Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, June 8, 1906, Page 2

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When the hair combs out badly | That § | is the time you want to know exactly g K Om ui’ what to do. Here is advice founded § ° on an experience of half a century — Use Ayer’s Hair Vigor! It feeds the hair-bulbs, gives life and strength to the g hair. The hair stays in, grows rapidly, keeps soft and glossy. There is hand- some hair in every bottie of Ayer’s Hair Vigor! THE RESULT OF A QUARREL. One Sister Dead and the Other Se- riously Burned. Vancouver, Wash., June 8.—As the result of what is said to have been a quarrel, Mrs. Alice Myers of Wash- ington, D.- C,, is dead and her sister, Miss Clara Lavoie, is seriously burned. As far as can be learned by the sheriff Mrs. Myers became enraged at Minnesota her sister and threw a lighted lamp at % Manufacturers and Jobbers % 3 her. I[n so doing Mrs. Myers sprinkled R~ MARCONI WIRELESS TELEGRAPH STOCK Ts the wonder of the age and I have made it a specialty. My price is only $5.00 per share right now. It is bound to double shortly, so order to-day. R. B. HIGBEE, Broker Germania Life Bldg., ST.PAUL,ML.N. National Bank Refercnces. &4 herself with ignited oil, and although her sister was hit by the lamp the fire It caused on the latier was quick- MINNETONKA |ly extinguished. Mrs. Myers, though the guaranteed apples | ot seriously burned externally, in- and.our general Tine o1 | haled the flanies and died. e e Aneged Lynchers Taken. Hardy, accl ated,Min> Springfield, Mo., June 8.—Doss Gal- e o for terme. | braith *and Hill Gooch, blacksmiths, have been arrested charged with mur- der in the first degree for their al- leged participation in the lynching of three negroes in this city on the night of Auvril 14. We Want Men o sellour famous. — Apply for terms. L. L. MAY & CO., - ST.PAUL MINN. oowivs Early Risers The famous little pills. Represents Today And Tomorrow In England the Conservatives represent “yesterday and today,”’ the Liberals “today and tomorrow,”’ In train service between the Twin Cities and Chicago, The Pioneer Limited was the first \ train to break away from “yesterday and to- day,” and to give travelers the benefits of “today and tomorrow.” Its route is via the Chieago, Milwaukee, St. Paul Railway Leaves Minneapolis 8:00 p. m.; St. Paul 8:35 p. m.; arrives Union Station, Chicago 8:55 a, m, Equipmentincludes standard and com- partment sleepers with “lenger, higher and wider berths,” library-buffet car,.dining car chair car and coaches. Buy your ticket East from your local agent, but insist that itis over the Milwaukee Road between the Twin Cities and Chicago. W. B. DIXON NORTHWESTERN PASSENGER AGENT 365 Robert Street, St. Paul (Fiour! Four] If you want good flour letus send you a sack of our “Majestic” We handle a nice line of fruits, always fresh, as we receive daily shipments. Just received a large shipment of Gotzian’s shoes. Lat- est styles. Prices right. First class timothy hay, a bale, 40¢ TEA: Green tea per pound, 2Ic Fancy dairy butter, 10¢, 17¢ and 20c per pound. Strictly fresh Eggs a specialty at our store. Remember for good goods trade at the old Reliable Store. SCHROEDER & SCHWANDT, 314 Minnesota Avenue. Phone 65 Bemidji, Minn. I —— E—— LOTS | ON EASY PAYMENTS For the man or woman of moderate means we are offering lots in the third addition on easy monthly payments. The lots are nicely located and the price is within the reach of all. For further particulars write or call : Bemidji Townsite and Im- provement Company. H. A. SIMONS, Agent. Swedback Block, Bemidji. The Daily Pioneer Y Official Paper City of Bemidji Bemidji Pioneer Publishing Co, By A. KAISER. Entered 1n the postofiice at Bemidjl. Minn., as second class matter. | SUBSCRIPTION $5 PER YEAR As was expected, several can- didates are making claims on each uninstructed delegation. The passing Show man in the Duluth Herald thinks “Let’s irri- gate,” will be a popular slogan among the delegates in spite. of the sentiment for drainage. Some public spirited court ought~to grant ap injunction against the freak one-word key- line heads affected by the Minne- apolis Tribune, the Grand Forks Times, the Fargo Call and a few othersheets that seem to think because the public is good natured and long