Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, November 4, 1911, Page 7

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SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1911 S00 RAILROAD 162 East Bound Leaves 9: 45 163 West Bound Leaves 4:37 45 186 East Bound Leaves 2: BBEB GREAT NORTHERN 3 West Bound Leaves 3:30 4 East Bound Leaves 12: 5 Freight West Leaves at 9:00 a. Freight East Leaves at 3:30 D. Minnesota & International South Bound Leaves 8:15 North Bound Leaves 6:10 South Bound Leaves 11.35 North Bound Leaves 4:20 reight South Leaves at 7:30 reight North Leaves at 6:00 Minn. Red Lake & Man. 1 North Bound Leaves 3:35 p. 2 South Bound Leaves 10:30 a. €O wa b LY pPpRUY R BEBEEEB ot oo o0 0o 03 BE PROFESSIONAL CARDS ARTS MISS GLARA ELIZABETH FISK Teacher of Elocution and Physicial Culture Res. 1013 Dewey Ave. Phone 181 HARRY MASTEN Piano Tuner ermerly o Radenbush & Co. of 8t. Pau Instructor of Vioin, Piano, Mando- tin and Brass Instruments. Music furnished for balls, hotels. weddings, banquets, and all occasions. Terms reas.nable. All music-up.to-date. HARRY 'MASTEN, Phamo Tuner Room 36, Third floor, Brinkman Hote: Telephone 535 PHYSICIANS AND SURCEONS DR. ROWLAND GILMORE PHYSICTAN AND SURGEON Office—Miles Block R. E. A. SHANNON, M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGECN Office in Mayo Block Phone 396 Res. Phone 347 R. 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 1§ Residence Phone 21, INER W. JOHNSON PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Residence 1113 Bemidji Ave. Phone 435 Offices over Security!Bank. Phone 130 DENTISTS R. D. L. STAN'IUN DENTIST Office in Winter Bleck DR. J. T. TUOMY DENTIST ist 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 GRAHAM_'M. TORRANCE LAWYER Miles Block Telephone 560 H. FISK L ATTORNEY AT LAW Office over City Drug Store F. JOSLYN, . TAXIDERMIST Office at Reed’s Studio Bemidji - Minnesota | ) | Catholic educational institutions. BHEEREEE POPE PIUS HONORS PENFIELD Confers Order of St. Gregory on New York Man. New York, Nov. 4.—Word has reach- | ed this city from Rome that the pope |has conferred upon Frederic Court- lland Penfield of this city the grand | cross of the order of St. Gregory, in recognition of his benefactions to He i i j FREDERIC C. PENFIELD. is the first American to receive the Lighest class of the St. Gregory order. {to which there are four degrees. Mr. | Penfield is a well known authority on | diplomacy. modern Egypt and inter- |'national policies. He spent four years in Egypt as minister resident from the TUnited States and has held other diplomatic | positions. Twenty Teachers Injured. Westchester, Pa. Nov. 4.—Aboul twenty public school teachers and sev- eral school directors were injured as they were leaving the Westchester | high school after attending a meeting of county teachers. The concrete floor of the vestibule of the building gave way and all upon it fell ten feet intc the cellar. The rotting of wooden joists supporting the floor caused the aecident. | THE SOUTHERN STATES. Their History Rich In Events of Con- sequence to the Nation. The south is especially rich in points { of historic consequence, remarks a writer in Leslie's Weekly. At the out- i set Virginia was the most populous as | well as the most powerful of all the ! states. As “the mother of presidents™ she practically gave the law to the country from the accession of Wash- | ington in 1789 to the retirement of Monroe in 1825, except during the four { years of John Adams in the presidency. ! In the mnext third of a century, with | its Hayne, Calhoun. MecDuffie and oth- er statesmen of large influence, South { Carolina was the center of events in the nation. Texas. with its boundary dispute with Mexico. precipitated the war between the latter and the United States. in which by conquest and pur- { chase we obtained Arizona. New Mes- ico. Ttah, Nevada. California and parts of Colorado and Wyoming. The neces- | sity for the control of the mouth of the Mississippi incited the negotiation with France which resuited in the an i nexation of the province of Louisiana. by whch the area of the United States { sions of rerritory were rendered in- !e\'itableA Florida saw white settlements which were