Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, June 8, 1912, Page 3

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

SATURDAY, JUNE 8, 1912, DATES T0 REMEMBER. Saturday, June $—C. E. conven- tion sessions morning. afternoon and evening. . Saturday, June 8 — Preliminary hearing of Charles Swanland. Sunday, June 9—U. E. convention sessions all day. Wednesday, June 12— land sale, Bemidji. State school Friday, June 14—Faimers’ day in| Clearbrook. Monday, June 17—Summer 9n‘hnn1 begins. Monday, June 17—TFirst University week. Monday, June 17-- ing of the city council. Tuesday, J vention at Chicago. day of tegular meet- National con- Wm. Bruce of Kelliher, on busine s here to- day - Miss Helen Enfield of Ames, Towa, arrvived last night to spend the sum- mer with the Misses Grace and Mable Blyth. A. A, Buckingham of Crookston, who has spent the past few days in the city on business, rcturned home today. Will Russell returned this morn- ing from Thief River Falls where he has spent the past two weeks visit- ing friends. Upholstering and furaiture repair- ing. Have your furnitire renovated and made as good as new. William Krause, Tel. 697. Mrs. C. R. Sanborn left this morn- ing for Brainerd where she will be the guest of Miss Nell Fie Alder- man for a few days. Savings deposits made tn the North ern National Bank up to and includ- ing the 10th of the month draw in- terest for the full month. H. L. Holmes of Bathgate, was in the city this morning en route to Hackensack where he will open the Holmes cottage for the summer. Mrs. C. A. Bilben and son, and Miss Mary Lucisjausky, of Walker, spent vesterday in the city on their way to Federal Dam where they will visit friends. J. C. McGhee, principal of the Ten- strike schools, is in the city today. Mr. McGhee will go out to his farm northwest of town for the summer months. The North End club was enter- tained yesterday afterncon at a thim- ble bee by Mrs. E. N. Ebert, ' The club consists of eight ladies living in the north end of town. Go to Hakkerup for photos. A. C. DePuy, state forester of Park Rapids, was in the city this morning en route home from points along the Minnesota and International railway where he has been working. A sprained ankle may as a rulé be cured in from three to four days by applying Chamberlain’s Liniment and observing the directions with each bottle. For salc by Barker’s Drug Store. Mr. and Mrs. Cleveland King, Mr. and Mrs. Lee King and John Lam- bert, returned last night from New London, Minn., where they were called by the death of their mother, Mrs. C. A. King. Mrs. I. C. Johnston cf Grand Rap- ids, is in the city for a few days as the guest of her sister, Mrs. Agnes Robinson. Mr. Johnston will join his wife here this afternoon, for an over Sunday visit. Hal Huffman is expected home from Minneapolis 5 evening to spend his summer vacation with his parents. Mr. Huffman has just com- pleted his sophomore year at the Uni- versity of Minnesota. Buy your adding machine paper rolls at the Pioneer Otiice and School Supply Store. Single rolls 10 cents, 3 for 25 cents. Lloyd Davis of Akeley, arrived in the city last evening ‘c be the guest of Dr. and Mrs. J. T. Tuomy. Mr. Davis has spent the past nine months attending the University of Minne- sota where he is studving medicine. Miss Rose Barrette will leave in the morning for International Falls. She will be accompanied by her cous- in, Miss Olive Fortier of Crookston, and together they will be guests .of Miss Barrette's sisters for a few days. Mrs. E. L. Grinolds left this morn- ing for an extended visit with rela- tives. While away Mrs. Grinolds will visit at the twin cities, Fair Haven, Spring Grove and Fergus Falls. She plans on being gone about two months, There is no real need of anyone be- ing troubled with constipation. Chamberlain’s Tablets will cause an agreeable movement of the bowels without any unpleasant effect. Give them a trial. For sale hy Rarker’s Drug Store. Miss Margie Arnold of Crookston, and her guest, Miss T. Stewart, of Snohomish, Wash., arrived from Blackduck last evening and left on the night train for Crockston where they will be the guests of Miss- Ar- nold’s mother. Mrs G. M. Macneil of Winnipes, who ‘has spent the past few weeka'at Won By Waiting Mustrated Sorfl When My Charcoal Industry very amusing. Masestic THeaTRE Friday and Saturday’s Program 3000 Feet of Animated Plotures The Price of Silence Silence is golden, never more 8o than in this strong Western drama. A melodramatic picture thnt holds attention throughout. ark Diana Dreams of Me C. J. Woodmansee An interesting and instructive picture, “That Houn’ Dawg’’ This is the “Dawg” you have been singing about and it certainly is Entire Change of Program Sunday ““Qypsy Blood,’’ a Blgmfm'l:'a' zR‘sel Production June an (Vltagraph) (Lubin) In Cuba (Pathe) Pathe) Walker visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Kinkell, returned home this morning. She was accompanied to Bemidji by her mother who re- turned to Walker this morning. The Misses Ernestine and Ruth Ja- cobi and Rheinhold and Jack Jacobi arrived from Grand Forks this noon head of the lake. Mr. and Mrs. Ja- cobi and Miss Qeraldine will drive over from Grand Forks in their ma- chine on Monday. Miss Tone Higgins of Nebish, who has been teaching at the Tenstrike school during the past nine months, is| in the city for a couple of days rep-| resenting the Tenstrike Christian En- | deavor at the convention which is being held here. hile here Miss| Higgins will be the guest of friends. | Did you ever betore 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 hoxes at the above price. If you wish a heavier grade paper we have the same at $1.00 a box of 500 sheets. The Bemidji Pioneer Office Supply Store. The eighth grade graduating class of Tenstrike held their graduating exercises last evening at Tenstrike. The program consisted of songs and drills and the commencement ad- dress was given by Rev. Chas. H.| Flesher of this city. The graduating class consisted of two members, George Schulke and Wilbur Morris, “Deutscher Tag"” will be celebrated | with a picnic at the khome of Her- man Eickstadt, six miles east of Be- midji, on Sunday, June 9, under the auspices of the local Sons of Herman lodge, to which all German speaking people and their friends are cordial- ly invited. Cars will leave the city hall at 2 p. m,, fare $1.00 for the round trip. President Frank L. McVey, of the| University of North Dakota, will leave next Thursday for a summer tour of Europe. President McVey is scheduled to make several important addresses while abroad. cottage at Grand Forks bay has been let for the season and Mrs. McVey will spend the summer with friends at Lake Minnetonka. When your child has whooping cough be careful to keep the cough loose and exporation easy by giv- ing Chamberlain’s Coughk Remedy as may be required. This remedy will also ligquify the tough mucus and make it easier o expectorate. Tt has been used successfully in many epi- demics and is safe and sure. For sale by Barker’s Drug Store. Miss Mary Simons, who has been engaged as teacher in the Ray school during the past nine months, return- ed home yesterday. Miss Simons has spent the past week camping with a party of friends at Bena. She was accompanied here by Miss Olive Stephenson of Long Prairie who has been a member of the International Falls teaching corps during the past term. Miss Stephenson was also a member of the camping party. She left for her home this morning. 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 fancy quality light weight grade. Positively none better made. Eath box 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. to open the Jacobi cottage at the |} iclean and healthy, gives the The McVey | To Water Consumers. Will flush storm sewers and dead end hydrants Sunday. . George Kirk. Excellent. Friend—“How are you getting on| #ith your play?” Dramatist—“Almost finighed; I have only two more peo ple to kill off."—Fliegende Blaetter. CRANDMOTHERS USED SAGE TEA {To Darken the Hair and Restore Gray and Faded Hair to Its Natural Color It is easier to preserve the color of the hair than to restore it, al- though it is possible to do both. Our grandmothers understood the secret They ‘made a “sage tea,”” and their dark, glossy hair long after middle life was due to this fact. Our moth- ers have gray hairs before they are fifty, but they are beginning to ap- preciate the wisdom of our grand- mothers in using “sage tea” for their hair and are fast following suit. The present generation has the ad- vantage of the past in that it can get a ready-to-use preparation call- ed Wyeth’s Sage and Sulphur Hair Remedy. As a scalp tonic and color restorer this prepartion is vastly su- perior to the ordinary “sage tea” made by our grandmothers, The growth and beauty of the hair depends on a healthy condition of the scalp. Weyth’s Sage and Sulphur Hair Remedy quickly kills the dand- ruff germs which rob the hair of 1ts life, color and lustre, makes the scalp hair strength, color and beauty, and makes it-grow. Get a 50 cent bottle from your druggist today. He will give your money back if you are not satisfied after a fair trial. machines which pass the through boiling starch in such a way that they are not handléd. One ma- chine