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i + RAILROAD TIME C EE KKK KKK KK * MPLS., RED LAKE & m o 1. North' Bound Leaves....:... 1 pm 2, South Bound Arrives........ l “ am 800 RAILROAD 162 East Bound Leaves. M! Weu Bound Leaves, Bound Leave: IE7 West Bound Leaves. GREAT NORT! 38 West Bound Leaves. . 8:16 pm 84 East Bound Leaves. .12:08 pm ls ‘West Bound Leaves. . 8:28 am East Bound Leaves. . 2:32 am 105 North Bound Arrives . 7:40 pm 106 South Bound Leaves . 6 Freight West Leaves at :00 a Freight East Leaves at.. MINNESOTA & INTE 82 South Bound Leaves. 81 North Bound Leaves Freight North Leaves at .. KX KKK KK RKK KKK KK * PROFESSIONAL CARDS * KR KKK KKK KK KKK KK Ruth Wightman ' Teacher of Piano Residence Studio 1002 Bemidji Ave. Phone 168 LAWYERS GRAHAM M. TORRANCE LAWYER Miles Block Telephone 56¢ JOHN F. GIBBONS ATTORNEY AT LAW First National Bank Building BEMIDJI, MINN. D. H. FISK ATTORNEY AT LAW Office second floor O'Leary-Bowser Blda PHYSICIANS, SURGEONS DR. ROWLAND GILMORE PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office—Miles Block DR. E. A, SHANNON, M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON fiice in M’Ayo Bloe ‘Phone 896 ‘Phone 397 DR. C. R. SANBORN ' PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office—Miles Block DR. A, E. HENDERSON PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Over First National bank, Bemidji, Minn, Office "Phone 36, Residence Phc’;ne 2 DR. E. H. SMITH PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office in Winter Block - DR. E. H. MARCUM PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office in Mayo Bl Phone 18 Rosidanuo Phone 211 EINER W. JOHNSON PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office over Security Bank DENTISTS OR. D. L. STANTON DENTIST Office in Winter Block First Natlonal Bank Bldg. Tel. 230 DR. G. M. PALMER DENTIST Miles Block Evening Work by Appointment Only NEW PUBLIC LIBRARY Open dauy except Sunday, 1 to 6 p. 7 to 9 p. m. S nday, reading rooms oniy 8 to 6 p. m. W. K. DENISON VETERINARIAN Phone 164 Pogue’s Livery TOM SMART DRAY AND TRANSFER BAFE AND PIANO MOVING Res. 'Phone §8. 818 America A Office Phone 13. i FUNERAL DIRECTOR M. E. IBERTSON| UNDERTAKER and COUNTY CORONER 405 Beltrami Ave. Bemidji, Minn. BREVIG Licenced detective. Bonded under | state Laws of Minnesota. Ten years of experience. Good references. Write me. All business absolutely confi- deritial. Freé consultations: ' :Lock Box 88 Nary, Minn. KRR KRR R KRR KRR RN :| WHAT DAWSON MISSED rAw&anQKER aLso overLook.!IHf ED A “GOOD THING.N As It Turned Out, Suit Was Really |HI Worth More Than the $5 Which “Uncle” Grudgingly Gave Up for Collateral. At T o’clock 'Dawson yé.wned; turned over, then yawned agdin. Stimulateq mentally by physical exertion, he be- |} gan to think. Apparently his mind did | not dwell ‘on pleasant themes, for he groaned dismally. “Broke,” he said; “dead broke, and nobody .to borrow from. What beats me is how I blew in ‘all that money I started out with last night. I could swear I put some of it away for safe- || keeping, only it ain’t here. I recollect that I turned my pockets inside out the last thing before I went to bed and it wasn’t there.” For proof that Dawson’s recollection in regard to his pockets was correct he Had only to look at his clothes, which were scattered about the floor. The pockets were still turned inside :out. They hung limp and empty. Clearly “it” was not there. “There’s only one way out,” Dawson decided. “I've got to pawn something. Dawson opened his closet door. On the nearest hook hung a new suit that had been brought home from the tailor’'s two days before. “That’s the thing,” he said. Dawson folded his suit neatly into a paper box, dressed as hurriedly as his shaky condition would allow, and head ed guiltily for a loan office. “Will you let me have 510 on these things?” he asked. The broker shook out the suit with an air of aggravating disrespect. : “Ten dollars?” he said. “Why, there ain’t $10 worth of goods in ’em. I'll let you have $5. That the best I can do." Dawson looked with diminished ad miration on the suit of clothes which, incasing his own trim figure, he had 'surveyed with such satisfaction in the tailor’s window three days before. “Well,” he said, “make it five. ] suppose that will do.” Dawson was wreiched all morning He continued to grow in wretchedness each succeeding day. Many things con tributed to his misery, chief of which was his unusual popularity. Everybody who had ever invited him to anything before, and some who hadn’t, seemed suddenly possessed with a mad yearn ing for his society and urged him tc go somewhere. All this hospitality Dawson was obliged to decline because | he looked too shabby. On Saturday evening Dawson was again in possession of his own clothes Just for exercise he ran