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THURSDAY, DECMEI!. 28, 1911. ‘BEMIDJI BRIEF Editorial Telephone, “THREE-ONE” DORA BARRETTE, Soclety Reporter L R TR TR ey To Stay Well Sleep Enough. A sufficient amount of sleep : : is an important factor in keep- : : ing well. Sleep is the only : : form of complete rest. There : : is a less amount of blood flow- : : ing over the brain surface in : our sleeping than in our waking : hours. During sleep the brain : : cells regain their strength. Good, : : sound, healthy, dreamless sleep : : 1w a well ventilated room is in- : dced *“nature’'s sweet restorer,” : One should try to form the hab- : it of retiring at the same hour : every night when possible, for : sleep does the most good when : it is regular. The amount of : sleep vequired depends upon the : : individual. Children, of course, : require more than adults. The : child of four needs twelve hours, : the boy or girl of fourteen needs : : nine and the aversge adult : : eight. C. H. Sandberg of Warren, was a Bemidji visitor yesterday. F. C. Weber of Duluth, was in the city yesterday on business. " Book sale at Peterson’s. Born to Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Crowse on Tuesday. Dec. 26, a son. Dr. C. R. Sanborn went to Cass Lake yesterday on business. Annual book reduction half price sale at Peterson’s. Alec Ross of Kelliher, was a busi- ness visitor in the city yesterday. Mrs. D. Bridgman of Turtle River is a shopping visitor in the city to- day. Go to Hakkerup for photos. Mrs. A. O. Johnson of Turtle River is in the city today on a shopping tour. Bert Getchell left yesterday for Northome to be gone several days on business. All books in the store go at halt price this week at Peterson’s. Emil Schneider returned this morning from Minneapolis where he speat Christmas with relatives. Chas. Carter of the Kaye & Carter Lumber company of Hines, transact- ed business in the city yesterday. Order your fresh milk from Roe & Markusen 8c¢ a quart. Marc Adams returned this morn- ing from Little Falls where he spent Christmas as the guest of his par- ents. Mrs. M. F. Cunningham entertain- ed at dinner last cvening Mrs. J. C. Thompson and Mrs. Ed. French of Blackduck. BEverybody is invited to attend the Golden Wedding at the Brinkman Theater tonight. H. E. Titus, master mechanic of the Minnesota & International Rail- way, has returned from a visit with relatives at Superior, Wis. G. 1. Warner, of Brainerd, road- master for the Minnesota & Interna- tional railway company, is attending to business in the city today. All books including blank books half price this week at Peterson’s. Attorney Thayer Bailey left this afternoon for Crookston where his marriage to Miss Gertrude Stone will take place on Saturday evening. Whitney Brown has returned from Crookston where he had gone to spend Christmas as the guest of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. A. Brown. Fresh milk delivered to all parts of the city. 8ca quart at Roe & Markusen’s. Frank Slipp of Baudette, is in the city on business. Mr. Slipp, who is a merchant at Baudette, formerly was a clerk in the Bemidji post-office. Chas. Emerson of Duluth, travel- ing engineer for the Minnesota & In- ternational railway company, is spending the day in the city on busi- ness. New books, copy right, Dibles, Algers, Meads, 15¢ libraries and ete. All go at half price at Peterson’s. Attorney M. J. Brown returned last night from Rochester where he had gone to spend Christmas with his wife who is visiting her parents there. \ H. J. Harrmann of St. Paul, spec- ial agent for the Great Northern railroad, was in the city yesterday looking over business interests of the company. What is more appreciated and ap- propriate for a New Years Gift than a useful or interesting book. Get one or more at Peterson’s half price sale. Dr. E. H. Smith and family left last evening for Minneapolis where they will visit Dr. Smith’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. James Smith. They will return after the first of next week. Mrs. Roviand Gilmore and chil- dren will leave tomorrow for Foss- ton, where they will visit Mrs. Gil- more’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. P. M. Marks. Dr. Gilmore will join his family for New Year’s day. i Mrs. A. Carmichael of Port Wing, Wis., will return to her home