Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, June 19, 1911, Page 4

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A Lace Millinery . Copyright, Underwood & Underwood, N. Y. HE keynote of fashionable head wear for women is lace, as shown In I the photograph above. The hat should be of dark straw so as to .form an effectlve background which may be Irish, Cluny or better still of Nacrame. for the delicate tracery of the lace, In this instance, the hat is of dark blue straw, trimmed and rimmed with babe Irish lace. A pom-pom of fluffy white feathers completes the confection. Ribbon Des'gns 1 seem to be developing more and more, a fancy for flower forms made of ribbon, for all occaslons where ribbon is an acces- sory of decoration. We may have borrowed the original idea from the French, but America boasts the most original and prolific designer of rib- bon garnitures. Ora Lue, of New York, has recently discovered for the hostesses off that opulent city, a new world In the possibilities of ribbons and for decorative purposes. Dinner tables and drawing rooms of the coming season promise to blos- som with unfading flower forms that charm both by their beauty and in- genulty. These forms, used In con- junction with asparagus ferns, smilax and other lasting follage, make the hostess think twice, when choosing decorations for any soclal function. The same ribbon serves for many oc- ceslons and forms and it Is sald even its color may be changed. Four designs are given here to be used at a June wedding where the color scheme is white and green. The rosette, made of white messa- line, is shown mounted with smilax and asparagus fern. The effect is de- lightful. Narrow ribbons are used as well as wide ones and innumerable graceful forms seem to lie asleep in the brain of this ingenious magp. Let a whisper reach them that they are needed and they rush to his finger- tips. Many professional women, mil- liners and others, are taking up this work of ribbon for decoration and it may prove a new profitable accom- plishment for them. Ribbons will not supplant natural flowers entirely, but they will bring about a new order of things. Fewer blossoms will be used and greater effectiveness glven to those that so appear. We shall be spared the little hurt that lurks in the drooping fading flow- er because those that are used will be placed {n vases while ribbons and fo- lage will make a marvelous back- ground for them. JULIA BOTTOMLEY. A A A A A AAAAAAAAA A AN AN A A AN A A A AN AN AN Tinlest Pearis Liked. Ropes of pearls with tasseled ends were much seen a few Seasons ago, but it was thought the fashion would be fleeting. It has, however, proved permanent go far, and has brought along with it the revival of an old plan for making use of the tinlest pearls. There is 8 fashionable de- Tand Tor threaded pearl Braceléts and other jewelry of strung pearls, de- vised after the fashion in which chil- dren thread beads. The effect is light and graceful and the ornaments are popular among young women. Annie Douglas Graham, flancee of Jay Gould, has many of the trinkets in her wed- ding outfit for the halr, throat, wrist and corsage. FOR WOMEN ONLY |/0ge CHARGES HURLED AT [MAYOR DUMAS (Continued from Page 1.) after he had told Kennedy how many turns of the knob to give the heavy doors swung open and the inerimi- nating dynamite was brought to view. Despite the doctor’s bravado and the air of innocence which he main- tains he is being shadowed wherever he goes. After he was released on $5,000 bail Saturday night by Court Commissioner Simons he conferred with his atorneys Judge Spooner and A. A. Andrews. He went to Cass Lake on the night train. When asked if he intended to re- sign as mayor, Dr. Dumas said: “Well, I should say not.” His bail bond was signed by C. M. Johnson, Cass Lake druggist; Henry Mullen, Cass Lake Hardware mer- hant, and Albert Marshik, saloon zeeper at Cass Lake. Detectives declare they have a complete report of what they assert to be the exact conversation of plans ziven the two robbers in the John Larson saloon here by Mayor Dumas of the Puposky robbery. While Dumas was telling his leutenants vhat