Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, November 16, 1905, Page 1

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™ The Bemidji Daily Pio MINKESOTA HISTORICAL VOLUME 3. NUMBER 177 BEMIDJ1, MINNESOTA, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1905. TEN CENTS PER WEEK We want you to visitour Crock ery departm’nt Extra Valves New Designs. Boy’s Wear. The boy can be fitted out at this store in less time and at less expense than you would expect. His suit, overcoat, cap, shoes, shirts, mitts, stockings and underwear can all be hought here, and a small profit on each article satisfies us. Children’s and Misses’ Coats. Children’s coats from $2.50 to 4 $10.00 Misses’ coats, $5.00 to $22.50 DAVID M.PFAELZER BCQ i ¥ Wrappers Ladies’ fleeced wrappers, ifine patterns, full width, well made garments, each, $1 to $2.50 EHEHIHHHHHHEWIHHMEHEERHHEEEHEEMBEEH s coat, size 40, Ladies’ Coats Just Listen to This: We have on hand a Lady’s black kersey squirrel lined throughout, with fine Siberian Squirrel collar and cuffs, cannot be bought at any city store for less than $75.00, our regular price is $60 Special price this week, $50.00 R P X P P XA 1 W O !FIVE ARE DEAD O'LEARY & BOWSER Sewing Ma- chines—New- Home Sewing BY BLACK HAND Six Story Tenement Buildidg Believed to Have Been Fired by Black Hand Society. Machines $35 to $40. Other makes $15-$25 —————————————( New York, Nov. 1¢—Five persons perished this morning in a fire which destroyed 2 six story tenement house joccupied by I'alians. The Biack 1 Hand society recently demanded $2000 PRESIDENT OF UNION PACIFIC| from the lessee of the building and the TESTIFIES IN INSURANCE fire is believed to be the result of a and brown. Ladies’ Broadcloth Coats, with blended fur collar, $15.00. Ladies’ fine kersey coats full satin lined, extra good fur collar, $25. No. 100, Home Spun Yarn Colors: black white, grey, Specml price while this log lasts, a skein, INVESTIGATION. rofusal to pay the blackmail, ciie STOCK. T2 sa™l he remienibered the Union Pacific holding syndicate and was desirous of combining vari- ous interests in Union Pacific and of- fered Mr. Hyde's repuesentative 5 per cent interest in the syndicate. When Mr. Hyde returned from abroad he MANY:'SUBJECTS: COVERED said he could not swing such a large i BY EVIDENCE. thing, but would_interast the Equirab_ 3) i Mr. Harriman did not want the Equit- ( _— able society in the syndicate unless his confidence could be guarded. New York, Nov. 16—E. H. Harrk| Believed Transaction Proper. man, president of the Union Pacific! yp paiyiman said he thought it was and Southern Pacific railroads, Wasi perfectly proper for the Equitable Lifa called to the stand in the insurancei to buy the Union Pacific st under [ CONTRADICTS YOUNG HYDE'S STORY GIVES DIFFERENT 'VERSION OF 19¢ l!!llllllllllllllll!lll V/ARSHIPS ARE ASSEMBLINE| | Sensational Testlmony Given by Ja'nei K. Hyde. New York, Now., Llii— Hyde, in the s POWERS PREPARING TO MAKE IJ: James on of the ] t NAVAL DEMONSTRATION v accused 1 Governor B. B. Odell, Jr., of blackmail ! in threatening through E. H. H rfiman AGAINST TURKEY. Paris, Nov. 16.—It is =aid in .official quarte here that the ambassadors ol the powers will | ent an ultimatum' to Turkey at once as the last AIiplu. matic move before making a naval ' demonstration. The powers have alsc agreed that their warships shall begin to rendezvous at Pleraeus early nex week. The ultimatum cov , the acceptance of 1he powers’ ]th for the Q financial reform of Macedonia; de createil further sensations | |'by accusing the Fri¢ck committee of un- s in its report and by charging Harriman with con- spiracy to get him out of the (mmlxv by inspiring him with the ambition 1o become ambassader ‘to France and i*with endeavoring ‘to overthrow his pi second the exiension for two vears of t..| sition in the Equitable Life Assuranc terms ot the financia: ascus appoin. . ‘ society. by Austria and Rus.ic va beaalt of (h. ! Mr. Hyde's atteniion was called 12 powers. the seriousn of ‘these charges on It is .the atentina 1 several occasions by Charles R. POW! to QA uemo: ! Hnum\s counsel to the committee, but against the Isiund of My Uiews to the French demonstration of 1901 ade the statements after! nights .and long, sad la,\'s of reflection, FOR BREACH CF PROMISE. ODELL WOULD "TESTIFY. Verdict Against Former AJdermafli O’Neil of Chicago. P Chicaga, Nov. I16—A jury has r(-*‘* turned a verdict of $15,000 in favor ol New York., Nov. lt.