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Everybody uses it Everybody likes it Model Ice Cream Sold at every ice cream stand in the city. Made by Ghe Model Ice Cream Factory and Bakery 315 Mlinn. Ave. Phone 125. THE CITY. Read the Daily Pioneer. M. N. Koll came up last even- ing from Cass Lake on business. B. H. Lauten of the town of Erskine was a business visitor in the city yesterday. The Bemidji Eiavator company are exclusive agents for Barlow’s Dest, Mascot and Cremo flour, Miss Clara Loud left this morn- ing for a month’s visit with friends in the twin cities. It tones and vitalizes the entire system and wmakes life worth living: no matter what your station, Hollister’s Rocky Moun- tain Tea is the greatest prevent- ative known for all diseases. - 85 cents tea or tablets. Barker’s Drug Store. Officers and people desiring the very best lead pencils should bear in miand 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, Mepbisto, stenograph- ers, and seyeral grades of the best 5c pencils, Detroit and Retura $12, Baffalo, N. Y., and Return $14.00. The Duluth, South Shore & Atlantic Ry., will run their Popu- lar Spring Kxcursions to Detroit and Buffalo from Duluth June 8, 12, 15, and 19. Excursion tramms will be run from Duluth at 6:20 p. m. to St. Ignace where connection will be made with one of the Palatial Steamers of the famous D. & C. Line. For the occasion the following rates will be made: Buffalo and return....$14.00 Cleveland and return..$18.50 Toledo and return. .. Detroit and Intermedi- ate points and re- turn . $12.00" In planning your Summer trip don’t fail to figure on this de- lightful route ‘“‘Along the Coast Line”’ of Lake Huron. For further particulars and sleeping car and stateroom res- ervation apply to, A. J.PERRIN, Gen. Agt. 430 West Superior St., Duluth, Minn. Miss DiCkiflSOI] testimonials. Piano Teacher Swedback Block, Bemidji, | Read the daily Pioneer. { H. H. McHhailn came down ‘yesterday from Tenstrike. ! Robert Mitchell was a visitor iin the city yesterday from Kelli- her, Duplicate order books and commercial men’s expense ac- lcouut books at the Pioneer office, A. P. Johnson of Crookston came down yesterday afternoon to spend the day with friends in | this city. The Pioneer has been re- quested to announce that a good home can be secured for a little |girl from 4 to 7 years of age. Apply at this office. | Mrs. C, Britton of Grand Forks is in the city visiting with Miss Anna McConnell. Mrs. Britton intends - to stay for about a month, William Gerstman of Foy, Minn., is in Bemidji today mak- ing arrangements for a change of residence to Duluth. He ex- pects to leave for the lake city today and to remain there in- definately. . There’s little room in this great world of ours for the “Fat Woman.” She’s a hindrance to herself in street cars, flats, ele- vators; but what can she do, poor thing—take Hollister’s Rocky Mouutain Tea. 35 cents, tea or tablets. Barker’s Drug Store. Judge of Probate Clark yes- terday sent Hattie Boston, aged 14 years, to the state institute for the feeble minded at Fari- bault. The girl is a daughter of Harvey Boston, und the mother is in the asylum at Fergus Falls. The Pioneer has recently added to its stock a new and complete 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. $100 Reward, $100. The readers of this paper will i be pleased to learn that there is at least one dreaded disease that science has been able to cure in all its stages, and that is catarrh. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a constitutional disease, requires a constitutional treat- ment. Hall’s Catarrh Cure taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous sur- faces of the system, thereby de- stroying the foundation of the disease, and giving the patient | strength by building up the con- stitution and assisting nature in doing its work. The proprietors have so much faith in its curative powers that they offer One Hun- dred Dollars for any case that it fails to cure. Send for list of Address, F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O. Sold by druggists, 75¢, Take Hali’s Family Pills for constipation. ]| Salmon, Imported Gold Corn Beef, Roast Beef, ROE @ MARKUSEN, Lobsters, Boneless Chicken, Lunch Deviled Ham and Potted Ham. ies, Crackers, Olives, Canned Goods and Fruits, Cheese and Summer Sausage. The