Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, March 7, 1911, Page 3

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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. 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 BRBSH 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 Leaves at 7:30 a. m Freight North Bound Leaves at 6:00 a. m Minn. Red Lake & Man. No. 1 North Bound Leavesitat 3:35 p. m]| No 2 South Bound Arrives at 10:30 a. m | PROFESSIONAL iL_ CARDS i ARTS HARRY MASTEN] Piano Tuner ormerly o Radenbush & Co. of St. Paul | Instructor of Viohn. -Piano, Mando- lin and Brass Instruments. Music furnished for balls, hotels. weddings, banquets, and all occasions. Terms reascnable. 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 theVirgil Piano and| Pipe Organ School of London and New York. Studio Brinkman Hotel. Room 36,-Phone 525. 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 ye Is leading in the profes- sion for Beltrami, Koochiching and Itasca | counties. Has made Bemidji headquarters for three years, where he has upwards of 200 steady enstomers. Thoroughly familiar with United States make of pianos. You will save money and get better satisfaction if you take him into your con- tidence 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. Telephone 82 or 310 Address 515 Bemid]i 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. 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 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 21] INER W. JOHNSON PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Residence 1113 Bemidji Ave. Phone 435 Offices over Security Bank. Phone 130 DENTISTS R. D. L. STANTUN DENTIST Office in Winter Bleck DR. J. T. TUOMY DENTIST | 1st National Bank Build'g. Telephone 230 R. G. M. PALMER DENTIST gMiles Block Evening Work by Appointment Only LAWYERS RAHAM M. TORRANCE LAWYER Miles Block Telephone 560 H. FISK . ATTORNEY AT LAW Office over City Drug Strra EW PUBLIC LIBRARY Open daily, except Sunday and Mon- dayllto12a.m. 1t0 6 p.m., 7 to 9 p. m. ‘~uday 3 to 6 p.m. Monday 7to 9 p. EATRICE MILLS; Librarian. [ RAILROAD TIME cARDS || " Dont forget that Tubbs Bilious he man without a home, th ship without a harbor, are examples of misguided calculations. = Make your banking home with the North- ern National Bank while you are earning money and in your old age you can live comfortably on the in- come from it. ; M. N. Lenihan of Red Lake Falls spent yesterday in Bemidji. Tubbs White Liniment for aches| Tupbs White Pine Cough Cure, and pains. City Drug Store, cures coughs and colds. City Drug 80,000 Living pictures at the City|Store. SOCIAL AND | PERSONAL| | | Call for Mark’s Lung Balsam and {get it. J. D. Buch was a Deer River visi- i tor in Bemidji yesterday. it. , |acted official business in Bemidji Take advantage of the hosiery|yesterday. |and underwear sale at Hetland & | Fallon. Miss Mabel Anderson of Walker was the guest of Bemidji friends! | yesterday. | T. ]J. Harnis of Negannee, Mich., | was in Bemidji yesterday attending to business matters. - Plain sewing and dressmaking done. Room 21, Bazaar building, Phone 419. As a quick relief for coughs and |colds use Mark’s Lung Balsam. Price 25, 50 and $1.00. C. G. Gordan of Littlefork, who owns a general store at that place, | F. A Dare of Walker, editor of spent yesterday in Bemidji. Ithe Walker Pilot, spent yesterday Bovs Hizh'Grade Hose. Special in Bemidji on a business mission. linen knee. Best 25c quality at this sale 18c. Hetland & Fallon. Man’s Friend cures those tired feel-| J. McConnell of Akely spent ings. For sale at City Drug Store. | | ‘ H. H. Ledenbery of St. Paul, ‘rlepmy creamery inspector for the | state, was in Bemidii on official busl-l his home at Akely. Catch a glimpse of the Norway |spirit at the illustrated lecture in Remember Hetland & Fallon are|the City Hall Tuesday evening. closing out their entirelineof hosiery | March 7th., 8 o’clock. and underwear. Sale begins March| Ty cigcs class of the high school, ?hh' and will continue throughout| gnich wasunder the direction of Pre- | the week. fessor W. Z. Robinson, for the high The Baptist Ladies’ Aid will be|school faculty, visited district court ‘emenained on Wednesday afternoon | this morning. | by Mesdames Smyth and Hulett at| J. A. Long of Walker, who has | the home of Mrs. Smyth, 703 Min- | charge of logging operations at Boy ! nesota avenue. Everyone cordially | p;ier for the Pine Tree Lumber invited to attend. company, spe t yesterday in the “All on board” for a trip thmlmty, returning to Boy River in the| |Norway. Train leaves City Hall evening. Tuesday evening. Tickets full fare| VCH(: Children 20c. A male quartet |will meet at the home of |of trained sir, gers will accompany | August Elmquist at the trip and render national songs. ‘Thursday afternosn. Rigs will leave Thompson’s and Moberg’s residence at 2 o’clock. Everyone | invited. Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Titus enter- itained at dinner Sunday evening. | Covers were laid for twelve. The out of town guests were Supt. Toohey Patronage hangs on a thread—|of the M. D. W. Co. of Internation- that thread is your satisfaction, trezt;a) Falls, Train master, G. H. you honestly—and it is as strorg as| Warner of the M. & 1., James Nolan, | acable. Abuse your confidence—|F, Koop and Manager Consicline and it snaps like a cobweb. Mark’s| of the Northwestern Telephone Co., | Lung Balsam can get your confidence | Brainerd district. Mrs. Titus was “‘“‘d bold it. |assisted by the Misses Bab and Nymore lodge, M. B. A. will give | Beryl Neal. a masked ball on Saturday night, : The public is protected in a large March 11 in the Nymore hall. Those | way Dby our pure pure food laws, in | participating must mask in dominoes, | ness yesterday. Mrs. J. C. Snow of Big Falls arrived in | Bemidji last evening to meet his wife, who has been visiting for sev- eral weeks with friends at Park Rapids. Mr. and Mrs. Soow left for their home at Big Falls this morning. compelling the manufacturer’s to the ladies in white, the gentlemen|lape] and print on each tin or !in black. An invitation is ex!ended\bume_ just what it’s contents are, to the public to attend. An admis-| | providing it isin any way adulter- sion fee of 25c will be charged at|ated. Thisis acknowledged by all the door, and dance tickets will|¢o be a just and wise law, and we cost 25¢ extra. No one will be al-|take pleasure in assuring our patrons lowed to daace who does not wear a that, they are equally protected domino. The unmasking will take | when buying fresh milk or cream place at 12, midnight. from the “Clover Leaf Dairy Farm,”| A tip to you, use Mark’s Lunz{or Schwandt & Marin. Our report | Balsam for coughs and colds. from the Food and Dairy Depart- Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Riddell, 1213™ent givesas “their test,” 4.5 per Lake Boulevard, celebrated their tin| €0t for milk and 24 per cent for wedding last evening by entertain.|cream- Reporton display at our ing a company of friends at “500.” | Store. were served| and guest was presented with a faver inthe form of tin ware. Those| List of advertised Letters for present were Mr. and Mrs. E. E.!geek ending March 4, 1911. Unclaim- McDonald, Mr. and Mrs. R. H. [ ed. Schumaker, Mr. and Mrs. R. L. leen, | Mr. and Mrs. E. H. Denu, Dr. and;’ Mr. C. R. Sanborn, Mr. and Mrs.| Oscar Erwig, Mr. and Mrs. W. C.| | Klein, Mrs. F. D. LaFavar, Judge C. W. Stanton and Messrs. George Buxton and A. L. Barker. | Men Bronn, Mr. Karl, Brandon, Mr. G. W. Boufford, Mr. Olivee, Blanchard, Mr. Tommy, Bentzin, Mr. R. A. Casperson, Mr. Ole, | - Congdon, Mr. D. H. | Dixon, Mr. David, Flack, Mr. Gust, Gillette, Mr. C. W. Jackson, Mr. Andrew, Landerback, Mr. J. S. Lee, Mr. Andrew, Lind, Mr. Sam, Maroney, Mr, J. C. Nolan, Mr. Frank, Peterson, Mr. Bert, | Peterson, Mr. John E. Peltier, Mr. Peter, Potter, Mr. Walter, | Robertson, Mr. Fldor, Sampson, Mr. Bert, Tracey, Mr. W. E. Thamson, Mr. Martin, Williams, Mr. B. T. Women Collins, Mrs. Emma, Dougherty, Mrs. Wm. Nelson, Mrs. Erick, Schot, Mageus. A BOOK WORTH READING. A little book showing the human Appendix and telling how Appendicitis is caused and n EASILY prevent it, is offered ort time by E. N. French & Co., Automobile, Gas Engine and Motor Boat EXPERT REPAIR WORK Shop, Lake front foot of 4th St. Phone 152 E. H. JERRARD | When you have rheumatism in | your foot or instep apply Chaniber- |lain’s Liniment and you will get quick relief. It costs but a quai‘ter. Why Suffer? For sale by Barkeér's Drug Stere: » 2 R. F. MURPHY | FUNERAL DIRECTOR AND EMBALMER Oftfice 313 Beltrami Ave. Phone 318-2. | Hall, Tuesday evening. Don’t mxss; J. E. Kulander of Walker trans-| |several hours in Bemidji yesterday! |enroute from International Falls to| The Swedish Ladies’ Aid Society Nymore on| | at Fulton street, below which he or- IN SEGHIHT IES Aged New' York Broker Is Robbed of ‘$160,000. TRICK IS CLEVERLY DONE | Jostied on Way to Safety Deposit Vaults He Drops His Valuable Pack- age and Polite Young Man Comes to His Aid, Substituting a Bundle of Old Newspapers in Place of the Securities. New York, March 7.