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| RAILROAD TIME GARDS Great 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. 58B88888B E88BB8E 88 I ROFESSIONAL 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 reasenable. 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 H SOCIAL AND PERSONAL The more it is washed the harder it gets— Mound Oity Floor Paint. W. M. Ross. The last night at the Brinkman to see Signa the girl from Norway. Deputy Sheriff A. G. Rutledge is in Duluth today on official business. W. E. Rowe, an attorney of Crookston, was in Bemidji yester- day. George Paquin left this morning for Long Prairie where he will at- tend to business matters, ) |in the Northern National Bank. A Studebaker pony cart and har- Piano Tuning, Boston, Mass. Leave orders at the Bemwidji Music House, 117 Third St. Phone 319-2. Residence Phone 174-2. RS. TOM SMART DRESS MAKING PARLORS Orders taken for Nu Bone corsets, made to order, also tallor made sults. coats, ete. T. BEAUDE’!‘TE Merchant Tailor Ladies' and Gents' Suits to Order. French Dry Cleaning, Pressing and Repairing a Specialty. 315 Beltrami Avenue PHYSICIANS AND SURCEONS R. ROWLAND GILMORE PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office—Miles Block R. E. A. SHANNON, M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGECN 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. 60i 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 R. D. L STANTUN DENTIST Office in Winter Bleck R. J. T. TUOMY DENTIST 1st National Bank Build’g. Telephone 230 R. G. M. PALMER DENTIST Miles Block Evening, Work by Appointment Only [200d LAWYERS RAHAM M. TORRANCE LAWYER Telephone 560 FRANK 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 Residonce Phone 58 618 Amorlca Ave. ~Office Phone 12 EW PUBLIC LIBRARY Open 1o a. to 8 p. m, daily except Monday; 2 p. m. to 6 p. m. Sun- Miss Beatrice MlIls. Librarian. M. MALZAHN & CO. Miles Block * REAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE FARM LOANS, RENTALS FARMS AND CITY PROPERTIES 407 Minn. Ave. Bemidjf, Minn ness for sale. For particulars see the Bemidji Shoe House, A. A. Warfield and A. Norris left last night for Cass Lake, near which place they will hunt for a few days. Charles Bunker, formerly of the Crothers barber shop has become associated with the Rex hotel shop. Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Blythe and Mrs. S. M. Blythe of Topeka, Kansas, are guests at the home of Mrs. M. E Everett, Mrs. LaMont of Park Rapids arrived in the city last night and will visit at the home of her son W. S. Lamont. . Mrs. H. R. Curtiss of Long Prairie was in the city yesterday, being the guest of her dsugher, Ollie Curtiss. Dr. and Mrs. L. A. Ward have re- turned from Eau Claire, Wis., where they havs spent two weeks visiting friends and relatives. E. T. Teitsworth of Minneapolis was at the Markham last evening on his way home from Bagley, where he has been on a hunting trip. Miss Bertha Larson left last night for Lengby, where she will attend the marriage of a cousin. Miss Larson will returr .to the city on Saturday. Mrs. Oscar Holden of Fosston arrived in the city yesterday and will move into the Holden cottage on Diamond Point, where the family will spend the month of October. Irving Gowdy of International Falls isin Bemidji to secure a num- ber of men to assist in cutting timber. Heis to putin two pieces this winter and. he will need a large number of men to complete his oper- ations. W. P. Hill of Rossburg pleaded guilty in Judge Williams’ court at Aitkin to a violation of the game laws and was fined $50 and costs. Hill was caught last week by the deputy game warden shipping part- ridges to Duluth. I have a renter who wants a good house, auy size, between Miunnesota avenue and the lake, and not futher out than Tenth street. Will pay rent for the right place. Modern conviences prefered. A suite of rooms will also be considered. If you have such to let, let me know at once by telephone or other- wise. H. E. Reynolds, Phone 23. Envold Olson of Fergus Falls, who has beeun conducting a notion store in Rothsay, has disappeared and his friends are alarmed. He left home on Sept. 19, and nothing has Leen beard from him since. It is not known whether he bhas become