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"friends at her store—Adv. N oI L. Latteral of Kelliher was in Bes midji yesterday. J. H. Larson of Little Fnlls, spent/ yesterday in Bemidji, Chas. Beauleau of Red Lake, speut yesterday in Bemidji. J. V. Claypool of Coleraine spent yesterday in Bemidji. A. H. Harris transacted business at Virginia, Thursday. Peter Saresin of Mizpah was in Bemidji yesterday on business. Big crowd at the and Sunday.—Adv. The U. C.T.s gave anothex of their dances in the cit hall last evening.| Fred La Brie of Gemmell, was.a business visitor in Bemidji yesterday. Mrs. M. Stonedahl and daughter, Mary of Leonard, were in Bemidjl yesterday. Erwin Keezar of Warren is spend- ing a few days as the guest of his uncle, W. A. Worth. Mrs. Ralph E. Quinn, Mrs. George Kerr and Miss B. McGarry, of Brain- erd, arrived in Bemidji yesterday. A. G. Wedge, Jr., returned this morning from the cities where he has been attending a forestry board meeting. The Epworth League and the even- ing preaching service in the Metho- dist church will be at 7 and 8 o’clock respectively. Graduates of Mankato Commercial college, Mankato, Minn., have paying | position awaiting them. Send for| catalog.—Adv. Miss Naomi Johnson will return this evening from Park Rapids, Min- nesota, where she has spept her spring vacation. Pine River Sentinel: E. Stutson is in Bemidji with a car load of work horsse of which he is disposing for Bowman and Christian. T. J, Brophy of Spooner arrived in the city last night and will be the guest of his sister, Mrs. Frank Me-| Manus for about a month. Mrs. E. L. Callahan of St. Paul was in Bemidji yesterday on~ business. Miss Callahan is . interested 'in the] Bemidji Townsite company. | Mrs: Fallon = wishes to announce that she has fully recovered and will be pleased to meet the trade and her Mayne Stanton returned from Grand Rapids Thursday afternoon| after having spent a day with his father, Judge C. W. Stanton. Miss Mary Simons will return to her school at Saum, Minnesota, this evening, after spending her vacation with her parents in this city. Miss Helen Hayner returned this morning from Tenstrike where she has been vistiing her grandmother and other friends for the past week. J. J. Opsahl and sons, Leo, and Morris, will return this evening from Akeley, Minnesota, where they have been for several days past on busi- ness. Brainerd Daily Dispatch: Mr. and Mrs. M. J. Phillips went to Bemidji last night, called there by the sick- nes of his grandmother, Mrs. M. Flint. Miss Edith Edgar of Bagley was in Bemidji yesterday. - Miss Edgar has Brinkman Theatre Where Everybody Goes Booking in Conjunction and Splitting the Shows With the Orpheum Theatre, Fargo. “Vaudeville Frogram Gycling Peids In Their Own Original Com~dy Cycling Novelty Act. Featuring Gus Reid, the ‘World’s Comedy Unicyclist Pierce & Knoll Comedy, Singing-and Talking Oddity. Taking An Order. Hattie Mack Comedienne Picture Program The Universal Film M'f'g. Co., Offers 101 - Bison 101 Electrifying Two Reel Western Feature Half Breed Scout Red Flowers imperils her life to save the white girl. ' Dickson, half breed, recognizes his old rival and the girl he loves. Eclair Comedy PI] A Dick's Wife “The Sole Aim of this Theatre Is to Present those Photo Plays Which Please Our Patrons The Brinkman Orchestra Show Starts 7l0---9'l° Admission 10c and 25c Groat Ocean Disaster Showing - Here One Night Only, April rink Saturday | menu. | vacation with {National Bank.—Adv. {les H. Flesher officiating. Mr. -|luth Normal “grounds is dry and many young me A Western ‘comedy-drama, fea Mllustrated Song: ““The Rest Cure’” xt Monday and OI.D TAHITE.”’? A s tion made and._ac! in "Whon the Tide Is Turning”’ = C. J. Woodmansee -“Orange Growing’’ (Lubin Interesting scenes in tne orange ‘groves. A farce comedy that will drive away the blues. ndous Something out of the ordinary. TONIGHT PIGWRES DELUXE «Just Show" ‘People’” (Vitagraph) An emotional, melodramatic picture which keeps us .deeply “in. sym; pathy with a pretty circus pertormer “The Making of Broncho Bill" (Essanay turing G: M. Anderson. (Lubin). Tuesday, "A TALE OF roduc- the South Soa lands. been teaching at the Cross Lake school en the Red Lake reservation the past year but has resigned. " Miss Melba Anderson of Thief Riv-y er Falls, who has been the guest of | her sister