Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, March 4, 1905, Page 2

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£ egal Blank To meet the demand, and for the convenience of our customers, THE PIONEER is now prepared to fill orders forlegal blanks on short notice We carry in stock a good assort- ment of blanks for justice court, district court, conveyancing and miscellaneous. SN R NN O R O M O O o D NN TN N iThe Pioneer: S BEAUTIFUL BEMIDJI 'S BUY RESIDENCE LOTS while they are cheap AND BUY BUSINESS LOTS while they are reasonable Prices Will NEVER. Again Be So Low Bemidji Townsite & Improvement Co. H. A. SIMONS, Agent. Hotel Markham Bldg. A e ea e e o o HENRY BUENTHER Naturalist and Taxidermist 208 Second St. Postoffice Box No. 686 BEMIDJI, MINN. BIRDS, WHOLE ANIMALS, FISH, FUR RUGS AND ROBES and GAME HEADS mounted to order and for sale. 1 carry at all times a good assortment of INDIAN RELICS and CURIOS, FUR GARMENTS made to order, repalred and remodeled FURS in season bought. guarantee my work mothproof and the most lifelike of any in the state MY WORK IS EQUALED BY FEW, FXCELLED BY N A Deposit Required on All Work YOUR TRADE SOLICITED -l e e i i i o B A A B . o B B B 2B P B o B j..Our Watch Display..!} Shows a variety of styles iu all sizes; open face and hunt- ing cases; plain, bassine and engraved; at prices 0, suit - each and every purchaser. g g & H 7 a——————¢ Silverware E In Sterling and Plated from the best well known factories; the latest designs and patterns. Engraving on any articles purchased of us in latest artistic designs free of charge. Repairing a specialty. | . £ & George T. Baker @ Co. L E L Located in City Drug Store. Wmmm DR. F. E. BRINKMAN, CHIROPRACTIONER. OFFICE HOURS: 10 a. m. to Noon, and 1to 5:30 p. m. Office over Mrs. Thompson’s boardinghouse Minnesota Ave. Are Chiropractic Adjustments the same a.s Osteopath Treatments? No. The Chiropractic and the Osteopath both aim to put in place that which is out of place, to right that which is wrong; but the Path- ology Diagnosis, Prognosis and Movements are entirely different, One of my patients, Mr. W. A. Casler, has taken both Chiropractic and Osteopoth treatments. The Chiropractic is 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. ol 2 2 P o >l 0 S B _ By R. W, HITCHCOCK. atered In the postoffice at’ Bemtdl, Minn.; 28 sacond rlass matter. 3 Otficial Paper Village of Bemidji SUBSCRIPTION ' $5 PER YEAR Time to be Stirring. THERE are a number of mat- ters of great intertest to Be- midji which the Business Men’s club should take up at once. The time is ripe when the club can once more render valuable ser vices to the city. The directors should meet at once, : Do Not Know-What to Do. THE bills that they have intro- duced for the amendment of the primary election law show plain- ly that Minnesota solons do not know what to do with the law. The joint committee on elections after rejecting all bills offered have revolved a bill of their own, to which, however, thereis fierce opposition within the committee itself. This bill provides that the primary election law shall extend to state officials but re tains the state convention as well on the ground that the conven tion will help to preserve party alignment. It must be apparent to everyone, however, who has carefully considered the work ings of the primary law that the retention of the law involves the certain doom of all political par- ties. The disintegration is al ready very serious and disolution rapidly approaches. The truth is that the members of the legislatyre believe that there is a popular demand for the primary election law and they want to keep it on the-statute bogks, but is so faulty that it must be amended radically to be at all satisfactory. How to amend it the wisest do not know. No wonder the members of the leg- islature are puzzled. E_BITS NORTH| COUNTRY ¢ FROM THE me.