Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, December 1, 1905, Page 4

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ROBBERS MAKE HAUL| MONSTERLYNX NoW ENDED Safe of Gelden West Hotel :at Blackduck Opened Wed- nesday Night. $1,900 CERTIFICATE OF DEPOS- IT AND $ie2 IN CASH TAKEN. Identity of Perpetrators Unkanowa and Rebbers are Still at Large. The safe of the Golden Wast! hotel at Blackduck was Wednes-~ day night robbed by unknown persons and a certificate of de- posit for $1,900 on the First State bank of Blackduck, money in the sum of $1/2 and a number of valuable papers were taken. The robbery was committed after all the guests of the hotel had retired and the office of the hotel had been locked up for the | g& night. The robbers effected an entrance to the office, in which the safe was located and after-| wards opened the safe, securing the booty. The identity of the perpetrat- ors of the robrery is unknown. Suspicion does not rest upon anyone and how the deed was committed is a mystery. The police have been notified of the affair, however, and a sharp look- out will be kept up for the rob- bers. Buenos Ayres, Dec. 1,—A serious fire broke out here during the day in a warehouse containing inflammuble merchandise, including 100,000 cans of petroleum. The fire is still burn- ing as this dispatch is filed. The loss {8 rlready estimated at $1,000,000. Dode Fisk tonight. Stein - Bloch Difference Fit you first and sell to you after- wards sells you first and flts you after times wards—some 2 This Label Stands for Tafii Or ¢ raffle was won by Mrs. WOMAN KILLS ‘Mrs. Meeder Shoots Animal ‘When Latter Attempts to | Steal Chickens. .Alone and unaided, Mrs. Meeder, wife of a homesteader who lives.about ifive miles from Northome, Monday accomplished | the death of a huge lynx. The .animal appeared in the clearing surrounding the cabin and was in the act of entering the chicken 6oop when Mrs. Meeder detected it. She grabbed arifle and, tak- ing deliberate aim, sent a bullet through its body. The animal made its escape to the woods but left a blood trail which was fol- lowed by the homesteader with the result that the lynx was found dead a shortdistance from the cabin. Dode Fisk priees 50e. tonight, popular Reserved seats 75c¢. ¥ CORRESPONDENCE & LOUIS. Mrs. Alex Nelson of Little Moose lake is slowly recovering from a serious illness. Mr. Rhodes and son of Bemidji have been hunting in this wvicin- ity the past week or two. John Arndt of Pimush Lake drove out to Tenstrike last Thursday. He moved out a party of hunters from Crookston who have been hunting near here and Rebedew lake for the past few ! weeks. They succeeded in killing two deer. Quite a little work has been done on the road near Pimush lake under the direction of Chas. Wis_r, road master. WILTON. Roads in our vicinity are blocked and the storm is still prevailing. The M. W. A.are preparing for a grand ball and oyster sup- per Thanksgiving eve. Mrs. James Watkins and daughter, Agusta have gone to Turtle where they will spend the holidays with the formers daugh- ter, Mrs. Timms. Mrs. Joe Burnham is spend- ing a few days with her grand- mother, Mrs. Obedier. Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Smith and daughter, Iva spent Sunday at Mr. and Mrs John Newbury’s. Chas. Teller and Miss Mand Dirst were married in Bemidji last Thursday. Their friends are extending congratulations to the new married couple. Miss Grace Brogen spent Sun- day at Bagley. Miss Vilettia Brant was happi- Iy surprised by her pupils Mon- day evening, it being her twenty- third birthday. She received many presents and the eyening was spent very enjoyably. Re freshments was served at mid- night. The Ladies Aid Society who Iheld their auction Saturday last was very successful, The beautiful silkjquilt at the Frank Gustafson. The proceeds were over a hundred dollars, On account of the bad weather the dance given by Chas. Rogers was not so well attended but those present reporteda good time. Miss Bertha Soland spenta few days with her parents at Spaulding last week. REBEDEW. Wm. Girton has a small crew of men at work cutting cedar. Mrs. S. Adams went to Wil- 3| ton Friday. George Thomas has a small 3 lcrew of men at work on the new Tyarew. I SRS, W“* SCHNEIDER BROTHERS Bemidji 1 £ |connty road betwean Tenstrike i and Rebedew. He expects tohave i itall completed by the first of] ;January. Wm. Olmstead recently pur- chased 80 acres of land from the | Minnesota Hardwood and Devel- Rev. H. Dingman of Fort Rip- §1ley, who has been visiting C. A. Matheny, I day. returned home Mon- He expects to move] nis G V. Thowmas, H. A. Matheny, L Kirtpatrick and Wm. Girton | the home of D. W. Bright. SEASONIS | Twenty Days For Shooting| Deer.and Moose Expired | Yesterday. | SMALLEST NUMBER OF ANIMALS KILLED IN MANY YEARS. | Game Violations Were Few, Only one Complaint Being Made to Local Warden. Yesterday, Nov. :80, was the last day of the seasou for shoot- ing deer and moose. Three days | from the end of the seasou, or antil Dec. 4, areallowed the hunt- ers in which to remcve from the woods the game they have killed, after which it will be