Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, January 15, 1912, Page 3

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o o e BEMIDJ1 BRIEFS- Editorlal. Telepliohe, “THREE-ONE" DORA BARRETTE, Soclety Reporter Orvall Wolden of Wilton, was a Bemidji visitor on Saturday. John Horren of ‘Wilton, friends in the city Saturday. visited A. Kaiser, the Bagley banker, was in the city today on business. Robert Stai of Wilton, spent Sat- urday in the city on business. @Go to Hakkerup for photos. J. E. Black went to Kelliher to- day to be gone several days on bus- iness. John Curr of Wilton, was in the city Saturday receiving medical treatment. Lawrence Howden of Pine Wood, was a business visitor in the city on Saturday. Misses Nora and Oma Hannah of Wilton, were in the city Saturday on a shopping tour. C. J. Wagner and wife ston, are the guests of Mr. E. Gearlds for a few days. Miss Ethel Bell of Cass Lake is a guest at the home of her cousin, Mrs. A. P. Ritchie, for this week. Mrs. Mary B. Kellog is reported | seriously ill at the home of her daughter, Mrs. J. P. Pogue. Dr. J. A. McClure’s many patrons will be pleased to know that he pre- pares veterinary remedies that suit the case. of Crook- and Mrs. 1 T. J. Crane left this noon for New York City to make spring goods pur- chases. Mr. Crane will be away about two weeks. The offices of the Beltrami County Savings & Buildings association will | be open up to 8 p. m. Jan. 15, 1912. W. C. Klein, Sec. { L. S. Florsheim of Neving, was in the city Saturday consulting local | wholesalers. Mr. Florsheim is to! open a store at Neving soon. A. King of Frazeee, was in the city today. Mr. King has been look- | ing over lands in the vicinity of Kel- liher during the past few years. You have absolute control of your| account in the Northern National Bank no one can ever withdraw your money except by your written con- sent. Rev. and Mrs. Chas. H. Flesher and Miss Mabel Flesher were- the guests of L. A. Loomis of Fergus Falls at dinner at the Rex Hotel yes- terday. Mrs. 8. L. Summers of Thief River Falls, spent this morning in the city en route to her home from Black- Hanson, Hans; Nelson, Owen; Olsen, Halvor H.; Smith, Frank E.; Svans- son, Herr Edward; women: Burrell, Mrs. R. W.; Chamberlain, Miss Ruth; Elliott, Mrs. Nellie; Newman, Miss Myrtle; Siversen, Miss Ricka; Swan- son, Mrs. Ed.; Verling, Mrs. John; Knight-Steger Grain Co. The resignation of Hiram Simons, Jr., as president was accepted at the regular monthly meeting of the Ep- worth League, and Mrs. Lawrence Higgins was unanimously elected to fill the vacant office. The resignation of Ruth Wightman as vice-president of the social department was accept- ed but the office will not be filled until the next monthly business meeting. Dues for the current month were collected. Four new members were taken into the society. After the business meeting there was a so- cial session at which young people from the othsr churches were pres- ent. Games were played, and light refreshments were served. The wedding of Joseph S. Pogue and Miss Olive Tibbetts took place Friday evening at the Presbyterian parsonage, Rev. S. E. P. White per- forming the ceremony. The bride was attended by Mrs. Wm. Tibbetts, tand Wm. Tibbetts, brothers of the i bride was best man. The only guests were the members of the families of the couple. Following the ceremony !a wedding supper was served at the home of the groom’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Pogue, 521 Fourth street. The guests were Mr. and Mrs. F. S. Tibbetts, parents af the bride, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Currey, Mrs. William Sprague, James Pogue, brother of the groom, and George Hickerson of Grand Rapids. Mr. and Mrs. Pogue will reside in Bemid- ji, Mr. Pogue being employed by the Northern Grocery Company here. Annonncement I hereby announce myself as a candidate for Mayor on. the In- dependent ticket