Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, April 22, 1912, Page 3

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L PCPOOOO00OOCO®O®G® [4 COMING EVENTS. Monday, April 22—Meeting ¢ of the committee to discuss city & finance to be held in the coun- cil chamber at § p. m. Tuesday, April 23.—Regular meeting of the county commis- sioners. Tuesday, April 23—Wllliam E. Lee will deliver a political address in the city hall at 8:30 p. m. Wednesday, April 24.—Con- cert in the city hall by Skov- gaard, the Danish violinist. Wednesday, April 24.—The Eastern Star lodge will give a dancing party in the Masonic Temple. % R R R R R IR IR O R O ® @ POPPPIPOPIPHOPIDOL O 6O POHYLYLLOIPOOOOLOOOO G C. L. Isted of Spooner, is in Be- midji for a few days on business. Dr. A. Kahala of Erskine, spent yesterday in the city visiting friends. Skovgaards concert tickets for sale at Netzer’s Drug store. E. L. Oberg, editor of the Black- duck American, is in the city today on business. The Eastern Star lodge will give a dance in the Masonic hall on Wed- nesday, Anril 24. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Latimer of Turtle River, are spending the day in the city on business. Go to Hakkerup for photos. George L. Austin, of Crookston, spent a few hours in the city Satur- day night with friends. Mrs. Chas. Carter and Miss Harriet Shook of Hines, spent Saturday in the city on a shopping tour. Mr. and Mrs. Del Burgess and som, spent yesterday at their farm near Warner, returning home this morn- ing. Harold J. Dane, editor of the Pio- neer, returned this morning from Red Lake where he had gone on bus- iness, spending Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. John Morrison, Jr. Skovgaards concert tickets for sale at Netzer's Drug store. Mr. and Mrs. E. B. Wood and daughter, Helen, of Cass Lake, vis- ited friends in the city for a few hours Saturday evening. Mrs. Joun English is ill at her home, 820 Mississippi avenue. Mrs. English has been suffering with pneu- monia for the past week. Mrs. W. A. Danaher of Superior, left this afternoon for her home after having spent the past two weeks in the city visiting friends. The Misses Bertha and Clara Di- caire have issued invitations for a dance to be given in the Odd Fel- lows hall on Tuesday, April 30. Most users of pencils are now writing with the popular “Bemidji.” They may be had at practically ev- ery first class pencil store in the eity. Dwight D. Miller, deputy of the Modern Brotherhood of America, came down from International Falls te spend Saturday with his wife and baby. Miss Donna Davis returned to her home at Park Rapids this morning af- ter having spent the past two days i the city as the guest of Miss Flora Todd. J. Shere of Akeley, was in the city yesterday en route home from Marble waere he owns a store and where he had gone on business con- nected with the store. Mr. and Mrs. Roland Jenkins, formerly of this city, but now of Brainerd, spent yesterday in the city as the guests of friends, returning home this morning. You can buy full letter head size, 8 1-2x11 carbon paper, the kind that will make as many copies as. you de- sire, guaranteed to be equal to the best on the market or money back. The most interesting thing about it next to quality is the price. 100 MAJESTIC ~ THEATRE MONDAY AND TUESDAY 3,000 Feet of the Best Pictures “The Hobo’s Redemption” graph) A dramatic story of life in a mining town. An Interrupted Wedding (Kalem) A western picture with a bit more thrills than usual in photoplays. (Vita- Illustrated Song— When A Fellow Who is Lonesome Meets A Girl Who is Feeling Blue M.i.ls Hazelle Fellows. The Baby (Edison) A good natured and quite human comedy. sheets put up in neat boxes for $1.00 Bemidji Ploneer Office Supply Store. Tom Nary of Park Rapids, left this morning on a business trip to Hibbing, after having spent Satur- day and Sunday in the city as the Buests of B. 0. Todd. LaPorte