Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
FRIDAY, MAY 10, 1912. THE BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEER THE HOME OF THE Me and Bill (Sehg) A good strong drama. Ilustrated Song Way Down A comedy gem. Masestic THeaTRE FRIDAY AND SATURDAY Matinee Saturday, 2:30. G.A.R.Monument Fund The dramatic story of a sweet friendship between two old cronies and their children in times of the Civil War. The Governor Who Had a Heart (Vitagraph) C. J. Woodmansee. ' Getting a Hired Girl (Essny) BEST PHOTOPLAYS in Alabam’ Gumplelé Change of Program Sunday Night % >, i f i ERCS 1 i i { F ry | i i I\ Y (2 J. E. O‘'Connell of Deer River, was in the city today on business. A. J. Linden of Pine River, trans- acted business here yesterday. Chas. Elmquist of Rush City. transacted business in the city to- day. 50 cents for a pair of misses’ shocs, 2 to 3 o'clock tomorrow. O’Leary- Bowser Co. W. G. Graham of St. Paul, deputy pure food inspector, is here for a few days on business. Robert E. DeLury of Walker, sher- ~ iff of Cass County, was here yester- day on business. Mr. and Mrs. Fred E. Betz of Deer River, were in the city yesterday, go- ing on to Cass Lake last evening. Don’t forget to telephone Dr. J. A. McClure your chicken troubles. Phone 105. The Degree of Honor will give a card party in the Odd Fellows Lall on Monday evening. Refreshments will be served. i Miss Effie Lidenberg of Fosston. was in the city yesterday en route to Big Falls where she will visit friends for a few days. Hour Sale—Saturday afternoon, 2 to 3 o’clock, misses’ shoes 59¢ a pair. O’Leary-Bowser Co. Misses Lulu McCrum and Mabel ‘Wheeler went to Blackduck this ev- ening where they will be the guests of friends over Sunday. Mrs. G. H. Hansell of Bagley, ar- rived in the city yesterday and will be the guest of her mother, Mrs. ii. ‘W. Bailey for a fortnight. 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 city. H. A. Sedgwick of Duluth, man- ager of the credit department of the Marshall-Wells Hardware company, is in Bemidji and vicinity on busi- ness for the company. Mrs. A. P. White, Mrs. F. S, Lycan and Miss Leah Berman went to Cass Lake this noon to attend the con- cert to be &iven in the Episcopal church this evening. Go to Hakkerup for photos. Rev. S. E. P. White of Bemidji was| a visitor here last evening between trains, having come up to confer with the officials of the Presbyterian church.—The Blackduck American. » Attorney George T. Simpson, and L. J. Chadbourn of Minneapolis, were in the city last evening en route home from Walker where they had spent the past two days on legal bus- iness, Tomorrow, between 2 and 3 o’clock we will sell 50 pairs of misses’ shoes for 59 cents a pair. O’Leary-Bowser Co. Attorney George H. Spear of Grand Rapids, came up from Walker last night where he had spent the past few days on professional business Mr. Spear left for home on the noon train. The members of the Epworth league of the Methodist church will have charge of the Mother’s Day cer- vices on Sunday evening. The church will be elaborately decorated for the occasion. C. W. Conway of Blackduck, who was appointed deputy supervisor of assessors, has come to Bemidji where most of his time will be spent in the vicinity of the big mills listing logs and lumber. s Attorney Thayer C. Bailey will go to Albert Lea the first of the week to attend the state convention of tie Knights of Pythias and the Pythian Sisters which is to be held there on Tuesday and Wednesday, May 14th and 15th. The place to get your typewriter 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. W. R. Mackenzie of Minneapolis, spent yesterday here on business, Mr, Mackenzie went to Pine River this morning and from there he will go to International Falls on business, re- turning to Bemidji on Sunday. 1t $10.00 You £100.00 Have $1.000.00 temporarily idle its Safety should be your first considération. There is no better security for your savings than a Certificate of Deposit in the Northern National Bank. Rev. Chas. H. Flesher left this morning for Fergus Falls where he will officiate at a wedding this even- ing. He will then go to Minneapolis to attend the General Conference of the Methodist church. Mr. Flesher will be gone about 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. Miss Minnie Bailey leaves this ev- ening for St. Paul where she will be the guest of Miss Marguerite Shay until Monday when she will go ‘o Albert Lea to attend the state cou- vention of the Pythian Sisters which will be held there on Tuesday and Wednesday of next week. . Miss Bai- ley will represent the Pythian Sisters here. Before returning home Miss Bailey will go to Ames, Iowa, and Tipton, Towa, the latter being the old Bailey home. She will be gone about two weeks. 