Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, March 6, 1917, Page 3

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~%: Japanese needs. . 'TUESDAY. MARCH 6. 1917. Minister From Servia First to Be Sent Here The newly appointed Servian minis- ter to the United States, Lioubomir M. Mihallovitch, who recently arrived im this country, is the first man to repre- sent his government at Washington. Heretofore Servia's only diplomatic of- ficer here was M. I. Pupin, who held the title of honorary consul general at New York. Minister Mihailovitch does not speak English. In the course of an interview he said he had passed most of his time Photo by American Press Association. LIOUBOMIR M. MIHAILOVITCH. on the way here studying an English grammar and felt encouraged by the progress he had wmade. He speaks French fluently. The new minister is forty-five years old. He was graduated from the Uni- versity of Belgrade, where he studied law. His education was finished in Paris. For the last eighteen years he has been in the diplomatic service, for the most part in the provinces inhabit- ed by Servians formerly under the Turkish government. At the beginning of the war he was at Rome as charge d@'affaires. Later he was sent as minis- ter to Montenegro. He removed fo France when the Servian capital was removed from Belgrade. Mother’s Doll Story Fluffy and Rex Once there was a little boy whose name was Kay. He had two beautiful rag dogs, Fluffy and Rex, who loved to play with him in his big yard. Every morning Kay played soldier, and Fluffy and Rex would jump around him and bark joyfully and leap up on him. Kay had a great many soldiers, and some he would line up and drill. till they could march as one man. Others he taught to dig trenches, and still more Kay taught to shoot straight. All the time he was playing soldier Fluffy and Rex would frisk and bark. One winter day a “norther” came up. This means that the wind blows sud- denly and the sunshine is spoiled by the cold. In fact, it was so very cold that the two rag dogs jumped right down into the trench to keep warm. ‘When Kay got back to his tent—for he had a fine tent in his big yard—he whistled and called for his pets. But the wind blew so hard they did not hear him. Then Jack Frost snowed down in the trench, and poor Fluffy and Rex were all covered up with great white flakes, so that Kay, hunting for them, could not even see them. They had to stay outdoors in their cold snow bed all night, but when the morning sun thaw- ed off their cover Kay found them and brought them back to his tent to get all warm and happy again. Boy Scout Work In Japan. Boy scouts were not actually organ- ‘ized in Osaka until 1914, but interest has grown rapidly during these two years. Scout activities are much the same as elsewhere, with such adapta- tion as is mecessary to make them fit Japanese conditions. The oath and the twelve points of the scout law have been taken from the American and English handbooks, but revised and . Japanized. Special suits, knapsacks and other supplies have been carefully worked out from the point of view of The uniform is, of course, of the European style, because the kimono is unsuitable for active life.—Chicago News. A Watch Game. Place a watch upon a table, then pass paper and pencil to all and have them write down parts of the watch that will complete the following: 1. Something used before. 2. What a cry- baby makes. 3. The support of a flow- er. 4. A season. Revolving portions of machinery. 9. Clear, transparent. 10. Adornments. Answers: 1. Second band. 2. Face. 3. Stem. 4. Spring. 5. Case. 6. Figures. 7. Hands. 8 Wheels. 9. Crystal. 10. Jewels. The Ingenious Baker “DO IT NOW.” A Tip For the Girl Who Wants Suc- cess In Business. “I think that the best advice any young woman can get when she goes into business life is contained in these three .words, ‘Do it now,’” said the woman manager of an interior decorat- ing establishment. “I have more trou- ble in my busmess over that one sin of procrastination than all the rest put together. It's incredible the amount of follow up I have to do, and it takes time that I ought to give to important work. “For instai.:e, one young woman here who has taste and sound train- ing in the piinciples of decoration, could be invaluable to me. I would give her a position that any girl could be proud of except for the fact that 1 cannot depend on her. “She bad somse special velvet hang- ings to make up last week. They were to be trimmed with an edging that could only be bought in one place. It was her job to, get this, to have the velvet ready for the worker, properly measured, to make a visit to the house where the hangings were to be put up, and to get the final word from the owner as to which of three different linings was to be used. “She should have dome all these things in one morning. Well, it took her four days and then she hadn't seen the owner about the linings, and the work bad to be stopped. While the worker’s time was being paid for, she went up there. She hadn’t learned the “A SHINE IN EVERY DROP” Black Silk Stove Polish 18 different. 