suffering, it will stand for anything. The Crookston Times would have every man who comes out with a prediction of the end of the word locked up for insanity. It might help to discourage the nuisance. It used to be funny, but the joke is getting thread- bare. And while we are about it, why couldn’t something be done with the man who, when asked for the news, answers, “It is raining, you might put that in the paper,” and then laughs as if he had sprung something original, Forty Years in Harness. The long expected fortieth an- niversary edition of the Anoka Union has arrived and so far ex- ceeds expectations that it isim- possible to do it justice in a mere paragraph. It is a remarkable issue. Granville S. Pease, who scowls good naturedly at the reader from the front cover, is the man who has made the edition possible. = Since 1866, but a year after the close of the war, he has been editor and publisher of the same old Union in the same old Anoka, The name of the town has become a sort of good humored butt for jokers, so that when one says, Anoka, Minne- sota, it creates a smile; but “Dad’” Pease, or “Granny”’ as he is better known, has never been abutt. He has been a virile -|force in Minnesota journalism since the day he first took up the pen—now, alas, abandoned in all well regulated offices for the typewriter. His editorials have been copied and commented on by every paper in the state for forty years, and his influence in politics and in the upbuilding of the state has beén great. Not only this, but his influence on other editors has been marked. ‘Dad’* is-a great be- liever 1n the ¢‘short paragraph poke’ and it has been said that be refuses to write an editorial more than two lines long. This, of course, is an exaggeration, but many a young writer, a little doubtful and inclined to -the weighty and :giresome column editorial, has taken a helpful hiat from the editorial page of the Union. Here’s to “Granny” Pease; may he live long and prosper. % The State Press Itasca Co. Independent:—The proper drainage of reads would be a great help toward maintain- ing good roads. Brainerd Dispatch:— A Balti- more woman showed she had some feeling left for her husband when she allowed him the cus- tody of the twenty-four children at the time she secured the divorce from him. Woman’s kindness will crop out. Rochester Post aud . Record: — John D. Rockefeller says the notion that the Standard Oil com- pany has been opposing free aleohol is preposterous. After January 1, when the new law goes into effect, it may be found that the Standard Oil company has organized a denatured alcohol trust as a side line. Bill to Repress Monopolies. Melbourne, June 8.—Lord Northcot, the governor general of Australia, at ‘the -opening of the federal parliament announced the immediate submission of a bill for the “preservation of the Australian industries and the repres- sion of destructive monopolies.” OFTEN LEAD oLD s n TO CANCER = Whenever a sore or ulcer does not heal and shows signs of becoming chronle, it should arouse suspicion, because many of these places lead to Cancer. It may appear as an ordinary sore at first, and is given treatment as such, with some simple salve, wash ot plaster, with the hope that the place will heal, but the real seat of the trouble is in the blood and canmot be reached by external remedies, and soon the sore will return. - After awhile the deadly poison begins to eat into the surrounding flesh and the ulcer spreads rapidly, becoming more offensive and alarming until at last the sufferer finds ke is afflicted with Cancer. - Cancerous ulcers often start from a boil, wart, mole or pimple, which has been bruised or roughly handled, showing that the taint is in mother and two of her| Cancer. I am fully sat-| isfled I would have gone the samewa but for 8. 8. S., which cured me. Bolton, Mo. ~ MRS. J. CASSELL. the blood, perhaps inherited. Another cause for non-healing ulcers and sores 18 the remains of some constitutional disease or the effects of a long spell of sickness. S.S. S. goes down to the ly that there is never any sign of the trouble B in after years. As soon as the system gets L] L ® under the influence of S. 8. 