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= ~ THE S g, Pty MADE TO ORDER . i ~ IN THE LATEST FASHIONS Cleaning, pressing and repairing, ladies’ and gentlemen’s garments. Removed to rooms formerl)" occupied by Gibbons & Torrance. Opposite: Hotel Markham. THE CITY. Read the Daily Pionesr. Go to Hakkerup’s for Photos. J. C. Paiker is a business visi- tor at Northome today. Guy A. Aubul of Crookston is transacting business in Bemidji today. We have coal to burn but we would rather sell it. Markham, Schisel Co., phone 100 H. A. Langord arrived in the| city this morving from Langor for a brief business visit here. Mr, and Mrs. James Taylor re-i turned to their home at Ten- strike last night after a brief yisit with friends in Bemidji. Superintendent W. A. Gould .of the Crookston Lumber com- pany went to Kelliter last night and will spend a short time look- ing after the work in the camps in that vicinity. W. H. Roberts of the First National bank returned this morning from Ripple, Northome and Blackduck, where he has looked after his banking inter- ests in those villages for a few days. Dr, C. J. Larson’ the EYES *"well known eye spec- ialist, will make his next regular trip to Bemidji, January 17,18,19, 20 and 21. All those having trouble with - their eves should not fail to se» him. Hotel Ramore. J. J. Opsabl left last night for Turtle River and Tenstrike, and will spend severai days in that vicinity « n business. Before his return Mr. Opsahl expects to close a deal woeceby he will dis- pose of a tract of land near Ten- strike to southern investors. Wremidii GROWING! T. Beaudette the old reliable tailor. has add- ed a full line «f woolen goods to his tailoring establishmwent and wishes to 1wform the penple of Bemidji and surrounding couatry that thev now have the aavantage to picK out their su'ts from the piece instead of from samples, which will give much Better Satisfaction. LS SN I N D P SUITS TO ORDER-=$18--AND UP PANTS 't O ORDER==$5-~AND UP 3. Peauvdeiie 320 Beltrami Avs. Bt e ale o o Office at the ' Read the Daily Pioneer, : W. J. Whiting of Blackduck is a visitor in Bemidji today. Sheriff Bailey returned this !morning from an official visit to i Blackduck. | Mrs. Paul Foucault spent last 1night with friends at Kelliher, i returning home this morning. ! The Bemidji Elevator company ‘are exclusive agents for Barlow’s | Best, Mascot and Cremo flour. i G. N. Christie of St. Paul,| spent last night in Bemidji with | ifriends, leaving for the south | | ' this morning. i The Ladies Guild of the Epis-! copal church will give & fruit! sale at the Grill Saturday after- noon. Attorney H. A. Simons left last night for Northome, where he spent the day. He will re- turn home $omorrow morning, FOR SALE—16 in. dry Jack pine and Popple at $1.25 per cord at The Bargain store, 1 door north of postoffice, A. A. Goodrich, superintend- ent for the Carpenter-Lamb com- pany, spent last night at North- ome, returning home this morn- ing. Superintendent Strachan of the M. & I. returned to Brainerd this morning after looking after business for the company along the north line for several days. Suceess is stamped on every package 1iis the mostsuccess- ful remedy knowa. It makes you well and keeps you well, That’s what Hollister’s Rocky Mountain Tea does. 85 cents, Tea or Tablets. Barker’s Diug Stere. | State of Obio, City of Toledo, | _ ! Lucas County. Iy Frank J. Cheney makes oath {that he is senior partner of the firm of F. J. Cheney & Co., doing business in the City of Toledo, County and State aforesaid, and that said firm will pay the sum of One Hundred Dollars for each and every case of Catarrh that jcannot be cured by the use of | Hall’s Catarrh Cure. Frank J. Cheney. Sworn to before me and sub- scribed in my presence, this 6th . day of December, A. D. 1886. ! (Seal, A. W. Gleason, Notary Public. ! Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken jinternally and acts directly on! ithe blood and muenus surfaces | :of the system. Send for testi- { monials free. F.J. Cheney & Co, Toledo, O. Sold by all druggists, T5ec. Take Hall’s Family Pills for constipation, SPECIAL! STOVE Design warranted. last long at Biiy now and save SALE ! Owing to the continued mild weather we still have a large atfect in Rumber of stoves on hand. These we have marked at "~ CLOSING! | OUT PRICES rather than carry them over. the Jot includes: Hard Coal {WARRANTED Bgge Burners, Round Oaks, Ranges and Cook: Stoves. Every stove or range fully money. They will not these prices. Fleming Bro 316" Minn. Ave. ; thers ; “’d’W-7 Telephone 57 Phone 57. . e ‘Mrs. Johnston returned to Crookston yesterday afternoon after a visit at the home of Mr. and Mrs. E. M. Peterson. Ole Moen of the town of Frobn 1:aves this evening