Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, September 13, 1913, Page 3

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e o o o e e KRR KKKKKK KK RKH KK * LEST WE FORGET KKK KKKK XXX XXX K% x| Falls The Schubert Symphony Orchestra given under the auspices of the Bem- fd§i, Athletic association September|Ward and Miss 23 at.the Bemidjl armory. The Indian Falr at Red Lake sép-1 tember 18, 19 and 20, To Boost for the girls in the Schroeder-Ploneer Free Plano con- test. To cut the five vote coupon out of this paper and save it for your favor- ite ‘contestant in the Schroeder- Ploneer Free Plano contest. To try to buy it at home before we send away. Phone Society news to society edi- tor, phone No. 31. To send in your application to be- comeé a member of the Bemidji athletlc Club °~ to Secretary Car! Johnson. : Go-carts retirea at the second hana store.—Adv. Rev Frary of Blackduck is in the city today on business. Mrs. H. Vehon and children’ of Minneapolis are visitors in the city. Dishwasher wanted at the Hotel Markham at once.—Adv. For pure apple clder vinegar and no mistake go to Schmitt’s grocery. J. Jacobson of Kelliher spent yesterday in Bemidji at the county falr. F. M. Grim of Orth is in the city on a combined business and pleasure trip. Nat Field of Crookston is a busi- ness caller in the city today. trip. Mrs. Henry Sath and Miss Jacob- son of Albert Lea spent yesterday in the city. Mr. and Mrs. Gust BEmblem of Sauk Centre are visiting friends in the city. R. F. Ross and Miss Mable Rogers of Walker are attending the fair in Bemidji. J. E. Johnson of Blackduck is at- tending the fair and visiting friends in Bemidji. Joseph Anderson and E. N. Smith of Blackduck are northline visitors in the city. John McDougald and C. W. Con- way of Blackduck are attending the fair in Bemidjl, Ome of these nice aays you ought to go to Hakkerups and have your pie- ture taken.—Adv. Mr. and Mrs. A. Underwood are visitors from Kelliher today and are attending the fair. T. G. Rowan, United States inspec- tor of Crookston, is transacting busi- ness in the city today. Henry Holden, merchant at Black- duck spent yesterday in the city on a business and pleasure trip. Bemidji Business College begins'its fall term October 6th.—Adv. John Morrison, Jr.,, of Red Lake I8 among the out of town visitors at- tending the fair in Bemldji. H. J. Kolden and James Johnson of Blackduck are spending the day in the city on a pleasure trip. Mrs. Patterson and daughter Ar- villa, of Wilton were among the county fair visitors yesterday. Tom Abrahamson of Blackduck spent yesterday in Bemidji on a com- bined business and pleasure trip. Harry Mooney will leave in a few days for Nokomis, - Saskatchewan, ‘where he will take care of his crop. Go-carts repalred at the second hand store.—Adv. | Jack ‘Bradyrof Kelifher- t yes-| terday in Bemid}i ~attelidfng” " the{stal 1 county fair. e ley. Thursday evening and left fo Miss Emiina Sohmidel 'of ‘Chaska ‘is St.” Paul last: evening. He Ivisiting friends o ty * during!| companied by’Dr, Brant of St. Faull the Beltram! Cotnty fairs’ Mr. and Mrs. J E. L. Obétg, -aditor-of the Black- |Carmel Rourks 6t Kansusory, Mis. duck American 18 in the eity ‘today-{#0Ur!, returned to their home in thht attending the county fair. city today after spending the suin- 1 mers months at thelr summer hote Poche, " deplity _ unifed: 1t Lake Georgef: i (Call on us WHEH¥In need of tirps, have a comple 3 "stocl all siges, iE o Iutery niew, second, ¥nd/aligf¥i¥ Hiked at low (spending the day in the city ; Fépair alf*h of tirks. on & combined busindss ‘4nd ‘pleasure X Dreuf makis - ‘The’ the Berman Emporfum Me —AdY. | ginayt thoFanchurch ‘Wil have Dr. and Mrs. R. T. Thomipson; Miss & ‘Sun Belle Jacobs, and C. M. Johnson of|Point Sunday. The ladies ‘are asked Rockford, Minnesota, are visitors in|to bring ‘well filled” baskets. Dinner Bemidjl. will be served at about one o’clock, Mrs. Archie Fenton returned from| The good uld ‘Quaker‘once ‘said to Pinewood Thursday, where she has|his son: n been the guest of her parents for a|thee earns that makés thee’rich, but’ few days. what thee saves.” The "Northern tions k “will” pay -4 ‘per cent Our special for this Sunday will [ Loiional Bank willpay -4'p interest on your saving account.— be Whitehouse ice cream, 40 cents Adv. L4 By per brick, Model Manufacturing comi- s pany.—Ady. Mr. and Mrs. 8. Burns ‘who' have been guests at the I. G. Haycraft 3 ib- 17e5,05Mylra of the toyn of Li home for several days left for their erty was among the out of town eople Who attended’ the county iair home at Butterfield, Minnesota, ik i this mornfifg.“While tn‘the city Mr, el ! Burns purchased 160 acres of nor- Everyone should ‘have a business|thern Minnesota land.’ education and Mankato Commercial College, Mankato, Minn., is the school to get it.—Adv. Mrs, H. J. Updeéfgrast * and’ her mother Mrs. Emina Medde, of Pipe- stone, Minnesota ‘are ‘guests at the Charles Fleichman of Ten-|home ‘of Mr. and Mrs. M."F. Cun- strike was among the north line ningham! They arrived last~ night visitors who attended the fair in Be-|and will remain for a week. Mrs. midji yesterday. Updergrast is Mrs. Cunningham’s e niece. Theodore Gerlinger of Spur who has been visiting friends in the city Mrs, ‘Curo- of Hackensack, Min- for the past few days left for his|nesota, who has been confined at the home last evening. home of her daughter' Mrs. B. 0. Todd for some'time i8 now convalesc- Rev. Charles Chandler has been on ing. Mrs. Curo’will leave for Edmon- the sick list for the past three weeks ton, Canada, as soon ‘as she is able to and is unable to occupy the pulpit in travel and her daughter Mrs. Todd the Baptist church tomorrow. will accompany her there om & ¥isty Mr. and Mrs. 0. B. Kirtland of | The bloodhound that saved the Backus, Minnesota, were guests at|life of the little girl who was lost the home of Mr. and Mss. A. M.{near Crookston is owned by Man- Crowell last evening. kato county, and is known as “Man- kato Queen.” She ‘was purchased last spring, being one of a pair of hounds bought jointly by the county commissioners of Blue Earth county . and the business men of Mankato, Dr. M. D. Fuller will preach in the|{who raised money by subsecription Methodlst church tomorrow morn-|for their purchase. The hounds ing and evening, in the absemce of {Were bought for the purpose of Rev. Charles H. Flesher. tracking criminals or lost persons and she recently tracked a negro Mrs. Olat Opsahl, 816 Irving av-facouged of a crime to a cornfield enue, left this morning for Norway | ynere he was arrested.—Fergus where she will spend a year visiting Falls Daily Journal, old friends and relatives. Marie Sherberg returned to her home at Blackduck last might. after spending the past few days in the city attending the fair. A little deaf and dumb boy from Neva Moon left. for her home at|Backus created quite a good deal of Blackduck. this morning after spend- [sfmpathy on the-morning: passenger ing the past few days in the city as|His father had not told him of his & guest at the Begsley home, intention to’ send him away alone. After the train had started and-the tather had jumped off the boy was scared and heart broken. Friendly passengers did what they could for him, provided him lunch and have Miss Bertha Larson of Lengby,|determined to see him through to his Minnesota, who has been the guest|destination. He is on the way to- of her sister Mrs. Andrew Dahl for |Fairbault to the school for defectives the past week, returned to her home |there. F. G. Schadegg, of Bemidji, today. was his chief benefactor. There were four other deaf and dumb Willlam Montgomery of Sleepy |gcholars for the same institution in Eye, Minnesota, is the guest of his company with him. Chief of Police daughter, Mrs. Joe McTaggart. He|Quinn made arrangements for his expects to remalin for about three transportation and care en route.