will. handle 1,000 collars an hour and the collar ironing machine will handle sixty a minute. ture of the plant is that all belting and machinery is in the basement and the second story ceilings are tin covered so that once ite clothes reach the drying and iron rooms, they have left the vegion of dirt and overhead dust. i Mr. Trask is assisted in the laun- dry by Mrs. Trask, Miss Bertha Trask and seven girls. For local customers,. he has a wagon delivery: service and for out of town customers, an express | serviee, here has seen a materidl increase in fias 4 CLEAN PLANT Bemidji Steam Laundry Machinery is Placed in Basement—No Dirt in Ironing Room. LABOR SAVING MACHINES Bemidji has at least one plant that is clean—for that is Its business. This plant is. the Bemidji fteam Laundry, owned by J. J. Trask and operated under his personal supervision. The laundry is designed to turn out clean clothes in the shortest possible time With the least wear and tear. The present plant is the result of 2 natural and steady growth during | the three years in which Mr. Trask has been operating the laundry. Fow of the operations are done by hand and labor saving machinery is the rule. Only fancy goods, sych as shirt waists, dresses 2nd-good shirts are handled from the time they are brought into the office dirty until they leave it clean. Mr. Trask has so arranged his plant that when a bundle of dirty clothing is left in the office, it is ment. There. it is sérted and made ready for the washers.; Each class of goods, such as white 'shirts, colored shirts, stockings and, table ware, is washed by itself. The soap used is the best on the market and each class of goods has the soap which is best suited for it. in soft distilled water. All clothes are washed From the basement, the washed clothes are taken to the second floor and put in a steam’ heated drying room. When dry, they go to the ir- oning machines where gix girls make them ready for delivery. one large ironer for table cloths and large pieces; a speci2l machine for ironing collars; one that iron cufts and neck bands; one that iron bos- oms, and one that irons the rest of the shirt. by hand. goods cannot get torn. There is Fancy goods are ironed All irons are round so that Mr.Trask has installed two starch - goods One fea- dropped through a chate to the base- |[. boosters, OO0 0OO900065 2@ @ DAILY MARKET REPORT, @ 0900009090 C 0000 @ Butter, dalry, per pound. .$ .28 Butter, creamery, per. pound.. .32 Lettuce, per bushel . Asparagus, per dozen . Rhubarb, per pound . ‘Wheat, bushel... "..... Oats, bushel Rye, bushel“...... S e P Barley, bushel .....: .. 100 Corn, 756 pound sack ........ 1.36 Bran and shorts, per 100 1b... 1.50 Potatoes, bushel ............ .76 Clover seed, pound .29 Timothy, pound . 18 Alfalfa, pound .26 Kentucky blue grass, peund... .36 It is now well known that no more than one case of rheumatism in ten requires -any internal -treatment whatever. All that is needed is & free application of Chamberlain’s Lini- ment and massaging the parts at each application. Try it and see how quickly it will relieve the pain and soreness. Sold by Barker’s Drug Store. The Pioneer ‘Want Ads I CASH WITH ORDER { }/2 Gent Per Word Per lssue | Regular charge rate 1 cent per word per insertion. than 15 cents. No ad taken for less Phone 31 HELP WANTED GIRL WANTED—At once Erickson Hotel, —_—————— FOR SALE A AN A AR RSN SR ¥OR SALE—Typewriter ribbons for every make of typewriter an the wmarket at 50 cents and 76 cents each. Every ribbon sold for 75 cents guaranteed. ‘Phone orders roromptly filled. Mail orders given the same careful attention as when you appear in person. Phone 31. “The Bemidji Pioneer Office Supply Store. at the |FOR SALE—The Bemidji lead pen- pencil (the best nickle pemcil 1n the world) at Netzer’s, Barker’s, 0. C. Rood’s, McCuaig’s, Omich’s, Roe and Markusen’s and the Plo- neer Office Supply Store at & cents |1 each and 50 cents a dozen. FOR SALE—Small fonts of type, several different points and In Sirst class condition. Each year that he has been. his volume of business and Mr. Trask: e S R s ——— | WANT BEMIDJI BUTT is one of Bemidji’s most enthusiastic | Call or write “midji Pioneer, Bemidji, Minn. « rubber stamp for m on .short motice. FOR SALE—Business buiiding on 3rd St. Essy terms. W. C. Klein, Bemidji, Minn. FOR SALE—Fresh milk cow. . In- quire Raymond’s residence, Ny- more. ; i FOR RENT FOR RENT—Furnished rooms with “bath. Cver Grotte's Varlety store FOR RENT—Two furnished rooms at 416 Minnesota Ave. FOR RENT—Furnished rooms for rent. 510 4th St. LOST AND FOUND FOUND—Two small pocketbooks each containing small amount of change. Owners may have same by calling at this office and prov- ing property. MISCELLANEOUS WANTED—You to know that “Doc. Blane’s Indica Corn Cure” will cure your corns, bunicns, callouses. Guaranteed to do so and it will. Send twenty-five cents for a bottle to convince yourself. Don’t delay, Do it now. Sent postpaid to any address. Address 912 27th Ave. NE., Minneapolis, Minn. BOUGHT AND SOLD—Second hand furniture. Odd Fellows building, across from postofiice, phone 129. WANTED—Board and room in ex- change for light house work by lady. Address P. O Box 495. WANTED—Washing called for and delivered. Mrs. Mary Blandin, 1206 Irvine Ave. 7 C. G.