afternoon.. People who ‘work by night and sleep during the day, however, are coldest in thg aftérnoon and warmest in the early morning. It is a remarkable fact that we nearly always die if our blood varies ‘more than a few degrees either way. A temperature below 95 degrees or above 108 degrees is generally fatal.—Pear- son's. Criminals and Crime. Is the criminal so because he wants to be s0? No more wicked fallacy was ever foisted upon a credulous world than this. Nobody at any period of the world ever wished to be eriminal Rvery one instinctively hates and fears crime. Hvery one is honest by nature. It s inherent in the soul. 1 have never met a criminal who did not hate his crime even more than his condemners hate it.. The apparent exception is when the man does ont consider his act a crime. He has killed because his victim exasperated him to it. He bhas robbed society because soclety made war on him. The offender hates his crime. X But he 18 not ashamed of 1t? * Now, that is true. He Is not asham- ed of it in the current sense. He hates 8, he fears it, but it does not fill him with a sense of sin.—H. Fielding Hall in Atlantic Monthly. Why Not Schools For Men? No man ever feels the need of educa- tion so ‘much as the man who sees opportunity for advancement open be- fore him,.but who does not dare to take it for fear that he can not rise to it It is useless to say anything to such a man about neglected op- portunities, and it is equally futile to say the same thing to the youth who is neglecting his studies. The first cannot go back and live his boyhood over; the latter cannot comprehend own possibilities, nor can he really study intelligently things for which he is not sufficiently mature. The few who mature early enough in life to go through technical schools or col- leges are provided for. Can we not provide men’s schools for those who mature normally?—American Maga- zine. A City That Was a Failure,"' haps Sardi has the most interesting its natural advantages, its wealth, its famous rulers, its wise counselors, its Herald. world, Croesus, was king of Sardis; the wisest man, Solon, was her guest. it was surprised, conquered and all but ing rock and soil from its own citadel, loosened by the winter rains and hurl- ed down by destructive earthquakes, buried the city thirty feet deep from the sight of man. It became a dead of nature. Regulating His' Sleep. oversleeping and gave a recipe where- by one may find out how much sleep he really wants. It was derived from experience. about 12 and lay awake for some time, and I readily concluded that this arose from my being longer in bed than na- ture required. - 1 procured an alarm. which waked me next morning at 7 before), yet I lay awake at night. The next morning [ rose at 6; motwith- standing. 1 lay awake the second night. theless lay awake. The fourth morn- ing I rose at 4, as 1 have done ever since, and I lay awake no more.”—Lon: don Chronicle. No Matter Who. A party of women were being escort- ed through the state house the other day by a bowing and scraping guide. The women were of the enthusiastic type and raved over this and that and said, *“Oh, simply too gorgeous.” Fi- nally they were shown the portrait of a former governor. “Oh, superb. isn't it?”" said one of them, *“and an excellent likeness too. A portrait of whom did you say it ‘was?'—Boston Traveler. The Fishless Fisherman. - “So you took a day off from your work and went fishing?"