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_games, and are located where the passing public cannot easily interfere with | the players TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1911, fl BEMIDJI BRIEF: Editorial : Telephone, “THREE-ONE” DORA BARRETTE, Society Reporter Mrs. Ellen Edd of Mill Park is confined to her home with typhoid fever. Dressmaking parlors at 1215 Bel- trami Ave. now open. Miss Meta Stechman. Phone 587. Mrs, John Moberg will entertain the Ladies' Aid of the Swedish Luth- eran Church on Thursday afternoon in th2 church basement. Miss Rasmussen from Waupaca, ex- perienced dressmaker. Fancy and party dresses a specialty. 221 3rd St. Over Gill Bros. Oysters have been received by Be- midji dealers and are rtailing at 50 a quart, being of an unusually shipments of cents high grade for the fir the year. Wanted! Wanted!! Wanted!!! Everybody who dances to come up to the City Hall and take in the dance | on Wednesday night. A good time is assured t» all who come. That fish are again being caught in larze numbers from our lakes is evident by the numerous strings that are being brought in daily. Perch, | Saturday—T*"e carpenter crew which has been hvve building the depot left Monday.—Among the many who went from Lure to attend the fair at Bemidji were; Louis Tigner, Markus Molie, A. G. Sthol, Emil Diseth, Mil- ton Fink, George Sthol, Halvor Koppang, Mr. and Mrs. Haarklan and Henning Kirkvold.—The Aid Society will meet with Mrs. Steve Nelson Tharsday, Sept. 28.—Fred Moller spent a few days of lagt week in Bemidji.—Much cream is being shipped from here to the Bemidji Creamery.—A number of Bemidji hunters stopped at Chas. Lindgren’s last week for a chicken dinner.—P. Holm is improving the property of A. G. Sthol by giving his buildings a coat of piint.—Carl Peterson and Sam Jamtold were Bemidji visitors Tuesday. Ed Sidney has opened up J. P. ! Pogue's blacksmith shop and is ready for all kinds of horseshoeing and general repair work. He wishes the patronage of the citizens of Bemidji and vicinity. Guarantees good work and right prices. He recently re- signed the position of horseshoer of pike and pickerel are plentiful. 4H-HHHH. want and need tor mechanical draw- | ing sold at the Bemidj Pioueer} Schonl Supply store two for 15 cents. | We Lave a large stock of these at encils the kind yom| hand. The Bapt.st Ladies' Aid will meet | at the church Wednesd; September | 20, at 2 o'clock., Eve member is | requested 19 be present as there work to do A picnic lunch will be | served Go to Hakkerup's . Photo's. Scarcity in the production of milk | is reported by dealers. Some of them | have been compelled to temporarily | cut off regular customers. At the] stores where milk is sold the price | is eight cents a quart. | Dixon’s Carnival pencils are pro ing a tavorite among the school chil dren. The pencil is made in various | colors with mickle top and rubber | tip. They are a hexegon pencil and | sell two for five cents at the Bemidji| School Supply store. } A freshman organization meeting was held last cvening in the Mathe- | maties room of the high school. The was election of the fol- Pioneer only busines lowing officers president, Edwin Si-| mons: vice-president, Clara Nangle; | Gertrude Huntosh: treas-| secretary. urer, Leglie Slater. The class of l‘Yla | is the largest ever enrolled at me-‘ Bemidji high school, there heing \.h‘ members, ‘ Attend Murphy's Sale of Sample‘ Furniture. Tennis games of the “Hot and Furious” type are daily going on at! the new tennis courts at Fourteenth | and lake boulevard. The Lenms\ champions of this city, M. J. Brown, | W. L. Brooks, W. P. Dyer and Thom- as McCann are developing consider- able speed and put up some “classy” The courts are in fine shape | Dressmaking at reasonable prices. Miss Meta Stechman, 1215 Beltrami Ave. Phone 587. The Murphy Furniture Company | advertising that appeared in last ev- ening’s Pioneer was one of the best set up and also one of the largest furnirure ads that has been seen in any newspaper in North Central Min- | nesota. The sale of sample furniture | whicn this ad announced began this | mornmng and it sale whiéh the people of this city| and county should not overlook. Mr. Murphy is also distributing large bills throughout the city telling of the big sale now in progress. a genuine sample | Tomorrow