Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, August 1, 1911, Page 3

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’ BEMIDJI BRIE Editorial Telephone, “THREE-O! MAYNE STANTON, City News.: DORA BARRETTE, Soclety. Reporter Born Sunday, July 30, to Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Virnig, a girl. The Bemidji Dancing Academy will give its weekly dance on Wed- nesday in the City Hall. Masten’s grchescra. At the regular meeting of the Be- midji Commercial club to be held to- night, important business will come up for settlement. See Hud Fisk, when in need of automobile, gas engine and motor boat repair work. Shop, lake front foot of Fourth street. Phone 381. Street Commissioner Carter has changed the “Danger” buoys at Dia- mond Point to the bay where it was found the danger was greater than exactly at the point. Did you take your Kodak with you? If you do not own one we will rent one to you and finish the pictures when you get back. Bar- ker's Kodak Shop. Owing to the lack of funds in the treasury of the town of Northern the proposed co-operative road im- provement with the city of Bemidji has been abandoned for this year. | Money to Loan, V. L. Ellis, On account of one of the attorneys | being unable to be present because | of illness, arguments in the Interna- tional Falls street car injunction case | were not made before Judge Stanton here on Saturday as planned but | were deferred to a future date. i Your interests are furthered by | the interest you will receive on the| Certificates of Deposit issued by the Northern National Bank. It cost the city $198.27 to pay its| street workers last week, the pay | roll having passed the council last| evening. The municipal court re-| port for week ending July 22, show-i ing that $23 had been turned ove to the city treasurer was accepted. | We have a very complete depart- | ment devoted exclusively to ama- teur finishing. Barker's Kodak Shop. i Plans have been perfected for the annual Presbyterian Sunday School and church picnic to be held| on the lake shore tomorrow af-| ternoon. Games, swings ani other | forms of outdoor amusements will be‘w provided and picnic lunches will be | served. 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. | Address A. E. Brown, Prin., Amer. | Nat. Bank, St. Paul. | Members of the Bemidji Fire De-| partment championship running team, which recently won the cham- pionship banner at the Ada Fire-| men’s Tournament, are to have their| individual pictures taken, which will be placed in one large group together with Chief Earl Geil, who was a member of the first championship team the Bemidji firemen ever had. For a good time you want to at- tend the weekly dances given by the Bemidji Dancing Academy in the City Hall on Wednesday. Good mu- sie, good floor, good time. Requests will be made to the Great Northern, Soo Line and Red Lake] railroads asking them to put in more | substantial crossings at Fourth| street. Alderman Smart said last ev- ening at the council meeting that the conditions of the crossing at this point were unusually bad and that they should be rebuilt. The street committee will take the matter up| with the railroads. | Beginning at an early hour last| evening gentle rain continued untit by 9 p. m. it was a drenching down- pour. The rain continued until late in the night and was accompanied by some wind, but not enough to damage the crops, which for the most part are about ready to be cut. Much benefit will result to the pas- tures. The forests also are well soaked relieging all apprehension from possible fires. Ka-Be-Non-Gue-Went, the Chip- pewa Indian of Cass Lake, who as- serts he is anywhere from 110 to 128 years old, and submits a deeply wrinkled face as proof, spent Sunday in Bemidji, returning to Cass Lake yesterday. Ka-Be, etc., says he will live eight years longer and then die. He took much pride in a hair cut he received here and declared it was the best he has had since George Wash- ington was president. If the water and light committee of the city council has any influence with the Beltrami Board of County Commissioners at least three large arch lights will be established at the court house block. A motion was made at the council meeting last ev- ening by Alderman Bailey to this effect, the alderman arguing that this being one of the principal parts of the city as well as a beauty