* “Yes.” replied the man who insists on being cheerful. “Have any luck?” “Certainly. A day off is luck enough.”—Washington Star. A Wafer. “What,” asked the teacher, “is the meaning of the word ‘wafer? ” “A wafer,” replled Maurice. aged nine, “is a kid without any father or mother.”—Chicago News. But Which'ls:Which. e Willie—Paw. what is the difference between firmness and obstinacy? Paw —Merely a matter of sex, my :son.”— Cincinnatl Enquirer. s S L e S i S his danger, nor will he believe In his [ Of all the seven cities of Asia per- i and romantic history, and yet. with all | § victorious armies, it was the greatest |§ failure of them all, says the Christian {{ The richest man in the|f and yet, through overconfidence and [ lack of watchfulness, time and again |} destroyed, until at last the disintegrat- |} city, and it was buried by the forces | |} John Wesley recognized the evils of | “1 waked every night 4 (an hour earlier than I rose the day | The third morning I rose at 5, never- | 7 How Caterpillars Build. Many clever caterpillars which dwell habitually in company build a common nest for the common benefit. Of these is the famous American tent caterpil- lar. The tents are really nests of silk spun among leaves and twigs. 'In them the caterpillars dwell when young, and to them they resort for shelter in rainy weather even when larger grown. Al- Hed species which pass through the winter in the caterpillar state con- struct winter sleeping quarters which the bookish folk call hibernaculums. These are often conspicuous among the branches during the cold months of the year. If torn open they reveal a sur- prising thickness of spun silk, forming a dense nonconductive wall. At the center of the mass lie from thirty to fifty tightly packed caterpillars waiting for the return of the warm weather, when they will resume their feeding. ) i Why: They Quarreled. “I hear that you quarreled with Harry,” said one young woman to another. “Is it so?” “Yes, 1 did,” replied the other girl. “He is a horrid thing. He asked me how old 1 was, and I told him twen- ty-one. and he wouldn’t believe me!” ,“Indeed!” said the first. “Well, you should have referred him to Bob Yates. He could swear you told him the very same thing four years ago.”—Detroit Free Preea. Caught a Bad Cold. “Last winter my son caught a very bad cold and the way he coughed was something dreadful,” writes Mrs. Sarah E. Duncan, of Tipton, Iowa. “We thought sure he was going into consumption. ‘We bought just one bottle of Chamberlain’s Cough Rem- i o o ; edy and that one bottle stopped his| P- J- WOLpu Agent cough and cured his cold complete- 3 Phone 63v Bfinidfi_ Minn, 1y.” For sale by Barker’s Drug Store. —Adv. : [ Merchants Who Want Your Business It matters not where you reside or what you want, the merchants below can get it for you at a price that will defy competition. Every merchant is reliable and will give you the best value for your mohey. ‘Badadaad it i it S S S Sl SO MRS S S eSS S SRR Tl 2t 2l e I Y S T TR e = We strive to sell THAT'S NATURAL. Do you want THE BEST GROCER\ES found in Bemidji * k% MeCUAIG % But we strive harder to please. w GENERAL MERCHANDIS. i 28232222228 2 b2 82 24842 32 2224 Come right here and get b THAT’S SERVICE. ; them, a8 we pride ourselves * . " on having only the best ¥ Oourteous attention has Dry Goods, Shoes, Groceries money can buy. ¥ won over wmany jewelry cus- and Provisious. * tomers to us. 0TTO G SCHWANDT ¥ Third Bt. Bemidji Minnesota Ave. * 3 Bemidjli - Minnesota, : George T. Baker & Co. Wk Wk ek ok ok ok ok sk b3S B2 222222222 ] L2 482232222228 * AR AR PRI K R KA AR RSN FRRRIHKIRIRIRIIH KKK RIS SSt S et ees sy Rl s S S 33 S S S S8 2 2 22 ] i x $ $ 38888 * X x ¥ * § * gu\m YOUR MONEY!