to be noted upon at the coming election, to: be held February 20, 1912. If elected I pledge myself to conduct the affiairs of the city at all times for it’s best interest. I golicit the hearty support of the voters of this city. GEO. KREATZ Card of Thanks. We wish to express our gratitude to the many friends and neighbors who assisted us with the funeral of our mother and wife. Tspecially do we wish to thank the Degree of Hon- or, the Ladies’ Ald Soclety of the duck-.where she. has been - visiting:{-Methodist Church ~and others who friends. The Ladies Aid Society of . the "Methodist church will give a lunch and musical in the church basement on Wednesday, January 17, at 8 o’clock. Admission 15c. H. A. Larson of Waupaca, Wis., of the United Stateg Indian Bureau who has charge of enforcing the law aginst the sale of liquor to persons having Indian blood, is in the city. John Ryberg and Mrs. Dolly Bau- er, both of Bemidji, were united in marriage on Saturday, Rev. Chas. H. Flesher officiating. The marriage took place in the parlors of the In- ternational hotel. A. P. Ritchie will leave tonight for St. Paul to attend the annual convention of the grand order of ma- sons, which is being held there this week. Mr. Ritchie is master of the Blue lodge and will represent this lodge. Miss Jenie Meyers arrived in the city Saturday evening from Sauk Center to resume her teaching here. Miss Meyers is an instructor in the public schools here and was unable to return at the close of the holidays owing to sickness. Miss Lillian Coch- ran acted as substitute for Miss Mey- ers during her absence. Thomas Peet, A. Dumont, G. Thompson, C. B. Steicky, B. A. Young, and F. Kruger, arrived in the city yesterday from Crookston called here to aid the local telephone men in repairing the broken telephone wires, about 150 telephones having been disconnected by the fire which ocurred Saturday night. C. 0. Carlson of Erskine, F. F. Marshall of Grove City, Minn., L. H. Bugbee of Wrenshall, and Mrs. M. F. Nugent of Wrenshall, who are conducting farmers’ institutes in the northern part of Minnesota, spent Saturday and Sunday in the city en route from Red Lake, where they had just completed a course, to LaPorte. From LaPorte they will go to Nevis. They will hold short courses at both LaPorte and Nevis. Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Rice enter- tained Classes 3 and 4, of the Bap- tist Sunday School, of which Mr. Rice is superintendent. Gamesg were played, candy was made and other pastimes were indulged in.. The ev- ening was most enjoyably spent. Those present were: Misses Julia Kleve, Nellie Erb, Izetta Fischer, Harriet Davids, Maude Slater, Mable and Lillian Booth and Messrs. Lester Achenbach, Leslie Slater, Earl Thur- ber, Delbert Elletson. List of advertised letters in the Bemidji postoffice “unclaimed” for week ending Jan. 14. Men: Ander- son, Harvet; Buthus,.John; Bye, Theodore; Bodie, Wm.; Foseng, Ot- contributed floral offerings to the funeral. The kindnesses and consid- erations shown us in our late sor- rows have done much to alleviate our distress. Daniel Backlund and Family. Bemidii to; Ferk, Henry; Greerson, Marfid; IS SIS S S SIS S S S S, | Year’s Resolution, home or business property? Make your resoluhons right nuw and we will furnish you the money to either pay off your mortgage, buy or build you a home. (Call or phone to our office.and' let us know what your wants are. Huffman, Harris & Reynolds, agents for Bagley Bldg. & Loan Asso- ciation. . Phone 144, 209 Beltrami avenue. Notice. Regular meeting of Bemidji Lodge No. 168, Knights of Pythias, on Tuesday, January 16th, at Elks Club room on Third street. Installation of officers -and social session. T. C. Bailey, C. C. Prayer In an East Indian Court. The noon hour struck, tolled by the rail gong at the treasury door, and in 2 moment all things came to a stand- still. The Mobammedan lawyers, the village Moslems