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’ . s £ Opposite Depot. First Class Accommodations 3 > n Rares: $1 to $2 per day. Largest Hotel North of Bemidji. Furnished. Your Patronage Earnestly Solicited. Stechman, § "Tenstrike, Minn, : w Newly Built and in Every Particular. EEEEECEECEEEECE EEEE Henry Stechman, Prop. €& CEEEEEEEEEECEEEECEFEEECEEEEEEEREFEEECEEEEEEEEEEEL THE CITY. Go to Hakkerup’s for Photos. To get the best, go to the Pal- ace restaurant for your Sunday dinner. Special Sunday dinner at the Palace restaurant tomorrow from 12 to 3:30. Mrs, L. L. Berman left this morning for the twin cities to spend a week purchasing goods for her ladies’ furnishings es- tablishment in Bemidji. Deputy Sheriff Thos. Bailey, | Jr., and John Hubbard left this morning for Jones township to serve summons on jurors and witnesses for the coming term of district court. Can’t you eat, sleep or work? Bad liver? Hollister’s Rocky Tea makes rich, red blood, gives strength and health. Cures when all others fail. Nocure no pay. 35 cents, teaor tablets, Barker’s drug store. Mr. and Mrs. P. Cassin ar- rived in Bemidji last night from ! Quebec, Can., where they have spent the past seven weeks with relatives. Mr. and Mrs. Cassin will return to their home at Nebish the tirst of the week. Dr. C. J, Larson, th EYE S"e;e spenile?;tjoxglll bg at home at the hotel Remore next | week Sept. 12 and remain there the balance of the week. Dr. Larson’s careful ways and methods has brought him friends and those needing eye treatment should not fail to see him. buys more than ————————————————————r~ in the Jewelers line in Jargest variety at the lowest pos- We offereve’ything I sible cash price every day in the year : [.A. BARKER, Third Street Jeweler CASHI Read the Daily Pioneer. Special Sunday dinner at the Palace restaurant tomorrow from 12 to 3:30. Mrs. C. R. Ward of Northome is the guest of relatives and ifriends in Bemidji today. Don’t forget that a special Sunday dinner will be served to- morrow at the Palace restaurant from 12 to 3:30. Suits cleaned, repaired and pressed. Good work and prompt service. T. Baudette, Minnesota avenue. i Rev. E. M. Peterson left this morning for Lakeport, where he will hold Scandinavian Lutheran |services tomorrow. County Treasurer French left this morning for Guthrie to ispend Sunday hunting ducks in the lakes in that vicinity. Henry Kolden passed through the city last night enroute home {to. Blackduck from the twin jcities, where he attended the istate fair, Hollister’s Rocky Mountain iTea never fails to tone the stomach, - regulate the kidneys, stimulate the liver and cleanse 1the blood, A great tonic and |muscle producing remedy. 35 | cents, tea or tablets. Barker’s drug store. A. A, Potter of Blackduck }passei through the city last night enroute heme from a visit to the state fair. ; Sheriff Thos. Bailey spent last night at Northome securing wit- nesses for the fall term of dis- itrict court, returning home this | morning. Mrs. A. Jeffrey snd son, Vern, who have been the guests of Dr. and Mrs. /ing to their home at Cedar Rap- ids, Iowa. {Beware of Ointments for Catarrh that Contain Mercury, as mercury will surely destroy the sense of smell and completely derange the whole system when {entering it through the mucous |surfaces. Such articles should 'ine\'er be used except on pre- Escriptinns from reputable physi- }ciams, as the damage they will do |is ten fold to thé good you can | possibly derive from them. Hall’s i Catarrh Cure, manufactured by | F.J. Cheney & Co.,’ Toledo, O., contains no mercury, and is | taken internally, acting directly lon the blood and. mucous sur- | faces of the system. In buying ; Hall’s Catarrh Cure be, sure you ! got the genuine. Tt is taken in- i ternally and made in Toledo, i Ohio, by F. J. Cheney & Co. | Testimonials free. Sold by a1l Druggists. “ cents per bottle. Take Hall’s Family piils for j constipation. Price 75 Fleming @ Downs Phone 57 Excellent