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

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s WOOD!'! Leave your orders for seasoned Birch, Tam- arack or Jack Pine Wood with S. P. HAYTH Telephone 11 FUNERAL DIRECTOR AND EMBALMER Office 313 Beltraml Ave. Phone 319-2. William C. Klein Real Estate Insurance Real Estate & Farm Loans O’Leary-Bowser Bldg. Phone 19 250,000 10-cent packages of Sebastian Kneipp,s CORN and BUNION Plasters have been sold in the last ten days in the state of Minnesota. WHY! Because this wonderful Father Sebastian Kneipp’s Corn and Bun- ion Plaster cured and relieved all pain in six hours or one night. For sale in the city of Bemidji, Minn. Up-to=date Shoes at BEMIDJI SHOE HOUSE JAMES VAN PELT, Prop. Wholesale and Retall F. M. FRITZ Naturalist Taxidermist Fur Dresser Mounting Game Heads, Whole Animals, Birds, Fish, Fur Rugs and Horns Decorative and Scientific Taxidermy in all its branches Father All Work Guaranteed MOTH PROOF and First Class in Every Particular Bemidji Minnesota 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. SOCIAL AND PERSONAL]J G. E. Kreatz, the local contractor, went to Chisholm this morning on a business trip. Mrs. Fred LaFavar returned last night from Minneapolis where she spent the past ten days. Mrs. M. M. Nelson of Windom, Minn., is visiting friends 1n the city as the guest of Mrs. H. J. Unruh, The Swedish Ladies Aid Society will meet at the home of Mrs, P. Bodin on Thursday afternoon at 2:30. Everybody nvited. Mr. and Mrs. Fawcett left yester- day morning for their home in Min- neapolis, after having spent a week as the guests of Mr. and Mrs. G. M. Torrance. Rev. H. Robinson McKee has re- turned from Park Rapids, where he attended the ordination of C L. Kingsburg as a minister of the Baptist church. Mr. and Mrs. O. C. Simonsen entertained at a five-course duck dinner last evening. The guests were Mr. and Mrs. Anthony and Mr. and Mrs. W. A. McDonald. Mesdames C. R. Sanborn, A. P. White and F. S. Lycan went to Cass Lake yesterday morning and were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Murray Humes for the day. They returned home last evening. Mr. and Mrs. G. H. French er- tertained at a duck dinner last even- ing at their home on Dewey avenue. Covers were laid for six, the guests being Mr. and Mrs. Fred LaFavar and Mr. and Mrs. Riddell. Can any one furnish me with the address of Cash Townsed, a lumber- jack who was last seen at Wilton, Minnesota in the spring of 1909. He had a broken arm at this time. Liberal reward for information. Write to C. D. Brower, Kimball, Minn, J. Evan Carson has gone to Brooklyn, N. Y. to take a course of study in the Merganthalsr linotype factory. He will be gone a month and when he returns he will have charge of the new typesetting machine being installed by the Pio- neer. ; Arrangements had been made by Masten’s Orchestra to give a concert and dance at Bagley on Thursday night of this week. As the Bemidji Dancing Club will give a dance in Bemidji Thursday night, Mr. Masten has been obliged to change the date of the Bagley dance and concert to ¥riday, October 28. Dorothy Riley Danaher celebrated her tenth birthday yesterday by en- tertaining thirteen of her young friends at her home on Minnesota avenue from 4 to 6 o’clock. Games were played and supper was served, covers being laid for fifteen. The guests were Louise McCready, Emma Kline, Dorothy Nangle, Elaine Boyd, Pearl Ellis, Hazel Smith, Grace Riley, Veronica Mc- Cauley, Gladys Getchell, Ardith and Alice Schroeder, Howard Palmer and Earl Cochran. In order to keep out a gang of toughs who are in the habit of joining in university parades and causing trouble, students of the state university who are arranging a mammoth parade Thursday night as a fitting send-off for the football team to the camp of the Maroons, have decided that everybody who marches must wear either a night shirt or a suit of pajamas. They be- lieve that this will serve the double purpose of having a real pre-celebra. tion and eliminating the undesirable non-students. Leon and Harry Biever, young farmers four miles east of Euclid in Polk county are puzzling over the shooting of three valuable colts which strayed from their farm last evening. They were out all night and when their owners went out to look them up they were found near the home of a neighbor all having been shot and seriously injured. One yearling, will die and for another there is but slight hope while the third though badly injured, may live, though there are forty-two shots in its body. No hunters have been observed in the vicinity. All gifts are good; some are better than others; the best of all for your kiddies is a bank book from the Savings Department of the Northern National Bank. E. Hylander arrived yesterday from "Bemidji, where he will soon ship a carload of horses.