loitering about the court, even Mozuffer Khan with his guardian policeman, all reverently withdrew. A moment later they re- appeared on the wide concrete veranda outside the window at my left. There they laid down their prayer mats, and, standing first with devoutly bowed heads and hands folded. they murmur- ed the noon prayers of the prophet’s religion; then knelt, still praying, and made obeisance, prostrating them- selves before Allah the merciful, the compassionate. The reverence of their devotion was perfect and wholly free from the self conscious shamefaced- ness that I should have felt, supposing court to pray there in public.—Charles Johnston in Atlantie. The Russian Amsterdam, St. Petersburg is one of the few great cities which have beeu made and not born. During his residence in Hol- land Peter the Great was so impressed by Amsterdam, perched upon the wa ters, that he determined to abandon { Moscow and build a new capital which i should bave canals for streets. In his campaign against Sweden in 1702 he noted an island situated in the mid stream of the Neva. “Here is my Rus- sian Amsterdam!” he exclaimed and tmmediately began the building of & city there. The site was a marsh in summer and a frozen morass in win- ter. Two miserable huts were the only buildings. The erection of the citadel, a great fort in the shape of a hexagon, with a tower 360 feet high, on the-north bank of the Neva: was hig first care. The cottage in which Peter lived while laying out the city still exists. Some urniusroariny, The official undertaker of a small town was driving through the county on one of his regular missions..- A wo- man came out-to the-gnte of & farm yard and hailed him. “I don’t seem to recall your name, madam,” he sald. “That's funny,” she said. “It ain't been more'n a year and a half ago since you undertook my first hus- band.”—Saturday Evening Post. el Peckiund and Py, [beadlPerrey MrmE R | It is Not Too Late for a Good New ‘Which is it going to be at the end of the next few years—a hand full of rent receipts or'a deed to your that I, the magistrate, had suspended |. Catching 8peud: L'wo wild eyed horses; wearing - mlnw Mated harness and drawing,a;battered gflllver,v wam stopped .at. the stable ‘Just had h rumm'nyl“ panted tho driver. “Then, for neavenl lalm. don’t pat those horses in.with the other horses: that will soon. go .out. on ia itrip,” said the -head hostler. *If youdo: they’ll run away too.. They elways:do. Be: fore [ learned as much Rhout borses as { know now I brought on a dozen Jnaways by “doing that -fool trick The' horses that ‘have ¥pree are still. worke pitch, the rest .of: the es catch the spirit of the devil. from: them, and as 300D as. they get: out they . take a header.”—New York Times. Conferring a. Title, While be ywas governor of Kentucky Proctor Knott sent to the Hon. Stod- signed and benring’the {mpress.of, the 13 sloning him s “Mister}” which he said was a distinctive and honorable title that no Kentuckian had'ever previous. 1y borne. Lost and Found=-a Heart. Nothing seems so hopelessly - lost, when it is lost, as a heart; yet noth- ing, when it is lost, i3 by the expe- rlence of the centuries so absolutely eertain of recovery.—Puck. Mislaid. - *1 mislaid $50 last night." *‘Hard lines! Can't you think where you put it?" 5 “Yes. | put it on the wrong card.”- Toledo Blade. ANSWERS THE CALL Bemidji People Have Found That This is True. A cold, a strain, a sudden wrench, ‘A little cause may hurt the kidneys Spells of backache often follow, Or some irregularity of the urine, A splendid remedy for such at- tacks, A medicine that has cured thou- sands Is Doan’s Kidney Pills, 2 true kid- f ney remedy. Many Bemidji people rely on it. Here is Bemidji proof. Mrs. Mary Gamble, 1119 Dowd | Ave., Bemidji, Minn., says: “Doan’s Kidney Pills have been used by dif- ferent members of my family with good results that I feel as if I were doing mothing more than