Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, May 25, 1906, Page 3

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MRS INSIST! on having Model Ice Cream made by ~ Ghe Model Ice Cream Company 315 MNinn, Ave. Phone 125. Sold at all leading Ice Cream stands. THE CITY. Read the Daily Pioneer. Hawkin’s & Co, pays the high- est price for fresh lake fish. Ten per cént off on all walking skirts at McCuoaig’s” Saturday and Monday. e B, D:Algér of Tenstrike passed through the city this morning on his'way to Brainerd.’ Regular 85¢ corset covers for 25ciat McCQuaig’s Saturday and Monday. _ - The Bemidji Eievator company are exclusiveagents for Barlow’s Dest,. Mascot and Cremo flour, Peter Maule is down from Ten- strike attending to business matters before the probate court. The Pioneer carries the lead- ing grades of typewriter paper, which sells from 80c to $3 per box. The popular traveling man, William Currie, left today for Du- luth and will spend a week at his home office. The United Order of Foresters will give a dance and card party at the 1. O. O. F. hall Thursday evening, May 31, Admission 25c. It is safe to say that the girls of 1906 “are sweeter and more beautiful than the girls of war times. The up-to-date girls take Hollister’s Rocky Mountain Tea. 35 cents, Tea or Tablets. Bar- ker’s Drug Store. PICKARD! HAND PAINTED CHINA We have just received a large assortment. The finest china ware in the market, We invite you to call at our store and inspect the beautiful ware. See our windows. | cents at McCuaig’s Saturday and M. & M. Coming. Embroidery turnovers from 10c to 35¢ at McCuaig’s. Ice cream soda and soft drinks at the Palace of Sweets Hawkin’s & Co. pays the high- est price for fresh lake fish. Ten bars Cabinet soap for 25 Monday. Furnished room for rent. Best location in the city, Enqaire at Peterson’s. Twenty per cent off on all lace and insertion Saturday and Mon- day at McCuaig’s. Duplicate order books and commercial men’s expense ac- count books at the Pioneer office, Henry Larson of Shevlin and Olof A. Thompson of thetown of Leoni have made application for a discharge from bankruptcy. EYES“D:‘, C. J. Larson, the eye specialist, makes his next regular visit to Bemidji May 25, 26, 27. Office at Hotel Brinkman, Don’t bet; but if you must bet, bet on the home team. The game Sunday will be worth going miles | to see. A course, leathery complexion made unbeautiful by eruptions, calls for a general reform in liv- ing. The diet should be plenty of Hollister’s Rocky- Mountain Tea. 35 cents; tea or tablets. Barker’s Drug Store. Andrew Smohl, a prominent and prosperous farmer of Bel- trami county is a Bemidji visitor from Lynx today. Mr, Smohl reports his crop in good condi- tion, with good prespects for a; good crop of hay. He will re- turn home tomorrow. Dr. C. J. Larson, the well, known eye specialist, arrived in the city last evening and will be found at the Brinkman Hotel un- | til Sunday evening. Dr. Larson iz well known as a careful op- tician and those needing his ser- vices should not fail to come and | see him. Special sale of Paris Poplins, 50c quality only 89¢ at Me- Cuaig’s Saturday and Monday. Don McDonald, a Grand Korks andertaker, is in the city to take; the body of Mrs. H. L Pitt back to Grand Forks. He will return to Grand Forks this afternoon. There is more Catarrh in this section of the country than all diseases put together, and until vhe last few years it was supposed to be incurable. For a great many years doctors pronounced it a local disease and prescribed local remedies and by constantly failing to cure: with local treat- H * The Only 2 | REAL HOME BAKER in the city ‘We make a specialty of HOME BAKED BREAD, PIES, CAKE AND DOUGHNUTS. Fresh baking daily =7 The old rellable - LARESTE Tk eny Telephone 118 M. & M. Read the Daily Pioneer. b Hawkin’s & Co. pays the high- est price for fresh lake fish. - _The latest magazines and copy- right books at the Palace of Sweets. Don’t forget the ball’ game Sunday. It will be fast and furi- ous. It is Bemidji vs. Deer River. Kendall Clark, who owns a claim near Blackduck, arrived in the city this morning for a short visit with friends. The baseball game Snnday is to be the. best one so far of the season; in fact, it is the first big game of the year, Typewriter ribbons of all standard makes, either record, copying or indelible, can be pro cured in the color you