Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, February 24, 1911, Page 3

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RAILROAD TIME GARDS H . sSo0 No. 162 East Bound Leaves 9:54 a. No. 163 West Bound Leaves 4:37 p. No. 186 East Bound Leaves 2:45 p. No. 187 West Bound Leaves 10:38 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 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 Bound Lezves at 7:30 a. m Freight North Bound Leaves at 6:00 a. m Minn. Red Lake & Man. No. 1 North Bound Leavesjiat 3:35 p. m No 2 South Bound Arrives at 10:30 a. m BpEEH | PROFESSIONAL I CARDS ARTS HARRY MASTEN Piano Tuner ormerly o Radenbush & Co. of St. Paul Instructor of Violn, 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. Sti Brinkman Hotel. Room 36, Phone 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 ¢ organs) Practiced in| | Walker were in Bemidji last evening | Mrs. Long, and together they { Marine Corps of a rifle trophy to{ SOCIAL AND/| PERSONAL| Bakery geods at Peterson’s. | Better stop coughing. Mark’s Lung Balsam will do it. Mr. and Mrs. C. ‘M. Taylor of Cass Lake were vistors in Bemidji today. : Apprentice girls wanted at Con ger’'s Millinery. Call at once, 209 4th Street. Fresh eggs, butter, cheese and other fancy provisions and groceries at Peterson’s. Miss Gertrude Stone of Crookston arrived in Bemidji last night and is the guest of Miss Bailey. Mrs. A. K. Southworth, Miss Margaret Shay and Thayer Bailey were the dinner guests of T. E. Wilde of Cruokston, at the Markham hotel last night. | Miss Edna Schmitt, who is steno- grapher at the Citizens State Bankat Thief River Falls, is the guest of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Schmitt for the week. Miss Marie Wallsmith returned last evening from a seven weeks trip i Milwaukee and Chicago. While away, Miss Wallsmith selected her spring stock of millinery. John King and J. C. Kulander of and attended the meeting of the K. P.lodge beld last night. Mr. Kul- ander was accompanied by his wife,i‘ who was the guest of friends. J. A. Loog of Boy River, who hns‘ charge of the logging operations of | the Pine Tree Lumber company was in Bemidji yesterday and left in the evening for Walker, where he mel% will| return to Bemidji this evening. ! Arrangements have been made for | the donation by enlisted men of the the Northern Rifle Association to be| competed for annually by teams of | six men each from the United States | services and from the Militia. Conp- in the profes- ochichiog and Itasca | de Bemidji headquarters | for three years. where he has upwards of 200 | steady CUSIOMETS. 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 to meet you and explain the | different instruments and will enjoy aiding | you in making your selection. i Address 615 Bemidji Ave. Telsphone 82 or 310 | PHYSICIANS AND SURCEONS R. ROWLAND GILMORE| PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Otfice—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 Fo. 60z 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 1 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 | - H R. D. L. STAN'IUIY DENTIST Office in Winter Block l R. J. T. TUOMY DENTIST Ist National Bank Build'd. Telephone 230 R. G. M. PALMER DENTIST EMiles Block Evening;Work by Appointment Only LAWYERS RAHAM M. TORRANCE | LAWYER Miles Block Telephone 560 H. FISK . ATTORNEY AT LAW Office over City Drug Stove EW PUBLIC LIBRARY Open daily, except Sunday and Mon- daylito12a.m., 1to 6 p.m., 7 t0 9 p. m. Snuday 3 to 6 p.m. Monday 7to 9 p. . B%Am MILLS, Librarian. |less than $7, 292. 53 will be donated, kpmvidiue the entire corps of 9, 521 \Things that You Wil Find = { Coffee, per Ib............. tcau . |Salad Oil, per i Fish Sauce, per | East Indian Chutney, 400 |Pimiento Cheese, per tributions for the purchase of this | trophy have come in satisfactori.y. | The Marines on duty at the Marine | Corps Recruiting District of Minne- sota, Wisconsin and Dakotas have | contributed ~ every generously. | Sergeant Semmelreth of St. Paul, | Minn, who collected the contribu- tions of this District stated that no Marines, contributes in the same proportion of Marines to dollars as was donated in this District. That sum, however, is not expected nor needed. Our thousand new S. &S. 15¢ books of fiction just received at Peterson’s. at Roe & Markusen’s| Grocery | Caldwells Electric Cut 3 5C Pimientos, per bottle ....omumusiiis Delft Peanut Oil, per bottle s i cusessissiiass 30C Taragon Vinegar, per bottle . 