Miss Nannie Anderson, of | this city for the past few days, will| return to her school tomorrow muru-! ing. Rev. J. H. Randahl returned yes-| terday from Quiring where he offii- ciated at the funeral of Mrs. Charles Johnson. Mrs. Johnson leaves a hus- band and three children to mourn her death. . Remember the men’s annual ham and egg and flap jack supper in the| Presbterian church basement, Tues- day evening, April 15th. Watch for Adv. i I Miss Winnifred Richardson of| Terrabone, Minnesota, returned to| her school at Belgrade this morning, | after having spent her week’s spring | the family of her, brother, A. A. Richardson. | Tomorrow afternoon and e\'ening} will be the last day the roller rink will be open. On account of the warm weather the crowds have been: small and ‘Manager MacLachlan has) decided to close for the summer. | The class of men who live from | hand to mouth are not the men who | are doing the things in a business way. Get into the thrifty class. Start right by saving some money and hav- ing it at interest with the Northern A quiet wedding occurred at the Methodist parsonage last e\‘ening,‘ when Miss Myrtle Prather became! 0 the bride of Guy A. Tood, Rev. Chal»!‘ and | Mrs. Todd will make their future| home in Bemidji on Beltrami avenue.; Eugene Van Cleef, head of the de- partment of geography at the Du- school, arrived thls morning and will be the over-Sunday ; guest of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Dane. They will also entertain Miss Mar-} jorie Knappen and Earl Carson at dinner tonight. The baseball diamond at-the fai have planned to get out for the first | baseball pracice of the year tomor- row afternoon. The ground is wet | between the gate and the diamond but as thé diamond is higher it has for play. International Falls Press (April 3): Mayne Stanton, son of Judge C. W. Stanton, who formerly lived here; | as one of the pioneer boys, spent yes-| terday in .our city and kept r\mning‘; into magnificent business blocks | whenever he tried to strike one of the former Indian trails he used to tread as a boy. Miss Ingerborg Johnson of Chicago and Ingvald Johnson of Andover, South Dakota, left for their respec- tive homes today after attending the; funeral of their brother Gunvald Johnson, who died here of pneu- monia last Sunday. Another sister living at Chicago and another broth-| er at Andover, South Dakota, were unable to attend the funeral. T. L. Shevlin and J. A. Nichols, at the head of the Sheviin iumber in- terests, were in Bemidji yesterday, afternoon and returned to Minneap- olis last night. They came down from the Crookston Lumber company camps about'1 p. m. and looked over; the new addition to the Bemidji plant. Mr. Shevlin was the dinner guest of Mr. and Mrs. T.' A. McCann last evening. C. R. Middleton, mayor of Bau-; dette, is in Bemidji today on a pro- bate court case. ~ Mayor Middleton says that the vilage of Spooner is ex- pecting great things from the. fact that the Backus-Brooks interests have bought out the Shevlin people. It i§ believed that the Minnesota, Dakota and Western will be extended | from Loman to Spooner this summer giving a direct line from Spooner to International Falls via Little Fork. ! Mayor Middleton will leave for In- ternational Falls tomorrow morning. Frederick Murphy, editor of thé Virginia Enterprise, connected with the Duluth News- Tribune and the Daily Virginian, leaves tomorrow for Pittsburgh, Pa., Mabel Vates, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John C. Vates, 8 Grape street. icated near what is now St. |where they abandoned their canoes drained off and is in fair condition jBeltrami had Mrs. Mackey will enjoy a short trip to South Bend, Ind., Detroit, Mich., and Cleveland Ohio. They will re- turn to Virginia about April 15 to make their home. Miss Vates is a refined and accomplished woman and juntil recently has been a teacher in the Thipd Ward school at Homestead, Pa. Straight at It. There is no use of our “beating around the bush.” *We might as well out with it first as last. We want {you to try Chamberlain’s Cough Rem- edy the next time you have a cough or cold. There is no reason so far as we can see why you should not do so. This preparation by its remarkable cures has gained a world wide repu- tation, and people everywhere speak of it in the highest terms of praise. It is for sale