Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, October 16, 1912, Page 4

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s [ A Bemidji Citizen Gives Information 600D ADVIGE of Priceless Value, When you suffer from backache, Headaches, dizziness, nervousness, Feel weak, languid, depressed, Have annoying urinary disorders; Do you know what to do? Some Bemidji people do. Read the statement that follows. It’s from a Bemidji citizen. Testimony that can be investigat- ed. Mrs. Carl Golz, 209 Ninth St., Be- midji, Minn., says: “I do not hesitate to recommend Doan’s Kidney Pills. I used -them, getting my supply at Bar- ker's Drug Store and have been greatly benefited. I had a weak and lame back and suffered from back- ache and dizzy spells. My kidneys annoyed me and I had headaches. Af- ter I used two boxes of Doan’s Kid- ney Pills I felt better in every way.” 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.—Adv. No Fly Specks for lowa Food. Do fly specks make food impure? Btate Food and Dairy Commissioner Barney of Iowa says so and.promises prosecutions under the state pure food law against all grocers, butchers and other merchants who expose food- stuffs to flies. Commissioner Barney holds that under the Iowa pure food law food- stuffs so exposed are in fact adulter- gpted and that merchants who offer them for sale after such exposure are liable to prosecution and punishment. Bcreens will have to be placed over all foodtstuffs offered for gale if Commis- sloner Barney is successful in his rosecutions. . Saving Trays. ‘When a japannsd tray becomes old and chipped give it two coats of white paint and one of enamel, the bottom as well as the top. Stand it on the edge to dry after each coat. It will be found as good as nev, as well as very pretty. The snam¥l is easily re- newed. A Blillion, In British computation 1,000,000.000 is & thousand millicns. In the United States, and commonly In this country also, it is called a billlon, though, ety- mologically, the British conception that a million millions makes a bil- lion is undoubtedly correct. Real End of Human Living. Things which never could make a man happy, develop a power to make him strong. Strength, and not hap- piness, or, rather, only that happiness which comes by strength, is the end of human living.—Phillips Brooks. EELLINER TELEPHONE COMPANY. ARTICLES OF INCORPORATION. KNOW ALL MEN BY THESE PRESENTS: That we, the under- signed, citizens of the State of Min- nesota, do hereby assoclate ourselves together for the purpose of creating a corporation under the laws of the State of Minnesota, and to that end do adopt the following articles and certificate of incorporation. ARTICLE 1. The name of this corporation shall be the Kelliher Telephone Company. The general nature of its business shall be the acquiring, constructing, maintaining and operating of a tele- phone system and lines in the village of Kelliher and Beltrami, Koochiching and Itasca counties, Minnesota, transmitting messages by telephone or telephone con- nections, and engage in such , other business as may be incident to or con- venient in connection with the carrying on of said telephone business; and the acquiring by purchase or grant of franchise from said village of Kelliher or any other municipality or body politic, of the right or privilege in the said Village or any other .municipilty, of erecting, maintaining and operating such telephone system and its lines and connections and the transmission of messages by telephone by means there- of; and to do such other things as may be incident to or convenient or neces- sary in carrying on said general busi- ness; and right to acquire, hold, sell or convey any real or personal property, that may be deemed to be necessary in . He says he has been figuring all Bummer on some way to compel the screening of fruits and vegetables in open markets.