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

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s RS NAME YOUR ROUTE EAST In purchasing your tickets East, if you call for an excelllence in service and equipment not obtainable elsewhere, name your route CHICAGO, MILWAUKEE & ST. PAUL RAILWAY it No additional charge to ride on the Pioneer Limited or the Fast Mail, the two most pop- ular trains between Minneapolis, St. Paul and Chicago. But it is necessary to Name Your Route. W. B. DIXON NORTHWESTERN:PASSENGER AGENT 365 ROBERT STREET, ST. PAUL T Y T T Y TR Our Facilities for PLUMBING 72 of ALL KINDS 7 are Unexcelled. 2 Let us Quote you Prices. g;ilééé SEESESETSTETETSEEEEEE 5@.‘ |77 A, Remember My Prophecy. I have sold more lots in Bemidji the n past month than have been sold in any six months during the past two ": years, 1\ Buy NOW while prices are LOW. Come jn and i\ make your selection before the choice locationsare ~ ft gone. They are going fast. 'Q: BUSINESS LOTS RESIDENCE LOTS z: MANUFACTURING SITES. X m ’Bemidii Townsite & Imp. Co. ] n Swedback Block s SIS IIIIBNE” JEEEEEECTEE CEETELEECTEEEEE SOLD BY Fleming & Downs Hardware OFFICE, quLy 16% 1301, ANKS, FENCES z7c. Merchants. /7] Prompt]Delivery. < 4 MADE ONLY BY! by THE NATIONAL PRINT <= VARNISH 60} i asmomome Phone 57, CLEVELAND, OHIO. MAMAMAAAMNANA \Y ¥ ¥ ¥V ¥ WWWWWAWWWY WAAWVWMWMAAN VAN Subséribe for the Daily Pioneer e ca s PUBLISHED EVERY AFTERNOON, Official Paper Village of Bemidiji PIONEER PUBLISHING Co. By -R. W. HITCHCOCK. A A A A AN NP Entered in the postoffice at Bemidji, Minn., 1 a8 second class matter. SUBSCRIPTION $5 PER YEAR TRIES TO BLOW UP JAIL, Prisoner at Seattle Touches Off Five Sticks of Dynamite. Seattle, Wash., Aug. 4—Jack Ches- terfield, serving a sentence in jail here, made a desperate attempt to blow up the county bastile. His wife smug- gled five sticks of dynamite and a re- volver into his cell. Chesterfield, though watched by three guards, touched off the dynamite, tearing a huge hole in the cell. He held all the guards at bay until the police and fire departments were summoned. Ches- terfield was nearly drowned by the deluge of the department’s water and then shot himself fatally. DENIES THE REPORT. Italian Diplomat Says the Kaiser Is Not Trying to Close Baltic Sea. Turin, Italy, Aug. 4—Count Lanza, di Busca, the Italian ambassador to Germany, who has just arrived here from Berlin, says that there is no truth in the report that Emperor Will- iam is endeavoring to secure for the Baltic sea the status of a mare clau- sum. 'The emperor, he says, is anx- ious for peace. Ten Have Fever Symptoms. New York, Aug. 3.—Ten persons with fever symptoms, two of them passengers and the remainder mem- bers of the crew, were removed from’ the steamship Advance at quarantine during the day. The steamer came from Colon, having aboard several em- ployes of the isthmian canal. All those removed had high temperatures and were taken to Hoffman island for observation, Bishop Hargrove Dead. Nashville, Tenn., Aug. 4—Bishop R. K. Hargrove of the Methodist Episco- pal.church south, died at his home here shortly after midnight. He was born in Pickins county, Ala., Sept. 17, 1829, and during the Civil war was a chaplain in the Confederate army. In 1882 he was elected a bishop. BRIEF BITS OF NEWS. Negotiations are pending, it is an- nounced, for international yacht races between the United States and Ger many. Arthur Weaver, a prominent busi- ness man of Clinton, Wis., was killed in a runaway. His wife was seriously injured and may die. Creditors of Mrs. Cassie L. Chad- wick will receive a total dividend of about 7 mills on the dollar when the matter is finally