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Everybody uses it Everybody likes it Model Ice Cream Sold at every lce cream stand fn the clty. Made by Ghe Model Ice Cream Factory and Bakery 315 Minn. Ave. Phone 125. M. & M, Read the daily Pioneer, A. W, Rundguist of Crookston arrived in the city last evening. J. I, Mitzer arrived in the city +last night from Grand Rapids. Frank Lufts of Cass Lake is in the city today doing a little trad ling between trains, The Pioneer carries the lead ing grades of typewriter paper, which sells from 80c to $3 per THE CITY. Read the Daily Pioneer. in the city last evening, — R. E. came down this morning. The Bemidji Eievator company are exclusive agents for Barlow’s Mascot and Cremo flour, H. N. Harding arrived in the city last evening from Cass Lake and is calling on friends in the Dest, city today. L E. N, Falk, editor of the Bag- ley Times, and always a welcome visitor to Bemidji, spent a few . hours in the city yesterday. The Bagley seribe is as big and as jolly as ever. & How's This? We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any case of Catarrh that can not be cured by Hall’s & Catarrh Cure. Co., Toledo, O. We, F. J. Cheney by his tirm, Marvin, "y Toledo, O. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting directly upon q the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Testimonials sent free. Price T5c. per bottle. P Sold by all Druggists. constipation. J. A. Ross of Wadena arrived Daniels of Red Lake the undersigned have known F. J. Cheney for the Jast 15 years, and believe him per- fectly honorable in all business - transactions and financially able to carry out any obligations made Walding, Kinnan & Wholesale Druggists, Take Hall’s Family Pills for box. Everybody turn out Thursday and watch some of the “old- timers’’ swat the ball in the city- county game. B F. Gardner came down this worning from Blackduck and is attending to business matters in the city today. 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. If Ernest Engleking will communicate with Chief of Police Bailey he can receive informa- tion that will be of interest to him. The chief has receiwved a letter from some friends of Engleking asking as to his whereabouts. Sheriff Thomas Bailey, wlo has been in Minneapolis for t! e last few weeks under medical care, is expected home the latter part of this week. He has becn suffering from nervous strain oc- casioned by over work. 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 Aunderson & Johnson’s Kmployment office, Bemidji, Minn. The postoftice is being fitted out with a new steel ceiling, , the workmen having begun the job yesterday. The scheme of im- provement also includes a coat or two of calcimine for the walls. Duluth, Minn. June 19, 106 A Cool Comfortable Ride. toall points east via > D.S. 8. & A. RY. and connections Through Sleeper, Duluth to Montreal. Solid vestibuled electric lighted trains. Write freely for rates and informa- These changes will add much to the appearance of Uncle Sam’s quarters. ! ) iss Gerirude Bergman, who has been employed as trimmer at Miss Louise Hetland’s milliner stove for the past eighteen weeks, | has closed her season’s work and left this morning for her homein Plato, Minn. Miss Bergman does not expect to go direct to v ¢ tion. MART ADSON,G.P.A. || Piato, but is planning on making short visits with friends in 1 Brainerd and with relatives in Minneapolis. i LOTS FOR SALE $27 40 to Denver & return from St. Paul or Minneapolis WE OFFER FOR_SALE CHEAP— via GOOD_LOTS AT GR. rorks nay [} Chicago, Great Western Railway. Tickets on sale daily to Sept. WHITE & STREET 30. Final return limit Oct. 31. TOWNSITE coMp'NY [f|Equally low rates to other Colo- ‘., 1. F, GIBRONS, Locsl s rado and Utah points. For fur- - Bemidji, Minn. ther information apply ¢oJ. P. Elmer, G. P. A_.. St. Paul, Minn, Ghe NEW GROCERY BEMIDJI PHONE 207 - —.f “The hest quality for the least money” is the way we ) - have bnilt up the best grocery business in town. We - +- 8 are always selling our groceries and constantly buying ) N —@ fresh stock. Our line of teas and coffees cannot e ex- ‘"8 celled. _An excellentline of canned goods—and goods for picnic lunches—always to be had at our store. ROE @ MARKUSEN, 207 FOURTH STREET. Souvenir | i OF b [ ‘e e Bemidji ! on sale at Pioneer Office ! > Opposit Post Office ¥ The Only REAL HOME BAKERY in the city We wnake a speclalty o HOME BAKED BREAD, PIES, CAKE AND DOUGHNUTS. Fresh baking daily Ghe old reliable LAKESIDE BAKERY Telephone 118 Read the Daily Picneer, Come to the city-county game Thursday and have a laugh. Mrs. Oscar Halvorson is the guestof Mr. and Mrs, Mageau. The county-city baseball game next Thursday will be worth seeing. H, A. Rider arrived in the eity last evening and is spending the day calling on friends. Duplicate order books and commercial men’s expense ac- count books at the Pioneer office, T. F. Griffeth came down last night from Grand Forks and is calling on the local trade today. Fun? Nothing but fun; better than games you used to play when a kid. The county-city game Thursday at the down- town park. One drunk was brought before Judge Pendergast this morning and was given a sentence of five days. He went by the name of Charlie Ward, and was an Indian. Typewriter ribbons of all standard makes, either record, copying or indelible, can be pro cured in the color you wish at the Pioneer office. J. F. B. Neils, treasurer and manager of the J. Neils Lumber company of Cass Lake, is in the city today, and nas been before the county board of equalization relative to some tax matters, WANTED—Those wishing to take lessons in water color painting to call on Floy Donald- son at 611 Minnesota Ave. Phone 41. Tied down to his desk in the office, while others are free and at play, papa fancies he is hayving a vacation, while drinking Rocky Mountain Tea. Barker’s Drug Store. “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. B. L. Lewis has disposed of his interest in the Bemidji Cigar Factory to John E Stevens, and has returned to Michigan, where he will take a position with the Grand Rapids and Indiana Rail- way company as a conductor on one of its vassenger trains. 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 Favers HH, HHH, HHHH, HHHHH and HHHHHH; | the Kohinoor, Mephisto, stenograph- ers, and seyeral grades of, the best 5c pencils. The Northwestern Editorial association trip, which was_post- poned on account of a misunder- standing with the railroads as to rates, has been arranged for, at last. The propcsed journey to Devils Lake has been abandoned, and instead the trip will include stops at Crookston, Cass Lake and Grand Rapids. The .dates are August 3 to 5 inclusive. J. E. McGee, superintendent of the logging department, for the Pine Tree Lumter company of Hibbing, is representing his company before the board of equalization in session this week at the courthouse. Mr. McGee is something of a baseball fan and thinks that his town has quite a baseball team. Hg denies that they are “pikers.” Eleven homesteaders , made final proof on their claims Mon- day at the office of Clerk of Court Rhoda. They are: , Bazil Jarbo of Wilton, John Swenson of Bemidji, Theodore Snyder of Turtle River, Thomas Croshaw of Wilton, Fred Messerschmidt of Langor, Harris Dean. of Battle River, Lars H. Emberland of Be- midji, Martin Sorenson of Sol- way, William C, Lietz of.Fowlds, Linnens Hinshaw. of Bemidjj, and Bertha M. Iverson of Aure, Read the Daily Pioneer. Walter Dow arrived in the city last evening from Canada, and left this morning for his home at Lake George. L. W. Stone is a business visitor in the city today from Northome and is also calling on friends in the city, Mrs. J, P. Signal left this noon for Grand Rapids, where she will visit for several days with rela- tives and friends. A. H. Pitkin came down on this morning’s passenger train from Kelliher and is transacting busi- ness in the city today. The local K. P. lodge conferred the initiatory degree on one can- didate at the regular meeting of the lodge last eveuning, R. M. Hoover of International Falls arrived in the city yester- day and may decide to locate here and engage in business. S. D. Richardson and wife ar- rived in the city yesterday from Winnebago City with five of his representatives. Mr. Richardson is the proprietor of the Winne- bago Nursery, and came np for a short visit with friends. Remuves 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 tatlets, 25 ents. Barker’s Drug Store. Four [ndians charged with in- troducing whiskey onto the Cass Lake reservation were received at the county jail today from the United States court at Duluth. Their names are Nay-tah-we-gea- hiz, John Drumbeater, Joseph !’ “The best oyster experts that I know Flatt, and Kah way tah-we-aush They will be guests of the sheriff for the next ninety days. Installation of Officers. Toall Odd Fellows and_their wives and all Rebekahs in the city and in towns near Bemidji: You are very earnestly requested to meet at our hall this evening for the joint installation of officers, which will be done by the district deputy, J. J. Jinken- son. A cordial invitation is hereby extended by order of, the lodge. H. S. Annette, secretary Club Meets Wednesday. The Commerecial club is to hold an important meeting this evening in the club room in the Miles building, and an effort is being made to get out as large a representation as possible. Secretary George Markham has adopted the scheme of sending out notices to all members ad monishing them of the meeting. Matters of special interest are to be discussed. “Your son, I believe, made some ex- periments while at college?” “Yes; he discovered what he calls his ‘scientific paradox.’ ” “What is the nature of 1t?” “He succeeded in demonstrating that debts are expanded by contracting thom » Some- Thing New In Jewelry is finding a home here all the time, The store is hardly the same on any two successive days. Selling makes gaps in stocks—buying fills them up again. S)looking here is always worth while. Our values always interest the shrewd and careful buyer. Our invitation is extended to everybody—and it is al: ways in force. markable man,” sald the late Colonel Bwitzler, “in some respects the most remarkable I have ever known, but he could not begin a career at this time. The people would not tolerate him. He would impress even a stranger by his appearance. He walked as If he owned the earth, With head raised at an angle of 46 degrees and hands behind his back he would stalk with measured tread down the street, looking neither to the right nor to the left, recognizing no one, If he had an appointment to speak at 2 o'cloek, promptly at 2 o'clock he would arrive. He would come in his carriage unattended. He would permit no one to introduce him, but, passing through the crowd, he would make his zens.” ed he would make his way back to the hotel without personally addressing & terrupt him in his speech. He refused to recognize the right of any constitu- ent to ask him how he stood on any subject.”