Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, October 6, 1908, Page 3

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PROFESSIONAL CARDS.. ARTS MISS DICKINSON ART OF PIANO PLAYING 404 MINNESOTA AVE, MISS EUGENIA OLIVER VOICE CULTURE Minnesota Bemidji JAMES FRASER PIANO TUNING - ACTiON REGULATING VOICING 311 Minnesota Ave, Phone 319 LAWYER . FRANK: A. JACKSON LAWYER BEMI - MINN D. H. FISK Atto ney and Counsellor at Lew Office over Post Office E. E McDonald NEY AT LAW B--t‘:;.rzngn Offics: Bwedback Block Five hundred new fifteen-cent “libraries” just in at Peterson’s. J. Bisiar, the piano man, went to Walker this morning on business for his music house in this city. K. Mclver of this city went to Blackduck last evening for a short visit among the business men at that place. John E. Croone, proprietor of the Nicollet hotel in this city, left last evening for a visit to his saloon at Mizpah. Emil Olson of this city went to Minneapolis this morning to visit a week with his brother who lives in that city, G. H. Nelson and John King came in last evening from Walker and spent the night in this city as guests at the Markham, Judge of Probate M. A. Clark of this city left - last evening for Spooner where he will hold a hearing in the John Fitzgerald case. Miss Leela Stewart returned this FRANCIS S. ARNOLD, LL.M. Land Titles Examined and Deraigned 802 Beltrami Ave. PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS. Dr. Rowland Gilmore Physician and Surgeon Otfice: Iiles Block DR. E. A. SHANNON, M. D. Physician and Surgeon Office in Mayo Bloek Phone 396 Res. Phone 397 L. A. WARD, M. D. Phone No. 51 Office over First National Bank. House No. 601 Lake Blvd. Phone No. 351 Dr. A. E. Henderson Physician and Surgeon Office over First National;Bank, Bemidji, Mjnn Office Phone 36. _Residence Phone 72 DENTISTS. DR. J. T. TUOMY Dentist st Natlonal Bank Bu 1d'g. Tetephone No. 230 DRAY AND TRANSFER. Wes Wright, Drey and Transfer. Phone 40. 404 Beltram! Ave Tom Smart d b . Safe and Plano moving. DP’I;;;:: N:‘E‘ ) 618 America Ave. CITY LIVERY, FEED AND SALE STABLE Good Rigs and Careful Drivers. SMART & REITER, 312 Beltrami Ave. Why suffer with kidneys? Jhe dise covery of Kidney-Ettes has proved a blessing to thousands of kidney sutferérs who have been restored to perfoct health. These Tablets drive g | train. morning to Foreston after visiting three weeks at the home of her aunt, Mrs. C. N. Shannon of this city. A. A. Melges.of this city went to St. Paul this morning where he will spend a week on busi ess for the Melges Brothers’ Wholesale house in this city. George Kirk, the logger, returned this morning from a few days’ trip to Northome where he has been pre- paring his lumber camps for the winter’s work. D. W. Spooner came in yesterday noon from his home near Deer Lake and spent 2 few hours on business here, returning to the ‘Lake” on the afternoon train. No experimenting with Hunt’s Perfect Extracts and Baking Pow- der. Always the same and will give the same pertect results. You can depend upon them. A. Cameron, who traves for the Stone-Ordean-Wells company of Duluth, went “up the line” last evening on one of his regular trips for the good of his company Richard Leet of this city returned to his work at Houpt last evening after spending Sunday at his home here. Mr. Leet is the shipping manager for the W. C. Church Lum- ber company. Miss Edla Nelson, who “pounds the typewriter” in the office of the Clark Pole & Tie company of this city, returned last evening from a week’s visit with friends in St. Paul and in Little Falls. J. A. Wessell, of the candy firm of Wessell Brothers of St. Paul, and a member of the State Game & Fish Commission, returned this morning from a trip ‘“up the line” in the interest of his firm. A. O. Aubolee of this city is carrying his right arm in a sling as a result of spraining his wrist while at- | tempting to start a gasoline engine. The wheel reversed at full speed and wrenched his arm severely. S. E. Thompson came in from Tenstrike yesterday and enjoyed a short visit in the city, returning home last evening on the M. & I. Mr. Thompson is one of the Owl Drug Store. 