News. ribbons is at the Bemidji Pioneer Office” Supply store. A ribbon for every make of typewriter and any grade you may want. Prices at re- tail, 50, 75 and $1. Miss Edgar of Bagley, who is teaching in the government school at Ponemah, came down to Bemidji this morning for medical treatment. She was accompanied here by Miss M. B. Johnston of Red Lake. C. C. Gowran of the First National Bank of Grand Forks, spent yester- day in the city making preparations for his summer stay here, having bought the Nash cottage. While here Mr. Gowran was the guest of F. S. Lycan. Is your money working for you? Are yqu insured against hard luck or hard times? Now is the time to save part of your income. Deposit it at interest in Northern National Bank. Miss Lucy LaFontisee left this morning for Cove, Minnesota, where she will oe the guest of her sister, Mrs. C. L. Freer. Before returning home Miss LaFontisee will also visit friends at Duluth. She will be ‘away a week or ten days. You can buy full letter head size, 8 1-2x11 carbon paper, the kind that will make as many copies as you de- sire, guaranteed to be equal to the best on the market or money back. The most interesting thing about it next to quality is the price. 100 sheets put up in neat boxes for $1.00 Bemidji Pioneer Office Supply Store. List of advertised letters “un- claimed” for week ending April 22, 1912, in the Bemidji post office. Men: George E. Anderson, John Bulka, Rev. Stephen Bujalski, James Belch, Andrew Bratlund, P. Buys, Fred Caya, Alid Dall, K. O. Dock, C. C. Gowan, Norman Holtby, Anton Iverson, Edward Jorden, = Hanford Johnson, Kearsaw, C. W. Linning, D. McDonald, Ondrey Mozola, Herr Otto Nelson, H. F. Neffman, M. S. Peterson, Alfred Pitre, Martin Stok- ke, Dan Tull, Frank Vermilyea, Bert ‘Waren, C. S. Wilson, Thomas Wall; women: Nettie Cookberg, Miss: Elin Maria Eriksson, Miss Florence Hew- itt, Mrs. S. H. Hanson, Mrs. J. C. Loyd, Miss Mabel Rogstead, Miss An- nie Robbins, Mrs. Stevens, Mrs. A. Wells, Miss Rhue Young. BEMIDJI MAN'S LUGKY FIND Will Interest Readers of the Pioneer. Those having the misfortune to suffer from backache, urinary disor- ders, gravel, dropsical swellings, rheumatic pains, or other kidney and bladder disorders, will read with gratification this encouraging state- ment by a Bemidji man. A. E. Hannah, 704 Mississippi Ave., Bemidji, Minn., says: “I have used Doan’s Kidney Pills and know that they are a valuable kidhey rem- edy. I had been annoyed by a lame and aching back and pains in my kid- neys. I could hardly stoop or lift and I felt lame and stiff in the morn- ing. I got Doan’s Kidney Pills from Barker’s Drug Store and they re- lieved me quickly. I am willing to recommend them.” For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster - Milburn Co., Buffalo, New York, sole agents for the United States. Remember the and take no other. name—Doan’s— THE MUSING PRINTER. The printer sat on his trusty stool, and drummed a tune with his metal rule. - “Gee whizz,” quoth he. “I cannot see, why life so deals with you and me. There’s the banker there, as his filthy tin, till the eagle squawks assed by midnight dreams. tvpe while I sing the lay, of men in ‘Wolford Raboin of Bemidji, son of Mr. and Mrs. Thos..Raboin, arrived Monday morning to spend a few days visiting the home and his numerous other friends in this vicinity.