Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, January 14, 1911, Page 3

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o o (5] 800 No. 162 East Bound Leaves 10:53 a. No. 163 West Bound Leaves4:37 p: No. 186 East Bound Leaves 2:45 p. No. 187 West Bound Leaves 10:53 a. Creat Northern No. 33 West Bound Leaves at 3:30 p. m No. 34 East Bound Leaves at 12:08 p. m No. 35 West Bound Leaves at 3:42 a. m No. 36 East Bound Leaves at 1:20 a. m No. 105 North Bound Arrivesat 7:40 p.m No. 106 South BoundLeaves at 7:00 a. m m. m. m. m. Freight West Bound Leaves at 9:00 a. m|the funeral of her sister’s baby which Freight East Bound Leaves at 3:30 p. m Minnesota & International No. 32 South Bound Leaves at 8:15 a. m No. 31 North Bound Leaves at 6:10 p. m No. 34 South Bound Leaves at 11:35 p.m | wonders. No. 33 North Bound Leaves at 4:20 a. m Freight South BoundLeaves at 7:30 a. m Freight North Bound Leaves at 6:00 a. m Minn. Red Lake & Man. No. 1 North Bound Leavesjlat 3:35 p. m No 2 South Bound Arrives at 10:30 a. m PROFESSIONAL CARDS ARTS HARRY MASTEN Piano Tuner ermerly 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 reas nable. All music up to date. HARRY MASTEN, Plano Tuner Room 38, Third floor, Brinkman Hotel. Telephone 535 RS. HARRY MASTEN Instructor of Piano and Pipe Organ Graduate of the Virgil Piano and Pipe Organ School of London and New York. Studio Brinkman Hotel. Room 36, Phone 535. LENN H. SLOSSON " PIANO TUNING Graduate of the Boston School of | Piano Tuning, Boston, Mass. Leave orders at the Bemidji Music House, 117 Third St. Phone 319-2. Residence Phone 174-2. EDWARD STRIDE Expert Organ Tuner and Repairer (Specialty church organs) Practiced in Europe for vears. Is leading in the_ profes- sion for Beltrami, Koochiching and Itasca counties. Has made Bemidii headquarters for three years, where e has upwards of 200 steady customers. y Thoroughly familiar with United States pianos. You will save money and get_better satisfaction if you take him into your con- fidence before buying your piano. He will be pleased to meet you and explain_the dilferent instruments and will enjoy aiding you in making your selection. Addgess 615 Bemid)i Ave. Telophone 92 ar 310 PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS R. ROWLAND GILMORE PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office—Miles Block DR. 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 Natiunal Bank. Phone 51 House No. 601 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 INER W. JOHNSON PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Residence 1113 Bemidji Ave. Phone 435 Offices over Security Bank. Phone 130 DENTISTS R. D. L. STAN'TON DENTIST Office in Winter Block R. J. T. TUOMY DENTIST 15t National Bank Build’g. Telephone 230 R. G. M. PALMER DENTIST {Miles Block Evening{Work by Appointment Only LAWYERS RAHAM M. TORRANCE LAWYER Telephone 560 Miles Block H. FISK @ ATTORNEY AT LAW Office over City Drug Store EW PUBLIC LIBRARY Open daily, except Sunday and Mon- daylito12a.m., 1t0 6 p.m., 7 to 9 p. m. Snuday 3 to 6 p. m. Monday 7to 9 p. m. BEATRICE MILLS, Librarian. || Miss Ruth Harding of Cass Lake SOCIAL AND PERSONAL] Phone Falls & Cameron for good oak 'straw. Bt Ed French, the Blackduck drug- gist made Bemidji a business visit yesterday. Mrs. S. A. Paquain left yesterday afternoon for Crookston to attend is to be held tomorrow. Just you keep fit,a few doses ot Tubbs Bilious Man’s Friend does Saves bad feeling and doctors bills. KEEP FIT, Ike Blooston, the Bemidji -merch- ant, returned this morning from Red Lake where he has spent the past few days on a business trip. Dry cut wood for $1 per cord at Falls & Cameron. Phone 374, arrived in the city last evening and will remain here a few days as the guest of Miss Gladys Stanton. Roses and carnations always on hand. Flowers, ferns and potted plants for table decoration, delivered on short notice. Phone 166. A. E, Webs:er. Judge C. W. Stanton is expected to return to Bemidji this evening from Grand Rapids where he has been holding a term of court during the past week. N. L.Given, a member of the hardware firm of Given Brothers |left thisnoon for Duluth and range points on a business trip to be gone | for a week or ten days. W. B. Stewart, county superin- tendent of schools left yesterdayl afternoon for points northwest of Red Lake to look over-matters