Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, April 15, 1905, Page 1

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1 R, ‘The VOLUME 2. NUMBER 295. SPECIAL BARGAINS $12.00, $ $13.50 and up to 18.00; choice for 10 One lot Men’s Douglas $3.00, and $3.50 Shoes for $2.59fl One lot Ladies’ $3.00 and $3.50 Shoes; .clloice for $2.49 One lot Ladies’ Shoes, worth $1.50 to $2.00; for 1.19 One lot Boys’ 50c¢ Laundried Shirts, choice for 39¢ 25¢ $7.95 23¢ 5¢ One lot Men’s Ligh‘o-Wéight Suits, worth One lot Pillow Tops, regular price 50¢; choice for $10 Mohair Dress Patterns, each One lot Men's 2000 y;n-ds of Dress I’rin(:;7 per yard ar 35¢ Suspenders ;.O’Leary & Bowser.. Bemidiji, Minnesota. JE P M O I Furniture Rugs Carpets Before making your purchases in the above goods kindly look over E. H. Winter & Co.’s line and let us quote you prices. We know you can do no bet- ter elsewhere. : : : : : Dressers, Chiffoneers and Dressing Tables. We have them from $7.50 to $25.00. Couches. If you are in the market for a Couch, we have them from the cheapest cloth to the hest leather covered ones. Our prices are the lowest. Rugs and Carpets. This spring we were fortunate in being able to buy our Carpets and Rugs direct from the mills in Philadelphia. You derive the henefit by saving 10, on every Rug you purchase of us. Ingrains, Art Squares, Electrias, Royal Wiltons and Selkirk Wiltons in all sizes from 2!x4 to 9x12. Ingrains by the yard and Mattings always in stock. Satisfaction guaranteed or your 3 money cheerfully refunded. 3 H E. H. Winter @ Co., . Phone 30. =Bemidii. - Minnesota. DR O W P | O ( ) O U U P 2 O M o OFFICE:meians:s THE SUPPLIES PIONEER TYPEWRITER RIBBONS AND PAPER, CARBON PAPER, FILES, RUBBER BANDS, ETC, ETC. Y A L|Full Supply bt ALWAYS BLANKS|0n Hand % THE 3 PIONEER BLOODSHED IS FEARED INDICATIONS POINT TO SERIOUS OUTBREAKS IN RUSSIA ON COMING MAY DAY. MILITARY PROTECTION - REQUESTED APPEALS-REACHING ST. PETERS- BURG FROM ALL SEGTIONS ‘OF THE EMPIRE. St. Petersburg, April 15.—Develop- ments all point to a crisis in the present agitation among the workmen in the cities and the peasants in the country on May day and appeals are pouring in from all quarters of Rus- ' Military protection. The St. Petersiurg workmen are preparing & great demonstration. ~Arms and bombs in large quantities have been smuggled in and bloodshed on a largé scale is feared. Wealthy persons who ordinarily go to villas on the islands of the Neva or to neighboring country places this year are going abroad. The government has taken few special measures to meet the situation, evi- dently relying on the troops and po- lice to guard the capital. The latter are extremely active. All the promi- nent agitators are being arrested or have already been sent back to the villages from- which they originally came. The prisons are filled to over- flowing. There have heen fresh disputes be- tween the workmen and the managers of the Putiloff, Baltic and Nevski works and between the employes and the management of the government cartridge factory. At the latter place the men refuse to continue to donate any portion of their pay to assist in the support. of families of soldiers at the front, claiming that the money is used to prosecute the war, to which they are opposed. ‘The news received from the interior is alarming, especially from the Bal tic provinces, where the entire popu- lation is in a state of intense exaite- ment. The cities are being flooded with revolutionary proclamations call- ing on the people to rise on May day. The criminal classes are taking ad- vantage of the situation to pilage and plunder, while in the country the land- lords are powerless to .cope with the peasants and demand the stationing at every station. e advices Irom Reval, govern- ment of HEsthonia, say the police are following their old practice of divid- ing the population against itself. They are trying to excite the natives against the Germans and the position of the latter is becoming so alarming that many are going abroad. READY TO FACE CONSEQUENCES. Germany Will Carry Out Plans Re- garding Morocco. Berlin, April 15.