Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, September 9, 1907, Page 3

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SRS, ¢ PROFESSIONAL ..CARDS.. Get Your Good Things ARTS MISS EUGENIA OLIVER VOICE CULTURE and PHYSICAL CULTURE "MISS DICKINSON ART OF PIANO PLAYING 415 MINNESOTA AVE, To Eat Gre Model Bakery, Confectionery and Dairy Store Phone 123 315 Minnesota Ave. LAWYER . D. H. FISK Attorney and Counsellor at Law Office oppesite Hotel Markham. THE HOME OF Model Ice Cream E. E. McDonald ATTORNEY AT LAW Bemidy, Ninn. Office: Swedback Block PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS. Dr. Rowland Gilmore Physician and Surgeon Office: Iiles Block Legal blanks at this office. “A Messenger Boy.” Opera house, DR. E. A. SHANNON, M. D Physician and Surgeon Office In Mayo Bloek tonight. Laura D. Grant of Staples spent Saturday night in the city. Typewriter ribbons, nearly all makes of standard machines at the Phone 396 Res. Phone 397 DENTISTS. DR. J. T. TUOMY Dentist st National Bank Bu 1d'g. Telephone No. 230 Pioneer office. Mrs. J. A. Smith and Mrs. L. A. Payden were in the city from their DR. WARNINGER VETERINARY SURGEON Teloghone Number 20 Third St.. one 9 lock west of 1st Nat'l Bank home at Fowlds. He left this afternoon for Mc- Intosh for the purpose of purchasing a team of horses for use on his farm. DRAY AND TRANSFER. Wes Wright, d Transfer. pray = 4'6: B;ltraml Ave Phone 40. Tom Smart Dray and baggage. Safe and Plano moving. Phone No. 58 | 18 America Ave. The Messenger Boy transports people into a world of brightness and mirth. At City Opera House Sept. 9. J. F. Essler, the local agent for the Minneapolis Brewing company, went to Tenstrike this morning on a business trip. A A A A A A AN AN Characteristics of Kimball Pianos and Organs Sweet Tone, Reliability, Splendid Action, Dura- bility, Refined Case, Mod- est Price.......c.ovennnnn Try a Singer or a Wheeler & Wilson Sewing Machine on the Rental Plan. ‘When you rent a Singer or a Wheeler & Wilson Sewing Machine your rental payments may be applied to the purchase of the ma- chine if you decide to keep it. 311 Minnesota Ave. BEMIDJI, MINN. Tel. 319 Bisiar, Vanderlip & Co.'s? last evening. Mrs. Barbender of Fosston came over from her home Saturday night for a visit at the home of Dr. | Warninger and family. A. A. Melges left Saturday night on a business trip to Duluth. He returned from the “Zenith City” on the 3:10 train this morning. Misses Grace Brown and Maud E. Brener came up Saturday evening | from their home at Park Rapids and spent Saturday night in the city. Arthur Gould, clerk in Schneider Bros'. clothing store, left this morn- ing for Miuneapolis, where be will visit for the remainder of the week. A number of local nimrods went to several neighboring lakes yester- day, in search of ducks. Some good bags of water fowl were brought in A. C. Wilkinson of Crookston, attorney for the Great Northern Railway company, was a visitor in THE BIJOU C. L. LASHER & CO. C.L. Lasher, Manager Every Evening 7:3 to 10:30 Saturday Afternoon 2:30 10 3:30 TONIGHT Three Phases of the Moon Chase for His Wig Jamestown Naval Review Tllustrated Song The City Is No Place for You The Union Spoils the Food The Book Worm Program Changes Without Notice Admission Ten Cents the city Saturday afternoon, on legal business for the company. No baseball game was played yesterday, it being impossible to secure a team to play against the locals. Manager Otto tried to get the Bena Indians, but the reds failed to close the date. John Knights and wife (the latter formerly Miss Johnson) passed through the city last night on their way to their home at Crookston, after having visited for several days with relatives at Cass Lake. Ezra Fulton, a Cass Lake cruiser, and his wife came over from the “Lake” Saturday afternoon and visited in the city until the night train on the Great Northern went east, when they returned home. J. Bisiar left this morning on a trip to the country south of Bemidji. He will visit Walker, Akeley, Park Rapids and Nevis, for the purpose of checking up business being done Want Ads FOR RENTING A PROPERTY, SELL- ING A BUSINESS OR OBTAINING HELP ARE BEST. Pioneer in the vicinity of those places by Bisiar, Vanderlip & Company of this city. J. Ferdinand Peterson (better known as “Jack”) and his brother, Julian Peterson, left this morning for Minneapolis, where they will enter the University of Minnesota as students. “Jack” will take a | course in dentistry, and Julian will take up an acadamic course. ~Both boys will attend the “U” until next June. COMMENCING Monday, Sept. 9th, Our store will close at 8 p. m. Saturdays, 10 p. m. O’LEARY AND BOWSER lafter some business matters. Ask for Model ice cream. Fountain pen ink at the Pioneer office. ‘A Messenger Boy.” Opera house, tonight, John Gilstad came down this morning from his home at Blackduck. A. Wilks Johnson and Miss E. Johnson of Cass Lake were visitors in the city yesterday evening. A. Kleven, the land