+ All Categories
Home > Documents > BLACK LETTERS AND WHITE Classified

BLACK LETTERS AND WHITE Classified

Date post: 21-Mar-2022
Category:
Upload: others
View: 1 times
Download: 0 times
Share this document with a friend
1
II w THE BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEER AT THE BRINKMAN TONIGHT This is a picture of the St. Louis baby found in an ash pit. See this on the screen and hear the story at the Brinkman tonight.—Adv. < MACK'S WEEKLY LETTER (Continued from first page). a proposition to meet a negro in the ring. Can anyone have tipped Luth- er off that J. Arthur no longer re- tains the form that made hija heavy- weight champion? It may be just as well >r for Mc- Carthy that Johnson is tied .up with court engagements and the match With falser. While it is possible he might lick Johnson, the odds ace against it. McCarty is hardly out of the novice class as yet and will do well to confine his efforts to the "hopes" for the next year or two. He needs a great deal more experience before tackling the colored fighters. Later on, if he continues to improve, his ambition to go after the undis- puted heavyweight championship may be given consideration, but the immediate future promises to keep him busy establishing his supremacy among the white heavies. MACK, DELEGATES PREPARE TO LEAVE London, Feb. 1.—The Balkan al- lies and Turks are making active pre- parations to resume hostilities in southwestern Europe. Delegates of the allies to the peace conference are saying farewell and packing their baggage preparatory to departing. A dispatch received from Constan- tinople reported that the Turkish delegates are ordered home, but the command has not yet been received here. It seems that only intervention by the powers can avert further re- sort to arms. Their work thus far has apparently failed. Even at this hour each side is ac- cusing the other of bluffing. The TuSks declare that in their note to the powers the allies have given greater concessions as a basis of re- suming peace negotiations than they had expected to make at the com- mencement of peace negotiations. The allies say what was acceptable a fortnight ago is not to be enter- tained now; that the Turks' game is obviously to lead them by the nose for months, counting on the allies' financial exhaustion and complica- tions to arise to favor Turkey. -Dr. Daneff, head of the Bulgarian delegation, said the feeling of the, Balkan population must be consider- ed. Excitement among them, he de- clared, reached the highest- degree against their "fraudulent treatment" by the handful of young Turk con- spirators who attempted to play with the decision of the Europeans' honor, the prestige and lives of the Balkan people. Dr. Daneff repeated that the-only thing to stop the reopening of the war was the unconditional surrender of Adrianople and the Aegean Islands. Exchanges of communications be tween representatives of the powers were active yesterday, but thus far no practical way has been found to avert the resumption of hostilities. CHIMNEY BURNED OUT Fire in a chimney at the resi dence of M. J. Brown, 1005 Lake Boulevard, called out the department about 7:45 this morning. The flames did Jiot catch the house and the damage was nominal. The chim- ney caught when Mr. Brown started to warm up the house this morning, BEMIDJI MEN ATTENDED The January number of "The North Woods," a monthly published by the state forestry department, contains an account of the cedar- men's convention which was held in Minneapolis—January 7. The con- vention and banquet was attended by two Bemidji operators, H, M. Clark and J. W. Naugle. Mr. Clark was also in Minneapolis this week and called at the rooms of the Northern Minnesota Development association. PAID TRIBUTE TO LAUGHTER Dr. Hartman Says: Write to Peruna Testimonials If Yon Want to Know the Truth. The following letter was received hy Dr. Hartman through his regular cor- respondence; *X T notlce the testimonial of Mrs Attce Bogle, which you give in youi last" article. If I should write her dc you'.suppose she would give me i jrthei particulars ? I have heard it said many times that such testimonials are falter that they are either absolutely fleroipus or else the people have been hired to write them. I have been in- clined to write you a great many times but these stories about patent medi- cine advertisements have discouraged me from doing so. I am afflicted with catarrh and should like very much tc find a remedy such as your article de- scribes." To ihe above letter Dr. Hartmar. made the following reply: My dear Madam:—I do not wondei that you are confused and have lost all faith in advertised remedies There has been so much said against them, so much controversy concern- ing them, I am not surprised that some people have lost confidence in them. I wish you would write Mrs. Bogle, as onjf' woman to another. I wish you would ask her whether she has been hired, to write such a testimonial whether her testimonial represents th« truth. I hope you will remember that she it a housewife, like yourself, that she has something to do besides write letters, that she is a woman of moderate means and cannot afford to write thest letters and pay her own postage. 1 hope you will enclose stamp so she can answer you without loss to herself Mrs. Bogle Is a very estimable lady and no doubt you will both profit by s*lng .acquainted with each other. Should you conclude to try Peruna tor your catarrh I would be very glad to hear: of the result. I can assure you that nd use will be made of your let tor, except by your written consent. Mrs. Bogle very kindly consented to have me use her letter, which Is my reason for doing so, and you will be treated exactly as she has been. „ People recover from chronic catarrh Who take Peruna. There is no doubt •bout that. Some surprising recoveries are rej&rted almost daily. I have thou- sands of them lh my flies. PERUNA IB FOR SALE AT ALL DRUG STORES. SPBCIAL 2VOTlC£J—Many person* •re making inquiries for the old- Jjjpe Jgpruna. To such would say. wm reanula is now put out under the Jf^«:m.KAjTAR-NO, manufactured Jff.^ Ai ^fc AR * N 9 Company, Columbus. ©hi*. .Write them and they will bo to tend you a free booklet. Men of Intellect and Renown Join In Testimony to the Value of Jollity In Life. The value of a good-natured laugb may be rated low by some people; but many writers have attested its worth in no measured terms. It is not surprising that Charles Lamb should have said, "A laugh is worth a hundred groans in any mar- ket;" but from the lips of the somber Carlyle one is scarcely prepared to hear, "No man who has once heartily and wholly laughed can be altogether or Irreclalmably bad." It was Douglas Jerrold who boldly stated that, "What was talked of" as the golden chain of Jove was nothing more than a succession of laughs, a chromatic scale of merriment reach ing from earth to Olympus." '1 am persuaded," wrote Laurence Sterne, "that every time a man smiles but much more so when he laughs—it adds something to his fragment ot life." Last of all may be cited the verdict of Oliver Wendell Holmes, given with his own inimitable humor, "The riot- out tumult of a laugh, I take it, is the mob law of the features, and Pro- priety the magistrate who reads the riot act."