Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, July 19, 1905, Page 4

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i i i | BELTRAMI GAINS 7,000 POPULATION IS 12,338 Complete Returns of the State Census of 1905 for Towns and Villages of Beltrami County. Bemidji Has a Population of 4,327-.| Village Proper Ecing 3,800, And Nymore 527. Blackduck Has 702---Tenstrike 349| --Turtle River 228---Baudette 135---Spooner 110. The Pioneer is able to present to its readers today a complete abstract of the census of 1905, being the Fifth Decennial Census of Minnesota, for Beltrami county, giving the results of the June count for every village and township in the county, The actual gain in population for Beltrami county in five years is 7,000, or about 120 per cent. The population of Beltram1 county. is now 12,838 while the tigures for 1900 were 11,030 but this included some 4,000 people now living in Clearwater county and all of the population of the Indian reservations, which are not included in vhis year’s count. The population of Beltrami county according to the census of 1895 was 1,364. The actual population of Bemidji is 4,327 although inasmuch as Bemidji and Nymore are separate villages as to their political m agement the official figures are given separately as 3,800 and 527. The census of 1900 gave Bemidji 2,183 and the gain in five years omitbing Nymore, is thus 1617 or 74 per cent. Including Nymore the real gain in the population of the city is a little over 100 per cent. The population of the villages of the county is as follows: Blackduck 702, Nymore 527, Tenstrike 349, Turtle River 228, Beau- dette - Spooner 110, Solway 91, Farley 65. . Otticial tigures for every town and village in the county as follows: CIVIL DIVISIONS FEDERAL CEXSUS 1900 Alaska ‘ Battle Beaudette Beaudette Village Bemidji Bemidji Village Benville Blackduck Blackduck Village Buzzle Cormant Hekles Frohn Grant Valley Hagali Hamre Hornet Jones Kelliher including Kelliher Vil. 216 127 240 | of constructing an outlet in Lake " used to take up the orders issued urt. i Jennie Anderson, accused of drunken and disorderly conduct and of frequenting winerocms, was arraigned before Judge Pen- dergast this morning on com- plaint of her husband. Sentence was suspended. . Swan Ecklund received a 60 day sentence this morning in Judge Pendergast’s court after being found guilty of drunken and disorderly conduct. SEWERAGE DISCUSSED City Council Takes Up Ques- tion of Establishing Sys- tem for Bemidji. ACTION MAY BE TAKEN AT NEXT MEETING. City Attorney Instructed to Devise Ways and Means to Pay i for Work. At the meeting of the c'\ty( council last night the question of providing a sewerage system for Bemidji was taken up and discussed at some length with the result that the city attorney was instructed to devise ways and -means whereby funds can be obtained to pay for the work Bemidji. It is estimated that the outlet will cost from $2,000 to $5,000. The financial condition of the city atthe presenttimeis such that cash can not be paid for the work of layinz the pipe, and it will be attempted by the council to secure a contractor who will accept city ordersas payment-s' for this work, and the property ownars benefitted by the system will be compelled to pay into the city treasurer the amount in| which they are benefitted and the money thus secured will be to the contractor, Itis planned to construct a system reaching from Minne- sota avenue to Bemidji lake. The pipe will be laid on Third street beginning at Minnesota avenue to Beltrami avenue, thence down Beltrami avenue to Second street and down Second street to the lake. obtained for the construction of the outlet is that this portion of| the system does not directly| benetit any one property owner but is a benefit to the city asa world. Itis thus apparent that payment for the work must come from the city treasury, and the city attorney will make an effort | | Lammers, inc Solway(Solway 91) 191 268 Langor 111 150 Lee 146 Liberty 289 165 McDougald 194 Maple Ridge 156 33 Nebish 107 119 Northern Nymore Village Port Hope inc. Farley(Farly 65) 111 Quiring Roosevelt Summit $ Turtle Lake 338 177 Turtle River 99 Turtle River Village 228 Taylor a8 Tenstrike Village 249 Wabanaca 100 147-30 59 4H b5 6 Bl 4 23 6 (Shotley) 3 > S . 