50 YOUNG MEN WANTED AT ONCE Tolearn Telegraphy and prepare for theRail- wayand Commercial Telegraph Service—Un- abie to fill orders — Write at once for partic- ulars—Telegraph Department, DAKOTA BUSINESS COLLEGE, Fargo, N. D, & How are your Kldneys? Tt Is dangerons ohec the Kidneya are.slek. Obe ok of ‘will recommend the next. 25,0 Owl Drug Store. GhHe PIONEER Delivered to your door every evening Only 40c per Month prosperous merchants at Tenstrike. Henry Logan of Grand Rapids, traveling represeutative of the St. Benedictine Sisters’ Hospital Associ- ation, came in yesterday afternoon from the “Rapids” to attend some business for the St. Anthony’s hos- pital in this city. Mrs. A. A. LeVan, who has been visiting all summer with her daugh- ter, Mrs. T. J. Andrews of this city, left this morning for Minneapolis and Kansas City where she will visit with relatives before going on to California to spend the winter. J. E. Burdick, manager of the International Falls Abstract com- pauy, passed through the city this morning enroute to Minneapolis on a few days’ business visit. Mr. Burdick reported that it is expected that work on the big power dam will be commenced at the “Falls” in the near future. J. Ferdinand Peterson of this city, commonly known among hig friends as “Jack,” and- who is taking-a dental course at the state university, has been admitted to the Mandolin Club at the ““U” and is playing first parts. the people of this city that the University Mandolin and Glee Clubs appeared at the City Opera house during the Christmas holidays last year and gave one of the finsst en- tertainments ever presented here. It will be remembered by: Wanted—Man to work in store. Inquire at Peterson’s. For sale or rent—Two ~ pianos. Inquire of Bemidji Music House. Wanted—Good girl for general housework. Good wages. Inquire at Berman’s Emporium. ” will meet at the home of Mrs. Tohn C. Tenstrom, 409 American avenue, tomorrow afternoon at 2:30. County Attorney Henry Funkley. returned yesterday- from_‘Winnipeg and the northern part of the county, where he went on legal business. Miss Anna Theiveige came in from Blackduck this morning and spent the day in this city as a guest of Mrs! E. N. French while enroute to her home in Thief River Falls. J. R. Rasmusson of Crookston, northwest manager of the Hamm Brewing company, arrived in the city vesterday to look-over the busi- ness in the local office of the com- pany. Temple & O’Brien at the Bijou Tuesday and Wednesday only, The hit of the season. .The most elabor- ate costumes ever seen in Bemidji. A veritable tornado of fun. See the Hebrew comedian. H. F. Brown, the Crookston cigar- maker, spent yesterday and last night in Bemidji interviewing local dealers and getting orders for his “smokes”. “Brownie” is very popu- lar in this “neck o’ the woods.” He returned to Crookston Jast night. John Larson, who has been em- ployed on the Itasca Logging Co.’s railroad from Deer River north, was a Bemidji visitor yesterday. Mr., Larson states that it is very likely that he will move to Bemidji and again make this place his home. J. A. Nichols, of the Nichols- Chisholm Lumber company, returned this morning to his home at Frazee after spending four or five days on business in this city. Mr. Nichols was accompanied by Mrs. Ethel Ames of this city, a distant relative of his, who will visit a week or ten days at his home. Reverend Denniston, of the Methodist church of this city, left this morning for Litchfield where he will attend the annual conference of the Methodist ministers which is being held there this week. Mr. Denniston will deliver the annual missionery sermon before the con- ference next Saturday. Mrs. W. N. Bowser gave a 6 o’clock dinner last evening at her home in honor of Mr. and Mrs. G. E. Crocker, prior to the departure of the latter for Bonner’s Ferry, Idaho, to make their home.. The guests at the dinner were Mr. and Mrs. G. E. Crocker, Mr. and Mrs. F. A. Mayo, Dr. and Mrs. Smith, Mr. and Mrs. P. J. Russell and Mrs. James Black. John King came up from his home at Walker last evening and spent the night and today in Bemidji. Mr. King is one of the shrewdest politicians in the state and, while he said but little concern- ing his