—Brainerd Dispatch. The Brainerd council of the Knight of Columbus will initiate a class of 100 candidates on Jan uary 8, 1911. New club rooms are being fitted up in the new Iron Exchange building. Beside the large meeting hall, the rooms will consist of a receptioun hall, library parlors, billiard rooms, gymna- sium, lounging room; kitchen and bath rooms. The general com- mittee consists of D M. Clark, James Cullen, S. E Queenie, John Imgrund, F. M. Koop, ] Nolan and F. L. Sanborn, After being pigeon-holed for half a century in the Department of the Interior at Washington, patent to 6,570 acres of swamp and overflowed land near Cass Lake was received at the Minnesota State Capitol vester- day. The land will be available for sale to homeseekers, The act giv- ing title to the state was approved March 12, 1860, but the patent was never issued and the land lay practi- cally unclaimed until Senator Nelson, State Auditor Iverson and Attorney General Simpson went to Washing- ton early this year and insisted on the patent being issued. The Great American Play. The greatest play of the time and the most popular will be the at- traction at the Armory Theater Oct. 31 st. when the United Play com- pany offers Eugene Waiter’s “Paid in Full” with a cast that brings out in the highest degree the superbly qualities, the sympathy, the comedy that make this the most aprealing work the stage has seen. “Paid in Full” is a master- piece.” It drives across the footlights and grips with a power that 1s not once relaxed. It contains every factor that lifts a play to the highest place dramatic human in public favor. Consider its wonderful record and it becomes plain that everybody likes it. Two years in New York it ran, going without halt through a summer, exceeding in drawing power the musical shows that until then had been the only form of hot weather threatricale Broadway would patronize. At the same time in Chicago 1t scored an all summer run. Then thoughout last season five companies appeared in it, more than ever before had played any piece at the same time, and again this year an equal number are tour- ing the country. With all this is the fact that more persons have seen “Paid in Full” than any other play in a like length ot time, which sustains Acton Davies, the eminent dramatic critic of the New York Sun, who wrote:—"* ‘Paid in Full’ is the biggest dramatic hit of the age.” It is the vital, living story of the hour, depicting with compelling power conditions and persons that help make up the human sum of every American city. Itisa play to be seen more than once and it will have a hearty re- ception in this city. It will be acted by a brilliant New York cast so that every atom of its tremendous- ly entertaining quality will be brought out to the full. To see this great play acted by a great cast is a treat not to be missed. Enjoying Life 1} Bowels clogged, sick headache, no fun is it? Why not have the happy face, red cheeks that come with good digestion. Hollister’s Rocky Mountain Tea or Tablets makes the bowels work regular, natural, makes you feel like new. Begin tonight. E. N. French & Co. Announcement. Attorney A. A. Andrews has moved his office from the Schroeder Building to the ground floor build- ing at 310 Minnesota Ave. Tele- phone 395. Then stop *“doping” him for fits, weak heart, fever, incipient consumption, and a lot of other “scare” diseases. Give him Kickapoo Worm Killer and watch him grow. It cleansand regu- lates bad bowels. tones up torpid livers and purifies the bleod. Price, 25.; sold by druggists everywhere GREAT LAKE 1S DISCOVERED Canadian