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I RAILROAD TIME GARDS I soo No. 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 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 BoundLezves at 7:30 a. m Freight North Bound Leaves at 6:00 a. m| Minn. Red Lake & Man. | No. 1 North Bound Leavesgiat 3:35 p. No 2 South Bound Arrives at 10:30 a. m m PROFESSIONAL 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, Plano 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 | LENN H. SLOSSON * PIANO TUNING Graduate of the Boston School of Piano Tuning, Boston, Mass. Leave orders at the Bemwidji Music House, 117 Third St. Phone 319-2. Residence Phone 174-2. EDWARD STRIDE Expert Plano and Organ Tuner and Repairer (Specialty chureh organs) Practiced in Europe for years. Isleading in the profes- n for Beltrami, Koochiching and Itasca nties. Has made Bemidil headquarters | for three sears. where he has upwards of 200 | steady customers. i Thoroughly familiar with United States make | of pianos. You will save money and get better satisfaction if you take him into your con- fidence befure buying your piano. He will be pleased to meet you and explain the | different instruments and will enjoy aiding | you in making yeur selection. H Tsiephone 92 or 310 Address 516 Bamidji Ave. 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 A. WARD, M. D. * Over First National Bank. Phone 51 House 0. 60: 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 H DENTISTS i R. D. L. STANTUN DENTIST Office in Winter Bleck R. J. T. TUOMY DENTIST Ist National Bank Build'¢. Telephone 230 R. G. M. PALMER DENTIST =Miles Block Evening Work by Appointment Only LAWYERS RAHAM M. TORRANCE LAWYER Miles Block Telephone 560 H. FISK * ATIORNEY AT LAW Office over City Drug Store NEW PUBLIC LIBRARY Qpen daily, except Sunday and Mop- day 11 to 12 a.mi._leéP-m-._'l wflg.uy P. i s styles in suits, coats, dresses:and lv:ompany of that city, is in the city | brother,who is attending the Medical | enjoyed her visit. them on their return to this city. | SOCIAL AND PERSONAL Better stop coughing. Lung Balsam will do it. Take advantage of the great final winter clearance sale at the Berman Emporium. Mark’s George Silk was in Bemidji Satur- day evening enroute from Duluth to his home at Pine Ruver. Mrs. P. J. Russell is visiting place she left last Friday. { Mrs. Gertrude Rogers solicitsi your subscriptions for all magazines, also renewals. Phone 487. Ask to see the new advance s{srimzi waists at the Berman Emporium. Mrs. William Halliday left this morning for Erskine, where she will visit with friends for some time. Judge M. A. Spooner left Sa(ur-‘ day night for Minneapolis, where| he goes to attend to legal matters. Attend the sale of Zion laces| every patiern that this great in. | stitution produces is shown at lhe! Berman Emporium. Judge C. W. Stantoz returned! from Brainerd this morning, where[ he has spent several days attending | to judicial matters. { Rev. H. F. Parshall has re!urnedi from a visit to the twin cities. He conducted services here yesterday in the I. O. O. F. hall. Ernest Wilde of Crockston, sales- man for the Finch-Winslow-Carlisle today, in the interest of his com- pany. E. J. Irvine, of the Bemidji Lum- ber company, returned this morning from Blackduck, where he went Saturday evening to visit his par- ents, Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Irvine. Van B. Boyd of Crookston, a| member of the Crookston Fire de-] partment who is well known in th's city, was here yesterday and par- ticipated in the Crookston-Bemidji hockey game yesterday afternoon. George Noll, secretary and treas- urer of the Fitzsimmons-Baldwin company, returned to Bemidji this | morning from Dulwth, where he has been since Tuesday packing his | household goods and preparing to! move his family to this city, where they will make their future home. Mrs. J. J. Conger has returned to! Bemidji after a nine dav trip to the’ twia cities, Chicago and Milwaukee, where she purchased her spring stock of millinery. Mrs. Conger spent five days in Chicago, and while there was the guest of her College of Chicago, and thoroughly- Harry Koors. who is connected with the Fitzsimmons-Baldwin com- pany, will leave the first of the week for Duluth to move his family to this city, where they will reside in the future. Mr. and Mrs.” Koors made their home in Bemidii several years prior to moving to Duluth, and they have many friends | here who will be glad to welcome The Charm of a Beautiful Face 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 ask for it. We also have a liberal supply of Euthymol Tooth paste The world renowned den- trifice. It cleanses and beautifies the teeth. Have you tried it? Ask your dentist. He will recom- mend it. Bty Drug Store WHERE QUALITY PREVAILN Phone 52 vear-old son. {21, 1881, and was married {country to Mr. | Ipe. j sins and covered with a rich sauce. Snuday 3 to 6 p. m. Monday 7 to m. BEATRICE MILLS, Librarian. All gifts'are gopd; some are better than others; the best of all .for|, || your kiddies is 2 bank book from the Savings Department ,of the Northern National Bank. Apprentice girls wanted at Con ger’s Millinery. Call at once, 209 4th Street. § W. E. Bergfelt of St. Paul was in Bemidji yesterday and was the guest of his brother at the Mark- ham botel. Marvelously beautiful are the selections in the white sale at the i | Berman Emporium. friends in Minneapolis, for which | Funeral services for the late Mrs. Bertha Hershay were held this morn- ing at the bome, 1104 Doud avenue, and were conducted by Rev. C. H. Flesher of the Methodist church. The male quartette of the Methodist church sang. Mrs. Hershay died on Saturday of cancer, after a_bri:f illness. Sbe is survived by her hus- band, Fred E. Hershay, and a 2- Miss Bertha Nelscn was born in Norway on September in this Hershay July 8, 1906. The body was taken to Little Falls this morning, where the rela- tives of Mrs. Hershay 1eside and where interment will be made this afternoon. i Don’t peglect your cough for a | minute when Mark’s Lung Balsam 1s so easy to get. A Bawbee From Carlyle. I used to see Carlyle when I lived as a child in Chelsea. I regarded him with extraordinary aversion and fear. One day 1 was sent to post a letter. I suppose 1 was older. though uncon- sclous, as always, of anything ahead. 1 cannoned into Carlyle. The impact laid me flat on the pavement, where I yelled for some minutes, though sooth- | ed eventually by England’s great think- er. And then—this is the point of the story—Carlyle dived into his pockets, produced a halfpenny and said kind- ly, “Here is a bawbee for Bobby.” 1 have the halfpenny to this day. When Mr. Carlyle died I was put into deep mourning. He was the first and per- haps the most interesting of all my street acquaintances.—Robert Ross in London Bystander. Self Reliance. The spirit of self help is the root of all genuine growth in the individual, and, exhibited in the lives of many, it constitutes the true source of national vigor and strength. Help from with- out is often enfeebling in its effects, but help from within invariably invig- orates. Whatever is done for men or classes to a certain extent takes away the stimulus and necessity of doing for themselves, and where men are sub- Jected to averguidan ment the Inevitable cy is to ren- der them comparatively helpless.—Sam- | el Smiles. A Field at Home. A Boston gentleman was showing a West African who is interested in missionary work a number of photo- graphs. “What is this?” asked the visitor, gazing in wonder at one of them. “Oh, that’s a snapshot taken during a football scrimmage at the stadium.” “But has your church no mission- aries to send among these people? was the quick rejoinder. — Boston Transcript. Origin of Plum Duff. This i8 the origin of plum duff, ac- cording to the captain of an Atlantic liner: “One Christmas day, hundreds of years ago at sea, a ship in a storm was swept by a comber that carried off her cook, her crate of chickens, her turkeys—in a word, the whole raw material of her Christmas dinner. “But the sailors were determined to have at least some sort of Christmas pudding. They knew nothing about cooking, and they drew lots for their new cook. The lot fell to the boat- swain’s mate. “This chap fished up a cookbook from the bottom of his sea chest. He ran over the pudding recipes and chose one that began: “‘Make a stiff dough.’ “He made a pudding after this rec- It was stuffed with Malaga rai- The men were delighted. “‘Put a name to it they said. ‘Put a name to it’ “And the boatswain's mate, know- ing that ‘r-o-u-g-h’ was pronounced ‘rough’ and - thinking ‘d-o-u-g-h’ fol- lowed the same rule, answered read- ily: “‘It's called duff, mates.’” il J i Hogarth Used to Forget. ‘William Hogarth, the famous Eng- lish artist, was so absentminded be caused his friends much entertain- ment, When he was prosperous enough to have his own carriage he first used it to make a call upon the lord mayor. When he came out of the Mansion House it was raining bard, and the artist tramped the entire way home. wet to the skin. When asked why he had not come in the carriage he said he. forgot all about it, and a messen- ger had to be dispatched to the coach- wan to tell him to return. Why He Stopped. They had been engaged only a week. He had kissed ber fully forty times that evening. When he stopped the tears came into her eyes, and she said: “Dearest. ‘you have ceased to Igve 0ot Sy ." be replied, “but | myst breathe.”—Ladies’ Home Journalk 5 Gunning. Cunning signifies especially a habit or gift of overreaching. accompanied | d; with enjoyment and a sense of superi- erity. It i3 associated with small and dull coneeit and with an absolute want of sympathy or affection. It is the in- tensest.rendering of vulgarity, absolute and utter.—Ruskin, et i d gvergovern: | lew is much more in- “teresting. He derivesiit from a certain Captain Fudge,. who ‘seems to have been a marine--Munchausen. *Yon fudge it” is said to have been his ~crew’s. “equivalent' to. the modern “Rat®?™ In a collection of some pa- pers of ‘Wiiliam Crouch, : the Quaker, Ppublished in: 1712 it-is recorded that one Degory Marshall informed Crouch. that “in the year 1664 we were sen- tenced. for banishmeat to Jamaica by Judges Hyde and Twisden, and our number was fifty-five. We were put on board the ship-Black Eagle. The master’s name was Fudge, by some -called Lying Fudge:”—Tondon Stand- ard. The Leipzig Book Fair. Leipzig is the largest publieation cen- Jter in the world. . More :books and pe- riodicals are printed there than any- Where else, and more people are en- gaged. in making and. using printers’ supplies than in London, .New - York. Berlin or Paris. Many of the orders for these publications come from Eng- land, France, Austria and other coun- tries because the mechanical work' can ‘be done in Leipzig much cheaper than elsewhere. More than half of the transactions in books take place at the Leipzig. book fair, which occurs every year at the jubilate. the first: week in Easter, when booksellers and publish- ers from all parts of Germany assem- ble to compare and balance accounts and to make contracts for the next year. musICTAns ano Sneezing. Nobody can dispute the sincerity of the players in a big orchestra like the Philharmonic or the New York Sym- phony. Most of the time they take their work seriously, but sometimes the men, break Joose and play tricks on one another as though they were youngsters in school. Of course the audlence knows nothing of these things; they’re usually perpetrated in rehearsals, The red pepper trick is the common- est. The jokers scatter it where the bassoon and trombone players are like- 1y to suck it-up. The result is chokes and sneezes. Sometimes the epidemic reaches even into the strings, but of course the players on the wind instru- ments get it worst. As a matter of fact, the jokers are playiug with fire. “A confirmed sneezer coa't get a job In a good or- chestra, no matter how. good a per- former he may. be,” 83id- a- consistent concert goer. “Think of the effect of a rousing sneeze son a pianissimo! Why, it would spoil a whele concert, one sneeze would. A conductor has to guard against a sneeze as he does agaiast inebriety.”—New York Sun. Spoiled His Sport. “How many ducks did you shoot, Pat?” “The divil 2 wan.” “Weren't there any there?” “Sure th* lake wor fyll av thim, but Iv'ry toime I'd point me gun at wan, d'ye moind, another wan w'd get be- fwixt me him. 20’ g9alk e a'Wl— "Toledo TOM SMART DRAY AND TRANSFER SAFE AND PIANO MOVING Residonce Phone 58 818 America Ave. Office Phone 12 M. MALZAHBN & CO. 'L« REAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE FARM,LOANS, RENTALS FARMS AND CITY PROPERTIES 407 Minn. Ave. Bemidji, Minn T. BEAUDETTE Merchant Tailor Ladies’ and Gents' Suits to Order. French Dry Cleaning, Pressing and Repairing a Specialty. 