—The Sunday Magazine. Worried Nero. A critic of Wells' novel, "Marriage," Bnds in the confounding of the hero "the desire to have it all ways; te possess a woman who shall have all the charm and the caprice of the eternal feminine; who shall, by the irosaness of her desires and the petti ness of conversation, give htm an agreeable sense of superiority, and ret shall, to order, acquire deep spir- itual Insight when her husband feels be needs it." "Symptoms." Occasionally an afflicted lady telle why she left her husband. For the married man, of some Introspection and conscience, the feeling produced by the recital is something like the feeling one used to have In reading the patent medicine list of "symp- toms." He used to feel that he had ton and deserved the treatment. £•* Yemr Druggist tor Frmi Ptruno Almpimj* for 19i3 Old Age. Old age as it comes in the orderly process of nature is a beautiful and majestic thing . It stands for exper- ience, knowledge, wisdom, counsel. That is old ago as it should be, but old age as it. often' is means poor digestion, torpid bowels, a sluggish liver and a general feeling of ill health, despondency and*||misery. This in almost every instance is wholly unnecessary. One of Cham berlain's Tablets taken immediately after supper will improve the diges- tion; tone up the liver and regulate the bowelB. That feeling of despon- dency will give way to one of hope and good cheer.glgFor sale by Bar- ker's Drug Store.—-Adv. a >?£ FEBRUARY T, 1913. HAD THE CHILDREN GUESSING Chicago Youngster* floundered BM> J ly When Aeked to Doteribo One -' of the Simplest Flowers. Y ''~'* l 'A. The pimpernel to, a simple, sweat tittle flower that grows widely, but It would seem practically unknown to the public school children of Chicago. Phis, at least, was the conclusion forced upon a certain teacher after living out a line from Tennyson's *Maud" and asking for its written leflnltion. The line was: "As the pimpernel dosed on the lea," and here tre some of the answers received, in addition to those defining the pimper- ie) as "a frog,'* a "a small deer," "a jragon fl>" and "a small shrub like i prtckley pear." "The word pimpernel calls up to my nlnd the image of a pampered cuts 9e is a worthless brute who spends nost of his time dosing In the sun- ihine," "The pimpernel seems tame a small inimal resembling an eel. It has short, rounded ears and bright, beadlike *yes. As I Imagine it, the pimpernel ts lying half asleep on the grass near the shore of a lake, ready to slip Into the water at the slightest sound." • "A pimpernel seems to hie a tramp or gypsy. He lies on the bank in the tun with an old battered hat drawn over his face." "I do not know what the word means, but it instantly suggests to me a small lizard covered with pimples pr warts. The Image flashed upon my mind as soon as the word was spoken and is still vivid and distinct. Air though I never heard the word before, I seem always to have known it and to attach this meaning to it. I am ah. surdly confident that this is the true meaning." All of which would seem to prove that the juvenile imagination, given free rein, can make strange work of almost any given thought or idea. BLACK LETTERS AND WHITE former Pan Be Read at a Greater W Distance Than the Latter, Is Judgment of Experts. There is a tendency on the part of railroads to adopt signs with white let- ters on a black background,; not realiz* ing that the black letter oil a white background is easier to read and can be seen at a greater distance. This follows in an Interesting way from the structure of the retina of the eye. The impression of a letter at the limit of vision is received oh the ends of a small bundle of nerves which con* vey to the brain a sort of mosaic inv pression. A nerve can only transmit *to the brain information aa to whether or not a ray of light is falling upon It, and when a nerve is partly in the light and partly in darkness the sensation is the same as though all of it was, Jn the light. It follows, therefore, that all nerves on the dividing edge. between any black and white area transmit the sen- sation-of light so that.all white lines and white areas appear wider end all black lines and black areas appear narrower than they really aire.'";-' Black letters grow thinner at the limit of vision and are still recognis- able,: while at the same distance white letters grow thicker and cannot be ,dis? tinguished. There are circumstances when it IS necessary to use white let- ters, but in such cases legibility will be improved if they are made with a thin stroke and strongly lighted. Black letters are more distinct if made with a heavy stroke.—Scientific American, Tobacco Supports Kavalla. A historian, writing less than fifty years ago, speaks of Kavalla, the Na- ples or Neapplis of Macedonia, as "a. small Turkish village." When I vis? ited it In the early days of 1012, says a writer In the Christian Herald, J found it a thriving city, the second seaport in Macedonia, beautifully situ- ated around the little bay that forms ita harbor, while on one side Is a great citadel crowned with a Turkish tort? ress. ;v. The narrow streets are cleaner than most Turkish cities can boast, and there are really fine and imposing buildings. These are mostly-tobacco warehouses, or belong to tobacco mag- nates, tor this weed must at least # be given the credit tor the present pros- perity of this rising town, 'which 1ft the great tobacco port and manufac turlng center of Macedonia. {| The chief ruins, which datevback to Paul's time, are the remaihs of a huge Roman aqueduct, whose magni- ficent arches until two years before my visit had brought water to tbm modern city. ;.-' "' False Sore Throat. -4 If you come home after a hard day's work with a raw, rasping feeling In your, throat, which becomes quite painful, do not be deceived Into be- lieving that you are contracting a sore throat, and accordingly take medicine for this affection. The throat will oft- en become dry and painful from great fatigue, or from neglect to eat at the proper time. It the subject will drink a cup of hot water, or take Ji table- spoonful of cocoanut or olive loll, and thereafter lie down and relax: for fif- teen or twenty minutes, the ^feeling will, most likely, disappear. The sub- ject should, under these circum- stances, eat an easily digestible din- ner with little meat, and no acids of any kind. the An. Outrage. **What's Mrs. Wombat abusing government for now?" * "Seems they wouldn't let her gallon of Ice cream by parcels pott, 4 To Sterilise Cistern Water. ' Cistern water can be thoroughly sterilised by the addition of one-tenth of a grain of hypochlorlde of lime to the gallop. This does not Injure the water tor laundry and bathing pur- poses. 