Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, June 2, 1913, Page 3

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RE KRR RE R KKK KK % LEST WE FORGET . * ERR KKK KRR KKK KKK Taberacle meeting tonight. Phone Soclety news to soclety edi- tor, phone No. 31. The U. C. T. Beneflt shows at the Brinkman, June 2, 3, 4 A. E. Witting came down from Blackduck and spent Sunday with his family. Dr. J. Warninger made a profess- ional trip to Quiring and Blackduck Saturday. Dr. and Mrs. Sanborn and Dr. and Mrs, Stanton spent yesterday in Buena Vista. Go-carts repalred at the second hand store.—Adv. Attorney A. A. Andrews left Sat- urday evening for the twin cities on legal business. Mrs. W. T. Berry who has been visiting friends in Bemidji for a few days, returned to Kelliher Saturday. Mrs. Harvey McCabe and daugh- ter Katherine of Walker, spent Sun- day here the guests of Mrs. Walker’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. McElroy. High grade tomatoes, 10c a can at Schmitt’s store.—Adv. Baudette Reglon: Ernie Bour- geols of Bemid]i is spending the week in this district on business connected with the various judicial ditches. Mrs. C. G. Johnson of Shooks, Min- nesota, who has spent the past few days in Bemidji visiting friends will leave for her home this evening. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Bentley and son of Brainerd, who have been the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Roy Rice, of Nymore, returned to their home last evening. Pimples, blackheads, clogged bow- els, sluggish livers, upset stomachs, means Hollister’s R. M. Tea for you. Barker’s Drug Store.—Adv. Ray Eickstad of Spooner, Minne- sota, cashier of the Backus-Brooks Lumber Company, formerly the Shev- lin-Mathieu plant, is in the city for a few days on business. Mrs. A. E. Witting entertained a number fo.ladies and. gentlemen at Five Hundred Saturday evening. Mrs. C .G. Johnson, of Shooks, Minnesota, was the guest of honor. Miss Ellen Djonne of Northome who was taken to the Samaritan hos- pital several days ago in a critical condition has greatly improved, and was able to return home Saturday. Go-carts retired au the second hand store.—Adv. "Ranger Kilby, J. L.”Williams and' the lmnu-al.d m 3! s “Row, Rflv. Row" Hazelle An exceptlonally gnod col tion which will be held in that city this week. Garnet Peterson came down from International Falls Friday night dnd was the guest of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. Peterson; Jr. From here he went to Grand Rapids, returned from that city this morning and:went on to International Falls. Spooner News: The change of the mills here takes place on Monday and from that time on the mills will be known as International Lumber Co., instead of Shevlin-Mathieu - Lumber Co., as the mill here has been known since its erection in 1906. Has your wife a savings account? She is the one who can save fmoney for you. An especial invitation Is ex- tended to her by the Northern Na- tional Bank.—Adv. Miss Grace Peterson left Friday for International Falls where she will visit at her brother.’s and friends. From there she will go to Baudette to visit her brother John and from there to Spooner where she will be the guest of her brother Julian. Several picnic parties enjoyed the afternoon and evening on Diamond Point Sunday, and had their dinner by the campfires. There was a fine breeez from Grand Forks bay and the mosquitoes did not bother until late in the afternoon. The children en- joyed bathing off the point. Baudette Region: Baudette is to be represented by a delegation of five at Hinckley next week, when North- ern Minnesota Development Associa- tion holds its summer meeting. Those to go are Mayor Middleton, J. U. Wil- liams, president of the Board of ’l‘rade} editor of this sheet. One of these nice days you ought to go to Hakkerups and have your pic- ture taken.