Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, April 19, 1905, Page 3

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T THI Good || | | | | | || | | | _| B_| | | | | | | | | Children’ « FOR AT E. S. Straw’s SHOE STORE Next Door to First Nat'l Bank. SIS s Week Shoes U A 1 1 Y O Supper Opera House Presbyterian Fair Tonight and tomorrow night. Go to Hakkerup's for Photos. N, L. Hakkerup is at Tenstrike on business. C. B. Rowley was a visitor from Brainerd yesterday. Attorney D. H. Fisk spent last evening at Blackduck, John Wenholzis a Turtle River visitor on business today. Get your supper tomght at the Presbyterian Fair. Opera House. Peter Larkin has spent the day in the city from Turtle River. Ice cream at the Model Bakery. Private parties a specialty. Phone 125, Mr. and Mrs. Martin Stennick are in the city today from Ten- strike. D. E,. Elliot, state timber cruiser, was at Blackduck last evening. Attorney Henry unkley went to Walker on legal business this morning. Choice varieties of seed wheat for sale by the Bemidji Elevator company. x senator C. McCarthy of Grand Rapids is transacting legal business in Bemi Chester McKusick is at Wa.ll(er‘, attending the general April term of court for Cass county, Thomas Newby went to Walker this morning where he will dis- pose of a car load of horses. A. E Oliver, publisher fass County Pioneer at Walker, is spending the day in Bemidji A musical program will be rendered at the Presbyterian at the Opera house tonight and to- morrow night. Louis Blooston has returned| from the twin cities where he! has been spending a week being treated for trouble of the ear. $200 down, the balance in small | monthly payments will purchase a four room house and two lots well located and near school house. Call at Pioneer office. Aad A, Tone passed through the citv today from Northome on his way to Grand Rapids to at- tend a meeting of the board of county commissioners of Itasca county. The Ladies of the G. A. R. will give a supper at the I 0.0, F. hall Saturday evening where you can get things to eat like your mother used to cook. Adults 25 cents, children 15, No mercury, no minerals, no danger in Hollister’s Rocky Mountain Tea. The greatest family tonic known, Bring good health to all who use it. of the| Easter eggs at Presbyterian Fair. Nothing can be better than the best—Mark’s lung Balsam is the bost. John Severson and W, Neudeck of Buena Vista are Bemidji visit ors today, Joseph Sutor of Buena Vista is attending to business matters here today. Presbyterian Fair at Opera house tonight. Supper will be served from six to eight. Fred Wilson came down from | Tenstrike this morning and is spending the day in the city. Mrs. Bradford came up from La Porte last evening and is trad- ing with the B(‘mld]l merchants mday. J. H. Mackey of Duluth passed (through the city enoute to Ten- strike, where he has business in terests to look after. C. D. Carter, superintendent of the Iron Range Electric Tele phone company is spending a few days inspecting the Bemidji sys tem. Corporal Eilek, in charge of the recruiting station at Cass Lake attended the presentation ol Mahara’s Minstrels here last evening. Potted plants at Presbyterian Fair. Attorney Oscar Miller of the {firm of Washburn, Mitchell & Bailey of Duluth passed through i the city this morning enroute to Walker. Mr. and Mrs. George Labree {of Dexterville are trading with the local merchants today. Mr, Labree reports business good in i the north end of the county. Mrs. Catherine Peterson of | Buena Vista is a Bemidji visitor | today. - Mrs. Peterson is on her i way to Cass Lake, where she will jprove up on a valuable piece of { Beltrami county lands. { Tt fills the arteries with rich, ired blood. Makes new flesh and ‘hoalthy men and women. That’s i what Hollister’s Rocky Mountain Tea willdo. 35 cents. tea or tab lets. Barker’s drug store. Mahara’s Minstrels played to a fair house here last night and gave an excellent entertainment The singing was good and the special features, particularly the feats of balancing,were very well done. Hollister’s Rocky = Mountain Tea is positive, never nauseates or upsets the stomach. Cleanses and purifies the entire system. A great Dblessing to suffering humanity. 35 cents, tea or tab- lets. Barker’s drug store. Arrangements are being made for a wrestling match to be held at the opera house Saturday evening between Rootand Shores. Manager Wheelock has the mat- ter in hand and the match will cents, tea. or tablets. Barker’s|draw a big house as both men drug store. are well worth seeing work. \56&5&55’: EEEETEETETCEEE >?