0 HERE'S NErV TYPE OF DESERT Those Who Have teen the Real Thing Would He Surprised at Pictorial *?: Representation. ^ «* '" - .__ - . i Those who have lived In Egypt wffll find a source of unending surprise in. the scenic offerings of "high class vaudeville" which accompany the throaty howling by a near barytone of 1 Shall Love Yew Till the Hot Des- ert Freezes Eternally," illustrated with pictures from the East (side). It should be noted here that it is hardly lair to call « locality a "desert" at all, when it is so plentifully peopled with the cosmopolitan races presented to the public on the screen. The Pictures ahow a' wild profusion of Bedouins, Chinese, Arabs, Moors, Greeks, Armenians, Bulgarians and Turks, with a fair sprinkling of Ro- man senators. In every conceivable garb, ancient and modern/ lounging jeomtortably around the pyramids and Smoking Havana cigars, English pipes, hookahs and cigarettes and mostly chewing gum; But if in his choice of {population the scenic artist has done well In Egyptian Scenery he has cer- tainly surpassed himself, for you be- hold great clusters of. pyramids, sphinxes by the dozen, camels, horses, sheep, deer, ostriches and even ele* phanta crossing the soft sand of tha alleged desert or resting beneath the Xnglish oaks, Lombardy poplars, oao* tus and palm trees. And before.you can get your breath a gallant knight in the uniform of the Austrian hussars, covered with a ki- mono and a scimitar stuck in his belt, brings his sultana into the moonlight and hugs her until the everlasting des- ert is removed and the applause of the audience freezes over.—New York Herald. WOMEN HOLD HIGH POSITION Probably In No Country In the World Are They Favored With Greater Esteem Than In 8ervla. There Is no country in the world where women ocupy a more dignified or honored position in the home than In Servia. The Servian idea is quite different from that of the Turk, who keeps his women behind shut doors, or the German, whose ideal woman is a good hausfrau. In Servia the wom- an is the companion of the man. A man is responsible for his unmar- ried sisters, and throughout the Bal- kan states it is considered rather a breach of etiquette for him to marry before his older sister. No Servian girl would feel she could hold up her head in society unless she could speak four languages. There is hardly a Servian woman who cannot play some musical instrument. Em- broidery, painting, drawing and sculp- ture are all studied. Politics is a popular feature among women. - Servian women are very domestic cated and the highest pay personal ate tention to trivial matters of house-: keeping. ~ • There are two women doctors prae? tlcing in Belgrade^ and women teach? era galore. But public opinion, on the whole, is ratber against women enter* Ing the labor arena. In Installments. They were expertB in many things, hut chiefly In the art of bragging. And at the moment they were discussing their own wonderful feats as vocal- ists. "Why," said the Englishman, blow- ing rings of smoke from his cigar, "the first time I sang in public the au- dience simply showered me with bou- quets. Bless you, there were enough to start a flower shop!" "Faith, an* J can beat you!" cried the Irishman. "The first toime I sang was at an open air concert, and, be- gorra, the audience were that de- loighted they presented me with a house, they did!" ''A house! You must be off your head!" interrupted the Englishman, Scofflngly. "Not at all." answered Pat. "I tell ye they gave me a house—but it was a brick at a toime!"—London An- swers, An Anodyne. "An anodyne," patiently explained a well-known physician to a woman pa tient, "is a delusion. Any medicine that soothes pain has this drawback •—It relieves the attack, but the next attack comes on much sooner. Under- stand, itll wire your headache, but you're bound to have another head- ache in a day or two." The woman pondered a bit. "I know Just what you mean, doc- tor," she said. "I've noticed it about Henry, my husband, you know. A doc- tor prescribed whisky tor his cough. My husband says it cured his cough quicker than anything else ever did, but I notice that he gets a new cough almost every week, now."—Louisville Times. Old Coins Really Broken. [ They had an Ingenious plan for meeting a shortage of small change In the old days before copper coins existed. Until, the reign of Edward I. the silver penny, was the smallest coin minted in England, to the great Inconvenience of the small purchaser of the period. But the difficulty was to some extent got over by the issue of pennies indented with a deep cross. The coin could then be broken into halfpennies and farthings. Our first real copper coinage only dates from 1672, and until the time of Edward VI. farthings of silver were coined, grow- ing smaller and smaller as the value of sliver increased.—London Chroa- *?w* *'&' ^ ^ - P f s r , Dead Past - • - Wife— 'I earns across some of year ild love letters today. How you loved me, Harry!" Husband—"Tea. is par ready? Tm awfully _ - &SU.,. . f .art , ^ ^ , ^j^iiw. Blessings of Oblivion. The- reign of Antoninus is marked oy the rare advantage of furnishing { rery few materials for history, which ' Is indeed little more than the register Of the crimes, follies and misfortunes of mankind.—Edward Gibbon, i ' ^ Little Card Suppers. '$&, \k- A little supper of rolled sandwiches filled with strips of celery, lobster fin- gers, saltlne crackers, cream cheese with Bar-le-duc currants, salted nuts, aaisjy aad elder It m y •fprttftof .^ ^iH^^&^c^"!. £-' \; The local newspaper is the connecting link between the merchant and the public. Without this connecting link the merchant would find it much more,^fljcult^ jto reach ^the heart and pocket book of--the' buyer.