to do, a detective, it is said, was :oncealed within hearing distance, -aking notes. Other witnesses are said to have been present. “I stole a gold watch and conceal- ed it in the rear o fthe Endion hotel 1t Cass Lake,” one of the robbers is -ecorded to have said to Dumas, who, .he detective says replied: “I will get it and keep it for you,” the mayor is said to have replied. The alleged conference here was m Wednesday of last week. On Fhursday Dr. Dumas purchased sev- :ral sticks of dynamite in the T. Dugas hardware store at Cass Lake. t is presumed the uynamite found in his safe was part of this purchase. Wiile in Bemidji Wednesday, Dr. Dumas attempted to purchase a Sav- age automatic revolver and when he -couldn’t get a savage took a Colt’s it a Beitrami avenue store. That Mayor Dumas was not only the brains but a working partner so far as preparing the explosives, which are said to have been the most powerful ever devised for safe crack- ing, and that he systematically olanned the burning of buildings for nsurance money, after they first had been robbed and dynamited in indi- :ated by evidence which the Pinker- tons will present at the examination of Dr. Dumas before Court Commis- sioner H. A. Simons in this city on June 28, DR. DUMAS MINNEAPOLIS BOY Captain of Football Team—Graduate Chicago Medical School. Minneapolis, June 18.—Dr. D, T. Dumas, mayor of Cass Lake, is well known in Minenapolis. Dr. Dumas is a son of Frederick Dumas, 1787 Irving avenue S, salesmanager of W, 8. Nott company. He was captain of the 1897 football team of South High school, and also a member of the track and base ball teams. After his graduation at South high he studied mericine at the College of Physicans and Surgeons, Chicago, where he graduated. He practiced medicine in Minneapolis for several years, after which he went to Cass Lake where he has been located for three years. DUMAS IN DIVORCE CASE First Wife Secures Degree, Alleging Cruel and Inhuman Treatment. The arrest of Dr. D. T. Dumas in Cass Lake has recalled his matrimon- ial troubles in Minneapolis while he was still a student in a medical school in Chicago. Dr. Dumas mar- ried Francis Coleman in the fall of 1901, when he was a senior at the College of Physicians and Surgeons, Chicago, and she was visiting in Chicago. Early in 1903 Mrs. Dumas filed a petition for divorce in Minneapolis, alleging cruel and inhuman treat- ment,failure to support and desertion. Dr. Dumas did not answer the peti- tion and the divorce was granted by default Oct. 4, 1904. The divorce petition, states that Mrs. Dumas was 23 years old and Dr. Dumas 25. It alleges cruel and in- human treatment within a year after the marriage, which took place in Chicago, Nov. 29, 1901, but no speci- fic acts of cruelty are mentioned. E. Boynton Armstrong of Lynn, master workmen of the Cutters’ Na- tional Trade assembly, Knights of Labor, has resigned. The Alabama division of the A. F. of L. protested against the manner in which John J. McNamara was ar- rested in Indianapolis. SWINDLERS WORK NEW GAME By Using Names of Prominent Firms They Easily Obtain Merchandise. The Ploneer has the following from one in a position to speak authoritatively: “A gang now under.surveillance operates in an original way. They land in a town and send an order to a merchant in St. Paul or else- where for a bill of goods running from $50 to $100, and giving a name strikingly similar to a regular mer- chant in the town who has a high rating in the commercial agency books. In this way the merchants believing that the name was mis- spelled, forward the goods, which are takeh from the express office by the bogus merchants, who immediate- 1y leave the town. Still under the be- lief that a mistake in. name was made by the legitimate town mer- chant, the shipper renders him the bill. This is, of course, immediate- ly refused, which brings to light the fraud. By this time the perpetrators have had from a week to a month’s start in the get-a-way.” EDITOR JOHN WILM DIES HERE Former Bemidji Man Comes From Northome, Failsto Survive Knife. John B. Wilm, 28 years old, editor of the Northome Record for the past four years, and who was