my duty in saying a good word for them. One of my children suffered from back- ache and other symptoms of kidney complaint. Finally Doan's Kidney Pills were used and in a compara- tively short time they:entirely dis- posed of the difficulty.” For sale by-all dealers,' Price 50, cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, New York, sole agents for the United States. Remember the name—Doan’s— and take no other. Address ~all ust ' been' on a || ‘up to fever | dart Johnston a certificate, officlally| | great seal of the ‘state, duly commis- || WHY NOT' uwx 1P YOUR PnLIGIEsa Probahly Yon llmn't Enough Insunm. The Bomidji Insurance Agency L. L. BERMAN, Agent Writes Iasurance; That Insures and Doss -Not Allow:Policies fo Lapsa, DO IT NOW! Miles Block !Phone. 181 % BEGIN THE NEW YEAR:RIGHT - Have YOIT figured up YOUR PROFIT and LOSS account for 1911%: ° Why not decide-to “CUT . OUT” the LOSS :items . during 1912. - . ONE of the most common “LOSS”, to OWN YOUR OWN HOME. Let US tell YOI about the opportunities at BE- MIDJI— on'a LARGE or SMALL scale:and quote prices on business and residence lots in this, up-to-date city— either kind can_be ‘bought on.our; EASY: PAYMENT PLAN. SMALLCASH payment—balance monthly ‘at 8 per cent. COMPLETE information- regarding the’ city and cotinty will be cheerfully furnished npon request to this office or by onr Bemidji representative, ’fi:[AYER C. BAILEY, located in Postoffice. Block.. Bemidji Townsite &: Inmravamant 0. 520 Capital Bank Bullding : MINNESOTA - -items: is NOT 8T. PAUL Plan to secure collection of best photogyaphs taken in northern. Minnesota ,of farm scenes, farm buildings, crops, wild lands etc. - The company plans on pubhslung a pamphlet ‘with - many illustrations and will pay $3.00 CASH Now get busy, you men and women, boys and girls who ha you think will be desirable for advertising purpose. Photographs not used will be returned and those used will be pald for.at th each n addition to the $5.00 prize. These letters might cover crop reports and yields of various kinds. Anythmg that w1ll be of interest to the stranger reading of the Northern Minnesota Lands. Commumeatlon to ve colle t 800 RAILRO, 162 Bast Bound Leaves 9:54 a. 163 West Bound Lelm 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. 36 West Bound Leaves 3:42 a. 86 East Bound Leaves 1:16 &. 105 North Bound Arrives 7:46 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. 81 North Bound Leaves 6:20 p. 84 South Bound Leaves 11:46 p. 33 North Bound Leaves 4:30 a. #reight South Leaves at 7:30 a. ¥reight North Leaves at 6:00 a. Minn. Red Lake & Man. 1L North Bound Leaves 3:36 p. 2 South Bound Leaves 10:30 a. m, m. m. m. BBEBEBEER m m. m, m. - m. m. PROFESSIONAL CARDS LAWYERS RAHAM'M. TORRANCE LAWYER Telephone 560 Miles Block H. FISK ATTORNEY AT LAW Office over City Drug Store HAKKY MASTEN Piano Tuner ermerly o Radenbush & Co.of 81. Pau HARRY MASTEN, Plano Tuner Room(36, Third floor, $Brinkman Hotex Telephone 535 PHYSICIANS AND SURCEONS R. ROWLAND' GILMORE PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office—Miles Block R. E. A. SHANNON, M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office in Mayo Block Phone 396 Res. Phone 367 R. C. R: SANBORN: PHYSICIAN AND:SURGEON Office—Miles Block A. WARD, M. D. * Over First National Bank. Phone 51 tlouse No. 60i Lake Blvd. Phone 351 R. A. E. HENDERSON PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON wver- First National Bank, Bemidji, Minn. " Office Pbane 36. Residence Pone 72. DREH 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 . STANT DENTIST Uiy R. G. M. PALMER DENTIST . pMiles Block Evening Work by Appointmeat Oaly EDUARD F. NETZER, Pn. C. RECISTERED PHARMACIST Postoffice Corrier Phone 308 Personal attention to.prescriptions TOM ‘SMART DRAY AND TRANSFER SAFE AND PIANO MOVING tooionce Phous 58 610 Amories Ave. - Offise Phone 12

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