- > : - ^ ; ' There is a strained relationship between the buyer and the seller, and there is no denying that the local paper does more to clarify the; local market situation, and to produce good x will on the part of the local buy- er toward the local merchant than anything else. Every merchant profits thereby. Good will may be two kinds— good will toward the merchants generally, and good will which is'an asset in each business^>The good will which is an asset in a business is but a part of the general good will, and who, does more to create that general good will than the Jpcal paper, i ** . . The local paper wins the confidence Qf its readers by giving the news in an honest way and supporting those things that tend to make a better community. Every en- terprising merchant, who advertises in the paper, shares in the confidence thus created in the paper, as it is natural for a reader to have confidence in ads that appear in a paper in which he has confidence. The merchant should inspire greater confidence in his store and his goods by judicious advertising.. He can do so because advertising always reduces the cost of distribu- tion and enables the merchant to sell cheaper. A noted writer hits the nail on the head when he gives the advertiser this advice, which if followed would be im- mensely beneficial to the advertiser: "Make your adver- tisements morally useful to the public, and educationally useful to the public as well as materially useful." ' Covyright 1913 by Geo. E. Patterson Classified Department The Pioneer Want Ads ) . OASH WITH QQPY \ /} e o n * jsef» word nor hmw* Regular charge rate i cent per word per insertion less than 15 cents «> No ad taken for Phone 31 HOW THOSe WANT ADS DO THE BUSINESS The Pioneer goes everywhere so that everyone has a neighbor who takes it and people who dQ not take the paper generally read their neighbor's so your want ad gets to them all. ~\ ' J4 Cent a Word Is All It Costs HELP WAHTid} WANTED—Cook at Lake Shore, F 0 £ SALE FOR SALE—Typewriter ribbons for every make of typewriter on the market at 50 cents and 75 cents each. Every ribbon sold for 76 cents guaranteed. Phone orders promptly filled. Mail orders given the same careful attention as when you appear in person. Phone 31. The Bemidji Pioneer Office Supply Store. FOR SALE—The Bemidji lead pencil (the best nickel pencil in the world, at Netzer's, Barker's, 0. C. Rood's, McCuaig's, Omich's, Roe ft Markusen's, and the Pioneer Office Supply Store at 5 cents each and 50 cents a dozen. FOR SALE—Small fonts of type, sev- eral different points and in first class condition. Call or write this office for proofs. Address Bemidji Pioneer, Bemidji, Minn. FOR SALE—Rubber stamps. The Pioneer will procure any kind of rubber stamp for you on short no- tice. .. FOR SALE— Sixteen inch seasoned •jack pine and tamarack wood.—J. E. Swanson, Phone 684-7, Farm. FOR SALE—Dry poplar, wood at $2.50 per cord delivered. Inquire . Nicollet hotel. FOR SALE—Hay meadow. Six miles from town. Falls & Cameron, phone 374. FOR SA^.^—Five-room bungalow, 1207 Minnesota avenue. Phone 526 or 93. FOR SALE—Seasoned pine wood, $1.50. Phone 374. Falls ft Cam- eron. FOR SALE—Five milch cows, quire T. J. Brennan, Wilton. In- F0R BENT FOR RENT—5 room house 516 Bel- trami avenue. Apply to J. E. Mc- Glnnis, East Bemidji. r /-r. **.**"<-' FOR RENT—Six room cottage, phone _ MBCELLANE0IT8 ADVERTISERS—The great state of North Dakota offers unlimited op- portunities for business to classi- fied advertisers. The recognized advertising medium in the Fargo *Daily and Sunday Courier-News; the only seven-day paper in the state and the paper which carries the largest amount of classified advertising, The Courier-News covers North Dakota like a blank- et; reaching all parts of the state the day of publication; it is the paper to use in order to get re- sults; rates one cent per word first insertion, one-half cent per word succeeding insertions; fifty cents per line per month. Address the Courier-News, Fargo, N. D. WANTED—100 merchants In North- ern Minnesota to sell "The Bemid- ji" lead pencil. Will carry name of every merchant in advertising columns of Pioneer in order that all receive advantage of advertis- ing. For wholesale prices write or phone the Bemidji Pioneer Of- fice Supply Co. Phone 31. Be- midji, Minn. WANTEDr-To buy gasoline boat. Muat be in good condition and cheap. Apply 406 Minnesota av.e- nue. BOUGHT AND SOLD—Second hand furniture. Odd Fellow's building, across from postoffice. phone 129 WANTED—Position by. stenograph- er. Inquire "Z", Pioneer office. WANTED—Position in quire Pioneer office. office. In- Pioneer Want Ads 1-2 Gent a Word Bring Results **> i\ --•••»> Ask Hie Man Who Has. Triad Them L0DGED0M IN BEMDH. + + • • w • • • • • <& • • • • • A.O. w. w . Bemidji Lodes K«. 277. Regular meeting nights—first and thirS Monday, at 8 o'clock. —at Odd Fellows hall. 40* Beltrami Are. a. r. 4>. «. - 8fe. Bemidji Lodge No. 10SI. Regular meeting nights— first and third Thursdays 8 o'clock—at Masonic hall Beltrami Ave., and Fifth fit a a. p. every second and fourth Sunday evening, at • o'clock In basement ot Catholic church. , »acnu« or atovos Meeting nights every second and fourth Monday evenings, at Odd Fellow* Hall. r. o. x. Regular meeting nlghtsi every let and 2nd Wednes- day evening at 8 o'clock.. Eagles halL. a. A. m. Regular meetings —First: and third Saturday after- noons, at 2:10—at Odd Fell lows Halls, 408 Beltraail Ave. i. o. o. r. Bemidji Lodge No. tie Regular meeting' night* —every Friday, 8 o'clock at Odd Fellows Hall, 402 Beltrami. L O. O. F. Camp Ne. Regular meeting -every eeceaa and fourth Wednesdays at t o'clock at Odd Fellows HalL Rebecca Lodge. Regular meeting nights first aa* third Wednesday at So'oleek. —I. O. O. F. Hall. ISZOITS or rsTWAS Bemidji Lodge No. 14C. Regular meeting nights—ex- ery Tuesday evening at 8 o'clock—at the Vagles* Hall, Third street. x*Dns or via CASUS. Regular meeting night last Wednesday evening j in each month. MASOVIO. A. F. A A. M., Bemidji, 283. Regular meeting* nights first and third! Wednpsdays, 8 o'clock—ett Masonic HalL Beltramli Ave., and Fifth St. Bemidji Chapter No. It.. R. A. M. stated convocations —first and third Mondays. B o'clock p. m.—at Masonic Hail Zeitraml Ave., and Fifth street. Elkanah Commandery No. 8t K. T. Stated conclave—second and fourth Fridays, 8 o'clock p. m.—at Masonic Temple, Bel- trami Ave., and Fifth St O. B. S. Chapter No. 171, Regular meeting nights- first and third Fridays, 8 o'clock — at Masonic HaU, Beltrami Ave., and Fifth St. X.B. A. Roosevelt, - No. list Regular meeting nights j Thursday everings at o'clock In Odd Fellows, Hall. Bemidji Camp No. 8011 ^ Regular meeting nights T first and third Tuesdays at s S o'clock at Odd Fellows, Hall, 402 Beltrami Ave. MODBBjr SABtAtfXTAm. . Regular meeting nights aft]. the first and third Thursday*! in the L O. O. F. Hall a t 8* p. m. sows or Meetings held thtrtu Sunday afternoon of ssjCSn month at Troppisesrs* HalL Meetings the first Friday? evening of the month at* the home of Mrs. H. 1J.-, Schmidt. 808 Third street*, Who Sells It? Here they are all in a row. They sell it because it's the best nickel pencil on the market today and will be for many days to come. The Bemidji Pencil stands alone in the gfivel Tcent world. It is sold on your money back basis. A store on every street and in surrounding cities. Hers They Are: Omrtmon'm VmrtotySUwo < Bmrkw'm Drug mud Jmw- airy Store W. Q. Sohroodor O. O. Rood Si Oo. C F.Notzor'mPhmrmmoy Wm.MoOumlg J. P. Omtoh'm Otgom* Storo Roo A Mmrkumon F. H. TrootMnmn & Oo. £• Abororomblo The Faff* Storo Mr*.E.L. Wood* - ' OMtmowa Trading Storo Rod Lmko J **-- BomldH Plonoor Supply Storo -^ .^Retailers will receive immediate shipments in gross (more or less) by calling Phone 31/ or addressing the Bemidji Pioneer Supply Store. Bemidju Minn. -I : ^'? 1 r ue> kf&
Transcript

