Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, June 21, 1909, Page 4

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E ,{, PLANTAGNET TELEPHONE COMPANY IS PROSPERING Directors of Company Held Meeting Sa’- urday.—Will Extend Line fo the Lake George Coun'ry. The Plantagnet Telephone com- panyis in a prosperous condition and is doing a nice business, accord- ing to reports which were submitted to the board of directors, who held ameeting in this city Saturday and discussed the affairs of the company. The directors declared a dividend of ten per cent and were well satis- fied with the reports submitted by the officers. It was decided to extend the present line, during the coming summer, from Lake Plantagnet to Lake George, a distance of over twenty miles; which will be a matter of great convenience to people living in the territory south of Bemidji to Lake George. The present line extends east from Bemidji to the Jester farm, on Lake Plantagnet, and the addition of the Lake George extension will give an independent line of con- siderable deminsions. The present line has quite a number of private lines which con- nect with the Plantagnet line, giving long distance service over the wires of the Northwestern Telephone com- pany at Bemidji. The officers of the Plantagnet company are A. H. Jester, president; F. S. Lycan, treasurer; E. A. Schnei- der, secretary. These officers, with J. A. Wessell of St. Paul and Charles Vandersluis of Bemidji, constitute the board of directors. < Notice to Electrical and Piumbing Contractors. Sealed bids will be received at the office of Graham M. Torrance, clerk of 1ndependent School District of Bemidji, Minn,, until 8:00 p. m. July 1, 1909, for the installation of gas piping, electrical work, and addi- tional plumbing of a High School _building at Bemidji, Minn. Each bid must be accompanied by a certified check in the sum of five per cent of the amount of bid made payable to T. J. Andrews, treasurer, as a guarantee that the successful bidder will enter into con- tract and furnish a Surety Company Bond satisfactory to the School Board in full of the amount ot his bid. Plans and specifications can be seen on file with Graham M. Tor- rance, at Bemidji, Minn., or at the office of the Architects, W. R. Par| sons & Son Co., at 601 Phoenix Bldg., Minneapolis, Minn. ‘The work must be completed on or before the 15th of August, 1909. The Board of Education reserves the right to reject any or all bids. By Order of the School Board. —Graham M. Torrance, ‘ Clerk. FATHER OF R. F. MURPHY DIED ON.SATURDAY LAST Breathed His Last at Billingham, Wash- ington.—Body Will Be Buried at DeGraff, Minnesota. R. F. Murphy has received a tele- gram to the effect that his father, John P. Murphy, had died last Saturday at Billingham, Wash., after having been ill for some time with stomach trouble. The telegram announced that the body ot the elder Murphy would be brought east from Billingham by Walter Murphy, a brother of Ray Murphy, and that the funeral would be held at DeGraff, Minn., and the body buried beside that of the wife of the deceased, who died some twenty-nine years ago. John P. Murphy was born fifty- five years ago in New York state. He moved to Minnesota some twenty years ago and for fifteen years lived at Minneapolis, moving from the “Mill City” a year ago to make his home at Billingham, Wash. The deceased is survived by seven children. Mr. Murphy bore the reputation of being a most excellent citizen and wherever he is known there will be general sorrow because of his demise. George Cochran, the logger, spent Saturday at Walker, returning to Bemidji Saturday evening. Mr. Cochran has a large number of both business and social friends at .the Week-End Excursions. Via the South Shore for Detroit, Toledo, Cleveland and Buffalo by rail to St. Ignace thence D. & C. N. Co.'s steamers, leaving Duluth every Friday. June 4 to July 30. To Detroit and return $17.00. Limit Sept. 15th. PUMPING PLANT | For Bemiidji, Minnesota. Sealed proposals will be received by the Oitv Clerk of the Olty of Bemidji, Minnesota, on or before 8 o'clock p. m, of June 28th, 1908, for the furnishing of one griplex pump diréct connected to 50 horse power motor, one single stage 1,800 gallon centrifugal pump direct connected to 70 