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Hundreds and hundreds of people are crowding Berman’s Emporium. During the last few days hundreds of people have partaken of the greatest feast of bargains in Dry Goods, Furnishing Goods, Millinery, Cloaks and Skirts, Etc., ever put before the public. The wonderful success of this gigantic removal sale is not due only to the extraordinary GhHe Berman Emporium. They realize that this is a bonafide sale and that we mean business. BEMIDJI'S GREATEST SALE NOW ON IN FULL BLAST! There are thousands reductions are made on every article in the house—nothing reserved. low prices which prevail, in every department butalso to the fact that the people have confidence in our store and goods ' ® of big snaps here. The New Hotel Oppositec Depot. First Class Accommodations Your P: Rates: $1 to $2 per day. 233233333393333333333, & ?3333333333333333333333333333334 Largest Hotel North of Bemidji. Furnished. Stechman, Tenstrike, Minp, Newly Built and in Every Particular. atronage Earnestly Solicited. Henry Stechman, Prop. EEEFEFEEFEEEEEE EEEE CEFEEFEE T EF P EEFEECECFCEECECEEECEEEEEEEEEEEEE " THE CITY. Go to Hakkerav’s for Photos. Andrew J. Smith is in the city today from Wadena. Nels Martin of Solway was the guest of Bamidji friends yester- day. Dou’t forget the chicken sup- per Thursday night at the City hall. Supper 35cents. Mrs. John Goldhammer and Miss Tillie Olson of Nabisn are visiting friends in Bemidji today. George Moody of Brainerd ar- rived in the city last night and will remain here for a few days on busine Season tickets for the series of five library entertainments $2 f.r adults, %1 for children. Single tickets 50 and 25 cents. Taere’s no beauty in all the land, that can with her face com- pare, Her lips are red, her eyes are bright, she takes Rocky Mountain Tea at night. Bark- er’s Drug store. October | Diamonds | Read the Daily Pioneer. J. A. Wonzor is in the city to- day from Tenstrike. Bruce Harris arrived in the jcity last night from Crookston. J. K. Haney, a banker of St. Hilaire, is in the city today on business. Tickets for library entertain- ment course on sale at Barker’s First entertainment tonight at opera house, R. A. McCuaig of Tenstrike is in the city today on his way home from Duluth and the twin cities, where he has spent several days on business, W. T. Blakely passed through the city last night enroute to Farley from Minneapolis, where he has spent several days on business. Attorney L. M. Davis of Long | Prairie and W. J. Sarff, an Eagle Bend banker, arrived in the city last night and left this morning for the vicimty of Lake George, where they will spend the big _|game hunting season. Obstinate constipation, indiges- tion and stomach disorders are ' permanently and positively cured by taking Hollister’'s Rocky Mountain Tea. 385 cents, tea or tablets. Barker’s Drug store. v Home Again---Vacations do make a big hole in the pecket-book, but neverthe- less, the relentless demand for diamonds continues. As the old colored brother said about the chickens on the elevated perch—¢“Dey sholy is high, Lut dey must be had.” Before---January 1st. Dia- monds are going to ad- vance 10 per cent. We have just receided our fall assortment. v 3rd. St. Jeweler. E. A. Barker, | Deafness Cannot Be Cured by local applications, as they cannot reach the diseased por- tion of the ear. There is only one way to cure deafness and |that is by constitutional reme- |dies. Deafness is caused by an inflamed condition of the mucous lining of the KEustachian Tuabe. When this tuoeis inflamed -you |have a rumbling sound or im- perfect hearing, and when it is entirely closed, deafnessis the result, and unless the inflamation can be taken out and this tube restored to its normal condition, hearing will be destroyed for- ever, nine cases out of ten are caused by Catarrb, which is rothing but an inflamed condi- tion of the mucous surfaces, We will give One Hundred | Dollars for any case of deafness (caused by catarrh) that cannot be cured by Hall’s Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars, free. F.J. Cuexey & Co., Toledo, O. Sold by druggists, T5c. Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation, WiHSoN Ghe WILSON Improved Air Tight Heater Will Burn Chips, Shavings, Bark, Roots, Corn Cobs, or Cord Wood and give more heat in less time and retain it longer than any stove ever made. By the patent method secure a perfect Air Tight Heater, fire of taking the draft from the top, we giving us absolute control of the The draft being obtained from descending currents, which ar full of impurities, makes the heater the best of venttilators. The air becomes gradually heated as it passes thru draft pipe and therefore enters the fire at the right temperature, supplying the proper amount of Oxyg gen to produce and maintain a perfect combustion, and saving Fuel, becnuse with our Damper we have complete control of the fire. The hot air ) coming from the top ignites and utilizes as fuel all the gases in the Stove which in other Stoves goes to waste. This explains why the Wilson Heater consumes much less fuel than other Stoves and is therefore more economical. FLEMIN Successors to FLEMING Call and see them. For sale only by G BROS,, & DOWNS. Phone 57. Opera house ' tonight—Colum- bian Entertainers. J. P. Lahr transacted business at Blackduck last night, return- ing home this morning. W. D. Bright of Tenstrike re- turned home last night after a business visit in Bemidji. Dr. Ingalls made a professional visit to Farley last night, return- ing home this morning. Hans P. Thompson is in the city today from the H. J. Me- Carty camps near Niawa. 