Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, September 3, 1910, Page 5

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New-Cash-Want-Rate . ',-Gent-a-Word Where cash accompanies copy we will publish all ““Want Ads" for half- cent a word per insertion. Where cash does not accompany copy the regular rate of one ceuta word will be charged. SVERY HOME HAS A WANT AD For Rent--For Sale--Exchange --Help Wanted--Work Wanted --Etc.--Etc. HELP WANTED. WANTED — Competent girl for general house work. Mrs. George W. Rhea 1010 Beltrami avenue. FOR SALE, FOR SALE—16 inch wood—50c¢ per load at mill, or $1.50 delivered All grades lumber, lath and shin gles at reasonable prices. Doug lass Lumber Co., Telephone 371 FOR EXCHANGE—$1,000 stock of General Merchandise. Will exchange tor Bemidji property or farm land. J. H. Grant. FOR SALE—Large piano cased organ; cost $135. Will sell for $50 if taken at once; easy terms if desired. M. E. Ibertson. FOR SALE—160 acres of good clay land three miles from Bemidji if nterested call on Frank Hitchcock 714 13st. Bemidji Minn. FOR SALE—Rubber stamps. The Pioneer will procure any kind of a rubber stamp for you an short notice. ; FOR SALE—Glass Ink welis— Sample bottle Carter’s Ink free with each 10c ink well. Pioneer office. FOR SALE—Buggy, single harness, baby cab, tent, Eighth and America. FOR SALE—English perambulator. Inquire 423 Bemidji avenue. FOR RENT. FOR RENT—35 room house, five blocks from post office. Inquire 116 3rd. St. FOR RENT—Two rooms, 518 Bel- trami avenue. LOST and FOUND LOST— Pocketbook on Beltrami avenue, betwteen 9th St. and Mid- way store. Pocketbook contained receipt for money order and small amount of money. Return to Mrs. A. Lord, 903 Beltrami Ave. LOST—Between Owl Drug Store and Miles’ corner, $2.50 gold piece in pin form. Return to Abercrombie’s confectionary store. MISCELLANEOUS WANTED — By young married couple furnished or unfurnished room with board for the winter. Private family prefered. Wife willing to assist housework. Best of reference. Address Albert Lellmann. No. 733 Van Buren St. Minneapolis. WANTED—to rent modern house or flat or 2 or 3 unfurnished rooms heated. Answer by giving price and location of rooms. Address box 501—Bemidji, Minn. [ can accommodate two or three gentlemen in my appartments 5 in the Winter Block. Steam heat and bath. E. H. Jerrard. 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, 434 " Calls Answered at All Hours LS.~ i SR 3 y Manufacturers of 1 § OAS, GASOLINE and STEAM ENGINES, PULLEYS, g HANGERS, SHAFTING, CLUTCHES and ail POER TRANSMISSION SUPPLIES, direct to the consumer, Largest Machine Shop in the West i i MINNEAPOLIS STEEL AND MACHINERY CO. MINNEAPOLIS, MINN. SOCIAL AND PERSONAL \ Items phoned or handed in for this column before noon will be printed the same day. The more it is washed the harder it gets— Mound Citv Floor Paint. W. M. Ross. Furniture for sale 809 Bemidji Ave. Mrs, Mary Gallagher, of Turtle River was a Bemidji visitor today. Thomas Hughes, manager of the Beltrami Elevator company has gone to the Twin Cities. A. W, Danaher came down from Tenstrike last night and spent the day with his family. Ladies wishing Spirella corsets leave orders with Mrs. Conger or write Miss Ramsdell. Mrs. Henrionett cordially invites you to inspect her new line of fall millinery now on display. Ed M. Ebert, secretary and treasuier of the Northern Wholesale grocery company, has gone to Min- neapolis for a few days. The millinery showing at Hen- rionett’s Parlors is one that cannot fail to please and the prices are of the most convincing character. Look thisup. 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. Henry Logan, of the St. Anthony hospital, who has been ill for the past two weeks, has so far recovered that he was able to make a business trip to Walker yestetday. Henry James paid the mortage on his father’s farm last week. A bus- ness course at the Mankato Com- mercial College a few years ago enabled him to do this. Miss Madeline Johnson, who is to teach in the Bemidji schools has arrived ih the city. She was ac- companied by her brother Newhall, who will attend school here. Mrs. C. B. Minnick and daughter, Miss Helen of Spooner, Minn., are the guests of Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Minnick, 1013 Irvin avenue. Miss Helen will remaim here for the school year as a Sophomore. Order work a specialty at the Henrionnet Millinery.Parlors. Bring in your