Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, March 2, 1915, Page 4

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oo " has a nicely balanced one. The New York Giants. The Giants have an excellent chance to win the National league pennant this season. The best -the Yankees are hoping for is a first di- vision berth this year. That, in sub- stance, is the way New York is look- ing at the coming pennant fight. And there is"a lot more interest in both teams this year than there was last. The monotonous succession of pennants the Giants won rather kill- ed interest in them from the sports- man’s viewpoint. Losing last year’s flag has stimulated the satiated ap- petites. Interest in.the Yanks was dead last year, principally because of the ownership and the way the club was run. This year the owners are popular, as is the new manager, Bill Donovan. It will be surprising if 1915 isn’t the banner year in New York despite the croy of “hard times and a lean year.” ‘With the exception of his pitching staff, McGraw has as good a team to start the pennant fight as any mana- ger in the circuit—and a whole lot better than most of them. The re- turn of Tillie Shafer would give him a mighty sweet infield. As it is, he Merkle on first will probably perform in his usual style. Should Shafer really re- turn he and Larry Doyle would put up a pretty scrap for second. Fletcher on short seems to have position clinched an dthere is practically no doubt that Hans Lobert will be seen pickin’ them o ffaround third. Lobert at third has solved a great problem for McGraw. Many is the game that rolled away through Ed- die Grant and Milton Stock last year while McGraw sat on the bench curs- ing the day he ever let Charley Her- zog get away to Cincinnati. Yes, McGraw has an infield that will com- pare favorably with any in Tener’s cireuit. In the outfield there are four reg- ulars—Snodgrass, Burns, Murray and Robertson. All four are dependable men—good fielders and steady with the bludgeon. Jim Thorpe, the big Indian, expects to make a hard fight this year for a regular berth. McGraw freely admits his pitching staff is giving him worry. Mathew- son, Tesreau and Fromme are his on- ly veterans, as Rube Marquard’s case is unsettled. He has two youngsters who have sat on the bench for two seasons now and they should be about ready for the firing line. They are Schauer and Schupp. McGraw probably is depending more this year on his fifty-odd re- cruits he paid expenses for to Marlin than ever before. He needs a young catcher and could use a couple »f promising young hurlers. 'Meyers and McLean will probably bear the brunt of the receiving again (fhis season. DON ALMO CIGARS 5 A HOME PRODUCT (Continued from Page 1.) A. He will also place on the market a five-cent seller, which experienced smokers declare are the best they ever knew for the money. In Labor Alone. Did you ever stop to consider what it would mean to Bemidji if every man who smokes would buy one Don Almo cigar a day? To give you an idea, 1914 Mr. Burgess’ cigar factory paid out in labor alone over which meant the supporting of from three to five families in addition to his own. Keep in mind also that these families spent every cent in Bemidji, which meant the boosting of practically every line of industry. Is a Habit. Smoking, they say, is a habit. Smoking a certain brand of cigars DRINK HOT TEA! DR PR ——4 package of Hamburg Get. o small Breast Tea, or as the German folks call it, “Hamburger Brust Thee,” at any pharmacy. Take a tablespoonful of the tea, put a cup of boiling water upon it, pour through a sieve and drink & teacup full at any time during the day or before retiring, It is the most effective way to break a cold and cure grip, as it opens the pores of the skin, relieving congestion. Also loosens the bowels, thus breaking up a cold, Try it the next time you suffer from a cold or the grip. It is inexpensive and ‘entirely vegetable, therefore safe and harmless, RUB RHEUMATISM FROM STIFF, ACHING JOINTS Rub Soreness from joints and muscles with a small trial bottle of old 8t. Jacobs Of1 Stop “dosing” Rheumatism. It’s pain only; not one case in fifty requires internal treatment. Rub sooth- ing, penetrating “St. Jacobs Oil” right on the “tender spot,” and by the time you say Jack Robinson—out’ comes the rheumatic pain. “St. Jacob’s Oil”. is a harmless rheumatism cure which, never disappoints’and doesn’t burn the akin, It