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SAME so be sure you get it MODEL ICK 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. GhHe Model THE CITY. Read the Daily Pioneer, Joe Urness of Nebish was a visitor over Sunday at the Jones home in Puposky. EYES— Drs. Larsen & Larson, specialists in fitting glasses, Oftice in Swedback Block. P. A. Johnson and Oscar Krantz, who have been spending the last three weeks in the lnr vest tields near Rugby, N. D., turned last night to Lheu home at Whitefish, near Nebish. Joe Urness, who has been in charge of a steam shovel as en- gineer at Nebish for some time past, has completed his work at that point and has gone to Getchel, on the M. & 1., to take charge of a steam shovel there, Pimples call for immediate treatment. There’s nothing more offensive and dreaded than a pretty face covered with erup-; tions. The body must be kept perfectly healthy with Hollister’s Rocky Mouuntain Tea. Tea or tablets, 83c. Barker’s Drug Store. It is indeed goed news to our theatre goers to know that we are to have “The Belle of Japan,”} the most phenominal hit in years, at the Bemidji Opera House on Thursday aed Friday, Sept. ‘71| and 28. We shall hear a lot of | good singing, see interesting and amusing dancing, and acompany | of clever people who can enter-' tain, augmented by beautiful costumes, scenery and mechani- cal effects, in short it is the style Read the Daily Pioneer. Letter files and letter presses at the Pioneer office. Mrs. R. E. Miller went to Blackduck last evening. WANTED —Two girls for kitchen \work. Apply Hotel Markham. The Swedish Ladies’ Aid so- ciety will meet with Mrs. John C. Temstrom, 409 America- iavenue, Thursday at 2 p. m. The girls of the high school athletic association will give a | football supper in the Masonic _hall Saturday evening from 5:30 to 8 Aad A. Tone, the Northome ‘attorney, returned to his home last evening, after having spent |yesterday in the city on legal | business. Typewriter ribbons of all standard makes, either record, copying or indelible, can be pro cured in the color you wish at | the Pioneer office. You little knew when first we met that some day you would be the lucky fellow I'd choose to let pay for my Rocky Mountain Tea. Barker’s Drug Store. Northome is to have a fair Oc- tober 2. All kinds of field and garden products will be exhibited and there will be a department where fruits, jams and dairy iproducts will be shown. Clerk of Court Rhoda desires that all persons wanting second papers get them befure Septem- ber 27, as under the new law after that date the method of procuring the same will be much more complicated and expensive, Don't forget the football supper to be given Saturday, September 29, in the Masonic hall by the girls of the high school athletic association. Supper will be served between the hours of 5:30 and 8 p. m. znd the charge wiil be 25c. 1t is certainly a pleasure to our theatre goers t> know that they will have an opportunity of wit- nessing something really new, and that they will embrace the chance and pack the house for “The Belle of Japan” when it comes to the local opera house on Sept. 27 28 there is no question. No play ever met with greater success, and that success is due to the fact that they give the people just the kind of a per- formancethat the average theatre goer likes, presented by a com- pany of merit, enhanced by beautiful costumes, scenery and electrical effects. Tickets will he on sale at the City drugstore. There will be an important meeting of the K. of P. lodge tc- nightin the lodge rooms. There will be third degree work, and important business matters will be brought up. of a performance to please all classes, It is advisable to get tickets early; they are on sale at the City drug store. | Lucas County. Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he is senior paitner of the firm of I'. J.{Cheney & Co., doing business in the City of Toledo, County and State aforesaid, and that said firm will pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for each and every case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by the use of Hall’s Catarrh Cure. FRANK J. CHENEY. Sworn to before me and sub- scribed in my presence, this 6th day of December, A. D. 1886. (Seal) A. W. GLEASON, Notary Pubiic. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Send for testi- monialsjfree. F.J. CHENEY & CO., To]edo, 0. Stata of Ohio, City of Toledo, l I Supper Saturday. After the races Saturday, September 29, try the supper prepared by the girls of the high school athletic association, They meal in the Masonic hall between 5:30 and 8 p. m. and the charge is but a quarter. Money goes to the athletic association. Help tie young people out. Notice of Sale of Stumpage on State Lands. Notice 1s hereby given that I will offer for sale at public auction, at the State Capitol, in St. Paul, on the 11th day of October, A. D. 1906, at 10 o’clock in the forenoon, certain timber belonging to the State a.nd liable to waste. An official copy of the list of lands upon which said timber is situated will be furnished by me to all applicants. Sold by all Druggists, 75c. Take Hall’s Family Pills for constipation. Dated, St. Paul, Minn., this 11th day of August, A. D. 1906. 