planted | anywhere in the present United States. In the Wautauga colony in Tennessee | self government made its advent west of the Alleghanies. Right Handed Parrots. Past the parrot cages walked the bird fancier, poking an inquisitive { finger at the birds. | “I am looking for a right handed parrot, he said. “‘but there doesn’t seem to be one in this lot. Most parrots are left handed. Training, not nature. made them so. “Their owners are right handed and when putting out a finger for the bird | to stand on it is most convenient for { him to step up with the left foot. In ia little while that left handed action becomes second nature and he doesn't know how to use his right foot first. | “The only right handed parrots have | belonged to left handed persons. In their training the order was reversed. The left finger was extended for a { perch and the bird naturally grasped The Sign on the Bottle. Maggie is a willing but rather stupid domestic in & Chicago family. She | suffered from toothache for some time. and. the creosote that had been pre- !soribbed proving ineffectual, her mis- | tress procured another remedy at the i drug store. Thinking to impress the i gir] with the necessity of being careful | In the use of it. she said: “Now, Mag- | gie. do you see the skull and cross bones on this label? Do you know what they mean? “Yes. ma’am.” Maggie promptly re- plied: “they mean that the medicine | is good for the teeth.” | A Harder Task. “I can twist my husband around my little finger,” said the Circassian beauty. | “That's all right” repled the fat | iady, “but if you had married the os- | sified man instead of the contortionist | you'd find him a harder customer to deal with."—Chicago Record-Herald. was doubled and all subsequent acces- | the earliest | it with his right foot.”—New York Sun ! WHEN MEAT IS COSTLY Several Ways in Which Cheap Cuts Can Be Prepared By Following Directions. MOCK CHICKEN ROUND STEAK Here are some ways in which | cheap cuts of meat can be prepared: | Mock Chicken.—One and u half pounds of round steak, cut into small pieces about two inches squarz; roll in flour, put in roasting pan and fry in butter till brown. Then remove from stove, cover with cold water, add a little flour set in the oven and simmer for three hours: stir oc- casionally, and add more water as needed to keep the meat covered.| When the meat is cooked it tastes surprisingly like chicken. Thicken the gravy more if necessary. Add salt about an hour before it is done.! Beef Loaf.—Three pounds round steak, one-half pound salk pork, four or five soda crackers, one-half cup of milk. Add more salt if desired. Sea- son with one-half teaspoon of ground sage, or cloye or garlic, or a few drops of onion extract. Mix into a loat and bake in oven. Bastz occa- sionally. Breakfast Dish.—Take five cents’ worth of liver and ten cents’ worth of a cheap cut of pork and put in a kettle together; cover with four{ quarts of water, cook slowly for an hour, salt after it has commenced to boil, and stir occasionally. Drain off half of the liquid and use for soup istock; it is splendid. Place the re- mainder on the fire and stir in ,euough yellow cornmeal to make as thick as mush. Run the pork and liver through a meat chopper. or chop fine. Season with mort salt, sage and pepper, and stir into the meal mush. Turn out into a2 pan and set in a cool place. Fry for vreak- fasts; it will keep for a week. Meat Pie.—Get a ten-cent neck cut of meat; trim. place in kettle, cover with cold water, let come to 2 boil, | then simmer till done, keeping the | |same amount of water on it. When | lit is cooked. remove the meat. break | it up in small pieces, season and_ cover with stock. Thicken with flour. | Then pour the mixture in a basin. Make a dough as follows: Two cups flour, one heaping teaspoon of bak- ing powder, a pinch of salt, three rounding tablespoons of lard, or but-| ter; mix well together, add enough ! milk to make a dough that can be;‘ shaped with the hands, press into a! flat shape and cover the meat in the| basin. Bake until done, about half |or three-quarters of an hour. Half of the amount of meat and stock will be enough for four people. If all of | the meat and stock is used. double| the quantities for the dough. 