Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, May 5, 1920, Page 3

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‘WEDNESDAY EVENING, MAY §, 1920 ‘SPEEDY MOTOR TO CATCH ILLEGAL FISHERS St. Paul, May 5.—Poachers in the TLake of the Woods and the Rainey river will have to hustle to escape -game wardens in the future. Carlos Avery, state game and fish .commissioner, today announced that ‘the department has purchased two high speed motor boats for use of the agents of the commission in prevent- ing illegal fishing in these waters. Mr, Avery said that on the Canad- ian side high power’motor boats have been used for sometime—the regult has been that illegal fishing has been more or less successful on the Ameri- «can side because the boats used by the Minnesota department were too alow. The boats will be located at War- road apd International Falls. TOURISTS TO BOOST S'l' PAUL mm’“cl's and observers became intoxicated . St. Paul, May 5.—St. Paul manu- ‘facturers and jobbers will laud St. Paul products to more than 180,000 Minnesota residents during the trade _tour trip, May 24 to 29, of the job- bing subdivision of the St. Paul As- sociation. - The trade tour is an annual affair, $ts purpose being to bring St. Paul manufacturers and jobbers into close; contact with their customers through out the state. A nineteen piece band and moving pictures will be taken by the boosters on the trip as an added feature. The 1our will be maqe on a special train. ‘Seventy-three towns will be visited. The itinery includes St. Colud, St. Joseph, Albany, Melrose, Sauk Cen- ter, West Union, Osakis, Nelsan Alexandria, Garfield, Brandon, Melby, Ashby, Dalton, Fergus Falls, Under- wood, Battle Creek, Clitherall, Vin- ing, Henning, Deer Creek, Wadena, Verndale, Staples, Motley, Pillager, “Brainerd, Deerwood, Crosby, Cuyana, Aitkin, McGregor, Tamarack, Wright, Oromwell, Carlton, Cloquet, Flood- well, Grand Rapids, Coleraine, Bo- ey, Marble, Calumet, Nashwauk, Keewatin, Kelly Lawe, Hibbing Aurora, Biwabik, McKinley, Gilbert, ‘Eveleth, Virginia, Cohasset, Deer - Rive, Ball Club, Bona, Cass Lake, Farris, Bemidji, Laporte, Walker, Hackensack, Backus, Pine River, Pe- quot, and Little Falls. Préscott, Wis.—The condition of the Mississippi river at this point is not - favorable for first-of-the-season fishing for river pike. The water is still too high and dirty for good fish- ing. “THAT DULL ACHING Don’t worry and complain about a bad back. Get rid of it! For weak kidneys, lame and achy backs, your neighbors recommend Doan’s Kidney Pills. Read this statement: Mrs. D. G. Miller, 313 Second St., Bemidji, says:. “I had a dull, heavy ache in the small of my back and over my_ kidneys; it ached continu- ally day and night. My back even hurt when I turned over in bed. With this misery came a tired, languid feeling. It robbed me of all energy. My kidneys were weak and acted ir- regularly. I tried Doan’s Kidfey Pills and they quickly relieved me of the disagreeable aching. They strengthened my back and fixed up my kidneys.” OVER THREE YEARS LATER, Mrs. Miller said: “The cure Doan’s Kidney Pills gave me has lasted ever since I recommended them. I have - unlimited faith in them.” Price 60c, at all dealers. Don’t simply ask for a kidney remedy—get Doan’s Kidney Pills—the same that Mrs. Miller had. Foster-Milburn §o., Mfrs., Buffalo, N. Y. | |3 Coffee Didn't Taste * - Right This Morning? - “times follows coffee, _ drinking,, you know.’; - Isn't this a good time to try INS'Ei'ANT POS “There's a Reason” g Made Postum Cereal Company. - SCIENTIST TURNS SWITCH AND GUESTS ARE INTOXICATED Non-Alcoholic Jag Is Staged in San Francisco; Every- thing Real But Taste San Francisco Woman Has Gained Thirty Pounds by Taking Tanlac “I had not seen a well day in twenty-five years until I started tak- ing Tanlac,” said Mrs. Virginia Stapp, (o:fllss Valencia St., San Francisco, al. “I was beginning to think,” she continued, “that I would have to bear my wretched health as long as I lived. T had no appetite, and when I man- aged to eat a few bites I could not digest it and as I could get no strength or nourishment I fell off twenty-five pounds in weight. I hardly knew what it was to be with- out a headache. All my life I have been so constipated that every day for years I had to take a laxative. My tongue was always coated and I had a bad taste in my mouth all the time. My condition was so bad that I could get litle sleep, but would roll and toss about all night long. “But all that is changed now, for since taking Tanlac I am able to eat! anything I please without any bad after effects and I have actually gained thirty pounds. I haven’t had a headache in so long I have almost (By International News Service) San Francisco, May 5.—Science is always a lap ahead of legislation. It is not surprising, therefore, that the imagination and inventive genius of man has contrived a machine that promises to make the Federal Prohi- bition Amendment of little conse- quence. And the “Ohm cocktail,” the “Am- peres high ball” and the ‘“high volt- age fizz”’ may yet become as famous as the Martini, Ecotch or the gin of less arid days. The first non-alcoholic “‘jag” party recorded in history took place here recently in the laboratory of Dr. -.1- bert Abrams, a San Francisci scient- ist. \ Physicians, dentists, students without the use of a single drop of alcoholic stimulant. Vibration did it. It was the “elec- tronic jag” the “vibratory bun” or whatever name it may come to be called. Dr. Abrams simply turned a switth and his guests began to show all the familiar symptoms. Some had talking jags, others were hilarious and still others fell asleep. The machine produced vibrations of alcohol. You put your feet on a sheet of zinc, clap an electroue on your head and John Barleycorn is with you again. [@fverything is there but the taste. SALE OF BONUS o e JVE COLOR IN CHEEKS St. Paul, May 5.