Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, May 20, 1912, Page 3

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Tickets for the operetta Sylvia on sale at all Bemidji drug stores. A. G. Wedge, Jr., spent Saturday at International Falls on business. Dr. A.*Kahala of Erskine, spent yesterday in the city with friends. Goods are being sold at a big re- duction at the Henrionnet Millinery Parlors. John was in* triends. Ervickson of Osakis, Minn., the city over Sunday with F. L. Whitney of Grafton, N. is in the city for on business, D, a couple of days Miss Olga Johnson of this city, spent Sunday with friends at Inter- national Fa The funeral of Ole Senstrud was held this afternoon from the home at 1204 Dewey avenue, Don't forget to telephone Dr. J. A. McClure your chicken troubles. Phone 105, J. Shere of Akeley, was in the eity Saturday night en route to Marble where he owns a store. Miss Helen B. Ham of Minneapolis, has arrived in the city and will at once organize a class in music. Dwight D. Miller arrived from Min- neapolis Saturday and is spending a few days in the city on business. Go to Hakkerup for photos. The operetta Sylvia which will be presented in the city hall Thursday night, uses thirty people in the cast. Frank Sutor of Cass Lake, was in the city Saturday evening for a few hours, returning home on the late train. Miss Marjorie Knappen went to Tenstrike Saturday evening to spend Sunday with her aunt, Mrs. M. E. Knappen. Buy your adding machine paper rolls at the Pioneer Office and School Supply Store. Single rolls 10 cents, 3 for 25 cents. A. M. Stedman of Minneapolis, post office inspector, is in the city today having come from Baudette Saturday night. County Attorney Graham M. Tor- rance returned on Saturday from St. Paul, where he presented a case to the supreme court. Mrs. Tom Newton and baby daugh- ter, left this morning for Backus where they will spend the next week »s the guests of friends. Don't fail to attend the millinery sale at the Henrionnet Millinery Par- lors, 309 Minnesota avenue, Goods will be sold at less than cost. Proceeds of the operetta Sylvia, to be given Thursday night in the city hall, will go to the Episcopal church. Cass Lake talent will be used. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Blais of Shovel Lake, were in the city yesterday en route to the twin cities where they will visit friends for some time. like now it— The Model Bread is so near mother’s that the mothers may take a rest. Your grocer has con't forget the name—MODEL. Mr. and Mrs. W. S. LaMont and son, Lawrence, left this morning for Park Rapids where they will be the guests of Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Haradon for a few days. Mr. and Mrs. E. R. Bray of Bag- ley, came to Bemidji yesterday for a short outing. Mr. Bray returned home this morning but Mrs. Bray will | remain here for several days as the guest of friends. C. C. Gowran, of Grand Forks, ar- rived in Bemidji yesterday noon and yeturned to Grand Forks this after- noon. Mr. Gowran is superintend- ing some repairs that are being made cn his cottage at Lakeside. Ed. Moran left Saturday night for Devils Lake, N. D., where he has ac- cepted a position with a newspaper. Mr. Moran will join the band there as cornet player. While here he was a member of the Bemidji band. William McCuaig returned Satur- day night from Minneapolis where he had gone to attend the convention which was held there Thursday. Mr. McCuaig purchased a Maxwell car which he drove home Friday and Saturday. E. C. Kiley, editor of the Grand Rapids Herald-Review, spent Sunday in Bemidji, returning to Grand Rap- ids this noon. Mrs. Kiley is in the St. Anthony hospital recovering from an operation. She is said to be pro- gressing satisfactorily. Profit by the costly experience of those unfortunate people who have lost their money by specnlation, fire or thieves and deposit your hard- earned savings