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GhHe Model Bakery Con- fectionery and wairy Store Dairy Products wholesale to the consumer. Faney creamery butter, Bggs.. 9c 23¢ Ice Cream, Swest Cream, Milk and Cheese. Iinest line of Cukes und Pastry in the Northwest. THE MODEL The home of Snowilake Bread 315 Minnesota Ave. Fhone 125 AAA VANV AR A ! The City VAR AAARAAAAAAAAAAAAAARS Read the Daily Pioneer, Guaranteed maple syrup at Boyer’s. John Patterson is among these who are contined to their homes with lagrippe. Bemidji Elevator Co.. jobbers for Barlows Best also Gold Medal, Mascot and Cremo. Dr. last evening to look after his cedar business at that place. Eyeglasses fitted in latest styles by Larson & Larson, spe- cialists. Second flvor Swedback block. The Swedish Ladies Aid soci- ety will meet with Mrs, B Edd, 311 Bemidji avenue, afternoon, ut 2:30. G. F. Ross, the logeer, came down from Kelliher this morning and passed through the city on the M. & L. to Brainerd R. E White, the I to Kelliher last evening, arrived in the city yesterday | afternoon from his home as Da- | luth, They scowled and look sour) from morn till night, They never | tomorrow o er, went haviag would agree; Now they are healthy, happy and bright, They | both take Rocky Mountain Tea at night. Barker's Drug Stor C. O. Glidden left this morning for Turtle River and will investi gate the veport that some t pas~ is being committed by s Blukesle» went to Houpt! Read the Dailv Pioveer, Bulk olives, the ficest at Boyer’s, L G. Crothers went to Minne- apolis yesterday, on a business mission. i G.R. Stewart, a representa- tive of the Northland Pine com- pany, went north last evening along the line of the M. & L. Attorney G. W. Campbell went to Tenstrike last evening, on le- | gal business. He passed through | the city this morning to Brainerd i whither he went to consult with | Judge McClenahan. John Bertels, of Cass Lake, | was a visitor in the city yester- !day afternoon. He went to i Blackduck last evening and will | work in the logging camps for |Ernest Flemming, near that | place. ! J. P. Daugherty, the railroad [contrachor, went to Big Falls last !evening. He was accompanied | by a gang of men, who will work |on the Big Falls-International Falls extepsion of the M. & I railway. ! That'sall. ’Nuf said, when you say that Hollister’s Rocky 'Mountain Tea is the greatest family remedy on earth. It does | you good going and coming. 85 'cents, tea or tablets. Barkér’s | Drug Store. Ross Reynolds of Crookston, who has been night clerk at the {Hotel Crookston for some time Epasb, arrived in the city yester- !day and will hereafter officiate | behind the desk at the Markbam, | nigh Mr. Ross isin affable gentleman, and well posted in { the hotel business. Clarence Hill, who was for sev- leral months clerk at the Mark- ham hotel, and who later went “on the road"’ for a packing con- cern, has resigned his position with the meat people and ac- cepted a situation as traveling salesman for the Saxonia Cigar company of Superior. Mr. Hill will “make’ this territory. Clarence is a good fellow, and his friends in these parts will weleome his return to the old stamping ground. Ervest Fleming, merchant, fogger and a good fellow of Bena, came in from his home yester- day afternoon and went to Black- duck last evening to look after the logging which is being done for him near that place this winter. Mr. Fleming, among tle « near Tartle River on lands |0ther good traits, is first assis- ST of Minneapolis PILES CURED IN 6 TO 14 DAYS. PAZO OINTMENT is guaranteed to cure any case of Itching,!Blind. Bleeding or Protruding piles in U to 14 days or money refunded. 30¢ I A Refreshing Drink at all times, and especially in hot weather, is a foaming glass of MOOSE BRAND B ER. 1t _has life and body too. Cool, healthtul, nvigorating, it stimulates diges tion and quenches thirst. For a friend you can find no better than MOOSE BRAND BEKR. 1t'srood beer, real lager beer, none better. We take special care to make it that way. We deliver it to u d by the Pillsbury company | tant to Zeke Smith, chaplain of the ‘‘gobblers,” a sectarian so- ciety whose members reside along the lise of the Great Nor- thern from Duluth to Cass Lake; also Ike Black, milk-cooler pro- ducer of this city. !State of Ohio, City of Toledo, Lucas County, ss. Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he is senior partner of the firm of F. J. Cheney & Co., doing business in the city of Toledo, county and state aforesaid, and that said firm will pay the sum of one husndred dollars for each and every case of Catarrh that can- Ini 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 Public. At The Lakeside ‘We have only good tales to, tell of what we put into our bread, cakes and pies. The flour we use as well as the other materials).are the best and the bake insures a high class product. way we mix and You have but to give us a trial in order to be convinced PHONE 118 Mrs. J. Li Dale was in the city today from Turtle River. Chris Olson returned this morning from a business trip to Kelliher. Miss M. Lycan, the trained nurse, is at present engaged at the home of W. Ross. Aad