Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, January 20, 1911, Page 3

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l RAILROAD TIME GARDS I soo 162 East Bound Leaves 10:53-a. 163.West Bound ' Leaves 4:37 p. 186 East Bound Leaves 2:45 p. 187 West Bound Leaves 10:53 a. Creat Northern 33 West Bound Leaves at 3:30 p. m 34 East Bound Leaves at 12:08 p. m 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 7:00a.m| A, J. Jones of Northome spent :.::g‘;; ‘g:‘: ;;’::: l'f:“f:‘ ::; ;’3 : = | vesterday in Bemidji, returniog to | b’s home last evening. Minnesota & International | No. 32 South Bound Leaves at 815 a. m| Mrs. Gertrude Rogers solicits No. 31 North Bound Leaves at 6:10 p. m | your subscriptions fof all magazines, No. 34 South Bound Leaves at 11:35 p.m | { SOCIAL. AND | lPERSONAL No. No. g:- Frank Norquist of Bag'ey was 4 transacting business in this city to- day. m: m. m. m. No. No. 3 Honey chew, 10c a pound tomor- 0. row. The Model Bakery, 315 Min. nesota Ave. deal? Are you saving your money and investing it so as to bring a 2ood return with safety of principal? Investigate tbe features of the Cer- tificate of Deposit in the Northern National Baok avd you will be cer- tain of these qualities. Honey Chew, fresh-as dew, made for you, encugh for two in a pound for only 10c at the Model tomorrow | only. Just you keep. fit, a few doses ot Tubbs Bilious Man’s Friend does wonders. Saves bad feeling and doctors bills. xzep FIT. Albert Rhoda, of Long Prairie, No. 33 North Bound Leaves at 4:20 a. m Freight South Bound Leaves at 7:30 a. m Freight North Bound Leaves at 6:00 a. m Minn. Red Lake & Man. No. 1 North Bound Leavesat 3:35 p. m No 2 South Bound Arrives at 10:30 a. m | PROFESSIONAL CARDS ARTS HARRY MASTEN Piano Tuner ormerly o 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 reasonable. All music up to date. HARRY MASTEN, Plano Tuner Room 36, Third floor, Brinkman Hotel. Telephone 535 MRS. 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. NLENN H. SLOSSON PIANO TUNING Graduate of the Boston School of Piano Tuning, Boston, Mass. Leave orders at the Bemidji Music House, 117Third St. Phone 319-2. Residence Phone 174-2. EDWARD STRIDE Expert Plano and Organ Tuner and Repairer (Specialty church organs) Practiced in Europe fof rears. Is leading in the profes- sion for Heltrami, Koochichiog and Itasca counties. Has made Bemidji headquarters for three years. where he has upwards of 200 steady CuslOmers. . Thoroughly fam: with United States make of pianos. You will save money and get better satisfaction if you take him into your con- fidence before busing your piano.” He will be pleased to meet you and explain the different instruments and will enjoy alding ¥ou in making your selection. Address 616 Bemidjl Ave. Telophone 82 or 310 PHYSICIANS AND SURCEONS DR. ROWLAND GILMORI PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office—Liles Block R. E. A. SHANNON, M. D PHYSICIAN AND SURGECN Office in Mayo Block Phone 396 Res. Phone 397 DR. C. R. SANBORN PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON A. WARD, M. D. Office—Miles Block *® Over First Nativnal Bank. Phone 51 | House 0. 6C+« Lake Blvd. Phone 351 DR. 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 EINER W. JOHNSON PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Residence 1113 Bemidji Ave. Phone 435 Offices over Security Bank. Phone 130 DENTISTS R. D. L. STAN1UN 4 DENTIST Office in Winter Block DR. J. T. TUOMY DENTIST 1st National Bank Build's. Telephone 230 R. G. M. PALMER DENTIST £Miles Block EveningWork by Appointment Only LAWYERS RAHAM M. TORRANCE LAWYER Miles Block Telephone 560 H. FISK . ATTORNEY AT LAW Office over City Drug Stove C. G. JOHNSON INVESTMENTS Trading In Copper and Minnesota iron 8tocks a Speciaity M. V. Phone 147 | beast. ;(H. No. 5.) Coffee b Sanidf, Minn. |1 | also renewals. Phone 487, Attorney M. J. Brown, of the firm. of Spooner & Brown, spent yester- | day at Tenstrike on legal business. | “The-Episcopal Giuld will hold a | If you have any bad cuts or|food sale at McCuaig’s store tomor- |strains, use Tubbs Iodomyrrh, it|row afternoon. Those having do- doesits work quickly. For man or|nations are requested to bring them | in-early. is in Bemidji as the guest of his son Fred, who is the Beltrami county clerk of