Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, November 17, 1911, Page 3

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FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1011 - Editorial Telephone, “THREE-ONE" - } BEMIDJI BRIEF. DORA BARRETTE, Soclety Reporter M. D. Stoner is in the city for a few days. Mrs. M. B. Sibley of Island Lake was in the city yesterday. S. Foster and L. Wolcott of Man- kato, were Bemidji visitors vester- day. Go to Hakkerup for photos. Judge W. S. McClenahan and Court Reporter Geo. Moody. The term of cour which is being held there at present is an exceptionally long one, lasting until Christmas. An incidental advantage claimed for the new Soyer System of Cooking {in Paper Bags is that it saves time B. W. Lakin returned last night2Rd 2nxiety—the housewife doesn’t from a business trip to Kelliher and Blackduck. Dr. G. M. Palmer left last night for the Twin Cities for a few days on business. Chas. Kinkle and son, R. J. Kinkle, loggers of Walker are in the city to- day on business. Ralph Lycan returned this morn- ing from Brainerd where he went to attend the Beare-Ingersoll wedding. Mrs. C. R. Sanborn will return this evening from Brainerd where she had gone to attend the Beare-Ingersoll wedding. | W. B. McLachlan sprained his knee yesterday while working about the house and will be confined to his home for a week. 0. 8. Jackson and wife of Madison Lake, Minn., are in the city as the guests of their son, 0. E. Jackson. | They will remain here two weeks. Mrs. John Buck of Deer River re- turned to her home today after hav- ing spent the past few days in the city as the guest of Miss Minnie Eid- em. R. L. Palmer, proprietor of the Buckman Hotel of Little Falls, was in the city last night en route to his| home from a hunting trip in this! vicinity. Harry Titus and wife will go to| Brainerd tomorrow afternoon to at-| tend the funeral of S. D. Stillings; which will take place at Brainerd to- morrow afternoon. L. G. Weir and wife left this af- ternoon for Mrs. Weir's home at An- nandale “where they will bury their! vear old daughter who died Tuesday, November 14, of bronchitis. i Dr. J. R. Collard and John G. Mor- rison, Jr.. returned yesterday from Fergus Falls where they were called | on the Dumas case. They went on the their homes at Red Lake last ev- ening. n P. N. Anderson left this morning for Santiago, Mexico, where he will spend most of the winter. Mr. An- derson has accepted a position as mill-wright in a large saw mill at| Santiago. | Miss Agnes Peterson of the wom-| an's department of the state labor bu- reau, of St. Paul, will arrive in the city this evening from International Falls where she has spent the past] few days. i See the ball game between the| Giants and the Athletics at the Ma- jestic. Theater Monday and Tuesday nights, November 20 and 21. It will be one of the World's series games. Tickets only 10 cents. Geo. L. Sterns, A. J. Marcol and E. | E. Vandervoit of Thief River Falls, | were in the city this morning en route to their homes from Northome where they have spent the past few days hunting. They returned with| one deer. PRIZE WALTZ P Tonight is the night! You Wj R are cordially invited to attend A | 1 the weekly dances of the Bemid- Z ji Dancing Academy. Good mu- T E sic. Prize waltz tonight. Z PRIZE WALTZ | Clerk of Court Fred Rhoda issued marriage licenses yesterday to the following: Edward Gauthier of Polk county and Miss Mary Billadeau or} Beltrami county; Chas. Sievek and| Miss Christina Nelson both of Bel-s trami county. ! “There is nothing likelier to keep a man within compass than having constantly before his eyes, the state of his affairs, in a regular course of account.” Keep tab on your expens-| es and deposit what you can save at | interest in the Northern National Bank. | Mrs. Perry Starkweather of the woman's department of the state-la-! bor bureau of St. Paul, will arrive in the city this evening from St. Paul and will address the women of Bemid- ji at the Commercial Club .rooms to- morrow afternoon. Our shipment of more than 100 gross of lead pencils is expected in soon. When they arrive we’ll let you know. In the mean time remember that we are wholesalers of lead pen- cils. In dozen or gross quantities we can save you the cost of freight and cartage. Bemidji Pioneer Supply Store. Assistant Attorney General A. L.| Janes, Dr. F. J. Savage and Sheriff A. B. Hazen returned yesterday from the northern part of the county, where they have spent the past week hunting. Dr. Savage went on last evening to his home at St. Paul while Mr. Janes remains in the city. Crisp lettuce the kind that crum- bles and melts in your mouth. Celery fully bleached and tender as a house plant, shallots that are good eating, | cucumbers -fresh from the hot house | with a flavor that enly hot house cu- cumbers have, and radishes, those round, red, crisp and snappy kind you long for during the summer time. All these and more at Roe and Mar- kusens. Telephone your orders to 206 and 207. Judge C. W. Stanton and Court Re- porter Lee - LaBaw will leave for Grand Rapids Sunday night to relieve ‘have to keep looking at the food from time to time as it is cooking to see if everything