orders early. Bishop Corbett of Crookston ar- rived today on the noon train. He will conduct high mass here in the catholic church at 10:30 tomorrow morning. The bishop will leave Monday morning for other visita- tions. Miss Christina Lee of Grand Forks has purchased lots in Block etghteen, third addition to the city of Bemidji and intends erecting a residence and will make Bemidji her future home. The sale was consum- mated through the C. J. Pryor real estate agency. Large plate glass windows ‘are be- ing put in the Gill brothers store, giving the place a metropolitan appearance. It will permit of at- trative displays and materially lightened the interior of the store. The windows are to be arranged with specially attrative displays, Whisky and beer flowed in the streets of Park Rapids, Minn., re- cently, a wagon load on its way to a blind pig, consisting of 48 gallons of whisky and 288 bottles of beer, being captured and the liquid poured into the gutter, going gurg- ing on its way with no ome to intercept. At the Methodist parsonage Thursday evening, the local Ep- worth League gave a farewell party to Misses Nell Shannon and Ethel Getchel, who will leave soon for the Moorhead Normal School. Games were played, a short pro- gram was given and refreshments were served, Bemidji Socialists certainly are not bashful. They have a candi- date for governor, state senator and representative. The = sixty-first senatorial district is quite large, but Bemidji is not the whole of it, However, if other parts of the dis- trict had as many candidates as Bemidji, the other parties would not stand much of a chiace,— Thief River Falls News, Has your wife a savings ac- count? She is the one who can save money for you. An especial invitation is extended to her by the Narthern National Bank, F. J. Dunwoody, of Bass Lake was a Bemidji visitor today. Fly-goods and suitcases at cost at A. L. Collars Harness shop. S. C. Thompson, the Tenstrike merchant, was here on business Fri- day. New fall millinery now on display at the Henrionvett Millinery Parlors. Mrs. Porter and daughter, Olive, of Turtle River, were Bemidji visitors today. Mrs. L.W. Bills, wife of Postmaster Bills of Park Rapids, visited friends in the city yesterday. W. T. Blakeley ot Farley, has gone to the Twin Cities to attend the state fair next week. Charles Gould left last night for Minneapolis where he will visit friends and take in the fair. Mrs. John Dale and son John Jr., were Bemidji visitors today returning to their Turtle River home on the evening train, The Bemidji Band will give an open air concert at the lake dock Monday night, after which there will be a dance in the city hall. The Lakeside Bakery on Third street has been purchased by Miles, Burgett of Jamestown, N. D. of W,A. McDonald. Mr. Burgett has taken possession, The Misses Lillian MacGregor and Rachel Reckard went to Hornet last evening. Miss MacGregor will teach the Winans school and Miss Reckerd the Miller school at that place. Trade-winning and catchy mil- linery creations that will give you smart style and the advantages of trip to the large cities, are to be found at the Hennrionnett Millin- ery Parlors. A merry-go-round just off Third street near the lake, will begin to whirl tonight. The machine will re- main until after the county fair. It is equipped with a specially de- signed organ, one of the largest ever used on this class of machines. At the Island home of her parents, on Sept. 1, Miss Jesse Rose was united in marriage to Charles Cross. The couple went through Bemidji last night on their way to the Twin Cities where they will spend their honeymoon. Mr. Cross is a promis- ing young business man and his wife a popular member of the younger society circles. The Misses Jessamine and Grace Peterson were surprised at their home on Bemidji avenue last even- ing. It was a farewell party given by a number of friends. The even- ing was spent in playing games, and at midnight lunch was served. The Misses Peterson will enter the Lutheran Seminary at Red Wing at the opening of the fall and winter term next Tuesday. MINE MEN WANT A RAISE Montana Workers Demand Increase in Wages. Billings, Mont., Sept. 3.—It was learned here that at a conference be- tween mine operators and mine work- ers the latter not only demanded an increase of 5.55 per cent in wages but also shorter hours in that the eight hour day will include time occupied in going from bank to bank. Commis- sioner Burke of the operators said the operators will never agree to these de- mands, as the companies would there- by be operating at such a loss as to cause closing of every commercial coal mine in Montana. Jeffries’ Nephew Killed. Los Angeles, Cal.,, Sept. 3.