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“_. % Y - . [y THURSDAY, JULY 183, 1911, ' BEMIDJI BRIE Editorial Telephon: MAYNE STANTON, City News Heporter DOKA BARRETTE, Society Reporter “THREE-ONE” Baptist Ladies Aid will hold a food sale at McCuaig’s Store, Saturday, July 15. Money to Loan. V. L. Ellis. Men's straw hats, values up to $4, 49 cents each. O’Leary-Bowser Co. There will be a special meeting of the Episcopal Guild at the home of Mrs. John Goodman, 5th St., and Bel- trami Ave. at 7:30 tonight. All members are urgently requested to be present. Certificates of Deposit bearing 4 per cent interest and secured by its entire assets are issued by the Nor- thern National Bank. Friday morning at 8 o'clock we | place on sale 100 pairs of children’s and Misses shoes, $2.00 to $2.50 value (one pair to a customer) at 75 cents a pair. O'Leary-Bowser Co. Winter rye is being cut in this vicinity, Frank Patterson, just west of the city limits being one of the first to start a harvester in Beltrami county this year. The rye, as in the case of all grain, promises an unusual vield. See Hud Fisk, when in need of automobile, gas engine and motor boat repair work. Shop, lake front foot of Fourth street. Phone 381. MEN and WOMEN, sell guaranteed hose. 70 per cent profit. Make $10 daily. Full or part time. Beginners investigate. ~ Wear Proof, 3038 Chestnut St., Philadelphia, Pa. Day and night crews will be put to work finishing the Commercial club quarters in the Nangle block, Third and Minuesota. so that the place will be ready for the club by August 1 as originally planned. The work is being done by Contractor Tom Johnson. Clothe the boy at our clothing sale. 0'Leary-Bowser Co. A chance to get a good location for | business, three year lease, in run- ning order. Step right in. See me at once. Bldg. After having been in the course of construction for nearly a year, Be- midj septic tank has been com- pleted and will be turned over to the city next week. The roof has been put in place and the tank will | be ready to have the sewer turned into it within the next few days. We offer you quality, service and reasonable prices, an immense line of | T. Baker| seasonable jewelry. Geo. Co.. 116 3d St. Near the lake. A chance to get a good location for business. Three year lease. In run- ning order. Step right in. See me| at once. J. G. Ziegler, Odd Fello\\'s‘ Bldg. Work has begun on grading down the hill on First street near the creamery so that farmers coming in with cream will have no difficulty in delivering their cans. Street Com-| missioner A. A. Carter has per- sonal charge of the work. The street | will be lowered four or five feet. Girl's dresses for less than the ma- | terial is worth. O'Leary-Bowser Co. | Large stock and reasonable prices | makes us the leading watch house ln!‘ Minnesota. Geo. T. Baker & Co.. 116 | 3rd St., near the lake. Medium red clover five feet, three | inches in length from a field which averages a height of more than four | feet from the W. R. Mackenzie farm in the town of Liberty will form part of the Beltrami exhibit to be on dis-| play at the St. Paul land show next December. The Beltrami hay crop. | will be even larger than last year. | Young People's society of the Swedish Lutheran Church will meet | Friday evening, July 14, at the home of Rev. J. H. Randahl, 7th St. and Miss. Ave. When you buy a watch from us| that is warranted you are receiving | a guarantee that is worth something. Select the BEMIDJI SPECIAL, the finest watch made for the money. Geo. T. Baker & Co., 116 3rd St., near the lake. F. S. Lycan and George Kreatz, of Bemidji, are in the city with their families on a motor trip. Mr. Lycan offers to send a pilot car to Fosston to meet the Crookston Automobile Club on their trip, which will pilot the party to Bagley, where he will meet them with his car and pilot them to Bemidji, an offer which is much appreciated by the members of the club, who are busy shaping the expedition.