A. Tone, the Northome at- torney who might be likened unto the “tall pine,”” came down from his home this morning and went to Cass Lake this noon to appear as an attorney in a case before the U. S. land office. J. O. Harris went to Tenstrike last evening on a business mis- sion. He was accompanied by his brother, G. W. Harris, who had just returned from a visit at Hibbing. Miss Cora Davis and her brother, James Davis, who live at Brainerd, returned to their home this morning, after having visited for several days atthe home of Mr, and Mrs. F. D. Sti'- lings. W.H. Koberts, vice president of the First National Bank of Be- midji, went to Blackduck last evening to note the business be- ing done by the banking institu tion at that place in which he is interested. Great investment, absolutely safe, brings returns, giving sur- pius earning power of youth till old age, securing comfort and health i your declining years. That’s what Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea does. Barker’s drug store. Jerome St. Cyr left last even- ing for Kelli where he will remain for eks. He will have charge of the Funkley-Kelli- her accommodation train on the M. & I, during the absence of Conductor George MecDonald, who is taking a lay-off from duty as ticket-puncher. W. P. Heberd and wife came down this morning from the camps of Walker & Akeley,’near L. B. Kelley, the pulpwood buyer, went to Laporte this morning. The Pioneer at all times has in stock office supplies of every description Harry Mills went to Brainerd this morning, in his capacity as roadmaster of the M, & I. rail- way. The Episcopal Ladies’ Guild will meet with Mrs. G. E Crcek- er tomorrow afternoon at 2 o’clock. Rev. Allan Clark, a Congrega- tional minister whose home is in Brainerd, was a visitor in tlke city this morning. Henry Krohn, a prominent farmer living near Tenstrike, was purchasing a large guant:ty of supplies in the city today. Attorney Frank C. Hale re- turned to his home at Northome Farley, where Mrs. Heberd has been visiting with her husband for several days, Mr. Heberd be- ing chief clerk at the camps, Mrs. Heberd left this afternoon for Fosston, where she will re- main for some time. Miss Huntzinger, sister of Mrs. Carson, accompanied by Mrs. Farley, left last evening for Northome, where they will visit with Mrs. C. W. Speelman, daughter of Mrs. Farley. Miss Huntsinger is making a visit in this part of the [country, her home being at West Union, fowa. ZA. McLean, local| representa- tive for the Martin Bros., tie dealers of Duluth,went to Backus this morning, where he will look after the selling of 20,000 ties to the Northern Pacific railway, and Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces J;,,UZ;S? ;’;’;gfi*g‘;fifi“ke Ty 4l of the system. Send for testi- monials free. luth Brewing & Malting Co. Duluth Brewing & Malting Co. F. J. CHENEY & CO,, Toledo, Ohio. I r:;jlgl:“AL Sold by all Druggists, 75c. Bemidjt - = Minnesota Tuke Hall’s Family Pills for Residence Phone 200, Office Phone 220 C‘)nsllpafiiofl, e . = = White Jacket Flour The Perfect Flour is a scientific product of the most appreved milling methods. The bread, rolls, bis- cuits, cakes and pastriesit vields are genuine health foods —-the kind that combine purity and deliciousness with highest nourishing values. You get this flour at our store. ROE @ MARKUSEN PHONE 207 which were cut at Backus. Mr. McLean says that he expects to secure at least 60,000 ties in the territory south of Bemidji dur- ing the balance of this year. Peter Larkin and wife of Tortle River were visitors in the city today. Mr. Larkin returned last Saturday from Ottawa, Can- ada, where he has been since the latter part of January, visiting his old home The wmother of Mr. Larkin died at Ottawa on January 31st and was buried Feoruary 2 r."Larkin hav- ing been summoned to present at her last iliness. T J. Audrews left last evening for Rridgie, where he has] been logging ou his claim during the present winter. Mr. Andrews has already gotten in 6,000 cedar poles and posts, and figures that he has 300,000 feet of logs yet to getin. He expects to clean up the merchantable timber on the claim before the spring thaw sets in, except some which is in swamps and cannot be logged t advantage this winter, owing to the deep snow and lack of frost in the ground. last evening, after having spent yesterday in the city looking aft- er some legal business, A. L. LaFraniere, owner of the Grand Rapids Independent,came down this morning from Nortk- ome and left this noon for his home. He sold his Northome Record while he was at North- ome, W. H. Strachan, superintend- ent of the M. & I, came down from Big Falls last evening in his private car, which was at- tached to the local freight from the north. He went to Brainerd this morring, Advice to mothers. Don't let your children waste away. They can be strong, healthy and vigor- ous with Hollister’s Rocky Mountain Tea. It’s a swift winged messenger of health. 85 cents, tea or tablets. Barker’s Drug Store. Mrs. Conger is very pleasantly located in her new su re and pe- pared to show the latest desigps in spring millinery. Miss Peter son of Minneapolis, an exper- imced artist in willinery, is em- ployed as trimmer and arrived in Bemidji Saturday evening. V. L. Ellis left this morning for Pine River, where his family has been visiting for a month. Mr. Ellis has recently been at Winni- peg and point3 near there, look- ing up a business location, but has not as yet made a definite determination as to his future intentions. Neil Burrell, who is represent- ative at Blackduck for the Valen- tine-Clark Cedar company of Chicago, from a trip to St. Paul, where he had been to seek medical aid for the relief of a severe attack of inflammatory rheumatism. Mr. Burrell states that his company has put in a large new cedar yard at St. Paul, where their north-country business will here- after be handled. WANTED—100 station men for A. Guthrie & Co., on Great Northern, near Duluth. Ander- : son & Johnson’s Employment i office, Bemidji. Has a Good Plot. The old Jew has staked every dollar he hag 1n the world on his protege, “Terry, the kid,” but at the last moment the kid is drugged. To regain his fortune, “The Old Clothes Man’’ (James Kyrle MacCurdy) jumps into the ring himself, and the de- risive jeers of the spectators at the ridiculous antics of the old Jew are suddenly changed to amazed cheers as he knocks out his opponent with his trick blow. ‘| the “Yiddish twist,” thus win- ning a fortune. “The OId Clothes Man” Will be at the City Opera house Friday night, March 1. Hank White Gave the Tip. Hank White, the minstrel, lived in Reading, Vt., for many years. He was very fond of horse races, and rarely missed any of the meetings in Windsor or Rutland county. Once Le attended a breeders' meeting at Rutland. The breeders’ meetings were famous and attracted people from New York, Mas- sachusetts, New Hampshire and all over Vermont. On this particular day Hank was seated in the grand stand, one of 5,000 people. “Hod” Fish Ira, a well known char- acter, was driving his horse Belvidere, a very large bay horse, with not too much speed, but the owner had an idea. that he was a wonder. It was in the free for all race. All the horses except Belvidere had passed the grand stand almost neck and neck on the first half. It was a beautiful race. Trailing be- hind about twenty rods came Belvi- dere, the driver urging him on to bet- ter efforts, and when he was in front of the grand stand Hank stood up and yelled at the top of his voice: “Take the first turn to the left, Hod; all the oth- ers have gone that way.” Hod drove Belvidere to the barn.—Boston Herald, returned last night |3 i Barefooted Waiting Maids In Japan. Unless there are ladies among the guests the wife and daughters of the host do not appear at dinner in Japan. Before the meal begins it is customary for them to bring small cups of tea and dainty confectionery, when they take their survey of the party. If gen- tlemen only are present the Japanese hostess disappears after the greeting Is over and does not return until the guests are taking their departure. At a signal from the host barefooted wait- Ing maids, dressed in graceful and prei- tlly tinted kimonos, bring in lacquer tray, bearing tiny covered bowls. Be- fore setting the trays on the table the maids sink gracefully to their knees and bend forward till their foreheads touch the floor. Then they serve din- ner, which is of several courses.— Smith’'s Weekly. A Lively Paper Cutter. Here is a little story which the Eng- lish papers tell and any one is at lib- erty to believe if he will. No afidavits go with it. When Lord Dufferin was viceroy of India the mabarajah of In- dor paid him a visit and asked as a wemento an ivory paper cutter belong- ing to Lord Dufferin. He consented, the Indian left, and the viceroy never saw him until some months later when the maharajah Introduced a fine young elephant into the room. A pile of news- papers lay at Lord Dufferin’s side. The animal went up to them, cut them neatly with his tusks, which had been purposely sharpened, and laid them in & neat heap on the floor, ready for pe- rusal. Great Britain’s Rainfall. Rainfall is a condition which has much to do with our health. A wet dis- triet with a good deal of subsoil water, making houses damp, is a locality in which - rheumatism and consumption are likely to prevail. Over: England and Wales the average yearly rainfall is about thirty-four inches, in Scotland it reaches forty-six inches and in Ire- land about thirty-eight inches. Possi- bly the wettest parts of Britain are in Cumberland, where the rainfall may attain 150 inches per year. One inch of rain on one acre of ground means a hundred tons of water.—London Graph- le. Herltages. Leave children an accumulated for- tune of memories and Inspirations and examples and hopes, so that they are rich in brain and heart and soul and service. Then if you happen to leave them a fortune besides, if they have all these, the fortune will be shorn of its posaibilities of evil and will become an instrument of higher and nobler good.—M. J. Savage. Protection. Mr. Bebee for love? Mrs. Bebee— that. I married him to protect him from no less than three widows in our ; of them would have been sure to get Mrs. Albee—Of course, you married & ‘Well, yes, I suppose you would call it ( | i street. If I hadn’t snapped him up one | i Spectacles Demoralizing, A certain Somerset vicar made him- self notorious by the vigor with which in the seventecnth century he inveigh- ed against the use of the newly invent- ed optic glasses, since they perverted vision and made all things appear in {an unnatural and therefore a false their array of lenses, he declared to be impostors, since a man could not see 80 well with two pairs of spectacles as with one. Some asserted it to be sinful | to assist the eyes. which were adapted | by Providence to the capacity of the individual, whether good, bad or indif- ferent. “It was argued that soclety at large would become demoralized by the use of spectacles. They would give one man an unfair advantage over his fellow and every man an unfair ad- vantage over every woman, who could not be expected on aesthetic and intel- lectual grounds to adopt the practice.” —London Spectator. Cross Purposes. Mrs. Klubbs (severe —I've boen lying awake these th hours waiting for you to come home. Mr. Klubbs (ruefully)—Gee! And I've been sf ing away for three hours waiting for you to go to sleap. A Lady Bountiful. Tramp—Kin you give a poor feller a cold bite, mum? Housewife—Yes. your way out youwll fiud some ic on the gate.—Woman's Home Compan fon. The Clever Onen. Griggs—Some men are born great. others achleve greatness. Brigzs—Ye: and others simply have the k of making other people think they're great. light. Microscopes and telescopes, with ! g H I The Fountain Pen, l The fountain pen is not an invention |of recent years. In Samuel Taylor's { “Universal System of Shorthand Writ- ing,” published in 1788, we find proof of the fountain pen’s great age. “I have nothing more to add,” wrote Samuel Taylor, “for the use or Instruc- tlon of the practitioner, except a few words concerning the kind of pen prop- er to be used for writing shorthand. For expeditious writing some use what are called fountain pens, into whicl, your ink is put, which gradually fio- ‘when writing, from thence into « s er pen cut short to fit the smalier of this instrument, but it is a L matter to meet with u good one of this kind.” It is fork muw ce in Europe. 1o €9 A, 'D. a sen of the doge Pietro Orsolo had wedded in Venice the Briz- zantine Princess Argila, who produced at the wedding breakfast a silver fork and gold spoon. Then the high Vene- tion families followed suit, and these martyrs to fashion pricked their lips with the new instrument. The fork prospered, however, and spread over Italy. In 1379 it had traveled as far as France, and in 1608 a traveler brought it direct to England. or water produced, “but if,” he added, “I may trust to the above trials, which 1 endeavored to perform with care, snow newly fallen, with a moderate gale of wind, freezing cold, will pro- duce a quantity of water equalto one- tenth part of its bulk.” So that a fall of snow of ten inches represents a rainfall of one inch.—London Chroni- ‘While Mercury and Potash may than before. S.S.S. PURELY VEGETABLE MERCUR DOES NOT CURE BLOOD POISON mask the disease in the system and cover up the outward symptoms for awhile, they cannot cure Contagious Blood Poison; when the treatment is left off, the disease will return worse Mercury and Potash eat out the delicate lining of the stomach and bowels, produce chronic dyspepsia, cause the teeth to decay, make spongy, tender gums, affect the bones and nerves, and often cause Mercurial Rheumatism, the most hopeless form of this disease. Thousands have taken the mineral treatment faithfully for years to find, when it was left off, that the disease had only been smouldering in the system, and the old symptoms of ulcerated mouth and throat, falling hair, copper-colored spots, swollen glands, sores and ulcers, etc.,, would return in all their hideousness, and they were no nearer a cure than when they first commenced the treat- ment. and reliable treatment for Contagious Blood Poison. that is able to go into the blood and cure the disease permanently, and without in- jury to any part of the system. S.S.S. {does mnot cover up anything, but so completely removes the poison that no traceof it is ever seen again. This medicine will also remove any bad effects left by previous mineral treatment. entirely of roots, herbs and barks; proof that it contains a particleof mineral in any form. Write for our home treatment beok, and if you desire special medical advice, our physi- cians will be glad to furnish it, as well as the book, free of charge. i THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., ATLANTA, GAs, S. S. 8. is the only certain, safe It is the ome medicine S. 8. S. is made we offer a reward of $1,000 for dred pages. Beginning the New Year nearly every business will need new sets of books. The Pioneer carries a full line of books and an in- spection of the stock will show that we carry all sizes, styles and bindings of books. We have the two, three, our and five column day books and journals. A good line of cash books; a well selected stock of ledgers, single or double entry, one hundred to eight, hun- RTEOERREY 4.\;‘. SRS n&.;.T