Northwest Surveyors Say It s as 8ig as Superior. Winnipeg. Oct 26 —Announcement of the discovery ot another great iake in the Canadian Northwest s com tained tn » wire received from Will 1am F. Brulard ot Windson Ont.. now 'v Edmonton Alta Indians arriving from the Far Nortb hrought the story that a party of government surveyors bad discovered » new lake. supposeo L6 be as large as Lake Superior German Army Aviator Killed. Magdeburg, Prussia, Oct. 26 —Lieu- tenant Monto fell with a Wright aero- plane and was instantly killed. He was planing to the earth when he started this motor. The strain caused the machine to turn turtle. It crashed to the ground, carrying the lieutenant beneath it. NOTICE OF APPLICATION —FOR— LIQUOR LICENSE STATE OF MINNESOTA, County of Beltrami, SS. Oity of Bemldji, Notice Is hereby given, that application has been made in writing to the Oity Council of sald City of Bemidjl. and filed in my office, praying for license tosell intoxicating liquors for the term commencing on November 15th 1910, and terminating on November 15th 1911, by the following person. and at the following place, asstated insald application, respec- tively, to-wit: CHRIST OLSON At and in the front room, ground floor of that certain two story frame building located on lot 13, block 11, original townsite Bemidji, Minnesota. Said application will be heard and deter- mined by said City council of the City of Be- midjl at the council coom in the city hall in sald city of Bemidjl in Beltrami county, and State of Minnesota, on Monday the 14th day gt November, 1910, at 8 o'clock p. m. of that ay. Witness my hand and seal of city of Bemidjl this 25th day of Oct. 1910, THOMAS MALOY, City Clerk. Oct. 26th and Nov. 14th. NOTICE OF APPLICATION —for— LIQUOR LICENSE STATE OF MINNESOTA, County of Beltrami, 8s. City of Bemidil, Notice is Hereby Given, That application bas been made in writing to the city council of said City of Bemidji and filed in my office, praying for license to sell intoxicating liquors for the term commencing on Nov. 15th, 1918, and terminating on Nov. 15th, 1911, by the fol- lowing person, and at the following place, as stated: in sald application, respec- tively, to-wit: PETER LINDEBERG Atandin the front room, ground fioor, of that certain two-story frame building located on lov twenty-one (21), block twenty (20), original Townsite, Bemidji, Minnesota. Said application will be heard and deter- mined by said city councll of the city of Bemidii. at the council room in the city hall in said city of Bemidji, in Beltrami county, and State of Minnesota, on Monday, the l4th day of Nov. 1910, at 8 o'clock p. m., of that da; \glmess my hand and seal of said clty, this 26th day of October, 1910. [Sell]v “ THOS. MALOY, City Clerk. Oct. 26th and Nov. 14th. You want him strong, don't you?: JUDGE C. W. STANTON Non-Partisan . Candidate for Judge of Fifteenth Judicial District MR. RENTER Have you ever stopped to think that every few years you p actically pay for the house vou live in and vet do not own it? Figure 1t up for yourself. Theodore Rousevelt says: “No Investment on earth i s0 safe, so sure. 80 certain to earich its owners as undeveloped realty.” We will be glad to tell you about the City of Be- midji. and quote you prices with easy terms of payment if desred on some of the best residence and business propertv in that rapidly growing City. A letter addres:ed to us will bring you full partcu- lars or if you prefer to see the property, call on H. A. Simons, at Bemidji. The Soo Railroad will be running its freight and passenger trains into Bemidji within a few months; investigate the opportunities offered for business on a small or large scale. Bemidji Townsite & Improvement Co. 404 New York Life Bullding 8T. PAUL MINNESOTA 1911 Calendars! We have in stock 10,000 fancy 1911 Cal- endars appropriate for all lines of business Can You Use Any at Your Own Price? We will take ‘your order for 'lonts‘ of. 50 and up, printed any style you like, and deliver them to you before the holidays At Your Convenience / Step in and look them over. Pioneer Security State Bank Building Publishing Co. I NEECATI\/IC DADVL' |” ] frmmm

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