8. 8, Iverson, State Auditor, GhHe New Store Is headquarters for the best Creamery Butter and Strictly Fresh Eggs. Call at the stor e or phone 207 will serve the best kind of a hot|: the public can get what they wanted all . summer long IVE’S ICE CREAM Follow the crowd and get one of our CANTILOUPE SUNDAES They all cometo us for Ive's Ice Croam, 1t 1s tho purest of all lce creams, To be had at the Lakeside Bakery ——— ONLY' M. & M. Read the Daily Pioneer. Bemidji levator Co. head- quarters for hay, grain, ground feeds and flour. * Don’t forget the M. E church supper Friday evening of this week at the Musonic Temple. The official count for Norman county of the vote for state sen ator is as follows: Hanson, 968; Lightbourne, 669; Simons, 97. The Ladies’ Aid of the M, E church will give a pie supper Friday evening at the Masonic Temple at 5:30. Price 25 cents. After the races next Saturday evening eat supper with the girls of the high school athletic association at the Masonic Temple. It will ccst you only 25¢c a meal, and will be worth 1t For developing Cleanhness is the medicine. If you want a fine figure and perfect health, use Hollister’s Rocky Mountain Tea. Tea or Tablets, 85c. Barker’s Drug Store. the figure. first law in The Colossus of Hits. The theatre-going public, as well as all newspaper and maga- zine readers, are aware of the in- tense stir the production of “The Belle of Japan” caused in the theatrical circles of the east since its 1itial production. Every- where it met with the greatest success, packed houses greeting the performances in every city in which it has* been presented. The press universally pronounced it to be the colyssus of all hits, Miss Bessie Clifton who heads the excellent cast, will appear as “Titi” the Belle of Japan, and as “Gloria Swift” an American girl, and will during the action of the Comedy introduce with other members, many singing and dancing numbers. The costumes are said to be beautiful, and ihe scenery especially attractive and realistic and is made from sketches of K. Tagamo the famous Japanese artist, and shows an interior of a Japanese home, an Artist’s Studio, and also the Famous Public Tea Gardens at Yokahoma: This attraction will be at opera house on Thursday and Friday Sept. 27 and 28, His Size, Cholly Nowitt — D’ye know, Miss Smart, though I've only just met you, there seems to be a sort of intellectual sympathy between us. You know just how to appeal to my tastes, you see. Are you a literary woman? Dolly Smart—No; I'm a kindergarten teacher, Answer Easy. Nurse (to fond mother of celebrated musical [lrod&gy)—Please, mum, Is Mas- ter Willy to 'ave ’is morning sleep or 0 on Wiv ’is Sixteenth Sympherny?— Punch, (OFFICIAL) 8 Cmmcll ot at city hall in regular meeting ep! g;nlled fu (firflur by Chlfmrmnvéoauld A resent—Bowser, ler, Smart, Mayer, nrlnkmnu and Gould. b t—Graham and McTaggart. ]\Hnntel of 1ast meeting read and approved. The following audited bills were allowed and ordered paid, viz; Markham Chisel Co., lumber todate, $ 29.15 Beltrami County News, printing book of warrants , 2.50 W. Telephone and long distance for August. 3.10 Flatley, team 20.00 days. 17.00 200 'hos. Dosman, team wurk (Ih'/ n) 4 dlys $16.00, % day labor ¢ 9 Chni Fruland, bur\lnlrwlo dogs. Eureka Fire Hose Co., two play pi and two shu Will Plek] 6nights at L Fol ki 6 dui‘u at 2. . (,nhlll snflnlnl police (l‘nrnlvnl) 5 (lnyfl ’t 387.50 12.00 12.00 10.00 strict wore now ()pt‘nr:d lmd read as follows: Wes Wright, 26%c per cublc yard. 7 l 'c per cuble ynrd, » 27C per cubic yard, Muve(l nnd scconded that Lhe bid ot Wes Wll\'lch t be accepted: l;i‘ovéser M.lllen Smart, Mayer, Kinch, b G abam, McTaggart, IC(::\;lremdof tax levy board x sl o vy bourd was latd over till ond o heolock " ¢ [,""fi"“l“""“\ 2 ll:loc un;nlayment agen: Stition o ovin an , walk on north 1do of 11th Sproor Beiw o o ving and Minnesota avennes. refereed ‘1o commitioo on trecty and sldswali: ninco No, upmamee e i ogs” was read a thixd yes-<Mlllor, Brinkman, § No's—Bowser, Mayor, Kineh. Gould, oo tux assessmont roll by tho ity ane otion o gincor was on motion and socond. ald” over oved we ld!ourn—-Adjournfld WoA: GO Chalrm| Clork.. THOS: MALOY, Ol ¢ Forest of Glants. 