for six years foreman of the Daily Pioneer job department, died in this city yester- day morning; following an operation for stricture of the bowels, caused Mr. Wilm was married seven years ago, making a Bemidji girl, Cynthia Bishop, daughter of B. F. Bishop of Spokane, Wash., his wife. He is survived by his wife and a son of 5 years, his father and mocher, who reside in Mizpah and two brothers and two sisters who reside in St. Paul. Mr. Wilm was born and learned the trade in Melrose. He was manager of the Northome base- ball organization, and was the leader of the cornet band in that city. The body will be taken to Northome for interment which will take place Thursday, under the auspices of the 0dd Fellows of which order he was a member. JOHN G. ZIEGLER from a sickness of only one week. | ] “THE LAND MAN" Fire=- Life=-=-1N SUR A N C E~=--Accident REAL ESTATE IN ALL ITS BRANCHES _FARM LANDS BOUCHT AND SOLD Go to Him for Farm Loans Office--Odd Fellows Building NORTHERNAUTOMOBILECO. REPAIRING, RENTING AND STORAGE Fifteen years experience. Specialist on gasoline engines and automobile engineering. Bring your work to us and save the expense of experimenting. Our shop is equipped with modern machinery. Our responsibility is back of our work. Prairie Joe’s Wild West AND Skerbecks Great One Ring R. R. Shows Combined Bemidji, Friday, June 23 Afternoon and Evening Vivid Representation of the Historic West and Frontier Days Gowhoys, Gowgirls, Indians and Rough Riders of the World Gongress of Gomical Glowns Amazing Array of Acrobats and Ariel Artists A Day of Pleasure for Young and Old Machinists of Baldwin Locomotive works, Philadelphia, are agitating for an eight hour schedule. Sixty per cent of the adult workers of Great Britain receive less than $7.50 weekly wages, according to the statistics quoted in the house of com- mons. Representative Reilly of Connecti- cut has introduced a bill providing an eight hour workday for mail car- riers and clerks in first and second class postoffices. DOWNWARD COURSE Fast Being Realized by Bemidji People. A little backache at first. Daily increasing till the back is lame and weak. Urinary disorders quickly follow; Diabetes and finally Bright’s di- Bease. This is the downward cource of kidney ills. Don’t take this course. Follow the advice of a Bemidji citizen. Mrs. A. E. Hannah, 804 America Ave., Bemidji, Minn., says: “Some time ago I began the use of Doan’s Kidney Pills and the results were highly satisfactory. At that time I was suffering severely from backache and my kidneys were not doing their work as they should. I was steadily running down in health and my con- dition was becoming serious, when a friend advised me to try Doan’s Kidney Pills. I was so greatly bene- fited by them from the first that I procured a further supply. Since then I have had little cause to worry about my condition. Today I am en- joying good health and do not hesi- tate to give Doan’s Kidney Pills the credit for this remarkable change.” For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster-Millburn Co., Buffalo, New York, sole agents for the United States. Remember the name — Doan’s— and take no other. WE SELL, BUY, L PROP EASE, OR MANAGE ERTY How about that real estate you have been trying to sell for years; we can find a purchaser. thorough knowledge of realty values. at your disposal. We have a Our services are Perhaps you have been looking for a farm. city realty, a summer home, lake shore property. If you wish to buy property of any kind, tell us what you want and where you want it, we will find it for you and buy it at a price that will please you. 407 Minn. Ave. Phone 420 To the Investor and Home-Builder We have selected a number of lots—some of the most desirable in the residence district of Bemidji—which we are selling on the EASY PAYMENT PLAN—small cash payment—balance, weekly or monthly at 8 per cent. For description of lots and full information regarding these and other lots in Bemidji, write us or call on H. A. Simons our local representative. Bemidji Townsite & Improvement Go, 520 Capital Bane Building 8T. PAUL MINNESOTA W. @G. Schroeder Large Department Store Attractive CGash Prices Ladies’ Jefferson Shoes 50 per cent discount, 2 11b Gan Baking Powder 25¢. Kerosene Oil, 10¢ gal. 100 bar Box Swift Soap $3.00. T cans Swift's Cleanser 50 cfs. Dairy Butter 15 to 22c. Full cream Cheese 15cts pr. Ib. - 25¢ts Goffee for 20 cts pr. Ih 11 cans Standard Tomatoes $1.00. 