settled, according to Referee in Bankruptcy Remington. Twelve of the twenty mills of the American Sheet and Tin Plate com- pany of Newcastle, Pa., will be placed in operation next Monday. The mills were closed eight weeks ago for re- pairs. A notice has been posted announc- ing the temporary suspension of pay- ments by the savings bank connected with the Printemps, one of the largest department stores in Paris. The an. nouncement has caused great exciter ment. BASEBALL SCORES. National League. At Chicago, 3; Boston, 4—eleven in- nings. At St. Louis, 2; Philadelphia, 4. At Pittsburg, 1; New York, 3. At Cincinnati, 8; Brooklyn, 7—thir- teen innings. : American League. At New York, 4; Cleveland, 3. At Washington, 2; Detroit, 1. At Philadelphia, 4; Chicago, 3. At Boston, 4; St. Louis, 2. Second game—Boston, 4; St. Louis, 3. American Associatien. At Columbus, 1; Minneapolis, 2. At Louisville, 4; Milwaukee, 5. At Indianapolis, 3; Kansas City, 1. At Toledo, 3; St. Paul, 14. MARKET QUOTATIONS. . Minneapolis Wheat. Minneapolis, Aug. 3.—Wheat—Sept., 80%c; Dec., 87%0. On track—No. 1 hiard, $1.09; Ne. 1 Northern, $1.07; No. 2 Northern, $1.08@1.05. St. Paul Union Steck Yards. St. Paul, Aug. 3.—Cattle—Good to ehoice steers, $4.50@5.00; common to fair, $3.75@4.25; good to choice eows and heifers, $3.00@3.75; veals, $2,00@ 5.00. Hogs—$5.40@5.80. Sheep—VYear- 1ings;~.$4.50@5.75; good to ehoies na- tive lambs, $5.00@6.00. Duluth Wheat and Flax. Duluth, Aug. 3.—Wheat—To areive —=No. 1 Northern, $1.06. - On tragk— 9, 1 Northern, $1.07; T s ), T 89%c. Flax—To arrive, $1.45; on track, $1.48; Aug., $1.30; Sept. $1.- 21%; Oet, $1.10%; Nov., $1.19%; Dec., $1.171%. Chieago Union Steek Yards. Chicago, Aug. 1.—Cattle—Good - to prime steers, $5.25@5.90; peor to me- dium, $3.75@5.10; stockers and feed- ers, $2.25@®4.00; ecows and heifers, $2.-- 25@4.85; calves, $3.00@7.00. Mogs— Mixed and butchers, $5.50@6.05; geod to choice heavy, $5.835@6.00; light, $5.75@6.10. Sheey to eholes wethers, $4.50@4.85; R W’ g.oofifl; native lamb .00G7.80; Western, 35.50@7.10. Sl ©Chlcago Merchant Retires -to Give Some One Else a- Chance. Chicago, Aug. 4,—There is such a thing as getting enough money. That is the opinion of Otto Young, who has just sold his half interest in The Fair department store and who is accounted one of the wealthiest men in Chicago. Mr. Young declares his ‘own ambitions in the acquiring of wealth are satis- fied. “I feel that I have all the money I desire,” said Mr. Young, “and I am willing and glad that some one else should obtain a fortune from Th% Fair. Undoubtedly there is a time when a man comes-to feel that he had reached the limit of his desire in the way of piling up Tiches.” Some idea of the profits in the de- partment store business may be ob- tained from knowledge of the fact that an original investment in 1886 of $200,- 000 in The Fair ha® ,‘hid Mr. Young between $12,000,000 and $13,000,000. INSURANCE INVESTIGATION. Commissioners of Several States Join in Inquiry. Chicago, Aug. 4—In pursuance of plans adopted at a conference of the insurance commissioners of eight states Minnesota’s insurance commis- sioner; Thomas D. O’Brien, together with the commissioners of Tennessee, Kentucky and Wisconsin, will begin soon a most searching investigation of three of the largest life insurance com- panies of the United States. Further than the statement that these companies have headquarters at New York the commissioners refused to go into details regarding their mis- sion, but the idea prevails that the Equitable, the Mutual Life of New York and the New York Life, termed “The Big Three” by Thomas Lawson and other reformers, are the targets of the