with the Northern National Bank, where you are in- sured against loss from any cause. W. R. Mackenzie, secretary of the Northern Minnesota Development as- sociation, arrived in Bemidji last night. He went to Cass Lake this noon to attend a meeting of the ex- ecutive committee of the association but is expected back tonight. An excellent society drama. Pathe’s Weekly Maine. Hlustrated Song When Women Rule A farce comedy. Mr. and Mrs. John Wilecox of Fowlds, were in the city Saturday en route to Red Wood Falls, Minn,, Wwhere they will spend the next week as the guests of Mr. Wilcox’s broth- er. While in the city they were the guests of Mrs. A. P. Henrionnet. A basket social was held last even- ing at the John Eickstadt farm in the town of Frohn. The affair was given for the benefit of the German Luth- eran church there. $102.75 was cleared from the sale of the baskets, the highest price being paid for a basket was $4.50 and the lowest $2.75. Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Lycan and Mr and Mrs. H. C. Reed left for Crook- ston this morning after an over Sun- day visit with Mr. and Mrs. F. S. Ly- can. Mr. and Mrs. F: 8. Lycan drove as far as Fosston with them in their own car acting as pathfinders. They were accompanied by C. C. Gowran of Grand Forks and L. C. Crotherg of Bemidji. Did you ever before buy full size typewriter paper, the kind that goes with a guarantee at the rate of 500 sheets for 75 cents? We offer you AVON BOND paper put up in boxes at the above price. If you wish a heavier grade paper we have the same at $1.00 a box of 500 sheets. The Bemidjg Pioneer Office Supply Store. Saturday night at the home of the Lride’s parents occurred the marriage of Miss Emma Loitved to Howard Lamb, both of this city. The cere- mony took place at 8 o’clock, Rev. S. E. P. White officiating. Only the immediate friends were present. Mr. and Mrs. Lamb will make their home in this city. Mr. Lamb is connected with Mr. Loitved in the cement work. List of advertised letters “un- claimed” for week ending May 20, 1912. Men: E. J. Arnold, Martin Dooley, Semne Francoeur, John E. Grattan, Orvar Kroon, Marka Ljubo- bratovie, Chris. Larvick, Henry Mar- H. N. Rhodes, Boya Titus; women: Mrs. Edward French, Mrs. Adolph Knudson, Miss Tora Lundkvist (2), Miss Thora Lundkvist, Mrs. M. Ross, Mrs. Fred Scott, Miss L. E. Tytus. You can buy the best carbon paper made, every sheet guaranteed, any weight you desire at $1.00 per box for a good grade that will answer all ordinary purposes; $2.00 for an extra good paper and $2.75 for the best ex- tra faney quality light weight grade. Positively none better made. Each hox contains 100 sheets of paper, size § 1-2x13. Phone your orders, call or write the Bemidji Pioneer Office Sup- ply Store. Phone 31. Security State Bank Building, Bemidji, Minn. Murs. J. C. Courtney entertained the members of the second class of the Methodist Teachers associatiod Sat- vriay evening at her home on 817 Minnesota avenue. lhe evening was spent cocially at th~ close ¢f waich ty 1efreshments were served. The table decorations were pink and white carnations. The guasts found their places by matching cards on whick a verse of seripture had been written. Ihe guests included Mesdames R. H. Muncey, M. F. Cunningham, M. Fhibbs, J. W. Naugle E. H. Denu, C H. Flesher, and Chas. Shannon. A Woman’s Home Missionary so- ciety was organized yesterday after- noon at the Methodist church. Mrs. Cotton Mather of Fort Collins, Colo- rado, who spoke in the Methodist church yesterday morning, organized the society, fourteen members join- ing. Officers for the society were clected and plans were made to hold a meeting once each month, the first meeting to be held June 13. The of- ficers elected were as follows: Mrs. Chas. H. Flesher, president; Mrs. W. Naugle, vice-president; Mrs. B. H. Denu, recording secretary; Mrs. C. N. Shannon, corresponding secretary; Mrs. Bert