Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, June 26, 1915, Page 4

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Costs dnly two cents per hour to operate at average heat Costs only 4c¢ an hour for 2 burners at average heat. etc. call on you. Bemidji, [inn. Saving, Safe, Satisfactory Call at the office and see these and other types of stoves, ovens, Or telephone 26 and have our representative Minnesota Electric Light and Power Co. Truly ‘“matchless.” Let us demonstrate its usefulness. the afternoon. tor. First Scandiniavian Lutheran. Sunday school at 9:80, Norwegian services in the morning at 10:30. English services in the evening at 8 o’clock. Osmund Johnson, pastor. Baptist. . Sunday school at 10 a. m. .Morn- ing worship at 11. Senior B. Y. P. U. service at 7 p. m. ~ Evening gospel service at'8 p. m. 'Special music by the large chorus, both morning and evening, Reception of new members Ready to cook a meal at any moment day or night SHAKESPEARE; HARDLY. A'QUOTATION.USED IN LITERATURE THAT 1S NOT TAKEN FROM ONETOF-THESE WORKS DA The above Certificate Entitles bearer to this $5.00 Ilustrated Bible If presented at this office, together with the stated amount that covers the necessary EXPENSE items of this great distribution—including clerk hire, cost : g : g ; ! | { i SPOOOOPOOOOECOOOPHOOOVOVTODOPOOOPOOEGEHOSOGOOS ; NOW— o=y ONE certiricate — NOW MAGNIFICENT (like illustration in announcements from day to day) is bound in full flexible limp leather, with overlapping covers ILLUSTRATED and title stamped in gold, with numerous full-page plates Editton - in color from the world famous Tissot collection, togetlier s of the with six hundred superb pictures graphically lllus(ratmg BIBLE 20d making plain the verse in the light of modern Biblical knowledge and research. The text conforms to the marginal references, maps and helps; printed on thin bible paper, flat opening at all pages; beautiful, read- able type. NOW only ONE Free Certificate and the ;authonzed version, is self-pronouncing, with copious $1.23 Also an Edition for Catholics Through an exclusive arrangement we |§‘exackly the same as The $3 book, it ILLUSTRATED ihe Siyte” 5t “Sinfins. which is in silk cloth: | have been most fortunate in securing the BIBLE contains all of the illus: | Catholic Bible, Douay Version, endorsed trations and map: by Cardinal 'Gibbons and Archbishop NOWDnlyONEFreg 1 Ammmt (now Cardinal) Farley, as well as by the Certificate and the ' 8. NSE various Archbishe s of the country. The Tioms s of the full-page en. illustrations co ravings approved by the Church, with- out the Tissot and text pictures. It will be distributed in the same bindings a5 the Pro- testant books and at the same Amount Expense Items, with the necessary Free Certificate. MAIL ORDERS—Any book by parcel post. include EXTRA 7 cents within & 150 miles; 10 cents 150 o 300 miles; for greater distances ask your rostmaster amount to include for 3 pounds. $ 1998080000000300000990009 m"“.’““’OSQfi#é{O&éfi? NGINE wrong ? We can fix it and save See us. you time and trouble. prices for repair work of this kind are very liberal. We pride ourselves on do- ing engine repairs right. Our garage is at your serv- ice at all times. Patron- ize us. It'll pay 7 you well always. =5 C. ' W. JEWETT CO,, Inc. Phone 474 Bemidji, Minn. Our o Subseribe for The Pioneer JONES MAY LOSE RECORD If confidence counts for anything, John Paul Jones’ world’s record of 4.14 2-5 for the mile will be smashed to smithereens today on the Harvard stadium track. Abel Kiviat, the diminutive middle-distance runner of the Trish-American club of New- York in cut after Jones’ title. Hundreds of New York admirers of the doughty little athlete have accompanied him to Boston to watch his" attempt. Kiviat will appear in the tryouts held to pick athletes to represent the East {in the track and field championships to be held at the Panama-Pacific ex- position, August 6 and 7. Kiviat is generally conceded to be the classiest miler in the East today. The Harvard track is declared to be jthe fastest in the world. With this combination many believe Jones’ mark will be eclipsed. Critics who saw Kiviat’s great running at the Harvard stadium in 11912 declare he would have won the ,world’s championship then but for forgetfullness on his part. Kiviat was running in the 1500- metre race in the Olympic tryouts. ! Officials had arranged for Kiviat to try for the mile record at the same time. Kiviat ran the race of his life that smashed the 1500-metre record to pieces. As he crossed the finish {line of that race he forgot for a mo- ment his plan to cop the mile title and slowed down. Shouts of friends and officials brought him to his senses and he spurted ahead again, finish- ing the mile. The clock caught him just one-fifth of a second under the record. Had he not slowed up when he crossed the 1500-metre line, offi- cials declare he would have set a new mile record by seconds. FORWARD MOVEMENT ON (Continuea iroms Fage 1.) and protect him by income should he survive the number of years for which it is written has alone no firni faith in luck. He must see for him- self that when his next premium comes due conditions will surely have restored so toward normal that he will be able to meet it. One of the notable things is that the thrift encouraged by hard times has developed the fact that those practicing it have shown supreme faith in our business institutions. There is nothing new in the manner in which thrift has manifested itself; people have always managed to save more hard times than in good. But the old tendency to distrust of cus- codian institutions’ was, in the last year, encouragingly absent. The people not only did not lose faith in those institutions and return all that they had to the loose brick in the hearth or the secret niche in the gar- ret, but with the admirable #pirit re- tained in their investments through- out. - SUNDAY IN THE CHURCHES (Continued frown Page 1.) Junior league, 3:30; Epworth league, 7 p. m.; evening service, 8 p. m.; prayer meeting Thursday night at 8 oclnck There will be speci: misic morning and evening; Sunda; All are cordially invited-to the set- vices. C. W. Gilman, pastor. Swedish Lutheran.” There will be services in the morn- ing at 10:30. Sunday school at 12. Services in the evening at 8 o’clock. at the morning service. .service at 8 p. m. Thursday. Alvord, pastor. L D. Christian Science, Elks” hall at 8 o’clock. TRIAL TO ATTRACT NOTICE (Continued ‘trnm arst page). "early days of their torrid love af- fair, when he was only a. youth out of the grind of a Wall street bank, and she was a world-wearied adven- turess seeking peace and love in the mountains with the fresh young boy. I talked today with the state prosecutor, Signor Milleni, and with the Judge 4@’ Imstruction, who will try the case, but whose name, under Mid-week Services in the Elks’ hall, Sunday morning at 11 o’clock. Wednesday ‘evening service will be held in the theItalian law, I am not rmiufid ‘to divulge. - The war, they said, will make no difference in the date of the trial. It ‘has been set for July. 4 and there is little likelihood that it will be changed. Charlton’s chances for a fair trial seem every bit as good as they would be in the United States.- The ques- tion of his sanity has been brouglt up, and for some months he has been living in St. Martini asylum in well- furnished quarters under the obser- vation of Dr. Valtorta and two other Italian alienists. - One of these ali- enists has asserted that he believes young Charlton was deranged at the time of the murder, but the other two are withholding their: opinions. Charlton’s father, former United States judge in Porto Rico, has spent several weeks at Como visiting his son. The young prisoner is permit- ted to receive the attendance of.sev- eral Italian-Americans who have ta- ken an interest in-him because he-is imprisoned in a foreign land. = One of these is Lugui Corti, who spent twelve years at Marshall, Tex., and who was an American soldier in the Spanish war. He is now a wealthy storekeeper in a small town near Como, and for the sake of old days in the United States he has done all he could to make Charlton feel that he has a friend at hand. Not only here in Como, but all over Italy, I am told, is there keen interest in the coming trial. Tt will be a court room story that will hold the attention of the country in spite CHICAGO'S FIGHT AGAINST VICE Chicago, June 26.