Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, November 12, 1906, Page 3

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FINE HOME MADE GANDY - DELICIOUS AND CHEAP Eat one of our CREAM CARAMELS and you will buy no other. Our assortment of Cakes and pastry is always the finest. Ices,Ice Cream & Sweet Cream. Party orders solici- ted. 315 Minnesota Ave, Phone 125 The home of Snowflake Bread. THE CITY. M. & M. Read the Daily Pioneer. Bemidji Elevator Co., jobbers for Gold Medal tlour. I. Blooston went to Bagley yesterday on business. An entire change of program at the Bijou theatre tonight. Sam Ellis of Blackduck was a business visitor in the city today. Frank Stephens, cruiser for the Crookston Lumber company, left this morning for Tenstrike to look after some matters there for his company. Into each life some ruins must fall, wise people doa’t sit down and bawl; only fools suicide or take to flight, smart people take Rocky Mountain Tea at night. Barker’s drugstore. Rev. Roderick Mooney, lec- tures on I[reland next Friday night at the opera house; or per- haps it would be better to say he takes his audience on a tour of Ireland. Stereoptican views illustrate the lecture. Proceeds for the benefit of the new Epis- copal church building fund. Catarrh Cannot Be Cured by local applications, as they cannot reach the seat of the dis- ease. Catarrh is a blood or con- stitutional disease, and in order t> cure it you must take internal remedies. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and acts di- rectly on the {blood and macous surfaces. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is not a quack medicine. It was prescribed by one of the best physicians in this country for years and is a regular prescrip- tion. It is composed of the best tonics known, combined with me:the marine recruiting offices for best blood purifiers, acting di- rectly on the mucous surfaces. The perfect combination of the two ingredients is what produces such wonderful results in curing catarrh. Send for testimouials free. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Props., Teledo, O. Sold by Druggists, price 75c. Take Hall’'s Family Pills for constipation. KEEP YOUR TIES! Martin Bros., of Duluth, Minn., will buy ties a- - long the lines of . the M. & 1., and G. N. Railway. A, C. McLean, of Bemidji, will call on you. If: you have ties for sale write to him at Bemidji. . MARTIN - BROTHERS, Read the Daily Pioneer. Good Photos at Reed’s studio. J. O. Parker went to Duluth yesterday on a business mission. William Joce of Blackduck was a guest at the Remore Saturday evening. EYES—Drs. Larson & Larson, specialists in fitting glasses, Office in Swedback Block. C. J. Pryor of the Pioneer de- parted yesterday for the twin cities to look after some business i | matters. A.P. Kirsch, a one-time resi- dent of Bemidji who is now living at Crookston, Sundayed in Be- midji. Theodore M. Klement came over from Bena Saturday after- noon and remained in Bemidji over Sunday. E. D. Beeson went to Laporte this morning to look after some poles and ties which the Naugle company owns there. A. A, Dahl, one of the “stal. warts” at Nebish, came down from that place Saturday even- ing and Sundayed in this city. Dr. C. W, Higgins of Minne-| apolis arrived in Bemidji Satur- day night and was an over Sun- day visitor with relatives. He left for home on the early Mon- day morning train. We owe the young people of this country the best example and teaching that we chance to know. That's good advice.— Take Hollister’s Rocky Mountain Tea. Tea or Tablets, 35 cents. Barker’s drugstore. Rev. Roderick Mooney will givea lecture on Ireland, illus- trated with stereoptican views, next Saturday night at the opera house. Proceeds go for the benefit of the new Episcopal church building faund. 85c for any seat in the house. J. A. McAvoy left yesterday afternoon for Duluth and - points jon the iron range. He hasseveral propositions to engage in busi- ness on the range, and it is possible that he may decide to locate permanently in Hibbing or some other good town over there. Grand Rapids Herald-Review: Judge Spooner of Bemidji and Deputy Sheriff Fish of this county started from Deer River yester- day for Turtle River, where they will use their rifles for a few days, if opportunity presents. Fred says there’s deer,in that vicinity that may be had for the shooting. W. A. McNeil of St Paul, first lieutenant in the U. S. marine corps and who has full charge of the district of Minnesota, was in Bemidji Saturday, inspecting the local recruiting office. He is well pleased with the work being done here by Sergeant Hayes, who has had a number of years’ experience on recruiting duty. Will Continue Business. Mrs. Henry Buenther has de- cided to continue the business formerly conducted by her husband