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pa J. e et TR A. MeCONKEY § Notice t; ;I;e "Public: We have added to our line of Crockery,'Glass-. ware, Groceries, Feed, Hay, Etc., a full line of Fresh Meats of all kinds such as Fresh Beef, Pork, Mutton, Veal, Ete., as well as all kinds of Salt Meats, Smoked Meats, Ete. We extend a cordial invitation to each and all to call at our store and give us a trial. Mr. Heaskley, who is associated with us, has had 30 years’ experience in this work and 1s thoroughly up-to-date, fully understanding this business. We do not pretend to sell at cost % but our aim will be to give good weights, make only a reasonable profit and will try to deliver promptly. Do not be alraid to send your children for the same pains will be taken as though you came yourself. Remember our K 30 prct. discount ¢n Faney Lamps This is a closing out price. Our Apples at 50 cents per bushel are going very fast and will not last long. Very Truly Yours, | J. A. McConkey. FE S A W S ...pest Lots... In All Parts of the City. EEEEAEEE T Cheapest Lots In All Parts of the City. : Bemidji Townsite & Improvement Co. JOHN F. GIBBONS, Local Agent. RT3 R B B B R T SRR R AR A ERE T B R ] R RS HENRY BUENTHER Naturalist and Taxidermist 208 Second St. Postoffice Box No. 686 BEMIDJI, MINN. BIRDS, WHOLE ANIMALS, FISH, FUR RUGS AND ROBES and GAME HEADS mounted to order and for sale. | carry at all times a good assortment of INDIAN RELICS and CURIOS, FUR GARMENTS made to order, repaired and remodeled FURSin season bought. 1 guarantee my work mothproof and the most lifelike of any in the state MY WORK IS EQUALLED BY FEW, EXCELLED BY NONE A Deposit Required on All Work YOUR TRADE SOLICITED A Beautiful Display of - Chinaware and Glassware just received at 'THE FAIR. Liverpool China, Semi-Porceline Sets, Tvory, Opal, Ruby, Crystal and Gold, and Souvenir, Table and Timo Berry Sets. Big line of Stop Jars from the Zanes- ville pottery; regular price $1.25, now THE "FAULTLESS"” {..STUMP PULLER... | ' P IThe Daily Pioneer PUBLISHED EVERY AFTERNOON. PIONEER PUBLISHING CO0. By R. W. HITCHCOCK. ntered in the postoffice at Bewidji, Minn., ag second rlass matter. Official County aud City Paper SUBSCRIPTION $5 PER YEAR A Shameful Business. The campaign conducted azainst Hon. Robert C. Dunn and his defeat for governor is a last- ing disgrace to the state of Min- nesota. Mr. Dunn’s defeat was accomplished purely by dis- honorable means. It was accom- plished by winning away from Mr. Dunn thousands of republi- can votes, the conviction having been forced upon hundreds and thousands of good republicans that Mr. Dunn was not ‘“fit” for the office. No such inundation of lies ever swept over any state; nothing was too mean, too low, too vileto be told and retold, printed and reprinted about Mr. Dunn. It mattered not that none of these had any basis in fact, that all of them were pure inventions and repeatedly proved so0. Old lies were repeddled and new slanders were spread with a porsistence and a malignity that were astounding; the campaign of vilification triumphed, to the everlasting disgrace of the fair name of the great state of Min- nesota. THE Duluth News Tribune well says: g It is difficult to see where justice will coma in the case of the Minnesota campaiga liar and his vietim. The damage done the reputation of an upright and honorable official cannot be. repaired. If ever an honest and kindly heart beat in a manly breast, it is the heart of Robert C. Dunn. The state election in Minnesota this year is truly a shameful busi- ness. Ski-U-Mah. The people of Minnesota have good reason to be proud of their great university, for it is a great university. Although a compara- tively young institution it ranks in point of attendance among the two or three largest institutions in the United States being out- done in this respect