to- morrow after having spent the past week in the city attending her niece Miss Ann McGillan, who underwent an operation at St. Anthony’s hospi- tal last Saturday. Miss McGillan is recovering but will be forced to give up teaching for the remainder of the year. There is perfect safety in the For- eign Bills of Exchange bought from the Northern National Bank. It is a convenient and economical way to send money to the old country. Miss Floy Donaldson returned yes- terday from Northome where she spent Christmas with friends. Miss Donaldson left last evening for Min- He Was Pnpmd. An honest old Philadelphia Quaker ‘was refused a vote because he could not show the necessary papers. He at- tempted to cast his ballot, but was turned down by an inspector. “Why. my friend, thee knows me. Thee knows that 1 live in thy ward.” said the Quaker. *“I know you by sight, but I must see your papers,” was the reply. “I1 would not tell thee a falsehood. I bave the papers-at home, and I will go and bring them to thee.” can vote.” The old gentleman went home and got the papers and cast his ballot. The next year he again appeared at the polls and the same inspector challenged his vote. “Surely thee would not have me go again a mile to get thee my papers?” asked the Quaker. “Thee must know that I have a vote.” “No papers, no vote, sir,” the inspector. answered neapolis, where she will spend New |- “I thought thee might be so vicious.” Year’s with friends. Mrs. Sara Rob- erts, who has been ill at St. Luke’s hospital in St. Paul for the past sev- eral months will return with Miss Donaldson in a week. FUNKLEY—Mrs. G. 0. Leach, and children spent Sunday with friends in Houpt.—J. C. Sullivan was transacting business in Bemidji Thursday.—Miss Margaret Lattrell, left Friday evening for her home at St. Clouq for the holidays.—Mrs. P. Sharf was shopping in Bemidji Fri- day.—J. D. Bogart of Hornet, was a caller here Tuesday.—Miss Dora Premble, of Tenstrike, is the guest of her sister Mrs. G. O. Leach.—Mrs. Martin Leet spent Wednesday in Blackduck.—Mrs. Frank Croul of Bemidji is spending this week with her daughter, Mrs. Frank Berry.— G. E. Whitford, spent Xmas with friends in Brainerd.—John Ewalt, of Kelliher, is visiting with friends in town. OPENING BIE[.L FOR Last Half of Week Xmas Bill High Class Vaudeville and Moving Pictures. The marvelous Tetsuwari Japs in Dexterous and Daring Feats are the star attraction at the Brinkman Theater. The Home of refined vau- deville. This act alone would prove a feature on any vaudeville circuit and it is included in the Brinkman Program as only one of the list of fine attractions. Kathryn Hawthorn aid in the vaudeville entertainment with a catchy little monclogue and Walter Rogers does an amusing turn. There is no lack of laughs through either of these specialties and they furnish good entertainment. Red Tape and a Murderer. This is a tale of u seif confessed mur- derer who wished to be arrested, as related by a writer in Le Matin, Paris. Some time ago a man named Berges was stabbed to death at Algiers. Three men were arrested on suspicion, but as they proved their innocence they were released and the matter was shelved. A few days afterward a man called at the office of the local police commissary and d to that official: “My name is Marius Yvorra. I killed Berges, and this is how I did it." The commissary listened to the man’s confession and said: “You had better see my secretary.” The secretary also listened fo the man's confession and after a little re- flection said: “Now, look bere. my good man; thl: is not the way to get arrested. You must write us a letter confirming the oral statement made to us. Then e shall be able to attend to you. Now, get along.”" The man left the office, and perhaps because he was not a good writer he has not been seen since in Algiers. Wu Ting Fang’s Good Cheer. Among the most intimate of the Chi- nese friends of the late Sir Robert Hart was a high official, Wu Ting Fang, who prided himself on his alert man- ner, which made him appear much younger than he was, and boasted that he intended to live 200 years. He once esplained how this feat was to be ac- complished. “The first thing, natu- rally, is diet.” said he. “The man who would cheat Time should live on nuts like the squirrels. Under no condition should he touch salt, and he should begin and end each meal with a tea- spoonful of olive oil. 1 have hung serolls in my bedroom,” Wu Ting went on to explain, “with these sentences written upon them in English and Chi- nese, 'l am young, 1 am healthy, 1 am cheerful.’ Immediately 1 enter the room my eye falls upon these precepts. I say to myself, “Why, of course I am,’ and therefore I am!"—London Chron- icle. One View of the “Terrible Turk.” Speaking of the Turk, an English resident in Turkey writes: *The man 1 like best is the pure, uncontaminated Turk who has never seen Europe. He is wonderfully hospitable, amazingly kind, essentially a man of peace and a fervent religionist. He is a Moslem, has been reared in Moslemism and be- lieves in his religion. He is honest and straightforward in his business dealings. and his word is his bond. I do not suggest that every Turk pos- sesses all these qualities which I have attributed to the Tace. nor am I paint- ing him in too rosy a color. 1 bave made many voyages into the interior of Macedonia and Asia Minor: I have entered Turkish villages high up on the snow, stockaded against the bears. where the inhabitants bad never seen a European before, and my trust in the kindness and hospitality of these men bas never failed me.”—London Graph- ie. TO CURE A COLD IN ONE DAY said the old man, as a smile played under his broadbrim. “and 1. have brought them with me this timée. Thee will not have the pleasure of having me walk a mile for them. I will bring them next year, too.”'—Washington Star. Wall Street's Name. Wall street got its name from a mili- tary wall or earthworks that was » |thrown up by the Dutch in 1654. The English colonists in Connecticut, lay- ing claim to all the land “as far as the ocean,” moved down and settled on Mestchester creek in what is now Bronx borough. The Dutch of New Amsterdam were in great fear of a hostile move down on them and sent an armed force to arrest the approach of the invaders. At the same time they hastily built the wall from river to river to make sure of effective resist- ance if the ememy should decide to make a hostile move against New Am- sterdam. For a time a regular patrol of soldiers was distributed along the military wall, detachments being as- signed to keep close guard over the two gates in the wall, one at what is now Broadway and the other at the East river end. At that period the wall marked the northern boundary of the town of New Amsterdam.—New York Times. Not Discouraged. “There’s a New York man,” said a Brooklynite, “whose daughter during a winter in Nice got engaged to a cer- tain Count Beau de Beau. The New York man was rich at that time, but a few weeks before the date set for the wedding he went to smash. *‘My dear Count Beau de Beau,’ he groaned that night, ‘I'm very sorry for you. You are to marry my daugh- ter—you were to have had $3%,000 a year—but the crash has come. I'm ruined now. How sorry I am, count? “But Count Beau de Beau gave the New York man a reassuring slap on the back. “‘Oh, don’t you worry about me, sir! he said, with an easy laugh. ‘With a title like ‘nrine, you know, I can find another heiress tomorrow.’” — Ex- change. “Overhang” Houses. By the year 1670 wooden chimneys and log houses of the Plymouth and Bay colonies were replaced by more sightly houses of two stories, which ‘were frequently built with the second story jutting out a foot or two over the first and sometimes with the attic story still further extending over the second story. This “overhang” is pop- ularly supposed to have been built for the purpose of affording a convenient shooting place from which to repel the Indians. This is, -however, an historie fable. The overhanging second story was a common form of building in England in the time of Queen Eliza- beth, and the Massachusetts and Rhode Island settlers simply and naturally copied their old homes. England’s Silver Greyhounds. The “silver greyhounds,” as the king's foreign service messengers are called, wear a broad silver disk stamp- ed with a greyhound in full gallop, sur- mounted with a crown. They are in- trusted with the most delicate duties. The chief qualification for the post, as defined by Lord Palmerston to a friend who applied to him for the office, is a knowledge of the gentle are of *“hold- ing your tongue in several languages.” —London Express. Declined With Thanks. The Duke of Wellington, who had a taste for anything that Napoleon had liked, applied to David, the artist, who had painted Napoleon’s portrait, re- guesting David to execute one of him- self. “Sir,” replled David, “I paint only bistorical characters.”