Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, January 10, 1918, Page 3

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John Paul Jones Was Scotca. { ; ' . TOM SMART - hin Paul Jones was Scotch by A | % 1 ' DRAY AND TRANSFER u very enterprising person. Dur-} . g . Safe and Plano. Moving the. Revolutionury “wur. he ~com- ANB PH“FESSI“"“_ Res. Phone 68 .818 America ed an' American privateer and{} = X Saice Phoi iy de successful -attacks on- British " 5 R RS merce. In 1779 the Dutch pemmit- DOCTORS Py Iz B —— A et him to®nter thelr ports with two A DR. C. }. SANBORN British ships of war. which he had ken and which ‘the Tocal authorities : ; PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON ~-Office—-Miles Block CIOLhe.s (l?lgayne?s !or Met‘:}, ‘Women and- Children N The ¢ flitly refused to deliver up. He died Paris in 1792, and his remains were ght to this country a few years e Beauty or Ugliness. eaking ' of the personnl appear Lincoln and dther presidents, PHYSICIAN AND SURGHON- : - - ;. Office Security Bank Bleck J 5 i DEAN LAND CO. -~ 4and, Loans, Insurance and 8 lady who has had the honor an introduction to President Wilson, | == . ‘explains why she was disappointed in “his looks. She says: “He isn’t home- 1y enough to be handsome and he isn’t DB. E. A. SHANNOK, M. D. SHy. Tropegty ‘handsome enough to be attractive” A || - PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Troppman Block Bemidji . famous Parisienne once said that next Office in Mayo Block e to being. the most beautiful womun in|| phone 39¢ _' Res. Phone 397 "Paris, she would prefer to be known a8 the homellest.” ‘She would then hieve distinction in either case. GENERAL MERCHANDISE Groceries, Dry Goods, Shoes, Flour, . DR. L. A, WARD i Feed, etc. . The careful PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON buyers buy here." Rats Steal Fiatiron. Troppman Block I W. 6. SCHROEDER “Some plastering fell from the ceiling “of ' the llnen room at the Glenn house ‘recently, says Pittsburgh Dispatch, and Harland Ray secured a ladder and Bemidji, Minn. Bemidji Phone 66 ‘climbed up to knock down the loose DRS. GILMORE & McCANN . Bat at .plaster remaining. ' He discovered a PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS ‘rat’s nest and in it were three ladles' Oftice—Miles Block THE HOME CAFE S f Gordon Burns, Prop. ——————— e e Corner 3rd St. and Beltrami Ave, DE. EINER JOHNSON g PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Bemidji, Minn. if _silk stockings, two perfume bottles and .a’.flatiron, besides numerous other >things not mentioned in this inventory. . “How the rats got the iron there re: - }flhtns a mystery. TUSETH SCHOOL OF MUSIC Teachers of : VIOLIN, PIANO AND BAND . Gave Timely Warning. Vivian was playing in the lumber ‘that had been piled in the backyard A. V. GARLOCK, M. D. - INSTRUMENTS “*when her mother happened to see her. SPECIALIST Phone 683-W 116 3rd 8t. L “Vivian,” her mother said, “you!| EYE EAR NOSE THROAT ! mustn’t play on that lumber; you are Glasses Fitted ltable to get hurt.”- Vivian obeyed and ‘was ‘soon interested in something else DENTI NE R "untll Billy came out, He, like boys, = 8T8 ; bad to climb up to the top of the lum- g i ber. Vivian said: “Bllly, don't climb DR. J. W. DIEDRICH- up- on that lumber 'cause if you do DENTIST . .you'll be wearin’ crutches.” ! Office O'Leary-Bowser Bldg. Fu"“lTUHE & Rer Phone 3767 UNDERTAKING * . Guard Against Evil Spirit. If a Chinese baby dies, the evil spirit when released will enter the body of | . EL N MRS, S inara B fogon .~ DR. G. M. PALMER PHONE 178-W or R the next child born. In order to pre- “vent this_calamity, says World’s Work, -DENTIST S the parents “tie an egg and some ‘mus- | | Office Phone 124 Residence 346 - e . tard seed to the body of the dead child Miles ‘Block, Bemidji ln the belief that the evil spirit will not |° appear until the egg hatches and the seed sprouts. The astute parents care- | |. A Y ‘finll); boil the egg and the seefl‘ h; or- DE; gb%.