1t does not is not only most economieal, notbe’ ant, -nky‘f_u-u-m-ces‘-“ rub off—it lasts four times a8 polish—so it saves you is the new science, that, adjusting the abnormal conditions, makes possible Nature’s best gift—Good Health. Have you personally tried or inves- 5. What a lawyer | tigated ives to win. 6. Dealt with in arith- ‘metic. 7. You have a pair of them. 8 CHIROPRACTIC? ‘We invite you to visit us and learn about its merits. A. Dannenberg, D. C. First National Bank Bldg., Bemidji Office Hours: 10-13, 1:30-6, 7-8 Phone 406-W THE BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEER simple Tittle rdle that you cannot put tomorrow in the place of today with success. I shall have to ask her to re- sign.” _ One procrastinating, behind the hour employee can play havoc with an office or a business. Things are so closely fitted together, one bit of work depend- ing for its accomplishment on the fact that another bit has been done prompt- ly, and the lagger and the time waster will not long be tolerated in an up to date concern. Not tomorrow, but to day, is the rule of the successtul Wrote of Scenery He Never Saw. The most notable instance of a novel dealing with a country which the au- thor had never seen was Shorthouse’s “John Inglesant.” i The second volume of that remarka- ble romance deals in the most detailed way with Italian manners and Italian scenery. Many of the descriptions— that of Umbria at night, for instance, and the scene in the pavilion in the forest—are charged with the very ‘at- mosphere of Italy, and Florence dur- ing the plague lives horribly before our eyes. Yet Joseph' Henry Shorthouse had never been in Italy. Enthusiasm and the genius for assimilation evolved it all in a quiet house at Edgbaston.— London Chronicle. A Great Discovery Swollen hands, ankles, feet are due to & dropsical condition,. often caused by disordered kidneys. Naturally when the kidneys are d the blood is filled with poisonous waste matter, swhich set- tles in the feet, ankles and wrists; or ungder the eyes in bag-like formations. As a remedy for those nized symptoms of i by uric acid—as \ uent urination, as well as sediment in i e urine, or if uric acid in the blood has caused rheumatism, lum- urine, back- There is more Catarrh in this section of the country than all other diseases put together, and for years it was sup- posed to be incurable. Doctors prescribed local remedies, and by constantly failing to cure with local treatment, pronounced it incurable. Catarrh is a local disease, greatly influenced by constitutional con- ditions and therefore requires constitu- tional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Medi- cine, manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohilo,” is a constitutional remedy, is taken internally and acts thru the Blood on the Mucous Surfaces of the System. One Hundred Dollars re- ward is offered for any case that Hall's Catarrh Medicine falls to cure. Send for circulars and testimonials. F. J. CHENBY & CO., Toledo, Ohio. Sold by Druggists, - T6c. ~ Hall's Family Pills for constipation. = ———————————— Expensive ¥nooting. One of the Maxim guns, said Sir Hi- ram, was designed to fire a shell welghing about a pound. These shells were, of course, expensive, costing about $1.60 each. On a demonstration of the gun before Li Hung Chang it fired 400 of the shells, costing about $650, in one minute. The old Chinese statesman on being told the cost of the shells said, “This gun fires altogether too fast for China.” The king of Den- mark’s comment was, “That gun would bankrupt my little kingdom in about two hours.” Regulations of the United States steamboat inspection service require persons to be twenty-one years old be- fore being licensed as masters or chief engineers. ity about themselves. AR LT a4n . - £ Pottery of the Amazon. An interesting tribe of the upper Amazon has been discovered which in 1ts division of work is remindful of the guilds of the middle ages. One portion makes clothing and nothing else; an- other one is purely agricultural; an- other devotes its time and labor to the construction of weapons, and so on. Their pottery, however, is the most notable of their productions. Some of these jars are extremely large, but very thin, although strong and durable. Some of the smaller vessels are almost as thin as paper. Cure that cold ~Do it today. Sile CASCARA EPQUININE ‘The old family remedy—in tablet form—safe, sure, easy to take. No opiates—no unpleasant after effects. Cures colds in 24 hours—Gripin 3 days. Money back if it fails. Get the genuine box with Red Top and Mr. Hill’s