§ * Gst Your * X b {* 888 $ 8 x & 2 ¥ NORTHERN GROCERY * % “Regularly and systematl- ¥ x HOUSEHOLD UTENSILS & ¥ * % cally. If you receive your pay ¥ & and FARYM IMPLEMENTS + ¥ COMPLNY * ] # weekly, lay some aside each ¥ % ¥ * % week, if monthly do it month- ¥ of x % * % ly. The t}ollan will pile up : Y * : + & surprisingly. % - "srscessensse x ThnY uInT' : * C. E. BATTLES : : * WHOLESALE s ¥ % Now is the time to open a * * % GROCERS * + [ & bank account with the X X The Hardware Merchant X % tcsccccreccsns * SECURITY STATE BANK * % Bemidj!, - Minn. x ¥ * ‘B F BEmD{I. X X x ¥ * Raad 28 S SETRRR 22338 03 0] ERAHHEIHR KRR Baasas g S S S S S S22 S SR E Y S i*: RGP KK helalata e S S 8 3 8 8 8 8 88 8 S S80S 2 hldadaaaSS IS8 38 88 2 eSS ] ) ovr : . i X X #ox * % merchandise sales are always ¥ & BAGE « * FOR GOOD THINGS TO EAT X ¥ on the increase and each ¥ & For a dry and safe place to & ¥ * % month has been better than ¥ 4 store your Household Goods, x ¥ @o TO * B X the last. If you are not.al- ¥ <& etc., see us. Rates Reason- & ¥ * % ready a customer, you do not %« % able. « * ROE AND MARKUSEN + § : lmv.wrrl how well we can ph‘:u * X *x : v x you in quality and satlsfy &« & LER x “THEY BEAT.” * % you in quantity. * X JOEN @. ZIEG! ) * : o * *® © ® X Office, 0dd Fell Building, * Fourth street, Bemidjl. ¥ ¥ W G.SCHROEDER + i " * Phone 2°8. * + Bemidji, Minn, + Phone 129. * » % * ¥ X x = * *fi*{i#iii*i‘lifiifiifi‘kifi*fifi FERS SIS S S 338 SIS SR 333 S S o %« BEMIDJI MUSIC HOUSE 117 Third Street, Bemidji. AR BRI R KRR * * ¥« All kinds of building ms- % 4% terial, as much or as little as % you like at the RIS We are Jobbers of PIN TICKETS and GUMMED LABELS No need te send outeide of Bemidji for them. The Pioneer Supply Store Can Save You Money : BEMIDJI PIONEER PUB. CO. : FRKIIIIIIIAIAE KK fedilaaan s dd S S S S8 SR 88 S e St sy FURNITURE J. P. LAHR Wholesale ‘and retail Pla- nog, Organs and Sewing Machines. Phone 573. 8T. HILAIRE RETAIL LUM- BER COMPANY. dkkk Ak KR AT AN Threhhk * Coal and wood also for sale % Minnesota Ave. and R. R. 8. ¥ * x SRR I T Tt T e x nnnfl DRUG JEWELRY STORE drkhkhk & okk dk ok J. BISIAR, MANAGaR. AR *i‘l*i{iii###iii: L2 28 88 83228 & &1 P22 2R S22 28 52 ek ok %k ok ke * GUENTHER & MEHLHORN * " *x o g gk ok Contractors and Bullders * 1 d Retallers Phones 431, 376. &y nclemlorn:and, B % Service and satisfaction. Mail % Orders given that same ser- : vice you get in person. * BARKER'S % Third St. _Bemidji, Minn. : x AR KRR AKK KR KKK KKK KKK K KKK Furaiture, Rugs and Stoves, Undertaking. Phone eall 178-2. 2222288288244 Bemidji, Minn, *hk kkkkkkk X Kkk 323 Minnesota Ave. AR KKK ISR RS SRR LS E 2222222 ¢ 2232324 2228223232322 3 23 Yok Kok ko EEK KKK AKX KKK :fi*fifilfilfim’lfi”&hfiifl: * x % * * - x x TIMBER. 4« ¥ MODEL MANUFACTURING * +# THE CROOKSTON :.mnn: x x ¥ * ot COMPANY . % ¥ Iamatal timesin the x X COMPANY b » 4 % market for seven ‘foot Jack X 4 Manufacturers and x « # & Pine and Temarack Posts. ¥ : ‘Wholesale ; % Call and see me. * : ; Jobbers : * x x = * Ios Cream, Bakery Goods * * Batchelder’s General Store. * . % e ..l‘. % i . % * Confectionery and Feun- * > : X BEMIRY- MINN. '° ¥ & _tain Supplies. x R XX KKK xS KEKKE PR ERN RN R RE KX LSS St S oSNt TS TRRIIITNN - -

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