-JOHNSON nds Loans ~ Stocks Office—214 Beltirami Ave. THE SPALDING Dnhnh'- Lml llfltun Hotel DULUTH . MINNESOTA recently ug:lndud More than n.:l.mn o ooton "5. atral "ll oo of the Great Relols |l Stop at the Hotel Nicollet inMinnespelts “Recognized as Convenient Central the Really Good" Comfortable W.-lilltn- Ave. between l'lplll( and Henneopin Aves. AN 200 IIOOMS-‘OI .00 UPWARD oderate Priced Cafe “If I insist on eating Bemidji butter I know it will help the local creanxery, the business men back of it and ‘the farmers who - supply the cream,” said one of Bemidii’s best housekeepers this morning. ‘This is the kind of loyal support every housewife in the city should lend to this growing local institution. = The funeral of Mrs. C. A. King of this city, whose death occurred on Tuesday at New London, was held Thursday. afternoon at Hawick, Minn. Mrs. King was in the best of health until about five minutes before her death, heart fallure being the cause of it. She and her hushand, Levi King, had been visiting Mrs. King’s daughter, Mrs. John Harris at New London, Minn., for three weeks. Mrs. King was buried beside her for- mer husband and two daughters, at Hawick. She was a member of the G. A, R. circle of this city and was very well known here. She is sur- vived by her husband, two sons and three daughters, and het father, John Motts of Eagle Bend. Each age of our lives has its joys. 0ld people should be happy, and they will be if Chamberlain’s Tablets are taken to strengthen the digestion and keep the bowels regular. These | ple of middle age and older;-For for BEMIDJI CREAMERY BUTTER. lf he hasnt itin stock make him get it for you. Be loyal to your home town and insist that your table serve BEMIDJI MERY BUTTER. tablets are mild and gentle in:thelr|] action and especially suitable for peo. i this office for progfs. Address Be- KEXKEKE K KKK KKK * RAILROAD TIME CARDS, * AL EEEEE RS SRR S & $0Q BAILBOAD 162 East Bound Leaves 163 West: Bound Leaves 188 Bast Bound Leaves 187 West Bound Leaves GREAT NORTEERN 33 West Bound Leaves .. 3:30 pm 34 East Bound Leaves .. 35 West Bound Leaves 36 East Bound Leaves 36 East Bound Leaves 106 South Bound Leaves Freight West Leaves at Freight East Leaves at MINNESOTA & mAm 32 South Bound Leaves 31 North bound Leaves 24 South Bound Leaves 33 North Bound Leaves Frelght South Leaves at Freight North Leaves at MINN., RED LAKE & MAN. 1 North Bound Leaves 2 South Bound Leaves e EHEKEKKEKEKXKKK KKK ¥ Lake Bemidji Time Table * * East Bemidji..6:30 a. m. and 5:20. p. m. Fare 10c. Grand Forks Bay and Down RIVOF . soocvccicnccannnansss 9 a m Fare 25c. All Points on the Lake. -1 p. m. Fare 25c. All Summer Resorts..7:30 and 8:30 p. m. Fare 25c. Down the Mississippi River to the Dam 22 mile trip and 1 hour stop at the dam. Boat leaves 2:30 p. m., return- ing at 5:30. Fare, Round Trip, 50c. Chilaren Malf Fare. Fhone 318 CAPT. W. B. MacLACHLAN. EREKKKKKK KKK KKK K * PROFESSIONAL CARDS. ¥ LR R R R R S R RUTH WIGHTMAN TEAGHER OF PIANO Leschetitsky Method Residence Studio 917 Minnesota Ave. Phone 168 MUSIC LESSONS 'MISS SOPHIA - MONSEN TEAGHER OF PIAND AND HARMONY Studio at 921 Beltrami Avenue LAWYERS D. H. FISK. _ ATTORNEY AT LAW Office over Baker's Jowelry Stors —— e PHYSICIANS, SURGEONS DR. ROWLAND GILMORE PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Offico—Miles Block DR. E, A. SHARNON, M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON in Mayo Block ‘Phone 396 Res. "Phone 397 DR. C. R. SANBORN PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON lonal onrrlntlhfl Bank, Bemidyl, e DE. E. H. SMITH PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Offics 1n Winter Block DR. E. H. MARCUM PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office in Maye Blook "Phone 18 Residence Phone 818 W. JOHNSON PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office over Securtly Bank DENTISTS DR. D. L. STANTON DENTIST Office in. Winter Block DR. J. T. TUOMY 10t National Bank:Blds. - Tele 380.

Other pages from this issue: