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" THE ClTY Go to Hakkerup's for Photos. It’s a perennial flonr—Bar low’s Best. W. P. Hebard of Fosston spenn' Sunday in the city. * ‘Wanted—Every housew1fe_ to use Barlow’s Best. W. S. Brannon came down from Northome this morning. » Fred Jordan left this afternoon for Cass Lake. When you phone your: grocer specify Barlow’s Best. T. A. Falihee of Dexterville was in the city over Sunday. John Smith, the Blackduck tonsorial artist, is a visitor in Be midji today. Home made ice cream 30c per aquart, at the Model Bakery. Phone 125. Oane drunk paid a fine of $1 and costs in Judge Skinvik’s. court this morning. If youare t.hmkmv of buying ahome see T. Beaudette, the tailor, 311 Minnesota avenue. A regular meeting of the city council will be held this evening. No important business will come up. J.J. Trask returned to the city this morning from Tenstrike, where he held Presbyterian serv.cas yesterday. Mrs. J. C. Dale returned Sat- urday night to her home at Turtle River after having enjoyed a short visit in Bemidji with friends. Mrs. Lizzie Muney arrived in the city Saturday nigbt from Royalton to spend a few days in the city at the home of her sister, Mrs. R. H. Muncy. Harry Gillham was in the city Saturday evening on his way home to Blackduck from Duluth, where he vrepresented Bluck- duck at the Hagles convention. Dr. Eltun of Minneapolis was in the city yesterday enroute to points in North Dakota where he will spend his summer vacation with friends. While here Dr. Eltun was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Albrant. Mr. and Mrs. Stewart Wright left this morning for Walker, where they will spend two weeks with friends. Mr., Wrightis em- ployed as accountant at the E. H. Winter & Co. store in Bemidji and is now taking his summer yacation, - Miss Laura Bolton, who has been employed as trimmer at the Hetland millinery parlors in Be- midji, has resigned her position and leftt his morning for St. Paul. From that city she will go to Portland, Ore., to attend the world’s fair now being held-in that city. Cashier W. H. Roberts of the First National bank left Satur- day night for Northome to take charge of the bank in that village during the absence of George Millard, who avrived in Bemidji this morning to spenda shoré time here with friends. Mr. Millard has been incharge of the bank at Northome for the past month. Judge L. G. Pendergast re- turned yesterday from Minne- apolis and Hutchinson, Mr. Pen- dergast attended the avnual re- union of the First Mianesota regiment, which was held 'at Minnehaha on June 13, and was in Minneapolis when the death of Col. Colvill pcctirred. The judge was a member of the First Min- nesota and served under Col. Colvill for two years during the Civil war. He states that about 100 veterans of the regiment were present at the reunion. There is nothing that catches the people like circus day. It fascinates the old and young and causes the gray haired father to invent a theory that he is.at once interested in natural science. If he isn’t close-fisted he will invite his family to accompany him to the tents cansing untold wonder. A father who hasn’ta liking to takehis family toa eircus isa curious sort of ‘a being. There are circuses that the most liberal father would never think of tak ing his family to, but a- whole- some up-to-date circus like Goll- mar Bros. where nothing will be said or done to mar the feeling-of the most refined, there 'is no ex- cuse for Pa not to take the fam- ily., Remember this when Gall- mar Bros. Greatest of American shows arrive here on June 28 at Bemidji. Anton Erickson is in the today from Rosby. 4 Mrs. J. H. Bailey spent Sun- day with relatives at Akelay. . €. Parker and Wade Pevey ! e.»in the city today from Wilton. g. L. Georgeof Duluth was the guest of George T. Baker over Sunday. 5 George Beaton was in the city Saturday on his way to Black- duck from Dututh. Hon. J. M. Markham returned Saturday night from a business trip to St, Paul. Mr. and Mrs. A. A. Bucking- han of Crookston spent Sunday in Bemidji with friends. Ice cream will be served at Dicaire’s store, 1101 Irving .ave- nue, from noon until night to- morrow. Frank Anderson arrived in the city this morning from Northome to spend a few days here with friends. Largest and most complete ice cream plant in northern Minne. sota. Wholesale and retail Model Bakery. Phone 125. Lieutenant Mason of Duluathis making his regular trip of in- spection of the local recruiting station in Bemidji today. Mrs. J. Bisiar returned Satur- day night from Brainerd, where she has been visiting