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

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" th Ploneer. — Go to' the*Bijou! - Bartetes o , TOUF follow” manner rends seutotorsnorea wore || HOT DRINKS ][ore sootimnen. |z i e oy Sonsn | B b, o o | Small calendar pads can be had | wheu the ceremony Is kept unusually A nice assortment of fouatain % ; i tim ) HUME MA“E GANDY pens at the Pioneer office. ; 7" | at the Pioneer office. . mfm‘:"é';;‘:“ f:»&r:l,-fi.?um i i y ““Thers Auomatie D;nmt—V-ud'ovme—Pop- Rev. Hall-Quest came down|| We have installed at our 1907 diaries make good pres- es. The cogrelon of ‘prospective m" run way. with m” A ular . Concerts———— Ear oo Civgan |t morning trom bis home aé|| - place of business, vaoda PR L £50C EEDCIANS ORBO) rescding weil tuinimind n fact | e tonion s o - * (302 THIRD ST, at one of our Blackduck. ountain hot drinks.” g and fiction. A kidnaped bridegroom, CARAMELS and you will 'i‘(l:le ll\‘d & 1. vorth-bound pass- 1S 1s: oUN BN Dressmaking and sewing done I-t unusual, zh:outch he ::t buy no other. ) il ¢ N : at reasonable prices. Fanny . George's' not long (Y)m assortment of Cakes fJ|o5° srain’ yas thirty minutes Hot Chocolate with Macarons Whiting, 517 Second street. He "l:'m: I‘fllflmln .“.."“"“fi m and pastry is always the ke Lass evening. Hot Clam Bouillon . : i ::m‘:d him om:;:rhy“ ui':-.' There' fi tp e 4 1f you intend using a new day || yos chicken Bouillon . . You need a tonic that will putt L 05 i or ust impediment save ! Y ‘baving : TONIGHT mf? i’ Tce C & Sweet [Jjbook or ledger, remember the || yot Tomato'Bouillon . . 100 || #he 8apotlifeinto your system | gocial rank. The gentleman was de- | mo a tull Louls | EXTRA SPECIALS ces,leg Lream & Swes Pioneer has the best assortment || yos aone. Ext. of Cotee . 10¢ and fortify you from all diseases. | termined, and the lady seconded his the 5 Cream. Party orders solici- of all kinds of blank books and an Hollister’s Rocky Mountain Tea | Plns sdmirably. But the day and the replled, ¢, - done, THE CAMERAGRAPH detalls leaked out, and before the time | #ire; If you will allow me to keep early order will insure you just is recognized as [the greatest|fixed the bridegroom's male ‘relatives | stone for a month” A wmonth later he presenting " ¢ ki 3 deployed strategically through “Mad- | Brought ‘back the’ An Artist's Dream the book you want. LakOSide Baker"‘ :‘;::ln ffihen:; c::t.: o BTe: (:r dox street and surrounded the church. pe ‘ideg 4 The Poor Tutor The Blackduck Employment oks, : DArMers| ge drove up in a hansom cab. With | leas. T ; . agency shipped twenty men to drug store, his eyes fixed on' the expectant bride, ; g ‘“THE TIE THAT BINDS" i be prepared to alight. An athletic un- Illustrated Song by k this morning to ight. 5 Hackensac g Club dance tomorrow night.|_ s e cle and a brother sprang forward, H. L. Alldis, work in the logging camps near| (hrigtmas stickers, at the| mmne lamentable effects of the gener- | thrust bim back. with a “Glad to meet ; Weekiy. that place for the Northland Pine Pioneer office, al destruction of forests are now suf- 15 Minnesota Ave, Phone 125 compauy. . < .. | Aiclently ‘recognized in' all ‘civilized The home of Showflake Bread. ¢ See Bijou ad elsewhere in thiS| countries, Such destruction Invites Dan Rose, the buyer for the|{sgye for change of program, etc: | devastating foods in mountatn streams NOhCC Of Sale Of Stumpage on State Lands. Watab Paper & Pulp company of and causes the surrounding land to s lub dance Thursday evening. ¢ 4 St. Cloud, spent yesterday in the 5 y 8:|dry up. Forests ict like vast con Notice s hereby given that I will ofter at Public Auction at the Court . not n changed. j They: THE CITY. [city. He stated that business| 2°d8te basnot bee B o e oomve aboss thows suton, | HoUSe in Bemidfl, Minnesots, on Thursday, December 13th, 1906, at 9 . : was good with him and that he Ed Munhall has entirely re-| . "ho torce of torrentiat downfalls, :fil:o:!