—George Ban- croft, Sr., a broker eighty-six years | old, was robbed of securities worth ap- proximately $100,000, while in the ves- tibule of the Produce Exchange Safety ! Deposit and Storage company. | ! For twenty-five years it has been | | Mr. Bancroft’s habit every Thursday afternoon to deposit the firm’s valu- | ables in a box rented by it from the deposit and storage company. The| distance from his office to the vaults | | is not more than 200 feet. Last Thursday Mr. Bancroft, as usual, placed securities worth that day about $100,000 in a large envelope, approximately ten by fourteen inches, tied with red tape. and with the firm’s | mame printed in the corner. i Alone he walked from his office to the produce exchange. A flight of| steps leads from the street level en- trance to the vaults. As ‘Mr. Ban- croft reached the bottom of the steps he noticed a young man whom he only remembers as rather undersized lean- ing against the corridor wall. | Just as Mr. Bancroft was about to | turn the corner at the end of the corri- dor into the vaults a tall man, in a great hurry, came running around the corner in the opposite direction and | | collided with him. The shock threw | i Mr. Bancroft off his feet and in fall- | ing he dropped the envelope. | Polite Young Man Did It. That was the cue for the undersized young man who had been leaning against the corridor wall. He stepped | up to Mr. Bancroft, assisted him to| his feet and was solicitous to tuck the fallen envelope under his arm. At | least Mr. Bancroft thought it was the envelope that fell. He went on to de- posit it in his box as usual. Monday morning when his son, George Bancroft, Jr., unlocked the box to check up the securities before the opening of business for the week, he found that the only envelope there contained three old newspapers. A | clever substitution had been effected. The securities were made up of rail- road and industrial stocks which could easily be hypothecated in any stock | brokerage house in the United States | having connections with the New York Stock Exchange. | So bold a robbery in daylight, in the | very heart of the financial district, shocked the police like an exploded ‘bombshell. Years ago Inspector Byrnes had drawn a dead line across the city dered that mo crook or pickpocket should go, even on an innocent errand, under pain of instant trouble with the 1 police. @eware of Olntments for Catarrh that Contain Mercury. as mercury will surely destroy the sense of | smell and completely derange the whole sys- } vem when entering it through the mucous surfaces. Such articles should never be used | except _on presciiption of reputable physi- | cians, as the damage they will do is tenfold | to the good you can possibly derive from them. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by . J. Cheney & Co., Toldedo, O.. contains no mercury, ard istaken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous ‘services of the system.. In buying Hall's Catarrh Cure be sure you get the genwine. It is taken internally and made in Toledo, Ohio, by F.! J. Okeney & Co, Testimonials free, | Sold by Druggists. Price, 5 per bottle. | Take [Hall'sFamily Pills for constipation { 1 T3 EOTHER AND GHILD.¢ S the G UM ; CURE! D COLIC, and y'for DIARRHGIA. _ It js ab- | i . Be sure and ask for ““Mrs. | ing. | Eezema | unhesitatingly recommend D. D. D. ty-five centsa bottle, TWO ARE KILLED IN DUEL Wife of One of the Men Witnesses the Battle. Birmingham, Ala., March 7—L. E. Marbut shot and killed C. J. Strong and was himself killed by Strong in the presence of the former’s wife at the Marbut home at Rising. Each man emptied a revolver at the other and both were fatally wounded, dying at a local hospital a few hours later. The cause 'of the trouble is a mys- tery, as the men were on the best of terms half an hour before the shoot- CONGRESS SPENT A BILLION Ex-Chairman Tawney Is Footing Up Total of Appropriations. ‘Washongton, March 7.