Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, November 18, 1904, Page 1

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[ ] i MINNESOTA HISTORICAL SOCIETY. A Pioneer WANT AD :: Will Do It, idji VOLUME 2. NUMBER 181. WEEESTETTECESTaeeEEs = %Thursda Friday and Saturday Sale Thursday morning will be the beginning of our Great Cleaning-Up Sale on broken lines of Fall Everthing offered will be Fresh Fall Merchandise, but will be the last of our pur- chase as we want to clean up all broken lines to make room for our Holiday Display. : Goods. Y, n n n " " n n n n L m n n n n n n n n stamped $4.00; sale price, 1 lot Men’s Douglas Shoes; 1 lot Men’s Fine Undewear 1 worth up to $6 a suit; sale » a price 25 per cent discount. n 10 dozen Tadies’ Pants (vests have all ; Outing Flannel.—All short ends in 12¢ :a been sold); colors: white, blue and pink; | sale price, each 1 lot Children’s Wool Underwear; (most- | ly pants and drawers); sale price 10°}, dis 1 lot Children’s $2.00 vici kid, Goodyear | welt Shoes; sale price, per pair ‘ 1 lot Misses’ light box calf Shoes; Good- year welt; sale price, per pair 1 lot Infants” Shoes worth up to 75 sale price, per pair 45¢ i | $1.75 $2.00 50¢ | and 15¢ Outings; sale price, per yard Dress Ginghams.—12¢ Dress Ginghams, all new fall patterns; we bought too many pieces; sale price, per yard | sale price, per hox cts; | We show a complete line of Rubbers and ' Lumbermen’s Clothing. N\ 10¢ 6¢ Rughy Foot Balls, each 85¢ to $1.00 g\ [ Face Powder.—1 lot 50c Face Powder; n 25¢ Tickets Shoe Store Tickets Important Announcement Ladies who up to the present time have not found just whai they want in the late styles of Fine Footwear will be more than repaid if they will call and see our distinctive and exclusive models in Gun Metal and Patent Leather Walk- ing Boots. Nifty, Snappy, New Shapes. Another invoice just received of that popular O. K. last. Bring your repairing here; we have engaged an artist in this line. We have now in connection with the store a first class re- pair shop and are prepared to do your work p you conscientiou: giv vork a speciall mptly and s service and expert work. Custom Tickets Swedback Block 403 Beltrami Ave Straw’s Shoe Store. | piano Phone 8. Tickets Third Victim of Wreck. Grand Rapids, Mich., Nov. 18.—J. L. Smith of Grand Rapids, who was in- jured in the Pere Marquette wreck near Elmdale, died at the hospital here from his burns. He is the third victim of the wreck. Ralph Savoy of Grand Rapids is in a critical con- dition and not expected to live. He is badly scalded and has a brolken leg. Killed by Shot From Ambush. Birmingham, Ala, Nov. 18—W. S. Lang. superintendent of the coal mines of the Tennessee Coal, Iron and Rail- road company at Blocton, who was shot from ambush last Saturday night, is dead. Lang was a native.of Penn- sylvania, but came to Alabama some months ago frem Virgiria. Altoona, Pa., June 20, 1903. 1 was afflicted with Tetter in bad shape. ) It would ap; in blotches as large as m; hand, a yellowish color, and scale off. You can imagine how offensive it was. For twelve years I was afflicted with this trouble. At night it wasa case of scratch and many times no rest at all. Seeing the good the medicine was doing a friend who was taking it for Fczema, I com- menced it, and as a result the eruption be- gan to dry up and disappear, and to-day I am practically a well man. Only two tiny spots are left on the elbow and shin, where once the whole body was affected. rmvwwwvvvwvvw DR. F. E. BRINKMAN, CHIROPRACTIONER. | E OFFICE HOVURS: 10 a. m. to Noon, and 1 to 5:30 p. m. Office--SWEDBACK BUILDING. Are Chiropractic Adjustments the same as Osteopath Treatments? No. The Chiropractic and the Osteopath both aim to put in place e 2l 2 e 2 e 2 28 B a0 20 2 2B 38 s e O B B o B B that which is out of place, to right that which is wrong; but the Path- logy Diagnosis, Prognosis and Movements are entirely different. One of my patients, Mr. W. A. Casler, has taken both Chiropractic and Osteopoth treatments. § The Chiropractic i- ten times more direct in the adjustments and the results getting health ten times more thor- ough in one tenth of the time than an Osteopath would. 