Getchell, treasurer; -and Mrs. J. L. Botting, secretary of the mite boxes. The mite boxes are giv- en to the children during the year and in them the children put their offerings. One day of the year is put aside to open these and donate the money where it is most needed. Automobile For Sale. My Parry four-passenger touring car for sale or trade. Car in first class condition. Ask for demonstration. Northern Automobile Co., C. W. Jewett. E. H. Sothern and Julla Marlowe will not close their present season |; until the beginning of July. Masestic TheaTRE 3000 Feot of Piotures DeLuxe Rice and Old Shoes One of the most interesting pictures of current events from all over the world, among:them being the burial of 38 bodies taken from the Mysterious Rag Miss Hazelle Fellows There Is Always Something Good In the Next Change, Don’t Miss It quette, L. A. Olson, Peter Peterson, |2 J. | bake until done, (Lubin) (Selig) mA.RNmfl. like money, may atterly vold tmbln]:co!nubh rly vol of use; or sterling, require good management {0 make 1t serve the purposes of sense and ha Inquiries for information on house- hold problems should be addressed to me, care of the Pioneer. ELIZABETH LEWISON. WAYS OF COOKING POTATOES. Potato Puff. Take 2 cupfuls of cold mashed po- tatoes and stir into it 2 tablespoon- fuls of melted butter, beaten to a white cream before adding anything else. Then put into this 2 eggs whipped very light and one cup of cream or milk, salting to taste. Beat all well, pour into a deep dish and bake in a quick oven until it is nicely browned. If properly mixed it will come out of the oven light. s Scalloped Potatoes. For a quart of boiled potatoes, cut very small, allow a large cupful of milk. Use cream if you have it. Make 4 cream dressing of the milk, 1 tea- spoonful of flour, and 1 tablespoon of butter. Cook until it thickens. Put a layer of potatoes in a baking dish, season with salt and pepper and rour on a little of the cream dressing. Continue until all is used. Cover the top with rolled cracker crumbs. and bits of butter. Bake twenty minutes. . Delicatessen Potatoes, 10 baked potatoes, cream sauce, 4 tablespoons of roasted bread crumbs, tablespoons melted butter. Crum- tle the potatoes while warm before taking out of the skins. Make a very thick cream sauce, using 4 teaspoons of flour and 3 tablespoons of melted butter; add milk enough to make the sauce thick. Season with salt and pepper. Put a layer of potatoes in a baking dish, then a layer of cream sauce. Two layers of each are suffi- cient. Bake until the cream sauce browns on top. Put toasted bread crumbs in saucepan with 2 table- spoons of melted butter. When hot, cover the scalloped potatoes with these just before serving. The suc- cess of this dish depends on using baked potatoes, and having the cream sauce thick enough to make a layer that will not mix with the potatoes. . Potatoes au Gratin, * Slice raw potatoes thin into a dish, put plenty of butter with them, and plenty of cheese broken into small rleces. Salt and pepper well. Cover the potato with milk, and make al- most an hour. . Browned Potato Balls, > Cut raw potatoes into balls. Boil them in stock seasoned with onions until not quite tender. Put them in- to a shallow baking pan covered with melted butter, just enough to brown them nicely in a hot oven. Bsfore serving, sprinkle with finely minced parsley. . Potato Farci. Select potatoes of even size, pare end cut off about 1-3 from one end. Hollow out center with a small knife or painted ‘apple corer and fill with chopped cooked or raw beef, mutton, or chicken, well seasoned. Set the rotatoes in a pan in a hot oven, and When served add a spoonful of stock gravy to each po- tato. Garnish with parsley. For a brown gravy to serve with the pota- toes, fry 2 level tablespoons chopped onion in 2 level tablespoons butter until yellow, then stir in 2 level ta- blespoons dry flour and finally add 1-2 pint boiling water gradually, and season with salt and pepper. Beat until smooth, then after cooking 5 minutes strain through a wire strain- er, . Mashed Potatoes with Cheese Sauce. Boil and mash potatoes; to.each 1-2 Cozen large omes add a tablespoon of butter, pepper and salt to tasts, and 1-2 cupful of milk. Form into comi- cal shape with ice cream scoop .or small cups first rinsed in cold: water, and get on platter in oven to keep hot. 