Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, October 28, 1907, Page 3

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| Cakes! = Suttable o alte- o Tane! woapp tove ean Wooarstore They are made of the best pastry flour, fresh creamery butter and fresh eggs. All ingredients have been tested and are strictly pure. Tempting. are they not? THE LAKESIDE BAKERY Phone 118 AR MISS FEUGENIA OLIVER VOI'E CULTURE and PHYSICAL CULTURY MISS 0I _KINSON ART OF PLANO PLAYING 415 MINNESOTA AVE o o Otfice ver Post Office E E -'I don la APCORNEY AT . 2HY SICIANS AND SURGEONS Rowland Gilm P hysician mml sSurgeo: Office: "lles Block DR. E. A. SHANNON, M. D. Phs n _od surgeon b Office in Mayo Bloek Phone 396 Res. Phone 397 L DENTISTS DR J.T.TUOMY Dentist - rst National Bank rsu 1d’g. Telephone No. 23 DR. WARNINGER | VETERINARY SURGEON Telephone Number 2 Third St.. one block west of DRAY AND TRANSFER 15t Nat'l Bamk Wes Wright. Dray and Transfer. 404 Beltram ‘Tom Smart , Dray and baggage. Safe and Plano moving. Phone No 58 | §18 America Ave. Are You Going to Build? 1t so write to A G. EV SS-UR tor plans and specifications, Modern Plans. Careful Estimates. A.G.LE VASSEUR, Grand Rapids, Minn. Question and Answer G S e g Fountain pen ink at the Pioneer | office. Wanted-Experienced dining room lgirl and chambermaid. Hotel | Armstrong. | Sheriff Thomas Bailey returned | this morning from an official trip to | International Falls. E. Barker returned this morn- ing, by way of Duluth, from a busi- | ness trip to the twin cities. | Mayor Campbell of Fosston was a Bemidji visitor yesterday, returning | home on the afternoon train. cards suitable | for invitations to Hollowe’en parties, on sale at the Pioneer office. Hollowe'en postal t1 William Josie, the official narrator for the Blackduck | came down this Handcar club, morning from a | business trip to Kelliher. | W. T. Blakeley, the Farley logger, came down from his home this morn- ing and spent today in the city, | looking after some business matters. in the Miss Bradford, a teacher | Cass Lake schools, was over from | | her home Saturday ~afternoon, and | spent several | Bemidji friends. hours You can depend upon Hunt,s Per- fect Baking Powder and Extracts to produce satisfactory results; not sometimes but always. They are pure and uniform. | F. L. Stocking is in the city today ifrom Hutchinson. Mr. Stocking | owns considerable real estate in this vicinity, and his trip here is for the | purpose of looking after it. ] John Dale and wife came down i this morning from Turtle River and spent the day in the city, Mrs. Dale doing some shopping and Mr. Dale ‘looking after some business in the | city. | K. McIvor is assisting in the | clerical work at the office of Register 'of Deeds Harris. ‘“Mac” is an old- | timer at working on records, and he |is giving Mr. Harris valuable assist- ance. Bert Williams, local manager at Cass Lake for the Northwestern Telephone’ Exchange company, was home on the night train. 1 G. E. Crocker, general manager | for the Grand Forks Lumber com- | pany, returned this morning from | Kelliher, where he was an over-Sun- j day visitor, looking after interests at that place for his company. J. F. Boss, superintendent of the sales department of the Crookston Lumber company, left yesterday afternoon on a business trip to the twin cities and other points. He IF YOU USE THE LONG expects to be gone a week or ten i DISTANCE LINES OF days. The Northwestern Telephone A. H. Pitkin, a former resident of > Exchange Company Kelliher, was a business visitor in . the city Saturday night. Mr. Pitkin - PROMPT s:;;‘;::!EABLE RATES || €ame up .from Walker, whgre he has been stationed for some time past. He went to Crookston Sunday morn- ing for a visit with his family for a Connections &8 e Everywhere || few days. M P. M. Dicaire left Saturday night for Duluth, having received a tele- gram from the “Zenith City” an- = THE BIJOU C. L. LASHER & CO. C.L. Lasher, Manager Saturday Afternoon 2:30 t0 3;30 Every Evening 7:30 to 10:30 TONIGHT Rocky Mountains Jim’s Apprenticeship Tllustrated Song ' Any Old Time At All A