friends and relatives for the past week. Mr, and Mrs, F. P. Nash, Mr and Mrs. W. . Dutz, Mrs. Eisen hard dnd O.J. Barnes were ir Bemidji yesterday from Grard Forks. J. E. Flatley, who is speunding the summer at Puposky looking after business interests, spent yesterday in the city with his family. $ F. A. Thompson of Verndal« arrived in the city Saturday night and will remain here for several days the guest of Harry Calvert. Mrs. Thos. Gibbons, mother of Attorney John F. Gibbons, left this morning for St. Paul for a three weeks visit with friends and relatives. Misses Beulah and Gladys Brannon left Saturdry night for Northome to spend several weeks in‘that village with their father, W. S. Brannon. Mrs. W. Blossingham returned this afternoon to her home at Superior, Wis., after having en- joyed a visit at the home of Mr. and Mrs. W..A. Casler. The Woodmen and Royal Neighbor pic-ic which was to haye been held yesterday did not materialize owing to bad weather. The picnic will be given at a future date. 1 The sawmill of James Milligan located at the head of Lake Be- midji has been closed down un- til after the Fourth of July, the men employed at the mill having been granted a vacation. Ben Ven was in the city today from Rosby. Mr. Ven is making arrangements for removing his household gnods from Rosby to Hendrum, where he expects to spend the summer with relatives. Mrs. George E. Anderson and childrenare the guests of friends at Minneapolis, where they will spend some time. They will also visitat Stillwater, Minn,, and Eau Claire and Stanley, Wis., and expect to be absent from the city about two months. Deafness Cannot Be Cured by local applications, as they can- not reach the diseased portion of the ear. There isonly one way to cure deafness, and that is by constitutional remedies. Deaf- ness is caused by an inflamed condition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube is inflamed you have a rumbling sound or imperfect hearing, and when itis e‘m.ire]y closed, deafness is the result, and unless the inflamation can be taken out and this tube restored to its normal condition, hearing will be destroyed forever; mine cases out of ten are caused by catarrb, which is nothing but an inflamed condition of the mucu- ous surfaces, We will give one hundred dol- lars for any case of deafness MILES GETS AN First Horseless Vehicle Ow ed by Bemidji Man Arriv: Today. : C. H. Miles today received the first automobile that was everin Bemidji,and the horseless vehicle is now at the Great Northern de- pot. Mr. Miles purchased the auto several months ago and has kept it at Hibbing, where he has large property interests. He de- cided, however, that the carriage would be of more use to him in| Bemidji thao at the range town and shipped it to this city with the result that it landed here safely today. BRIGHT'S DISEASE Many people who are neglecting symptoms of kidney lrouble. hoping “it will wear away,” are drifting towards Bright’s 1sease, which is kidney trouble in one of its worst forms. FOLEY'S KIDNEY CURE stops irregularities, strengthens the urinary organs and builds u the worn-out tissues of the kid- *neys so they will perform their functions properly. Healthy kid- neys strain out the impurities from the blood as it passes through them. Diseased kidneys do not, and the poisonous waste matter is carried by the circulation to every part of the body, causing dizziness, backache, stomach trouble, sluggish liver, irregular heart action, etc. ou have any signs of Kidney or B adder trouble commence tak- ing FOLEY’S KIDNEY CURE at once, as it will cure a slight dis- order in a few days and prevent a fatal malady. It is pleasant to take and benefits the whole system. How to Find Out. ‘You can easily determine if your kid- neys are out of order. by setting aside for 24 hours a bottle of the urine passed upon arising. If upon examination it is cloudy or milky or has a brick-dust sediment or small particles float about jn it, your kldneg are diseased, and FOLEY’'S KIDNEY CURE should be taken at once. 6. B. Burhans Testifies After Four Years. G. B. Burhans of Carlisle Center, N. Y., writes: . *About four years ago I wrote you stating that I had been entirely cured of a severe kidney trouble by taking less than two bottles ot Foley's Kidney Cure. It entircly stopped the brick- dust sediment and pain and symptoms of kidney disease disappeared. I am glad to say that I have never had a return of any of those symp- toms during the four years that have elapsed, and I am evidently cured to stay cured, and heartily recommend Foley's Kidney Cure to any one suffering from kidney or Rjadder trouble.” Two Sizes; 500 and 100. SOLD AND RECOMMENDED BY Barker’s Diug Stoie. Rates to Blackduck. On account of the- firemen’s tournament to Blackduck the Great Northern will sell tickets at a fare and a third from St, Vincent, Wylie, Greenbush, Wa dena and Virgiria and all inter- mediate points. . Minimum ‘rate 50c, Good going June 19,-20, 21, and 22. Return limit June 24. SPRING EXCURSIONS. Detroit and Return $12.00, Buf: falo and Return $14.00. On June 6- 9. 