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¥ s soo Noe 162 East Bound Leaves 9:54 a. m. No. 163 West Bound Leaves 4:37 p. m No. 186 East Bound Leaves 2:45 p. m. No. 187 West Bound Leaves 10:38 a. m. Great 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 Freight West Bound Leaves at 9:00 a. m Freight East Bound Leaves at 3:30 p. m| Minnesota & International i 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 No. 33 North Bound Leaves at 4:20 a. m Freight South Bound Lezves at 7:30 a. m Freight North Bound Leaves at 6:00 a. m Minn. Red Lake & Man. No. 1 North Bound Leavesgat 3:35 p. | | | No 2 South Bound Arrives at 10:30 a. m| m m| P — PROFESSIONAL CARDS i; ARTS HARRY MASTEN| Piano Tuner ormerly o Radenbush & Co. of St. Paul Instructor of Vioin, 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, Piano Tuner Room 36, 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 Plano and Organ Tuner and Repairer | (Specialty church organs.) Practiced in Europe for years. Is leading in the profes- sion for Beltrami, Koochichiog and Itasca counties. Has made Bemidji headquarters for three years. where he has upwards of 200 steady customers. Thoroughly familiar with United States make of 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 1o meet you and explain the different instruments and will enjoy aiding sou in making your selection. Address 515 Bemid]l Ave. | i i 0 92 or stm PHYSICIANS AND SURCEONS R. ROWLAND GILMOR! 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. 601 Lake Blvd. Phone 351 R. A. E. HENDERSON | PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Over First National Bank, Bemidji, Minn. | Office Pbone 36. Residence Pone 72. R. E. H. SMITH PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON | Office in Winter Block | R. E. H. MARCUM PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON | Office in Maya Block Phone 18 Residence Phone*211 INER W. JOHNSON PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Residence 1113 Bemidji Ave. Phone 435 Offices over Security Bank. Phone130 | DENTISTS R. D. L. STAN'TUNN DENTIST Office in Winter Bleck DR. J. T. TUOMY DENTIST 1st National Bank Build’d. 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 &+~=n EW PUBLIC LIBRARY Open daily, except Sunday and Mon- daylltolZa.m..ltoGp m., 7 o9 p. m. Smniaysm p- m. Mnnday 7t0 9 p. ATRICE MILLS. Librarian. | motor boat overhauled :ard ready for itrip connected with the firm of Ross | ham hotel. i of the Bemidji basket ball team, | Fay Brenneman, manager of the ’twelve of her young friends yester-| Iupby thirteen candles and decorated | German party last evening in the | Malzahn, Rath and Esther Getchell, |life is necessary to protect a child “* Why not - make your &finn a birthday present of a baok book from S@CIAL AND‘ PERSONAL thy Clnugo—l"nmer now on saleat “Gould’s. Better stop coughing. Lung l.hlnm will do lt . |papers at Gould’s. s:l”“ s..d.;. """'l E"""’t Ole Sime-of Solway. is in. Bemidji e ey, Ly B today oo business. “ g 7 G’I.‘:I:e:dvannze of the great final "Abnhr.m : Lincaln’s.. Clemency ! at the Majestic. Saturday -and Sun- winter .clcavanoe sale at the Berman day nights. Eaporium: MR Don’ti'neglect .your cough for a M G" tr?zde‘ Rogers sol.lmtg minute'when Mark’s Luog Balsam your subscriptions for all magazines, is'soeasy to get. alsorenewslx Phiones18 Marvelously - beautiful are -the Moot Buat Ogiera selections in-the white sale at ‘the | Berman Emporium. Now 'is ‘the time to have: your motor boat put in shape for the sea son. See E. H. Jerrard. Bert Ferral,” who represents the| Attend the sale of Zion laeesi::l;:e;::,::ip: Bf;\;:;iirtywc‘o:xplny every patlern that this great in- % stitution. produces is shown at theE ASk tojfec the dew advadceiprith Berman Emporium. tstyles in suits, coats, dresses and & 5 Canadar ' ® ‘walsls at the Berman Emponum re Jou RlR fo.iCanada? x| Don’t fail to see “Abraham Lin- cheap rates write or call on W. E.| 1 Cl i he M Black Canadian Government Agent, CO.n° Clemency,” at the Majestic ety Theatre Saturday and Sunday n:ghts. | Crookston, Minn. | . - | Morris Ryan, Fred Cutter, Bertel C. A. Weirheauser of Little Falls| . klund and Dale Walker were arrived in Bemidy last night m’miamong the boosters who accompani- Shevlin and left this morning for | | ed the Bemidji quintet to Walker this | International Falls on a business| | morning. 