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

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VOLUME 3. NUMBER 160. BEMIDJ1, MINNESOTA, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1905. .. TEN CENTS PER WEEK PRES. ROOSEVELT IN Light House Tender Collides With Fruit Steamer-- Chief Executive Safe. New Orleans, T.a., Oct. distance telephone rmessage from| Nairn, La., 60 miles down the river, announces than the lizht house tender | with President Roosevelt in coliision with the Esparta Magnolia, on board, was ‘ruit steamer midnight. Both vessels are neround atthe river’s bank. XNo one was seri- ously hurt. The president is safe and uninjured. The light bouse tender Ivy took the president on- board and the voyageto the Gulf of Mexico was resumed. 27.—A long | shortly after; | tained the motion to quash the indict- COLLISION Carrying President BAILEY CASE . DISMISSED. Indictment Against Peoria School Offi- cial Quashed. Peoria, Ill, Oct. 27.—Judge Slem- mons, in the county court, has sus- ment against O. J. Bailey, chairman of the finance committee of the school board, for malfeasance in office in per- mitting N. C. Dougherty to carry on his alleged defalcations undisturbed. The court held that neither the statute creating the school board, nor any set FEeE of rules and regulations at hand, nor A ctatue of Field Marshal von the indictment specifically set forth Moltke, the gift of the army to the the duties which 'the defendant failed German people, was unvelled at Berlin to perform. Thursday in the presence of Emperor| Counsel for’Mr. Bailey, moved his William, the imperial family, all the discharge from remgnizance wmch great personages of state and many was allowed. thousands of people. i St. Louis, South and Southwest Shortest of all lines between the Twin Cities and St. Louis. Two daily trains with through sleepers afford a seven hours’ ride along the beautiful Mississippi. Nothing like it, nothing half so lnterestmg as this 200-mile ride along the majestic river is seen by passengers on other routes. If you are going south —it’s Rock Island — everytime. Direct connection made in Union Station at St. Louis for Hot Springs, Ark. For tickets, time of trains and berth reservations, call on or address W. L. HATHAWAY, A.L.STEECE, Dist. Pass. Agt., City Pass. Agt., 322 Nicollet Ave.,, MINNEAPOLIS. _— Q&BO@@QQQ...O..OOOQ. COAT BARGAINS e e aaale e e e e e ae o o aF o 0 TN Thursday Morning we will put on sale 25 ladies’ coats at 1-2 price Y’Ig‘!hese‘ coats are worth from $5.00 to $25.00 and for service are well worth the money but they are last.season’s i garments and we want to close them out. $5 Coats $2.50, $10.00 Coats $5.00, $15 Coats $7.50, $20 Coats $10, $25 Coats $12.50. (0’Leary & Bowser. We are showing the finest line of Fall Q | . and Winter Coats in town. OO.Q.Q.O. ."‘OOOOQCQ@QOOO..O.Q ......OQQ..Q..0.000&&@90@9900000. | fought the strikers, whom they charge | tionary leaders are keeping their men: /| Vasiliostrov district and in all the 4 cation to interfere. TIEUP NOW COMPLETE RUSSIA ISOLATED FROM REST OF EUROPE AS RESULT OF STRIKE ON RAILWAYS. SITUATION (S DECIDEDLY MENACING MILITARY INTERFERENCE. AND BLOODSHED WILL FOLLOW RIOTS OR DISORDER. AT St. Petersburg, Oct. 27.—Russia is practically 1solated1rom the rest of the continent of Europe, as the inter- national train service on all the lines has virtually ceased. The tieup in the interior is more complete. The only trains running are operated by the railroad battalions. i The strike contagion is spreading | All classes of workmen are organizing sympathetic strikes and industrial life is coming to a standstill. The situa- tion cannot long continue. Either the, workmen will soon be starved into sub: mission or pillage, with military inter- ference and bloodshed on a large scale, are bound to follow. At Moscow 600 cabmen have already with taking the bread out of their mouths. In many cities, especially at Moscow, the question of food is becom: | ing extremely serious. Collisions between troops and strik- ers are reported to have occurred at! several places. At Ekaterinoslav a regular pitched battle between the soldiers and strik- ers was fought and the city was left in[ darkness. But as a rule the revolu, Communication by telegraph with' many interior points is interrupted. Panic ,at St. Petersburg. The whole country is becomingi alarmed and in St. Petersburg an in-! cipient panic prevails. The boats and | the Finnish trains, now the only means of ‘egress, are crowded with people fleeing abroad. The situation here has grown ' much worse over night. The ranks of the 40,000 workmen from the mills and factories who joined the! strikers Wednesday were increased by 30,000 more during the morning. All the employes of the port, 4,000 in num- ber, walked out and 12.000 other men from the steel works left work in a body. The inhabitants of St. Petersburg awoke to find the capital resembling a beleaguered city. The shops in the suburbs are closed, windows are board- ed and barred and mounted patrols are to be seen everywhere in’ the streets. Except in the heart of the city women and children are afraid to ven- ture out. Workmen are gathering at all the places frequented in the days of Father Gapon, but they are quiet and the Cossacks have had no provo- The general ap- pearance of' the town is menacing. All the St. Petersburg schools were closed during the day and the children were sent home with instructions not to return until their parents think it safe to do so. Suffering Falis on the Poor. The prices of food have gone up .and the supply