Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, September 27, 1905, Page 1

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“ b The Bemidji Daily Pioneer VOLUME 3. NUMBER 133. Children’s Ladies’ Misses’ Coats O’Leary & Bowser His““’"ieal- ; Coats Fur Lined Coats $40.00 to $75. Cloth Coats, New Styles,$8.50 to $25 Fur coats $27.50 to $60.00 and AIMED AT THE PREMIER. Demonstration Marks Reassembling of Austrian Pacliament. Vienna, Sept. 27.—When the house reassembled the opening ments were marked by a lower mo- 8ocial Democr agalnst the pre von Frankentr the wrath of @ his attitude on the que toral reform, having adv peror to refuse to cc troduction of univ Hungary. The uproar time, shouts of “'w a pign” being heard above ihe general din, The premier ultin succeeded in obtaining a hearin house of the go faithfully execute it Hungary provided t: and complet of the commer ty negotiations. Should Hungary not agree to the Aus trian views on this poiat the go ¥ent wouid take st or the protec- tion of Austrian interestz. The pre- mier further declared that an iancor- rect view had been taken of his acti- tude towards universal suffrage for Hungary. He claimed he had not ek- ercised alleged decisive infiuence in the matter and said he made a prin- ciple of not interfering in the internal affairs of Hunga FIERY SOCIALISTIG SPEECHES oT. CIDE TO END STRIKE AND RESUME STUDIES. PETERSBURG STUDENTS DE. + . Bt. Petersburg, Sept. 27.—Following a long and earnest debate concerning the question of the resumption of work the students of the St. Peters- burg univ: decided by & large majority to resume their studies “be- cause an open university will be more dangerous (o imperia versity on ike.” For sweltering rspiring mw students stocd closely pack: assembly hall of which « new oil paintlng of Fmperor Nicholas has taken the place of the portrait desiroyed at the meeting of Feb. 20, hstening to a series of heated but remarkably able speeches from student orators. Nearly all the speak- ers were members of the socialistic group and many of them were out and out revolutionists and a stranger listening to the fiery debate would have little idea that he was in Russia. ive nours a of 2,000 in the .| 18 not permiited. ¢ | or recpen the ul | revolution.” sm than a uni-! the university, im | AFTER GAYNOR AND GREENE United States Officers En Route to Montreal. . Montreal, Sept. 27.—Two . United States officers are expected to arrive here shortly commissioned to escort Messrs. Gaynor and Greene to Savan- nah, Ga. Their case is now in the hands of the minister of justice at Ottawa and as the law governing the situation is very definite he has no aption. ~=! to order. their deliverance supposedly a land ‘wnerevIree Speeca No voice was raised in favor of the government. All the speakers were the present con: sions are unsatis- faciory it is necessary to continue the reform prepaganda, but they diifered as to whether it would be better tactics to continue the strike iversity as a center of agitation, or even as a “temple of Students of the moderate faction, who were thinking of continu- {ing their education rather than fur- thering the work of reform, abandoned the forum to the agitators, but when {the vole was taken they snowed un- der those who wished to continue the strike. Revolutionary proclamations were several times showered from the galleries and the students sang “Mar- seillaise.” The meeting, however, was {far more orderly than that of Febru- ary. Neither police nor troops were | sity. { Eleven Thousand Troops Arrive in | Caucasian City. | Baka, cCa 2, Sept. forcements t | three Dbatte 27.—Rein- oi artillery, y. The governor has bldding the troops houses occeipied by foreign consuis. Should, ho er, shots be fired irom the troops the land- vily fined. _ | The proprietors of the naphtha wells tand refineries have been ordered un- der pain of arrest to pay all the ar- rears of wages due to their employes. NO THIRD TERM. | President Roosevelt's Determination i Remains Unshaken. ! County Democrat on Sept. 6 published |an editorial enthusiastically advocat- ling President Roosevelt’s unanimous : nomination and re-election. i This editorial was brought to the ;presiuent's notice through Secretary | Loeb. | rrat expressing his appreciation. In -‘[Lerlined in the typewritten letter in | ink by Secretary Loeb was the state { ment that the third term declaration | would stand to the end. Ocjp, ‘:y G in the idea that | ible in the vicivity of the univer- | REINFORCEMENTS AT BAKU, | alling 11,000 men, with | have | Lewiston, 111, Sept. 27.