horse power moter: one 1,000 gallon 2 stage pump and motor: one 6 inch turbine meter and all piping, vaives, and fittings and the completo instaliation of the piping and machinery. The Cley Council shall open aud consider ali bids, submitted in regular form, at thelr regular meeting held In the evening of the above date but reserves the right to reject any or all bids or accept anv part of any bid. A certified check on a_Bemidji Bank for 10 per cent. of the amountof the bid shall accompany each proposal. No_other form of check cap be considered according to the Oity Charter. Plans tlll;lfl Sxpeclflciltl%l}S témy]‘l:gul;ecclvad cation to the City Engl A G s THOMAS MALOY, M. D. STONER, City Clerk’ City Englneer. “BUTTERFLY BUD” MARRIED Girl For Whose Ball Flutterers Were Imported Becomes Bride. Philadelphia, June 21.—Owing to the recent death of James W. Paul, Jr., the banker, of this: city, the mar- riage today of his daughter, Miss Mary Astor Paul, to Charles A. Munn, Jr, of Washington was celebrated with extreme simplicity, although the bride is a member of one of this city’s most prominent families and the bride- groom’s family is very well known socially in Washington. Today’s bride is tho famous “but- terfly debutante” of the winter of 1807-8. For her coming out her father brought from Brazil and Peru 500 Hve butterflies, which were released at the ball given in honor of his daughter’s debut. It was estimated at the time that the expense of bring: MARY ASTOR PAUL. ing out Miss Paul amounted to $100, 000. The bridegroom is a brother of Miss Currie Munn, who was reported engaged to Theodore Roosevelt, Jr., in the spring of this year. The ceremony was performed in St. Martin’s church, Radnor, and was wit. nessed only by the immediate families and a few intimate friends of the bride and bridegroom. Mr. Munn is a senior in Harvard, and the young couple will occupy a house near the university until he completes his course. Later they wil reside near Philadelphta. HONOR CONFEDERATE DEAD Bids Opened For Monument to Mark Their Resting Place. ‘Washington, June 21.—At the war department today bids were opened for the crection of a monument to the Confederate dead who are burfed in the Finns Point National cemetery at Balem, N. J. The monument, which is to cost about $8,600, will be erected by the United States government to mark the resting place of 2,460 officers and men of the Confederate army and navy who died as prisoners of war at Fort Delaware between 1862 and 1865. ‘The adoption of a general monu- ment for the purpose is due to the fact that it has been found impossible because of imperfect records to place a distinctive beadstone at each indi- vidual grave, as contemplated by the act of congress. The commissioner for marking the graves of Confederate soldiers is Gen- eral Rdwin M. Coates, retired. National Conversations. If you see three men standing to gether on the sidewalk in any given country, you can guess the subject of their conversation. In Germany it is the army; in Russia, the bureaucracy; in France, women; in' the United States, business; in England, sport, and in Turkey nothing at all.—Brussels Dernfere Heure. Her Way. “I wouldn't cry like that if I were you,” said a lady to little Alice. “Well,” sald Alice between her sobs, “yeu can cry any way you like, but ‘this 1s my way.”—United ‘Presbyterian Life 13 measured by experience and county seat of Cass county. not by years.—Latin Proverb. facing the north. There is ample shelter for more than 500 contestants slould the weather prove stormy, and the appointments are equal to any- thing of the kind in the world. The schedule of events ndoptexf by the Interstate association includes the preliminary handicap on Wednesday and the event of ‘the year for trap shooters, the Grand American handi- cap, on Thursday. DEBTS MAY BE EXEMPTED Court Decision Will Lessen Tax Pay- ments Considerably. Des Moines, June 21.—Judge W. H. McHenry, in the Polk county court, held that debts may be deducted from the actual value of corporation stock for assessment purposes under the Towa law. The decision settles a question which has been mooted for years and will knock city treasuries out of thousands of dollars annually. The decision was made on an ap peal from assessment by three Iowa insurance companies. SAY HEIS GUILTY BUT ACQUIT HIM Remarkable Ve;dict of Jur- ors in Murder Trial. SCORED BY THE COURT Presiding Judge Denounces Triers of Case and Orders Their Names Stricken From the List of Avallable Jurors for Future Service—Defend: ant in the Case an Italian Saloon Keeper. Amsterdam, N. Y., June 21.