—Crookston Times. A chance to get a good location for business, three year lease, in run- ning order. Step right in. See me at once. J. G. Ziegler, 0dd Fellows Bldg. Never leave home on a journey without a bottle of Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Rem- edy. It is almost certain to be need- ed and cannot be obtained when on board the cars or steamships. For sale by Barker’s Drug Store. Little Mary was going to a party. Before going her mother instructed her about table manners. “Suppose,” she said, “cake was passed to you, the first time it is passed to you, you take some, the second time it is passed you say ‘No, thank you!’, and | so on.” Little Mary then went to the party. When she returned her mother asked her how everything went and how she behaved. “Well,” Mary said, “I did as you told me. J. G. Ziegler, 0dd Fellows | The first time cake was passed to me 1 took some, the second time I said ‘No, thank you!' and the third time I did not know what to say, so I said like Pa says, ‘No, I don't want any, take the @ stuff away! " 1f you hurry there is a chance to |get a pair of Men's $6.00 shoes for 98c. O’Leary-Bowser Co. For summer diarrhoea in children always give Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy and castor oil, and a speedy cure is cer- tain. For sale by Barker’'s Drug Store. Newspapers of Washington, D. C., and Pittsburg, Pa., last Sunday con- |tained the following announcement Pioneer. “Judge and Mrs. Edward F. Crawford. of Aspen Hill Farm, Fair- |fax county, Virginia, announce the Maud Crawford. to Mr. Lee Lord | Chandler, of Pittsburg, Pa. The mar- riage will take place in October. {Miss Crawford comes from a well |known Minnesota family, her parents having lived in that state until a few | years ago. She is a graduate of Holy | Cross Academy. one of the fashion |able schools for young | Washington, D. C., and made her debut in society in that city in the winter of 1909, since which time she ‘has been an attractive and popular figure in thé younger circle of the | capital’'s society. Mr. Chandler is | from one of Pittsburg’s oldest fami- lies. His grandfather, Aaron Har- | tuppe, being one of the first settlers there. He is a nephew of Mrs. Sett- lers McKee, of the North side, now |living-in Paris. The Chandlers have been prominent in the social activity | of Pittsburg for the past half century I Mr. Chandler is a graduate of the | Case school for Applied Science of i Cleveland, and since his graduation | about ten years ago has distinguished himself in the commercial line through his connection with the Pittsburg Plate Glass company.” Miss Crawford is well remembered in Bemidji where the family resided until a few years ago and where she has many friends. L O R R R RO R RO ) @ i® PERSONALS. © O A R R R R R O RCRCRCROR A. T. Kronschnable of Fosston, was |in Bemidji today. J. A. Long the Walker lumberman, was in the city yesterday. | Mayor J. C. Parker and wife, spent last evening in Blackduck. A. A. Scott and wife of Wales, N. Dy were among the Bemidji visitors last evening. M. D. Stoner, formerly the Bemidji this morning. Misses Jennie and Grace McClaren of Crookston. are the guests of friends in the city. Viggo Peterson of Puposky, chair- man of the county board of commis- sioners has returned to his home. Miss Myrtle Shepherd of Minne- apolis, is the guest of her aunt, Mrs. C. C. Shepherd for a week or more. Samuel Sutor of Cass Lake, was in | Bemidji last evening, on his way to MecIntosh where he has business in- terests. Mrs. W. Buell of Council Bluffs, | who formerly resided in Bemidji, ar- rived in the city yesterday and left of interest to many readers of thé| |engagement of their daughter, Miss| ladies in | city engineer, returned to Brainerd | this morning for Beci: will visit for some time. H. D. Reed of Crookston, who is in- terested in the banking business in that city, was a Bemidji business vis- itor yesterday. Mrs. Rosaan and sons Orin and city yesterday and will open their cottage at Lavinia. County Commissioner Fellows re- turned to his home in Tenstrike last evening, the board having adjourned late yesterday afternoon. Mrs. Tom Youngand daughter, Elsie of Crookston, arrived in the city and will be guests at the Clark home for a week or more. Otto Peterson and wife left last evening for Kelliher. Mr. Peterson |is the Bemidji representative of the L. K. Deal Lumber company. Rev. M. Somersedike of Philadel- phia, Rev. R. F. Sulzer of Minnea- polis, and Rev. S. A. Blair of Duluth, were in Bemidji yesterday, and while here were the guests of Rev. S. E. P. | White. | Lester Harold Monte, who is the baggageman for the Sauk Centre run of the Great Northern, and ‘who ' makes his home in Bemidji, is enter- | taining his mother, Mrs. Mary Monte “of Fargo. F. S. Lycan and wife, Geo. Kreatz and wife, and Misses Donna Lycan and Ivis Roberts and Messrs. Carl | Wolfe and Wilbur Lycan who left Tuesday in their cars for Grand Forks spent yesterday in Crookston where they attended the carnival which is being held there this week. Miss Emma Noesen, accompanied by her mother of Crookston, returned this morning from Duluth where they were present when Miss Rose Noesen