Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, October 9, 1913, Page 6

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. RUFFLES AND FRILLS A-PLENTY WITH ! JUST A TOUCH OF FUR - The only hint of winter in the gown r-4oday, unless it be a tailored street frock, is the strip of fur that trims it. Most of the dressy frocks are fashion- ed of materials so sheer that they could easlly be drawn through a bracelet ‘were it not for the ‘“hoop” at the bot- tom of the tunic. It may seem a trifle incongruous to|, have bands of fur on filmy blouses that are scarcely more than breadths of lace velled in chiffon, but what matters in- congruity if the effect is smart and new? Certainly a rippling line of fur edging a transparent tunic gives a ‘wonderful touch to a gown. Flounces of net on the softest, most supple of taffetas is the charming com- bination seen in many of the dancing dresses, A suitable model for such ma- ice and flounces may be of the net; the body of the frock in a soft pink taffeta. In its long, slender lines this dress sug- gests a Directoire design, and a decid- edly quaint effect is given by the straps or “suspenders” over the shoul- ders. <For size 36 this model requires 6% yards of 36 inch material. Charmeuse veiled in chiffon, edged with fur and flounced with lace makes a most attractive dinner or dancing frock (7930). The underblouse is of the same lace as the flounces. One of those effective frilled girdles and a venture- some sash, caught with a bow back and front and fglling nearly to the | hem on each side, are distinguishing features. "To copy this model in size 18 it re- quires 8% yards of 36 inch material. terials is seen in 7972. The underbod- |Each pattern is 15 cents. stamps or coin. Address Pattern Department. To obtain either pattern illustrated fll out this coupon and inclose 16 cents in Be sure to state number of pattern and size, measuring over the fullest part of the bust for dimensions. No. .... Name . Address . KKK KKK KKK KKK KK KKK * NYMORE s KKK KKK KKK K KKK KK KK Mrs. E. P. Lane and son Joe left Friday morning for Marble, Minn., Mrs. Lane’s mission is to visit a daughter who is in poor health. Mr. O. J. Tagley moved ~Monday into his temporary home opposite the schoolhouse. s. Martin Johnson of Park Rap- visited in town over Sunday, re- turning Monday morning. Mrs. Bernard Lane has had an at- tack of pleurisy, necessitating tae calling of a professional nurse. Mr. and Mrs, A. O. Aakre have returned from Canada with Mr. Aakre’s parents. They will visit Mr. Ed. Aakre’s for the present after which the parents may probably lo- cate in Nymore permanently. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Smith ars now about settled in their pretty lit- tle cottage near the schoélhousz. Mr. S. Teenheim, editor of the New TFolden “Bud and Hilsen,” gave an interesting talk in the Nor- wegian Lutheran church Monday evening. Mps. Gust Johnson went to Brain- erd Tuesday morning to be with her daughter Doliie who will undergo an operation for appendicitis. Mrs. I. T. Smith will go to N. Dak.| to care for her son who is in a hos- pital sick with typhoid fever. Rev. Southerland was unable to be heré last Thursday; he sent a message that he was sick at Detroit Minn. Miss Ivy Brandt’s year showed their appreciation of her by sending a large boquet of flowers to -her. Although she has gone to new fields to her work. She is still remembered, especially by the recipients of them.. Many words of sympathy have been expressed over her recent. illness. Through the efforts of Mrs. Lau- grades of last Tens the Congregational Sunday school superintendent that M & 1 Railroad Co. has very generously donated a bell to the Sunday school. The mechanics at the Round House are now preparing it for inatallation. him, The Town Hall is nearing comple- tion. It make quite an improvement on the corner. Now when they get the store down there with the mer- chants dwellmg etc. This will be quite a village and will be ready for a post office. Mr. Wilcox is digging potatoes for Cronemiller, just started the diggiag Mr. Marsh who resides in Dakota is out on his place