25 c bottle per bottle. Bar-Le-Duc-Jam, per 8lass.........coeveennnn.. 3 Oc Marachino Cherries perbottle.................. 3 5 C| glass. Roquefort Chesse, per Slassi. ... s Limburger Cheese, per Blass:cuncisisorssisvnmssn 35 C Combination Cheese, per brick.................. loc; Peanut Butter, per R 25¢ Fish Flakes; per CA S R ausnrsavonsiosss IOC Euchred Pickles, per bottle 350 | Roe & Markusen The Quality Grocers Foreign. Bills of Exchange bought from the: Northern . National, Bank. Itis a: convenient-and economical way to send money to the old coun- try. Fancy fruit for the table or sick room at Peterson’s. Don’t - neglect your cough for a minute when Mark’s Lung. Balsam is so easy to get. - Mrs. Gertrude Rogers . solicits your subscriptions for all magazines, also renewals. Phone 487, Mr. and Mrs. P. J. Russell . re- turned this morning from Minne- apolis, where they have spent the past week consulting a physician in regard to Mrs. Russell’s health. F.D. LaFavar, who has charge of the Wallace Drug store of Crookston, arrived in Bemidji last night and will tonight be initiated into the Elkanah Commandery of the Masonic lodge. There will be a special service in the Presbyterian church Thursday evening at 7.30. Rev. J. B. Astwood will speak on “The Seventieth Week of Daniel, its Relation to the Gen- tiles and the Church.” The public is cordially invited. Mr. and Mrs. A. Lord return to Bemidji tonight from Muskegon, Mich.. where they were calleda week ago by the death of Mr. Lord’s mother, Mrs. Cyrus Lord, Mr. Cyrus Lord. will return with M. and Mrs. Lord tonight and will here- after make his home with his son. All the papers, all the periodicals at Peterson’s. SORRY HE SAID PRESIDENT LIED Minnesota Senator Did Not Mean fo Be Taken Literally, St. Paul, Feb. 24—Immediately after the motion was made for ad- Journment of the senate, in deference to the memory of Justice Jaggard, Senator McGrath of Winona, who made a sensational attack upon Presi- dent Taft in a speech against the Ca- nadian raciprocity treaty Tuesday, arose and said: “Mr. President, before this body ad- journs. I want to make a brief state- ment or explanation. In debate on the reciprocity measure, I believe I said things 1 should not have said. In’ the pique 1 was im, I believe I made remarks about the president which T intended in a figurative way and not literal. 1 did not mean to call the president a liar. “I want to say, Mr. President, that I have the greatest respect for Mr. Taft, both as a man and as president, | and I do not believe he intentionally would state untruths. I do not want to say anything that would lower the dignity of this senate and I assure | you I will not in the future. I wish. to be quoted as I meant it, and not as I said it—figuratively, not literally.” SEATTLE WOMEN AT POLLS Enter Primaries and Defeat Friends: of Mayor Recently Recalled. Seattle, Feb. 24—For the second time within a month the votes of wo- men have worked a revolution in Seat- tle. In the primary election to choose eighteen candidates for councilmen to be voted on March 7 the women voters followed up their vote of Feb. 7, which ousted Mayor Hiram C. Gill and his appointive officers, by defeating all but three candidates who were ac- cused of being on intimate terms with the late Gill administration. These three were nominated by so | narrow a margin that it is almost cer- tain they will not be among the nine selected as councilmen in March, Most of the nominees:are wealthy | men, PASSES ITS FIRST READING Bill to Curb Lords Has Blg Majority in Commons. London, Feb. 24—Premier Asquith was given an ovation by his. support- ers in the house of commons when the parliament bill, otherwise knowa as the veto bill, a measure designed to curtail the power of the lords, was passed on its first reading by the gov- ernment’s full majority of 124, the The Nationalists first rose in their places, cheering wildly and waving their hats. The Liberal members. quickly emulated their example.. This exhibition of enthusiasm was repcated 2 few minutes later as the prime min- ister quietly left the scene of