Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
~% SAME PRICE so be sure you get it MODEL 10 CREAM made in our own town and acknowledged by all good judges to be the purest, and smoothest and best ice cream sold in Northern Minnesota. You can get it at our store or OLSON’S Confectionery CITY DRUG STORE PALACE OF SWEETS MIDWAY Store and all the other leading deal- ers in this part of the state. 6GhHe Model THE CITY. Read the Daily Pioneer. . Strictly fresh eggs at Roe & Markusen's. Deputy Sheriff J. N. Bailey went to Turtle Riyer Saturday evening. The Bemidji Eievator company are exclusive agents for Barlow’s Dest, Mascot and Cremo flour, C. H. Hale, the Blackduck attorney, returned home Satur- day evening, after having spent the day in the city on legal busi- ness. Henry Funkley went to Kelli- her Saturday evening to do a little missionary work relative to his candidacy for the republi- can nomnation for county attorney. I pay no taxes—I pay no rent, often busted—without a cent; but a king among men—from disease I'm free, since taking Rocky Mountain Tea. Barker’s Drug Store. E. J. Swedback and daughter, Mrs. Stewart, and the latter’s son Floyd went to Big Falls Sat- urday night and visited at that place over Sunday with the family of Charles Swedback. William O’Neil, superintendent of logging on the Chippewa Indian resegvations, came over from Cass Lake yesterday after- noon. He reports everything moving nicely, along official lines. Deafness Cannot Be Cured by local applications, as they cannot reach the diseased por- tion of the ear. There is only one way to cure deafness, and that is by constitutional reme- dies. Deafness is caused by an inflamed condition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian tube. When this tube is inflamed you havea rumbling sound or imper- fect hearing, and when it is en- tirely closed, deafness is the re- sult, and unless the inflamation can be taken out and this tube re- stored to its normal condition, hearing will be destroyed for- ever; nine cases out of ten are caused by catarrh, which is noth- ing but an inflamed condition of the mucous surfaces. We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of deafness (caused by catarrh) that cannot be cured by Hall’s Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars free. F. C. Cheney&]Co., Toledo, O. Sold by druggists, 75c. Take Hall’s Family Pills for constipation. Carter Dairy Comp’y We have opened our store on Minnesota avenue and will always have on hand, Butter and Eggs, Cheese, Milk, Cream & Butter Milk All goods dellvered on ice and orders promptly attend edw i oo TELEPHONE NUMBER 208 Carter Dairy Comp’y M. & M, Markusen's. A. M. Pierce left yesterday afternoon for Crookston, . Telephone your news to the Pioneer. Our number is 31. Mrs. J. M. Sines and Mrs. McManus have returned from a visit to the twin cities. A. Kaiser, the Bagley banker, visited with friends in Bemidji yesterday, returning to his home on the night passenger train. Frank Davies, brother of Mrs. E. H. Marcum, returned to his home at Crookston yesterday afternoon, George Anderson came over from Crookston yesterday tolook after his interests at the Crooks- ton Lumber compansy’s mill here. Eric Ives left this morning for Chicago, where he will look over the offerings of wholesale houses with the intention of purchasing fall and winter stocks for the Bazaar. Rey. Hall-Quest of Blackduck occupied the Presbyterian pulpit yesterday and delivered two ex- cellent sermons, morning and evening, the church being well filled with members of the con- gregation. John Irving left Saturday for Lengby, where he will act as night operator for the Great Northern during the fall rush of business. Irving deserves con- siderable praise for the manner 1 which he mastered telegraphy in a short time. Crookston Times: Dan Tierney of Bemidj, who was employed by McGregor Bros. of St. Cloud to drive some horses from Boise~ vain to Neche, broke his foot in attempting to step out of a wagon twisting it between the wheel and a large rock. Crookston Journal: Mrs. W. L. Davies left this morning for Bemidji, where she will spend a few days with her daughters, Miss Helen and Mrs. E. H. Marcum. The condition of Miss Davies has not been as satis- factory of late as her friends would wish. 