Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, July 17, 1906, Page 3

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A PRI T R Everybody uses it Everybody likes it M. & M., Read the daily Pioneer, " G. G. Smity arrived in the city this morning from Nary. M. R. Bright left this morning for Walker on business. He will return this evening. David Gill left last evening for Chicago to make purchases for the fall and winter trade. The Pioneer carries the lead- ing grades of typewriter paper, which sells from 80c to $3 per box. John O’Niel of theO'Niel,Irvine Lamber company is a business Model Ice Cream Sold at overy feo cream stand in the clty. Made by Ghe Model Ice Cream Factory and Bakery 31§ Minn. Ave. Phone 125, ' THE CITY. Read the Daily Pioneer. B. . Hiakle came down last|visitor in the city today from evening from Little Falls, Northome. - B. Franklin came up last even-| H. G.Teerrton came down last ing from Pine River to do a little [eveuing from Barnesville and is trading. attending to business matters in B The Bemidji Eiovator company | the city today. are exclusive agents for Barlow’s Dest, Mascot and Cremo flour.|and watch some of the “old- H. Dean ot Kelliher arrived in|timers” swat the ball in the city- the city last evening and spent|county game. the day looking alter business| James Hawkins lef this morn- | matters, ing for Brainerd, where he will C. S. Vance and wile arrived|spend two or three days looking in the city last evening from S, [after business interests. Paul and will spend a few days| Mrs. H R. McDonald came N in the city with friends at the|down this morning from Grand head of the lake, Forks and will spend a few days at the head of the lake with friends. Everybody turn out Thursday How's 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 last 15 years, and believe him per- [ fectly honorable in all business transactions and financially able to carry out any obligations made . by his tirm, 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 sent free. Price 75c. per bottle. Sold by all Druggists. Take Hall’s Family Pills for constipation. For eruptions, sores, pimples, kidney and liver troubles, consti- pation, indigestion, use Hollis- ter’s Rocky Mountain Tea. Carries new life to every part of the body. Tea or tablets, 35 cents. Barker’'s Drug Store. It Ernest Engleking will communicate with Chief of Police Bailey he can receive informa- tion that will be of interest to him. The chief has recewved a letter from some friends of Eagleking asking as to his whereabouts. Wanted:—100 railroad labor- ers, station men, day men, team- sters and extra gang men, for work in North Dakota and Mon- tana. Ship daily, free fares. Call at Anderson & Johnson’s L Employment office, Bemidii, 4 . ¥ Minn. Duluth, Minn. June 19, 19% Brookston Herald: The A Cool Cl?mlformbl[e Ride. Clequet “Pikers"’ is the name of : e R the representative ball team in D. S. S. & A. RY. our sister village on tha east. and connections Last Sunday at Bemidji they Through Sleeper, Duluth to || were trimmed to the time of 8—5 Montreal. Solid vestibuled || by the bes: team on the line. As electric lighted trains. Write ||usual the ¢Pikers” wanted to freely for rates and informa- || quit the game when they saw tion. MART ADSON,G.P.A. || they were clearly outclassed, and it took several sugarteats before /. they consented to finish the igame, LOTS FOR SALE $27.40 to Denver & return from St. Paul or Minneapolis via Chicago, Great Western Railway. Tickets on sale daily to Sept, 30. Final return limit Oct. 31. Equally low rates to other Colo- rado and Utah points. For fur- ! ther information apply toJ. P. Flmer, G. P. A, St. Paul, Minn. WE_OFFER_FOR _SALE CHEAP— GOOD_LOTS AT GR. FORI WHITE & STREET TOWNSITE COMP'NY J. F. GIBBONS, Loc Bemidji, Minn, GHhe NEW GROCERY BEMIDJI PHONE 207 “The best quality for the least money” is the way we have built up the best grocery business in town. We s are always selling our groceries and constantly buying fresh stock. Our line of teas and coffees cannot be ex- celled. An excellent line of canned goods—and goods o> for picnic lunches—always to be had at our store. ROE @ MARKUSEN, 207 FOURTH STREET. Souvenir Envelopes OF . s Bemidji on sale at Pioneer Office Opposit Post Office The Only REALHOME BAKERY in the city ‘We wake a speclalty o HOME BAKED BREAD, PIES, CAKE AND DOUGHNUTS. Fresh baking daily Bhe old rellable LAKESIDE PAKERY Telephone 118 Read the Daily Pioneer, Come to the city-county game Thursday and have a laugh. The county-city baseball game next Thursday ‘- will be worth seeing. y Mrs, E. S, McFarland came down last evening from Bagley and returned home today. Duplicate order books and commercial men’s expense ac- count books at the Pioneer