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PAGE TWO { S — THE BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEER FRIDAY EVENING, MAY 26, 19022 S OO Y| ! 'SHOP HERE|THiE FIRST THE HOUSEWIFE WIL E"-'|||||IIIIIIIIIII||lIIIIIIll!!!!l.IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllIIIIIIIIIIIIII|||IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII|IIIIIIIIIIlIi.alllIIIIIlIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIII IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIlIIIIIIIIllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIE THE SATURDAY MARKET BASKET THE MERCHANT WHO ADVERTISES HIS WARES AND PRICES IS NATURALLY A FAIR DEALER L FIND THIS PAGE A LABOR AND TIME SAVER IN DECIDING "HER ORDER PO NS ) IIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIHIIIIIIIIiIIIIiIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIlIIIlllI|I|IIIIII!III|lIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIII|IllII!IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIlIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII 0000000000000 00O A W‘ww The Trial of a Lawyer. A successful Chmnuuqua lecturer, IRISHMEN ONCE WORE KILTS mmmmmmm&ml ) inent att y In his own city, o 2 3 :; e riiued trse auds | Asetion Made by Now verk News.| Modern Girl Is Worth a Dozen of Her Sisters Try a Meat Order ences with his lecture, “The Trlal of Those of the Scots. of the Straltlaced Era From Us Satur day Jesus From a Lawyer's Standpoint.” Recently he listened to toe following diverting introduction from the lips of a platform manager: I am very glad to introduce to you, Broton: IBwe iwete 106, il Gherallpis 25250525252 5252 525252 525252525252585e525252 52525252525 5e5ese5e52525e5 . lu,;"ms ,lfl"flfl“ge:;‘gxfln ::rwl:}l-.;s declares the New York Evening Telo- It is beyond my small power to comprehend the Y glllISbIljr "}; s Wheat Ger eal }261‘ pkg igc ::szv:lled lecture, ‘The Trial of E’";‘mi T reason for the derogatory attitude of a modern world ue Label Jam, in 1-b jars . L c Jesus From a Lawyer's Standpont: | (% Fretod KIC8 S8 B0, C toward the modern girl. I think the modern girl Saturda % Large cans Hominy, each . .15¢ :nlcgnl:‘t l;]l:‘];:'l:ml':li‘r':"I?l‘l‘:fl::::l‘l‘gre(;v‘;m: by which the various Scottish clans is worth a dozen of her long-skirted, long-faced, A y i 10-1b sacks Corn Meal ............ 35(; g audience than the one announced, |Are Sl distinguished, was ever ar- pale-lipped sisters of the straitlaced strata. Specials [ Golden Bantam Sweet Corn, per 1b. . .25¢ % | That vould be ‘The Trial ;l l;:]tnuw- Irish bagpipes were of a simple I am for her! I vote for her every time. I think 5 { yer From Jesus' Standpoint.’”— , : & 3 N . : i e i type. ‘They were not blown, but she is charming. I think, as you Americans say, that Pot Roast, Ib ....... 11c _Everybody's Magazine. pumped and never reached the high she is @ peach, a pippin! "She is piquante. Shg'is al- ) FOR SATURDAY ONLY! * stute of development of the war in- Jui he ie R g Rib Boiling Beef, Ib.. &c 4 pkgs Corn Flakes ............. 25¢ strument so closely associated with uring. She is more modest in her frank, self-confident | 3 ) 4 Scots fighting regiments for hundreds way than the rather silly young female who held the Hamburger, Ib ...... 10c cans Pork and Beans ........ v 250* of years and with life in the high- center of the stage in the reign of Victoria. SATsaR . I it et 10¢ e e —————————=uaf There is no more doubt that kilts and plaids were worn In early times in Ireland than there is that the lands. The Irish guards have had the pipes since their formation as a result of the Boer war. Among those In private life who af- By E. PHILLIPS OPPENHEIM, in New York Herald. Girls are just as nice today as ever they were in any period of the world’s history—jnst as modest—and a blessed sight more sensible ; more aole to take care of themselves. It’s asinine to go along on the assumption Choice Meats Always Lard, 10-1b pail . Special Lunch Her- ..