spot it should be better lighted. There will be a meeting of the Be- midji Boy Scouts at the Presbyterian church at 7:30 tonight called by Scoutmaster Rev. S. E. P. White for the purpose of completing arrange- ments for the Scouts going into camp at the head of the lake next week. The meeting therefore is one of im- portance and the Scoutmaster urges that all Scouts be present. The 3oy Scouts suits ordered several days have been shipped and will be here within the few days. H. F. Schleusener, 70 years of age, Lakin of this city, died in that city yesterday. Mr. Schleusener suffered a stroke of paralysis about a year ago and has been ailing since then. About a week ago he became worse and the members of the family were called to attend him. His death oc- curred yesterday aboit noon. Mr. Schleusener was an old resident of Little Falls and is well known both there and in this city. Graceful and unusual jewelry— distinctive and original goldsmith- ing. We take a great deal of pride in having our stock of jewelry rep- resent all that is not only newest and best, but that also is different from the common run. Exclusive and dis- tinctive designing forms a large part of our business and those desiring jewelry that has these qualities will find wide range for satisfactory se- lection here. Special order work. Correct engraving. Geo. T. Baker & Co., Third street, near the lake. The commercial clubs of Detroit, Ogema, Mahnomen and Waubum, Minn.,, have wired Representative Steenerson a request that he give the committee on expenditures in the in- terior department which is investi- gating the White Earth reservation troubles, a description of conditions on the reservation as he saw them on a recent visit. Mr. Steenerson has returned to Washington from his home in Crookston, where he has been for several weeks. He expressed an intention to follow closely the progress of the White Earth hear- ings. 1000006000000 0606 4 PERSONALS. i PPOPP0POPOP000006 Olive LaDue of Walker, Bemidji today. Sam Simpson of Minneapolis, was in Bemidji today. C. R. Winslow and wife of Grand Forks, were in the city this morn- ing. Dr. George B. Grober of La Porte, was a professional caller in the eity today. Miss Ada Mayer left last evening for Brainerd, where she will visit for a week. ) J. J. Opsahl, who is living on his farm at Lavinia, was in Bemidji to- day on business. was in Miss Fannie Chesterfield of Brain- erd is spending a few days awith friends in Bemidji. Ray Cook, civil engineer of this city, spent yesterday at Internation- al Falls on business. Frank Palmer, an attorney at In- ternational Falls, was in Bemidji to- day on legal business. ad T. J. Nary of Park Rapids, was in the city yesterday on business, re- turning home this noon. Dr. J. R. Collard and Omer Gra- velle of Red Lake, were business vis- | itors in Bemidji yesterday. M. D. Stoner returned to Brainerd | this morning after spending yester- day in Bemidji on business. J. A. Long of Minneapolis, who has extensive lumber interests in this vi- cinity was in Bemidji today. Samuel Wordden, corset salesman for a New York concern, is spending a month’s vacation in Bemidji. Mrs. Anton Erickson and daugh- ters, Lizzie and Nellie, have returned from a trip of several days in Min- neapolis. . G. W. Juhl and wife of Omaha, Neb., who have spent the past month at Buena Vista, left this morning for their home. Paul Williams of Brookings, S. D., Wwho has been the guest of Hallan Huffman during the past several days, has returned to his home. E. J. Swedback, president of the Security State Bank, left this morn- ing for Minneapolis where he will remain several days on business. Mrs. R. Brownlee and daughter Pearl of Mill Park have returned from a six weeks’ trip to Owatonna and- Medford where they were the guests of relatives. Rev. P. J. Thoranson of Blakes- ville, Wis.,, was in Bemidji this morning on his way to Cass Lake near which place he will camp in an effort to regain his health. Mrs. Rosaan and two soms, who have spent the past month at their cottage at Lavinia, have closed the place and returned to their home at Crookston yesterday. F. Keeler and wife and family who have made their home in Bemidji for the past two years, will leave tomor- row for Cloguet, where they will make their future home. Miss Olive Miller, who has been the guest of her father, T. J. Miller, and brother, D. D. Miller, during