359 I have every confidence in the medicine, }tmd feel sure that in a short time these w0 remaining spots will disappear. S.8.8. is certginl}g a great blood i’f“-. fier, and has done me a world of good. I am grateful for ‘what it has accom- plished, and trust that what I have said will lead others who are similarly afflict- ed to take the remedy and obtain the same good results that I have, 125 East Fifth Ave. JoHN F. LEAR. ‘While washes, soaps, salves and powders relieve temporarily, they do not reach the real cause of the disease. The blood must be purified before the cure is permanent. S.8.S. contains no potash, arsenic or min- eral of any description, but is guaranteed purely vegetable, Send for our book on the skin and its diseases, which is mailed free, Our physicians will cheerfully advise without ‘charge any-who write us about theircase. The Swift Specifio Company, Atianta, Ga. N | to the Russians, except the steel screw . | water. GAS TANKS - | LET GO ’l‘wenty"l‘wo Gas Tanks Explodé in Chicago at Gas Station. Eight Dead Have Already Been Removed From The Ruins. Chicago, Nov. 18—Twenty-two tanks at the big gas charging GENERAL PUBLIC BARRED. Work of Selecting a Jury to Try Nan Patteraon Continues. New York, Nov. 18.—With' four of the twelve men who are to decide her fate already selected the trial of Nan Patterson, the former show girl charg- ed with the murder of Caesar Young, the wealthy horseman, was continued in the criminal branch of the supreme court during the day. The greatest care has been used in the examina- tlon of talesmen and the exhaustive questioning and almo@} indiscriminate challenging for even the slightest cause indicated that not only might another full court day or even more be consumed in filling the jury box, but that the panel of 100 talesmen might be exhausted before the task was finished. Thus far the general public has been shut out entirely from the proceedings, only those having a direct connection with the case being allowed to enter the courtroom. station at the cofoner of Seventy- third street and Chicago avenue exploded this morning, scatter- ing scraps and chumks of iron blocks around. At two o’clock this afternoon eight bodies of cmployees had been removed from the ruins while there are still ten of the employees missing and unac- counted for. = Many structures-in that vici- nity are so severely shattered that they are mot fit for oc- cupancy. BLOW UP ARSENAL Japs Destroy Another Arsenal And Magazine at Port Arthur. Tokio, Nov. 18—A telegram from Moji reports the destruc- tion of another arsenal and maga- zine av Port Arthur. Chefoo, Nov. 18.—Fighting at Port Arthur has taken place nightly since the Japanese began their general as- sault on Oct. 26, according to Captain Ronberg, a pilot, who was a passenger on the Russian torpedo boat destroyer Rastoropny. - The Japanese trenches. the captain says, are close to the forts on Rihlung and Keekwan mountains and to other forts on the northeastern group. The sharpshooters of both sides, oc- cupying the pits, conversed with each other frequently and make truces in. order to borrow cigarettes or to relieve their cramped limbs. The Japanese are displaying great energy in the construction of trenches and the mounting of guns. All the railroad steamers belonging transport Amur, have been sunk by Japanese shells. The hospital ship Angara, formerly & transport, has been sunk in shallow The patients are still on board the ship and are comfortable. One day last week a hospital ship moved too near the battleship in the harbor, whereupon the Japanese drop- ped small shells around her with the obvious purpose of warning her away. The ship took the hint and when she was outside the zone of danger larse shells began falling near the battle- ships. REPORTS JAP REPULSE. 8evare Fighting Cccurred at Port Are thur Oct. 26. . St. Petersburg, Nov. 18.—General Stoessel, 1n his wispatcnes 1o kLmperor Nichoias, 1eports ue repulse oL a Jap- anese aulack UCL. 6 On Lue no.th front or Port Arthur, ‘I'he Kussian losses were 480 kuled or wounued. All the attacks Nov, 3, the day the anniversary or the emperor’s accession to the throne was celebiated, were repulsed. Gencral Stoessel was siightly wound- cd in the head auring one of the latest assaults on Port Aitour. The text of General Stoessel’s dispatch of Oct. 28 follows: A “Wwe have the honor to report to your majesty taat the Japanese bom- barded very vigorously, Oct. 25, our forts and entrenchments north and northeast. ‘The followwing day they algo attacked one of the forts on the north siide, but our heavy artillery and shrapnel fire dispersed their reserves and the assault was repulsed. Our losses were 1 officer and about 71 men killed and 400 wounded. “Engineer Captain Sakharoff, for- merly governor of Port Dalny, died Oct. 27 of typhus fever. “It is difficult to single out indi- viduals for special mention among the heroic defenders.” PLEASES THE JAPANESE. Sinking of the Rastoropny Relieves Embarrassing Position. Chefoo, Nov. 18.