—Bakers’ Weekly. ¢ Wanted Pay for Doll, The maiming of a china doll recent- Jy caused the war department to con- tue@ @& mass of correspondence and sue an order for a claim board to pass upon the question of damages. ‘The doll belonged to seven-year-old Marion Coggeshall, daughter of Mur ray H. Coggeshall, a New York bank- er, who has a summer hoine at Cape Elizabeth, and was broken by con- pussion incident to heavy artillery practice. The child made her claim without the knowledge of her parents. When Mrs, Coggeshall learned what had oc- ocurred she withdrew her little daugh- ler’s claim, Made His Blessing Retroactive. The father of a family who had een striving to bring up his children dn the way they should go was very uch annoyed at his son’s uncouth bit of helping himself to a few bites ore grace had been said. The tereotyped form called for: “A bless- fing on what we are about to eat” ut one occasion being particularly exasperating, he astounded the young man by adding to his petition, “and that which has already been ten.” Fully Explained. Every now and again some individ- arises to tell us Why We Are, d What We Are, and How We Know Why We Are, and How We Are What We Know, and What We Would Be if We Weren't, and: What, Precise- ly, Areness Is, also Wereness, and Why We Aren't What We Mightn't Have Been if We Weren't, and other pimple and entrancing facts. Such an individual is called a philosopher. +~—Bulletin, Stdney. . OLD TIME REMEDY DARKENS THE HAIR Gives Color, Lustre to Faded and Gray Hair—Dandruff Quickly Removed: For generations Sage and Sulphur 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 any up-to-date druggist ocan supply his patrons with a ready-to-use prod- uct, skillfully prepared in perfectly equipped laboratories. An ideal preparation of this sort 18 Wyeth’s Sage and Sulphur Hair Remedy, in which Sage and Sulphur ere combined with other valuable remedies for scalp troubles and thin, weak hair that is losing its color or coming‘out. After using this rem- edy for a few days, you will notice the color gradually coming back, your scalp will feel better, the dan- druff will soon be gone, and i less than a month’s time there will be a wonderful difference in your hair. Don’t neglect your hair if it is full of dandruff, losing its color or com- ing out. Get a fifty cent bottle of Wyeth’s Sage and Sulphur from your druggist, and see what a few day’s treatment will do for you. All drug- gists sell it, under guarantee that said business. To acquire by lease, or other contract, the right to use real or personal property in the carrying on of said business. The principal place of transacting the business shall be at the village of Kelli- her, Beltrami County, Minnesota. ARTICLE IL The period of duration of this cor- poration shall be thirty years from the first day of September, 1912. ARTICLE IIL The names and places of residence -of the incorporators of this company are as follows: Names Residences William Burce, William Lennon, Henry Pfund, ‘William T. Barry, ARTICLE IV. The management of said corporation shall be vested in its Board of Direct- ors, which shall consist of four mem- bers. The names and addresses of those composing the Board of Directors, to hold office until the first annual elec- tion and until their successors are elected and qualified, are as follows: Names Addresses William Burce, Kelliher, Minnesota. William Lennon, Kelliher, Minnesota. Henry Pfund, Kelliher, Minnesota. William T. Barry, Kelliher, Minnesota. The said Board of Directors shall be elected by the stockholders at their an- nual meeting in each year. The annual meeting of the stock-holders shall be held at the office of the Company at its usual place of business on the first Tuesday of January of each year, the first annual meeting to be held on the first Tuesday of January, 1913. ARTICLE V. The amount of capital stock of this company shall be $15000,divided into 150 shares of $100 each, face value; and the par value of each share shall be $100. The stock shall be paid for at least at its face value at the time it is issued and shall be issued and delivered in such amounts, and at such time, and for such price, as its Board of Direct- ors may by resolution determine. ARTICLE VI The highest amount of indebtedness or liability to which this corporation shall at any time be subject shall be $10000.00. This corporation shall have the power to issue its notes, bonds or other ob- ligation and make its mortgage or mortgages or other conveyances to secure the same as may be determined by resolution of. the Board of Direct- ors. Kelliher, Minnesota, Kelliher, Minnesota. Kelliher, Minnesota, Kelliher,” Minnesota. ARTICLE VIL The other officers of said corporation shall be a President, Vice-President, Secretary, Treasurer and a General- Manager, who must, with the exception of the' General-Manager, be owners of stock of said Company. They shall hold office for the year after their elec- tion and until their successors are elec- ted and qualified. Any two of said offices may be held by the same person except the