Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, March 9, 1904, Page 1

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- al Pioneer The Bemidji ly 3 BEMIDJI, MINNESOTA, WEDNESDAY, MARCH v, 1904, TEN CENTS PER 4 OLUME 1. NUMBER 272. WEEK. i nave been -enrofled as ensigns in the | some 1mportant cnanges in the Rose | : B Bayy. : bud bill as a result of the frequent Y ! Snow has been falling for the last b 20 el TR T . it - e A W8 k= = 4 -\ Y WU qays: S DM subject of price and the manner of | | SLOWER THAN EXPECTED. g:x' 1g :u h >l.lln1’l:m |.¢Iu Is in Greg | ry county, .. have been in con | - BOMBARDED =z o~ TWO WIVES &2 i SUFFE { ceaduiRingularly: T is l.xiulf:;;f.‘“l:";}r the bill will be - Shanghal, March 9.—The mobiliza- 86 ainenAsd 8% (omrotide that the.nust — 4 tion of Japanese troops proceeds reg- 200 selections In the reservation shallj S e 7 ularly, but much slower than expected. | e T e e = : Once landed in Korea and Manchu-| DECLARES HE IS PRACTICING PO- $3 an acre and tho;romalndor 101 eporte nocagement o @@LS| ria the Japanese forces will bo divid: A e S e 1g aterdweeps Away nomes ed into four armies. The points of| LYGAMY AND EXPECTS TO | ety ' Hhe prosidentes rar as] 5 Sy . concentration selected by the Japanese | CONTINUE TO DO SO. the price Is concerned. It is und o in the Vicinity of Vladi- | rmmomemise oon arand sttt of Lowland Residents at i effectoad o selling the g ACTING ON THE DEFENSIVE. i 1o0:ths mantor of‘s/ling.th - = | arch 9.—The foature | e i VOStOk IS Denled. Russians Not Prepared to Make of. | ashington, March &—The fedturd| yy NORTHWEST TERRITORY. HaPI'lelng. atMive of the day’s session of the Smoot hear- Parls, March 9.—The Temps prints.| D8 ¥as the SDPOStNRAa;on Eh ;' Mi Canadian Paclfic Wil Bulld Four Hun | - A ) a dispatch from St. Petersburg which | :Jé 1‘:}‘“"‘»’ M. }:«‘}H‘?"v l-‘l“ ‘("1 e of dred Mlles of Track. 9 PHKnamem Walca was cedea 1o Kussia| #8YS: eformong chuteh S A1 SRS SDIOS Montreal, March 8--The C Yo & e toW! v i : YAP FLEET EXPECTED TO LIE OFF| poare e e ated out (hat the| The landing of Japanese troops con- | pective successor of Mr. Is (h_as| Pacific has decided to build ne u;:-"m o ,‘m,'. ‘I“‘“."‘ 9 eng-ol e town aie under several feet 1 d whole of Northern Japan will be| tinues near Wonsan, Korea. Most of president of the church. Mr. Lyman{ miles of track during the coming “ -u=tnestiupiall Lo idiemsy : ' VLADNOSTOIC UNTIE-THE threatened with famine p” the food| the forces are proceeding to Ping:|not only declared that he was prac-| mer in the Northwest DT, The STalimB beenany lve ’::uf.{,:m,‘\,rtl;::.e {Tfi:‘w{: ‘(x.:?,‘,f,;'fié 1 RUSSIANS RETURN. supply derived from the island of Sak | Y&ng: - tielng polyzamy but declared that he | Pheasant Hill branch will ho oxtend.| BIENE and fx now 21t incoming waters, : > ' halien fisheries is cut off. Nine-tenths| It IS ‘,fie(?‘v\(’l‘ea‘fi“flg that the Jap-| expected to continue to s0 live in po :u for 200 mwiles. Branches eah wni‘-- mark ; L e 1 - of the exports go to Japan, In addition| 8nese will take the offensive as s00n | jygqpyg cohabitation. | twenty-five miles long will be built At Duncannon the fron company i s 10 which Japanese boats' havo bees| 88 they have concentrated helr (raots. O eatal Kennedy resumod | from the Calgary and Edmonton lne | blowins holes through tho fee with | RANCHE RS DRINENEHOMEHOMES ‘ LATTER SQUADRON IN A DILEMM| carrying on piratical fishing along the| f00 CUeSOR taetics ewillibematrictly, g el vt e beginning of thie day's] cho Starting fromaWelaskivty and thgfaynanigilo he wor to 0pen 4| Cloudburst Causes Flood in Blue Moun- coast, which has exhausted the fish| defensive for some time. 1228 other from Lacombe. chaunel | ; : supply of the Amur estuary. The na| The Amur and other streams will be | 8ession. | In addition the Arcola branch willl A¢ aMiddlotown the suftéring 15| < tain Foothills. j tive tribes there are suffering fron.