Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, August 26, 1910, Page 3

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RAILROAD TIME CARDS Creat Northern No. 33 West Bound Leaves at 3:30 p. No. 34 East Bound Leaves at 12:08 p. No. 35 West Bound Leaves at 3:42 a. No. 36 East Bound Leaves at 1:20 a. No. 105 North Bound Arrivesat 7:40 p. No. 106 South BoundLeaves at 7:00 a, Freight West Bound Leaves at 9:00 a. Freight East Bound Leaves at 3:30 p. Minnesota & International No. 32 South Bound Leaves at 8:15_a. No. 31 North Bound Leaves at 6:10 p. No. 34 South Bound Leaves at 11:35 p. No. 33 North Bound Leaves at 4:20 a. Freight South Bound Leaves at 7:30 a. Freight North Bound Leaves at 6:00 a. Minn. Red Lake & Man. No. 1 North Bound Leaves at 3:35 p. No 2 South Bound Arrives at 10:30 a. : FEEEEE 88 PROFESSIONAL CARDS ARTS HARRY MASTEN Piano Tuner ormerly of Radenbush & Co. of St. Paul Instructor of Violin, Piano, Mando- lin and Brass Instruments. Music furnished for balls, hotels. weddings, banquets, and all occasions. Terms reasunable. All music up to date. Phone N. W. 535, or call at 213 Third Street, upstairs. HARRY MASTEN, Piano Tuner LENN H. SLOSSON PIANO TUNING Graduate of the Boston School of Piano Tuning, Boston, M. Leave orders at the Bemwidji Music House, Ih’lhlrdbt Phone 31 Residence Phone 174-2. RS. TOM SMART DRESS MAKING PARLORS E8BBEBBESH (SOCIAL, AND | PERSONAL Items.phoned or handed in for this column before noon will be Printed the same day. The more it 1s washed the harder it gets— Mound Oitv Floor Paint. W. M. Ross. Farms and city loans. C. J. Pryor. G. E. Carson is confined to his bed by an acute attack of indigestion. Mrs. C. W. Thomas and children, of Minneapolis, will be the guests of Mrs. A. A. Melges over Sunday. Miss Ramsdell, Spirella represen- tative, will be in town until Sept. 5. Ladies wishing corsets send card. Mrs. W. L. Hortor and Mrs. Ruth Holcomb of Ontario, are visiting at the home of Mr, and Mrs. Conrad Lajambe, C. J. Woodmansee proprietor of the Majestic Theater of this city re- turned from a business trip to Ten- strike Wednesday evening, Look this up. A $400.00 Piano for $275.00; a $350.00 Piano for $225.00. Snap if taken at once. Bemidji Music House, J. Bisiar Mgr. Mrs. Wygant and daughter, of Barren, Wisconsin, arrived in the city Tuesday and are visiting at the bome of Mrs. Wygant’s brother, E. S. Woodward. The man you work for has not time to give you a business train- ing, you should get it at the Lit- tle Falls Business College. En- roll next Monday. I have frequent calls for money which can be placed on good real | estate security. If you have money Orders taken for Nu Bone corsets, made to order, also tailor made suits, coats, etc. Bring Your Orders to T. BEAUDETTE Merchant Tailor Cleaning and Pressing a Specialty 314 Minnesota Avenue PHYSICIANS AND SURCEONS - R. ROWLAND GILM.ORE PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office—Miles Block R. E. A. SHANNON, M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office in Mayo Block Phone 396 Res. Phone 397 R. C. R. SANBORN PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office—Miles Block A. WARD, M. D. * Over First National Bank. Phone 51 House No. 60x Lake Blvd. Phone 351 R. A. E. HENDERSON PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Over First National Bank, Bemidji, Minn. Office Phone 36. Residence Pone 72. R. E. H. SMITH PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office in Winter Block R. E. H. MARCUM PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office in Mayo Block Phone 18 Residence Phone 211 DENTISTS L STANTUIN DENTIST Office in Winter Block R. J. T. TUOMY DENTIST Ist National Bank Build'g. Telephone 230 R. G. M. PALMER DENTIST Miles Block DR that you want to net you eight or nine per cent see Clyde J. Pryor, or telephone 32. Sheriff Hazen has been warned to be on the lookout for a young Frenchman, Joe LaMontauge, who is wanted at Crookston on the charge of horse stealing. He is ex- pected to be found driving the rig. Mrs. E. H. Denu entertained a party of friends at her home on Bel- trami Avenue last evening. Those present were. Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Given, the Misses Julia Mahoney and Susan Pratt of Virginia, Minn. and James Given and William Clish. Judge and Mrs. M. ‘A. Spooner and Mr. and Mrs. G. M. Torrance left this morning for Hackensack, where they will spend a few days near ove of the lakes. Mr. Torrance, reports that the fish bite so fast at this choice fishing grounds that it takes only a few moments to catch all the boat w'll hold. The party will no doubt take extra boats to carry the fish, all members being expert anglers. . ‘Profit by-the cmtly experience of those unfortunate_people who have lost their money by - speculatio: fire or thieves and deposit your hard- earned savings with ‘the Northern National Bank, where you are in sured against loss from any cause. Fire Insurance. C.]J. Pryor. Ed V. Specht of Felton is here today. P. J. O'Gara of Crookston is-in Bemidji on business. Frank Bennett of Litrle Falls is here visiting relatives. 3 Mrs. James R. Bower, who have been visiting relative here, has-re- turned to . her home in Minneapolis. Felix Barbeau, the Soo 'bridge builder, came to Bemidji today. He is well pleased with the work being done on‘the Soo bridge at this"point, Mr. ann Mrs, W, D. Merickle of Riverside Califorzia, and A. .J. Merickle, of Wadena, are visiting at the home of Mr. and Mrs Frank Thompson- Your money will net you eight or nine per cent if placed on first mortgage loans through the C. J. Pryor real estate and insurance agency, Miles Block. Clarence Shannon fire ranger, came in last evening from Kelliher where brush fires have required his attention. Today he is in the vicinity of International Falls, Miss Lucile Young was given a farewell party Wednesday evening. There were twenty friends enter- tained. Lunch was served. Miss Lucile is to leave for her new home at Spokane soon. The spear on display in the Palmer hardware store show window bas an interesting history. The weapon was used first by. the kaffirs of South Africa. It was captured during the Boer war and taken to Liverpool where it fell into the hands-of a curio dealer. There it was purchased by O. A. Sime, who later gave it to Daniel Rose. Caspar Maehren of Cold Spring, 'who is in Bemidji today, was a candidate two years ago for Sheriff of Stearns -county. He had the usual .political cards distributed. Heis interested in a brewery. This vear during his travels he was re- peatedly asked where his cards were, although he is not a candi- date. To get even he has had cards printed to resemble. a political an- noucement, reading “Vote right and drink—Beer.” Oh! You Norman County Girls. Ye editor and family spent Sun- day at the pleasant farm home of A. J. Rude who lives two miles north- east of Gary, It wasour good for- tune to be present in .the afternoon at regular meeting of the Forward Young Peoples Society. An excel- lent program consisting of songs, readings, recitations, etc., had been prepared which was rendered in a manver that reflected great credit on the young people—and : we want to say right here that Norman county has a fine lot of young people grow- ing up and the style and beauty that the young ladies possess is enough to make any young man with a particle of get in his. make-up dig in and win one for a life partner. —Norman County Herald. GRAIN AND PROVISION: PRICES Minneapolis Wheat. Minneapolis, Aug. 25.