by only Harvard and Michigan, and that by a narrow margin. But.the greatness of the school has out- grown its attendance and the University of Minnesota draws its students from every state and from every land even to the distant lands across the seas. It must be the pride of every Min- nesotan that the state «U” stands foremost in every depart- ment of human endeavor and we do well to rejoice in the magnifi- cent showing made by the Min- nesota football eleven of 1904, Football stands today in the col- leges of the land as the supreme test of physical deyelopment, and unless it be Michigan, there are none in the west to dispute Min- nesota’s supremacy in the field of athletics. For brains and brawn Minnesota is hard to beat. MINNESOTA appears to have a pretty fair claim to the western footballi championship. It has piled upa greater total score, has been less scored upon and has made a greater score in one sin- gle game than any other football team in the land. This, with ten uninterrupted victories, is a pretty substantial basis for championship claims, Tough Men in Town. It is said that Bemidji at the present time is infested with a large number of tough men who travel under guise of woodsmen, but whose real character is of a shady nature. The police are 4 Most Simple and Durable Stump Puller on the Market. E E § World’s Fair Prize. flvfls WRIGHT, - Local Agent.: taking strenuous methods to rid the city of the men, and hardly a day passes but that a number of them are sent outof the city. Flour! Flour! Flour! Use “Pillsbury’s Best” Flour PIONEER WANT COLUMN Bemidji, it The Flour that Never Fails :: We have bought not only one carload but 1000 barrels of “Pillsbury’s Best” Flour below present market price and we offer it to you at a remarkably low price. Call en Us and We Will Tell You We guarantee every sack of Flour, and if not found satisfactory money cl:ccrfully refunded. low the crowd it wiiilead you to the busy store. We treat you on the [] the year O. W. G.__S—cIr_oeder, : £ HELP WANTED. e WANTED—Competent girl for general housework. Good wages. Apply Mrs. Thos. Bailey, county jail. WANTED—A girl to assist in light house work for board and room and piano lessons. (all or address Mrs. M. G. Slocum, Music store, Bemidji. WANTED—For U. S. army able- bodied, unmarried men be- tween ages of 21 and 35, citi- zens of United States, of good character and temperate habits, who can speak, read and write English. For in- formation apply to Recruiting Officer, Miles block, Bemidji. Minnesota. BUSINESS CHANCES. TO TRADE—Forty acre farm 15 acres under cultivation, with good house and buildings, want to trade for city property S. Walker, Brainerd. If you fol- FOR SALE. FOR SALE—Part cash and part exchange, first class saw mill property with contracts for sawing timber.. Box 7 Med- ford, Minn. LOST AND FOUND. FOUND—Coat at Mike Guyer saloon, Nymore. Owner can hayve same by proving property and paying for this notice. FOR RENT. A A AN AR AAANAA NN NS, FOR RENT—Four room house. Frank Lane, N. P. saloon, TO RENT—Suite of rooms im Troppman block. Apply at the Bazaar. MISGELLANEOUS. P s, FOUR NEW TOWNS on the Thief River Falls extension. First class openings for all kinds of business and investments, Ad- dress A. D. Stephens, Crooks- ton, Minn. Minnesota. ALI’S Voting Contest Given by the Enterprising Bemidji Merchants by which a $400.00 Wesley Piano Will be given away FREE to the School, Lodge or Organization voted the most popular by March 1, 1905. The following merchants issue ballots with each 25c cash purchase, all ballots must be marked with the name of merchant issuing same or they will not be«counted: THE TROPPMAN, IVES, WEST CO., Dry Goods angd Grtocu ies, J"IA' IE{!DTNG ON. Hardware, Hamess and hop. A. E. LN, Proprietor Peoples Meai Market. STRAW, Shoes, 403 Beltrami Ave. IDJTSTEAM LAUNDRY, C.E. Albrant, 0., D STUDIO, Photographs and Views. BARKER, Drugs and Jewelry. IDJI MERCANTILE CO. E. L. NAYLOR, Furniture, BLY’S MODEL'BAK: THE GRILL, Restauran LOUISE HETLAND, Milliner. Piano_on exhibition at Troppman, Ives, West Co. Store. Ballot box jocated at Barker’s Jewelry Store. LARGE SUM IN REVENUE LOST. Novel Method of Bringing Leaf To- bacco Into the Country, New York, Nov, 14.