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‘evening for the purpose of complet- DORA BARRETTE; Socfety Reporter ;l E_Emli—m’“figfif‘d‘{“! S‘l‘iu{ 'ON, Oity News Reporter. torial Tel s et L i ik | e, “THREE-O] Remer, the new town on the Soo Line is to have a $6,000 - modern brick building. 5 Don’t fail to attend the dance at the City Hall tonight. Masten’s or- chestra. Bemidji Dancing Academy. At the Bagley school election, A. Kaiser, Oscar T. Stenvick and O. T. Davids were elected school directors without opposition. I - have the Chapman blacksmith shop. I can do your work and war- rant it. T am here to stay. -A. H. McDougall, horse shoer. J. P. Pogue will return to Bemidji early next week with a car load of faney driving horses, which he re- cently purchased near Miles City, Mont. X 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. Ben's Cafe, opposite the Markham hotel has been sold to E. Bosard, who with William Sly will run the place from this date on. Rooms upstairs will be rented and a barber shop add- ed. Yes, I can shoe your horses. I make a specialty of lame, strikers, drivers, ete., and warrant them. T have had 20 years experience along this line. A. H. McDougall, horse shoer. Fire destroyed the 40 foot launch of John King at Walker on Leech Lake Thursday morning. It is| thought that the gasoline tank ex- ploded. The boat is said to have; been insured for $1,200. The housewife having any pride in her kitchen can not do without one of the new Art Brass Soap dishes. We will display them in our window, and they will be on sale next week only. Sale price while they last $1. Doran Bros. Numerous men are being laid off daily at the Crookston lumber mill, because of the usual mid-summer dull season. Three Bemidji young men to receive the “hook’ during the past few days are Alfred Moritz, Alfred Neuman and John Burke. Money to Loan, V. L. Ellis. Because there was not a quorum present at the meeting of the house committee of the Commercial club, which was to have been held last ing plans for the moving into the new club rooms the first of August, no business was transacted. Excursions to the Dam on the|’ Yankee Doodle, fast mail and pass- enger boat. Leaves Bemidji at 2:30, returning at 5:30. Walker is to be the terminal for sota & International, the new sche- dule already being in effect. Here- tofore the mail coach ran between Bemidji and International Falls. The coach will be sidetracked at Walker and picked up by the night train. Will buy for cash a gasoline launch. Address box 474, Bemidji, Minn. M. A. Spooner, J. J. Conger and O. B. Jackson of Bemidji were among the happy landseekers inspecting Clearwater soil here Friday. They were much pleased with our county and highly impressed with business appearances and staple industrial in- stitutions located here, chiefly our creamery and farmer’'s elevator.— Clearwater Journal. See Hud Fisk, when in need of automobile, gas engine and motor boat repair work. Shop, lake front foot of Fourth street. Phone 381. W. T. Cox, state forester, has made arrangements to secure from rail- roads reports on the weather at every station of importance to the forestry service. Officials of the Northern Pa- cific and Minnesota & International have consented to send him daily bulletins of rain and climatic con- ditions in Northern Minnesota. There reports will assist the department in protecting “dry spots” in the forests. EARN A FREE SCHOLARSHIP by sending the names of all young people who might be interested in taking a fine business or shorthand course in Brown’s Business College which and growing up to grass and brush. a fine moose standing about six rods away from him, apparently as sur- d : Prised and startled at the encounter railway mail service on the Mine- | ot S fent, how- left with the coroner for the home- stead to hold an inquest. R The Bemidji Dancing Academy in- vites your presence at'their dance in City Hall tonight. Music by Mas-/| ten’s orchestra. Goed floor. This morning an,automobile with a driver and two men left Akeley to Brainerd for the Red River Lumber company of Akeley for the purpose of placing guide boards at regular ‘| Minneapolis, returned to their home this morning after having spent the hree weeks st the home of Mamus,. E. H. Denu, of the Pioneer