—The The place to get your typewriter HARNING, llke money, may be of so base & coin as to be utterly vold of use; or if sterling, ma; require good management to make it serve the purposes of sense and happiness. —Shenstone. Inquiries for information on house- hold problems should be addressed to me, care of the Pioneer. ELIZABETH LEWISON SOUPS Soup Stock. Place a large beef shank (with Lbone well cracked) in 2 gallons of cold water. Add 1 teaspoonful of salt and boil all day, skimming care- fully just before it begins to boil. Strain and cool. In the morning skim off the fat and turn into a soup kettle without the sediment. It is tken ready for any kind of soup. . Cream of Celery Soup. I pint of milk, 1 tablespoonful of flour, 1 of butter, 1 head of celery, 1 large slice of onion, a small piece of mace. Boil celery in a pint of water from thirty to forty-five minutes; boil mace, onion and milk together. Mix flour with 2 tablespoonfuls of cold milk, and add boiling milk. Cook 10 minutes, mash celery in wa- ter in which it has been cooked and stir into Dboiling milk. Add butter and season to taste with salt and pepper. Strain and serve immediate- 1y. The flavor is improved by adding 2 little whipped cream to each cup ot soup. » Cream of Tomato Soup. 1 quart of tomatoes, 1 quart of wilk, with a little cream, 1 pint of water, 1 leaspoonful of soda in the tomato. Put the tomato in a pan and ccok it by itself; season like oysters and strain. Heat the milk and wa- ter and mix with the tomato just before putting on the table, . Potato Soup. Put 1 medium sized onion (choped), 6 or 8 leaves of green or dried celery, and 1-2 into a cheese cloth bag, and drop in- te one quart of milk. Place in a deuble boiler and scald until suffi- ciently seasoned (an hour or more). Five minutes before serving, heat to- gether, butter the size of an egg, and 1-2 tablespoonful of flour, add to milk with 3 small potatoes, mashed. Sea- son - with pepper and salt. Add whipped cream just before serving. Tomato Soup Without Stock. 1 quart canned tomatoes poured into a sauce pan with 1 quart of hot water . Cook ten minutes afler it be- dozen cloves | — glns to boll, Mix 8 tablespoonfuls of flour and 3 of butter in'a frying pan. Cook together till smooth, stirring| constantly. After the.tomatoes are|! cooked, put a little into the butter and flour, adding it all gradually un- til you have a smooth mixture. Then add 1 teaspoonful of salt, 2 teaspoon- Pd | Tuls of sugar and cook ten minutes. Strain through a fine'sieve and add a little pepper. If fresh tomatoes are used, take a quart when sieved and cook a half an hour longer. . Corn Soup. 1 can best corn, 3 pints of boiling water, 1 pint of hot milk, 8 table- spoons of butter, 2 even tablesporms of flour, yolks of 2 eggs. Cook the corn' in the water till soft (about 20 minutes), pour through a coarse sieve; season with pepper and salt. Return to the fire and let it simmer while you rub the butter and flour together.” Add this to the soup and stir constantly till it thickens; then add the hot milk and cook one min- ute. Add the beaten eggs and serve at once, . Chicken and Corn Soup. Save the liquor left from boiling a chicken, clear it of ‘fat when cold, add 1 can of corn chopped, boil to- gether slowly for an ‘hour. Rub through a colander, reheat and add pepper and salt, 1 tablespoonful minced parsley and the same of green onion tops. Heat to boiling, add a tablespoon of butter mixed with one of flour; simmer 5 minutes and add a cup of boiling milk, - Croutons. Cut bread about half an inch square; toast quite brown, and serve with soups. . Next week Miss Lewison will tell how to make some fish entrees. PILES CURED IN 6 TO 14 DAYS Your druggist will refund money if PA- ZO OINTMENT fails to cure any case of Ttching, Blind, Bleeding or Protrud- ing Piles in 6 to 14 davs. 60c. MACHINE SHOP We do general repair work of allkinds. Gasoline and steam engines a specialty. OLAF ONGSTAD Shop—Rear of Pioneer Building R. F. MURPHY FUNERAL DIRECTOR AND EMBALMER Office 313 Baitram! Ave. Phone 318-2. Powder is Che-apand Big Can Baking Big in Size - Not! price 'kind. ever 1 before. toyour can tod pose. I baking i it back : . ) is Only Mt bcln Satisfaction —Not in Economy © A large can and a small cost does not make baking powder cheap—or even less expen- sive than Calumet— the high-quality, moderate- It certainly cannot make it as good. Don’t judge baking powder in this way—the real test—the proof of raising power, of