Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
. Dr. W. K. Dentson—Dr. D. R. Burgess TODAY'S DATE FALLS . UPONFRIDAY.THE13TH: || ..., Vowtierase " ¢ LEAPYEAR AT THAT|l memiew i Records Show Nothing Unusual Has Happened on That Date for Decade A A A A A A A AN AN BUSINESS P DRY CLEANING Olotbes Cleansrs for Men, Womes and Ohildren DAY CLEANING HOUSE .‘3202;‘;\'»:?.0»« BROS PROPS New York, Feb. 13.—Today is Friday, the 13th—and Leap Year at that. " If statistics are reliable, supersti- tious persons need have no fear that the day will bring disaster. By the law of averages, in fact, the day probably will not bring anything DR. E. A. SHANNON, M. D. Office Phone 396 C. R. SANBORN, M. D. Physician and Surgeon Oftice: Miles Bloek House Phone #49——Office phone §§ .DR. E. H. CUM Office hours, 11 a:m: t60 12 m,, 2 pm. to 5 p.m.. Schroeder Biock. Office phone 18, Res. phone 211. HOTEL RADISSON Minneapolis LUNDE and DANNENBERG Physician and Surgeon Chiropractors m Mayo Blok M ure10 to 12 ams 8 to 5,7 to 8 pm [n the heart of the retail and theatrical Phone 401-W Calls made district; 450 rooms at moderate rates. 1st National Bank Blag. Bemidji Four large cafes. The largest and most complete hotel in the northwest. DR. H. A. NORTHROP OSTEOPATHIC PHYSBIOIAW AND SURGEON Oftice phone 183 SUBSCRIBE FOR THE DAILY ¥10NEER Ibertson Block more than the ordinary run of luck. The records show that Fridays, the 13th, of the last ten years, instead of being notably days of bad luck, have been nothing whatever out of the ordinary. Last year had only one—June 13— for which is recorded nothing more exciting that the resignation of a Chinese cabinet. = In 1918 there were two—Septem- i ber 13, a new barren day, and .De- cember 13. On the later day, Gor- don Fawcett Hamby killed two offi- ‘\ cials of the East Brooklyn bank, for whose deaths he paid the penalty at Sing Sing recently; the governor of Colorado beat the federal govern- ment to it by signing a bill that made P H. C. NELSON " - Piano Tuning and Piano and Violin Repairing—Bow Filling 216 Beltrami Ave. Phone 573W E. M. SATHRE Buys Small Houses for cash and sells them on small * montHly payments ‘ D. H. FISK, Attorney at Law Office, Northern National Bank Colorado dry, and President Wilson|| Bldg. Phone 181. Collections a first set foot on French soil at Brest. |} specialty. In 1917 there were two Fridays|—"" the 13th, and, for all the newspapers —- show; they may have been the very & gui]g,st days in the year. As for{| FIRE INSURANCE 916’s one day of the double curse, it g REAL ESTATE ) was so far from unlucky as to mark the end of a milk strike in New York which has made an 11,000,000 quart s cut in the city’s supply since Oct. 1. REYNOLDS & WINTER 212 Beltrami Avenue August 13, 1915, records no out- Phone 144 standing calamity. Friday, June 13, - 1918 (triply cursed?), was just as empty of news, and so were the four ™ / preceding years. ' DENTISTS On May 13, 1910, the first Friday\ the 13th in the decade and the only |~~~ = one in that year, one man was killed ; " and three hurt in a twenty-four hour DR. J. W. DIEDRICH automobile race at Brighton Beach; DENTIST track. Offiee—O’Leary-Bowser Bldg. Phones—Oftice 376-W. Res. 37¢-R We haven't got around to the point of view of the ancient Scandi-! navians, who called “Frigi deag” the g day of the Goddess Frigga, or Freyja, DR. H. A. HASS the luckiest day of the week; but we \ are getting more liké the Moslems, DENTIST whose conviction that the sixth day 8 of the week is a pretty.average day, Office Over Boardman’s Drug after all, is expressed in their belief that it was on Friday that Adam was, Phone 447 created, entered Paradise, was ex-| pelled, repented, and died, and that on Friday will come the day of resur- rection. Store. DOCTORS : \ R | A AAAAAAAAAAANANAANAAANAANANA Bemidji Lod . 119, 1.”(‘)l i Logse 2o , DR. EINER JOHNSON R0, IO OO . 0. F., Beltrami Ave. and 4th St., meets Physician and Surgeon Bemidji, Minn. i S0 0 O S MID-WINTER SUITS & OVERCOATS For Men and Young Men Right now especially, you can save money by buying a Sincerity Suit or Overcoat Any price you care to pay from $30.00 to $55.00 ®. 3. Lagua The Clothier and House of Quality 206 Third Street Bemidji, Minn. OO O OO AR il every Friday evening at 8 o’clock. THIS WEEK FIRST DEGREE g C. J. Winter, N. G., Tel. 362J l R. A. Hannah, Ree. Sec., Tel 719W B [BUSINESS AND | PROFESSIONAL A A A T VETERINARIANS | DR E H. SMITH Physician and Surgeonm Office Security Bank Sleck DR. L. A. WARD ~ Physician and Surgeon DRS. GILMORE & McCANN Physicians and Surgeons Office Miles Block DR. G. M. PALMER Dentist and Orthodontist ..Office and Hospital'$ doors west. . Hioe o o Barker Building of Troppman's FhoneNeat" | Bemidji, Minn. J. WARNINGER VEATEAINARY SURGEON Good for the Whole Family “A good cough remedy is one that can be depended upon to cure goughs. that cures some particular cough, but coughs in genex ot one It must be a cough remedy that can be relied upon for all the different coughs that are so prevalent. While the causes of all coughs are primarily the same, yet the condition of the -patient is what makes the difference in the nature of the cough itself, Coughs of healthy persons are easier to cure than the coughs of invalids. The powerful convulsive cough of a large man is harder to cure than the cough of a baby. If you get a remedy that will cure a large man's cough and yet not be too powerful for the baby, you have a good cough remedy. ed ‘3 e 9 ) Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy is just this kind of remedy. It is good for any member of the family. It relieves coughs of all kinds. It is the product of much thought and study to produce an ideal cough remedy. It iscom- posed of things which cure easily and soothingly without harm- ing the most delicate tissues of the throat. Itacts as easily and safely on the young as on the old, and is the ideal remedy for coughs, colds, croup, influenza, whooping cough and bronchitis.” [ s THE HOUSE OF KUPPENHEIMER CLOTHES The reason why Kuppenheimer Clothes prove their worthiness in long wear and service ) IT’S simple enough to make a suit of clothes that will get i your approval on casual inspection. But 3} consider what is required of a garment * to win approval in continued service. . = E o] 'l You want clothes that ™ will meet every requirement of appear- ance, fit and wear. You want merit in every detail—in fabrics, in style, in workmanship. You get these things in Kuppenheimer clothes and Styleplus clothes They are made with your interests as the prime consideration. Every stitch, every seam, every trim- ming, every button, must pass under rigid inspection. Kuppenheimer wool- ens are cold water shrunk, and tested to sun, moisture and climatic conditions, to insure fastness of color and long- wearing service. GILL BROTHERS BEMIDJI'S LARGEST CLOTHING STORE We’ll Show You in Suits and Overcoats $35 $40 $45 $50 $55 $60