1t 18 almost lmpoulble for one has' seen only the eastern or Rocky mountain forests to Imagine the woods big trees are as common as postage stamps, but the most wonderful thing about the big trees is ‘that they are scarcely bigger than the rest of the for- est, The Paclfic coast bears only a tenth of our woodland, but nearly half of our timber. An average acre In the Rocky mountain forest ylelds one to two thousand hoard feet of lumber; in the southern forest, three to four thou- sand; in the northern forest, four to slx thousand. An average acre on the Paclfic coast ylelds fifteen to twenty thousand. Telescope the southern and Rocky mountain forests, toss the north. ern on top of them and stuff the cen- tral into the chinks, and, acre for acre, the Pacific forest will outweigh them all.—American Magazine, Stains on Books, Ink stains may be removed from a book by applying with a camel’s hair pencil a small quantity of oxalic acld diluted with water and then using blot- ting paper. Two applications will re- move all traces of the lnk. To remove grease spots lay powdered pipecluy each slde of the spot and press with an fron as hot as the paper will bear ‘without scorching. Sometimes grease spots may be removed from paper or cloth by laying a plece of blotting pa- per on them and then pressing the blot- ting paper. with a hot iron. The heat melts the grease, and the blotting pa- per absorbs it. A Missing Five Franc Plece. Fully half the grownup people of France believe the old story that Napo- leon Bonaparte put a check for 100,000 francs in a silver five frane piece and that the coin is yet in circulation. They say that the people did not want the five franc piece and that in order to create a demand for- it Napoleon re sorted to the device mentioned. The check or treasury order, it is said, was written upon asbestus paper and in- closed in the metal at the time the coin was made. Thousands of five franc pleces are annually broken open and have been so Inspected since the story of the check was first circulated. Right of Way In New York. Most people in New York think Uncle Sam’s mail wagons are supreme, They are not. The hospital ambulance comes first. Life is more sacred than mail, and when the ambulance gong gongs clear the track. Next in importance is the fire engine. Property is more im- portant than mail, and when the en gine toots and the bells ring clear the way. Then the mall wagons, which have precedence over everything but the ambulance and fire engine. This is settled by city ordinance.—New York Press. Natural Spectacles. Many birds are provided with natura) spectacles, a transparent membrane called the third eyelid.” This third eye lid when not in use lies folded in the Inner corner of the eye. Two muscles work it, spreading it over the cornea or folding it up again much more cleverly than a man can put on or take off his spectacles. But for its third eyelid the eagle could not look at the sun. The spectacled bear belongs to Chile. Its Latin name is Ursus ornatus: It is black, and around its eyes pale rings are drawn which have exactly the ap- pearance of a pair of goggles.—£t Louis Globe-Democrat. Wind Veloeity. The average velocity of the wind is low, In most places between five and ten miles an hour, corresponding re- spectively to wind pressure of from two ounces to eight ounces a square foot. During portions of nearly every day, however, somewhat higher veloc ities are recorded, since the averages contain - considerable periods of very light breezes occurring often within a few: hours -before and after sunrise and sunset. There are few days with- out periods of brisk breezes of from fifteen to twenty miles an hour. Rather Caustic. “Did you tell yeotr father I was a hu. morist?” asked the tall young man with long hair. “I @id,” replied the pretty girl, “and he laughed.” “Laughed? Why, I thought he used to say writing jokes was hard on the brain.” “So he did; but he says he never heard of your writing any jokes.”"-~ Chicago News. The Very Thing. “Yes, ma’am,” said the salesman, “an establishment like ours has its own lit- erary staff. Here, for example, is an ‘Ode to Our Furniture Polish, written by our own poet and set to music by dur own musician.” “An ode to furniture polish!” ex- tlaimed Miss Peekay-Booh, “Why, that would be just the thing to take home nnd try on the piano!”—Chicago Trib- une. — -4 Truly Uonsiderate. A ronstderate patient had an artery openad by mistake for a vein by a French surgeon in the operation of bloodletting. The woman succumbed not long after to the effect of the blander, but in her will left the sur- geon a small yearly pension, “not only to comfort him, but so that he could live the rest of his life without doing vivisection any more.” A similar his- torlc occurrence is related in the Med- Yeal Times of a Polish princess who had had the same experience. She add- forgiveness and leaving the surgeon a small pension to fndemnify him for the “loss of reputation that may follow my’ sad catastrophe. Cleopatra’s Mummy. ‘Where does Cleopatra’s body rest? Bearcely a layman who would not an. swer, “Why, in BEgypt!” After her