his vic- tory in ‘the initial action against the lords. BANKERFINED FOR CONTEMPT Minneapolis Man Must Pay $250 or Go to Workhouse. Minneapolis, Feb. 24—Andrew D. Clarke, sixty-nine years old, former president of the Minnesota National bank of Minneapolis, was fined 3250 for contempt of court with an alterna- tive of thirty days in the workhouse. Clarke pleaded guilty to contempt in disposing of stock in the State Bank of Algona, Ia., 'and 10,009 acres of North Dakota land, following the issuance of a restraining order by Judge H. D. Dickinson forbidding the sale or transfer of any of his hold- ings until the validity of a divorce ob- tained by him atCarson City, Nev., Phone 206 Phone 207. 'had been determined. There- ‘is perfect safety.in the|l Taft Concedes Tariif. Com- mission Bill Is Dead. SUN OF $400,00 ASKED Item.in. Sundry Civil Bill-Provides for the - Continuation of the Present Board: for the Next Two Years— Chairman Emery Telis of the Work Being Done in Finding Cost of Pro- duction at Home and. Abroad. ‘Washington, Feb. 24—That Presi- dent Taft recognizes that his perman- ent tariff board bill has fallen into an innocuous desuetude and plans to con- tinue the ‘present tariff board for two years under any circumstances, was indicated by an item of $400,000 for the tariff ‘board carried in the sundry civil bill, which was reported to the house by Representative James A. Tawney. The $400,000, according to the bill, is to keep the present board running for the next two years, and, if it goes through, the next Democratic house will have no opportunity to interfere with President Taft and his board. The president evidently believes that $400,000 for the present tariff board is better than nothing, for after a most earnest attempt to force the perma- nent board bill through congress he has apparently centered his efforts cn continuing the life of the present or- ganization. In examining Chairman Emery of the board Chairman Tawney elicited the fact that the investigations of the board so far have not in any case been directed toward ascertaining the dif- ference in the cost of production in the United .States and abroad. “The investigation of the question of cost abroad has hardly begun in a systematic fashion,” said Mr. Emery, “for the reason that certain people are carrying out the problem of get- ting the cost here and we could not properly carry on the investigation abroad before the home cost was se- cured.” Probing Paper Business. Some detailed information as to the lines along which the board’s investi- gations have been conducted was fur- nished by Chairman Emery. He de- | clared that at present the board has experts abroad investigating the wool industry. In the pulp and paper in- vestigation he said that the board had examined the books of every impor- tant mill in the East. { “We have men now in Wisconsin going over books,” Mr. Emery de- clared, “and are about to examine the { books of the mills in Minnesota, which { practically covers the whole industry. { We have every item of cost price and sales, including, in the case of many companies, all the figures showing the cost of wood, where they cut wood on their own land, what they have charged for stumpage and what profit { they have made on the lumber trans- actions.” “Have you made a corresponding }‘ pulp and paper investigation in Can- ada?’ asked Representative Malby | (Rep., N. Y.). “We have agents in Canada now for | that purpose,” sald Mr. Emery. “We have some figures directly from Cana- dian manufacturers from this end of the line, but we have not yet received| the Canadian returns. Our agents in| Canada are working on that now.” | PLAGUE WIPES OUT VILLAGE Chinese Hamlet Discovered With Not One Survivor Left. St. Petersburg, Feb. 24.—A telegram from Harbin -reports the grewsome discovery of a Chinese village near here in which the entire population was dead from the plague. Many bodies lay in the open air and were covered with snow. Chicago Men Fight Duel. Chicago, Feb: 24.