President or Vice-President. The first officers of said corporation shall be as follows: President, William Burce; Vice-President, William Lennon; Secretary, Henry Pfund; Treasurer, Willlam T. Barry; General-Manager, William Burce. They shall hold their offices until first annual meeting and until their successors are elected and qualified. Executed and certified to this 16th day of Sept, 1912. William Burce; William Lennon; Henry Pfund; Wm. T. Barry. Executed in the presence of, John C. Russell; Thos. Morrison. State of Minnesota, & County of Beltrami. Be it known that on this 16th day of September, 1912, personally appeared before me, a Notary Public in and for said County, Willlam Burce, William Lennon, Henry Pfund and Wililam T. Barry, to me known to be the persons named in and who executed the fore- going Articles and Certificate of In- corporation, and acknowledge that they executed the same as their own free act and deed. (SEAL) John C. Russell. Notary Public, Beltrami County, Minnesota. My Commission expires July 12, 1919. State of Minnesota, Department of State I hereby certify that the within in- strument was filed for record in this office on the 9th day of October, A. D. 1912, at 8 o'clock P. M. and was duly recorded in Book W. 3 of incorporations on page 47. JULIUS A. SCHMAHL, Secretary of State. 41669 Office of Register of Deeds, Beltrami_County, Minn. I hereby certify that the within in- strument was filed in this office for record on the 14th day of October, A. D. 1912 at 10 o'clock A. M. and was duly rzcurded n“bodk 7- of Misc. on page (SEAL) the money will be refunded if the |40, remedy is not exactly as represented. —Adv, J. 0. HARRIS, (BEAL) Register of Deeds. 1015:3017 : % ; This Sale In- _ cludes Our En- tire Stock. the Store Is Where big saving to you: shawls, bonnets, etc. confidence that you ge Will Destroy Moths. \ It is said that the following will destroy moths, eggs and larvae in a closet: Place a brick on the floor of the closet and on this a tin or iron pan. Heat a brick until it becomes very hot and then put it in the pam: Pour hot, strong vinegar on this brick, then close the door and keep it closed for 24 hours. The steam from the vinegar will kill any live thing that may be in the closet. Little Doubt About It. Married a month, a young man told the magistrate that his wife had done the followfng things: Torn up the marriage-certificate, pawned the ring, torn up her wedding-dress, assaulteg him. She followed him to court, he added, but he managed to dodge her The Clerk: “You took her for better or worse, and you seem to have gol the worse.” ' 8pecialists Recommend Yawning. In the opirnion of learned specialists #0 one can be healthy unless he or phe does a certain amount of yawning. ‘When you yawn you expel from the fungs a lot of superfluous air; the breathing muscles of both the chest pnd the throat are strengthened by rawning. One of the Most Aftractive Places In sweaters, flannel sacques, skirts, kimonas, bath robes, dvesses, crib blankets and carriage robes, You can come with perfect Y CronctG 2, Everything Ready-to-War _great third Anniversary Sale. Beaufiful Gowns &, and Dresses, Spec- %% fally Priced for this Great Bargain Giv- ing Event, No two of our gowns are alike. The wide range of colors, the richness and variety in fabrics used, render the selection of a be- coming gown a pleas- ure and satisfaction. Gowns of chiffon, marqusitte, voil, nets, velvets; taffetas and‘ crepe de chine. Ex- traordinary values at $11.50, $14.50, $18.50 and $22.50, All the Pretty Dainty Things for Babies Are Shown. The following Infant’s Wear is on sale at a Cosy sleeping garments, t our regular stock, as we have bought nothing for a special sale. Classified Department HELF WANTED WANTED—A competent woman or girl that can cook and keep house. Phone Hotel Stechman, Tenstrike, or inquire 1215 Belt. avenue. WANTED—Good girl for general housework. Mrs. H. W. Bailey, 605 Minnesota avenue. WANTED—Good girl for general housework at once. Apply to Mrs. John Hormann, 417 Irvin Ave. WANTED—A girl to take care of baby. Inquire Abell’'s Lunch Room. ‘WANTED—An office boy for - the winter. Inquire of Tom Smart. FOR SALE FOR SALE—Typewriter ribbons for every make of typewriter on the market at 50 cents and 75 cents each, - Every ribbon sold for 76 cents guaranteed. Phone orders promptly filled. Mail orders given Coats Much Reduced| Beautiful Tailored Attractive novelti;es in new Sllils M Greai SaV' Fall Coats, in