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

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i i }J BEMIDJI BRIEFS awe h-‘q “THREB-ONE™ - l(Aml: STANTON, City. News Beporter nnm Society Reporter. Martin Johnson of Blackduek, the man who died at the International Falls hospital of a chronic disease, was buried yesterday afternoon in the pauper's field ‘of International Falls cemetery. In addition to its resources as a Guarantee Fund for the safety of your deposits, the stockholders of the Northern National Bank are individ- ually responsible for their propor- tion of all the obligations of the bank. The Ladies’ Aid of the Norwegian Lutheran church will be entertained tomorrow afternoon at 2:30 o’clock by Mrs. Peter Larson, at her home a mile west of the city. All members are requested to meet at the home of R. Richardson, Fourth street and America avenue, where conveyances will be in waiting, at 2 o’clock. Money to Loan, V. L. Ellis. 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. While Ralph Grover, mail carrier on rural route 1, was putting mail in one of the mail boxes along his route Tuesday the bridle on his horse became loose which frightened the horse and caused him to run away. The buggy was knocked against a telephone post, one wheel being brok- en off and the rig badly smashed. We make any letter or monogram for ladies’ hand bags. Geo. T. Baker & Co., Mfg. Jewelers, 116 3d St Near the lake. 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, is on his way to Baudette to lay out fire lines or fire breaks. This trip is in line with a number which Mr. Cox will make throughout that portion of the state. The districts about Baudette and Spooner are to receive first atten- tion of the department as they were left in bad shape from the last fires. The settlers are co-operating with the forestry department, and with the running out of a series of fire lines| the towns are fast becoming safe from fires. The Bemidji Dancing Academy will give its weekly dance tonight. Mas- ten's orchestra will play. Floor is in good condition. At City Hall. 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 opens in Bemidji about Sept. 15th.— Address A. E. Brown, Prin,, AmPT.! Nat. Bank, St. Paul. Low water in the streams is re- sponsible for the fact that many log- ging companies will be forced to wait until next year to get their logs down to the larger lakes and rivers. Sam- uel Simpson of Minneapolis, who has logged for several years near Bena, Minnesota, states that while he has succeeded in getting 15,000,000 feet into the Mississippi he will have to hold over 9,000,000 feet more at Round Lake on account of low wa- ter. He says that the .water in the lakes and streams near Bena is low- er than ever before and that in all parts of the logging districts the same trouble is being experienced. 1 have the Chapman blacksmith shop. 1 can do your work and war- rant it. 1 am here to stay. A. H. McDougall, horse shoer. Yes, 1 can shoe your horses. I make a specialty of lame, strikers, drivers, etc., and warrant them. I have had 20 years experience along this line. A. H. McDougall, horse shoer. Sivert Simpson was sentenced by Judge William Watts in the district court this afternoon to seven years at hard labor in the state penitenti- ary at Stillwater. The convicted man found guilty of taking the life of a friend, Theodore Nelson, some months ago, was brought into the court room Tuesday afternoon short- ly after 3 o’clock and, after answer- ing the customary questions and hav- ing no reason to give why sentence should not be imposed, the court promptly imposed the above sentence. Simpson heard the sentence without a tremor and had evidently steeled himself for the ordeal. He was taken at once from the courtroom to the county jail, where he will be held until this evening, when, accom- panied by Sheriff Daniels, he will start for the state penitentiary at Stillwater.