Pub- lishing' company, Tho. accompanied have spent the week in Minneapoti and in Duluth, returned to Bemidj this morning. Miss Alice Morier of Chicago, sis- ter of L. E. Morier, who is connected’ intervals. The boards will give the miTage © * g tion. A mobile g to the 1 ids, Wall iful “plt cated in For su always Cholera castor of tain. F Store. Sayin; lost $17 struct di ty, R. A, has aske him on holding 1 the ditilice: sun wnousin asmasKeg soil and Mr. Elzy says that as fast as he cleans the ditch out the mud runs in again and that it is impos- sible to keep it clean. When he bid on the work he overlooked the nature of one of the cuts, he said, and this resnlted in a loss of more than $17,- 000. His case will be passed upon next Tuesday. . 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. Postmaster Steenerson has return- ed from the fishing and berrying trip on which he and Mrs. Steenerson, ac- companied by Miss Florence John- son, left on Saturday. They went directly to Blackduck. They drove to the site of the old mill formerly | owned by Mr. Steenerson on O’Brien creek, which is a stream running through Mr. Steenerson's land, which is situated nine miles west of Black- duck. The mill was burned some time ago in a disasterous fire which destroyed much valuable property on Mr. Steenerson’s claim, but he was anxious to visit it and to look over the land, which is now all cut over ‘While walking through the slash- ings—the ladies were busy berrying, Mr. Steenerson was surprised to see "Mrs/ O: Saney and “daughter of by Mrs. Denu and 'son, Philip, who| with the Naugle Pole & Tie company vine were Bemid)l boys who attended the dancing party given at Lavinia last evening, by Misses Agnes Boe- ing and Francis Titus of Minto, N. D., and Miss Martha Williams of Grand Forks. Others among the guests were Nat Field and wife of Minneapolis; Thomas Beare and Fred DuBois of Brainerd and Ed Conmy of Fargo. About fifteen couple were present. CROOPOOOOOOOOOOO O ® Ifasca State Park News. @ POOPPPPIOPOOQROO®O®Q® Professor E. G. Cheyney left the Forest School yesterday for St. Paul, to.return in a week. . Eli Wentling of Knox, Pennsyl- vania, while out on Lake Itasca to- day, rod fishing, caught several pike, one 18 inches long. The Junior Corporation has about a.month longer to spend at the For- estry School, taking the four months’ summer work. From now on, the time of the sixteen students will be taken us as follows: Three day with Professor J. P. Wentling, reconnais- sance and field planting plans for areas of 160 acres within Itasca State Park; Four days with Professor E. G. Cheyney, forest mensuration and cruising under Oliver S. Keay of Park Rapids, a cruiser in the state auditor’s office; and 20 days with Professor John T. Stewart, chief of the department of agriculture engi- neering at the state university, sur- veying with transit, level and tra- ever, and later stepped into the old logging road in which Mr. Steener- son was walking, and walked leisure- ly down the road ahead of him, final- ly disappearing in the timber. It was announced at the time of Mr. Steen- erson’s leaving that, while the ladies were searching for berries, he would do some prospecting for oil and Iron ore. He states that he found no oil, but that there was plenty of iron at the site of the old mill.—Crookston Times. Never leave home on a journey without a bottle of Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Rer- 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. POPOPPOPOOPOOO®O @ PERSONALS. @ CROROROROROR R RR R R R R R R 0. H. Oberg of Bagley, were Be- midji visitors yesterday. Emil Schneider will leave tonight for Minneapolis for a week’s business trip. P. M. Dicaire is suffering from poison ivy, obtained while in the woods picking blueberries. F. R. Bridgeman and wife of Mus- kogee, Okla., were among the Be- midji visitors this morning. Attorney Ed Conmy of Fargo who has spent the past two weeks at La- vinia, will leave tomorrow for his opens in Bemidji about Sept. 15th.— Address A. B. Brown, Prin.,, Amer. Nat. Bank, St. Paul. Word has been received from In- ternational Falls that the term of district court which has been in ses- sion in that city during the last sev- eral weeks, and which originally had 111 civil cases and six eriminal cases will be completed some time during the next week, and Judge C. W. Stanton who has been residing will return to Bemidji, where he will hear court cases for a few days. 