0. B. Olson, the Kelliher post- master, returned home last night after a brief visiv in Bemidji. J. F., Essler transacted busi- ness at Kelliher last night, re- turning home this morning. Rey. S. E. P. White was a Ten- strike visitor last night and re- turned to Bemidji this morning. E. R. Getchell left last night for Northome, where he will look after timber interests for afew days. Edward Kaelble arrived in the city from Kelliher this morning to cast his vote at the election today. Carbon paper, all colors, per dozen 50c. per hundred $3.25. Good quality. At the Pioneer office. H.T. McIntosh of Northome passed through the city 1this morning on his way to Brainerd, where he will transact business for a few days. E. S. Doyle, a member of the Figge-Doyle company of Milwau- kee, transacted business in Be- midjt yesterday and léft last night for points up the line of the M &1I. Miss Maggic Weber, a teacher in the agency schools at Red | Lake, passed through the citv yesterday enroute to Keliiher, where she will enjoy a visit with her parents. Frank Schultz, a former resi-| dent of Bemidji who now owns a.i homestead on the Sandy river, arrived in the city yesterday and wiil remain for a few days re- newing acquaintances. Contractor G. E. Kreatz re- turned last night from St. Paul, where he presented a bid for the building of the new Hamm Brew- ing company brick block. The contract has not as yet reen let. Harry Calvert is now doinga nice commission broker busi- ness in flour, feed, hay and grain in car lots. Mr. Calvert delivers goods as represented and guar- antees time delivery. Write him when in need of any of these line of goods. Baby sleeps and grows while mammy rests if Hollister’s Rocky Mountain Tea is given. It isthe gieatest baby medicine ever offered loving mothers. 35 cents, T'ea or tablets. Barker’s Drug store. George Reynolds and family ,arrived in the city last night ‘from Walker, where he has op- ‘erated a steamboat during .the ‘summer. Mr. Reynolds will; re- | main 1n Bemidji this winter, hav- ling accepted a position with the | Warfield Electric com pany. It should be borne in mind that | i ] every cold weakens the lungs, low- ers the vitality and prepares the system for the more serious dis- eases, among which are the two greatest destroyers of -human life, pneumonia and consumption. ¥ Chamberlain’s | | Cough Remedy I has won its great popularity by its prompt cures of this niost common ailment. . It aids expectoration, re- i} lieves the lungs and opens the | )| secretions, effecting a speedy and permanent cure. It counteracts any tendency toward pneumonia. IS Priceasc, Large Size 50c. L_-— & Read the Daily Pioneer. Columbian entertainers to- night. Office stationery and supplies at the Pioneer office. Robert Neving arrived in the city today from Neving post- office. Editor S. R. Moorhead is a business visitor in the city today trom Turtle River. The violin numbers at the li- brary benefit tonight will richly repay all who attend. G. W. Millet, superintendent for the J. Neils Lumber com- pany, is a visitor in the city to- day from Cass Lake, An excellent line of typewriter paper, at from 80c to $1.75 per box at the Pioneer office. Wm. Williams is confined to his home at the corner of Third street and Minnesota avenue seriously ill. Fair and supper for benefit of St. Philip’s Catholic church Thursday, Friday and Saturday nights. Deputy U. S. Marshall Frank W. Tufts arrived in the city last night from St. Paul and left this worning for the north. Special Agent Cornwall re- turned this morning from points up the line of the.M. & 1., where he has spent some time looking up trespass cases, The Columbian Entertainers come to Bemidji under a heavy guarantee. They give a splendid entertainment and the profit all goesto support the public library. The safe plan for selling your grain and handling your option business is to deal direct with the old reliable firm of L T. Billousness, dyspepsia, loss of appeti disturbed sleep, nervousness, hegflacfi':: glddiness and drowsiness, wind and pain or fullness of the stomach after meals, cold chills and flushings of heat, short: ness of breath —these are the blank cheques of physical bankruptey. The man who suffers from- these dis- orders and neglects them will soon be in the relentless grasp of some fatal disease, If he is naturally narrow chested and shallow lunged, it will probably be con- sumption; if his father or mother died of paralysis or some nervous trouble, it will probably be nervous exhaustion or pros- tration, or even insanity; if there Is & taint in the family blood, it will be blood or skin disease; if he lives in a