Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, December 29, 1914, Page 3

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town of Frohn are visiting tthndn in Alexandria, Minnesota,.this:we Mrs. P. Branwick of -Nary -transs|: acted business in| Bemidji. yesterd m’ ’ uemhm ‘that She returned home o1ythe night trainy have perished in the ppea fave' yonr furnityrs ‘repeired a fm the bargain stofe, first clam/work uh; § reasonable prices.—wAdv.” wnw‘fln _kek of food. The sick man_is as much= ont Mr. and Mrs. Archie. mfym a le-for:life ‘and | JILTER OF GIRL -1S SLAIN “Handsome” Joe Zarona Assassinated!| in Chicago. Chicago, Det. 29.—A well dressed Italian who was lured to a-lonely spot on the outskirts of the city and assas- sinated was identified as “Handsome”, Jack Zarona. According to the police Zarona a few months ago became enamored of] _About The City (A RS SRR RES SRR RS 2 ¥ LEST WE FORGET * R R R R R R R R e In case of fire call 349. THE HOUSE OF QUALITY TONIGHT ONLY 4n his strugg Trainmen’s annual dance, in City hall, New Year’s night. L B The Bemidji public schools will re- sume classes January 4. LI Minnesota’s 1915 state fair will be held September 6 to 11. s e Beltrami county’s next term of court will convene on Tuesday, Feb- ruary 9. LRI The 1915 convention of the North- Central Minnesota Educational asso- ciatfon will be held in this city, Feb- ruary 11, 12 and 13. PRI Red Cross seals may be purchased until December 31. Buy your share now and help bring a Visiting Nurse to Bemidji for a stay of one month. ... On next Tuesday, January 5, the county commissioners will hold their first session of the new year. Board officers will be selected at this session. .o . “The Cavaliers” will appear in Be- midji January 15. This is a Red- path attraction and comes here under the auspices of the Woman’s Study club, s . The 1916 summer meeting of the N. M. D. A. will be held at Coleraine, June 10 and 11. The winter con- vention will be held in Bemidji next December. P Public Christmas tree, given un- der the auspices of the Associated Charities and Salvation Army, in the City hall; - Wednesday ~evening, De- cember 30. o . Basketball- Puesday-evening, “Big Bemidg” against the Minneapolis In- dependents. On Thursday and Fri- day the-8t.-Cloud C. C's will play here. Everybody’s: going. LI It Is the effort of the publishers of the Ploneer: to-make the local col- umns-of the paper-of much interest to its readers.. In this they cannot be successful ;without assistance, and every news item, no matter if seem- ingly of trifie consequence, phoned to the recipients:of a belsted € gift last night, it being:: an_ glsht pound son. Mrs. E. Gessell of Swanwijlé,/whe has been visiting her daughteér it inewood for some:-time;: Wfldl her home yesterdayis:= 5 Omnibus te all trains;: l!m and night. :Phone - 866-88. ~Night, Call 104. Bunker.—Ady.. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Geil;;Sc., who have spent some time on .their somic., Harry’s’ farm-.in Plummen; >/ Idaho; have returned to Bemfdjt: Mrs. George: Linn of-Bemidii;:who! has been visiting:hér daughter, . Mrs. S. Peterson of ‘Wilton for-a .shartsdl time, returned to the city:yesterday, Miss Verle Jensen..of -BigFall§ arrived in the city yesterdax-snd is the guest of Miss Grace..Pefersomn She will remain in the eity:until:Fri= day. Miss Ethel Kerr of Big Falls; ‘who! has been the guest- of Miss Tda Virs| ginia Brown:of Bemidji‘ avenue,for4 the past few'-days, has returmedio her home. Miss. Alice. Pendergast;-teacher, din the government-schaol ot Flandrean, South Dakota, is. visiting=her sister; Miss Jessie Pendergast-of Grant:¥al- |&T! ley for a short time:; ; Miss Flora: Todd ‘of Kelliher;swho has been visiting friends and rela-, tives in. Park-Rapids; during Qhriat- mas, returned.-to-Bemidji last/evens ing, enroute to Kellilier; 7~ Mrs. Mark Lambert will-leave: this: evening for. Kelliher, where 'she will; visit - friends--for--a -few. days/-She. will go to the twin cities the latter part of the week for a visit. There will be a band concert in the City hall this evening. Several spe- cial numbers have been arranged for the concert and it is expected and urged that a large number be present. Mrs. 1. G. Haycraft of Solway was a Bemidji visitor yesterday. The Haycrafts were formerly residents of tkis city. They now own a store in Solway, known as the Hayeraft Mer- cantile company. You will be surprised at the thor- ough results we secure—and : the savings we can make you by restor- ing garments to usefulness at very little cost. The Model Dry Cleaning 81, is appreciated. Al Roecker of Grand Rapids was in Bemidji-yesterday on business mat- ters. Miss Martha Klingbeil of Pine- wood transacted business in the city yesterday. For Wood Phone 129.