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M. & M. Everybody uses it Read the daily Pioneer, ko Everybody likes it B. B. Lerdale came in last HIRgR evening from Backus to spend o Model Ice Cream [|the day calling on his friends. Sold at every lee croam stand Duplicate order books and in the clty. Made by commercial men’s expense ac- count books at the Pioneer office, 6?.’ Model lceBCl:eam A. Carrie came down this .3 actory and Bakery morning from Red Lake Falls to . allinmdves Phoneiray, spend the day in the city on ! business. The Pioneer carries the lead- THE CITY ing grades of typewriter paper, L which sells from 80c to $3 per Read the Da\lv Pioneer. box. \ John Hemgsgus is a visitor in| Thomas Twite of the city of the city today from the town of b Northome. ) The Bemidji Eiavator company are exclusive agents for Barlow’s Dest, Mascot and Cremo flour, John Cann came down last evening from Blackduck to spend the day in the city on business. A. Albertson came down this morning from Blackduck and is transacting business in the city today. t’lltt.xere S z.m _gm.‘of earlh_o;l‘lslig, The Epworth League will give ' b 4th your:ich atorc_s withhold, an ice cream social at the pavilion it is thre bre;ft.hpofkllfeMm “m-e, on Friday e/ening July 13, com- JOur: famous tocky ountain mencing at 7:30. Ice cream and p s Doiig S Tea, Barker’s Drug Store. cake 15¢. A cordial invitation. Dr. Geo. E. Spofford (op- > tometrist) has an office at Hotel Markham the 15th .day of July and the 15th of every month. Spectacles and eye glasses scientifically fitted. Crookston came down last even- ing to visit with friends for a short time. Dr. C. Johnson arrived in the city yesterday from Crookston and will spend a few days in the city on business. Typewriter ribbons of all standard makes, either record, copying or indelible, can be pro- cured in the color you wish at the Pioneer oflica. How's This? We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any case of Catarrh that can not be cured by Hall’s Catarrh Cure. F.J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O, We, the undersigned have known F. J. Cheney for the Jlast You are often out of sorts, your body lacks energy, your 15 years, and believe him per- fectly honorable in all business transactions and financially "able to carry out any obligations made by his firm, Walding, Kinnan & Marvin, Wholesale Druggists, » Toledo, O. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Testimonials N sent free. Price 75c. per bottle. Sold by all Druggists. . Take Hall’s Family Pills for constipation, nerves are weak, bad taste in your mouth; why not help nature by taking Hollister’s Rocky Mountain Tea. Tea or Tablets, 35 cents. Barker's Drug Store WANTED—Fifty railroad la- borers for extra-gang work in Montana, $2a day. Also station men, day men and teamsters for the new Billings & Northern line Free fare, Ship daily. Call ‘|Anderson & Johnson Employ- ment company, Bemidji, Minn. $27.40 to Denver & return from St. Paul or Minneapolis via Duluth, Minn. June 19, A Cool Comfortable Ride. ) Chicago, Great Western Railway. to all points cast via Tickets on sale daily to Sept, D. S. S. & A. RY.|[s0. Final return limit Oct. 31, : and connections Equally low rates to other Colo- Through Sleeper,-Duluth to |{rado and Utah points. For fur- Montreal. Solid vestibuled || ther information apply toJ. P. ¢ electric lighted trains. Write || Elmer, G. P. A., St. Paul, Minn. N freely for rates and informa- e tion.y:VIART ADSON,G.P.A. Low Rates to Crookston. On account of the Woodmen'’s e Ipicnic at Crookston, Minn., July 12th and 13th, the Great Northern Railway will sell round trip tick- Lors ror 8ALR Wleio't Orookston from Bemid, Barnesville, Moorhead, St. Vin- WE _OFFER_FOR SALE_CHFAP— mfceat, Greenbush, Minn., Grand GOOD_LOTS AT GR. FORKs BAY W!Forks, N. D., and intermediate ¢ stations for one and one-third WHITE & STREET fare for the round trip. Tickets TOWNSITE COMP'NY [{on sale July 11th and 12th, final J. F. GIBRONS, Local agt. return limit July 14th. E. E. Bemidji, Minn, Chamberlain, Agent, Great Northern Railway. . 