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Everybody uses it Everybody likes it Model Ice Cream Sold at overy lco cream stand in the eity. Mado by Ghe Model Ice Cream Factory and Bakery 315 Minn. Ave. Phone 135. THE CITY. M &M Read the D: Warning reductions in all de- partments now at Schoeider Bros. Put life preservers in your boats. Jerrard Plumbing com- pany. The Bemidji Eiovator company are exclusive agents for Barlow’s Dest, Mascot and Cremo flour, Miss Mildred Woodruff left this morning on the M. & 1. for a week's visit with friends at St. Paul. W. N. Bowser and R. B. Foster returned home last evening from Hackensack, where they have been for a few days fishing. 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 last 15 years, and believe him per- fectly honorable in all business transactions aund 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 T5c. per bottle. Sold by all Druggists. Take Hall’s Family Pills for constipation. Duluth, Minn. June 19, 1976 Rcad the daily Pioneer. See Jerrard Plumbing cowm- pany for your life preservers. Absolute clearance selling of odds and ends at cut pnces, Schneider Bros. Mrs. C. Foursight came down this morning from Tenstrike to do a little trading in the city be- tween trains. Government inspected life preservers, solid block cork, ten sections — Jerrard Plumbing company. Mrs. A, L. Morris came down this morning from Tenstrike and is spending the day in the city with friends. The Pioneer carries the lead- ing grades of typewriter paper, which sells from 80c to $3 per box. R. E. White was a passenger on this morning train from Kelli- her and will spend the day in the city. St. Philips Aid Society will give a lawn social and apron sale at the residence of Mrs. J. . Boss, Thursday afternoon and evening, July 26sh for the benefit of the Catholic church. County Superintendent J. J. Regan returned Sunday evening from Grand Rapids, where he has been the past three or four days. While there Mr. Regan spoke on educational matters be- fore the summer school. It brings to the little one that priceless gift of healthy flesh, solid bone and muscle. That’s what Hollister’s Rocky Mountain Tea does. Best baby medicine on earth. Tea or Tablets, 35 cents. Barker’s Drug Store. K. Melvor leaves today for the Saskatchawan country, over in Canada, and will look over that country with the intention of lo- cating permanently, if he likes the outlook. He returned last Saturday from a visitto Wakaopa, Canada, west of Winnipeg. Carnival Envelopes. Special carnival envelopes to the number of 15,000 or more will be used by Bemidji business A Cool Comfortable Ride. houses between now and carnival to all points east via D. S.S. & A. RY. and connections Through Sleeper, Duluth to Montreal. Solid vestibuled electric lighted trains. Write freely for rates and informa- tion. MART ADSON,G.P.A. LOTS I'OR SALE e ER GOOD_LOTS FOR_SALE CHEAP-— AT _GR. FORKS BAY time. Orders are coming into the Pioneer daily and the mails will soon be advertising -Bemidji and her big show for August 14, 15, 16, 17, and 18, $27.40 to Denver & return from St. Paul or Minneapolis via Chicago, Great Western Railway. i 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. Elmer, G. P. A., St. Paul, Minn. WHITE & STREET TOWNSITE COMP'NY I ~A [ SO BY ALI. GROCERS Ghe 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 are always selling our groceries and constantly buying fresh stock. Our line of teas and coffees cannot be ex- celled. for picnic lunches—always ROE @ MARKUSEN, An excellent line of canned goods—and goods to be had at our store. 207 FOURTH STREET. Souvenir Envelopes. OF Bemidji on sale at Pioneer Office Opposit Post Office DURING THE SUMMER remember we are headquarters for the best ice cream and ice cream soda Choice Fruits and Con- fectionery Always Here. ~Cream bread and cholce pastory— The Lake Side Bakery. Read the Daily Picneer, We please the hard to please at Schneider Bros. Duplicate order books and commercial men’s expense ac- count books at the Pioneer office, We own and control and are wonoplers of the best clothes made in America. Schneider Bros. 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. R. Rasmusson came down last evening from Crookston and is attending to a few business wmatters in the city today. Fred A. Smith and family arrived in the city last evening from Red Lake and will spend a few days in the city visiting friends. Ilive and let my brethern live With all that’s good to me; Uato the poor some cash I give, the balance I give Rocky Mountain Tea. Barker’s Drug Store. Miss B Napping came down this morning from Tenstrike, where she has been for a short time visiting with her aunt, Mrs. L. Napping. Miss Napping is cn her way home to St. Paul. ““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. Mrs J. E Carson returned last evening from Crow Wing, where she had been visiting for a couple of weelts with her brouher, Horace Newell, The ladies of the Presbyterian church will serve supper at the Masonic hall Wednesday, Thurs- day, Friday and Saturday of next week. This will bea splendid opportunity to avoid prepa.rmg supper during the week. 