for Ripple, in i which vicinity he owns a tract of timber land which he expects to dispose of. Don’t let your face grow old, sallow, hollow and wrinkled. If you care at all for beauty, take Hollister’s Rocky Mountain Tea. 35 cents, Tea or tahlets. Bark- er’s Drug Store. Erick Ness and Matt Berg, who have been at St. Anthony’s hospital in this city several days suffering with broken facial bones, were discharged today and returned to their home at Fowlds this afternoon. Mrs. L. L. Berman left this jmorning for the twin cities and Chicago, where she will make the purchase of a spring stock of goods for her establishment in this city. Mrs. Berman expects to beabsent from Bemidji about two weeks. John: Pasha passed through the city last night on his way home to Blackduck from Brain- erd, to which city he accompan- ied Thos. Hagin, who is suffering with rheumatism. Mr. Hagin was taken to a hospital in Brain- erd for treatment. Miss Hetland entertained the F. L. D. and the T. L. D. clubs at a sleigh ride party last pight. After the ride the members of the party, numbering 11, re- paired to the rooms of Miss Het- land, where refreshments were sarved, C E Aikin, cashier of the First National bank of Grand Rapids. returned tome tkis af- ternoon after attending the] meetings of the stockholders of the First National band of this city and the banks at Blackduck and Northome. Wi‘,}iam Tidd, formerly with the Shevlin-Carpenter company with headquarters at Hibbin: , has accepted a position with the Crookston Lumber company and leaves this evening for Black- duck, where he will look after timber for the company. West bound passenger No. 33 was three hours late yesterday afternoon owing to a gravel train being across the track on the Eastern Minnesota division. A car of the gravel train was across the track and the passenger was forced to wait until it was put back upon the rails. Sending Recruits to Vancouver. The localarmy recruiting office has received orders to fill vacan cies in the Vancouver barracks. and hereafter all recruits secur- 'ed at the Bemdji s‘ation will be sent to. Vancouver. These bar racks are located six miles frcm Portland, Ore., and are the {beautiful, Mt Hood and Mt. Ranier being plainly visitle from a the barracks. N A PAIR WORK. You get the best services on the shortest mnotice. | Doran Bros. | TELEPHONE NO. 225 largest in the United State:§} ~ | The scenery in this section is N ATIAICE to.any part of the city, phone 57. Fleming Bros. = = ’ - E A, Schueider returned this afternoon from Fosston, where he spent a short time looking after business interests. The Ladies Guild of the Epis- copal church will give a fruit sale at the Grill Saturday after- noon. M. A. Rognlien, S. H. Ruch and | Gilbert Waldron of Wilton are business visitors in Bemidji today. The local lodge I 0.0 F. will hoid a regular meeting this even- ing,‘ The first, second and third degree will be conferred. A marriage license was issued this afternoon at the office of Clerk of Court Rhoda to Thos. W. Hilts and Miss Lizziz Sum- merhouse. Iv’s an easy thing to say.and say it good and strong, and say it prewy frequent, push Rocky Mountain Tea along. Barker’s Drug Store. 4 County Attorney McDonald | all relurned to his homestead in Maple Ridge township last nigho after spending a few days in the city on official business. There will be a meeting of the Eastern Star F'riday evening. All members are urgently re- quested toattend. Mrs. A. E Henderson, worthy watron. Leonard Dokken returned to his home at Kellys, N. D., this afternoon after a brief visit at the home of Mr. and Mrs. I. B. Olson. J. E. Wagner is in the city to- day from Fowlds. Mr. Wagner states that the bunilding to be oc- cupied bv the bank at Fowlds has already been completed and | the safe for the institution has been placed in the building. OCCASIONS MUCH ORATORY. Resolution Calling for Popular Elec- tion of Senators. Columbus, O., Jan. 12.—Senator Meeks’ resolution declaring in favor of the election of United States sen- ators by popular vote was the occa- sion of a lot of oratory in the senate, but it was finally unanimously adopt- ed. Senator Wood said that senators who could probably not be- elected by the popular vote were blocking the president in his effort at rate legisla- tion. The spectacle of one senator dying in disgrace and another con- victed of a felony was before the coun- try, he said, and showed the method of electing them should be changed. <. JlINUSements .... HARMONY, MINN., Nov. 14, 1905. Ogdon’s Rip Van Winkle Co., played here last night to an over crowded house. Everyone pres- it the best show that has yisited our town for years. Geo. Miiti- | more’s interpretation of “Rip Van Winkle” was excellent. The play, as well as the specialties, was clean and well rendered. Should they ever appear here again it is safe to say that the house will not hold all who wish to attend. 