—Life. He Began to Talk Business. “I shall make you love me yet,” de- clared Mr. Stinjay determinedly. “I shall Jeave no stone unturned.” “Ah, that sounds something like!” exclaimed the fair girl. “If the stone weighs not less than a carat and 1s pure white you may interest me.,” Too Short. “I don't like these modern sermons much.” “Why not?” “They're over before a man fairly gets to sleep.”—Detroit Free Press. Malicious. Belle—Edgar bas such tact in choos- Ing an engagement ring! Nell—Yes, and such knack in getting 1t back from every girl he gives it to, Every man’s task is his life pre- server.—Emerson. . Use For the Library. ™ Architect (showing plans)—This room will be your library. Mr. Newrich— My library? Oh, yes, of course. 1 must have a place to smoke.—Boston Transeript. N6 man can do nothing, and no man can do everything.—German. e e e Take LAXATIVE BROMO Quinine Tab- lets. Druggists refund money if it fails to cure. E. W. GROVE'S signature s on each box. 26¢. Consclence 1s harder ‘than' our ene- mies, knows more. accuses with more Mcet:.—fleorge Ellot, “Get the necessary papers and you’ *“wheel animalcules.” Making Her Trunk Safe. “No safety deposit vault red tape for me!” declared the woman who cannot help being the wife of a very. rich man. “I keep my: jewels in a shabby old trunk in my own room. There isn’t even a lock on it. 1 had to force it off one time when I'Q mis- laid the key.” “Evidently. you don't encourage en- terprise in burglars,”” observed one of her hearers. “All a man would have to do would be to raise the lid. You might at least make him a little trouble.” - “He’d have trouble enough,” sald the ‘woman, - mysteriously.. ‘“‘Our .coach- man’s brother is an old sailor—a per- fect - artist in knots—and he ‘showed me how to bind up the trunk in the most complicated way, and no burglar could possibly untie it. He wouldn't know the combination.’ The only man in the group grinned. “Of course,” he murmured reflec- tively, “no mere second story man would ever-dream of cutting those knots.”—Youth's Companion. Saved. A lazy negro who let his wife take in ‘washing without demur had a dream one night and a policy ‘dream at that. He borrowed money from her to play the combination, and before he left home he stated his conviction. “Mandy,” he said, “Ah’s goin’ up- town to play dis combine, ‘what am sho' to come out. When you see me comin’ home in a hack you break up yo’ wash tubs.” The “combine” didn’t come out, and Sam, in great dejection, acquired a lot of gin. Then he was messed up a bit by a dray, and ‘some other negroes hired a hack to take him home. Sam was nearly out and was breathing heavily when the hack turned d famil- far corner, and his wife was standing in the door. With his last ounce of energy he stuck his head out of the window and yelled: “Mandy, spare dem tubs!”—Chicago Post. Looming Mirages. In what are called *looming mi- rages” distant objects show an appar- ent extravagant increase in height without alteration of breadth. Distant pinnacles of ice are thus magnified into immense towers or tall. jagged mountains, and a ship thus reflected from far out at sea may appear to be twelve or fifteen times as tall as it is long. Rocks and trees are also shown in abnormal shapes and positions, while houses, animal and human be- ings appear in like exaggerated shapes. Before the sandy plains of our south- western states and territories were converted into verdant fields by the ingenuity and tireless enmergy of man mirages were very common in those regions, the Indians regarding the phe- nomenon as being the work of evil | spirits. The Horse’s Pedometers, The whorls of hair on the coats of horses and other animals are natural pedometers, inasmuch as they register the locomotive activities of the ani- mals on whose bodles they are found. The best examples and the greatest number of these hiity whorls and crests are found on the domestic horse. A notable instance is the grace- ful feathering that extends along the hollow of the flank, dividing the trunk of the animal from the hind quarters. There are also crests and whorls on the horse’s chest and other parts of its body. A study of the action of the un- derlying muscles explains the origin of these peculiarities in the lay of the hair and furnishes the justification for calling them pedometers, although the analogy is, of course, merely superfl- clal.