—Frank Denatto, a wealthy Amsterdam Ital- ian saloon keeper, who has been on trial at Fonda for the past four weeks for being accessory before the fact in the murder of William E. McLach- lan of Cranes Hollow, in July, 1907, ‘was acquitted by a jury, which handed up one of the most remarkable ver- dicts ever rendered in a homicide case. The document reads: “While i our own minds and opin- ion, we, as men, regard the defendant as guilty, yet after considering our oaths as jurors and carefully consid- ering the evidence as placed before us, we cannot find sufficient evidence to convict and therefore render a ver- dict of not guilty.” Survivors of Sea Fight Meet. ‘Waltham, Mass., June 21.—The sur- vivors of the crew which manned the warghip Kearsarge during her famous sea fight with the Confederate ship Alabama off the coast of France on June 19, 1864, gathered in this city to celebrate the forty-fifth anniversary of that encounter. Of the 163 men wlho comprised the crew at that time but thirty are lvin The Pole St oA Ursa Major and Ursa Minor are known also as the triones and as the Greater Wain and the Lesser Wain, It 1s curious to note that the larger con- stellation was given the figure of the bear by the Arabs and by the Iroquois The jury was roundly scored by Jus.|fed men. The assumed forms are or- tice Spencer, who declared that they [diparily fanciful, and the identity of apparently had failed to give full at-|the names in this instance affords food tention to the case, and in conclusion | for speculation. Homer uses both bear he ordered the clerk to remove thelr | 3nd wain (wagon) in his references to names from the list of available jurors | these stars. It 1s evident that the for future service. name bear was a translation from some original Aryan language, as the constellation is called in Sanskrit TRIAL BEGAN JAN. 12 LAST|riksha, o word that in different gen- == ders means both a bear and a star. Of Case Against Patrick Calhoun Finally | course the polar star in the tal of Ursa Given to the Jury. Minor is the constellation’s point of San Francisco, June 21.—The case glory. In (hig.cise'ws biaysay fatily of Patrick Calhoun, milllonaire prest-| P22t ‘h"t“‘“mw"f!s ‘:e dog, hec':l“;e ;:: dent of the United Railronds, charged [ £00P, B S17 T8 omre PACC 1 with bribery, was given to the jury[}oB3 & OF oy after a trial that dates back to Jan.|DAVe our Word cynosure, that towar 12, 1908. which all eyes turn, as to the dog’s Not alone beoause of the exceeding | &1l for SIEht of the pole star.—Minne- bitternéss that has marked many of | WPOlS Tribune. its stages, but because of its length has the trial been a notable one in ‘Western history. Between Jan. 12 of this year, when the attempt to se- cure the first juryman was instituted, and when the case was given to the twelve men finally selected, five months and a week elapsed. Of this period 110 days had been devoted to court sessions. In this respect the case outstrips the record established in the case of Abraham Ruef, who was convicted after seventy-six days' actual court procedure. The cost of the trial, including the maintenance of jurors, a special police detail, transeript and the usval ex- pense of the court for o great a pe- ricd can only be conjectured, but it 1s estimated that it will cost $50,000. How Nora Coaxed the Tips. A group of women were standing in the corridor of a summer hotel when an aged scrubwoman started upstairs with a pail of water. Just then a bright faced, buxom Irish chamber- maid came up. “This looks purty heavy for the likes of ye” she said cheerily to the old woman. “Better let me help.” 8he took up the paid and whisked off upstairs with it. “How thoughtful of Noral” “Isn’t she kind?” and similar expressions rose to the lips of the women. The proprietor of the -hotel and another man also witnessed the incident. “Clever girl, that Nora,” sald the hotel man to his companfon. “She’s always doing something like that when there are people looking on. She gets more tips than any two other girls in the house. She could afford to pay me for the privilege of working here. Every summer she makes enough to spend the winter in idleness at.her old home in Ireland.”