court. Honey chew—a dainty palatable !candy make from pure stramed|Machine, the happy house wife feels |honey. Tomorrow only 10c a pound. |like singing, Let Me Call You iThe Model. b Sweetheart I'm in Love With You; | Ben Grotte of Wadena, is in Be. |°0 sale at the Music Store. |midjifor a few days visiting his| Carl Guoderson and Aleck Gund- i{parents of this city. Mr. Grotte is erson of Black River Fall’s Wis., who {a telegraph operator. { arrived here toattend the funeral of | Roses and carnations always on | theif daugh.ler “d. sister,. Mex {band. Flowers, ferns and pn:ved'ThF"“C““’s" left this morning for plants for table decoration, deliver:d their bome. {on short notiez. Phone 166, A. E.| Mrs. Ed Borgin of Blackduck, ac- ;Webs‘er. ieomplnied by her mother, Mrs. T. | M.F. Murphy, mayor of Grand|R. Walker of Shell Lake, Wis, | Forks, N. D., passed through Be. | Were Bemidji visitors on Wednes | midji this morning on bis way to|day, peiog guests for the day of {Grand Forks from International| Mrs.. Warner Brandborg of Lake | Falls, where he has been looking , Boulevard. lafter his banking interests. After using a Singer Sewing New electric street display signs D N. Neill of Red Wing, presi:| have been put up by the City Drug dent of the Minnesota Federation of | Store, Brinkman Theatre and Baker Commercial Clubs, arrived in Be.|Jewelry Store. These signs are a midji this morning. Mr. Neill will | marked improvement on the old speak at the Commercial club ban. |ones, and speak well for the pros- | quet which will be held in the High | perity of Bemidji merchants. |school auditorium tonight. lL L. LaRue of St. Paul, traveling The Training School for Nurses : passenger agent for the Great North- ‘uf the University of Minnesota will ern railway, and J. H. Griffin of |receive applications for admission, | Grand Forks, N. D., division freight |at this time, to the class enlerinz‘azeut for the same road, were Be- February 1, 1911. A first grade | midji visitors yesterday, on business | bigh school diploma is ieguired for|in connection with their company. Iaddfms;wn. Thestudents are e.nter When vou feel rotten, take Tubbs ed in a four months’ prelim‘nary .. 5 5 g i ...~ | Bilious Man’s Friend, two teaspoon- course of instruction, under a tuition | o i |fuls to a dose for six doses, taken The re- jee of twenty-five dollars. .. |before meals. It drives the cold | mander of the course, covering in| ‘all a period of three years,” requiresiou‘ of yoursystem,and starta. yon |right, gets your liver working and Vg fee.' The N i rf“mbfl"y)m’ kidneys on the job again, 50c in this entering class will bel - 5k and $1.00. enlarged in view of the open- | |ing of the Elliott Memorial| No stronger incentive for spring | Hospital Building, with 120 beds, |in the early spring. No students | will be received whose age is less |than twenty years. Application | blanks may be had and applications imay be filed with Miss Louise M. | Powell, Superintendent of Training ‘School, University Hospital, Min- | neapolis, Minzesota. MUSSY GHILDREN Kickapoo Worm Killer makes chil- dren regular; stops mussy habits; makes their bowls act naturally; stimulates the liver; cleans out ma- larial symptons. Acts asa safe tonic and health-builder. It is the best worm medicine known, and also the finest general tonic for children. Price 25¢., sold by druggists everywhere. McGUAIG'S 120 Third $t, Phane No. 1 now to be had in silk and cotton 1 sPEcIAL | weaves and in cotton fabrics. This FOR lis especially true of the plain colors, . | which follow closely the color card | F"day a"d saturday | for silks and silk and wool materials, | {and in the beautiful floral patterns 450 which exquisitely portray the same & effects as were shown in the ex- pensive silks for this winter’s use. As is usual for wasb goods in sum. ‘mer there are no fixed rules nor fa- sewing seems necessary than a peep at the new wash fabrics. The pro- gress made in the weaving and color- g of cotton goods is marvelous, and quite in keeping with the pro- gress to be seen in all other branches of maoufacturing. In fact we may safely say that the manufacturing of cotton fabrics today is an art, including the weaves we have always thought of in silk and wool textures, and that in consequence these fabrics are each season