trip here, there is no doubt but what his visit had to do with political matters. Mr. King has many friends in Bemidji, and is alwaysa welcome visitor. Frank Meyst, general manager of the Minneapolis branch of the A. N. Kellogg Newspaper Union, was a visitor in Bemidji last evening. Mr. Meyst had been to Walker for several days on a combined business and pleasure trip and he cameto | this place last evening to look after a little business matter. Mr. Meyst returned to Minneapolis last night on the Great Northern, via Duluth. Casper. Maehren of St. Cloud was a visitor in Bemidji today. Mr. Maehren was for several yearsan engineer on the Great Northern railway and ran a locomotive on the “local freight” from Cass Lake to | Melrose. He severed his connection | with the railroad some three years ago and is now a commercial trav- eler for the Cold Spring Brewing & Mineral Water company of Cold Spring, Minn. Casper says he is doing well. Roe & Markusen have installed a new McCaskey book-keeping regis- ter with which to handle their grocery business more ex peditiously | The register has two drawers .and is !so arranged that every person who trades at the store will have an in- 1 dividual account which brings for- ward the amount due at the time the article wanted is put out. The register is one of the latest on the market and is a splendid addition to the store. The Swedish Ladies’ Aid Society | talent musicale to be given there tonigkt. Miss Oliver. ‘has been a resident of Bemidji for the past two years and her musical ability is well known here. - In the published pro- gram she has four solo parts, which will no doubt be a musical treat to the people of Akeley. e Tombs of the Patriarchs. No spot in all Palestine is so jealous. 1y- guarded as' the haram or sacred area built above the ‘cave where, ac: cording- to - tradition; lie buried the bodies of Abraham and Sarah, Isaac and Rebecca, Jacob and Leah. This haram Is inclosed within a double wall, an outer one of Arab workman- ship, dating from the fourteenth cen- tury, and an_inner very massive one with many buttresses, which compe- tent authorities ascribe to the days of the Herods. 'No Christian or Jew s, except by very special permission, al- lowed within these-walls. The most the “unbelievers” may ordinarily do is to ascend from the street to the sev- enth step on one of the staircases be- tween the walls. At a spot near the stair is a stone with a hole in it, down ‘which, it is said, a long Bedouin lance can be thrust its whole length without reaching any obstruction. This, the Jews believe, reaches-to the sacred cave Itself, and in its mneighborhood they assemble every Friday to mourn and pray, as they do before the wall of that other haram—the temple area —in Jerusalem.—Philadelphia Ledger. Proving His Honesty: “You say you have confidence in the plaintiff, Mr. Smith?” “Yes, sir.” “State to the court, if you please, ‘what caused this confidence.” “Why, you see, sir, there’s,allers re- ports ’bout eatin’ house men, and 1 used to think”— “Never mind what you thought. us-what you know.” “Well, sir, one day I goes down to Cooken’s shop and sez to the waliter, ‘Waiter, sez 1, ‘give’s a weal pie. Well, just then Mr. Cooken comes up, and sez he: ‘How do Mr. Smith? What ye going to have? ' “‘Weal pie; says 1. ‘Good,’ says he; ‘I'll have one tu.’ So he sets down an’ eats one of his own weal ples right afore me.” “Did that cause your confidence in him?” “Yes, indeed, siv; when an eatin’ house keeper sets down afore his cus- tomers an’ deliberately eats one of his own weal pies no man can refuse to feel confidence. It shows him to be an honest man.”—London Seraps. Tell A Philosopher In a Cyclone. “1 believe in optimism,” sald the cheerful citizen, “but there is a limit even to that. I saw a man the other day whose house had been carried away by cyclone, and he was the most cheerful citizen in town. ‘Why,’ I said, ‘I thought you had lost your house?" “¢I did lose it he replied, ‘but thar ‘wus nobody in it but me at the time, an’ thar wuzn't a hair o’ my head hurt. The cyclone lifted the house high, all but the ground floor where I was sleep- in’ peaceful in my bed, an’ I hain’t never seen nor hearn o' that house sence! Ar’, anyhow, I didn’t have any fire insurance on it an’ wuzn’t able to put up a lightnin’ rod, an’ ef the wind hadn’t took it away who knows but lightnin’ would ’a’ hit it, an’ I've got the rheumatism so bad I couldn’t run in case o’ fire.’ "—Atlanta Constitution. Dream Troubles. “Once when I was blue,” said a busi- ness man, “a friend told me I was wor- rying over imaginary troubles. He cheered me up with a yarn about his little nephew. This little fellow’s sis- ter said one morning: “‘Oh, Gussle, I had such a lovely dream last night! T dreamed I was at a cake shop, and I had such loads of good things—ice cream, pie, strawberry shortcake, chocolates, jelly macaroons, kisses and lots of other things besides.” “The little boy’s eyes glistened. He smiled with delight. “¢‘And what was I eating? he asked eagerly. “‘Oh, you wasn’t there, Gussie.” “Then, overwhelmed with sorrow, lit- tle Gussie hid his face in his hands and wept bitterly.” Hercules’ Labors. The twelve labors of Hercules were: To slay the Nemean lion; to kill the Lernean hydra; to catch and hold the Arcadian stag; to destroy the Eryman- thian boar; to cleanse the stables of King Augeas; to destroy the cannibal birds of Lake Stymphalus; to capture the Cretan bull; to catch the horses of Diomedes; to get possession of the girdle of Hippolyte, queen of the Ama- wons; to capture the oxen of the mon- ster Geryon; to get possession of the apples of the Hesperides and to bring up from the infernal regions the three headed dog Cerberus. ‘The frresponsible Child. Small Boy (noticing-the Phi Beta Kappa key hanging from the minis- ter's watch chain)—Did you find ft again, or is this another? Minister—Why, my little man, what do you mean? I never lost it. Small Boy—Oh, mother said you had lost the charm you had when you were young.—Judge. Saw Things. Oculist (trying various glasses)—How do they look now? See them any bet- ter? Mr. Wunmore—Well, the green giraffe I can shee firsh rate, but that red el’phant an’ the purple ’potamus still look kinder—kinder blurred.— Puck. The puzzle over the ten lost tribes is as nothing compared with the hiding place of Bryan’s lost issues: Don’t Try Uncertain Recipes. It is entirely unnecessary to experiment with this, that and the other recipe. Why waste time, money and patience when you can got from your er, for 10 cents, & Bmlnxe of “OUR-PIE” Preparation—Lemon, hocolate or Custard—for making pies that are so good that when gon eat one piece you will want another? The way to please the men-folks is to give them good pie, _The pack mule I5 quit institution as the. team 1 absolutely indispensable in the moun- | tains. -~ Mule packing is a fine art, and with a well trained animal and a skill- ful packer you can safely transport anything irom a piano to a bag of oats. ‘When the packer has finished his job in an artistic manner, the animal may buck or back, kick or rear or roll, but he cannot rid himself of his burden, and he finally gives it up in despair. After two or three experiences he will submit to his destiny and fall into line ‘with the rest of the train every morn- Ing to receive his load from the pack- er. A well trained pack mule is at- ways proud of his load, and if by any means 1t ‘gets loose he will step’ quietly vut of line and' walt until the pack- méster comes along to tighten it. The most serious objection to the mule, which you sometimes find in hu- man beings also, Is the delusion that he can sing. One who has never heard a mule solo cannot appreciate the ex- tent of his mistake; but, like every- thing else about a mule, his song 1s strictly original. It belongs to no other animal. No one can describe and no one can imitate it—New York Mail, Mixed Pickles. Bishop Knox once explalned that “Mr. McKenna’s sword was an over- loaded pistol which, being hung up in a tight corner lest it should burst, pre- tended to be dead until it got up and trotted home on the friendly back of the bishop of St. Asaph.” But it is in political debate, especially In the house of commons, that the mixed metaphor flourishes most-luxuriantly. “The flood- gates of irreligion and Intemperance are stalking arm in arm throughout the land.” “This bill effects such a change that the last leap in the dark was a mere flea bite” “That is the marrow of the educational act, and it will not be taken out by Dr. Clifford or anybody else. It is founded on a gran- ite foundation and speaks in a voice not to be drowned In sectarian clam- or” “The question of moisture In to- bacco is a thorny subject and has long been a bone of contention.”