—New York Tribune. WAS HOUNDED TO HIS DEATH Executioner of Haymarket Rioters Ex- pires Suddenly. Mason City, Ia., June 21.—D. W. Nickerson, the man who hanged the Haymarket rioters in Chicago, was found dead in his bed at his Floyd county home. One of the strange coincidences in connection witlt his death, caused by apoplexy, is the fact that both Sheriff S. F. Hatchett, who was at that time sheriif of Cook county, and W. H. Gleason, who was the chief clerk, both came to this county and both died very suddenly from the same cause and within three days of each other. This was about three years ago. Mr. Nickerson never spent a day without thinking of this affair. He left Chicago in 1902 and came to the prairies of the West, where he thought he could bury his hauntings. But he was in constant receipt of letters from amarchists threatening his life, and he was literally hounded to his death. IS ON HIS WAY TO ENGLAND President Reyes of Colombia Leaves Vice President in Power. ‘Washington, June 21.—A dispatch from the United States of Colombia received at the state department re- ports that President Reyes of Col- ombia is on his way to England, hav- ing left Santa Marta for Manchester. The dispatch indicates a satisfac- tory condition of affairs in Colombia when the president left the country. The political situation was ‘quiet, va- rious reforms were being instituted| Secure a feather somewhere—it will and a general amnesty had been grant- | be much better than a picture—and ed. During General Reyes’ absence |you will see that it has a main stem the presidency is left in charge of Dr. | or midrib. Along each side of this ex- Jorge Holquin, the vice president, a |tends the thin part known as the vane. warm friend of Reyes. If President | Look closely and you will see that this Reyes does not intend to resume of- | vane is composed of tiny feathers, call- fice on his return to Colombia no of-|ed beards, fastened together through- ficial information to that effect has|out their whole length from where reached the state- department. their bases join the midrib to their —_——— tips. You can easily separate one of Bank Cashier Convicted. these from the rest, when you will ;e: Clarksburg, W. Va., June 21.—Fred- how like a tiny feather it is, with whaf erick B. Wood, former cashier of the | S¢ems a fine fuzziness along ench edge. West Virginia bank, was found guilty | —St. Nicholas. of making false entries in the books of the bank. The punishment is from two to ten years in the penitentiary. ‘Wood asserted that the bank’s loss, about $22,000, was sustained through loans made by him:' and that he de- rived no henefit. BIG SHOOTING EVENT BEGINS Preliminary Practice First Step To- ward Grand American Handicap. Chicago, June 21.—With _today’s preliminary practice the tenth grand American target shooting competition -was begun. Unless all signs fail it will be the greatest tournament of the kind ever held in the United States. The grounds of the Chicago Gun club, on which the tournament is hel are twelve acres in extent, and th Oddities of Color Blindness. Color blindness, or the inability to distinguish certain colors, is by no means rare. Incomplete color blindness is when a person cannot distinguish one of the fundamental colors, red, green or violet. If a person is told to select colors resembling violet, he will if red blind usually select blues as well as violets. If he is green blind, he will select green or gray, with possibly some blues and violets of the brightest shades. Violet blindness is rare. To a red blind person the American flag ap- pears to have green and white stripes, while the white stars appear on a vio- let fleld. To a green blind person the stripes have the proper colors, but the fleld for the stars 18 red violet. To a violet blind person the stripes are nor- mal, but the stars appear to be set in a dark brownish gray fleld. To a person who is totally color blind the blue of the flag appears a light yellowish brown, while the red stripes seem to be a darker brown. H. and Feathers. Hairs are found on almost every- thing that grows, and, if we may so call the fine fibers of asbestus, they even invade the mineral world. From a plece of mineral asbestus quarried from the earth and looking like a stone with a satiny fracture the silken fibers can be rubbed with the finger till the lump 1s_worn away. Unsettled. Bkinner—-Good morning, ma’am. Did you ever see anything so unsettled as thé weather has been lately? Mrs. Hashley—Well, there’s your board bill, Mr. Skinner.