demented or met with foul play. His business affairs are said to be in good condition. John Kler, a transient, who had indulged quite heavily, walked un- steadily down the streets of Brainerd and laboriously clambered up the steps to Elk’s hall, imagining this meeting place of the best people on earth was some kind of a hotel. He selected a nice leather lounge as his resting place and was discovered peacefully snoring by Chief of Police Quinn, who took the stranger in and up to Judge Warner of the munici- pal court. The judge imposed a fine o’ $5 which was promptly paid and definitely shows that it costs some- thing to sleep in the Elk’s caravan. sary.—Brainerd Dispatch. “Our Duluth to-Chicago trains will be turned loose on Oct. 3,” said a Soo official in Bemidji to- day, ‘“‘and we are ‘going to have as fine a train as thereis in this country. The equipment will be the best that money cah buy. Our locomotives are of the new swift passenger type and with the shortest line of them all we will pull into the Windy City on the dot every day.” Bemidji is par- ticularly interested in- the new train service as it is merely a_ques tion of time until solid vestibuled, through trains for Chicago will be run from Winnipeg through this city, Saving money is a habit that grows and the more it grows the easier 'it becomes. = Save something this week and deposit it at interest Senator. Frank Clague of Redwood Falls is in the city. H. R. Grotte and wife of Detroit, were Bemidji visitors yesterday. The last night at the Brinkman to see Signa the girl from Norway. Charles Hayden, a lumberman. of Blackduck, was in the city yesterday on business. W. D. O’Shea, foreman of the work] on the new Soo bridge, is in the city for three weeks. Stella O'Donnell, a teacher in the Bena schools, spent several hours in the city yesterday. Mrs. John Bailey, of the Rex Hotel, returned last night from a month’s visit in the Twin Cities. Mr. and Mrs. E. A, Barker and Oscar Erwig returned 'this morning from Minneapolis in the Barker auto- mobile. R. E. DeLury of Walker and Harry Blake of Minneapolis returned last night from a hunting trip at Blackduck. Jack Shambeau, formerly of Walker bat now of Daluth and M. L. Hanft]| of St. Paul transacted busmess in the city yesterday. Mr. and Mrs. AL" H. Jester -re- turned this. morning from an ex- tended wedding trip to .the Twin Cities and Chicago. Mrs, Joyce of Margie and Mrs. Gaffigan of Bemidji visited with Mrs. Noble and Mrs. Haluptzok at International Falls last Sunday. Hello friend, what’s the hurry? Just going to the new tailor shop to order my fall suit, you know the best of work there. Hugh Dickie mana- ger. 314 Minn. Ave. J. C. Schultz, auditor of the M. & I, G.H. Warner, trainmaster and J. H. Davison, civil engineer for the M. & I, were in the city yesterday on business connected with the com- pany. The Norwegian Ladies Aid will meet at Mrs. Geo. Danilson, corner 4th st.-and "American Ave. next to Minnesota House, Thursday after. noon at 2 o’clock. Everybody cor- dially invited. Atty. Franz Jevne, we understand, spent a few days in Bemidji during the week. Heis now wearing his arm in a sling caused, as we hear, by some irritation. It is ‘nothing seri- ous.—Border Call. Albert Chilgrenofthe town of Chil- gren, attending court at Bemidji this week. Mr. Chilgren formerly lived in Crookston, where he was a law partner of Judge Montague. Mr. Chilgren took up a homestead in Beltrami county about five years ago, near Baudette. The last night at the Brinkman to see Signa the girl from Norway. There will be a one-tenth of a mill reduction in the - state revenue tax for 1910. ~ Despite the recent an- nouncement of state officials that the entire revenue tax of one mill in 190> might be wiped out this yesr, it has been been decided that the levy shall be made and the only change in the levy will be the reduction from one mill in 1909 to nine-tenths of a mill this year. A certain Adrian young man was visiting in a neighboring town not long ago and seeing some nice post cards, he bought one he thought was a bird carring a basket of flowers, which he sent to his best girl. The next time he called she set the dog on him. It has leaked out that the picture was one of a stork with a baby in the basket.