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. Freeman Pike, a progressive agriculturist of Northern town- ship, has returned from Chero- kee, Iowa, whither he went to consult a physician relative to a cancer which has caused him considerable trouble for several years. The Cherokee surgeon removed the cancer and now Mr. Pike is apparently well rid of the offending sore. Charles B, Wilson of Iowa City, Iowa has written to Earl G il requesting information as to the inducemer.ts held out here to summer visitors; the hotel ac commodations, fishing, toating, bathing, etc., and states that he will come with his family and spend the balance of the summer if he can get suitable accommo dations. Healsorequests a copy of a beoklet relative to this com- munity. He has been furnished the rcquired information and will probably jiin the large num- ber who are recuperating here, Sealed Bids. Notice is hereby given that the undersigned will receive sealed bids for the construction of a Catholic church to be built at Blackduck, Minn, All bids to be received before 9 o'clock p. m. of the evening of August 1. Plans and specifications are on file at the office of Dade & Praught, in said city, and suc- cessful bidder will be required to enter into contract and give S = ; - 'Read the Daily Pioneer. Mrs. C. J. Larson came down from Park Rapids yesterday to join her hugband, Dr. Larson, in this city for a fewdays. Assoon as it is possible to secure a de- sirable residence, Dr. Larson intends-to move his family here. Pharmacists throughout the world have devoted their lives to the perfecting of Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea. It con- tains the choicest medical roots and herbs known to modsrn medicine. Tex or tablets, 85 cents. Barker’s Drug Store. A French Verdiet. All juries have a way of tempering Justice with mercy and strict logle with good or bad sense, French juries excel In these practices. A Mme. Ca- naby of Bordeaux was accused of hav- ing forged two prescriptions and of having thereby obtained large quanti- tles of polson, some of which she ad- winistered to her husband, who nearly dled and was only saved by his doctor, who suspected something wrong and took him away. The evidence was overwbelming, for the prisoner com- pletely failed to give any plausible ex- planation as to why she wanted the poison—enough, as the chemist sald, te kill two regiments. Nevertheless the Jury found Mme. Canaby guilty of forging the prescriptions, but not guilty of attempting to polson her husband. Perhaps the jury thought the husband unpoisoned was punishment enough in himself for one crime. Inebriety and the Eating of Frulf. There is but one sure cure for the drinking disease or habit, and that Is the simplest of all. The cure consists in eating frui‘s. That will cure the worst case of inebriety that ever af- flicted a person. It will entirely de- stroy the taste for intoxlcants and will make the drunkard return to the thoughts and tastes of his childhood. No person ever saw a man or woman who liked fruit and who had an ap- petite for drink. No person ever saw a man or woman with an appetite for drink who liked fruit. The two tastes are at deadly enmity with each other, and there is no room for both of them In the same human constitution. One will surely destroy the other.—What to Bat. Boston’s Name. Boston owes its name to a Roman Catholic saint. Early in the seventh century a Catholic monk named Bo- tolph founded a church in what is now Lincolnshire, England. - As the years went by a town grew up around the church and was called Botolphstown. This was shortened for convenience into Botolphston, then to Botoston and finally to Boston. John Cotton came to America from that town and named the New England capital after his native village. I Love You. A Danish paper compares “I love you” in many languages. Here are some of them—the Danish paper is our only authority for their correctness: The Chinaman says, “Uo ngai ni;” the Armenian, “Ge sirem ez hez;” the Arabian, very shortly, “Nehabeeck;” the Egyptian, similarly, “N’achkeb;" the Turk, “Sisl sevejorum,” and the Hindoo, “Main tym ko pijar karyn." But overwhelming Is the declaration of love