3 Yours Truly, L. 0. HAUGEN, Editor '‘News.” Bemidji Opera House, Jan. 16. Seat sale at Barker’s Drug Store. _Mr. Harold Nelson. The return to this city of Mr. Harold Nelson will be acceptable to patrons of - the local theater, who have seen him saveral times before. Since his last appear- ance in Bemidji, Mr. Nelson has improved in his ability as an actor, and is now considered one of the foremost men in the. pro- fession. The title of the play in which he will appear is “Prince Otto,” a forcible and remarkable story from the pen of “Robert Louis Stevenson descriptive of life in England centuries ago when the 'country was in a primitive stage. - The date for ~or cheap whisky which thoroughly unfits ent was more than pleased with| the performance and pronounced Mr. Nelson’s appearance is Jan. 19.. i . Energetic. persevering action is gen necessary to overcome the obstacles and attain great and noble ends in life. So, too, if one is afflicted. with a dread disease which has fastened itself upon some of the organs of the body and become firmly seated as a lingering or chronic malady, active and persistent treatment is generally necessary to dislodge the enemy. Since any medical treatment, however food it may be, must be long continued n order to be effective in old established and therefore obstinate cases, how im- portant that the remedical agencies em- ployed be of a harmless character. To be safe and harmless, when their use is thus protracted, they should be of such nature as to be easily eliminated or carried out of the system when they have performed their work, just as the refuse of food is carried out of the system. Most mineral medicines are not thus easily gotten rid of. Take arsenic, for instance, if intro- duced into the system in any considerable quantity it will lodge {a the brain, liver, kidneysand other parts and there remain as a foreign body to set up irritation and disease for a long period of time if death does not sooner intervene. This is also true of most mineral medicines. With medicines of vegetable composi- tion it ie different. They do their work |h by aiding the natural functions of the several organs of the body for which they have an affinity, and like the refuse of our food, are carried out of the system through the natural emunctori the lungs, skin, kidneys and bowels. Thus no injury is done to the system in cases where the use of such medicines is con- tinued for a long period of time. cially is this true if the medicine taken is free from alcohol. = Itis well known, how- ever, that even small portions of alcohol taken for a considerable period of time will do serious injury to the bodily organs and functions and eSpecially to the brain. How important then, in choosing a med- icine for treating a malady of long stand- ing, and when medicines must, in order to cure, be preseveringly taken for a con- siderable period of time, that those only should be used which are known tobe free g;om alcohol and of vegetable composi- ion. 2 ‘With most medicines put up for family. use and sold through druggists, their composition is kept a_ profound secret. known only to those who compound and put them out for sale. Any afflicted person who bulsl's and uses then, does so, as it were, in the dark, if not indeed athis or her peril. They may and generally do, contain a very large percentage of alcohol them for protracted use. But this is not the worst fault of many of them, objec- tionable though it is. Narcoties and mineral poisons, which we have shown to be so harmful, especially when used pro- tractedly, are contained in many of these secret compounds. To overcome the well-grounded and reasonable objections of the more intel- ligent to the use of secret, medicinal com- ggunds, Dr. R. V. Pierce, of Buffalo, N. ., Some time ago, decided to make a bold departure from the usual course pursued by the makers of put-up medicines for do- mestic use, and so has published broad- cast and openly to the whole world, a full and complet t of all the ingredients entering into th mposition of I celebrated medicin Thus he has his numerous patrons and patients his full confidence. Thus too he has re- moved his medicines from among secret nostrums of doubtful merits, and made them Remedies of Known Composition. By this bold step he has shown that his formulas are of such excellence that he is not afraid _te subjeet them to scrutiny. He has come to beli willing to concede, that his patients, and all who take his put-up medicines have a Espe- | D perfect right to know what they are ‘taking into their stomachs. Not only does the