|Used as soon as they are free of ice Mr. Worthington, for the defense,| pe extended to Reglina, a distance of ",‘,\, e s .‘_“ il l\\ la Walla, Wash.,, March 9.—a hunger and typhus. The Russian gov | for carrying military supplies. continued ¢ examination of the | 115 miles. L L any ather portlon off eloudburst occurred above Dixie in the : CANNOT SECURE SHELTER ELSE| grypont will prepare a gunboat flofilh FIVE '—‘—*AI\, \ DE witness and brought out many facts | e ] “|']" aoded ““n' {hinhoroNEDidoy il foothills ot m;» m“\n mountains and . WHERE BECAUSE THE HAR- on the Amur to provide for the pro MEN A ]| resarding her plural marriase o a I\ R 7S lan subscribad $500 rsthe-relin! the ranchers along Mud creek bottom 4 /.; thotion ofithie RherIca as Tao0n a8 thi TR 1 ILA 4"\1 | A ket IhBran faato ol mm‘ K“:ln\ “ ”(”AL l \ “ l ]:\ | of (!n-_ flood sufferers and the Y. M. O | have been u»u\pr'!'lwl lu‘fl}' from theit 1 BORS ARE FROZEN. river is free from ice. S tending to weaken her testimony. She - | A bullding has heen transforme o | homes. to the hllls. Communieation e T with Dixle and points interyening has - DEMANDS_ HEAVY. PRICE LIMITED EXPRESS ON ALABAMA| admitted that Apostle Teasdile 1¢ | RETIRED GERMAN ARMY OFFICER | & l;\mlun.n_\ hospital.There s much | Wit Dixlo and pc eryening has & tused to conduct or authorlze the mur- | sickness among the restdents of the | PecH o b == GREAT SOUTHERN WRECKED Coiw R RNy bertorii e Fears are entertained for Dixle, R Turkey's Reply to Russian Request to riags;which swas fualiy perlonnia ROISONS aWIEEFICHIEDREN l 1oy g | which lies only four feet above the ~ USSIANS ARE HOPEFUL OF VICTOR) Geelo b Dardaneiie IN COLLISION. Mexico. T Tho famous ol Middlotown forrs., | piteic Trnakmen report: that. the wa: e e s e Apostle’s Son Testifies. el | which has stood many A00ts. WES T er {3 overflowing the tracks and ru | s thus far met the réquest.s olf’ the Rus: Charles F. Merrill, a son of Apostle ==as washed oft {ts foundations during the | fng down the hills [n torrents. Detalls - §fan ambassador to Turkey, M. Zino. | . Dirmingham, Ala, March 9.—The) Merrill, was thon called Lo the stand n, March 9.—Lleutenant night : | of the damase cannot be obtalned as ; BQUADRON CONSISTS OF FOUR OF Y, i : i 1 vieff, to permit the Black sea fieet to | #outhbound limited express on the| He said he was the son of his fathes's | gocake retived, ‘aftor a long B At 1ligh .\mu-] the water s one yot E THE FINEST CRUISERS IN | pass the Dardanelles by naming condi- | Alabama Great Southern railroad, run: third plural wife and Is hmscll a Do} gioq gy “decay of fortune, took his st S I GO U0 RIG Ny e e D, ‘ 5 e xty R -1/ lygamist. In answer to questions con rapidly risit y Indus s own. ] e i tions wholly unacceptable to Russia. ning sixty miles an hour, collided L Blaen RLeg e i1 [ money and gave a splendid dinuer in R S s ey R an foe ] IMPERIAL NAVY. One of these conditions naturally is | headon with a northbound Southern| CCriing his own marriages M kot fRlcois ont i s AR : ending, Pa., March 9.—The flood b 6 was o o 88 henor of his nincteen-yearold daugh-| ter on the ratlroad tracks at the sta ho 8¢ G ; ' gaid he was married first in 1857 to a | ul tn the Schuylkill river at this point ! ¥ . that Russia shall break off or evade | Railway freight near Kewanee, Miss.| o/ T AT s sseko. the 3 ’ y ; W oth % 7 4 i i wife that died in 1889 and that he mar- | ter's birthday. Beseke then polsoned tlon fn Washineton boronsh, with (he fand north, of Reading had spent its - the fulfillment of her agreements with | Five railway employes lost their liv R o i : 3 i : ! [ v 5 rled his “legal wife,” Chloe Hendricks, | his wifo, daughter, two so respecs | river still risi arly the entire | force by daylight and the water Is Tkl March 9. —A- cableg] _| Austria respecting the Balkans, give | and several wero injured. The dead| fn 1891 and had five children by lir.| tvely twelve and sisteen yoars old, Hver stect (5 inundated nnd o large | now slowly receding. - Reports from Tokio, A A cablegram re-|the sultan leave to settle the contro- . Dugincer P, P, Larkin: Fire il ant st Ve | Y lvalve RN CESINGeN Y QLS ik 8 R ! il RIOW. Yo 10 LS POL S L0 ; ceived at the a Imiralty oftice at 100N | yersy by his own methods and assist are: Engineer P. P. Larkin; Fireman| He marcied another wife in 1888, the | cadets at a milita academy, and Bumber of houses are flood Ihe| south of Reading indicate that much today announces that Javanese War|myrkey should Austria or other pow- Henry ‘Banks, colored; Robinson| ceremony being performed in the Lo-| pimself with cyanide of potnssium, StBUOnIMStEr was driven from his| damage can beyexpected in the Lower ships bombarded the forts at Talien | grg dispute the sultan’s decision. Riggs, mail clerk; D. D. Nicholson | gan temple by M. C. Edwardso IR et R T Sehuylklll valley. In this city the ' A ‘Wai last night for a period of two Russia rejected these proposals as mail clerk; Express Messenger J. H.| has had four children by that wifte,| oo G anen mh[nc AL R At Creswell there are from ten to! sheet mill of the Reading Iron com- ‘ | g.oum The amount of damage in-| pronosterous, but she renewed her re- | Hinds. | the oldest of which isTnine years and | fri0E T G e s e TrostTgrewalevon e railrond | pany and other industries shut down 4 icted is unknown. Following the Qquest, to which there seems little like- Both roads use the same track neat| the youngest two and a half years. - trachs on account of tho high water. ~ bombardment Port Arthur was again | §°00 0 810Chian vielding, as Dritisn | Kewance. The express train was| Their mother's name was Anui Bjsleen. o - : = { | attacked. The reported engagement three hours late. No passengers arc| Stoddard. After a brilliant carcer and a mar LOWLANDS UNDER WATER. Connecticut Rivers Raging. | 5 4 diplomacy is active at Constantinople b 8 £ : . | ging. i ot Russian and Japanese fleets in the 4 E reported to have been killed. The| “The marriage to my legal wife in rlage with an heiress Beseke had = New Haven, Conn., March 9.—Hoav { S L e n urging on the porte a strict ob- | h | i " T ew Tlaven, Conn,, Mar cavy | vicinity o adivostok cannot be | g0 oo 5 P o Berlin treaty, France, | Mail and baggage car and one coach| 1891,% sald M ' was solem- | reached the émd of his fortune. e 8usquehanna River at Wilkesbarre poy yuy pafsed rivers all over Cone confirmed. S0 far as can be percelved here, has | Of the limited train were burned, while nized by my father.” won the iron cross during the war of Continues to Rise. wetfent to freshet piteh and caused S0 far 88 can he percelyed bore w® | six frefght cars were destroyed by fire | “Were you living with Anna 1L SO | 1670010 with France, el the | Wilkesharee, P, March - AL 0 serio O o Z St. Petershurg, March 9.