—Adv. B. I Larson of Fosston, who has been the guest of Dr. and Mrs. J. Warninger for a couple of days. re- turned to Fosston this morning. He was accompanied by his sons, Lillmer and Russell who have been attending Mr. and Mrs. Charles Borchardt of Crookston arrived in the city Sunday noon and will spend the summer months at the home of Mrs. Borch- ardt’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Naugle. Miss Basha Edwards who has taught school at Bertha, Minnesota, this past year arrivéd in the city Saturday evening and will spend her summer vacation here with her par- ents, Mr. and Mrs. John Edwards. Speeds you along, gets you up early with a clear head, new feeling all over—it’s Hollister’s R. M. Tea. Bar- ker’s Drug Store.—Adv. T. A. McCann of the Crookston Lumber company and J. M. Richards of the Bemidji Lumber company left Saturday for Kansas City to attended the National Lumberman’s conven- Brinkman Theatre Where Everybody Goes TONIGHT Booking In Conjunction and Split- ing the Shows With the Orpheum school hére in Bemidji this winter, and have made their home with their “ Th.lr OnQ Bood Sull" grandparents, Dr. and Mrs. J. Warn- inger. Prayer meetings - for Tuesday: South district—Mrs. Hans Mosen, Irvine avenue south; first district— Mrs .Geo. Kreatz, 607 Bemidil ave- nue; second district—Mrs. Campbell, 1202 Minnesota avenue; third dist- rict—Mrs.” Wilcox, 611 Irvine ave- nue; fourth district—Mrs. Scarrot, 1011 Irvine avenue; northwest dist- rict—Mrs. - T. J. ‘Andrews, corner Fourteenth and Irvine. Attorney John Gibbons is making extensive improvements on his resi- dence on ‘Lake Boulevard. A large veranda has been added to the rear of the house, cement walks will be laid and other improvements made. He set out a number of apple trees in his large garden and expects soon to have an orchard large enough to supply apples and plums for the market. The grading in front of his place has been completed and Mr. Gibbons will ex- tend his lawn out to the drive, he having already taken down the front fence. When finished this residence promises to be one of the beauty spots on the lake front. Headache, clogged ~bowels, sour Theatre, Fargo. The event of the season under the auspices of U.C T, Jue 2 3,4 The Place—Brinkman Theatre, Third Street A Feast of Vaudeville 1f you cannot attend. yourself it will be the best stroke of either business.or friendship of the year if you buy tick- stomach, poor appetite, puts one down and out, take Hollister’s R. M. Tea and come back strong. Barker’s Drug Store.—Adv. List of advertised letters “unclaim- ed” for week ending June 2, 1913: Men—Mr. Walter ‘Ayers, Otto Bing, Fred Barker, Mr. A. Clark, Mr. Frank Cornwell, Mr..Bert Downey, Mr. Christ O. Johanson, -Wm. ‘Johnson, Mr. C. O. Johnson, Her: Oscar Karlsen, William Lopping, Mr. Chester Law- son, Mr. M. T. Maloney, Her Oskar Olsen (3), Her Olaf Paulsen, Leon Stein, Mr. Herbert Stille, Mr. Harry ets and send them to. your friends in -Bemidji. A m}ring Western drama in two parts The Vortex Jim receives- the fatal letter Special Music Admission 250, 38c qus,,commmg June. 9th, the Brinkman Theatre will inaugurate a ~ulmtu:mnlmhn.ficm‘. e Stevens, Mr. Wm. T. Sharpe, Joe Wal- Fellows (fiia;iriph) a June bride; 'The rooms wWere beau- titully decorated i yellow and white, | ! Yellow strumei's of crape paper were strung from a’ yellow parasol, whlch was decorated with sprays of plum and blueberry blossoms and yellow buttercups. After luncheon Mrs. C. G. Johnson of Shooks, sang “The Gar- den~of Love.”