—Crookston Times. Excursions to the Dam on the Yankee Doodle, fast mail and pass- enger boat. Leaves Bemidji at 2:30, returning at 5:30. We can positively sell you dia- monds for less money grade for grade in all comparisons than you can buy them for in the large cities. Our expenses are light, therefore enab- ling us to sell at a small margin of profit. Geo. T. Baker & Co., 116 3d St, Near the lake. Hurley Hanson of Grand Forks, who for the past several years, has spent his summer months in Bemidji, and who left this city Monday to at- tend the Grand Forks state fair which is now in progress, in a let- ter to a Bemidji friend tells how Tom McGovey, the Grand Forks aero- plane man narrowly escaped death yesterday afternoon when Ml:n;l- chine on leaving the ground swayed and crashed into a barn on the right of the field, breaking the right wing and injuring the steering rudder. It is thought that the machine can be make anether flight tomorrow. Mec- Govey has made several suceessful flights in private, and during one re- mained in the air 14 1-2 minutes. Yesterday’s attempted flight was his first one before the public. Parma- lee, the Wright aviator, made two successful flights. Do you dance? If you do dom’t fail to attend the weekly dances giv- en by the Bemidji Dancing Academy every Wednesday in the City Hall. Masten’s orchestra. Dance tonight. * LE AR R R E X R R R R R R R @ PERSONALS. o (A2 AS 2 X 2 R X2 XX X Clayton Kreatz left this morning for LaPorte. E. A. Feldman of Northome, was in Bemidji yesterday. Samuel Sutor of Cass Lake, was in Bemidji yesterday. ‘William Roos of Gemmel was in Bemidji yesterday. Mrs. M. A. Downs.and children and Miss Ruth Walker ‘have returned from an extended western trip. { Miss Ruth Wightman left this morning for Walker, where she re- cently organized a music class. C. F. Ditty and wife and family H. K. Finch and Thomas McCarty |left this morning for Ten Mile Lake, where they spend the next few days fishing. Mrs. J. J. Gits of Noonan, S. D., arrived in Bemidji last evening and is the guest of Dr. and Mrs. C. R. Sanborn. Miss Bertha Larson returned yes- terday from Crookston, where she has spent the past week with relatives and friends. Oscar Stinvick of Bagley, county attorney of Clearwater county, was present at the Good Roads meeting last evening. Miss Stella Sivertson, who has been a guest at the Rosaan cottage at La- vinia for the past week returned to her home at Crookston yesterday. Miss Meta Ebbinghausen of Crook- ston, who has been a guest at the Rosaan cottage at Lavinia for the past week returned to her home yes- terday. J. P. Bruer and daughter of Min- neapolis, who have spent the past week at the Jester Farm, summer re- sort, ~returned to their home this morning. in, Francis Kane, returned from Blackduck yesterday where they have been the guest of friends for the past few days. Mrs. Josie Walters and little daughter came down from Blackduck this morning and will visit with Mrs. Walters’ mother, Mrs. P. M. Dicaire, for some time. A. H. Ferrell of St. Paul, who rep- resents the Minnesota Type Foundry of St. Paul, was in Bemidji today. Mr. Ferrell was formely editor of the International Falls Press. County Commissioner R. S. Mec- Donald of International Falls was among the Bemidji visitors yesterday who were here for the purpose of at- tending the Good Roads meeting. M. N. Koll, a member of the execu- tive committee of the Northern Min- nesota Development Association, was one of the Cass Lake delegates to the Good Roads meeting last evening. Mesdames Thomas Smart and Ted Getchell, left this morning on a trip through the western states. Before returning to Bemidji the women will visit Seattle, Portland, British Co- lumbia and Vancouver. Dave Hyman and wife of Grand Forks, spent Monday night in Crook- ston and Tuesday morning started for ‘Bemidji in their car. They plan on following the route laid out by W. F. Lycan and no trouble is expected. Mrs. J. A. Younggren left this af- ternoon for Fargo, where she will vis- it her mother: for a month and will then continue to the Twin Cities where she will spend a few weeks. Mrs. Younggren expects to be gone until the middle of September. Horace White of Fargo, professor of chemistry in the Fargo Agricultur- al college, who with his family and his father have spent the last few days in Bemidji, left yesterday for their home. Mr. White is a cousin of A. P. White of Bemidji, president of the Northern National Bank. Andrew Dalgleish of Butte, Mon- tana, will join his wife here tomor- row, and together they will go on a boat trip to Chicago, Buffalo and New York, returning to their home early in the fall. Mrs. Dalgleish has been the guest here of her sister, Mrs. W. A. McDonald, for the past six weeks. Mrs. Willard Matthews will leave this evening for Martinsville, Ind., where she will enter the Home Lawn Mineral Springs, which is owned and operated by her father, Dr.” W. E. Hendricks, Mrs. Matthews, who with her husband spend their summers at Riverside, where they have a summer cottage, has not been in good health since arriving in Bemidji