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NODEL T0R 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. Ghe Model THE CITY. M. & M. Read the Daily Pioneer. J. L. Whitbeck of Dorset was a | visitor in the city Sunday. Bemidji ilevator Co. head- quarters for hay, g¢rain, ground teeds and tlour, T. A. Sannis and J Murray of! Akeley were guests at the Brink- man yesteraay. O. Gravelle of Red Lalke spert Sunday in the city and returned home this morning. EYES—Drs. Larsen & Larson, | specialists in fisting glasses, | Office in Swedback Block. Sewell Tibbets, a member of the U. S. forest service, spent yesterday in the city and re- turned this mornicg to Cass Lake, where he is now employed. Gymnastics alone can oever give that elasticity, ease and] graceful figure which comes by taking Hollister’s Rocky Moun- tain Tea. Tea or tablets. At Barker’s drug store. R. E. L. Daniel, agent at the Red Lake Indian agency, crme! down from Red Lake Saturday evening and j ined Mrs. Daniel a1d Miss Ginnis in spending the| day in Remidji. Bemidji people will remember Miss Ida Riot Gordon as the] lady who gave a recital at the ! Presbyterian church June 17, Read the Daily Pioneer. Letter files and letter presses at the Pioneer office. A notoworthy attraction, ,“Taming of the Shrew,” Oct. 2, | “Romeo and Juliet,” Oct. 8. A. C. McLean, the ‘‘tie man,” leaves tomorrow morning for a trip to the Boy river country. Charles Argall and W. E. ' Hovey were over from Cass Lake | Saturday afternoon and attended ! the races. W. B. Sherman, whom many accost as “Bill,’”’ came down this morning fromw Kelliher, where he in the employ of Ross & Ross, the loggers. . Typewriter ribbons of all 'standard makes, either record, copying or indelible, can be pro cured in the color you wish at the Pioneer offica. W. H. Squier of Blackduck, originator of the “Old Settlers’ i{Register” during the recent county fair held at the “Duck,” was in the city today. J. C. Dade, Mayor of Black- duck, remained in the city over Sunday and very materially assisted the officials at the race track in pulling off the races Saturday and yesterday. J. W. Speelman of Buena Vista returned to Bemidji this morning from Northome, where he had been on a visit to his son, C. W. Speelman. He returned today to his home at the ‘top of the world.”” Miss June Hyatt of Turtle River passed through the city this morning on the M. & L. on her way to Concordia, Minn., where she will take a course of study for the fall and winter term at Concordia college. E. R. Getchell returned Satur day from a trip through the western states, which included Oregon and Washington. His mother, Mrs. Bert Getchell, who accompanied him on the trip out from Bemidji west, will not re- turn for a week or ten days. The most awkward and un- gainly woman can be transformed into a beautiful, lovely creature if she has the brain power to ab- sorb the fact that Hollister’s Rocky Mountain Tea will do . the business. Tea or tablets, 35 cents. At Barker’s drug store. C. S. McCoy of Minneapolis spent Saturday and Sunday on a ;visit at the home of H. W. Bailey. Mr. McCoy is traveling for the Moline Plow company and makes tbis territory about once a year. He is an old friend of the Bailey 1903. She is remembered as! one who gave satisfaction, and those present were pleased with the entertainment. She will appear as Juliet, daughter of Capulet, in the play Romeo and Juliet to be given at the opera house October 2. Catarrh Cannot Be Cured by local applications, as they cannot reach the seat of the dis- ease. Catarrh is a blood or con- stitutional disease, and in order to cure it you must take internal remedies. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and acts di- rectly on the blo.d and muacous surfaces. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is not a quack medicine. It was prescribed by one of the best physicians in this country for years and is a regular prescrip tion. It is composed of the best tonics known, combined with the best blood purifiers, acting di- rectly on the mucous surfaces. The perfect combination of the two ingredients is what produces such wonderful results in curing catarrh. Send for testimouials free. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Props., Teledo, O. Sold by Druggists, price 75c. Take Hall’s Family Pills for constipation. family, having been neighbors to them in South Dakota a number of years ago. Notice. There is money in the village treasury to pay up all general fund orders. Interest ceases from date. J. W. MURRAY, Village Recorder, Kelliher, Minn. Schlegel’s Praise. Of the play “Romeo and Juliet”’ Seclegel, the German critic, eloguently remarks: “Whatever is more intoxicating in the ordour of a southern spring, languishing in the song of the nightingale, or voluptuous in the tirst epening of the rose, is to be found in this poem. The sweetest and bitterest love and batred, festivity and dark fore- bodings, tender embraces and sepulchres, the fullness of life and self-annihilation, are all here brought close to each other; and all these contrasts are so blended in the harmonious and wonder- ful work into a unity of expres- sion, that the echo which the whole leaves behind in the mind, resembles a single but endless sigh.” Bemidji opera house Oct. 8. “Taming of the Schrew Oct. 2nd, FLOUR! FLOUR! FLOUR! We have just received a carload of the celebrated White Jacket Flour Those who have used the White Jacket flour are reorder- ing it and say for a good flou there is no flour its equal. r that will give satisfaction If you have used it we know you will re-order. .If you have not used it we invi te you to try a trial sack. Call at the store or phone 207. ROE @ MARKUSEN. Oysters - Oysters - Oysiers e s We have just received from Baltimore, -at our store, a shipment of these select oysters which can be had at the right price. If you are in need of any- thing in the bakery line or fruit line, call up Phone 118 > and it will be delivered promptly from the Lakeside Baker Read the Daily Pioneer. August Johnson of Grand Rapids spent Saturday and Sun- day in the city and attended the races. Rev. Hall-Quest of Blackduck came down from his home this morning and spont the day in the city. SR Harry Mills, road master on the M. & I, left this morning for Brainerd, on an official trip of inspection. A, OKelliher, the handler of ‘“pills and sich” at Blackduck, was circulating among his friends here today. John B. Reis, the popular Shakopee traveling man, Sun- dayed in the city and was a guest at the Brinkman. If you see nothing else this season see “Taming of the Shrew” at the Bemidji opera house Oct. 2, “Romeo and Juliey” Oct. 8. W. E. Hyatt came in this morn- ing from his home at Turtle] River and was looking after some business matters in the city to day. S. J. Ellis, the pioneer cruiser of Blackduck, came down from the “Duck” this -morning and transacted business in the city today. A. C. Johnson, manager at Turtle River for the Kelso Lum- ber company, returned to his howe this morning, having spent Sunday in the city, a guestat the Markham, John G Morrison, Jr., superin- tendant of the Cross Lake Indian school (located on the narrows between upper and lower Red lake) spent Saturday and Sur- day 1n the city. 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 products will be shown. E. F. Nichols, a former em- ploye of the Crookston Lumber company who is now a cruiser for the Commonwealth Lumber company of Little Falls, was a visitor in the city over Sunday. Naish McKinnon, who is now a resident of Jenkins, a small sta- tion on the M. &. 1. south of Be- midji, spent Saturday and Sun- day in the city and left today for his home, McKinnon at one time resided at Farris and is well known in Bemidji. There is nothing that takes away the beautiful, womanly charms like a plodding, stooped, awkward carriage. There is ab- solutely no excuse for that as Hollister’s Rocky Mountain Tea is made. Tea or tablets, 35 cents at Barker’s drug store. The ladies of the Presbyterian church are planning for their annual rummage sale which is to be held some time during the month of October, and they request that you lay aside articles for the committee which will call upon you at your home soon. John Dale, of Larkin & Dale, was among those from Turtle River who were in the city wit- nessing the races. Of the con- tests Mr. Dalesaid: ““The mem- bers of the agricultural associaticn are to be congratu- lated on making a success of the races, They are much better than I expected.” J. A. Campbell, ex-mayor of Fosston and a prominent horse- man of that place, came over from Fosston Saturday to see the races. He pronounced the contests as the best he had seen in years, and predicted a fine meet for Bemidji next year, when the local track will have been worked down to the con- dition that it is the intention of tbe officers of the agricultural association to put it in, . Read the Daily Ploneer. A. A. Haarkian, who has been serving on the petit jury, left this afternoon for his home in Buazzle township, A. Lemlab, who owns one of the best of the farms near Puposky, was in the city today doing some trading with local