Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, September 3, 1914, Page 3

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] About The City HHHH KRR KKK KKK KKK * LEST WE FORGET * LA RS S S SR SR EEEEE S Phone 31 about it. Seed Corn Week, September 14 to 19. Athletic club dance September 11. Opening club’s social season. General election day, November 3. Band concert every Friday night at the city dock. The fall term of court for this county begins September 8. The great Minnesota state fair wiil be held September 7 to 12. Rubie Henrionnet recital at the Methodist church Thursday evening. The Baudette Fair will be held Tuesday and Wednesday, September 15 and 16. The Bemidji public schools will open for the fall term on Tuesday, September 8. The next meeting of the county commissioners will be held Wednes- day, September 30. Annual rally of the Beltrami Coun- ty Christian Endeavor association will be keld in Bemidji September 4, 5 and 6. Friday is Bemidji Day at the Red Lake Indian Fair. The special train will leave at 9 a. m. Every- body is going. . The duck and prairie chicken hunting season opens Monday, Sep- tember 7. Hunting partridges is legal after October 1. That the state meeting of the Uni- ted Charities association will be held here Sept. 26, 27, 28 and 29. The state commissioners will meet here at the same time. Big meeting of N. M. D. A. at Brainerd, December 1, 2, 3 and 4. Affiliated at the convention will be the Minnesota Crop Improvement as- sociation and the Women’s Auxiliary. That the 1914 fair of the Beltrami County Agricultural association will be given Sepiember 16, 17 and 18. Mony features have been secured and the exhibiticu is certain to be a greater success than ever before. Tuesday, 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 assist by phoning all news items to 31. Favors of this kind are appreciated by the publish- ers. P LOCAKE BREVITIES Rev. Soper of Northome was a Be- midji visitor yesterday. L. Sinclair of Chicago is in the city a few days on business. For Wood Phone 129.—Adv. George Ralph, formerly state drainage engineer, was a Bemidji vis- itor yesterday. Mrs. E. G. Perry of Northern was in the city yesterday calling on the local merchants. Bell boy wanted at Hotel Mark- ham. Must be over 16 years of age. —Adv. Miss Marie Bjelle of Frohn was in the city yesterday, shopping and calling on friends. Mrs. O. T. Hegland and Mrs. A. Nuss of Frohn were among the out of town visitors yesterday. One of tifese aays you ought to %0 to Hakkerups and have your pic- ture taken.—Adv. E. A. Simpson, deputy state fire marshal, with headquarters at Min- neapolis, was in the city today. Mrs. M. Malone and family have moved from 703 Beltrami avenue to 1100 Beltrami avenue, the |Oscar |( Miner rasiflence. boe Have your furniture repaired: at| the bargain store first class work l.t reasonable prices .—Aaav. 8. G. Byerly of Duluth, where he is connected with the Duluth Brew- ing company, was a Bemidji busi- ness visitor this morning. Mrs. Frank Patterson of Wilton was the’guest of her daughter, Miss Arvilla Patterson, operator at the Markham hotel, yesterdn_y. Fancy Sliced Pineapple, $2.00 per one dozen cans at W. G. Schroeder’s Store. Phone 65.—Adv. Mrs. Calvin Daniels of Becida, who has been visiting relatives at Barron, Wisconsin, and points in Minnesota, returned to her home yesterday. Miss Signa Paulson of Shevlin, who ‘has been viSiting relatives in the town of Frohn for some time, re- turned to her home yesterday. She will attend high school this year. Start school with a Bemidji pen- cil, sold at any store that sell pen- cils. Both hard and soft, 6c each. —Adv. Mrs. A. D. Perry, who has spent the summer at her home in town of Northern, has returned to her work in the Sisseton Indian school, where she is in the employ of the govern- ment. Charles Schroeder and daughter Ardyth of Plantaganet and Miss Florence Middleton of Washington, D. C., autoed to the Schroeder farm in Grant Valley yesterday and spent the day. Savings depusits made 1n the North ern National Bank up to and includ- ing the 10th of the month draw in- terest for the full month.—Adv. Miss Edna Brown of Minneapolis, who has spent the past two months in Bemidji, returned to her home this morning. Miss Brown is a sis- ter of Attorney M. J. Brown of this city. Mrs. Jack Meyro of Nevis, who has been visiting at the Hayth home in the town of Northern for the past two weeks, has returned to her home. Her husband is the depot agent at Nevis. Mrs. O. Miner and daughter Ruth have spent several days in Walker this week, visiting friends. They shipped their household goods to Grand Forks Monday and expect to leave for that city in a day or two. Let the little tots come for sup- plies themselves. We’ll take care of ‘em as well as if their parents ac- companied them. They know what they want, so do we. Anything for the school. The Pioneer School supply store. Phone 31.