—Manches- ter Guardian. Tulip Soup. “What makes this vegetable soup taste so different?”’ asked the young husband of the pretty bride. ““Only the leeks you sent home,” re- plied the bride. “You remember you sald you were going to order leeks.” “I didp’t order any leeks,” growled the husband, but he finished his bowl of soup rather than disappoint her. That afternoon he stopped at the grocery store. “How did you come to send leeks up to my house this morning?’ he de- manded. “I didn’t order them.” “Great Scott! Did you eat them?” exclaimed the grocer. “Sure, we ate them.” “Oh, for land’s sake. They were Mrs. Jackson’s tulip bulbs. She left them on the counter and they got into your basket by mistake.”—Detroit Free Press. A Queer Practice. A queer practice which is general throughout all the tribes of Australia s the ribbing of the skin. When the children are still young long cuts are made across the chest, down the up- per arm and leg and even across the back and ribs. While the wound is quite fresh the cut is opened and a mixture of mud is grafted in, the skin being pulled as far as possible over it. The skin eventually grows completely round the mud filling and forms ridges varying in length and size from an ordinary lead pencil to the thickness of a man’s little finger and extending from armpit to armpit. I am Informed that while the healing process is going on the pain is ex- quisite, but the result seems to satisfy all parties concerned.—London Stand: ard. Bryan claims to be at once the fa- ther and the heir of the Roosevelt poli- cles. His brother Democrat, Judge Parker, denounces Rooseveltism. The family seems a little jarred. How’s This? We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. We, the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe him perfectly honorable in all business transac- tions and_financially able to carry out any obligations made by his firm. WALDING, KINNAN & MARVIN, ‘Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, O. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting directly upon the bi and mucous surfaces of the system. Testimonials sent free, Price 7 cents per bottle. -Sold by all Draggists. N Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation. 1 i WHEAT FLAKE > 106 An economical breakfast food. Can be substituted for meat at a much less cost. Just to remind you of the importance of sav- ingyourteeth. That’s my business. DR. G. M. PALMER TE A The New Grocery has in stock the very best line of selected Teas to be found in the city. Among the many brands they ~ have just received you find the famous Tetley and Lipton Brands Japan Formosa Oolong English Breakfast - Imperial Gunpowder India & Ceylon . Young Hyson Mixed: Green and Black These are excellent brands ROE @ MARKUSE PHONE 206 or 207 . DAILY PIONEER| FOR LEGALS Attorneys and others having the handling of - the publication of legal notices should remember that the Daily and Weekly Pioneer ccver the entire week, with regard to the legal publication of notices. Should your notice not be ready for publication before Wed- nesday evening (when the Weekly Pioneer is pub- lished) you may insert them once each week in the Daily Pioneer for the allotted number of weeks, which will give you a legal publication, as desired. v The Pioneer is the ONLY paper in Beltrami county which can do this—as no other daily s a legal publication. SEE THE PIONEER FOR YOUR LEGALS EMIDJI In Pianos, Organs, Edison Phono- graphs and Sewing Machines. Now is the time to buy a piane or an organ as we must sell off the Bisiar & Fraser stock of pianos and organs within ten days. You need the piano, we need the money. Come and See Us for Bargains. J. BISIAR, Manager MUSIC HOUSE

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