—Former Rep- resentative James A. Tawney of Min- nesota is working on a statement of the appropriations made during the re- cent session. It will show the expenditures to have totaled approximately a billion dollars. Situation Is Improving. | Honolulu, March 7.—The cholera epidemic in Hawaii appears less seri- ous than at any time in the past week. In all twenty-nine cases of cholera have been reported. Had Been Honored by Pope. Baltimore, March 7.—Mrs. Mary Isa- bella Jenkins, wife of Michael Jen- kins, capitalist and philanthropist, is dead at her home here. The title of Duchess of Llewellyn was conferred op Mrs. Jenkins by Pope Pius X. in recog: nition of her benefactions to the Cath- olic church. WHAT CURES ECZEMA? We have had so many inquiries lately regarding Eczema and other skin diseases, that we are glad to make our answer public. After care- ful investigation we have found that a simple wash of Oil of Wintergreen, as compounded in D. D. D., can be re- Hed upon. We would not make this statement to our patrons, friends and neighbors unless we were sure of it— and although there are many so-called remedies sold, we ourselves Prescription. Because—We know that it gives In- stant relief to that torturing iteh. Because—D. D. D. starts the eure at the foundation of the tiouble. Because—It cleanses, soothes and heals the skin. Because—It enables Nature to repair the ravages of the disease. Because—The records of ten years of complete cures of thousands of the most serious cases show that D. D. D. is today recognized as the absolutely | reliable Eczema cure. Drop into our store today, just to talk over your case with us. Barker’s Drug Store. T. BEAUDETTE | Merchant Tailor Ladies' and Gents' Suits to Order. French | Dry Cleaning, Pressing and Repairing a Specialty. 315 Beltrami Avenue WOOD Leave your orders for seasoned Birch, Tam- arack or Jack Pine Wood with S.P. HAYTH Telephone 11 If you have North American or Vermillion to sell; Call on 1C. G. JOHNSON BROKER Office 0’Leary-Bowser Bidg. BEMIDJI, MINN. Phone 641 and when you see the prices of from $12.00 term. 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 thissale— 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 getting a bargain in the broadest sense of the . 0. Madson & Co One Priced Clothiers clothing and at the sale to $25.00 you're simply It's the coolest - Shoe for the o matism, Tender, Burning and ' Perspir- ing Feet. The Improved Cushion Shoe is the latest and best Patents of Dr. A. Reed and comes as a climaxto all that has gone before in Cushion Shoe Manu- facture. This is not the (old) or original Dr. A. Reed Cushion Shoe previously patented, but Dr. A. Reed’s latest invention in Cushion Soles. Glothing House Hetland & Fallon 313 Minnesota Ave. Closing Qut Sale Our entire Stock of Muslin Under- wear, Knit Underwear in Union Suits, and separate garments, Ladies' and Ghildren's hosiery and a full line of Neckwear. All will be sold af less than cost at this Sale. BEGINNING MARCH 7TH And will continue the balance of the week. We are making this sacrifice so as to make room for our Spring Millinery which is arriving daily. Come early and take advantage of the many bargains we have to offer you. Now is the time to buy your spring Underwear so don’t miss this sale. Remember we are head- quarters for Underwear and Hosiery. Space wont allow us to enumerate prices, but come and see for yourself. HETLAND & FALLON to Mail Order Concerns Because-- They have never contributed a cent to furthering the inteersts of our town— " We're Opposed Every cent received by them from this ‘commurity is a direct loss to our merch- ants— In almost every case their prices can be met right here, without delay in receiving goods and the possibility of mistakes in filling orders. But-- The natural human trait is to buy where goods are cheapest. Local pride is usually secondary in the game of life as played today. Therelore Mr. Merchant and Business Man, meet your competitors with their own weapons—ad- vertising. Advertise! The local field is yours. All you need do is to avail yourself of the opportunities offered. An advertisement in this paper will carry your message into hundreds of homes in this community. It is the surest medium ofkilling your greatest.competitor. Come in and see us about it. ,

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