wish at the Pioneer office. -Somebody is going to get iicked in the ball game Sunday and it is likely to be Deer River. Turn out and watch the local boys per- form the ceremony. Great - reduction in rates to Norway and Sweden on ‘account of Crowning of King Haakon VII, Tickets on sale from May 16 to June 26. Single ticket $54.60 Round trip $104,20. For further information write Anderson & Johnson, Agents, Bemidji, Minn. The big steamer, “The Colum- bia,” was launched yesterday afternoon and Jesse Scarrott, the owner, expectsto have it ready for passenger seérvice by Sunday. The boat will make regular trips and also makea specialty of parties during the coming season. Men and women who eat fat meats and drink strong coffee usually have course, florid skins. county col held on Tuesday May 29. “The best is. never too good” in shoes. Gill Brothers guaran- tee every pair they sell A. W, Krane, deputy state bank examiner from St. Paul, is in Bemidji today on official busi- ness. - Gill Brothers, the popular one price clothiers, are offering their large stock of clothing at re- duced prices. Peter Maule this morning made application for appointment as executor of the estate .of Margaret Maule, : P. Peterson of Crookston is in the city today visiting his folks. Mr. Peterson is a brakeman on the Great Northern. Men’s fine dress pants in all the latest patterns, worth $4 and $5, at Gill Brothers pnpular clothing store, only $3.50. There will be some interesting moving pictures of San Francisco before and after the earthquake at the city hall Tuesday evening, May 29. Miss HKthel McTaggart re- turned last evening from Brain- erd, where she underwent a successful operation for ap- pendicitis, Charles Nangle is in the mar- ket tobuy a few dry cows, heifers, and some Those having any to.sell must let, him know by Saturday night. The ladies of St. Bartholomew Mission will give a pianola musical assisted by local talent at the home of Mrs. W. A. Me- Donald on Thursday afternoon June 7. Mrs. Ferris, mother of W. A. Ferris, has been brought to the city for medical treatment. Mrs, Ferris lives about nine miles east of the city and has been in poor health for some time. The employees of the Markham } and Brinkman hotels will play a ball game tomorrow at the ball park. The line-up has not bern definately decided upon yet but the game will doubtless be an in- teresting one, The Pioneer has recently added to its stock a new and complete Holliter’s Rocky Mountain Tea makes your skin soft and fair. 35 cents, Tea or Tablets. Bar- ker’s Drug Store. The stock of groceries, shoes and notions formerly owned by J: A, McConkey was sold in bulk thismorning to William McCuuig ment, pronounced it.incurable. Science has proven catarrh to be aconstitutional disease and there- fore requires constitutional treat- ment. Hall’s Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio, is the only con- stitutional cure on the market, It is taken internally in doses from 10 drops to a teaspoonful. It acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. They offer one hundred dollars {for any case it fails to cure, GEO.T.BAKFR & C0. Located in City Drug Store, ' constipation. - Send for circulirs and testi- monials. Address: F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Chio, Sold by Druggists, 75c. Take Hall’s Family Pills fcr for the benefit of the creditors of Mr. McConkey. The stock in- voiced a little over $3,700 and was sold for $1,200. S Twenty per cent off on all India linens, Saturday and Mon- day at McCuaig's. The Ladies Aid Scciety of the Baptist church will serve supper in the building formerly occupied by the J. A. McConkey grocery store on *Minnesota ayenue this evening.. The proceeds of the supper to be used to pay for painting and repair- ing the church. 