the past week, returned to her home in Minneapolis this morning. Mrs. Argall, of Cass Lake, widow of Attorney Argall who died recently in Cass Lake, has decided to make her home in North Dakota and will g0 as soon as her preparations are made. E. Ferrant and wife and R. Bruse of Minneapolis arrived in Bemidji this morning and left this afternoon for the Jester Farm summer resort, where they will remain for several ‘weeks. F. P. Nicoll, Don P. Nicoll, Marga- ret Nicoll of Minneapolis, and Mrs. R. C. Buck of Superior, Wis.,, ar- rived in Bemidji this morning and of Little Falls, father of- Mra. B. W. will leave this evening for Turtle BY FLORENCE FAIRBANKS. New York, Aug. 1.—The exigen- cies of fashion during the last few seasons have completely revolution- ized the style of women’s under- clothes. The modish woman of to- day wears fewer underclothes than the woman of a year or two ago, and those she does wear are less aggres- sively self-assertive, finer, daintier and—alas—more expensive. . The combination in one form or another is the favorite undergarment, and the woman who has worn it finds it hard to go back to separate corset covers and drawers or underskirts, ‘with their multiplicity of waistbands always shrinking out of place in the laundering and their troublesome fastenings. Not that corset covers, separate drawers and separate underskirts are not worn. They are, and many wom- en favor them, insisting that the women who need to consider laun- dering economies will find the sepa- rate garments better, since often one needs changing when another does not. But the fact remains that the combination is in high favor, and that it does away with awkward ful-| ness at the waistline and is far more | trim and neat than are the separate pieces as a rule. - Along with the combination skirts | and corset covers, chemises have some slipping back into favor, but they are modified chemises, making concession to the law against ob- trusive fulness of undergarments. They are not tight fitting, but they the body and do not fall from the top in full folds as they once did. The material is 8o soft and sheer that what little fulness there is to be dis- posed of about the waist is not no- ticable under a frock. to shirr into this waistband, and the princess models in which the waist- band is eliminated entirely are very popular. These, like the chemises, do not fit closely but follow the curves of the figure easily. In place of the circular drawers, which, even in the softest lingerie | stuffs, have a certdin fulness at the ibottom which may be perceived through one of the extremely narrow and soft frock skirts. French wom- en have taken up drawers of nar- rower and straighter shape, fasten- ing in like knickers at the knee or left open but quite narrow. In many cases thin silk tights are worn by fashionable women. To avoid every suggestion of fulness the trimming upon undergarments has been _re- duced to a minimum. Frills and | flounces have been altogether aban- | doned and lace insections or other flat trimming alone is used. Double skirts have been revived and the regime of the hobble skirt and similar atrocities seems to be on the decline. Perhaps we owe the Lake where they will spend several weeks. Judge C. W. Stanton, accompanied by his court reporter, left this morn- ing for Grand Rapids where a short { term of court will be held. They will return to Berhidji the latter part of the week. Mrs. P. N. Anderson of this city has gone to Fort Francis to join her husband who holds a responsible position in the saw mill. It is possi- ble that the Andersons may decide to locate in the Canadian town. Frank Start and wife of St. Cloud are spending a few days in Bemidji before continuing on to Canada where they have purchased land and expect to make their future home. Peter Milbach, the lineman of the Northwestern telephone company who was severely injured last fall when a telephone pole on which he was working fell to the ground, left this morning for Benedict in the in- terests of the company. Harvey Woodward, who returned Saturday from a two months trip to the Pacific coast, will remain in Be- midji for some time and perhaps permanently, although he has two offers, either of which, if accepted, would carry him away from here. Archie Naugle left last night for Duluth from where hé will start on a lake trip going