( In the forenoon, certaln timber belunging to-the State and liable' to THE CAMERAGRAPH ‘“Ihe Tunoel Workers’’ 3 The moving picture sensation | of the year. i —SYNOPSIS— Superintendent and Foreman " Jealousy Aroused Read the Daily Pioneer, was getting his share of pulp cove‘red from a severe attack of g:;:g:: ae ::lo;e Kg:::nnlnn;e::::a :tt ::: Following 18 a list of the lands upon which said timber is situated, Hoisting and Carrying Rock A. Young of Northome was in|wood. La Grippe. showing the kind of timber that will be offered on ‘each tract, and the esti- From the Tunnel soll against too rapld evaporation. | mateq quantity of same: the city last night, What Adam ate, not what he| Charles Clark of Chicago is a|anq yet the manner In which forests Superstruction of Peon. R. R. Tunnel Bemidji Elevator Co., jobbers|drank h ! from Eden’s|Visitor at the home of "Mr. and|act thelr beneficent part is not exactly | ™ @ 5 5 Betweeu N. Y. and Long Island ) ) rank; wee he Ir . Mrs. H. E. Anderson. such as might be supposed. They pre- 3 g & Descent into Tunnel for Mascot Flour, also Cremo, Bar-|garden driven, O, what a differ- S , vent a large part of the rain that falls [ Parts of Sections . § § @ Estimated Quantity of Timber Departure of the Night Shift From - low’s Best and Gold Medal. ence there now would be, If he| A.P. White, who now resides | from reaching the soil at all. It Is es- Z the Tunnel &nd the Arrivsl of : e . . . timated that in European climates the : the Supt. and F Helen Grimes, who has been a|had tiken Rocky Mountain Tea. |at Ft. Smith, Ark., is-transact:| ¢, egts evaporate directly or transpire N% SWy, SW4 === S pl. ‘; - o;cmlin guest at the Brinkman for sev-|Barker’s drug store. ing business in the city. physiologically four-fifths of the rain| SWX%, Ni SE%, . S Tunnel Under the River 4 5 e 5 that falls upon them. Thus the forest| SE% SEX and Quarrel Between Foreman and the eral days, left this morning for = Thomas J. McGuire of Bau- s o ceeennreines 16 146 36 70 M pine, jack and spruce; 160 cords jack Supt.—in which the Foreman atmosphere {8 no less Important than the forest soll In equalizing the cli- matic conditions of a country.—Youth's | NW¥% and 8k her home at Red Lake agency. Horses; Horses. dette was among the out-of-town lath bolts; 20 cords spruce. Fragrant neds the flower, be-| I have for sale horses weigh |vigitors who were in the city to Sets Off the Blast—Think- ing to Blow Both Into ~ SWY% covvnnnnn 22 146 35 30 M spruce and tamarack; 50 cords jack side the garden path; white are|ing from 1,300 to 3,300 per team. | 4ay, Companion. N% NE b A e it 1 R S . s | Seo Pogu . R Nwu. ™Y 25046 35 40 M tamarack; 75 cords Zhe Rescue daisies, laughing in morning’s | See Pogue. Henry Daho left this noon for Tale of & Coat. BEYK viooriennss 30 146- 38 - 30:M sprace. snd Stavmareck 125 ‘corts Forgiven The clawhammer, or evening coat, has many oddities of cut. These oddl- tles were once essentlals. There was, In fact, a time when every idiosyn- crasy of the clawhammer served some dewy bath. But purer than the " 5 . daisies, more sweet than helio- Will Continue Business. trope, are the M. & M. cigar,| Mrs. HenryjBuenther has de- cided to continue the business P formerly conducted by her Low Rates to the Southeast. husband Henry Buenther, who Commencing December 18 and | was drowned a short time ago, on the first and third Tuesdays| She wishes the Pioneer to of each month thereafter until|state that she has hired compe- March, 1907, the Chicago Great|tent men to do the work and that Westerns Railway will sell one-|all unfinished work will be turned way colonist tickets at nearly [outas soon as possible. half fare to points %n Alabama, Holiday Rates. Louisiana, and Mississippi. For further information apply to H. L. Wyand, T. P. A, 364 Robert street, St. Paul, Minn, spruce; 300 tamarack posts. 