‘-}‘sqrom l.adms' and Gsms' s“"s er to postpone the date indefinitely. North of Markham Hotel MADE to ORDER o T Gibbons Block Tel. 230 Could Be Worse. A stoi c Cleaning. pressing and alterations ifl\e Woman at the Back Door—*Tt - 3 of allkinds. All work up-to-date, [i must be a terrible thing to have to go 3R D. L STANTON first class workmanship through life without your limb. You N eid ; must remember, however, that it will TIST bé restored to you in the next world.” 4T know,” sald the tramp, “it will, mum, but that don’t encourage me none. You OSTEOPATH = gee, me foot was cut off when I was a DR. H. A. NORTHROP baby, and it won’t come within a foot -of the ground when it’s restored. A=) OSTEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Puck. i e 3 ‘Ibertson Bldg. O s — Office Phone 153-W T. Beaudette, Merchant Talilor Office in Winter Block . 210 Third Street Had a Slim Chance. Being firm friends, Marie's two lov- FUNERAL DIRECTOR ‘-ers gecided that one must end his § ‘courtship to help the other. When CHIROPRACTOR . ON Axel suggested “heads or talls” no coln | =——————i———— . was at hand. He agreed to the use of THORWALD LUNDE M' E_:_ IBERTS Sandy’s pocketknife, but was 11l pre- CHIROPRACTOR - _pared for his friend’s words as the || o4 anq Chrontc Diseases han- UNDE RTAKER knife-shot up'wnrd “If the knife stays 1ded with great success ou win!" . : 425 e T LY First National Bank Buflding- 405 Beltrami Ave., G e : Bemidji, Minn_ Phone 406-W emidji, Minn, Remarkable Memory. lours 10-12 a. m.; 2-6 7-8 p. m. In England Samuel Wesley repro- L ——_—_.—.——-J * ~duced from memory after-a lapse of - e 25 years an oratorlo covering upward VETERINARIANS T ‘of 800 closely written pages which he | s had composed early in life. He sald J. \VARNINGER L ' v E R Y ] that he saw the score in his mind’s VETERINARY SURGEON . . % :}'e as accurately as if it lay before (| otice and Howpital 3 doors west || We are prepared to furnish g of Tropyman Store good teams and drivers — Phone No. 209 . on short notice - The Observant Recontour. Congleby—“When I am telling a man Reeves & Reeves __..a story I stop short if I see a peculiar W. K. DENISON, D. V. M. ] gleam fn his eye.” Mimms—"“Does it | VETERINARIAN Phones 164-W mean that he has heard it before?” || Office Phone 3-R Res. 99-J Congleby—*“No, it means that he is P not listening, because he is thinking of 4th Street Miss. AV_G. S"e one he intends to tell me!” IAWYERS AT e e 3rd St. and Irvine Ave. The ‘Dough That Father Made. —_— “ T " You can announce it that she is the i house guest of her parents, or any way Miles Block Phone 560 . < they like, but 4t generally means that H A Y ! the bride has ambled back for a little E home cooking—Louisville Courier MUSIC urnal. C 3 < MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS GRAHAM M. TORRANCE ‘LAWYER By the Bale, Ton or Carload New Auto Cooling System. Pianos, Organs and Sewing ¥ A new cooling system for automo- Machi —~pllés is regutated by the quantity of e chines e Phones 'sgaw fuel used to operate an engine rather “- o than by the engine’s speed, its’ action one = 4th Street Miss. Ave. J. BISIAR, Manager : o C I Paying for Poetry. BUSINESS - Poetess—“Do you pay for poetry?” ‘.WE MUST OPERATE AT * Editor—"Yes, madam. My physician N. L. HAKKERUP { orders me to an expensive rest cure o A 0NCE" twice a year.”—Buffalo Express. R Appendicitis has clutched another Doubtful. Photos Day and Night victim. Clogged intestines generate the poisons of this dreaded disease. ~.. For-our part, we doubt if there was How often this might have been ever a girl who could carry a broken avoided by the use of “Hollister’s e o e bl cTase AL " |!