of an Eskimo, who tries to win the chosen one by the pleasing sound of the dainty little word: “Univifigs- saerntdluinalerfimajungnarsignjak.” An odadity In Building. “If you want to see an oddity,” an undertaker said, “go to a cemetery and note how In the erection of old fash- ioned tombs they lower into place the marble slabs. These marble slabs are not lowered by means of a derrick. They are lowered by hand. The work i8 so delicate, you see, and it Is so necessary not to chip the edges of the stones, that only band work answers. You wonder, I suppose, how the men avoid pinching or crushing their fingers as they lower a great slab of marble on to its marble base. Well, they ac- complish this by lowering the stone upon lumps of sugar arranged in or- derly lines, and then they gradually dissolve the sugar by squirting water over it. All the huge, flat stones of old fashioned tombs or vaults are lowered by hand on to lumps of sugar.” The Sunbird. Very curlous are the nests of the sun- bird, scarcely larger than a butterfly. It chooses some exposed spot, probably close to the public road, and proceeds o bulld on an overhanging twig. The finishing touches being put to the small abode, it is left, according to one au- thority, . severely alone until spiders have woven their webs overand around it. Another naturalist says that the birds themselves turn ragmen and, col- lecting any rubbish they can find in the way of moss, faded leaves, ends of cot- ton and other such trifles, stick them on the outside of the nest by means of pleces of purloined webs. In either case the result Is the same, and they make their future home a thoroughly disreputable object. Then, and not till then, does the little hen sunbird lay bher two greenigh white eggs, which she batches under the shelter of a small porch which has been constructed over the nest, shielding her from sun and ralo. Care of the Eyes. On rising in the morning the eyes should be bathed gently In cold water. Twenty passes are said to be decided- ly strengthening. While using then® closely they should be rested at Inter vals of an hour or two, for the strain of constant reading, etc., Is like that of extending the arms at a ‘certain helght immovably. Imagine, then, the taxing of the eyes, which cannot com: plain save after years of irrcparable teresting Chapters. Women 28 a clasl are credited with - having no scruples about opening a book at the middle or end or anywhere else’ they may expect to find the most interesting chapter. A frequont fem- Inine visitor at libraries was overheard her secret of locating at once the most thrilling chapter in any book, no mat- ter how unfamiliar one may be with ' 8aid, “and glance along the edge of the leaves. It is seldom, indeed, that you do not notice a distinct line, or even more than one, caused by a number of edges soiled slightly more than those about them. Open the book there and you have the best chapter.” A librarian explained this by saying that the reading and rereading of the par: ticularly interesting chapters of a hook naturally cause certain pages and their edges to be more soiled. Of coursa-the longer the book has been In circula- tlon the more distinct are the marks.— Philadelphia Record. A Bit of Fairyland. Cruising down Milford sound, New Zealand, when the clouds are clearing after a shower, the mountaius are like fairyland. No longer grim and black and fearful, they are laced everywhere with, the strcaming silver of cloud born cascades. Ome day we watched the giddy journey of one of these cat- aracts. It sprang from the very top of the Lion rock, a 3,000 foot perpendic ular wall. Long and slender and glint: ing like-glass In the sun, it fell straight down over us, but never reached us. It had dropped, say. 1,000 feet, when it was caught by the wind, swayed this way and that, and finally blown clean away, dissolving in misty raln. We steamed right under it, or, rather, un- der the place where it ought to have been, and experienced the peculiar sen- sation of looking straight up at a wa- terfall that, as the launch skipper put It, “never fell anywhere.”