—Former Miss Mabel Beland against John ernor B. B. Odell. Jr., has requested O’Neil, a tormer aiderman and )num of the insurance inent contractor, for lumuh ul mumhfl ting comnittee to call & : lhe committee and give him an /Asks [Permission to Reply to Evidence of James | Hyde. of marriage. The trial for oppor o tes under oath in much int reply testimony of My. Hyde, several vears an immate of O'Neil's’ given before the commitiee, home and co it reside there a: the divorce of! husband. She t O'Neil had 1d demanded his he Hie Q’Neil bi suit ©Oyama to Quit Manchuria. Tokio, . 16.—Replying to an im- ed o ily return to Tokio and render a per- L0t tar his i > Lo adhe sonal report of the recent war Field rach she dec " bad wmadc’ yarshal Oyama has named Nov. 25 as ber. O'Neil denied. the charse (he dare of his departure from Man- and “tought the case with churia. : ce in hi y — Jerome’s Election Cost Nothing. New York, Nov. 16.—District Attor ney William T. Jerome has filed his declaration of election expenses, which evidence 1 had taken 3 .and other places in the Northwest. irips to [ 1e sa amounts 1o nothing, he hav- S RIKE . e SERIOUS STRIK FEARED. - spent mot one cent to _— . {obiain his electd “Trouble in Building Trades in New! b Bt York Drawing to a Head. | York, Nov. 16.—Trouble of a nature between men and em-| New i{MPORTANT POSTAL ORDER. serious | ployers in the building trades is not| il i far off, it the predictions of lead Postmaster General Redistributes Du' on both sides amount to anything.| ties of Assistants. Armstrons; 1ting committee late} former | Gov-' him, perial mesgaze ordering him to speed-' There are strong. indications that nut; later than next spring and perhaps! long before that building industry in! New York will be involved in a \\‘orse_i fight than that of 1903. | Many prominent builders are dis-! couraged over the outlook and do uoLL hesitate to express their belief that a| stubbern war is inevitable. The diffi-| culty arises from the refusal of the' unions to accept recent decisions of the arbitration boaxd ! e Sl [ Secretary Taft at Washington. Washington, Nov. 16.—Secretary Taft arrived in Washington from Hampton Roads at 7 a. mm. Imme- diately after breakfast he called at the | executive oftfice and saw the president | when the latter came to the ofiice, ] l Washington, Nov. 1 Postmaste General Cortelyou has issued an orde:’ of farreaching importance redistribut ; ing the duties of the four assistam postmaster generals and affecting the ruled the demurrer filed Tuesday to | entire postal service. The order wil carry into effect Dec. 1 a plan of the postmaster work by grouping under all related subjects. one bureatr The result wil be to place under the postmaster gen ! eral's personal supervision the direc| tion of ihe postal ser under the direction of the first assistant the post ofiice personnel and maneg general to consolidate the: ement; un, IOPERTY OF THE EMPEROR AND GRAND DUKES TO BE GIVEN i TO THE PEOPLE. to have the charter of the Mercantile! Trust company repezaled unless Odell's suit to recover on bonds of the United States Shipbuilding company was set-! 16.—The Asso- st ‘vurg, Nov. ciated Press is i'source that a ukase will be issaed im- { mediately i the imperial domain, which covers al- most a third of Russia and which at .pre nt is the property of the em- peror and grand .dukes, will be gne.n: ,10 the ]wdaanl.\ l lNTEREST Cashier of Allegheny Bank Owned | ! High Bred Herses. | Pittsburg, Nov. 16—The private pa- i pers of T. Lee Clark, the dead cashier ;of the Enterprise National Bank of Al- legheny, which are now under examin- ation by appraisers appointed to deter- fmine the value of Clark's estate, 2re i said to show that Clark’s outside finan- { cial transactions began ‘ago, and that he w; interested in many corporations, including several ! mining ventures. Amonz his death, it is said, was a haif inte est in a ing of high bred Kentucky horses. S0 cent ny are the papers that those in charge have no idea when they can complete their work or what the . value of the estate will be. Aiter the | work is co cled a will be sub- ! mitted to court, which claims 'against tne estate m: be presenied. CAUSES THREE DEATHS. Fz:ling Picture Breaks Off Gas Pipe While Victins Sleep. \ Palerson, N. Three !'deaths were can night , by the failing of a heavy picture on i wall, which broke a i I the Schroeder family w a Schroeder, his mother and her grand- child, Ira La Forge, were all asp} iated. Neighbors who entered the house in the morning found the fallen i picture beneath a gas fixture, which +had been snapped off short. They ar- ir M‘uall La l‘ux"e‘ (hxldren DEMURRER OVERRULEP !Senator Burton Must Stand Trial on Indictment. St. Louis, Nov. 16.