of beef is only sufficient for three ®ays, but there are ample sup- plies of wheat and rye for two months, The emperor and the court at Peterhof are supplied by a warship from St. Petersburg. All the families who can afford it have hastened to lay in sup- plies and stand a siege. The suffering falls the heaviest on the poor, who live from hand to mouth. All the bakers sold out their bread before noon. . The meat dealers have been ordered by the revolutionists not to deliver meat to the troops under pain of death and ! consequently the soldiers are living on canned food. The great strike promises to delay and possibly interrupt the negotxations 'for the new Russian loan. The inter- national bankers who are here do not ecem greatly disturbed by the situa- tion, although they are constantly in receipt of threatening letters from the revolutionists warning them that: if they contract a loan without the con- sent of the national assembly itywill be repudiated. Nevertheless, they are not disposed to close with the govern- ment until the situation has cleared up. By imperial order the garrison of St. Petersburg has been placed under the command of General Trepoff, assistant minister of the interior, who is held responsible for the safety and order of the capital. Battleship Reported Destroyed. London, Oct. 27.—A dispatch to the Evening Standard from Odessa says it 'is reported thert from Sebastopol that the Russian battleship Patelomin (for. merly the Kniaz Potemkine) has been destroyed by incendiaries. PEOPLE ARE GRATEFUL! RESIDENTS OF NEW ORLEANS RE- MEMBER PRESIDENT'S AID IN FEVER EPIDEMIC. GIVEN. SPLENDID. WELGOME TO CITY LINE OF MARCH THROUGH PRIN- CIPAL STREETS FILLED BY CHEZRING CROWDS: s New Orleans, Oct. 27.—Gratitude for the immeasurable service he has ren--i dered this city in its struggle against the yellow fever epidemic was the' dominant note in the splendid ‘wel- come/which New Orleans extended to President, Roosevelt - during the day. Political differences were effaced and past antagonisms forgotten in a spon- taneous demonstfation/of popular ap- preciation. of the president’s unfailing sympathy and practical help through- i inews agency from St. Petersburg says {\About 100" workmen, CRAWFORD MUST PAY PENALTY Supreme‘ Court Refuses to Grant New Trial to Convicted Murderer of Hemo Lundeen. St. Paul, Oct. 27.—C. D. Crawford, COSSACKS ATTACK WORKMEN. | the convicted murderer oy Heine Lun- - (deen at Elk River, must hang. The HU"‘!"ed Persons Reported Wounded supreme court refused to grant him a at St. Petersburg. new trial. The governor must now .London, Oct. 27.—A dispatch to 2| fix the date for the hanging, which was deferred from AUGQOn account of the appeals to the supfeme court. that two squadrons of Cossacks at- tacked 7,000 workmen who were hold- ing a meeting ‘at the Nevski works. it is reported, were wounded apd seven - Cossacks were injured by stones., “The sultan of Morocco has acoepted Algeciras, Spain, as the place fér the Moroccan conference. iby the governor, the mayor and Pres- | during the day returned by a jury in! ¥ out the period of the fever’s visitation. The president’s train reached the Stuyvesant docks at 9 a. m., where the commodious ocean going steamer Co- mus awaited him. On board the steam- er were 400 of the leading men and women of tHe city, répresenting the{ various -committees connected with the reception. When the president went aboard Mayor Behrman, on be- half of the city, extended a brief wel- come and then the guest was escorted Good Coffee! Ghe Monogram is the Best | Our line of Monogram canned goods;cannot be excelled. (8 We carry a full line of Dry Goods. Groceries, General Merchandise, Lum- bermens Supplies. | Rubber Goods, also a complete line of Shoes, Crockery and Stoneware. Pillsbury’s Best Flour; and Majestic. OATS ident Sanders of the Progressive un- ion to a point of vantage where he had | pointed out to him the features of in- terest during a trip along the city’s, ¢ water front. f | LEITER LOSES STOCK suIT. | Verdict for Plaintiffs in Internatmnal} Power Case. 1 New York, Oct. 27.—A verdict for $80,241 against Joseph I.eiter, Josep H. Hoadley and Cyrus F. Judson wa: the supreme court in a suit bmugh( against these: three’ defendants b William H. Franklin and George L' ‘Scott. The plaintiffs claimed. that as members of the firm of Franklin, Scott. @ & Co., in April, 1902, they lost $65,80C: & by can\mg stock for a pool in the! | FEED which included Messrs. Judson, Lelte i - Stop and Readl of the full amount, with interest, whic the jury granted. Did you know that E.H. Winter & Company carry the largest stock of Rubber Goods of any concern in Northern Minnesota. thereby enabling us to purchase our goods from 5 per cent to 10 per cent cheaper than other concerns and we are giving you the benefit. Every ‘pair guaranteed. both price and quality. HAY TAR RUBBERSARE THE BEST RUBBERS For the Woodsman. ml The prices are the lowest. OVERSHOES From the smallest childs to largest' man’s. When you cannot get fitted elsewhere come here. ; Lol ol i ARCTI S Everythmg in this line of Alaskas and fleece lined rubbers for both La,dxes and Gents UNDERWEAR /' By buying early we are able to give you the same prices as last year although wool has advanced 10 to 15¢ per pound. An inspection of $1.00 and $1.50 garments will satlsfy you that thls is the pla.ce to buy. Illllllllllllllllllllll Sausfactlon Guaranteed or Money Cheerfully Refunded. fE.H.WINTER (&cb.,. Phone 30 ‘Bemidji, Minn. - lll..lll.l.lllllll.llllllll D‘”‘ SN

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