2, 3 Ghe NEW GROCERY BEMIDJI PHONE 207 Y “The best quality for the least money”is the way we have built up the best grocery business in town. We R are always selling our groceries and constantly buying fresh stock. Our line of teas and coffees cannot he ex- e celled. An excellentline of canned goods—and goods for picnic lunches—always to be had at our store. ROE @ MARKUSEN, 207 FOURTH STREET. Souvenir Envelopes Bemidji 6n sale at Pioneer Office The Only REALHOMBE: in the city ‘We make a specialty of HOME BAKED BREAD, PIES, CAKE AND DOUGHNUTS. Fresh baking daily Ehe old reltable LAKENIDE BAKERY Telephone 118 Read the Daily Pioneer. Letter files and letter presses at the Pioneer office. Mrs. W. White came down yesterday from Tenstrike. Joseph Kenville came down this morning from Kelliher. Mrs. E. J. Saland and Mrs. T. O. Melby were down yesterday from Nebish. John O’Leary, the mayor of East Grand Forks, arrived in the city today on business. Mrs. W. C. Kline left yester- day noon for a short visit with her parents at Eagle Bend. Oliver Hill came down this morning from Maple Ridge to attend to a few business matters. Mrs. John Baker arrived in the city yesterday morming from Tenstrikeand spent the day with friends. Charles Rove came up last evening from Brainerd to spend a few days in the city with friends. The Ladies Aid society of the Norwegian Lutheran church will meet in the church parlors Thursday afternoon. G. O. Hanson arrived in the city last evening from Crookston and is attending to a few busi- ness matters today. C. Deraicke arrived in the city this morning from Kelliher and will attend to a few business mateers before returning. Otto Dahl and family arrived in the city yesterday from Nebish. They spent the day with friends and returned home last evening. Charles Beaudette has closed his barber shop today and is moving his fixtures to Baudette, where he will re-open for busi- ness. The Epworth League will give an-ice cream social at the pavilion or Friday evening July 13, com mencing at 7:30. Ice cream and cake 15c. A cordial invitation. Miss Hattie Chamberlain re- turned home yesterday from Minneapolis, where she has been for the past six months trimmiog in one of the millinery stores, A painless cure for pain. One’s pains are curable. Hollis- ter’s Rocky Mountain Tea comes to one’s relief immediately, Tea or Tablets, 35 cents. Barker’s Drug Store. Mr. and Mrs. F. J. Shepherd, who have been at the home of Mr. and Mrs. D. Wilcox, Mrs. Shepherd’s parents, left for their home at Minneapolis this morn- ing St. Philips Aid society will meet at Mrs. Morris’ residence, between Eleventh and Twelfth streets on Beltrami avenue, Thursday afterncon at 2:30 o’clock. Mrs. S. L Donaldson and daughter, Miss Floy, have re- turned from Northome where they have been visiting for the last five weeks with Mrs, Donald- son’s daughter, Mrs. Ward. “Hooligan,” the world famous tramp, will be assisted by a sing- ing and dancing chorus of pretty girls and a number of other comedians in the presentation of his ““Troubles” here July 27. 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 - HOAHHHH; the Kohinoor, Mephisto, stenograph- ers, and seyeral grades of the best 6c pencils. Miss Emma Scott, a young woman living in Bismark, N. D,, has returned home after a sta.y of five or six weeks in Bomi Opposit Post Office Miss Scott is representin, known monthly magazil finding this city sucha d ful summer resort, decide¢ main for an outing after. s|: canvassed the town. Read the Daily Ploneer, Charles Hunt arrived in the | city last evening from Stevenson, Minn, Mr. Hunt was at one time one of the firemen on the Great Northern with a run through this city, and is now bossing an engine at one . of '.he‘ mines at Stevenson, Complete lualcn between the Lin- coln Republican and Democratic par- tles of Pennsylvania was effected utl & reassembled convention of the Lin- coln party in Philadelphia. Brigadier General Louls Henry: Rucker, U. 8, A, retired, {s dead at| Los Angeles, Cal. He had been in con- | tinuous military service of the United | States for more than forty years. If We Could Talk to everybody in town at once today do you know what " we would say first Iv wis FuLL /% SURREN- |APS. Qronstndt, Ruselu, July 11.