Fisherman’s Dream Under the Sea Program Changes Without Notice Admission Ten Cents Ghe PIONEER Delivered to your door every evening Only 40c per Month nouncing the serious illness of his brother, who was not expected to survive but a few hours at the time the telegram was sent, late Sat- urday afternoon. George Zahn, who has been visit- ing at Melrose with his brother, Edward Zahn, came up Saturday evening from Melrose and visited in this city over Sunday. Mr. Zahn left this morning for Crookston and from that place will go to Spokane, ‘Washington, to make his home. F. S. Arnold returned this morn- ing from the Third river country, southeast of Blackduck, where he has spent the last ten days, looking after his interests in that vicin_‘it'y. Mr, Arnold has a fine farm out in that country, and he is making his possessions blossom like the rose. Superior in Strength s s Flavoring Extracts are perior strength, freshness and f ness of flavor to any flavoring extracts made in the world, and ladies of the best taste, who are now using them find them just as represented. Persons who desire a delicate and natural flavor in their cakes, puddings, or any table delicacy, will obtain it by using ptPRICES DELICIOUS Flavorin veriia Extracts &5 Orange Rose, m. visiting with | |a visitor in the city yesterday after-| noon and last evening. He returned | i Blackduck, where, | Northome. Souvenir envelopes at this office. The T. J. Miller Co,, surety bonds and plate glass insurance, Edward Lindell spent Sunday at his farm home near Solway. A. M. Bagley returned last even- ing from a business trip to Fosston. For rent: Two furnished rooms for gentlemen with or without board. 921 Minnesota Ave. William Burce, general manager of the Beltrami Timber company, was a visitor in the city today. F. H. Jackson left today for the Town of Jones, where he has some real estate interests which he is look- ing after. Joe Wessel left this morning for he asserts, he has contract to teach vocal music to a Chinaman. Harry Millarand Frank Ruzek of Angus, Minn,, came over from their home Sunday night and are trans. acting business in the city. Charles Larson of Blackduck came down from his home this morning and spent today in the city looking after some business matters. George Kirk this morning shipped a carload of horses to Northome to be used in logging operations in the Kirk camps near Northome. The Ladies’ Aid society of the Methodist church will meet at the church parlors Wednesday afternoon at 2:30. All are invited to attend. Otto Peterson, who buys cedar for the L. K. Deal Lumber company of Des Moines, Iowa, left this morning for Turtle River, to look up some cedar dealers. Peter Slough, the Nary wood dealer and farmer,came up Saturday from his home and remained the city over Sunday. to Nary this morning. in He returned A. C. McLean, the representative for Martin Bros. of Duluth, left this morning for Pequot to logk up some ties at that place, whlch he will prob- ably purchase fur 1 William McVeety, has extensive lo; eRopRrations the vicinity of through the city :: way to Minneap trip. John O’Neil, passed through e s ing on his way Duluth, whither ' to work this wir ity 3 camps of O’Nei! b} William Dunk: i, o p o time lumberjac of -t country, left thiz «ossin porte and will camp for John several logging onioriioin Kabekona gulct The west-bour ! b ivd Great Northern due to arrive in th and did not reach until nearly 5 <’ being caused east o1 < C. J. Tiller, a printer who hat the Minot paji city Saturday n' his way from national Falls, = the employ of Falls Echo, ownail b gomery, Mr. 1 International Fi! way of Big Fa!l:m The body of 1 died at Big Fall brought down fi morning and place to the Grer for shipment the former homs¢ The remains we: F. D. Kiley, a s a nephew. Thy: | manently buried J. Wessell, kr v s kid,” came in Singay ton, where he &ad one tu pany the other members of the Crookston Elks quartette to Minot. It was impossible for one member of the quartette to get away from Crookston, and the singers decided not to go to the “Flickertail” town to assist with their melody in