Picnic Season is at hand and we have what you want for lunches Label Sardines, Canned Dried Beef, Veal Loaf, Tongue, Pickles, Cook- PHONE 207, BEMIDJL Souvenir Envelopes OF e Yoo Bemidji onjsale at Pioneer Office 0),))sit Post Office ; The Only RIALHOMS BAKERY + in the city We wmake a specialty of’ HOME BAKED BREAD, PIES, CAKE AND DOUGHNUTS. Fresh baking daily Bhe old reliable LAKESIDE BAKERY Telephone 118 M. & M. Charles Saxrud leaves this af- ternoon for his home at Maple Ridge. H. Bluhm was a business visit- or in the city yesterday from Eagle Bend. R. W. Hitchcock left yesterday afternoon for Duluth on a short business trip. The Pioneer carries the lead- ing grades of typewriter paper, which sells from 80c to $3 per box. Miss Florence Wright wil open her Kindergarten school next Monday morning at the home of her sister, Mrs. Edward Kaiser. In beauby town there dwells a lass, her face was fair to se , The secret of her beauty lay in Rocky Mountain Tea. Bark r’s Drug Store. Oa motion of City Attorney Russell Judge Skinvik today dis- missed the charges for gampling against Matt Mayer and Frank Silversaclk. Typewriter ribbons = of all standard makes, either record, copying or indelible, can be pro- cured in the color you wish at the Pioneer offica. At the regular monthly meet- ing of the library board Tues- day afternoon it was decided to keeépthe library open hereafter on Tuesdays and Saturdays from 2:30 to 6 p. m., and on Thursdays from 7 to 8 p. m. Miss Verda Handy and brother, Howard, came down yesterday afternoon from Graf ton, N. D., to spend the summer vacation with Mr. and Mr, E. K. Anderson of this city. make his next regular trip-to Be- midji, June 28, 29, 30, and July 1. All those whose eyes trouble them should not faijl to see him on one of those dates. Office at Hotel Brinkman, Sergeant E. C. Boyce arrived last evening from Duluth to take charge of the local army recruit- ing office. Sergeant William the offige leaves this evening for Kelliher for three or-four days, and from there he goes to Black- duck and Tenstrike to do billing and posting for the local office. Low Rates to Cass Lake. On account of the meeting of the Northern Minnesota Fire- men’s Tournament Assn. at Cass Lake, June 20-23, the Great Northern Railway will sell June 19 to 23, round trip tickets from Bemidji to Cass Lake for one and one third fare with a final return limit of June 25, 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 Eilek who has been in charge of|. Read the Daily Pionger. George Fairbanks of White Earth spent yesterday in the city visiting with friends. Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Brooks left yesterday noon for a short visit with friends in Minneapolis and expect'to return home Sun- day afternoon. The children of the Presby- terian Sunday school are re; quested to te at the church Sat- urday afternoon at 3 o’clock for the last.practice of the Chiidren’s day exercises. P. Lewis, representing the Swiss Entertainers, was in the city today looking over the field for his company. He intends putting his show in for a week, about July 4, if certain local con- ditions are favorable. The Swiss people were here last year and gave general satisfaction. They give their entertainments in a tent. 3 MINISTER GOES TO PRISON. 8elf-Confessed Bigamist Sentenced at Los Angeles. Los Angeles, June 8 —Rev. James R. Wylie, self-confessed bigamist, has been sentenced by Judge Smith to pay a fine of $5 and to be imprisoned at Folsom penitentiary for one year. The district attorney’s office represented that the crime was not an aggravated case and dropped prosecution against the clergyman’s second wife, a Mrs. Green. Wylie was a minister of the Meth- odist Episcopal church at New York, where he married his first-wife eight- een years ago. Last year the Wylies moved to a mining camp near Phoenix, Ariz., and were visited by Mrs. Fannie M. Green of New York. The clergy- man sent his wife and an adopted child te relatives at Council Bluffs, Ia., and during their absence married the Green woman at Los Angeles last Au- gust. The first wife learned of the second marriage and swore to a com- plaint charging the contracting parties with bigamy. The clergyman and his second wife were en route to Ensenada when intercepted by the police. BRIDGE DAMAGED BY STEAMER. Congestion of Trains One Result of Accident. Superior, Wis., June 8.