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. Carnations for Mothers’ Day. Sunday, May 12th. A white carnation for mothers’ I ERE RS R E R R R EE R R ] HOW TO FIND The Northern Minnesota Devel- opment Association Immigra- tion Commission Quarters, 39- Third Street, South, Minne- apolis. For the benefit of the readers of the Pioneer this notice will appear in both the Daily and Weekly Pioneer for the next six month. Ou leaving the union depot turn to the left and continue up Nicollet to Third street, cross- ing that thoroughfare, turn to the left and proceed half a block, toward the postoffice. , From the Milwaukee depot, turn to the left on Washington avenue and continue to First avenue, turn to the left and go one block to Third street and then one half block to the right. Daily Pioneer will be found on file here. N EEKEKEKXKP X i KAk AKXk A A A A AR AAAA A A A A A AO K KA Ak h & 2 R R R R R R R R R R E R R R R R Rt i i Gopher Tennis Team to Invade East. Minneapolis, Minn., May 10.—The crack tennis team of the University of Minnesota left this city today for its second invasion of the Easternl courts. The trip will last an entire month, during which time the Goph- er racquet wielders will play con- tests with the tennis teams of Ohio State University, University of Penn- sylvania, College of the City of New York, Yale, Brown, Harvard, Dart- mouth, Amherst and several other big colleges and universities. Joe Armstrong and Seiford Stillwagen will make the trip. lmnxm PRICE FOR YOUR CREAM memory. A colored ecarnation for mothers living. At the Greenhouse; phone 166. WHAT PUNY CHILDREN NEED More Food—How to Make Them Eat | Heartily, More food, better blood, those are the two thinga that pale, delicate children need most. “But they won't eat” wmays the anxious mother. Yes they will, if you give them ou¥ delicious tonie, Vinol. It’s the greatest thing we ever saw to create an appetite. It makes the blood rich, too—builds up weak chil- dren and grown folks as well) and makes them strong and rosy. Mrs. W. O. Strother of Raleigh, N. C., says: “My little girl, Hazel, has been taking Vinol to build her up after a severe spell of sickness. It has done so much good by restoring her appetite and building up her strength that I think Vinol is the finest tonic' ever prepared and I am telling everyone .about it.” Children like to take Vinol, the taste is so pleasant. - It is not a strong medicine and there is not one hatm- ful ‘thing in it. We will give back your money if Vinol disappoints you. Barker’s Drug Store, Bemidji, Minn. Intercollegiate Athletics. Chicago, 111.,, May 10.—The season of intercollegiate track and field sports in the middle west will reach its zenith tomorrow, when virtually all of the leading institutions will engage in dual meets that will test the prowess of their best perform- ers and go far towards determining who’s who. in this branch of college athletics. The teams of Wisconsin and Chicago will contest at Marshall Field, Nebraska and Minnesota will meet at Lincoln and Kansas and Mis- souri at Columbia. NOTICE TO FARMERS!!! BRING OR SEND YOUR CREAM T0 THE BELTRAMI 'FARMERS CREAMERY AT 'BEMIDJI WHEREb YOU WILL GET THE HIGHEST AND GET IT CASH ON DELIVERY IF YOU CHOOSE. CREAMERY NOW OPERATING AT FULL BLAST. FOR FURTHER INFORMATION TELEPHONE OR WRITE ANY OF THE OFFICERS. W. L. BROOKS, PRES. R.L GIVEN, SEC. Devout Mecca Pilgrims. ‘We stopped our special train yester- day for an hour or two in the very middle of native Africa, and went for a morning walk. There were troops of natives on donkeys from the' vil- ] lages around coming for water to the wells, which they themselves dig, and we talked to some delightful native boys about their lives. One boy standing by the well, to my surprise, was on his way to Mececa, having traveled already two or three thousand miles, which had taken two or three years. His father had died on the way, and when I asked him how he would manage he said quietly: “God. will provide,” and it never en- tered his mind to ask me for any- thing. Five minutes afterward we came across three women—an old woman and two daughters. The eldest daugh- ter was five and twenty. They were coming back from Mecca, but they had started off, she said, when she was a Lttle girl :bout twelve—Bishop of London in the Treasury. o Rquitys “%!ht to the inem'ssd ¢cost of Fything, the doughnut had become too valuable to eat. Aceordlngly 1t wii belng financed. Naturally an entorprho ol such mag- nitude was fraught with more or less unoertainty. ‘“How, for instance,” the underwriters asked, “about the hole— 1s it to be financed, too?” So the courts ‘were appealed to. the declded, after the equity, and as such it may not be financed.” U. 8. Doughnut fell off a point or two, but speedily recovered, because something had to be the oqnity any- way—Puck. Legend of the Niger. There I8 a curious legend connects ed with the source of the Niger. Tra- dition says that a devil lives insioe the rock whence the river springs. The natives are very superstitious, and greatly fear this demon, who is supposed to kill any individual who dares to look at the source. Hence, when showing a stranger the spot, they cover up their faces and walk ‘backward in the direction of the source, pointing toward it with hand |} ‘outstretched behind the back.