picture on it—25 cents, At Any Drug Store These Are “Good-Service” Advertisers Offering you their “‘good-service” and spending money to tell this commun- Why not call them up? iati t, it is simpl; de miofiuio ?h;fl:m‘;yzognfi; I EEE RS SRR R R R R R R LR LR R R R R R R R and stiffness rapidly dau?pesr x x & * The very best possible way to take * DRY CLEANING % % KOORS BROTHERS CO. & care of yourself is to take a of o hot water before meals and Anuri¢, the * * ¥ discovery of Dr. Pierce of Buffalo, N. Y. % Clothes Cleaners for Mem & & Bakers and Confectioners & Step into any drug store and ask for a * Women and Children % & Manufacturers and Jobbers ¥ 50c. package of Anuric, which is man x THE MODEL DRY % & Ice Cream, Bakery Goods, & times more potent than lithia and elimi- nates uric acid as hot water melts sugar. * CLEANING HOUSE x & Confectionery, Cigarsand * A short trial will convince you. * Hogan Bros., Props. ® x Fountain Goods * OTHE) __IH] JESOT. * # & 316 Minn. Ave. Phone 1256 * MHERE[‘S‘SA.S)Vl';ChBiFORYOUA EE XXX E AR KX KRR XX ° KX XX R R RRERE Minneapolis, Minn.—“I have found * * reneesFavorss ||N| T e ree’s 'avori q Prescription. « BROSVIK, THE TAILOR +* 0‘”’ ing w early mar- * ® o, it ried life it was rec- * Phone 438 ] Qoo |!jommended to me x « Wy 1during expectancy. x x Wad' was run-down and in a nervous state, and the ‘Prescrip- tion’ built me up and cured me of this “ nervous condition. Since that time I have always taken the ‘Favorite Prescri) tion’ and it has always been such a help to me in keeping me well and strong, and my babies were all fine and healthy. consider ‘Favorite Prescription’ one of the best things a woman can take.”—Ma#gs. Davip Dusry, 2228 E. Lake Street, G. W. LaMoure Co. 800 Line Bullding Wood For Sale Birch ‘ Jack Pine Tamarack Prompt Defivery Phone 32 FUNERAL DIRECTOR M. E. IBERTSON . UNDERTAKER inn. 6E0. N, FRENCH & SON Phone 93 or 438-J Prompt deliveries to all parts of the city. 4 ft. or 16 in. lengths. Special rate on delivery from ear. Huffman & 0'Leary FURNITURE AND UNBERTAKING H N Inxm.ihull Director Phone (78-W or ™ eranged easil, inflammat the glass f y el Dur- I KK XK KRR R KT ERESE KEERERR KRR KRR HE & DRUGS AND JEWELRY & % Wholesalers and Retallers & % Orders given that same ser- & ¥ vice you get in person. * x BARKER'S * %« Third St. Bemidji, Minn. * KEEXKXREXXKRKKEKR & Yy * Service and satisfaction. Mail & ¥ KKK XK EEK « GENERAL MERCHANDISE & % QGroceries, Dry Goods, Shoes, Flour, Feed, etc. The * * careful buyers * * buy here. * * W. G. SCHROEDER * +« Bemidji Phoue 65 LR R R R R R R R NSRS KRR KRR R RN R RRE 'S S E RS R SRR EEEEEEE R R KX XEEEREX XX ERE X ok/k ko kR ® I EE S SRR R LR R MACHINERY catalog puinted on delicate pink OLD PRESGRIPTION FOR WEAK KIDNEYS A medicinal preparation like Dr. Kilmer’'s Swamp-Root, that has real curative value almost sells f{tself. Like an endless chain system the remedy is recommended by those who have been benefitted to those who are in need of ii. Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-Root 18 a physician’s prescription. It has been tested for years and has brought re- sults to countless numbers who have suffered. The success of Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root is due to the fact that it fulfills almost every wish in over- coming kidney, liver and bladder dis- eases, corrects urinary troubles and neutralizes the uric acid which causes rheumatism. Do not suffer. Get a bottle of Swamp-Root from any druggist now. Start treatment today. However, if you wish first to test this great preparation send ten cents to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y., for a sample bottle. When writing be sure and mention the Be- midji Daily Pioneer.—Adv. kiliifl‘lif#iiil: x £ 3 The Daily Pioneer receives <+ & wire services of the United & Press Association. * * * [ EE LSRR R R R R RS R R * ® x PHOTOGRAPHER * * Photos Pay and Night * « N. L. HAKKERUP * * ® IEEERERE R R R R N IEE SRR R R R R LR MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS & Wholesale and Retafl *® Planos, Organs and Sewing * Machines x 117 Third 8t. Bemidji * Phone 6573-W ® J. BISIAR, Manager x IZEE SRR R RE R RN x DBEAN LAND CO. * * Land, Loans, Insurance * and City Property x Troppman Block Bemidji papeswould be-like a construc- tion feseman in sik overalls— and-a: booklet about perfume printed on heavy weight battle- ship gray paper would be like keeping the kitchen cabinet in It isn’t encughiite -seldsé good paper—it mustibe appropriate paper, which/ is something quite different.dSelect the paper that says yourysay. . L it We will gladiyfeond:great aad small advertisers ourrbookiet, *“Paper Does Express,” Bradley’s mono- - graph on thesuserof: Strathmore Pa- pers. Strathmoves Paper Co., Mit- tineague Mass., /828, A. i 1]

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