the good time out there at the institut- ing of the new lodge. D. R. Burgess has moved his Del Marca cigar factory from the old location, on Fourth street, near the city hall, to the building (}ccupied by Doran Bros., on Minnesota avenue, where he will an have larger and more commodious in which to handle his increasing business. Mr [Burgess has prospered since he dame to Bemidji and his cigars llave an enviable reputation in thi§ north apidly- country. tuarters 4 NCECATIVIE DACE A well selected line of pocket memorandum books can be seen at this office. John R. Stewart, general mau:\ger for the Beltrami Cedar & Land com- | A pany, came down this morning from his home at Blackduck and spent| the day in the city looking after some business matters. Attention, K. of P.’s. All members of Bemidji Lodge, Knights of Pythias, are urgently | requested to be present at the regu- lar meeting of the lodge, which will be held next Tuesday even- ing. The third rank will be . conferred on three candidates; and the busi- ness meeting will' be followed by a social session, at which a lunch will be served. Taxes Due. Parties who paid one half of their taxes before May 31st should bear in mind the other half becomes due on October 31st, and the taxes should be paid before that date. If not paid by Nov. 1st, the additional penalty of ten per cent will be [ added, as well as the further penalty of five per cent after December 31st. Life Insurance Companies Unaffected. The financial troubles through which New York is now passing emphasize the fact that life insur- ance companies are about the only financial institutions which are not| affected. Their membership is widely distributed and their liabilities are of a different character. Hunting the Maribou. Hunting bou is- attended with great . as the bird pos- sesses Wole unting and often contrives to ouvtvii the most sliilll’nlI bunter. With I Dle dignity 1t measures the g .l between itself and its pursuer anl takes very good care not to ex! itself Ly too rapid flight. If the hunter moves.slowly the bird at once adopis an equally easy pnce but i the hunter quickens his EAS R x nlx off like an arrow. It Genlt to get within gun caleulating creature, but adept a novel means of ich the bird, with all is unable to compre- s an easy vietim. A “rsel of meat is tied to the hg stout cord, which the ter flings to a great dis- + would a lasso, tle bait par the fleeing bird as he Ie then conceals himeell 1d a bush er erouches low The marahou, which al- ere on the hunter, see- <h, quietly stops and de- fait, when it is easil e- 4 hunter, who runs toward 7. e rope as he goes. s Recipa For Shirts. 3 extract from a letter of idlyle, in which he asks his ake him some shirts and asurements. How many 1 make a shirt after them? Jenny—* * * In the mean- at you to make me some s, too—three flannel shirts You can get the flannel if he has any that he can dend. You can readily have ¢ [before the other shirts go | taken the measure today ad you the dimensions, to- a measuring strap which 1 ¢ <wna weeks ago (at one penny) uirpose! You ave to be care- 4ur the flannel first, after sess the dimensions are ih (when the shirt is laid I, 2216 inches; extent from :: to wrist button, 61 inches; 1 I 4 back, 35 inches; length in inches. Do you under- t? I dare say you will and this measuring band you to be exact enongh.” an With “D” Anyway. |\ they gits to Italy,” goes in’ quite enthusiastic, as < say, over th’ idee, “he’ll \':m of his life ruminatin’ ¥ o‘d palaces of the dogs. I goeped. “Palaces of the )then, I s’'pose you might he, “if you're so blamed fhough it ain’t spelt that pelt dogs, only with the bx,” says I, “for an uned- 1 you are th’ most ignorant Do you mean to tell me ;Aver hear of th’ dodges of 2t has been mayors of th’ b’ last hundred years or g uq't,” says he, “an’ no one ;#hed. Ther’ aln't any, such ss“the_reJ Dodge ain’t an Eyetallan name nohow. It b’longs in Connectl- cut. Not but what ther’s a few mebbe in New York an’ Rhode Island, but not in Italy, not by a derned sight”— American Magazine. Dr. Mabie and the Liveryman. A literary