32146 35 65 M spruce and tamarack; 625 coras |A Grand Entertaioment it would be spruce; 1,300 tamarack poles. be a priviledge to sce at several times the price. Our moving pictures are - 6 35 30 M spruce and tamarack; 110 cords |as far ahead of others as an electric useful purpose. The cutaway front of 3214 I 5 the coat, for instance, was originally 36146 35 95 B phae Jch marack Poles. marack: soo |Light is abead of a candle. All films cut away so that the wearer when on cords jack lath bolts; 125 cords spruce; |shewn in this theatre are direct from horseback would not be Incommoded. | 104 3 my sW %,600: tamarack: poles. New York City. -The best place of The two buttons at the back were for and SW13 SE 30 147 34 80 M pine, spruce and tamarack; 70 cords'| Amusement in our city. fastening up the talls out of harm’s 2 jack lath bolts; 60 cords spruce. way, each tall having in the past a | Lot 1 veereerees 26 149 32 so“:fi ap;nnaale:-yl&u‘;:oeo and, ;n“l;l!n'rmk; 1,000 = buttonhole at Its: end. The ‘sleeves, [ Lots 1, 2 and 3.... 24 152 31 85 M pine, spruce and tamarack; 150 cords [DON'T MISS IT! PROGRAMME e with-their false cuffs, are relics of the spruce; 8,000 cedar poles; 25,000 cedar | CHANGES WITHOUT NOTICE. e days when sleeves were always turned | swy, . NEy and poats. WATCH THIS AD DaILY. back and ‘therefore were always made NEY SW¥%...... 25152 31 75 M pine, spruce, tamarack and balsam; TICKETS 5c—100 his home at Minneapolis, -after having yisited here for several days. Joseph Markham left yester- day for Crookston, and will tend bar at the Hotel Crookston for W. 8. Lycan, Mrs. W. S. Lycan arrived in the city this noon from Crooks- ton and will visit with Mrs. F. S. Lycan for several days. A.J.and R. Holm of Grand Forks, N. D., came over from their home last night and were transacting business in the city today. Mr.and Mrs. Pat Cassin of Nebish are in the city today, and leave tomorrow morning for a month’s visit with friends at Minneapolis. Stevens makes to smoke. ES S with cuffs that unbuttoned. The col- 3,000 cedar poles; 8,000 cedar posts. far, with its wide notches, Is a sur- | Tt 1 ccecreeeon 30008 31 10 M pins and tamarack:, 4,400 codasipolens vival of the old collar that was notch- g‘?’; 3 s‘!‘:‘& N3% SEY% 35 152 31 40 M pine, spruce and tamarack. ed in order that its wearer could turn | W% SEY% ......0 20 151 31 70 M spruce and tamarack; 200::cords 1t up conveniently in cold or stormy | w1, NEy.. and g AJ. A B ELIJIS&SON - weather. The dress coat, In a word, is NWY% SE% .... 29151 81 15 M spruce and tamarack; 225 cords MANAGERS For Christmas and New Years holidays the Minnesota & Inter- national and Northern Pacific Railways will sell tickets be- Christmas and New Years Holiday|tween all stations on their lines Rates. in the states ot Wisconsin, Min} The Great Northern Kailway nesota and North Dakota at the . " following rates: One regular 11 sell tickets for th N S first class fare plus $2.00, except a patchwork of relics—relics once es-| o0, , 4 , spruce. sential, but now of no use on earth.— SEY% NEY%, NEY% Philadelphia Bulletin. SE% and S¥% CITL 5t 18 162 30 20 M tamarack; 450 cords spruce; 2,650 cedar poles; 9,000 cedar posts. NWY% NEY%, S% ? NEY% and E NW% ‘Webster’s Fine Talk to a Fish. I bad a chat ence with old John At- taquin, then a patrlarch among the 30 45 M pine, jack and tamarack; 7,700 cedar poles; 14,700 cedar posts. above occasions from December; : o few survivors of the Mashpee Indians. | gy SBY ... 30 80 M pine, )t ‘k and balsam; 22 to January 1, inclusive, return | Where Tate of fare and one third Charley Finnick of Brooklynm,|He had often been Mr. Webster's i sgd:'ér“.i::gf.}‘::} 2,000 cedar poles; 10,000 2 ) 1 ? e . limit January 7, 1907. Con.|makes less. No ticket to be sold |N. Y., was the guest of Mr. and|gulde and companion on hls fishing | gy gmy ....... 35161 30 25°M pine. spruce, timarack and. balsami: trips and' remembered clearly many of thelr happenings. It was with a glow of love and” admiration amounting to 100. cords spruce, 2,000 cedar poles; 6,000 T cedar posts. Al of ...iiicivonin 16 149 30 95 M tamarack. N% NEY, SE!%NE% % for less than 50 cents. Dates of sale December 22,1906 to January Mrs. R. E. Miller for a few days this week, leaving last night for tinuous passage each direction. Rate one fare plus two dollars + 07, i ive, i Blackduck. ‘worship that he related how this great d NEy, SE%.. 