—Adv. 8. C. Brown of Big Falls has been visiting friends in Bemidji for a short time. Mrs. Frank Trafton and daughter Gustava of Rosby were Bemidji vis- itors yesterday. One of these days you ought:to go to Hakkerup’s and have your pic- ture taken.—Adv. Mr. and Mrs. Nels Wilett ‘of the CREAM FOR CATARRH OPENS UP NOSTRILS ' | Tells How To Get Quick Relief | from Head-Colds, It's Splendid! In one minute your clogged nostrils will open, the nir passages Gf your head will clear and you can breathe freely No more hawking, snuffling, blowing headache, dryness. No struggling for breath at night; your cold or ecatarrh will be gone. Get a small bottle of Ely’s Cream Balm from your druggist now. Apply a little of this fragrant, antiseptic, bealing cream in your nostrils. It pen- etrates through every air passage of the head, soothes the inflamed or swollen mucous membrane and relief .comes: in- stantly. It’s J\lst fine. Don’t stay stuffed-up with a cold or nasty catarrh—Reliet comes go quickly. “The Best Medicine I Ever Used” “Chamberlain’s Tablets is the best medicine I ever used for constipation, biliousness and headache,” writes Mrs. A. W. Milne, St. George, Utah. These tablets are very effectual, easy and pleasant to take. For sale by All Dealers. 2 Northwestern: l:nnsomloq of Music, Art and lm'““non e e aveimi e bt ted. . Free class ‘ment in which vuu;;m';m Pres 2 The Ploneer has just completed the publishing of a splendid 175-page ook hoek -issued by the ladies of the Presbyterian church of = Crookston, and-will retain a few copies to be s0ld.at :50q., . Better reserve one by telephone. Phone Sh—Ady. o House, 309 3rd St.—Adv. The marriage of Miss Bess Rogers, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George Rogers of Nary, to Allen R..Forte, son of Mr. and Mrs. George Forte of the town of Eckles, will take place Friday, January 1, at Nary. Ollie Neilson, chief clerk of the Markham hotel, who is a member of the Minnesota Hotel Clerks associa- tion, will not attend the convention which is not in progress at Duluth. Mr. Neilson had intended.to be pres- ent, but was unable to leave his du- ties here. < J. P. Lahr and family. left yester- day for St. Cloud, where they will visit friends today, before leaving for California, where they. will spend the winter. Mr. Lahr is one of the First ward aldermen on the Bemidji council and is also clerk of the school board, Mrs. M. Malone and daughter Gertrude and son Gregg, returned yesterday from Crooksfon, where they spent Christmas, the guests of Mrs. Malone’s daughters, Mrs. H. J. Welte and Mrs. Norman. James Malone, who spent Christmas day in Crooks- R A R s ton, returned to the city Saturday. 4 per cent 4444444 or 4 Deposit. . Northern National Bank.—Adv. Four surveyors of the Great North- ern railroad company, William H. Feyder, P. W. Birmingham, F. W. Gallagher and. W. . W. McDonald, all of St. Paul, who were in Bemidji for some time before Christmas in con- nection with work which they have been doing in this vicinity, have re- turned to Bemidji for a short stay. Tow Stewart, who recently dis- posed of his Kelliher business hold- ings, soon after returning to this city to again take up his residence, has accepted a position-astraveling’'sales- man with the Gamble-Robinson rBe- midji company, assuming his new duties yesterday. - Ben Hall, who for- merly held the position,: will leave tonight for: Duluth. Margaret Carson entertained at-a Kewpie party yesterday,:ithe occa- sion being her tenth :birth anniver-| ' sury. The guests were Stella De- Rushia, Eunice DeRushia, Aileen Naylor, Jean Walker, Grace Currie, Lorraine Kreatz and Margaret -Mc- |Cuaig. The birthday. cake and : a very large Kewpie formed a charm- ing centerpiece. The favors were un- ique and consisted of small kewpies. Misses Edith Mills and Dorothy. Car- son