— weeks. Brainerd Daily Dispatch. J. Shere of Akeley arrived in the] city last evening and is spending the | day in the city tramsacting busin- ness and attending the fair. Lottie Madson came up from Nary e ———— last night. Miss Madson received a|® ¥ ¥ % X % ¥ ¥ X % X % ¥ k% % X lease from her comtract to teach at|¥* SUNDAY IN THE CHURCHES ¥ Nary and will teach in East Bemfdft| ¥ X X X K K K K X K X X X X ¥k this school term, Episcopal: Sunday school at 9:30 a. m. Holy Myrtle and Aldatel Zimmerman |Gommunion and sermon at 10:30. of Blackduck arrived in the city this Archdeacon Parshall, pastor. morning and spent ‘the day at the 4 county fair, They expect to return to Methodist : home this evening. . e Preaching 11 a. m: Subject, Teacher Wanted for a term of sev-|“Christ the Chief Corner ‘Stome.”” A en month school in Distriet 86, Bel-|class of thirty will be received into trami county, ~wages, $40 per|the church. A group of eight or ten month. Apply to Jacob Andersof, [will be baptised. Epworth League at Jelle, Minn.—Adv. 7 p. m. Preaching at 8§ p. m. Dr. M. D. Fuller, acting pastor. There will be the usual services tomorrow morning and evening. Bible class and Sunday school at 10. Mrs. Mary Roff of Little Falls, ar- rived in the city Yyesterday and is the guest of her dsmghter Mrs. R. H. Muncy who went to Little Falls to meet her, mother. TONICHT AT THE BRINKMAN THEATRE Morning worship at 11. Junior C. E. at 4. Young peoples meeting at 7. Evening- Gobpél'sétvice at 8. The Public is cordially invited-to these fservices. 8. E. P. White; pastor. Baptist: Sunday school'at 10. a. m: Preach- ing services withdrawn on account finding of little Beulah Gr: found, etc. roe . S Asar Granzhorn Pictures At considerable expense the Brinkman has secured a series of pictures' of the search for and days and nights in the woods near Erskine, showing Beulah and her mother, the Granzhorn home; the Mankato bloodhound .and its owner, the spot in’ the tangled underbrush::where the little one . was < In addition to the Pictures there will be the regulir Th¥ée Reels of Motion Pictures l:ll !‘h V‘l'nd:v’i?h Pronim.. of pagdtor’s illnéss. Young peoples’ meeting at 7 p. m. Miss® Lillian Booth will' lead. -Meeting for Bible study and prayer Thursday and Sat- markhall, ' ¢anfe dp!trom Ake-| 2y “school “picnic-at- Diamond [ “Nathan,”1t is ot ‘what |* Photo by American Press Association. Edwin Gould, one'of the most enthu- slestic millionaire mariners in Ameri- o8, has purchased two air boats and plans-a flight along the coast from New London, Conn, to Balm Beach, Fla. He has been spending several weeks in Chicago watching Harold Mc. Cormick’s air boat'and perfecting his fiying. * The largeést Gould air boat will carry six persons on a cruise and will be the- most luxurious -in the world. The ‘flight, ‘according to the present plans, will take place next month, £ CAMPAIGN AGAINST HOG CHOLERA URGED | Disease Cost American Farmers Sixty Millions Last Year. Washington, Sept. 13.—Inaugura- tlon of a country-wide campaign to eliminate or control hog cholera is urged in a special report by Marion Dorset of the burean of animal in. dustry, who" estimates - that during the last year about $60,000,000 worth of hogs' died’ of the disease. After experimenting for more than twenty-five years the department of agriculture finally discovered-a serum* that will prevent the disease and which now is being ‘distributed in thirty states. This work, however, Mr. Dorset says, has not resulted in a noticeable diminution of the disease in ‘the: country as a whole. In suggesting a national anti-chol- era campaign the report urges that the serum be used as a basis. Tho success of the movement, it says, de- pends upon the establishment of ef- fiolent state and federal organiza- tlons: ‘which will work together, but wheh must enlist “the full co-oper- ation and support of the farmers.” GRAND JURY TO' INVESTIGATE WIIl Probe Charges Against Nobleman Who Recently Married Heiress: Los Angeles, Sept.