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BERLAING S S éf.o A few doses of this remedy will in- variably cure an ordinary attack of diarrheea. It can always be depended upon, even in the re severe attacks of cramp colic and cholera morbus. It is equally successtul for summer diarrhcea and cholera infantum in children, and is the means of saving' the lives of many children each year. When educed with water and sweetened it is pleasant to take. Every man of a family should keep this remedy in his home. Buy it now. PRICE, 25C. LARGE SIZE, 50c. Barker’s Drug Store PROFESSIONAL ..CARDS.. o i’ —————— e e 1 H | | ] | 1 ] i ' LAWYER . WM. B.MATTHEWS ATTORNEY AT LAW Practices before the United States Supreme Court—Court of Claims—The United States General Land Ofice—Indlan Ofice and- Con- gress. Special attention given to Land Con- tests—Procurement of Patents and Indian Claims. Refer to the members of the Minne- sota Delegation in Crongress. Offices; 420 New York Avenue, Washington, D. C D. H. FISK Attoraey and Counsellor at Law Office opposite Hotel Markbam, E. E, McDonald ATTORNEY AT LAW Bemldjl, Mion. Office: Swedback Block PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS. Dr. Rowland Gilmore Physician and Surgeon Office: Iies Block DR. E. A.'SHANNON, M. D. Physician and Surgeon Office in Mayo Bloek Phone 396 Res. Phone 397 DR. WARNINGER VETERINARY SURGEON Telephone Number 209 Third St.. one block west of 1st Nat’l Bank DRAY AND TRANSFER. Wes Wright, Dray and Transfer, 404 Beltraml Ave. Phone 40. DENTISTS. . Dr. R. B. Foster, SURGEON DENTIST PHONE 124 MILES BLOCK. DR. J. T. TUOMY Dentist rst National Bank Bu Id’g. Telephone No. a3c 20 years experience as a SPECIALIST DR. REA Eye, Ear, Nose, Throat Diseases of Men; Diseases of Women; Nervous Dis- eases; Chronic Diseases. Coming to Bemidji Thur’y, July 11 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. All curable medical and su-gical diseases acute and chronic catarrh, and Special Dis- eases of the Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat, Lung Disease, Early Consumption, Bronchitis, Bron chial Catarrh, Constitutional Catarrh, Dys- psia, Sick Headache, Stomach and Bowel ‘roubles, Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Sciatica, Bright's Disease, Diabetes. Kidney, Liver. Bladder, Prostatic and Female Disoases, Diz- ziness, Nervousness, Indigestion. Obesity, In- terrupted Nutrition. Slow groth in children, and all wasting disease in adults. Many cases of deafness, ringing In the ears, loss of eyesight, cataract, cross eyes, etc., that have ‘been improperly treated or neglected, can be saslly restored. Deformities, club feet, cur- verature of the spine, disease of the brain. paralysis, epllepsy, heart disease, dropsy, swellingof the 1imbs, stricture, open sores, pain in the bone, granular enlargements and all long-standing diseases properiy treated. 'Young,middleaged and old, single or married men and all who suffer from lost manhood. nervous debility, spermatorrhoea, seminal losses, sexual decay, failing memory, weak eyes, stunted developement, lack of energy, impoverished blood, pimples, impediments to marriage; also blood and skin diseases, Syph- 1lis, eruptions, hair falling, bone palins, swell- Inss. sore throat, ulcers, effects of mercury, kidney and bladder troubles, weak back, burning urine, passing urine too often, gouo, rhoea, gleet, stricture, recelving treatment prompt relief for life. Cancers, Tumors, Goiter, Fisiula, Piles, THE BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEER PUBLISHED EVERY AFTERNOON, AR AAAAAAAAAAAAAANANAAARS R OFFICIAL PAPER---CITY OF BEMIDJI BEMIDJI PIONEER PUBLISHING CO. CLYDE J. PRYOR Business Manager | A, RuTLEDGE Managing Editor Entered In the postoffice at Bemidil, Minn., as second class matter. SUBSCRIPTION---$5.00 PER ANNUM QBSERVATIONS. The man that won’t listen to rea- son is about as aggravating as the man that won’t talk it. The average man has the idea that he would make "the greatest baseball umpire the world has ever seen. Of course your friends