—Thi| Such a step as permiti‘ng the Black | Which broke out immediately after the| dard when ed what you call| guughtor of u rich hotelieeper, there- & m. the water i the north binnch of plaves ‘des a number of small whereabouts of the Russian Viadivos|ea fieet to pass tke Dardanelles crash. Surgeons and wrecking cr your lcgal wife? s asked. i by ing to leave the serviee us he s the Su 1 Piver w28 foet 4 highway bridges three raflroad bridges ; . would be regarded diplomatically as a | Were sent to the scene from Meridian although she had no house. | plaicd out of his casto, and started Inches above low water mark and sl were carried away or damaged so that tok squadron is carefully guarded by G e q at the home of her father 1 | ¢ the military authorities, but there i breach of neutrality on the part of SAIL FROM NEW YORK ad-hos othar f" | ; lived With my | & newspaper. The lieutenant wrote rising. All ot the lowlands are undor traveli s interrupte In Derby ] B : Sty 2 "| Turkey, though Great Britain's opposi- 5 4 ner mOter andicle Xat V. 1Y | well, but the paper wis nol suceesstul - water and the towns on e west bask several factories closed down on a % @ strong impression here that Whei| ¢ion to' it being almed at the main- S mother,” answered the witness. and he became sales 0t for a man- 0f the river ave cut off. Tho Pennsyl count of the b water in the Hous: i the seven Japanese warships appeare| tenance of the status quo, is not so Eight ‘Hundreds Delegates to Conven In answer to questions from Chair-|ye, fyrer and then manager of a map vania and Delaw Lackawanna and tonfe. off the harhor Sunday and Monday th¢| considered. Russia’s diplomatic weight tion In Jerusalem. man Burrows Mr. Merrill sald he now | puiine enterprise, He lved besond Western railionds wre completely cut e Damage | d Russion souadron was outside, per|at Constantinople has neen somewhat| New York, March 9—Between 700| bus two wives and“ls cohablting With | iy means for (hirly years. Precédiug Off from commuuization with the city. Great Damage s Feared. haps down the coast co-operating witt| reduced by the occurrences in the Far | 8nd 800 delegates to the world’s fourth| both. i the tragedy the Beseke family had o Some of ihe anthracite mines in the Schenectady, N. Y., March 9 the Russian land force near the moutt| East, The porte will give nothing | Sunday school convention, to be held Prospective President Called. box at tho oivous At 10 alcloek din-| Vieinity arg tooded higher tempe let loc ; of the Tumen river. If the Russian.| Without a heavy price, at Jerusalem April 18, 19 and 20, sailed| Francis M, Lyman, an apostle of the | ner was ordered In from u caterer,| At Rurwood and Westmoor e eal - anantiiios of 3 the rivers i ] were 'outsid d the Japancse def S at 3 p. m. on the special chartered| Mormon church and the prospective | Bescke w spocially gay and tender dents wore compelled to” leave thelr ¢ flowing Into the Mohawk. The e Rances den BUssiANs el roUTED steamer Grosser Kurfurst of the North| guccessor of Mr. Smith as president of | and pressed his wife und his threo homos in hoats. lco is from twenty-=six to thirty(wo :’g;‘t"] a“ce::’l'l"e‘.l sl f“‘“ d’tbxlg set 3 German Lloyd line for a seventy-onel the chu the next witness, He | children to drink lots of champagne. The railroud tracks ‘at Katawissn, l;wlw« ul\h»l, 50 ]whelp' it l(:r:‘:\lw il Siproba bV mmINCnL a8 1 con it days’ cruise of the Mediterrancan.| wag pborn tour ears ago. ond | He died. holding his wifes land | below lere, have lieon/wished awny. dumngo ls feared. dhe state authorl: sidered certain that the Japanese if °'Va“'Yf F:r:ewS‘;l‘dr:o HB\II-Q Been De | mhoy represent nearly every state, ter-| paq heen an N,f,m,. sin mu.