6| wigiion: L. K. Deal of Des Moines, head G. F. Ross of Duluth, arrived in gf the L. K. Deal Lumber company, Bemldn last night from Gemmeu.qs in Bemidji for a week and is where he had been on a business | registered as a guest at the Mark- | I will encourage them to be thrifty. and teach a .valuable lesson economy. . 5 Joseph: Askew of Wadena was in Bemidji- today. Mark's Get your Magazines -and" Snfiy- Have your | the season. See E. H. Jerrard. Ike Blooston returned.to the city this morning from Kelliher, where be went last evening on a short busi- ness trip. & Ross at Gemmell, i in‘which he ls S. N. Snelenberzer of Duluth; interested. Mr. Ross left this morn-| 4 Herald ing for his home at Duluth. | representediithies Doluthy"Herald,n, | Bemidji this forenoon. He returned! Prefessor Robinson, who is coach | ito bis home at Duluth on the) and | {noon train. team, accompanied the boys tn‘ Charles Carlson of Walker, Walker this morning, where thls‘ proprietor of the Lakeshore hotel at afternoon they were scheduled for a |23t Place, was in Bemidii Iy(ester- game with the Walker team, | day consulting with Harry Koors, . | representative of the Fitzsimmons- Miss Margaret Shay, of St. Paul »| Baldwin company here. who has been the guest of Miss Gert. | | rude Stone for the past few days, left this morning for Bemidji, where | she will be the guest at the Bailey . home before returning to her home | suring:-stack -rof: wmillinery /for" the Miss Shay attended the tennis c!\xb! Hedand-Fallon. mllinery patlors: dancing party last evening.—Crooks-| Mrs. M. A. Clark, 917 America} { ton Times. | avenue, was.pleasantly surprised last ting wheén twelve of her friends Miss Dorothy Carson entert a/ev 4 atertaine | walked into the house unbidden. The day afternoon and evening at h"‘evemnz was spent with cards, after bome at 223 Irvine Avemue S., which a delicious lunch, prepared the occasion being her thirteenth by tl?e Tedies; il “"gd.‘ B birth anniversary. The rooms were | °6€3Sion Was the. Lietti annivereary orettily decorated with cupids aud‘nf Mrs. Clack, sand.ishe ~was prec) bearts. At7 o'clock Mrs. Carson sented with a beautiful ring as a memento. Mrs. George Baker won Mrs. Fallon returned last evening from Milwaukee and the Twin Cities, !where she has been buying the served an elaborate supper, covers being laid for thirteen. Caruations| firstiionors, ‘ and ferns were used as table decora-| The German class of the Bemidji tions and a large birthday cake, lit | High school held its second amnualf with flowers and ferns graced the|High School Gymnasium. The par- center of the table. After supper|ticipants were. dressed after the the party ended wnth a merry sleigh|Dutch fashion. Games were played ride all over -the city, each guest | during the evening, there was music being taken to her home. Those|by the High School orchestra and a present were Lucille Bailey, Vada|number of German songswere sung McPherson, Annie Jackson, Margaret | by the entire party. The girls of and Edna Anderson, Lucille Mc-|the cooking class prepared and Cuaig, Hazel Siverson, Bernice|served a Dutch lunch, consisting of | weinerwursts, saurekraut, rye bread, Edith Mills and Milre Achenbach. |cheese, pickles and coffee. More When her child is in danger a wo- than forty guests were present. man will risk her life to protect it.| . A Ch . No great act of heroism or risk of| eupiGLY Mr.' Mann—Great Ceasar, Laura, { why did you buy me those ties? from croup. -Give Chamberlain’s| Mrs- Mann—Why, they were marked Cough Remed d all | down to almost nothing. v and all daoger is| Mr Mann—And that's exactly what avoided. = For sale by Barkers Drug| Tl be if I wear them!—Tlustrated Store. | Sunday Magazine, Copyright 1909, by C. E. Zimmerm=u-Co.--No: 60 IN time of distress, no matter the icause, a bank account will render its aid, and it is at such times that those without one regret their folly for not sooner heeding the injunction to - have: .one. Start a bank aecount today. - the Northern National'Bank? Te|% ++++o+++ $++++ ¥t + i * * + + + *. - I - sota Uni hrm. :: t-++++++++~i++++++ One of the mflmleetad crops guitable for this state is pop cornm. There is-practically ne: portion of the Northwest which mt not to pro-. duce ail the pop corn heeded for home consumption, " inste of buying it through Twin City or Chicago jobbing Thouses, - as. at:present. It is of the easiest culture. and any farmer-boy or girl should easily be:able to grow a plantation. large - enmwk to- supply. the family -Beeds. and ‘ha¥e some.left to dispose.of to the I market. It is a crop whicli can be readily converted'. into. cash: ®hen -harvested. ‘The price varies-from 50 cents to $4 per hundred weight for the shelled corn. The yield is:about 1,000 to 1,500 wounds per acre; often running up.as aigh as-2,000.pounds with certain.vari- etles, on good soil and-in favorable seasons. = Most of the supply nowa- days comes from' Northeastern Ne- braska, Jowa and Michigan. 