—The three Japa- nese torpedo boat destroyers which entered the harbor during the morn- ing to ascertam if the Russian torpe- do boat aestroyer Rastoropny was here disappeared for a time, but reappeared in toe atternoon. The Japanese consul sent a cutter out to meet them and informed the nearest destroyer, the Kasumi, that the Rastoropny had been sunk. The consul says this was the first the ships knew of the sinking of the Rastoropny. The Kasumi trans- mitted the information by wireless telegraphy to the Japanese flagship,[ whereupon the destroyers disappeared in the direction of Port Arthur. The sinking of the Rastoropny by the Russians relieved the Japanese of an embarrassing position. A repeti- tion of the torpedo boat destroyer Ryeshitelni incident would have arous- ed indignation, while a failure to de- CUT DOWN IN YARDS. Two Minneapolis Switchmen Killed by Trains, Minneapolis, Nov. 1. -John Powell, foreman of the Wisconsin Central switching crew, was killed by a freight train in the Boom island yards and Jacob Barron, who assisted the morgue keeper to gather up his body, met a similar fate five hours later beneath the wheels of a Minneapolis and S¢. Louis train. Powell caught his foot in a switch block and the freight train backed down upon him' before Barron, who was standing nearby, could make the engineer understand the danger. Bar- ron assisted the morgue keeper to gather up the body. About 7 o'clock Barron was return- ing to his home. As he was crossing the tracks near Third avenue north and First street he was run down by a backing train and instantly killed. AUTO GOES OVER EMBANKMENT. One Man Killed and Two Persons Se- riously Injured. Los Angeles, Cal, Nov. 18.—In an automobile accident in the suburbs of the city Humphrey Praed, assistant general manager of the San Jacinto Land company of Riverside, Cal, was instantly killed and Miss Mina Ru- dolph, leading lady of the “San Toy” Opera company, and C. S. Fry, chaf- feur, seriously hurt. Praed was run- ning ‘the machine when it went over an embankkment, pinning the occu- pants beneath. Miss Rudolph is suffering from con- cussion of the brain and possibly in- ternal injuries. She will recover. Fry sustained only minor injuries. Praed’s mother, Mrs. Campbell Praed, is a well known literary woman. The fam- ily is a wesithy one, the members of which reside in England. AFTER TERRIBLE EXPERIENCE. Shipwrecked Sailors Rescued From Sinking Vessel, New York, Nov. 18.—Eight ship- wrecked sailors, the captain and c of the three-masted schooner boro, who were rescued from t! storm-battered, water-logged, craft er a terrible experience in the hu cane which swept the Atlantic sea- board early In the week, were brought ‘here during the day on the British steamer Atholl, which arrived from Yokohama and other Far Eastern ports. The rescue was made in the dangerous seas off Cape Henry while the waves were breaking over the helpless craft fore and aft. CAPTURE FIVE TOWNS. Chinese Rebels Defeat the Imperial Troops. Shanghai, Nov. 18.—The imperial troops have been defeated and five towns taken by Chinese rebels in Kwangsi province. The merchants and bankers fled from the towns. Chou ['u, former governor of the province of Shantung, who was recent- ly appointed viceroy at Ninking, has been ordered to proceed immediately to his post and take measures to check the rebels in the Yangtse valley. DIES IN SAVING BROTHER. Girl of Thirteen Hit by Train, but Boy Escapes. Carroll, Ja.,, Nov. 18.—Katie Stum- meyer of this place is dead as the re sult of a heroic and successful attempt to save her little brother from being run down by a train. The little boy was not hurt, but the girl, who was thirteen years old, failed to get out of harm’s way and was instantly killed. MOB BLOCKS TRAFFIC RIOTERS ATTACK NONUNION FUR- NITURE MOVERS IN BUSIEST SECTION OF CHICAGO. POLICE RESERVES ARE CALLED OUT OFFICERS AT SCENE OF TROUBLE UNABLE TO MAKE HEADWAY AGAINST THE CROWD. ~ Chicago, Nov. 18.—A mob of sympa- thizers and striking furniture movers attacked several wagons of the John- ston Chair company in the heart of the business district during the day and for a time trafic was blocked by a mass of struggling rioters. The driv- ers of the wagons were menaced by the mob. The few policemen on hand were helpless to make headway against the crowd, which only gave way when reinforcements of police arrived. Similar trouble occurred when two wagons loaded with chairs drove up to the Sherman street entrance to the Board of Trade building. A crowd of 1,000 persons followed the wagons, which were under police guard, and many threats were made at the nonunion drivers. Doors on the Jackson boulevard side of the Board of Trade building Were locked and other doors guarded that no trouble might occur in the building. Operators, clerks and mes- sengers gathered upon window ledges of the Board of Trade and surrounding buildings, threw corn upon the crowd and increased the confusion by yell- ing continuously. The corn throwers were finally dislodged by the police. Ropes which held dozens of chairs on the wagons were cut. Foes of the nonunion drivers hurled the chairs at the wagon men. Two patrolmen re- ceived injuries from chairs. A run- ning fight ensued, the crowd pursuing the wagon all the way back to the factory. AFTER DESPERATE BATTLE. One of the “Cody Bandits” Captured in Wyoming. Thermopolis, Wyo., Nov. 18.