3 Special sale of ladies’ 50¢ and 60c black -lace hose only 89c at McCuaig’s=Saturday and Mon- day. you're safe. Suppose you step in and t fear not your verdict. Go over CLOTHCRAFT garments point by point, the fabrics, the patterns, the graceful lines, the lay of the collar, the shaped shoulders, the trimmings, the finish, the faultlessness of the general ensemble and you will not wonder then at the giant strides CLOT) CRAFT has made in the clothing world. The sooner you learn why you should wear this famous makie, the sooner you hegin to save, and the sooner you discover that every builder and wearer of good clothes can learn something in clothes ., craft from CLOTHCRAFT. We can sell “all wool” without a blush because the hest woolen mills in the land Know too well that they dare not submit a yard of: questionable cloth to go into CLOTHCRAFT garments—that’s cloth- ing insurance for you. CLOTHCRAFT is not merely a high grade distinguishing mark, but a name that has made a mark in tailoring triumph; it means service—protection: ask for CLOTHCRAFT CLOTHES and he sure . ) line of blank books. We have everything you want from the cheap book to the 800-page flat- opening leather-bound books. The line will meet the wants of everyone using blank books. Officers and people desiring the very best lead pencils should bear in mind that the Pioneer carries in stock a full line of the best pencils among which are Fabers HH, HHH, HHHH, HHHHH and HHHHHH; the Kohinoor, Mephisto, stenograph- ers, and seyeral grades of the best 5c pencils. PRIVATE CONCERN WINS, Builds Warship in Less Time Than Government Yard. ‘Washington, May 25.—The delivery Tuesday at Norfolk to the government of the completed battleship Louisiana of 16,000 tons, built by the Newport News Shipbuilding company, ended in favor of a private corporation the great struggle that has been going on for nearly three and a half years to determine whether the government could build at a navyyard a warship as quickly as it could be constructed in a private yard. The keel of thc Louisiana was laid down Feb. 7, 1903 at Newport News and the keel of the Connecticut, which was to be.built in competition, was laid down at the Brooklyn navyyard March 7 of the same year. The Louisiana was “| 1aunched Aug. 27, 1904, ard the Con- necticut followed her into the water a month later, Sept. 29. So far the race had been close; but soon the pri- vate workmen forged ahead and the result was that the Louisiana was de- livered ready for service probably some months in advance of the Con- necticut. Another point against the govern- ment was the fact that the Louisiana cost the navy department $3,992,000, while the Comnecticut has already consumed all of the total appropria tion of $4,212,000 and her builders have asked congress for $380,000 more. LIABLE TO DAILY FINE OF §50. Ohio’s Attorney General Serves No- tice on Trusts. . Columbus, O., May 25.—Acting un- der section 7 of the Valentine-Stewart anti-trust act Attorney Genmeral Ellic has served notice on all’ companies concerns and persons shown by his preliminary inquiries to be violating that law that they are so violating it end in consequence are liable to for feit 350 to the state for every day thex continue its yiolation. It is a section that has not bee: used in trust fighting before and be est your senses of sight and touch, we S. longs to the civil and not the criminal provisions of the law. Indictment and conyiction are not necessary to estab Ush the claim. Other trust litigation previously begun is wholly separate two-year-old steers, | Hawkin’s & Co, | est price for fresh lake fish. ery at the Palace of Sweets. Fruits and choice confection-| . pays the high- Just Réceived another shipment of Pianos and Organs. You can trade in your. Organs on part payment for Piauos, Alsoyou can trade in your old sewing machine on a part payment for new machine. BISIAR & VANDERLIP, 315 Fourth St. Bemidji, . Minnesota LOTS FOR SALE WE _OFFER FOR SALE CHEAP— GOOD LOTS AT GR. FORKS BAY WHITE & STREET TOWNSITE COMP'NY J. F. GIBBONS, Local agt. Bemidji, Minn. HORSESHOEING | A specialty at Chap- man’s shop, rear of Wes Wright’s Barn - Mike Seberger Guaranteed to stop itching scalp, dandruff and falling hair Macnab’s Vegetable Hair Tonic & Dandruff Cure. Special Sale now going on at ENFrench&Co’s City Drug Store, Bemidji, Mifn. '1$27.40 to Denver & return from _ Close at 7:30. The employers of the different barber shops have got together and decided to close their shops at 7:30 p. m. hereafter. To the Dealer and Smokers The approval of a great city is most always a fore- runner of national popu- larity. - The cigar of the East is' now made in Bemidji. | Pure and unadulterated, mild and sweet, always uniform in every point oisj high quality and a metro-_ politan standard. s St. Paul or Minneapolis via Chicago, Great Western Railway. Tickets on sale June 1 to Sept,. 