Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, May 31, 1913, Page 3

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KRR KKK KKK KA * LEST WE FORGET KRKKKKKKKKK KKK KK To pay our taxes before June 1. Taberacle meeting tonight. To go to Internatlonal Falls Sun- day with the baseball team. Phone Society news to society edi-' tor, phone No. 31. The U. C. T. Benefit shows at the Brinkman, June 2, 3, 4. Mable Jaostad of Fosston, epent yesterday in Bemiadji. M. A. Ralstad of Clarissa, was a| visitor in Bemidji yesterday. Mrs. C. A. Miller of Little Fork .was a Bemidji visitor Thursday. Harriette Frizelle of Mrs. Bartrum of Fairview, is in the city for a few days visiting friends. Go-carts repalred at the second hand store.—Adv. E. M. Tschoeppe of Nebish, was a business caller in Bemidji yesterday. Joseph Kennedy of Grand Forks, was in Bemidji between trains yes- terday. C. W. Derchest of East Grand Forks was in Bemidji yesterday on business. Louise Wiley of Harlen, Iowa, is visiting friends in this city and vicin- ity for a few days. Splendid reductions on Bibles and New Testaments at Abercrombies.— Adv. Miss Fannie Mosford, principal of the sixth grade, left last evening for St. Cloud, Minnesota. Miss Amanda Hovermire of Mena- gha, was in the city a few hours en- route to Duluth Thursday. Painters are at wrok repainting the exterior of the Markham liotel and making other minor repairs. High grade tomatoes, 10c a can at Schmitt’s store.—Adv. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Bentley and son of Brainerd, are the guests at the Roy Rice home in Nymore. Maurice, Annetta, Doralisa and Mrs. Bray of Blackduck remained over in the city for Decoration day. “Mr."and*Mrs. WS LaMént will re- turn this evening from a three weeks’ visit at Park Rapids and Lake City. Spend the Sunday down the river. Boat leaves at 9:00 A. M., 2:30 P. M., returning at 5:30 P. M.—Adv. Rev. Frarey of Blackduck was in the.city last evening and heard Rev. Honeywell’s sermon .on amusements. Mrs. Frank Lycan returned from Crookston Thursday where she has been the guest of Mrs. W. S. Lycan. Maurice Ryan and By Russell left this noon for Cass Lake where they will remain a few days on a pleasure trip, Mr. and Mrs. A. P. White, Mrs. Ira J. Coole and niece were dinner guests of Miss Leah Berman at the Mark- ham yesterday. Splendid reductions on Bibles and New Testaments at Abercrombies.— Adv, Mr. and Mrs, F. W. Rhoda return- ed from Long Prairie, Minnesota, last evening where they have been visiting relatives. Mrs. Ross Prentiss, who was oper- ated upon at the Samaritan hospital e e e Brinkman Theatre Where Everybody Goes Parkers Prairie spent yesterday in Bemidji. SPEGIAL T™WO Rlfl. Fflfm “The Battle of Bl .-;Fflrfl,d” A spectacular Civil War. pmdumlnn, ‘one. ol those rare features that lose nothing of their charm on.even the: third view. : Hiustratod Song: “Why Dld You SQ,y You l Lovod mz" Hazelle Fellows : f!rha Hardup Family’s Blufr” (Pathe) | A side splitting comedy. _Next Manday and Tuesday, “THE POWER OF THE OROSS,’* a wonderful two reel melodrama i yesterday is getting along very nicely | ning fc;r 'l;enntrik.é. where ahe wlll after the operation. visit her aunt, Mrs. M. E. Knappen,| Miss Beatrice Eddy, teacher of do- |2°foTe leaving for her home. mestic economy for the past year, in| Miss Agnes Faust, fourth grade our schools, left last evening for her |teacher, will leave Monday for Crool home in Minneapolis. ston and St. Hilaire, where she will visit friends before leaving for her home at Long Prairie, Minnesota. Miss Mary Grant left yesterday for Houghton, Michigan, where she will visit her Bister for some time before leaving for her home. Mrs. J. A. Younggren is expected to arrive home this evening. She has spent the past two weeks visiting at. Fargo and Hope, North Dakota. She spent Decoration Day at Brainerd. Go-carts retired au the second band store.—Adv. Miss Naomi Johnson left yester- day for Elk River, Minnesota, where she will visit before leaving for her home at Cresco, Iowa. Miss McDonald, left last evening for her home in St. Cloud, Minnesota. Miss McDonald took Miss Ethel Mur- ray’s place as teacher of music and William Peters of Chicago, the|pyygica) culture when she resigned. decorator for .the Methodist church, Miss Minnie Kersten left Thursday will be in the city the first of next week and will go to work. night on, the Soo for South Haven. ¥ Miss Kersten has taught arithmetic Ann Houlihan and Eleanor Brown |, tye grammar ~department - this will go to International Falls in the|yoor Sne will not return to Bemidji morning and will spend the day|peyt yvear. there as the guests of friends. A security that cannot be ques- One of these nice @ays you ought t0 | tioneq, a location that is convenient, go to Hakkerups and have your pic-| 5 courtesy and accommodstion that ture taken.