Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, October 26, 1911, Page 7

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

RALROAD TINE GARIS | S00 RAILROAD 162 East Bound Leaves 9:45 a. m. 163 West Bound Leaves 4:37 p. m. 186 East Bound Leaves 2:45 p. m. 187 West Bound Leaves 10:38 a. m. GREAT NORTHERN 3 West Bound Leaves 3:30 p. 4 East Bound Leaves 12:08 p. West Bound Leaves 3:42 a. East Bound Leaves 1:20 a. North Bound Arrives 7:45 p. South Bound Leaves 6:30 2. ght West Leaves at 9:00 a. Freight East Leaves at 3:30 p. Minnesota & International 32 South Bound Leaves 8:15 31 North Bound Leaves 6:10 34 South Bound Leaves 11.35 33 North Bound Leaves 4:20 t South Leaves at 7:30 North Leaves at 6:00 Minn. Red Lake & Man. North Bound Leaves 3:35 p. m. 2 South Bound Leaves 10:30 a. m. BHEBEBEEBE ppPYY R BEEBEE PROFESSION if 1l i ARTS MISS GLARA ELIZABETH FISK Teacher of Elocution and Physicial Culture 1013 Dewey Ave. Res. Phone 181 HARRY MASTEN Piano Tuner ermerly o Radenbush & Co.of St. Pau Instructor of Vioin, Piano, Mando- in and Brass Instruments. Music furnished for balls, hotels, weddings, banquets, and all occasions. Terms reasonable. All music up to date. HARRY MASTEN, Piano Tuner 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 R. C. K. SANBORN PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office—Miles Block A. WARD, M. D. *# Qver First National Bank. Phone 51 House No. 60i Lake Blvd. Phone 351 R. A. E. HENDERSON PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON vver 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 21, INER W. JOHNSON PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Residence 1113 Bemidji Ave. Offices over Security/Bank. Phone 130 DENTISTS R. D. L. STANT DENTIST Office in Winter Bleck o Uiy R.J. T. TUOMY DENTIST st National Bank Build'g. Telephone 230 R. G. M. PALMER DENTIST §Miles Block Evening Work by Appointment Only R. J. F. PETERSON DENTIST Office in Miles Block LAWYERS RAHAMM. TORRANCE LAWYER Miles Block Telephone 560 H. FISK . ATTORNEY AT LAW Office over City Drug Store EDUARD F. NETZER, Ph. G. RECISTERED PHARMACIST Postoffice Corner Phone 304 Personal attention to prescriptions | carps l Res. Phone 397 | | | o | 1 i | The Stake In the Game. A party of apaches entered a Paris eafe to have & game of billiards. The game was carried on in great mystery and absorbed all the interest and at tention of the players. They had an enemy who was to be *done for.” and whoever lost the game was to “do” him. Wbhen the game was over the loser accepied the result without dix cussion. Not long afterward a work man was stabbed fatally as he was eoming out of a dance hall. The man ! who had stabbed him quickly disap- peared. and the workman was placed in a cab and driven to an address which be had given. This was in a certain street where a sister of his was living. The man was barely able to get out of the cab und to explaiu that he had been stabbed. His case was so serious that he was conveyed tc a hospital and died a few nours later. The police then made an inquiry and learned how the murder was delib- erately decided upon and savagely executed. The workman himself did not know that his life was staked oun 1a game of billiards.—Paris Cor. Lon- | don Telegraph. Scotch Accent Too Much For Him. The only real blot on my visit to Glasgow, says a writer in the London Sketch, is my total inability to speak with a Scottish aceent. I rather pride myself. as most people do, on my vocil imitative faculties. but I confess 1o all the world here and now that 1 can- not imitate the Scottish accent. My Irish is beautiful: it would make = Dublin weep. My American is qui good; I could nearly always get any- thing that 1 wanted in the shops if 1 had the money. Anybody can italk ! Welsh who cares to substitute *p” for “b™ and “f" for “va.” But the Scot tish accent eludes me. Sometimes 1 | speak a little Scottish, tentatively. to the policeman or the tram conductors or the shopkeepers. The policemen draw their staves. the tram conductors stop their trams, and the shopkeepers put up their shutters. I am not quite sure, but I rather think that I shall