Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, August 31, 1911, Page 3

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vy THURSDAY, AUGUST 31, 1911 ' BEMIDJI BRIEF | Editorial Telephone, “THREE-~ONE” DORA BARRETTE, Society Reporter Born, Monday, August 28, to Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hubert, of this city, a son. x To secure indepencence, practice simple economy—have a savings ac- count with the Northern National Pank. The men of the First Methodist | church are spending their evenings lathing the basement of the new church preparatory to plastering. The Pioneer school supply store is the place to buy your school wants. K Prayer meeting of the First Meth- odis Episcopal church will be held| at the residence of H. A. Whitney, 907 Irvine avenue, on Thursday eve- ning. All aboard for the Dam! The Yankee Doodle leaves at 2:30 -every day. 0. C. Rood is building an addition | to his house in the north end of the city. Work was begun several weeks ago and has progressed rapidly, be- ing almost completed. Money to Loan, V. L. Ellis. Harry Trask has accepted the agency for the Eaton Medicine com- pany of Minneapolis. a neat little wagon and will cover Be- midji, surrounding territory and Ot-| ter Tail county. Come on all you kids and get a blotter free at the Pioneer Supply store. All you have to do is to ask| for one. ¥ % % Loose boards on the side walk on| the rustic bridge on Lake Boulevard continue 1o endanger Ivrdes(rlhlls_ The boards have worked loose and | pedestrians are compelled to walk cautiously less they trip and fall. What have you to trade for new standard piano? Call at second hand store, 0dd Fellows Bldg. Clarence Synnes, 8 months old, son of Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Synnes of Ny- more died Sunday, August 2 of spinal meningitis. The funeral was held Monday and interment was made in the Nymore cemetery. Nizht School at Bemidji Business College now open for both ladies and| gentlemen. Individual instruction,; any branch you want. Special rates‘ this week. Call or phone. The contractors who are laying the cement paving on the streets are tak-| ing advantage of the fine weather and working their men over time. A ew was kept busy until late last evening on Minnesota avenue. lurge ¢ The Henrionnet Millinery Parlors are now ready to do order work and remodeling. Our work-room is charge of Miss Eidem, an experi- enced and artistic trimmer. All work | guaranteed satisfacticn. 309 Minn. Ave. Viggo Peterson came to Bemidji vesterday to take his wife and recent- 1y born son to their Puposky home. The young people of the Swedish Lutheran church will meet Friday| evening at the home of Oscar Christ- ianson, 906 Bemidji avenue. Pencils 5 cents, pen holders 5 cents, erasers 5 cents, “What Next" tablets 5 cents, at the Pioneer Sup-! ply Store. ¥k Work is progressing rapidly on the foundation is in and work on the upright part o fthe building has be- gun. Teh new store is located next| to the J. P. Lahr furniture store. Night School, Monday, Wednesday and Friday, at Bemidji Business Col-| lege. 1. 0. 0. F. Hall. Careful indi- vidual instruction. Call or phone. Special rates this week. The state fair management has had built at Pine Island, Minn., a cheese weighing 6,000 pounds, which will be | on exhibition in the dairy building| during the entire fair. This mam- moth exhibit was built to emphasize the possibilities ¢f the cleese indus-| try in Minnesota. Bemidji and surrounding territory looks so good to the Northwestern railroad company that it has sent Charles T. Peterson of St. Paul, its traveling passenger agent, to solicit business for that line. Mr. Peterson came to Bemidji yesterday. He will make regular trips in the future, making a special bid for St. Paul to| Chicago business. This office holds an order for trans- portation to the extent of $36, good | over the route of the Chicago & Du- luth Transportation Company. Good on the new steamer Minnesota from Duluth to Chicago and return includ- | ing berth and meals or good for two passengers mnot including berth and meals. The same is being held for sale for $20. Speak quick if you want this snap. ¥¥¥ Beltrami county premium lists or any information concerning the fair | can be had at this office by| anyone. A. P. Ritchie, secretary of the fair association can al- ways be reached by telephone at his home or be found at the state fair | exhibit headquarters on Second street. The banks of the city also are glad to give information regarding the fair. Premium lists can also be obtained there. ASK TO SEE THE SANITARY AT THE City Drug Store Mr. Trask has| CROWN PIPE! The executive committee