'One Iowa grower crops more than a thou- sand-acres annually. The cost of pro- duction ranges from $12 to $15 per| |'acre, and the: cash profit is.seldom ! {ess than $25 per acre. The soil for the ‘erop should -be | given the -same preparation as for| sweet corn. Fall-plowed clover or stubble land will be best. The ground | should be fairly rich. A dressing of manure may be given before plowing; but it should be disced thoroughly into the top soil before it is turned under. In the spring the ground:should be disced or dragged as soon:as.it cam be worked. Then replow it; pack it | f it seems loose, and .disc thoroughly at frequent intervals up to seeding time, to save the moisture and cause the soil to warm up. In May, when danger of frost is | past, it may-be -planted-with an-ords-| nary corn-planter, -drilling' it in-with | the smallest-holed - blades .to be. had. | | Another satisfactory way is to stop up the required number of openings on ! a wheat drill, set the drill to the | proper size, and drill it in. If this plan is followed a press drill must be used in order that the soil shall be packed- over the kernels. -By this method’ the rows can-be made a little closer, a thing which may be bene- | ficial if the soil is rich. The seed! | should be-selected with as much eare as is used for fleld-corn. seed. It should be tested, tipped, and graded Just as accurately as for that arop. ‘When the plants come up, cultiva- tion should be begun at once. ' Prob- ably as good a tool as-any for the cul- tivation will be the harrow tooth -cul- tivator used 'for truck crops. The crop should receive shallow-and fre- quent cultivation - and the working should be kept up -umtil the ground is' completely shaded. There are iwo:-waps-of-barvesting, cutting and - shocking-and:then: husk- ing from the shock; and husking from the standing: corn. :Gemerally: the lat- ter method will-be-found the more-de- sirable, because of the loss often occa- sloned by rats and mies in the shocks while the crop is-curing. -Corni‘which has -been gnawed, or which has -be- come “mousey” from the: urine .of these little animals, can only-be-used for stock-feed. ¢ There is .a general impression among users that the-kernels will not'pop to their best advantage until they bave been kept in-storage at least a year,| but this is not necessarily -true. Pop- ping depends on the amount of mois- ture- contained in starch -oslls of the corn. It must-reach ounly a-certain stage of drynese. This-is -usually found in corn -naturally-dried et air temperatures for a-season. This cur- ing must be done on the cob. ' When shelled, even: at.the proper: degree.of dryness, its popping qualities:deterior- ate rapidly. On the cob it will keep in. definitely. Corn:that has-lost its pop- ping qualities from being -shelled or from beceming: too dry can often be restored by ~soaking it for twelve hours in tepid water; then drying it at about 66 degrees fortwenty-four hours. Any one anticipating the growing!| of the crop on a large :scale should be provided ‘with ample curing:cribs or bins, and with storage-rooms which are vermin-proof. In these it.can be stored in the ear, and shelled and sold. as the market demands it. Otherwise, he will get the: best-results by selling to a commission .man immediately: . after harvesting. The price will avar. -age lower, but he will:not have the loss: from ' shrinkage, pests, ‘and- pooe. storage. The best varieties to plant comprise| the White- Rice, the “Red Rice, the! | Pearl varieties, the Tom Thumb, the Mapledale Prolific, and the QI-l! Golden. The-last two are heavier|| yielders and:are usnally good:poppers,] i but they are sometimes discriminated| against because of the large grains; | the claim being made that they have; hard centers in the popped centers. L R R R K The soil is one vast synthet- ical laboratory, where . Nature works at building up, from ele- mentary materials, ali the var- ied forms assumed by vegeta- tion. The analysis and treat- ment of soils, as taught in the Schools of Agriculture, simply aims {o assist Nature in the achievement of the best re- sults. oo ofe oo ole T e ol o oo o oo ol o ofe ++++++,+++’F++~P++ H+++¢;-+1g+++‘+-x¢—;-++ Damascus Olive Groves. 