cajoleries, her wiles, her life of in: tense if not very exalted loves, Cleo- patra was lald In one of the loveliest tombs that has ever been fashioned by the hand of man.. But what a change 2,000 years has brought about! Today an ugly mummy, with an emblematic bunch of decayed wheat and a coarse comb tied to Its head—a mere roll of tightly swathed dust—lies’ crumbled. in a hideous glass case at the British mu- seum, of the Pacific coast. Pictures of the ed a clause to her will expressing her. qual oi in edients care The ; g ‘and skill in every process of Btewmg is res nslble for the me owness and the delicious flavor of UDWEISER The King of Bottled Beers With those who appreciate Quality and Palatablhty, Budweiser occupies a place all its own. superlatively good that, though higher in price, it has a greater sale than all other bottled beers. A exquisite taste, the It is so Bottled only at the Home Plant; Anheuser-Busch Brewing Ass’n St. Louts, U. 5. A, C. H. MILES, Distributor. Bemidji. The Sunbira, Very curlous are the nests of the sun- bird, scarcely larger than a butterfly. [t chooses some exposed spot, probably close to the public road, and proceeds 20 bulld on an overbanging twig. The finishing touches being put to the small have woven their webs over and 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 pieces of purloined webs. ¢ase the result Is the same, and they make thelr future home a thoroughly disreputable object. Then, and not till then, does: the little hen sunbird lay bher two greenish white eggs, which she hatches under the shelter of a small porch which has been constructed over the nest, shielding her from sun and vain. Baoana Hread. Bread made from banana flour ls common enough in Europe-and Eng- land. One pound Is said to contain more nourishment and energy produc- Ing material than one pound of the fnest beefsteak, is much more digest- fble and less than one-sixth the price. Sir Henry Stanley was a firm bellever in the banana. He went so far as to advise that its consumption would cure rheumatism, gout and all liver affec- tions. When lying at the point of death from gastritis a light gruel of ‘banana flour mixeéd with milk was the only food he could retain and dlgest. The secret of the banana as a health and strength producing food lies in its high percentage of proteids and the great number of its calorles, respective- ly 20 and 391.71. It is a perfectly bal und served with milk and sugar.—New York Press. sun ~7orshipers. = One of the best friends the tallor hu is a spell of warm, bright sunshine, It shows up the shabby portions of dress tailor and order a fresh supply of up to date styles.—London Tailor end Cutter. Miraculous MultipMcation. - A lady who recently bought a dinner service consisting of fifty:four pleces i for £1 3s. was Informed by~her house- mald the next day that the bargain | had become still more wonderful, for It now consisted of 1,125 pieces. - Punch. | Spurgeon’s mnguz!ne. Sword and Trow- | el says, “In Cromwell's day the royal- abode, it is left, according to one au-; motto, thority, severely alone until spidersi In either” anced ration if sliced for. breakfast| end reveals its faded parts In unmis- ! takable fashion, with the result that | the wearers soon find their way to the | Origin of “W'Ill‘v." What s the origin of the word “whig?’ A twenty-year-old number of TUse Big @ forunnataral 1sts first called the liberals whigs, tak- ing the first letter of each word in their God,’ and forming MARCONI WIRELESS TE‘lfi:mru n:elh IS Ts the wonder of the age and I have made it a special My 3 priceis . share right now. It is boun = 20 dotibie shortly, 80 order today. R. B. HIGBEE, Broker Germadia Life Bldg,, Sr.PavL,Mr.x. National Bank References. . ORIND Laxative FruitSyrp - Pleasant to take . - 1 Orino cleanses the sys- | tem, and makes sallow ‘ blotched complexions TIN AND RE- PAIR WORK. You“get the best services on the shortest notice. smooth and clear.. Cures [ chronic constipation by gently stimulating the stomach,liverand bowels. Refuse subatitutes. Price 800, Barker’s Drng Store. Doran Bros. TELEPHONE NO 225 e -6 J. P POGUE’S LIVERY, FEED AND SALE”STABLE : BEMIDJI, It 18 Cleopatra, #he once great ‘and. LADIES’ SKIRTS parison with othevlines is all we ask to get our share . of theskirt busmess. New dress goods a.rnvmg da.lly Tailor-Made Garments | Why buy a ready-to-wear -suit of clothes when you can get one made to order at the same price. We carry the Royal ‘faylors & Co. and Work Bros.. samples: Every Suit Guaranteed Thereby you take no chanees in fit or workmanship. Ladies’ Tailored Suits Made by the Faultless Tailoring B Co., ot Chicago are the best and all man-tailored. Call and ex- amine our large line of samples. Allthelatest weaves and fabrics Satisfacti’ nGuaranteed with -~'ew'rer-y‘ suit. Our new fall line is ready for your inspection® A com- .