—A novel method of bringing Sumatra tobacco leaf into the United States without paying offiv cial duty has been brought to the no- tice of the customhouse officials and agents are now at work on the case. It is estimated that Sumatra leaf val- ued at $100,009 has entered this port in the last three months without duty, Emigrants sailing from Bremen, Hamburg, Anciterdam, Rotterdam, Ants werp and other Dutch and German ports have been given a card which is printed in German and Hebrew and tells the recipient to visit a certain person at a given address and receive a present. If the emigrants called they were told how to obtain employ- ment in America and given a smal package wrapped in colored paper and warned not to open it until the barge office at New York had been left be- hind. Agents of the smuggler invari- ably met each load of emigrants out- side of the harge office and requested the packages as a means of identify- ing the seeker for employment. At the proper moment the agents disap- peared, taking the smuggled tobacco along. BREAKS THE TROTTING RECORD, Lou Dillon Reels Off a Fast Mile on the Memphis Track. Memphis, Tenn., Nov. 14—Lou Dil- lon smashed the world’s unpaced rec- ord at the driving park here by completing the mile in 2:01 flat. The former unpaced record, 2:011, was held jointly by Lou Dillon and Major Delmar. The daughter of Sidney Dillon was driven by Millard Sanders, her train- er, and was accompanied by a runner at the side. The weather conditions were not the best, the day being cold and disagreeable. The first quarter was made in 30 seconds flat; the half in 59%, the third quarter in 1:30 and the mile in 2:01. LAST OF THE LIGHT BRIGADE. Trumpeter Who Sounded Famous Charge Dies in Denver. Denver, Nov. 14.—Alexander Suther- land, said to have been the last sur- vivor of the famous Balaklava “600,” is dead at his home in this city, where he has resided for thirty years. He was the trumpeter who sounded the bugle call for the memorable charge. Mr. Sutherland was sixty-four years old and he died of pneumonia. A de- tachment of the Colorado National uard will escort the hero’s remains o their final resting place in Calvary cemetery. Splinter Pierced His Body. Minneapolis, Nov. 14—Henry Nord- by was struck by a splinter at the Wyman & Smith box factory angd seri- ously injured. . The gplinter, thrown from a machine, passed into his body and he nearly died from loss of blood before reaching the city hospital.e President Will Make No Stops. ‘Washington, Nov. 14—It was an- nounced during the day at the White House that the president, on his ap- proaching trip to St. Louis, would wake no stops at other cities, either going or coming. '|E E. CHAMBERLAIN, Agent Office in rear of Arcade idii Srison. i 8L, “phoness Bemidiji A splendid tonic for the hair, makes the hair grow long and heavy. Always restores color to gray hair, all the dark, rich color of youth. Stops falling hair, also. Sold for fifty years. ™y a oy i siow VEGETABLE SICILIAN Hair Renewer Owner of General Blackford, record 2:22%, who will make the season of 1904 in Bemidjl at a service fee of §20; Five Dollars cash and 315 when the mare is known to be in foal. Don’t fail to see him before breeding your mares. PODDPODSY Subseribe for th { Dr.J. Warninger "gicziners % e Daily Pioneer. ~=All Kinds of— .WOOD.. FOR SALE! Stoves ! BRI =BY— To make room for a large 8 stock we are selling sec- 1 J, P. DUNGAIIF, ond hand cook, coal and ) Phone 204, } heating stoves for a SO O e song, and the stoves are stoves are as good as | OHiR | Great Northern R’y|: EAST BOUND. new. Call and see them, .