—As the result of what the police declare was a pre- arranged pistol duel James Galligher is dying from a bullet wound in the abdomen, while -Thomas Hinckey is under arrest. The two men are watch- | men for the Illinois Central. It is charged that following a quarrel they went to “the wilderness,” paced off twenty steps, wheeled and opened fire. A Brass Bed Sale For Tomorrow, Saturday Onl.y $16.50 Bed same as above, 2 inch continous . post, 5 spindles, very heavy brass. We 1: have only a few 8o you will have to hurry- i | The regular price of this bed was 1328.50 tomorrow you can buy one for 1 $16.50. Murphy Furitus - G, midji, Minn. With Tar [For Coughs. and Cgldi. Cuaranteed to glve Satisfaction., books suffer in transit. The head of a moving company was interviewed on this subject, and he said: “After sev- eral years’ experimenting with differ ent things for the:best conveyance of books I have found that the use of small boxes is by far the most advis- able, the smaller the better. These boxes are easily secured for a few cents from your grocer. For storage purposes, where the matter is left to us, we move books in long, narrow boxes fitted with handles made espe cially for this purpose, but this is not necessary, of course, for the ordinary moving. Barrels simply ruin books, umes have caused more than ope strike among our men. They are the clum- slest of all things to handle, as well as the heaviest.” Another mode of moving books is to tle them up in small bundles with stout ‘wrapping paper and heavy twine, leav- | ing enough of the twine to make a loop handle-for lifting.—New Idea Woman’s Magazine. The Drummer’s Sermon. “Certainly I will make a few re- marks,” says the cigar salesman who, because of his solemn garb, has been mistaken for a man of the cloth Ascending the platform, he says: ' “Men are much like cigars. Often the filler is. Sometimes a good old stogy is more popular than an im- ported celebrity. Some men are all right in the showcase on display, but | are great disappointments when you get them home. No matter how fine a man s, eventually he meets his match. A two-fer often puts on as many airs as a fifty-center. Some men pever get to the front at all except during campaigns. Some are very fancy outside and -are selected for presents. Others have a rough ex- terior, but spread cheer and comfort about them because of what is inside. But all men, as all cigars, good or | bad, two-fers, stogies or rich or poor, | come to ashes at the last.”—San Fran- eisco Chronicle. * The End In View. Ella—Why do you let him-call you | by your first name? Stella—I want to | encourage im to help me get rid of | my last nar:e.—Judge. Never educate a child to be a gentle- man or a lady alone, but to be & man, & woman.—Herbert Spencer. CARELESS ABOUT APPENDICITIS IN BEMIDII Mans Bemidii people have chronic Appen- dicitis which is carelessly treated s if it were ordinary bowel or stomach trouble. | If you have wind or gas in the stomach or| bowels, sour stomach or constipation. try simple buckthorn bark, glycerine ect., as compounded 1n Adler-i-ka, the new German Appendicitis. remedy. E.N. French & Co. state that A SINGLE DOSE of this simple remedy will relieve any bowel or stomach trouble, Motor Boat EXPERT REPAIR WORK Shop, Lake front foot of 4th St. Phone 152 E. H. JERRARD R. F. MURPHY FUNERAL DIRECTOR AND EMBALMER Office 313 Beltrami Ave. Phone 319-2, |Mining Stocks Bought and Sold Buy Keating & C lomet & Carbon. Getrin NOW. C. G. JOHNSON BROKER 0Office 0'Leary-Bowser Bidg. BEMIDJi, MINN. William C. Klein Real Estate Insurance Phone 641. |l Real Estate & Farm Loans 0’Leary-Bowser Bldg. Phone 19 Mark’s: I.uné Balsam1 and mrge boxes filled with heavy vol- | = you cannot tell by the wrapper what | Automobile, Gas Engine and | Deposits made on or before March 5th, in the Savings De- partment will draw four months .interest at 4 per cent, July 1st. The Security State Ban OF BEMIDJI SPRING COATS You Gan See Them Now Ladies, Misses and Girls--- None too early to make your selection for Easter Sunday. Selecting your garment from our stock, you know that the style and and price are right---two important factors in gar- ment buying. 0'Lary-Bowser Co. * BEMIDJI, MINNESOTA 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 Can’t Find any Fault With our regular prices from $15.00 to $30.00 and when you see the clothing and .at the sale prices of from $12.00 to $25.00 you’re simply getting a bargain in the broadest sense of the term. M. 0. Madson & Co. One Priced Clothiers | i | i |

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