99 . oner (ine. Spooner Vil. 110) 4 21 162-834 Total for county 12,888 11,030 LOUIS. Henry and Lottie Baumgartner were callersat the Bentley home- stead Sunday. O. S. Newman made a business trip to Cass Lake on Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. W. Webster, Mrs. E. Webster and grandson, Leslie, spent Sunday with Mr. The annual school-meeting of the Rebedew school district was | aeld at the home of Mr. Thomas, | the director, Saturday at 7 p. m. { They had a very long session,un- fortunately so for the worthy treasurer and clerk‘who had to walk to their respectiye homes ithrough a drenching rain arriv- ing near midnight. ‘Wiser and family. Notice of the annual school-! Miss Bertha Romming of meeting was given out for Sat-| Moose Lake took dinner at the urday night but on account of the | Bentley homestead Monday. small attendance no meeting was| Mike Laughlin of Farley is held. visiting George Newell of Pimush B. A. Ronning made a trip to|Lake. to arrange some plan whereby money <zan be secured to goon with the work Providing a plan is found by the city attorney it is probable | that some definite action will be | taken by the council atits next| meeting. MAD DOG BITES LITTLE CHILD, ) | i i 1 | Four Year 0ld Daughter of Mr. and Mrs. T. Beaudette ! Bitten Last Night. ! Delphine, the four year old! daughter of- Mr. and Mrs. T. Beaudette, was last night bitten | by a mad dog at the corner of Third street and Minnesota aye-, jnue. The little child was stand- ing on the sidewalk near the First National bank when the| dog rushed upon her and bit her| twice upon the arm, drawing blood. The parents of the girl| were near at hand and they caught her up and took her to.a physician’s office, where she was cared for. An officer took charge of the dog and dispatched him, Ecklund became involved in a fight with Henry Almquist last night and during the meelee he struck at Almquist with a knife, cutting a small gagsh on the lat- ter’s head. Almquist was given 10 days in the county jail. HOMESTEADERS GOING WEST Many Beltrami County Set- tiers Leaving for Dakota Harvest Fields. l A Fish Dinner. Crookston Times: Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Newbery entertained a company of 12 ata fish dinner last evening that was a very unique and dainty affair. Mr. A well known railway man who was in the city yesterday stated while here that during the past The dog and pony show is headed this way. It isa new. one, a big one and a great one, that is’ according to all reports. ’ On Monday of next week Siebel Bros. Trained Animal exhibition, the latest aspirant for dogand’ pony fame, will give two exhibi- tions daily at the old base ball grounds. This dog and pony show has never visited this sec- tion before, this being its first rannual tour through northern Minnesota, but that it is one of the very best shows of its kind on the road. Seibel Bros. be- gan their season in Milwaukee, Wis., this year, under the aus- pices of the Humane Society of the State, and over 40,000 people were in attendance during the week. Seven weeks spentin the 1larger cities of the south result- two weeks traffic on the Great | Northern line has been unusually heavy owing tothe many men that are now making their way to the Dakota harvest fields. North. ern Minnesota is contributing its share of men and a large number of homesteaders living in Bel- trami. county huve already gone Newbery cavght the fishat Be-led in a turn-away business at midji and they constituted the every performance, which isa piece de resistance at a very en-|triumph never before recorded joyable repast. in tent show history. There are about two hundred educated ani- mal actors with the Siebel outfit, and the ring performance is said to be the wonder of every show- man, and the delight of eyery What the Minot gptic says about *“The Banker’s Child.” Last night a large audience witnessed the play, ‘“The Bank- west. er’s Child” at the opera house and every oné€ present left at the close of the play with the highest praise for Harry Shannon’s play. It has been a long time since a play has come to Minot as elevat- ing in its tone and as’ prettily staged and costumed as “The Banker’s Child,”” The elegant Couldn’t Get to Ripple. Dr. Layfayette Dodds, who is in the city today, has made two attempts of late to get to Ripple. Dr. Dodds started ffom Crooks- ton and went around by Roseau but when he reached that village he learned that to reach Ripple|costumes are seldom equalled on was an impossibility. Last night|the stage and the play from be- when he went to Northome he in-{ ginning to end is intensely inter- tended to continue the journey tolesting. Little Stella, known as the Big Fork town, but at North. | the Banker’s Child, is a marvel. ome he was told that it was abso- | She played her partin a manner lutely impossible to get through ! which captured the entire audi- the swamp, so he returned tojence. The specialties were very Bemidji this morning. | fine last night, It is hoped by _— many who saw the play last See the line of Steel R: n zes at | night that this company will play Ross’ Hardware before you buy, 'a retarn date in Minot. spectator who has seen it. Prices, -adults 