Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, April 26, 1911, Page 3

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\ o | RAILROAD-TIME GARDS 800 182 East Bound Leaves 9:54 a. 163 West Bound Leaves 4:37 p. 186 East Bound Leaves 2:45 p. 187 West Bound Leaves 10:38 a. Creat Northern 33 West Bound Leaves at 3:30 p. m l No. No. No. No. ss38 No. No. 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. 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 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 Leaves{at 3:35 p. m No 2 South Bound Arrives at 10:30 a.'m PROFESSIONAL CARDS ARTS 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 reas nable. All music up to date. HARRY MASTEN, Plano Tuner Room 36, Third floor, Brinkman Hotel, Telephone 535 LENN H. SLOSSON PIANO TUNING Graduate of the Boston School of Piano Tuning, Boston, Mass. Leave orders at “he Bemwidji Music House, 117 Third St. Phone 319-2. Residence Phone 174-2. EDWARD STRIDE Expert Plano and Organ Tuner and Repairer (Specialy church organs) Practiced in Europe for years. llas made Bemidjl headquarters years, where he has upwards of 200 ustor y famillar with United States make money and get better him into your con- our piano.” Ho will | and explain _the 1 will enjoy alding stion. Telephone 92 or 31ll1 steady tal hefore huying be pleased 10 moet y diffcrent instramer you in anaking Address 516 Bemld]l Ave. H..: Offices—Room 9, O'Leary-Bowser Bldg. Phone 23 . REYNOLDS M. COOK . CIVIL ENGINEER Room 9, O'Leary-Bowser Bldg. Phone 23 PHYSICIANS AND SURCEGNS R ROWIAND GILMORE PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office—Miles Block DR. E. A.SHANNON, M. D PHYSICIAN AND SURGECN Office in Mayo Block Phone 396 R C R. SANBORN PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Oftice—Miles Block A. WARD, M. D. *# Qver First National Bank. Phone 51 House 0. 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 211 INER W. JOHNSON PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Residence 1113 Bemidji Ave. Phone 435 Offices over Security Bank. Phone 130 DENTISTS R. D. L STAN ULV DENTIST Office ir. Winter Bleck DR. J. T. TUOMY DENTIST Ist National Bank Build'g. Telephone 230 R. G. M. PALMER DENTIST fMiles Block Evening{Work by Appointment Only LAWYERS RAHAM M. TORRANCE LAWYER Miles Block Telephone 560 H. FISK L d ATTORNEY AT LAW Office over City Drug Store - 34 East Bound Leaves at 12:08 p. m/| 106 South BoundLeaves at 7:00 a. m | 0 a. m| Ts loading In the profes- | Beltraml, KKoochichlag and Itasca| Res. Fhone 397 | SCIAL AND [t ERSONAL] For dancing rmxsic see W. S. Chapman. Mrs. Emma Wrigg of Lake Wil- son, was a Bemidji visitor today. Mr. and Mrs. Andrews of Gonvick, spent the day in the city yesterday. Let us store your stove for sum- mer. Given Hardware Co. Phone 57, | Mr. T. A. Harris of Crookston, is spending a few days at the home of his son, A. E. Harris. F. A. Carter and wife of Redby, | were in Bemidji today on a combin- ed business and pleasure trip. Mrs McAndrews of Big Falls, |was a Bemidji shopper today. She was accompanied by Mrs. Madden | district superintendent of the Metho- dist church, was in the city today on | official business, | Invitations have been issued for ¥ ilhe Knight of Columbus big dance HARRY MASTEN)| | which will be held Friday evening in the City Hall. { I.J. Opsahl, returned this morn- 2sts in that locality. John Schroeder, chief clerk at the City Drug Store, has retu~ned from | Mountain Lake, where he had gone |to be present at wedding of his ‘| brother. | Why bother with your stove this summer. We'll get it, clean it, keep it in a good clean place and set it up for you next fall. Phone 57.| Given Hardware Co. Lee LaBaw left this morning for Walker, where he will join Judge Stanton, who is presiding at the i present term of court in Cass county, |lover of good music, should fail to will be held in the city hall tomor- row night. ckets are now on sale {at the Hanson Drug Store. Jobn McElroy of Bemidji, father |of Mrs. McCabe, whose husband ¢ Architect and Realestate Bre ulu-r‘ was shot and killed in January when | ! as deputy sheriff, he was arresting a | man Yy the pame of Smith, left this - | mornine for Walker, where he will | ihe present during the trial of Smith, :who will be arraigned to answer to a charge of murder in the first degree. Lnunty attorney Funck, of Cass | {county, will act as the prosecuting | attorney in the case. | M.J. Wolfe of Minneapolis is| ‘speudmz the day in this city among | | the Odd Fellows. He has complet- | ed the publication of a book con- | taining the history of all the Odd Fellows homes in the United States and Carada. The book also con- tains a photograph of each home | with a short discription. for one dollar. The local organiza- | tion consists of nearly one hundred | members and the sale of the book in this city should meet with success. know them,” the users of | Euthymal (Tooth Paste When you meet a per- || son whose beautiful daz- || zling teeth attract your || immediute attention, you will findin nearly every instance that they are users of Euthymol Tooth Paste It's a scientific product and your dentist- will re- commend it. | “By their teeth you may | For Sale at the City Drug: Store: An interesting book on the care of the teeth given free on application. * | mess trip. {! A H, McKee of Fergus Falls, iinz from Lavina, where he has been| | devoting his attention to his ‘inter- | Mr. LaBaw is Judge Stanton’s| official court reporter. No Bemidji resident, who is a! attend the Junior Concert, which| The work | | was compiled by Mr. and Mrs. Wolfe | and is offered to the Odd Fellows| FBEEE. wovimii s .17 Potatoes .70 Onions \1.50 Cabbage .03 * | Turnips .60 Beets .... .02 Poultry . .15 Wheat .. 1.00 ; Oats .... . .40 cons‘antly before his eyes, the state| account.” penses.and deposi save at interest NationalBank. Theo Fox of Crookston, is visit: ing friends-here today. what .you can in the Northern midji business caller today. Miss Ina Hough of Cass Lake, made the city a short visit yester- day. A Music lovers treat, The Junior Concert, at the ‘city ball tomorrow night. A.]. Johnson of Turtle River, made Bemidji a short business visit today. S J. Jedleka of Long Prairic, arrived |in Bemidjii last night on a short busi- Charles Gustafson, the Tenstrike editor was in the city yesterday on business. $250.00 buys horse and: bugey. The buggy can be made either single or double. P.J. O’Leary. George Martell of Superior spent the day here yesterday as the guest of his cousin, Miss Rose Barrette. We call for, deliver, clean up and Call ‘ys up and Given Hardware Co. | store your stove. we'll get it. | Phone 57. Dr. G. M. Palmer, has returned from Mankato, where he had gone to visit his mother, whose health is very poor. Clerk of Court, Fred Rhoda, who together with his wife, has spent the past week as the guests of relatives 1:r Long Prairie, has returned to thel ! city, V. R. Coppernol, the prominent Hubbard county attorney, was in | Bemidji yesterday on legal business. Mr. Coppernol is located at Park Rapids. T. L. Shevlin of Minneapolis, who is manager of the Crookston Lumber | Co., mills in this city, arrived in Be- midji this morning to attend to busi- ness matters. W. A. Gould, treasurer of the Be- midji Lumber Mill, which is located |in this city. returned this morning from Kelliher, where he had gone to attend to business matters. Miss Cora Hanson, who has been | the guest-of Mr. and Mrs, A. A, Comstock for the past week left | yesterday for Cass Lake, where she | will visit a few days before return- |ing to her home at Thief River | Falls. The Epworth Leaguers of the §Melhodist church are raising the| | money for their subscription of the |new church and will give a chafing dish social at the Baptist church Friday evening, April 28 at 7:30. Everybody invited. 0000000000060 66 @ BEMIDJI MARKET PRICES ¢ 0000000000000606 i Butter (Dairy).... .$ .26 Always Feminine. A young chap was walking along a business street with a very pretty igirl when he happened to glance into & couple of windows where the latest styles of men’s overcoats and suits | were displayed. The girl -noticed it. | She stopped and exclaimed: “What a |dandy overcoat! Why don’t you get one of those, Bob? You'll look fine in- side of that.” | She looked at everything in that window, and the young chap was de- |lighted at her {nterest In men's clothes, “You're all right, Grace,” said he. “That's what I like about you. Most | girls. would rather look at lingerie waists than at a man’s overcoat and suits.” The girl laughed. “Well, Bob,” sald ishe, “to be perfectly honest, the mir rors in that window are something to cry for. I was trying to see if my hat | was on stralghtl” Brignoli In a Temper. On one occasion Blanchi, the noted teacher, went on the stage to ‘see Bri- gnoli, the famous singer, whom he found pacing up and down like a mad- man, humming over his part. “Why, Brig, what 1s the matter with you? Are vou nervous?’ he asked. “Yes, I am nervous,” was the reply a8 he walked harder and faster than ever. “But, Brig, you ought not to_be nerv- ous. I've heard you slng the part 200 {times. 1 heard you sing it thirty years ago.” i “Thirty years ago! Who are you that should know so much?" “Who am 1? You know who I am, and I know who you are.” “Very well; you know -what 1 am, but'I am sure you do not know what you are, and if you wish I will- wu of his affairs, in a regular. cousse of Keep tab on your iex- V. N. Owen of Hines, w;s» a Be-| . Commissioner of Corporations Finds . you,-You are-a fooll” . .= - Will NakeAdditionaiReports on Subject. FEW" CONTROL INDUSTRY That Three Concerns Hold Enough Standing Timber to Build a Home for Every Family in the United States—Prosecutions May Be Start- ed Under Sherman Anti-Trust Law. | Chicago, April 26.—A special to the | Tribune from: Washington says: The lumber interests. of the country | are not through with their troubles with the government. Two more reports on their industry will be made by Herbert Knox Smith commissioner -of corporations, and At-| torney General Wickersham is care: | fully considering all the data which | have been collected with a view to in- stituting prosecutions under the Sher- man antitrust law. It 18 a situation which augurs well for the dissolution of the combinations which now dominate the lumber sup- ply of the United States. Mr. Smith has made'a comprehen- sive report on the standing timber of the country, showing that three cor- porations control enough to build an ordinary five or six-room frame house | for each of the 16,000,000 families in| the United States in 1900. Putting it| another way, he said that if the tlm ber were sawed into lumber and placed in cars, it would load a train about 100,000 miles long. The companies having such a tre- mendous holding are the Southern Pa- cific Railroad company, which is the| largest owner, the Weyerheauser Tim-| ber company and the Northern Pacific | Railway company. Would Control Lumber Industry, | It was pointed out by Mr. Smith that | the concentration which has occurred | in standing timber, if permitted to con- tinue and increase, makes probable a final central control of the whole lum- ber industry. In the next report Mr. Smith will make he proposes to discuss the prices of lumber and probably will dis- | cuss the extent of competition that prevalls in the industry. He has made | it clear, however, that the control of the timber controls the whole indus-| try, and whatever power over prices| may arise from combinations. In manufacture and distribution, as dis- tinguished from timber owning, such‘ power is insignificant and translmry! compared to the control of the itnnd- ing timber itself ‘or & dominating part: thereof. It is, consequently, to the standin, timber situation that Attorney Gen: eral Wickersham is devoting his in- vestigation. In the last forty years concentration has proceeded im such fashion that 195 holders, many inter-| related, have practically one-half. of the privately owned timber. LEADS ALL NATIONALITIES Jewlsh Birth Rate in New York City Is 55 Per 1,000. New York, April 26.—Figures which throw light or what various nation- alities are doing in the way of increas- ing the population of the city of New \ York have just been issued by the health department. In the Jewish dis- trict the birth rate is the highest, aver- aging 55 per 1,000 of the population | there. In typically Italian sections the rate {8 50.5. In the negro districts the | birth rate averages 26.6. But in the| high class native American private residence districts the rate 13 less than 7 per 1,000. The gumber of children resulting from mixed marriages indicates, the ; experts say, that the second genera- tion of immigrants are not so prolifie in offspring as are the first genera tion. A Slap at Whistler. A young 8an Franciscan, the owner of a large and valuable collection of autographs, once wrote to James Me- Nelll ‘Whistler, politely requesting his signature. The letter was sent in care.