20149 80 23 ; 6, 3 3 except when fare and third l.’ l? 07 inclusive: Final; return 5 % flllm'n?nn, after landing a large frrout m;?‘ NwWi % 30 149 30 lg gr:(-n:'p ;::;. ::::fi:.‘ '3':‘3'-’-’-23“1?.; bal- makes less. Minimum fare limit January 7, 1907. 5 Hunt’s Perfect Baking Powder | on the bank of the stream, “talked sam; 600 tamarack poles; 500 cedar posts 50c, to all points in Minnesota| Holf of above rates for child-|would be just as good without | miighty strong and fine to that fish and TERMS ‘OF SALE. North and South Dakota, ren of half fare age. G. A.|the name, but you wouldn’s kmow | told him' what a mistake he had made This sale is made pursuant to the provision of Chapter 204 of the Gen- and what & fool he was to take that 3 t—as eral Laws of Minnesota for 1905. The timber in this list will be offered and you were buying the bes i fiy and that he would have been all | golq for cash; the full amount of bid must be paid at time of sale. Pay- for Hunt'’s Perfect. fltv‘;; ;f -.:: l:;':. ll):“t :::‘:;91; ::t soarch ments must be made by certified check, or draft on St. £aul or Minuéapolis bank. All checks or drafts must be mad ble to the “State Treasurer .LiJG' Tow;ls el:‘d returned to would disclose somewliere in Mr. Web- [ of Minnesota.” ;loney will :o,t b: take: nll‘l?;eren:y crrcmlt:nm. I:l‘lle. his home at Blackduck last even- | sters speecties and writinigs the elabo- | yimber will be sold outright and “Permits” will bo issued allowing purchaser icg, after having spent yester:|ration, with bigh Intent, of that| two logging seasons (or until June 1, 1908) for the removal of the timber X day in the city looking after some “mighty strong and fine” talk “lddress- from the land. No timber can be sold for less than the appraised price. | * The personal recommendations of pec: busi od to the fish at )@nhpfe'l— Flshing | These terms will be strictly adhered to:and fntending purchasers witl govern |:ple who have been cured of coughs and usiness matters. and Shooting Sketches,” by Grover | ‘themselves accordingly. e 3 | colds by Chambertain's Coughi Remedy William O'Neil, superintendent | Cleveland. Dated at St. Paul, Minnesota, this 9th day of November, 1906. have done more thati all ‘else to makeita of logging on the Chippewa A& Literary Tragedy. = & GIvR sogé‘m Auditor. | staple articlé of trade and commerce over §_ reservations, spent last night in ‘th@fi g;l'll.fl“ h:d fi';"hfl:h *hl;r fll‘fl; " . ‘| volume of | great work on the Frencl the city. He retm:ned to.hm, revolution he- lent. the manuseript to home at Cass Lake this morning. | his friend John Stuart Mill. One even- 1 ing: soon ‘afterward MIll entered Car- If you will buy your presents| | o e as Hector's ghost, with early in the d_‘y and early this| the aismal information; gasped out in month you will avoid the rush, | almost ‘inarticulate words, that with which is trying to the buyer | the - exception of ‘about four or five ying ye snd sheets the ‘manuscript was completely A ——" Walker, agent, Low Rates to the Westand Southwest. On the first and third Tues- days of each 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, 364 Robert street, St. Paul, Minn. Souvenir Playing Cards. Issued by Great Northern Railway. The Great Northern Railway and Great Northern Steamship companies have issued a new edition of playing cards. They are printed on exceptionally fine stock, and better cards for' the price asked than can be had else- where, The advertising, con- sisting of the trade mark, is worked into an oriental design and is confined entirely to the back of the cards. The Steam- e v | SDID card is the more elaborate | doubly trying to the workers be- | annipyatea. - Minl had left it too care- KEE P Y fl “R _” Es ) of the two and is finished with |hind the counters. lessly lying about, and a servant; think- 1 gilt edges. Great Northern| The Swedish Ladies Aid | I8 itso much waste paper, had burned