his fingers through his pockets. Presently they struck something that crinkled crisply under his touch. He withdrew his hand, looked dizzily at what it held and keeled across the bed. “Of all the infernal fools,” he said “] wasn’t mistaken, after all. I did put some of it away. I don’t believe any other idiot on earth ever pawned for $5 a suit of clothes that had- $1¢ tucked away in the pocket!"” - & Growth of a Legend. The militant suffrage muddle in Ergland has reached a point which should inspire writers of fiction like the inventors of Sherlock Holmes and Arsene Lupin. The development of this grotesque comedy seems to reveal an organization of forces opposed to society such as the criminal classes are shown to possess in fiction. We have been inclined to believe that the hysterical women were not guilty of all the crimes charged to them. In the matter of the atiempted destruc tion of a suburban house rented by the chancellor of the exchequer, for instance, and the burning of certain buildings the evidence is not clear But the London pclice yesterday re- ported the discovery of a veritable suffragettes’ den in a decent Ken-|| sington neighborhood, resembling the thieves’ dens which we encounter so \frequntly in fiction. Ostensibly an ar- tists’ studio, this place is said to con- tain an assortment of implements for cutting telegraph wires, bottles full of corrosive fluid, false identification plates for automobiles, suggesting projected crimes that might, indeed, “stagger humanity,” and tools for breaking windows. Windows are eas- ily broken without special tools, and the other articles might appertain to a popular illustrator's “props,” to be used in composing pictures. We feel no surer of the suffragettes’ den than | we do of the charges of argon. How Synge Gets His Material. No mere -man of letters ever knew the life of the Irish peasant better than Synge. Books ‘about Irish life do not appear to have interested him. He went to the people themselves for his - information. ~'Wandering about the country with his fiddle, he en- countered sdme strange companions —farmers, ‘‘tinkers, ‘- beggars, ballad singers—a motley crowd. He observ: .ed, them closely, their ‘mode. of life, .|'thelr manner of speech, and what he saw he reported faithfully. Unlike the majority of writers on Ireland, he sentimentality. There is 1o Cslfld ghmour;n thess pages, The uol peasant in his vhiwvuhd cabin -tnh!ukmtnn'll. 18 entirely free from mawkishness o1 [{ .who_bewalls the conquest.on.an.aliex | tongue, may possibly exist, but Synge 'does not appear to have met him. i advines. Unolo Jerry Peeblu, "l onot | Commences Saturday : THF Iladies of this community can: an- : ticipate their Spring needs and select their merchandise at this sale at a great saving from what they would have to pay later on when the prices will be much higher. We especially prepared for this event by placing our order last fall in these lines of merchandise. In offering these exceptional values we ‘will ask you to make a list anticipating your needs for the commg Spring and Summer. You Wlll find here the entire store ar- rayed in white. Every article is fresh and new and up to the minute in style. Embroideries Our entire stock of embroideries, consisting of edgings, insertions, - flouncings' and our embroidered dress patterns, every one of the newest designs in Ratine, Bulgarian and Irish 'Crochet ef- fects, will be specially marked for this sale. LOT 1—Edgings and insertions, regular 7% ' - values up to 15c, sale price per yard.......... LOT 2—Edgings and insertions, short 5 lengths, per - YATd. ... . v sins sassshonmmsasarsans C LOT 3—27 inch flouncings, bands to match, dainty effects, values up - to 90c per yard for.............. 49c a"d 396 White Wash Goods We have a splendid assortment of White Wash Goods consisting of plain Ratines, embroidered Ratines, fancy and plain Costume Welts, Russian Cords, Reps, etc. Laces All the new arrivals will be placed in this sale. Special care has been taken in selecting the very best edges and patterns. LOT 1—Laces and insertions values up to 5 12 1-2c, saleprice per yard....................... C Handkerchiefs, lace collar and cuff sets, all specially marked. Muslin Underwear Our entire stock of Muslin Un- derwear; consisting of lace and embroidery trimmed Corset Cov- .ers, Drawers, Skirts, Night Dresses, etc., will be placed on the tables at exactly one-half of the former price. This startling reduction should be an inducement for every woman to lay in a whole summer supply. Season’s First Price Reductions in Coats To the women who attend this big White Sale we wish to call attention to our Ready to Wear Department. We have an especially fine assortment of Ladies’ Coats' ranging in price from $10.00 to $25.00. These will be specially marked for this sale.