night the Bemidji Danc- ing Academy gives its weekly dance | in the City ilali. Drop in for a so- ciable time ~Partridge are so plentiful that I had to halt my team along a certain | country road in order to let them get out of the way. Yesterday I would surely have killed several by driving over them had I not pulled in my horses. After the first of October we tarm-rs can go along as fast as we like and not be in danger of break- ing the game laws.” This came from a Bemidji farmer, who is willing to make affidavit to the truth of the as- sertion. The farmer lives less than seven miles northwest of Bemidji. Another farmer asserts that the prai- rie chickens on his farm are so tame that they came into the barn-yard and fed with the tame chickens. Thumb tacks and sketch boards are again among the things needed by the school children at the Bemidji Pioneer School Supply Store. Owing to the tremendous demand the sup- ply became exhausted and it was necessary that the children wait or go elsewhere until the new stock ar- rived. PINEWOOT --Another store- open- ed for business here this week.—Mrs. Dickenson was 2 Bemidji visitor last ASK TO SEE THE SANITARY CROWN PIPE AT THE | writes Mrs. M. L i ville, Md. | ior class this the Crookston Lumber Co., in this city. k& “I have a world of confidence in Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy for I have used it with perfect success,” Basford, Pooles- For sale by Barker’s Drug Store. PPORPPIRPOOOOOOOQOPOES® - PERSONALS. @ PPPPOPOCOPO0®OOQ L. Bloosten is spending a few days {in the city. H. C. Grave of Big Falls, spent yesterday in Bemidji. Mrs. F. Anderson of Island Lake is in the city for a day or so. P. Krogseng of Saum, is spending the day in the city on business. H. Drury and wife of Cass Lake, were Bemidji shoppers yesterday. Mrs. W. R. B. Smyth of Park Rap- ids, was a Bemidji shopper yesterday. M. H. Kelliher, terday. A. L. Hillstead, merchant of Big Falls, was in the city yesterday on business. McGuire, a lumberman of was a Bemidji visitor yes- Contractor John Moberg went to | Akelay yesterday where he will spend | a few days on business. Alex C. Ross of the Ross & Ross Lumber Company of Kelliher, was in the city yesterday on business, S. B. Atkins of St. Paul, is in the city today on business. Mr. Atkins has charge of the state cruisers. C. T. Kennedy of the Gibson Lum- |ber Company of ‘Grand Rapids, was in the city yesterday on business. P. H. McGary and Editor F. A. Dare of the Walker Pilot, came up from. Walker last evening for a short | visit. W. G. Graham, deputy pure food inspector came up from Long Prai- rie yesterday and went on to Cass Lake this morning. Miss Ora Nealy left last night for Minneapolis to attend the University. Miss Nealy is a member of the sen- year. Miss Beatrice Mills went to Minne- apolis last night where she will at- tend the librarian's convention which is being held there. Mrs. E. N. Ebert returned last {evening from Little Falls, where she ihas spent the rast three weeks as the guest of her parents. Miss Selma’ Witting left last night for Minneapolis where she will at- tend the Minneapolis School of Music during the coming term. Deputy Sheriff J. G. Morrison, Jr., went to Red Lake yesterday, return- ing today. Mr. Morrison is acting as bailiff during the present term of court. Miss Bernice Pendergast left last night for Minneapolis where she will attend the University. Miss Pender- gast will be a member of the senior class this year. Dr. L. A. Ward left yesterday for Terre Haute, Indiana, where he will join Mrs. Ward and baby who are visiting Mrs. Ward’s parents. He will be gone a week. Dr. J. H. Seapy of Geddes, S. D., who has been visiting Mr. and Mrs. A. P. Ritchie for the past two weeks, returned to his home this morning. Mrs. Seapy and child will remain here *or another week. Mrs. Ed. Netzer returned yesterday from Crookston where she has been visiting her mother, Mrs. A. R. Ful- ler. Royal Netzer remained with his grandmother who will accompany him here in a few days. Mariorie Knappen, who is now one of the faculty of the Bemidji High School, accompanied by her sister, Bessie Knappen of Minneapolis, spent Saturday and Suuday with their aunt, Mrs. M. E. Knappen, in Tenstrike.