—The Fulton | President Roosevelt wrote to ! Editor W. D. Davidson of the Demo- ! : SOCIETY. BEMIDJ1, MINNESOTA, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 2¥] 1905, Stnit JS AT PENSACOLA { THOUSANDS HOMELESS YELLOW FEVER SECURES FIRM HOLD AND CONTINUES TO SPREAD RAPIDLY. f \ wen PHYSICIANS ADVISE ALL RESI- PENTS WHO ARE ABLE TO LEAVE THE CITY. A r Pensacola, Fla., Sept. 27.—Interest In the yellow fever fight in the South has shifted from New Orleans to Pen- sacola, where the situation is serious. A distressing feature of the problem in' Pen@acola is that the cases are scattered all over the city, rendering more difficult the task of those who are engaged in suppressing the pest. The fever has spread rapidly since its first appearance in Pensacola and the twenty-five new cases reported during the past twenty-four hours shows the Rhold the pestilence has. Natchez, Miss., Sept. 27.—The local yellow fever situation is becoming serious and physicians have advised all the people who can to leave the city. Five new cases were reporied during the day, of which two were white. One death was also reported. There are twenty-one foci to i two new ones being reported during the day. Jackson, Miss.,, Sept. 27.—One posi- of yellow fever was an- at Port Gibson during the Doctors (€ as and Haral VIO WEre senl to the place ob special rain. SITUATION ENCOURAGING. at New Orleans Confined to One Section. New Orleans, Sept. 27.—With .the fever appearing only sporadically in the upper districts the principal fight of the authorities now is being carried on in the lower section of New Or- leans; to which ihe new cases are carefully confined. The report for the last forty-eight hours, covering new cases, death and foci, give an encour- aging view of the situation. Fever Yellow Fever Death at New York. New York, Sept. 27.—Joseph Me- eara, 2 coal passer, died of yellow fever at Swinburne Island quarantine hospital. He was removed from the steamer Havana, from Colon, last Sunday, but the yellow fever did not develop sufiiciently to be diagnosed until late Monday. The.body will be eremated. FIVE DEAD IN WRECK. Collision of Passenger Trains on the Pennsylvania Road. Philadelphia, Sept. 27.—A rearend eoilision: between the- eastbound New York limited express from St. Louis and a local passenger train which was standing at the Paoli station of the Pennsylvaria railroad resulted in the death of five men and the injuring of wore than twenty others. All those who ‘met death were in the private car of General Manager Atterbury, which was attached to the rear of the local train. Mr. Atterbury ls on his vacation in Muine. In the car at the time of the collision were about a dozen men who had been en- gaged in overhauling the car. Those who were not killed were injured. The force of the collision was so great that the. engine of the limited plowed ten feet into the private car and the latter was forced half way { through the day coach ahead. BROKEN WIRE CAUSES PANIC. { Workmen Jump From Car With Seri- ous Resuits. \ H Minneapolis, Sept. 27.—John Antou | was killed and three other men se- verely injured in a pamnic which re- | sulted from a breaking trolley wire at i Twenty-eighth street and Hennepin avenue. The men were members of a gang of twenty workmen who were re- turning from work ocn the Minne- jtonka line. = As the work car crossed { Twenty-eighth street the trolley wire jbroke and fell upon the platform Wwhere the men were ‘#itting. The { laborers were thrown into a panic and ‘(eaped from the car, which was run- fing at a lively rate. Anton, who was sitling . forward, jumped directly { In front of the car and went under the { fender. He was instantly killed and ilns body was dragged nearly 100 feet i wnd fearfully mangled. Girl Scalped by Machiner,: Cokato, Minn., Sept. 27.—Miss Ruby ustafson, an employe in the local i canning factory, got her head too mear shafting rod, her hair became caught in the machinery and she was completely scalped. | fic.was suspended. DESTRUCTIVE TYPHOON CAUSES LOSS OF LIFE AND PROP- _ BRTY AT MANILA. | FIVE NEW. CASES AT NATCHEZ, MISS. | NATIVE 9ISTRICTS SWEPT. .AWAY 1 ELECTRIC LIGHT WIRES BLOWN DOWN AND STREET TRAF- . FIC ABANDONED. New York, Sept. 27.—The Evening Sun has a dispatch from Manila re- porting a destructive typhoon in that city. The native districts were swept away, 8,000 persons are homeless and § Fillpinos were killed and 200 in- -jured.. Hundreds of buildings were umroofed. Thousands of electric light wires. were blown down, filling the streets with flames until the current | was turned off. The city was in darkness when the dispatch was sentand all street traf- It was believed that shipping in the bay had warning of the approach of the storm, but up to the time the dispatch was sent the ships were Invisible on account of the rain and had not communicated with the shore. SULTAN GETS ANOTHER NOTE. Pewers Insist on Control of Mace- donian Finances. Constantinople, Sept. 27.