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Rl i Ghe Model | BakeryDairy § and Confec- tionery Fancy Cr(‘:\mory btr. . 30c Fresh Eggs . ... ..... 25¢ All kinds of poultry at § the lowest market price. Don’t think becauss we are selling you dairy pro- ducts at who'esale pric that the quality is inferior Cream, lce Cream, Milk THE MODEL 315 Minnesota Ave. Phone 125 THE CITY. Read the Dailv Pioneer, Bemidji Elevator Co., jhbbers for Glod Medal fl ur. Thomas S. Ervin was from St. Cloud today. Entire change of progam at the Bijou tonight. here Eddie Berg and terday for Seattle, The Pioueer at all times has in stock office supplies of every description. A. W. Danaher went to Ten- strike last evenmg to look after his business interests at that place. W. E. Ferris left this morning for Walker, where he had some line repairing to do for the M. &I Theodore Gullickson went to Kelliher last evening to supply vhe thirsty who desire the Hamm product. C. E. Mitchell left this morn- ing for Brainerd, where_he will enter the employ of the M. & I. as a brakeman. The Ladies Aid society of the Presbyterian church will give an entertainment at the city hall, Friday evening, Jan. 25. George Balker, the jeweler and watchmaker, returned yester- day afternoon from a trip to the lumbering camps at Kelliher and Blackduck. Properly fitted glasses not only improve the vision, but preserve the eyes. Call on Drs. Larson & Larson, 2nd floor Swedback block. Miss Clara Wright, sister of Arthur Wright, arrived in the city last evening from her home at Little Falls and will visitin this city for several days. Are you tired, fagged out, nervous, sleepless, feel mean? Hollister’s Rocky Mountain Tea strengthens your nerves, aids digestion, brings refreshing sleep. 85 cents, tea or tablets. Barker’s Drug store. J. W. and A.S. Campion of ngus, Minn,, spent last night the city and left this morning r poitts along the north line of e M, & I., where they have 2 mber of horses that are beis g »rked in the woods. W. T. Blakeley, the Karley log- ger, left this morning for La- porte. to inspect some timber which he owns near that place. He was accompanied by H. Puphall, manager of Mr, Blake- ley’s store at Farley, who will assist in the work of loeking over the timber, James Cahul, who has been suffering severely during the past month with inflammatory rheumatism, somewhat more easily than for some time past. However, he still has no use of his lower limbs, and it will be some time before he can get about without aid. wife left yes- is able to move! Read the Dailv Pioneer. Phone 57—Fleming Bros. hard- H | ware. | J.0. Harris wasa visitor at | Wadena yesterday. B! Batire change of program at the Bijou tonight. E. D. Beeson went to North me last night and returned this orning. R. C. Fraser of International Falls was a visitor in Bemidji 8 last night, Hunt’s Perfect Baking Powder ever disappoints, because it is always made the same—is uni- formly good-—ana wholesome. G. i Crocke= went to Kelliher last evening to make the rounds of the Grand FKorks Lumber ompany’s logging camp at that place. It you don’s attend pretty reg- jular now you will miss some- | thing good for the program changes at the Bijou every other inighh. |, R. E. White, the logger, came over from his home at Duluth yesterday afternooa and spent last night in Bemidji. Mr. White has extensive logging interests 1at Kelliher. William Muenze, traveling auditor for the Minneapolis Brewing company, spent yester- day in the city, conferring with the local agent for the Minne- rapolis company. James Murray. the agent for the St. Croix Cedar company, came down this morning from his home at Blackduck and spent | the day in the city looking after | some business matters. Mrs. Lucy Purdy of Duluth, imperial good samaritan of the grand lodge of Samaritans of the state, is the guest of Miss Minnie I Bailey. Mrs. Purdy installed the Samaritan officers last eve- ning. Iv’s a good old world after all, if you have no friends or wmoney, in the river you can fall; mar- riages are quite common and, more people there will be, pro- vided you take Rocky Mountain Tea. Barker’s Drug store. , M. W. Barnard, of Barnard & Gorder, the railroad contractors and loggers, was a visitor in the city yesterday. Mr. Barnard had been to Mallard, where he jand his partner did considerable logging a few years ago, and at which place they still have a log- ging outtit, Joint Installation. The members of the local Woodman and Royal Neighbor lodges will hold a j»int install- ation of officers next Tuesday _|evening, at theOdd Fellow hall. Itis the intention of the lodges to serve an elegant oyster sup- i per and havea general go d time. All members of either order are requested to attend. Ellis & Co. Will Expand. V. L. Ellis & Co. have decided