- 13.—Coincident with the arrival from Washington of a warrant for the deportation of Mrs. Clara Melcher, a Vienna laundress; whose charges against Prince Stanis- laus Sulkowski, Austrian nobleman and soldier, set federal officers on his trail, it was announced that a United States grand jury investigation of the case would begin here shortly. Prince Sulkowski is now in Japan with his bride, a Los Angeles heiress: Her parents; Mr. and Mrs. August Freeze, admitted they had been served with grand jury subpoenas. The warrant for Mrs. Melcher’s depor- tation’ will not be executed pending results of the grand jury inquiry. Woman Accused of Smuggling. New York, Sept. 13.—Mrs. Frank- Wiborg; wife of the former assistant commissioner of commerce and la- bor, faces prosecution on the charge of ‘smuggling. Twenty trunks brought into New York by Mrs. Wiborg and her daughters have been formaly seirad and are in the appraiser's Diarrhoea Quickly Cured. “I was taken with diarrhoea and Mr. Yorks, the merchant here, per- suaded me to try a bottle-of Cham- berlain’s ‘Colic, Cholera and Diarr- Loea Remedy. After taking one dose of it T was cured. It also cured oth- ers that I ‘gave it to,” writes M. K, Gebhart, Oriole, Pa. That is not at all unusual. An ordinary attack: of diarrhoea e¢an almost invariably be urday evening. Charles Chandler, pastor. 4 horn who was lost _four TR EE R R E R e L] 4 STEADY INCREASE IN GES OF LABOR! +* + e - Washington, Sept. = 13.— & There was a’ steady increase <« in the scale of ‘wages paid to -+ labor in this country in the Tonight and Brinkman Two Nights Only last six years and this was ac- complished in the face of a steady reduction in the work- ing hours of labor. Statistics “published by the department of labor ' indicate that labor now is Tecelving Sunday Night Admission - . . NS i oo ofa ofe os ol ofe ofo ohe ofe more remuneration for ' fewer hours of toll thin- ever before. L R R R R R R ) * PSR R e Se e — cured-by one or two doses of this'rem- edy. For sale by Barker’s Drug Store. —Adv. It's the school BUSINESS COLLEGE ITS THE SCHOOL FOR YOU. ‘Write today oritelephons for particu: lars at our expense. g for your; bby or girl|: SAY WILSON_URGED. | ~ COAL FIELD STRIKE © Seustary of Labor ivaved Wit Oy, ‘Washington, Sept. 18.—In support of their: attempt .to show an unlaw- ful*'conspiracy between the United Mine “Workers and coal operators of ‘Western“Pennsylvania, Ohio, Indiana and Ilinois fields to' stop' the produc- tlon of “cheap coal” in West Virginia, attorneys for the West Virginia op erators brought in the name of Will- iam B. Wilson, secretary of labor. In 1902 Wilson was national secre tary of the United Mine Workers. D. 0. Kennedy, now secretary of the Kanawha Coal association, testified that Wilson, in that capacity, atia miners’ meeting in Huntington, or: dered a strike in West Virginia fields.|. U “Mr. -Wilson told.us a strike wag mecessary in West Virginia to win the (anthracite. .strike. in Pennsylvania,’ (testified Kennedy. He added thal, .during the recent strike on Paint and "Cabin creeks the miners in West Vir ‘ginia-raised $6,000, while: miners out “side the ‘state contributed $139,000. Fifteen Women Arrested. Calumet, Mich., Sept. 18.—As a re sult of a noisy demonstration by cop per.mine .strikers and women sympa i thizers who poured into Calumet from: all parts of the district fifteen womer and ‘three men are under arrest, in. cluding ‘Yanko Terzich 'of Denver, { member: of the executive board:of thy ‘Western: Federation: of ‘Miners, Caught a Bad Oold." “Last. winter my son caught a very bad cold and the way he coughed was something dreadful,” ~ writes Mra. Sarah E. Duncan, of Tipton, Towa. “We thought sure he was going into consumption. We- bought ‘just one bottle of Chamberlain’s Cough Rem- edy and that.-one bottle stopped his cough and cured his cold complete- ly.” For sale by Barker's Drug Store. —Adv. ‘LPAY.. CASH For Hides, Furs, Wool; Copper Brass and Rubbers. W. H. NEWTON" 8th 8t. Bem!dJl Phone 510 Take no ether. Buy of yoor. i AskTor O LONES.TER 8 l’mfln ‘llnANl. PILLR, lfll ‘years known as Best, Safest, Always Reliable " Hold!" Stop! | Don't throw away your old | overcoat-we can put it in| first - class condition at! moderate price, new collar and-lining. We do first class work PRESSING, R 3 REPAIRING, ALTERATION. Moderate - Tailor Tailors 117 3rd S, at Bisiar Music Store- Work called for and ' delivered. Phone 873 P mINNEAPOLIS - DULUTH & SUPERIOR .’ In your race for success don’t ,léosen sight of the fact tha og]l through good health can you attain success, = - The tension you must necessarily; place upon your nerves, ‘the sacrifica of proper._exercise you have to make at times hfi be balanced in some way. & » e o A Dr. Pierce’s’ Golden Medical Disco is the balancing power—a vitalizing power. It acts on the stomach and organs of digestion and nutrition, thus purifying the blood and giving strength to the nerves, -indirectly aiding the liver to perform its very important :work. Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery has been successful for a generation as a tonic and body builder, Sold - by medicine dealers in liquid or tablet form— trial box of ‘‘Tablets’’ mailed on receipt of 50 one. cent stamps, 3 If in failing health write Dr. R. V. Pierce’s fnmplty at Invalids’ Hotel, Buffalo, New York, D R x COUPRON. & x GOOD FO'i 6 VOTES L] Cast these votes for No . . P 3 * 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 ¥ ¥ votes for the person represented by the aboye number. x The Bemidji Ploneer Pub, Co, % TR KRR KKK IR KKK KKK KKK R KKK KK Sihs ribe for The Pioneer- The Gheapest Advertising- “A newspaper advertisement strikes the eye the moment the sheet.is opened,” says W. L. Douglas, the big shoe man, who spends about $200,000. an- nually in newspaper advertising. He says. further. that the very fact is the reason he chooses the news- paper rather than any other-advertising medium. This is one very good reason why newspaper ad- vertising is the cheapest regardless of price. Let us look at different. kinds of advertising, such as personal solicitation and personal letter -writing, and see how they compare with newspaper, advertising. We-do not refer to circular letters, bills, etc., because from the standpoint of the local merchant these only act as an auxiliary or rein- forcement to newspaper advertising, and success- ful advertisers only regard them as such. But per: sonal solicitation by the local merchant and writ- ing prospective customers personal letters do com- pete-with newspaper advertising. Personal solicitation and personal letter writ- ing are very expensive to the local merchant, in fact so expensive as to be practically prohibitive. Take personal letter writing as illustration, and we take this as illustration. because it is far. cheaper than personal solicitation. The right kind of a $5.00 ad put in a paper with 2,000 circulation would be read by 10,000. people. Same substance. put into a letter; each letter- typewritten, mailed under a two cent stamped envelope, addressed and sealed as personal letters must be, and sent to 10, 000 people would cost $200 for postage stamps, and $100 extra for printing envelopes and letter- heads, stenographer to write letters and address envelopes, etc., making a total of over $300. And the cost to personally solicit the 10,000 people would be something enormous. . Newspapers are run for the advertiser. All other items of information are put in to make the, paper popular and sell the paper. This fact alone makes newspaper advertising the cheapest adver- tising. 4 Copyright 1918 by George E. Patterson SZPAUL anp S

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