—Wheat— Sept., $1.10%; Dec., $1.12%@1.12%; May, $1.16%. On track—No. 1 hard Evening, Work by Appointment Only LAWYERS G_RAHAM M. TORRANCE LAWYER Telephone 560 RANK A. JACKSON LAWYER Bemidji, Minnesota E. McDONALD * ATTORNEY AT LAW Office—Swedback Block, Bemidji, Minn. H. FISK . ATTORNEY AT LAW Office over City Drug Store OM SMART DRAY AND TRANSFER SAFE AND PIANO MOVING Rosidence Phone 58 618 Amarica Ave. Office Phone 12 TEW PUBLIC LIBRARY Open 1o a. m. to 8 p. m., daily except Monday; 2 p. m. to 61.}4) m. Sun- day. Mlss m ltnce Mllls, Librarian. M. MALZAHN & CO. * REAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE FARM LOANS, RENTALS . FARMS AND CITY PROPERTIES 407 Minn. Ave. - Bemidji, Minn Miles Block MISS ADDIE MOORE Flute Soloist, Navassar Ladies’ Band, at the State Fair, Sept. 5 to 10. WOOD ! Leave your orders for seasoned Birch, Tam- arack or Jack Pine Wood with S. P. HAYTH Telephone 11 BISIAR & MURPHY FUNERAL DIRECTORS 117 Third Street Dayphone 319, Night phones 118, lu Oalis Answered at Al Mours $1.13%; No. 1 Northern, $1.11%@1. -12%; No. 2 Northern, $1.067% @1.11 No. 3 Northern, $1.03%@$1.08%. St. Paul Live Stock. St. Paul, Aug. 25.—Cattle—Good to cholce steers, $5.25@5.75; fair to good, $4.75@5.25; good to choice cows and heifers, $4.00@4.50; veals, $5.50@6.75. Hogs—$8.40@8.75. Sheep—Wethers, $3.75@4.00; yearlings, $4.25@4.75; spring lambs, $5.25@6.00. Duluth Wheat and Flax. Duluth, Aug. 25.—Wheat—To arrive and on track—No. 1 hard, $1.14; No 1 Northern, $1.13%4; No. 2 Northern, §1.08%@1.11%; Sept., $1.13%; Dec., $1:13% @1.13%; May, $1.16%. Flax --On track, in store, to arrive and Slept. $2.49; Oct., $2.39; Nov., $2.38; Dec., $2.32. Chicago Grain and Provisions. Chicago, Aug. 25.—Wheat—Sept., 991, @99%c; Dec., $1.03%; May, $1. 08%@1.09. Corn—Sept., 61%¢; Dec., 59% @59%¢c; May, 613, @61%¢c. Oats —Sept., :34%c; Dec, 37%c; May, 40%c. Pork—Sept., $21.12%; - Jam., $18.47%. Butter—Creameries, 24%@ 29c; dairies, 25@27c. Bggs—14%@ 22c. Poultry—Turkeys, 20c; chickens, 13c; springs, 16c. Chicago Live Stock. Chicago, Aug. 25.—Cattle—Beeves, :$4.90@8.40; Texas steers, $3.75@6.00; ‘Western steers, $4:35@7. and feeders, $4.10@6.20; heifers; $2.60@86. $8.10@8.30; good to choice heavy, $ 30@8 9 -Almost Two Hundred Men -and Montana, and the total is 142. MANY RANGERS STILL MISSING Lost in Fire District. Lok KNOWN DEAD NEARLY 150 This Includes. All the Victims in Idaho, Montana and Washington; Consisting of Fire Fighters and Oth- ers—Timber Losses Believed to Be the Greatest in the History of Amer Ican Forest Fires. Spokane, ‘Wash., Aug. 26.—There are 185 men in the two forest ranger parties now missing in the country at the headwaters of the St. Joe river. Eighty-five men are in the party headed by Joseph D. Halm and the ‘expedition under F. A. Fern contains 100 men. -Deputy Rangers Fishcr and Hol comb have left Wellace at the l.ead of relief expeditions tc the St. Joe. They will try to penetrate the forest Ly way of the Clcarwater divide, ca medicines and condeused rations. A special from Wallace says: “Forest Supervisor Weigle said thers were no other large parties than those of Halm and Fern missing in the Coeur d’Alene forest, although there might be loss of life in isolated groups. Halm and his men are in the densest woads in the national forest. Fern and his crew are thirty miles from safety. Conditions on the St. Joe are very bad. Absence of news Is very discouraging, but the leaders are skillful and experienced and hope has not been abandoned.” Scores of Settlers Missing. One hundred and six men living in the St. Joe valley are said' to be miss- ing. Twenty-two bodies, supposed to be of settlers, have been found. Sev- eral days ago twenty bodies were dis- covered scattered over an area of over half a mile and it was assumed they were forest employes, Supervisor Wei- gle including them in his list of dead