8. the place begins the inflammation leaves, the flesh resumes its healthy color, and soon the sore is well, because every vestige of the cause has been removed from the blood. Book on sores and uicers and medical ad- very root of the trouble and cures so thorough- PURELY VEGETABLE. to improve, the discharge gradually grows less, Vice without charge. _JHE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., ATLANTA, GA: Minneapolis, June 7.—Wheat—July, ! 8314c; Sept., 817%@82¢c; Dec., 81%ec. On track—No. 1 hard, S5%c; No. 1 Northern, 84%4c; No. 2 Northern, 82%c. . BRIEF BITS OF NEWS. Maxim Gorky, the Russian revolu- tionist, has arrived in Chicago. More than 250 buildings in New York city are involved in the lockout of the 12,000 members of the Brother- hood of Carpenters. The funeral of the late Senator Gor- man of Maryland took place at Wash- ington Thursday. The remains were interred in Oak Hill cemetery. The case of a number of packing companies indicted on charges of ac- cepting rebates, on trial at Kansas City, has been given to the jury. T. Spence Smith of Rapides has in- troduced into the Louisiana state leg- islature a bill to regulate marriage contracts and prevent race suicide, Duluth Wheat and Flax. Duluth, June 7.—Wheat—To arrive and on track—No. 1 Northern, 84%¢; No. 2 Northern, 82%c; July, 843c; Sept., 823%c. Flax—To arrive and on track, $1.13%; July, $1.14%; Sept., $1.15%; Oct., $1.14. St. Paul Union Stock Yards. St. .Paul, June 7.—Cattle—Good to choice steers, $4.50@5.50; common to fair, $3.560@4.25; good to choice cows and heifers, $3.00@4.50; veals, $1.50@ 4.40. Hogs—$6.20@6.35. Sheep—Weth- ers, $4.75@5.75; good to choice lambs, $6.00@6.50; good to prime spring | lambs, $6.50@8.50. i Chicago Union Stock Yards. i Chicago, June 7.—Cattle—Beeves, | $4.00@6.00; cows and heifers, $1.65@ } 5.00; stockers and feeders, $2.70@ 4.65; Texans, $3.70@4.40; calves, $5.50 @7.35. Hogs—Mixed and butchers, | $6.35@6.60; good heavy, $6.50@6.60; | rough heavy, $6.35@6.45; light, $6.35 | @6.55; pigs, $5.55@6.30. Sheep, $4.50 @6.10; lambs, $5.40@7.00. Chicago Grain and Provisions. Chicago, = June 7.—Wheat—July, 833c; Sept., 825%c. Corn—July, 513% @51% Sept., 51%c. Oats—July, | 361c; Sept., 33% @33%c. Pork—July, | $16.75@16.77%; Sept., $16.50. Flax— Cash, Northwestern, $1.12%; South- western, $1.07%%; Sept., $1.14. Butter —Creameries, 14@19c; dairies, 13% @ 17c. Eggs—12@14c. Poultry—Tur- keys, 9c¢; chickens, 11%ec. UND TO BEMIDJI SPECIAL £ — Sold and guar- anteed by Located in City Drug Store Round trip From Bemidji to Pacific Northwest “See America First” Summer Rates one-third lower than usual. Visit | the Columbia River Region. See Puget Sound— ‘‘Mediterranean of America’’—and visit Scenic Alaska. Special round; trip rates vo Springdale, Livingston, Butte. Helena, Anaconda, Missoula, Spokane, Eastern Washington, British Columbia and California Points, until Sept. 15, 1906. Ask about them. An opportunity en route to visit Yellowstone National Park via the Gardiner Gateway for “WONDERLAND 190¢.” Send six cents to A. M. Cleland, Gen. Pass. Agt., St. Paul, Minn., Back to Old Kentucky YVia the Burlington Route $19.75 St. Paul to Louisville and Reiurn JUNE 11, 12 and 13 Rates proportionately low from other points Good till June 23; privilege of extension to thirty days. PROFESSIONAL ..CARDS.. LAWYERS. D. H. FISK Attorney and Counsellor at Law Office opposite Hotel Markham. P.J. Russell Attorney at Law BEMUDJ, - -« - - . [UNN. E. E. NcDonald. C. A. Pitkin McDonald & Pitkin LAWYERS Bemidjl, Minu. Office: Swedback Block PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS. L. A. Ward, M. D, Physician and Surgeon, Diseases of the Eye a specialty. Glasses fitted. Dr. Rowland Gilmore Physician and Surgeon Office: Tliles Block DR. WARNINGER VETERINARY SURGEON Telephone Number 209 Third St., one block west of 1st Nat'l Bank DRAY AND TRANSFER. ‘Wes Wright, Dray and Transfer, 404 Beltrami Ave Tom Smart Dray and baggage. Safe and Piano moving. Phone No. 58 | 18 America Ave. Phone 40. DENTISTS. DR. J. T. TUOMY Dentist First National Bank Build'g. Telephone No. 230 Dr. R. B. Foster, Dr. Phinney SURGEON DENTISTS PHONE 124 MILES BLOCE. Dr. C. M. Smith, DE NTIST Office over E. H. Winter's Store, W. R. Baumbach, President. C. W. Baumbach, Vice-President. ‘W. L. Brooks, Cashler Lumbermens National Bank OF BEMIDJI. Respectfully Solicits Your Business, FIRE INSURANCE written in the Best Old Line