—Count von Tatten- bach-Ashold, who has been appointed lemporary charge of Germany in Mo- rocco, has given the correspondent of the T.okal Anzeiger at Fez, where the count Is arranging for a special Ger- man-Moroccan treaty, a declaration of Germany's policy towards Morocco. “It is not only Germany’s right,” the count says, “but also her imme- diate and undeniable duty to protect and develop her Moroccan interests. While she energetically demands for the powers signatories at the confer- ence held at Madrid in 1880 a frank recognition of the open door policy Germany insists on the preservation of the sultan’s sovereignty and the independence of Morocco, especially because both are mentioned vaguely in the Franco-British agreement and, therefore, permit legitimate doubt on this subject. “Ciermany's programme of action, which stands on a sound and irre- proachable footing, is, fortunately, generally supported by public opinion in Germany and has the sympathy of the whole Spanish population, includ- ing the Liberal party, and the ap- proval of all the unprejudiced powers. Therefore: Germany may confidently carry out her plans and can fearlessly face the consequences, whatever they may be. “The watchword of Germany f{s dauntlessly forward.” MUST REMAIN IN TURKEY. Permission to Leave Refused Fiancee of American Citizen. Washington, April 15.—Some time ago a Turk who had become a nat- uralized American citizen appealed to the state department to secure per- mission from the Turkish govern- ment for his fiancee to leave Turkey and come to America to be married to him. The Turkish governmeént is always reluctant to allow Turks to quit the country and it has therefore replied that while it will permit Turks who are naturalized citizens or the minor children -of such to leaye Fur- key it cannot permit the emigration of the liancee, who is a Turkish sub- Ject. Takes Long Leap to Death. Chicago, April 15—Frank Clark, thirty years old, kissed his wife and two children goodbye and then leaped to death from the fourth floor of an apartment house at Forty- treet and St. Lawrence avenue. * ond- ency over financial troubles is thought to have caused the act. Clark was ago lost his a restaurant waiter, but several days |drank Pio nee ON REQUEST OF PROSECUTION. iracy. Aw:!nut Indictment for Cons Nan Patterson [ ‘New York, April ment - charging Nan Patterson ' with consyiracy with J. Morgan Smith and Mrs _ Smith wrongfully - to Ghtain money from Caesar Young. was dis- missed in the court of general ses- sions at the request of Asslgt?wt Dis- krict Attorney Rand.. Counsel for the Smiths. demurred-to the fndictment pgainst the Smiths and declared that the facts alleged against them did not constitute a crime. The court re- served decision in that case. Cusnsel for the Smiths endeavored to secure the return of property {aken from the Smi but failed. Miss Patterson, who is about to be tried again for the murder of Caesar Young, was prought fhto colrd -with the Smiths. "Mr. Rand. told thecourt that a mistake had been wmgle in drawing up the indictment aiainst Miss Patterson and that it tended to prejudice her position in the case. In asking for the dismif the indictment against @ - he réix-ved right to resubmit. Miss T™.ttersis was then remanded back to the ‘fombs prison. The effect of the actity will: be to prevent her counsel fre get- ting at the grand jury minutes, ihich might have aided in her defens SENTENCES SUSPENDED, Mrs. Nation and Others Convisled of Destroying ‘Property. Wichita, Kan., April 15—In the district court here Carrie Nation, Myra McHenry and: Mrs. Lucy Wil- hoit were found guilty of destoying property and sentenced hy Judg: Wil- son. MMrs. Nation was fined $25) and given four months in jail; Mrs. Mc- Henry Lwo months &nd a fine of $150, and Mrs. Wilhoit twenty-five days in jail and a fine of $150. Sentence was suspended pending gaod behavigy. The offense was committed Sept. 33 last Wwhen the three women broke thé win- dows of a wholesale liquor ‘house. The women voluntarily surreidered some time ago. £ - b MRS. CRAVEN ADJUDGED INSANE., Figured in Sensational Suit for Share of Fair Estate. Burlingfon, la, April 15:Mrs. Craven, who figured in a sensational suit for a share of the late Senator Fair's estate on the ‘ground that she was a common law wife, was a Insane here. “She. Wil Be Seiu ty 1 sapitarium. B Mrs. Craven has been here a week, staylng at different hotels. She be- came violent during the night and, it is alleged, attempted to fire the Hotel Delano. Mrs. Craven is said to have wealthy relatives at Washington, la. Her daughter resides in St. Louis. MANY NARROWLY ESCAPE. Fire Destroys Seven-Story Sweatshop in New York City. New York, April 16.