&;& And the Soo? = Ada will vote on license. —0— Some seeding near Fargo. —0— Socialism rampant at Brain- erd. & —0— The lion is heing groomed for exit. —0— Wouldn’t this weather make you warm? —0— It is not safe to cultivate other people’s corns. —— The percentage column’s busy season is at hand. —— 2 - The Ada basket ball team has swatted Crookston something fierce. —— & The Brainerd Dispatch thinks that the ground hogis missing something. —0— e Little Falls contemplates along legged tower where 1000 fee‘ of hose can be dried: > 7 . WSS "Maybe this weather is due to that oyer heated county seat fight in Red Lake county. —o— A Fertile miller has lost a val- uable diamond ring in & big batch Subscribe for the Daily Pioneer| of flour he was preparing for shipment. Is he unfortunate or only unusually bright?. g fEE Alvah Eastman says that Min- nesota has a bed rock republican majority of 100,000. Since the election of a domocratic governor Brother Eastman is making a great success as an optimist. —— When the Aitkin county com- missioner get through reading all the north country press has to say of them anent their aripoint- inga chaplin to open the ‘meet- ings they will be ready to, elect an official cussery ) PIONEER PUBLISHING CO. alifornia ~ Every day, March 1 to May 15, 1905, inclusive, from St. Paul and Minneapolis to San Francisco, Los Angeles, San Diego and many-othér points on the Pacific coast, via the : - CHICAGO, MILWAUKEE & ST. PAUL ~ RAILWAY and its connections. Tickets good in tourist sleepers. Through tourist sleeper for Los An- geles via the SUNSHINE ROUTE (C. M. & St. P. R’y and Santa Fe System) leaves St. Paul at 8:30 a. m. every Tuesday. Rate for double berth $6.75. These cars are fully equipped, clean and comfortable. For folders and particulars, address TICKETS, 365 Robert Street. W. B. DIXON, N. W.P. A.ST. PAUL. REPORTED T0 HOUSE FAMOUS REVISED CODE MAKES ITS APPEARANCE BEFORE * THE LEGI_SLATURE.\.« LOWER HOUSE ADOPTS A LARGE MASS OF AMENDMENTS TO THE ORIGINAL BILL. 8t. Paul, March 3.—House file No. 34, famous in legislative history as the revised code, was formally reporied to the house Thursday. Frms Accompanying the bulky instru- ment of 1,085 pages, was a mass of smendments, nearly 1,500 in. all, and the lot, on motion of W. B. Anderson, the chairman of the judiciary commit- tee, was adopted. It was a strange procedure, the adoption of amendments without the knowledge of their contents by any except the judiciary committee, but this, it was explained, was the only way out of the difficulty. The vote on their adoption was ‘weak, and the absence of voices was explained by one member, who said that, while he did not want to be an obstructionist, his conscience would ' not permit him to vote aye, so he re- mained silent. On Mr. Anderson’s motion next Mon- day at 11 o’clock was selected as the time when the bill shall become a spe- cial order of business, to be continued as such until disposed of. Thirteen bills were given passage in the house, among the number was Elmer Adams’ full dimension lumber act, which he had the satisfaction of seeing prevail by a vote of 81 to 28. Hennepin members voted against the bill to a man, and they had the sup- port of the Ramsey delegation. Bills on general orders, numbering & score or more, were considered, and when adjournment * was taken, the house had completed one of the busiest half days of the session. Railroad Bill Amended. In the passage of the bill requiring railroad companies to report all wrecks, with details, to the railroad and warehouse commission, an amend- ment was added which removes public inspection of the records of such com- panies. It was explained that this would- curtail the activity of certain damage suit attorneys. Several negatives were heard in the vote taken on the bill providing Du- luth with a naval reserve, but it passed with a confortable margin to its credit. Railroads will be compelled to haul grain and all other cereals at a figure not to exceed 1 cent per mile. if a bill offered by A. K. Ware becomes a law. County school superintendents are made appointive instead of elective un- der the terms of a bill, which H. O. Bjorge of Becker county asks be made a law. The bill is the one desired by leading educators of the state. J. A. Gates of Goodhue would in- creage the state tax imposed on fire in- surance companies from 2 to 4 per cent. Among the bills passed are: H. F. No. 202—Forbidding any com- pany from producing or playving for profit any unpublished or undedicated dramatic or musical composition. Hickey. H. F. No. 278—Legalize the fore- closure of mortgages by advertisement. Flower. b H. F. No. 320—Pertaining to drain- age. Klein. N VOTING MACHINE MEASURE. One Introduced in the