Henry Buenther, who was drowned a short time ago, She wishes the Pioneer to state that she has hired compe- tent men to do the work and that all unfinished work will be turned out as soon as possible. Low Rates to the Westand Southwest. ‘On the first and third Tues- days of eacb month until March, 1907, inclusive, the Chicago Great Western railway will sell one-way Colonist tickets at nearly half fare to points in Arkansas, Jolorado, Indian Territory, Kan- sas, Louisiana, Mexico, Missouri, Nebraska, New Mexico, Okla- homa, South Dakota, Texas and Wyoming. For further informa- tion apply to H. L. Wyand, T. P. A, 864 Robert street, St. Paul, Minn. |Canned Goods canned goods, put'up Salmon and Halibut. WE are now receiving our new stock of “Easter” -.and “Echo” brands of We have a shipment of nice- smoked Fresh eggs and creamery butter. | ROE @ MARKUSE from this year’s crop. Last chance for peachos at 81,15 per crate Oysters - Oysters « Oysters —— We have just received from Baltimore, at our store, a shipment of these select oysters which can be had at the right price. If you are in need of any- thing in the bakery line or fruit line, call up Phone 118 and it will be delivered promptly from the Lakeside Bakery. Read the Daily Pioneer. Ole Locken was in the city yesterday from Nebish. C. H. Allen of Blackduzk was in Bemidji Saturday night. D. W. Carter of Quiring reg- istered at the Brinkman yester- day. W. M. Stone of Crookstcn was & guest of Bemidji friends yes- terday. s A. M. Marks of Guthrie trans- acted business in the city Satur- day afternoon. Wesell all kinds of sheet music from 10c to 85c—Bisiar, Vanderlip & Co. C. G. Johnson, of the Johnson & O’Connor employment agency, went to Grand Forks yesterday on business for his firm. William King of Grand Rapids came over from his home yester- day afternoon for a visit with Mr. and Mrs. Fred Eberlien. Take a tour of Ireland next Friday night with Rev. Roderick J. Mooney. Stereoptican Illus- trations add point and beauty to the lecture. Opera house. J. F. Stack of Northome, an employe of the Backus-Brooks Lumber company, passed through the city Saturday even- ing on his way home from a trip to Brainerd. A novel feeling of leaping, bounding impulses goes through your body. You feel young, act young and are young after taking Hollister’s Rocky Mountain Tea. Tea or Tablets, 85 cents. Barker’s drugstore. Bert Getchell returned Satur- day evening from -Blackduck, near which place he had been to appraise the value of the land owned by the Leland estate, having been appointed appraiser by the judge of probate. Professors Ritchie and Stewart returned this morning from Professor Stewart’s claim, near Blackduck, where they had been in quest of game. Beyond se- curing a few partridges, they were unsuccessful in their hunt. Harry Arnold came down Sat- urday evemng from Redby, where he has been acting as agent for the M., R.L, & M. Ry. He has resigned his position at Redby, accepted a position with the Great Northera as express messenger. He will run from Bemidji to Sauk Center. Mrs. Edward Kerwin left this morning for her home at Pelican Rapids, Minn.,, having been a visitor in the city for two weeks. She took with her the 2-year-old daughter of J. L. Sutherland, her brother-in-law, and will keep her at the Kerwin home at Pelican Rapids. B.L. Fairbanks, one of the numerous members of the Fair- banks family who have been prominently “identiied with Indian affairs on the White Earth reservation for many years, was a Bemidji visitor over - Sunday; He had been to the -Red Lake Indian agency on business in- cident to the payment made to the Red Lakers and returned from that place Saturday even- ing. He left for his home at White Earih this morning. Harness Shop I haye just opened up a new harness shop and am prepared to do'all kinds of work in ‘har- nees and saddlery,wheth €r new or repair work. 1 also carry: light and heavy harness, sweat pads, collars, curry combs brushes, whips, blank- _ | ets and robes. 406 Minnesota Avenue | A. L. Collard ]| been made to vote bonds for the » Danaher cam¢ morning from Tenstrike, where he spent Sunday. H. O. Calvertleft this morning for points along the north line of the M, &. I. railway. Miss Bessie Harris returned this morning from Tenstrike, where she had been visiting with relatives for several days, J. M. Marsden, general man- ager of the M., R. L. & M. rail- way, returned yesterday after- noon from a business trip to the twin cities. W. T. Blakely came down this morning from Farley to look after some business matters in connection with his various log- ging operations around Farley. The M. E. Ladies Aid Society will meet: Wednesday afternoon at 2 o’clock with Mrs. Michdels and Mrs. Cutter at.620 Third St. A cordial invitation is extended to all, R Notin Minnesota