— Tenstrike Tribune. Miss Cora Gustison, probably the only young woman life insurance writer in the state, who for the past four months has been working this territory, left this afternoon for Crookston, which city she expects to make her headquarters for some time. During her stay in Bemidji Miss Gus- tison wrote many thousand dollars City Drug Store worth of insurance. “One November day,” says C. M. King of Deer River, “we received word that a woman was very sick on a homesteader’s claim back in the woods. I got a doctor and started for the claim. It was cold and wet and we made slow progress. Night overtook us and we stayed a few hours in a settler’s shack, then push- ed on. It was ‘4 o’clock the next afternoon by the time we reached the cabin where the woman lay mortally sick. On a hurried examin- ation the doctor saw that medicines were necessary and we turned back. snow and we used a sled. Beneath jthe snow the swamps were frozen and the soft snow accumulated on the runners till we could not move. All night we stopped every few onto to them and there chop off the runners, then push on a-little fur- ther. All night and all the next day we toiled after that fashion till, we reached the village. | “Before relief could come to the | | woman she was dead. “And there I made a vow that if {1 could do anything to bring roads! to these poeple pioneering in the wilderness, had done all that T could.” Active in Goed Work. { committee ‘on good roads appointed | by the Northern ment Association. He has taken a |leading part in the conferences at | Bemidji and Brainerd on the pro- | posed trunk lines, and has thorough- ly posted himself on the Elwell law under which action is to be taken. As county comissioner, he acquainted with ‘conditions in the woods, the need of roads and the difficulties in the way. He is a tall, grave, iron gray man, | with eyes ‘that are grey till they twinkle blue. Smooth shaven, he parts his hair like W. J. Bryan. He is an enthusiast about farming in Northern Minnesota, about good | roads, about iron ore on the out- | skirts of Deer River, about human- ity in general. - He is one of the men we have not heard much about who are doing real work. Coming to Culmination. It seems as though: the good roads movement was just arriving. Hun- dreds of men have been for years to bring about things that fare now happening, as it appears, lof themselves. Roads seem today to be leaping from point to point. As though by wave of ‘the hand they are constructed from one center to another. But the easy progress today, where it is easy, is due to the hard work and to the effort that sometimes seemed wasted in the for- mer years. Here is a road from Duluth to St. Vincent, to be built all of a sud- den. Three hundred miles of first- class thoroughfare to be constructed in a few months. No, far from it. | That road has been creeping along section by section year after vear. Sometimes a bit was made between one village and another, then an- other, then a corduroy was laid through a swamp, then another Her Overdrawn Account. Not long ago a prominent New York ‘woman was notifled by the bank where she keeps her surplus money that her account was overdrawn $17.50. Al most before the bank doors were open- ed that morning she rushed breathless- ly in and confided to the cashier that she did not know any money was com- Ing to her, for she thought she' had drawn it all out and asked sweetly how she could get it. Should she make a check for it, or would the teller give it to her if she presented the slip the bank had sent her?—New York World THE CAUSE OF ECZEMA is germ life that burrows under and feeds on the skin. The way to cure ECZEMA is to remove the cause by washing away with a clean, pene- trating liquid, the germ life and pois- ons that cause the trouble. We have a preparation that will do this. The first application will stop the itching and give prompt re- lief to an irritated, itching or in- flamad skin. If you are a sufferer from skin or scalp eruption in any form, try one bottleo f ZEMO, a clean scientific preparation, we are confi- dent you will be pleased with the re- sults from the use of this standard preparation for eczema. Good for infants as well as grown persons. City Drug Store. Not Surprised. “Funny thing about Boliver,” ‘Wiggins. “What’s that?” asked Bjones.” “Why. they operated on him for ap- pendicitis the other day. and. by gin- ger, when they came to look there wasn't anything there.” said Wigging. “Well, I'm not surprised.” saié Bjones: “I never could see anything i Boliver myself."