Senate Creates Examining Commission. A voting machine bill was introduced by Senator Gjertson Thugsday. It is a measure of great length;and is new in this, that it creates a commission known as “The Minnesota Voting Ma- chine Commission,” whose function is to examine the merits of voting ma- chines. The commission is to be com- posed of three members, of which-the attorney general is chairman. The other—+two are to named by the gov- ernor, one Republican and one Demo- crat. Persons interested in machines must apply to the commission to have |them examined, the fee to be $200 in each case. E Under the bill, machines must pos- sees certain requirements, and it is claimed that a machine known as the ‘Sjoblom Is the one covered by the pro- visions of the bill. - ‘The common council may, by resolu- | tion, provide for the use of any ma- L d by the commission ot on submitted a I SR RNy Distributors.. Western b 2 _ i Electric Medicine Company ; wants agentsto advertise and sell (3] ) 3 ONONKWA, cures Stomach and Kidney Discases. 5 cures all Skin Dise ELECTRIC Corn and Bunion Cure. R R SR S X R R R R Dr. A. Jones, - Prop. 407 America Ave., Bemidji. = W. E. 0., Catarrh and Rh¢umatism Eradicator. JONES® MEDICATED SOAP, b 5 5| Bl New Wood Shop T. M. HARVEY, Prop. Wagon Work and General Repairing Located in Pingle’s Blacksmith shop, two blocks west of city hall. Dr.J. Warninger Veterinary Surgeon Office Phone 178, Residence 114 Irvine Avsnue Phone 248. Located at Bagley Livery Barn ¢ >IONEER DO YOU WANT To Rent a2 Room HELP WANTED. WANTED- Cook at City hotel. Get a Girl WANTED—To fill your wants Sell a Farm Nothing does it like a Pioneer Buy a Horse want ad. Hire a Man WANTED—Position as clerk or Find the Lost bookkeeper, good reference furnished. Box 73 Crookston. WANTED — Ten men in each state to travel, tack signs and distribute samples and circu- lars of our goods. Salary $75 per month. §3 per day for ex- venses. Kuhlman Co., Dept. Atlas Building, Chicago, YOU CAN DO IT HERE IF ANYWHERE And for 15 cents MISCELLANEOUS. Lot USSR FOUR NEW TOWNS on the Thief River Falls extension. [irst class openings for all kinds of business and investments. Ad- dress A. D. Stephens, Crooks® ton, Minn. PUBLIC LIBRARY — Oren Tuesdays, Thursdays and Sat- urdays, 2to 6 p. m. Thurs®} WANTED—For U. S. army able- day 7 t08:30 p. m. also. Ll'J bodied, unmarried men be- brary in basement of court| tween ages of 21 and 35, citi- House. Mrs. E. R. Ryan, li-| gzens of United States, of brarian. good character and temperate habits, who can speak, read and write English. For in- formation apply to Recruiting Officer, Miles block, Bemidji. Minnesota. . WANTED—Information as to the whereabouts of Benjamin Ross,who left Brampton, On- tario about fifteen years ago. His father is dead and a for- tuneawaits him. Address Wm. Ross, Brampton, Ontario. WE DESIRE A LADY familiar with high-class goods to intro- duceand sell the Great Belto -Corset. Exclusive control giv- en toright party. Send stamp for booklet and terms toagents, and establish a business of your own. The Belto Com- pany, Jackson, Mich. FOR SALE. FOR SALE—High grade Ply- mouth Rock roosters. J. H. Thomas, Crookston, R. F, D. No. 1. LOST AND FOUND. LOST—On Minnesota avenue be- tween Seventh and Third streets. a gold photograph pin FOR RENT. FOR RENT—Five room cottage, set with a moonstone. Kinder| 905 Minnesota Ave. Apply at * return to this office for reward. ! Schroeder’s store. e ————————————————————————————————————————————— PROFESSIONAL {|Minnesota § lnternational Sl KR D 8 RAILWAY COMPANY In Connection with the LAWYERS. ..Northern Pacific.. D. H. FISK RAILWAY COMPANY. Attorney and Counsellor at Law | Provides the best train pussenger Office opposite Hotel Markham. servicebetween Northome, Hovey Junc- tlon, Blackduck, Bemidji, Walker P. J. Russell Attorney at Law and intermediate points and Minne- apolis, St. Paul, Fargo and Duluth and all points east, west and South. BEOIDNL, - = iie s losni sl SOMNN:, dyrongh ri‘maches between Northome : and the Twin Cities. No change Bailey & McDonald |of care. Ample iy ot i LAWYERS for dinner. Bemidjl, Minn. Office: Swedback Block g:ll ex, STATIONS nday PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS. g-;m :4 m. Lv. It provides for a wide-open tax amendment, and gives the legislature