§$¢' W n W " W n AL am N \04 " £ Wedoit--all kinds ; :*.: Get Our flgures A fiiiiii‘!iiiiiifi‘i‘)iiifi%fi-’ @"“) lllllllllll-llllllfi Rainy River Region ’[hinks Some One Took Advant- age of Situation. In discussing the coroner’s in- quest into the assassination of Matt Gannon, the Rainy River Region says: ‘At the coroner’s inquest yes- terday, -twenty-six witnesses were examined. The county at- tcrney appealed to any and all to volunteer any information with regard to the tragedy, the evi- dence did not in the slightest tend to show any conspiracy on the part of the crowd to commit the awful deed not even develop anything that would even cast any suspicion on anyone though the examination was rigid and exhausting. Itis possible that some unknown aggrieved person took adyantage of the situation to shleld his cowardly act. . WENT INSANE AT HOSPITAL Mathies Ramstead of Bel- trami County Lost Rea- son Last Evening. Mathies Ramstead, of Beltrami county, a single man who has been confined to the St. Vincent ital under the care of local ans during the past few days, yesterday lost his reason entirely and last evening was ad- judged insane by Judge of Pro- vate Thoreson and the custom- ary board of examining physi cians. Ramstead, who is a homestead- er out east, has had an insane idea for some time past that he was bothered by a peculiar us cular growth and insisted that he should be operated upon for its removal. His mania for opera tion became so pronounced as to cause an almost total loss of mind and local physicians were unable to do anything with him at all. Sheriff Gonyea and son Louis took him to the state asylum at Fergus Falls last evening, re ‘urning home this morning.— Crookston Times. NEW FAD IN TOWN. Many Men Getting a Sensible Habit. In the last few days it has be- come the popular thing to step in E. A. Barker’s drug store and get a pocketful of Wadsworth Bros.” “Chicos,” a 5c cigar that has caused many men to get what may be called the **Chicos’’ habit. It is far more sensible to smoke a good 5¢ cigar like the “Chico’’ (and there is no other 5¢ cigar like it) than to pay double the price and get no better smoke. It is made with a clear, long Ha- vana filler, and is especially pleas ing to the man who has been smoking a 10c or two for a quart- er cigar. It burns freely, and tastes good clear to the stub. Try a “Chico,” and see if you, too, do not get into the habit of frequenting E. A. Barker’s drug store for your supply of cigars, $100 Reward, $100. The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that thereis at least one dreaded disease that science has been able to cure in all its stages, and thatis Catarrh. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a constitutional disease, re- quires a constitutional treatment. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken in- ternally, acting Jdirectly upon Witz of New York opened the hearing |yl hefore the senate committee on inter-| 5} state commerce during the day. He |\ is chalrman of the executive commit- tee and general counsel of the Atchi- | uhs son, Topeka and Santa Fe railroad. | He made a stateinent regarding the mileage; stock, bonds and employes of |\l the railroad. He said it was a fair|sps estimate that 450,000 persons would | * be interested in any legislation af- |\ fecting the road. Speaking of the railways in general | o he said they had some difficulty-in keeping up their betterments and im- provements. If it was attempted to adjust railway rates in times of pros- of earnings what would happen, he asked, in bad times? three evils complained of, he said, upon which the demand was made for legislation to fix rates; first, that that -there were against shippers; third, that there were discriminations against locali- ties. He insisted that railroad rates were not excessive. also were prohibited from making unjust discriminations. Congress had no constitutional right to fix a rate catory of the property of the railroad. No Word From the President. dent Roosevelt started on his bear sidered strange, for the president an- nounced before farewells were said something of importance to send out. Rate Commission Bill Passed. Madison, Wis., April 18.—Without debate, by a vote of 75 to 12, the |\ Wisconsin assembly passed the ad- ministration railroad rate commission | ) bill. The assembly concurred in sen- ate bills prohibiting the sale of giant firecrackers and forbidding spring shooting. The Social Democrat reso- lution for an old age pension fund was killed. BRIEF BITS OF NEWS. The Diamond saw mill at Minne- apolis has been destroyed by fire, causing a loss of $60,000. Mrs. Rachel J. Wilson Albright, ninety-three years old. is dead at Fort Madison, Ia.. She was a granddaugh- ter of Betsy Ross, who made the American flag. Mrs. J. King Clark, the artist who recently returned from a visit to the court centers of Europe, is dead at Cincinnati from exhaustion following an operation for tumor, Chicago clubs are expecting to en- tertain President Roosevelt and-Alton B. Parker at the same time. Both party leaders have arranged for a visit to that city ‘the last week in May. The American submarine boats have proved so satisf.ctory that the Russian admiralty has just signed a large order for additional boats which will be built at Libau under the direct supervision of the inventor. BASEBALL SCORES. National League. At St. Louis, 9; Chicago, 5. At Brooklyn, 4; Philadelphia, 7. At Cincinnati, 4; Pittsburg, 6. American League. At ‘Washington, 7; New York, 13. At Chicago, 1; St. Louis, 0—eleven innings. American Contracts in the Orient. New York, April 19.