. The afternoon was spent in making holders for the bride to be, and she was also presented with a linen tablecloth by the guests. The guests included: - Mesdames E. H. Winter, Edward Ebert, C. G. Johnson, of Shooks, D. L.-Stanton, T. J. Welsh and the Misses Madeline guest of honor, Gladys Stanton, Ser- via McKusick. and Irene Logan. FEEL WORTH OF PROGRESS' %eople of South. American Metropotis; Keep More Than Abreast With the Spirit of the Day. ‘Though perhaps without intending: to do so, Mr. Bryce in his “South’ America” delivers a little lecture to the large American cities. He is tell- ing about Buenos Aires, and how it I8 something between Paris and New York. The streets are filled with fashionable crowds and “nowhere in the world does one get a stronger Impression of exuberant wealth and extravagance. The opera house and | the races and the park show one side of the activities of this sanguine com- munity and the docks and the ‘port show another. Twenty years ago sea- going vessels had to lie two or three miles off Buenos Aires, discharging | their cargo by lighters and their pas- pengers by small launches and partly by high wheeled carts’ which carried people from the launches ashore through the shallow, water. Now a long, deep. channel has been. dug ¢ and - 1s kept open by dredging, up ‘which Jarge steamers find their way to- the very edge of -the city. - Docks many miles in length have been constructed to recelve the shipping and large stretches of land reclaimed and huge warehouses erected and railway lines laid down alongside the wharves. “Not Glasgow when ‘she deepened her river to admit the largest ships, nor Manchester When she made her ship canal, ‘hardly even- Chicago when she planned a new park-and lagoons In the lake that .washes her fromt, phowed greater enterprise and bolder conceptions than did the men of Bue- nos Alres when on this exposéd shal- low coast they made alongside their city a great ocean harbor. “They are a type of our time, in their equal devotion to business and pleasure, the two and only ‘deities of this latest phase of humanity.” SEEMS MOST FABULOUS SUM | Fortune of the ‘Rothschlids -Estimated at Two Billon—Own Property in All Countries, A French statistician has just com- pleted figures which, he asserts, show the fortune of the famous house of Rothschild. The entire fortune i8 es- timated at ten milliards of francs. A milliard is a billion, 8o that in dol- Jars the Rothschild fortune equals $2,000,000,000. Placed at 4 per cent.'the Rothschild fortune would produce an annual rev- enue of $80,000,000. But this sum is far from being a reality, as the great part of the Rothschild- riches is in |: property. . In Lancashire -they own immense thread mills, while in Ger- many they possess numerous coal mines -with a capacity of ‘millions of tons per annum. childs own immense -rubber forests, and in Persia factories ‘where the most beautiful carpets in the world are made. 3 In Spain’ there are numerous” ‘zinc and lead mines operated by the Roths- childs. In South Africa also the Roths- childs own mines. The Roths- childs, in addition, own large forests in Siberia, whilé in Australia entire cities are their property. They also own’large quantities of real estate-in different European capitals. Woman Picks Up a Snake. Mrs. Drusilla Smith, an aged wom- en, living at Brownsville, had the ex- perience of picking up a live snake in mistake for an apron string.” She was 8o unnerved that she fell and was injured. . * Observing what she thought was an ters, Mr: Franklin Wollaston. Wom- len—Miss Ruth Brown, Mrs. = Carl Blum, Miss Cora Blarmen, Mrs. Bert Downey, Mrs. Emma Lindeen, Mrs.] Frank McCharles, Miss Mable Abarg, Mrs. Erwin Stevens, Mrs. John Tow-| ér, Mrs, Eunlca ‘Willet. Mesdames E. F. Stevens ‘and George cunphell entertained.at a linen show- ér and luncheon, Saturday: afternoon t 