commissioners. CATERED LARGELY TO WOMEN. New York Brokerage Concern Sus- pends Business. New York, Aug. 4—J. H. Mansfield & Co., a brokerage firm, said to have been without exchange connections, which occupied a handsome suite in a Lower Broadway office building, have suspended and anxious creditors be- siege the place seeking some explana- tion. No member of the firm could be found. Their only consolation is a placard on the door reading: “Business temporarily suspended; will resume in a few days.” According to the firm’s letterheads the concern was incorporated with a capital of $100,000. It had been in business only six months and catered largely to women, forty of whom gath- ered about the closed rooms and stared ruefully at the notice of suspension. SWEDISH RIKSDAG ADJOURNS. Will Reassemble When Norway Re- plies to Proposals, " Stockholm, Aug. 4.—The extraor- dinary session of the riksdag was brought to & close during the day. King Oscar was not present but was represented by the new premier, Chris- tian Lundeberg. . In declaring the session closed the spfeaker of the lower house said the situatlon still contained disquieting elements, but Sweden would be ab- solved from blame if a breach oc- curred after the offer made by the riksdag. Another special session will be called as soon as Norway is ready to act on the Swedish conditions. MOORE 1S A FREE 'MAN. Former United States Consul Released From Prison. New York, Aug. 4—Governor Hig- gins has pardoned William A. E. Moore, ex-United States consul to Dur- ban, South Africa, and the former hus- band of Fayne Moore. Moore was sentenced by Recorder Goff in 1898 to nineteen years, having been convicted of robbery in the first degree for working the “badger game” upon Martin Mahon, the Ilate pro- prietor of the New Amsterdam hotel, together with his wife, Fayne Moore. The latter was tried once, the jury disagreeing, and she escaped a second | trial through the death of the com- plaining witness. ACCUSED OF BEING A TRUST. Injunction lIssued Against Nebraska Grain Dealers’ Association. Lincoln, Neb., Aug. 4.—Judge Barnes of the Nebraska supreme. court has granted a temporary injunction against the Nebraska Grain Dealers’ associa- tion, which, it is alleged, is operating a trust and in restraint of trade. The association 'is forbidden to pool prices. or accept rebates and, pending the in- Jjunction, the officers of the associa- tion must not act as-officers and new officers must not be elected. The ac- tion is brought by the attorney general of the state under the law passed by the last legislature, framed along the lines of the national Sherman law. STATE FILES APPEAL BRIEF. Case Against Beef Trust in Montana Up Again, Helena, Mont., Aug. 4—In the beef trust cases now in appeal before the supreme court Attorney General Al- bert Galen has filled the appellant’s brief ‘with the clerk of the supreme court. These cases were brought by former Attorney General James Donovan against the Cudahy Packing company and the Hammond Packing company, Armour & Co. and Swift & Co., charg- ing them with having formed 3 com- binatfon for the purpese of controljing BHess on pacl oyse commodities. SSE YOUR WANTS 31 Call2 FOR SALE. e el T L R S i FOR SALE—Good well located homesteads, $50. Apply at this office quick. FOR SALE—Magnificent moose head, mounted;" will be sold cheap. Inquire at this office. FOR SALE— Rubber stamps. The Pioneer will procure any kind of a rubber stamp for you on short notice. FOR SALE—Hotel furniture. 