315 Beltrami Avenue R. F. MURPHY FUNERAL DIRECTOR AND EMBALMER Office 313 Beltrami Ave. Phone 319-2. Mining Stocks Bought and Sold Buy Keating & Calumet & Carbon. Getin NOW. G. G. JOHNSON Office o'mn-la?u;n s NOTICE OF APPLICATION —for— LIQUOR LICENSE. STATE OF M NNEEOTA.% 5§ 3 Phons 641 MINN. County of Beltrami City of Beg‘ldin Notice is berel ven, That application has beeh made 1htlwfifing to the SoPcaen of said city of Bemidji andfiled in my office. praying tor license {0 sell intoxicating liquors. for the term commencing on March Gth- 1911, and terminating op March Gth. 1012, by the following person. and:at the following: place, as stated in said_application, respec- tively, to-wit: i x ALBERT MARSHEE At and in the {ront room grourd floon of that cerain Two-story Grick hallding, Moosted on 1)1:;. 6 block 17 original tewnsite Bemidji, nn. Said application will be heard and deter-. mined by said ity council: of the city of Bemidji at the council rooms in the city ball in said city of Bemidji, in Beltrami .County. and Btate of Minnesota,, on Monday, the 27th tffi ?if February, 1911, 8 .o'clock p. m. of at day it Vi 190 day ot BeLE LB th day ‘ebruary, 1911. THOS. MALOY, City Olerk. By G. 8tein, Deputy. children are sick childten. Don't be ] cross and slap and scold them. Give {{ them Kickapoo Worm Killer (It tastes they change to happy, good natured children that play all day, sleep well at night, and look rugged and well nourished. Price 25c., sold by drug- gists everywhere. Clears Whitens Beautifies The Complexion Hanson's Almond]| Cream)| WOOD !| Leave your orders for || seasoned Birch, Tam- || arack or Jack Pine || Wood with S. P. HAYTH Telephone 11 Automobile, Gas Engine and Motor Boat (EXPERT REPAIR WORK Shop, Lake front foot of 4th St. Phone 152 E. H. JERRARD Real Estate Insurance Real Estate & Farm Loans O’Leary=Bowser Bldg. Phone 19 KFACIAL Defects ) QUICKLY : CORRECTED LJ The chief surgeon of the Plastic Surgery Institute quickly nfihts all wrongs with the human fa or features without knife or pain to the entire satisfaction and de- i light of everypatient. The work is as lasting as lifeitself. Ifyou have a facial irregularity of any kind write Plastic Surgery lnsfiluie Corner Sixth and Hennepin [ umnmov:. MINN. THE CROOKSTON -LUMBER CO. WHOLESALE LUMBER: LATH AND BUILDING MATERIAL Fitzsimmons - Baldwin : Company +Successors to Melges Bro. Co. Farmers Produce bought or sold - 2tMon. Feb, Hth-0t5 { like candy) and see how quickly i NORTHERN GROGERY Whelesale: Fralts and Produce T Coale and Retall - on Gommission. Quick returas Phoas §7 Deposits made on or before - March 5th, in the Savings De- partment will draw four months interest at 4 per cent, July Ist. The Security State Bank OF BEMIDJI The Merry Musicians ARMORY THEATRE ‘Saturday, feh. 25 Prices---25¢, 35¢, 50c Sale of Zion Laces pet. i Separating, clipping and scalloping the webs of laces. and a display of illustrations of mechanical de- vices requisite in the art of fine lacé making. & This sale offers an exceptional opportunity for economy purchases of durable fine laces of ex- quisite beauty. It will prove very interesting even to those not intending to purchase. § Zion Laces, manufactured in the most modern lace factory in the world, are the best of their kind —the best wash laces ever placed before the American women—and sold without a customs duty of 70£ added to the cost, as are all imported laces. G All machines of Zion Lace Industries are and have been operating 18 hours daily, except Sunday, for about three years, with the product of each machine sold ahead several weeks. New machines are continually being installed. & VWomen wanting laces for present or future use will experience a marked saving by visiting our lace counters. Berman Emporium Bemidji Manufacturers, Wholesalers and Jobbers The Following Firms Are AThoruughI] Reliable and Orders Sent-to Them- Will Be Promptly Filled at Lowest: Prices Model Ice Cream, Snowflake Bread and Deehshus Canpdies Made at The Model Wholesale Bakery, Man- facturing Confectionery and Ice Cream Factory 315 Minnesota Ave. BEMIDJI, MINN. COMPANY WHOLESALE GROGERS Send your Mail Orders to GEO. T. BAKER & GO, Manufacturing Jewelers and Jobbers The Given Hardware Co. Hardware 318 Minnsssta Ava.