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. A homesteader, Jester Lystad, 28 years old, sixteen miles south on the north branch of the Rapid river, near Spooner, has been found dead in his cabin cellar by his sister who lived on her claim nearby. Lystad stayed with his brother most of the time. His sister had not seen him for sev- eral days, when, going to his cabin, she discovered him in the cellar dead. He had been dead several days. His father arrived from Grand Forks and Verse boards: - Lmte in AUEUSL th class-is to report at Cass Lake. The Forest School will end its sum- mer session August 19. Ernest 0. Buhler of Berne; Switz- erland, a junior in the College of For- estry, has just arrived at Lake Itasca from St. Paul, where he took the summer course in steam and gas en- gineering at University farm.” Buh- ler came up for Prof. Stewart’s sur- veying here. Last Sunday fourteen of the for- estry boys and men engaged in the improvement work at Itasca State Park, went to Park Rapids and were beaten by a score of 5 to 2, by the Park Rapid’s firemen’s baseball team. July 16, returning from Park Rapids to the Forest School, the for- estry boys were glad-to be of assist- ance to a party of automobilists: Miss Ethel Kingsford, Rena Bruce, Inez Stickney, Sarah Jones and Etta Burnett, all of the summer school at Park Rapids, who spent the day at Douglas Lodge, coming out in a Mit- chell touring car driven by Robert Irwin of Dorset. Negotiating the Hay Creek bridge near Arago on their return to Park Rapids, the car near- ly slipped off a dangerously narrow approach of the soft dirt and stalled, blocking the road; they were damsels in distress until we came along and pushed all together, starting the au- tomobile for home. July 23, the Rev. Richard Simmer of Minneapolis will entertain a party of Catholic priests at Douglas Lodge: Rev. E. R. Pope of Minneapolis, Rev. at inoffensive persons,imostly chil- dren. Several children_;were shot by the young criminals and:one of their victims, at least, has bit little hope of recovering. The older of the two boys, who was. positively identified as one of the assailants, is about fifteen or seventeen years of age and has already a criminal record. For steal- Ing a bicycle he was committed to the Catholic Protectory, from which institution he was rel:ased only .a few days before his arrest for shoot- ing several children. 2 It was quite characteristic of the Ice Trust that the price of ice was raised during the recent hot spell. It was not claimed that last winter's ice crop had been a fallure or even short; neither did the officials of the trust give as an excuse that the ice cost the trust more during hot weath- er than at other times. The only reason given for the increase in price was, that owing to the heat the de- mand for ice had increased and the trust found it difficult to supply the suddenly increased demand, owing to the poor system of distribution em- ployed by the subordinate companies making the deliveries to the con- sumers. .« There are some men in the frater- nity of crooks who are well educated and clever enough to make a success in some honest calling, could they only resist the temptation of prey- ing upon the rest of mankind. There are, TOr INBUANES, tWO €10V rooks, well educated and apparently - not without refinement, who make a spe- clalty of robbing jewelers by sub- stituting paste rings for valuable diamond rings.and pawning or sel- ling the latter. One of the men, who signs himself the “Bear-Headed Pen- nyweighter,” seems to find a pecu- liar pleasure in writing letters full of humor and sarcasm to the Jewel- erg’ Circular Weekly after every suc- cessful coup. In his last communi- cation to the trade paper named the literary crook explaine{l that he had some time ago “retained for inspec- tion” a ring with a nice Cape dia- mond from the largest jewelry store in Newark, N. J., anq that he had pawned the bauble for $150 with a pawnbroker in Brooklyn. Strange to relate, th¢ Newark jew- eler referred to did not| know that he had been robbed until| his attention was called to it by the letter sent to the jewelers’ trade pajer. The ring +was found in the pawhbroker's shop mentioned in the letter. The writer of the letter evidently|had a grudge against the pawnbroker, because the latter had refused to l¢nd more than $125 for the same ring, when the crook offered it as secyrity again af- ter he had redeemed it once. s All the shady sejts in Union Square were taken thiother day to- ward the end of the nopn hour. There were plenty of vacant seats in the sun, but it was a scorching hot day. | “Moonshine” onshi distillery raided in Brooklyn the other day. The Goy-| ernment’s. revenue ‘agents, who had done a°clever bit of detective work, |- arrested six men and sefzed 2,000 gallons 'of 1lli¢it brandy and - two. stills, capable of producing 150 gal- lons each per day. 8 5 s e s The Rey.- Willlam B ¥ B T of Stone; pas f your own making—cut . W Ul lacy vy many -well e o = B . et oltisens bat the. tformants loose from extravagant habits, stop making bad invest- invariably received the reply that|Ments, ‘keep out of the way of get-rich-quick schémes— they must be mistaken. They were|gstart right today by .putting your money to work in our told that the Park Department had . & . . several men looking after the trees|5aVings department. You will also find this bank a and that they were fully capable of |great help in your business transactions---remember that holding the caterpillar pest in check. : : . In the moantime the catorpillars, un: | W€ 8T€ in businessto help you do more business, disturbed and unmolested by poison o t y ti to feast h or s, conmimee 10 et wn e\ T'he Northern National Bank ginning to look like shaggy brooms. 1ecLeu The meaty, tender, sweet- heart of the finest white . corn, flaked and toasted; crisp,brown and appetizing == —that’s Kellogg’s Toasted : « every grocer .. sells it—nearly ‘everybady eats it Corn Flakes. If you’ve never eaten | Kelloge’s.-you haven’t . v tastedcorn in its most ' g B delicious. form. It has a flavor that words: cannot describe. WITHOUT THIS SIGNATURE Bemidji Manufacturers, The Following Firms Are Thoroughly Reliable and Ord THE CRODKSTON W A McDONALD LUMBER CO. | NORTHERN GROCERY| ~ wwoueuace A young man and a girl strolled into they are spending -the day picking raspberries. Mrs. C. T. Tuomy of Genesee, Idaho, who has been visiting at the Dr. J. T. Tuomy home, during the past two weeks, left this morning for her home. Mrs. John Allen and son, Voight, of Park Rapids, are guests of friends in the city. From here they will go on to join Mr. Allen on his homestead near Cass Lake, B Miss Rose Barrette, deputy .clerk ot court, will leave tomorrow morn- apolis, a studént; and Wilson was charged with being a “Forester’” and held guilty of extinguishing a forest fire by spitting on it. He was sen- tenced to dance with every woman in the room, and there were no wall flowers at the dance. people present. elected treasurer; Rev. ator, and E. Sauers holds over one year as clerk. $50 a month is offered. & teacher—11 pupils last term. Itasca school district held its an- nual meeting the 15th, with eight Morton was ‘Theodore Weg- meann holds over two years.as moder- cupying the benches jtarted off. Two of the coolest, shadiest seats were then selected by the(youth, and he and his companion ELL down. for a pleasant chat. e have always had th¢ reputation of being. the home -6 fhe “Moonshin- ers;” as the makers ¢ illicit whisky and brandy are call jthat may have" time, it is no longerfso. Of course, r'v . 2 . J . . F. % J1V]I 4 3 o o e spot in which ‘the youth had select- | ed to sit, more thnl:jull of those oc-| ‘The mountain regiohs ot’Kentueky‘ . But how true| once upon a companY; IGE GREAM AND ! ) BAKERY 600DS Works and Office 315 Minn. Ave. WHOLESALE -i§:| WE ARE JOBBERS i | PIN TICKETS AND 18 | GuMMED LABELS No need to send outside of Bemidji for . them o L8 THE Pioneer = Supply Store CanSave you Money : Bemidji Pioneer Pub. Co. nd your Mail Orders to _{GED. T. BAKER & C0. Hardware Co. , Manufacturing Jewelers and Jobbe! Fitzsimmons - Baldwin{ - ‘company z Successors to Melges Bro Co. ‘Wholesale /ana Rétall . They are, especiall ) : | prompity 8 o e 1 variona - - Hard “l a’re .7 W-whltnn:i‘:g flfut aqnippedwfl‘! i z 7 ‘Northern Minnesota, Special = ‘Wholesale Fraits and Produce 1 Farsiors Produce i‘nmi‘ors’bld‘ t on Commissi ek returns_ - £ ™A™