Martin Bros., of . it. P the of steadfast, fon- Railway cards fifteen cents per|society will meet tomorrow after-| any eXodtitve st ;m;m?smfi'c:e:fy pack. Steamship cards twenty- Duluth, Minn., will buy ties a- noon at the home of Mrs. Elmer | lost! For three' weeks Carlyle could MISSES’AND CHILDREN’ s COATS five cents per pack. Mailed to & long the lines of Alton, 1103 Dewey avenue, at 2 do nothing but read Marryat's novels. any address on receipt of price, the M. & I., and Then one night, sitting talking to his iA. L. Craig, Passenger Traffic G. N. Railway-. o’cleck. Everybody is 1nvited, | cook, he decided it should be written - ¢ Y o ) 8 A 2 and all are welcome. agaln and eventually finished “such a g 4 = sy E R e z : Manager, 8t. Paul, Minn, 0. M. Olson, deputy sheriff of task as I never tried before or since.” W 2 . > ) D B ; A. C. McLean. ] Itasca county, came down. from| Ruakia’s Opinton of Mrs. Carlyle. his hume at Northome this morn- B“'”r“ "P;‘“’ . “""‘t‘;‘“ jJmtac ing and left this noon for Grand | oot of such mistaken enthusiasts as % B wished to.enroll Jane Welsh Carlyle Rapids, where he had consider-| among the martyrs on account of her Subks:thy 'We offer the balance of our stock of misses and Child- of Bemidji, will [ D el M fl rc a able official business to transact, | (maus® bed temper. He adumitted that ren’s coats at: dbsolutely flat cost in order to make call on you. If e Nathan Carver, the logger, | habltually melanctioly—"but so am I’ room for our disnlay of Holiday goods. you have ties for sale write to him at Bemidji. MARTIN BROTHERS, i ; : d. h ily frritated. “That 3 et T e oy soaay trom Mal | ove siow.” e wite, wet ¥n, thi You cannot afford to neglect this epportunity as o - P 3 and by the very. tones of her voice as we have an exceptionally good assortment of strictly rother are - doing - considerable | she “rasped out his name” could set e date styl o . f fabri logging this winter. He reports | bis nerves on. edge In a paroxysm of up-to-date styles 11.1‘8' va.nety_o & 1’108 o & that the work is progressing| TePrile {rritation—Seribner's. These coats will be on display in our show win- very nicely. Not In. His Business. dows & in the front part of our Dry Goods Denartm’'nt For the sake of justica to the| - “You fellows may find it all right,” . THESE et et e S 50 S st et afflicted ~and for ‘the' good of e e of Ty ‘B ARMI.NS -4 smoking compartment, “but In. my humanity, 1t is my’ right and | business I can’t:take people as I find duty to recommend Hollister’s 2 are worthy of your attention. Kindly stop and look them over. 'We will be pleased to show them whether Manufactured By Del Burgess, Bemidji. them.”. Rocky Mountain Tea. Wo 0We | man whoss Bt cave was covered with oar country and our ‘féllowmen a | labels. duty. Tea or Tablets, 35 -cents. Barker’s drug store. Fresh Canned Goods WE have just received a large shipment “I'm & " photographer.” — Cleveland Press. of Fresh Canned Goods. oy g B S CERRL you buy or not. s 1 S. B. Daugherty, the cou-|, Syong ey tisfaction guar: vith every purchase or The Easter Brand ractor who with 1. M. Dempacy| o] St e & Bt sioher St e T ! We h ve choice Peaches, Pears, Muscat Grapes, Apricots; [ '|is building the extension of the | laugh: on'a:riend of mine last night. 5 ; M. & [ railway from Big Fallg|H® ¢onfessed that he.did not know | . = WINTER | morth to International Falls, ar-| "sermen s #p to you to latgh at me ; e rived in the city this morning | was the answer. “I don't know either. . 1\ "‘ = and Egg Plums put up from this year’s crop. Our Echo Brand Of canned Tomatoes, Peas, Corn, Pumpkin, Lima Beans, Red Kidney Beans, String Beans and Refugee Beans are the best in the market. Call at the storelor phone 207. IIDJL. for Minueapolis, by way of Du: ¢ luth. ' Be 'reports that the 'work| " ~18 any from Big Falls and left this noon ' ‘| of puttiug in camps and clearing | #%es“Withi this dog? Itinerant Dog ROE @ MARKUSEN J iy eenes |22 i P 3221 (G ' " AEEEATIAIE AN

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