all the new fabrics and styles such as Chinchillas, Velours, Scotch Mixtures, English Tweeds, Plush and Caracule. ! Plain tailored Coats, novelty styles and combination colors. Every model bearing the same earmarks of “well-bred style in this sale. Coats for Women and Misses, in all sizes at $8.75, $13.50, $18.50, $22.50 -_——— Especially Good Values in Dress Skirts at $4.35 Smart tailored models in the new straight styles; new models introducing new cloths, snappy mixtures. Outing Nlght Gowns During this sale we offer o extensive line of Outing Flannel Night Gowns, in all sizes, regular $1.75 and $1.50 values at 95¢c This is our Third Anniversary Sale and Fall Opening, the largest Bargain-Giving Event ever held in Bemidji the same careful attention as when you appear in person. Phone 31. The Bemidji Pioneer Office Supply Store. FOR SALE—The Bemidji lead pen- cil (the best nickel pencil in the world, at Netzer's, Barker’s, 0. C. | Rood’s, McCuaig’s, Omich’s, Roe & Markusen's and the Pioneer Office Supply Store at 6 cents each and 50 cents a dozen. FOR SALE—House and lot, 1013 Dewey avenue. Will sell this prop-| erty at a great sacrifice for cash, also two lots on Dewey avenue known as the Sprague lots. Ad-| dress C, care Pioneer. FOR SALE—104 acres of hardwood timber land in section 31, township 148, north range 34, town of Lib- erty, Beltrami county. Price for whole tract $1,600. Apply at Pio- neer office. FOR SALE—Small fonts of type, several different points and in first class condition. Call or write this office for proofs. Address Be- -~ midji Pioneer, Bemidji, Minn. Our Third Anniversary Sale Now Under Way Great has been the enthusiasm shown at the opening of our \ Many women taking advantage of the extraordinary values offered here during this Sale. Never before have the women of this vicinity had an opportunity to buy seasonable merchandise at such a reduction in Fall Opening Display of Beautiful Gowns and Dancing Frocks ings, Heavy cheviots, serges, diagonals and mixtures, in navy, tan, brown, gray and black. tailored models; many with “velvet collars Many plain and cuffs. All are Skinner satin lined and all New Fall Models. Rare Bargains at $19.50, $22.50, $24.50 and wp to $31.50 ur 35¢, 50¢, B5¢, $1.15, Remember-—-Nothing Offered In this Sale that Is Not Up to the T. J. Grang & Go.'s HIGH STANDARD of Quality Merchandise TG Crone$§ s in town of Liberty, section 25. A snap if taken this fall. Write or call on Tom Smart or G. E. Carson. FOR SALE—65 foot lot on Irvine avenue near Red Lake depot. Will sell cheap if taken at once Address S, care Pioneer. FOR SALE—One good team, two cows, one automatic seperator, one cultivator. C. H. Cassler, phone 408-2, FOR SALE—Rubber stamps. The Pioneer will procure any kind of rubber stamp for you on short no- tice. FOR SALE—Kitchen range, bed and dresser. Inquire 1018 Bemidji avenue. 3 FOR RENT FOR RENT—Warm House. John Ziegler. * MISCELLANEOUS ADVERTISERS—The great state of North Dakota offers-gnlimtted op- Inquire prices. Children’s Dresses A variety of pretty styles, plain colors and assorted stripe and checks, neatly trimmed with pipings and bands of contrasting colors. Plain Norfolk and sailor styles. The entire lot included in our third Anniversary Sale. Prices SavingsinThis Sale #re From 20 to 60 per cent for You. $1.75, $2.75 and Up Daily and Sunday Courier-News, the only seven-day paper in the state and the paper which carries the largest amount of classified advertising. The Courler-Newa covers North Dakota like a blank- et; reaching all parts of the state the day of publication ;it is the paper to use in order to get re- sults; rates one cent per word first ingertion, on-half cent per word succeeding insertions; fifty cents per line per month. Address the Courier-News, Fargo, N. D. o WANTED—100 merchants in North- ern Minnesota to sell “The Bemid- 31” lead pencil. Will carry name of every merchant in advertising columns of Pioneer in order that all receive advantage of advertis- ing. For wholesale prices write or phone the Bemidji Ploneer Of- fice Supply Co. Phone 31. Be- midji, Minn. BOUGHT AND SOLD—Second hand furniture. 0dd Fellows building, across from postoffice, phone 129. portunities for Business to classi- fied advertisers. The recognized FOR SALE—80 acres good farm land advertising medium is the Fargo e S ek b St WANTED—To buy Gasoline launch must be cheap, apply. at No. 406 _ Minn. Ave, H ]

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