Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, September 11, 1906, Page 3

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S0 be sure you get it MODEL 10 CREAM made in our own town and acknowledged by all good judges to be the purest, and smoothest and best ice cream sold in Northern Minnesota. You can get it at our store or OLSON’S Confectionery CITY DRUG STORE PALACE OF SWEETS MIDWAY Store and all the other leading deal- ers in this part of the state. GhHe Model THE CITY. Read the Daily Pioneer, Robert Morris of Grand Rapids spent last night in the city. Harry Gillman spent the night in the city and was a guest at the Brinkman. Bemidji Elevator Co. quarters for hay, feeds and flour. F. A. Ludolph and wife of Grand Forks were guests at the Brinkman last night. The beauty bee is a money- maker. It ‘honers” up one’s thoughts; it sweetens one’s life; it’s nectar on one's words, and drops, sip by sip into one’s heart when Hollister’s Recky Mountain Tea is used. Tea or Tablets 33 cents. Barker’s Drug Store. A. J. Swanberg, of Cass Lake, who has the contract to do the piling for the J. Neils Lumber company at Cass Lake, spert last night in the city. He re- ports a great scarcity of laboring men and tried to get a crew from Bemidji, but met with poor | success. Those who have enjiyed “Uncle Josh Spruceby” in times' past will not need any urging and to those who have neyver en- joyed that pleasure, we can say, head- grain, ground look in on ““Uncle Josh Spruce- ! M. & M. Read the Daily Pioneer. Letter files and letter presses at the Pioneer office. l J. Johnson and wife returned |last evening from a trip to the twin cities, taking in the fairand lyisiting with friends. Typewriter ribbons of all standard makes, either record, copying or indelible, can be pro {cured in the color you wish at | the Pioneer oftice. 1 W. Vanderlip left this morning ona trip to Park Rapids and Akcley in the interests of his firm, Bisiar, Vanderlip & Co. Te expects to be absent three or four days, 5 Third degree work will be the order of business at the K. of P. ‘meeting tomorrow evening, All members are requested to be | present. Andrew Rood, an employe of the Akeley Tribune, came up ifrom Akeley last evening and ISpenz the night in the city. Mr, 1Rood was here with the Viking | Chorus of Crookston last spring, jand made many friends in Bemidji. Clarence Welch, son of Wm. Welch, left this morning for St. John’s college, near St. Cloud, where he will attend school for the next six months. Clarence has spent his vacavion of three months with his father, in Be- midji. Crookston Journal: H.F. Fisk and sister, Miss Clare Fisk, of Bemidji passed through the city last Saturday evening on their way to Fargo to visit friends be- fore proceeding to Montevideo, Minn., where they will resume their studies. The passenger train on the Great Northern was fifty min- utes late last evening, the delay being caused by late connections with mainline trains at Sauk Center, traffic having been ex ceedingly heavy out of the twin cities yesterday morning. Stat2 of Ohio, City of Tolédo, Lucas County. Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he is senior partner of the firm of F. J. Cheney & Co., doing business in the City of Toledo, County and State aforesaid, and that said firm will pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for each and every case of fss g, | Catarrh that cannot be cured by the use of Hall’s Catarrh Cure. FRANK J. CHENEY. Sworn to before me and sub- by’ and you will know that you scribed in my presence, this 6th have put in a pleasant evening: and only regret that the time passed so quickly. House tonight, Y MARCONI WIRELESS TELEGRAPH STOCK Ts the wonder of the age and I have made it a specialty. My price is only $5.00 per share right now. It is bound o double shortly, so order to-day. R. B, HIGBEE, Broker Germania Life Bldg., ST.PAUL, Mr.x. National Bank Referinecs. v — At the Operal : day of December, A. D. 1886. :(Seal) A. W. GLEASON, Notary Pubiic. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Send for testi- | monials free. ! F.J. CHENEY & CO, Toledo, O. Sold by all Druggists, 75c. Take Hall’s Family Pills for constipation. JEWELRY MADE & REPAIRED GEO.T. BAKER& CO ON TIME GhHe New Store Is headquarters for the best Creamery Butter and Strictly Fresh Eggs. Call at the store or phone 207 e ]| e LAST th public can get what the: lhay y wanted all summer loni IVE'S ICE CREAM Follow the crowd and got one of our CANTILOUPE SUNDAES Thoy all como to us for Tv It 1s the purest of all lee eal had at the Lakeside Bakery. ONLY Read the Daily Pioneer. Keep your ties for Martin Bros. of Duluth, who will buy along the line of the M. & I. and the G.N. A. C. McL»an, purchasing agent, of Bemidji, will call on you. L. G. Crothers and wife re- turned last evening from a visit with friends in the twin cities, during which they were at the state fair and other points of interest about St. Paul and Minneapolis. Young ladies