/Rocky Mountain Tea.” This wonder- Fime time. alyeston News. !ful herb laxative penetrates = and fel the lower bowels, removing ‘n' and poisons. "Thousands To Remove Ink Stalns. - Hair dressing, face massage of are today enjoying health Apply a few drops of oxalic acid. fol- scalp treatment. Switches made jthru ti\e virtues of this excellent lowing it with a few drops of Javelle from combings $1.50. 'medicine. Trifling cost, harmless in water and rinsing botb guick]y with 311 6th St. Phone 112-W | Setion. Get a package today. bolllog water. City Drug e B'xrkera Drug Store, THE BEMIDII DAILY PIONEER Wholesale and Retail Reeves & Reeves SUGAR Wzth a view to giving the public a cor- _ rect_w_understandmg of the sugar situation, the following FACTS are presented: Existing conditions are world wide in their effect, not in “any sense local. Any consideration of the question of available sugar supply must take into account a series of ex- traordinary factors. The immediate effect of the declaration of the European wat was to cut off from the world’s market the sugar of the Central Powers. About one-third of the world’s total pro- duction formerly came from within the present battlelines of Europe. The Western battlefront passes through the sugar producing territory of France and of Belgium. In conse- quence, England, France and other foreign countries have competed with the United States for Cuba’s cane sugar. Not only did this cause an advance in the price of raw and refined sugar, but until competition was checked by the recent agreement among the Allies, it resulted in lessening the supply available to the people of this country last fall. At the same time, an abundance of sugar—-hundreds of thousands of tons—has been locked up in far-away Java, owing to the lack of ships to transport it. It is no more available than unmined gold. To provide ships to bring this sugar here—or to Europe—would withdraw them from the more important business of carrying our soldiers and their supplies overseas, as Mr. Hoover has pointed out. The nation-wide movement to save the fruit crop last sea« son greatly increased the use of sugar. While the quantity in the sugar bowl was for this and other reasons lessened, this sugar is wisely stored as food in preserved fruits, jams and _jellies. ‘ “Every jar of fruit preserved adds that much to our in-- surance of victory, adds that much to hasten the end of this conflict.” Because of the increased demand for sugar. more sugar cane has been planted in Cuba, Porto Rico, Hawaii and Louisiana, the chief sources from which the United States gets cane sugar. . The reports from Cuba and Porto Rico make the situation more favorable than a month ago for a supply to meet the sugar needs of all who are dependent on this source—includ- ing this country, our soldiers abroad and the Allies. We buy raw cane sugar in the open market and refine it. To the extent of our ability, we are co-operating with the Government to insure a fair distribution of cane sugar, to stabilize the price to the consumer and to prevent hoarding and waste. We kept our refineries working last fall so long as there was a ton of raw sugar to be had. _In order to make our output of refined sugar go as widely as possible, we distribute Domino Cane Sugars in convenient- - size cartons and small ‘cotton bags. These small-size pack- " ages make it easy for grocers to limit sales to actual needs and to prevent hoarding. They help to prevent waste in the home. Housewives can cooperate with this plan by asking for these package sugars. It will be necessary for grocers and consumers to watch carefully their distribution and purchases during the ap- proaching period of readjustment. The refineries are now starting up and supplies of raw sugar coming forward but it will take weeks, and posnbly months, for the return of normal conditions. In war-time and at all times it is our aim to safes .d the interests of the public we serve. American SugarRefining Company ““ Sweeten it with Domino’’ Granulated, Tablet, Powdered, Confectioners, Brown

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