| No. 40...Park Rapids L ] % (Connects with Flyer at Sauk Contre, ar e x( Minneapolis ahout 3:00 p. m., formerly 4 ; No. 14...Duluth Express..,12:27 p.m. ial « 96 % i 12:39 a.m, Call or phone to WEST BOUND _ DORAN BROS. ¢ 13....Fosston Line..... 2:50 p. m. P “ 95 T 2:50 2. m. Lhona 25 ‘¢ 39....Park Rapids Line7:55 ‘¢ - Full information from Bemidii. Minn Minnesota & International | RAILWAY COMPANY In Connection with the ..Northern Pacific..| RAILWAY COMPANY, Provides the best train passenger service between Northome, Hovey Junc- tlon, Blackduck, Bemidji, Walker and intermediate points and Minne- apolis, St. Paul, Fargo and Duluth and all points east, west and South. | Through coaches between Northome and the Twin Cities. No change of cars. Ample time at Brainerd for dinner. Dally ex. Sunday 30u. m. Ly. Thos. Cathcart & Son, Props. Baudette, . Hotel Catheart, E | Minn. g adapted for the traveling public, beautifully lacat- ed on the banks of the great Rainy River fac- ing the Canadian border. This Hotel is specially fi &l X We pay strict attention to run a quietly and orderly place. STATIONS THOS. JOHNSON, Contractor and Builder. Can do your fine work and your coarse work, will do it prompt- 1y and at right prices. SEE US BEFORE YOU BUILD. 1001 Minnesota Avenue. ittle Fall 8t. Cloud. Anoka. Wood For Sale! Ihave for sale an unlimit- ed quantity of Fine Jack Pine and Tamarack Wood in any lengths. : : : : W. H. GEMMELL, G.A. WALKER General Manager; Agent, Brainerd Bemidji. TSI ..Tremont Hotel.. e Combined with Restaurant 110 America Ave. Bemidji. Meals at All Hours. Furnished Rooms. R. M ARTIN Open Day and Night. Leading Painter =|| and Decorator. Now Located on Fourth Street, Two Doors West of City Hall. Sign of the Big Black Bear All Orders Promptly Attended to Fine Art Wall Paper Fresco Painting Frece Cut this out and send your name and address, plainly written, A and we will mail - you a jar of Cidic Salye, Send ue 5 cents in postage to pay for mailing same. HY’NE Company 475 W- N. Av., Chicago, lil. F. O. E. Fraternal Order of les, Bemidji AerleNo. 351, Meets every edne-d-yl:ll! P -"o 22 Gilmour’s Hall. A. T. Wheelock, ~ H. LeBleu, = Visiting Eagles mu:u.y'mvw. B PROFESSIONAL S ICARDS .. LAWYERS. D. H. FISK Attorney and Counsellarat Law Office opposite Hotel Markbam. P. J. Russell Attorney at Law BEMIDJ, - - - NN, Bailey & McDonald LAWYERS ,Bemidji, IMina, Office: Swedback Bleck J ay_L. Reynolds Attorney at Law Office in Miles Block, % PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS. L. A. Ward, M. D., Physician and Surgeon. Diseases of the Eye a specialty. Glasses fitted. | Jennie E. Ward, M. D., Physician and Surgeon. Troubles peculiar to hersex a specialty ‘Office haurs 2 to 5; over Barker’s Drug Store. Dr. Rowland Gilmore Physician and Surgeon Office: Ililes Block Dr. Blakeslee Fhysician and Surgeon Office: Miles Block.. Beminil Dr. E. H. Marcum Physician and Surgeon Office: Swedback Block Residence Phone 221 Otfice Phene 18 DENTISTS, Dr. R. B. Foster, DENTIST MILES BLOCK. Dr. C. M. Smith, DENTIST Office over E. H. Winter's Stare. HOTELS AND RESTAURANTS. Palace Cafe, FRED THROM, Prop. A s I NGnnesota A ve: Thompson’s Hotel, HANS P. THOMPSON, Prop. Conmection | 100 Third St Hotel Challenge A. L. SMITH, Proprictor, Beltrami Ave. DRAY AND TRANSFER. Wes Wright, Dray and Transfer. 404 Beltrami Ave. Phone 40. Tom Smart, Dray and Baggage, Safe and Piano Moving a Specialty. Phone No. 58 | 618 America Avenue MACHINISTS. W. B. McLachlan, Gasoline Expert. Phone No. 300. ! BRUNSWICK-BALKE Billiard Hall. L. J. MATHENY, Prop. Fine Line of Cigars & Tobaccos Bemidi, -, - - Minn. eooeee. — . F. E. COOLEY, Painter, Paper Hanger and Decorator. Phone - T i 283. ER—— g e