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v TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 191 ' BEMIDJI BRIEF Editorial Telephone, DORA BARRETTE, Society Reporter “THREE-ONE” The Ladies’ Aid of the Seandinavi- an Lutheran Churcn will meet to- morrow afternoon at 3 o'clock at the home of Mrs. C. J. Larson 515 Be- midji avenue. Get your Kodak Films Saturday for that Sunday morning outing. Barker's Kodak Shop. Big Dance in the City Hall tomor- row night by the E~midji Dancing Academy. Free candy to the ladies. Masten's orchestra wilt play. Col. C. E. Johnson of St. Paul, dep- uty public examiner, who come to look over the books of the several leltrami county officers left yester- day. Asked as to the import of his visit at this time, Colonel Johnson stated that he was simply here at the request of Public Examiner Fritz. ~I checked the books and accounts of County Treasurer French and others but 1 can not say as to what report I may make.” Miss Rasmussen from Waupaca, ex- perienced dressmaker. Fancy and party dresses a specialty. 221 3rd St. Over Gill Bros. Recent attacks of “Graymatter,” the Bemidji socialistic publication, on | Mayor Parker and e city. council | caused a ripple of amusement in the council chamber last night when one of the aldermen suggested that the mayor “who has charge of the City| ilall anywa; should see to it that the border around tn- stage be im- proved. The mayor rromised to do| the work but id he not | agree to please Graymatter. would What have you to trade for new standard pian Call at second hand store, Odd Fellows Bldg. 1 The Northern Pacific has jusl; bought 1,000 square feet of floor space at the Twin City Show, which is to Le given from December 12 to 23 under the auspices of the North-| western Development League. This| means the railroad company will make a good showing for every state | along its lines. Being one of the! first railroad companies to buy space, | the Northern Pacific has selected aj section sixty feet long between thej main entrances, about the best there is in the Show. Go to Hakkerup's f.; Photo's. “1 have a world of confidence iui {four weeks, but by applying Cham-| jcure can be effected in from two to| tendance.—Ball game between Ny- more and Solway last Sunday was witnessed by a few Pinewood people who report some good playing. The score was 6 to 12 in favor of Solway. Have you a Kodak Film Tank for developing your films?. If not you are more than likely to spoil them in developing. Take them to Bark- er’s Kodak Shop. The marriage of Miss Margaret Bowe to James Meines oceurred this morning at 8 o'clock at the St. Phil- lip's Catholic Church, Rev. Fr. O'Dwyer officiating a~ a solemn nup- tial high mass. They were attended by Miss Katherine Bowe, sister of the bride, and Ed. Goald. Both bride and bridesmaid were dressed in white suits, the bride carrying white Am- erican Leauties and the bridesmaid carrying red American beauties. * Im- | mediately after the cerrnmony the par- ty went to the home of the bride on Lake Boulevard where an elaborate wedding breakfast was served to about 30 guests. The 100ms were dee- orated in pink and white and this color scheme was carried throughout | the breakfast. Mr. and Mrs. Meines left this noon for Duiutn from where | they will go by way of the lakes to Chicago, going from there to New | York. They will return at the end of three weeks to Minneapolis where they will make thzir home. The bride is well known in this city, be- ing the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jas. Bowe. Mr. Meines, who is a young busin man of inueapolis, has made many friends during his short| stay in the city. As usually treated, a sprained an- kle will disable a man for three or berlain’s Liniment freely as soon as| evening in the interests of his com- pany. Karl Stromme left +his morning for Leaf River where Le will conduct Norwegian Lutheran service tonight. From there he will leave for St. Paul where he will ente: the Lutheran Seminary for the winver. J. K. Stangland of Kaser, B. C,, is in the city. ' He will join his wife who is the guest of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Mat Meyers. Mr. Stangland was formerly of this city, having been connected with the Stansland {and Moore company. M. Behan, of Eau Claire, in com- pany with State Fir Marshal-C. E. Keller and E. J. Meinbach of St. Paul, arrived in the city this noon and will remain herz for some time, Mr. Beihan being one ot the principal witnesses in the Dumas case. C. W. Backus and iwo sons, Sey- mor an1 Raymond, and Frank BoWw- man, all of Minneapolis, arrived in the city yesterday for a few days’ hunting. They left this morning with