—Wide i ‘World Magazine. CPOOOPOPOPPOOOOOO © CORRESPONDENTS COLUMN. ¢ 0000000000606 60606 ORHEIM. Gilbert A. Benson of Malcolm, bought a fine milch cow of Andrew Norton Monday. Andy Erickson returned home af- ter a two months’ absence. Small grain is coming up and the farmers are busy breaking for flax. Jack McKercher is going to move into Frank Hendrickson’s place until the ditches come through, as he has been seasick ever since he moved out on the bog. Farmers are very much wrought up about the extension of time grant- ed the ditch contractors as it will not be safe to put in crops until ditches come through. . TURTLE RIVER. Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Baldwin of New Albin, Iowa, arrived here last week. Mrs. Baldwin expects to spend the summer with her daughter-in- law, Mrs. Wiley. A daughter was born to Mr. and Mrs. Ryan, April 26. A pleasant little surprise was giv- en Mr. Burr Bridgham last Wednes- day evening, when a number of his friends gathered at his home to cele- brate his seventy-sixth birthday. Those present were Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Baldwin, Mrs. E. 1. Porter, Mrs. Ethel Wiley and son, Rev. S. E. P, White of Bemidji, Mrs. A. O. Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Williams, Messrs. Oscar and Reuben Johnson, Martin and Carl Otterstad, Misses J. Ben- son, T. Pendergast, Oline Porter, Josie Sadek, Ella Otterstad, ‘and Masters Sidney Johnson and:Robbie Porter. Uncle Burr received a num- ber of presents. The teachers are busy drilling and preparing the school children for the Memorial Day exercises. Anna, the five year old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. N. A. Otterstadt, is confined to the hospital in Bemidji with a mild attack of typhoid fever. A. 0. Johnson left Tuesday ev- ening for points in Iowa. The busi- ness will'keep him away from home about a week. B. D. Bridgham spent Thursday with friends in Bemidji. The Turtle River ball team played a game with Spur 105 last Sunday afternoon. - The score was 19 to 2 in our favor. Our boys played a splendid ;game’ for being the first of the season and we hope to see many more like it. A large crowd was in attendance. Mrs. Bd. Williams and Mrs*A. O. Johnson were in Bemidji Saturday. Master Albert Tryan who recent- ly has ‘undergone an operation for appendicitis at Bemidji, returned home Thursday. Mrs. Ethel Wiley s two months old baby was baptized Wednesday even- ing at her home by Reverend White in- the -presence of a number of friends.. He was given the name of Harold 8. Wiley. The pupils of the school have been gathering arbutus the past week. A box was sent to the ward of the city hospital at Bemidji, a large bouquet was given Mrs. S. E. P. White, and a number of bunches were sent down to B. D. Bridgham on his birthday. Reverend White held services last Wednesday evening. A large audi- ence- was in- attendance. He will preach again here a week from the first, coming Wednesday, May 22. Miss Nellie Knot of Spur 105 gave her closing day exercises of her school Friday, May 3. A number of Abercrombie’s Saturday Sale Any Sheet of Popular Music in this Store can be had for 10 cents on Saturday. Rag Time Love Rum Tum Tiddle Trolley Car Swing My Chippewa Monkey Rag Honey Babe Baby Rose Black Diamond Rag Red Pepper Rag Down-to-Date Fiction for Sunday Prompt Attention to Mail Orders ABERCROMBIE’S Phone. 290. 218 Beltrami Ave. young people from here attended. Pictures Pretty lands capes, floral fruit, games, etc. 8 x 10glass covered special at........... 1oc Shoes See our Bargain table of Ladies’, Misses’ and Child- ren’s Shoes from 78c up. Dress Goods Worth 40c and 50c zsc BARKER Deliberately tells the truth. Without the quiver of an eyelash he tells it as easily as some don't. ne Gan Always Depend on what Barker's advertisements say. Moth activity begins. Save your furs, woolens, etc., from the ravages of moths. Use \ the right insecticide and use it at once and there’ll be no danger of the pests harming a thing. We have all the common moth destroyers— moth balls, tar camphor, ' genuine camphor gum, etc. Don’t pack away your furs and winter clothing with- out consulting Barker. Barker’s Drug & Jewelry Store BEMIDJI - - MINN. Cotton Fabrics Blankets CottonGoods and Ginghams 3})33 Blanket o 690 worth to 15¢ c Straw Hats at Calicoes in all 5 ; colors at.................. Ladies’, Misses’ and Child- ren’s Straw Hats, excell- ent Bargains 28c¢ to 38c Dress Patteins Muslin Underwear Received a new line of Embroidered Patterns in’ Carmentas: o £ rextallont: Sursses, Voilles a. n d} values at a Price to reach Batistes. v‘everybody. P