to expand their theater business, and with that object in view Mr. Ellis visited Akeley and Cuss Lake, and has made arrange. {ments to give moving picture performances at these places, Iihree nights of each week being devoted to Cass Lake and the remaining three nights to Ake- ley. They will continue their performances here as usual. The company has two addi- tional picture machines and as both Mr. Ellis and his partner are competent operators, they will easily handle the additional business. | ORGHESTRA MUSIG i | furnished for all occasions. Also Pianos tuued. Satisfaction guar- anteed. Box 233, Bemidji, Minn. | T.SYMINGTON Coffee! "Coffeo For pure coffee—and a coffee approved by the state pure food commission—we invite you to try a pound of our celebrated “Yale” coffee at 40c, 35c, 80¢, 25¢ and 20c. Our pure “Mocha and Jave has stood the test for a long time. ’ Call at the store or phone. ROE @ MARKUSEN PHONE 207 e e T e T ey HOT DRINKS! We have installed at our place of business, “sod fountain hot drinks.” THIS IS OUR MENU: Hot Chocolate with Macarons 15¢ Hot Clam Bouillon . . 10¢ Hot Chicken Bouillon . 10¢ Hot Tomato Bouillon « « 10c Hot Conc. Ext. of Coffee . 10¢ Lakeside Bakery. Read the Daily Pioneer. Reed’s studio for colored work John J. O'Neil, the logger, came down from Northome this morning. Harry Mills, roadmaster for the M. & I,, went to Brainerd this morning. R. J. Poupore, the Blackduck logger, was transacting business in Bemidji yesterday. D.in Rose of Northome, buyer for the Watab Pulp and Paper company of St. Cloud, passed through the city this morning on his way from his home to St. Cloud:to confer with the officials of the Watab company. Mary—Dark circles under the eyes indicate a sluggish circula- tion or torpid liver and kidneys, Exercise daily and take. Hol- lister’s Rocky Mountain Tea. "T'will do you good. 85 cents, tea or tablets, Barker’s Drug store. Dissolution of Partnership. Notice is hereby given that the copartnership heretofore exist- ing between William Begsley and E. Englund, has been dissolved by mutual consent. All out- standing bills are to be collected by William Begsley and the busi- ness of blacksmithing shall be conducted at the same stand by William Begsley. Dated January 14th, 1907. William Begsley. Bids for Wood. Sealed bids will be received up to January 22, 1907, by Board of Rducation of Bemidji for two hundred cords of green-cut jack- pine and tamarac cordwood, to be delivered at the school grounds in Bemidji prior to April 1st 1907. Bids for 50 cords or more will be considered. Board reserves right to reject any and all bids. Bids ahould be directed to GranaM M. TORRANCE, Clerk, Bemidji, Minnesota. How’s This? We offer one hundred dollars reward for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall’s caearrh cure. F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O. We, the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney for the last fifteen years, and believe him perfectly honorable in all busi- ness transactions and financially able to carry out any obligations made by his firm. Walding, Kinnan & Marvin, Wholesale druggists, Toledo, O. Hall’s catarrh cure is taken in- ternally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Testimonials sent free. Price 75 cents per bottle. Sold by all druggists. Take Hall’s family "piils for constipation. Miles Branching Out. Hibbing, Jan. 18.—The state- ment recently made to the effect that the Miles hotel had been closed until April 1, was an error, the facts being that merely the dining room was closed, and that a Dutch cafe will be substituted for it in the near future. In addition to the general improvements to the hotel, there will be an opera house opened in connection with it at an early date. The new theater will havea seating capacity of about 600, and will be modern in every respect The attractions at the house will be the same as those at the Bijou, in Duluth, the book- ing being done by the same syn- dicate. The Miles hotel is owned byr C. H. Miles of this city and George Markham, who recently moved to Hibbing to assume act- ive management of the Miles. BOOST JUDICIAL SALARIES. Judges of This District Increased Compensation. The senate judiciary committee of the legislature held u session after the adjournmeut of the senate yesterday at St Paul, the salaries of the suprewe aud district court judges were coi- sidered. The bill introduced by Rapids relates only to the two |judges of the Fifteenth district while the other bill introduced by Senator Julius A, Coller of " | Shakopee, provides for an in- crease in the salaries of all of the judges of the supreme and Ais- trict courts. It is said that both bills prob- ably will receive favorable action as most of the members ex- pressed thewselves heartily in favor of an increase salaries of the judges. It was suggested that an anti- pass bill probably will be passe at this session of the legislature. Some of the judges having a large district to cover and their expenses must be paid out of their salaries. If tbe payment of their railroad fare is added to their other expenses the aggre- gate will be increased consider- ably in some districts. 