Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, March 23, 1905, Page 4

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_ cough. ESTABLISH A NORMAL Bemidji High School May Add a Normal Training Department. ADVANTAGES WOULD BE VERY CONSIDERABLE. Would Entitle School to an Addi- tional State Appropriation of $750 Yearly. The board of education has un- der consideration the advisability of establishing a normal training department in connection with the Bemidji high school. Ifsuch a department is established the state will appropriate yearly the sum of §750 for its support. The state now makes appropri- ation for thirteen such depart ments in high schools and eleven high schools have established the course. When State High School Inspector George B. Aiton was in Bemidji a few weeks ago he assured the board of edu cation that if the course is estab- lished in Bemidji the appropria- tion will be immediately availa ble._ The department would require the services of one additional teacher but the amount appro- priated by the state would be ample to meet all the expense. At least eight scholars would have to enroll for the course and anyone who has completed the work of theeighth grade would be eligible for admission. The ad- ditional teacher, would not only care for the work of this depart- ment but . would be able to ma- terially relieve the high school of apart of the work thatis now done by the regular teachers. The course will make neces- sary an additional recitation room and it is probable that it cannot be established unless the board is authorized at the _election set for Saturday April 1to issue bonds for $10,000 to provide ad- ditional school room to relieve the crowded condition of the schools. HOLD ANNUAL 'ELECTION Important Meeting of Busi- ness Men’s Club Tomor- row Evening. Tomorrow evening at 9 o’clock at Masonic hall will be held the annual election of directors of the Business Men’s club. It is planned to make this meeting a sort of round table for the discussion of vrrious matters of importance to Bemidji and the attendance of every business man in the city, whether a member of the club or not, is urgently soli- cited. The attendance of every busi- ness man in Bemidjiat this meet- ing would be the best thing that could happen to the city at the present time. A Favorite Remedy for Babies. Its pleasant taste and prompt cures have made Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy a favorite with the mothers of small children. It quickly cures their coughs and colds and prevents any danger of pneumonia or other serious consequences, For sale by Bark- er’s Drug Store. Mercantile Company Stock Sold. W. R. Peyton, trustee for the Bankrupt Bemidji Mercantile company, has disposed of the en- tire stock remaining. Wm. Mec- Cuaig purchased nearly the en- tire stock and a large proportion of the fixtures, paying $325 for the lot, “A Hidden Crime” which comes to light at the City Opera House Tuesday March 27, is said to have all the thrills the name would indicate. The scenes are laid in and around San Francis- co, and the breaking of a suspen- sion bridge are among the scenic features. There is no lever so powerful as plain and simple facts—Mark’s Lung Balsam will cure your SEVERAL DIVORCES Present Term of Court Called Upon to Adjust Marital Differences. Court convened this morning at the usual hour and the first jury case to be tried this term was called—that of the Interna- tional Boom Company et al vs. Rainy Lake River Boom Co. The jurors sworn to try the case are as follows: Perle Olson, Nels BErickson, Fred Bardwell, John Engbert, Knut Aakus, Otto My ran, George Keiser, Ed Brannon, Nels Sorenson, Martin Galchutt, Mike Rivett, L. Bjorge. Judge Spooner heard the evi- dence in the case of E. P. Felt against Marian Felt for an abso- lute divorce on the grounds of cruel and inhuman treatment. " At Chambers the cases of Leo Quesnell, Anna Rivard, Geo. Quesnell, Herlie Quesnell against John Quesnell and Jette Lejambe came before Judge Spooner and in each case the defendants were permitted to answer upon the payment of ten dollars costs and the filing a stipulation permitting the evidence to be taken before a referce. These actions are log leins and the defendants in each permitted the same to go by de- fault. In the matter of the proceed- ings for divorce—Dr. Irish of Akeley vs. Leah Irish, the defen- dant through her attorneys P. J. Russell and Tawney, Smith & Tawney of Winona, was permit- ted to answer on grounds shown. Judgment was granted John Hinchy against D. S. Weaver for $144.50 and interest, the judg- ment being protected by garnish ment proceedings. This afternoon the defendants who were arraigned yesterday were brought into court and en- tered a plea of not guilty to the crimes as charged in the indict- ments. The trials will be set for a later date. Henry McNaney when brought into court entered a plea of guilty to the crime of burglary in the third degree and will be sen- tenced-in a few days. Fannie Wendorf plead not guilty to the crime of grand lar- ceny in the second degree, but will be permitted to plead guilty to petit larceny. There is more