'Leave the-oven door partly open, 8o 3 Whil potatoes are boiling make gauce, Melt i1 tablespoon butter in double boiler, [add’ 1 tablespoon, flour and thorough- Ty ‘blend; then add'l cup of hot milk scasoned with. dash of paprica and salt. When this is smooth stir in.1 cup of grated cheese. The cheese will melt in a short:time. Keep sauce hot in double boiler until potatoes are ready. Serve the potatoes on the platter, and the sauce in a gravy boat. This is excellent with broiled steak. Potatoes Finnegan. Make a white sauce by melting 2 rounding teaspoons of butter and 2 ¢f flour, add a scant pint of rich milk. Let boil several minutes, stirring con- stantly, and season with salt, pepper and a little onion juice. Have ready 1 quart of cooked potatoes diced and o cupful of young carrots coarsely chopped. Mix these with the sauce while- hot and sprinkle lightly with parsley when ready and serve. While the carrots do not flavor the pota- | toes, they.make the dish attractive to the eye. . Stuffed Potatoes. Select 6 good sized potatoes, scrub with a brush until they are as white as you can make them; grease the skins lightly with a little bacon grease, and bake until they are done. Remove from the oven, and with a sharp knife cut off one end and scoop out the inside; mash thoroughly with a fork; season well with butter, salt, and a little paprika. Refill the cases and return to the oven, until the ex- posed ends are a light brown. OLD-TIME REMEDY DARKENS THE HAIR Gives Color, Lustre to Faded and Gray Hair—Dandruff Quickly Removed. have been used for hair and scalp troubles. Almost everyone knows the value of such a combination for keeping the hair a good even color, for curing dandruff, itching scalp and falling hair, and for promoting the growth of the hair. Years ago the only way to get a Hair Tonic of this kind was to make it in the home, which was troublesome and not al- ways satisfactory. Nowadays, almost an/ up-to-date druggist can supply his patrons with a ready-to-use pro- duct, skillfully prepared in perfectlyy equipped laboratories. An ideal preparation of this sort is Wyeth’s Sage and Sulphur Hair Remedy, in which Sage and Sulphur are combined with other valuable remedies for scalp troubles and thin, weak hair that is losing its color or coming out. After using this remedy for a few days, you will notice the color gradually coming back, your scalp will feel better, the dandruft will soon be gone, and in less than a month’s time there will be a won- derful difference in your hair. Don’t neglect your hair if it is full of dandruff, losing its color or coming out. Get a fifty cent bottle of Wyeth’s Sage and.Sulphur from your druggist, and see what a few days’ treatment will do for you. All druggists sell it, under guarantee that the money will be refunded if the remedy is not exactly as repre- sented. The Golumbia “IDEAL” Hornless. Graphophone $35.00 This is. (ruly the_one "W' Hornless. Graphophone. It is the first instrument of its kind on the market and was perfected only af- ter many months of npecmhzed laboratory work. Its faultless construction, its un usually beautiful cabinet—which is made of selected guartered oak— together with its generous and pleasing proportions, : all combine to: give it such an appearance of ele- gance and rich, mellow tonal qua ties that on. first. nunn and hear- ing” this Columbia. *“/desl’” Hornless Graphaphone, it is hard to believe” you - have rémembered the price correctly—only . & ,.”