should be most particular about their looks, Don’t attire yourself carelessly; be faultlessly dressed, and Hol- lister’s Rocky Mountain Tea will do the rest. Tea or Tablets, 35 cents. Barker’s Drug Store. Crookston Journal: Miss Bertha Remshardt, who was for a number of years connected with the Crookston Journal, has accepted a position with the Be midji Pioneer. She has assumed charge of her new duties, A picaic will be given at the home of John Luckert, four miles west of Bemidji, Saturday and Sunday. September 15 and 16, for the benefit of the new Catholic church to be erected one block east of the courthouse. A social dance will be given, Harry Works,who was for four years conductor on the Sauk Center-Bemidji passenger train, is now running out of St. Paul to Barnesville. His friends in Be- midji will be pleased tolearn that he is enjoying good health at the present time. ‘The last year Harry ran into Bemidji he was in very poor health. Eldie Brinkman left .this morning for Faribault, where he will attend the State School for the Deaf, at which place he has been afstudent for several years. He has spent his summer vacation with Mr. and Mrs. Fred Brinkman. Eddie is a very apt scholar and is classed as oneof the best students at the school. E R. Farley came up last evening from his home in Minne- apolis and visited in the city to day. He will go to Sauk Center in the morning and will attend the races being held there this week. He is -the owner of “Doris,” a speedy little mare, which be has entered in the 2:28 class races at Sauk Center, and as she goes in the race there to- morrow, Mr. Farley will be on the ground to see how she moves. He intends to enter his horse in the races t2 be held here. A man in one of our adjoining cities registered a vow some months ago that he would not - |smileagain as long as his mother- in-law continued her -visit which had already been of several months duration. He had been feeding her on liver three meals aday for months but she still stayed and hence the aforesaid vow. One evening he dropped in to see “Uncle Josh Spruceby?’ and laughed so much and got into such a good humor gener- ally that on reaching home he got the old lady out of bed and took her out to a champagne lunch, At Opera House tonight. For a clear complexion take ORIND Laxative Fruit Syrup Pleasant to take Orino cleanses the sys- tem, and makes sallow blotched complexions smooth and clear.” Cures chronic constipation by gently stimulating the stomach,liverand bowels. Refuse subatitutes. Price 800, Barker’s Drug Store. H. A. Langord of Langor spent last night in the city. Charles H. Carter of Hines spent the day in the city on business. F, O. Sibley came in from Is- land Lake last evening and spent the night in the city on business, W. S. Fowlds and wife of Fowlds spent last night in the city and were guests at the Markham. Miss Clara Miller of Nebish spent last night in the city and left this morning over the Red L ke line for her home, O. Gravelle and* brother, O. Gravelle, were here from Red Lake last mght. Both are resi- ‘dents of the White Earth reser- vation. J. C. Thompson, proprietor of the Palace hotel at Blackduck, was a visitor in the city yester day. He returned home in the evening, Harry Sprague has returned from a visit with old friends at Grand Forks and Forest Ruver, N.D. Harry at one time lived at Forest River. W. H. Roberts and daughter Ivis returned last evening from Minneapolis, where they had been visiting for several days with friends. Crookston Journal: Mrs. Elmer Ryan, who has been the guest of Mrs. Geo. Murch for a few days, has returned to her home at Bemidji. Crookston Journal: Mrs. E. Walker and Miss Minnie Walker, who have been spending the last two weeks at Lake Bemidji, have returned home. Mary had a little lad Whose face was fair to see, Because each night he had a drink Of Rocky Mountain Tea. Barker’s Drug Store. Crookston Times: A. A, Law- son, the well known druggist of Blackduck who has been spend- ing several days with a hunting party in this vicinity, left for his home yesterday evening. Misses Minnie -and Emma Lind, daughters of Lars Lind of Maltby, departed this morning for Faribault, where they will attend the State School for the Deaf duriag the next term at that institution. Bagley Independent: Henry Huseby, assistant cashier at the First National Bank of this place, has accepted the cashiershio of the Union Commercial Bank of Superior and will leave for that place this week, Miss Myrtle Culbertson, for- werly an employe at the Bazaar store but now living at Walker, came up from Walker last even- ing and visited over night with Miss Dora Hazen. She returned to Walker this morning. Alexander Mather returned last evening from a week’s visit at Beuna Vista and will remain here for several days before re- turning to his home at Grand Forks. Mr. Mather has spent the summer here and in this vicinity W. G. Schroeder, Frank Schroeder and O. G. Schwandt have gone to the country north of Duluth to look over the situa- tion relative to obtaining timber claims and also the business con- ditions prevailing in that com- munity. A. B. Clair of Grand. Rapids, ex-register of deeds of Itasca county, city snd circulated among his friends in Bemidji today. *Andy” is one of the best of ‘em, over at the Rapids, and he has a host of friends in this part of the state. George French left this morn- ing for Kabakona, near which place he will hunt during the remainder of the week. Mrs. French will join her husband in the field tomorrow. Mr. French has a valuable hunting dog and is one of the few hunters in this vicinity wh) mvarubly comes home with game. Whata sweet, pretty girl is the heroine in the play of ‘WUncle Josh Spruceby” and how you do wish she was your sweetheart, ‘| that is of course, if you do not haye one of those pleasant little affairs, And in that saw-mill scene do you not want to just jump on the stage to help her hit that bad man ‘‘just once for luck.” night. spent last night in the|: At Opera House to-| The M & 1. passenger trai late last evening, Louis Lauritzen has traded his proper ty on America avenuve for a 200-acre farm in the town of Grant Valley, about seven ard one-balf miles west of Bem'dj,! the place being known as t e Hannah farm, Mr. Luuritzen will move with his family in a few days to his new location and will begin the cccupation of ti'l- ing the soil. “‘Uncle Josh Spruceby.” Asa large audience wus lea. ing a prominent Now Y rk! theatre recently a very rofinid’ looking lady was heard toremark | to ber escort, ‘‘Ihet play is! sweeter and pretticr than hel clover blossoms down in Cl ver! Lane.” The play she had j .~ witnessed was the more ihan pastoral play, ‘“Uncle Jcsh Spruceby.” Could anything {rom the south was several hours prettier be said of a drama? Surely not, and the manager ofi the company when told of the re- mark said that he considered it the greatest compliment ever paid to any play, and it would be the headline for his handsom- est announcements. It is a pretty play and one to please all classes. The comedy is comedy, and the heart interestis of more than ordinary pathos. By mauny of our best critics it has been compared to “The Old Home- stead” and not without reason. We see all the beanty and fresh- ness of the green fields, and al- most imagine we inhale the fragrance of the new mown hay, as we gaz2 with admiring eyes on the elegent stage settings. In this tale of farm life the audience is introduced to country life as it really is, with its joys and its sorrows, its laughter and its.tears. Itisa play that will make you feel better after seeing and make you glad you did not niss theperformance, at thesame time promising yourself that you will surely see it again. The company this season is one of the best and no expense has been spared in the production. At opera house tonight. CAUSES IMMENSE DAMAGE. Bursting of Irrigation Reservoir Re- | sults in Serious Flood. El Paso, 'Pex., Sept. 11.—Mail ad- vices to the Herald from Durango, Mex., say that the breaking of a huge Irrigation reservoir at hacienda Santa Catalina del Alamo, killed one man, washed away four:houses and dam- aged crops to the extent of $500,000. The. hacienda was the property of Pahlo Martinez del Rio. T PLUMBINGT TIN AND RE- PAIR WORK. You get the best services on the shortest notice. Doran Bros. & «§+ || BEMIDJI, Lagering or ageing (storing for maturity) has much to do with {)he qua.hti and healthfulness of M, A. Clark, the present judge of probate, has mace sach a com- petent and obliging official that the people will undoubtedly retain him for another term for that office. The judge is so well known that any remarks we might make seem unnecessary, but to those few who are not acquainted with him, we wish to say that he is one of the early pioneers of this sec- tion of the state, having been in this county continuously since 1899 As to qualifications, his references are seven years of experience in probate work; having served three years as a clerk prior to his election as judge. His complete and comprehensive knowledge of the requirements of the office makes him peculiarly fiitted for the position. DAVE B.LEVIS’ BIG PRODUCTION —17TH YEAR OF SUCCESS— JOSH SPRUCEBY 20 People Grand Operatic New and Novel Farmer Band Orchestra Specialties ALL NEW THIS YEAR Watch for the Big Street Parade Opera House This Evening e, { Wall Paper Carload Special Scenery. Great aw-Mill Scene &] uperb Mechani- ccal Effects. Mouldings J. A. HOFF Reliable Painter Rear Swedback Blk All Work Guaranteed. Sho Varnishes J. P. POGUE’S LIVERY, FEED AND SALE STABLE MINN With our in the World. w are etiabled to Iager from four to five months before being m This_lagering bri exquisite taste and fine flavor chatactenst:e only gs, out, to the utmost, of Anheuser-Busch Beer. Anheuser-Busch Brewing Ass’n St. Louts, U. S. A, q H. MILES, Distributor. MEERS B RS |

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