of the |Cass Lake Commercial club, officers |and directors, held a meeting Tues- day evening and decided to employ an | expert landscape artist to take views of the points of interest about Cass iLake, These pictures will be publish- |ed in a handsome booklet, together | with information and data concern- ing the advantages of Cass Lake. The booklet will be issued some time shortly after the holidays. Tablets 5 cents, composition books the Pioneer School Supply Store. ‘lli Mrs. M. F. Cunningham entertain- ed some of the members of the Teach- ers Training Class of the Methodist Episcopal church at her summer | home at Lakeside. The women were taken oven in a launch in the early part of the afternoon. The afternoon | was spent socially, and refreshments |were served. Those present were | Mrs. M. Phibbs, Mrs. C. N. Shannon, !Mrs. C. H. Flesher and Mrs. R. H. Munsey. Mrs. Cunningham is a member of the class. FREE—One month night school free to all enrolling this week, Be- !midji Business College. open every | phone at once. er about three miles west of LaPorte. [The tower will be thirt | high, and as it will be erected on| {one of the bLighest points in the| neighborhood, 9 person on the top of it can see for nearly twenty miles lin every direction. This will be used iin the foresiry service. Mr. Johnson | was cruiser for the Northern Pacific| | Railway company several years, and ‘in February, 1888, wrote his name | with a lead pencil in the bearingmark {of a cedar tree on the bank of Gar- |field lake. Saturday he went to the | |tree and found his name still plain-| 1y visible. Grayola 5 cents, thumb tacks |cents, scissors five cents, pencils 5 | cents, at the Pioneer Supply Store. | Fxx | old, for more than 30 years foreman of the Northern Pacific railway shops roundhouse at Brainerd died there| | Tuesday night of Bright's disease at| | the railway sanatarium. He was \Jorn\ in Blairglowrie, Scotland, and emi- | grated to America at the close of the| He was married at Sl'l [civil war. |Paul to Miss Thompson. Four of | their children are living—Mrs. W. G. Percy of Phoenix, Ariz.; Lawrence D. | McPherson of Vancouver, Wash.: James and Margaret McPherson of Brainerd. His second marriage took | place twenty-five years ago to Miss | Maggie McLean, and two children { were born, Mabel and Roy McPherson of Brainerd. | Big Five tablets 5 cents, Beats all | You Can Carry 5 cents, note books | 5 cents, at the Bemidji Pioneer Sup- ply Store. ¥k Cuts and bruises may be healed in about one-third the time required by the usual tredtment by applyin 1 Chamberlain’s Liniment. heal without maturation. This lini- |ment also relieves soreness of the muscles and rheumatic pains. For | sale by Barker's Drug Store. { M. H. Koll of Cass Lake left yes- terday morning for Hamline, Minn., where together with Wm. A. Dorsey of Pillager, and Geo. J. Silk of Pine River, the work of setting up Cass | county’s exhibit at the state fair will be begun. | Lake has been interested in sending an exhibit to the fair and Mr. Koll | has gathered a good }grams. grasses and garden truck which will help make up the county’s exhibit at the fair this year. About | the most interesting article taken by | Mr. Koll is a tobacco plant from the | | garden of Predium Gamache who lives in Cass Lake. The plant itself is a little more than six feet high and cotnains more than a dozen |leaves the largest of which are three | feet long and two Teet wide. | 5 cents, spelling tablets 5 cents, at]| evening, I. 0. 0. F. hall. Call or| POOOOOPO0OOOCSEOSOS Vvuiness @ PERSONALS. @ | the diseased sortion: 0000000000000 R. C. Spooner of Lynx, was a Be- midji visitor yesterday. H. Brummond and wife of Walker, spent yesterday in the city. H. F. Bosworth of Ada, was in the |379 city yesterday on business. e Mrs. P. Sarff, of Funkley is visit-|cannot be cured : 3 Yor etrent Send Lox ClECYRE ENEY & CO., Toledo, O. Dmmn Take Bl\lsF‘mfly Pills for constipation ing today with friends in this city. F. M. Miller and wife of Dicken-| son, spent last evening in the city. ‘W. P. Dyer and wife returned yes- terday from a short outing at the Lahr farm. Geo. Gunderson, a merchant of Kel- liher, and his son Ernest, were Be- midji visitors yesterday. J. W. Olson, superintendent of public instruction in Minneapolis is spending a few days in the city. E. M. Farnham, formerly of this city, but now of Minneapolis, is spending a few days in the city. J. Rasmussen of the Theo. Hamm | Brewing company of Crookston, spent vesterday in the city on business. Miss Vera Kelsey of Grand Forks is a guest at the Williams cottage at Lakeside for a couple of weeks. M. C. Bacheller and wife of Grand