playing a larger part in women’s and children’s apparel. This is a step in the right direction, and I believe women are rapidly awakening to the advantage as well as to the beauty of garments than can be Jaundered. All the familiar materials are to be found, but in new and improved effects, the weaves more perfect and the colors more beautiful—if that is possible—than ever before. Many of the unusual colors and color combinations pre- viously seen only in costly silks are | Oranges—Oranges per pk.. . (With one dollar’s worth of other goods.) |Grape Fruits 10¢ Ithree for.................. vorites, one may choose what is most | becoming. Apples pk... 60C one riciis S A littleforethought—a little ‘‘plan- ning ahead”—may enable many al {Imported Figs 1b . ‘ Hominy 3 cans | farmer, orhis: wife, son or daughter, ooyt B0 et i) 1 ., . . 15“ ture af L. n on' ark, who for Del Monte Galifornia Fruits [ m ot o Antoooy Park, who | lack of such forethought may be de | | White Cherries ) | nied its privileges. The date, June | | LemonCling Peaches I |19, may seem a loog way abead;| Muscatel Gl'apes ! 30 czbnt it is none too early row to plan Damson Plums - [ for the six weeks’ absence from home | Egg Plums | per :]which the school requires. Pears can | |Green Gage Plums J } Cardof Thasks. | We desire to thank the friends and | meighbors who extended assistance and sympathy to us durin} the re- cent death of our sister, Mrs. Curtiss. Home Brand Coffee b4o¢ D. L. Winans left on Thursday for the southern part of the state. Andrew Shaw went to 'Blackduck Tuesday. : The fire swept. districts are keep- g some of the settlers busy log- ging-these days. Claude Palmer and James Angell wentto Blackduck Wednesday. DISLIKES INNOVATIONS. Hence the Rhino Blindly Attacks Any- thing New to Him. Sir Frederick Treves, the distinguish- ed British surgeon, in his book “Ugan- @a For a Holiday” has a word or two to say about the rhinoceros. “The rhinoceros is the embodiment of blind conservatism,” he writes. “Its hide 1s impenetrable, its vision is weak, while its intellect is weaker. It has, however, two marked qualities—com- bativeness and a sense of smell. "It is aroused to'its maximum energy by the presence of anything that is new. This object need not be a thing that is ag- gressive or inconvenient. Its offensive- unfamiliar, and the more unfamiliar acts. “When a rhinoceros smells a man he will charge him with maniacal vio- ly sitting on a stool reading Milton. The massive beast will dash at him like a torpedo or a runaway locomo- tive simply because the smell of him is novel. Actuated by this insane hate of whatever savors of an innovation, the rhinoceros has charged an iron wa- ter tank on the outskirts of a camp and has crumpled it up as a blacksmith would an empty meat tin. “A conservative rhinoceros with a senile dislike of anything new once charged a train-on the Uganda railway, but with no more serious results than the tearing away of the footboard of a carriage. As regards the rhinoceros in this case, it appeared surprised that a thing composed, as it had imagined, of flesh and blood could be so hard. It went off with an additional grievance and an increased swelling of the head.” He Was Slow. “I had not talked to him more than fifteen minutes when he called me an tdiot.” “Gee! He didn’t violate any speed | Hmit in getting next, did he?”—Boston Post. Drying Her Tears. “What do you do when your wife erles?” asked the younger man. “Do you have to give in to her?” “No,” said the older man. “Give her some money.”—Buffalo Express. overshoe now Woman’s $1.25 overshoe now NOW % o9 bers $1.00 now $2.00 now . . $1.25 now . . Misses’ 2 buckle $1.75 now . . NOW: St e o, “veterans told this story: “In the recon- struction days a ‘man from a ‘Missis- sippt valley town came to our western house one day. We had sold him be- paid. He had enlarged his- business, he told us, and wanted a bigger line than usual, but before making his se- erences. We expressed surprise at such an unheard of demand, but he sald, ‘My two brothers-in-law have gone in with me, and they're very par- *| ticular as to whom they do business | with.! So we sent him to our banks, and he came back, sald we were all right, picked out a big line of goods, | and in days he ‘busted.’ couldn’t collect a doliar. Two years later 1 met the man in Cincinnatl and told him we had become reconciled to our loss. ‘But will you please tell me,” I asked, ‘why ‘did you want references a8 to our credit? ‘Well, you see,’ he answered, ‘I wanted to know if you could stand 1t.’ "—Exchange, FRANKLIN MILES, M. D, LL. B. ness depends upon the fact that it is | the object is the worse the rhinoceros | lence, although the man may be mere- | Woman’s 2 buckle over- shoes $2.00 now . Misses’ 4 buckle overshoe Misses’ low overshoe 90¢ The Well-Known Heart and Dropsy | Specialist, Will Send a New $3.75 Treatment Free. —_— i | Many ‘‘Hopeless’* Cases Soon Cured After s 0 15 Doctors Falled, | At first no disease is -apparently more | harmless than dropsy, a little swelling of | the eyelids, hands, feet, ankles or abdo- |men. Finally there is great shortness of .;breath. smothering spells, sitting up to |breathe, cough, faint spells, sometimes | nausea and vomiting, even bursting of the |limbs and a lingering and wretched death if the dropsy is not removed. { Dr. Miles has been known as a leading | specialist in these diseases for 30 years. | His liberal offer is certainly worthy of servious consideration. You may not have another opportunity. | The Grand Dropsy Treatment consists of four dropsy remedies in one, also Tonic | Tablets, and Pural-Laxa for removing the water. This treatment is specially pie- pared for each patient and is at least ten times as successfulas that of most | physicians. It relieves unually the first day, and removes swelling in six days in most cases. Delay is dangerous. Mr. Alexander Milne, Spokane, Wash, cured b; 0 months’ treatment. Mis. Sarah | A. Boyd, Oelwein. Ia.. cured after giving up | hope. Mrs. Elvina Sounders, Decatur, Nebr., | cured after 10 physicians failed. Mrs. Tennie | Hubbard. Teagues, Mo., cured. whole body | swollen. could not lie down. Mr. O. A. Kili- inger, Shippensburg, Pa., cured after four | pbysicians falled to | Brellt, Dugdale, Minn., Incurable by_three physicians, Mr. John T. Alexander, Elwood, 1ll., cured | after 4 failed. Dr. Miles' Book contains a |large number of remarkable cures. All afflicted readers may have the new | Dropsy Book, Examination Chart, Opinion, |Advice, and a_$3.75 Treatment freé. | Write at once. Describe your case. Ad- dress Dr. Franklin Miles, Dept. D. 1427‘ | 101437 Main St., Elkhart, Ind. 1 buckle $1.00 Woman’s low overshoe $1.1095c . . . . Woman’s fleeced lined rub-goc $1.50 $1.75 ox.fer?ho.es$l. 3 5 75¢ Misses’ 1 buckle overshoe$l OO lections he wanted us to give him ref- | DROPSY - TREATED FREE fore in a small way, and he alwaya |d We |- i i - Another Lot of SEASONABLE MERCHANDISE ADDED TO OUR January Clearance Sale It is WINTER OVERSHOES, something most every- one wears. You can buy them now at a saving Woman’s $2.50 4 buckle $2.00 The White Goods Sale € O’Leary-Bowser Co. We Closa at 6 p. m. except Saturdays " ight | Opera House ¢ ONLY | Friday, January Smn$;: Td::r:::medy FTH NIGHT A Large Company of Players Including £ WM YULE VIO_I.ET EDDY : as as SIR TOBY BELCH VIOLA A Massive Scenic and Costume Production | Prices: $1.00, 75¢, 50c, 35¢ - MR. RENTER Have you ever.stopped to think that every few years you practically pay for the house you live in and yet do not own |t‘{ Figure it up for yourself. Thecdore Roousevelt says: “No Investment on earth is 80 safe, so sure, s0 certain to enrich its owners as undevelop-d realty.” We will be glad to tell you about the City of Be- midji. and quote you prices with easy terms of payment if desired on some of the best residence and business property in that rapidly growing City. A letter addressed $o us will bring you tull partcu- lars or if you prefer to see the property, call on H. A. Simons, at Bemidji. The Soo Railroad is now running its freight and passenger trains into Bemidji; investigate the oppor- tunities off>red for business on a smail or large scale. Bemidji Townsite & Improvement Co, 404 Noew York Life Bullding ST. PAUL MINNESOTA . — g;[%r;; sn‘(t) ‘l;)vu-ckle overshoes $2. 7 5 %’{C;IS’ sn})vl;uckle overshoes $l. 50 Al .$l,_5() Boy’s 1 buckle overshoes BlLS5pew . T . . Youths 1 buckle overshoes $125now . . . . . $1.00 oversnom $1.50 5 7" $1.25 Saturday Night Bemidji, Minn.

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