by Barker’s Drug Store. —Adv. I S R e s * THE NAME “BELTRAML” ¥ KKK KKK KKK KK KK KK for the Beltrami county was named Gigcomo Constantino Beltrami, |first white man to explore this part lof Minnesota. Beltrami was here in 1823. David Thompson, who named Turtle Lake, April 23, 1798, was the first white man in this country. . Beltrami, who was an Italian count, was at Fort Snelling when Major Stephen H. Long, U. S. A., was about ready to start for. Pembina where he was to find the interna- tional boundary by astronomical ob- {servation and mark the spot by a monument, Pembina at that time was a trading post of @bout 300 pop- ulation. Major Long and his party set out from Fort Snelling July 9, 1823, and went west to Traverse des Sioux, lo- Peter, amnd set out for Lake Traverse on the ‘overland trail. Here the party was welcomed by the men of the Colum- bia Fur company. The party went down the Red river in boats and reached Pembina August 2. . After determining the internation- 1 boundary, Major Long’s instruc- ions had been to strike east and trace the boundary to the Lake of the Woods. -He found this impracticable and putting his party in canoes, went down the Red river to*Lake Winni- peg and ascended the Winnipeg riv- er to Rat Portage on the Lake of the Woods. Beltrami had come to America for the purpose of discovering,the true isource of the Mississippi river. When Long went down to Lake Winnipeg, Beltrami detached himself with a small company and struck out south- east. After several days of hardship, the party reached the South Red Lake and skirting the south shore came to “Bloody river.” 'This stream is now known as Mud creek and empties just east of Redby. The party ascended the river to a small heart shaped lake which the county named “Lake Julia” in mem- or of a deceased friend. The villages of Puposky and Buena Vista lie on either end of this lake at present. On August 28, Beltrami was at Lake Julia and promounced it the most jsouthern source of the Red river and the most northern source of the Mis- sissippi. Finding no outlet, he imag- ined that the seepage. of the lake |drained indifferently into both riv- ers.” He at once made haste to Fort Snelling, went down the river to New Orleans and in 1824 published an ac- count of his journey. On his map, charted a “Lac la Biche” as the most western source of the Mississippi. This was afterwards {identified as Lake Itasca. Beltrami has left but little record of his early life but it is known that he had held civil and military ap- pointments but had for some reason had seen fit to absent himself from Italy for a period. Look to Your Plumbing, You know what happens in a house in which the plumbing is in poor condition—everybody in the house is liable to comtract typhoid or some other fever. The digestive organs perform the same functions in the and formerly|human body as the plumbing does for the house, and they should be kept in first class condition all the time. and you are-certain to-get quick re- Following the wedding Mr, nnd‘ Hef. For sale by Bnrkel"! Drug Store. ——Adv.- g If you have any trouble with your| where on April 9, he weds Miss: Clara | digestion take Chamberlain’s Tablets KKK RKE KKK KKK KK KK * VOQTING AND MILITIA AGES * #*i*li*fiiit{iiii The total number, of males twenty- one years of age and over in Minne- sota ‘is 642,669, representing thirty- one per cent of the population. Of such males, 21.1 pel cent are native| whites of native, paféntage, 31.6 per | empl cent native whites of:fareign,_or mixed parentage; 46.4-per gent foreign-born whites, 0.5-per cent: flegroes and 0.3 per cent Indians: qr the 298,282 foreign-born white x(\ales of voting age, 179,187, or GO;@ per cent are natutalized. Males of militia age— 18 to 44—number 491,113 NOTICE TO WATER CONSUMERS Will flush hydranfs Sunday. Look out for dirty water. GEORGE' KIRK. _ DRESS MAKING PARLORS. Mrs. P. N. Anderson, who has open- ed parlors in the Bazadr store extends a cordial invitation to the ladies of Bemidji and surrounding country. All work guaranteed to be first class. Found a Cure for Rheumatism, “I suffered with rheumatism for two years and could not get my right hand to my mouth for that length of| time,” writes Lee L: Chapman, Maple: ton, lowa. “I suffered terrible pain| so I could not sleep or lie still at night. Five years ago I began using Chamberlain’s Liniment and in- two months I was well and have not suf- fered with rheumatism since.” Eor; sale by Barker’s' Drug Store.