a month ago, and her continual illness has necessitated her leaving., repaired so as to enable McGovey to | leave tonight for Minneapolis where they will visit relatives for twol | weeks. Miss Bertha Dicaire and her cous-| £ 00—0’0 & ‘_‘0 ‘When. broiling halibut,; cover -the fish with minced green pepper. . The seasoning will-be found delicious. ~Lime. water: and olive oil, applied |- with a soft muslin rag, is one of the best lotions for burns and scalds. - ‘Wiping over shelves with oil of cedar is said to be the most effective ‘way of keeping mold from books. ni, with grated cheese, and baked in the oven, makes a nice dinner dish. If soft Doiled eggs are left over, boil them hard at once. Tehn they may be used in meat and fish sauces. Butter keeps -best in stone jars with stone lids: Wrap the butter in a clean cloth, wrung out of salt wa- ter. Straight hair can be curled by moistening with quinee seed, rolling in paper and holding in hot tongs to dry. Vegetables which have been served with a white sauce should be warmed over only in a double boiler lest they burn. A’pineh of soda in water in which green vegetables, peas, string beans and caggage are boiled will keep the color. Green grape and elder berry make a-delicions combination for a jelly. Use twice as much elder berry as grape. Macaroni may be satisfactorily warmed--over in a double boiler. ‘When warmed in the oven it becomes dry and hard. Soaking the hands and wrists in hot water will sometimes relieve headache. Soaking the feet in hot water also helps. If one of the rooms in the house seems too dark, try putting in a piece of brassware, highly polished, in a conspicuous place. Sweet sandwiches for the afternoon tea may be made of thin slices of white bread, spread with jam, topped with cream cheese. Matting and matting rugs of straw may be freshened by washing with salt and water and then rubbing dry quickly with a cloth. To prevent embroidery from puck- ering baste tissue paper under the part to be embroidered. It will eas- ily pull away when the work is fin- isned. Many housewives have the kitchen table covered with oil cloth. It is wise to have the table first covered with a piece of felt, old blanket or some soft material. This will deaden sound and save wear on the oilcloth. LATEST CURE FOR “NEB.VES" Walking Barefoot on Sands of Sea- shore Advised by Specialist. Walking barefooted on the sands of the sea is the latest cure for nerves so a well-known medical specialist insists. “The good qualities of sea sand, which in many ways, is as health- giving as ozone, have been universal- 1y overlooked by holiday makers,” he said. “One of the most soothing and beneficial ‘cures’ a tired business man can obtain is that of walking bare- footed on the sand by the seashore. “The nerves on the sole and ball of the foot are slightly irritated by the small grains of sand, and, so stimulated, setting up an increased circulation of blood throughout the body. “Mentally this exercise has a most invigorating effect. The nerves of the feet telegraph to the brain, as it were, how comfortable and refreshed they feel, and the brain responds by feeling comfortable and refreshed too. “If you do not want to walk bare- footed wear shoes—not boots—so that the sand may get in over the top and at your feet. “Then there is the soothing mo- notony of the sands. The long, flat stretches of yellow sand have a soporific effect én the mind—they in- duce a feeling of rest and detachment from the worries of the world. “Some enterprising man also should open hot sea sand baths at some resort, just as there are mud or earth baths at certain German -seas. These baths are very beneficial in cases of rheumatism and neuritis.” An 0ld Tune. We read in the Peoria Journal that Miss Timplin will play the Mendell- shon wedding march and the congre- gation, which will fill the church, will unite in the grand anthem, “The Vice that Breathed o’er Eden.”—Chi- cago Tribune. Effect But No Cause. “So there’s another rupture of Mount Vociferous,” said Mrs. Part- ington, as she put on her specs. “The paper tells us about burning lather running down the mountains, but it don’t tell how it got afire.” Tough Combination- Probably there is no combination on earth harder to live with than an artistic temperament soused in a bad cold.—Galveston News. Don’t Get the “Swell Head.” Pride goeth before destruction and a haughty spirit before a fall—Pro- verbs 16:18. substitution of people’s rulefor class rule—Thomas :Jefferson;. 1743. rope. of whom are over eighty Boiled: rice, prepared like macaro-land one is over one hundred. MAJESTIC = THEATRE PROGRAM - WEDNESDAY. AND THURSDAY 1—Overture—"Dixiana"™ 2—Motion Picture of the week. S—HIUMM Song 4—Motion Picture fun. NURSE A Q.C.H.L.O. Duluth’s Largest and Best DULUTH baths, 60 sample rooms. Eve: dln!nfl rooms: Sun i Superio: Only Plenty Is Enough | \MH]N bl Model each turjes ahead of Ml -time,. April -2, Healthy Spot in Europe. The village of Aumone.in France is said to be the healthiest ‘place in-Eu- 1t has only 40 inhabitasits, 23 Mins Hazelle Fellows “‘Her Humble Ministry® (Lubin) - One of the most mteruung d.nmn s I’'m Looking For a Dear (7] Lady C. J. Woodmansee “‘Cupids Chauffeur” (Vitagraph) A Comedy of real life and clean-cut Change of Program Frijday Night. -SMITH KAISER HOUSE €09 Bemid)i Av,. Maternity and GeneralNursing THE SPALDING UROPEAN PLAN MINNESOTA More than $100,000.00 recently elmended on improvements. 250 rooms, 125 private conyenience: Luxurious and jAranss ga by F) FAREE o G el icent , lol S0 P00} P L s arlor ‘4nd_Gbserva- Located in heart of business. sec- 108 bt OvarIook1ng the bArbor ana Leke r. Convenient to everything. One of the Breat Hotels ‘of the Northwest born .cen- _years old, ~ J. P. LAHR, Pres. at your disposal. t Hotel modern 407 Minn. Ave. monthly at 8 per cent. representative. il ! ST. PAUL 1 Remington 2—Smith Premiers—Model 2—and Model -4 WE SELL, BUY, LEASE, OR IMANAGE PROPERTY How about that real estate you have been trying to sell for years; we can -find a purchaser. thorough knowledge of realty values. 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 Every One a Big Snap 1.—Wide Carraige Smlth Premier No. 7314— . $25.00 $25.00 $27.50 Takes No Vacation : Itmnsmt&estat the rate of 4 per cent-365-days each year, If you-have no savings account start oone-and see how fast it grows, JOHN G. ZIEGLER “THE LAND' MAN" Fire-- Life—I N SUR A N CE—Accident REAL ESTATE IN ALL ITS BRANCHES FARM LANDS BOUCHT AND SOLD Co to Him for Farm Loans -~ - Office--Odd Feliows Bullding YOU OWN YOUR OWN HOME? If not let us build you one on monthly payments or we will pay off your old mortgage in the same way. Beltrami Co. Saving and Building Association W. C. KLEIN, Secy. Offices, Rooms 5 and 6, O’Leary.BOwser Block 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. F. M. MALZAHN Phone 420 For description of lots and full information regarding these and other lots in Bemidji, write us or call on H. A. Simons our local Bemidji Townsite &-Improvement Go, 520 Capital Bank: Building ESOTA Cafl:olic church. DEGREE OF NONOR. - Meeting _ ni every second and xo\i‘?'.h Monday QH':lliunss. at Odd Fellows D] P. 0. E. "ggy l‘;zvr meeting nl:}lts edne S oclock. Bagles Tail T G. A =B Bemidji Lodge No. 119 Regular mesting ni —evelaz Friday, 8 o'cl ock Odd Feliows Hall, 402 Beltrami. I 0. O. F. Camp No. 24. Regular meeting every second fourth Wednesdays at & o'clock, at Odd Fellows Hall Rebecea Lodge. Regular meeting nights — first and 4 (l'nIrd Wedn;sdays at 8 o'clock ) — XNIGETS OF PREYTHIAS. Bemidji Lodge No. 168. Regn]m' meeting nights—ev- P iedday cvening. at 8 Slociat the Bagles Hall, Third street. LADIES OF THE MAC- CABEES. gular meeting night Re; last Wednesdlv evening in each month. MASONIC. A. F. & A. M, Bemidjl, 233, " Regular meetin, nights — first and thir Wednesdays, 8 o'clock—at Masonic 'Hall, Beltrami Ave, and Fifth St 5 % Bemidjl Chnmer No. 70, F Stated convocations " irst ‘ana” thid MoRdars Tolook B mat Masonie Hall Beltrami Ave., and Fifth St. slkanah Commandery-No. 30 K. T. Stated conclave—second aud fourth Fridays,-8 o'clock p. m.—at Masonic Temnle. Bel- trami Ave., and Fifth 0.5, §. Chapter No. 171, Regular_meetin nlshts— first and third Fridays, 8 o'clock — at Masonic Hall, Peltrami Ave, and Fiftn ™ B. A Roosevelt, ~ No. 1523. Regular meeting. nights every second and fourth Thursday evenings at § gelock in~ 0dd ~Fellows M. W. A. Bemid:l Camp No 5012, lar meeting ghts — nrst, and tmrd Tuesdays at *clock Fellows Hall, 02 Bltrami Ave. MODERN SAMARITANSE. d Regular meeting nights on the fifst and third Thursdays . F. t in the L O. P. m. @ SONE OF HERMAN. Meetings held second and fourth Sunday after- noon of each month at 205 Bel Ave. M SMART DRAY AND TRANSFER SAFE AND PIANO MOVING R. F. MURPHY] FUNERAL DIRECTOR AND EMBALMER Office313 Beitram! Ave. Phone 319-2. Farm and Gity Loans Insurance Real Estate William_C. Kiein O’Leary-Bowser Bldg. Phone 19. © . Minn.

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