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. J. OKelliher of Blackduck spent today in the city, working up interest in the fair to be held at the “Duck’ this week, He says that all is'in readiness for a good time and a fine exhibit of the resources of Beltrami county. Special trains have been pro- vided for the accommodation of all passengers to Blackduck, and the people up there ‘are out to give the visitors the time of their lives. Mr. and Mrs. Kinney and two children left this morning for their home at DesMoines, Iowa. They have visited in Bemidji dur- ing the past two weeks, being guests at the Markham hotel. This was Mr. Kinrey’s first visit to Bemidji. He stated that he and his family had enjoyed their stay here and would return again next year for a much long- er visit. Louis Entrup, the traveling representative for the Eliel- Jerman Drug company of Minne- apolis, spent Sunday in the city. “Louie,” who greatly resembles the crown prince of Germany in appearance, always has a num- bar of good stories to tell the boys when he arrives on his regular tour and yesterday was no exception. He is good-natured and has many friends through out the northwest. Victoria Colonist: “Mr. Mec Ewen keeps every feature of his performance above the criticism of the most sensitive and exact- ing, Off the stage the professor has made many friends in Vie- torid, and it is noticed that t'.ey are composed of some of our best citizens. He has . fine social qualities, a magnetic personality and a thoroughly gentlemanly disposition. These qualities must materially aid him in winning his way to public appreciation as he has doue in this city dur- ing the past week.” At opera house Aug. 27, 28 and 29, Ad- mission 50, 35 and 25. : Striotly fresh eggs at Roe &' BISIAR { VANDERLIP & CO i have removed to their new quarters ‘where they in- L] 8 vite the public fo call and 5 inspect the new stock of PIANOS ORGANS Repairs for all kinds of Sewing Ma- chines. Sewing Machine ofl and need- les. We tune Pionos and repair Or- : : mans and Sewing Machines. : : summerlnnu; IVE'S ICE CREAM TFollow the crowd and get one of our CANTILOUPE SUNDAES They all come to us for Ive's Ice Cream, 1t 1s the purest |l)l 311 ice creams. To be Lakeside fiakery. —CON L Y 339333333333 333393 395 CEEEEEEEE FEHELLECHECPERREREFEEEEEEEE ¢ H § § H : H i £ An Ingenious Accusation. “The favorite horse of the Chinese BEmperor Tsl,” said a Chinese states- man, “died through negligence on the part of the royal master of the horse. The emperor was so enraged at thig that he drew his sword and would have run the careless functionary through the body. “But the learned mandarin, Yen- tse, struck up the emperor's sword, saying: “‘Sire, this man has not yet been formally accused of any crime. ‘He de- terves te die, but his accusation should come first. It is the law.’ “‘Well, said the emperor, ‘tell me what he has done. . “‘Listen, you rogue,’ said the man- farin, turning to the trembling master of the horse—‘listen to a catalogue of your heinous offenses. In the first place, you have allowed a horse to perish that his majesty had intrusted to your care. In the second place, it IS on your account that the emperor became so exasperated that he was actually on the point of disgracing himself in all his people’s eyes by killing a man for the sake of a horse.” “‘Enough,’ said the emperor, appre- ciating ‘the rebuke. ‘Let him go. He Is pardoned.’ " Iwassuffering greatly from a cancer-| ous ulcer on my left breast, which had| and at times would dis-| charge offoensive matter. know the troubie wash ereditary as an| oBly sister, my mother and two of her sistors died of Cancer. I am fully sat-| isfied I would have gone the samewa: but for 8. 8. 