$1.50 WEEKLY SPECIALS 1-galon Earthen Jars, with cover, for pickling or jams 4-gallon Jars, with bales . . .. § o | that women don’t know anything, that they are giddy innocents. The 8-Ib pail. .. .$1.45 ¢ fected the f Irish kilts in town - B = 4 ring, pal ;:. :‘-e” Izsuii“?m-y in memn y:[‘“'g girls of Victoria’s time knew about all there was to know, I fancy, but B i by slab, Ib. .. .18 -‘*allon Jars, with bales . ceeee $1'20 Fraite i Sirawher] was one of the brothers Oftth: I’;es‘ they were guilty of a peculiar kind of hypocrisy and deception in pretend- ACOR;. DY, 08 e 6-ga110n Jars withbales......... $1-45 ri: ':' ‘Pl:ne?:;ren; Winesap) ot 'Ig'r';;‘cfi::z’:l‘l‘;:"e' son of the for- | 0 invariably to be stupidly unaware of the commonest facts of life, and | Picnci Hams, Ib .. ... 19¢ Aluminum Doub]e Boilers .........89¢c - Apples, Oranges, Grape.f, In many minute detalls as to equip- | of making a face over even the accidental revelation of an inch of ankle. Aluminum Preserving Kettles ...... 89c fruits, Lemons and Bananas.f |ment. dress and custom there was a How silly it all was! (T RGO 4 h - fruits, Lemons anc 2anana®E | vose parallel between the two coun- Modsstiis & 2iths doil P— 2 i -inch Paint Brushes ..............70c ies. A grace of the soul, not an advertisement of the dress Outside White P 5 Sugar, 10-1b bags...... 69¢k | (ntique gold ornaments In the Dub- | makers. I seo not the slightest reason why a girl who clips her tresses, SAVO | utside ite Paint, gallon ..$2.3 lin museum, while of the same type | vermilions her lips, wears her skirts to the knee and powders her little | Outside House Pamt gallon SEE B $2.00 Creamery Butter, 1-1b Pure Lard, a Ib Milk, tall cans, 10 for.$1.00 Bacon, lean stock, 25¢ and 191:l Struwberry, Loganberry nnd White Wax or Brown Wax Onions, a lb Picnic Hams, a 1b 12¢ New Cabbage, Texas, - a lb Laundry Soap, brown, 30 bars for ........$1.00 Toilet Paper, large size roll,| 9-0z Fresh Vegetables, Radisheu,l Onions, Carrots, Fancy Head Lettuce and Cucumbers; Jello, all flavors, a pkg. .10c! Apples, fancy Winesaps, E Salt Pork,alb ........ Richelieu 1,000-Island Salad Dressing and Richelieu Mayonnaise Dressing, large| bottles (Fresh Country Eggs, a dozen We deliver free anywhere in| the city an order of groceries‘ $5.00 or over—under that, amount we make a small| charge depending on the| distance. —CALL 851— Always at Your Service 1 MILK & CREAM Pure Milk & Cream from grade Shorthorns in Dr. Gilmore’s herd. Have been supplying St. Anthony’s Hospital and can now take care of city | water. ns those of the ancient Scots, are dif- ferent in sculptural design. But in both instances the workwmanship is distinctly Celtle. Both countries had the clan system. In Ireland the chlefs, so often in- accurately described as “kings,” wer@ nothing but the heads of familles, with the dependents and slaves. In going back to the Celtic dress and music the Irish are resuming what the Strictly Original. The teacher, with a class of fourth- grade boys, considers her profession unything but boresome, “Few would ha bored if they conld look over the cora- positions my children turn in,” she con- fided to the Woman. She invited her to glance over a certain choice piece: of literature ; the “thesis,” as she cally it follows : “Story on Lambs— “Lamb is n noun and its a commen eat them roar. They take the wool off the Iambs back and wash it because it I1s always dirty and then they put it in bluing to make It that way. Thats all I know about lambs."