—United States " Circuit Judge Van Deventer has over- i the indictment of United States Sena- tor Burton of Kansas. The trial of Senator Burton on the icharge of having used his influence i before the postoffice'department in he- hall of the Riaito Grain and Securities company of St. Louis to prevent the [ssuance of a fraud order against the company is set for beginning on next Monday. der the second assistant the directior’ et 21l matters a]-pm[ammg to mai under the third assistant th¢ direction of matters pertairing tc finance, and under the fourth assist ant the direction of rural free delivery and miscellaneous postal business, the Coupl¥ Drowned While "Hunting. Haliburton, Ont., Nov. 16.—Chief of Police Bond of Port Hope and his sis- Miss Grier of Toronto, were They were on a ter-dn-law, drowned near here. i aunting trip, whereby :a large porticn of ! seven years | his holdings at the time of | ved in time to save the lives of two ¢ cnaness seamst oosii (TANDS FOR THE PEASANTS| l informed from =z high ia carriage. DU SN a IN RACING sT,AsLE.‘fl““dend was $6 a share and the divi- Hflflfiflflfllllil lllllllllllfififlfllflfifl 1836, | investigation during the afternoon. Mr | an agreement not to sell it for Harriman was accompanied by hisj years. He knew none of Mr. Hyde's INTENDED 'VICTIM ESCAPES: counsel, Robert Lovett. He said h(-l personal money was interested in the syndicate but he had Mr. Hyde had been a director of the Equilab]c—i' » : € Life from May, 1901, up to last spring | B¢ ndicate agreement in It was Mr. Hyde who suggésted that! (Hyde’s) individual capacity lw‘-m» o e el | nobody would want to go into a syndi- he becan{e a director. Hé owned no] cate with a corporation. stock until Mr. Hyde transferred some: to him. , Mr. Harriman said that Mr. Hyde ! came to him and asked him to use L % The $2,500,000 loan made by the his influence with Governor Odell in and the explosion did l.iltle ‘13“‘—"‘3‘3~_} Equitable society to Mr. Harriman was| settling the suit against the Mercan- The bomb was lhrown' from the moti inquired into and he said he did nol' tile Trust com n.)_ ; }o)fer:; h:;;ls.:\e:)gsl?z]]:?l:agofigssoiflgtli know to whom he applied for it first! Upon hhans‘g \}f; Hy de'sd te-.nimnn); q The aitempt on hi.s life jg | The rate was the market rate and he| l];eeaga‘(? su‘;iesllsd rz“\:;“‘fivde:lii L“"': avtributed to the Armenians, as an | Teceived no special consideration. He| ger of. the . repeal ot the ’\’[el il Armenian was discovered in the house | thought the gillateral was Union Pa. from which the bomb was thmw;l Pale, Thin, | Nervous Bomb Thrown at Chief of Turkish Se- cret Police. Constantinople, Nov. 16.—Fehmi Pasha, the chief of the secret police of the palace, was intended to be the victim of Tuesday's bomb outrage. Pasha, however, escaped ubpscathed Standard Qli Dividends Increase. New York, Nov. 16.—The Standard , il company has declared a quarterly idend of $18 @ share. The previous Then your blood must be in a very bad condition. You certainly know what to take, then why not take itP—Ayer’s Sar- saparilla. If you doubt, then consult your doctor. We know what he will say about this grand old family medicine. We bave no secrets! We publish 3.0. ayer tire formulas of all our medicines. Lowell, M Stop and Read Did you know that E.H. Winter & Comvpany 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, {dend at this time last year was $7 a |share. The total dividend for this | year is $40 a share. Last year it was STAR RUBBERS ARE THE BEST RUBBERS For the Woodsman. The pnces are the lowest. OVERSHOES From the smallest childs to largest man’s. When you cannot get fitted el%ewhere come here. ARCTICS Everything in this line of Alaskas and fleece lined rubbers for both Ladies and Gents” UNDERWEAR By buying early we are able to give you the same prices as last year although wool has advanced 10 to ! 15c per pound. An inspection of $1.00 and $1.50 garments will satisfy you that this is the place to buy, llllllllll!llllllllillllllf ‘ Satisfaction Guaranteed or Money Cheerfully Refunded. ZE.H. WINTER @ CO., Phone 30 - - Bemidji, Minn. : . lllll--llllllililllllllllll

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