—Adyv. | ORRINE: CURES DRINK HABIT So uniformly successful- has ORRINE in restoring the victims of - the been “Trink Mabit’” citizens, and so strong is our’ confidence its curative powers, {hat\we' want to e that ORRINE -ig sold umlm this positive guarantee, the fact will be refunded. 4100 per box. into sober and useful Lf, -after trial, you get no benefit, your. money ORRINT costsanly | Ask for Fres Booklet. City Drug Store, Beltrami Avenue. .Anvxlmmn:fl Fon FEDEBAT Office of the Secretary. Washington, D, €., March 13, 1913, Proposals are hereby solicited, to be opened. in. the office.of the Supervising Architect, , Treasury_ Depart; ment, “Wash- ington, D. at 10 o'clock A, on April 8, 1915, for the sals o donation tox the United States. of ,a corner lot, centrally and conveniently located and suitable for a-Federal building site at ‘Bemidji,- Minnesota. The site must be approximately 19,000 square feet in arct, the lot offered is rectansulur, its minimum .dimension must be not less than 120 ‘feet. Upon application the Postmaster will | supply prospective bidders with a cir- |cular” giving particulars as to- require- Treasury Department . {iments “ana instruction ‘for preparation of bids and, data to.accompany same. —W. G. Mc. 28 3 7 Secretary. ,Ilrx._l».,nn 1 North Bouni 2 South Boun GREAT .onmu. 33..West Bound Leaves. 84 East Bound Lflx;” 86 West ~‘nnd Leav 86 Bast :Zound. Leave: mmlmu & INTERNATIONAL '83-South Bound. Leaves. . 81 North Hound Leaves... .. 618 o 84 South Bound Leaves 6 pm 83 North Bound Leaves 6 am srelght South' Leaves a Freight North Leaves at . PROFES!IONKI.OABM * KX REX KR RKKRK KKK Ruth Wightman Teacher of Piano Residence Stadio 1002 Bemidji A Phone 168 g LAWYERS GRAHAM M. TORRANCE LAWYER Telophone 58v Miles Block JOHN F. GIBBONS - . ATTORNEY AT LAW - " Pirst National Bank Building BEMIDJI, MINN. D. H. FISK = ' ATTORNEY AT LAW s Office second floor O'Leary-Bowser Blas PHYSICIANS, SURGEONS OR:-'ROWLAND GILMORE PHYSICIAN AND -SURGEON Office—Miles Block GO TO BATCHELDER’S 600D, GROCERIES AND_GENERAL NERCHANDISE * FRESH EGGS AND BUTTER ' . } 1. P. BATCHELDER 117 Minnesota Ave. . -~ Phone 180 SUPERIOR LOTS _“The New Steel Center” ASnap on Two, Lots One Block from Street Car Line: ta.xes Information Bradley Brmk Co. (lnc) 909 Tower Avé.sSuperior, Wik, K. K. ROE, Agent, Bemidn, Minn.. « $200,.$5 00.down and $5 00 a lponth Wlthout Interest and * Automobile Owners Place your order now for-an ~ (Dfficia Road Guide Of iMinnesota Built for and under the auspices of the Minnesota Auto Association Price $1.00 : S Contains 550 speedometer ROAD TRIPS giving mileage between towns’ R Maps 'complgate, showin'g charted and all traveled roads in state Book Contains Nearly 1000 ,Pages . Wiall bc on salc at this store about May Ist The Bemuiu Pioneer ffice Supply Slnra ‘[ DR. E. A, SHANNON H D PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office in Mayo Block Phone 396 Res. "Phone 397 3R. C. BR. SANBORN 1"t1YSICIAN AND SURGEON Office—Miles - Block OR. A. E. HENDERSON -~ 'PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Over First National bank, Bemi 1) Otfice ,'Phone 36, Residence 'P?(l;nle‘ 7"2“ JR. E. H. SMITH PHYSICIAN AND SURGE’)N Office in Winter Block DR. E. H. MARCUM PUYSICIAN AND:SURGEON ° Office in Mayo Block Phone 18 Residence Phone 311 EINER W. JOHNSON = PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office over Security Bank DENTIST S JR. D. L. STANTON DENTIST Office in Winter Block DR. J. T. TUOMY ’ DENTIST First Natlonal Bank Bldg. Tel. 220 DR. G, M. PALMER DENTIST Miles Block Evenln‘ Work by Appointment Olll’ NEW PUBLIC LIBRARY Open daily, except Sunday, 1 to 6 p. m., 7to 9 pfl. m. » only, 8§ to W K. DENISON - . VETERINARIAN Phone 164 Pogue’s Livery TOM SMART DRAY AND TRANSFER SAFE AND PIANO MOVING Res. "Phone 68. 818 America Ave. Office Phone 12. FUNERAL DIRECTOR M. E. IBERTSON UNDERTAKER and COUNTY CORONER Bemidji, Minn. 405 Beltrami Ave. BREVIG Licenced detective. Bonded under state Laws of Minnesota. Ten years of experience. Good references. Write me. All" business absolutely confi- dential. Free consultations. P. M. BREVIC Lock Box 58 Nary, Minn. R. F. MURPHY: I‘UNERAL DIREGTOR i AND EMIALMER Sunday, reading rooms m. .