I I

w

T H E BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEER

AT THE BRINKMAN TONIGHT

This is a picture of the St. Louis baby found in an ash pit. See this on the screen and hear the story at the Brinkman tonight.—Adv. <

MACK'S WEEKLY LETTER (Continued from first page).

a proposition to meet a negro in the ring. Can anyone have tipped Luth­er off that J. Arthur no longer re­tains the form that made hija heavy­weight champion?

It may be just as well >rfor Mc­Carthy that Johnson is tied .up with court engagements and the match With falser. While it is possible he might lick Johnson, the odds ace against it. McCarty is hardly out of the novice class as yet and will do well to confine his efforts to the "hopes" for the next year or two. He needs a great deal more experience before tackling the colored fighters. Later on, if he continues to improve, his ambition to go after the undis­puted heavyweight championship may be given consideration, but the immediate future promises to keep him busy establishing his supremacy among the white heavies.

MACK,

DELEGATES PREPARE TO LEAVE London, Feb. 1.—The Balkan al­

lies and Turks are making active pre­parations to resume hostilities in southwestern Europe. Delegates of the allies to the peace conference are saying farewell and packing their baggage preparatory to departing.

A dispatch received from Constan­tinople reported that the Turkish delegates are ordered home, but the command has not yet been received here. It seems that only intervention by the powers can avert further re­sort to arms. Their work thus far has apparently failed.

Even at this hour each side is ac­cusing the other of bluffing. The TuSks declare that in their note to the powers the allies have given greater concessions as a basis of re­suming peace negotiations than they had expected to make at the com­mencement of peace negotiations.

The allies say what was acceptable a fortnight ago is not to be enter­tained now; that the Turks' game is obviously to lead them by the nose for months, counting on the allies' financial exhaustion and complica­tions to arise to favor Turkey.

-Dr. Daneff, head of the Bulgarian delegation, said the feeling of the, Balkan population must be consider­ed. Excitement among them, he de­

clared, reached the highest- degree against their "fraudulent treatment" by the handful of young Turk con­spirators who attempted to play with the decision of the Europeans' honor, the prestige and lives of the Balkan people.

Dr. Daneff repeated that the-only thing to stop the reopening of the war was the unconditional surrender of Adrianople and the Aegean Islands.

Exchanges of communications be tween representatives of the powers were active yesterday, but thus far no practical way has been found to avert the resumption of hostilities.

CHIMNEY BURNED OUT Fire in a chimney at the resi

dence of M. J. Brown, 1005 Lake Boulevard, called out the department about 7:45 this morning. The flames did Jiot catch the house and the damage was nominal. The chim­ney caught when Mr. Brown started to warm up the house this morning,

BEMIDJI MEN ATTENDED The January number of "The

North Woods," a monthly published by the state forestry department, contains an account of the cedar-men's convention which was held in Minneapolis—January 7. The con­vention and banquet was attended by two Bemidji operators, H, M. Clark and J. W. Naugle. Mr. Clark was also in Minneapolis this week and called at the rooms of the Northern Minnesota Development association.

PAID TRIBUTE TO LAUGHTER

Dr. Hart man Says: Write to Peruna Testimonials If Yon

Want to Know the Truth. The following letter was received hy

Dr. Hartman through his regular cor­respondence;

*XTnotlce the testimonial of Mrs Attce Bogle, which you give in youi last" article. If I should write her dc you'.suppose she would give me i jrthei particulars ? I have heard it said many times that such testimonials are falter that they are either absolutely fleroipus or else the people have been hired to write them. I have been in­clined to write you a great many times but these stories about patent medi­cine advertisements have discouraged me from doing so. I am afflicted with catarrh and should like very much tc find a remedy such as your article de­scribes."

To i h e above letter Dr. Hartmar. made the following reply:

My dear Madam:—I do not wondei that you are confused and have lost all faith in advertised • remedies There has been so much said against them, so much controversy concern­ing them, I am not surprised that some people have lost confidence in them.

I wish you would write Mrs. Bogle, as onjf' woman to another. I wish you would ask her whether she has been hired, to write such a testimonial whether her testimonial represents th« truth.

I hope you will remember that she it a housewife, like yourself, that she has something to do besides write letters, that she is a woman of moderate means and cannot afford to write thest letters and pay her own postage. 1 hope you will enclose stamp so she can answer you without loss to herself Mrs. Bogle Is a very estimable lady and no doubt you will both profit by s*lng .acquainted with each other.

Should you conclude to try Peruna tor your catarrh I would be very glad to hear: of the result. I can assure you that nd use will be made of your let tor, except by your written consent. Mrs. Bogle very kindly consented to have me use her letter, which Is my reason for doing so, and you will be treated exactly as she has been. „ People recover from chronic catarrh Who take Peruna. There is no doubt •bout that. Some surprising recoveries are rej&rted almost daily. I have thou­sands of them lh my flies. PERUNA IB FOR SALE AT ALL DRUG STORES.

SPBCIAL 2VOTlC£J—Many person* •re making inquiries for the old-Jjjpe Jgpruna. To such would say. wm reanula is now put out under the Jf^«:m.KAjTAR-NO, manufactured Jff.^Ai^fcAR*N9 Company, Columbus. ©hi*. .Write them and they will bo

to tend you a free booklet.

Men of Intellect and Renown Join In Testimony to the Value of

Jollity In Life.

The value of a good-natured laugb may be rated low by some people; but many writers have attested its worth in no measured terms.

It is not surprising that Charles Lamb should have said, "A laugh is worth a hundred groans in any mar­ket;" but from the lips of the somber Carlyle one is scarcely prepared to hear, "No man who has once heartily and wholly laughed can be altogether or Irreclalmably bad."

It was Douglas Jerrold who boldly stated that, "What was talked of" as the golden chain of Jove was nothing more than a succession of laughs, a chromatic scale of merriment reach ing from earth to Olympus."

'1 am persuaded," wrote Laurence Sterne, "that every time a man smiles but much more so when he laughs—it adds something to his fragment ot life."

Last of all may be cited the verdict of Oliver Wendell Holmes, given with his own inimitable humor, "The riot-out tumult of a laugh, I take it, is the mob law of the features, and Pro­priety the magistrate who reads the riot act."—The Sunday Magazine.

Worried Nero. A critic of Wells' novel, "Marriage,"

Bnds in the confounding of the hero "the desire to have it all ways; te possess a woman who shall have all the charm and the caprice of the eternal feminine; who shall, by the irosaness of her desires and the petti ness of conversation, give htm an agreeable sense of superiority, and ret shall, to order, acquire deep spir­itual Insight when her husband feels be needs it."

"Symptoms." Occasionally an afflicted lady telle

why she left her husband. For the married man, of some Introspection and conscience, the feeling produced by the recital is something like the feeling one used to have In reading the patent medicine list of "symp­toms." He used to feel that he had ton and deserved the treatment.

£•* Yemr Druggist tor Frmi Ptruno Almpimj* for 19i3

Old Age. Old age as it comes in the orderly

process of nature is a beautiful and majestic thing . It stands for exper­ience, knowledge, wisdom, counsel. That is old ago as it should be, but old age as it. often' is means poor digestion, torpid bowels, a sluggish liver and a general feeling of ill health, despondency and*||misery. This in almost every instance is wholly unnecessary. One of Cham berlain's Tablets taken immediately after supper will improve the diges­tion; tone up the liver and regulate the bowelB. That feeling of despon­dency will give way to one of hope and good cheer.glgFor sale by Bar­ker's Drug Store.—-Adv.

a >?£ FEBRUARY T, 1913.

HAD THE CHILDREN GUESSING

Chicago Youngster* floundered BM> J ly When Aeked to Doteribo One -' of the Simplest Flowers. Y''~'*

• l 'A.

The pimpernel to, a simple, sweat tittle flower that grows widely, but It would seem practically unknown to the public school children of Chicago. Phis, at least, was the conclusion forced upon a certain teacher after living out a line from Tennyson's *Maud" and asking for its written leflnltion. The line was: "As the pimpernel dosed on the lea," and here tre some of the answers received, in addition to those defining the pimper-ie) as "a frog,'* a "a small deer," "a jragon fl>" and "a small shrub like i prtckley pear."

"The word pimpernel calls up to my nlnd the image of a pampered cuts 9e is a worthless brute who spends nost of his time dosing In the sun-ihine,"

"The pimpernel seems tame a small inimal resembling an eel. It has short, rounded ears and bright, beadlike *yes. As I Imagine it, the pimpernel ts lying half asleep on the grass near the shore of a lake, ready to slip Into the water at the slightest sound." •

"A pimpernel seems to hie a tramp or gypsy. He lies on the bank in the tun with an old battered hat drawn over his face."

"I do not know what the word means, but it instantly suggests to me a small lizard covered with pimples pr warts. The Image flashed upon my mind as soon as the word was spoken and is still vivid and distinct. Air though I never heard the word before, I seem always to have known it and to attach this meaning to it. I am ah. surdly confident that this is the true meaning."

All of which would seem to prove that the juvenile imagination, given free rein, can make strange work of almost any given thought or idea.

BLACK LETTERS AND WHITE former Pan Be Read at a Greater W Distance Than the Latter, Is

Judgment of Experts.

There is a tendency on the part of railroads to adopt signs with white let­ters on a black background,; not realiz* ing that the black letter oil a white background is easier to read and can be seen at a greater distance. This follows in an Interesting way from the structure of the retina of the eye.

The impression of a letter at the limit of vision is received oh the ends of a small bundle of nerves which con* vey to the brain a sort of mosaic inv pression. A nerve can only transmit

*to the brain information aa to whether or not a ray of light is falling upon It, and when a nerve is partly in the light and partly in darkness the sensation is the same as though all of it was, Jn the light.

It follows, therefore, that all nerves on the dividing edge. between any black and white area transmit the sen­sation-of light so that.all white lines and white areas appear wider end all black lines and black areas appear narrower than they really aire.'";-'

Black letters grow thinner at the limit of vision and are still recognis­able,: while at the same distance white letters grow thicker and cannot be ,dis? tinguished. There are circumstances when it IS necessary to use white let­ters, but in such cases legibility will be improved if they are made with a thin stroke and strongly lighted. Black letters are more distinct if made with a heavy stroke.—Scientific American,

Tobacco Supports Kavalla. A historian, writing less than fifty

years ago, speaks of Kavalla, the Na­ples or Neapplis of Macedonia, as "a. small Turkish village." When I vis? ited it In the early days of 1012, says a writer In the Christian Herald, J found it a thriving city, the second seaport in Macedonia, beautifully situ­ated around the little bay that forms ita harbor, while on one side Is a great citadel crowned with a Turkish tort? ress. ;v.

The narrow streets are cleaner than most Turkish cities can boast, and there are really fine and imposing buildings. These are mostly-tobacco warehouses, or belong to tobacco mag­nates, tor this weed must at least #be given the credit tor the present pros­perity of this rising town, 'which 1ft the great tobacco port and manufac turlng center of Macedonia. {|

The chief ruins, which datevback to Paul's time, are the remaihs of a huge Roman aqueduct, whose magni­ficent arches until two years before my visit had brought water to tbm modern city. ;.-' "'

False Sore Throat. -4 If you come home after a hard day's

work with a raw, rasping feeling In your, throat, which becomes quite painful, do not be deceived Into be­lieving that you are contracting a sore throat, and accordingly take medicine for this affection. The throat will oft­en become dry and painful from great fatigue, or from neglect to eat at the proper time. It the subject will drink a cup of hot water, or take Ji table-spoonful of cocoanut or olive loll, and thereafter lie down and relax: for fif­teen or twenty minutes, the ^feeling will, most likely, disappear. The sub­ject should, under these circum­stances, eat an easily digestible din­ner with little meat, and no acids of any kind.

the An. Outrage.

**What's Mrs. Wombat abusing government for now?" *

"Seems they wouldn't let her gallon of Ice cream by parcels pott,4

To Sterilise Cistern Water. ' Cistern water can be thoroughly

sterilised by the addition of one-tenth of a grain of hypochlorlde of lime to the gallop. This does not Injure the water tor laundry and bathing pur­poses. 0

HERE'S NErV TYPE OF DESERT

Those Who Have teen the Real Thing Would He Surprised at Pictorial

*?: Representation. ^ «* • '" - . _ _ - . i Those who have lived In Egypt wffll

find a source of unending surprise in. the scenic offerings of "high class vaudeville" which accompany the throaty howling by a near barytone of 1 Shall Love Yew Till the Hot Des­ert Freezes Eternally," illustrated with pictures from the East (side). It should be noted here that it is hardly lair to call « locality a "desert" at all, when it is so plentifully peopled with the cosmopolitan races presented to the public on the screen.

The Pictures ahow a' wild profusion of Bedouins, Chinese, Arabs, Moors, Greeks, Armenians, Bulgarians and Turks, with a fair sprinkling of Ro­man senators. In every conceivable garb, ancient and modern/ lounging jeomtortably around the pyramids and Smoking Havana cigars, English pipes, hookahs and cigarettes and mostly chewing gum; But if in his choice of {population the scenic artist has done well In Egyptian Scenery he has cer­tainly surpassed himself, for you be­hold great clusters of. pyramids, sphinxes by the dozen, camels, horses, sheep, deer, ostriches and even ele* phanta crossing the soft sand of tha alleged desert or resting beneath the Xnglish oaks, Lombardy poplars, oao* tus and palm trees.

And before.you can get your breath a gallant knight in the uniform of the Austrian hussars, covered with a ki­mono and a scimitar stuck in his belt, brings his sultana into the moonlight and hugs her until the everlasting des­ert is removed and the applause of the audience freezes over.—New York Herald.

WOMEN HOLD HIGH POSITION

Probably In No Country In the World Are They Favored With Greater

Esteem Than In 8ervla.

There Is no country in the world where women ocupy a more dignified or honored position in the home than In Servia. The Servian idea is quite different from that of the Turk, who keeps his women behind shut doors, or the German, whose ideal woman is a good hausfrau. In Servia the wom­an is the companion of the man.

A man is responsible for his unmar­ried sisters, and throughout the Bal­kan states it is considered rather a breach of etiquette for him to marry before his older sister.

No Servian girl would feel she could hold up her head in society unless she could speak four languages. There is hardly a Servian woman who cannot play some musical instrument. Em­broidery, painting, drawing and sculp­ture are all studied. Politics is a popular feature among women. - Servian women are very domestic cated and the highest pay personal ate tention to trivial matters of house-: keeping. ~ • There are two women doctors prae?

tlcing in Belgrade^ and women teach? era galore. But public opinion, on the whole, is ratber against women enter* Ing the labor arena. „

In Installments. They were expertB in many things,

hut chiefly In the art of bragging. And at the moment they were discussing their own wonderful feats as vocal­ists.

"Why," said the Englishman, blow­ing rings of smoke from his cigar, "the first time I sang in public the au­dience simply showered me with bou­quets. Bless you, there were enough to start a flower shop!"

"Faith, an* J can beat you!" cried the Irishman. "The first toime I sang was at an open air concert, and, be-gorra, the audience were that de-loighted they presented me with a house, they did!"

''A house! You must be off your head!" interrupted the Englishman, Scofflngly.

"Not at all." answered Pat. "I tell ye they gave me a house—but it was a brick at a toime!"—London An­swers,

An Anodyne. "An anodyne," patiently explained a

well-known physician to a woman pa tient, "is a delusion. Any medicine that soothes pain has this drawback •—It relieves the attack, but the next attack comes on much sooner. Under­stand, itll wire your headache, but you're bound to have another head­ache in a day or two."

The woman pondered a bit. "I know Just what you mean, doc­

tor," she said. "I've noticed it about Henry, my husband, you know. A doc­tor prescribed whisky tor his cough. My husband says it cured his cough quicker than anything else ever did, but I notice that he gets a new cough almost every week, now."—Louisville Times.

Old Coins Really Broken. [ They had an Ingenious plan for

meeting a shortage of small change In the old days before copper coins existed. Until, the reign of Edward I. the silver penny, was the smallest coin minted in England, to the great Inconvenience of the small purchaser of the period. But the difficulty was to some extent got over by the issue of pennies indented with a deep cross. The coin could then be broken into halfpennies and farthings. Our first real copper coinage only dates from 1672, and until the time of Edward VI. farthings of silver were coined, grow­ing smaller and smaller as the value of sliver increased.—London Chroa-

*?w*

*'&' ^^-Pfsr , Dead Past - • -Wife— 'I earns across some of year

ild love letters today. How you loved me, Harry!" Husband—"Tea. i s par ready? Tm awfully

_- &SU.,. . f .art , ^ ̂ , ^j^i iw.

Blessings of Oblivion. The- reign of Antoninus is marked

oy the rare advantage of furnishing { rery few materials for history, which ' Is indeed little more than the register Of the crimes, follies and misfortunes of mankind.—Edward Gibbon, i ' ^

Little Card Suppers. '$&, \k-A little supper of rolled sandwiches

filled with strips of celery, lobster fin­gers, saltlne crackers, cream cheese with Bar-le-duc currants, salted nuts, aaisjy aad elder It m y •fprttftof .^ ^iH^^&^c^"!. £-'

\ ; The local newspaper is the connecting link between the merchant and the public. Without this connecting link the merchant would find it much more,^fljcult^ jto reach

^the heart and pocket book of--the' buyer.- >: - ̂ ; ' There is a strained relationship between the buyer

and the seller, and there is no denying that the local paper does more to clarify the; local market situation, and to produce good xwill on the part of the local buy­er toward the local merchant than anything else. Every merchant profits thereby. Good will may be two kinds— good will toward the merchants generally, and good will which is'an asset in each business^>The good will which is an asset in a business is but a part of the general good will, and who, does more to create that general good will than the Jpcal paper, i ** . .

The local paper wins the confidence Qf its readers by giving the news in an honest way and supporting those things that tend to make a better community. Every en­terprising merchant, who advertises in the paper, shares in the confidence thus created in the paper, as it is natural for a reader to have confidence in ads that appear in a paper in which he has confidence.

The merchant should inspire greater confidence in his store and his goods by judicious advertising.. He can do so because advertising always reduces the cost of distribu­tion and enables the merchant to sell cheaper.

A noted writer hits the nail on the head when he gives the advertiser this advice, which if followed would be im­mensely beneficial to the advertiser: "Make your adver­tisements morally useful to the public, and educationally useful to the public as well as materially useful."

' Covyright 1913 by Geo. E. Patterson

Classified

Department The Pioneer Want Ads

) . OASH WITH QQPY \ /} eon* jsef» word nor hmw*

Regular charge rate i cent per word per insertion less than 15 cents «>

No ad taken for Phone 31

HOW T H O S e W A N T ADS DO THE BUSINESS

The Pioneer goes everywhere so that everyone has a neighbor who takes it and people who dQ not take the paper generally read their neighbor's so your want ad gets to them all. ~\ '

J4 Cent a Word Is All It Costs

HELP WAHTid}

WANTED—Cook at Lake Shore,

F 0 £ SALE

FOR SALE—Typewriter ribbons for every make of typewriter on the market at 50 cents and 75 cents each. Every ribbon sold for 76 cents guaranteed. Phone orders promptly filled. Mail orders given the same careful attention as when you appear in person. Phone 31. The Bemidji Pioneer Office Supply Store.

FOR SALE—The Bemidji lead pencil (the best nickel pencil in the world, at Netzer's, Barker's, 0 . C. Rood's, McCuaig's, Omich's, Roe ft Markusen's, and the Pioneer Office Supply Store at 5 cents each and 50 cents a dozen.