Baking Quickly Done With Little Fuel on Acorn America’s Best Bakers for seventy years . Bemidji. W. R. Morriscn for | iseveral days, returned this morn- | for employment in the camps of i Itoolt advantage of the prairie Read the Daily Pioneer. Theo Gulickson went to Ten- strike last night. £ A new school houseis being’ erected at Rebedew. i Iver Erickson of Tenstrike is transacting business in Bemidji today. Charles S. Carter of Tenstrike is a business visitor in the city today. Mrs. P. L. Knappen arrived in the city this morning from Ten- strike. First class bath rooms in con- nection with the Markham hotel barber shop. i To get the best, go to the Palace restaurant for your Sun- day dinner. 1 George Tanner spent yester- day in Brainerd on business, re- turning last night. O. Benson returned home to Blackduck last night after hav- ing attended the state fair. C. W. Jewett of Blackduck ar- rived in the city this morning for a short business visit here. o Kittle Kittleson of Blackduck passed through Bemidji last night on his way home from the fair. Mrs. J. C. Dale arrived in Be- midji this morning from Turtle River to enjoy a short yisit with friends, Don’t forget that a special Sun- day dinner will be served tc- morrow at the Palace restaurant from 12 to 3:30, Mrs. Ole Gennes and Mrs. H. Thompson, who haye enjoyed a visit to the state fair, returned home last night. i New fall line of suiting and woolen goods. A good line from which to make your fall and win- ter suits. Good fit guaranteed. T. Baudette, Minnesota avenue. J. G. Morrison arrived in the city last might from the twin cities, where he attended the fair, and returngd today to his home at Red Lake. Mrs. J. C. Thompson, who has enjoyed a visit in Bemidji at the home of Mr. and Mrs. E, N. French, returned last night to her home at Blackduck. Why suffer with headache, con- stipation, stomach, kidney and liver troubles, when Hollister’s Rocky Mountain Tea will cure you? No money wanted unless you are cured. 35 cents, tea or tablets. Barker’s drug store. Miss Clara Fisk left today for Montevideo, Minn., where she will meet her brother, H. F. Fisk, and together they will take a course in the Windom institute .in that city. Allan Benner headed a party that left this morning for Wilton, where they will put their boat in- to Grantcreek and float down into the Mississippi and back to Bemidji in search of ducks. McDonald & Harrington | shipped six men to Bena today {the Irwin & O’Brien company. | James L. George, superintendent for TIrwin & O’Brien, accom- panied the men to Bena. | Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Stafford returned last night from Foss- ton, where they have spent a week with relatives and friends. During their stay Mr. Stafford chicken hunting in that vicinity and reports good success. nd Sale Stable. LIVERY ATTACHED Feed Goods of All Description Stored i J. P. Pogue. S T d i3 'recovering from an attack of la grippe. H. F. Brown, the Crookston cigar man, is calling on his Be- midji trade today. Dr. J. T, Tuomy has returned | from the' twin cities, where he has attended the fair. { A, H. Jester, who has spent several daysia the twin cities, returned to Bemidji last night.' Miss Alice Mills spent last night with her parents in Bemid;i returning this morning to her schoo! at Walker, A. A. Goodrich,superintendent| for the Corpenter-Lamb company | returned last night' from a busi- ness trip to Minreapolis. Miss Maggie Coklcy will ar-| rive in the city this evening to! spend a few days here with her| sister, Miss Nellie Cokley. | C. D. Carter of Crookston,gen- eral manager of the Iron Range| Electric Telephone company, transacted business in Bemidji yesterday. A. J. Collard, who has spent a few days in Bemidji with his brothers, A. L. and Fred Collard, returned yesterday to his home in Manitoba. ANNUAL FALL EXCURSIONS. To Detroit and return $12.00— To Buffalo and return—$14.00, On September 10 and 12, the Duluth, South