—Chicago Jour- nal. Animal Folklore From India. Chaucer and “Uncle Remus” ob- talned Inspiration for their storleg from the same source—Indin—accord- ing to a theory advanced by Prof. J. M. McBryde of Tulane university. Fro- fessor McBryde says the storles prob- ably came from India, on the cne hand to England by the way of the Crusaders, forming part of the grent wave of animal folklore which spread ovver Europe, and on the other hand, through Buddhist missionaries into AL~ rica, whence they were hrought by tlte negroes to Southern plantation homes. Storles of the fox autwitting the wolf ‘in the well episoce as told by an English poet a century before Chaucer, and by “Uncle Remus” to “the little boys,” both pnrabeling an anclent tale of Indla, ard the “lur baby” theme of one of the tales of Buddha's 550 transmigrations, are among those cited by Professor M Bryde to prove his polnt. Chacolate Propetly Appreciated. Cocoa as a beverage was first used by Leonardo Cortez, to whom the ancient Mexican natives taught the | use of it. In the aboriginal Mexican langnage, this concoction was called “chocolate,” which means cocon and Although from the moment that this explorer and his followers nose whenever she jolly well pleases cannot be as pure at heart and as sweetly souled as Jeanne d’Arc. "I'he bobbed-haired girl, the lip-rouged girl that I left behind me, but that meets me here again in the New I salute her. is the girl of the times. York I had not seen for eleven years, I shall make her a heroine of mine. It may be that in my seventy-first novel she will reign supreme, a new portrait in the long gallery of the lovely ladies of my fancy. And she will uot be the least lovely in that somewhat crowded gallery. Saddle at an Astonishingly Tender Age. If a daring traveler braves the dan- gers of a trip Into Mongolia he is fas- cinated by the natives at the time of thefr summer festivals. Then every Mongolian family puts on its best bibs and tuckers and goes to the fair, much in the same way the people in our own country sections go to the county fair. However, at the Mone gollan county fair one does not “hit the baby” and get a five-cent cigar, or horses. The women ride as well rs the men, and by tbe time a boy has renched the age of teu he Is an expert on the very fast Mongolian ponies, without saddles. Their only trappings are a bridle, a whip and a handker- chief, They start on their wild ride over the steppes with the courage and spirit of men, whipping their horses flercely, but often reaching over kindly to wipe the dust from the eyes and nastrils of their ponies. year that they were definitely allowed to seek asylum In New Netherlands. There was a provision that “Jews | shali have permission to sail to and trade in New Netherlands and to live and remain there, provided the poor among them shall not become a burden to the company (Dutch West India company) or to the community, but be supported by their own na- tion.” This stipulation has been lived up to so faithfuily that in 10186, with a Jewish population In New York of more than 1,250,000, there as the result of examinations of 1,578 recruits for the Swedish army. Out of the total number, 1,578,117, or 7.4 number who had suffered from lum- bago was 245 per cent; among those with minor allments, the number was 5.1 per cent, and among the perfectly healthy it was only 1.7 per cent. In the case of sclatica, 3.46 per cent of those with serlous morbid conditions had suffered, and only 0.12 per cent of the healthy recruits. topped Kitchen Table. These Ranges give Universal Satisfaction, are per- fect bakers, and our present price is very low. Deduct from this a fair value for the Silverware and your Range is cheaper than it will be in three years. You may trade your Silverwarc for a Porcelai If you need a Range, be sure to see the UNIVERSAL man on Saturday, the last day of this offer. There are more UNIVERSAL Ranges in use in Be- ool o s R L R H M o T Just