man, returned this morning from a cruising expedi- tion in the vicinity of Tamaracriver, north of Kelliher. If you are out of Hnnt’s Perfect Baking Powder and Extracts, put them on your list of groceries needed now before you forget it. Charles S. Carter, the postmaster at Hines, came down from his home this morning and spent today in the city looking after some business matters, Summer Baking ‘We make a specialty to sup- ply the home with good baking. Why worry and take up your time in cooking during the warm weather when you can procure choice viands at our bakery. We make fresh pies, cakes, cookies, graham bread, cream bread, buns, and other choice goods every day. Phone 118 THE LAKESIDE BAKERY Souvenir envelopes at this office. “A Messenger Boy.” tonight. Opera house, Regular meeting of the city coun- cil will be held at the Miss Minnie Carter, who has been {“ A A council visiting in the city for a week with | Chambers this evening. | her sister, Miss Florence Carter,|, Mrs. A. A Andrews left this left this morning for her home at |morning for Durand, Wis., for a visit Grey Eagle. with relatives for a fortnight. J. F. Casey and wife returned this| Miss Ruth Wilcox left this morn- morning to their home at Brainerd, | for Minneapolis, where she will visit after having spent the last two weeks | With friends for some time to come. visiting in this city at the home of Mrs. Casey’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. | ducing high class specialties will be F. D. Skillings. seen in the Messenger Boy At M. D. Stoner returned this morn-| City Operz House Sept.9 ing from a business trip to Gemmell.| E. H. Cornwall returned this Mr. Stoner is the owner of the town- | morning from a cruising expedition site of Gemmell, and waxes enthusi- | north of Blackduck, in the interest astic, when occasion offers, on the|of the U. S. general land office "at great prospects for his town. Washington, D. C. Charles Swedback, the postmaster| J. R. Oringer, the mayor of and all around good fellow who is|Nebish, was among the many out-of residing at Big Falls, came down |town visitors who spent Sunday in from his home this morning and|Bemidji. Mr. Oringer returned to spent today in the city looking|Nebish this afternoon. All members of the Royal Neigh- John D. Morrison, Sr., and wife|bors are requested to be at the arrived in the city Saturday night|regular meeting of the lodge to be from a visit with old friends at|held at I O. O. F. hall Tuesday White Earth agency. They remained |evening, September 10. in this city over Sunday and left this| Mr. and Mrs. J. G. Vivian arrived afternoon for their home at Red|this afternoon from Duluth and will Lake agency. visit for two weeks at the home of For Sale—One 25 horse power|Mr. and Mrs. Ike Black. Mrs. compound, traction New Giant En-|Vivian is a sister of Mr. Black. gine, used only two seasons, in fine| g, L. Lalone, who is acting as working order, good as new, ata|scaler at the Kelso Lumber com- snap figure. Engine can be seen|pany’s sawmill at Turtle River, left working. For further information|this morning for Turtle River, after call at Pioneer office. having visited in this city over Sun- Frank Anderson, the land locator, { day with his family. came down this morning from Inter- national Falls. A capable company of actors intro- George W. Baker, father of George He was accompanied | T, Baker of this city, is now a guest by five persons, whom he took to|of his son, having arrived in the Cass Lake, where they this afternoon filed on stone and timber claims in the Rainy river country. in Bemidji for two weeks. Docite Lauren and Herbert Mc-| A party consisting of T. J. Cum- Cauley, who have valuable home-|pings, Harry G. Moran and Ed. E. steads in the Big Falls country,came | parker arrived in the city Saturday down from their homes this morn- city from his home at Fenton, Mich- igan. The elder Baker will remain ing. They left this afternoon for|spending several days in this vicin- Oregon, where they both will take ity, looking over the country. up stone and timber claims. J. W. Smith, the gentleman who Mr. and Mrs. M. F. Falahy and|has beeu engaged in the meat busi- little daughter, Dorothy, arrived in|pegs at Tenstriké for several years the city yesterday noon and visited | past, was a visitor in the city today. here until the night train went west, | Mr, Smith has recently purchased when they returned to their home|yaluable property at Turtle River at Cando. Mrs. Falahay is a sister|,nd last week moved with his family of A. G: Rutledge of this city. from Tenstrike to Turtle River to O. S. Ellenson, who owns a farm|make his home. Mr. Smith now in Heart Lake township, Hubbard |has one of the finest places in the county, has decided to put in a shoe | north half of the state. repairing shop in the city. He is having a small building erected at the corner of Fourth and America, where he will transact his business. from a nearby summer colony was Lieutenant O. H. Dockery, Jr., of | minded to rouse the civic conscience Duluth, arrived in the city last night | by declaring that trade was the begin- P : f ning of wisdom. “And,” said he, “I as- and visited here until this noon, | gy you that it is not capital balf so when he left for Duluth, The lieuten- | much as it Is initiative that is needed ant was accompanied by Private|n 2 place like this. Z The three citlzens spat collectively James T. Davis, who had been|aq gimultaneously, looking straight assisting in the recruiting work for | ahead. the army here, and who will be here| “That kind o’ reminds me,” drawled 5 e % ithout shifting his gaze, “o’ after stationed at Hibbing, relieving o8, LA b Harve Upham an’ Dan Winsor, down Perry Sweedberg, who goes to|the beacha ways. Harve had a shanty A 8teady Trade. There were only three houses in the little hamlet on Cape Cod, but an orator Duluth. an’ Dan had a shanty, an’ they both ) had some plug tobacco. One day Harve Editor Miner of the Border|went to Dan’s an’ bought 10 cents’ . . wuth o tobacco, an’ the next day Dan Budget, accompanied by his son and went to Harve an’ bought 10 cents’ Attorney F. J. McPartlin, U. S. com-| wutlt o tobacco off him. They con- missioner at International Falls, ufl“el}!"?esfi’ ;':’9: :e"'mlu‘]iflyfl- T:mdy. s " + both all the tobacco they wante were visitors in the city last Satur-| " ove An'lly retired on the dime.” day. The gentlemen had been visit- | —Youth’s Companion. ing at St. Paul during fair week and were on th.eir way to their home| mqpo man eating fish par excellence is at International Falls, for which| the great white shark. It is otherwise place they left Saturday evening, on | known by the name of man eater. Oc- casionally specimens are seen on both the north-bound M. & T. passenger | consts of the United States, though 1ts train, more customary habitat is in troplcal ‘waters. This frightful creature attains a length of nearly forty feet, and it is able to swallow a man whole. This fact 1s proved by an experiment which sailors are fond of making when such a shark is captured. The skull being preserved, they amuse themselves by crawling one after another through the The Great White Shark. The best show of the season was the “Messenger Boy” by the Geo. D. Sweet company in Flandeau last Friday night. The play isa good drama, well staged and faultlessly read, and free from objectionable distended jaws. It would be unsafe to features. Be it said to the credit of | do this, however, when the head has the management that nota single | been freshly cut off, because under such word of :fan or “tainted” 1 & conditions the jaws will snap together g i anguage flercely. for some time afterward it was uttered. - The band and orches- | anything is placed between them. The tra proved features of value. The | skull of a big shark, by the way, Is al- overture called “The Circus” was ways salable owing to the demand by museums and curiosity hunters, A well rendered and delighted the andience.—Flandeau, S.D . Herald | Pounds has been found In the stomach young sea lion weighing a hundred i k. At City Opera Honse: Sept. 9. of a white shar! PN & - — — e —_— night from St. Louis, Mo., and are| Literary Stone. The struggling author.boldly entered the editorial sanctum, “I have come with my latest story,” he announced. “That so?’ ejaculated the busy edi- tor. “Let us hear how it runs.” “Well, this is from the first chapter: ‘Casper had been standing as motlon- less as a block of. granite. Suddenly he dropped on his knees before the beautiful girl with the alabaster brow and boldly proposed. It was then that she answered with a stony stare and handed him the marble heart, Then’”— But the busy editor reached for the clipping shears. “Young man,” he thuidered, “you have made a mistake. Take that story down to the nearest stoneyard. This 1s an editorial office.”—Chicago News. Evolution of the Rait. The canoe was one of the earliest of boats, but it is not in line with the later growth.. The ancestry of the modern boat begins with the log and is traced through the raft rather than through the canoe. By lashing togeth- er several logs it was found that lar- ger burdens could be carried. There- fore the boat of a single log grew into one of several logs—a raft. By the time man had learned to make a raft we see he had learned something else— he had learned to row his boat along by pulling at an oar instead of push- ing it along with a paddle. Rafts were used by nearly all the nations of an- tiquity. Herodotus, the father of his- tory, tells us that they were in use in ancient Chaldea.