merchants, Prof, Ritchie went to Cass Lake this afternoon and visited the schools there this afternoon at theinvit: tionof Superintendent P. M. Larson, open through it. In one Instance in Honduras a road sixteen feet wide was made by engineers and laborers through a jungle, the underbrush and vines belng cut away even with the ground. Twt weeks later, returning to complete the work by laying stones on the roadbed, they could not find the road, the vines having completely filled the vacant space, The ingredients of which S, S, 8. is com; , and the method of com- bining and preparing them so that they gently and leasantly build up and strengtlien every part of the body, make it the i\iu{ tonic for a disordered condition of the system. Every one feels the need of a tonic sometimes. The system seems to get *out of gear, ’ the appetite becomes fickle, the energies are depressed, sleep is not restful or refreshing, and the entire body has a nervous, worn-out feeling, When the system is in this depleted, run- down condition it must be aided by a tonic, and S, S. S. is recognized cvez- wheie as the standard. Being made entirely of roots, herbs and barl selected for their gentle action as well as their invigorating effect on the system, it will not disagreeably affect any of the delicate members or tissues as do most of the so-called tonics on the market which contain potash or some other hannful mineral ingredient. These derange the stomach and digestion, unfavorably affect the bowels or otherwise damage the health. S. S. S. tones up the stomach and digestion, improves the appetite, produces refreshing sleep, rids the body of that tired, run-down feeling, and supplies tone and vigor to the entire system. It re-establishes the healthy circulation of the blood, acts more promptly and gives better and more lasting results than any other tonic, and because of its vegetable purity is an absolutely not even if one had learned penman- safe medicime for young or old. 8. 8. S. acts admirably in cases of dyspep- ‘ship from tho’Immortal Cockier bimsele | sia, indigestion and other stomach troubles, and after using it that uncom- 3 i lrx’ls house in “Paul's Chuvchyard. bo. | fortable feeling of fullness, dizziness or drowsiness, after eating, are mo 2 SISt th 8 ‘“h & I’: S aad longer felt. NotonlyisS. S. S. the greatest of all tonics but possesses puri- XL e Sisnes of the Sugar-Loaf and | gy;yo and alterative properties, and if there is a taint in the blood it will promptly remove every trace and restore perfect health. In selecting your tonic for this year do not experiment but get S. S. S., the recognized stand- solete, but the worthy man, besides be- WIFT SPECIFIC CO., ‘nfir‘. GA. ing a ready reckoner, was also a | —<=—= — 2 mighty penman. Doubtless many a . FEPES 7 ; seventeenth century youth tolled along John Graham lg!t today for St. .Tne dlrecyors of School Dis- with Inky fingers under his direction. | Paul, where he will purchase the | trict No. 8, in the Town of Frohn, 3 Hearken to what the master says to.| fixtures and other paraphernalia|Saturday accepted the two Blm: “Let not your breast lle on the |y vij) be used in the new|school houses which were built desk you write on or your nose on 5 = the paper, but sit in as majestical a | meat market which Mr.Graham |by J. M. Price and pronounced posture as you can. With practice you { and J. F. Hawkins will start at|the buildings first-class in every may do brave things.”—London Mail, Minot, N. D, pgrficu]ar_ , N. D, The Great Cocker. Glancing through a plle of anclent copy books and letter writers, one dim- 1y realizes what an awful thing it used | to be to composc and put upon paper a thoroughly correct epistle. It was not an affair to be lightly taken In hand any more than matrimony. No, Cata, A wman of cats declures It Is the worst of luck for a pet black cat to forsake your home, A woman of cats asserts it is the best of luck. In the middle ages Satan’s favorite form was a black cat.” Wilches always have a cat as their familiar—-a stray black pussy In If a white cat races across your yard a child is golng to die. If a stray cat of any color takes up with you, making your house its home, you will have good fuck. Napoleon Bona- parte showed a morbid horror of cats, The night before the battle of Water- loo a Dlack cat passed near him, and at the sight the great warrior was com- pletely unnerved. Hg saw an omen of defeat. Henry IIL of France swoon- ed whe r Lie saw a cat, and one of the Ferdinands of Germany would tremble in his boots if a harmless tabby got in the line of his vision. Among the