Companies. Mhelhooy's Siveryl OPEN DAY AND NIGHT Goeod Rigs and Careful Drivers LIVERY HACK IN CON- NECTION. Night Calls Promptly An- swered. THE COMFORTABLE WAY. EAST BOUND. No. 108.. Park Rapids Line..7:10 a. m. (Connects with Oriental Limited at Sauk Centre, arrives Minneapolis at 5:15 p. m, St. Paul at 5:45p. m.) No. 34....Duluth Express.. « 35 - - WEST BOUND. Fosston Lile. ... FULL INFORMATION FROM E E CHAMBERLAIN. Agt. Bemidji, Minn. Mionesota & International In Connection with the ..Northern Pacific.. Provides the best train passenger service between Northome, Funkley Blackduck, Bemidji, Walker and intermediate points and Minne- apolis, St. Paul, Fargo and Duluth and all points east, west and South. Through coaches between Northome and the Twin Cities. No change of cars. Ample time at Brainerd for dinner. JARD TIME C. Effective June 4th., 1905, Dally except Sunday STATIONS Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera & Diarrhea Remedy Almost -every family has need of a reliable remedy for colic or diarthea at some time during the year. This remedy is recommended by dealers who have sold it for many years and know its value. It has received thousands of testimonials from grateful people. It has been prescribed by phy- sicians with the most satisfactory results. It has often saved life before medicine could have been sent for or a physician summoned. It only costs a quarter. Can you afford to risk so much for so lile? BUY IT NOW. Barker’s Drug Store Account State Republican Con- vention, Duluth, Minn., June 13- 141906, The Great Northern Ry. will sell sickets at rate of one fare for round trip, Dates of sale June 11, 12 and 13. Final return limit June 16. Children 5 years of age and under 12 half of adult rate. WANIS ONE CENT A WORD. No Advertisemnent Acoepted For Less Than 15 Cents. Cash Must Accompany All Out Of Town Orders HELP WANTED. N TP L T it ) s SOOI WANTED--For the U. S, Marine Corps; men between ages 21 and 35. An opportunity to see the world. For full informa- tion apply in person or by let- ler to U. S. Marine Corps re- cruiting offlce, cor. Beltrami and Second Aves., Bemidji, Minnesota. WANTED—For U. S. army able- bodied, unmarried men be- tween ages of 21 and 85, citi- zens of TUnited States, of good character and temperate habits, who can speak, read and write English. For in- formation apply to Recruiting Officer, Miles block, Bemidji, Minnesota. WANTED TO RENT— From July 1to 15 or August 1, furnished cottage on the shore of Lake Bemidji. . State number of rooms and vent. . L. Griffin, Grand Forks, N. D. WANTED TO RENT—Furnished cottage of three or four rooms, July 1 to Sept. 1, E. D. Beeson at Markham Hotel. WANTED—Young girl to assist with housework. Inquire Mrs, S. E. DeLong, 701—Beltrami. WANTED—Girl to work;in cigar factory. Address Bemidji Cigar Company, WANTED—Dishwasher at once at the Brinkman Hotel. FOR SALE. D TTTIISIS i M o S FOR SALE—Three cottages on Lake Bemidji. Price $200. Xasy terms. ~ J. J. Opsahl. FOR SALE—Magnificent moose head, mounted; will be sold cheap. Inquire at this office, FOR SALE—House and twenty- five-foot lot. Will sell cheap if taken at once. W. A. Ferris, FOR SALE— Rubber stamps. The Pioneer will procure any kind of a rubber stamp for you on short notice. - FOR SALE—Furniture from a complete furnished house. Furniture as good as new ‘will be at a reasonable discount, Apply at 508 Minnesota avenue atternoons between 1 and 2 o’clock and 6 and 7. MISCELLANEOUS. PUBLIC LIBRARY — Open Tuesdays and Saturdays, 2:30 to 6 p. m. Thursdays 7 to 8 p. m. also. Library in base- ment of Court House. Mrs. H. G. Hays, librarian. LOST and FOUND AN~ LOST — Pocketbook containing railroad receipts. Return to this office for reward. ; | FOUND—on the lake shore near old dancing pavilion, ladies umbrella, Owner can have same by calling at the Pioneer office, identifying property and paying for this notice, 4 Webster @ Cooley § { Wall Paper & Paint Store ¥ Let me give you the details of this excursion." F. M .RUGG, Northwestern Passenger Agt., Germania Life Building, St. Paul, Minn. Burlington - Roure 8 One door south of old P. 0. 1 building. Telephone No, 283, i gt i i 2 TS 2 MAURRAYSVANTLLA WORTH A DOLLAR > A DROP =~ SULD BY ALL GRGGERS o = E e

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