at “Marsh Sidinz to spend the winter cutting cord wood.. A quiet wedding was solemnized at Delbert Whitings. Friday evening at 6 o’clock the bride is our teacher, Miss. Nina Webster and the groom Mr. Robt. Love of Aberdeen, S. D.. The short but impressive and beau- tiful words of ceremony of the church of Jesus Christ were pro- nounced by Elder D. A. Whiting in the company of 'a few of the school children, after which Mrs. Whiting intertained all at a sumptuous wed- ding feast. The evening was then spent in visiting and - congratula- tions. The invited guests were: Beit and Glenn Grover, Clarence and Lee Worth, Clarence Conaut, Ralph and Arthur Brown Dale and Delmar Wil- liams, Blym and Maude Anderson and Mildred Whiting. Many hand- some and -useful presents were re- *|ceived by the bride and groom. KKK KKK KKK KKK KKK KK * NYMORE SCHOOL NOTES * KK KKK KKKK KKK KKK KK Office, * OASH WITH O00PY oent per word peor lssue HELP WANTED WANTED—Woman with or without children to work in boarding house or man and wife. Address Mrs. A. F. Erenburg, Nymore Minn. . ' WANTED—Girl for general house- work. 1218 Bemidji avenue. WANTED—Good seamstresses at the Berman Emporium. WANTED—Girl for housework. 910 Beltrami Phone 570. WANTED—Girl for housework at Baptist parsonage. call FOR SALE FOR SALE—Official 1913 automo- bile guides showing 500 Red Line trips connected including maps and instructions indicating roads, . crossings, guide ‘posts, etc. Book " has 500 pages showing distance in miles between cities. Apply at Pioneer Office Supply Store. FOR SALE—on reasonable terms team of young horses, weight about 3400 1bs. also set of heavy harness, wagon and buggy. Ad- dress or call 509 Minn. ave. or phone 556. FOR, SALE—Coal stove self feeder; base burner nickle parts in per- fect condition, to be sold at a bargain. 1009 Beltrami avenue. FOR SALE—STEEL RANGE dining room set and other household furniture. 723 Irvine ave. Phone. 462, FOR SALE—Rubber stamps. The Ploneer win procure any kind o! rubber stamp for you on short no- tee. FOR SALE—Range, cook stove and other household goods. 702 13th st. Phone 808. FOR SALE—Two heaters practical- ly new. Phone 455 or call 523 Bemidji ave. FOR SALE—Eight weeks old _pigs inquire of J. H. French or phone 686-2. FOR RENT—Three furnished rooms. Inquire 719 Beltrami avenue. Cost Little Accomplish Much PIONEER WANT ADS One-half cent a word-cash with copy Phone 31 I. P. 117 Minnesota Ave. GO TO BATCH ELDER’ GOOD _ GROCERIES AND fiENERAL MERCHANI)ISE FRESH EGGS AND BUTTER BATCHELDER FARMS FOR SALE. FOR SALE—Nec. 21—260 acres. 40 acres under cultivation, 26 acres meadow. 65 acres fenced for pas- ture. 9 room frame house with basement. Large hip roof barn with hay fork. Granary. Store building. $1000 stock of mer- chandise. 1 team of horses, 6 cows. Complete line of farm machinery. Price $8,000.00. Address H. E. .Reynolds, Bemidji, Minn. FOR SALE—The S.W. Ya of the S. E% of Section 21-146-32. This forty has a fair house and barn and a few acres under cultivation and ‘is on a mail, telephone and cream route. Price $20.00 - per acre. Time given to suit purchaser interest 6 per cent. For further particulars call on or address A. Kaiser, Bagley, Minn. FOR SALE—150 acres good heavy clay soil on a nice lake with lots ot fish in, seven miles from Ten- strike on the M. & I. railroad, and four miles from Puposky on the Red LaKe railroad. This is an ex- ' ceptionally good piece of land fairly ‘level and mostly hard land with some low that will make good natural meadow, when cleared. About 1000 cords nice Birch tim- ber and about 150 thousand feet of saw log timber. Small clearing on the Lake shore where there has been some buildings which bave been removed. - Price $15.00 per acre. One-fourth down and bal- ance time will be given at 6% in- terest made payable in equal an- nual payments. V. W. Owen, Hines, Minn. FOR SALE—75 and 30-100 acres on famous twin lakes, one of ithe best locations in Minnesota for a sum- mer home or resort, having lake front and nice: high banks with fine 'grove of Norway pines near the water. Good level clay land about 100,000 feet of good pine timber, and 100,000 feet of hard wood timber on the land. Only six miles from Hines and Tenstrike and on good wagon road. Fine fishing in these lakes. Price, it taken with the timber on, $1,- 600.00. $600.00 down and if taken with timber reserved, $1,- 200.00. $400 down and balancs on time at 6% interest. Address V. M. Owen, Hines, Minn. TRY A WANT AD Phone 180 This_New Illustrated Book For Every Reader = &l CERT ‘\WEGIK. Birger Johnson . is cccupying his old seat again, although still looking pale from his recent 'illness. Miss Lehman, teacher of Pine Grove school spent her week end vacation with Miss Loken pnmary teacher here. Roy "Goodno, formerly ' of (_Jass Lake has joined our small army -of knowledge seekers. Miss Thompson, who has charge-of the second and third' grades has now an enrollment of 58 in‘her room. Thos' Schroeth has become'a mem- |- ber of the fifth grade. He only fills Minnie Olson’s place who left Mon- day for Spooner Wis. The fnculty attended the Minis- |- KK ***«««cu*;a«o trel at Bemidjt, Wednudsy mnxng X NORTHERN, #|in a body.. i‘l*i**#*i*#‘k***** i 4 'Barl Cronemiller and Mr. Love- 5 Tfl’ m‘ You'Féel Good- green returned home from North Da- kota Monday. “Theéy have been out there through harvest. Mr. Cronemiller of Chicago- The pleasant purgative effect pro- duced by Chamberlain’s Tablets and 1s | the healthy.condition of body and with his family now. He will remain mind which they create make one until crops are in for e winter and | feel _Joytul. For sals by Barkers Drug his wife will return to Chicago with Store. [FICATE OF PRESF)y ATlON -l'l ( PRESENTED BY THE r:l Read How You May Have It Almost Free' Cut out the above coupon, and fresent it at this office with the ex- feue amount herein set opposite the ltrla selected (which covers the clthemtnfwklnz ; thcuboou PANAMA . AND THE $ CANAL g Il!lul-lmn on special paper; * ILLUSTRATED EDITION ox’mgs that far su ,and see this beauti » express from the factory, checking, clerk and other necessary EXPENSE {temn).u‘iduoezoynnr cholce .fA This beauniul big volume is written by Willis'J. Abbot, .a writer of international renown, and is the ackn 1 edged standard reference work of the great Canal Zone, 1t 'is a ‘splendid large book. of almost 500-pages, 9x12 inches in size; printed from new type, large and clear, bound in tropical red vdlum title stamped. in gold, with inlaid color panel; i . more than 600 magmficent illustrations, mclmfmg beau- *tiful pages reproduced from water color studies in col- ss any work of a similar character. Call ul book that would sell for $4 under usual owl- cloth; conditions, but whicn is presented to our feaders for SIX of ' i the above' ficates of consecutive dates, and only © . Sent by Mail, Postage Paid, for sl.zn and 6 Certificates” Pm[h : llld Wlnu:w omitted. OCTAVO | EDITION fil.-lh-fi‘ ' tions, but s Mnu'n ut i Mfl;fln For and Factory Phone 31 11760 SE; Borond; 3550 Home WANTED, B e VU UV UVUVUU U Sy WANTED—One or two good fresh cows. Tel. 579-6 or by mail. F, M. Freese, eBmidji. MISCELLANEOUS ADVERTISERS—The great state of North Dakota offers unlimited op- portunities for business to classi- fied advertisers. The recognized advertising medium in the Fargo Daily and Sunday Courier-News the only seven-ddy paper in the state and the paper which carries the largest amount of classified advertising.. The Courier-News 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 insertion, one-half cent per word succeeding insertions; fifty cents per line per month. Address the Courier-News, Fargo, N. D. FOR SALE—Typewriter ribbons for every make of typewriter on the market at 50 cents and 75 cents each. Every ribbon sold. for 75 cents guaranteed. Phone- orders promptly filled. Mail orders given the same careful attention as when Yyou appear in person. Pohne 31. The Bemidji Pioneer Office Supply Store. {BOUGHT AND SOLD—Second hand furniture. 0dd Fellow’s building across from postoffice. phone 122. FXKKKK XXX XX XX ¥ If you have a room to rent or * * want to rent one—you get the * * best choice through a Pioneer * * want ad. Phone 31. * KRKEKKK KK KKK KK KKK K LT Markets .mfl South St. Paul Live Stock. South St. Paul, Oct. 8.—Cattle— Steers, $6.50@8.00; cows and heifers, $4.50@7.00; calves, $6.00@10.00; feed- ers, $4.30@7.40. Hogs—$7.75@8.30. Sheep—Shorn lambs, $5.00@6.85; shorn wethers, §4.00@4.25; shorn ewes, $2.50@4.00. Duluth Wheat and Flax. Duluth, Oct. 8.—Wheat—On track and to arrive, No. 1 hard, 85%c: No. 1 Northern, 84%c; No. 2 Northern, 825 @83%c; Dec., 841 @843%c; May, §91, @893c. Flax—Ontrack and to arrive—Oct., $1.39%; Nov., $1.40%; Dec., $1.38%; May, $1.43%. Chicago Grain and Provisions. Chicago, Oct. 8.—Wheat—Dec. 861%4c; May, 91%c. Corn—Dec., 68%:; May, T71%@71%ec. QOats — Dec., 44%c; May, 44%c, Pork—Jan., $19.55; May, $19.70. Butter—Cream- eries, 3lc. Eggs—25@26c. Poultry— Hens, 13c; springs, 13%c. Minneapolig Grain. Minneapolis, Oct. 8.—Wheat—Dec., 84%c; May, 89%c. Cash close on track: No. 1 hard, 863%c; No. 1 Northern, 83%@85%c; to arrive, 835% @84%c; No. 2 Northern, 81%@ 837%c; Nb. 3 Northern, 79% @81%¢c; No. 4 corn, 65@66c; No. 3 white oats, 37@37%c; Naq. 3 oats, 34%@36c; barley, 51@69c; rye, 54@58c; flax, $1.38%,@1.40%.. Chicago Live Stock. Chicago, Oct. 8—Cattle—Beeves, ‘| $7.20@9.50; Texas steers, $7.00@8.00; Western steers, $6.20@8.60; stockers, and . feeders, $5.25@7.85; cows and heifers, $3.65@8.60; calves, $7.50@ 11.50. Hogs—Light, $8.05@8.70; mixed, $7.85@8.75; heavy, $7.80@8.65. rough, 1 $7.80@8.00; pigs, $4.50@7.60. Sheep— Native, $3.90@5.00; yearlings, $5.00@ 6.00; lambs, $5.90@7.40. 1 PAY CASH For Hides, Furs, Wool, Copper _Btass and Rubbers. H.NEWTON Phone 810 | STOVE WOOD FOR SALE BUNDI.E'WOOD 12—20 in. long Bemidji, $2.25 to Delivered to Nymore, $2.00 and il g ‘:l.ocx'woon‘zw hldilfi, to T St., beyond, $2:25 i to"Nymore, fi?sfifl’ THURSDAY OCTOBER 9, 1013 Noadtakenforleuthan lOc.l VETERINARY SURGEON W. K. DENISON : VETERINARIAN 3 Phooe 164 Pogue’s Livery SRR RE Y S R TS DI _ DRAY LINE TOM SMART DRAY AND TRANSFER SAPE AND PIANO MOVING Res. Phone 58 818 Office Phone 13 merica Ave. —_— MUSIC INSTRUCTOR t ESTHER M. KOLSTE, TEACHER OF PIANO Graduate of Chicago Musical College Phone 523. 3 % DENTISTS A A A A AR AN A DR. D. L. STANTON, : DENTIST Offiice: in Winter Block DR. J. T. TUOMY DENTIST First National Bank Bldg. DR. G. M. PALMER Tel. 236 DENTIST Miles Block Evening Work by Appointment Oaly _ LAWYERS WV"M‘MWVVW“WW GRAHAM M. TORRANCE LAWYER Miles Block Phone 60 JOHN F. GIBBONS ATTORNEY AT LAW First National Bank Bufl Bemidji, Min s 0. H. FISK ATTORNEY AT LAW Office second floor O'Leary-Bowser Bldg \Q PHYSICIAN, SURGEONS P A A A A A A A A A A A A A A DR. ROWLAND GILMORE PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office—Miles Block DR. E. A. SHANKON, M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office in Mayo_ Block Res. Phone $i1 Phone 396 DR. C. R. SANBORN PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Offiice—Miles Block DR. L. A. WARD PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Over First National bank, Bemidji, Minn DR. A. E: HENDERSON PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Over First National bank, Bemi i, Office Phone 36 Residence gjhon‘.‘.sz e O T R TS S DR. E. H. SMITH PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office In Winter Block * DR. E. H. MARCUM PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office in Mayo Block Residence Phone 211 Y R e A v i _ KKK KK KKK KKK KK KKK ¥ RAILROAD TIME CARDS * R KKK KR KKK K KKK KK MPLS., RED LAKE & MAN. 2 North Bound Arrives. . 1 North Bound Leaves. B S00 RAILROAD Bound Leaves s Phone 12 162 East 163 West 186 East 187 West Bound Leaves. GREAT NOR!' 33 West Bound Leaves. Bound Leave: Bound Leaves Bound Leaves. 5 North Bound Arrives. 106 South Bound Leaves Freight West Leaves at Freight East Leaves at. 3 MINNESOTA & INTERNATIONATL 82 South Bound Leaves §1 North Bound Leaves &: South Bound Leaves. €3 North Bound Leaves Freight South Leaves at. Freight North Leaves at. Rl * NEW PUBLIC LIBRARY Open daily, oxeop'. Sunday, 1 to € p m., 7 to 9 p. m. undav.ruin‘ro- only, 3 to 6 p m. FUNERAL DIRECTOR UNIIEITAKBR and OOUN'“‘ CORONER ] 405 Idni_'Avo. Bemidji,{Mina,

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