One More Day Of the FREE Silverware Offer WITH EACH UNIVERSAL RANGE AT GIVEN’S MEAT MARKET EDD BROTHERS —Phone 66 — Early Smooth, All Sizes EVERYTHING IN FLOWERS and PLANTS for MEMORIAL DAY BERNIE W. ALDRICH AUTO REPAIRING All Work Guaranteed 408-410 AMERICA AVE. —>Phone 187— Night Phune 515-W E = | ! =S Not Cheap Goods, but Geod Goods Cheap Phone 160 Phone 160 Clifford and Gompany Not Cheap Goods, but Good Goods Cheap A e a e e e e e Grape, in 5-1b tins, chenp- Scots never entirely abandoned. et S 9 Phone 160 [ PR Phone 160 er that butter. . .. .. $1.25 5 YMGIAR = T D’l(‘)glv'erl')]'l&l\éT Pure Vermont Maple Syrup, = 151 YOUNG BOYS EXPERT JOCKEYS o First J;w- lnl A:‘narlcfae.“ by i e ae { 2 al " here may have been a few Jewl ntil you have looke: quart oo 1.15! scI:;-’::o{:c:::::f;l::zzm:: "L,:'::" Mongolian Youths at Home In the | bere before 1654, but it was in that over your varieti es. SUBSCRIBE one, to, ouly when it gets tos : Matches, full t mutton. 1 :lon't like "g then I‘)‘:('*Imll;: throw rings at cuncs to obtain a prize, | Were but 72 pnu[:e:'l Je‘wls ‘3 the e Order Early, Please ! 1O THE 3 ALehe, fulleconn’ Its harder to chew. When its alive be- | Put one does see horse races. bauso:on Blackwells lalanc. special ... .. ..o 5S¢k | fore its killed and sent to the boachers | Instead of sitting in a grand stand —== Bemidji Floral Co. : : its called n sheep because its an oid | 20 Watching the entire race, as you No Backachs Tor the: iHeatth Oil Sardines, acan ...... SclE |jamb. It eats a lot of grass and when | 90 here, you see only the start or fin- - 4 l“ b‘ o °"‘ “0 'ld Y. —Phone 418— . you by It in the boochers you must | /Sh For the races in Mongolia are L, i l?gu}.‘ sclatica-and. other o Tomatoes, special, 2 for.35c [ now the aiferent parts because some | 30 miles long. rorms“nf bac “‘I' ? ‘"‘l"é" b'f regarded 1 Year, by mail suuous avms seevwmesinms s vt $5.00 are fat and some are skinny, You al- | The Mongollans are great horsemen, Go.re :x neu,:u Elas 1 o L Btdd“e = 1Year,bycarrier . ............. ..o, $6.00 Salmon, 1-Ib tall cans, ways must cook them because you can't | And learn to ride at a very carly age. gecayed jteet, Jo. 8 tieory adviace | e : 2 for 35¢ A > Their lives are spent with and on |DY Dr. Folke Lindstedt of Stockholm, 6 Months, by carrier ................ ... ... $3.00 6 Months, by mail . .. 3 Months, by carrier . Ink to make it black and then make \ . R Flour,,49-1b sack, | sockings and sulta out of tt. 1 have a | Morsemn. In fact, the Jockeys aro [Ber cent, had suffered 'ff,:?ni'ém:??f;; GARAGE 3 Months, by mail ............ A "w ten-year-old boys. cf 3 Shod o & o - s special ........... $1.98F [blue suit and I guess they put it fn | (COECROR POV o ounteq | With “serious morbid conditions,” the First Class Daily, by carrier, in city, 1 Month ............ 55¢ WEEKLY PIONEER, $2.00 a Year All the week’s news published in The Daily Pioneer is published every Thursday evening in The Weekly Picneer. FARMERS ARE WELCOME TO USE THE FREE EXCHANGE COLUMNS. MILLIONS OF POUNDS BOUGHT BY THE GOVERNMENT G Baking Powder SAME PRICE For more than 3( years midjt than any other. Let us tell you which of your trade. neighbors use a UNIVERSAL. DELIVERED DAILY MILK, per quart....10c CREAM, per quart...50c CHAS. BARCLAY brought it to Europe, just four cen- turies ago, “chocolate” found its en- | thuslastic devotees, yet, at the same | time, it met with bitter opposition on the part of many gersons. Fortunately, saner opinions, in respect of this harm- less product now prevail, and, al- though cocon differs somewhat from the chocolate of Cortez’ times, the change does' not lie with the cocoa beans, which are practically the same now au they were then. (=t AR MR 5 Ounces for 25¢ WHY PAY WAR PRICES? Given Hardware “UNIVERSAL Range Stors” —PHONE 7-F-410— =il