& tightly. opeck creek, a tributary of the tes are dynamiting the lce two and a that case will lle off Vladivostok t¢ cate cavyaL0ss: ritory and province on the North| “«“pre you a polygamist?’ Mr. Tayle 5 o Susquehanni, 15 very high and threo half miles above the city to protect revent the re q Chefoo, March 9.—There is excellent| American continent. A similar con 7 STt aae Teplladitr Y HOLDER county hefdees were washed against the rie canal and local factories. D eturn of the Rusnans asked, and the witness replied frankly [ RATIFIED BY SHARE s glving battle if they are caught in th¢| Eround for believing that a Russian| tingent sailing from England, made up| tyes. i the largo hridie on the Hazloton divi-| z S open sea. All the harbors along (he| 1nd force has been defeated with) of European Sunday school workers | “He said that he had had three|Grand Trunk Line to Pacific Goast slon of the Fennay lvania railvoad, moy-| ass the Danger Line. Const! Inwilan) thel Russfans Cuafen| ach 10N 08 o nOrth Besh of the | will moet the Amiericeninatty ATIne) wives wnd thaiof thomitn ate siil Assured. fug 11 several fnchor, |, Pitishurg, Mreh 9-For the third river at Anju. Mediterranean and in all between 1. | living, B Tho Isiness sections of Plymouth time in five weeks rivors seek refuge are frozen and the squad | * The Japanese military authorities at| 200 and 1400 delogates will attond the| - By his second wite, o whom he Wis | ral s s esaold and I3dwandiviile are under water and the danger line during the day and ron must eventually be forced to re 1 i YR BasQcon , L rallroad sharcholders, al ! ! S Toulnas e little Pingyang have suppressed all infor | convention. matiied. in 1894, He haa! Had Ave ohil-| qusiieih o oseiinad tha i 1 oot all of West Nantcoke is sub-, submerged the lowlands Very 1f ] turn to Viadivostok for coal. Althougt| mation as to the-Russian repulse, but| — With the party from America are a! dren, the last being born in 1900 |-ducligtho-day,-rotllled-Lho-dsioumont dnmage was done, however, as the 1 e e o hro s | T e T G RS (2 0 (oG || s o) R i (] el i e e e e e A L S (he water (s rlsing at resilents along the river fronts were I numbers and guns, consisting of a bat | Danpo say that more than 2,000 Rus | their respective fields of labor in the| the committee followed In rapid suc- :x‘l"'.‘*x‘,‘,x‘:_'dh‘”‘ of.a Grand - Trunk ne tog o et o o dnches an hour prepared. The rivers are uow slowly tleship, four armored cruisers and twc| 8ian cavalrymen were attacked from| Orfent. s cession and Mr. Lyman admitted in| “mhe decisfon was reached only after| 8nd noarly all the streets in the lower rectalng. g i A unarmored cruisers, the four armoret| the north side of the river by Japanese) o\ +y Gr NEGLECT OF DUTY.|response fo them that he knew thit|g prolonged discussion. Tho meetiig — | cruisers of the Russian -squadron aré infantry dthat d?zcende& from u\I(lo)ng- “msliving In polygamy he wae disobey | wag nacked and al one stage of the CONDEMNED MAN ESCAKES. | corruprionists he would have s u~‘r< Sl T ey AR by 8rtlICY | paymaster on the Wisconsin Reduced| !DE both the law of the land and the | proceedings the tone was unmistak- T | Jumitigeolit ctravary. windowgin: the I nayy, constituting as sister ships s Inen. The Russlans were reported In In Rank. rule of his church, He said in reply | aplv hostile to embarking fn so hugo, Sccures Possession. of Two Revolvers homogenous fighting unit, and experts| full fiight toward Kusong and Chonju il to one of these questions that he Was [ o1 ntorprise. General Man Ha and Overpowers Officials. sults—before the report was e here ure not certain that they coulg| This is confirmed also from Kasan | Manila, March 9.