—The Minne- sota draw of the Northern Pacific bridge, which was struck by the steamer Hooger and Mason while that boat was bound up the river Wednes- day, will be out of commission for at least a week, according to a statement made by Northern Pacific officials. Meanwhile all trains make a detour by way of the Grasse point bridge at ‘West Duluth, A train congestion is reported as a result of the accident. INDIANA DEMOCRATS. Convention Adopts Platform Strongly Endorsing Bryan. Indianapolis, June 8.—Democrats of Indiana, in convention here, adopted a platform strongly endorsing William J. Bryan for the presidency and select- ed a state ticket for all offices except governor and reporter of the supreme court. Benjamin F. Shively of South Bend, former representative in con- gress from the Thirteenth district, was permanent chairman of the con- vention. The following ticket was nated: Secretary of state, James F. Cox, Columbus; auditor of state, Marion Bailey, Liseton; treasurer of state, John Isenbarger, North Manchester; attorney general, Walter J. Lotz, Mun- cie; clerk of the supreme court, Bert New, North Vernon; superintendent of public instruction, Robert J. Halley, Monroe county. SOUTH DAKOTA DEMOCRATS. State Ticket Named and Bryan En- daorsed for President. Yankton, S. D., June 8.—The South Dakota Democratic convention, which was held here, strongly endorsed Bryan for president in 1908 and every mention of his name on the floor of the convention brought forth a storm of applause. The following state ticket was nomi- nated: For congress, S. Elder, Law- rence county, and S. A. Ramsey, San- born; for governor, J. A. Stransky, Brule; lieutenant governor, James Coffe, Walworth; secretary of state, F. L. Latta, Hyde; state auditor, John Haynes, Stanley; state treasurer, C. W. Martin, Grant; attorney general, C. J. B. Harris, Yankton; commis- sioner of schools and public lands, C. G. Laughlin, Lake; superintendent of public mstruction, Thomas Linn, Clay; railroad commissioner, Burr H. Lien, Minnehaha. nomi- Boys Drown While Bathing. Benton Harbor, Mich., June 8.—Les- ter Thompson and Benny Runyan, aged eleven, were drowned while bath- ing in the Pawpaw river at Water- vliet. A young brother of Benny Run- yan was pulled out of the river uncon- scious and was resuscitated. BQ LIVE WIRE. KILLED Motorman Attempts to Remove Ob- struction From Track. St. Paul, June 8.—Sanford Swanson, twenty-eight vears old, an apprentice motorman for the street car company, was instantly killed by. coming in con- tact with a live wire that had been broken by the wind. Swanson was riding in the vestibule of a street car with the motorman. When the car reached Fourth and Exchange streets the men noticed that a wire had been blown down and was lying across the tracks. The wire was blazing and sputtering and the motorman ordered Swanson to remove it. JSwanson boldly walked up to the wire and, apparently ignorant of the ‘City-, Drug Store, Bemidji, Minn. danger, picked it up in his hand. He fell instantly and before several by- standers and the passengers on the car could reach him he was dead. The T;;uest q*uara,nty of Merit. OPEN TO EVERYBODY i3 the fultait information as to "h;fim rties and us3s of the several ingredients entering int> Dr. Pierce’s family medicines. Not only are all the ingredients printed in plain En?lsh on each bottle wrapper, but a | little book of extracts from numerous standard authorities of all the different schools of medical practice, extolling these several ingredients and giving their Bro erties and uses, has been compiled y Dr. R. V. Pierce, and will be mailed free by him to the address of any one sending a_postal card or letter to him, at Buffalo, N. Y., and requesting a copy of the same. S5 In this way the afflicted, who may think favorably of using these non-secret medicines, are taken into Dr. Pierce’s full confidence and are informed as to the properties and uses of each of ‘the several vegetable ingredients of which they are composed. s you do not have to rely upon Dr. Pierce’s recommendation alone as to the marvelous curative ec{)ro?emes ‘possessed E’y his “Golden Medical Discovery” for he cure of weak stomachs, dyspepsia, torpid liver or biliousness, impure Mool and kindred ailments, nor 'of his “Favor- ite-Prescription” for the