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Editorial Telephone, “THREE-ONE” DORA BARRETTE, Society Reporter BEMIDJI BRIEF Presbyterian women will serve | music and playing “500.” The guests ken pie supper the basement |included Miss Gladys Kreatz, Bab church from 5:30 to 8§ next|Neal. and Olive Cunningham and ay, Nov. 11. Messrs. Ralph Lycan, Edgar Irvine, Lee LaBaw and Walter Marcum. for Christmas presents. S on some magazines un- Telephone 487, Because the conductor on a north bound Minnesota & International saw Aleck Halvorson taking a drink | from a bottle handed to him by a friend. Halvorson was put off the e will begin at Walker and rra-iu at Bllackduck and was taken antiouriced are:at Bandettaand | before .Jusuce Oberg where, under CATTORH: jauthority of the new law which pro- hibits drinking on railroad trains, he | was sentenced to pay a fine of $25, F. Cunningham and wife and |20d not having the money was sent nter, Olive, have taken rooms at |10 the county jail here for 20 days. Minnesota avenue where they | *“T am pleased to recommend Cham- ive until their new house on| . | berlain’s Cough Remedy as the best et and America avenue haSithing I know of and safest remedy | ompleted. | for coughs, colds and bronchial trou- ! Boys!! Boys!!! |ble,”” writes Mrs. L. B. Arnold of te straps 2 and 3 for 5ec. | Denver, Colo. “We have used it re- Store, 11 St. and Bemidji Ave. |peatedly and it has never failed to and Mrs. E. H. Denu will en-}%‘;‘fg rseth;fe. For sale by Barker's 1 a few friends this evening at| . @ six o'clock dinner. The guests in-| More than 60 couple attended the clude Mr. and Mrs. B. W. Lakin, Mr. | weekly dance given by the Bemidji and Mrs. F. A. Wilson, and Mr. and Dancing Academy at the City Hall Mrs. R. L. Given. last night. The music was furnished zood old Quaker once said to | DY the Curtiss orchestra of Cass Lake. E “Nathan, it is not whathrs‘ Curtiss plays the drums. The earns that makes thee rich, but | hall last night was specially decorat-| ~hat ¢ saves.” The Northern led. On next Friday evening Hakker- National Bank will pay { per cent|UP: the photographer, will take a pic- interest on your saving account. |ture of the dancers. Manager J. J. Williams announces the re-engage- C. W. Jewett, proprietor of the|p.;t of the Curtiss orchestra for the Northern Automobile company, has! { dance next week. been taken to St. Anthony’s hospital. | It was first thought he was suffering from typhoid fever but rapid im- provement indicates that his illness| will not be serious. The Leech Lake saw mill at Walk- er will close for the season next week | after having lost but two days since| being in operation from last April,‘ During the present season, says the Walker Pilot, more than 19,000,000 feet of timber has been sawed. | new postal savings banks are lished in the near future in this vicinity. On Novem- Go to Hakkerup for photos. M. Mr. son: There is littie aanger from a cold or from an attack of the grip except when followed by pneumonia, and this never happens when Chamber- lain’s Cough Remedy is used. This remedy has won its great reputation and extensive sale by its remarkable cures of colds and grip and can be re- lied upon with implicit confidence, For sale by Barker's Drug Store. At Cass Lake on Thursdey night, Masten's orchestra of this city played at a banquet given by the Masons in the Endion hotel. The orchestra gave a concert from 8:30 to 11:30 and played during the banquet which lasted from 11:30 to 1 a. m. Plates were laid for 70 persons. Dr. and Mrs. Stanton of Bemidji were among the guests. On Nov. 17 the Masten orchestra will again play at Cass Lake, a banquet being given at that =1 do not believe there is any oth~; er medicine so good for whooping cough as Chamberlain’s Cough Rem- edy,” writes Mrs. Francis Turpin, Junction City, Ore. This remedy is| also unsurpassed for colds and croup. For sale by Barker’s Drug Store. Miss Harriet Cochrane entertained a few friends last evening at a duck dinner. The evening was spent with equipment $690.00 r Roadster. — All Prices S. F.O.B Factory. Send for Catalogues. " 12 Ford Model T, while in all essential features ord that has been built for several years, is a than ever. Several minor improvements have These include improved timer, tapered rear style air cushions, hand-holes in bottom of crank oroof valves. Aside from these detail changes the vill be the same sturdy and reliable car that has ord the leader in the Automobile world. ‘ourth car manufactured in the United States was 1 1912 Ford will manufacture and sell