1t is intin.ated that the salaries of the two judges in this (the Fifteenth) district will be in- creased to $4,500 per yecar, with allowances for raiiroad fare. Peter Larkin came down from Turtle River this morning and ness. . Judge Spooner returned yes- terday from a visit in St. Paul, where he combined business with pleasure. Valuable Farm Involved. M. A. Clark, judge of probate, left yesterday afternoon Grafton, N. D., where he will consult with Judge Shepherd, judge of probate of Walsh county, relative’to some probate matters | that have a local ~ bearing, The the estate of the late J. B. Sprague, who died in this city fin 1902. A valuable farm in Walsh county, consisting of 320 acres of land that recently sold for $10,000, 1s involved in a trans- action wherein the purchaser failed to keep his contract with the estate. at which the two bills relating to! { Senator D. M. Gunn of Grand| in the; Senator Gunn Introduces Bill to Give g, o, spent today in the city on busi-|! for | il business is in connection with |} br. plakeslee returned this morning from a professional vi unkley. He brought down with him from Funkley Ernest Vandervort, who is suffering with pueumonia, and who will be placed in the hospitul for ireat- ment, 20 vears exnerience ac a SPECIALIST DR. REA Evye, Ear, Nose, Throat Diseases of Men; Diseases of Women; Nervous Dis- eases; Chronic Diseases. Coming to Bemidji Thur’y. Feb. 14 at Markham Hotel 9 a, m. to 3:30 p. m. One Day Only! Dr. Rea has made more re- markable cures in the Nor- thwestern states than any living man. suffer from 1o rmatorri neray ents to in Syph- ¢ hone pa roat, u bladder- troubles, weak ing urine too often, gonor e receiving treatment, prompt reli Cancers, Tumors, Goiter, Fisiula, Piles, varicocele and enlarged glands. with the s n me bsolutely. the most reall curcof the tw to those interested, £1.00. DR. REA & CO., i Minneapolis, Minn. Louisville, Ky. y suro A LAZY LIVER May be only a tired liver, or a starved liver. It would be a stupid as ; well as savage thing to beat a weary or starved man because he lagged in his work. So in treating the mistake to lash it with strong drastic drugs. indication of an ill-nourishcd, enfeebled body whose organs are weary lagging, torpid liver it is a great A torpid liver is but an with overswork. . Start with the stomach and allied-organs of - digestion and Tintrition. " Put them in worki fiver will become active, Dr. Pie ng order ‘and see how quickly your s Golden Mecdical Discovery has made” many ‘marvelous”cures of “liver ‘complaint,” or “torpid- liver; by its woruderful control over the organs of digestion and nutrition:—It restores the normal activity of the the blood-making glands, cleanses lations, and so relieves the Tiver of defection of other organs. Symptoms. If you have-bitter or bad taste in the morning, poor or vari- ableappetite,coated tongue, foul breath, constipated or _irregular bowels, feel weak, easily tired; despondent, frequent headaches, pain or distress in “small of back,” gnawing or distressed feeling in stomach, perhaps nausea, bitter or sour “risings” in throat after eating, and kindred symptoms of weak stomach and torpid liver, or biliousness, no medicine will relieve you more promptly or cure you more permanently than Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery. Perhaps only a part of the above symp- toms’will be present at one time and yet point to torpid liver, or biliousness and weak stomach. Avoid all hot bread and biscuits, griddle cakes and other indigestible food and take the “Golden Medical Discovery” regularly and stick to its use until you are vigorous and strong. Of Goiden Seal root, which is one of the prominent ingredients of *Golden Medical Discovery,” Dr. Roberts Barth- olow, of.Jefferson Medical College, says:, “Very useful as a stomachic (stomach) tonic_and in atonic dyspepsia. Cures gastric (stomach) catarrh and head- aches accompanying same.” Dr. Grover Coe, of New York, says: “Hydrastis (Golden Seal root) exercises an especial influence over mucous sur- faces, Upon the liver it acts with equal certainty and eflicacy. -As a cholagogue (liver invigorator) it has few equals.” r. Coe also advises it _for affections of the spleen and other abdominalyiscera generally,and for scrofulous and gland- ular diseases, cutaneaus eruptions) in- digestion, debility, 7 i ea, constipation, also in edveral affections peculiar ¢0 womenTX.d in ali chronic derangements liver, also for chronic_inflammatlyn of bladder, for which/Dr. it is one of the mostfreliable agents of cure ” / Prd{_John King, M D, late of Cin- i 5 of the AMERICAN Dis- PENSATORY, gives it a prominent place among medicinal agents, reiterates all the faregoing writers have said about it, as does also Prof. Jolm M. Scudder, M. D.,late of Cincinnati. Dr. Scudder says: It stimulates the digestive pro- i cesses and increases the assimilation of food. By these means the blood is en- riched. * ¥ ¥ * the consequent improve- ment on the glandular and nervous sys- tems are natural results.” Dr. Scudder further says, “in relation to its general effect upon the system, there is no medi- | cine in use about which there s such general unanimity of opinion. It is uni- wersally regarded as the tonic, useful in all debilitated states * * ¥ stomach, increases the secrétions of the system of poisonous accimu- the burdens imposed upon it by the 20, says 18 ~a -most atarrhal gastritis (inflammation ‘of the stomach), chronic ation, general debility, in con- valescence from protracted fevers, in prostrating night- s. It is an im- portant remedy in disorders of the womb.” (This agent, Golden Scal root, is an important ingredient -of Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription for woman’s weal:- nesses, as well as of the " Golden Med- ical Discovery.”) Dr. Ellingwood con- tinues, “in al! catarthal conditions it is useful.” Much more, did space permit, could- be quoted from prominent authorities as to the wonderful curative properties possessed by Golden Seal root. We want to -assure the reader that “Golden Medical Discovery” “can be relied upon to do all that'is claimed: for Golden Seal root in the cure of all the various diseases as set forth in-the above brief extracts, for its ~mogt prominent and important ingredient is Golden Seal root. This agent is, how- ever, strongly reinforced, and its cura- tive action greatly enhanced by the addition, in just the right proportion of Queen’s root, Stone root, Black Cherrybark, Bloodroot, Mandrake root and chemically pure glycerine. All of | these are happily and harmoniously blended into a most perfect phar- maceutical compound, now f: bly known throughout most. of the ¢ d countries of the world. Bear in mind that each and everv ingredient enteri endorseiment_ol_The Teading _medical men of our [and; who extol each article named _above in the highest forms What _other_medicine put up for_sale through druggists can_show any suc rofessional _endorsement 7. For _ dys- pEep- sia, liver troubles, all chronic catar- rhal affections of whatever name or nature, lingering coughs, bronchial, throat and lung affections, the *Dis- covery” can be relied upon as a sover- eign remedy. A little book of extracts treating of all the several ingredients entering into Dr. Rierce’s medicines, being extracts from standard medical works, of the different schools of practice will ‘be mailed free to any one asking (by postal card or letter), for the same, addressed to Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y., and giving the writer’s full post-office ad- dress plainly written. Don’t accept a substitute of unknown composition for this non-secret MEDI= CINE OF KNOWN COMPOSITION. Read the daily Picneer. ! lke Black was at Walker yes.' iterday. And thereby hangetha ;ta.le, which the Pioneer will pub- ilish 1n the near future. ry'. Cousulation | goolers.” Read the Dailv Pioneer. ! “Milk MARCONI: WIRELESS TELEGRAPH STOCK Is the wonder of the age and I have made it a specialty. My priceis $5.00 per share right now. Itisb o double shortly, so order to R. B. HIGBEE, Broker Germania Life Bldg., ST.PAUL,} & National Bank Refercnces. ens. INTENTIONAL DUPLIGATE EXPOSIAE Clothing OurSemi-AnnualClearance Sale Is the Most Suecessful Display and Sale of Clothing Furnishings and Shoes for Men and Young Men House Not most successful in the sense of ““Cheapnmess,” for poorly made and ill-fitting clothing are not cheap at any price,---successful because of the high standard “quality” shown in materials and workmanship, and because of the very excellent values. No such collections of Mens garments have heretofore been shown under a Bemidji roof,---from the shops of B. Kuppenheimer & Co., and Stein-Bloch Co., garments that are hand worked by men who understand the art right through the lines of very finest American and Imported wool- We doubt if you could find one single garment that wouldn’t ap- peal to the taste of the most discriminating man in Bemidji. We’ve been very careful of prices; we want to do a volume of business rather than to sell a few things at high prices. present display and sale will prove a revelation to you. AGAIN WE INVITE YOU TO COME And we know that this