office, Ole Johnson and wife arrived in the city last evening from Shotley to visit Bemidji friends. Mark Foster, who is in the employ of the J. A. Irvine Lum- ber company at Blackduck, is in the city today. Miss Harriet Hartman left this noon for Cass Lake, where she will spend a few days visiling with friends. Charles Wayner came down this morning from Blackduck and is transacting business in the city between trains. Typewriter ribbons of all standard makes, either record, copying or indelible, can be pro- cured in the color you wish at the Pioneer office. Mrs. Dr. R. B. Foster and children left this morning for New Market, Virginia, where she will spend the next three weeks visiting with her mother, Tied down to his desk in the office, while others are free and at play, papa fancies he is having a vacation, while drinking Rocky Mountain Tea. Barker’s Drug Store. " Mrs. C. H. Miles returned home this noon from Grand Forks, where she went to meet Mr. Miles and also to attend the Ringling circus. “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 25. John Armstrong left this noon for Dualuth, where he will be for two or three days attending toa few business matters. All mewbers of the K. of P, lodge are requested to meet at the Masonic ball this evening. There will be work in the first degree. At this meet- ing the proposition of making a reduction of tha initiatory fee from $25 to $15 will be taken up and discussed, and if deemed advisable, suitable amendments will be made to cover this re- duction. Mrs, W. L. Prebble returned Saturday evening from Minneap- olis, where she had been to wit- ness the marriage of her daugh- Philip Dansereau. The wedding was witnessed only by the imme- diate members of the family. Miss Gertrude is well and favor- ably known here by a hostof friends who extend to the newly married couple their best wishes, Fun? Nothing but fun; better than games you used to play when a kid. The county-city game Thursday at the down- town park. H. J. McCarty, the well known logger, leaves this_afternoon for ed alarge contract for railroad being done by the Northern about November 1. Mr, Mec- Carthy’s family will spend from now until September 1 at Moor- head. the very best lead pencils should ter, Miss Gertrude Prebble, to|] Moorhead, where he has accept- work on the double track work Pacific Railway company. The work will not be complete until Officers and people desiring Read the Daily Pioneer, WANTED—Those wishing “to take lessons in water color painting to call on Floy Donald- son at 611 Minnesota Ave. Phone 41. Remvuves the microbes which impoverish the blood and circula- tion. Stops all trouble that in- terferes with nutrition. That’s what Hollister’s Rocky Mountain Tea will do. Tea or tablets, 85 cents, Barker’s Drug Store. e dlINUSsements .... "Hooligan Coming. The approaching engagement of Arthur J. Aylesworth’s bril. liant musical farce, ‘“Hooligan’s Troubles,” is attracting more than ordinary interest. Expert dramatic critics declare that this is the brightest of the season’s offerings because of its grotesque situations and ludi- crous climaxes., A good laugh in these cynical and calloused days is a feat worthy of note. The ability to present brightness and mirth, banishing worldly cares, is not easy, but.Hooligan does it thoroughly and not .an oppor- tunity for a laugh is allowed to escape. ‘‘Hooligan’s Troubles” will be at the Opera House on Wednesday July 25. BRIEF BITS OF NEWS. Jobn A. Aylward of Madison, Wis., has announced himself-a candidate for governor on the Democratic ticket. An immigrant train on the Erie rail way was wrecked in the railway yards at Port Jervis, N. Y. The engineer and fireman were killed. William Painter, whose fame as an inventor is national, died at the Johns Hopkins hospital at Baltimore follow- ing an operation performed July 4 for an internal disorder. He was sixty- eight years of age. Perfect sanitation and clean linen are proving fatal to the West Indian negroes employed on the Panama canal. Sanitary precautions make the negroes especially susceptible to pneu- monia and other throat and l\mg trou- bles. MARKET QUOTATIONS. Chicago Union Stock Yards. Chicago, July 16.—Cattle—Beeves, $4.10@6€.20; cows and heifers, $1.30@ 5.30; stockers and feeders, $2.60@ 4.40. Hogs—$6.70@06.80. Sheep, $3.10 @6.00; lambs, $4.75@8.00. Duluth Wheat and Flax. Duluth, July 16.—Wheat—To arrive and on track—No. 1 Northern, 80c; ©. 2 Northern, 78c; July, 80c; Sept., 79: Dec., 78%ec. Flax—To arrive, on track and July, $1.11%; Sept., $1.11; Oct., $1.10. Minneapolis Wheat. Minneapolis, July 16.—Wheat—July, 18%c; Sept., 8% @78%c; Dec., 19% @ 79%c; May, 827% @83c. On track—No. 1 hard, 81%ec: No. 1 Northern, 80%c; No. 2 Northern, 78%c; No. 3 North- ern, 765% @77%ec. St. Paul Union Stock Yards. St. Paul, July 16.