8., which cured me. Belton, Mo. = MRS. J. CASSELL. * Breaking It Gently. “Laura,” said Mr. Ferguson as he buttered a Lisguit and passed his cof- R S Mouldings Too many [ in nearly ev o of the solecism—to call it by {he mild- est name—of cutting the plate. Of times to be J. A. HOFF Reliable Painter | All Work Guaranteed. Shop Rear Swedback Blk Read the Daily Pioneer. s cari clanifiaim. | Read the Daily Pioneer. Roy Bliler went to Akeley this|caserta of the king of Nuples haa | Oreamery butter a specialty at|’ 7 . garden, made in 1782 by order of Marle - P°“‘P° °}‘1‘°Wmfi° ";“éh of Ake’:y’ Daroline of Austria, It was bright with | £ hone 207. : for . H Wellsiof, Soutl Omahh, Jobn Lavin, the Blackdack plants and trees; so that It was re- i hout th 5 summer resort on Fifth lake. nowned throughous e world, but the urday in the city: and. Tetorned Creamery butter a specialty at|camellla tree, a plant then unknown |to his home Saturday evening. In Eurdpe. The seeds were collected Phone 207, used to give them and cuttings of this |ing grades of typewriter paper, W. L. Preble, superintendent|c2mellia as presents to her friends, | which sells from 80c to $3 per and thus It has become a Huropean struction for the Red River|flower, 5o much so that the exporta- | Ray Dennis left this morning Lumber company, returned to by An CeiteAT Tialy T . oGy for.LaPorte where he will visit there are vast flields of them. In its spent Sunday in Bemidji with McDonald.: He expects toreturn his family. velve Tachea 12 Glamete, the whow | OHOETOW ovening. | Read the Daily Picneer. held services Sunday in the r;"“ttw'“ ina fourlshing condition up | day from the twin cities, where Strictly fresh eggs at Roe &|German Lutheran church in the | secus semin nos heont Moy the E9F | 1o has been visiting two weeks, Into decay, and with it the glorious . T. J. Bisiar left this morning|Bemidji. He will return a week | ®2mella.—Pall Mall Gazette, First Naticnal bank. for Park Rapids oa a business|from next Sunday and conduct , Rewards of Literature. Thomas D. Campbell, H. W. Saeti writer—successful; too, in the popular ) W. H. Squier of Blackduck this city. estimation—tells me: “I lmowpnpmnn c,lme Tes Irom G,‘-M?d Forks, 7 spent the day in the city on busi- Saturday night and-enjoyed the 9hing or hire help, try an ad ting the material for his best book -and ; lin the Pioneer want column. o H d to G writing. it over three times, then OFer- | m e scar Hanson returned to Cass Lake thi: ing, having spent America, meeting with refusal by all, g E this morning B SPH and finally sold it to a London pub- f 'l'll cmmn Typewriter ribbons of all tAmerica some years afterward, g(;t ”a 3 few dollars before the publishers fail- standard makes, either record, chronle, it should arouse suspicion, because many of these places lead to just 2 cents, which was exactly 10 per | Cancer. It may appear as an ordinary sore at first, and is given cured in the color you wish at cent of the last sum due him. I am ] pe the Pioneer office, that the place will heal, but the real seat of the trouble is in the blood and e nor feel ‘inclined to brag about it nor cannot be reached by external remedies, and soon the sore will return., After i d thi. in and would oniy cheapen my ‘wares in |into the surrounding flesh and the z’;‘:;i"h:)e‘:‘;?s'ffi,iu;" 0'21',';5 the literary market. The book paid | ulcer spreads rapidly, becoming more a week for the fifteen years' work.”— | the sufferer finds ke is afflicted with Schneider for a month past. Papyrus. Cancer. Cancerous ulcers often start Beauty rules of the beauties. Birds Have Favorite Plauts, which has been bruised or roughly Like man, birds have their favorite | handled, showing-that the taint is in little talk, luncheon, an pO“Y’S goldfineh s passionately fond of apple |8ores i3 the remains of some constitutional disease or the effects of a long rest, and at night Hollister’s blossom. This may: be because its fa- spell of sickness. S. S. S. goes down to the i . 