F. S. Lycan, E. A. Barker, T. J. Bur- ke, Geo. H. French and F. Tibbetts in the Lycan and Barker cars for Sol- way where they will hunt. “Enoch Arden.” C. J. Woodmansee proprietor of the Majestic Theatre received a |telegram this morning from his ex- change in Minneapolis. stating. that he could feature the big Biograph production in two re-ls, (2,000 feet) “Enoch Arden” for Wednesday and Thursday nights oni; Sept. 13 and 14th. Mr. Woodmansee has been trying for some time to get this big feature film but it has been in such demand that this is the first oppor- | tunity he has had in securing this | picture. The admission for this big feature will be the same 10 cents. As They Used to View the Plague. the injury is received, 2nd observing the directions with each bottle, a| four days. Store. For sale by Barker's Drug | 200000006060606060060 @ PERSONALS. @) PP00000C000000006] Dan Lilly of Cass Lake, was a Be-| midji visitor yesterday M. N. Koll, of Cass Lake, is in the| city today on business. . Chas. Moller and wife of Pinewood, are registered at the Rex today. Attorney Bunn T. of Blackduck, are in the city today. E. Case, state cruiser of Little was a Bemidji visitor yester- Wilson and wife | | alls, day Sheriff Robert DeLury of Walker, spent yesterday in the city on busi- ness F. L. Foote, hotel man of Boy Riv- Clhamberlain’s Cough Remedy for 1 lave used it with perfect writes Mrs. M. L. ville, Md. For sale by Barker's Drog Sto! \ A. M. Landby threshed the oats on 15 acres on his Lome place, last| week, which netted him bushels by the machine sure, but on| weighing it found that it was over a; thousand bushels by weight, being| exceptionally heavy and the machine | measure liberal. This makes 52 bush-| els per acre by machine measure, and | about 70 by weight. which is some-| what more than twice an memze‘ crop for the state.—\Warroad Plain- \ dealer. | | Tomorrow night (he Bemidji Danc- ing Ac my gives i.s weekly dance in the Ci Hall. verybody wel- Masten's orchesira. come. Dairy Inspector H. A. Linderberg assisted in the organization of a| creamery associati of the farmers| about Malcolm. nerth of Red lake. illi this county. The creamery is sixty | miles from Thief River Falls. its nearest railway shipping point. For all this handicap the farmers are en- thusiastic. They attended the organ- ization meeting in large numbers and | subscribed generesously to the stock. The country is prairie, studded with small groves and is noted for its heavy growth of natural grasses. There 18 a creamery at Grygla, the patrons of which haul their product here for shipment the intervening forty-five miles. Numerous cream- eries are found in the territory be- tween the two points mentioned. | Neatly furnished rooms for rent. Down town, first door west of Peter- son's confectionery. By week or month. Mrs. Rutledge. Diarrhoea is always more or less| prevalent during September. Be pre-| pared for it. Chamberlain's Colic,| Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy is| prompt and effectual. It can always | be depended upon and is pleasant to take. Store. PINEWOOD.—The dance given by the young men of Pinewood last Sat- urday night was weil attended. The lunch served near midnight was much enjoyed by all. Music fur- nished by Ed. Spencer and Ed. Sme-‘ rud.—Lawrence Enerwald was the| guest of friends in Remidji Sunday. —Miss Lind, who is employed in Be- midji, came home for a week’s vaca- tion.—A crowd of young people gath- ered at the home of Willie Fink last| Thursday in honor of his birthday anniversary and gave him quite a| surprise. The evening was spent in playing cards. A delicious lunch was served which everyone enjoyed very much.—A new store fcr Pinewood is being built by Mr. Sennan.—School opened last Tuesday with a large at- ASK TO SEE THE SANITARY CROWN PIPE AT THE | evening on business for the Crookston For sale by Barker's Drugjso. tne Twin Cities where he will er, spent yesterday in the city on business. Ben Lungren of the Irvine Lumber Company of Kelliher is a Bemidji vis-| itor today. Andrew Gohres and wife and fam- ily of La Porte, are spending the day in the city. W. B. Lakin left foy Kelliher last ! Lumber Company. Hans Solberg of Eau Claire, Wis- consin, is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. George Anderson. Peter Wing, chief oi police of Hib- bing, is in the city today as a witness in the Cumas case. Attorney S. M. Koeford of Bau- dette was in the city yesterday on professional business. Attorney Chas. Loring of Crook- ston, was in the city yesterday on professional business. Mrs. E. C. McGregor returned last night from a week's - isit at Minne- apolis and Chippewa Falls. Peter Eberhardt ol Thief River Falls, is in the city