one-third of “JBILE CO linneapolis " South Fourth Street ICARCIRCIE R R CIRC IR AR IR CIROONCY 7| time by the Royal League. Last night 00'660996660‘0090 the orchestra played at Kelliher for the firemen’s dance which was largely attended. One of the most successful social functions ever held in the high school was the Freshman party given in the gymnasium last night. About 40 out of a total of 105 members were pres- ent. Misses Inez Patterson, Adelaide Berge and Knappen acted as chaper- ones. The singing of school! songs| and playing of many games made the | evening enpoyable to all present. Lunch was served by some of the Freshmen boys under the direction of Clara Nangle and Jean Richards, Chamberlain’s Stomach and Liver Tablets do not sicken or gripe, and | may be taken with perfect safety by | the most delicate woman or the youngest child. The old and feeble will also find them a most suitable remedy for aiding and strengthen- ing their weakened digestion and for regulating the bowels. For sale by Barker’s Drug Store. The Bemidji High Schonl football | eleven left this morning for Crook- ston. where this afternoon they are playing the Crookston High School | team. Notwithstanding the loss of the big full back, Hendrickson, the team is in good condition. Professor Robinson, the coach, accompanied | them and is confident of success. The | line-up follows: c, Elletson: guards, Ryan and Olson; tackles, Ripple and | Sullivan; ends, Hayner and Graham; .ab, Bailey; fb, Moritz; half-backs, McDonald (capt.) and Peck. The Be- midji boys have not been seored upon this year. b PERSONALS. * 0000000000000 e00 e 1 J. Fogelberg of Fosston, is in the city today on business. J. F. Deneeen of Remer, was a bus- iness visitor yesterday. C. E. Rain of Shevlin, spent yes- terday in the city on business. P. H. McGarry of Walker, is in the city with friends for a few days. R. S. McDonald of International Falls, is in the city today on busi-‘ ness. A. B. Clair, a Big Falls lumberman, transacted business in the city yes- terday. i | Miss Isabel Boyle of Blackduck, is the guest of Miss Ann MecGillin for the day. Mrs. E. T. Nelson of Thief River Falls, is the guest of friends in the city today. John W. Carl of Mahnomen, is| transacting business in the rity for a few days. { R. F. Batholomew, of Minneapolis, a clothing man, is in the city today | on business. Edward Brinkman left yesterday for Minneapolis to attend the Chic- ago-Minnesota football game there today. T. A. McCann of the Crookston Lumber Company, left last night for Minneapolis on a combined business | and pleasure trip. { ! L. E. Morier returned this morning | from Kelliher where he has spent the past few days on business for lSwift and Company. T. B. McCulloch of St. Cloud, is] expected to arrive in the city today to be the guest of Mr. and Mrs. E. N. Ebert for a few days. Geo. Shea is in the city for a few days. Mr. Shea travels for the Crook- | ston Lumber Company and makes | this city his headquarters. Mrs. T. F. Hayes of Little Falls, | will arrive in the city this evening and will be the guest of her daughter, Mrs. E. N. Ebert, for a week. ‘W. L. Martin of Powers, Michigau. | is in the city for a few days on busi- ness. Mr. Martin is connected with | the Northwestern Telephone Ex- change Company. Mrs. Geo. Edwards and daughter, Ruth, returned last evening from Ab- erdeen Sask., where they were called three weeks ago by the death of Mrs. Edwards’ father. Dr. F. J. Peterson left yesterday for St. Paul where he will spend the next week. Dr. Peterson will attend the Minnesota-Chicago football game which is being played at Minneapolis today. Dr. C. R. Sanborn and Mayne Stan- ton left last night for Minneapolis where they will attend the football game between Minnesota and Chicago which is being played at Minneapolis today. Dr. Sanborn will return this evening but Mayne Stanton will re- main for a few days. C. A. Bilben of Walker, E. C. Sunck and N. J. Thies, both of Minneapolis, were in the city last evening from Boy River where they have spent the past few days hunting. Messrs. Sunck and Thies left on the late train isheet of very thin notepaper, and rol- {add another tablespoon of sugar and { til mixture is stiff enough to nold in :into as many parts as there are col- jones. It should be iced and put away | ¥You may place it upon frosted cake, © SUNDAY SERVICES HERE. @ PUoddedddodd®oedd Episcopal. Sunday School will be held at 10 o'clock. There will be no evening services until next Sunday. | o R | Swedish Lutheran. Sunday School will be held in the forenoon at 10 o’clock. Services will be held in the evening at 8 o’clock. Presbyterian. Morning worship at 11. S\mday: School 12-15; Young People’s meet- ! ing 7; Evening service at 8. Bible] Study Thursday eve at, 8. Lesson Daniel, Chapter 2. Nebuchadnezzar‘s, Dream. All are welcome. S. E. P.