abandon the unequal struggle. She Was Persistent. A huge package once reached Sir Walter Scott from a young lady in America for which he had to pay %25 expressage. It contained a manuscript iplay and a letter from the fair author requesting Scott to read and correct her work, write a prologue and an epilogue, arrange for its production at Drury Lane and negotiate with a pub- lisher for the copyright. That was bad enough. but worse was to follow. About u fortnight later arrived another mighiy packet, charged with a similar postage Scott. who had not grown wiser bLF experience, paid the charges and opened the parcel. Qut came a dupli cate copy of the play and a second letter from the authoress, stating rhat as the weather had been stormy and she feared something might have hap pened to ber former manuscript she had thought it prudent to send him a duplicate. How Centipedes Walk. An eminent authority has investigat- ed the peculiar wavy motion of centi- | pedes and millepedes to determine the mannper in which these animals man age to use their superabundant pedal extremities so gracefully and harmo- niously. It has been found that the legs move in groups or waves, each | wave including a definite number of egs. The number of waves inciuded in the length of the body is constaut for each species. In millepedes the waves of each side are synchronous. In centipedes they are symmetically | | Hers at this store you get the best and most valuable | goods on earth and don't have fo pay extraffor them alternate. giving rise to beautifully ac- cordant movements. The difference may be explained by suggesting that the millepede moves like a pacing horse. the centipede like a trotter.— Chicago Record-Herald. & Pleasant Surprise. A young man in Indianapolis felt his heart sink as be pulled from his mail box a letter of the wedding in- vitation tvpe. That was the fifth he had received this season. and he had Phone 435 begun to wonder whether he had any friends left in the single state. “Another five dollar bill busted to smash,” be mourned. Then he opened the envelope. But it was only the innouncement of a wed- ding that had taken place the week before. And be found in the same cover a check for 8$5. made with a friend years before. The conditions were that the one first mar- | ried shouid pay the other §5.—Indian apolis News. And Upside Down at That. “Where does this train stop next?” asked the nervous traveler on an un- certain railway. “Well. boss.” replied the porter, “dar’s three washouts un’ some bad track right along bere, an’ she’s liable to stop mos’ any place mos’ any min- ute.”—Washington Star. Experienced. “That trained nurse is quite remark- able. She made a man | know cough up a brass tack at the bospital.” “That's nothing to what she can do. She made the young doctor she’s en- ged to cough up a diamond ring.”— Baltimore American. Diplomatic. Young Man—So Miss Ethel is your oldest sister. Who comes after her? Small Brother—Nobody ain’t come yet. but pa says the first fellow that comes can have her.—Exchange. A Kitchen Jar. Lady — Susan. ['ve come down to you didn’t, please, busy today. mum. I'm very help you. Servant—I'd much rather | Good and Bad. A remarkably brief. efective sum- ming up was once quoted by Lord | James in an after dinner.speech. lt{ was delivered by an Irish judge trying | a man for pig stealing. The evidence of bis guilt was conclusive, but the prisoner insisted on calling a number of witnesses, who testified most ew- phatically to hisgeneral good character. After hearing their evidence and the counsel's speeches the indge remarked. “Gentlemen of the jury, 1 think that| the only conclusion you can arrive atis | that the pig was stolen bv the prisoner and that be is the most amiable map in the county.”—Lordon Chronicle. Clam Shells. Clam shells are susceptible of a fine | polish and are used for many orna- menta] purposes. Chinese carve them | into snuffboxes, tops of walking sticks. | bracelets and similar articles. 