cure of weak, nervous, invalid women, for you have in addition the strongest kind ‘of endorse- ment of each and every ingredient ente) Ing into the composition of these worll famed medicines by numerous leadin; tmedical writers of the several schools of gracue& In fact nothing which Doctor jerce has ever said in recommendation of these medicines is quite so strong and laudatory of thefr merits as what has Indirectly been said of them through the nuinerous unqualified endorsements and recommendation of each of their several }flgredlents by the leading writers on lateria Medica. Of course these endorsements were written from entirely disinterested mo- tives and are therefore the more valu- able. They were written to instruct medical practitioners in the properties and uses of the several ingredients which enter into Doctor Pierce’s medicines, the writers not being aware that they were extolling and endorsing ingredi- énts which are used in these medicines. Hence the fraat value of these highest ossible endorsements, coming, as they o, from leaders of the medical sion in the matter of Materia Med: Among the well-known authorities will be found Drs. Bartholow, Hare, Johnson, ‘Wood, King, Scudder, Hale, Coe, Elling- wood and many others. The ingredients are all indigenous, or native, medicinal roots. Dr. Pierce be- lieves that medicine can cure disease only as it assists Nature to overcome the abnormal or diseased conditions. For thus assisting Nature in throwing off disease, Dr. Pierce believes the best and only real remedies are to be found in Nature’s Laboratory. In the roots of medicinal plants found in this country, Providence has stored up most valuable, active, curative principles, which, when scientifically extracted” and combined in ust the right rggortlons, as in Dr. ierce’s_Golden ical Discovery, are most_effective in curinj ist of chronic or lingering an tinate digeases. In chronic, bronchial, throat and lung affections, M_compa.niexf with hoarseness or loss of voice, cough, profuse expecto- ration and cven bleeding from lungs, “Golden Medical Discovery” has proven/| # sovereign remedy. In cases of weal stomach, indigestion, dyspepsia, vlceration of stomach or bowels, torpid liver, or biliousness, the “Golden Medical Discovery” has never been excelled as a tonic and invigorator which puts the affected organs “in tune” mles- a long most ol and enables them to perform their proper | N. functions. It vurifies and enriches the blood, curing all manner of “humors,® | alood taints, scrofulous and skin ag;’- ons. 2 i “In all irregularities and painful periods to which women are sl?b]ect, m in | leucorrhcea, or “female weakness,” dis- placements, as prolapsus, . anteversion and retroversion of the uterus, ulcera- tion of uterus, inflammation of ovaries, and kindred maladies, Dr. Pierce’s Fa vorite Prescription has more real cures to its credit than any other medicine {mt up and sold through druggists lor| he cure of this class of weaknesses and ! diseases, I ‘When a womsn takes “Favoite Pre- seription,” she knows just what she is uslng. Dr. Pierce takes his patients into his full confidence.. His medicines are not_secret comgonndl, are not patent medicines, but the favorite prescriptions of a regular, graduated physician of large”experience in actual practice. i ‘You can not afford to experiment with your health by awepting and taking free “trial bottles” of Cheap John Fake Medi- cines, so freely given away in this country. Health is a heritage too sacred to be trified with in that way. Take only Medicines of Known Composition— those made after formuls so choice that the makers take you fully into their con- fidence and feel that they can afford to tell you just what yon are using when you employ their medicines. i Dr. Pierce never believed it necessary ; or advisable to use alcohol in the prep- | aration of either his “Favorite Prescrip- tion” for weak women, or his “Golden Medical Dls(:overfi ” the well - known-al- terative tonic, which is so largely used as a remedy for indigestion, torpid liver, | bad blood and kindred ailments. Over forty years ago, he discevered that chem- | ically pure, triple-refinea glycerine is a ' far better solvent of most of the active | principles residing In our native medicinal | plants when used at a proper and sus- tained temperature than is