—A collec- tlve note from the six powers has been handed to the porte declaring that their decision to assume interna- tional centrol of the finances of Mace- donia is unalterable. ‘The note in- forms ‘the Ottoman government that the foreign delegates appointed as controllers will arrive at Salonica Oct. 1 and requests that the necessary in- structions be sent to the provincial authorities so that the delegates may enter on their functions without de- lay. There is increasing friction between Typewriter and TEN CENTS PER WEEK % Typewriter % Pl Supplies. s vof a.il 'BEMIDJI opposite post office kinds . . PIONEER 1 MUNICIPAL OWNERSHIP FIGHT. Contest Over Waterworks Causes Riot at Manitowoc, Wi Manitowoe, Wis., Sept. 27.—An ai- tempt of the Manitowoc Waterworks company to open a river intake pipe during a test of the plant precipitated a riot in which citizens oifered armed resistance to the plan. Mayor Stolze, who is charged with having been responsible indirectly for the move made by the waterworks company and who insisted that the test continue after he had been in- formed it would be necessary to open . the river pipe, was assaulted by by- standers and knocked down. City heaith officers had issued or- ders against the opening of the pipe and in seeking to enforce the order Health Officer Max Stachle was in- Jured by being struck in the face by 1| @ heavy iron bar used for opening a shutoff. Alderman Lorengen was also beaten. The-riot is a culmination of a fight that started with the selection of the British embassy and the porte in Stolze as mayor on a platform of city conseguence of the delay in the pay- ment of-an indemnity to the Swners of British dhows attacked by Arab pirates in the Red sea. The embassy’s latest note pointed out that unless the matter was soon satisfactorily settled the incident would assume a graver aspect. CHILDREN CANNOT USE STREETS Radical Steps Taken to Check Diph- theria Epidemic. Peoria, Ill.,, Sept. 27.—The board of health of Farmington, Ill., has issued a proclamation forbidding children the use of the streets day or might uniil an epidemic of diphtheria now raging at ghat place is checked. The procla- mation is signed by Mayor Stearns, S. P. Rolle, president of the board of education, and two physicians. It pro- vides a heavy fine for all children found on the streets either on foot or in a vehicle. All cats in the village ownership of the water plant. The test of the waterworks was directed by the council two weeks ago and the water company claimed that in order to meet the requirements of a test it would be necessary to open the river pipe, which would flood the entire sys- tem with river water and would en: danger public health, CONTROLS TRACTION LINES. Standard Oil Group Buys Ohio ana indiana Roads. Cleveland, Sept. says: The Standard Oil group of New 1| York financiers hes obtained control of traction securities in Ohio and In- dlena with a par value ‘of $83,105,000 at a reported cash outlay of $50,000,- 000. Other similar transactions are known to be pending. Three Deaths From Explosion. New York, Sept. 27.—Two employes are ‘ordered exterminated and dogs| Of ‘the Spazzio fireworks factory in must be tied up. REPORTS NOT EXAGGERATED. Secretary Wilson Says Western Crofis Are Enormous. Washington, Sept. Wilson of the department of agricul- ture has returned to Washington from a visit to the Middle West. He says Brooklyn, which was blown up Mon: day, died during the day. This -makes three dead out of five persons whc were working in' the factory at the time of the explogion. Small Boy Torn to Picces, Iowa Falls,” Ia., Sept. 27.—Frank Carpenter, the flve-year-old son of Or. 27.—Secretary vil Carpenter, a well known farmer ten: who lives south of here in Ellis town- ship, fell into a corn harvester and was Instantly killed, the body being that the glowing reports of enormous | terally ¢ut to pieces. crops have not been exaggerated. In the Dakotas the small grain has sur- passed in yield and quality the crops of the last six or seven years and in these states and Nebraska, Kansas, Iowa and Illinois the corn crop is the best he has ®ver known. He says the Socialist Commits Suicide. Bridgeport, Conn., Sept. 27.—John A. Norton, once a candidate for gov- ernor of the state on the = Socialist ticket, committed suicide Monday by inhaling gas through a tube which he entire crop is beyond the danger of | attached to a jet. Norton was forty- frosts. SITUATION MORE ACUTE. Generai Strike of Berlin Electrical Workers Probable. Berlin, Sept. 27.