—Harper's Weekly. sald As usually treated, a sprained an- kle will disable a man for three or four weeks, but by applying Cham- berlain’s Liniment freely as soon as the injury is received, 2nd observing the directions with each bottle, a cure can be effected in from two to four days. For sale by Barker’s Drug Store. By the that time it had come on to] minutes to cut boughs, slide the sled ! caked snow and the ice under the| 1 would not rest till I] | like Koochching and Northern Bel- I Minnesota Develop- | is well| PO OVOOOCPOOD 0900000600660 0 0 ROADS SPRING TOGETHER ON © Work That Has Been Carried-on- For Forty Years by Driblets @ is Quickly Brought to a Focus in Northern Minnesota, Under @ The Stimulus of New Conditions in Law and Settlemenb— ® Pushing the Frontier Further Out. POPOOTOOOOO®OS @@@O@@@@O@@@@@ | | | | working | . [t Grand Rapids and Duluth. -FOUNDATIONS. LR RN o8 piece was cut out and almost made passable. Some of it grew up to brush and had to be made over. Some of it rotted into swamp and was filled again with earth. Gradu- ally the road was pulled and scrap- ped together, till now a highway of 300 miles can be made by building a few stretches of three or five or ten miles and bringing up to'stand- ard the neglected parts. Again the road from Moorhead to Duluth. That has been even longer ‘building, for most of thé country was settled after a fashion forty 1ears ago, and much of it has been | well settled twenty years ago or more. All those counties and towns have taken care of their local roads and licked them into pretty good shape with few exceptions. To. link them tosether is a task that is trifiing compared with what has been done. it has come to the place where the scattered parts run together almost 0¢ themselves. And we must thank the men whose work is buried and whose efforts often seemed wasted, for laying foundations on which the cusy building is done. Frontier Work Done. The real work in road building is being done in the new counties trami, where ways must be ecut | through the virgin wilderness. The Mr. King is the chairman of the men in those districts are addressing themselves to their task with bold- nesss and directness. They are try- ing to plan their work so it shall be most effective, and so what is done each year shall be joined to what came before and what is to follow. They are in a position to do their work more systematically than the former pioneers of the older counties, and htey have broad plans more clearly in view. And further more, this new plan of highways on lines that cross the state, helps their work. Take Kooch- ching, almost an unbroken waste as it seems or did seem two or three years ago. Run a line southwest through Koochching, following roughly the Minnesota & Inter- natioanl. Run another line south- erly parallel with the county line. |Connect one with the road to Be- midji and the other with the road And it 1s surprising how easily and by whnat short lines a road can be made o enter every town and reach every System More Expeditious. Formerly the counties built and had to build to reach first one set- tler and then another, and what was done last year had a little to relieve the next year’s needs. To run a few lines first as a backbone to the system, doubles the efficiency of roads built after. If better road work is being done now than formerly, it is largely be- cause better road work is possible. It is not a little due to good legisla- tion that permits roads to be financed through new country. It is due most of all to work done year after year by road enthusiasts, work that does now appear on the surface, much of it that seemed wasted at that time. —The Bear’s Cub in Duluth News Tribune. - STATE OF OH10, O17¥ OF TOLEDO, %fl Luocas COUNTY. ¢ Frank J, Cheney makes oath that he is senior partner of the firm of F. J. Cheney & Co., doing iness in the City of Toledo, County and State aforesaid, and that said firm will pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for each and every case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by the use of Hall's Catarrh Cure. FRANK J. CHENEY. Sworn to before me and subscrlbed ln my presence. this 6th day of December, I O Ba]l s Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and acts directly upon tte mucous surfaces of the system. Send for testimonials free. F.J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo O. Sold by all Druggists, 75c. Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation. TIMBER SALE—RED LAKE IN- DIAN RESERVATION. Red Lake, Minnesota, September 1, 1911. Sealed proposals in tripli- cate, each envelope marked “Propo- sal for timber, Red Lake Reserva- tion,” will be received until 12 o’clock noon. Central Time, Thurs- day, November 9, 1911, for the pur- chase of approximately 7,500,000 feet of pine timber on the Red Lake Indian Reservation, Minnesota. This timber is upon portions of sections 11, 12, 13 and 14, T. 150 N, R. 35 W.; sections 7, 8, 9, 10, 15, 16, 17 and 18, T. 150 N., R. 34 W., and sec- tions 28 and 33, T. 151 N, R. 33 W. About 2,500,000 feet of the timber offered for sale is white pine and about 5,000,000 feet Norway pine. Only timber which has been imjured by fire will be sold. However, all of it is of good quality and it is all accessible to a railroad or Red Lake. The minimum prices whieh will be accepted are $6.00 per M. for Norway pine and $8.00 per M. for white pine. The-timber must be cut under regulations preseribed 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. Further in- formation as to the timber, and cop- ies of the approved form.of contract may be obtained upon request from William H. Bishep, Superintendent Red Lake Indian School, Red Lake, Minnesota. (Authority—Office of Indian Af- fairs; received Aug. 30, 1911; file 76054). < |Physician Sam Apmdieius Gall Stones Expelled by the- G’rflt Kidney Preparation. I thought I would do you a favor and let you know what Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-Root has done so far for me. About one year ago I was taken sick with a terrible pain in my right side. My family physician pro- nounced it appendicitis. About two weeks ago I received your almanac and' read in it about weak kidneys, and my back hurting me so much, I thought I would try your Swamp-| Root and to my great astonishment, after using one bottle, I expelled three gall stones, which weighed 135 grains—just think of it. My kid- neys are not well yet, so I have con- cluded to eontinue with Swamp- Root. Mr. Schwake, the druggist, thought that it never was appendi- citis and that the doctor had made a mistake. It was no doubt, gall stones that caused the trouble, or they would not have come away so soon after commencing with Swamp- Root. 1 shall always praise Dr. Kilmar’s Swamp-Root to all those who suf- fer from kidney, liver and bladder troubles and am very thankful that 1 ever discovered such a worthy remedy. 1 feel confident that it will cure me entirely of all kidney and liver trouble. MRS. MAaRY J. SCHNITTGER, 1502 15th St. and 5th Ave. Nevraska City, Neb. Personally appeared before me this 31st day of August, 1909, Mrs. Mary J. Schnittger, who subscribed the above statement and made oath that the same is true in substance and in fact. A. P. Young, County Clerk, Louis Stutt, Deputy. Letter to i ‘ Dr. Kilmer & Co.. | {Binghampton. N. Y. Prove What Swamp-Root Will Do For You. Send to Dr. Kilmar & Co., Bing- hampton, N. Y., for a sample bottle. It will convince anyone. You will also receive a bookiet of valiable in- formation, telling ali about the Xid- neys and bladder. When writin; be sure and mention the Daily Pioneer. For sale at all stores. Price fifty-cents anr one dollar. T. BEAUDETTE Merchant Tailor Ladies' and Gents' Suits to Order. French Dry Cleaning, Pmpfl; and Repairing s 315 Beltrami Avenuve NURSE A, SMITH Q.C.H.L.O.S." KAISER HOUSE 609 Bemidji Ave. Maternity and General Nursing Bemidji | Huffman, - Harris & Reynolds The -T. J. Miller Co. Fire Insurance Real Estate Bonds- & Loans 209 Beltrami Ave. Bemidji Minn. 'Keeps Your Stove ““Always Ready for Company” A bright, clean, glossy stove is the joy and pride of every housekeeper. But it is hard to 4eep a stove nice and shiny— { unless Black Silk Stove Polish is used. ~ Here is the reason: Black Silk Stove | Polish sticks right to the irom. It doesn’t | rub off or dust off. lts shine lasts four times longer than the shine of any other polish. You only need to polish one- fourth. as often, yet your stove will be cleaner, brighter and better looking than it has been since you first bought it. Use BLACK SILK STOVE POLISH on your parlor stove, kitchen stove or gas stove. Get a can from your hardware or stove dealer. It you do not find it éefzcr than any other stove polish you have cver used authorized to refund your money. But we feel | sure you will agree with the Zkousands of othe up-todate women who are now using Black Silkc Stove Polish and who say it is the “best stove polish cuer made." LIQUID OR PASTE Be sure to get the genuine. Black Silk Stove Polish costs you o more than the ordinary kind. e e e B sing ight an rom_rusi BERCR Sirk Hik BRYING ENAMEL Brush | free with each can of enamel only. Use BLACK SILK METAL POLISH for silver- ware, hickel, tinware or brass. It works quickly, easily, and leaves a brilliant surface, It has no | equal for use on automobiles. |Black Silk Stove Polish Works JOHN G. ZIEGLER “THE LAND MAN® Fire=-Life-==-IN SUR A N CE-==Accident REAL ESTATE IN ALL ITS BRANCHES FARM LANDS BOUCHT AND SOLD Co to Him for Farm Loans Office--Odd Fellows Building F. M. PENDERGAST, President Producers Co-operative Ass’n. Bemidji, Minnesota. Dear Sir: I am in favor of the aims and objects of your association of stock, at $2 per share, for and will take.... which find §$.. My potato acreage this year is ....e....Shares Come in and boost. Sign here.......cocoevieen WE have plenty of Sketch Boards and Thumb Tacks now. The large demand for them exhausted our supply completely. Thumb Tacks are 5§ cents Boards 5 cents each. OUR stock of White per dozen and Sketch Drawing Paper was also completely sold out but we have received . a fresh supply now and Wwill sell it cut any size and punched to fit your covers. HOW are your blotters We are keeping a good holding out, Children? supply of these on hand at all times and you may have one or two any ' time you ask for them. EXTRA wide ruled smooth paper tablets, ‘“The Pioneer ‘Special” made especially for the school trade, good quality paper and a lot for your money. Ten cents is the price and its big value for that money. The ‘Bemidjl Pioneer School Supply Store, Fourth Street, Bank Building, Bemidii, in. the Security State Minn before, your dealer is | S00 RAILROAD - - 162 East Bound Leaves 9:45 a. 186 East Bound Leaves 2:45. D. 187 West Bound Leaves 10:38 a. GREAT NORTHERN 33 West Bound Leaves 3:30 p. 34 East Bound Leaves 12:08 p. 85 West Bound Leaves 3:42 a. 36 East Bound Leaves 1:20 a. 105 North Bound Arrives 7:45 p. m. 106 South Bound Leaves 6:30 a. m. 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. PROFESSIONAL CARDS ARTS MISS GLARA ELIZABETH FISK Teacher of Elocution and Physicial Culture Res. 1013 Dewey Ave. Phone 181 MRS. J. A, THOMPSON 317 America Avenue wiil care for chil- dren up to 10 years of age. Rates reasonable. Telephone 545. HARRY MASTEN Piano Tuner ormerly o Radenbush & Co.of 1. Pau Instructor of Violin, Piano, Mando- lin and Brass Instruments. Music furnished for balls, hotels. weddings, banquets, and all occasions. Terms reascnable. All music up to date. HARRY MASTEN, Plano Tuner Room 36, Third floor, Brinkman Hote:. Telephone 535 PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS R. ROWLAND GILMORE PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office—Miles Biock R. E. A. SHANNON, PHYSICIAN AND SURG Office in Mayo Block | Phone 396 Res. Phon 397 R. C. R. SANBORN PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office—Miles Block A. WARD, M. D. ® Qver First National Bank. Phone 51 House No. 607 Lake Blvd. Phone 351 R. A. E. HENDERSON PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Over 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 Bléck Phone 18 Residence Phone 213 INER W. JOHNSON PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Residence 1113 Bemidji Ave. Phone 435 Offices over Security.Bank. Phone 130 DENTISTS DR. D. L. STANTUN DENTIST Office iz Winter Bleck DR. J. T. TUOMY DENTIST Ist National Bank Build'g. Telephone 230 R. G. M. PALMER DENTIST fMiles Block Evening Work by Appointment Only R. J. F. PETERSON DENTIST Office in Miles Block LAWYERS RAHAM M. TORRANCE LAWYER Telephone 560 Miles Block D H. FISK ATTORNEY AT LAW *_ Office over City Drug Store Graduate Nurse |Margaret Wang 311 AMERICA AVE. EW PUBLIC LIBRARY n daily, except Sunday and Mon- daylit012a.m.,1to 6 p.m.,7 to 9 p. m. Sundnysmfl . m. Monday 7to 9 p. mmpmm Librarian. m.. 163, West Bound Leaves 4:37 p. m. m. m.