—S. E. Forman in St. Nicholas. The Razor In Disrepute, “And he told her all his heart, and sald unto her, there hath not come a razor upon mine head, for I have been a Nazarite unto God from my mother’s womb; if I be shaven, then my strength will go from me, and I shall become weak and be like other men.” —Judges xvi, 17. Hair on man or brute is a sign of strength. He who desires to keep ata safe distance from dentists, let him keep also at a great distance from the knife of the barber. To shave is anact against nature. Provoke nature, and in return nature will provoke you. Sald Daniel Webster: “— the razor! It has taught me to curse. It has cost me more time and more trouble thah all my speeches.” Rufus Choate, the lawyer, called the razor an instrument invented by Lu- cifer to fill up hell with barristers, Edward Everett never used profane language, but before shaving he would invariably give vent to all sorts of French barbarisms. Jordan Water. There is a general impression that the Jordan water which s used at royal baptisms is taken from the sa-|. cred stream, put into a bottle, hermet- lcally sealed and left untouched until the bottle is opened by the officlating priest. As a matter of fact, the water which flows out of the lake of Gal- flee and descends "a rocky gorge to a level far below that of the Mediter- ranean is full of organic substances. If a bottle be filled with the water and kept tightly corked for a few days it turns perfectly black and of- fers to the nostrils all the odors of the tropies. The precaution Is there- fore taken of bofling the water and straining 1t before it is sealed up, and this is why the baptismal water al- ways possesses the crystal clearness which one notices on these ceremonial occasions.—Modern Soclety. The Undertaker’s Shop. “The one thing in New York that I can’t get used to,” sald the country visitor, “Is the manifold uses to which undertakers put their shops. T used to be of the opinion that the only possible errand a person could have at an un- dertaker’'s was to purchase funeral supplies, but in this town I find that people go there for all sorts of pur- poses. They go to vote, to get mar- ried and to transact all the legal busi- ness that a notary public is capable of transacting. Yesterday I even saw a party eating luncheon In an under- taker's establishment. They had come into town apparently to attend a fu- neral and instead of patronizing a res- taurant they calmly munched their midday meal in the midst of those lu- gubrious surroundings.” — New York Globe. Irascible Carlyle. A lady who lived near Thomas Car- 1yle kept Cochin China fowls, and their crowing was such a nuisance that the philosopher sent a complaint to her. The owner was indignant upon hear- ing the appeal. “Why,” sald she, “they crow only four times a day, and how can Mr. Carlyle be seriously annoyed at that?” Upon hearing of her attitude .upon the subject Carlyle replied, “The lady forgets the pain I suffer in waiting for those four crows.” Once Too Often. “What's all this excitement about?” “Nothing worth mentioning. Man got knocked down.” “Accldent?” “Not exactly. One of these men who always catch hold of you and push you out of their way when you happen to meet them at a crowded corner grab- bed the wrong man just now. That's all "—pmcugo ‘Tribune. To Be Safe To be safe confine yourself to: the use of such flavors as your experience and judgment tell you are of the purest quality. flavogn? g Extracts sz= are just as they are represented to be. If not the cheapest they are the best, and -no puddings, takes, creams, or other table deli- sacies, are spoiled by their use. Your Teeth Nged attention. It will cost you less mnow than after awhile. It won't cost you anything to have them exam- ined anyway. Dr. G. M. Palmer Formerly of Minneapolis Phone 124 Office--Sulte 9, Miles Bik MINN. Properly Fitted Glasses ~ Removes Poor Eyesight, Head ache, Dizziness, and Nervous- ness. Consult DRS. LARSON & LARSON. Specialists in Scientific Treatment and Correction of Eyes Office Over Post Office BETIDJI, IINN. Phone 92; Res,'3%0 Stereoscope and Views We have received a large shipment of PETTIJOHN BREAKFAST FOOD and \1:'> as a special inducement we make the fol- S |owing offer: Two packages of Pettijohn’s celebrated breakfast food, one Sterescope and fourteen views for fifty cents. ROE & MARKUSEN, = SECEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEes SOUVENIR ENVELOPES s The Pioneer has just received a large shipment of Souvenir Envelopes which advertise the beauties of Bemidji. They can be had at the office at 15 cents per package. Everybody should use these envelopes and help advertise the best town in northern Minnesota, Business men desiring to use these can have them printed with return card. A333333333333333333333333 & Lumber and Building Material We carry in stock at all times a complete line of Lumber and Building Material, Dimensions, ete. Glass Glass Glass We.are clcsing out at cost our large line of glass and can give you good values. St. Hilaire Retail Lbr. Co. BEMIDJI, MINN. Now Is The Time To purchase a building site in Bemidji. We have a number of choice building lots which may _be purchased on reasanable terms For further particulars write or call Bemidji Townsite and Im- provement Company. , H. A.SIMONS. Agant. Swedback Block, Bemidji. Subs

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