tuday. Mr. Eber- hardt operates a boat on Red Lake. Alderman Joseph Fisiar left this morning for Akeley where he went on business. He will return this ev- ening. Mack Kennedy, deputy sheriff of Cass Lake, who opened the Dumas safe when dynezmite was found, is in the city. F. G. Troppman ioft last evening spend the remainder of the week on’ business. Herbert Wood and wife returned |last night from a weeks' visit with friends and relatives at Minneapolis and Elsworth, Wis. A. E. Brown, manager of the :Brown's Business College, returned |last night from the I'win Cities where he went on business A. A. Magill and wife of Kelliher, | are in the city today en route to-their |home from the Twin Cities where ‘they went to attend the state fair. 8. J. Harvey returned last night |from Minneapolis where he went on a combined business and pleasure trip which included visits to the state fair. 2 Mrs. R. H. Muncey went to Frazee last nizat where she will attend the | Nichols-Gummer wedding there -to- |day. Mr. Gummer 1s a nephew of Mrs. Muncey. C. J. Kennedy of Grand Rapids, spent yesterday in the city. Mr. Ken- nedy is connected with the Gibson City Drug Store Lumber company and went north last | ages. We learn that it is due to the | asked Pat. i Exchange. An old work. a little book published in Cologne in 1665 under the title of | “Geistliche und TLeibliche Arzteney Wider die Pest.” gives a crude ex- | planation .of the plague and its rav- eccentric movement of the planets. eclipses of the moon or sun. inunda- tions, earthquakes, famines and wars. | Often also it follows the bad effluvium | set up by pigs. ducks and geese. It is frequently attributable to the anger of God for man's sins. such as injustice in the law courts. the oppression of subjects by their rulers, the dearness of goods, the dance and gaming. Appearances Not Always Reliable. * Two Irishmen were digging a dit when the priest passed aloug. “Moik,” said one of the men, loike to have that mon's job.” “All right,” said tbe priest, who had heard the remark. “Give me your shovel, Pat, and you go where 1 was going.” “Where was your riverence goin'?" “1rd “On the hill yonder to see a man who has the smallpox,” replied the priest. “I'll stick to me shovel,” said Pat.— MORHHINE RELIEV ED PAIN---THE GREAT KIGNEYREMEDY RESTORES T0. HEALTH. —For the past few years I suffered greatly from what three physicians called neuraliga of the stomach. The doctorg treated me without any suc- cess and I called in a fourth doctor, who pronounced my disease gall stones. I suffered intense pain and the only relief the doctor could give me was by injections of morphine. 1 was so completely discouraged that I had almost given up hope when a neighbor told me about Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root. 1 decided to try it and began its use at once and after tak- ing nine bottles was completely cur- ed, not having a spell of sickness in over two years. 1 have so much confidence in Swamp-Root that I never fail to re- commend it to my friends who may have kidney trouble of any kind. I feel certain that Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp- Root saved my life, why should it not do likewise to others who take it in time. You are at liberty to use this testi- many at any time. Yours truly, MRS. ELLA HENRY, 816 Schaefer Ave., Kansas City, Mo. State of Missouri ) County of Jackson ) ss On the 28th day of July, A. D. 1909, personally appeared before me a Notary Public within and for said County and State, Mrs. Ella Henry, who subscribed the above statement and made oath that the same is true. Henry C. Emery, Notary Public. Letter to Dr. Kilmer & Co. ||Binghampton. N Prove .What Swamp-Root Will Do For YOU. Send to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Blng- hamton, N. Y., for a ample bottle. It receive a booklet of valuable inform- and bladder. When writing, be sure and mention.the Bemidji Daily Pio- neer. For sale at all drug stores. Price fifty-cents and one-doliar. ‘Huffman, Harris & Reynolds SBuccessors to The T. J. Miller Co. Fire Insurance ‘Real Estate Bonds & Loans 209 Beltrami Ave. Bemidji Minn. skin and a beautiul complexion if you use ZEMO and ZEMO SOAP ac- cording to directions. scientific preparation for the treat- ment .or eczema, pimples, and all diseases of the skin and scalp. ZEMO SOAP is the nicest, test lather- ing anticeptic soap you evzr used for toilet or bath. MISS GLARA ELIZABETH FISK TIMBER SALE—RED LAKE IN- cate, each envelope marked sal for timber, tion,” o’clock noon. _ day, November 9, 1911, for the pur- chase of approximately 7,500,000 feet of pine timber on the Red Lake | Indian Reservation, Minnesota. timber is upon portions of sections and 18, T. 150 N., R. 34 W, and sec- tions 28 R. 33 W. About of the timber offered for sale is white pine and about 5,000,000 feet | Norway pine. Only timber which has| been injured by fire will be sold. However, all of it is of good quality and it is all accessible to a railroad | or Red Lake. which will be accepted are $6.00 per M. for Norway pine and $8.00 per| M. for white pine. be cut under regulations prescribed | by the Secretary of the Interior. The! right of the Secretary of the Interior| to waive technical defects in adver-| tisements and bids and to reject any | and all bids is reserved. formation as to the timber, and cop-| may be obtained upon request from A Critical Shave. John Hays Hammond once pald $5 for & shave, and he did it at-a time when he was not wortb much money. He was married in a small town in Maryland and arrived there the morn- ing before the ceremony after a dash across the continent. One of the things he carried with him into the town was a thick but unornamental growth of whiskers, and one thing he did not bave was a razor. His search for a barber resulted in the discovery of the only one in town, an old negro who had been imbibing too freely for several days. As a re- sult of intemperance the tonsorial art- ist was shaking like an aspen leaf in a gale. “Look here!” said Hammond. “You are going to shave me. If you so much as make a nick in my face Nl cut your throat! If you don’t cut me I'll give you $5.” The barber, after much effort, agony and tremor, finished the shave success- fully. But the strain was too great for him. Just as his hand closed on the five dollar note he fainted away.— New York Tribune. The Taste For Music. Public taste in America has progress- ed in no direction more rapidly than in musiec. Not only opera, but instru- mental music of many kinds, is now thoroughly intrenched in the public interest. An amusing contrast can be found in a letter which Bret Harte wrote to his wife in 1879. He had been to see “Tannhauser,” which he | | deemed the “most diabolically hideous and stupidly monotonous perform- ance” he ever heard. The orchestra to bim was “like a power factory at work in the next street.” The singing was a multiplication table, he claim- ed, lugubrious. ponderous and-monot- onous. Bret Hurte executed the idea better than most of the others. Not long ago the newspapers were full of Jokes about Wagner. Now he and all other great composers aure accepted | simply as great writers or great paint- ers, and Bret Harte, if he were alive today, would scarcely produce the same joke.—Collier’s. | SILENCE AND SPEECH. The chief office of silence is to bury all that is evil, and the chief office of speech is to disclose and dissemicate all that is good. Let this be done with sincenty and ear- nestness, for its ultimate benefit to character and to_conduct is estab- lished beyond a doubt. LADIES. We can promise you a clear, clean ZEMO is a skin beautifier and a dandruff Sold by druggists everywhere and in Bemidji by the City Drag Store. Teacher of Elocution and Physicial Culture Phone 181 013 Dewey Ave. DIAN RESERVATION. Red Lake, Minnesota, September 1, 1911. Sealed proposals in tripli- “Propo- Red Lake Reserva- be received until 12 Central Time, Thurs- will This 11, 12, 13 and 14, T. 150 W.; sections 7, 8, 9, 10, 15, R. 35 16, 17 and 33, T. 151 2,500,000 N., feet The minimum prices The timber must 1‘ Further in- ies of the approved form of contract William' H. Bishop, Superintendent Red Lake Indian School, Red Lake, Minnesota. (Authority—Office of Indian Af- fairs; received Aug. 30, 1911; file! For bowel complaints in children always give Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy and castor oil. It is certain to effect a cure and when reduced with water and sweetened is pleasant to take. No physician can presecribe a better remedy. Store. For sale by Barker’s Drug You Will Be Proud & R7aNELLY of the appearance of yom.lou = IF YOU USE Blzack Silk Stove Polish | It makes old stoves look like new ' and lasts four times as long as anv | 1 other shine. Don’ tlmngme.ll bra | of stove pe Black S { is different. It’s so riuch better than | { other stove polishes that there is ab- solutely no comparison. It’s in a class all by itself. | It makes a brilliant, glossy shine that anneals to the iron—don’t rub or dust off. Give it a trial. Try it on your parlor stove—your cook l stove or your gas range. 