—Adv. E. M. Sathre went to Crookston yesterday afternoon to attend the annual meeting of the Vega Land company, of which he is president. He will be the guest of his brother, J. C. Sathre, while in Crookston. Mr. Sathre will return to Bemidji tomor- TOW. ) Bueford M. Gile, agriculturist in the Bemidji public schools, will leave tomorrow night for the twin cities, being in attendance at the Beltrami county exhibit booth at the state fair. He will resume his work in the schools here Monday, Septem- ber 14. The Pioneer school supply store has always been your store for tab- lets, erasers, note books, ink, writ- ing paper, rulers, crayoms, pencil boxes, etc., ete. This year this store is better and bigger stocked than ever before. Come in and see.— Ady. Mesdames E. K. Anderson and Robert McCall left last night for the twin cities, where they will attend the state fair. They will also visit friends and relatives at Mankato and New Ulm before returning to Be- midji. They expect to be away two weeks. Mrs. F. Paulson of Shevlin and her granddaughter, Jennett Nelson of Northwood, North Dakota, were in Bemidji yesterday enroute to the lat- ter’s home. Miss Jennett spent the summer with her aunt, Mr8. Fred Swenson of Frohn and returned home to attend school. Frank Price, the well known Grand lfiplds attorney, midji this morning enroute to Wi er, where he will = appear. . Judge C. W. Stanton on legal mat- ters. Miss Minnie Crowley of Chicago arrived in the city last evening and Will be the guest of her sister, Mrs, ‘W. N. Bowser for a couple of weeks. Her gister, Miss. Rose Crowley, has been a guest at the Bowser home for the past three months and ‘will re- turn to Chicago with her sister. A Japanase Supper September 7, from 6 to 10 p. m. HEveryone come to the Japanese supper to be given at the Hayner home, Lake Boulevard, Monday evening by Mrs. Evans’ Sunday school ~ class. A" regular Japanese supper will be served by Japanese girls. Admission ' 20c.— Adv. Mrs, C. H. Bergmeir of St. Paul, who is with the “Volks Zautung,” a German newspaper printed at St. Paul, is in Bemidji for a few days. Mrs. Bergmeis is troubled with hay fever and comes to this part of the country to get relief. From here she expects to go to Duluth for a visit. The case against Waugh and Bails, charged with assault on Dr. Kahala at Erskine two weeks ago, was set before the justice court at Erskine today, but because of the condition of the doctor, who is in the local hospital, the case was continued for two weeks.—Wednesday, Crookston Daily Times. Miss Corenne Carlson entertained at a taffy pull last evening for Miss Helen Chaffee of Valley City, North Dakota, who has been her guest for the past three weeks. The guests were Misses Edna Anderson, Lucille Moritz, Louise McCready, Emma Klein, Lucene McCuaig, Edith Mills, Edna Buckland, Catherine Richards, Izorah Scott, and Miss Helen Chaf- fee. Miss Chaffee left this morn- ing for her home. Eldridge Lord, son of Mr. and Mrs. A. Lord, went to Minneapolis this morning, where he will be a student at the St. Thomas military college this year. Mrs. Lord will go to the cities this evening and will spend a week there. Her niece, Miss Grace Shannon of Minneapolis, who has been a guest at the Lord home this summer, will accompany her to Min- neapolis. Mrs. Lord will attend the state fair while in the cities. Ralph Stone, one of the most suc- cessful of the young attorneys of this judicial district, arrived in Bemidji this morning from his home in Grand Rapids and later left for Walker where he has professional business today. Mr. Stone is one of the nom- inees for county attorney of Itasca county and as he received a very flattering vote at the primaries, his friends are confident that he will be returned a winner at the November polls. A party comprising Editor and Mrs. Farley Dare, of the Walker Pilot, Mrs. G. H. Nelson of Walker, Mrs. W. F. Gates of Independence, Kansas, who is spending the summer at Glengarry, Walker, and Judge C. ‘W. Stanton, spent last evening in Be- midji, having arrived on the after- noon Soo from Federal Dam, making the trip from Walker to that village by boat, a thirty-minute trip. They returned to Walker on the late train. Judge Stanton will return to Bemidji Saturday night and will preside at the September term of court here.. G. A. R. MARCHES IN REVIEW Veterans Parade in Detroit While Crowds Watch. Detroit, Sept. 3.—For the forty- eighth time members of the Grand Army of the Republic marched in na- tional review. Sidewalks, balconies, ‘windows -of buildings and temporary grand stands were jammed with spectators as the veterans attending the G. A. R. encampment here march- ed through the streets. By order of ‘Washington Gardner, commander-in- chief, women were not permitted to march in the parade. Hundreds. of women, wives and daughters .of the old soldiers, were among the specta-| m tors. The paraders marched over a route a mile and a half long. 70 URGE WAR TAX MEASURE President Wilson Will Appear Before Congress. ‘Washington, Sept. 3.—President Wil- son will address congress asking that a war tax measure be passed.to sup- before | Berlin, via The Hague, Sept. 83— Reports of continuéed successes In both the east and iwest were made public by the war office. The German ad; against Paris continued without interruption, it is stated; and the stubborn resistance is being “slowly -but steadily overcome, But- it is ‘in the east the German arms have scored itheir most note- worthy success. The Russian' inva- sion of Hastern FPrussia has' been checked and the adyancing columng Touted “with enormaqus losses. 'Thou- sands of prisoners have been taken] including many: Rufssian officers of high rank. , The situation in the east is much improved through the arrival ‘ there of fresh troops. Thése have been se cured witleut the general staff hay ing to call on the Western forces fc any men. LITTLE DAMM‘.E IS CAUSED Germans Continue Aerial ‘Aftacks on Parig. 3 Paris, Sept. 3.—French aviators have been instructed to prepave their armored aeroplanes for action against the German aeroplanes, which con- tinue to fly over Panis. Several bombs were dropped early in the day, but caused little damage. It is plain the German plan is not 50 much to do real damage as to ter- rorize the city. The American committee organized by Myron T. Herrick, the American ambassador, has cabled the -state de- partment at Washington asking the government to call attention of the Berlin governmert to the dropping of bombs on Paris, which is not yet be- seiged. It is claimed this action is in viola- tion of The Hasie agreement. e Mother of Eighteen Children. “I am-the mother; af eighteen chil- dren and have U!e praise of doing more work than i@y young woman in my town,” writes, Mrs. C. J. Mar- tin, Boone Mill, Va:® “I suffered for | five years with stomach trouble and could not eat as much as a biscuit without suffering. I have taken three bottles of Chamberlain’s Tab- lets and am now a well woman and | weigh 168 pounds.. I can eat any- | tihnk I want to,~and as much as I want and feel bettér than I have ot | any time in ten years. I refer to! any one in Boone Mill or vicinity and they will vouch for what I say.” | Chamberlain’s Tablets are for sale by | All Dealers. MEAT Wilt HIONEYS BT Take a glass of Sa.lm before breakfast if your Back hurts or Bladder is troubling you. No man or woman who eats meat regu- larly can make a mistake by flushing: the kidneys occasionally, says a well-known authority. Meat forms uric acid which excites the Kidneys, they become over- worked from the strain, get sluggish and fail to filter the waste and poisons from the blood, then we get sick. Nearly all rheumatism, headaches, liver —trouble, nervousness, dizziness, sleeplessness and urinary disorders come from sluggish kxdneys The moment you feel a dull ache in the kidneys or your back hurts or if the urine is ecloudy, offensive, full of sedi- ment, irregular of passage or attended by a sensation of scalding, stop eating meat and -get about four ounces of Jad Salts from any pharmacy; take a tablespoonful in ‘a glass of water before breakfast and in a few days your kidneys will 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 and stimulate the kidneys, also to neutralize the acids in urine so it no longer causes irritation, thus ending bladder weakness. Jad ‘Salts is inexpénsive and cannot injure; makes a delightful effervescent lithia-water drink which everyone should take now-and then to keep the kidneys clean and active and the blood pure, thereby avoiding serious kidney OPENING ‘DAY Saturday September 5th ery parlors herewith a cordial invita- to inspect their display of 1914 fall and winter hats. Whether you are in need of a new hat or not you will enjoy seeing the new things as much as we would like to have you. The Henrionnet Millinery Parlors Minnesota Avenue EN The Henrionnet Millin- extend you 1914 Fall Millinery Announcement OF THE y __Henrionnet Millinery Parlors 7 / / Our millinery work rooms under the direction of Miss Helen Leetch, are out- ~doing all former efforts in the production of beautiful hats in correct styles for the coming season. The variety of mc- dels is so comprehen- »\ sive that while there \ i I | | l I l I v%are hats suitable 1 " for the ‘most ele- gant costumes; there are many others designed to exactly suit the quietly dress- ed woman as well. Al possess that distinction of charac- ter which follows the close study of models from the foremost ‘ French designers. They are perfect in every detzil of shape and colerings. British Losses Given. ~ London, Sept. 3—The official cas- nalties suffered by the cavalry bri- gade and three of the divisions less one brigade, of the British foree in TFrance follows: Killed, 36 officers and 127 men; wounded, 57 officers and 629 men; missing, 95 officers and 4, 183 men. . ad the Pioneer want ads, CATARRH CANNOT BE CURED with LOCAL APPLICATIONS, as they cannot reach the seat of the digease. Catarrh is a blood or constitutional dis- ease, and in order to cure it you must take internal remedies. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken internaily, and acts di- rectly the blood and mucous surfaces. Hall's Catarrh Cure is not a quack med- icine. It was prescribed by one of the best physicians in this country for years and is a regular prescription. It is composed of the best tonics known, combined with the best blood purifiers acting directly on the mucous surfaces. The perfect combination of the two in- gredients is_what produces such won- derful results in curing catarrh. Send for testimonials, free. F. J. CHENEY & CO, Props,, Toledo, 0. Sold by Drugsists, price 75c. Take Hall's Family Pills for consti- pation—Adv. complications. SLAUGHTER WILL BE AWFUL Heavier Losses Yet to Come, Says Englishman. London, Sept. 3.—Telegraphing from Paris the correspondent of the London Daily News says that an old campaigner, who has reached the French capital, describing the battle he saw Tuesday morning, said: “Murderous as was the German on- slaught, their attack was repulsed. From news which has reached here from many sources, I fear you must be prepared to -hear of heavier losses.” % First Canadian Killed. Winnipeg, Sept. 3—The first Cana- dian reported killed in action in Bel- gium is Captain Bertram Denison, nephew of’ Police Magistrate Denison of Toronto and son of Admiral John Denison of Toronto. Something is wrong in our mar- keting system ‘when a small crop brings more money than a bountiful one. BEMIDJI FOLKS ASTONISH DRUGGIST We sell many good medicines but we are told the mixture of buckthorn bark, glycerine, etc., known as Ad- ler-i-ka, is the best we ever sold. Be- midji folks astonish us daily by tell- ing how QUICKLY Adler-i-ka re- lieves sour stomach, gas on the stom- ach and constipation. Many report that A SINGLE DOSE relieves these troubles almost IMMEDIATELY. We are glad we are Bemidji agents for Adler-i-ka. French & Co., druggists. —Adv. Despondency Is often caused by indigestion and constipation, and quickly disappears when Chamberlain’s Tablets are taken. For sale by All Dealers. Ploneer wanus—oge gall cent 3 word cash. TONIGHT AT Grand Theatre " i THE HOUSE OF. QUALITY TONICHT ONLY Daniel Frohman presents Mrs. Fiskes Famous Success plement the falling customs revenues. Soon after returning to Washington from the summer White House at Cor- nish, N. H., the president got in touch with congressional leaders. | Within ten minutes atter he arrived at the White House he was hard at work. He saw several callers. His health is much improved. - . [THE BRINKMAN .. The Eagle's Retuge "~ e is a‘series of thrilling escapades. In three parts. . : o With other universal pictures. 2 e o £ : ; - The Margot Beaton Stock Co. THE FISHING FROG Matinees daily, except Sunday, 1;30 to 4:30 presents - : | The fishing frog buries himself in g | the mud and ties barely concesled | i ot ghow 7:10 'Second Show 130 Third Show 9:50 The emotional drama : weeds, where, with his huge mouth ey open; he fishes for his dinner. On : Admission 10c, 5c¢ i the back of his head there are three : : spines, the longest of which he bends With Mary Pickford [forward in front of his ' mouth i & , in three acts A delightful c]omedy dra;.m:}l of ?omety, lovehm;ld the great outdcors. | gently swaying it in the water. At com 1 ng FI‘I day N lght i A sweet play proving the pleasant truth that love levels all. last it attracts a young fish, which - makes a spring for the supposed To" Of The war Path B | vorm, when ~enap- ftn” mouths | 1s Sunday Night - - - the comedy drama = First Show 7:20 Second 8:45 Third 9:50 closed, and Mr. Fishing Frog has had |. B Saturd ay . Plaln Mo"y Admission 5c and {0Oc his dinner. When man goes fishing ¥ % 3 he has better luck if he has “ZUM- L e e Ko o Million Dollar Mystery in four acts | FRIDAY. Mary Pickford in Hearts Adrif¢|{At. - T. R. Symons, Tel. 122-2. Matinee at 3 p. m. i TOMORROW — A Spemal' Feature for Sunday British factories employ over 200,- : n itled A M othel"fi Love Popular Prices ©000: women. = e o . [

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