wrapper of every bottle of Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Dis- covery, the famous medicine for weak stomach, torpid liver or biliousness and all catarrhal diseases wherever located, have printed upon it, in ipmi'n Emnglish, a full and complete list of all the ingredi- ents composing it, but a small book has been compiled from numerous standard medical works, ofiall the different schools of practice, contajning very numerous extracts from th tings of leading practitioners of ‘medicine. endorsing in the strongest. possible terms, each and everyingredient.contained in Dr. Pierce’s medicines. One of these little books will be mailed free to any one sending address on postal card or by letter. to Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo. N. Y., and requesting the same. From: this little book it will be learned that Dr. Pierce’s medicines con= tain no alcohol, narcotics. mineral agents or other poisonous or injurious agents; that they are made from indigenous, or native, medicinal roots of great value, the pro of which are extracted and pnr})e ly preserved by the of triple- refined, chemically pure glycerine of proper strength. It will also be found that the g i mployed greatly en- ances the curative prineiples of the {ho best a al] roots employed., s possible solvent of their med ples, besides po: ng intrinsic me value of its own, being a fine demulcent, nutritive, antiseptic and antiferment. From perusing this little hook of ex- tracts, it will be found that some of the most_valuable ingredi Pierce’s | Favori veak, neryous, over-worke: and- debilitated women, we long years ago, by the India; ailments affecting their squa one of the most valuable medicinal F entering_into the composition of i . Pierce’s Favorite Prescription was knov . to the Indians as “Squaw-Weed.” (1 knowledge of the uses of not a few of cnr most, valuable native, medicinal plants was gained from the Indians. As made up by improved and exact pro- cesses, the “Favoerite Prescription” is a most efficient rem for regulating all the .womanly functions, correcting dis- placements, ‘as” prolapsus, anteversion and retroversion..overcoming painful pe- riods, toning up the nerves and bringing about a perfect state of health. It cures the backaehe, the dragging-down distress in the pelv egion, the pain and tender- ness oyer the ovaries, dries up the pel catarrhal drain; so disagreeable and wea ening, and ovexcomes every form of weak- ness incident' to the organs distinctly feminine, i “Favorite Preseription” is the only med- icine for women, the makers of which are not afraid to print their formula on the bottle wrapper, thu 1king thei into their 1 ) It 3 medicine for women, every ingredient of which has the strongest possible endorse- ment of the most .eminent medi titioners and. write; mending .it. for the d “Favorite Prescription ” is us only put-up icine for women, sold through druggists,which does not contain a large percentage of alcohol. so harm- ful in the long run, especially to delicate women. Tt has more 0 its credit than all oth edicines for women combined. having saved thousands of suf- ferers from the surgeon’s ki . It ha restored delicate. < women to strong and vigorous health and virility, mak- ing motherhood po le where there was barrenness before; thereby brightening and making happy many thousands of homes by the a of little ones to strengthen. the m al bonds and add sunshine where gloom and despondency had reigned before. Haruess repair shop, Rudulfifii Bobm’s o'd stand, three doors porth of postoffice e ' Natice, d priorto Janu pquested to nr ent as int: warrant; from this date, S. Collard. §! in the treasury to pay all | I 1, 192 Minnesot % Manvufacturers and J-bkers We YWant Men toseliour famous MINNETONKA Dated Bemdii. January 11, 1906, JARL GEIL. Treasurer, City of Bemidji, nesota gro | —__ Apply for L. L. MAY & CO.. - ST. PAUL J. A. McConkey’s ANNOUNCEMEN T 'Owing to a change that is can use for some time . as an indes. 75 cents, only, for high grade, only grade] 2 1hs 2 A 20c candy, per lb, only next ten days in this siore, goods will be put down to a price that will pay any one to lay in what they A 50c Tea, uncolore , strictly a number on= article, for . L ; A 40c¢ Tea, good steeper, only 5 & Best Oolong, English Breakfas: tea always sold for Batavia 60c, any kind, you know that Batavia stands BestTea Dust [don’t (onfound this with a cheap Haud picked Navy beans, 6 lbs for Pearl Barley, Pearl Tapioca, fine German Sago, bulk Sturch, any of these 6 lbs, for The finest candies made, per lb,only A good standard Corn 2 for 15¢ or 4 for 5 Very truly yours to be made inside of the See prices on a few items 2 : 40c | 3Ce : : 60c g : . b0c 25¢ 25¢ 25¢ 24¢ : s 12¢ 25¢