| of the London Royal academy, with which the famous American painter was at outs. After four months the letter was returned to the Ban Fran- cisco address. from the dead letter of- fice in Washington. Covering the en- velope was the word, repeated num- | berless times, “Unknown.” | Boston Could Stand It. Ralph Waldo Emerson once made a crushing reply to a man who asked him whether the people in Boston did not feel alarmed. Sald Emerson, “What about?’ Said the man, “Why, the world is coming to an end next Monday.” Emerson replied: “I'm glad of it. We can get along a great deal | better without it.” | ered the ground and seed grasses. An |REAL ESTATE 5 b) i ‘countries of. Ennm- th bird. table may stll be seen in the rural districts. A bird table 1§ made by driving-a sbort. stake. Into the nolmd And firmly. nailing a shallow. Wooden::box on top of it. The box generally measures two by three feet and has a number of holes in the bottom to drain it of rain or snow. ‘water. _ It ls always high enough to be beyond reach of any cat that might try to leap to it from the ground. Care also is taken to select a spot far enough from fences, trees or buildings to pre-|| vent cats from pouncing down on it when the birds are feeding. Into the bird table go scraps from the house table and kitchen, pieces of stale bread and cake, strips of fat meat, potato parings, carrot ends, bits. of any kind of table greens, apple skins and cores and cabbage leaves. All kinds of nonmigratory birds come to feed at the bird table, and many a song bird has been saved by it from starvation when a deep snow has cov- English naturalist counted twenty- seven species of birds at the bird table in his garden In a single morning after a heavy fall of snow. The Shillalah. | The shillalah 1S no raw Hmb of a | ' | tree. It 18 almost as much a work of | art as a well balanced cricket bat. | The old shillalahs were as carefully | looked after by their loving owners as .‘ is a rifle in the wilds. Cut from the | sturdlest -of young -blackthorns nnd] showing as little taper as an ebony | ruler, it was welghed with lead or iron | at the end nearest the grip so that its | center of gravity was about four-fifths | of the way from the hitting end. | | When properly seasoned by being | kept in the neighborhood of the farm oven for a few months It became a | thing of supple steel. And the proper ‘ pronunciation of the name of this fear- | some weapon Is the melodious one of | “ghill-aily,” with the accent on the | “all.”—London Chronicle. POOR SLEEPER Healthy children sleep soundly. Any child that does not slesp is not Lealthy. Sleeplessness is caused by undigested substances which generate poisous. Kickapoo Worm Kilier (the nice- tasting candy lozenges) produces sound, restful sleep by cleaning out poisons and impurities. It is a great ¢hilds tonic and strength-builder. Price, 26c., soid by drugglsts cvery- where and by EW PUBLIC LIBRARY | Open daily, except Sunday and Mon- | dayllto12a.m., 1t0 6 p.m.,7 to 9 p. m. | |Snuday 3 to 6 p. m. Monday 7to0 9 p.| | m. BEATRICEPMILIS Librarian. F. M. MALZAH RENTALS City Property and Farm Lands Listed and Sold 407 Minnesota Ave. Bemldll, Minn, actrly Stae: OF BEMIDJI Will give your business that careful | sort of attention for which you are looking. : ; 4 per cent interest paid semi- annually on Savings accounts, 50 WALK RITE AND = MIEN '$3 Shoes and Oxfords Are made of clean new leather in all the best new styles and sold to you direct from the factory at wholesale prices. You save $1.00 on every pair. Positively the best valuesto be had anywhere. A strong statement which - we invite you toput to the severest test. PALACE CLOTHINC HOUSE 216 Minnesota Ave. Bemid)l, Minn. Big Piano Sale One Week Only To make room for May shipment will sell Pianos at wholesale - price. COME AND SEE US FOR BARGAINS BEMIDJI MUSIC HOUSE J. BISIAR, Mgr. 318 Minnesota Ave. Phone 573 O'LEA Tomorrow Afternoon ; We will place on sale thousands of yards of NANTS There will be laces, embroideries, ribbons, dress 'goods, silks, wash goods, ginghams and domestics. Tomorrow, Thursday; Hours 2 to 6 Orders Given Careful Attention Are You.Cognizant of the Fact? That we have fancy drinks in profusion at our fountain; careful attention to details; a never ending effort for bua]ity. 'Purity and ORIGINALTY coupled with the know how that is oursiare the strongest reasons ‘that can be advanced in asking you to visit our store and fountain. Let us order your Purees, Moussee Frangos Sherbets and Ices for your Parties or Receptions.

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