employes. Later, however, he declared they were not rangers. Add the number of dead rangers, seventy-four, the forty-four bodies found near Avery, the ten Japanese who perished near Avery and the vari- ous known dead in Washington, Idaho This is without taking into account the 185 rangers imprisoned on the headwaters of the St. Joe. * The appalling loss of life among the forest employes has taken the heart out of the surviving foresters and an order has been issued not to risk life to save timber. The little fires are being extinguished, but the great fires, to fight which might re- sult in more loss of life, will be al- lowed to burn themselves out or until the rains extinguish them. Fires Exhaust Their Fuel. In the Coeur d’Alene mining country the fires have exhausted their fuel, as also they have done in the Pend d’Reille valley. In the Clearwater country and in the thickest timber of the Coeur d'Alene national forest, however, the flames are hungry and active as ever. No lumberman or forester will give an estimate of the timber Ilosses. Even after the fires are out it will be difficult to reckon the cost. It is be- lieved, however, that the present fires are the 'most expensive the United States has ever known. ~An expert railroad builder estimates the loss of the Chicago, Milwaukee and Puget Sound railroad at $2,500,000. Conditions in the Clearwater reserve are hopeless and Major Fenn has re- ceived instructions from the forestry headquarters at Missoula to recall all the fire fighters from the interior of), the stricken region and set them to work on the outskirts of the fire zone. The messdge sald: “Save the lives of the men and let the timber go.” Leaving the Cities. Missoula, Mont., and on the Puget Sound railway. SAFE TO RETURN TO HOMES Refugees From Fire District Now Aug. 26.—Reports from the fire district are hopeful. At ’| the forestry office the assurance. was given that it was safe for refugees to return to their homes along the Coeur @’Alene line of the Northern Pacific| The exodus of refugees from this clty continues and nightfall will prob- ably find Missoula practically deserted by those who early in the week sought safety here, The Northern Pacific reports the De |! Borgia bridge repaired and trains are ordered to run to Saltese. New Fire-in Washington. Seattle, Aug. 26.—Men, dynamijte and- supplies have been rushed to Barneston, on the Columbia and Pu:| get Sound railroad about thirty miles!| east of Seattle, in a desperate effort| to check what is considered the worst| forest fire that Mas yet broken out in ‘Western Washington. California Fire Beyond Control. | Chico, Cal., Aug. 26.—A forest- fire which has been raging for the lasti| two weeks twenty miles east of this place has passed beyond control of the forest rangers and the volunteer|] fighting crew endeavoring to check it Steamer Runs Down Launch. Newark, N. J., Aug. 26.—Two per- sons were drowned and five others were rescued with difficulty when the steamer Majestic, running between this city and Coney lsland, ran down and sank a naphtha launch in Newark bay. Doings of Municipal Leaguers. St. Paul, Aug. 26—Papers by John M. Gundlach, president of the common council of St. Louis; Frank R. McDon- ald, superintendent of the Minneapolis workhouse, and Mayor R. F. Maddox of Atlanta, Ga., were the features of the morning session of the League of American Municipalities at the Audi- torium. In the afternoon the delegates were entertained at Harriet island. Eagles Put Lid on Scandal. St. Louis, Aug. 26.