13 and 18, the Duluth, South Shore and At lantic Railway will run their popular Rail and Lake excursions from Duluth to ‘Detroit, Toledo, Cleveland and Buffalo. The excursions will leave Du- luth via the Duluth, South Shore and Atlantic railway, connecting| /| escaped. at St. Ignace, Michigan with the famous D. & C, (Detroit & Cleve- and N amgatmn company) steamers. ? TO Detroit.--- (and intermediate points), Toledo and return. . cleveland and re‘urn. Butfalo and return Limit—Final return (caused by catarrh) that cannot be cured by Hall’s Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars free. P. J. CuENEY & Co., Toledo, O. Price 75 cents per bonle Sold by all Druggists. Take- Hall’s Family pills for For full information regardmg the scenic route, palatial steam ers and specnal attractions for these excursions, as well as for sleeping car or stateroomreserv- amon, pleaseqpply to o “MART ADSON, " 450 W S o7, Pmneer Office. % tutions wealk and, feeble, others hster S Rocky Mounmn‘[‘ea “will | Vessels which had been summoned to stand by to take off sher: passengers should the fire become more- serious. The fire finally was extinguished after the steamer had-reached her pier with the aid of fireboats and land apparatus which had been ordered to be in readi- ness for the steamer’'s arrival. The Kansas' City had sixty passen- gers on board in addition to her crew of nearly as many more and there was considerable excitement on’ the steam- er after the discovery of the flames ‘While the vessel was oft Sandy Hook. BIES TO SAVE FATHER Son check; Runaways by Running in Front of Mower. Edwardsville, IIl, June 19.—Frank ‘Wasman, twenty-two years old, while at work in the harvest field, saw his father perched on a wildly careening mowing machine, vainly endeavoring to check the runaway team. Without a moment’s hesitation the young man sprang in front of the whirling biades and caught the bridles. IIe"checked the team and saved nis father, but fell in front of ths sickle and was cut to pleces. MANY STATIOHS CUT OFF DE?RIVED OF RAILROAD SERV- ICE BECAUSE OF SERIOUS WASHOUTS. La Crosse, Wis.,, June ‘19.—Wash- outs worse than any others the rail- roads have experienced this year have been caused by the recent heavy rains. Fifty miles of stations on the Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul railroad from La Crosse to Wabasha, Minn., are de- prived of railway service as-the result of a washout at Minnesota City. Al trains on the Milwaukee road are now running on the east side of the Missis- sippi north of La Crosse. The North- western has also had bad washouts near Winona and all trains are several hours late. All the rivers are again rising. JOHNSON’S NARROW' ESCAPE. Niayor of Cleveland Gets in Front of Chicago Cable Car. Chicago,” June 19.—Mayor Tom L. Johnson of Cleveland, who is here in- vestigating the Chicago street car sit- uation, had a narrow escape when an automobile in which he and A. P. Du- pont of Cleveland were riding collided with a .cable car as the automobile was about to cross the street car tracks at Clark and Randolph streets. The dexterity of Mayor Johnson, who was operating the machine, prevented a serious accident. When he saw that a collision was unavoidable Mayor Johnson reversed the power and the big machine backed away, escaping with slight injuries to the front wheel, the only part of the machine touched by the street car. GARRISON RELEASED. Hottentots Evacuate Position Recently Captured From Germans. Capetown, Cape Colony, June 19.— Confirmation has reached here of the report that-the insurgent ‘natives re- cently captured Warmbad, German Southwest Africa, near the border of Cape Colony. The attacking force of Hottentots was led by Abraham Mor- ris. They captured the place June 2 and. evacuated it almost immediately afterwards, taking away-all the am- munition and stores, but releasing their prisoners. The German officers T'he same force of natives also cap- tured Kalk Fontein June 2, looting the place and taking away all horses, cat- tle and provisions. TEXAS LAND FOR ' SETTLERS. Six Million Acres. Will Be Placed on the Market. Austin, Tex., June 19.