—After & desperate battle between the two bandits, who have been given the title “Cody Bandits,” as a result or hav- ing murdered Cashier Middaugh of the Cody National bank and three men Who recognized them as the much sought outlaws, the larger of the pair was captured in the Big Stone valley, north of here, aily Pioneer BEMIDJI, MINNESOTA, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1904. The Pioneer Prints MORENEWS than any other news- er between Duluth Crookston, St- Paul and the North Pole. an TEN CENTS PER WEEK FOUR MEN ASPHYXIATED. Meet Death in Meter Room of Gas Company. New York, Nov. 18.—Four men em- ployed in the plant of the Dover, Rock- away and Port Oram Gas company at East Dover, N. J.,, were asphyxiated . in the meter room of the company. The accident was caused by a broken valve in the drip pipe under the floor of the meter room. Murder and Robbery Suspected. Niles, Mich.,, Noy. 18.—The charred body of John Perkins, an aged wond chopper, has been found in the ruins of his shanty, which stood in a strip of woods seven miles south of here. He was generally sufiosed to have considerable money hldden in his shanty and the police think he was killed and rohbed and that the mur- derer then set fire to the shanty. lllinois Forest Fire. Peoria, Ill, Nov. 18.—A forest fire, which has already covered two miles of country in the bottom lands about two miles north of this city, has been raging all day. Hundreds of acres of timber land have been destroyed and several large farms are threatened. The farmers have united to fight the flames, STUDENTS ON A MAN HUNT. Sequel of a Hazing Scrape at the Wis- censin University. Madison, Wis., Nov. 18.—For several hours a crowd of 1,000 students of the University of Wisconsin engaged in an organized man hunt, the object of their wrath being Walter R. Mason, a stu- dent of Brookline, Mass., who shot A. G. Grunert of Chicago, another stu- dent, in a hazing escapade Saturday night. Mason cheered for the Minne- sota footbail team. e ‘The mob was gathered on the univer- sity campus by a dozen leaders, wha fired guns and received the hundreds of students who came running up by saying: “We're going to clean out Mason for shooting Earl Grunert. We mean business apd want only fellows with no yellow streak in them to come along and help.” The mob went to the home of Aug- ust Scheibel, where Mason boarded, and after breaking into the house searched it from attic to cellar. He could not be found. PROMOTOR PLEADS GUILTY. At 8econd Trial Acknowledges Fraudu- lent Use of Mails. Des Moines, Nov. 18.—Letson Bal- liett,” who gained wide notoriety a couple of years ago as a promoter of the White Swan Mining company of Oregon, suddenly terminated his sec- ond trial in the district court for fraudulently using the mails, by plead- ing guilty. The first trial resulted in a conviction after a hard fight, but the second trial was ordered by the higher courts. 322 Nicollet Ave., Minneapolis; 6th and Robert Sts., St. Paul. W. L. Hatnaway, Dist Pas'r Agent, Minneapolis. EVERYTHING from EVERY- WHERE—paintiegs, statues, machinery of all kinds and for all sorts of purposes; strange people from the four corners of the EVERYTHING from EVERY- WHERE. Youcan’tafford to missiit. Only @ Night's Ride from the Twin Cities via the Rock Island System. duced rates in effect daily Tickets at offices of connecting lines globe. Re- orat Rock Island System = stroy or cut the Rastoropny out would have appeared like admitting previous. ‘wrong doing, (g Not like the other fellow's. Don’t go by the usual standard of judging ready-to-wear clothing when you consider Zhe Aaufnan THERE is no more dreary mechanical sameness in Kaufman garments than there is in the work of the best merchant tailors. Each Kaufman overcoat or suit is the individual hand- finished product of an artist tailor. Your Own Distinctive Style It is made to fit and give good service, at the same time imparting to the wearer that snappy style and distinctive touch that marks the well-dressed man. Keufman garments are money-back-guaranteed. . PALACGE ‘Clothing St 2 S

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