new or a low, swampy country, it will be malaria; if he lives a life of “exposure, it may be rheumatism. There is one safe course for a man to follow who finds himself “out of sorts” and suffering from the symptoms described, It is to Tesort to Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery. This medi- cine makes the alP_peme keen, corrects all disorders of the digestion, renders assimi- lation perfect, invigorates the liver, puri- fies and enriches the blood and builds firm, healthy flesh and nerve tissae. It cures almost all diseases that result from insufficient or improper nourishment of the brain and nerves. Bronchial, throat, and even lung affections, when not too far advanced, readily yield to it. A man.or woman who neglects constipation Suffers from siow gfl soning. Dr. Plerce's Pleasant Pel- lets cure constipation. One little “Pellet " i3 a gentle laxative, and two a mild cathartic. Don't let a selfish seller over-persuade you to accept a substitute for these Origi= nal Littie Liver Pils, drst put up y old Dr. R.V. Plerce ov v ago. Muck Imitated but never equated.” " Cigar Company has con meries” where the leaf blending. INNA Cigar Company—removes of the choicest tobaccos. WILL NOT BE OBEYED. Injunction of Chicago Judge Against Striking Printers. Chicago, Nov. 7.—John C. Harding sounded the keynote of the striking printers’ “‘anti-injunction” demonstra- tion at a North Side hall when he de- zlared that the union “could not and would not” obey the restraining order Issued by Judge Holdom in favor of the employers. Remedies for curbing tourt authority were offered, but Mr. Harding’s solution met with most fa- vor from the audience. More than 1,000 members of Typo- graphical Union No. 16 and other trade unionists gathered to discuss the in- Junction question. ‘Judge Holdom has granted an in- junction,” said Mr. Harding, *“which it is absolutely impossible to obey. It is so broad and sweeping that I be- lieve cven the judge himself realizes that he has gone too far. But we stand on our rights; we know what our rights are, and we intend to main- tain them, no matter what the result may be. “This strike,” he continued, “will be a long one, but we intend to carry on 2 plain, straightforward fight to the i h and we hope eventually to es- tab) the eight-hour day in the print- ing shops of Chicago. Marblchead Damaged and Floating Ma- chine Shop Sunk. Vallejo, Cal,, Nov. 7.—Caught by a powerful gust of wind while trying Soule & Son, Minneapolis, Es- tablished 1884. | Wrecked Parlor Car Back Again. “Bemidji” the Great Northern parlor car, which was wrecked on September 22nd, at Cloquet, bas returned from the Great Northern shops in a maze of fresh paint, fresh uph slstering and entire new arrangement and is again in service on the line be tween this city and Duluth. The car as now warranted is one of the swellest in the Northwest and would hardly be reconized by people familiar with it befre tte wreck at Cloquet. A musements “The Holy City.” Announcement of a perform- ance of “The Holy City’’ interests theatre-goes to an u \common de- gree. The great Biblical drama and sumptuous production given it, the strength of the acting company, the music and grand spectacle with which the play abounds, furnishes dramatic sat- isfaction and scenic pleasure so complete and grateful that Mana- gers Gordon & Bennett’s enter- prise is aleading feature in all columns containing theatrical news. Seldom has a play been so immediately noted, because seldom has any one play so many points of value. The theatre goers who appreciate entertain- ment in the proportion given for following thought, will, in the thrillingly told story of the Apostle John, ftind reflection, dramatic study and future enjny- ment rarely combined. . The theatre gcer who is more pleased with brilliant spectacle and w - derful stag effects, has his wish gratified by lavish preparation and almost unprecedented exe- cution. In his application for a performance of “The Holy City” Manager Wheelock sought the most important theatrical offer- ing of this season at Opera house tomorrow night. to make a landing at the coal wharf at Mare Island navyyard the refriger- ator s crashed into the cruiser Marblehead and into the float: ing machine shop, doing them so ver amage that the Marblehcad may have to go out of commission, it is said, while the machine shop wasisunk. The force of the impact was so great that two of the five nine-inch guns of the cruiser were completely demol- ished, the bridge torn away and two dingies reduced to kindling wood.: Two plates of the Marblehead were badly bent and the machine shop, whick had been rammed, soon sank. The Celtic suffered but slight damage in the collision. Tenement House Tragedy. New York, Nov. 7.—Andrew Ingan, thirty-four years old, was shot and instantly Kkilied in a fight at a tene- ment house on Canal street. ' lgnace Pontremick, twenty-four years old, was probably fatally wounded. Tony Mori, twenty years old, is charged with doing the shooting. Railroad Bonds Missing. Pittsburg, Nov. 7.