6 quarts Onion Sets, 25¢. Caldwell’s Electric Cut Coffee in sealed Ib, tins 30 cts, usual price 35 cts. CALL AND SEE OUR STOCK CORNER FOURTH STREET AND MINNESOTA AVENUE Now-Cash-Want-Rats ~Gent-a-Word Where cash accompanies z:up{I e will publish all “Want Ads” for half- cent a word per insertion. Where sash_does mot accompany copy .the regular rate of one ceuta word will be charged. SVERY HOME MHAS A WANT AD For Rent--For Sale--Exchange --Help Wanted--Work Wanted «-Etc.--Etc. HELP WANTED WANTED—For the United States army, ablebodied unmarried men between ages of 18 and 35; citizens of the United States, of goo¢ character and temperate habits, who can speak, read and write the English language. For in- formation apply to Recruiting Officer, 4th St and Minnesota Ave., Bemidji, Minnesota. ¢ | WANTED—Girl for general house- work. Good wages. Apply 621 Lake Boulevard, Mrs. C. M. Bacon. WANTED AT ONCE—Girls midji Steam Laundry. at Be- Wanted—Dishwasher at Lake Shore hotel. FOR SALE FOR SALE—Case stands and racks number 6, double news stand with rack for 8 full sized cases. Good as new. Sell regularly for $3:75. We have 6 of these at $1.50 each. Bemidji Pioneer Publishing Co. Bemidji, Mina. FOR SALE OR TRADE—160 acre farm, all under cultivation in Becker county; one mile from town; good soil; easy payment or will trade for city property. Ap- ply J. W. Wilcox, Fowlds, phone 210 Bemidji. | FOR SALE—Job type and body type. Fonts of 6 point to 72 point, Prices furnished with proof sheets upon request. Ad- dress Pioneer Publishing Co., Be- midji, Mion. FOR SALE—Three second hand typewriters, Oune Smith Premier at $40.00 One Smith Premier at $2500 aud one Remington at $2500 Apply at this office. FOR SALE—]Job cases, triple cases, quadrupple cases and lead and slug cases, 40c each. Pioneer Publishing Co. Bemidji. FOR SALE—Rubber stamps. The Pioneer will procure any kind of a rubber stamp for yoo an short notice. FOR SALE—Large frame building at South Bemidji cheap, inquire at M. & 1. depot. FOR SALE—Number 5 Oliver type- writer. Doran Bros. FOR RENT FOR RENT—House at 1111 Lake Blod. and nouse ut wenth and Bel- trami Ave. Cafe. inquire at Stechman FOR RENT—Log house 609 Be- midji avenue. Inquire of Mrs. Kaiser. FOR RENT—Furnished rooms; good cheap rooms for laboring men. 517 America Ave. MISCELLANEOU! ADVERTISERS—The great State of North Dakota offers unlimited opportunities for business toclassi- fied advertisers. The recognized advertising medium is the Fargo Daily and Sunday Courier-News, the only seven day paper in the state and the paper which carries the largest amount of classified advertising. The Courier-News covers North Dakota like a blanket; reaching all parts of the state the day of publication; it is the paper to use in order to get results; rates one cent per word first insertion, one-balf cent per word succeeding insertion; fifty cents per line per month. Address the Courier News, Fargo N. D. lalk to the people in prosperous North Dakota through the columns of The Grand Forks Herald; read every day by 30,000 in 150 towns and 1ural routes in the northern balf of the state, Classified ads, for :al:, help wanted, exchange, real estate etc., or % cent a word each insertion. Send “stamps to The Herald, Grand Forks, N. D. POINT COMFORT—The finest sum- mer resort in Northern Minnesota. Lots for sale and cottages to rent. A, 0. Johnson, Turtle River, Minn. WANTED—Men and boys to know that we can make their 4th of July suits, New Taylor Shop, 318 Minn. Ave. WANTED—Nursing, preferably con- finment cases, or by the day. Mrs. Hitchcock. 517 America Ave. WANTED—Ladies’ and children’s washing and ironing to do at home. 517 America Ave. T. BEAUDETTE Merchant Tailor Ladies' and Gents’ Suitr to Order. Freach Ory Cleaning, Pm-_in( and - Repairing ty. 315 Beltrami Avenue

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