| White, Pastor. —_ | First Baptist. ; at the Baptist Church will be “The Redemption Name of God Unfolded,"‘ No. 2. At the evening service a ser- ! mon will be given on the “Spiritual | Significance of the Sixth and Seventh Days of Creation.” At the Thurs- day evening prayer meeting the les- son will be First John, Chapter 1. First Methodist Episcopal. { At the First Methodist church, | Ninth and Beltrami avenue preach- ing services will be held at 10:45 and 7:30, with special music. Sun- day School will be held at noon and | Epworth League at 6:30 P. M. At! the morning service there will also| be a reception of members. Prayer | Meeting will be held Thursday even- ing. The public is invited to all these meetings. Chas. H. Flesher, Pastor. FINE FROSTING FOR CAKES Success Depends Mainly on Steady and Brisk Whipping—How Icing Is Colored. HOW TO ADD DECORATIONS Take some paper: parchmeut or a ling it into the shape of a funnel, pin it together, cutting off the lower end just above the bottom. Make frosting as follows: Put | whites of four eggs into a bowl and; whip them with a strong whip or! whisk until they ®re dry. The suc- cess of the frosting depends entirely on the steady and brisk whippiag be-} tween additions of sugar. Add one! which has been carefully sifted, and whip briskly for three minut=s, then ! i whip as before. After third table- | spoon has been added, add half tea- spoon of lemon juice and whip brisk- {1y again. Continu= this process un-| lany form. : The icing should now be divided | | ors, and each portion colored deli—;l cately to the desired shade. Care must be taken to mix the paste! thoroughly through frosting, as oth- | erwise specks of ecolor will appear in it. i Round loaf cakes lend themselves better to decorations than square to stand for at least one hour. The remainder of icing should be kept covered with a damp cloth. Draw a circle the size of th cake on a piece of paper, and draw any design such as flowers, figures, ete., | on the paper. Perforate desizgn with a pinl thus making a pattern. If paper is firm rough side of paper on cake, rubbing gently so that pin pricks will show in frosting, or you may place paper on cake and sprinkle over it a little | finely powdered charcoal <o that | gvhen paper is taken off the pattern | is left on cake. Then take the fun- nel and partly fill it with icing of de- sired color. Fold the top of funmnel over icing, so that none of the icing will flow over top of funnel when contents are being forced out of the bottom Hold-| ing funnel in ome hand, move it along the lines of the designs, using the other hand to squeeze icing on pattern. It is a good idea to always begin in center and work outward, i ] | i For pains in the side or chest dam- pen a piece of Aannel with Chamber- lain’s Liniment and bind it on over the seat of pain. There is nothing better. For sale by Barker’s Drug Store. A hobble skirt in an Indiana mwn} was the cause of a yoke of oxen run- ning away from fright. The skirt Was lucky in frightening them. Had it antagonized them it would have for Minneapolis and Mr. Bilben re- turned to his home at Walker. The subject of the morning service! 12004 in the display wirdow of Bark- 1ing, innocent face. IGIVES AWAY ART GEMS| (Continued from first page). lead boat, the dashing Valyries, the Rhine-maidens, Tannhauser, Sieg- fried, Wotan, and other heroes and heroines of mythological and operatic | lore. “Leaving the Hills,” by Joseph Farquharson, the English artist will be displayed in the windows of the Berman Emporium. This picture shows a shepherd driving his flock home from their hillside pasture. It is a picture full of quiet charm, and suggests vividly the peace of evening in the country. “Daniel in the Lions’ Den,” is the masterpiece of the great animal ainter, Briton-Riviere. This will be er’s Drug Store. “Mona Lisa,” the greatest portrait jof all ages, the original of which re- cently was stolen, was painted by Leonardo du Vinci, an Italian artist, and is the portrait of a “subtle, shad- owy, uncertain smile, an image of the iuniversal mystery.” This picture will |be displayed in the window of the Given Hardware Store. “Simplicity,” is a portrait of Sir Joshua Reynolds’ great niece, is one of his finest works. The sweet face of the-child is turned aside in a