and North Dakota alone, but everywhere, the pure food laws approve Hunt's Perfect Baking Powder, because it is pure, efficient and of high quality. The Eastern Star Thimble Bee will meet at the home of Mrs, T. J. Audrews, corner of Fourteenth street and Irving avenue, tomorrow afternoon at 2 o'clock. All members cor- dially invited. Henry Funkley left this morn- ing for Fergus Falls, where he will attend the term of the U. 8. court which convenes there to- morrow. Mr. Funkley is attor- ney for the defendants in several cases that will be tried at this term. : Pat Walsh, who owns a tine clzim a few miles from Big Falle, made a trip to Cass Lake and back Saturday and left Saturday evening over the M. & I. for his home. Charles Tedford; the Cass Lake sportsman, and a number of friends accompanied Mr. Walsh and will hunt in the vicinity o f Big Falls for deer and moose. John M. Johnson and wife and fourteen other residents of Wilton were in the city yester- day, assisting Mr. . Johnson in appropriately celebrating the wedding of Mr. Johnson, which occurred at Wilton lasv Friday. Saturday evening Mr. Jobnson gave a free dance and supper in the hall at Wilton, and "the event was one of the most enjoyable occurrences held there for some time. * Crookston Timres: George Elliot, filer in the Grand Forks saw mill and Mike McNichols a brother of John McNichols of this city are spending the day here from East Grand Forks, the mill there having closed ‘down last evening. Both will spend the winter in the woods. Mr. Elliot is moving his family to Blackduck for the winter, near where he will do some inspection | work for the Grand Forks Lum- ber company. has been a very successful one for the Grand Forks concern. Will Hunt at Nebish. W. E. McKenzie, proprietor of the Crookston Daily Times, W. S. Lycan, proprietor of the Crookston hotel, and William Munch, game warden for the Crookston district, came in last night from Crookston, and will|’ hunt big game ‘in Beltrami county. They were joined this morning by F. S. Lycan, of the Markham, and went to Nebish, from which place they will do their stunts for big game. Cass Lake Chief in Town. William. Congdon, chief of police of Cass Lake, spent last|.: night in the city. - Mr. Congden is the object of counsiderable good-natured ralliery ‘as to the|: condition of the village jail at ass Lake, which has 'been con- demned by the state board of charities and corrections, and is notoriously deficient for the incarceration of prisoners. windows, Two attempts have purpose of erecting a new city hall and jail there, but. i ta | 3 * The ants whleh’.}l‘: really protective to plants are not those which obtain thelr food, Indirectly for the most part F @ 3 through the aphides, from the'vegeta- D W b g ble kingdoin, but those which are rea)- « ly carnlvorous, These are numerous in temperate climates, andtheir useful- | meniannt St. Paul, Minneapolis Incontestable, Thus the field ant is a and return via the R. account foot ball game Jreat Insect destroyer. - A nest of this University of Minnesota species 1s capable of « destroying as VS wmany as twenty-elght caterplllars and Carlisle Indians grasshoppers. a minute, or 1,600 an bour, and such a colony s at work Northrup - Field, Minneapolis, Saturday,- Nc- vember 17, 2 p. 'm. : day and night during the pleasant 5 < season, In the arid plains of ‘America’| 4 $ the beneficent ‘work of ants is revealed - UARU R* & ° In the lsles of verdure around thelr 7 bills, There are plants hospitable to ants, which furnish them shelter and often food, within the cavities of which the instincts of the ants prompt them) to take their abode. This I8 the case- with several ferns, among them the Polypodium nectariferum, the sterile fronds of which bear nectaries on their lower face and are, moreover, of a shape favorable to sheltering the in- sect. S1gn of & Trained Nurse. “I used to wonder why it was that I noticed so many young women lugging Buit cases all aver town,” sald the man The past season| Re-| 4 cently, three men who had been|" locked up for robbery walked|: out of tha jail, simply pulling off |- a few of the rusty bars on thel- on the street corner. “At first I thought perhaps they were Independent young persons who were on their way to the Grand Central station or to the ferry- boats to take trains, but then I mo- Hced them In parts of the town’where they couldn’t possibly be. making for 8 railroad statlon, since they were go- Ing In the wrong directions. Now I have learned who these women. are. Most of them are tralned nurses. When they leave the hospitals or their homes to attend a case they pack their unl- forms and other necessaries in'‘these suit cases, which they carry ' with them. So when you see a young wom- an carrying a suit case and bound in a direction away from a boat or ratlroad station it’s very likely she’s a trained 15 nurse and is elther starting out to at- ! tend a case or is returning from one.” —New York Press. The most important-game of the season, furnishing a long sought opportunity to:compare the Jeading teams of the East and West. Tickets will be gold for all. trains, arnving in Minneapolis Friday, November 16. 