pilgrim, says the Satur- day Evening Post, once made his way to Summit; N. J,, to pay his respects to Hamilton Wright Mable. At the station he asked the liveryman who had been in service, there for thirty Years: “Can you tell me where Dr. Mable ltves?” “Never heard of him,” replied the liveryman. “Surely you must,” continued the {A}lgflm. “I mean Hamilton Wright able.” “Shucks!” responded the driver. ain’t a doctor. newspaper.” ‘When told of this incident Mr. Ma- ble put the seal on it by, saying: “And just to think that I subseribed “He He's a reportar for a for a wooden leg for that liverymant” Kangaroos Saved a Rothschild. Walter Rothsehild, the richest hache- lor In England, had a close call with matrimony when lie was a young man, designing mamma had managed to {get the heir to the Rothsehild millions Interested in ler daughter, and the daughter did all she could to lead the Interest up to the point of a marriage a watering place, after Rothschild had retived fo his room, he heard voices under his window which he recogn ne of the young lady and her i “Has he proposed yet?” asked the old wom:n “Not nsweral the daughter, bt Il bave him hooked before long if aaly [ ean endnre his conversation, Tonight he Lored me almost to death talking about his kangaroos.” “I am sorry,” said Rothschild, put- ting his head out of the window, “to have bored yon with tales of my ani- mals. Torgive me. T shall never do 80 again.” And he never did.—London | Beho, Hats That Improve With Age. “A silk hat, like wine, improves with age,” said a clubman. “The oftener you have it ironed the slceker and more brilliant it becomes. It costs a good deal at the outset, but in the end 1t Is the cheapest hat to wear. It lasts, you see, so long, and to iron it costs 8o little. very perishable. If it gets soaked with rain, if some one sits on it and crush- es it into an accordion, they think it must be thrown away the same as if it were a derby. But not at all. A silk hat can be taken apart and put together again like a watch, and if it gets crushed nothing is easier than to melt off the silk, straighten out the frame and then put on the silk again. In England, the home of this hat, I have known men to wear the same topper for ten or twelve years. And the oftener the old hat is ironed the brighter and finer it shines. Its luster Increases with time and friction like the luster of zood antique furniture.” ~Los Angeles Times. 5 Mistakes of Drug Clerks. “There is one loss sustained by drug- | gists that very few people know about,” said the experienced clerk. “That is in the prescriptions that have to be made over, the same as clerks, stenographers, writers and artists, 10 | matter how painstaking, frequentlv have to do their work over. The most careful drug clerk in existence ‘is bound to make mistakes sometimes in measuring and mixing. “He may pour in too much of some kind of liquid or sift in too much of a certain powder. In most cases the overdose would not really affect the value of the medicine, but the consci- entlous clerk isn’'t going to take any chances of murdering anybody, so Le throws away the whole mixture and | makes up another preseription.” “Try One of My Betels.” In Siam they don’t offer you a cigar or a cigarette, but a betel nut. There every oue carries a supply of them in a neat little ivory box, not unlike the snuffboxes of our ancestors. The betel nut 1S a naircotlc, In its effects not un- like tobacco, but it is much more harm- | ful. Those who chew it suffer from inflamed gums, and they generally lose their teeth. climbing plant, with a leaf not unlike ivy. It yields a crop of nuts, which are ground to a powder. This Is mixed with a similar powderderived from the areca nut and made into a paste, which is wrapped in pieces of betel leaf. True Charity. , Every water to the thirsty is charity. Re- moving stones and thorns from the road is charity. Exhorting your fel- low men to virtuous deeds is charity. Smiling In your brother’s face is char- ity. Putting a wanderer in the right path is charity. A man’s true wealth is the good he does in this world. ‘When he dies mortals will ask what property has he left behind him, but angels will inquire, “What good deeds hast thou sent before thee?'