—Five persons ‘were badly hurt, fifty others narrowly escaped death or injury and hundreds were driven from adjoining tenements in a fire which entirely destroyed the seven-story sweatshop building at 121-121 Hester street and extended to and damaged several other nearby buildings. When the fire was at its height the flames lit up the whole of the lower part of the city and the East river with a glare that could be seen for miles. The damage is esti- mated at close upon $100,000. MANY BUILDINGS DESTROYED. Fire at Springvale. Me., Causes Loss of $300,000. Springvale, Me., April 15—The greater portion of the business sec- tion of Springvale, together with many dwellings, was destroyed by fire during the day, entailing a loss esti- mated at $300,000. Assistance sent by the Portland fire department ar- rived in time to prevent the entire village from being obliterated. In all thirty-five buildings were burned. No lives were lost. The fire started in a boot and shoe factory owned by the ‘W. R. Usher & Sons company of New- buryport, Mass. MINERS RESUME WORK. Troubles Around Minn., Subsiding. Hibbing, Minn., April 15.—The labor troubles at the iron mines seem to be subsiding. Of the 900 men who went out at Chisholm many returned to work -during the morning and there is a disposition among all the better class of men here to return. By the first of next week it is expected all the mjnes will be in operation again. Mrs. Chadwick Pleads Not Guilty. Cleveland, April 15-—Mrs. Chad- wick, when arraigned in the United States district court during the day, pleaded not guilty to the new indict- ment recently returned against her by the grand jury, charging her with aid- ing and abetting Cashier A. B. Spear of the Oberlin bank in making false entries in the bank's books and -in making wntrue statements to the somptrolier of the currency. Labor Hibbing, Drinks Acid; Jumps From Cliff. Minneapolis, April 15.—The dead body of a man believed to be John Bradley of Midway was found on the bank of the Minnesota river at the foot of a seventy-five foot cliff near the mouth of Minnehaha creek. The finding of an empty carbolic acid bot- tle nearby and the burned features of the corpse indicate that the mau ‘BELIEVE COMBINE EXISTS. i Texas Legislative Committee ;nvenl- . gates Beef Trust. Austin, Tex., April 16.—The legis- lative committee appointed to inves- tigate the methods of the so-called “beef” trust” and its operations in Texas thade a report during the day and stated in substance that while they had made such inquiry there had not developed evidence of specific vio- lation of the anti-trust law on which they ‘could recommend.the instigation of civil or criminal proceedings against any particular person or cor- poration. - The report continues: “From advices received we are able to state that in our judgment there exists in this state a combination of persons and corporations engaged in the business of packing and selling beef and other like products in con- travention’ to the anti-trust laws of the state.” The committee asks that they be continued through the legislative vaca- tion with full power to summon and examine witnesses and asks for an appropriation to be used by the at- torney general to assist them in their investigation. The report was adopted. INDIAN GIRL MURDERED. Body Found After a Search Lasting Three Weeks. Marshalltown, Ja., April 15—The body of the young Indian girl, Masha- ohe, who disappeared from the reser- vation March 4, was found near Mon- tour in a ravine, where evidently it had been concealed. The body was almost nude, the clothes being torn from the body. Her wounds showed she had been murdered. The Indians have been searching for three weeks. She was the granddaughter of a chief and was last seen with an Indian named George Soldier, who was for- merly the girl’s husband. The Indians are greatly excited and will arrest Soldier. HIS SECOND CONVICTION. lowa Doctor Found Guilty of Murder of Young Woman. Osceola, Ia., of the Lamoni found guilty of the murder of Maude Stone, a Leon girl who died in’ Crof- ford’s hospital after a criminal opera- tion tour years ago. Crofford was tried and convicted once before and sentenced to thirteen years for sec- ond degree murder. [MANY RECRUITS WERE SECURED District in