took her final vows to become a nun. Mrs. Noesen went on to Crookston this afternoon, accom- panied by Clifford Scully who has been the guest Barrette for the past few days. who have been making an automobile tour of the Eastern states during the past six weeks, are expected to re- turn to the city tomorrow. They will | be accompanied by their son Herald, | who joined them in Duluth the first part of the week, St. Cloud Normal school during the past winter. Among the Bemidji visitors today |for the purpose of attending the Modern Brotherhood of America con- vention which has been in session, (are F. D. Lyon of Minneapolis, Au- rora Ziebech, Mrs. Ida Peterson, Dr. H. E. Nelson, C. C. Peterson and Wil- liam Milette all of Crookston, Samuel Gibeau, Alexine Gibeau, Joseph Be- lier, Lillian Beliar, J. H. Lasha of | Red Lake Falls and L"M. Olson and { Oscar Westlin of Warren. FEATHER RENOVATING. New feathers steam cured and cleaned. Old feathers made to ap- pear like new. Pillows made from beds if desired. Telephone No. 553, 511 First street, Bemidji, Minn. Happiest Girl in Lincoin. A Lincoln, Neb., girl writes, “I had been ailing for some time with chronic constipation and stomach trouble. I began taking Chamber- lain’s Stomach and Liver Tablets and in three days I was able to be jup and got better right along. I am the proudest girl in Lincoln to find such a good medicine.” For sale by Barker’s Drug Store. “THE LA Co to Him for Farm Loans JOHN G. ZIEGLER Fire- Life-=—=IN SUR A N C E=--Accident —_— REAL ESTATE IN ALL ITS BRANCHES FARM LANDS BOUCHT AND SOLD ND MAN" Office--Odd Fellows Bullding Chase and Seal Bra | Phone 206-207 Slavery was supposed to be abolished in America in the Sixties, but it is not done away with yet. Millions of women right now are slaving their lives out; it is not NECESSARY. We sell the highest, purest quality of pickles, catsups, pre- serv and fruits of all kinds for less money than they can be put up. Buy these things al- ready prepared and have more time for the children. Remember the most delicious coffee flavor you ever enjoyed—Multiply by 2. Result— Sanborn’s nd Coffee Roe & Markusen THE QUALITY GROCERS 4th St.Bemidji A. P. White and wife of Bemidji, | THEIR_AWFUL SECRET. It Caused the Real Estate Agent to Change His Mind. ‘When the family who admitted that they were moving because the tenants at the old address thade their lives miserable.confided to the renting agent Arnold, of Crookston, arrived in the | st they had ome pecallarity which they wished him not ‘to mention to their neighbors in his building the agent got uneasy and executed a men- tal quickstep trying to devise some way to break the lease.. But aloud he said very courteously: “I shall be glad to oblige you if 1 can. What is it you wish me to keep a secret?” “The fact that we pay our rent promptly on the 1st of every month,” said the head of the family. “That ‘was something that nobody eise in the other house did, and the agent as an incentive to quick actiom on their part | published the news of our promptness. The only action it stirred them into | was persecution of us, and they car- ried that to such extremes that we | had to move. If you Wil kindly re- | frain from using us as a club to whack your delinquents into .obedience we will appreciate it ‘The agent resolved not to cancel the lease, but at the same time he relin- quished a hastily conceived plan for procuring prompt remittances. — New York Times. Right in your busiest season when | you have the least time to spare you are most likely to take diarrhoea and lose several days’ time, unless you have Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy at hand and take a dose on the first ap- pearance of the disease. For sale by Barker's Drug Store. Poisoning as a Diversion. | Poisoning is never likely again to be- | come a fashionable diversion, as it was from time to time in anclent Rome. In B. C. 3381, for instance, there was & mysterious pestilence, which seemed to be particularly fatal to leading men. of Rose and Dora | At 1ast a slave girl gave information to the authorities, and a consequent police raid resulted in the discovery of about twenty matrons, some of them of high patrician families, busily preparing drugs over a fire. They in- | sisted that the drugs were not poison- ous, but, being compelled to drink | them publicly in the forum as a guar- antee of good falth, perished miser- ably. Further ‘informations followed, and daughter | ang 170 matrons in all were condemn- Marion, who has been attending the | ed. But this record was soundly beaten in B. C. 184, when a four months’ in. quiry by the praetor is said to have led to the condemnation of 2,000 persons.— London Chronicle. Sprains require careful treatment. Keep quiet and apply Chamberlain’s Liniment freely. It will remove the soreness and quickly restore the parts to a healthy condition. For sale by Barker's Drug Store. Opening at Brinkman Theatre To-night .. Il Build a Around You By Kerry Mills . The Stroud Family Singing. Talking, Instrumental 2 3. Trip Through Mexico 4, Stons & Hayes Proteau Comedy 5. The Heiress 6. Ferdies New Shoes 1. Song--In The City] Whers Nobody Gares 8. The Ross of Algeria By Otto Langey Fence WE SELL, BUY, LEASE, OR INANAGE PROPERT Y How about that real estate you have been trying . to sell for years; we can find a purchaser. We have a thorough knowledge of realty values. Our services are at gom‘ disposal. = erhaps 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. F. M. MALZAHN 407 Minn. Ave. each.. Atesos s To Sell Every One a Big Snap Niodel 5, oot Smith Premier - 914 $25.00 2—Smith Premiers—Model 2—and Model 4 $25 00 L] MR. FARMER:— Before you decide on the kind of a Cream Sep- arator, doget to see The Sharpeles Tubular It’s the kind you’ll have to buy in the end—why not get it at the start, then you'll only need to buy one separator 1n your life time. Sharpeles Lasts Forever Here’s the Guarantee Guaranteed Forever Every Sharples Tubular Cream Separator is guaranteed forever. No about it. free, and above-board perpetual guarantee. purchaser could fairly ask more. could fairly do more---few do as much. Here is an exact copy of the guarantee that goes with every Tubular; 30 years’ experience and square dealing, and the biggest and finest cream separator factory in the world stand back ofit to make every word of it good. “ifs,” “ands,” Phone 420 We Welcome the ~New Creamery or “buts” Simply a straight, honest, iron-clad, open, It's a guarantee that holds. Come in and let us show you why Sharples is the best. A. B. Palmer’s Hardware Store Third Street ... $27.50 No No manufacturer Bemidji, Minn. 0000300000000 0 © LODGEDOM IN BEMIDII ¢ 0000000000000 090 at .8 o'clock. 3 —at_Odd Fellows hall, Zuuy 402 Beltrami Ave. B. P 0. B Bemidjl Lodge No. 1052, Regular meeting nights— first and third Thursdays, 8 o'clock—at Masonic hall, Beltrami Ave, and Fiftn t. c.o. > Regular meeting night every Second and Fourth Sunday evening, at $ o'clock in basement of Catholic church. DR DEGREE OF NONOR. Meeting nights _every second and fourth Monday evenings, at 0da- Fellows AL Han. r. 0 2 Regular meeting nights every Wednesday evening at 8 o'clock. Eagles hall G AR Regular meetings—First and third Saturday after- noons, at 2:30—at Odd Fel- By lows Hall, 402 Beltrami Ave. Lo .0 P Bemidji Lodge No. 119 Regular mesting nights —every Friday, ¥ o'clock at 0dd Fellows Hall, 402 Beltrami. L O. O. F. Camp No. 24. Regular meeting every second and fourth Wednesdays at $ o'clock, at 0dd Fellows Hall Rebecca Lodge. Regular meeting nights—first and third Wednesdays at 8 o'clock. —1L O. O. F. Hall LNIGHTS OF PEYTHIAS. Bemidji Lodge No. 168. Regular meeting nights— every Tuesday evening at § oclock—at the Eagles' Hall, Third street. LADIES OF THE MAC- CABEES. Regular meeting night last Wednesday evening e N in each month. ‘MASONIC A. F. & A. M, Bemiadji, 233, Regular meeting nights—first and third Wednesdays, 8 o'clock—at Masonic Hall, Beltraml Ave., and Fifth St. Bemidji Chapter No. 70, R. A. M. Stated convoca- tions—first and third Mon. days, 8 o'clock p. m.—at Masonic ~ Hall, Beltrami Ave., and Fifth St. Elkanah Commandery No. 30 K. T. Stated conclave—se- € cond and fourth Fridays, 8 S oclock p. m—at Masonic Temple, Beltrami Ave, and Fifth St. 0. E. S. Chapter No. 171, Regular meeting nights— first and third Fridays, 8 o'clock—at Masonic Hall, Beltrami Ave, and Fifth st ™ B. A Roosevelt, No. 1523. Reg- ular meeting nights every second and fourth Thurs- day evenings ai 8 o'clock in Odd Fellows Hall M. W. A. Bemidji Camp No. 5012. Regular meeting nights— first and third Tuesdays at 8 o'clock at Odd Fellows hall, 402 Beltrami Ave. MODERN SAMARITANS £ Regular meeting nights on the First and Third Thurs- days in the L O. O. F. Hall at 8 p. m. SONS OF HERMAN. Meetings held second and ), fourth Sunday afternoon of Y% ¥ each month at 205 Beltrami Ave. OM SMART DRAY AND TRANSFER SAFE AND PIANO MOVING Nesidence Phone 58 618 Amorica Ava. Office Phons 12 R. F. MURPHY FUNERAL DIRECTOR AND EMBALMER Farm and Gity Loans Insurance - Real Estate William C. Klein O’Leary-Bowser Bidg. Phone (9. . Bemidji, Minn. ~. A l Py