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s0 be sure you get it MODEL [CF 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. Read the Daily Pioneer. John Hegg of Mizpah wasa visitor in the city last evening. Erick E. Johnson of Quiricg was a visitor in the city last ev enmv Attend the great cloak sale at the Berman Emporium Friday, October 12. Dr. Blakeslee left yesterday evening for Blackduck on profes- sional business. Bemidji levator Co. quarters for hay, feeds ard flour. Gottfried Eklund of Wilton was transacting business in the city last evening. EYES— Drs. Larson & Larson, specialists in fitting glasses, Office in Swedback Block. J. D. Lunn, of the Northland Produce company, left this morning for Szbeka, on a business trip. No sickly women or week men will ever regret tiking Hollister’s Rocky Mountain ‘Tea. It’s brought happiness to thousands of homes. Tea or Tablets, 85 cents, Barker’sdrug store, head- grain, ground The Ladies Aid of the Presby-| tarian church will tie and fimsh comforters for 50c. work with Mrs. Lindgren, Mrs. Reynolds or Mrs. Thomas Bailey, Carpenters Wanted. During the coming week ard the balance of the fall T want all the carpenters who desire ew- ployment and can give them steady work from now until the building season closes. THOMAS JOHNSON. 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 t7 cure it you must take internal |, remedies. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and acts di- rectly on the blood and mucous surfaces. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is not a quack medicine. It was prescribed by one of the best physicians in this country for Leave tle, Read the Daily Pioneer. Letter files and letter presses ab the Pioneer offige. Special cloak sale, Friday, October 12at Berman Emporium. ‘Miss Ida Lade went to Bagley yesterday afternoon fur a short visit.with frienda. Dr. Warninger went to Black- duck this morning. on. profes: ' sional business. last evening in the intereat of St. Anthony’s hospital. George Shea left last evening ifor Blackduck, where he will do some cruising for the. Crookston Lumber company. The Modern Samaritans wilk |give a Halloween party and dance at Masonic Hall on the evening of October 31st. The Married People’s club will give a dance at the city hall Fri- day night. Symington’s orchestra will furnish the music. Typewriter ribbons of all standard makes, either record, copying or indelible, can be pro cured in the color you wish at the Pioneer offica. John Mogan left last evening for Northome, where he will purchase logs for the Crookston Lumber company during.the re- mainder of this fall and the com- ing winter. Friday October 12, the largest assortment of ladies’ and child- ron’s cloaks will be on exhibition at the Berman. Emporium. Cloaks to be delivered from the sample line. A. M. Crowl was at Casp Lake today, where he made final proof 01 his claim, located on Long lake, near the old townsite.of Tartle River. Mr..Crowl hasa valuable homestead. A standard make Remington typewriter with tabulator, but little used and- as good as new can be had for $60.00 cash. Just one half the factory price. In- quire at Pioneer Office. John Belileau, Joseph C. Roy, Kay-bay-do-din, Mes-co-.gwanand Nathan J. Head 'werea delegation of Red Lakers who came down from the agency last evening and spent the night in the city. Children eat, sleep and grow after taking Hollister’s Rocky Mountan Tea. Brings rosy cheeks, laughing eyes, good bealth. and strength. A tonic jor sickly children, Tea or Tablets, 35 cents. Barker’s drug store, Judge McClenahan came up last evening from.Brainerd, with the intention of considering ar- guments in & -motion in a case, but as:the:atterneys on each'side of the proposition were out' of the city, the judge was unable to hear the arguments. Joseph Murphy and wife were at Cass Lake yesterday, where they appeared as- witnesseg for Mrs. Sutliff when the latter was making final proof on her claim, at the U. 8. land office. P, Dicaire of this city was also at the land office as a witness; J. P. Lahris having installed ia his residence on Irving avenne a hot water heating plant, of the] latest pattern, and the plant is being put in by Doran Bros: The city has also awarded the. Doran Bros. the contract for years and is a regular prescrip- tion. It is composed of the best tonics known, combined with the best blood purifiers, acting di- connecting the flush tanks of the sewer system. with- the city. waterworks. Mrs, M, Satlif was at Cassi Jobn Regan went:to Kelliher || Oysters - Oysters - Oysters 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 rectly on the mucous surfaces.