to Detroit, Niagara and other points. At Detroit he will be joined by his mother who will make the remainder of the trip with him. Mr. Naugle plans to be away about two weeks. I E. Lieghton of this city, who was ‘Tecently elected to attend the National Modern Brotherhood of America convention which is to be held in Denver soon, left this morn- ing for Minneapolis, where he -will join the delegates to the convention who will have a special train. Mrs. E. R- Ryan of Seattle and her mother, Mrs. Willson of Minneapolis, who have been the guests of Mrs. E. A. Barker for the past five weeks, will leave for Minneapolis tomorraw where Mrs. Ryan will be the guest of her mother for some time before returning to her home at Seattle. A. J. Diedrick, who for the past year has been with the Barker Drug company of Bemidji, and who recent-| ly severed his connections with that firm, left this morning for his home at Albany, Minn., where he will re- main for a short visit before leav- ing for St. Maries, Idaho, he having PPRPPVPPIPOIOOVO000009900 20000609 are shaped somewhat to the curve of | The combination corset covers and | skirts, or corset covers and drawers, | if made with a waistband at all, are! 0 cut that there is but little fulness| double skirt -to the bordered fabrics. that have been introduced during the: ‘early part of the.season. At any ously, their colored edges forming| parailel rows' of decoration at the knees and ankles. . The new jabots and side frills are S0 large that they almost cover the front of the waist. The new side frill extends far out aver the shoul- der, graduating to about two inches at the bottom, and extends from the mneck to the waistline: One very wide jabot arranged in butterfly effect ex- tends almost from shoulder to shoul- der. It is of hand-made tucked net, with trimmings of real Mechlin lace, with a tiny bow of narrow velvet at the throat and a fold of velvet at the top edge of the stock. Another is a triple tab jabot attached to a stock. The material used is fine net with a small embroidered ring dot, and the tabs are edged with Valencinnes lace and are of different length. The stock is finished at the top with a -fold of black satin, a tiny bow of the net being placed at the throat. One of the new-side frills is made of wide maline lace attached to an insertion: of hand-embroidered net. A narrow frill of pl#in net finishes the other edge. This frill is attached to a high stock of embroidered net edged with black velvet. Tiny black velvet buttons adom the cenfral | piece of insertion. One unusual design-in a side frill, instead of being A#ttached to a| straight piece of insertion, has the double-pleated frill joined to a tri- angular piece of pleated handker- chief linen. The frill is attached to | the stock collar by means of narrow Valencinnes insertion two inches long. When worn the upper point of the ffill is pinned at the left shoulder, while the lower corner is fastened over at the right side, the entire frill curving from the upper right to the lower left and suggest- ing the fichu. There is not particularly much tol| say about the new shapes of hats dis- played by Paris modistes. A new sailor shape, with rounded crown on top and broad brim has lately made its appearance, trimmed solely with a five-inch bias bend of velvet, neatly | affixed on the left side by a bow_and turn-under of velvet. These hats, generally white with some vivid col- ored trimming, have a band of straw to match, the garniture enframing the brim about a couple of inches in breadth, and will make pretty morn- ing and seaside hats,. shady and smart or chic and servicable at the same time. 1 For very hot weather, just as we have sexperienced-derg~during the past few weeks, fashionable women return to the pongee goat. This year these are made with the same round buttons, a large round or square col- lar and revers either of the pongee itself or else of silk of some contrast- ing color. i Woolen flowers on the sheerest frocks have come into unusual im- portance. They are circular disks of crocheted work, gathered into a cen- ter and in many sizes. The smallest ones are one inch in diameter and are used with embroidered stems on the edges of sashes. Large ones form patches of color on the bodice or girdle. Fringe is the favorite trimming for chick frocks of changeable silk. It also finishes the majority of sepa- rate