3 tablets, 385 cents, Barker’s Drug from such attachment the 1 in after years. As soon as the system gets Store. finch frequently spends hou under the influence of S. S. S. the place begins the nightinzal r builds in the the inflammation leaves, the flesh resumes bad charge of the Sauk Center- mzl.n' "fiou ‘15.‘ % I:Q‘L:l to ;u: 0‘1:] may its healthy color, and soon the sore is well, because every vestige of the cause Bemidji passenger train from 2 . £ of the fragrant blossoms, It is some- | Vi€ without charge. - FHE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., ATLANTA, GA« ductor David Nickie having laid what peculiar that most birds avoid = off for a Sunday visit with his unpleasant g smell cinitted by | 4 this umbelliferous plant. Small birds ! 1 Wall Paper Creamery butter a specialty at | = night, about 11:30, I found the |Dut the parsnip, gigautic and strongas | . the store of Roe & Markusen. [pouse had been broken into. Some- |it I8, is left severely aloie.—London { H. Dunham, local lineman for|;u9e his way up the stairs to the first the Northwestern Telephone Ex-|floor. There hasn’t been anything dis- or the sideboard, has there?” Falls Saturday evening, for the| uno» answered Mrs. Ferguson. purpose of assisting Charles " The Caverta Camellia Tree. morning. He will run lines, at a|smong its features a so called English |the store of Roe & Markusen. 4 2 flowers and wonderful rare orlental who intends to establish a private dealer in ‘‘wet goods,” spent Sat- crown and glory of all consisted ‘In a the store of Roe & Markucsen. 2s though flakes of gold, and the queen | TNe Pioneer carries tie lead- 2 These cuttings were most highly prized, of logging -and railroad con- box. tlon of camellias Is an extensive indus- Akeley this morning, having with a married sister, Mrs. B. F. palmy days the Caserta plant had eight Rev. Ulbricht of Cass Lake,|belng thirty feet high. This mother | Garnet Peterson returned Sun- geous garden has been allowed to fall % 9 % % Markusen’s. town of Frohn, five miles east’ of and is again at his desk in the trip. services at the courthouse in| A very talented.and well known | Whit.comb and Thomas Porte|™—— If you want to buy or sell any- who spent fifteen years’ leisure in get- ness Sabbath on Lake Bemidji. ed it to almost every publisfier in nm Lm the night in the city. lisher for £50, bad It republished in ~ Whenever a sore or ulcer does not heal and shows signs of becoming . B A ed and as his last royalty received copying or indelible, can be pro treatment as such, with some simple salve, wash or plaster, with the hoj the man, but 1 don’t publish tlie fact Mrs. B. Schoeider and four to complain. for that would b useless | awhile the deadly poison begins to eat A me, by accurate calculation, 33% cents | offensive and alarming until at last have been visiting here with Mr. from a boil, wart, mole or pimple, Breakfast early, a little walk, a . % o 3 plants. It has been discovered that the |the blood, perhaps inherited. Another cause for non-healing ulcers and Rocky Mountain Tea. Tea or vorite building site is in the ‘lichen very root of the trouble and cures so thorough- covered forks of apple trees, buf ' ly that there is never any sign of the trouble i ® L ® 1 . = George Goodman of Melrose the petals into tiny frazments. Thouzh PURELY VEGETABLE, 9 improve, the dischargegradually grows less, Jadon Bianahes, ofta the very midst | has been removed from the blood. Book on sores and uicers and medical ad- the south Saturday evening, Con- the cow pars 2. no doubt, to the family at Melrose. ing, “I don’ y B fesreupfor @ secondalling ;I don't very often build in less secure places, Phone 207. body had smashed a pane of glass ina | OPInion. change company, went t> Big turbed in the pantry, the china closet “But, mercy, who:could it have been Swedback in the work of instal- miss anything, but after I had come In basement window, crawled inside and and ‘what do you suppose he wanted?” dimen. it need not La : i “ ipect,” h ined, clearing his 3 3 ling his telephone exchange at m;:t‘fs “uuft !