25¢, children 15¢. The four-act comedy drama, “The Banker’s Child,” will be presented for one night only, Friday July 21. Manager Harry Shanhon promises one of the best productions of the season, and judging from the flattering press reports at hand, every |promise will be fulfilled. The |staging of the play is sumptous. Tons of special scenery and elec- trical effects are carried. Dur- ing the action of the play a num- ver of clever singing and dancing specialties will be introduced. | WANTED—-At once, assistant druggist, registered in North Dakota. Apply J. S. Mackay, Bottineau, N. D. § WHEN YOU THINK OF A BLOOD PURIFIER THINK OF §S S The Most Popular axe Widely-linown Blood Purifier The reason that cash must bo]| GUARANTEED PURELY VEGETABLE : This is the season that tests the quality of your blood, and if it is mnot good, then evidences of it will begin to show as the weather grows warmer. Carbuncles and boils, pimples and blotches, and numerous itching and burning skin eruptions will make their appearance, and are sure in- dications of bad blood. If spring-time finds you with im- | pure, sickly blood, then you are in poor condition to with- stand the strain upon the system which always comes at this time of the year. A failure to look after your physical wel- fare now, by purifying the blood and toning up the gen- eral system, may result in a complete breaking down of health later on, and you will find yourself weak and run i down, with no appetite, and a prey to indigestion and ner- It is poor blood that makes weak bhodies, for it SIS is this vital fluid that must supply vigor and strength to our systems, and upon its purity rests our chances for health. Any impuxity, humor or poison in the blood acts inju- vousness. riously upon the system and affects the general health. i matter in the blood that chronic sores and ulcers are due. | skin eruptions so common during spring and summer, show the blood to be in a riotous, feverish condition, as a result of too much acid or the presence of some irritating humor or acrid poison in the blood. A large per cent. of human ailments have their origin in 2 | polluted, diseased blood, and can only be reached by a remedy that goes into the circulation and uproots and expels the poison and restores the blood to a healthy, natural condition. If \ you have any symptoms of bad blood, and are thinking of a blood puri- Springfield, Ohio, May 16, 1903. On two occasions I have “sed your S. S. S. in the spring with fine results. I can heartily recommend it as a tonic and and found it to be a blood purifier of the * best order. SWIET'S SPECIFIC, THE GREAT BLOGD PURIFIER. g - It is to the morbid, unhealthy The pustular and scaly Wheeling, W. Va., May 28, 1903, Ihave used your S. 8. S. this spring, My system was run down blood purifier. I was troubled with headaches, indigestion and liver trouble, which all disappeared under the use of a few bottles of your great blood remedy, 8. 8.S. My appetite, which was poor, was greatly helped. Ican eat anything I want now without fear of indigestion, and my blood has been thoroughly cleansed of impurities and made rich and strong again. As a tonic and blood pur- ifier it is all you claim for it. MRS. GEORGE WIEGEL. 771 E. Main St. mineral, but is composed exclusively of vegetable ingredients, selected for their medicinal properties and gathered from nature’s store-houses—the fields and forests, fier, then think of S.S. S, a remedy with a long- established reputation and that has proven it- self to be a specific in dis- eases of the blood, and a superior tonic and sys- tem builder. S.S.S. con- tains mo mercury, pot- ash, arsemic or other and my joints ached and pained me con- siderably, and I began to fear that I was going to be laid up with Rheumatism. I had used S. S, S. before, and knew what it was; so I purchased a bottle of it, and have taken several bottles, with the resulr that the aches and pains I had are gone; my blood has been cleansed and reno. X vated, my general health built up, go that. I can cheerfully testify to its virtnes as a blood purifier and tonic, > JOHN C. STEIN. 1533 Market Street. J The thou- sands who have used S. S. S. and kuow from experience what it will do in blood troubles, do not need to be reminded of a blood purifier now, for they know no better camn. be found than S.S.S. If you are thinking of a blood sold for mearly fifty years, while the demand No remedy without merit could exist so long and retain the confidence of the people. Write us if in need of medical adyice, which is given without charge. s THE SWIFT SPECIFIC COMPANY, Afl‘lfl'g purifier, think of S. S. S. . which has been 1s greater now than ever in its histery. o 4

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