FOR SALE—Small fonts of type, sev­eral different points and in first class condition. Call or write this office for proofs. Address Bemidji Pioneer, Bemidji, Minn.

FOR SALE—Rubber stamps. The Pioneer will procure any kind of rubber stamp for you on short no­tice. ..

FOR SALE— Sixteen inch seasoned •jack pine and tamarack wood.—J. E. Swanson, Phone 684-7, Farm.

FOR SALE—Dry poplar, wood at $2.50 per cord delivered. Inquire

. Nicollet hotel.

FOR SALE—Hay meadow. Six miles from town. Falls & Cameron, phone 374.

FOR SA^.^—Five-room bungalow, 1207 Minnesota avenue. Phone 526 or 93.

FOR SALE—Seasoned pine wood, $1.50. Phone 374. Falls ft Cam­eron.

FOR SALE—Five milch cows, quire T. J. Brennan, Wilton.

In-

F0R BENT FOR RENT—5 room house 516 Bel­

trami avenue. Apply to J. E. Mc-Glnnis, East Bemidji. r/-r. **.**"<-'

FOR RENT—Six room cottage, phone

_ MBCELLANE0IT8 ADVERTISERS—The great state of

North Dakota offers unlimited op­portunities for business to classi­fied advertisers. The recognized advertising medium in the Fargo

*Daily and Sunday Courier-News; the only seven-day paper in the state and the paper which carries the largest amount of classified advertising, The Courier-News covers North Dakota like a blank­et; reaching all parts of the state the day of publication; it is the paper to use in order to get re­sults; rates one cent per word first insertion, one-half cent per word succeeding insertions; fifty cents per line per month. Address the Courier-News, Fargo, N. D.

WANTED—100 merchants In North­ern Minnesota to sell "The Bemid­ji" lead pencil. Will carry name of every merchant in advertising columns of Pioneer in order that all receive advantage of advertis­ing. For wholesale prices write or phone the Bemidji Pioneer Of­fice Supply Co. Phone 31. Be­midji, Minn.

WANTEDr-To buy gasoline boat. Muat be in good condition and cheap. Apply 406 Minnesota av.e-nue.

BOUGHT AND SOLD—Second hand furniture. Odd Fellow's building, across from postoffice. phone 129

WANTED—Position by. stenograph­er. Inquire "Z", Pioneer office.

WANTED—Position in quire Pioneer office.

office. In-

Pioneer Want Ads 1-2 Gent a Word

Bring Results **> i\ --•••»>

Ask Hie Man Who Has. Triad Them

• L0DGED0M IN BEMDH. + + • • • w • • • • • <& • • • • •

A.O. w. w . Bemidji Lodes K«.

277. Regular meeting nights—first and thirS Monday, at 8 o'clock. —at Odd Fellows hall. 40* Beltrami Are.

a. r. 4>. « . -8fe. Bemidji Lodge No. 10SI.

Regular meeting nights— first and third Thursdays 8 o'clock—at Masonic hall Beltrami Ave., and Fifth fit

a a. p. every second and fourth Sunday evening, at • o'clock In basement ot Catholic church.

, »acnu« or atovos Meeting nights every

second and fourth Monday evenings, at Odd Fellow* Hall.

r. o. x. Regular meeting nlghtsi

every let and 2nd Wednes­day evening at 8 o'clock.. Eagles halL.

a. A. m. Regular meetings —First:

and third Saturday after­noons, at 2:10—at Odd Fell lows Halls, 408 Beltraail Ave.

i. o. o. r. Bemidji Lodge No. t i e

Regular meeting' night* —every Friday, 8 o'clock at Odd Fellows Hall, 402 Beltrami.

L O. O. F. Camp Ne. t« Regular meeting -every eeceaa and fourth Wednesdays at t o'clock at Odd Fellows HalL

Rebecca Lodge. Regular meeting nights — first aa* third Wednesday at So'oleek. —I. O. O. F. Hall.

I S Z O I T S o r rsTWAS Bemidji Lodge No. 14C.

Regular meeting nights—ex-ery Tuesday evening at 8 o'clock—at the Vagles* Hall, Third street.

x*Dns or via C A S U S .

Regular meeting night last Wednesday evening j in each month.

MASOVIO.

A. F. A A. M., Bemidji, 283. Regular meeting* nights — first and third! Wednpsdays, 8 o'clock—ett Masonic HalL Beltramli Ave., and Fifth St.

Bemidji Chapter No. It.. R. A. M. stated convocations —first and third Mondays. B o'clock p. m.—at Masonic Hail Zeitraml Ave., and Fifth street.

Elkanah Commandery No. 8t K. T. Stated conclave—second and fourth Fridays, 8 o'clock p. m.—at Masonic Temple, Bel­trami Ave., and Fifth St

O. B. S. Chapter No. 171, Regular meeting nights-first and third Fridays, 8 o'clock — at Masonic HaU, Beltrami Ave., and Fifth St.

X . B . A. Roosevelt, - No. l i s t

Regular meeting nights j Thursday everings at 8» o'clock In Odd Fel lows, Hall.

Bemidji Camp No. 8011 ^ Regular meeting nights — T first and third Tuesdays a t s S o'clock at Odd Fel lows, Hall, 402 Beltrami Ave.

MODBBjr SABtAtfXTAm. . Regular meeting nights aft].

the first and third Thursday*! in the L O. O. F. Hall a t 8* p. m.

sows or Meetings held thtrtu

Sunday afternoon of ssjCSn month at Troppisesrs* HalL

Meetings the first Friday? evening of the month at* the home of Mrs. H. 1J.-, Schmidt. 808 Third street*,

Who Sells It? Here they are all in a row. They sell it because it's the best nickel pencil on the market today and will be for many days to come.

The Bemidji Pencil stands alone in the gfivel Tcent world. It is sold on your money back basis. A store on every street and in surrounding cities.

Hers They Are: Omrtmon'm VmrtotySUwo

< Bmrkw'm Drug mud Jmw-• airy Store

W. Q. Sohroodor O. O. Rood Si Oo. C F.Notzor'mPhmrmmoy Wm.MoOumlg J. P. Omtoh'm Otgom*

Storo Roo A Mmrkumon F. H. TrootMnmn & Oo. £• Abororomblo The Faff* Storo Mr*.E.L. Wood*

- ' OMtmowa Trading Storo Rod Lmko J**--

BomldH Plonoor Supply Storo -^

.̂ Retailers will receive immediate shipments in gross (more or less) by calling Phone 31/ or addressing the Bemidji Pioneer Supply Store. Bemidju Minn.

-I

: ^'?

1 r

ue>

kf&

Recommended