re- lative to schools of that district. Grant McClure, head filer for the Crookston lumber company in their mill in thiscity, during the season itis in operation, is in the city for a few days, having arrived from Milica | Thursday. | Dry cut wood for $1 per cord at | Falls & Cameron. Phone 374. Attorney M. J. Brown a member of the Bemidji law firm of Spooner & Brown, returned to the city last |evening from Park Rapids where he| appeared before Judge B. F. Wright | in connection with some court matt- ers Friday. When vou feel rotten, take Tubbs Bilious Man’s Friend, two teaspoon- fuls to a dose for six doses, taken before meals. It drives the cold out of your system and starts you right, gets your liver working and your kidneys on the job again. 50c¢ and $1.00. Miss Gladys Stanton, of Bem idji avenue, was the hostess this noon at a lunch given in honor of her guest Miss Ruth Harding of Cass Lake. Covers were laid for eight, the follow- ing young ladies were present, Misses Lillian and Bess Cochran, {Eva and Ethel Getchell, Arabelle Neal and Beryl Neil. Tubbs White Pine Cough Cure smoothes and satisfies. Be sure you get the name right. It is made different from other White Pine pre- parations. We put a very small amount of morphine and chloroform. i It costs us money to put it in but‘v {our experience of 29 years in the medicine business tells us that it is worth the money. We sold over | thirty-three thousand bottles of Tubbs White Pine Cough Cure in 1910. A few others must know it is good. Try it. the Saving babit. The Nortbern Natioral Bank pays 4 per cent inter- est on your savings and compounds J/ | this every six months. Phone Falls & Cameron for good oak ‘straw. 5 Arne Solberg, of Battles, was in Bemidji yesterday. Dr. Morley, of Crookston, spent yesterday in Bemidji. 20 per cent off on rubber foot- wear. W. G. Schrceder’s store. H. Ingalls, of Coleraine, was a Bemidji business caller yesterday. Charles Hayden, of Blackduck made Bemidji a business visit yes- terday. Mrs. Gertrude Rogers solicits your subscriptions for all magazines, also renewals. Phone 487. Miss Harriett Cochran left this noon for Bovey, where she will re- main several days visiting friends. C. W. Jewett spent yesterday in Bemidji on a business trip. Mr. Jewett intends to move his family to Bemidji in the near future. G. E. Herreid, T. E. Betz, O. E. Hulehan and H. Thompson, mer- chants of Deer River, spent yester- day in the city on a business trip. Mrs. A, A. Warfield, of Lake Boulevard, entertained at dinner last evening, having as her guests Messrs. and Mesdames Ike Black, Dr. A. E. Heuderson and Charles Warfield. E. H. Ives, who has been manager of the Bazaar store, in this city, for the past several years, has accepted a position as traveling salesman for the Tibbs, Hutchens company, of Minneapolis. Tubbs White Liniment relives chilblains, rheumatism, sore throat, cold ou the lungs, inflammation any- where. 25 and 50cts. Pour a little out into a warm saucer before apply- ing. It penetrates quicker. Alfred Fe'dman and his two sisters, Misses Inez and Lillian, returned to school at Minneapolis last Friday evening, having spent their holiday vacations here with their parents, Landlord and Mrs. J. W. Feldman of the Merchants Hotel. | —Northome Record. ‘““This article is written especially for the kids of various towns who makea habit of chasing out after every little girl in town and country whose petticoats reach below their knees with the purpose of inflecting matrimony upon some poor victim. A raw boy without a dollar present or prospective, sparking a girl and talking about marrying isa spectacle for gods and men. Heshould be reasoned with and if he will not quit it until he is able to support a wife and to know why he loves and the difference between love and the chickenpox, he should be quarante- ed or put in a convent erected for such cusses. Nine tenths of the unhappy marriages are the result of green human calves being allowed to run loose in society pastures with- out any yokes on them. They marry and have children before they have mous taches, they .are fathers of twins before they are proprietors of two pair of pants, and the girls they marry are old women before they are twenty. Occasionaly one of these gosling marriages turns out alright, butitis a clever case of luck. If there was a law against young galoots sparking and marry- ing before they cut their eye teeth we suppose the little cusses will evade it some way, but there ought to be sentiment against it.—Britt Tribune. independence—money in the ‘Nowadays women may have an in- dividual bank account-:-something that no woman should be without. Lady’s Department, which will make it easy for our femi- nine patrons to maintain that which is so necessary to We have provided- a bank. The Northern National Bank | Faire—What's that got to do with it3— this morning. ° W. L. Brooks returned to the city this morning from Minneapolis. strains, use Tubbs Iodomyrth, it does its work guickly,. For man or beast. S Mr. and Mrs. W. A, McDonald delightfully entertained at dinner and cards: last evening, having as their guests, Messrs. and Mesdames Fred LaFavar, Dr. D. L. Stanton and A. A. Melges. J. A. McDonald and son, John, returned to their home at Bemidji Monday night -after spending several days in this vicinity looking after some pulpwood matters for the Wa-. tab Pulp. and Paper company.— Northome Record. County Attorney Ed. Stanton, -of Pennington county, the county which was originated from Red Lake county, at the election last fall, spent several days during the week in Bemidji as the guest of his brother, Dr. D. L. Stanton. Judge Marshall A. Spooner, of the Bemidji law firm of Spooner & Brown, returned to the ‘city last evening from the twin cities, where he has been ona business trip during the past week or ten days. Judge Spooner was one of the Bemidji law- yers who were so prominent.in the recent injunction proceedings be- fore Judge Williard of the federal court. Mrs. Spooner did not return with the judge but will remain in the cities for several weeks. Appendicitis. How to avoid it Listen to your pains. Try our way, Read the booklets, ““General Health Discovers Himself” furnished frée by Tubbs Medicine Co., River Falls, Wis. Worth money to the man who has time to set up and take notice. Have you? NELLOGE SCORES THE OIL TRUST Opens Argument for Govern- ment in Famous Sit. TELLS ‘STORY IN- DETAIL Says the Standard Oil Company Was “Born and Reared in Oppression and Hangs Today Over the Country Like a Threatening Cloud”—Takes Issue With Opposing Counsel That Re- bates Were Legal at Any Time. Washington, Jan. 14.—The govern- ment’s side of the story-of the Stand- ard Oil corporation, with all the charges of sins laid at its doors, was placed in part before the supreme court of tae United States. After a few words of summary by John C. Milburn for the Standard, Frank B. Kellogg of St. Paul, special assistant to the attorney general, be- gan an address to the court in an ef- fort to show that the Standard Oil Company of New Jersey should be dis- solved in accordance with the decree entered by the federal court in Mis- souri. Mr. Kellogg-first referred to the re bates the Standard received, “up to the time this suit was begun.” He took issue with Mr. Milburn’s position that before the passage of the inter- state commerce law in 1887 it was legal for a big. shipper to receivc a lower freight rate than a small ship- per. “I have-listened to the story,” he said, “of how the Standard Oil was the result of natural growth, guided by the master hand of Mr. Rockefeller. But T mean to tell to the court the cold facts. And I say on my oath as a member of this bar, and I regard that highly, that the equal of this rec- ord in oppression is not to be found in the commercial history of this coun- try. I distrust my ability to present these facts.” Then he added that the Standard was “born and reared in oppression and hangs today over the country like a threatening cloud.” Mr. Milburn does not know this rec- ord as I do,” he said. “He did not sit for 187 weary days as those 20,000 pages of record were being written,” A Better P on. “Why did Dollarby sell his hotel?” “He wasn't making money fast enough.” “What is he doing now?’ ~ *He's luxuriating in the position of #ead waiter.”—Pearson’s Weekly. No Barrier. Miss Playne—You can't marry Jack because I'm engaged to him.. Miss St. Louis Post-Dispatch. Tubbs Bilious Man’s Friend. Tubbs White Pine Cough Cure. -Tubbs White Liniment. - Tubbs Iodomyrrh, With these medicines in the house, ‘the doctors won’t call very often. Guaranteed to make good. 5 Big Cargo, Little Ship.- An old official of the navy tells the following story of a conversation: he heard between two old sailors: “It was a rat ship I was sailin’ in that trip,” said one of the shellbacka: “one of the dingdest rat ships I ever knew. They was rats in it from bow to stern, rats in the hold, in the galley, in the steerage, in the fo'castle, in the old man’s room—everywhere rats, mothin’ but. “Bimeby it got so bad we had to put in an' get them off. So we hooked up to a dock an' fumigated. I was on Brinkman Famiy Theatrs Vaudeyille and Moving Pictures Program for Tonight deck, an’ I saw them rats leavin’. I counted*’em. They was 15,000,000 of rem.” “Fifteen million?” asked the other. “Afn’t that a lot o' rats? Are you sure?” “Sure! Yes, I'm sure. 15,000,000 rats, ones, I'm tellin".” “Fifteen million rats, and every one weighed half a pound, and they all came off your ship. That's 7,500,000 Say, Jim, what was the tonhage of that ship?” “Oh, about a hundred and fifty tons.” pounds of rats. —Judge. 8he Still Lectures. Mr. Tile—Your wife used to lecture before she was married Has she given Mr. Milds—Well—er—yes # up vow? ~—tbat Is. in publle. REST AND HEALTH TO MOTHER AND EHILD.. Mgs. WINSLOW'S SOOTHING SYRUP has been used for over SIXTY YEAR! C; MOTHERS for their TEETHING, with PE) olutely harmless, Be sure and ask for *Mrs. “inslow’s Soothing Syrup,” and take no other =l Twenty-five centsa bottle, Our Sacrifice Sale Is Still On Although our holiday trade has been far beyond expectations our stock assortment is still in tion. Take advantage of these price reductions on all men and boy’s suits, over.coats and furnish- ings. M. 0. Madson & Co. One Priced Clothiers and I counted More than that, every rat weighed half a pound. They was big, fat, sassy 'S by MILLIONS of ILDREN "WHILE ECT SUCCESS. 1t They was ‘em. fine condi- .deep cut| OPENING OVERTURE The Beauty Spot........... .......Reginald DeKoven Mrs. Harry Masten’s Orchestra LIFE MOTION PICTURES HILL and KNIGHT The Sport and the Coon LIFE MOTION PICTURES Overture--**GERTANA (Spanish Waltzes) e P .......Chauncy Haines McDONALD and GENERAUX Singing and Talking Sketch ! A Comedy Act JOHN G. ZIEGLER © “THE LAND MAN* Fire-- Life-—IN SUR A N C E=--Accident REAL ESTATE IN ALL ITS BRANCHES FARM LANDS BOUGHT AND SOLD Go to Him for Farm Loans Office--Schroeder Building SurErising Prices FOR MADE-T0-ORDER CLOTHES YOUR choice of scores of stunning styles in suits, coats, skirts, dresses and capes, and 268 fabrics. We have them all on show. The garments will be made to your individual measure by the American Ladies Tailoring Company, Chicago. They will be made under the personal direction of their tamous designer. Our fitter will take all the measure- ments. We will see that you get all the man-tailored effects. We will ourselves guarantee the fit, the workmanship and materials. SEE THIS EXHIBIT This is a remarkable exhibit—these styles and fabrics of these famous Chicago tailors. Please don't fail to see it. If you see what you want we will quote you a surprising price—almost as low as ready-made prices. Yet the garments will be made to your order. T. BEAUDETTE 315 BELTRAMI AVE. Making Candy That’s our business. We make it of pure delicious food stuffs and it’s always freshly dealt out to our customers. Bemidji Candy Kitchen BROWN & LANKIS Almond Cream of My Own Make Or Whether You Are Seeking My Almond Cream is prep: is composed of such ingredients that make it a YOU desire the just as HANSON’S ALMOND CREAM YOUR DECISION IS IN THE BALANGE whether It's Good Be- cause It Is Different good Kind, the Best ared after a formulae of my own compiling and heavy absorbent creamy preparation, which softens, whitens and beautifies the skin, prevents all chapping, cracking and roughening of the face and hands, producing a velvety softness making it very effective. Just what the young man needs after shaving. Just what the young lady earnestly desires, is what I have to offer. It is different and better than any yet PRODUCED Be sure and try a 25c bottle during -the cold wintery weather when you will appreciate it most ~ My Almond -Gream 11s The Genuine A Trial Will Convince If not satisfied-after a fair trial, return the bottle and I will cheerfully re- fund your money. |GED. A. HANSON A. D. S. Drug POSTOFFICE CORNER PHONE 304 My Almond Gream Store Is Guarantsed BEMIDJI, MINN 43

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