talk about your faults more than anybody else does—but if you didn’t have the faults it would be different. Some people get in the biggest hurry when they aren’t going any- where. Some men seem just naturally de- signed to be fitted\with booms that never last more than two weeks. Nature balances everything; while you are listening to some man ex- plain his failure, somebody else has to listen to another brag of his suc- cess. Sound travels at the rate of 400 yards a second except when you are trying to call a small boy across the street. ANCHOR STEAMER IN LAKE Scheme for Relieving Drought at Du- luth and Superior. Superior, Wis., June 25.—Chicago’s gambling steamer, the City of Tra- verse, may be brought to the Head of the Lakes for the purpose of relieving the drought on Sundays. Superior hag had the Sunday lid for several months, but as the Duluth saloons have been open right along the thirsty have ex- perienced no distress until the last couple of Sundays, both Duluth and Superior now being dry. Saloonmen have been figuring on a floating saloon to be anchored out in the lake with excursion boats running to it and ne- gotiations are now on with the owners of the City of Traverse for that pur- pose. Kaiser Goes Down in Submarine. Kiel, June 25.—A report is in circu- lation here that Emperor Willlam, during the secret naval maneuvers last Friday, took a plunge in one of the submarine boats. His majesty, ac- cording to the story/ was greatly pleased with the tri ) Boy Fishes Up Dead Body. Houghton, Mich, June 25.—While George Waltham, a ten-year-old boy, was fishing in Portage lake here his fishhook became entangled and on be- Ing hauled to the surface he brought up the body of a man in a badly de- composed condition. Clubman Indicted for Murder. Washington, June 25.—Gaston H. Phillip, well known in society and club life both in this city and New York, has been indicted by the grand Jury for the murder of Frank McAboy, 2 hackman, at the Arlington hotel on May 18 last. BRIEF BITS OF NEWS. John Johnson, a wife murderer, was #lit to death in the electric chair in Sing Sing prison Monday. Fourteen inches of snow fell in Butte, Mont., Sunday, but by night- fall the streets were a mass of slush. Secretary of War Taft has left Washington for New Haven, Conn., to ;&ttend a meeting of the Yale corpora- on. Joseph Motcovick, aged thirty-eight years, a coal miner, shot and killed his wife at their home in Sygan, Pa., and then ended his own life by firing a bullet into his heart. A reduction of 5 cents per thousand cubic feet in the maximum price of gas has been announced by the Bos- ton Consolidated Gas company. This reduction will make the maximum price 80 cents per thousand. MARKET QUOTATIONS. Minneapolis Wheat. Minneapolis, June 24.—Wheat—J; uly, 97%¢c; Sept., 96% @96%c. On track —No. 1 hard, $1.00%@1.00%; No. 1 Northern, 99% @99%¢; No. 2 North. ern, 97% @97%c; No. 8 Northern, 94 @95e. Duluth Wheat and Flax. Duluth, June 24—Wheat—To arrive and on track—No. 1 hard, 99%c; No. 1 Northern, 98%c; No. 2 Northern, 98%c; July, 97%c; Sept., 98%c; Dec., 96%ec. Flax—To arrive, on track and :illz\;, $1.23%; Sept,, $1.24%; Oct., $t. Paul Union Stock Yards, St. Paul, June 24.—Cattle—Good to choice steers, $5.50@56.75; fair to good, $4.00@5.00; good to choice cows and heifers, $3.60@4.76; veals, $4.25@5.25, Hogs—$5.55@5.80. Sheep—Wethers, $6.00@5.50; good to cholce lambs, $6.25@6.50; spring, $6.50@7.00, Chicago Grain and Provisions. - Chicago, June 24.—Wheat—July, varicocele and enlarged glands. with the sub- cutaneaus injection method, absolutely with- ont pain and without the 10ss of a drop of , 18 one ot his own discoveries, and is the most really scientific and certainly sure cureof the twentieth century. Consulation ot those interested, §1.00. DR.REA &CO ., Minneapolis, Minn. Loulsville. Ky 91% @91%rc; Sept., 94%0. Corn—July, 52% @52%¢; Sept., 62% @52%c. Oats —July, 48%c; Sept., 87%c. Pork— July, $16.70; Sept., $16.00. Butter— Creameries, 19@24c; dairles, 17@22¢c, Eggs—13% @14c. Poultry—Turkeys and chickens, 11c; springs, 20@22c. % Or has your comb run away with itP Bet- ter lo i Ou r 1 Ial r home on your head, notin the comb. Ayer’s Hair Vigor will act as ‘‘keeper,”” a particle of doubt about using this splendid preparation, let your doctor decit?’eclor you, o e O At Home?s: ok out for what’s left of it, and keep itat If you have blish the formulas our preparations. RO RS vy Chicago Union Stock Yards. Chicago, June- 24.—Cattle—Beeves, $466@7.00; cows, $1.75@4.75; heiters, $2.60@5.35; calves, $5.00@7.00; good to prime steers, $5.70@7.00; poor to medium, $4.60@5.65; stockers and feeders, $2.90@5.15. Hogs—Light, $6.05 @6.12%; mixed, $56.80@6.10; heavy, $5.60@6.05;" rough, $5.60@5.80; pigs, $5:50@6.00;. good to choice hegy, $5.95@6.0C. Sheep, $4.00@6.35; lambs, $5.75@7.40, Greater Than the Nation. There is a certaln congressman who; whatever authority he may hold im the councils of state, Is of compara- tively minor importance In his own household~ Indeed, it has been un- kindly intimated that his wife is “the whole thing” in their establishment. Representative and Mrs. Blank had been to Baltimore one afternoon. ‘When they left the train at Washing- ton on their return Mrs. Blank dis- covered that her umbrella, which had been Intrusted to the care of her hus- band, was missing. . “Where’s my umbrella?” manded. 2 “I'm afraid I've forgotten it, my dear,” meekly answered the .congress- man. “It must s§ll be in the train.” “In the train!” snofted the lady. “And to think that the affairs of the nation are intrusted to a man who doesn’t know enough to take care of a woman’s umbrella!”— Success. » " Sheridan’s Double' Marriage. ~ ~ It was in 1857 that the Gretna Green marriages were made illegal. A glance at its registers may yet inspire the novelist of the future. One entry will be sure to puzzle. Twice within a few days occurs the record of the marriage of Richard Brinsley Sheridan to Miss Grant. There was only one R. B. S. only one bride for the same gentleman, The double entries are not the result of any blunder on the part of the Rev. Mr. Vulean. The parties were really twice married at Gretna Green. Arriv- ing on a Sunday they were duly wed- ded, and sped. away to Edinburgh, There, however, Sheridan chanced to glance at a newspaper in which ap- peared the lucubrations of a lawyer. In these plainly stated was the fact that no contract executed on a Sunday is binding. Clearly, then, their wed- ding was not legal. Back to Gretna Green they scurried, to be remarried on a week day and leave the dual rec- ord to perplex later generations of sympathetic searchers of*the records.— St. James’ Gazette, she de The Buzzard In Flight. There can be no doubt that the buz- zard is the living aeroplane in perfec- tion. except as other birds do—by sheer pow- er of moving wings—but it can sail at amazing speed before the wind, at right angles to the wind and can sail within a few points of the wind. ‘When there is no wind its flight 18 clumsy—not much of an improvement on the flying of a hen. Authors are wont to describe the buzzard as sall- ing in the sky on days when the earth perspires beneath a sultry, still atmosphere. But it will also be re- membered that these authors invari- ably describe the buzzard as being “a speck in the brassy heavens.” Asa matter of fact, that is just the point of the buzzard’s aerfal knowledge. ‘When there is no breeze close to the earth it is always to be observed roost- ing in a tree or flying laboriously into the zenith until it finds an upper cur- rent, where it can navigate without la- bor.—New York Times. Bones and Their Places. It was a colloquy at a north side butcher’s shop. “Ob,” said the little woman, “that’s an awful big_ bone in that small steak. I-don’t like to have to pay for all bone.” “Yes’'m,” sald the butcher politely, but with a touch of irony in his an- swer, “that do seem to be & good deal of bone, but the animals what's com- in’ to this market now seems to have more or_less bone In 'em, And really as animals is built now I don’t see how they can get along without bones.” “That may all-be true,” said the lit- tle woman, and there was a wicked twinkle in her eye, “but this morning 1 found a good sized bone in the sau- sage, and I leave it to you, honest now, don’t you think that is going a little too far?’ And the butcher could not say a word in reply.—Indianapolis News. move it is available. Order it delivered until fall. It cannot sail against the wind | Next Winter’s COAL There is plenty of it at the head of the lakes, and the equipment necessary to Buy Your Supply Now Great Northern Railway The Man With Forty Ghosts. A popular novelist tallkled with re-- gret about,the old ghost habit of the past. “TFamous painters first and fanious writers afterward alike had ghosts,” he sald. ‘“These ghosts were pupils, disciples. They did the basic work of the master’s picture or novel, and the master polished up, put on the finish- ing touches and signed his name to it. This practice, indeed, still obtains in architecture. It was a practice that allowed a popular- artist a manifold increase of production and consequent- 1y of income, Dumas, the elder Du- mas, had no less than forty ghosts— forty 'intelligent' young men. writing away for him about D’Artagnan, Por- thos, Aramis and the rest. But Du- mas was reckless, and the existence of his forty ghosts became known; hence a good deal of scandal. At the height of this scandal Dumas said to a lady one night: “‘Have you read my last boolk, ma- dame? “The lady, with a mischievous smile, replied: o “‘No, M. Dumas. Have you? " He Felt Complimented. * A man from Philadelphia, says a writer in the Ledger of ‘that city, was visiting in a town of very few inhab- Itants” One day when he was about to make a purchase he discovered that he had exhausted his small change. The shopkeeper could not break the ten dollar bill offered him, and the man went out in the main street to see how he might solve the difficulty. He asked several persons, but no one had the requisite amount for the bill.- At last an old white haired, seedy negro came along. In sheer desperation the man said: “Uncle, can you change a ten dollar bill for me?” Uncle” looked dazed for a moment, then his shambling figure straightened. With a dofiing of the hat and a bow worthy of Chesterfield he replied, with dignity: “No, marse, I can’t change no ten dol- lar bill, but I done ’preciates the com- pliment jes’ the same, sah.” Birds That Boat In Their Nests. “The mother bird sat on her eggs at the water's edge, and when I ap- proached she pushed off with her foot as though the nest had been a boat, and away she floated calmly down the stream.” “What you saw was a rare specta- cle” said the nature student. “The bird was a grebe, the colymbus minor. She always builds on the water’s edge, and her nest is always woven of aquat- ic plantsso closely and firmly that it will float herself and her eggs without leaking. On the approach of danger the bird pushes off. Nor is she at the current’s mercy during her voyage. She uses her foot as a paddle, and -1 have seen her steer her boat-nest with some little dexterity round a bend, landing in a quiet cove as well, say, as the average young lady waterman.” Fresh Sheets at Premium. The woman who had just returned from abroad, where she had visited some country towns, was telling of the comforts ard discomforts of the Euro- pean country hotel. “They “have an aversion to putting fresh sheets on the beds for every new guest” she said, “and we always pulled down the bed- clothes the minute we were. assigned jour rooms to examine the shects, Ten chances to one they were wrinkled and had that ‘slept in’ appearance, and we invariably insisted on fresh ones. Finally we struck a series-of towns where the hotel proprietors got the best of us, for the sheeting they used was a sort of crepy stuff, something like *seersucker, and for the life of you you couldn’t tell whether they’d been slept on or not.”—New York Press_. Hardened by Sulphuric Acid. Hardening an ordinary drill in sul- phuric acid, states the English Me- [chagic, makes an edge that will cut tempered steel or facilitate cutting hard rock. The acid should be poured into a flat bottomed vessel to a depth of “8bout one-eighth of an inch. The point of the drill is heated to a dull cherry red and dipped in the acid to that depth. This makes the point ex- tremely hard, while the remalmder re- mains ‘soft. If the point breaks, re- harden, but with a little less acid in the vessel. Sere - = il i Greaf Northern Railway North Dakota “Chatauqua Devils Lake---June 29th--J uly 16th - Following {s & partial list of attractions for the first week: June 39. Speeches by Prof. Thos, Shaw and Gov. Cummings of Towa. iy July 1. Lecturesby Miss OlofKrarer and Dr. Payne July 2. Address by U. S. Senator Hansb(ro, July 3. Lecture by Hon. Smith Stimmel, first President of the Chatauqua. July 4. Oration, Governor Burke. July 5. ‘Lecture, Guy Carleton Lee. July 6. Address, John G. Wooley. These are only a fow of the principal events. Musical organi- zations, quartets, readings, stereopticon lectures and baseg ball ames of the North Dakota Central League. v 1BOATING, BATHING, ATHLETIC CLASSES “omplete program may be had b i Tdg S Ta: %\Le : a y addresemgindnar LaRue, T Special Rates. Ask G. N. Agent. Has visited Minnesota for Ten Years ll" DR. DORAN America’s Most Popular Specialist, Will Visit Blackduck Wednecsday, June : Bemidji | Thursday, June 27 at . ' HOTEL MARKHAM. Returning ‘every month. Con- sult him while'the oppor- tunity is at hand. Now Is The Time To. purchase a building site in + Bemidji. We have a number of choice building lots which may be purchased on reasanable terms For further particulars write or call Bemidji Townsite and Im- provement Company. H. A. SIMONS, Agent. Swedback Block, Bemidji. DR, DOBRAN has no superior in dlagndsing and treating diseases and deformities. He treats acute and-chronic catarrh, diseases of the eye, ear, nose, throat, lungs, liver, stomach and bowels.— Dyspepsia. © constitutional _catarrh. sick headache, rheumatism, chronic female dis- eases, neuralgia, siatica, dizziness, “nervous- ness, slow growth in children, and all wast- ing in aduits. Deformities, club feet. curva- ture of spine, diseases of the brain. diabetes. paralysis, Bright’s disease. heart disease, ap- pendicitis, eczema, varicocele and hydrocele properly treated. Their system of curing Cancers, Tumors, Goiters, Fistula, Piles, vasicocele and enlarged glands with the sub- sutancous injection method absolutely with- Jutpain and without the loss of a of blood, i3 ‘one of his own' discoverles and is the most, really sclentific and certain cure of the nineteenth century. Young. middle-age ind 01d, single and married men and all who suffer from lost manhood, nervous debility, spermatorrhoos, seminal losses, sexual do- cay, faltering memory, stu.ited development, 1ack of energy. impoverished blood, phmples. facial blemishes, imj ent to_marriage, also blood and skin diseases. syphilis, erup: tion, hair falling, bone pains, swelling sore throat, ulcers, effects of mercury, kidney and The Ceader of them il Price 25 @ents Owl Drug Store, Bemidij, Minn Ridney-Cties cure Backache bladder troubles, weak back, bu: e, passing urine too often, gonorreah, gleet and stricture _receives searc] treatment, prompt relief and cure for life. He is able to tell anyone his disease. He is not likely to doctor his patients for the wrong ailment. No incurable diseases taken. th sexes treated confidently and privately. Consulta- tion and examination to those interested, $1. Dr J. E. Doran, ® | 202 Nicollet Ave. Minneapolis. Minn Daily " For News reciated Outside of Bemidji. Tribune, published at Akeley, iays: "The Bemidji Daily Pi dress of type. ciated by the public. Don’t wait early. Owl Drug Store AR-GOL cuss SORE THRDAT , Bemidji, Minn Pays for the Daily joneer That the Proneer Gets and Prints the News Is Appre- Read what the Akeley Started the week in a brand new The :Pioneer is ; giving excellent news services. B The increased advertising pat= ronage and circulation is evi- dence that the paper is appre- 40 Cents per Month oneer