20 rooms, all newly furnished four months ago. 1928 West Michigan street, Duluth, Minn. FOR SALE—Soldiers Additional Homestead Scrip, Santa Fe Land Scrip, and Military Bounty Land Warrants. All sizes, fiast class, fully guaran- teed. Can be used on timber land or any Government Land subject to entry. Prompt de- livery. Price by letter or wire. L. W. Hubbell, Springfield, Mo. FOR RENT. FOR RENTGood office rooms. Swedback Block, MISCELLANEOUS. PUBLIC LIBRARY — Open Tuesdays, Thursdays and Sat- urdays, 2:30 to 6 p. m. Thurs- day 7 to 8 p. m. also. Li- brary in basement of court House. Mrs. E. R. Ryan, li- brarian. HELP WANTED. e S SO L TR Y WANTED—Lady cook at the Palace Lotel Blackduck, Miun. WANTED —Girl for general housework. Apply 413 Ameri- can avenue, WANTED—Man and wife to0 cook: and do chores at stopping place. Address J. Lundeen, Marecell, Minn. WANTE.D—At once, assistant druggist, registered in North. Dakota. Apply J. S.-Macka; Bottineau, N. D, ke —_— WANTED—For U. S. army able- bodied, unmarried men be- tween ages of 21 and 85, citi- zens of United States, of good character and temperate habits, who can speak, read and write English. For .in- formation apply to Recruiting Officer, Miles block, Bemidji. Minnesota. Lost and Found. A A A A AR AN FOUND—In Barlow’s Best, the best baking flour on the mar. ket |LOST—An old fashioned gold brooch black enameled inlaid, Return to E, A. Barker’s for reward. LOST—Two checks $1 and §5, name of Scott Stewart on back, Leave at LumbermensBank., PATENTS—Williamson & Mer- chant, Patent [awyers and Solicitors. Main office 920-937 Guaranty Bldg. Minneapolis, Minn, Branch office McGill Bldg. Washington D. C. e | ¢§ Webster @ Cooley # g Wall Paper & Paint Store One door south of old P. O. * building. Telephone No. 283. AT W AMAAAARARAARAARMRAAMAARADAMARA A ADAAARANAMARRA AR THOS. JOHNSON E Builder ; E AND g» ' Contractor E For any work in the line of building be sure to see me and get your work right pr;ces accordingly. Phone E 127. LAUALALLALLLA LA A AL LALA AL A ALR A1 ) O Minnesota & International In Connection with the ..Northern Pacific.. Provides the best train passenger service between Northome, Funkley Blackduck, Bemidji, ‘Walker and intermediate points and Minne- apolis, St. Paul, Fargo and Duluth and all points east, west and sSouth., Through coaches between Northome and the Twin Cities. No change of cars. Ample time at Brainerd for dinner. Dally ex. STATIONS Daily ex. Sunday Ar p.m. 7:50 Ly. p.m. 725 Lyv.p m 7:10 5 51 Daily except Sunday. 6:00a. m. Lv. .Relliher...... .Ar. p.m. e mAr . ey A T 11i50 PROFESSIONAL ..CARDS.. LAWYERS. ; D. H. FISK Attorney and Counsellorat Law Office opposite Hotel Markham. P. J. Russell Attorney at Law BEMIDJI, - . . - - T1INN. E. E. McDonald LAWYER Bemidji, Minn, Office: Swedback Biock PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS. L. A. Ward, M. D,, Physician and Surgeon, Diseases of the Eye a speeialty. Glasses fitted. B 7 (o el ol e BV S Dr. Rowland Gilmore Physician and Surgeon Office: Tliles Block Dr. Blakeslee Y hysician and Surgeon Office: Ililes Block. Beminji Dr. E. H. Marcum Physician and Surgeon i Office: Gver First National Bank Residence Phone 221 Office Phone 18 DENTISTS, Dr. R. B. Foster, Dr. Phinney SURGEON DENTISTS PHONE 124 MILES BLOCK. Dr. C. M. Smith, DENTIST Office over E. H. Winter’s Store. DRAY AND TRANSFER. Wes Wright, Dray and Transfer. Phone 40. 404 Beltrami Ave. Great Northern R’y ALL POINTS IN THE NORTHWEST . EAST BOUND, No.108...Park Rapids Line..5:30a. m. (Oonnects with Fiyer at Sauk Ce; eapolis about 3:00 p. m. Iomr"rfi:fie.n No. 34...Duluth Express.’.12:27 p.m: “ 38 S 12:49 a.m WEST BOUND 83....Fosston Line.....3:52 P. M 35 ) (0 2:55 a. m. *,107....Park Rapids Line7:50§ *¢ Full information from E E. CHAMBERLAIN, Bemidii. ‘Mlnn Agent | i 1

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