Forks, arrived in the city today and - | will spend a few days at their cottage |at Lakeside. Miss Nora Hurley of Brainerd, who | nas been the guest of Miss Helen Bisiar for the past two weeks, return- L. F. Johnson, deputy fire warden, | has let the contract for a watch mw-v ve feet | Lawrence S. McPherson, 60 years| collection of | ed to her home this morning. Robert Follansbee, who is with the | geographical survey of St. Paul, re- turned today from Red Lake where he has been the past two days. Mrs. T. Caulfield and daughter, Margaret, who have been guests at the J. Bisiar home for the past week returned to their home this morning. Mrs. C. C. Rowley and daughter, Irene, of Brainerd returned to their home this morning after having spent the past two days as the guests of Mr. Rowley. Miss Cora Gustison leaves tonight for Duluth from where she will start on a lake trip to Cleveland. Miss Gustison may visit friends at Detroit while away. Dick Johnson and William Barker of Brainerd came up to attend the dance given by the Bemidji Dancing Academy last evening and returned home this morning. J. 0. LaQua, a merchant of Iron Wood, Minn.. is spending a few days in the city. Mr. LaQua is well known here as at one time he owned the famous “robbery” store at Puposky. Miss S. Quale of Aurora, who has been the guest of Miss Lee Given for the past two weeks, has returned to her home. She was accompanied by Miss Given who will be her guest for two weeks. Miss Lizzie Murphy has accepted the position of deputy register of’ deeds, vacated by J. J. Conger and will begin her duties tomorrow. Miss | Murphy has just returned from a three weeks' trip through the west. Mrs. Harry Trask returned yester- | {day from Blackduck where she has spent the past week with her sister, Mrs. E. H. Hayes. She was accom- g | panied by her father, A. J. Rose who It is an an-| new store. building of O, C. Rood &‘liseplic and causes such injuries to| Company on Minnesota avenue. The | will make his home with his daugh- ter for some time. Mrs. A. A. Warfield and son, Her-| bert, will leave tomorrow morning for Bay Lake where they will be the| guests of Mrs. Warfield’s mother for | the next few days. From there they will go on to Minneapolis where they will visit for a week. They will be accompanied by Harold White. Dr. W. F. Braasch and wife of This is the f 2 iRochester are here for a few days’ 18 Is the first time Cass| y;;4 ity Mrs. Braasch’s sister, Mrs. Montreville J. Brown. Dr. Braasch is a member of the Mayo Brothers hospital staff. From here Dr. and Mrs. Braasch will go to| Walker. Buy it now. Now is the time to buy a bottle of Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy. It is almost certain to be needed be- fore the summer is over. This remedy has no superior. For sale by Barker’s Drug Store. | | Girls’ Dresses Mother we can fit the the H. & S. dresses and you will be surprised at the values. We show a large assortment of per- cales, gingham and chambray dresses at 50¢c. 75¢, $1.00 and $1.50 THE SPALD[NG | S Ces ontocc Mot that in by Sor. : s 3 PLAN | sumssare e INURSE A SMITH|| ooodtiotestiition. S B e o O et DULUTH MINNESOTA e fismed you have & rumbling sound or fm- Q.C.H.L.O.S. sl st e s & LunCh Room perfect h . and when it 1s entirely on Tt 25 Fooms. 12 private e e T baths, 80 AWI’;W “:’;“' ; 205 A e o o maoar o 1 (| KAISER HOUSE md, flomish_Hoom, Beltrami Avéf ©09 Bemidji Ave. tory. Located 3 3 o but ovesiooking the harbor-and Like uperior. Convenient to everything. Maternity andGeneral Nursing S S—— QUTCH AUCTION® It Closes Saturday Night, Sept. 2 girls’ out for school with! Gorner Third and Minnesota Ave. Never before in the history of Bemidji has high class and medium grade merchandise been sold so cheap as at this store during the past two weeks. : Our one aim has been to dispose of the goods,and we have succeeded in doing so to our entire satis- faction and to the satisfaction of our customers. Tis’ true some goods were sold way below cost but we needed the room and our customers the goods, money was no object. TWO0 BlG DAYS LEFI Friday and Saturday Sept. 1-2 We are going to make these two days crowning events in the history of our store and an era for our customers to remember. We Will Not Give Goods Away But they will be sold for little or no profit. As the Stock decreases the Bargains increase and You Are The Winner Don’t fail to attend this great Dutch Auction Sale. Friday and Saturday. Then Watch This Store In The Future We're going to surprise our citizens at our Opening when our Store is fully completed. Il Open Day and Night Meals at All Hours

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