—Lioutenant John| not anly now living in polygamous ¢o-| who had come from Canada sttt St Tokeon Marel §—Mark ~were the suspension or dis i B aie tho meacart of the Japanese| Which is at the mouth of the rivei | Wise Morse, paymaster of the battle:| yabiiation but that he cxpected (0| o utiond the mecting, saved tie situa. | Dunn, convicied of the murder of a| charke of ‘more thin MHfly iy om ships. G from Anju. It is said that seventy ot| ghip Wisconsin, who recently ac | continue so to live. on and when the final voto was taken | wealthy farmer nam Fenton Lo | Ployes. the indictment of a dozen and i 4 naval service organ here argues| the Cossacks wers' killed and forty| eused of irregularities in his commls| “Roferring to the rule of which you | thoro were_only o fow opponeity. to| years ago i sontenvad, o be hunkdg the resignation of numerous others. | ]:':]vitlh"(}llis‘:nas‘iti;ge pl;:i?;ts ‘Lan;r;evs: enprisongrs. :flfc}l"{;'(l!rfia‘::iflxfiu';l:& 1‘::(]]5;‘;3"]""{‘)_“';;‘] gnve‘ sm;)k;‘n." e Hoar H;mi‘ gu W the Grand Trunk raflrond undertaking March 11, cicape d from Juil during e | o —— § : s : era erstood the rule or law of the church transcontinental rond | morning. Dunn obtained poss EGRO MURDERER LYNCHED. 1 ment on & Jarge scalo oo the sea o| RESIDENTS NOT ALARMED. the charge of misappropristing fund | 5 T of G o 30w n0t7" [ to build a transcontinental rond | motuing, Duin-obtahicd yosscast ERE i apan. i B e courlmartial, however, found him| = wr pyman replied that such was | Into jail fn a coal oil can and forced | 8pringfield (0.) Mob E tes Slayer TR B 1 adivostok ellent e 2] et yma » ECUTION. | Into jail in a i can an | 8pringfield (0.) Mol xecutes ye NO TRUTH IN REPORT \P“po o caiite S R L e b ON_ MOTION ‘OF PROSECUTION. |y juatn wiatch o submit o bring of Rolicsman, s 5 ? G 2 LIS “Then you living and Intend to | i Kk Un-| bound with wire he had vsed in mak- , - ; 7 | i Fance an 7"’ ? Uprisoner it and force i 3 AT b Second Time. the harbor Monday and the bombard: ey snd men nd” sald Mr. Lyman,| Cripple Creck, Colo, March 9 prisoner all night and forced him Lo} jonpe here during the evening. He 7 8 Bank Employe Suicides. 1 fully intend,” sa Mr. Lyman, call the jaller soon after daybreak h. lie ha STy 4 St. Petersburg, March 9.—There is| ment of Sunday the inhabitants of Montreal. March 9.—1. G. Applefon | “to be true to the law of my country, case’D” peainst the unfon miners | “\epoy e jafler appeared at the door | shot and killed Policcman ( harles Co Bo trulh in the report that the Jap | Vladivostok are in good spirits. Crowds| gpupi5veq in the Toronto P IMOR | to my God and to my obligations and charg® vith different train dorailings, | puun threatened 1o Kill the death | 2)"*‘ Sunday hen thgAder attempted i anose.fleet._bombardel ‘Viadivostok al.-promenade the stréets Ba"usUsL | Noloon's bank, shot himsell: to death|.covenants with my wives, and I the Vindicator mine disaster and other | uyeq ugiesy the fallor reloased him, | *0 00 = . ; i day long Monday. According to the| cluding many women. i tha corrldars outeldasth el never done a thing that my cous ses, have been molled on the M6 it (o Rave i watebmuamsatly ic mob gathered carly in the even i latest information the fleet simply| Many suspected Japanese have been “m 2 “;“ poraalea Lhe executivel. o ot Approve.” quest of District Attorney Trowbridie. o furetd | 108 and after an appeal by the sherift § showed {tsélt and sailed away withou! | arrested, but when examined they | OMices of the bank hore. £opleion s At T | apalnst Charles 11. M e murdarr then fortte| to let“the law. take its” course the firing a gun. were proven to be Chinamen or Ko- u‘“ e :‘"’.'