—Philadelphia Inquirer. In a Bad Way. “Here is a doctor who says you mustn’t eat when you're worried.” “But suppose you’re always worried for fear you ain't goin’ to geét anything to eat?”—Cleveland Plain Dealer. Couldn’t Soream. “I was afraid you'd scream when 1 kissed you.” “I’dldn’t dare. Mamma was in the next room and would have heard me.” —Houston Post. . ‘The power of necessity is irresistible. W-Aeschylua. are equipped with five sets of -traps A Beggar In a-Basket. Perhaps the most curious use to which Mexicans put their baskets 1s to hold gamecocks. Sometimes the cock's basket 18 woven for the purpose; often- er it 1s made from a sombrero, the wide, high crowned, straw hat of the country, into which the bird is put, a hole cut in the crown to give him alr and the brim carefully tied down that he may not escape. The bullfight has been called the national sport of Mex- {co, but cockfighting 13 much more unf- versal, for the humblest peasant may have his gamecock, which he keeps in a carefully made cage in his patlo, watches with pride and tends with care. One of the strangest uses to which a basket has probably ever been put was the dally appearance in the streets of a young man carrying in a huge bush- el basket on his shoulders his great- grandmother, of unknown age, who held out a skinny hand to the passer- by for the centavo which was almost unfailingly given. Surely a trust in Providence could go no further.—Elea- nor Hope wJohnson in Outing Maga- zine. Dreams of the Blind. In my dreams I have sensations, odors, tastes and ideas which I do not remember to have had in reality. Perhaps they are the glimpses which my mind catches through the vell of sleep of my earliest babyhood. I have heard “the trampling of many waters.” Sometimes a wonderful light visits me in sleep. Such a flash and glory as it i8! I gaze and gaze until it vanishes. 1 smell and taste much as in my wak- ing hours, but the sense of touch plays a less important part. In sleep I al- most never grope. No one guides me. Bven in a crowded street I am self sufficient, and I enjoy an independ- ence quite foreign to my physical life. Now I seldom spell on my fingers, and it 1§ still rarer for others to spell into my hand. My mind acts independent of my physical organs. I am delight- ed to be thus endowed, if only in sleep, for then my soul dons its winged sandals and joyfully joins the throng of happy beings who dwell be- yond the reaches of bodily sense.— Helen Keller in Century. Our Language Is So Explicit! The tradesman had réndered his bill, walited a month and then wrote: “Please, sir, I want my bill.” Back came the bill with these words: “Certainly; here it is.” The bill was returned, and in a month the tradesman again wrote: “Kindly send me the amount of my bil.” _And the answer came promptly and politely: “Certainly; it is $104.26.” The third month the tradesman again wrote: “Will you send me a check for the amount of my bill?” The answer came, with a blank, un- signed check: ““Certainly; here is the check. I have kept the amount of your bill.” The fourth month the tradesman wrote: “I want my bill paid.” And the answer came back, “So do L Then the tradesman gave it up.—La. dles’ Home Journal. Is Oratory a Drawback? The great orators have not been the most fortunate aspirants for the presi- dency. Webster, Clay, Douglas and Blaine were idolized by their follow- ers, not only for their abilitles and personal traits, but also for their per- suasive powers of speech. Horace Greeley, candidate of the Democrats and Liberal Republicans in 1872, was not a notable orator, but was none the less an effective talker. He made a speaking tour in the latter part of the campaign, and, although his position was an anomalous one, he acquitted himself with credit, even if he was overwhelmingly defeated. Tilden, who in his free sofl days made speeches, obtained his mastery by his pen, not by his tongue. Grant, who was called the silent man because he could not make a speech when he first became a candidate, learned to speak very well in public, his speech for Garfleld In 1880 being a good example of his de- velopment in that direction.