full power to enact taxation laws. Senator Alley's bill prescribing the penalty for murder in the first and second dgrees was passed with a few dissenting votes. The bill gives juries the privilege not only to bring in a verdict of conviction for the crime of murder, but to fix the punishment at either death or life imprisonment, In the event that the jury fails to fix the punishment the court can then do so. The senate killed Senator Benson’s bill relating to the employment of teachers in independent school dis- tricts. This bill gave the right to em- ploy teachers for more than one year. The grand jury system was under discussion in the senate. Senator Lay- hourn’s bill, relating to the ordering and summoning of grand juries, came up on general order. The bill was made a special order for Friday by a vote of 32 to 24, WEST HAS MAGNETIC STORM. Telegraph Companies Using Electric- ity of Nature. Chicago, March 4.—The entire West- ern portion of the country is in the throes of a great magnetic storm that is causing much trouble to telegraph and telephone wires. These magnetic storms generally occur prior to the appearance of the aurora borealis and are prominent at the same time that the maximum sun spots are seen. Professor Cox of the weather bureau sald regarding the magnetic storm: “The entire country between Chi- cago and Kansas City is in the power of a magnetic storm. In some places I understand the telegraph companies have shut off their dynamo power and are using the electricity of nature. This often has been done in years past.” WEDS AND SUICIDES?AME DAY. Youth Takes Acid and Dies in His Bride’s Arms. Ottumwa, Ia., March 4—Edward F. Duboie, aged nineteen years, killed himself with a dose of carbolic acid less than twenty-four hours after his marriage to Miss Minnie Fuqua. He died in his bride’s arms, leaving no explanation of his act, BRIEF BITS OF NEWS. F. C. A. Denkman, a pioneer lumber- man with large timber interests in the Northwest, is dead at Rock Island, L He was eighty-three years old. The civil marriage of Elsie Porter, daughter of the American ambassador to France, and Edwin Mende of Zu- rich, Switzerland, was performed Fri- day at Paris. _ 2 Frank Gotch of Humboldt, Ia., cham« pion catch-as-cateh-can _wrestler of America, easily defeated Charles Witt- mer of Cincinnati' in a mixed style match at Cincinnati. Richard Somers Hayes, the railroad| L. A. Ward, M. D., Physician and Surgeon. Diseases of the Eye a specialty. Glasses fitted. Dr. Rowland Gilmore Physician and Surgeon Office: IMiles Block Dr. Blakeslee Fhysician and Surgeon Office: Iiles Block, Beminil Dr. E. H. Marcum Physician and Surgeon Office: Swedback Block Residence Phone 221 Office Phone 18 |3 Daily except Sunday a.m. Lv. .. ..Kelliker.. a.m. Ar...Hovey Junction N. P.RY. DENTISTS. Dr.R. B. Foster, W. M, GEMMELL, G.A. WALKER o) S ral Manager, , DENTIST O ratnat Ekagfdil. MILES BLOCK. Dr. C. M. Smith, DENTIST Office over E. H. Winter’s Store. HOTELS AND RESTAURANTS. Palace Cafe, % FRED THROM, Prop. Aoy | 219 Third Street, DRAY AND TRANSFER. Wes Wright, - Dray and Transfer. 404 Beltrami Ave. Great Northern R’y ALL POINTS IN THE NORTHWEST EAST BOUNT, No. 40...Park Rapids Line..5:30a. m. (Connects with Flyer at Sauk Centre, a ives Tom Smart’ Minneapolis about 3:00 p. m., formerly 4:45 No. 14...Duluth Express...12:27 p.m Dray and Baggage, Safe and Piano Moving | 1,0 00 5 L g s.m Phone No. 58 | 618 America Avenue|- WEST BOUND ¢ 13....Fosston Line..... 3:52 p. m. “ 25 &, i 2:50 a. m. WOOd For Sale ! §| * - -Psrk Rapids Lineriss Phone 40. Full information from E E. CHAMBERLAIN, Agent I have for sale an unlimit- Bemidii. Minn ed quantity of Fine Jack Phoe and Tamarack Wood © in any lengths. : & : : When your pump: or D. S. DENNIS, 710 America Ave. Bemidji. oo water pipes freeze up, APt il e R o do not wait until they ; ..Nymore House.. A fixst class house for board Dby the day, week or month. Transient trade solicited, burst—but ph one to DORAN F. J. Moser, Proprietor. F. E. COOLEY, Painter, Paper Hanger and Decorator. . Phone - - Ay eoooce BROS. 225 and have No. capitalist, is dead at New York city after a lingering illness. - He was fifty- them thawed out.. nine years old. ' Mr. Hayss was st one i time ‘president of the

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