|Lake yesterday and made final The perfect combination of the|proofon her homestead, located: two ingredients is what produces|in Section 24-145-34, about four; such wonderful results in curing | miles sovth of Bemidji. catarrh. Send for testimouials|returned to Bemidji on the after: free. noon train and continued her F. J. CHENEY & CO., Props., Teledo, O. Washington, where she will visit Sold by Druggists, price 75c. |for a month, and incidentally Take Hall’s Family Pills for|look after some business constipation. matters. FLOUR! FLOUR! FLOUR! We have just received a carload of-the. cglebrated White Jaccket Flour Those who have used: the White Jacket flour. are reopder- ing it and say for a good flour: that.will. give satisfaction: there is no flour its equal. If you have used it we know you will: reorder. If you have not used it we invite you to try a trial sack. Call at the store or phone 207. Shey| journey westward to Tacoma; | “/|stamach disorders. Lakeside Bakery. Read the Daily Pioneer. W. Brennan came. down this| morning from Big Falls. F. M. Pracht of Louis post- office spent.last night in the city. J. Bisiar and W. Vanderlip went to Cass Lake this morning. Parties wishing sewer pipe for lawn flower pots, apply to Hugh Bosworth, Hotel Brinkman. Mr. and Mrs. Clydesdale of Grand Rapids spent Sunday with the family of C. N. Shannon. John O’Neil, the logger, left for Northome last evening, after having spent yesterday in the city. W. A. Ferris left this morning for Brainerd, having received a telegram that Mrs. Ferris was very ill. A. C. McLean, the “tie man” for Martin Bros. of Duluth, left this morning on a business trip to Big Falls. E. Murphy of Felton was among. the many out-of-town people who were visitors in the city yesterday afternoon. John Goss and wife of Cass Lake came in yesterday after- noon from the “Lake” and were registered at the Markham. Felix Fournet, the wholesale liquer dealer of Crookston, spent last night in the city and left this morning for Blackduck. J. O. Harris, register of deeds, spent last night at Tenstrike, looking after some business matters in which he is interested. H. C. Norman, principal of the Indian school at Red Lake, came down from the agency last even ing and spent today in the city. . H Loucks, Edward Eogelk- ing and E. C. Carlton were among the residents of Northome who were transacting business in Be- midji yesterday. B.P. Munson, representative for-the Backus-Brooks company in the north country, came down this morning from Northome and went to Minuneapolis. Miss Hoppen, sister of Mrs. John Vogler, left this morning for her home at Junction City, Kan. She has spent the last month visiting in Bemidji. I. C. Brandt, representing the Fosston Woolen Mills, was transacting business in the city yesterday, He returned to Fosston on the afternoon train. George Ostrander and wife went tp Cass Lake this morning and acted as witnesses at the U. S. land office for A. M. Crowl, who made final proof on his Homestead. Curfew now rings at 8 o’clock, and but few of the “kids” of the town are ever seen on the streets after that hour, and they are usually homeward bound after the first-tap of the bell. Kreats, the contractor, set a crew of men to work this morr- ‘ing-on the Lumbermens bank, and the putting in of the new front and making of other im- provements will be pushed vigor- oualy until completed. W. A. Ferris, lineman for the M. & I railway, went to Funkley last evening and inspected the telegraph line from that place to Kelliher, and repaired the wires, which had became deranged yesterday afternoon. Greatest tonic and strength producing remedy ever offered suffering humanity. Cures in- digestiop, constipation, headache, That’s what Hollister’s Rocky Mountain Tea willdo. Tea or tablets, 35 cent. | Barker's drug store. J.H. Amber of Fosston re- tnroed to his home. yesterday afternoon. He was here for the purpose of consulting a logal physician velative to heart fail- ure and other complicat’ons con- - |stitnsing. & general breakdown of his constitution. I NECCECEATIAIC™ ma oo M. & M, Read the Daily Pioneer, John Lunney, & prominent business man of Cass Lake, was in 1he city yesterday afternoon on busioess, John was trying to purchase a good working team, but was unsuccessful in securing what he wanted. Inspected Schoolhouse. Charles Aiken returned this morning from Big Falls, where he inspected the schoolhouse for the ltasca conanty school board. He found the building to have | been erected according to plans |and specifications ‘and accepted: the same, officially, on bekalf of the board. Mr. Aikeu returned to Grand Rapids tiis noon. Men for Woods in Demand. Seventy-five men were shipped to Kelliher last evening and will be employed in the camps of Ross & Ross in the vicinity of Kel'iher, “Men wanted’’ appears to be the standing sign among the loggers on the north line this fall. Good wages are offered, but it is still a difficult matter, and entails a-good ‘‘gift of gab’’ to get the boys to desert the city for the weods, so long as they have any money in thejr posses- sion. Fullerton Well Again. Dell Fullerton,” who returned two weeks ago from North Dakota to his home near Bagley’s dam, and was affected with small- pox, has recovered from the disease and been released from quarantine. Fullerton had been working in the ha vest fields and with threshing crews and became|j afflicted with a mild attack of smallpox. He came to his home in Buzzle township, under quarantine. The attack proved to be a mild one, and |} Fullerton is now as well as be fore his sickness: The promyt action of the authorities pre. vented any spread of the disease Tickling Human Vanity. Few people realize how profitable the trade of tickling human vanity is and how many different forms it employs. There are obscure newspapers aud nominal magazines that live by it and provide good incomes for their editors. It is quite coinmon to find upon center tables luxuriously bound and printed volumes whose contents consist en- tirely of fulsome .puffs. Each profes- slon, trade, avocation and association has its library of memorabilia of per- sons of the kind who, in Lowell's phrase, were created to fill up the world. The writer remembers seeing In the “best room” of a remote farm- house a morocco bound, gild edged vol- ume upon the notabilities of the coun- try, which contained a bicgraphy and engraved portrait of rusticus horribilis himself. The original volunteered the information that his niche in the local pantheon had cost him a sum, which, on later conversation, was disclosed to be larger than a year’s Interest on the mortgage - encumbering the farm.