.t 1t measures 15 inches square a “the bnl: a‘:; 812 inches high and weighs 25 pounds. Drop+in. and. enjoy a pleasant _ half: hour's music at:the Sign of the 5~ Musical Notes, 4 For generations Sage and Sulphur ° Couldn’t 8tand: for Bestie. A young lontamer of Jassy, Rous mania, fainted the other day in the at a moment when the animals perfectly quiet. She was re- moved before they did more than phow signs of restlessness, and on re- vovering consclousness exclatmed: #Until the beetle’ crawling on one of ke bars 1s taken off I am mot going in again! The MODEL Dry Cleaning House ’Tolephu 537 . 106 Second St. French Dry Cleaning B T Repairing DULUTI MINNESOTA More hhun $100,000.00 recently expended on improvements, 250 mo baths, 60 sample rooms, convenience: Goods Called For and Delivered Eve Luxurlous |nd restaurants and buff uffet. Flem! Palm Room, Men’s Grill, Uolonlll Buffet; Magnificent lobby and public monu. Baliroom, blnn\lat rooms and tory. Located in hioatt of busin tion but overlooking the hu’bor and Lake Buperior. Convenfent to everything. One of the Brsat. Holels of the Northwest Subscribe for The Piomeer 0000000000000 » LODGEDOM IN BE] ® 3 eoeoooooooooooo‘ | s B.P.0.E Bemidji Lodge No. 1052. Regular meeting nights— first and third Thursdays, 8 o'clock—at Masonic hall, Beltrami Ave.,, and Fifth 8t @ 0. 0. ». every second and fourth Sunday evening, at 8 o'clock in basement of Catholic church. Meeting mnights every second and fourth Monday évenings, at Odd Fellows Hall. They cost only 1-2 cent per word per issue, figure it out for yourself. Write : what you want tosay, count F.0. B Regular meeting_ nights every 1st and 2nd Wednes- day evening at 8 o'clock. Eagles hall. s B G AR Regular meetings—First and third Saturday after- noons, at 2:30—et Odd Fel. j)\, lows Halls, 402 Beltrami = Ave. L 0.0. P Bemidji Lodge No. 110 Regular meeting nl‘lll.l L 0. 0. F. Camp No. 34 Regular meeting every second and fourth Wednesdays at 8 ¥/ o'clock at Odd Fellows Hall Rebecca -Lodge. “Regular meeting nights — first and a0 third Wednesday at 8o'clock. —I1. O. O. F. Hall. ENIGETS OF PYTHIAS Bemidji Lodge No. 168. Regular meeting nights—ex- ery Tuesday evening at 8 L o'clock—at the Eagles’ Hall, Third street. the words and divide by 2. That’s the cost per issue. If you want the ad run more than once multiply by the number of insertions you Beltrami Ave., and Fifth St. Bemidjl Chapter No. 70, R A. M. Stated convocations —first and third Mondays, 8 oclock p. m.—at Masonic Hall Zeltrami Ave., and Fifth street. desire. L Telephone 31 l Elkanah (‘Ammlnd‘ry No. ID K. T. Stated conclave—second and fourth Fridays, 8 o’clock P. m.—at Masonic Temple, Bel- trami Ave., and Fifth St Chapter No. 171, F3 Re;uhr meseting nights— first and third Fridays, 8 o'clock — at Masonic Hall, g:lh'lmi Avc.. and Fifth Everyhody Is Doing It - WHAT? M B. A Roosevelt, No. 1528. Regular meeting nights Thursday everings at $ o'clock in Odd Fellows Hall, 402 Beltrami Ave, | Using the Bemidii Pencil SAMARITANS. . Regular meeting nights on the first and third Thursdays in the L O. O. F. Hall at 8 p. m. WHY? SONE OF HERMAN. Meetings held thira - Sunday afternoon of each month at Troppman's Hall. Because it’s the best nickel pencil in the world. This pencil is Absolutely Guar- anteed or your money back at the following places: Barker's Drug and Jewslry Store W. G. Schroeder 0. C. Rood & Co. E. F. Netzer's Pharmacy Wm. McCuaig J, P. Omich’s Cigar Store foe & Markusen F. 6. Troppman & cn. |, Abercrombie -~ - Chippewa Trading Stors, Aed Lake Bemidi Fioneer Uifics Supply Store Retailers wx]l receive immediate slnpmentm gross Ladies’ and Geats' Suits te Order. Freach Dry Cleaning, Pressing and Repairiag- s YEOMANS. Meetings the first Friday Schmidt, 306 Third street. T. BEAUDETTE Merchant Tailor 318 Avesme INSURANCE Roials, Bonds, Real Estate » -First Mortgage Loans on‘:) City and Fu'm

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