—In its fight on abortion parlors—Chicago is plgm ning to fight the evil in a novel way. Coroner Hoffman conceived the plan. He would have the city. erect and maintain a maternity hospital which would ‘encourage prevention of un- lawful operations. Luckless mothers would be admitted to the hospital un- der rules of strictest secrecy. Cor- oner Hoffman would have a law pass- ed making a divulgence of the name of a patient punishable by a jail sentence. Births would be recorded and the babies offered for adoption, in case the mother could not or would not keép it. Women suffering from veneral disease, it is planed, would be treated at the hospital free of charge. That’s all it costs you per day to buy a high grade South Bend Watch on our club plan. e Rock Bottom Prices You buy the watch at the lowest cash price at which it can be sold. Our club plan makes this possible. Wear the Watch Pioneer want ads—one-nalf cent while you pay gordasemh oo You get the watchupon —_— ’ making your first pay- ADDITIONAL WANT ADS i gy pay:; &% Too Late To Classify mE!l . it P R ot e sl cviesa L A WANTED—Two- girls for. kitchen This offer is for a few work at Birchmont Beach. Hotel, days only— July 1. Apply to R. B. Lycan, Take advantage of this Monday morning at Markham opportumty — let us Hoel; give you the full par- WANTED—Two girls for chamber ticulars in regard to this remarkable offer. GEO. T. BAKER & CO. - work at Birchmont Beach Hotel, July 1. Apply to R. B. Lycan, Mon- day morning at Markham Hotel. j of the war. FOR SALE—16" birch wood, deliv- Jewelers ered to any part of the city; $2.00 116 3rd St. Near the Lake per cord. - L. P. Christianson. Tele- | [l} phone- 3628-8. ] oe————————=—20 tificates. every home. This $5.00 Bible GENUINE LIMP. - LEATHER IT CAN BE Contains * Over 1200 Pages BOTH CATHOLIC and ~ PROTESTANT EDITIONS presented under the same terms as shown in the free certificate printed elsewhere. cost $50,000. passages in this Address: ‘We will now give this opporunity. ‘We want you and everyone of your friends to have this wonderful book. a copy of this magnificent illustrated Bible are loud in their praise of its excellent qualities. N ) i i\ Out-of Town Readers: || TO BE WITHDRAWN The Bemidji Pioneer’s Bible Distribution must be withdrawn. have not taken advantage of our generous offer because they didn’t get a chance to clip the entire set of cer- We want to close this distribution in a blaze of excitement. Present Just One Certificate such as is printed on another page of this issue, together with the necessary EXPENSE items, which include ete. clerk hire, cost of packing, checking, express from factory, ete., More than 600 beautiful art_pictures, by the world’s greatest artists, are printed with the where they at once explain the subjects which they accompany. In addition thereto are full page plates of the world-famed Tissot collection in These beautiful color engravings are also carefully selected with the object of further making plain obscure greatest of Books. It can truthfully portrayed their subjects and embodied in them the spirit of living reality. _Mail orders THE PIONEER, BEMIDJI, MINN. ‘We now find that there are many who Pioneer readers who have received It should be in The Only Really ILLUSTRATED Bibig Heretofore the word “illus- trated,” as applied to a Bible, meant merely a few allegorical of Biblical taken - from any “conveniently” placed in part of the book, merely as embellishment inserts, but not “‘pictures” evenis source and any directly alongside and explana- tory to typify or make plain; but our publishers, at an out- lay of $50,000 prepared accur- ate illustrations DESCRIPTIVE of the VERSE which they ac- company, and placed directly next to the verse of the scene described—the only place it can be looked for or found quickly, the only place the il- lustration is a help to you— making this the FIRST and ONLY complete ILLUSTRATED Bible. $90,000 Spent in IIIustratmns type These magnificent illustrations matter, alone colors. be said that never before have illustrations so vividly | filled as explained in ‘the certificate.

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