1:30 at‘the homé of Mrs. Steyens, shotior ~of apron string on the floor, she picked it up. The “string” had a cold and ‘clammy “feeling and she ‘dropped the snake, which began to wriggle: The_sight of ‘the live reptile: nearly paralyzed . Mrs. Smith: with Mclb— Philadelphia !Kmrl. 3 Lucifer Matc Lueifer matches--that ‘1s; ‘matches tipped with ‘an’ explosive = substance that bursts into finme on being struck —were first used ‘about 1834. Many improvements have. been matches siricé ‘then; “the mos ant of » ehmmlnnnuonotth- strikiog Johnson,| i top of the meat or. chlc i boil again for 15 minutes. . Ttanza “castle, ‘once ‘the residence of the Scots kings. Then there are the tLe owner’s residence, 1s on the ‘site structure, but it has ' been rebuilt within recent times_in Scotch. baron style. Situ- ated, upopn, the northwest shore of Brodick position is an excep- tionally finie one. In 1902, when cruis- ing in these waters, King Edward pald a visit to the castle. - Thief's Message. A child’s bank, with “In God Wo Trust” printed across the top, and con- taining $30 in . dimes,- was. left un- touched by a burglar,who ransacked the home of Harry L.Kramer at Call. fornia, Pa, After searching anfl finding_little, the marauder unearthed the, little bank, which belongs to Kramer’s ten- year-old daughter. The.burglar evi dently decided he would leave the house empty-handed rather than takq the child’s savings. _; So, under the inecription “In God We Trust,” he scribbled, “So did I— once,” and departed, — washington Post. Told Him to “Hold On,” and He Did. In the far south they say “Hold on” when they mean gtop. A southern:| man went to a dentist to have a tooth removed. The pain.proving much worse ‘than the patient had . expected, te velled lustily: “Hold on, Doc, hold on!” “Didn’t T tell you to stop?” he de- manded angrily, amar the operation was completed. “No,” replied the dentist. “You tald me to hold on, and 86 I did.” Dumplin For Soups, Stews and Fricasseed Chicken Left overs of roast lamb, veal or --beef, the cheaper cuts of fresh meats, and.fowls too old for roasting, make delicious and nourishing stews. K C’Dumiplings make them'doubly attractive and the whole ‘dish is- most economical—an object to most families while meats are:so high and. must be made to go as far as.possibles K C Durr By Mis. Nevada Briggs, the “well known bakmg expert. M . ps r; 3 level teaspoonfuls K C wder; § teaspoonful salt; } cup shortening; "mille or cream. Sift together three times, the flour, baking powder and salt; into, this_ work_the shortening and use cream or milk to make a dough less stiff than for biscuits, s 7 Allow the stew to boil down: so that the Tiquid d ing-and drop the dough in large spoonfuls on Cover and let Made_with K C Baking Powder and \steamed in this way, dumplings are as light Jas biscuits 4nd are delicious with thickened "~ Thisrecipe is adapted from one for Chicken’ Pot Pie in “The (Cook’s Book™® by iMcKenzie Hill, editor of the: Boston ing School- Magazine. ‘The book _ contains. 90 excellent recipes for. dunfl‘gt that are gond e cost of livi sent free for e g::ked in every 25-cent Send to Jaques In Brazil the Roths- | . Dry. Cleaning House HOGANSON BROS., Props. not cover the meat or chicken. | Add half a cup. o( cokl water to stop its boil- Two thousand feet of funny férce, filled with thrilling features Have you ever livéd 4in a small country town? Do you' remember the sewing circle, the spell-down, the church ba- Zaar, and the events ‘of that pictur- esque community? Enjoy once:moré the humor of those quaint characters and the memories of ° 4 yesterday “The Sneak” . A powerful dramatic - story :featuring Alice Joyce - Illustrated Song— “ Wish | Was Back In OId Kllarney” C. J. Woodmansee Toni Great Book \ ledlgao Bargain Five Big Volumes, $1.98 . Regularly Selling at $12.00 CLIP. THIS_COU N3 T The Pioneer on FRIDAY, June 6th, (regularly selling at ‘$12) :eeefieeeaees y& MATL ORDERS, entitle the bearer to one five-volume set of Everyhody 's Cyclopedia For $1. 