[m‘“_“f"} ’:mf "f""l"” L clie "e 9"t | Rinney, who confessed to complicity oo e thn Jall2lsaidng: thion | crowd appeared to disperse, the Japanese in Northern waters ad Commanders of merchant vessels & 2 il s a 5 | into a pieading tone of voice, “to make pot peen dismissed and will come up 2 5 S 5 s the fugl | e returned and battered down thé i i After an interview with the officers of ; : scourlng the country for the fug ; vanced here is their probable desiré| and pilots who kave a thorough knowl- 2 2 120 cers of| g prief explanation 1f you will permit. | oriaparen 18, He testified that he was door of the fail. to_regain possession of the island ol| edge of the coast and of navigation the bank he killed himself. My case i different from ‘..]:xxl(:’r most | with Spectal Agent Hockman and at- | 1 l;lt\x’lnlwx:x (fl:;’-}n l|nm the ;‘-‘-vnl\'_ln{'xl other men. I was born in 1840 and L| forci 1o derail a Florence and Crip and his body riddled with bullots. The ] = Can hardly remember when my father e Grock passenger train which was |-W/-D RUN_OF BURNING TRAIN. b then procured a rope and, after ] A was not a polygamist. He was & jogqeq with union and nonunion men. | T 1 his corpse to a tolegraph A | % & Motor: & friend arnd an adviser of Prophet < | Fire Damages Machinery and spent an hour jeering aud shoot- - Novelties BEMIDJI. MINNESOTA. SHamrocks [ e e iin | on An_ \MRORTANT. Mission.| man 1a.Helpless | st eoie the importance and the truth of the | = Chicago, March 8.—A Northwestern There have been eleven murders. in 2 in Ladies’ \ for principle of polygamy. He accepted | parayie to Will Visit the Emperor of svated train crowded with passeus Clark county fn the past two years & the teaching and entered into the prac- Korea. s, mostly women, caught fire dur-| and in no case has there been a con k | tice, marrying six wives in the v . A L ; o ALGrRooT. viction fqr murder in the first degree ] Belts and an March | 1843 and 1845, s0 that my carliest rec- | Toklo, March 3—staraus (o 18 89| “rie motorman, pennod fn bls cage, — i Wai Set 17 o]!(:«"lu![l vmm;..](.s th .mvnr{’ (Ir;rl\v. «‘;F 'T)mh',rm'-l "!:u ;ml!hu‘“ or o iy | could not stop the tra ! . heat | Mother-and Datghter Drownads aist Sets amy. I remember all my father®y oSS0 e s aeritoon here by those | LOm the fire daUiRger the mia Y| St Louls, March 9-—Mrs. Joseph 1 g ;,""‘1'_“;‘, J’.“,"H‘”:"(I.'.T.r..fif","‘xi: outside of high ofcial circles. - [[Eorscightssutations e s oy | Withington, wife of a Missdhri Pacific vot-in-a lamily saus ituted until 08 BCE O rquis will carry an auto- | [ull speed with liames bursting froi) conductor, ‘and her eldest daughter, » 3 14 1 grew up_and_pecame. ho-head oL g graph letter from the mikado to the | ©V6Y window;of 000 oak | Nannie, were drowned in attempting ] . Men S Shirts. family ‘of my own, Conscquently I ETabh '6tET 00 For Syt art on | |, Women faluted and men dashe to ford Meremac river in a buggy west ] have known nothing else and I h T v trances, but the | g8y i Our spring line of Men's Fine Shirts are felt tmat it yrrect. 1 liave al b-instzand whtbe athent dhout - that to Jump off e SUStT oIS Aohergdaiehisrisayad This week we are showing our comp]ete 5P = 8 1l = - E kb wa art that it th-and ref Vosoren | h'“ seIf by holding to an overhanging g : Socton: ys felt in ) 2\ h 1 ‘ tree for two hours until rescued. The 5 3 o S e T : now ready tor mspection was correct. 1 married t 37, at Belmond avenue § 3 line of Ladies’ and Children’s Fine Shoes. We have the Monarch and the Gold and again in 1869 and onc o in 1884, council: General Us Fina buggy was overturned in midstream. The size of our stock allows us to show Silver Brands, the best known brands in 4‘;l;":".“"”]"‘l”;:;‘\‘:"‘lfr,)"" e ‘I'",”;"J 0 o will- heeatpany~tie-TIFqUIE on —*Hhe-mo O il BRIEF BITS OF NEWS. fine shoes in a wide range of prices. We America. They will cost you the same P find myself in oppositior, 10 the luw of his trip. = none seriously. oT6 oAy Cosatatly = cotved can sell you fine shoes at very small prices. | price in Bemidji as in New York. e oam - nant- L syt BERLIN. BANKER SUICIDES. | INVESTIGATORS —REPORT. | Gexural flexes-of-Colombia-fn-private But the shoe we like to talk about is the —— — "i°m','.’,‘m'.\’w XE;.('I f;"i’n e '.?’77’. St tnstitution Forced fo Close by Defalea | Council Committee Finds Only “Spo 1 v(hfi(;r'!ng o m.; r;‘m;;smg murder 1 i > ate em as long 5 | dic" hicag at Rising Sun, Ind., has been con: fine shoe that will wear and look well until Spring Hats. arst from i s 1 L ioms ofCathler. radic” Grat in Chicago. | chie A Helus S, L1, B boen s . . 5 ' ) me derlin, March 9.—Hugo Brendel, 8, Chicq e Vi worn out. That is the kind you will take it i Qo = fan ator Hoar asked: “Do you, an | pariper nihe i Brenac The framework for the Russian na- ¥ no‘ . L ¥ s The novelties in Spring Hats for Men i R e Zn.“ in 1 ‘1”“}1:- 7\,’,”‘5""",: 5 I yged Hon T e e comfort in and make you a lasting cus- oys-can now: be-seen at our store . Smith §n the presidency | eeyory) - fallure, attributed to the] grag committes fair was torn down Tuesday on receipt 6 £ 4 and Hys can now b en at our store. ¥ ielny | embczzlemet and ulation of the| & e gl e S St Priceat omer for our store. s Hats fr & cive divine ek T Ay 5 Manday city « lermar of a cablegram from St. Petersburg. ats from $1 to $5. cash wils Annc Monday, com ! 1 : o & : s that you | mitied suicide be by mann, chalrman of i The Servian Macedonian committee 5 3 4 A 3 mitted suicide the y by Bnb) Shoes from 50 cents to $1.75 a Hats from 50 cents to §1.50. are now living and expect to continue | ghraci S pi e S tadow ol 1 has decided to break off all relations pair. Bl S =3 SEE et - to live in ybedience 1 the banl with the committee in Macedonia and ildren’s Shoes from 75 cents to $2 a the law of Sinre the Bulgarfa in connection with the Mace Children’s Sh 0! S Men’s Suits. ¢ of God?" L pan b donian revolutionary movement. pair. = = ~ o s replied with a simple 4 The trustees of the will of the lata i ;@ 19 9 ¢ ther ci 5 Misses’ Shees from §1.25 to $2.50 a pair. We show much the largest assortment of S Jn jother ol Cecil Rhodes announce for the infor > =B~ Tadios' Shoes from- $1.35 to” 85 a’ par” [~ Mén's and Boys Suifs in town. All new. UP ROSEBUD BILL. rakes recomns The Talted Bt o Coalh (s Men's Shoes from $1.50 to 86 a pair. fresh goods. All the latest things in Suits §! 5 . or the reform of public evils, qualifying examination for Rhodes 8 o 2 B 3 50 2 nai 1 Rai i) otithDakotamestos MakeIE; More: 0 o e ilure and whe The investization was started Whed genolarships will be held -simultane Youth's Shoes from $1.25 to $2.50 a pair. and Raincoats. : B P‘reszd;ntshLl:mgh souts| S0 e e ihe Mondsy, T ;\,?]_\(,r ,l,,m.,u{ o an fmtersiow 1050 Gugly'fa sach state or province bogin ashington, March 9 e Sou detain in custo all, said that if he were to weed OUt ping April 13. P> | Dakota delegation has decided 1o make == \J A s ;

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