—Boston Globe. “Balderdash]” An {llustration of the manners of critics in bygone days is furnished by a scathing notice once printed concern- ing a volume of Browning’s poems. It was an early volume, and Browning ‘was delighted to receive a letter from J. 8. Mill proposing to write a notice of them in the Westminster Review. A few days later his expectations were dashed by hearing from Mr, Mill that he could not write the article, as he had been forestalled by a notice which had appeared in the Westminster Re- view itself. With a palpitating heart Browning rushed to his club and searched the pages of the Westmin- ster Review, to find, to his dismay, the article which had robbed him of Mr. Mill’s notice. It was to this effect: “A volume of poems by Browning— balderdash]” Oyster Shells as Medicine. Ground oyster shells were given by the mediaeval doctors to children suf- fering from rickets and scrofula. Now it appears that they were right. The shells contain lime, nitrogen, iron, sul- phur, manganese, magnesia, flour, bro- mide, phosphoric acid and fodine, all excellent for feeble children. They say that if growing children were to take powdered oyster shells in their food the teeth would be improved.—Lon- don Answers. Why He Refused. “Can I offer you a little more soup?” a lady asked her new paying.guest. “No, thanks!” was the quick reply. “I hope you are not refusing because It 1s considered bad form to take two helpings of soup. We are not sticklers for etiguette.” “Oh, it isn't etiquette that I was worrying about—it was the soup!” Apt: Pupil. “Didn’t 1 see the grocer’s boy kiss you this morning, Martha?" “Yes'm. But he ain't to 'blame, ma'am. 'Twas the fceman set him the bad example.” built up a reputation as being j‘, € s 1§ We carry one of the direct from the cutters you 20 per cent. Emblems, 116 Third st. Is famed S throughout “this and adjoining states. We have _grade watches, repairing and manufacturing fine jewelry. and Semi-Precious Gems in the State. Diamonds, Rubies, Emeralds, and the cheaper stones Estimates given on Special Work. Chains, made to order. Manufacturing Jewelers WATCH INSPECTOR M. & I. RY. experts in the repair of high ew largest stocks of Precious We buy and importers, and save Rings, Pins, BAKER co. Near the Lake The Nervous Mother. An Atchison woman who 1s very nervous and inclined to worry is the mother of a boy. She recently read of o boy who was killed’ while roller skating and immediately put her son’s roller skates in the fire. Another newspaper told of a boy who was kill- ed riding the street cars, and as boys are frequently killed while walking by street cars running over them she chained her boy to the front door. Then she read of a boy who died of blood poisoning caused by his shoe rubbing his heel, and her boy's shoes and stockings came off. The story of a boy who bit off a button on his waist and choked to death resulted in her taking off her boy’s clothes. He had left only a flannel shirt, and she 1s reading now that wearing flannel shirts is the cause of great mortality and s “thinking of removing that.—- Atchison Globe. The Bloom on the Egg. “] know these eggs at least are fresh,” said the young housewife. “Ag I took them from the basket a white bloom, like the down of a peach, came off on my hands.” Her husband, a food expert, gave 8 sneering laugh. “In that case,” he said, “I'll forego my usual morning omelette. That bloom, my dear, proves your eggs to be a year or so old—maybe four or five years old. “The bloom, as you so poetically call it, 1s llme dust. It shows that the eggs are pickled. Lime dust, which rubs off like flour, is the surest test we have for pickled eggs—a not une wholesome article, but not to be com- pared with the new laid sort.”