Catarrh in this section of the country than all other diseases put together, and until the last few years was sup- posed to be incurable. For a great many years doctors pro- nounced ita local disease and prescribed local remedies, and by constantly failing to cure with local treatment, pronounced it in- curable. Science has proven catarrh to be a constitutional disease and therefore requires constitutional treatment. Hall’s Catarrh Cure, manufactured by the F, J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio, is the ounly constitutional cure on the market. Itis taken internally in doses from 10 drops to a teaspoenful. It acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system, They offer one- hundred dollars for any case it failed to cure. Send for circulars and testimonials. Address: F. .J. CHENEY & Co. ToLEDO, OHIO. Sold by Druggists, 75 cents Take Hall’s Family Pills for constipation. Marriage Licenses. Ole Tollefson to Amanda John- son; Ben Johnson to Alma Peter- son; John Small to Gladys Rob- bins; Russell Bennington to Ma- mie Newby. Ben Johnson and' Miss Alma Peterson were married in Be- midji Tuesday, Judge Pendergast, performing the ceremony, JUNE FIRST {Work on New Red Lake Rail- way Being Pushed For- ward Rapidly. FIVE HUNDRED MEN NOW EM- PLOYED BY CONTRACTORS. Very Probable That Railway Will Be Completed During Next Two Months. There is every probability at the present time, according to an opinion expressed by C. A. Hal vorson, who is interested in the firm of Halvorson & Carlson, con- tractors for the building of the new Minneapolis, Red Lake & Manitoba railway from Bemidji to Red Lake, that the road will be finished by June 1. Since the work was started last fall, the number of men employed on the work has been gradually increased, until at the present time 500 laborers are working on the contract. Little trouble has been experi- enced by the contractors on ac- count of swamps and sink holes, and the work has progressed very satisfactorily. With. the coming of spring many more men will be put to work on the road, and it is confi- dently expected, providing all the right of way can be secured, that trains will be running on the line within the next two months. Settlers along the line and resi- dents of Red Lake are anxiously awaiting the completion of the road, which will be of great bene- fit to Bemidji and the country to the north in opening up a large amount of pine and farming lands to settlement. CLOCK SYSTEM TO BE INSTALLED Western Union Will Put Electric Clocks Into Be- midji Business Houses. The Western Union Telegraph company has decided to 1install its electric clock system in Be- midji, and arrangements are now being made to put at least a dozen timepieces into Bemidji business houses that have signi- fied their willingness to use -‘the system. The clocks are run by batteries placed within them and no outside wire or influence is necessary except a Western Union wire which is attached for the purpose of correcting the time each day. The system costs from $1 to $1.50 for each clock per month. BIG SUIT IS DENIED New Trial in $150,000 Suit Refused by Judge McClenahan. Judge McClenahan in cham- bers yesterday denied the motion of the defendantin the case of Stitt & Howe vs. the Rat Portage Logging company for anew trial. The suit grew out of logging con- tract between ths principals and involved something like $150,000. The suit is the result of log- ging operations north of Duluth. The first trial gave Stitt & Howe the right to redeem certain lands on payment to defendant of $67,000, Years of litigation have been consumed in the case the record of which covers 1600 pages of type written matter. Startling Mortality. Statistics show startling mort- ality, from appendicitis and .per- itonitis. Topreventandcure these awfuldiseases, there is just one Tuesday, March 28, Bemidji will get its first glimpse of John P. Lockney’s comedy drama ‘“‘A Hidden Crime.”” The play has been one of the great successes of the present theatrical season, and o doubt will prove a favorite to the patrons of the Opera House. reliable remedy, Dr. King’s New Life Pills. M. Flannery, of 14 Custom House Place, Chicago, says: “They have no equal for Constipation- and ' Billiousness.” 25¢ at all druggists. Nothing can be better than the Spur Will Be Started in Near Future. J. P. Daugherty of Minneap- olis, a member of the contracting firm of Dempsey & Daugherty, contractors for ‘construction of the Crookston Lumber Co.’s spur. north of Wilton, is in the city to- day and states that work on the spur will be started in the near future. The cutting of the right of way has been in progress for some time past, but up to the present nothing has been accom- plished in the line of grading. The negessary tools and imple: ments are now arriving at Wilton, however, and the work will com- mence as soon as -possible. Aec- cording to the contract, the road must be completed to Long lake by July 1. Insurance Paid. A. P. Henrionette, who sus- tained a heavy loss in the Third street fire on January 10, has re- ceived his insurance money. The amount was $2,000, divided among four companies. BY CHICAGO POLICE. Alleged Bandits Captured After Des- perate Encounters. Chicago, March 2°.