—The ac- cidental killing of Louis Jeffries, a nephew of James J. Jeffries, employed as a nonunion iron worker on the Al- exandria hotel annex, precipitated a riot between striking iron workers and the noninion men. A dozen fights started and many arrests were made. Jeffries was killed by the falling of a derrick, Reed Monument Unveiled. Portland, Me., Sept. 3.—The statue erected in honor of Thomas B. Reed in this city was unveiled with ap- propriate ceremonies. Representative Samuel McCall of Massachusetts made the principal address. The monument cost $35,000 and was given to the city by a committee that had charge of collecting the funds. - ———— -—— — We ixought the goods right and are willin Diamond Mountings The mountings of Diamonds is an important matter, and we not only have a large selection but we mount the stones in any way desired in Our Own Workshop. Thus your Ring or Pin may have an individual character, which the ordinary mountings lack. Facts to Consider We buy Diamonds direct from the importers and cutters, saving the Middle= man’s Profit. We manufacture the mountmgs in our own workshop. Buying from us you l"W 6 Have Just Received Another Big Imporfation of DIAMOND buy direct from the manufacturer. We buy the Loose Stones, thus guaranteeing Correct Weights, as every fraction of a carat means Dollars. As our expenses for doing business is much lower than the large city stores, you may purchase a Diamond or a piece of Diamond Jewelry from us with ‘the assurance that the quality of the stones will be perfect and the price at least 10 per cent less than you would pay elsewhere: Geo.T.Baker &Co. "l 116 Third Street, Near the Lake ; g to give you the advantage of our purchasing power and knowledge of the business. 8 . We beligve we can convince anyRunprejudiced person that it is worth their while to purchase their diamonds of us. * The Human Lobster. The lobster has always appealed to the Englishman as affording a nick- name for his fellow Englishman. “Lobster” was a favorite term of abuse among the Elizabethans, though it is only conjectural that an allusion to red faces was conveyed. As signifying a soldier, “lobster” originated in the civil ‘war, being applied to the Round- head cuirassiers, as Clarendon ex- plains, “because of the bright iron shells with which they were covered.” Afterward the allusion was transfer- red to the soldier's red uniform. But that was the *“boiled lobster.” The “raw lobster” was naturally the man in blue. the policeman. In earlier days we find Grose explaining that *to boil one’s lobster” meant for a clergyman to become a soldier.—London Chron- icle. Wanted Help. Wife (crying in a troubled dream)— Help! Help! Hub—Poor dear! Wor- rying about the servant problem even in her sleep.—Boston Transcript. Who Got the Baby? Once upon a time a crocodile stole a baby and was about to make a dinner of it. The frantic mother begged so piteously for the child that the croco- dile said: “Tell me one truth and you shall have your baby again.” The mother replied, “You will not give him back to me.” “Then."” said the cracodile, *“by our agreement 1 shall keep him, for if you bave told rhe truth | am not going to give him back, and if it is a lie I have also won." But the wother said, “If I told you the truth you are bound by your prom- ise, and if it is not the truth it will not be a lie until you have given me my child.” Who got the baby? A Slight Change. Slight changes sometimes make a great difference. “Dinner for nothing,” would be agreeable, for instance; not €0, ‘“Nothing for dinper.” Want Ads FOR RENTING A PROPERTY, SELL- ING A BUSINESS OR _ CBTAINING HELP ARE BEST. Pioneer Don’t these cool mornings make you think winter is coming on? Don’t it make you think you would like to be lo- cated in your own home so that you might fix it up cozy for youself instead of fixing it up comfortable for some one else to move into? ' I have a few places left that may be just what you want. Call and see me about it. H. E. REYNOLDS Building Contractor and Real Estate Broker ROOM 9, O’LEARY-BOWSER BUILDING Office Phone 23. House Phone 316, Bemidji, Minn. S Il

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