sashes. all essential ness. responsive as the finger to the brain. wear longer. accepted a position in that eity. This immediate, smooth, sym- pathetic action, duplicated in no | other writing machine, is easiest for the operator and most ad- vantageous to the machine, 420 Secind Ave. S., Minneapolis, Minn, If not let us build you _one on monthly payments “or we will pay off your old mortgage in the same way. - Beltrami Go. Savig ‘and Building Association J. P. LAHR, Pres. ‘W. C. KLEIN, Secy. Offices, Rooms 5 and 6, O’Leary.BOwser Block $3500 CLASS CABIN LAUNCH Length 41 feet Beam 8 ft. 2 inches, toilet, cook, galley, 5 sleeping bunks, Electric plant, lighted inside and out, Arc search light, two tow posts, Electric fan, 28 H. P. 4 cylinder engine (new), speaking tube, Electric bell. Complete and most serviceable boat in State. Will sell for about half price. + Draught 35 inches. Fine boat for Rainy River. -Write H. H. MARTIN, Cass Lake, Minn. Stop the Banging! Save your nerves and your ears—put an ‘7 end to the constant slamming, banging of screen doors all day long, by attaching a gaft.-cfit SCREEN DOOR CATCH Keeps the Door Shut 1t fastens to the top of the door as shown below and by a spring pressure of the flanges against each other, as well as by the opposing angles of the upper and lower flanges the door is held tight. =——==== = No matter how forcefully the door is closed the extending flanges will catch it softly. Holds frame in shape. No Open Doors—No Flies with this device. The greatest litde wonder out. Get one now. Sent direct for 25c if 2 your dealer doesn't sell it. R. G. WINTER MFG. CO. 2102 Viiet Street MILWAUKEE CLOSES DOOR SECURELY WITHOUT NOISE When Your Finger-Tip Taps the Key—What Happens? Your most delicately sensi- tive nerves direct the most delicately responsive mech- anism of the L. C. Smith & Bros. Typewriter (BALL-BEARING, LONG-WEARING) Key-lever, typebar, carriage (and shift, if you write capitals)—really operating parts of the typewriter—leap into action and perform their functions with the perfect easc, smoothness and abso- lute precision of ball bearings, made and adjusted with scientific exact- e nerves of this typewriter are sensitive to the nerves of your finger tips, and just as instantly / i = tps are =< = No. 34 East Bound Leaves at 1208 p. m 'No. 106 South BoundLeaves at 6:30 8 m Freight West Bound Leaves gt 9:00 &.m mm‘mmm_uw;pm Minnesota & International: - No: 32 South Bound Leaves at 845 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 4:20 a. m Freight South Bound Lezves at 7:30 a. m Freight North Bound Leaves at 8:00 a.m Minn. Red Lake & Man. No. 1 North Bound Leaves at3:35 p. m No 2 South Bound Arrives at 10:30° Z:'m “PROFESSIONAL CARDS ARTS HARRY MASTEN - Piano Tuner srmeely 0 Radenbush & Co. el 8¢t. Pau, reasonable. All music up to date. HARRY MASTEN, Piano Tuner Room 36, Third floor, Brinkman Hatel.. Telephone 535 M. COOK = CIVIL ENGINEER Room 9, O'Leary-Bowser Bldg. Phone 23 E. REYNOLDS ® Architect and Realestate Broker Offices—Room 9, O'Leary-Bowser Bidg. Phone 23 PHYSICIANS AND. SURGEONS: R. ROWLAND GILMORE PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office—Miles Block DR. E. A. SHANNON, M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGECN Office in Mayo Block Phone 396 Res. Phone 397 )R. C. R. SANBORN PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON- Office—Miles Block 2 A: WARD, M. D. ® Qver First Nativnal Bank. Phone 51 House No. 605 Lake Blvd. Phone 351 R. A. E. HENDERSON PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Qver First National Bank, Bemidji, Minn. Office Phone 36. Residence Pone 72. R. E. H. SMITH g PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office in Winter Block R. E. H. MARCUM Office in Mayo-Block Phone 18 Residence Phone 211 INER W.- JOHNSON PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Besidence 1113 Bemidji Ave. Phone 435 Offices over Security!Bank. Phone 130 DENTISTS R. D. L. STANTOKN DENTIST Office in Winter Bleck TUOMY DENTIST Ist National Bank Build’d. Telephone 230 G. M. PALMER DENTIST [Miles Biock Eveaing Work by Appointment Only R. J. F. PETERSON DENTIST Office in Miles Block DR_ J.T. LAWYERS ((YRAHAM M. TORRANCE LAWYER Telephone 560 Miles Block H. FISK i ATTORNEY AT LAW Office over City Drug Store Dry ing, Pressing “_m‘ a

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