takes pain, soreness and. stiffness from. uhmg joints, muscles and bones; stops ica, lumbago, i up! Io of old-time, .honest “St. Jacobs' Oil” lmm any drug store, and in a moment ow’ll be free from pains, aches and mfln 'Don’t suffer] let it be stated that during is: llso a habit. "Gause you like them better than an- Sther Kind., As yet you -have not ed 2 Don Almo, because they are nc! yet ‘on sale. "Mr. B\lrgerss says B e them at every retail stand in| his city. He does not merely want em stuck away in some obncurew rner of the showcase, but expects the spirit{of ‘bodsting a home-made product over all others and give Ilb- eral display space in their when the Don Almo makes its debut. With such a sendoff .the Don Almo | sf a gopd Havana smoke, because Mr. Burgess’ promises to ‘“‘deliver . the: goods.” Begin smoking Don 'Almo cigars in the morning. i Doctors Insist On Dperation-- Not Necessary - - I want to write and tell you what/| your Swamp-Root has done. for ‘me. During the years of 1906 and 1907 I'was troubled. 'with what the phys- icians pronounced “Gravel of the Kid- ney.” I was under the care of one physician for six months and two months with another without secur- ing relief or a cure. The physicians insisted on an operation claiming; that would be the only thing that would help me. My wife being bit- terly opposed to an operation I did not consent, but continued under their treatment for some time. When I was most discouraged believing that my end was near, I heard of Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-Root and at once be- gan taking your medicine and noticed almost immediately that the medic-! ine was having its. ‘effect. taking seven bottles of your Swamp- | Root I was entirely cured and have not had a sick spell for over a year.! ‘When a person has been -flat on *is back for six months, suffering un- teld agony and spent considerable money with physicians without any nenefit and then to be cured at an expense of not over $8.00, you can well understand how grateful I fecl toward you and your preparation. In appreciation for what your remedy has done for me, I am willing that you use this letter as a testimonial. Very respectfully yours, ROBERT E. HENDRICK, 4708 East 27th St., Kansas City, Mo. County of Jackson ss. State of Missouri On this 9th day of August, 1909, personally appeared before me, a Notary Public, in-and for said County and State, Robert E. Hendrick, who subscribed the foregoing statement and made oath that the same is true in substance and in fact. HENRY C. EMERY, Notary Public. Letter to Xilmer & Co. Prove What Swamp-Root Will Do - For You. 3 Send ‘ten centd ‘to’ Df. Kilnter & Jo., Binghamton, N. Y., for a sample size bottle. It Will convince' anyone. You “will~ also receive @ booklet ‘of valuable ififormation, ‘telling ~about that Wednesday, Marcl’ 3, he wm\. that the local dealers will enter into |- After| . stores |= A diy SOURS THE FOOD |Says EmessonydrodiloflcAeid is Cause of Indigestion. and ad " Salts it from the acid juice, combined with lithia and sodium: E;m sphate. thousands of people for stomach trouble with excellent results, wdl-hmm authority states that stomach trouble and indigestion is near- Iy aldway: due to aclidlltkys—acld stomach | i=—and not, as most fol habit will be acquired by every lover%; lack of digestive juices. He states |that an_excess of hydrochloric acid in the stomach retards digestion and starts food: fermentation, then our meals sour like garbage in a can, forming acrid Buids stomach like a toy balloon. We then get that heavy, lumpy feeling in chest, we eructate sour food, belch gas, lor have heartburn, flatulence, water- brash, or nausea. _He tells us to lay aside all dxgestxve ‘| aids ‘and instead, get from any pharmacy four ounces of Jad Salts and take a | tabléspoonful in a glass of water before | breakfast while it is effervescing, and furthermore, to. continue this for one week. Whlle relief follows the first doge, it is important to neutralize the acidity, remove the gas-making mass, start the liver, stimulate the kidneys and thus promote a free flow of pure stive juice: (congmnn trom Page 1.) 