—Moham- wed Hurt His Feelings. She—T think Mr. poet, felt hurt at a remark you made the other night. He—What did I say? She—You said there was only one Bhakespeare.—-T.ondon Telegraph. ALL TIRED OUT. Hundreds More in Bemidji in Same Plight. the Tired all the time: Weary and worn out night and day; Back aches; side achea, All on account of the kidneys. Must help them at their work. A Bemidji citizen shows you how: s Sam Collard, living * at 1007 American St., Bemidji, Minn., says: “For sometime I had been suffering from pains in the small of my back and a sort of rheumatic stiffness in my joints. At times I was so sore that T was scarcely able to do my work. A tired, bothered me a great deal. I tried a great many remedies but did not receive any relief until Doan’s Kid- | ney Pills were broughtto my at- tention. I procured a box at the Owl Drug Store. From my exberi- ence I can recommend them very highly to .others suffering from kidney trouble.” 7 For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, New York, sole agénts for the United States. Remember the name—Donn 5 nnd take no other Some folks (hink the topper | The Dbetel is a species of | good act is charity. Giving| Rymer, the minor | languid feeling was | with me consfantly and headaches | taking Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral for Hard Coui ghs e your hard cough, then buy it and use it, If he does not, then do not & take asingle dose of it. He knows all about this splendid medicine or Co. for coughs and colds. §.%.A e T 1f your doctor fully endorses your i ‘We pufilhh the complete /armula.‘ of all our ! We are proud of them. "We have i m./).mq /n conceal ; no_secrels to hide, e e e e Reasonable Charges is only one reason why I should be your dentist. I will promise to give you quality also. Dr. G. M. Palmer Phone 124 TMiles Bloc > WHEN IN NEED OF GLASSES If your eyes ache and your vision is becoming indistinct. you may have some error of refraction. i Onr methods of fitting glasses to the eyes are the most modern in use. We will take pleasure in examining your eyes and telling you the facts as they exist. Artificial eyes fitted. DRS. LARSON & LARSON, Specialists in Scientific Treatment and Correction of Eyes Office Qver Post Office BEMIDJI, MINN, Phone 92; Res. 310 | BUY A GOOD LOT With the growth of Bemidji good lots scarcer and scarcer. are becoming We “still have a number of g od lots in the residence part of town which will be sold on SE easy terms. For further particulars write or call Bemidji Townsite and Im- | provement Company. H. A. SIMONS, Agent. Swedback Block. Bemidjt i | Lumber and Building Material We carry in stock at all times a complete line of Lumber and Building Material, Dimensions, etc. Look us up for your winter supply of Coal and Wood We have a large supply St. Hilaire Retail Lbr. BEMIDJI, MINN. | Uus The Bemidji Pioneer Stationery Departm’t .Up To Date Goods. Well Selected Stock The Right Place to Get It. . The Pioneer in putting in this stock gives the People of Bemidji and surrounding country as good a selection as can be found in any stationery store Paper Fasteners The best and most complete line of fasteners to be found any where. We have the Gem Clips, Niagara, “0 K,” “Klip Klip,” Challenge Eylets and other va- rieties. 7 Type Writer Supplies ‘We carry a line of Ribbons for all Standard Machines, : either copying or record; Type ‘Writer Oil, Carbon Paper, Box Type Writer Paper from 80c¢ per box of 500 sheets up to $2.00. Pencils Blank Books In this line we carry the Fa- Our blank book stock is a bers, Kohinoors, Dixons, in cavefully, selected line of black, colored or copying. We books. Special books ordered have the artist’s extra soft pen- cils as well as the accountant’s hard pencils. on short notice. Our specialties are handy books for office or private accounts. i We are glad to show you our stationery and job stock and invite you to call at the office.

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