98 :99‘393957!33333933359‘33 ADDRESS THE PIONEER; BEMIDJI, -MINN.— ?SEGGGEEGEESGEEEEEGEES‘Q Bemidji .Everybody’s Cyclopedla .DAILY ‘COUPON This coupon, if presented at the main office of The Bemidji , Ploneer or. SATURDAY, June 7th, will The gets 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 charges to . be paid by the receiver. OUT-OF-TOWNRREADERS need not wait-until the days of distribution, but send orders any day of the week and -mpmentu will be made promptly on the distribution days, 'SUPERIOR LOTS “The New: Steel Center” Lots on easy terms. No interest, no taxes. In- - “vestment in Superior Lots will make you money. Informution-—Braflley‘ Brink Co. (Ine.) 909 Tower Ave,, Superior, Wis. - K. K. ROE,'Agent, Bemidji, Minn. This space reserved by the Bomidji Townsite & Improvement Go, For Price of Lots, Terms, Etc., INQUIRE OF T. C. BAILEY, Bemidji, or write BET1IDJI_ TOWNSITE & lMPROVEnENT co. 520 Capital.Bank Sullding. ... - 8T. PAUL 1SAYS SAGE TEA MIXED WITH SULPHUR RESTORES NATURAL: COLOR AND I.'IlmE. : Gray, ‘taded hair turned heautl!ully dark and luuuoun almost over night,] is a reality, if you'll take the trouble to mix sage tea and sulphur, but what’s the use? Yeu get a large bot- tle of the ready-to-use tomic, called wyeth’s Sage>and < Sulphur ‘Hair 1.omedy” at. drug stores here for about fifty cents. ~Millions of bottles of “Wyeth’s” are sold anmually, says It |and the real bum! and healthy’con-| heen npplled _ You just -l lm‘f‘ paur- gnd draw it through your hair, taking one small strand at a time. Those whose: hair is turning gray, becoming faded, dry, scraggly and thin have a surprise awaiting them, because after just one application the gray hair vanishes E‘ué & TFTERNA' PEaemiae e ganeas L & 2 l’l‘eachhr of Piano LAWYERS ATTORNEY- AT LAW First National .ml Bullding BEMIDJI, MINN. D. H. FISK " ATTORNEY AT LaW ffice second floor O'Leary-Bowser Bldg PHYSICIANS, SURGEONS OR. ROWLAND GILMORE PHYSICIAN. AND SURGEON Office—Miles Block JR. E. A suumou M D. PHYS]ClAN AND SURGEON fice in Ilyo Block Res. 'Phone 317 Phone I“ SR. C. R. SANBORN _ PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office—Miles Block OR. A. E. HENDERSON PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Jver First National bank, Bemidji, Mina. Office 'Phone 36, Residence ‘Phone 73 OR. E. H. SMITK PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office in Winter Block DR. E. H. MARCUM PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office in Mayo Block Residence Phone 818 Phone 18 EINER W. JOHNSON PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office over Becurity Bank DENTISTS JR. D. L. STANTON DENTIST Office in Winter Block 1to6 1ud.uly.xuptslmm » oxly, 3 W. K. DENISON VETERINARIAN Phone 164 Pogue’s Livery TOM SMART DRAY AND TRANSFER SAPE AND FIANO MOVING Res. 'Phone 68. 818 _Americs Ave. Office 18 Place Your Basiness With Us ‘We Specislize In - Real Estate, Rentals, etc., Fire, Life, Health and Accident Insurance, Boads and General Brokerage UNDER’I’AKER and COUNTY CORONER and your|’ locks ‘becomé luxuriantly dark and| beautiful—all dandruff goes, scalp| itening and falling hair stops. / ‘This is the age of youth. Gray-hair- |: ed, nntttrac; folks:aren’t wanted around, so_ get busy with the Sage and Sulphur tonight ‘and you’ll be | maged at your youthful .appearance ditlon of your hair wi Inquiry at:drug stores here| hows that...they Mm& 3 “ M t{ FUNERAL DIR c'ro TEETERY B §EETIE

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