—Admiral Rojestvensky, whose trial on the charge of surrendering to the enemy after the battle of the Sea of Japan began before a courtmartial here July Jack Tar, Humorist, There’s never any telling what our bluejackets will do when “out for a lark.” A number of them were In —_— MARKET QUOTATIONS, Minneapolis Wheat, Londonderry a week off two ago, and |4 has heen acquitted after Minneapolis, July 10.—Wheat—July, of all? a couple of them, walking along Foyle | o g dellbemledq to;e:early t;:el:;:x‘::t 6c; Sept., 763%@76%c; Dec., 77%c; | street, noticed & womin standing on | o flocrs ot tha. torhads: 1o - | May, 80%c. On track--No. 1 hard, the footpath with a baby in her arms, | FOUr officers of the torpedo boat de- | 79¢; No, T Northern, 78¢; No, 2 North. We would say One of the “tars” In pnssing snatched | 8trover Bedovi, who were placed on ern, 77c. trial with the admiral, were found guilty of having premeditatively sur- rendered the Bedovi and all four Wwere condemned to death by shooting. But on account of extenuating circum- stances the emrperor will be requested to commute the sentences of the four officers te dismissal from the service and to be deprived of certain rights' which. they would otherwise cnjoy. The full report of the courtmartial shows that Admiral Rojestvensky was acquitted on the ground that he was not in his fall senies and therefore was not accountable for what trans- the baby out of her arms and niade off at full speed toward the Great North- ern rallway. For a moment the as- tonished mother stood in bewilder- ment. She then raised an alarm and ran screnming after the bluejacket, He was jolned by others, who seemed to appreciate the joke Immensely. The ‘whole body rushed through street after street, the mother still pursuing. In Ferryquay street the “tars” halted, dashed Into a shop, bought a perambu- lator, placed the child In it and retrac- ed their steps at a rattling pace until they met the infurlated mother. They Dulutk: Wheat and Flax. % Duluth, July 10.—Wheat—To arrive Come Here For Drugs. Why come here you ask. For all the reasons that enter into the arguments | of a good drug store with an Al stock: —No. 1 Northern, 78c; No. 2 North- | ern, T6%c. On track—No. 1 North. | ern, 78%c; No. 2 Northern, 76%c; | July, 78%c; Sept., 77%c; Dec., 77 Flax—To arrive, on track and Jul ", $1.- 11%; Sept., $1.10%; Oct., $1.09%. St. Paul Union Stock Yards. St. Paul, July 10.—Cattle—Good to | chofce steers, $4.50@5.50; common to fair, $3.50(24.25; good to choice cows | :lad heifers, $3.00@4.50; veals, $4.00@ 0. For the exactly right then pulled up, quieted her fears and [ pired at the time of the surrender. Hogs—$6.25@6.65. Sheep— ) == handed her over her child I tho haud- | Seme of the officers who wers. tricd | Wethers, $475@6.00; gacd to chotes|| 00dS: some new perambulator, which she | with Rojestvensky were acquitted, | 1#0bs, $6.00@6.75; good to prime % 3 wheeled off In pride and triumph, the | their guilt not being proved. spring lambs, $6.75@8.40. For the precisely proper bluejnckets meantime cheering.