30. Final return limit Oct. 81. Equally low rates to cther Colo- rado and Utal points. For fur- ther information apply toJ. P. Elmer, G. P. A,, St. Paul, Minn. American Academy of Medicine Jume 2-4, 1906. -National Association of U. S. Pension Examining Surgeons June 4-3, 1906. American Medical Association June 5-8, 1906. First Church of Christ Scien- tist June 10-17, 1906. g Boston, Mass. . Account the above meetings at Boston, Mass.,, the Duluth, South Shore & Atlantic Ry., will have tickets on sale, May 30 to June 9 to Boston and return at rate of $26.00. Tickets can be extended for return passage until July 15, M&M| Cigars are forgsale by all: dealers and called for by all {obacco-using connoisseur. ; A Smoke For Smokers. 1906. S B R SR Combination rail and lake routes available with these ex-| Fawkin’s & Co. pays the high- cursions. . est price for fresh lake fish. For full particulars and sleep- ing car accommodation, apply to, A.J. Perrin, General Agent, 430 Spaulding Hotel Block, Du- luth, Minn. Miss Dickinson Piano Teacher Swedback Block, Bemidji, Electrocuted by Live Wire, Minneapolis, May 25.—Edward Cro- nin was electrocuted while attempt- Ing to enter a blacksmith shop on Central avenue for the purpose of ex- tinguishing a fire. Cronin was pass- Ing and saw the fire within and tried to get through a window. In doing so he came in contact with a wire which proved to be heavily charged with electric current. BRIEF BITS OF NEWS. One death and two prostrations due to heat have been reported at Pitts- burg in twenty-four hours. Colonel W. W. Switzler, aged eighty- seven, recognized as the oldest editor in the United States, is dead at Co- lumbia, Mo. The foreign commerce of the United States for April aggregated $251,000.- .000, of which $107,000,000 was in im- ports and $144,000,000 in exports. Princess Ena and her mother, Prin- cess Henry of Battenburg, have left London for Spain, at the frontier of which King Alfonso will await his future bride. Chief Engineer Stevens of the isth- mian’ canal commission has arrived in New York on the steamer Advance from Colon. He will present a report to the canal commission. An unidentified man shot himself in the forehead while sitting on the hank of the river at St. Paul. He was taken to the city hospital by the po- lice, where he died an hour later. The summer residence of Rolan C. Nickerson of New York, one of the finest on Cape Cod, was burned with its valuable interior furnishings, paint- ings and bric-a-brac. The loss-is esti- mated at $200,000. MARKET QUOTATIONS. Full Supply of Sundries Sundries is ahandy word, It means different things to different people. When we use it it means brushes, combs, mirrors,atom- izers, sachet powders and all those toilet requisites that are becoming all but indispens- able these days, And when we tell you that our supply is complete, we mean that we have them ALLL And in case you might bein doubt about it we want to make you sure upon this point too—That what we purchase in this line has got to show some substantial reason why we should buy it before we Minneapolis Wheat. ask you to look at it, Minneapolis, May 24.—Wheat—DMMay, 82%c; July, 82%¢; Sept, 80%@s0%ec || That leaves you nothing to On track—No. 1 hard, 84%c; No. 1]} do but pick from assured Northern, 837%c; No. 2 Northern, values, 82%c. 2 - Duluth Wheat and Flax, Duluth, May 24—Wheat—To arrive and on track—No. 1 Northern, 813c; No. 2 Northern, 823c; May, 84c; July, 84%c; Sept., 81%c. Flax—To arrive, on track and May, $1.15; July, $1.- 16%; Sept., $1.16%; Oct., $1.143. E. A. Barker, Third St. Druggist. “AFo 4 When Mr. Calixo Garcia saw the vesults of the NEW CURING PROCESS wused on Havana leaf tobacco, he said that “A great discovery had been made, a fortune found’—an admission by this celebrated Cuban tobacco expert of what Bondy & Lederer's jealous competitors tried -in vain to deny. ‘A harmless, perfectly healthful Havana tobacco . —the kind that smo une Fo SUN with all of its fine aroma intact ‘ relish and doctors CAN'T forbid.'; 5 - Made Mild by Nature No damp, pent up stemmeries, but only the softening, purifying rays of the sun can produce® that’ peculiar, . mild, rich flavor of the tobacco in the Lawrence Barrett “10c Cigar—the best cigar to be had at any price. Discriminating smokers recognize this. Bondy & Lederer’s success in Lawrence Barrett cigars is due to the satisfaction it gives to the ‘best class of smokers. _smoker? i S | |

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