—St. Louis Republic. Pittsburgh In 1784. When General Forbes captured Fort Duquesne in 1758 he renamed it Pitts- burgh in honor of the great English inspirer of victory. Later it dropped the “h” and became Pittsburg, only finally to tack the “h™ on officially and revert to the original spelling. In 1784 Arthur Lee described the place in language which seems: strange to those who know “the Smoky City” of today: “Pittsburgh is inhabited almost entirely by Scots and Irish, who' live in paltry log houses. There are in the town four attorneys, two doctors and not a priest of any persuasion, nor church or chapel, so that they are likely to be damned without the bene- fit of clergy. The place, I believe, will never be very considerable.” Cheaping. In parts of Switzerland the baker's wife carries round the bread in'a sort of hamper. and she has not a fixed, im- mutable charge, but chaffers for a price with the customérs, The old English word for this process was “cheaping,”. which in many places in England has been corrupted into chipping. Chip- ping Norton, for instance, is really Cheaping Norton,, or the place where goods were cheapened—that is, sold by chaffer. Wise Exceptions. “You really believe that & man should always be truthful to his wife?” “Certainly I do, always.” “And do you always tell your wife the truth about her cooking?” “Oh, well—er—there are exceptions, you know.”—Houston Post. A Fluent Talker. ‘Whangs—Is your wife a good conver- sationalist? Bangs—She would be but for one thing—she talks so fluently that she interrupts herself. Cruel. “Doesn’t it annoy yon to hear a-wo- man talking slang?” “Why- mention slang especially?'— Exchange. Suspended Animation. As we descend in the scale of animal life we find that what kills the higher animajs does not injure the lower. Cut a_polyp id two and you have two liv- ing polyps instead_of one dead polyp. Break off a lobster’s claw and another will grow.. .You may, it bas been said. freeze a fly, but you cannot freeze it to death. - There are infusoria called These_ rotifers. ‘which'is’ that of suspending nnimaunn for an indefinite périod fo ifve, Coloniés of rotifers may be | desiccated ‘and rendered apparently Mfeless, and in this condition they. may be kept for months and years-and pos- sibly ‘centuries. A single drop of wa- ter will restore them to life, and the ‘wheel bearers will- instantly resume their functional activity precisely at the point where it was broken off.— Harper’s. Bank Checks In Austria, Banks ‘of Austria are exempt from Hability for payment of checks and bills of exchange to parties who may have acquired unlawful possession of the same and forged the indorsements. thereon. The banks are not compelled to identify the bearer, and instances occur of such commercial papers being stolen and cashed with forged indorse- ment, leaving the owner without re- dress. A check or bill of exchange. therefore, though payable to order and not indorsed is a dangerous form for the remittance of money. Liability for payment on a forged indorsement is incurred by a bank only when it is pre- sumed to have knowledge of the payee's signature, as in the case of well known clients. A Real Estate Eninprlus‘ Here is one way a piece of land may be made profitable: Find a clay hole and make bricks out of the clay. Cut the ice in the hole in the winter if you can get away with it. Get money from the city to fill the hole as a dumping ground. Put a top soil over all"and sell the lot for a manufacturing site.—Chicago Post. Celebrity sells dearly what we think she gives.