—Six million acres of the 18,000,000 acres of public lands which this state owns. will be placed upon the market on Sept. 1 and sold to actual settlers in lots of one to eight sections. The purchase price has been fixed at $1 per acre, payable in forty annual installments, with 3 per cent interest. Each pur- chas¢ér must live upon his home sec- tion three years to acquire title. This land has heretofore been leased to cattlemen. It is situated in the west- ern part of the state. Price of Crude Oil Cut. Independence, Kan., June 19.—The price of Western oil was cut 3 cents a barrel dur®g the day. The Stand- ard Oil company is now paying 50 cents a barrel for high grade Kansas and Indian Territory oil and 5 cents less a barrel for each half degree gravity under 32 down to 30 cents a barrel. Two Michigan Boys Drowned. Menominee, Mich., June 19.—George Devoe, thirteen years old, and Frank Anderson, aged sixteen, were drowned In Green Bay by the sinking of a row- boat. Two others may die from ex- posure. Pocket maps, Minnas )l;.;, Mon tana and' North Dakota at the ‘Many children inherit consti- due.to.childhood troubles. Hol- z@—ezmee> ~In the fall of 1895 T.contracted that fear ful disease, Blood Poison. It gained such headway that I was forced to resign my position and seek relief at Hot ings. After spending all the means I had Twent to Memphis. ‘In less than three weeks I was in a hospital, and after nine weeks of suffering I was d:schnr%x:h.s cured. In less than a month every bone in my body seemed to be affected ‘and felt as they would break at the least exertion. Again I was. eompelled to resign, and I returned | thié hospital for a seven weeks stay. When I came out I was advised to try. farming. When I first t on the farm T srevmlerl on \the onlywz: rugs to get me one dozen bottlesof S. S. §. At that time both of my hands were ‘broken out'with blistersand I was covered with boils and sores, In themeantimemy dmgglst had gotten two dozen bottles of S, S.§. for me and I began its-use; and after taking the thirteenth bottle not a sore or boil was visible, R. B. POWELL. East oth St thfie Rock, Ark. Of all human d:seues, Contagious Blood Poison is the most hideous and hateful. ‘The victim is tortured with eating ulcers, sores and abscesses, unsightly blotches, eruptions and nkh:r sympmms of the mis- erable disease. S. S has been used , successfully for neady fifty years for Contagions Blood Poison. It con- tains no mercury, potash or other mineral, Ourhome "emmelnt‘h book ives all thes: - foms of thls dis ease. Medical ad- vice free. The Swift Specific Company, Atlanta, Ga There will be a special meeting | of the Masonic lodge this even- ing, which all members are ur- ged to attend. Tournament at Blackduck., The M. & L railroad will sell| tickets to Blackduck, on account of the firemen’s tournament ata' rate of one fare and a third for! the round trip; good going June 19, 20, 21, and 22, good returning to and including June 24 Mill Wood for Sale. During the coming summer, Wes Wright will handle all the | ‘mill wood a the Crookston Lum- | ber company, having secured that right from the mill manage-! ment. Wood will be dchveredl for $2 per load. See Wes Wright, | or call up phone No. 45 or the ‘who handled' | - Crookston Lumber company. —THE— MoDe. Bakeny Wholesale Bakery AND Ice Cream Manufacturers Goods Shipped to any pointin North’rn Minnesota R. R. BLY, Prop. BE IDJI, MINN. | styles. able in SILVER "OR CUT GLASS. | better stock of either anywhere than we can show you a the present time. ‘acceptable than something for the You wont find a - For:a Bridesmaid one could not choose a premer' favor than a SIMMON'S Neck or Lorgnette Chain or Fob Our lme of these comprises some extremely dainty E. A BARKER. NEW YORK Yuses vastly more writing ma- chmes than any other city on \earth and thelast censusshows’ 0, 78%, Remington. 'The voice of ex~] _perience decides for the REMINGTON TYPEWRITER, i Want your moustache or beard ! abeautiful brown or rich black? Use Vegetable, liver pills. is what they are. They cure constipation, blllousness, sick-headache. iaea: Subsc_ribe for the Daily Pioneer Just Arrived! Bits. \ One Car Salt One Car Hay One Car Feed One Car Load Pillsbury’s Best Flour. The Flour That Never Fails. Groceries When you want anything first class in Groceries, call for the Monogram and Uni- versity Brand. Specialties in Evaporated Fruit, Toma- toes, Can Corn and Peas--three for Two Bear in mind we handle the eelebra.ted 'Tefl‘ersora.nd Gotzian Shoes. : BUCKINGHAN'S DYE IFTY CTS. OF DRUGGISTS OR R. P. HALL & (0., NABHUA, N, .