some- what pensive poise, and the exquisite purity of its expression is the seal of the simplicity of childhood. It is on display in the window of the Pioneer office. “Christ disputing with the Doctors in the Temple,” one of Heinrich Hoff- man’s great character studies, is also on display at the Pioneer office. Roberto Ferruzzi, Italian “Madon- nina” is not a Madonna in the sense of being intended as a representation of the Virgin, but is a sweet, gentle creature of our own time, and the force of the work is in this plead- It is shown in the George T. Baker and Co.’s display window. “View on the Rhine by Wyk-by- Durstede,” is one of Rusdael’s great- est masterpieces. Earth, water, sky, all are in perfect accord; so strong; so powerful is the harmony, so sim- ple and yet so grand, that one is im- mediately struck by the singular ef- fect. This can be seen in the dis- play window of the O’Leary-Bowser Co.’s store. “The Road,” in the window of the Schneider Bros. Clothing store, shows the water soaked road, with its tall, wind-swept trees, the splashing riv- er and the two lone tenants of the road’ a woman and child, wind-blown and disheveled, all tell the same story. “St. Cecelia,” the patron saint of GRAIN AND PROVISION PRICES Duluth Wheat and Fiax. Duluth, Nov. 3.—Wheat—To arrive and on track—No. 1 hard, $1.053%; No. 1 Northern, $1.043%; No. 2 Northern; $1.01%; Dec., $1.03%; May, $1.07% Flax—On track, in store and to arrive: $2.12%;; Dec., $2.09; May, $2.12. St. Paul Live Stock. St. Paul, Nov. 3.—Cattle—Good tc choice steers, $6.50@7.00; fair to good. $5.75@6.35; good to choice cows and heifers, $4.75@5.25; veals, $5.00@7.00. Hogs—$5.75@86.00. Sheep—Wethers, §3.25@3.50; yearlings, $3.25@4.00; spring lambs, $4.00@5.40. Minneapolis Grain. Minneapolis, Nov. 3.—Wheat—Dec., $1.04@1.04%; May, $1.08%.@1.08%. Cash close on track: No. 1 hard, $1.- 05%; No. 1 Northern, $1.05%; to ar- rive, $1.045% @1.05%; No. 3 Northern, 97%c@$1.00%; No. 3 yellow corn, 63 @70c; No. 4 corn, 68@69c; No. 3 white oats, 45@45%c; to arrive, 443c; No. 3 oats, 4112, @44c; barley, T0c@$1.- 18; flax, $2.12%; to arrive, $2.12%. Chicago Grain and Provisions. Chicago, Nov. 3.—Wheat—Dec., 941 @94%c; May, $1.00% @1.00%; July, 9454c. Corn—Dec., 623 c; May, 64c; July, 637% @64c. Oats—Dec., 46%c; May, 483, @487%ec; July, 45%c. Pork— Jan., $15.90; May, $16.22@16.25. But- ter—Creameries, 241 @31c; dairies, 22@28¢c. Eggs—17@25c. Poultry— Turkeys, 14c; chickens, 9c¢; springs, 11%ec. Chicago Live Stock. Chicago, Nov. 3.—Cattle—Beeves, $4.75@9.15; Texas steers, $4.10@5.90; Western steers, $4.25@7.25; stockers and feeders, $3.00@5.90; cows and heifers, $2.00@6.00; calves, $5.50@8.- 75. Hogs—Light, $5.60@6.30; mixed, $5.70@6.40; heavy, $5.70@6.40; rough, $5.70@5.95; good to choice heavy, $5.- 95@6.40; pigs, $3.75@5.50. Sheep— Native, $2.50@4.00; yearlings, $3.75@ 4.25; lambs, $4.00@6.25. The harem skirt is being taken se- riously in Rome. One father has com- mitted suicide because his danghters wore them. Physical culthre is a great thing. Prinneton is planning a stadium where 40,000 persons can sit and watch athletic contests. A gold medal and $1,000 are to be awarded annually to the perscn do- ing the most for the advance of sur- gery. Now it is in order for some lover of his kind to offer a gold med- al and $2,000 for the person doing the,most for the progress of the pa- tients of advanced surgery. New York’s wage earners number 1,400,000, of whom the workers in factories lead all the rest with a total of 600,000. The store clerks are next in line with 290,000. There are 220,- 000 laborers and mechanics, 58,000 men in the liquor business, 45,000 itablespoon of confectioner’s sugar, Mmusic, is represented in the picture that will be seen in the window of the Roe & Markuson Grocery store. | office workers, 40,000 in the printing trades, 24,000 educators, 8,000 |church workers, 6,000 lawyers and iS,OOO physicians. Drink “Hot Drin ing hot” when you want etc. been promptly transformed to a gored skirt. - Go to Him for Farm Loans People With the Candy Habit Will be delighted to learn that we're now making fresh Candies daily—And its worth something to know that you are eating ABSOLUTELY FRESH GANDY EVERYTIME YOU BUY HERE We serve as no others can. Remember too that we have on hand at all times a complete stock of Ice Cream, Cold Cream, Bemidji | Candy Kitchen CUST BROWN ks” These Days Always hot, yes, “pip- it so. JOHN G. ZIEGLER “THE LAND MAN* Fire=-Life=—I N SU R A N C E—Accident REAL ESTATE IN ALL ITS BRANCHES FARM LANDS BOUCHT AND SOLD Office--Odd Fellows Buliding