—| Adrian Democrat, * The work of sending up sound- ing balloons by the United States weather bureau has been complet- ed. Twenty-six balloons were sent up and fifteen have been re- turned, but the record of onlya few have been translated. The altitude attained by one wasa little more than * eight miles and it registered a temperature of 62 degrees below zero, A few days ago people at the Great Northern depot, when the north line train pulled out, were attracted by the noise: of ten wild geese land thirty wild ducks which Walter Hill was having shipped to' Northcote to be used as decoys for hunting this fall. Yesterday a hunter from Joliet, N. D., dropped over into Minnesota for a little early shooting and clean- ed up the whole lot. If anything would cause anopen rupture between “certainly shauld.—Crookston Times Minnesota and North Dakota this MUSSY CHILDREN Kwknpoo Worm Klller makes chil- dren regular; stops mussy’ habits; makes. their bowels act naturally; stimulates the. liver; clears out ma- larial symptoms.: Acts as a safe tonic and health-builder. It is the best worm, medicine known, and also the. finest general tonic for children. Price 25c.; sold by druggists everywhere ROOSEVELT IS GIVEN PLAGE [Continued from Page 2] COLONEL ROOSEVELT. Defeats “Old Guard” in New York State Political Contest. © 1910, by American Press. Association. —_— T e ator Root, then premfer of the then national administration, was selected at the meeting of the state commlttee held a month before the convention. “AS§ chairman of the Republican state committee no one had suggested to me, or, as far.as I know, to any other member of the committee, the name of any other person than the vice president as temporary chairman until Mr. Griscom, sitting in the com- mittee as a proxy, moved to substi- tute another name for that of Vice President Sherman after the latter’s name had been. properly presented. What was the object of this action? “The correspondence between Colo- nel Roosevelt and myself just after the meeting of the state committee shows more clearly than can other- wise be presented that his opposition to the selection.of Vice Pregident Sherman was not based on any per- sonal grounds, but because he desired an opportunity to. present his views as to the policies which should here- after guide the destinies of the Repub- lican party.” Reads Some Correspondence. Chairman Woodruff here read sev- eral letters between himself and Colo- nel Roosevelt and continued: “Colonel Roosevelt manifestly meant that he desired to propound the doc- trine of the new nationalism, admit- 1| ting with his characteristic frankness that we were right in. selecting the vice president if we preferred the tra- ditional Republicanism of the admin- istration of William H. Taft, founded |}J upon the great national administration of Lincoln, Grant, McKinley and Roosevelt himself, for:which James S. Sherman, with his quarter of a cen- tury of splendid services in congress and as vice president, has always stood and stands today. “In accordance with the instructions of ‘the state committee, I present as temporary chairman of this conven- tion Hon. James S. Sherman.” Chairman Woodruff added to his speech the letter written by Vice President Sherman to the state com- mittee asking that the committee in- vestigate the charges that his selec- tion had been made by misrepresenta- tion and the committee action on the matter. The committee, Mr.. Woodruff- said, decided that Vice President Sherman’s selection was made’ without deceit and misrepresentation. Pays Respects to Roosevelt. Abraham Gruber of New York, who had been selected to fire the broad- sides of the old guara against Colo- nel ‘Roosevelt's selection, was recog- nized and made his way to the plat form.. Colonel Gruber made a bitter. attack on the lormer president. He sald, in part: “I'welve years ago on this platform I warned a Republican convention, against turning the executive mansion, into a shooting gallery. My advice was not heeded. Since that memora- ble day the man who has ever since been shooting has seen his party or- ganization divided in every state, his party’s candidate overwhelmingly de- feated, business depressed and the in- telligent and henest workingman with- out employment and hungry. Look- ing for other fields for shooting prac- tice, this man is now shooting at the courts and its judges. “Himself posing as a lawyer, who never had a case or drew a brief, he now finds sport in holding up the courts and judges to the scorn of the mob. But this is not a new- symptom: It is an old disease. This apostle of Derringer practice, while he was presi- dent, abused Judge Humphrey of the United States court, a: gentleman and an honest man, for rendering a de- cision -which was made according to the laws and which to this day is un- reversed. When the United States ap- pellate court reversed Judge Landis the same shooter, not. from the: head of a barrel, but from the White House, sanctified by Abraham Lincoln, told the people of the United States that the judges had been guilty of miscar- rying justice”” Floats Above Paris for Hours. Paris, Sept. 28.—The French war dirigible Colonel Reynard cruised over Paris for three and one-quarter hours at an average height of 4,700 feet. The balloon ascended and alighted at Issy, a suburb. It was under perfect control and was put through some dif- ficult maneuvers. Been Deceived Have you been betrayed by promi- ses of quacks, swallowed pills and bottled medicines without results except a damaged stomach? To those we offer Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea, to learn the value of a real soothing, healing, curing rem- edy. Don’t delay; start tonight E. N. French & Co. Dollar Stretchers For 20c we can put on your table 40 cups of excellent ' coffee—rich, mellow and fragrant. Chase & Sanborn brand has hosts of fnends in Bemidji. Won’t you try it? Dozens of the best bakings in the city today were produced from our White Jacket Flour. Hundreds of people eat bread made from it every day. $1.78 a sack. Just get acquainted with the merits of our Temco brand of Sweet Corn and Peas, 1Bc a v can and worth every cent of it too. If People would use more Olive Oil they would have smaller doctor bills. Heinz Olive Oil keeps the skin clean because 1t keeps the blood pure. $1.28 per quart can. - Our Premium Brand Creamery Butter is the finest butter you can put on your table. Di- rect from the creamery three times a week. 38c a pound. Each of these items goes into your house with our guarantee behind it, and if it isn’t just what we claim for it you can get your money back. Roe&‘Markusen The Quality Grocers Phone 206 Phone 207 Subscribe For The Pioneer Ederheimer Stein & Co. and Kolin Bros. TOP OVERCOATS Regular values $15, $18 & $20 Your Choice while they last ONLY $10 See our Window Display 50C Satisfaction Guaranteed Madson, Odegard & Co. One; Price Clothiers You ought to look at our Young Men'’s, Boys’ and Children’s clothing at on the Dollar ‘Dear Madam:— natural, task. service costs you nothing; the service that we give, You 1like to have your family compliment you on your table efforts— “praise from them is always sweet music in your ears. .too, for we all like to have our friends appreciate our efforts, and we are speaking for ourselves, too, when we say that. However, judging from remarks that we have heard some of our customers make, we imagine-that you, in common with all housekeepers, often find 1t difficult to set your table three times a day in a manner that appeals to you, let alone your family; and we know too, that if you had access to 2 the shelves of a well-stocked grocery store you wouldn't find 1t so difficult as you do at the present time. Knowing this after several years of experience in serving some of the most, particular families in this city, we have developed what we call a STORE SERVIGE that makes table setting & much easier and more pleasant This service consists of giving helpful suggestions when you are placing your orders—not in a way that is going to become annoying to you at all, but usually in the way of pleasant little surprises— and this the quality of the goods, coupled with is extremely cheap at the price we charge, and that service 1is yours whether you come to the store in person and place your orders- or whether you place your orders by phone. g Can you give us a trial order this week? in fact, It is perfectly We are sure that you will Ymu's respectfully, 5 RO! MARKUS uglity Grocers.