Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, February 18, 1914, Page 3

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About The City XXX R A KRR R K * LEAST WE FORGET * AR S L TR T ETTE D “The College Widow” will appear at the Athletic club theatre on Mon- day, February 23. Don’t miss it. s That news items telephoned to the Ploneer are appreciated both by the publishers and readers of the paper. Phone 31. The next basket ball game will be played February 28, when the St. Cloud Y. M. C. A. Quint will play here. This team is one of the best in the state. John Alexander, known the nation over as the “Boys’ Friend,” will be here on February 21 and 22 when he will be the chief speaker at the Boys Congress. Boys from all northern Minnesota will be here, and the whole affair will be under the con- trol of the lads. HOCAY BREVITIE: Mrs. Law of Bena was a Bemidjl visitor yesterday.. Hurray! Masquarde ball tonight. —Adv. F. M. Scofield of Deer River was a business caller in Bemidji Tuesday. Mrs. Nuss of Nary was in Bemidji |Mrs. Cleve King, 1118 Minnesota|in the Masonic hall yesterday after- ¢Biograph) Monday shopping and calling on|avenue, tomorrow afternoon at 2:30.|noon. They also served supper for A 1 edy mem hei ilies: burlesque. com = triends. Brinkman—A spedial teature | B¢ members and their fpmilies Wanted dish washer at once, Hotel Markham—Adv. St. Clair stock company present “Kidnapped for a Million”.—Adv. J. C. Thompson of Blackduck, eounty eommissioner, was in the city Yesterday on a short business visit. ‘Mr. and Mrs. F. .A. Craver of Tur- tle River, were in Bemidji Monday attending to various business mat- ters. Plan to see the “College Widow'” at the Athletic Club Theatre next Monday night. cast.—Adv. J. M. Goss of the Goss Lumber Company of Cass Lake spent Tues- ‘|day in Bemidji on a short business visit. William Lennon of Kelliher coun- ty commissioner was among the business callers who spent yesterday in the eity. You can appreciate the dollar you save. If deposited in the Northern National Bank it will grow con- stantly day and night and Sunday.— Adv. E. R. Montgomery of Crookston is among the business visitors who are spending a short time in the eity on a business visit. H. L. Spencer of Grand Rapids, as- sociate editor of the Herald-Review of that ecity, is spending a short time in Bemidji on Business. Mrs. Martin Hogan of Grant Val- ley was the gueSt of her daughter in this city yesterday. She returned to her home in the evening. I John gets the habit of staying out late, just insist on his taking Hollister’s R. M. Tea; it will instill regular habits. 35c. Barker’s Drug Store. —Adv. Mrs. J. M. Freeburg of Blackduck is among the north line visitors who are spending the day in the city shopping and calling on friends. The Ladies of the Episcopal Guild will be entertained at the home of sfarting Thursday night, Jan 19. The Newport Tango dancing four. That is An all home talent Doom Come early Mrs. Reed will retum to her home thig evening. E. R. Bvans of Crookston called on old fremds and transacted business in Bemidji yesterday. Mr. Evans tormerly made his home in this city and was connected with the Crooks- ton Lumber Company. Miss Christine Berggren entertain- ed eighteen of her friends at a sleighride party last evening. After driving around in the city they went to Nymore where lunch was served at the Otto Morken home. W. Z. Robinson, George A. Walker Dr. E. W. Johnson, A. B. Palmer A. G. Wedge, R. H. Schumaker, E. C. MeGregor and W. W. Lloyd went to Cass Lake last evening to attend the Masonic meeting and banquet. Mesdames George T. Baker, W. Z.| Robinsen and Walter Marcum enter- tained the Eastern Star thimble bee Fun from the rise of the curtain at 8:15 Monday night at the Armory 'l'he FIRS‘F Hanie Detective Drama ever filmed. An in- portraying a vivid panorama of fate, love tling on the high sea. A genuine innova denious, overpowering plot} You Have The Bank PICTURES DELUXE “Her Faith In: the Flag” Wlflc.h) Bank Free will find yourself gri; ety vt e “Gilt Edge. Stock” (Kllnl) SAVINGS GROW No one need hesitate about _starting a Savings Acwnnt because the sum in hand in small. Savings Accounts in - this bank amount. Money deposited regularly, beginning often develops into large results. Our representative will call upon you to explain our Savings plas, and will leave a Home Savings bank with you if you oper an aecount. what you save, not what you earh, that makes wealith begun with a small at interest, grows steadily, and a ‘#maM Many of the best - Capital $80,000 “A Flmhld Fflrful Plot” THE NORTHERN NATIONAL BANK BEMIDJI, MINN. Surplus $10,000 Resources $800,000 PRIZE EAR OF CORN STOLEN fr he Troublesome Mole” SHORT TIME LEFT Mrs. Narbo of Frohn spent several |2t Present taking the whole country | theatre. An all home talent cast A (Bifitflmmm ed Minmesota Exhibit at Dallas Show Is TO GE-I- THE mx arises in regard to Panama at hoite, tours in the city Monday transact-|PY Storm.—Adv. will present the “College Widow"” rough house y Gone. T A ng business. Mrs. M. A. Downs and daughter|iD fourt acts. Proceeds for the bene- Dallas, Feb. 18.—An ear of corn for you, but it develops the thought and will answer every question that _ Rt This volume is being distribated i from Minnesota, known at exhibitions 3 1 Mrs. J. S. Butts and Mrs. W. .| Kathleen, left this morning for|fit of the Athletic club.—Adv. = as “the $1,000 ear,” one of the attrac- : ; by leading newspapers tHfoughiout /| Chureh of Nary were Bemidji visitors| Jamestown, North Dakota, where| 1t file gets serious and you nsel HANS SGHMT mw tions at the national corn exhibition | It doesn’t take the oldest inhab- |the country. It is bound intropical ] between trains yesterday. they will spend the next month as strength and courage, don’t use sti- here, was stolen. J. J. Furlong, pres-|itant to remember when some of the (red vellum cloth, with the title | One of these days you ought to g0 to Hakkerups and have your ple- ture taken.—Adv. Mr. and Mrs. A. D. Campbell of Grant Valley transacted business at the court house yesterday. S. J. Devlin of McIntosh spent yes- terday in Bemidji calling on friends and transacting business. The best kind of well seasoned tam- arack for sale. Fred Barwdell, tele- phone 336-4.—Adv. C. G. Ekelund of Grand Rapids was among the business visitors who spent Tuesday in Bemidji. ‘W. R. Wallace of Deer River spent yesterday in the city on a combined business and pleasure visit. We still have a few boxes of those Western apples at $2.25 per box, at Schmitt’s grocery.—Adv. E. M. Stanton, county attorney of Pennington county spent yesterday in the city on legal business. A. M. Paulson of Grand Forks is spending a few days in the city on a combined business and pleasure trip. Brinkman—Thursday night the Severn 2% m. Pewwrst 2 iN. the guests of relatives. The infant child of Mr. and Mrs. G. Waldron in the town of Northern died Tuesday morning at 9:30 after a week’'s illness. The cause of his death was spinal trouble. The “College Widow”, some girl and some play, will be put on at the Athletic club theatre Monday night. Seats now selling at *Netzer’'s. All home talent.—Adv. Mrs. David Gill and daughter Nor- ine, who have spent the past seven week in St. Paul, as the guests of Mrs. Gill's parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. Fink, returned to Bemidji yesterday. Sam Simpson of Minneapolis spent yesterday in the city on business. Mr. Simpson is interested in the lum- ber industry at Bena and is making ‘his home in that village this winter. H. H. Zaiser of Federal Dam is spending the day in the eity trans- acting business. Mr. Zaiser is a prominent banker from that village and is here in the interests of his firm. Mrs. E. C. Neal has returned from the twin cities where she has pur- cifased her spring millinery stock. If your cook gets obstreperous and is inclined to runm things, buy her]| Hollister’s R. M. Tea, it will regu- late make her calm and peaceful.— Barker’s Drug Store. —Adv. Mrs. James Reed of Blackduck came to Bemidji this morning and is spending the day here visiting with friends and trensacting business, mulants; take Hollister’s R. M. Tea. It will put on top instead of making Drug Store—Adv. Next Saturday evening BEdwin Simons and Fred Cutter will give a dance in the city hall. Invitations have been issued to about fifty young men and as it will probably be the last dance before lent a large crowd is expected to attend. Lars Gibney, the five year old son of Mr. and Mrs. Barney Gibney of the town of Eckles, died yesterday afternoon at one o’clock, from a com- plication of diseases. The funeral will be held tomorrow. The mother is very sick at this time with a severe attack of tonsilitis; and the youngest child, two years old, is also ill. Joseph Leslie Bush of Braimerd, well known in this city having play- ed here with the Brainered basket ball team, has gone to Jacksomville, Florida, where the Athletics will do their spring training. Mr. Bush was on e of the heroes of the werld’s series. His mother and little brother, Leonard Arthur Bush accompanied him to St. Paul and they will visit relatives in Caroll, Jowa. Mr. Bush great year, \ TWO PERSONS DIE IN BLAZE Old Landmark on New York East Side Destroyed. New York, Feb. 18.—Two deaths marked a fierce fire which destroyed a landmark of the lower East Side. The blaze started in the second floor of the old building at Park row -and Roosevelt street, on the edge of the Bowery. you under dog or slave.—Barkers ident of the Minnesota state fair, in charge of the ear, informed the police: it was taken from a desk in the lobby of a hotel here. James J. Hill awarded a prize of $1,000 for this ear, which is fourteen inches long. It was Mr. Hill's prop- erty. BLAMES PHYSICIAN Says Criminal Operation Killed Anna Aumuller. < Gore Case Goes to Jury. Oklahoma City, Okla., Feb. 18.—The case of Mrs. Minnie E. Bond, who is asking $50,000 damages from Thomas P. Gore, United States senator from Oklahoma, for an alleged attack made on her in a Washington hotel, has been given to the jury for decision. New York, Feb. I§.—Anna Aumul- ler died from the effects of an illegal operation, accordingto a confession which Hans Schmidt, who recently was convicted of. her murder, is re- ported to have made to an attache of the district attorney’s office tu” the death house at Sing Sing. Schmidt’s reported - confession is said to have been that the woman sub- mitted to the opération’ at the hands of mother person than’ Schmidt and died and’ that Schmidt cut up and dis- posed of her body.' “I did not know what to do when 1 saw her dead before ine,” Schmidt is reported to have said. “I loved her so much that I was.driven frantic at the thought of losing her. I knew that I must hide her death and it was then the idea oe: to me to cut up her body and Mw it in the river. This I &id.™ Then, it is said;)Schmidt broke broke down and admitted that all of EAT LESS: MEAT IF- BACK- HURTS Tuhldudmtoluhndup H Bladder' Bothers you—Drink Eating meat nnhr!y eventual- Iy produces kidney trouble in some form or other, says & well-known au- great inventions of the day first came into use. Less than thirty years ago typewriters could not be eold and the telephone was but poorly patronized principally because of the lack of perfection in operation. Truly this is the day of big things. The Pioneer is carrying on a great educational distribution, which is just about to be brought to a close. “Panama and the Canal in Picture and Prose” is being given for one certificate and a small expense fee. This book does not do your thinking stamped in gold and the front cover inlaid with a beautiful stippled color panel showing the famous Culébra cut. It contains more than sfx hun- dred magnificent illustrations, mény of which are made from umique wa- ter color studies and reproduced in their artistic colorings to full page size. No expense has been spared to make this splendid big volume the standard work on Panama and the Canal. Clip the certificate from another page of this issue and get one of these books before they are all geme. The BEMIDJ I PIONEER wnn.! lv;rs. GiuW. Dmlld wadsll-ln ch:rse:f is already in a fair condition, his|his seeming acts of insanity were u'“ $1.50 the milimery pariors during her &b- |} inz ana outdoor life having kept | simulated- | A YEAR | YBAR | A Yoar | sence. his muscles hard and he expects ia Book Job, Commercial and Soc1ety | i In a few mements the flames raced though the structure and its fenants fled to the roof, where in a-howling gale they clung precariously to icy projections until rescued by firemen. .Fireman Kilbrade was brimging a woman down from the roof when either dynamite or gunpowder ex- ploded, blowing off a big section of the roof. Kilbride and the woman were thrown into the street, but nei- NO REASON FOR IT When Bemidji Citizens Show A Way There can be no reason why any reader of this who suffers the tor- tures of urinary disorders, the pains and dangers of kidney ills will fail to heed the words of a neighbor who has found relief. Read what a Bem- Printing Our Spec1alt1es thority, because the uric” acid in Mmfl-mmmm they be- come overworked; get slugzish clog up and_csuse all corts of dis- tress, particulatly backuche snd mis- ery in-the kiduey reglon; rheumatic tivinges, wovere béaddches, ac stomach, * torpid liver, lleaplenneu, bmm- and urinary TO-NICHT By Spefld Request the Harry Stock Company ther ‘was fatally injured. ~ [drritation. WumenttheGrut 1ajt citizen says: After the fire had been extinguish-| The mmun !auxé back hurts or Problem Play by Mrs, P. Schoendeman, 814 Bemidji| ed two bodies were found in the ruifis. | kidueys aren’t scting~ right, or if Eugene Walters Ave., Bemidji, Minn., says: “One of SR bladder bothers you, ‘get’ aBout four §iDa 1] the family had trouble from his| AKED REMAINS. AT HEAD founces of Jad Salis from —any good Pald |II F“" back and kidneys, eaused by hard| —_— | pharmacy; take a tablespoontul in a| work. He suffered badly from lame-| Frisco Church Federation Refusés|giass of water before breakfast for ness across his- loins. Whenever he President’s Resignatfon. a few days and your kidneys will Picture Program stooped he could Mardly get up| Sen Francisco, Feb. 18—BY a vote |then act fine, This famous saits is of 74 to 19 the San Francisto Church ade from acid of and federation refused to accept the resig- nage the gfapes lemon juice, combined with lithia, Tes T. = fa‘rm 1:7:0{ 51’2’ %”;Z mcmmued saat |and has been used for generations to church, as president of the organiza-|flush clogged kidneys-and stimulate tion. Dr. Aked had been criticised by |them to normal setivity; alsc to neu-, members of ':le ;&dmtfiogor ?Zfi tralize the acids in’the urine so it & sennon b dil It el 10 longer frritates, thus ending blad- orthodox belief regarding the virgin e i = i rist. birts of Shre Jad Salts eannot injure - anyone; again. Two years ago, while living in Brainerd, he was having so much trouble that he knew he had to do something. Doan’s Kidney Pills were recommended to him as the best remedy for kidney disorders and he| began taking them. In a short time he was rid of the trouble. Since then he has taken Doan’s Kidney Pills occasionally and has always had quick relief. We have great faith in| their efforts to oust him. this remedy.” Dr. Aked appeared be-tmen and women Price 50c, at all dealers. ~ Don’t| fore the federation, stated his position “The Stery of David Greig” In Two Parts Tonight a Handsome Cen- tiemen’s All-Wool Suit of Clothes Will be Given Away to the Persen Hold- ing the Lucky Number —_—— The minority of nineteen gnnounced after the vote they would continue Daflactiva DPDama

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