—Officers of the Fraternal Order of Eagles issued strict orders, following a meeting of the grand aerie at which further testi- mony relative to the alleged diversion of funds by four former grand officers was heard, to prevent news of the de- tails becoming public. Members who discussed the affair were threatened with expulsion. A Mother Talks Mrs. Kate Hall says: "I have kept house 15 years, am the mother of four children; and I would not keep house without Hollister’s Rocky Mountain Tea” Wise woman, why? Diives away sickness, brings health and happiness to the whole family. It’s the world’s health preserver. Our Ice Service like our ice, gives universal satisfaction. Every custo- mer is pleased at receiving each day a full weight of hard, clean and clear water in the solid state. Itis all important to have what can be used for Summer drinks without hesitation. Our sup- ply was harvested from an uncontaminated body of water. SMART & GETCHELL Phone 12. SKIN AFFEGTIONS WHETHER ON INFANT OR GROWN PERSON CURED BY ZEMO AND.ZEMO SOAP. “AN UNUSUAL OFFER The City Drug Store says to every person, be it man, woman or child, who has an irritated, tender or itch- ing skin to come to our store.andl| procure a bottle of ZEMO and a cake of ZEMO soap and if you are not. entirely ' satisfied - with_ resulu, come back and get your money. So confide. t are we o the efficiency of ] this clean, simple treatment, that well make you this unusual-offer. _this line. ZEMOis n’clelr liquid for extemal use. that thas cured -so many cases ~of " per cent lower than that of any legitimate This is the time for, you to get located in your own home, and get settled before winter comes on: I have a few real good chances to get a nice, com- fortable home on easy terms. - I also have one six-room ‘house’ and one eight- room house for rent. You must speak quick if you want something in In several of our recent DIAMOND advertisements we have called your attention to the fact that we could supply DIAMONDS in any desirable size, grade or quantity, at a price below the Retail Jewelry Stores in the large cities. We Are Prepared to Co Further than This. We have investigated the matter most thoroughly, and this permits this astounding assertion: We are prepared to sell Diamonds of any size or grade in any quantity, at a price ten retail jeweler in the large cities, considering grade for grade in all comparisons. We realize that this is a strong statement, but, as we are prepared to deliver the goods, we \\\\ul//// arein a position to go beyond mere words. And Why Gan We Sl Cheaper ? We buy direct from the cutters and importers in original packets, from the same importers and in the same way as the jobbers in the large cities. We admit that some of the larger firms buy in the same way, but their expenses are so high that they have to add this extra cost. To those who are interested we earnestly ask the oppor- tunity to prove these broad assertions. GEO. T. BAKER & CO. 116 Third St. Near the Lake COAL I am ready to receive your orders for your winter’s coal and you can save money by buying coal early of C. E. BATTLES 413-415 Beltrami Ave. Phone 21 Full Line of Hardware, Stoves and Sporting Goods WILLIAH H. PONTIUS, Director Department of | HARLES M. HOLT, Director Degartment of ratory wp Dramatic Art. The Exceptional Facilties Complete Organization and Comprehensive Courses make Minneapolis School of Music, Oratory and Dramatic Art 42-44 Eighth St. So., MINNEAPOLIS, MINN. The Recognized Leading Institution of the Northwest INVEST! (ON INVITED— BARIGATY —COMPARISON ENCOURAGED lerle! in all branches of MUSIC, ORATORY and DRAM. RT, from Elementary to Post-Graduate, equal m slnndard to similar courses given in Europ- vatories of first rank. Facultyof 44. Each department under Diplomas and certificate granted by ithority of State. Recital . School open all the year. Fallterm % Phone—N.W. Main 2988; T.S.1917. renowned masters, hall seating S00. Two-manual pedal pipe or opens Sept. 5. Send for illustrated cotalogs’

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