—Columbia Herald. sky. The moment at which the blue of change. By this means may be cai- gen which give to the sky its blueness of tint by the reflection of the smallest observatlon, but the method is not more doubtful than that based on the ob- " 401d Bulllon’s” Arrogance. “Thomas H. Benton was a most re- way to the rostrum and begin, ‘Citi- zens’ Never did he say ‘Fellow citl- Those before him were no fel lows of his. And when he had conclud- soul In the audience. No one dared in How Much Air We Have. One hundred and thirty-onc miles is the height of the atmosphere as meas- ured by Professor T. J. J. See, who determines the thickness of the alr envelope by noting the difference be- tween the time of sunset and the com- plete disappearance of blue from the changes into black can be observed quite easily with approximate cer tainty by the naked eye when the alr is clear, and by trigonometry may be ascertained the distance below the horizon of the sun at the moment culated the height of the smallest illu- minated particles of oxygen and nitro- wave lengths of the sun’s light. The Instant of change from blue to black 1s possibly a little difficult of exact servatlon of shooting stars. The shoot- Ing star method gives a result not greatly differing from the vanishing blue method. The former gives the height of the atmosphere at 109 miles ‘The True 'Tent of Oysters. of,” said the captain of an oyster boat, “judge an oyster by the smell Instead | - of by the taste. There is something about the smell of any oyster that in- dicates its condition to me much plain- er than does the taste. People buy them and eat them probably on ac- count of their taste. So also do they buy tea, coffep and the various grades of whisky and brandy for their taste, | but all experts on those things pass upon them entirely by their smell. The professional tea taster or whisky tast. er, so called, never tastes them, but! simply arrives at their taste by their; peculiarities of flavor or, to speak} plainly, smell. I can tell what price a load of oysters will be rated at when they arrive at the wharf here by open- ing up the hold of the boat and smell- ing. In eight cases out of ten I am yight. It strikes oystermen as strange when they see persons going about from boat to boat, as they lie at the wharf, tasting oysters before they con- clude to buy. Taste is all right, but 1f they don’t smell right they will never taste right.”—Washington Star. American Tourists and Thelr Ways. English people, as a rule, try to en- ter a hotel drawing room or any other public place as quietly as possible an¢ endeavor not to interfere with the other occupants of the room more than they can help. A party of French or Germans will never dream of stopping to consider iwhether their plercing voices arc deafening their neighbors, while Americans have a particularly maddening habit of reading thelr cor- respondence aloud in public without the slightest regard to other people who are reading or conversing in the same room. It is no doubt part of the same lack of breeding which leads them to hold conversations at the top of their very penetrating voices not only in public picture galleries, but also in continental churches, without paying any attention to the fact that a solemn service may be golng on within a few yards of them.—London Modern Society. A Mila Epithet. In Sweden they call a plumber “rat- tensledingsentreprenor.” In this coun- try we have heard plumbers called worse names than that.—Toledo Blade. | S'aengerfeSf Rates ONE FARE PLUS 50 CENTS FOR THE ROUND TRIP TO St. Paul Minneapolis JULY 24-25-26-1906 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. What Do You Need for a Remington Machine? Whatever it is you can get it at.the Pioneer Office that is used about a Typewriter. The Snipe’s Biil, | The 1conoclastic Baroness Howe. The bill of the snipe is provided with | Aftor Pope's death &he villa at a nerve running down to the Ip and{ Pryickenham belongd “sdecesilvely to then distributing itself over the end ; gir William Stanhope, who enlafged it of the beak. This is the only instance i considerably; to Mr. Welbore Ellis, aft- of this kind among birds and.is a:gerwarq Lord Mendip, and lastly to singular case of the care of nature i | Baroness Howe. This lady was so providing for her creatures. The sniDe { much annoyed at the number of pil | secks for his prey in mud and water, | grimg who came to see the _place that i where he cannot see, and it is believed | ghe razed it to the ground. eut down { that the nerve advises him of the pres- | the trees and endeavored to obliterate ence of food when his eyes give him | gy vestiges of its former distinguished uo information. occupant.—London Notes and Queriea. ] Mouldings J. A. HOFF Reliable Painter All Work Guaranteed. Shop.Rear Swedback, Blk . Varpishes / ' NK your stenographer what it means to changea typé- : writer ribbon three times in getting out a day’s work. makes ribbon changes ufinecessary; gives you, i.w,ith 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-cowr ribbon. No extra cost for this new model. 4 ER TYPEWRITER CO., '35 HENNEPINTAVE: THE SMITH PREMIER TV I B EENNEFINGE =