—Eighty thousand worth of honds of the Santa ntral railroad, of which the late Cashier T. Lee Clark of the Enlerprise National bank was treasurer, are re- ported missing. Receiver Cunningham of the defunct Enterprise bank has not becu able to find thes VETERAN ACTOR DEAD. William J. Le Moyne Passes Away at Age of Seventy-five. New York, Nov. 7.—William J. Le Moyne, the veteran actor, is dead at Inwood-on-the-Hudson of Brights dis- ease. Present at the bedside were his wife, Sarah Cowell Le Moyne, and a few intimate friends of the family. Mr. Le Moyne was seventy-five years of age and sixty years of his life were spent on the stage. Mr. Le Moyne made his first theatrical appearance in Portland, Me,, in “The Lady of Lyons” in a company which included Mrs. Ed- win Forrest. Mr. Le N¥yne served in the Northern army in the Civil war and rose to the rank of captain. He wounded at the battle of South Moun- tain. POSED AS MRS. J. J. HILL. ° Police of Paterson, N. J., Looking for Woman Swindler. Paterson, N. J,, Nov. 7.—The police are lookieg for a middle aged woman who has been masquerading for some time past as the wife of James J. Hill, the railroad man. She spoke often of her private car, her residence at New- port and her many automobile excur- sions through California and the West. She is quite tall, of distinguished bear- ing and talks well. Her plan is to se- cure an invitation to stop at a house has been accomplished b gars have been developed in the “Anna Held” cigar through the intelligent application of scientific principles to the culture of the tobacco leaf before it reaches the cigar factory. At a cost of over a million dollars the American processes of curing, riperi CIGAR—5c. This treatment—exclusive with the American ness, thoroughly matures the leaf, and combines in a rich, mellow, uniform flavor the natural fragrance The “ Anna Held ” is a striking example of what costs you a nickel—instead of a dime. Sold by all dealers in good cigars. Trade supplied by GEO. R. NEWELL @& CO, MINNEAPOLIS, MINN. The qualities usually attributed to ten-cent ci- structed immense “stem- is put through different , fermenting and the last suspicion of harshe y these new methods, It —_— Reward of $25. I will pay $25 toany person who will furnish me with evi- dence that will secure the con- viction of the parties who are stealing lumber from my yards. Lam always at my office during! office hours to wait upon and ac- comodate the public. M. E. SMITH. i ‘DO IT TO-DAY!"' “And to think that ten months ago I looked like this| Ioweitto German Syrup.” i qThe time-worn injnnction, *‘ Never put off 'til. to-morrow what you can do to- | day,” is now generally prescnted in this | form : “ Do it to-day I’ " That is the terse | advice we want to give you about that ! hacking cough or demoralizing cold with | which you have been struggling for sev- | eral days, perhaps weeks. (Take some | reliable remedy for-it To-DAy—and let | that remedy be Dr. Boschee’s German Syrup, which has been in use for over. thirty-five years. A few doses of it will undoubtedly relieve your cough or cold, and its continued use for a few days will cure you completely. No matter how deep-seated your cough, even if dread | consumption” has attacked your lungs, German Syrup will surely effect a cure— as it has done before in thousands of ap. ntly hopeless cases of lung trouble. | Eal?ew trial bottles, 25¢; regular size, ' 75¢. Atall druggists, s City Diug Store. l Lady Dead. Mrs. Mary Hutchins, who lived upon a homestead 25 miles from Blackduck, died Sunday with cancer of the stomach. The remains were brought to Black- duck, where they were prepared for burial, and they passed through the city this morning enroute to Minneapolis, where | the funeral will oceur. A Valuable Claim. Miss Millie Amber of Fosston sold the pine on her homestead near Blackduck last week for $2000. There is said to be in ad- dition $1000 worth of hardwood on the place and the land itself is worth quite a sum. Miss Amber certainly did well in tuk- ing a claim. - Feed and Sale Stable. LIVERY ATTACHED Goods of All Description Stored J. P. Pogue. like an oven thermometer on their the Chief most_carefully it has been looked after. About three times the thickness of asbes- tos is used to insulate the oven as is com- monly used maKing it a quick baxer with little fault. The saving is sure. The Chief is a range SOME PEOPLE Round Oak Chief Steel Range is made both ways—with and without— of quality, The work- manship is the zame as Oak people put into their the Round Round Oak Stove, and the price famous is right. ‘We are sure to plea:e and suit you with this sterling good range. Remember the range is right and the price is right. for a few days and then to secure a loan while waiting for a check from her husband. The police say that she has Jmposed upon people here, af Mon:clair and in the Oranges. making the rai -W. M. Ross - range: some people do not. The but the oven itself (the business part of the range), for baKing, is the most important, and ia \J / ? / i .In this room, Fritz. we crate the Round Oak Chiet Steel Ranges ready for shipment. See how well it 1s done.. We take the same points in having it right that we do in nge.” Dealer in Hardware & Coal.