Romans cat was a symbol of lib- erty. The @ yptians held the animal in veneration under the name of Aelu- rus, a deity with a human body and a cat’s head. Whoever killed a cat, even by acecident, was put to death. Diana assumed the form of a cat and excited the fury of the giants. the Naked Boy and Shears.” Cocker’s | fame rests on his arithmetic, now ob- | Average Lenath of Sentences. | “The English sentence grows shorter and shorter,” says an essayist. “Spen- cer, Sir Thomas Moore, Lyle and Syd- ney used sentences of the average of ! fifty-five words.. Nowadays the sen- | tences of the average journalist are only fifteen words long. Bacon intro- duced the short sentence. At a time when everybody else was using fifty words he took to twenty-two. Praise be to Bacon. Macaulay used a very short sentence. Its average length was ' twenty-three words. ‘was twenty-eight. Thackeray’s was thirty-one. Matthew Arnold’s sentences are long, but beautifully balamced. They are thirty-seveners. Henry James’ are longer and, though intri- cate, are well worth puzzling out, for in each of them a wonderful meaning ; s concealed. They are thirty-niners. Kipling’s sentences are twenty-oners. George Moore's are twenty-fourers and Yellowtail Fishing. There are no “between rounds,” no breathing spells, with the yellowtail. He is fighting for his life desperately, no quarter given nor asked, with an amazing staying power akin to that marvelous faculty of the leaping tuna. The augler is_far more likely to be the first one exhausted; the inches of line gradually granted to the “pump- ing” rod are earned by the sweat of his brow and thie semiparalysis of the bi- ceps. “Have I got a fish.or a devil?’ ex- claimed a weary Englishman after a half hour’s work, with Sir Yellowtail still gamboling at the end of 200 feet of line. And many have shared his astonishment while “catching” these animated galvanic batteries, That man has lived and lived In- tensely to whose bending rod a half dozen lusty yellowtail have capitulated in a bright afternoon. May his re maining history be ever so humdrum or prosaic, that crisp encounter wil illuminate the dullest moments.—F, L. Harding in Field and Stream. Dickens’ average J. P. POGUE'S LIVERY, FEED AND SALE STABLE {| BEMIDJI, : MINN H. G. Welly’ are twenty-threers. Hebrews and the Sabbath. There is not, and there never was in- tended to be, any such feeling of Puri- tanism or of Calvinism with regard to our day of rest as there Is connected with the Lord’s day of our neighbors. The Jewish Sabbath was to be a de- light, and we read that in the mediaeval ghetto dancing, among other recrea- tions, was common on that day. There is nothing contrary to the spirit of Judaism in the playing of games or in- dulgence In any form of light recrea- tlon on Saturday so long as it s com- Al AR T bined with a due regard for the sacred Brazil's Jungles. The jungles of Central America and %y‘;:; e o el ' Brazil are masses of vegetation so _— dense that it is practically impossibié Amiability. to penetrate them. Swain and hi: Bogg—Did he hurt himself when he ty when crossing the isthmus of Da- | fell downstairs? Fogg—I think not. ' rien labored hard with their hatchets | He died without making a sound.— ' and machetes the whole of one day and | Harper’s Weekly, t ‘C-&A-A 1 Wall Paper parts ot Central Au 3 growth renews Itself so rapldly that it 18 almost Impossible to keep a road ’ Mouldings J. A. HOFF Reliable Painter 1 Work Guaranteed. Shop Rear Swedback Blk e e e e e o o e e e o e R = N presenting the “Doros thy Dcdd” Shoe to our customers, we do so with the conviction that it is the best for the prices of $3.00, $3.50 and $4.00 of any woman’s shoe on the market today. It is striking in style, faultless in fit and of moderate price, three points which cannot but appeal to every woman. Anotherstrong point is the exceptional range of styles, —for not only is the proper style afforded for each and every occasion, but each style is divided and sub=divided by vari= ations of design and material until the possibilities for choice are practically limitless. The new Autumn styles pre= sent all the latest innovations, with all the little details of finish and workmane ship carried to a degree of perfection that makes their resemblance to the high priced custom products more ' marked than ever. *3.00 Announcement WE extend to you a most cordial invitation to favor with your presence our initial ex- hibit and sale of the “Dorothy Dodd” Shoe Y for which we have . been appointed the sole representatives for BAZAAR STORE $3.50 e e o e o e e e i o T B o