alcohol; and, ! furthermore, he found that a glyceric extract kept much better than an alco~ holic one, and that the glycerine pos- sessed intrinsic remedial value, being de~ maulcent, nutritive and an effective, anti- | Septic and antiferment. Although cost- ing somewhat more, Dr. Pierce predicts | that glyceric medicinal extracts will, in the mnot distant future, largely replace alcoholic ones so genemlli prescribed by physicians and put out by proprietary or “ patent medicine” manufacturers, as being more efficient and entirely tree from the serious objection of making inebriates when used in lingering or chronic cases, where a Somewhat pro- tracted use of medicine is necessary no | matter how good or well adapted to the case it may be in order to obtain per- manent results. Doctor Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets cure biliousness, sick and bilious headach dizziness, costiveness, or constipation of the bowels, loss of appetite, coated tongue, sour stomach, windy belchings, “heartburn,” gain and distress after eat- ing, and kindred derangements of the liver, stomach and bowels. glass vials, tightly corked, therefore always fresh and reliable. = One little “Pellet” is a laxative, two are cathartic. They regulate, invu?mte and cleanse the liver, stomach and bowels. A good medical book, written in plain English, and free from technical terms is a valuable work for frequent consulta~ tion. Such a work is Dr. Pierce’s Com- mon Sense Medical Adviser. It's a book of 1008 pages, profusely illusrated. It is f:ven awa{)_ now, although formerly sold in cloth binding for $1.50. Send 21 cents, in one-cent stamps, to pay for cost of mailing only for Gaper-wvered copy, addressing Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, a‘ or 31 cents for an elegantly cloth» conv. Put up in LY. boun | FIELDS WILL GIVE NAMES. | Legislators Who Took Bribes to Be Exposed. New York, June 8—Andrew C. Fields, lobbyist of the insurance com- panies, has offered to furnish District ACUriey Jervle withoa st UL UIe legislators who took money from him to assist in passing bills favorable to insurance companies. Scared Boy Drops Dead. Minneapolis, June 8. — Leonard neart ranure. rne riack Doy witn two other lads were playing on the street just after dark. Two intoxi- cated tramps came along and one of them remarked: “Here’s some boys; let’s chase them.” The three lads all ran and Plack fell before he had gone very far. Houser Placed Under Arrest, Madison, Wis., June 8.—Secretary of State Walter T. Houser was arrest- ed at his office here charged with at- tempted bribery of a state officer. After the warrant had been served Plack, a young boy living at 621 Har- rison avenue northeast; feil dead from Mr. Houser agreed to appear in the municipal court in the afternoon. LOTS FOR SALE WE OFFER FOR SALE CHEAP— -GOOD LOTS AT GR. FORKS BAY WHITE & STREET TOWNSITE COMP’NY J. F. GIBBONS, Local agt. Bemldjf, Minn. HORSESHOEING A specialty at Chap- man’s shop, rear.of Wes Wright's Barn Mike Seberger Read the Daily Pioneer. What Shall It Be That’s the question that is asked over and over again when thereis a present to be chosen for a bride. Most people agree that it should come froma jewelry store—hecause somehow jew- elry and presents are always associated, If theose mterested only knew {it, we could relieve them of their uncertainty in | a minute. Our stock furnishes the hints. It reveals in a min- ute more appropriate presents than anyone could sit at home and recall in a whole day. So we invite buyers of presents, aud we promise to maka thair chansing aasy and their choice satisfactory. E. A. Barker, Third St. Jeweler. SK your stenographer what it means to change a type- writer ribbon three times in getting out a day’s work. The New Tri-Chrome makes ribbon changes unnec;:ssary; givess .you, with' one ribbon and one machine, the three essential kinds of busi- ness typewriting—black record, purple copying and red. - This machine permits not only the use of a three-color ribbon, but also of a two-cclor or single-color tibbon. No extra cost for this new model. THE SMITH PREMIER TYPEWRITER CO.,}25 HENNEPIN AVE., MINNE APOLIS, MINN. €. Canoes, Duck Boats, constantly in stock Upwards from $18. Factory We save you the heavyZireight charges to Brainerd. Write for catalogué or visit our show rooms. Brainerd, Minn