—Lon- | The recommendations for merey in Jrier B don Answers. the cases of (he four officers who were Chl?; :l?u::moros_tc“': lVard- Toeasuremenss, —— found guilty and sentenced to be shot o, 10@6g25’ co\;’s &d halft e—Beeves, What “Paste” In. were In accordance with the regula- | £o V@025 o eifers, $1.25@ For the promptness that “Paste” from which imitation' pre- | tions and based on the physical and [ §20¢ stockers and feeders, $2.60@ A clous stones are made is widely known, | mental demoralization produced by | #50; ¢alves, $4.75@6.50. Hogs—Mixed Y 4 N but few are acquainted with the in- | the long voysre and shock of the dig | 204 butchers, S(: .40@6.87:5; zood 3 . gredients, though 1t Is generally un- [aster in battle. They were also ered $6.66@6.82%; rough heavy, And the quality of drugs derstood that the paste gains its bril- | fted with a de.iic 5 save the life of light, $6.40@¢. $5.75@6.40. Sheep, $4.60@8.1! $5.€0@%.00. Chicago Grain and Provisions. Chicago, July 10.—Wheat—July, 77c;. Sept, 77@77%c. Corn—July, 61%c; Sept, 52c. Oats—July, 38c; Sept., 34% @34 ;4¢c. Pork—July, $18.50; Sept., $17.42%. Flax—Cash, North- western, $1.08%; Sept., $1.05@1.07. Butter—Creameries, 15@20c; dairfes, 16@18c. Eggs—12@14%c. Poultry—- Turkeys, 1lc; chickens, 12¢; springs. 19@20c. Mance from the lead It contains. For- that your doctor likes. mulas vary for the paste, but all con- tain rock crystal, red lead, carbonate of potash, borax and white arsenic. It is required that these articles shall be of a high grade of purity, as there is a considerable waste, so that the Zems made from “strass,” as the com- position is technically known, are by no means Inexpensive. The lead gives to the strass its brilliancy, while the rock crystal contributes brilliancy. A paste dlamond cannot scratch glass and is thus easily detected, but colored stones are made of crystal alone that are considerably harder than glass. In the making of these a crystal stone is hollowed out and filled with some colored liquid, the orifice being closed with a plug of crystal, which is ground down so that there is no trace of the Junction. Rojestvensky. MADE A STUDY OF CRIMINALS. Physician Now Declares He Canrnet Live Straight. Denver, July 1l—William James Patterson, one ycar ago a respected and prosperous phy: , & university graduate and a graduate in medicine from the Washington and Rush medi- cal schools and an expert in crimin- ology, lies a physical and mental wreck in the city jail, the victim of his too deep study into the ways and the works of criminals. Only one qualification of this state- ment concerning himself does the once highly respected man make. This is that he would not have fallen had he not haa the natural criminal in- stinet, which was undeveloped until his delving into criminolegy brought it to the surface. Patterson was arrested in April last for forgery committed in Kansas. At that time he was living with his wife and two children. Wealthy parents of Salina, Kan,, rescued him from prison, but the quick repetition of the crime seems to demonstrate the truth of his statement that he cannot live straight. Waiting to prove it. Denver E. A. Barker 3d Street Druggist. Read the Daily Pioneer. Wall Paper Mouldings ‘Why the Eggs Didn’t Hatch. A famous Michigan egg raiser oceca- slonally sells some of his product to his grocer, and some smart town peo- ple who thought they could get his eggs for hatching cheaper by buying from the grocer were disappointed when they found that none of the store eggs hatched out. Some one told the old man about the disappointment, and he expressed no surprise. He only said: “Thay should come to me for thelr setting eggs. Whoever hear o' buying settin’ eggs in a grocer shop? ‘When I sell eggs for eatin’ I just dip the ends in boiling water—kill the germ. Them yas eatin’ eggs the gro- cer had. If these people want settin’ eggs they should come to me honest like.” J. A. HOFF Reliable Painter All Work Guaranteed. Shop Rear Swedback Blk A Peculia; f the Crow. Most birds ecannot carry anything which their mouths are too small to contain. The crow Is an exception at times." In Vermont, near Manchester, five crows were seen to come down Into an apple orchard. They came dally and after a time the owner dlscovered that they were taking apples from a tree bearing the mellowest fruit. Each crow jammed Its closed bill into an apple, raised its head and flew to'a tall