—The controversy between the electrical companies of Berlin and their workmen has become more acute. The striking screw work- ers of the Siems and Schuckert com- | panies and the packers of the General | Electric company met during the day . and rejected the companies’ -ultima- | the workmen of all the electrical com- panies and to-ask for a general strike, which will affect about 60,000 men. i Cardinal Visits Italian King. i i Milan, Sept. 27.—Cardinal Ferrarier, ;n.rchibshop of Milan, visited King Vie- itor Emmanuel and Queen Helena at the Toyal palace, where the sovereigns are now sojourning. The king con»; ferred with the cardinal for half an | hour. The visit is commented upon {in connection with the rapproachment ! petween church and state. : six years old. mARKET QUOTATIONS. Minneapolis Whea‘t. Mdnneapolis, Sept. 26.— Wheat— Sept., 82c; 88%c. 27—The Leader] MAY CAUSE GREAT DAMAGE. in Suez Cans! to Be Blown Up, Port . Said, Egypt, Sept. 27.—A seri- ous stoppage of traffic on the Suez canal is threatened owing to the ne cessity for the blowing up of the Brit- ish steamer Chatham, which was sunk on Sept. 6 owing to the fact that the ship was on fire and that the flames threatened a large quantity of dyns mite which formed part of her cargo. Since that time the wreck has ob- structed the waterway, especially at night, as the wreck is submerged. Divers will place cases of blasting gelatine. in the hold of the -Chatham and these will be connected with an electric battery ashore and the eighty tons of dynamite in the wreck will be exploded Thursday morning. An ex- pert from the Nobel company, who is conducting the operasons, says it is impossible to predié® the amount of mischief which will enspe from the great upheaval or o what extent traf- flc will be impeded. He says there is no precedent to gshow the effect of the explosion of such an: amount of dyna- mite. It may conceivably form a crater in the bed of the canal in which the wreckage/may be buried, leaving the canal deeper than before. The Suez Canal company déclares it is impossible to estimate the length of time the canal will be blocked, but | the company’s experts are confideni it will only be a matter of a few days. TEXT OF ANGLO-JAP TREATY Vessel Sunk e OEBJECT OF CONVENTION SAID TG BE FOR MAINTENANCE OF GENERAL PEACE. { | London, Sept. 27.—The text of the Anglo-Japanese treaty signed Aug. 12 was issued from the foreign office dur- ing the evening, together with a dis patch to the British ambassador at St. Petersburg forwarding a copy of the agreement with instructions to communicate it to the Russian govern- ment at the earliest opportunity. The treaty contains eight clauses and a long preamble. The latter states that . the object of the treaty is the main- ance of general peace in Asia and India and the preservation of the in- terests of all the powers in China by Insuring the integrity of China and the principle of equal opportunity for the commerce of all nations, the main- tenance of the territorial rights of Great Britain and Japan in Eastern Asia and India and the defense of their special interests therein. SEVENTY SALOONMEN FINED. ' Plead Guilty at Minneapolis to Kecp- ing Open on Sunday. Minneapolis, Sept. 27.—Seventy sa- loonkeepers pleaded guilty in the mu- 1 nicipal court during the day to keep- ing their places of busingss open oo Sunday. This number includes all of Dec., 8215c; May, 881, @ | the salooniteepers recently arrested in On track—No. 1 hard, 86%c; | the Mill City as a resuit of the cru- No. 1 Northern, 85%c; No. 2 North-| 8ade of the Home Protective league. ern, 82%ec. St. Paui Union Stock Yards. Each of the saloonmen was fined $25. It is stipulated that the pleas may be withdrawn if an appeal now pend- St. Paul, Sept. 26.—Cattle—Good tc| ing is decided adverse to the prose- and heifers, $3.50@4.25; veals, $2.00@ 5.50. Hogs—$5.00@5.35. Sheep—Year- ling wethers, $4.50@5.25; good to choice native lambs, $5.00@5.50. Chicago Union Stock Yards. tum. At meetings held later the men | cHoice steers, $4.50@5.50; common tc cution ‘by the supreme court and = ‘decided to appeal for the solidarity of | fair, $3.75@4.25; good to choice cows | stay to Oct. 15 is granted. & ! Insurance Man Commits Suicide. Philadelphia, Sept. 27.—William H. Chicago, Sept. 26.—Cattle—Beeves, | Kirkpatrick, Philadelphia agent of the $2.65@5.20; cows and heifers, 31.40@ | Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance 4.60; 4.45; Western, 33.10@4.60. Hogs Mixed and butchers, $5.10@5.70; heavy., $5.30@5.70; rough heavy, §$ @4:90; lambs, $4.2507.65. i stockers and feeders,-$£2.40@ | company of Milwaukee, was found dead in the bathroom of his_apart- ocd | ments with a bullet wound in his 00 | ead. He had shot himself some time ight, $5.10@5.60. Sheep, $3.50 | during the night. Il health s &e supposed cause for the deed. HISTORICAL

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