—Cattle—Good to choice steers, $4.50@5.50; common to fair, $3.50@4.25; good to, choice cows and heifers, $3.00@4.50; veals, $4.00@ 5.25. Hogs—$6.15@6.55. Sheep—Weth- ers, $4.75@6.00; good to choice lambs, $6.00@6.75. If We Could Talk to everybody in town at once today do you know what we would say first of all? We would say Come Here For Drugs. ~Why come Lere you ask. For all the reasons that enter into the arguments of a good drug store with an Al stock. For the exactly right goods. For the precisely proper measuremenss, For the promptness that you like. And the quality of drugs TAUNTED BY GIRL FRIENDS, ¥oung Man Unable to Swim Plunges «Intn Deep Water, New York, July 17.—Taunted by girl companions;-who sald he dare not ven- ture into the water above his head, Samuel Gutten, twenty years old, of ! Coney Islund, who could not swim, | plunged into deep water in Gravesend bay and was drowned in view of many bathers. Becoming hysterical when she saw Gutten disappear Miss Bessie Silver, to whom he had been devoted for many months, dived after him and was with great difficulty rescued. She was overcome and it was hours before she was revived. Gutten was the only one in the party who could not swim and the young women made fun of him be- caus¢ he did not go far from shore, At first he took their taunts as fun, but he became angry and sald he would show them he could swim, Plunging in he went down in forty feet of water. Miss Silver could not be re- strained and insisted on diving for Gutten until she was exhausted. The body was later re cnverad "UN_ 1S IMPROVING. Saengerfest . Rates : ONE FARE PLUS ’50 CENTS FOR THE ROUND TRIP TO St. Paul Minneapdlis JULY 24-25-26-1906 DIIVAL I\IN Is Nine Deaths From Cholera at Manila in Twenty-four Hours. Manila, July 17.—The cholera situa- tion has greatly improved. Twelve cases and nine deaths were reported during the past twenty-four hours. The health bureau offers free vaccina- tion to prevent the spread of the dis- ease. A test made of the vaccine since the outhreak of the disease shows that it acts as an absolute pre- ventative. Of the many natives in the Infected districts who had been treat- ed with the virus none developed the disease. All of the health officials were ¥accinated and none have developed the disease. The vaccine has been prepared at the government laboratory in this city. Tucara g, Learning hath its infancy, when it 18 almost childjsh; then its youth, when luxurious and juvenile; then its strength of yeurs, when solid, and, last- ly, its old age, when dry and exhaust, —Bacon. FOLEY’S Tickets good returning to and including July 31. Tickets may be extended, on payment of 50 cents, to August 15, 1906. For full information call on G. A. Walker, local agent. Minnesota. & International Railway Company M. W. DOWNIE, Auditor, Hrainerd, Minnesota. Lo - ——— v 7 What Do You Need"f(')'l_" a Remington Machine? Whatever it is you can get it at the Pioneer Office Ribbons KIDNEY CURE Tl 1 ‘ oil WILL CUREYOU' - | FErasers = of any case of Kidney or Y- Bladder disease that is not < beyond the reach of medi- Anything cine. Take it atonce. Do that is notrisk having Bright’s Dis- ! botit — ease or Diabetes. There'is' by ooy nothing gained by delay. ! 8 50c. and $1.0 Bottles. Typewriter. REFUSE SUBSTITUTES. Barker’s Drug Store. is a characteristic of nearly all Beers, but is only one of the essentials of Quality. The King of Bottled Beers is not only Pure and Carefully Sterilized, but is brewed from the very choicest materials obtainable —Barley-Malt from sound, thoroughly ripened grain, Hops of the finest quahty and Yeast of special culture. A beer of exquisite taste and delightful flavor is the result. Budwetser is bottled only at the Home Plant. Anheuser-Busch Brewing Ass’n St. Louts, U. S. A, C. H. MILES, Distributor. Bemidji. : ‘ASK your stenographer what it means to change a type-~ writer ribbon three times in getting out a day’s work. The New Tri-Chrome ~ Smith Premier Typewriter makes rrbbon changes unnecessary ; gives, you,‘with one bearin mind that the Pioneer|| that your doctor likes. carries‘in stock a ‘full line of the best pencils among whi¢h are Fabers HH, HHH, HHHH, HHHHH and HHHHHH; the Kohinoor, Mephisto, stenograph- ers, and seyeral grudes of the best Gc pencils:; ] Waiting to prove it, _L_.___ E A Barker ribbon and one machine, the three essential kinds of busi- ness typewriting—black record, purple copying and red. This muhlne permits not only the use of a three-color ribbon, but alsa of a two-cuiur or single<colac. ribbon. No extra cost for this new model. THE SMITH PREMIER TYFEWRITER (.(?.. :5 &5 HENNEPIN AVE, INNEAPOLIS, MINN

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