1f only half of the meat is used. the balance may be made into meat cakes for breakfast or luncheon as follows:i i Chop the meat, roll three crackers, chop one small onion, salt and pepper | to taste. one tablespoon of butter and | one egg. Beat the egg without sepa- | REST AND HEALTH T0 MOTHER AND EHilD.q | SOOTHING SYRTP has been YEARS by MILLIONS of their CHIL 3 MRS, WINSLO' ied for over & {OTHERS EETHING, wi OOTHES the LAYSall P. h ss. Be sure and ask for ** Mrs. 15w's Soothing Syrup,” and take no othes ‘nd Twenty-five centsa bottie. H EDUARD F. NETZER, Ph. G. { RECISTERED PHARMACIST Postoffice Corner Phone 304 Personal attention to prescriptions | C. 6. JOHNSON ! ‘Lands Loans Stocks! Box 736, Bemidji, Minn. Office—Room No. 11, Bacon Block TOM SMART { DRAY AND TRANSFER SAFE AND PIANO MOVING Residonce Phens 58 818 Amoric: Avs. Offics Phane 12 | Free Stomach Remedy. If you suffer from Dyspepsia. [ndigestion and their resulting conditions such as: Ner- | vousness, Constipation, Biliousness, Gas in the Stomach, Bloating, Heartburn, etc., write to me and I will send you free of cost a package of my Stomach Tablets which will relieve you at once. Address: Jobn A. Smith, Dept., 51, Smith Bldg., Milwankee, Wisconsin. SOAPS EXTRACTS & SPICES and the famous TURKISH RETEDIES Place your order with CHRIST M. JOHNSON Nymore, Minn. Box 56 rating, melt the butter, mix =211 to- in meat drippings. You can tell by the tone of a man’s voice when he's going to pro- pose, girls—there’s a ring in it Judging by the number and loca- tion on the harem skirt “riots,” the concern producing that remarkable contrivance has a large and efficient corps of press agents. The yellow journals are not having much success in reviving the old war cry of “Remember the Alamo.” “Re- member the alimony” probably would bring more tangible results. An English paper advises: At any one attacks you with a club, bind his wrists together with a handker- chief.”” Certainly. Then you tuck him under your arm and carry him off to a police station. An inexpensive substitute has been found for radium which is claimed to be quite as effective. Now the gen- eral public does not care how soon the price of radium goes up a few more millions or so a pound. In view of the fact that more than 25,000,000 are expected to be spent by Americans at the British corona- tion, the American invasion is not causing much worry among London shopkeepers. gether, make into flat cakes and I‘.ryl Kellogg’s. daintily flaked to li corn. That's corn at its best—that's Kellogg’s. Have it for tomorrow’s breakfast, sure. THE ORIGINAL HAS THIS SIGNATURE Vo R Hoblog o) LA\ ROE & MARKUSEN BEMIDJI'S EXCLUSIVE GROCERS Fourth Street *“Ole Virginny” corn pone? Ripe, juicy corn on the », cob? Both mighty good - but they're not in it with Just imagine ripe, sugar-sweet corn golden films o f toasted ‘“\L' Ak THE GROOKSTON LUMBER CO0. WHOLESALE LUMBER: LATH AND Wholesalers of INKS PENS PENCILS Wholesalers of TABLETS SCHOOL SUPPLIES STATIONERY Bemidji Pioneer Pub. Go. Bemidji, Minn. Fitzsimmons - Baldwin Company Successors to Meiges Bro Co. Wholesale Fruits and Produce Farmers Produce bought or sold on Commissien Quick returns BUILDING MATERIAL C. E. BATTLES Light and Heavy Hardware Bemidji Manufacturers, Wholesalers and Jobbers The Following Firms Are Thoroughly Reliable and Orders Sest to Them Will Be Promptly Filled at Lowest Prices NORTHERN GROGERY COMPANY WHOLESALE GROGERS Dealer’in Engine and Mill Supplies Smithing.Coal Mail Orders Solicited The Civen Hardware Co. Wholesale and Retail Hardware Phene 57 316 Minnssota Ava. W. A McDONALD WHOLELALE IGE CREAM AND BAKERY 60008 Works and Office 315 Minn. Ave. WE ARE JOBBERS oF PIN TICKETS AND GUMMED LABELS No need to send outside of Bemidji for them THE Pioneer Supply Store Can Save you Money Bemidji Pioneer Pub. Co. Send your Mail Orders to GED. T. BAKER & GO0 Manufacturing Jewelers and Jobbers They are especially prepared to promptly fill all orders in their various lines of merchandise. Largest stock of Diamonds and ‘Watches and the finest equipped work- shop in Northern Minnesota, Special order work given prompt attention Estimates furnished.

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