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.| RAILROAD TIME GARDS ) S00 RAILROAD 162 East Bound Leaves 9:45 a. 163 West Bound Leaves 4:37 p. 186 East Bound Leaves 2:45 p. 187 West Bound Leaves 10:38 a, GREAT NORTHERN 33 West Bound Leaves 3:30 p. 34 East Bound Leaves 12:08 p. N 35 West Bound Leaves 3:42 a. " 36 East Bound Leaves 1:20 a. 105 North Bound Arrives 7:45 p. 106 South Bound Leaves 6:30 a. Freight West Leaves at 9:00 a. Freight East Leaves at 3:30 p. Minnesota & International 32 South Bound Leaves 8:15 a. 31 North Bound Leaves 6:10 34 South Bound Leaves 11.35 33 North Bound Leaves 4:20 » *Freight South Leaves at 7:30 Freight North Leaves at 6:00 a. Minn. Red Lake & Man. 1 North Bound Leaves 3:35 p. 2 South Bound Leaves 10:30 a. BEEE BEBBEEEER pppOD BEEBEEEB BE PROFESSIONAL || CARDS ARTS . MISS GLARA ELIZABETH FISK 1 Teacher of Elocution and Physicial Culture Res. 1013 Dewey Ave. Phone 181 HARRY MASTEN Piano Tuner ormerly o Radenbush & Co. of 8t. Pau Instructor of Violn, Piano, Mando- lin and Brass Instruments. Music furnished for balls, hotels, weddings, banguets, and all occasions. Terms u reasonable. All music up to date. HARRY MASTEN, Plano 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 Res. Phone 3Y7 *TIR. C. K. SANBORN PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office—Miles Block A. WARD, M. D. . *® Over First National Bank. Phone 51 House No. 60: Lake Blvd. Phone 351 R. A. E. HENDERSON PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON wver First National Bank, Bemidji, Minn. Oifice 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 21y INER W. JOHNSON PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Residence 1113 Bemidji Ave. Phone 435 . Offices over Security!Bank. Phone 130 DENTISTS R. D. L. STAN1TUN DENTIST Office in Winter Bleck R. J. T. TUOMY DENTIST Ist National Bank Build’d. Telephone 230 - .R. G. M. PALMER DENTIST [Miles Block Evening Work by Appointment Only g R. J. F. PETERSON i 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. NETIER, Ph. G. RECISTERED PHARMACIST Postoffice Corner Phone 304 Personal attention to prescriptions . ° MAIL POUCHES. They Cost From a Few Cents to Thou- sands of Dollars Each. Uncle Sam has twenty-eight differ- ent kinds of mail bags in service, and they range in cost from 22 cents to $2,156 each. There are mail pouches for almost every conceivable use, and you can ship almost anything that comes within the postal regulations with a minimum of loss aud breakage, says Harper's Weekly. Probably the most peculiar mail bag is the one ar- ranged for carrying bees. Sending bees by mail was a difficult operation before the *“bee bag” was adopted. Usually the bees arrived at their des- tination dead or so exhausted that they were of little use. Now these little honey makers can be shipped by mail several thousand miles in the “bee bag” without suffering and can obtain air and a good supply of food during their transit. Mail bags are made of various mate- rials. The cheapest are of cotton and the most costly of leather. Those used on fast expresses are re-enforced with metal so that they can be flung from fast moving trains without damage. Even then these. bags, or *“catcher pouches,” do not last much more than a year and a half, while some of the cotton bags used for the work will re- main in service upward of ten years. In parts of the west, where the mail must be carried for many miles on horseback, special pouches are in use for slinging over the animal’s flanks. In the far frozen north special bags are made’ for sled transportation, and in the cities a bag in use for pneu- matic tube service is made of a com- position called ‘*‘leatheroid.”” The or- dinary cotton mail bags are woven so closely that they are practically wa- terproof, and in the weave there are thirteen stripes of blue. Each country marks its own mail pouches in some individual way, so that if one gets lost in a far country its ownership can be readily detected. Nearly 65.000.000 mail bags are used each year by the whole country, and as they are being worn out all the time the supply has to be kept up. There are mail bag hospitals, where tens of thousands of them go every week. One such mail bag hospital re pairs upward of 5.000 a day. Th crippled bags are in all sorts of dila idated conditions. A railroad wrec: may injure several hundreds or thou | sands, and these must all go to 11 hospital before entering active 3 again. Christmas is responsible 1or much damage to the mail bags. owing to the hard service they get, and im- mediately after the midwinter holiday season several hundred thousand bags E0 to the hospitals. Mail bags are the most traveled of all articles in use today. They are con- stantly moving, and it' would be im- possible to estimate the number of miles a bag ten years old has trav- eled. “Magic” Cloths. Many housewives gladly pay 25 cents for so called “magic” cloths, as they are very useful for silver and other metals. Being dry, they do not soil the hands or clothing and do their work until the cloth itself wears out. To make such a cloth take one quart of gasoline, one-half pound of whiting and one-eighth ounce of oleic acid, mixing all together and shaking well. Soak pieces of woolen cloth in the mixture and hang them in the open air in a shady place to dry. When the cloths are dry the *“magic” quali- ties have been given to them, and these they will never lose. The material must be wool.—New York Globe. “Dinner of Deadly Enemies.” Lady Randolph Churchill once gave at her house in Connaught place what she called a dinner of deadly enemies. It was thought, says Mr. G. W. Small- ey in his “Anglo-American Memories,” a hazardous experiment. “It proved a complete success. They were all weil bred people. They all recognized their obligations to their hostess as para- mount for the time being. In some cases ancient animosities were soft- ened. In all they were suspended.” A Queer Customer. “Mandy.” said the village tailor to his wife, “I'm going to give Sam Bil- lings a suit of clothes for a pig.” “My goodness, papa!” exclaimed his little daughter. ‘“What does a pig want with a suit of clothes?’—New York Times. [t’s the national favorite —never was a food so popular before. Last year the countryate more XELLOGG’S than all the sther brands together, ind there’s hardly a nome that doesn’t serve XELIL.OGG’S regu- larly. The tempting iley flakes have made a hit with the mation’s ippetite. J North,Fast, Sotith éndWest From youngsters up, the enchanting flavor of the tender, meaty, sun-rip- ened swecthearts of white corn, has made good. And you're miss~ ing the treat of your life if you're not serving the most delightful of all foods in your home. T'ry it tomorrow and let the children’s vote decide. Suits, merry clip. Get (B2 Overcoats, were not plentiful. Come Early and Follow the Crowd MODEL CLOTHING STORE 212 Third Street THE MODEL CLOTHING SALE STILL ON The stupendous Bargains that have sastisfied the throngs during the past two weeks have been renewed with double energy. Everything has been re-arranged and the “Knife of Profit” has again slashed the prices to a rediculously low level. Remember Everything Must Go Not a Thing Reserved Shoes, Caps, Underwear, And Furnishings busy. Are all being sacrificed regardless of original cost. has been cut to less than the Cost of Manufacture. The Big Day To-morrow Plans have been perfected during the past few days whereby Saturday’s new introduc- tion of prices will mean hundreds of dollars in saving to the public. the price cutting has reached a climax. Now is the time to buy. The Bargains are bigger and better than when the sale opened. If you have already bought come again and see the additional values for youself. The reason for this big sale has been stated many times---and we say it again Going Out Of Business This is a bonefide closing out sale and this high grade stock must be disposed of at a It's up to you. If you don’t profit by it it’s not because the bargains Bemidji, Minn. Sweaters, In many cases the retail From all indications Shirts sale price