—Emile Souvestre. BEMIDJI PEOPLE SHOULD TRY THIS. E. N. French & Co. states that any one who has constipation, sour stomach or gas on. the stomach, should try simple buckthorn bark, glycerine, ete.,, as compounded in Adler-i-ka, the new German Ap- pendicitis remedy. A SINGLE DOSE brings relief almost INSTANTLY and Bemidji people are surprised how QUICKLY it helps. This simple remedy antisepticizes the digestive organs and draws off the impurities. E. N. French & Co. The quicker a cold is gotten rid of the less the danger from pneumonia /and other serious diseases. Mr. B. ‘W. L. Hall, of Waverly, Va., says: “I firmly believe ' Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy to be absolutely the best preparation on the market for colds. I have recommended it to my friends and they all agree with me.” For sale by Barker’s Drug Store. AMUSEMENTS GRAND THEATER Entire Change TONICGHT Entertaining, Instructive and Amusing Motion Pictures “Happy Hobos” Comic. “The Stranger Man” “Mutt and Jeff and the Lady Stenographer” Hlustrated Song Latest Hit in New York, “Dreams, Just Dreams” Sung by Andrew Rood. Admission 10c Children 5¢ | The Best Xmas Gifs PARENTS | %o ooy &%years good reading. To get it send 50 cents today for leading boys’ monthly magazine of America. High class stories, educational manly, sports, Fuace, eletttical, Jnechpnienl, carpen- try, wireless, aviation, poultry, pets, camping, trapping and Boy couts dept. Keeps 52,000 boys interested now. Sent to three .homes a whole year for $1. Remit to THE NATIONAL YOUTH, 32 Kedzie Building, Chicago, Il J. P I.AHR Pres. D0 YOU OWN YOUR OWN HOME? It not let us build you one on monthly payments or we will pay off your old = mortgage-in the same way. Beltrami Co. Saig and Building Association W. C. KLEIN, Secy. fices, Rooms 5 and 6, O’Leary.BOwser Block 26 Albert Opening Announcement I will open a tailor shop on Minnesota Ave., next door to the city hall, Thursday, December 21 Years of Experience I do all kinds of tailoring, cleaning, pressing and remodeling of both ladies’ and men’s wearing apparel. Suits made to measure Norrie Remingto, HE. uniform ignition, due to perlediofi of famous UMC p!'imer. makes for sure-fire, accuracy and penetration. They minimize personal hazard. lndmdua“y made, tested and guaranteed for all stand- ard pistols‘and revolvers. Recommended by leading manufacturers. Remington; UMC —the perfect shooting combination, REMINGTON. ARMS-UNION METALLIC CARTRIDGE CO. 299 Broadway, New York City. 2 = 800 RAILROAD 162 East Bound Leaves 9:54 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. m. 34 East Bound Leaves 12:08 p. m. 35 West Bound Leaves 3:42 a. m. 36 East Bound Leaves 1:16 a. m. 105 North Bound Arrives 7:45 p. 106 South Bound Leaves 6:30 a. Freight West Leaves at 9:00 a. m. Freight East Leaves at 3:30 p. m. Minnesota & International 32 South Bound Leaves 8:16 a. m. 31 North Bound Leaves 6:20 p. m. 34 South Bound Leaves 11:45 p. m. 33 North Bound Leaves 4:30 a. m. ¥reight South Leaves at 7:30 a. m. Freight North Leaves at 6:00 a. m. Minn. Red Lake & Man. 1 North Bound Leaves 3:35 p. m. 2 South Bound Leaves 1 m m. m. m HYp PROFESSIONAL CARDS LAWYERS RAHAM'M. TORRANCE LAWYER Miles Block Telephone 560 H. FISK &t ATTORNEY AT LAW Office over City Drug Store HARRY MASTEN Piano Tuner ormerly o Radenbush & Co. of 8§t. Pau Instructor of Vioin, Piano, Mando- lin and Brass Instruments. Music furnished for balls, hole)s weddings, banquets, and all occasions. Terms reasznable. All music up to date. HARRY MASTEN, Plano Tuner Room(86, Third floor, Brinkman Hoter 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 2hone 396 Res. Phone 347 DR. C. R. SANBORN PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office—Miles Block A. WARD, M. D. ® Over First National Bank. Phone 5! touse No. 60 Lake Blvd. Phone 351 R. A. E. HENDERSON PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON sver 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 “hone 18 Residence Phone 21, INER W. JOHNSON PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office over Security Bank. DENTISTS R. D. L. STANTUN DENTIST - Office in Winter Bleck DR. J. T. TUOMY DENTIST st National Bank Build's. Telephone 230 R. G. M. PALMER DENTIST [Miles Block Evening Work by Appointment Only OM SMART DRAY AND TRANSFER SAFE AND PIANO MOVING fssidenco Phone 53 818 Amariea Ava. Office Phoae 12 B F. JOSLYN, L TAXIDERMIST (Office at Reed’s Studio Bemidji : - Minnesota T. BEAUDETTE Merchant Tailor Ladies’ and Gents' Suits to Order. French Dry Clesning, Pressing and Repairing a Specialty. 315 Belt.ami Aveaue EDUARD F. NETZER, Ph. C. RECISTERED PHARMACIST Postoffice Corner Phone 304 Personal-attention to prescriptions [ ALROAD TIME aBDs | C. 6. JOHNSON Lands Lloans . Stocks - Box 736, Bemidii, Minn. Office—Room No. 15, Bacon