— ‘Wilbur Larremore In Atlantic. The Dramatic Flavor of Wall Street. It is the speculative side of Wall street that most appeals to the imag- ination. If we were dealing with that slde of Wall street we should not lack for authenticated cases of high dra- matic flavor, as, for example, that of a youth of eighteen who ran $2 into a fortune of $200,000 in a few months and was last heard of trying to pawn his wife’'s engagement ring for $25; or that of the farmer who made sev- eral millions of dollars from a very modest beginning, slipped a check for | #$300,000 under the breakfast plate of each member of his family one morn- Ing, tore the checks up because within an hour the riches had become a mat- ter of domestic strife and was last heard of when one day he brought a load of hay across the ferry from Stat- en Island to New York and begged his brokers to take it in lieu of margins for one more “trade.”—Success Maga- zine, frufit Kating is neaitarul. If people ate more fruit they would need less medicine and would have bet- ter health. Fruit eaten early in the morning on an empty stomach serves as a stimulant to the digestion, and ap- ples and oranges eaten at any time in the day are good for biliousness. Stew- ed prunes and figs are also hellthtul at any time. No Bireh Rods Now. “The road to knowledge nowadays,” sald the first old schoolmaster, “is too swift and too easy. It's a regular rallroad.” “Yes,” agreed the other old peda- gogue, “and it's a rallroad with fewer switches than are necessary."—Phila- delphla Ledger: i e — i ‘Will He Make Itt A bull has forty rods to travel to reach a tramp, and-the tramp has thir- ty-two rods to travel to reach the fence, 'If the bull travels one-fourth faster than’the tramp, how close will the latter come'to’ getting the grand holst?--Ottawa Free Press, The man who 18 never quite ‘sure, “thinks perhaps,” ‘Imagines,” “guess- ee” or “presumes,” {s no man to trust, His foundations are bullt onsanid.~' where he|§ was exumincd by County Heal h|# Officer Blakeslee and placed |3 8t. Kapoleon, Many people ignorant of the true his- tory of the church will be scandalized when they read the title of this article. Let them read It to the:end, Thm was in Corsica some hundred years:| ago a very plous family called the Bo-, napartes, Their first child was born on the 15th of August, Assumption day, and as he looked very small and feeble they wanted him to be bnpuzefl without delay. Thelr priest-consented to perform the ceremony, but as it was customary to give to a child the name of the patron saint of his or her birth- day the good priest could not and 'would not call him “Assumption Bona- parte.”” In his embarrassment he look- ed carefully over ‘the “Lives of the, Saints” and finally found the name of. a salnt martyr who in the first centu- |/ rles of the church had been stoned to |- death on that very day of Aug. 15. Of [ course neither Mr. nor Mrs, Bonaparte, | objected that their firstborn child | should be named Napoleon, having GOING HOUSEKEEPING? Se If 80 you can hardly get along without Spoons, Knives and Forks. The silver. plated are, without a doubt, the most eco- nomical; they wear well; they look better and cost: very little more than the ordinary kinds. Your sideboard is hardly com- plete without a silver tea set; silver cake and fruit haskets thus the high patronage of a brave, martyr of the early Christian church.— | Letter to Philadelphia North American. A Blunder In Poets, Tennyson is not the only poet lan reate whom Regent street has. known. Southey relates a ludicrous scrape intoi|” which he and Campbell fell one day in the Quadrant. Campbell wished to relleve a poor woman and rushed into the nearest shop to change a sovereign. The shopkeeper was attending to cus- tomers and delayed to oblige him, and | the generous poet lost his temper. Thereupon the shopkeeper jumped to | the conclusion that he had two rogues to deal with and rashly sent for the po- lce. Campbell stood in helpless. fury, but when Southey explained things to the constable that worthy, who happen- ed to be a Glasgow man, at once ex- ! claimed, “Guidness, mon, is that Mais- |’ ter Camell, the lord.rector o’ Glaisgie?" | After that it was difficult to separate Campbell and the shopkeeper, so warmly were their hands Interclasped | should also be placed- - there. - The necessary things in cut glass_are the: decanter, berry bowl and the celery dish. GALL AND INSPEGT OUR LINE (ON TIME) GEO. T, BAKER- & COMP’Y LOCATED IN CITY DRUG STORE. In explanations and forgiveness. — Westminster Gazette, l “For Quick Results!’”” Use Bem'dji Daily Pioneer “Want Ads” You are invited to inspect a superb line of “The McKibben Furs” which will be on display at The Bazaar Store, Thursday» October llth 1906. The salesman Jackets, Searfs, Capes Muffs,_ and all small furs. . coll & Dorsey Co., will show a line of furs compnsmg alt the newest designs & styles in ladies’ furs. _ ANTEED to give SATISFACTION. Al furs will be delivered to customer at once. . THURSDAY, OCTOBER representing McKibben, Dris- Each and every fur GUAR- HTH., ONLY