Which Bemidji Is Located Comes in Fourth for 1904. A copy of the annual report of department has been received by Corporal Otto of the local station and shows that the district in which Bewidji is located was fourth in the number of recruits secured for the year 1904, with 836 recruits, a monthly average of 70. There were only three other cities in the United States that secured a larger number. San Francisco, Cal., came first. Duluth is the headguarters for the district, which includes be- sides that city Bemidji, Superior Brainerd and Hibbing. A large majority of the recruits enlisted for the service were secured in Bemidji and it is probable that this city will be made a head- quarters station in the near future. A Daredevil Ride often ends in a sad accident. To heal accidental injuries, use Bucklen’s Arnica Salve, “A deep wound in my foot, from an acci- dent,” writes Theodore Schuele, of Columbus, O., ‘‘caused me great pain. Physicians were helpless, but Bucklen’s Arnica Salve quickly healed it.” Soothes and heals burns like magic. 25 cents at all druggists, guaran- teed. John Baptie arrived in the city this afternoon from Grand Forks to spend a few days with friend=. Mr. Baptie was formerly a resi- dent of Bemidjiand has many ac- quaintances in the city. the preparation of the Grill’s Sunday dicner tomorrow. Served from 12:30 to 3 p. m. Tavestigate the merits of our Sunday dinner. Served ‘tomor- row from 12:30 to 3 p. m.. The Grill, : Peter Olson, proprietor of the new hostelry at Campbell Lake, is the guest of Bemidji friends today. - - g Miss Irene Murphy of Crooks- ston is:a guest at the Markham. Miss Ames of Fosston was an arrival in the city this afternoon. A P, Blom of Spauldiog the recruiting service of the war | Special effort will be made in! afternon, | work © SEARCH [S SUCCESSFUL. Body of Paul Jones Located and kdentified. Paris, April 15—The remarkable search which Ambassador Porter has conducted for the body of Paul Jones has been crowned ‘with success by the discovery of the body and its| identitication by the highest French medical experts as uwquestionably that of the famous American admiral ‘Who founded the American navy. Ambassador: Porter has cabled to Washington announcing the success- ful results of his long and difficult search, The body is in a good state of preservation considering that the interment ‘took place over 100 years ago. The circumstances leading to the final discovery of the body are par- ticularly interesting, General Porter has conducted the search for the last five years and when congress recent- ly took no action upon the president’s recommendation for She expenses in- cident to the search the ambassador continued the e sive labors at his own expense. A ge force of work- men has been engagel night and day tunneling and cross tunneling the old St. Louis cemetery] This constituted operation, embracing nearly a covered with “buiidin, and re- quiring a system of subterranean min- Negro Murderers Executed. Paterson, N. J., April 15—Arthur Laster and Joseph Miller, two negro murderers, died on the gallows in the county jail here. It had been expect- ed that Laster, who made a desperate attempt o escape from the jail last Sunday night after shooting his death watch, would make trouble, but he went to the gallows withont resist- ance. Neither execution was marked by an unusual incident. Will Not Precsecute Gorky. St. Petershurg, April 15—On ac- count of the condition of his health and the fact that the evidence against Maxim Gorky is not stronger than that against hundreds of others who have not been arrested in connection with the disturbances at St. Peters- burg Jan. it is unden that the government has abandone s inten- tion of bringing him to trl Police Commissioner Wounded. Odessa, April 15.—Police Commis- sfoner Olechevsky was wounded in the chest during the day by a bullet fired from a vevolver. His assassin, who was arrested, refused to disclose his identity. BRIEF BITS OF NEWS. A quarterly dividend of 1% per cent has heen declared on Northern Pacific stock. Traces of radium have heen found ten miles east of the business center of Kausas City, Mo. The uext annnal session of the Farmers’ National Congress will be held in Richmond, Va., Sept. 12-22. CONSUMPTION’S WARNING Inside facts soon become evident in~outside symptoms.