40 miles eas its entirety much space, area of Pales ot all of believe, from instrumental gases which inflate the the ce planet - whicl studied and inexpensive and -is.made of grapes and lemon |ists have gal This_harmless salts is used tain, valley, It Depends Altogether On How Early or How Late You Send Us Your ‘loountry ‘at the eastern ena of the Mediterrariean sea, strétching north and .south 7140-miles, and from 30 to square - miles. states cover.from five to ten times as universally' known. countries have given to the world square miles of Palestine. our own generation, every foot of it has been surveyed. have gone through the rocks, botan- t and west, covering in an area of only 1,200 ‘Why, most of our the state of Texas alone containing more than 20. times the tine. the lands of the earth, Palestine is one of the most interest- ing, for in this small country orig- inated a volume that is familiar -to all—the Bible. question of wonderment that suech a small portion of our earth could be It has often been'a in producing a work so And’ yet small eatest treasurer. ~Take Greece; ' England, Ttaly +all of them are small, yet they have been world leaders in‘soie one or andther characteristic, Today there is not a place on our h is more thoroughly known than this 1,200 Even in Our geologists thered and classified its plants, and zoologists have collected and arranged its animals. Maps have been made.that show every:moun- lake and river, as well Order Which Method Of Delivery We Use. We. Aim To Reach You On Time Rice Pudding- two tablespoonfuls of rice in wa- ter to cover. of a box of gelatine in cold water, stir into the rice while hot, cool Wash and boil Dissolve a quarter ORDER THESE EARLY FISH Finnan Haddiz=s iz :Smoked Salmon add a cupful of sugar, two table- : s*’llfil;:&gahb“t spoons of chopped or preserved [V Codfiah s ginger, vanilla to taste, and two J, tablespoons of preserved figs.. Put % Norway Herring on ‘iee several -hours; seFve:with 0[ Fourth:St. ‘whipped cream. _We close at 6:30 the kidneys-and bladder.-When writ- 1 ’ ing, be sure and mention the Bemidji ew s ro er Phnne 2“5 Daily Pioneer. Regular fifty-cent and one-dollar size bottles for sale at all drug stores. “DON ALMO” | 10¢ On sale everywhere $10,000, 1 OPE 0 > villages. In Palestine are to be found ll\ the rock.formations, .as well as all of the fiora ‘and fauna known tg this earth. Between the ‘high altitudes of its mountains-with their perpetual snow and tepid waters of the Salt sea, every climate - is experienced, in which there is every living thing that is known to the earth. 8o it has been truthfully said that Pales- tine is the wlole world in a nutshell. | By reading the foregoing, one ma¥ get a slight glimpse of the interest- ing knowledge. set forth in the New Tlustrated Bible, which is-being df tributed by The Pioneer. This mag: nificent volume contains 600 _text illugtrations prepared by, the world’s of $50,000, aside from the numerous full-page colored plates from the fa- mous Tissot collection. Every pie- ture accurately portrays a scene that throws a true light-on the particular subject which it accompanies. Some Bibles lay ‘claim ‘to “fllustrations,” where they simply.. have ‘“‘pictures’” inserted at random, without regard to the subjects. - These may be said to entitle the volume to the word “il- lustrated,” but it must be admitted that they have no educational value, inasmuch as they have no bearing on particular (subjects which they ac- company: The New Illustrated Bible which The Pioneer distributes is the only one that truly illustrates the exact subject related to it in position as well as in matter. MONK IS-CHIEF OF BELGIAN OBSERVERS _ (Continued from_Page 1.) triotism, his way of serving man- kind, by serving his country. Prior to joining the order the heroic monk was in the artillery branch of the army. When war was declared he got permission to leave his cell and get into his uniform again. His object was to serve God by fighting for King Albert. When the war is over and Belgium restored to the king, he says he shall return to his cell, his usefulness in'the army |at end. While we were talking the rain had stopped. It was now about 3 o’clock. - The cloids thinned and the moon came out almost as brilliantly as day. The little island - looked ghostly and ghastly and the illumina- ting bombs constantly arising from the German lines to prevent surprise attacks might have been jack-o-lan- terns or will-o’-the-wisps. The island, the monk explained, is all that is left of a village. The other houses were crumbled by shells or carried away by the flood. A few little shacks on the island were all that were left of the village—those and the old tower. The monk