assisted Mrs. Carson in serving. A bracket and clip have been pa- tented for a holding an incandescent lamp on. top :of & dry -battery. ‘s hs” would ;be en. the fir-3 lng/m On-theother hand . the strong, yigerous man,:his veins filled with nieh,: redblood, has an enor- moys gdyaniage- i whatever, position Im may die fated: to-occupy in.war or "The pésmpt and certain action of Dr. Pler¢e’s-Golden Medical Discov- in drjving all harmful-germs and rnities. from - the -blood, sets in fiottom\tho ~repair . process which works actively. on the diseased -mem- brane “where ‘Catarrh- flourishes un- checked :pr:where ‘the ' skin _ gives rnhgot the bad blood:beneath by Mlnmmma\ud boils; -also the skimelm‘n ecomes wholesome ""T’hu.rug!nlmi“*upfl new.-and P rfest saveriig .and carrying. sted Joat- ter by <way>of -the bloot:liver: .and | klg%yo,\ Catgrrh is overcome and “There is ndt a' drop ogaleohol\or any,/ narép! ‘Dr. Pierce!s Golden’ ical-Diseovery; -but in this safe vegetable-remedy:there is mighty al- ternative=pewer which by replacing the blooddimpurities with ‘pure, rich bl -nofenly -endg-Catarrhal. eon. ditigns whmr \located, but vital fzed tlie} kindneys,<stomach, liver, bowels 4w every -organ of the body. People=who suffér. hupiliation and mentsl-misery ;because-of -Pimples, Skin Bldtches, Eruptions, ‘Boils, ©arbuneles, escpeajally benefited: Itis notsa; secret;zemedy. for its in. gredients.are;printed -on- wrapper. Send:forfreecbook on_the blood to Er YPler --Invalid’s Hotel, Buffalo, REPOBT:*DEFEAT.Z0F : TURKS, Russjane;Fell of Victory in.the Cau- o5 ca Petrograd; :Dec:-29.—Enver. Pasha, Tufkish war minister, has arrived in Armenia &nd will take command of the Turkish troops in the Caucas: Assisted by the Black sea flLer which bombarded the shore where the Turks were concentrated, the Rus- sian troops drove the Turks from the ‘Transthovoch district, a statement as- serts. L R R o R T e EMPEROR FRANCIS JOSEPH SENDS THANKS. Washington, Dec. 29.—The state department announced re- celpt of the following telegram from Ambassador Penfield at Vienna: “Emperor Francis Joseph has communicated to me his grate- ful thanks to the sympathetic friends in America who sent gifts of clothing and toys to the war orphans: by ship Ja- son;, a half million gifts being ing distributed throughout Aus- tria-Hungary. Emperor thanks every donor and person taking part in work of sending Christ- mas cheer to his suffering peo- ple.” E e e i i o e i a a a a B o i R O R TONICHT Miss Olson of Nymore: will present.an interesting play entitled: ‘A Xmas Plot Cast of Characters as follows Grandma Van Cleve, Edith Craven; Miss Emmeline, an old mmd Alice Nichols: Dorothy, the z granddaughter, Ruth Fish- arkins, the butler, |Lonny Sci'nmb, v John Weston an - admir- er, John Westerlund; Henry Bar- low, another admirer; »Carl Larvik. FOU B SCENES ' Recitation: Alvin Blade Song«~ - Gg‘.llen Polinski Change of Pictures Box-office Attraction:Co. of New York presents THERAT, a thrill- multiple;:reels of action Admission 10c and 16¢c Tnmgbt aml Tuesday THE Haur:.Sh :clair Stock Co. The great comedy melodrama . :More -than 10,000 persons are-em- | ployed in Amsterdam’s diamond ewt~| ting and -polishing industry. Defective Page The Photo Drama Co. present AMERICA'S FAMOUS STARS Mr. Herbert-Kelsey and Miss Effie Shannon, two artists known and revered wherever the English language is spoken, in After The Ball P - IN 6 PARTS A photo drama which for intensity of human interest marks a new epoch in photoplays. . Nothing is left to the imagination, every turn of First'Show 7:20 Sharp thefilm discloses a laugh, a tear and a heart throb. Tomorrow: Alice Joyce in ‘‘The Viper”’ Admlulon 10c and 20c FOUR-- KNOWN T0: BE"'DEAD Inmates: of Clty Home at Cambridge, Mass., Perish in Fire, Cambridge, Mass., .Dec. . 29.—Four jdeaths and the probable fatal burning -of ‘another:inmate in the fire which trapped the occupants .of the City home while they: were.asleep was es- tablished ‘when: the offictals ‘made a careful ‘checking up of the register. '“ Many others among the 238 inmates, mostly aged men-and women, suffered severely from tright and ‘exposure and several .were partly overcome ° - Read the Want Ads.” ‘REPORT GN UNEMPLOYMERT Chicago . Commission Recommends System of Municipal Insurance. Chicago, Dec. 29.—The city commis- sion to investigate causes of unem- ployment recommends ‘a system of municipal insurance against idleness. A permanent committee of ten citi- zens is advocated to co-operate with employers in establishing a municipal employment commission. The report says that state employment agencies have been worthless in bringing men and jobs together. Need any nelp? rv a want ad. 'DECLARE FOR AN OPEN: SHOP. stroyed their home near here. an Italian girl, but recently discarded her for ancther whom he expected to marry Feb. 5 next. Zarona was shot in the back. Iden- tification was by means of receipts for, diamond rings, one baught two months, ago and the other on Christmas. New Orleans Publishers Break Off Negotiations.-With Unions. New. Orleans, Dec. 29.—Declaration for “open” newspaper shops was made here by all the morning papers of New Orleans, in published notices. ‘The announcements stated that all negotiations with the unions of me- chanical trades had Dbeen broken off. A wage controversy has been in prog- ress between the publishers and the unions. ARCHBISHOP RIORDAN DEAD Veteran Catholic Prelate Succumbs to Pneumonia. San Francisco, Dec. 29.—Most Rev. Patrick William Riordan, archbishop of the diocese of San Francisco of the Catholic church, died here of pneu- monia. He was born in New Bruns- wick in 1841 and appointed arch- bishop of the San Francisco diocese in 1888. Five Are Burned to Death. Winterhaven, Fla., Dec. 29.—Harry Alvey, his wife and three children were burned to death when fire de- A well-known: authority states stomach trouble and indig amn 5 ly always due to acidit —and not, as most fol eve. fmn a lack of digestive juices. He states that an excess of hydrochloric acid'im - the stomach retards digestion and starts food fermentation, then our meals sour like garbage in a can, fonmng gcnd fluids ~ and gases which mflatg stomach like a toy balloon. “We " get that heavy, lumpy feeling in'the chest, we eructate sour food, belch gas, or have heartburn, flatulence; water= br:I;;h of‘ nausea. 5 il e tells us to lay. u:de -digestive aids and instead, from any pharutacy. four ounces of Jad Snlu and take tablespoonful in. a glan of water before” breakfast while it is effervescing,” ang furthermore, to continue this for one week. While relief follows the first doge, it is important to neutralize th acidity, remove “the ga ing msl, start the liver, smnulate the. kidneys and thus promote a free flow of pure digestive jui N 5 ad Salts is inexpensive and is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined -with lithia and sodium hosphate. This harmless salts is used gy thousands of people for stomach trouble with excellent results, Cure Your Cold While You Can. More real danger lurks in a cold than in any other of the minor a‘l- ments. -The safe way is to take -Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy and rid yourself of the cold as quickly as possible. For sale by All Dealers. - L i Ledgers Single and double entry and loose leaf. All sizesi-and all prices. YOULL NEED B with which to commence -the new year, and you will find our supply will give you a splendid assortment from. which to . choose. Diaries, Vest Pocket Note Books, Coat Pocket Note Books, leather and cloth bound, from 10c to $1.50. L. P. Loose Leaf Pocket Note Books, cash, ledger, journal and record ruled. Let Us Help You = Journals 2, 3,4 and 6 column Journals, all sizes and all prices. Theres a great demand for new blank books at the beginning of every year and 1915 promises to be the biggest ever. Bemidji merchants are anxious to keep up-to-the-minute accounts and many are making plans to revise their bookkeeping systems during 1915. Columnar Blank Books We have them from 4 to 24 columns When you use one of these it will enable you to keep your various departments separate and strike a trial balance in a few minutes. ASK TO SEE ONE One Cent Each Grocers, Meat Markets and General Merchandise Account books for family accounts:for sale at one cent each. The Pioneer has always lead in the blank book busi- ness in North Central Minnesota. If we haven’t what jyou want we can get it for you on short notlce. The Pioneer Securlty Bank Bldg. Phone 31 - Bemidji, Minn.

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