1 OSLER RIGHT: YOUTH | SUCCEEDS AGE Gray Hair is Fu‘st Sign of Age,. ! Harmless Remedy Restores to | i Natural Color. | Osler isn’t the only man who lurusf down old age. In the business world | {the “young man™ is always the one| who picks the plums. It is an age of ! “new thought,” “new talent,” etc.! tand the old man is passed by iu the| jrace. | One of the first signs of coming age {is the appearance of gray rLairs.| [ When you see them, act promptly. | Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Hair Rem- edy will correct this sign, which so often deceives people into thinking {that age is really upon them. It is a wzll-known fact that Sage and Sul- phur will darken the hair. Sage and | Sulphur will darken the hair. Wy- leth's Sage and Sulphur combines | these old-time remedies with other jagents which remove dandruff and promote the growth of the hair. { The manufacturers of tkis remedy‘ authorize the druggists to sell it un- | der guarantee that the money will be | refunded if it fails to do exactly as represented. Don’t look old before your time. Get z bottle of Wyeth's Sage arnd Sulphur today, and see what an im- provement it will make in the ap-i pearance of your hair. This preparation is offered to the public at fifty cents a bottle. and is recommended and sold by all drug- gists. NURSE A, SMITH Q.C.H.L.O.S. KAISER HOUSE 609 Bemid]i Ave. Maternity andGeneralNursing Prescription, Tf you are snflefing trnm Emmn., Psoriasis_or any other trouble, drop into our store fnr in- will stant Telief. We o stop that itch in two you A 25c trial bottle will prove it We have sold other remedies for skin troubles, but none that we recommend more highly than the well ¥nown compound of 0il of Winter- green, Thymol and a few other in- srediénts that have wrought such won- derful cures all over the conntry ‘This compound, known as The Minneapolis Dollar-Hotel 180 MODERN ROOMS Located in Heart of Business District $1.00 SINGLE RATE $1.00 EUROPLAN. RATE FOR TWO PERSONS $1.50 PRIVATE BATH AND TOILET EXTRA EVERY ROOM HAS HOT AND COLD WATER, STEAM HEAT, LIGHTS, PORCELAIN LAVATORY, FICE AND CITY. ALL PLATED PLUMBING. SEVEN-STORY PROOF ANNEX NOW COMPLETED. will cool and haal “the | itchy. burning skin as nothing else can. Get a regular bottle and see—o: our no-pay offer, | Barker’s Drug Store, Bemidji, Minn. RUNNING GAS AND ELECTRIC PARQUET FLOOR, AND TELEPHONE SERVICE TO OF- BATH ROOMS ARE FINISHED IN WHITE TILE WITH OPEN NICKEL . D. n FIRE- EW PUBLIC LIBRARY . . except and Mon~ daylllea.m.,lmGp.m.JmSp.m. smysms Tt0 9 p. m. Monday P THE SPALDING EUROPEAN PLAN Dulntlln-.'s Largest and Best Hotel More than £100,000.00 recently expended on 'lilr:;nl:flvemen{:. 250 rooms, 1% private restaurants and buffet. Flemis] Palm Room, Men’s Grill, Uolcmisl Buffet: Magnificent lobby and public rooms; Ballroom, banquet rooms and private dining rooms: Sun parlor and observa- tory. Located in heart of business sec- tion but overlooking the harbor and Lake Superior. Convenient to everything. One of the Great Hotels of the Northwest MINNESOTA | M SMART <= DRAY AND TRANSFER SAFE AND PIANO MOVING Qssldonce Phowe 58§18 Amavica Ass. Bifice Phome 12 SOAPS EXTRACTS & SPICES and the famous TURKISH RETEDIES | Place your order with GHRIST M. JOHNSON Box 56 Nymore, Minn. Co to Him for Farm Loans JOHN G. ZIEGLER “THE LAND Fire=-Life—IN SUR A N CE—Accident REAL ESTATE IN ALL ITS BRANCHES FARM LANDS BOUCHT AND SOLD MAN" Office--Odd Fellows Building ~ Americas L Waking Thoug THE ORIGINAL HAS THIS SIGNATURE Wil K oMo g IS———— T — suits and Overcoats is sure to please all who appreciates high moderate prices. An interesting exhibit of new | betterment prices, a showing that It was then that he recalled a bet | know what is right in style, and We'll take just | as much pleasure in showing them to you when you come to look as when you come to buy, at value men who- qualilies at Ii you doubt our ability to sell you better shoes for less money than any other store, come and see our great big line of these goods. We are sure that you will be able to see the advantages of buying here as soon as you see the values we are offering. out is when pair. BEMIDJI, MINN. “THE BIC STORE WITH THE A good time to find you need your next GILL BROTHERS BIC VALUES”

Other pages from this issue: