Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, August 25, 1914, Page 3

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Minnesots, is: visiting her»dns!m Mrs. 'W. M. Shannon of this eity. - | ‘Mriiand: Mra, Bl M. Sathre-autoed out to Hazelwood farm, town of Litberty, Saturday avenhlg.,mnrn- ing 'to' Bemidji yesterday noon: Have your: furniture: repaired.- at the ‘bargain’ store"first ‘class werk-at reaann:ble prices .—Aav; Misa Della Baker. of Akeley, who About The City | (AR E SRR RS RN RE T 4 LEST WE FORGET * R R R R Phone 31 about it. oxox has. been: visiting friends :and -rela- TapgubeoiHone Goni, Week. tives in“Bemidji for -a-short time; returned: to. her home_this mermimy: Everett MsMurry .of . Cleveland, Ohio, arrived in Bemidji yesterday General election November 3. PR ; Band concert every Friday night at the city dock. day, Tuesday; satisfactory arrangements..cang ‘)s and may decide to. locate herp.if|" » ox o The fall term of court for this county begins September 8. - The great Minnesota state fair wiil be held September 7 to 12. o The Red Lake Indian. fair will be held on September 3, 4 and- 6. » .. Important meeting - of Athletic club members, Thursday, August 27, PR The Bemidji public schools will open for the fall term on Tuesday, September 8. P The next meeting of the county commissioners will be held Wednes- aay, September 30. . oo Annual rally of the Beltrami Coun- ty Christian Endeavor association will be keld in Bemidji September 4, 5 and 6. P The duck and prairie chicken hunting season opens Monday, Sep- tember 7. Hunting partridges is legal after October 1. P That the state meeting of the Unl- ted Charities association will be held here Sept. 26, 27, 28 and 29. The state commissioners will meet here at the same time. xox % That the 1914 fair of the Beltrami County Agricultural association will he given Sepiember 16, 17 and 18. A"any features have been secured and | the exhibiticn is certain to be a greater success than ever before. x % x - Realizing the value of bright and interesting local columns in making a paper welcome in the homes of its subscribers, the Pioneer asks its readers to asgist by phoning all news items to 31. Favors of this kind are appreciated by the publish- i BREVITIES Miss C. Tostrud of Puposky was vigiting friends in Bemidji yester- day. E. A. Cummings of Frohn s spending his vacation with friends in this city. For Wood Phone 129.—Adv. Mrs. L. L. Edmunds of Grant Val- ley transacted business at the court house yesterday. Mr. and Mrs. C. M. Jacobson moved into their new home on 214 Bemidji avenue yesterday. One of these days you cught to g0 to Hakkerups and have your ple- ture taken.—Adv. Miss L. A. Berge and O. Berge of Frohm spent yesterday in Bemidji shopping and calling on friends. Mrs. J. A. Myhre of Sauk Centre, EAT LESS MEAT IF BACK HURTS Take a glass of Salts to flush Kidneys if Bladder bothers you—Drink lots of water. Eating meat regularly eventually pro- duces kidney trouble in some- form or other, says a well-known authority, be- cause the uric acid in meat excites the kidneys, they become overworked; get sluggish; clog up and cause all sorts of distress, particularly backache-and -mis- ery in the kidney region; rheumatic twin- ges, severe headaches, acid stomach, con- stipation, torpid liver, sleeplesaness, bladder and urinary irritation. The moment your back hurts or kid- mneys aren’t acting right, or if bladder bothers you, get about four ounces of Jad Salts from any geod pharmacy; take a tablespoonful in a glass of water before breakfast for a few days and your kidneys will then act fine. This famous | salts is made from the acid of grapes! and lemon juice, combined with lithia, | and has been used for generations to| flush clogged kidneys and stimulate them to normal activity; also to neutralize the acids in the urine so it no longer irri- tates, thus ending bladder disorders. Jad Salts cannot injure anyone; makes a delightful effervescent lithia- water drink which millions of men and : women take now and then to keep the kidneys and urinary organs clean, thus avoiding serious kldney disease, Ills of Women. Many women suffer miserably from chronic constipation, causing ner- vousness, dizziness and sallow com- plexion. They will find that Cham berlan’ds Tablets invariably bring re- Hef. These tablets are easy to take and pleasant in effect. All Dealers. made, - Miss Stella Tenneson of Méntic- ello, Minnesota, is the: guest-of “her sister, Mrs. E. F. Stevens. She ex- peécts to remain for a - couple weeks. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Eastman of Turtle River returned to their home Monday. Mr. Eastman held services in the Free Methodist church at Sol- way Sunday. Miss Beulah Brown of St. Paul ar- rived in Bemidji last evening and will remain here during the next several weeks as the guest of her aunt, Mrs. D. L. Stanton. Misses Ruth and Genevieve Tayler, also son William, have gone for a week’s visit at Bemidji and Ten- strike.—Crookston Daily Times. Mrs. May Barnard of Chicago.is the guest of her sister, Mrs. William Clish, 1216 Minnesota avenue. Mrs: Barnard is an anaesthetist at the Ravenswood hospital in Chicago. Miss Mary Devine of Minneapolis, who has been spending some time with relatives near Bemidji, left yes- terday for Thief River Falls, where she will visit a few days before re- turning to her home. Mrs. Eckenbeck, Mrs. L. M. Is- grigg’s mother, who has been visit- ing' her dawghter for two months left vesterday for Duluth where she will visit a gremddaughter for a short time before returning to her home at Donnley, Minnesota. Miss Vina Cossentine, who has been visiting friends near Bemidji received word while enroute to her home of the serious illness of her sister, Mrs. Clara Newton of Drain, Oregon. Mrs. Cossentine will leave at once for her sister’s home. Eldridge Lord will leave next week for St. Thomas military col- lege, St. Paul, where he will be a student this year. His mother, Mrs. A. Lord, will accompany him to the cities and they will both at- tend the state fair for a day er two. Sam Simpson of Minneapolis, who is one of the bést known log- gers in northern Minnesota, arrived in~ Bemidji ~yesterday - from - -Fair- haven ~where he was present at” the funeral of Walter A. Gould, the Be- midji man who died in Minneapolis last Friday. Mrs. C. R. Sanborn left this morn- ing for Calgary, Alta., where she will visit several weeks. Enroute she will visit at International Falls, Winnipeg and Saskatoon. On her return trip Mrs. Sanborn will be met by Dr. Sanborn at Saskatoon, where he has business holdings. Mrs. W. N. Sanborn of Faribault, who has spent the past several weeks here as the guest of her son, Dr. C. R. Sanborn, will leave today for Lavinia where she will visit Mrs. Mary Root several days. Mrs. San- short time and after a trip west will polis. R. S. McDonald of International Falls and William Durrin of North- the Tuberculosis board. Bemidji members of the board are A. B, Rako, chairman of the county board, Dr. E. W. Johnson and Rev. S. E. P. White. and Mr. and Mrs. Ed Alger of Ten- attend to- business matters, leaving Hr. Fellows’ bull-dog Fritz at home to care for the place. An hour af- ter their arrival in Bemidji, they were very much surprised to meet the dog on the street. He had made the twenty-five miles in record time. The man without a home, the ship. without a harbor, are examples of misguided calculations. Make- your banking home with the Northern Na- tional: Bank- while you are esrning money and in your old age you can live confortably on the income from it.—adv. F. E. Rathman and .. family Jamestown, North Dakota, wlm hdave been the guests of Mr. and: Mrs. Thayer Bailey, Miss Minnie Bailey and Mrs. H. W. the past two weeks, will return to their home tomorrow. Mrs. Rath-; man is Mrs. . H. W. Bailey’s. daughs. ter. The Baileys -and. Rathmans have spent the past two Wweeks at; the head of the lake, in one of the Cochran cottages. - They returned to Bemidji yesterday. of terday afternoon in honor of her daughter Katherine’s third = birth anniversary. The rooms were made beautiful with autumn leaves and garden flowers for the occasion. The guests included Vera Cutter, lIone Bailey for| Mrs. A H. Jester entertained yes-] of | Mesdames Harper-and Taylor, and|{ § DR. PIERCE'S Golden Medical Dlscovei-y ,Stren, the weak stomach. Mmr. Feeds the starved nerves, Fonmin in & ol 1 " romedy S0 b spread as been spreading ability. to. make the sick well umig “‘being.yourold self again.”” Give —Now. You will soon Druggistsortrial box for 50cby mail. and year out for over forty yul!: this eel *‘likenewagain. * Gives tun 8 uhm 10 Fal o | ith-restoring hout the entire wikld—becanse of l;.f» e omtabe tomeny 8 st Ph 8 Vi 8 rem " Soldin i idor formby: WriteDr.V. M N. Dr. P!'m’lr‘( lmn‘-'w%m- Miss Margot Beaton Who opens a stock engagment at the Brinkman Theatre \{onday, Aug. 31 Vandersluis, Jr.,, Angus Vanders- luis, George Oppie, Eddie Megroth, James Lunn, Robert Lunn, Mes- dames C. M. Bacon, Katherine Mec- Cready, F. A. Megroth, S. L. Sel- lers, A. J. Abercrombie, F. M. Will- 'son, J. W. Oppie, Charlés-Vamderss luis, and Misses Louise -McCready and: ~Guida Abercrombie. Little Katherine received a large number of beautiful presents from the guests. GERMAN GOLUMNS MARCH SOUTHWARD London, Aug. 25.—The Ostend cor- respondent of the Daily Mail says that the German columns are marching southward to Valenciennes, on the Scheldt, thirty-one miles southeast of Lille, ‘one ' proceeding by way of Ni- nove, Grammont and Lessinges and the other going by way of Hal, ! harmless and has the enthusiastic end Bfainele-Comte and Mons, Belgium. born will then go to Duluth for a Thoy‘are moving with great speed. Further northwest advanced parties take up her residence in Minnea-| have appeared and done damage suc- cessively at Thielt and Lichtervelde. It is suggested that this means a dash upen Roubaix, one of the wealth- iest of French towns, or upon Lille. ome, county commissioners of Koo-|1n that-case the movement toward chiching county, sperit today in Be-|Valenciennes probably would be an midji in attendance at a meeting of | envircling omne. Adriatic Battle Rumored. Rome, Aug. 25.—The Avanti says that there has been another naval en- gagément in:the Adriatic in which sotme” Austrian ships were sunnk. The Mr. and Mrs. Willlam Fellows| gome paper says Greece has dispatch- ed troops to aid Servia in her ‘fight strike autoed to Bemidji Monday to| against Austria. Read the Want Ads. EYES TROUBLE YOU ? TRY THIS SIMPLE RECEIPT. We all know some home remedy for our minor troubles, and by use of thesh remedies many’a dncm o i1 15 seved and doubtless many & How fow know. what to do_when thelr eyes become.tired and ache, or feel dry and foflamed from abuse and overuse? In the our eyes feel rough or sticky, or ithey trowmle:you-when you read, What do you do?- Most of us rush off and get Elasses (perhaps at some cheap store where no skill is used ting our cses), which we-very often do ‘ot naod ot ail. T housands are wearing misfit or. unuecessary glasses which they might better discard and other 0 Stremgthen their eyes that glasses might never be necessary. Here is a free receipt i that may be relied upon to give comfort and to help the eyes of some people‘ni:wél ment of thousands who have used it: Z.& Grains Optons (1 tablet). -2 Ounces Water. TUse as an eye wash night lnd mornlng, or oftener if possible. It makes most eyes feel fine, quickly nlllyl ln’n.lflon, brlzh(en he eyes and ‘sharpens. the . vision. Many ve used it no longer feel the peed many others have ceased to fear AR them. ptona tablets from “your nearest’ druggist and m:hn'tne solution at. your’own home, Confidence Well Founded. The implicit confidence that many people have in ‘Chamberiain’s Colie, Choléra and Diarrhoea Remedy - is founded on their expeflenca in the For sale by |Sellers, Mary ‘Agnes ‘Welsh, Qladys | that it hu eflented. For sale by All Jester, Arthur Vandersluis, chnm Dellen_ edge of flm meny remnrnble cures| of” colic, diarrhoea and dysentery thousands can, with a little care, probably,l POLAND SAID TO HAVE REVOLTED ¥ork Aug 25.—Count Johan voi ‘Bépstorff, German ambassador to the United States, announced upon his arrival’ here from Rotterdam on the steamer Noordam, that his gov- ernment had been informed that Rus- sian clvil.-and military-authorities had withdrawn from Poland and that the Poles had set up an independent gov- ernment ‘with Warsaw as its capital. Count Bernstorff left Berlin on Aug. 11, All that time he said the Ger- man government had reports that not a Russian soldier had been left in Poland. This report, Count von Berns- torff added, was general throughout Berlin. Diarthoea Quickly Cured. “I ‘was-faken with diarrhoea and} Mr. Yorks, the merhant here, per- suaded me to try a bottle of Cham berlain’s C#lie, Cholerd and Diarrho- ea Remedy: After takiaz one dose of it I was cured. It also cured oth- ers that I gave it to,” writed M. B. ‘Gebhart, Oriole, Pa. . Jhat is not at all unusual:: An ordifiary attack of diarrhoea cin almost 'invariably be cured by one or two'doses' of this remedy. It is one of:the most suc- cessful preparations that has been discovered. Thousands have testi- fied to its value. For sale by All Dealers. Pioneer Want Ads Phy. The new Third St. Theatre In addition to uclle Love, eiting ad ' | crossing: the ‘River “Angerapp in East _[ed to have decided the fate of Pru Under the management of Fred Brinkman - and Tuesday Lucile Love HouSé* of Styr |The sequel to The Ruby of Destiny, in three parts. ; ‘of The Great Ruby of Styr. London. A!l‘a 25.4Announcement has been ‘maside: iuiSt. Petersburg that the Germans &re: in full retreat and Prussia, according to the St. Peters- burg correspondent of the. Reuter Telegram. company. -The. correspond- . |ent adds that the .passage across the river near. Bargehmen is in the hands, of the Russians. To the west of the Mazur “the~Russians- occupied- Johan- nesburg, Ortelsburg’ and Willenburg: “Soldau, fitty-eight-miles northwest of Thorn,” the.correspondeént ;continues, “has been occupied. The inhabitants fled. The Germans evacuated. Nelden: burg, seventy .miles southwest of Elb- ing, after setting the place on fire, “The battle of Gumbinnen is claim- sia on this side of the Vistula rive: WOMAN LIVES 125. YEARS. Mrs. Dutkiewitz, a resident of Po- sen, a city in Polish Germany, held | the old age record. According to documents in her possession she was born February 21, 1785, and is now over 125 years old. But now a Bul- garian woman, Baba Vasilka; claims to be ten months Mrs. Dutkiewitz's senior. The record of her birth gives the date as May, 1784." She is now living on the farmwhere she was born, and where she werked in the fields forcover 19-years. - Her only “child;” a sen, aged: minety- nine, still"tills ‘the soil and ‘does the chores. One. wonders . how they lived without “ZUMALWEISS” graint /belt beers. T. R. Symons, Tel. 122-2. ¥ Resnlts are mosl .arways :certain vhen you use a Plonesr want ad .THE HOUSE OF: T’ONIGHT DNLY with the great actor:andaccress Fl'éMAN AND ROBERTSON A rollicking military romance in five parts.: -A: magmie!m play progéxcnon replete with. thrilling episodes, -vivid cli LOLITA potent situations and a different finish. First Show 7:20° APPLY SULPHUR LI Second 8:45 Admission 10c and 20c 'mn_ias:w KE A COLD CREAM: - SAYS. SULPHUR WIiLL END ITCHING ECZEMA S — In the treatment of the-variows forms of disfiguring, itching and burning| Eczema such as Acme, Ringworm, Salt| Rheum, there is nothing known'that can| take the . plaee of bold-sulpbur cream.| It effects such prompt relief, even in| the aggravated Eczema, that it is aj never-ending source of amazement tof physicians. For years: boldeulphur has occupied| a secure position in the treatment of| cutaneous eruptions by reason of ital cooling, parasite-destroying. properties., fore invaluable in owe: and inflammatory affections,, While not alwuys e:td)h nten:t ]eure,myet in every .i?ll‘gm stantly s the agopizing: nuihu subdues the lrnhhml, andi Eh thestn- flamed, raw skin right: up and it-iswofkenr years later before any“ggmmn. -eruption.. again appears. Those troubled should obtain. from any good pharmacist an ounce of bold: sulphur cream and --apply it @ upon the abrasion Jike an. ordinary: e Bold-sulphur is not_omly-parasiticidal, ‘ne-half cent 4 word. Phone:31. LET’S CO to-the but antipruritic and antiseptic, there- eream. - Tt Jen’t nt anil i the: prompt relief -lofio;la-;ory weloprae:: Minnesota State Fair and Exposition Hamline, Minn. Midway between Minneapolis-St. Faul Bk wtia s » September 7-12, 1914 We will not attempt here to list or describe the attractions that will be. shown; to do so would require a large volume. A good fair stimulates all_ arteries- of agriculture, commerce, and. education, encourages. further: development - of natural resources and reflects the prosperity and' growth of your state. Every good citizen should if posiible at least confer the benefit his or her presence may yield by attending. Educatiomal, Entertaining, Inspiring, Beneficial Notthern Pacific standard of service-to- St: Paul-Minneapolis—Parlor Cars; Sleeping Cars and Dining Cars. Ticket Agent Call' on local agent for full particulars. Union Depot, Bemidji, Minn. Minnessta & Intemalmnal Railway W.H. Gemmell Gen. Mgr., Brainerd Minn. Warner's Features present ventures following the THE BRINKMAN THEATRE The Ethel Alton Players. open this woek’s engagement beginning tonight ~ Clouds and Su Thns is a three act comedy drama with a Malmal stbry and a splendid view of comedy. Togethas: with this splendid show wuh ‘special matinees Monda B Admission there will: bea%lig special feature picture Scanes in Six Reels of Nurm ay and Tuesday at 2:30 p. ™. & First show 7:15, second show 9:00° 15¢ and a5¢

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