—DR. G. G. GREEN. qThe aid of scientific inventions is not needed to determine whether your lungs are affected. The first symptoms can be readily noted by anyone of average in- telligence. QThere is no disease known that gives so many plain warnings of its approach as consumption, and no serious disease that can be so quickly reached and checked, if the medicine used is Dr. Boschee’s German Syrup, which is made to cure consumption. : qIt is in the early stages that German Syrup should be taken, when warniny are given in the cough that won’t quit, the congestion of the bronchial tnbes an the gmfil weakening of the lungs, ac- companied by frequent expectoration. QBut no matter how deep-seated your cough, even if dread consumption” has already attacked your lungs, German Syrup-will surely effect a cure—as it has done Before in thousands of apparently hopeless cases of lung trouble. QNew trial bottles, 2sc. Regular size, 75¢. At all druggists. s Sold by A. Gilmour & Co. _ TEN CENTS:-PER WEEK UNION PAGIFIG SCHEME SAID IT WILL TAKE OVER NEW ~ YORK CENTRAL AND CHICAGO AND NORTHWESTERN. STORY LACKS OFFICIAL CONFIRMATION GREAT NORTHERN PROPOSITION CAUSES JUMP IN NORTHERN SECURITIES STOCK. New York, April 15—It is impossi- ble to obtain either authoritative con- firmation or denial of the report that the Union Pacific Railway company is to take over the New York Central and the Chicago and Northwestern railroad and that a recapitalization scheme involving the issue of bonds to the extent of $790,000,000 is to be carried out. No official of either the Union Pacific or the New York Cen- tral would discuss the matter and banking houses allied with the two roads also were very reserved. Union Pacific stock was a leader In the market fluctuations, but its activ- ity was said to be due to the strength of Northern Securities stock rather than fo the New York Central ru- mors. The rise in the Northern Se- curities stock was caused by reports that the Northern Securities company would Dbenefit by an increased issue of Great Northern stock. This was said to be incorrect. Instead it was said that the plan is to give Great Northern stockholders, the Northern Securities being the principal stock- holder in that company, a bonus in the shape of new stock in a corpora- tion which will own and develop the Great Norther properties. This plan, it was figured out, would give each share of Great Northern $100 in stock in the new company and would | give each share of Northern Securi- | ties stock .86 in the new com- pany’s shares. Union Pacifie, through its -holding of Northern Securities stock, would receive a large block of the new shares under the plan, if carried out. Best Cough Medicine for Children. When you buy a- cough" medi- cine for smull children you want one in which you can place im- plicit confidence. You want one that notonly relieves but cures. You want one that is unquestion- ably harmless. You want one that is pleasant to take. Cham- berlain’s Cough Remedy meets all of these conditions. There is nothing so good for the coughs and colds incidentto childhood. For sale by Barker’s Drug store. John Sheridan, a farmer living in the town of Northern, was brought tothe city yesterday and- ccnfined to St. Anthony’s hospital suffering with a broken leg sustained while pulling stumps on his homestead. The accident happened Thursday. He is under medical care and is doing well. The case of Frank Heroux vs. the Viilage of Tenstrike, brought for the purpose of collecting Mr. Heroux’s ‘salary as recorder for the month of March, 1905, was heard before Judge Skinvik this morning and decided in favor of the plaintiff. Don’t waste your timein ex- perimenting. Go to the Grill for your Sunday dinner and you know that you are getting the best. The popular cafe will serve an- other of their special dinners. The Palace restaurant, tomorrow from 12 until 3. J. W. Jchason of Cass Lake arrived in the city last night on a short business visi JACK ROOT, has been called here again to meet B. R. Shares, a well known cateh - as- cateh can wrestler of Duluth. Root showed up on the mat_here some time ago, and his Wwas very interesting to'all. R: B. SHORES, has had a challenge here against . . Root for a week now, and has offered to put up’ §50 side bet which Root has sccepted and it will be pulled off in the Star Theatre Monday night, April 17

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