evenness, uni- formity, wholesomeness and deliciousness will be found only in the baking. ALUMET o EAKING POWDER isabetier baking powder than you have And we will leave it od judgment for proof. Buy a Try it for any baking pur- results are not better—if the -t lighter, more delicious, take « yret your money. Calumet is + price~—but great in satisfac~ =—large handsome recipe strated in colors. found “n pound can. Send 4c CHICAGO Low Round Tmp Fares aneapohs & Saint Paul APRIL 29, 30; MAY 1, 8, 15,22 on account of METHODIST GENERAL CONFERENCE May 1st to 31st $8.80 TO MINNEAPOLIS $9.20 TO SAINT PAUL For the Round Trip, with return limit of June 15, 1912, Convenient train service to. the Twin Cities via “The Line of High Quality.” R. E. FISHER Joint Ticket Agent. MINN. pif 4 MET BAKING puflf’fj Subseribe for The Pioneer hil "The EMPIRE BUILDER and Business Men of Northern rich as sin, who keeps a-squeezing and the woman screams like one har- I sit here on my stool all day, and stick this higher lines of work who act to me like they always shirk, I'm glad there is one thing left that cheers, and that’s good golden grain belt beers. T know they’re finer than the rest.— How do I know? They taste the best.”—T. R. Symons, local agent. THE SPALDING UROPEAN PLAN Duluhh'l Largest and Best‘Hotel DULUTH MINNESOTA lore than £100,000.00 ‘recently: ded on ment: REPTTIS S0 i convenience: Lu: restaurants ?a'-{‘n, o ":‘:n"a‘n':f; Ono of tho Breat Imll o lh lcrlind ARMORY, BE Will Talk to the Minnesota at the “]l have somethmg_ of mteresf‘to say Northern Mlnneso ., L 24 to the FA__!!MERS ‘of inmm TIHE CARDS f 162 East Bo\md u.vq 163 West Bound Leaves , 186 Esst Bound Leaves 33 West Bound Leaves 34 East Bound Leaves 35 West Bound Leaves 36 East Bound Leaves 105 North Bound Leaves 106 South Bound Leaves Frelght West Leaves at Freight East Leaves at 32 South Bound Leaves 31 North Bound Leaves 84 South Bound Leaves 33 North Bound Leaves Freight South Leaves at Freight North Leaves at MINN., RED LAXE '-‘.' 1 North Bound Leave: 3:36 pm 2 South Bound Leaves .. 10:30 am PROEESSIONAL CARDS | RUTH WIGHTMAN TEACHER OF PIANO Leschetitsky Method Residence Studio 917 Minnesota Ave. Phone 168 MUSIC LESSONS MISS SOPHIA MONSEN TEACHER OF PIANO AND HARMONY Studio at 921 Beitrami Avenue MRS. W. B. STEWART. Teacher of Piano, Guitar and Mandolin, Graduate of the New England Conserva- tory in Boston and a pupil of Dr. Wil- liam Mason of New York. Studio, 1003 Dewey Avenue. T. W. BRITTON - MAKER OF VIOLINS Violins repaired and Bows rehaired. Up stairs over Grand Theatre. LAWYERS GRAHAM M. TORRANCE LAWYER Miles Block Telephone 560 D. H. FISK ATTORNEY AT LAW Office over Baker's Jewelry Stors PHYSICIANS, SURGEONS DR. ROWLAND GILMORE PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office—Miles Block DR. E. A. SHANNON, M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office in Mayo Block ‘Phone 396 Res. "Phone 397 DR. C. R. SANBORN PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office— Miles Block DR. A, E. HENDERSON PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Over First National Bank, Bemidji, Minn Office "Phone 36. Residence ‘Phone 73. DR. E. H. SMITH PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office in Winter Block DR. E. H. MARCUM PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office in Mayo Block Phone 18 Residence Phone 213 EINER W. JOHNSON PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office over Securtly Bank DENTISTS DR. D. L. STANTON DENTIST Office in Winter Block DR. J. T. TUOMY DENTIST Ist National Bank Bldg. Tele. 230. DR. G. M. PALMER DENTIST Miles Block Evening Work by Apcintmeat Only NEW PUBLIC LIBRARY. Open daily, except Sunday, 1 to 6 p. m., 7to 9 p. m. Sunday, rooms only, 8 to 6 p. m. TOM SMART DRAY AND TRANSFER Res. 'Phone 68. 818 America Ave. Office "Phone 13 NELSON & C0. 210 Beltrami Ave,

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