never leaves his post: CONSIDER ADVIBABILITY $ OF ‘BOND ISSUE (Continued from first page). the band could be given the needed help. ‘The application of Frank Lane for greatest artist at the -enormous cost |- Our instructions to the famous editor of the Boston Cooking School “Get up a book of recipes of the things people like best. Fmdlhebealwaytomakemdbukemhane. Then write it out so plai housewife can't have a failure.” Magazine were: that even an inexperienced “The Cook’s Book™ wuth: result. . Some of the 90 teupeswaeorigf nated, many of them were improve ed upon, and all were personally tested this best known authority on cooking in America, and she tells so clearly how she made everything that one cannot go astray. ‘While some of the cakes and pastry are elaborate enough for any occasion, the recipes are all thoroughly practical and call for no expensive and unusual ingredients. In-addition to telling how to make them, the book is beautifully illustrated in colors showing how to arrange and serve the dishes appetizingly. More than half a million of “The Cook's Book™ are now in use in Amer- ican households. Yet the demand is constantly increasing. Many send for twoo!flueeatahmelongelo‘nendtonounsboum borrowing one from a keepers. depend on nenghbm—have one of your own. How to Get “The Cooks Book” In 25¢ can of KC Powder is packed a e'ety te. Sendmm u:nfiules(plth card if you like) with your name_and ad dress “The Cook’s Buok" will be mailed free of charge. Only one book for each certificate. Jaques Mfg. Company, colored certificate inly written, and Address: cense money was laid on the table. Reports of the city engineer, city treasurer and city clerk were ac- cepted. WANTS PUBLIC DEFENDER. Chicago, March 2.—A public de- fender for poor persons accused of] crime in Chicago is advocated by Prof. Robert H. Gault of Northwest- ern university, in a report before the crime commission of the city council. ‘“Attorneys appointed by the court receive no recompense and conse- quently have little inducement to make proper defense,” reads the re- port of Prof. Gault. ‘“They are gen- erally attorneys of medicore ability or young attorneys who hope to gain experience in criminal law.” “The precedent of Los Angeles, where pub- lic prosecutor and. public defender work in harmony to secure the un- hampered administration of justice, was cited by Gault as an example to be followed. ' A motorcycle for two persons who occupy chair seats, one behind the other, instead of saddles, has been patented. ING SALE SMOKE TOMORROW morning. at 8o clock will find every dealer of cigars in Bemidji ready for the rush. There will be a big stampede there is no doubt. Chicago “The Celebrated Scandal.” Through a piece of good fortune Mr. Woodmansee has secured the above five-reel film for Thursday eve- ning in place of the “Gilded Fool,” which films have . been destroyed. “The Celebrated Scandal” play deals with the wreckage of the lives of an upright man and a noble woman by the serpent’s tongue of gossip-mong- ers, in which Betty Nansen stars as ' the leading Iady. If you are in sym- pathy with the great ‘“anti-gossip” movement it is your duty to see this film next Thursday evening, at the Grand theater. Pearls now sell at half normal value in [ndia: ADDITIONAL WANT ADS Too Late To Classity FOR SALB At public sale, Mareh 9, 3 p. m., at Suckert’s residence, Sec. 22, town of Grant Valley, one Faultless stump puller, with table. FOR SALE—40 acres good farm land, 5 miles northwest of Bemidji. About 800 -cords wood; small shack. $20.00 an acre. A Nor- rie, 402 Minnesota Ave., Bemidji. ““ Consolation ” ik On sale same place Smokers know a good thing when they see it, and tomorrow morning when the cigar stands open for In the future business, and every cigar dealer pushes to the front the “Don Almo” Home Made Cigar some of the choicest tobacco will go up grant, sweet, home and hand made cigar odor. It is a strictly hand made cigar made to sell for 10 cents. surpassed by none at the price. Mr. Burgess will stake his reputation on this new cigar. HOME PRODUCT should make it THE POPULAR smoke in Bemidji. ‘Smoke the Home Clgar and Ioest the Home City SIGNS AND WINDOW DISPLAYS. < ALER IN ’IHE CITY in Smoke and the air will be purified by fra- The DON ALMO is surely a beauty. It is being made in three sizes and is guaranteed to be And the fact that it's a

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