1f you do | i not find it the best Ltove polish you |ever nsed, your dex authorized ! to refund your money. Here is what some of the ladies write us: “I Lke Black Silk Stove Polish the best 1 cover many dxFexem K ter than any I ¢ parties in this fous o get some oi they saw my stove Ask your hardware and stove | dealer for Black Sili Stove Polish | and refuse a counterfeit brand. Costs you no more than the or kind so why not have the best ? MADE IN LIQUID OR PASTE ONE QUALITY =y | Black Siik é Stove Polish Works STERLING, ILLINCIS Ask your hardware dealer also for Black Silk Air Drying Enamel for use on grates, feeders, reg ters, stove pipes, elc. Prevents rusting. CO TO HAKKERUP FOR PHOTOS Erickson Rest & Lunch Room 205 Beltrami Ave. Open Day andNight i Meals at All Hours e French Dry Cleaning Spells Economy For in many instances it means the saving of the_ price of a new suit or a new gar- i] ment. Clothing merely dirty, 1] spotted or wrinkled should not be discarded or thrown aside. Our scientific process of Dry Cleaning removes “all soil and dirt, not only from the outsideof a garment but || from the fabric itself. Our service means that at a mere trifle in cosi you can have another whole season’s wear added to your clothes. THE MODEL DRY GLEANING HOUSE Tel. 537 106 2nd Street north-east of Winnipeg. Railway will It already has water transportation. take charge and begin actual operati CHANDL LUMBERMEN, LOOK! Here’s an Investment Opportunity in Western Canada 10,000 acres marketable spruce and tamarac for sale sixty miles be built into this property next year. Fully equipped sawmill on property. Will sell outright or consider partnership with party who is prepared to ions at once. Apply to ER PARKER, Securities, Loans & Investments, Norther Crown Bank Building, Winnipeg. F. M. PENDERGAST. President Producers Co-operative Ass’n. l Come in and boost. Sign h Bemidji, Minnesota. Dear Sir: I am in favor of theaims and objects of your association and will take............... shares which find $............ My potato acreage this year is....... 1911 of stock, at $2 per share, for ere... D0 YOU OwN J. P. LAHR, Pres. 76054). ‘We guarantee that Copenhagen Snuff is now and always has been absolutely _pure snuff, that it complies with the laws of every State and all federal laws. American Snuff Company, 111 Fifth Ave., Ne\rYorh. YOUR OWN HOME? It-not let us build you one on monthly payments or we will pay off your old " mortgage in the same way. Beltranii Go. aving and Building Association W. C. KLEIN, Secy. Offices, Rooms b and 6, O’Leary.BOwser Block S00 RAILROAD 162 East Bound Leaves 9:45 a. 163 West Bound Leaves 4:37 p. 186 Fast Bound Leaves 2:45 p. m. 187 West Bound Leaves 10:38 a. m. GREAT NORTHERN 33 West Bound Leaves 3:30 p. m. & 34 Fast Bound Leaves 12:08 p. m. 35 West Bound Leaves 3:42 a. m. 36 East Bound Leaves 1:20 a. m. 105 North Bound Arrives 7:45 p. m. . 106 South Bound Leaves 6:30 a. m. x Freight West Leaves at 9:00 a. m. Freight East Leaves at 3:30 p. m. Minnesota & International 32 South Bound Leaves 8:15 a. m. 31 North Bound Leaves 6:10 p. m. 34 South Bound Leaves 11.35 p. m. 33 North Bound Leaves 4:20 a. m. Freight South Leaves at 7:30 a. m. Freight North Leaves at 6:00 a. m. Minn, Red Lake & Man. 1 North Bound Leaves 3:35 p. m. 2 South Bound Leaves 10:30 a. m. BE PROFESSIONAL CARDS ARTS HARRY MASTEN Piano Tuner esrmerly o Redenbush & co..' St Pau Instructor of Violn, Piano, Mando- lin and Brass Instruments. Music furnished for balls, hotels, weddings, banquets, and all occasions. Terms reasonable. All music up to date. HARRY MASTEN, Plamo Tu Room 36, Third floor, Brinkman Hote. Telephone 535 PHYSICIANS AND SURCEONS R. ROWLAND GILMORE PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office—Miles Block R. 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 A.WARD,M.D. o # Over First National Bank. Phone 51 House Fo. 601 Lake Blvd. Phone 351 R. A. E. HENDERSON PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Jver First National Bank, Bemidji, Minn. Office Phone 36. Residence Pone 72. R. E. H. SMITH PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office in Winter Block R. E. H. MARCUM PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office in Mayo Block Phone 18 Residence Phone 213 INER W. JOHNSON PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Residence 1113 Bemidji Ave. Phone 435 Offices over Security;Bank. Phone 130 DENTISTS > R. D. L. STANTORN DENTIST Office in Winter Bleck DR. J. T. TUOMY DENTIST st National Bank Build’¢. Telephone 230 R. G. M. PALMER DENTIST PMiles Block Evening Work by Appointment Oaly DR. J. F. PETERSON DENTIST Office in Miles Block LAWYERS GRAHAM M. TORRANCE - LAWYER Telephone 560 Miles Block H. FISK &5 . ATTORNEY AT LAW Office over City Drug Store Graduate Nurse Margaret Wang 311 AMERICA AVE. TEW PUBLIC LIBRARY ~Open daily, except Sunday and Mon- dnyutalzn.m..lep.m..Tmbp.m. Sunday 3 to 6 p. m. Monday 7to 9 p. m. BEATRICE MILLS, Librarian. £k NURSE A SMITH Q-C.H.L.O.S. KAISER HOUSE