pine tree, where the fruit was eat- en. More remarkable still 1s the fact that crows will sometimes carry turkey and hen eggs from a nest in the same manner. Oils Varnishes J ; What Do You Need for' a-Remington Machine? Eating Snails, Four Britons ate snails at a French restaurant in Brighton, England, not long ago. Their experiences are de- scribed as follows: “In due course the plates appeared, each bearing half a .dozen snail shells of a dingy white. A slender two pronged fork accompanied each dish. With this the snails were Jerked out, their big black horns com: Ing first, accompanied by a small erup- tion of gravy. One of the experimenters looked critically at the uninviting ob- Ject at the end of his fork, then he shul his eyes and popped it into his mouth. His teeth met on something yielding, but tough, rather suggestive of indla rubber. All four epicures manfully ate their six snails.” Whatever it is you can get it at the Pioneer Office Proper Kind of Window. Every window in a house should be as high as the ceiling, but a paneled ;| i top that can be opened in the summer ; and closed in the winter. If ceilings I were only six feet high and every oc- cupant of a house stood seventy inches the accumulation of fetid odors against the ceiling would soon Kkill, The Checkerboard Town, Improvements, as St. Paul-sald of sclence, Is often “falsely so called.” If the real estate men would but forget the checkerboard idea In laying out a new town and would take a good land- scape gardener Into -their confidence and the contour of the land into their consideration and plant trees accord- Ingly suburbanites would rise up and call them blessed.—Country Life In America. Baking Bread. The action of yeast on dough con- verts some of the starch into sugar. Then the sugar is made into carbonic acld gas and alcohol. When the dough 18 baked the alcohol is driven off. If the bread is underbaked some of the yeast may remain unkilled, and suck bread by being kept may have more of its starch changed into sugar. Thor- ough baking kills all yeast, and keep- ing of such bread does not cause any ripening. Stale bread is more digesti- ble than new bread solely hecuuse itls more easlly masticated. Children and Influences, The reason why children so easily contract the mien, gestures and habits of their surroundings is that they have no power of resistance—everything outside them is stronger than them- selves, and they have to borrow from all outward influences for their own growth; hence they are good, cheerful and contented or bad, morose and dis- couraged, just according to their sur- roundings.—Marenholtz-Bulow. His Little Claim. Mrs. A—Don’t you know, I really have an attachment for this plano. The Majd—Yessum, and the gentleman who was here while you were out said he had an attachment for it also. Mrs. A. ~—Indeed! Who was he? The Maid— (% The sherlff, mum.—Chicago News, - 3 SK your stenographer what it means to change a type- writer ribbon three times in getting outa day’s work. The New Tii-Chrome " Smith Premier Typewriter makes ribbon changes unnecessary; gives you, with one: : . ribbon and one machine, the three essential kinds of busi- . ness typewriting—black record, purple copying and red. it ‘Frensure Good Health, How few of us stop to count good health as a great blessing! We are go busy grumbling over some financial wrong that we forget that all the mon- ey In the world would profit us but little if we were Invalids. Honest About It, Kind Lady—Poor man! Are you real- ly anxious to earn a good dinner? Truthful Thomas—I'm more anxlous fer de dinner dan I am t' earn It, ns its advantages. If the better countrles he may ve his own, and if for- him to worse he may ‘[ his own.—Johnson. fusset once sald, ‘None d oftener than a wom- machine nermits not only the use of a three-color ribbon, but alsd of a two-csior or singlewcolor- ribbon. No extra cost for this new model: ”VIE SMITH PREMIER TYPEWRITER CO.. !li Iill(mm L5