—In one of the most desperate encounters between police and alleged desperadoes since the capture of the notorious car barn bandiiz four men, suspected of being implicated in the murder of Fritz Kreuger, a saloonkeeper, early Sunday morning, were-captured by the police during the day. Almost the entire po- lice department of the West Side, as well as Central station detectives, par- ticipated in the roundup of the alleged robbers. Frank Kreuger, one of the captured men, was shot through the ear, a bul- let having turrowed its way along the back of the skull. It was subsequent- I¥ reported to Inspector Revere that a man answering the description of Frank Papinlienski, who escaped during the fight aite® it was thought he had Leen wounded, had been arrest- ed at Waukegan. The man, it is said, was suffering from a bullet wound in the hack. The suspects were arrested at their respective homes and in every case, it is claimed, the police were forced to break down doors to make the arrests and desperate resistance was shown. Mauy shots were exchanged between the officers and the: suspected men, but no officer was wounded. REJOINING THEIR DIVISIONS. Russian Troops Lost in the Hills Since = Battle of Mukden. Gunshu Pass, 108 Miles North of Tie Pass, Manchuria, March 22.—The Jjapa- nese losses are estimated at the Rus- sian headgquarters to be 100,000. Some of -the troops employed to cover Lhe retreat from Mukden were badly demoralized, losing their way in the bjlls eastward and only now rejoin- ing their own divisions. So certain was General Kuropatkin of being able to hold Mukden that maps of the country northward were not even distributed. Kuropatkin, however, resolved to accept battle against his better judgment owing to the impatience of St. Petersburg for |' victory and he was confirmed in this decision by false calculations of Field Marshal Oyama’s strength. One of the main factors of the suc- cess ol the Japanese was their viola- tion of: Chinese neutrality in the use of the Sinmintin road. Brief Telegrams From Linevitch. St. Petersburg, March 22.—A couple of brief telegrams from General Line- vitch, dated March 20, were given out during the day. They merely say that the troops continued to retreat north- wards March 19; that he had allowed the men to rest March 20 and that he had inspected more new arrivals from Russia and had found the troops in ex- cellent spirits. A FAMILY SAFEGUARD with the Niece of Dr. Box D e to Taaiie Rar ismous Uncie's Great ‘Throat and Lung Cure. qThe best family safeguard is a reliable household {&Iedigne that will cure croup, colds, chilly sensations, runnin; W“Sh.;.d nose,‘soreythroat and bronchi: :%:'cfion:—thut will keep the children oof against all contagious diseases, [Such a medicine is Boschee’s German Syrup, which ks a record of 35 years in e cure of consumption, catarrh and all lung and bronchial troubles. ‘he fame of German Sy as a cofie ase by Dr. | famions Dr. best—Mark’s lung Balsam is the | 97Wo It would be hard to realize a larger or better assortment of the New Spring The Bazaar Dress Goods than this store can show you. New Colored Mohair Suitings are destined to be the most popular and stylish of the New Spring Lress Fabrics. We have them in a beautiful variety of new and popular colors that will appeal to the most particular buyers. Prices from 50c¢ to $1.50 yd. 1lot Men’s Working Shirts dark colors; regular price 60c; sale price 39¢ surpassed by any $4 Hat on the market. We sell them. 1 lot Men’s Lined Gloves; full assortment, of col- ors and sizes; regu- ular price $1.25; now '75¢ Ghre BAZAAR STORE The McKibbin Hat is not MEN’S FURNISHINGS — We sell the McKibbin Hat none better made; try one 1 lot Workingmen’s Sus- penders worth to 35¢; now 13¢ We also carry a full line of Men’s Working Gloves; prices from 50c to $1.50 Our entire line of Men’s Fur Lined Caps; plain and fancy colors; $1.25 and $1.50 gradesat 87¢ Our entire line of Men’s and Boys’ Sweaters in .broken lots to go at 207, discount. 1 lot Men’s Unlined Kid and Mocha Gloves, worth up to $1.00; to close at 49¢ ! lot Men’s Heavy Work- ing Shoes, the kind you pay $1.75 for; at the Bazaar you pay $1.87 An Excellent Opportunity To Earn Money .~ Is open to a limited number of people In your vicinity. If you are unemployed or if you have un- occupied time, write to us. The work we offer is clean, dignified and profitable. Particularly good! results await your efforts in this field. Write to-day for full particulars. CIRCULATION DEPT. METROPOLITAN MAGAZINE 3 WEST 29th STREET, NEW YORK CITY Are You a Gentleman? If so, why not buy American Gentleman * Shoes which are sure to give you satisfaction. The style is up-to-date and the quality is the MAKERS best. A glance at our window will convince you of what we say. Securit; School Shoes. / ‘|'would find their Shoe bills smaller at the end of the year. REMEMBER WE CARRY THE LARGEST SHOE LINE IN. THE NORTH- WEST AND SATISFACTION IS GUARANTEED WITH EVERYi P!SR. E. H. WINTER & CO. - General Mercha ndise. o —

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