_ee:e-jg‘de;it ;:nyselfgnnd or t_gre ]lu, t;u ctived by that place. that I wanted to get Inside without | g0 ¢ -ff inconeshands Mr. and Mrs, C. H. Miles, |disturbing anybody. You had-all gone |anq o fork in the . they slash to bed, and I had left my latchkey in wmy other trousers. It will cost about 25 cents to repair the basement win- dow. The weather man, I see, pre dicts possible -showers for today.”— Chicago Tribune. away at tic inoTensive green Qils with a vigorand a u of a mi mowing machine. until the leaves are “convertel into their former selves. There is ¢ sense in the couvention that prohibits such a’course. Néarly all green salads | are broken into pieces of convenient size before sending to the‘table.” Even when these are too large the leaf should be quietly divided with a fork. Miss McKee from Joplin, Mo., and George Markham returned Saturday from a trip to Hibbing and Duluth. They visited several of the iron mines around Hibbing and enjoyed their trip to the range country. Fred Theriault, leader of the Cass Lake band, John Osborn, Jr., a Cass Lake barber, and Ray Phelps, better known as “Fatty,’’ came over from Cass Lake yes- terday afternoon and visited with friends in the city, returning home on the midnight train. Mrs. J.-J. Conger has reated half of the McDugal building in Blackduck and is putting in a full and complete stock of up-to- date n.illinery which will be in charge - of an experienced trimmer from J. Rothschild & Co.’s wholesale house in St. Paul. John Graham and J. F. Hawkins left vesterday after- noon on a business trip to Minot, N. D, the intent of which is known to but themrselves, as they assumed a Phoenix-like silence when approached as to the cause and effect of their trip. E.H. Smith and family ar- rived in the city from Duluth Saturday night and will spend two days in Bemidji. Mr. Smith is president of the Bemidji Elevator company and he is look- ing over the I. ¢al field and points tribut vy t) Bemidji relative t» the business of hix company, - Varnishes Ly g g Three Kinds of Lightning. The -Etruscans of old believed that there were three kinds of lightning— one incapable of doing any Injury, an- other more mischievous In its character and consequently only to be issued with the consent of a quorum of twelve gods, and a third carrying mischief in its train and for which a regular de- cree was required from the highest di- vinities in the Etruscan skies. = Curi- ously enough, modern scientific men agree with the view that there are three kinds of lightning, but their-vari- etiés difier from the Efruscans. The first is known as forked lightning and runs in vzlgzug lines, the second as sheet lightning; because it is seen in a body; and the third as globe lightning, as it sometimes runs in the shape of a ball. The latter variety is rather slow in moving, Grocery Sriet:ials i @ The fivest canned goods in the market are to be found at our store. Try our canned meats for picnic lunches; .cannot be excelled. Remember our stock is strictly fresh and up-to-date. Our motto is: “To give our_customers the very best the market will afford.” Phone No. 207. ROE @ MARKUSEN Bl Raiel I am prepared to raise buildings, build foundations and do general re- pair work. All work guaranteed S. N. Reeves The Great Minnesota State Fair 3 : = Preminms & Parses ' §60,04000 ! Dan Pateh KING OF PACERS. _ Cresceus KING OF TROTTERS J.H Chapman and two child- ren left this morning for Wadena. He wi'l | ave the ¢!idren at the home of J, H. Stecker, fatker of Mrs. Chapman, and go on t» Grand Forks to remain until aft r threshing is completed there. Mrs. Chapman acd a‘*hired man” left Bemidji Saturday for Grand Forks by team. Mrs. J. J. Conger wishes to anndunce to the ladies of Be- midji and vicinity that they will now find & new and up-to-date line of fall millinery at her store at O'Lieary & Bowser’s. Every ALL THE WEERK——= effort will be made to make this one of the best millinery estab- lishments north of the twin cities. I golicit your patronage.