—Fifteen days’ ex- tension to May 20 of the popular sale S of state soldiers’ bonus bonds was Be Better Looking—Take formally announced by Henry Rines| | Olive Tablets state treasurer and bonus board member . Bonue payments during April ag- gregated $4,168,982, and fund now holds about $2,000,000. The latter total includes a large part of $1,478,- 600 of proceeds to noon Monday from the popnlar sales of bonds. Bonus board members in New York last week planned to search for a market for the large addition block of bonus certificates. If You Need a Medicine “You Should Have the Best pated condition has been relieved and I never have that bad taste or coated tongue any more. I sleep nine to ten hours every night, can do my housework with ease and I have so much new life and energy that I just feel fine all the time.” Tanlac is for sale by the City Drug Store and all leading drug stores everywhere. . If your skin is yellow—complexion :ou have a tast: hlxll‘g your mouth— . m.eod —you should tal!:z&ive blets. e mg'n'e FEdwards' Olive Tablets—a sub-by or calomel—were prepared Dr. Edwards after 17 years of 7 . Dr.Edwards’OliveTabletsarea Have you ever stopped to reason why it is that so many products that are extensively advertised, all at once drop out of sight and are soon for-} gotten? The reason is plain—the article did not fulfil the promises of|® the manufacturer. This applies more particularly to a medicine. A medi- cine. A medicinal preparation that has real curative value almost sells itself, as like an endless chain system the remedy is recommended by those who have been benefited, to those who are in need of it. A prominent druggist says “Take for example Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp- Root, a preparation I have sold for many years and never hesitate to recommend, for in almost every case it shows excellent results, as many, of my customers testify. No other kidney remedy has so large a sale.” According to sworn statements and verified testimony of thousands who have used the preparation, the suc- cess of Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-Root is due to the fact, so many people claim, that it fulfils almost every wish in overcoming kidney, liver and blad- der ailments, corrects urinary trou- bles and neutralizes the uric acid which causes rheumatism. You may receive a sample bottle of Swamp-Root by Parcels Post. Ad- dress Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y., and enclose ten cents; also mention the Bemidji Pioneer. Large and medium size bottles for sale at all drug stores. \ \ t some- N3 5 Battle Crock, Mich. F . THE BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEER D]DN’T HAVEWELL :Cfli{flififlklilli’ DAY FOR 25 YEARS (4 4 ¢ 4% 6 2% %% 4% » forgotten about them. My consti-|. When Louisville first heard l | In the early thirties of the nineteenth century, a ’ | lady of Louisville wrote to her cousin inNew York: It was many years after matches were generally made m Europe before they were seen throughout America. There was no means for spreading rapidly such wonderful news. Today the new invention that contributes largely to comfort or convenience is quickly known in every section of the land. Ad- vertisements being the story. The farmer’s wife of Idaho or Texas isqtfiteuweflpatedu&ecitywomanoftheEut. Read the advertisemenats in your newspaper. They are the heralds. of progress, the great news-spreading force of modern im- dustry. Tbeycdntainreo.lnewsfor you. They save you time and lessen your work and enable you to obtain better value for the money you spend. Time spent in reading advertisements is well spent. day in June, with N. G. Reynolds. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Grover of | & Bemidji, have moved on to the A. C. Wilcox place for the summer. NORTHERN * LIBERTY The Farmers’ elub met Saturday at the hali with Mr. and Mrs. H. L. Arnold. The new county agent was out and gave an interesting talk on cattle raising, and the different types of dairy cattle; advocating very strongly that this community keep just one breed of cattle. Mr. and Mrs. Poke, who own a large farm near Movil lake, this township, were added to tne club. The club will meet the first Satur- Bemidji will stay at the Noel farm |Sunday. this summer. They will continue to Mr. Brown:is a traveling salesman for the firm. Mr. and Mrs. B. Huggitt, and Miss|jtor at Herman Klauson’s Sunday. Agnes ‘Whiting were Bemidji visitors Saturday. Mrs. E. P. Cronemiller took dinner |midji Saturday. with Mr, and Mrs. D. A. Whiting Sunday. son’s Sunday. MUFFINS and POPOVERS REAKFAST is too B st ) o Sift together flour, bakin pqwde:,gm r and salt; ad POWDER ‘bsolutol_y Pure l?aflloven too soon they will SENT FREE New Royal oon- t'.\lninxlnml)ru of lighen economical n;c.l?en, "me the m famous day. Address use to ROYAL BAKING POWDER OO, 115 Palton Strest Now Yesk Oy of matches “When | was in Richmond last winter I was told of a curious new device for making fire. It consisted of small splin- ters of wood with tips of some substance that burst into flame when rubbed en a rough surface. lfgwcan-procuremof them for me, I shall be grateful.” PAGE THRER l#’i%il******i‘*lfi' I Z2E A SRS S S S Born to Mr. and Mrs. Champsy Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Brown of|Petri a big bouncing baby girl last . and Mrs. H. son and work for the Gamble-Robinson Co. ta.nn:[lll‘ya:ere r:m!::;nonx; Ifl:‘l‘( Erick- Fred Helbig of Nymore was a vig- Peter Utter, Champsy Petrl an& August Beeker were visitors in Be- Dr. E. H. Smith made a profession- al call at Champsy Petri’s Sunday.

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