—New Orleans Times-Democrat. A Pretty Warm Fish, A well known fisherman was fishing for perch and was seated along the edge of a lake near the roots of a large tree, which was a favorite spot for the perch. Luck had been only fair, and he was debating on the ques- tion of hauling in the line and going home when there came a powerfui tug. He knew that he had a huge fish and struggled vigorously for twenty minutes before he landed his prize. It was a sunfish, one of the largest he had ever seen. He landed it on the bank, and then he noticed that the rays from the fish were so powerful that he was almost blinded, and the grass in the vicinity was shriveled up by the heat. A few minutes later the man fell over. Te had been sunstruck by the sunfish and was beyond hope.—Phik adelphia American. The First Mourning Paper. The oldest known letter written on black edged note paper as a sign of mourning appears to be one dated Jan. 5, 1683. In Addison’s comedy of “The Drummer,” 1715, reference is made to the fashion in the words, “My lady’s mourning paper that is blacked at the edges.” A few years later Allan Ram. say, who died in 1758, speaks in one of his poems of “the sable bordered sheet” as a messenger of Sorrow. Mann, writing from Italy to Horace ‘Walpole in 1745, says that it was uni- versally used in Florence at that time. The superfor elegance of this Italian note paper, with its narrow margin of black, explains its ready acceptance in this country, where it superseded the quarto sheet with a black border some- times a quarter of an inch wide. In this way it probably gave an impetus to the fashion. But it Is a mistake to suppose, as some have done, that the faghion was Introduced from Italy.— London Answers, “The Diving Bell. The celebrated philosopher Aristotle speaks of a diving bell which was pat over the head of the diver, but there 18 no proof of the use of the bell in ancient times. John Jaesnfer, who lived in the early part of the sixteenth century, makes-the earliest mention of the practical use of the diving bell In Europe. In all probability the first real practical use of the diving bell was in the attempt at rescuing the treagures of the Spanish armada off the English coast, 1590 and on. A Change. “It used to be the helght of my ambi- tion to own a motor car,” said the war tled looking man, ; “And what is the height of your am- bition now?” asked his friend. “To gell {t.”—Philadelphia Inquirer. — . WANIS ONE CENT A WORD. HELP WANTED. WANTED—Girl for general house- work. Inquire Mrs. J. L. Heit- man, Grand Forks Bay, Bemidji WANTFD—Experienced, waitress, at once. Hotel. WANTED—Girl for general house- work. Inquire 503 Beltrami Ave. WANTFD—Woman cook. at Lake Shore Hotel. WANTED—Dining room girl; apply at Bereman Cafe. efficient Apply at City Inquire FOR SALE. FOR SALE OR TRADE—I own the following lots in original town- site of Nymore Minn. Lots1, 2,3, 4 and 12 in Block 1, and Lots 1, 2, 9, in Block2, and Lot1, in Block 6. Write me direct. Here is a snap for somebody. A. H. Froshaug, Twin Valley. FOR SALE—Rubber stamps. The Pioneer will procure any kind of a rubber stamp for you an short notice. FOR SALE—Two lots, new cottage, nice location offer wanted. H. A. Bliler. 1217 Bixby Ave. FOR SALE OR RENT—House and lot on Dewey avenue. Inquire Mrs. Edd, Mill Park. FOR RENT. {FOR RENT—The barn known as the S. P. Hayth barn at the rear of the postoffice. Inquire at 406 Minnesota Avenue. FOR RENT—Seven-room house at . 1111 Lake Boulevard, Inquire of Henry Stechman, 719 -~ Bemidji avenue. - FOR RENT—Furnished rooms with or without board, 1121 Bemidji avenue. FOR RENT—Seven-room flat above Majestic Theater. Inquire of A. Klein. MISCELLANEOUS. PUBLIC LIBRARY—Open Tues days, Thursdays and Saturdays 2:30to 6 p. m., and Saturday evening 7:30 to 9 p. m. also. Library in basement of Court House. Mrs. Donald, librarian. WANTED—To exchange good second-hand threshing machine for clear, wild or-improved land in Beltrami county. Inquire J. J. Opsahl, Sentinel office. Bemidji, Minn. WANTED—Position as book- keeper and stenographer, or assist- tant book-keeper. Wesley H. Gill, Happyland, Minn. Every Stationer Should Investigate | s Indispentabic.” Bute) tatimers write fov prine PEERLESS MOISTENER CO. For Sale at The Pioneer Office DiWivs Early Risers The famous little pilis, DR.KING’'S NEW DISCOVERY Will Surely Stop That Gough: A ) " s i s T R e S O R e S e | |

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