—Four Track News. In the Dark, Parks—How did the ship come to bang against the rocks? Barks—Why, a young man was court ing the keeper's daughter and they absentmindedly turned the light down low. A Difierent Complexion, Maud—Did you say I painted? Ma- rle—I did not. I said you powdered. Maud (reluctantly)—Oh, well, that puts Aanether complexion on it. For a clear complexion take ORIND Laxative Fruit Syrup Pleasant to take Orino cleanses the sys- tem, and makes sallow blotched complexions smooth and clear. Cures chronic constipation by gently stimulating the stomach,liver and bowels. Refuse subatitutes. Price BOo. Ba-ker’s Drug Store. T WL BOT - | DISAPFOINT YU JOHASON’S Has cured thousands. Our guarantee Is evidence of that. If you are not tfofied siter taking haif of the first bottle, you GET YOUR HONEY BACK Read what the oldest printer In Min- 1 ! nesotia says It did for ’ EDITORIAL ENDORSENENT “The readers of the A, O. U, W. (:‘n\.!ld!;l Whg‘mny be afflicted with rheu- matism are hereby informed that we have used this remedy, 6088, in our family for two years; ‘that & single bottle cured Theumatism of the arm of six months’ standing, and rheumatism of the feet of a year's standing, after experimenting _with several regular prescriptions_and recelving no_rallef. “St. Paul.. "' Sold and guaranteed by Barker’s Drug Stare, revealing to a friend ot her own sex' it. “You simply cluse it tight,” she : - _Semd Down Grace. A little Portland nlss, whose first ! DASSEL, MINN,, 'mame s Grace, had never attended | church, being too little and too lively. Sept. 9, 1905. to be trusted there, according fo the Kennebec Journal. But at last her MACNAB DRUG CO., mother permitted her to accompany (an elder sister, glving her grave warn- Ings beforehand. The rector of tho ! ; church was a frequent caller at Grace’s home, and her mother feared that on this account she might take libertles, “You must sit still” she said, “and you must not say one word, but let Mr, Hammond do the talking. Now, remember."” Gracle behaved very well in meet- ing. As soon as she reached home she reported: “Oh, mamma, I did keep still—real still, and when Mr. Hammond called Moorhead, Minn. I was bothered with patchy baldness and later became entirely bald, hav- ing to wear a wig fur two years, I tried a great many remedies and got no re- sults. Finally your Veg- etable Hair Tonic was me right out In meeting T never stirred |l Tecommended to me by the o to go to him.” 3 “Called you? Why, child, he never McCoy Phaflnmy and after called you in.meeting.” “Yes, but he did, mamma. He said theee or four times, ‘Send down Grace,’ but I sat as still as a mouse.” using two bottles my hair began growing and I now have a beautiful head of hair. You have my per- mission to use this letter in any way you wish. Yours Truly, John E. Nelson. The Nose. The nose is intended for breathing, the mouth for speaking and eating. ‘Who has ever seen a horse breathing otherwise than through his nostrils? Minute scientific investigation has re- vealed the fact that the number of*peo. ple who breathe through their nostrils are becoming gradually but surely few- er in number. The consequence is that the nostrils decrease in size, while it has been found that the prevailing nose is quite an inferior organ to that of our forefathers. Tt Is a well known phys- fological fact that unused muscles and bones gradually disappear. Fish who Uive in the dark, for instance, or the mole, who resides underground, be- come blind. Thus if we cease to use our noses for breathing they will cease to exist. They will become superfiu- ous!—Pearson’s Weekly. For sale and guaranteed by E.N.FRENCH & Company Bemidji, - Minn. Miss Belle Burlington left this morning for Minneapolis, where she will visit with friends for a few days. On account of the National Encampment of the Grand Army of the Republic in Minneapolis, August 13-18, the Great Northern Railway will sell round trip tickets from BEMIDJI to ST. PAUL AND MINNEAPOLIS for $4.60 Tickets on sale August 11th to 14th. Final return limit August 31. For further particulars see E. E. Chamberlain, Agent. — What Do You Need for ‘a Remington Machine? Whatever it is you can get it at the Pioneer Office Ribbons Paper oil Erasers Anything that is used about a Typewriter. e e e SK your writer r neglect. When dust settles In the eyes warm water will soothe them of any ation.—Exchange. ingsmmn m,‘ln Optimist, “Blank started out to be a rose spe- the proper bonds for same, The committee reserves the right to reject any and all bids, R. T. PRAUGHT, Blackduck, Minn. elalist, but the insects ate up his flow- ers so fast he had to give it up.” “Wagsn't he discouraged?” “No; he found so many interesting varleties of bugs he went In for that subject, and now he's just as enthu- slastic over bugs as he was over flow- arsl”—Detrolt Free Prese. ness typewrl THE 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- This machine permits not only the use of a three-color ribbon, but also of a m.x.ax or :lubenhr stenographer what it means to change a type- ibbon. three times in getting out a day’s work. iting—black record, purple copying and red.- ribbon. No extra cost for this new model. YPEWRITER CO.. E“‘mflu? smn-n PREMIER TYP 'r mm‘m -