is all right, but, instead, she puts the food in the oven, shuts the door and leaves it there until it is time to remove it, and there are definite rules for the length of time each kind of dish should remain in the oven. S. D. Stillings, 52 years old, form- erly of Bemidji but who sometime ago moved to Brainerd, died Wednes- day afternoon at his home in that city. Mr. Stillings suffered a stroke of paralysis a week ago and death followed. He leaves a mother, his wife and daughter. Mr. Stillings had been employed as an engineer on the Minnesota & International Railway and was one of the oldest employes of that road. place tomorrow afternoon at 2:30 from the Stillings’ residence. Tonight the Bemidji Dancing Aca- demy gives its weekly dances. You PRI ZE Are you going to WA Win 1t? LTZ T0 N GH T4 don’t want to miss it. Curtis orches- tra of Cass Lake will furnish the nm- sic. Class lesson at 7:30. SPUR.—Howard Wollaston and wife returned to their home in Be- midji last Saturday after having spent the week with Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Gerlinger.—The Ladies’ Aid So- ciety met this week with Mrs. Frank Falls.-—Miss Stella Minton, Rachel | Gerlinger and Edward Gerlinger went turning on the from Dakota Tuesday evening. linger returning home Thursday ev- ening.—Frank Perrin went to Towa last week with a carload of potatoes. —A surprise party was given Will Kronke last Tuesday evening, the oc- casion being his thirty-third birth- day anniversary.—Lawrence Dodge went to Bemidji Monday. Lingon Berries. Yes, they're in now. We've had hundreds of calls for them during the past month and we know that you'll be glad to hear of the good tidings. Many people think it as impossible to serve a Thanksgiving dinner with- out Lingon Berrles as without Tur- key. The Roe and Markusen Grocery Store have always carried this lucious little berry during season and are now ready to deliver them to the trade. Call at or phone 206. Roe & Markusen. To Whom It May Concern. Notice is hereby given that the co- partnership heretofore existing be- tween Adolph Klein and Arthur Hag- | bert, doing business in the City of Bemidji, under the firm name and style of People’s Meat Market, is this day dissolved by mutual consent. All bills due the said firm will be collected by the said Adolph Klein, who hereby assumes and agrees to pay all the debts of said firm. Dated at Bemidji, Minn., this 16th day of November, A. D. 1911. Adolph Klein, Arthur Hagberg. GRAY HAIR MAKE YOU LOOK OLD | A Simple Remedy Brings Back the Natural Color—Dandruff Quick- ly Removed. . How often one hears the expres- sion, “She is gray and beginning to lDolf old.” It is true that gray hair usually denotes age and is always as- sociated with age. You never hear one referred to as having gray hair and looking young. The hair is generally the index of age. If your hair is gray, you can’t blame your friends for referring to you as looking old. You can’t retain a youthful appearance if you allow your hair to grow gray. Many per- sons of middle age jeopardize their future simply by allowing the gray bair to become manifest. If your hair has become faded or gray, try Wyeth’s Sage and Sulphur Hair Rem- edy, a preparation which a chemist by the name of Wyeth devised a few years ago. It is simple, inexpensive and practical, and will banish the gray hairs in a few days. It is also guaranteed to remove dandruff and promote the growth of the hair. It is a pleasant dressing for the hair, and after using it a few days itching and dryness of the scalp en- tirely disappear. Don’t neglect your hair. . Start us- ing Wyeth’s Sage and Sulphur today, and you will be surprised at the quick results. This preparation is offered to the public at fifty cents a bottle, and is recommended and sold by all drug- gists. The funeral will take| to Bemidji last Saturday morning, re- ! evening train.—T. Gerlinger and Elmer Madson came Both went to Bemidji Wednesday, T. Ger-|| WALKER MAYOR RETURNS Makes Inspection Trip to Louisiana —Market Good and the Soil Productive. BUILDING = OF CITY BEGUN Mayor Kinkele returned last Fri- day from his inspection trip of the Delta lands in Louisiana near New Orleans. These lands are being of- fered for sale to Minnesotans through P. H. McGarry, and Mayor Kinkele made a personal inspection of the lands and comes back with the infor- mation that everything is as.adver- tised. It would take columns to tell all that Mr. Kinkele saw in the south but suffice to say he was extremely pleased with the land proposition and is not backward - in advising his friends to invest in Louisiana fruit lands. Markets. The production of crops is one thing and the marketing, or the real- ization of a profit, is quite another. Many farmers in new countries find themselves possessors of magnificent vields, but discover—all too late— that they have no ready market for their products and cannmot get real money on the fruit of their labors. Being so near to the great world port of New Orleans (and it should be re- membered that our interior prices are largely governed by prevailing prices at our seaports), with both rail and water transportation directly to 1hat port, from which many lines of transcontinental railways operate their rapid transit refrigerator ser- vice, Paradis Farmers are, indeed, as- sured of the best prices throughout the year, with the cheapest possible " t {Colgate’s Toilet Water, large Size 25c. Borings méde by the United States Drainage Bureau to the depth of 3,- 170 feet in the lower Deltas of Louis- iana have failed to penetrate the rich silt deposit soil which has been in course of development by the Mis- sissippi River for the Past ages. Cov- ering the top of this Bilt deposit is a humus soil consisting of a vegetable decay matter of from fwelve to twen- ty inches in depth. The combination of these two soils makes this land, in-| deed, the Tichest farm land in the world, with no need of fertilizer for probably hundreds of years. The soil is easy to plow and Yyields quickly to cultivation, the farmer being able to produce large yields from the very beginning. No difficult or expensive irrigation problems dre encountered, and the only real marked difference between farming in the North and South, is the all-year growing season, much to the delight gnd profit of the Northern farmer. Climate and Health, The health and climatic conditions which prevail in Southern Louisiana are greatly misunderstood by Ameri- in general. From a'climatic stand- point the reports of the New Orleans Weather Bureau Station, which has been maintained for some thirty-sev- en years, it is apparent that at this| latitude we find one of the most con- genial all-year climates in America. In summer it seldom gets above 95 of ed an! Many Bemidji Minn., says: ble. Bemidji People Know How to " Save It. it For sale by all dealers, Price 50 cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, New York, sole agents for the Unit- States. Remember the name—Doan’s — | d take no other. peoplé take their lives in their hands by neglecting the kidneys when they know these organs need help. Sick kidneys are responsible for a vast amount of suf- fering and ill health—the slightest delay is dangerous. ney Pills—a remedy that has cured thousands of kidney sufferers. is a Bemidji citizen’s recommenda- tion. B. Carisch, 621 Fifth St., Bemi “For many years I suf- |} fered from kidney and bladder trou- My back pained me almost con- stantly and the secretions from my kidneys were irregular in passage, I used a great many remedies, but |} nothing helped me fermanently until 1 procured Doan’s Kidney Pills. - T i feel that they have permanently rid || my system of kidney complaint, for I am now free from every symptom Use Doan’s Kid- 1t is surprising How - 2 much time, trouble and an- ~moyance this simple little - Crescent-Filler will save in a year’s time. It is to be found ~only on - CONKLIN’S Self-Filling Fountain Pen and is the means by which anyone ‘may immediately recognize the most perfect fountain pen made. Call and let us tell you all about the advantages of the Conklin. Here There is no more suitable Christmas i] present for the young man than a Fountain Pen, You do not have to go far to be able to buy the best Fountain in the world, . Conklin's Pen tells the whole story, It'sa pen that's degrees in the hottest portion of the day, while a gentle gulf breeze from | the south cools the afternoons and| makes the nights cool and delightful. The winters are always mild and pleasant, the temperature seldom fal- ling below 45 degrees, while the av- erage mean temperature in winter is about 63. From the standpoint of health the Northern visitor is always most sur- prised. Instead of a sickly, pale, ma- larial people, he finds a healthy, ro- bust populace, full of vigor, life and | hospitality. i 50c. Tan, pds e B Soft, warm Outing Yarn Eiderdown Yarn, col Cardinal, NURSE A Navy, Brown, Black and White. Home spun yarn, Black, White and Grey 25¢ a Skein. ! Q.C.H.L.O.S8. KAISER HOUSE 809 Bemid)i Ave. Maternity andGeneralNursing YOU TAKE NO CHANCES| . When you buy here you take no chances. It is true that you may be offered goods at a less price. Some would-be merchants think it smart to find out the O’Leary-Bowser price then cut 1t a few cents and make it up on something else. in a many price store. It's not our way, and we want to make it plain that if at any time you find that you could have bought “ the same quality of goods for less money elsewhere, just return the goods and get your money. We'll allow you to be the judge of quality. SMITH i as good a year from today as today. Let us show them to you, Barker’s Drug & Jewelry Store THIRD STREET, BEMIDJI, MINN. Golgate’s Tooth Powder 15¢ It’s easy done "Overcoat Saving It is unusual to offer Overcoats at a reduced price at this season of the year, but we are crowded for room and offer this We have selected 50 Coats from stock values ranging from $9.50 to | *$25; good honest values; money back guarantee; take your choice for $7.75 Each Brighton Robes Men’s 90c to $1.50; Boy’s 75c and 85c; Women’s 75c¢ to $2.00; Girl’s Children’s Sleeping Garments 50c. Robes. ors pair. 1 lot Cushion Sole leather lined high top $6.00 Shoes for _‘$5.00_ a season’s Coats at 10 per cent off. Suits same discount. Friday and Saturday Coat Bargains P, 's Shoes

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