—Important con- tracts have been closed for the Amer- ican equipment of the first steel mill to be built in China and for Japanese steel wire drawing, relling mill and blast furnace plants. A Cleveland (0.) company secured the contracts through its New York oftices. The work entails an expenditure of up- ward of $3,000,000. There is no lever so powerful as plain and simple facts—Mark’s Lung Balsam will cure your cough. the blood and mucous surface: of the system, thereby destroy- ing the foundation of the disease, and giving the patient strength by building up the constitution and assist nature indoing its work. The proprietors have so much faith in its curative pow- ers that they offer one hundred dollars for any case that it fails to cure. Send for list of testi- monials. Address: F. J. CHENEY & Co. ToLEDO, OHIO. Sold by Druggists, 75 cents Take Hall’s Family Pills for constipation. Mill Wood for Sale. During the coming summer, Wes Wright will handle all the mill wood at the Crookston Lum- ber company, having secured that right from the mill manage- ment. Wood will be delivered for $2 per load. See Wes Wright, or call up phone No. 45 or the Crookston Lumber company. Notice to Ticket Holders. Those holding tickets secured | We have trays full of them in an infinite va- riety of styles and de- signs. If you want a pretty ring set with a genuine stone for $10, we can show you two or three trays of them to select from and plenty of others at whatever price you want to pay, up to $300.00. € ¢ Another liae which we carry in fine assortment is the SIMMONS line of watch and lorgnette fobs and chains. They com- _prise the handsomest pat- terns that have been cre- ated and the quality of every chain and fob. is “absolutely guaranteed. at the J. A. McConkey auction sale are notified that:the draw- ing-for presents will take place tomorrow at iwoonloek. : E. A. Barker perity and large business on a basis| % There were |\l railroad rates were excessive; ‘second, | tly discriminations | = Under the com-| -3¢ mon law the carriers were prohibited 'V from making unreasonable rates and which would not give .the shipper a |\}f reasonable return or would be confis-| y)% Glenwood Springs, Colo., April 19.— | 3¢ Three days have passed since Presi- |\ hunt and no word has heen received | yby by Secretary Loeb. This.is not con-| -3¢ at Newcastle that he would not be in | )y a hurry to communicate unless he had | >3- at Mchonkey.’s has 'beén discbhtinued But the balance of the stock will be (Closed Out at Your Own Price Many of these articles, consisting prinei- pally of Dry Goods and Shoes, are now being offered far below cost price. Those holding tickets bring them in Tues- day, when ten valuable prizes will be distributed to those holding lucky tickets. _A. McCONKEY W - J. 10 W W W W W W W W W W (] W W W W W |V W W W W, and a complete line of (ardenSeedsinbulkandpackages With our fresh and up-to-date grocery line we have “University” and “Monogram” Canned Goods. Ladies’, Gents’ and Children’s Shoes and Rubber Goods, Dry Goods, Crockery, Pillsbury Flour, Feed, Bran, Shorts, Hay, Ete., Ete. We would be pleased ‘to have you ecall and get prices. Satlsfactlon Guaranteed. W. G. SCHROEDER, 314 Minnesota Ave. Telephone No. 65. Serious Stomach Trouble Cured. I was troubled with a distress in-my stomach, sour stomach! and vomiting spells,~ and can truthfully say that Chamberlain’s Stomach and Liver Tablets cured me.—Mrs. T.V. Williams, Laings- burg, Mich. For sale by Bark- er’s Drug store. Notice. I have moved my restaurant from its former location to a new location one door east of ‘the Re- more hotel. With new and en-|° larged quarters I will be in a position to serve my customers better than before, Thanking you for past favors and soliciting your future bnsmess - : W. N.Bro—r * ELit) l ;v vaw“vvmvvmvvm DR. F. E. BRINKMAN, CHIROPRACTIONER. OFFICE HOURS: 10 a. m. to Noon, and 1 to 5:30 p, m. Office over Mrs. Thompson’s boarding house 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- migh in one tenth of the time Lhan an Osteopath would. Y SR A ol il ol e o ol ol B B B B Easf 13 S ter Eggs. SUBM,:{!_, E FOR THE DAILY PIONEEIL —

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