—Adv. 18- uniform, are all afforded you as Mrs. E. E. Kenfield and daughters, |2 depositor of the Northern National Anzanetta and Harriet left this noon | Bank.—Adv. for Cass Lake where they will spend| Mrs. Young of Minneapolis who has the coming week on Star Island. ibeen a guest at the F. M. Pendergast The case of Mike O'Donnel was|home for some time is very much brought before Judge Crowell in | pleased with this country as a health Municipal court this morning but was |restorer. She will spend another postponed until Wednesday morning. | month or six weeks in tliis city. Mrs. D. A. McCue of Nymore was Mrs. Avis Guyer has resigned her given a linen shower by a number of position with the Pioneer and will her friends Wednesday evening at the|leave next week for Petersburg, home of Mrs, Henry Nye, of Nymore. North Dakota, where she will visit ) B rélatives this summer. Mrs. Guyer Splendia) reductions on B‘ble? and |} 0g been with the Pioneer for the New Testaments at Abercrombies.— past six years, i Adv. o Mrs. Walter ¥.” Marcum Wil re- Miss Lea Stempke of Forman,|y ., grom Minneapolis this evening North Dakota, who has been the yyop gho gpent the past three weeks guest of Mrs. Harley Hanson for the |, v, oyest of relatives. Mrs. Mar- past few days ,left Thursday for her| .y went to Minneapolis to attend Theatre, Fargo. Booking In Conjunction and Split- ing the Shows With - the Orpheum Mylie and Orth Week of May 29. Tyker St. Clair Family Advanced Vaudeville. Picture Program Union Features Presents Toars of Blood In Two Parts. With & Vital Moral. 3000 Feet of Pictures Music By Briokman Orchestra Show Starts 7:10 Vaudeville Program Entertainers Who Will Really Enter- “tain the Patrons of the Brinkman The World's Greatest Xylophenists. The Most Daring, Dramatic Production On the Theme of the Sins of Youth, Admission 10c, 28c bome, . the Grand Lodge meeting of the Ord- Miss Lillian Brady, third and|er of the Eastern Stars. fourth grade teacher, will go to Big Many farmers and residents of the Falls where she will spend a feW|ona); yijlages in Beltrami county days before leaving for her home at|;rowged into Bemidji this morning Red Lake Falls. to take advantage of their last chance J. E. Johnson of thig city who has|to pay- their taxes before June first. been confined at the St. Anthony hos-|[The treasurer’s.office’ is crowded to pital suffering with ulcers of the|the door and many are forced to be stomach has improved and left the|content with standing room dn the hospital Wednesday. corrldor‘ The best training insures the best Do not fail to attend the Folk positions. Send for Mankato Com-|Dance concert by the world’s re- mercial College, Mankato, Minn. free|nowned folk:dancer. Olav Thn\'shnug, catalog.—Adv. who won the title “Champion of Nor- way” at Christiania, 1911, and Nils Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Towle and|p, o0 eight string violin player, at niece Irma Towle of Minneapolls,|ipo city hall Monday, June 2.—Adv. are visiting at the home of G. W. g Slater. They expect to spend a| Miss Emogene Scribner passed couple of months here. through Bemidji yesterday on her way to the twin cities. From there Miss Marjory Knappen, teacher of|she will go to Seattle, Washington, English and elocution, left last eve-|and other points of interest on the AR KX KKRREK KK RIKK KKK KKK KRR KKK KK *‘SIR THOMAS LIPTON, WHILE AT x HIS FAVORITE PASTIME—YACHTING ¥ i*iiii#i!iii*iili#ii#lli#*lll*l*ii CopJright by International New tro Corporation, New York. 2 The New York Yacht Club has decided to “defend: cup - against Sir Thomas's uportmu.nuke defi. The series of races will h&safled Sandy Hook in-September_of- next year. Sir Thomn ls highly elated it h ccoeded 1 arranging an i urmtmml Tace. Mrs. Ann Nnble of Minneapolis, Fived: in the city Thursday evening| {{and is visiting ‘Mrs. John L. Broy and: other. friends in the eity, ,m ~here she W lhs will ¥isit her d | daugnters ‘Florence arrive from : Minne ,jpln her here. “ Mijss Ivis Roberts retuined trom‘ 'Caga Lake yesterday: She wa ;qupmnud by Miss Bu:m; Har ng and . Miss Sue Cotger of Cass Lake, :who were her gues 1 show. * They both- returned to Cgss Lake this morning. Hlu Roberts has tmlght in tho qullu .achool at GQll PD her dutjes there in the fall. “Pine River Sentinel: A party com- d of Ed M. LaFond of the Little Falls '.l‘unuemt W, H.Ryan, a hard- rchant of Little Falls, and B ‘W. ..Lakin _of- Bemidji, plsaed through.town Wednesday morning in Mr.. Lakin’s new big six - cylinder Mitchell ‘touring car an their way to Bemidji. The new. Ygteed” was be- B having real well When they were|] here. Most Prompt and Effeotual Cure for ~Bad Colds. When you have a bad cold you want a remedy that Will not only give rellef, but effect a prompt and permanent cure, a Temedy -that is pleasant to take, a . remedy that contains nothing injurious. Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy meets all these requirements. It Acts on ' nature’s plan, relieves the lungs, alds expectoration, opens the secretions and restores the system to a healthy condition. =~ This remedy has a world wide sale and use, and can always be depended upon. Sold by Barker’s Drug Store.—Adv. BREAD. THAT’S ALWAYS FRESH Scientists Have Come- Forward With Valuable Contribution to Food Supply of the People. ‘What man in the street knows or cares anything -about valency? Or perceives in, let us say, the allotropic modifications of sulphur an analogy to anything of practical interest to him? Yet these things have much to do with our daily bread, and may figure largely in the flltement of some bak- ers’ strike. Thus Prof. Katz of Amuterdnm, in studying the question-of what chem- Ists call valency, has:been investigat- ing the influence of température upon chemical reactions. “He finds that the fresh bread which most men prize and the stale bread whlch..only some dys- poptics. tolerate -ave“iimply. madifica: tions of the same substance, com: parable with the aforesaid allotroplq modifications of sulphur. But What causes the change? ~Nothing but the change of temperature. If bread 1f kept at a high temperature it remains unchanged. Or if it is immedhtely reduced to a very “low temnentm‘l and is kept there, the chemical chang es are go slow md :ll;ht as to be negligible. ~ * -~ 1t'is_therefore praposed in Holland to utilize this dfscovery through establinhment of large storage , Wi 8, either hot or cold, in h pnd kept perne all ‘the price, a8 thisis a v;’tal fac prospectxve purchaser.. - ics , of the people of the United . States live on a: snlary of $1200 or less per year. It is very evident that moqt of the people in the United *"States must be economlcal They must be saving and careful in their expenditures, and they are care- ful. They count the dollars, and when they.read an advertisement in the paper they want to know the sellmg price of ‘the goods so as to do some fignring of their own. g Someone has sa).d that “money talks.” That is true, and lowering the price of. goods is always a most effective selhng argument. Whether the ad- vertiser lowers the price or not he should never omit the price of the separabe items he deseribes, unless pnssxbly the advertlsmg space at his disposal does not permit him to describe specifically-go the reader can: thoroughly: understand the merits of the arti- -cles. In this latter case it is frequently customary to reserve the price for the catalogue which is sent out on:inquiry, or until the customer visits the store. 2 It is generally better to state the pnce after giv- ing:a careful and concise statement of the goods. If the price is a real inducement it serves as a climax. Good headlines and illustrations to attract at- tention and secure interest, good description to in- terest and convince, accompanied by the price of the article mal.e an ad that is-hard to beat. Copyright 1913 by George B. Pltlerson In case of puch emergenci > eral strike of bakers or a te racy pearcity of supplies of grain. 'rhen could searcely be a better fllustration of the relatfonship.hetween 8o the most abstruse researches ence and the most familiar needs of everyday. lue.—l{ew York Tribune, Hat-Catching Out West. “Yes,” said the man just back fram the west, “when I went out to Mon-. tana, 1 did what nearly every other. tenderfoot does—brought one of thnu broad-] brlmmed felt hats llks the ones stage cowboys wear, and. put it on at the, first opportunity. “Mine wasn’t-the only one in town, | but- I felt conspicuous just. the same. |- Somehow .or other I hadn't ncq\ured the knack-of wearing it. One wlndy day—and, believe me, it can blow some_ in. B— without half trying—I walked .down the, main street of: the town. holding onto. my_ hat with one| band and my coat. with the other. As 1 turned.a.-corner the wind seemed to stop blowing, and I let go of the xm, when a sudden_gust came, took it off| my head, and sent it rolling like a Arightened hoop.dawn the strget. “I.started to give chase, when, an- other hatless msn—he Wss.a sure enough _westerner, t00—took .me by the.arm and said: “/Don’t. chase it, pardne: .be .another one ajong in a mir Saund Eduutlan in Finland. In the rudiments of a sound educa- ton the Finnish people are unsurpass. | ed.’ Practically every man and woman in-the country has's working knowl. edge of reading, writing, and rith- metic, and' every child ‘of school age receives careful ,instruction-in- these | studies. - Every adult’ has a vote, and altliough 53 per cent. of the tants are. women there ate only #even- teen ‘of their sex fn the Finnish diet Kealth a hmr in Success. rgest factor oonlrlhuflnx to uccess . is unfloubiedly a mm '8 health. man {8 seldom sick when his bowels are regular—he is never- well ‘when they-are cnnmpuced ‘For constipa- ‘tion ‘you will-find nothing quite #o good as Chamberlain’s Tablets, They not only move the bowels but improve the tppetlp,; d ltfanman the ai- t. has been observed that al’ Great Book Bargain Five Big Volumes, $1.98 Regularly Selling’ at $12.00 CLIP THIS COUPON- —_— g:iS%i&i@&fieiEEflEGGEEGS@ W I The Bemidji Pioneer '.,'".\ &g Everybody's Cyclopedia LS Y DAILY COUPON g W This coupon, if presented at the main office- of The Bemidji m‘ w Plomlaer hon FRIDAY, May 30th, or SATURDAY,- May 31st, wil m' & e(:n;;t“ ?a‘rl : ::;lr:; t: :mse1 g;e-voluTe set of l?vreryhody s Cyclopedia ?“\ ¥ “For $1.98 A 22333333332333333233333337 MAIL ORDERS, ADDRESS THE PIONEER, BEMIDJI, MINN.. The sets are too bulky to_be sent by mail, but .out-of-town readers can have them for the $1.98, the set to be sent by express, shipping ch: rles to be pmd promptly on the distribution. days. SUPERIOR LOTS| “The New Steel Lenter" Lots on easy terms. - No interest, no taxés. In- vestment in Superior Lots will make you money. Information--Bradley Brink Co. (Ine.) 909 Tower Ave., Superior, Wis. Olav Thorshaug wegian Folk Dancer and Nils Borge Player | JOHN F. GIBBONS K. K. ROE, Agent, Bemidji, Minn. | The World’s" Most Famous Nor- . Europe’s greatest S‘Btfing‘Violfn . s EXEKKXKXE KKK X KR % PROFESSIONAL CARDS + KRR KKK K K& Ruth Wightman Teacher of P;ano Residence Studio 1002 . Phone 168 LAWYERS GRAHAM M. TORRANCE LAWYER g ) [pl Block Telephone G6v ATTORNEY AT LAW First National Bank Buflding BEMIDJI, MINN. D. H. FISK ATTORNEY AT LAW e second floor O'Leury-Bowser Blay PHYSICIANS, SUKGEONS m )R. ROWLAND GILMORE PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office—Miles Block OR. E. A. SHAN]&ON. M D PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office in M Phone 396 Y0 B DR. C. R. SANBORN *HYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office—Miles Block OR. A. E. HENDERSON PHYSICIAN 'AND SURGEON Jver First National bank, BemidJi, Minn. Office 'Phone 36, Residence ’;fl'onu I DR. E. H. SMITH PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office in Winter Block DR. E. H. MARCUM PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office in Mayo BI Resle ' lock Phone 18 dence Phone 811 EINER W. JOHNSON PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office over Becurity Bank DENTISTS OR. D. L. STANTON DENTIST Office 1n Winter Block DR. J. T. TUOMY DENTIST First Natlonal Bank Bldg. Tel. 830 DR. G. M. PALMER DENTIST Miles Block Evening Work by Appointment Only NEW PUBLIC LIBRARY pen daily, t Sunday, 1 to ¢ 1mlp.““3m‘y'f‘“:dmu %4 only, 3 to ¢ p. m. 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 13. Place Your Bosiness With Us ‘We Specialize In Real Estate, Rentals, etc, Fire, Life, Health and Accident Insuraace, Boads and General Brokerage Office Above Palace Meat Market 312 Mian. Ave. Phone 602 Roberts. Moore and_Titus, Props. FUNERAL DIRECTOR M. E. IBERTSON UNDERTAKER and COUNTY "CORONER 405 Beltrami Ave. Bemidji, Mina. 'Phonc L IIN

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