1 ‘There is an ancient custom under which ithe olive-grovesiaround Damas- cus are guarded: by offl 10 prevent the trees thieves. But on a certain’ datethe: m'- ernor or some magistrate’ ltuu a proclamation warning; all ‘owners_of | olive trees that they must pick their fruit, for after a certain. date it be- The Northern National Bank| comes_public property: -If a farmer has. bis crop only balf gathered when m:dlhlmmmmflhrfllmh— eriltuzull. | salem and vicinity. medans Mecca. in Arabia. is the hol,v| Holy Lands of All Religions. Chflmnm« call Palestine "the Holy -Eand because-it was the’ ‘birthplace of “the Christian religion on earth as well -as that of the Saviour, whose birth. ministry and. death are inseparably .associated with the history of Jeru. To' the, Moham: land, it ‘being the birthplace .of Mo | ‘hammed. the saviour of the followers _of that faith. ~India is the holy land of the Chinese and’ other oriental Buddhists. it being the native“land of Sakys Nuni, the supreme -Buddha. Elis, one of the Several divisions of the ancient Pelo- ponnesns, was the Mecca and the Jeru- salem of the ancient Greeks. The at Elis, and the sacred festivals were. held “there each year. it is at present a part of Greece. The believers in the Sinto religion wmake -ammual pilgrimage to Sitsa Kara, the -immense- stone" pillar: where: their: su. to. men.—New York World. * A Fair Proposition. “But.” the patient exclaimed, "yuu.r “I shall-cure you,” the doctor replied, me time.” “Very well. will be‘patient and give me time. When Ferala, of a i is enhanced by Beautiful Teeth. No part of the toilet should have more consideration than the care of the teeth. We have a little book on this subject which we will gladly give you if you will ilask for it. We also have a liberal supply of Euthymol Tooth paste trifice. you tried it? dentist. mend it. Oity Drug Store WHERE QUALITY PREVAILN Phone 52 Ask your REST-ARD-HEALTH T0 NOTHER AND GHILD., MOTHERS for their CHILDREN WHILI OOTHES the CHILD, SOFTENS the GUME ALLAY;anPuN CURES WIND COLIC, ant is the best remedy for DIARRHGEA. _it 35 ab solutely harmiess. - Be sure and ask for *Mrs Winslow’s Soothing Syrup,” and take no other &ind Twenty-five centsa bottle. Leave your orders for seasoned Birch, Tam- arack or Jack Pine Wood with . S.P. HAYTH elephone 11 temple of Olympus Zeéus was situated | ~With Achaia’ preme ruler last stood while tal.king advertisement said ‘no-cure, no pay.’” | “if youw: only will be patient and give | I will. pay you if you shall I-call ‘again?’—Chicago Record- | Beautiful Fage| The world renowned den- | It cleanses and || beautifies the teeth. Have |, He will recom- | MRrs. WINSLOW'S SOOTHING SYRUP has be. | used for over SIXTY YEARS by MILLIONS IEETHING, with PERFECT SUCCESS. 1 WOOD!| i i { { 1 | | I hereby announce myself a candidate for the office of | Mayor. It is hardly necessary for me to state what my policy will be for the reason that the people of Bemidji are thoroughly familiar with my position and know that I have always stood and now stand for a fair, economical iand business like administration of the city’s financial affairs as well as a just and impartial enforcement of the law and that without favor to any one. If elected it is my purpose to exert my utmost endeavors for the advance- ment of Bemidji and the welfare of its citizens. Your support is respectfully solicited. Yours truly, WM. McCUAIG. A Bargain Treat In Fine Clothing Now men we urge you to come and -get a suit, overcoat or cravenette while the price is low. You dou’t buy any shoddy clothing in this sale— it’s all cut in the height of prevailing fashions and made from fabrics which can only be ex- celled in suits worth $40 to $50. You Gan't Find any Fault | With our regular prices from $15.00 to $30.00 | and when you see the clothing and at the sale i prices of from $12.00 to $25.00 you're simply i getting a bargain in the broadest sense of the term. M. 0. Madson & Co. One Priced Clothiers Drug Store Im:to 2 p. m. as ‘Warner’s, Co. Pesteffice ..lIl‘l' THE ONLY Operated By a Registered Druggist - That-is One'Reason-Why | Should Get Your Prescription Business. Open from 7 a. Registered Druggist ‘here: all the time. Stock .only the "best Pharmaceuticals such ‘Wyeths, L"ill'ys, ‘“Parke, Davis ‘& .GEO. A. HANSON in Bemidji Owned and Here Are a Few Others. Not tied up by contracts to any manufacturers. Buy in small quantities so you always get fresh Drugs. A Stock only the best chemicals; Merck’s, 'Squibbs, ‘Mallinckrodt’s Powersand Weightman. COLD 'A:D.S.DRUG STORE SO0A Phone 304 Bemidjl