Shore and Atlan- tic Railway will run their usual popular Rail and Lake Excur. sions to Buffalo, Cleveland, De- troit and intermediate points. | Excursion trains leave Duluth at 6:20 p. m. Sept, 10 and 12, con- necting at St. Ignace the follow- ing morning with the famous palatial steamers of the Detroit & Cleveland Navigation Com- pany. For full information, illustrat- ed booklets, sleeping car and stateroom accommodation, please apply to A, J. Perrin, General Agent, 430 West Superior St., %No, Sir! You cannot palm off auf substitutes onme, I'vebeen using August Flowersince I was a boy, and I'll have no other.” QForty million bottles of August Flower sold in the United States alone since its introduction! And the demand for it is still growing, Isn’t that a fine showing of success? Don’t it prove that August Flower has had unfailing success in the cure of indigestion and dyspepsia—the worst enemies of health and happiness? @Does it not afford the best evidence that August Flower is a sure specific for all stomach and intestinal disorders P—that it is the bast of all liver regulators? QAugust Flower has a matchless record of over 35 years in curing the ailing ‘mil- lions of these distressing complaints. s qTwo sizes, 25¢ and 75c. druggista, New Wood Yard. Fleming & Downs have opened a wood yard at the corner of Fifth street and Beltramiavenue, where they will be prepared to furnish wood in all lengths and varieties. Mrs. A. G. Rutledge left this afternoon for Cass Lake to spend Sunday with friends. H. M. McKee, formerly con- nected with the Kelliher hos- pital but who recently resigned his position to remove to Solway, is a visitor in Bemidji today. fiPainting Paper Hanging Kalsomining Charter Meeting Postponed The meeting of the charter commission which was to have been held at the city hall last night was postpoped to Monday afternoonat 8 o’clock. The ob- ject of the|meeting is to receive bids for publishing a synopsis of the charter, which has been pre- paredjby the attorneys for the commission. The Gallatin Valley, Montana, Situated a little west of Bozeman, is becoming celebrated as the .home of the finest malting barley grown in the United States. - Un- der the influence of irrigation, it is not uncommon to raise a crop of fifty bushels to the acre, and the dryness of the atmosphere giyes it a better color than that grown in localities where the crop is dependent upon the rain- fall. The climate of Montana is exceedingly healthful, and the proximity of the mining camps, which abound in the west, in- sures profitable markets for all | products of the farm, The west Gallatin Irrigation Company, located at Manhattan, hold their land at from $15.00 to $25.00 per acre, including water rights. There is a large Holland i settlement in the valley. For maps and descriptive pamphlets, or full information regarding lands or business openings in other territory along the Northern Pacific, write to C. {W. Mott, General Emigration Agent, Northern Pacific Ry., St. Paul, Minn. Shop in rear of Swedback Block. Duluth, Minn. EARERKEARKEKK To North Pacific From St. Paul. Coast Points Stopovers at will west of Billings, Mont., » except between Logan and Garrison, via Sept, 15 to Oct. 31, 1905 Special one-way colonist excursion rates of $15 to Billings, Mont., $20 to Helena’ and Butte $22.50 to points in Eastern Washington. Fast through passenger service with new and com- fortable standard and lourisc sleeping cars daily to Pacific Coast and intermediate points. Through dining car service. ~Comfort enroute. Low side-trip rates to scenic points if you Through Northern Pacific-Burlington service from St. Louis to wish to break the journey. Puget Sound. Northern Pacific Railway Write for maps and pamplets to C. W. Mott, General Emmigration Agent, St. Paul. Regagding rates and train Broadway Streets, St. Pau Ask the agent to route you via service to Harry W. Sweet, Districs Passenger Agent, Fourth and 1, Minn.