1906, andbefere: 2. prm., Saturday, November 17, 1906. Al tickets good for return on trains leaving St. Paul:and Minneapolis not later-than Monday, November 19, 1906. E. E. Chamberlain, Agt.,"Bemidji, Minn. A. L: Craig, Passr. Traf. Mgr;, St. Paul, Minnesota. Golf aud’ the ‘Liver. l T . Golf 18 the greatest of all games. ' It hyacintli -has®:itésname: Greek - mythology. - According to: the _ the only recreation that is at one and story as told by Ovid, Hyacinthus, the same time health giving and a 4 ‘beautiful boy, was the son of a ‘complete preoccupation without being ] tan king and the favorite of Apollo, unduly physically ‘exhaustive. "Buot & é = Zephyrus, belng envious of the attach- am profoundly convinced that it is far o 5 3 Colors of the Bluebird. ’ ment of Apolio and Hyacinthus, so better for a man's ‘liver he should (| Of the male bluebird Thorean said, ' play & poor‘game than a good one. I turned the direction of a quoit which “He carries the sky on his back.” To know from personal experience that it | Apollo 'had pitched while at play that this John Burroughs- added, “and: the ' it struck the head’ of° Hyacinthus-and; A tter for ver to play a earth on his breast”” The bird’s back, i really bad game. Nothing stirs up the slew him. The fable concludes by: wings and tail, chin and throat are a ' 2 making “Apollo transform' the'body of; - lver e the lon, e ext 'ment P e I vivid blue, while his breast and ‘flanks i gna tne paroxysms of a really bad his favorite Into the flower-that bears are a chestnut brown and his abdomen | his name. { Dining Car Meals on the Burlington of the back over the shoulder. - The are served on the popular pay-only-for-what you-order plan The Hyacinth. Seminole Indians say that -the male bluebird once flew so high' that his back rubbed against the sky, which imparted to him its- own'azure tint. Returning to earth, his wife so admired fis new coat that she determined to have a like one for herself and the next morning flew away to get it, but the day proving somewhat cloudy the col- or given to her dress was not so' bril- \ant as was-that received by her mate. T TR A Shooting Gallery Secret. “Do you see this glass ball?” said the shootlng gallery man. It was a ball of hollow glass, an airy glass soap bubble, that had swung: all season at the end of a thread in the foreground |- of the clay pipes, bells and what not that had made up the gallery’s targets. “This glass ball,” the man went on, ‘“ls my great money maker. All season long people tried” to hit this ball—it was bigger and nearer than any other target—and everybody failed. - Thou- sands of bullets were fired at the ball, thousands of nickels were spent on it, yet here it is, still untouched, my best breadwinner. All wise shooting ‘gal- lery men have a glass ball like this. It.| makes such a tempting target, yet it is = mever hit. It IS never hit because the || = i alr that precedes a gun charge Is suf- | \BU”mUTUfl | ficlent to blow the ball aside, out of.. B | the way. You might fire a-hundred;! } +a shots at it, but, like a living thing; like | : e a timid soldier, for instance, it would dodge each shot.” % You order just what you went, it is prepared especially for you and seaved correctly and quickly in generous portions. If alight lunch is all you wish, that is all you pay for. If you want a course dinner, you may have it. The cost is mod- i erate, averaging about 75 cents f r sugper and less for break- fast. Business men, traveling men, tourists and particularly family parties, find Burlington dining car service more satisfactory than any other. There &re other good reasons why you should use Bur- lington trains. Let'me tell you about them, please. F. M .RUGG, Northwestern Passenger-Agt. Germanis- Life Bufiding, St. Pasl, Mins. Lumberman’s star ' rubbers, men’s women’s and ' children’s -overshoes' ‘and 'tubbers. The most - complete ~stock. + The -most reasonable prices. SHEEP ' COATS ‘& MACKINAWS ‘Any lengfl\i you desire. - Com- ‘pare our prices with’ the “other fellow’s "and you will be ‘con- vinced that our merchandise is what you want. HEAVY-WOOL PANTS ‘We are. uhowfiisgfila“lige from Bolute ‘satisfaction ’ guaranteed fwooL Socks| - ‘The biggest bargain :in men’s -60c all woeol gocks, ' Try them. bota | - instances the bond propositiont was defeated. Regardle this handicap, however;, Congdon is‘alert and ' makes a very good’ chief. . o

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