unlawful for any person to have in his pos- session deer or moose meat un- less it can be shown that the ami- mal was Jawfully killed According to reports from authentic sources, the number of deer and moose killed during the season of 1905 was the smallest in many years. From the begin- ning the season was unfavorable, and there was but two or three days during the entire season that were favorable to the hunt- ers. Violations of the game laws have been fewer during the sea- son just ended than during any previous season. Game warden Rutledge, who has been active during the season in looking af- ter violations, states that the hunters seemed to pay strict at- tention to the law and that only one complaint of illegal killing| was received by him from this section. This was inyestigated with the result that no arrests were made. Mr. Rutledge also states that the shipments of ani- mals through this city have been made regularly and according to law, and that no violations in this resp ct have come to his notice. - were Tenstrike visitors one day last week. Cnas. Olmstead and John Len nard of Darwin, Mion,, arrived here Saturday. Mr. Lennard contemplates buying land and moving his family here in the neaa future. Eliza Garrison returned home Saturday after an absence of four months spentat Redwocod Falls. Wm Girton cut his foot very badly. one da - last week, he is laid up at present, but expects to be able 1o get around in a week or ten days. E. V. Esterdahl made a bus-| iness trip to Black Duck ond day last weels, H. A. Mathey has recently taken a contract to cut and land | 856,020, feet of logs for the J. Neils Lumber Co. of Cass Lake. . Kelley Richerdson went to ten- strike tuesday, after a load of supplies foa G. V. Thomas. H. A. Matheney sundayed at SPAULDING. Miss Annie Rygg is in Be-| midji for an extended stay. ! O. E. Soland was a business| visitor at Bemidji on Monday. A.P. Blom was a business visitor at Wilton Monday. Mrs. Dr. Mason of West Su-| perior, Wis., is the guest of her} aunt, Mrs, O E. Soland. Ole Fraagot was a business and Friday. Died, at Blackduck, Elmer Vernon, infant child of Mr. and Mrs. Emil Olson, aged 6 months. Funeral was held on Thursday at! 10 o’clock from the residence of A. P. Blom, Rev. Opsata officiat- ing. John Hanson was to town on ‘Wednesday. A. P. Blow was av Bemidji. on Thursday. . Mr. Brown returned tr Dakota after enjoying a visit with friends. The Ladies’ Aid met on Friday. at the home of Mrs. Henry An- ! birthdays. derson and brated Mesdames incidentally cele- | Andersons’; spent CARS BURN AT LAPORTE Thanksgiving Binner Inter- rupted by Diseovery of Fire—Men Lose Clethes. While ¢he men employed on the steam loader now being op- erated by the M. & L at Laporte were eating their Thanksgiving dinuner on the boarding ear yes- terday, a fire was discovered in the car used for sleeping apart- ments and before the blaze could be extinguished this ear, to- gether with a number of others, was destroyed. The men were unable to enter the car to get their wearing apparel which they had left in the car preparatory to eating the noonday meal and the | garments were destroyed. Sev- eral of the men arrived in the city yesterday afternoon to pur- chase new raiments. A Dode Fisk tonight. Fire Alarm Last Night. The fire department was called out at 10:30 last night to guench a blaze reported to have started at 10th street and Irving avenue. An examination resulted in find- ine that the cause of the alarm was a chimney tire at the home of G. W. Rhea, south of the Great Northern tracks. Suspected Thief is Discharged. Bert Johnson, arrested Mon- day by the police charged with baving taken the purse contain- | ing $42.25 from a satchel owned by Miss Mabel Hart while the latter was returning from this city in a wagon to her school at Itasca, had his hearing before] Judge Pendergast Wednesday morning and was discharged,the judge deciding that there was not sufficient evidence to bind him over tothe grand jury ona charge of grand larceny. Firemen Nominate Officers. At a meeting of the fire de- partment held Wednesdav night, the following officers were nomi- nated for the ensuing year: Chief, Earl Geil; assistant chief, J. P. Pogue; secretary, John Washburn; treasurer, John Good- man; trustees, Joha Doran, W. B. Carlisle, Matt Mayer, J.P. Pogue. The election of officers will be held on the evening of the last Wednesday in December. Question of Squatter’s Right. Relatives of Jokn Kolbe, who was recently killed by being run over by an M. & I. work train north of Northome, were in the city Wednesday and employed an attorney to look afterthe in- terests of the widow, Mrs. Kolbe, in the bhomestead upon which they were living at the time of Kolbe’s death. Kolbe “squatted” upon the land and it is now a question whether or nof the widow can hold the land under the squnatter’s right. Unwversity Professor Here. | Prof. Otto Rosendahl ~f the University of Minnesota arrived in the city yesterday from Min- neapolis and will spend some time here at the home of his: brother-in-law, Rev. E. M. Peter- son. Mr. Rosendahl is now pro- fessor of botany at the university, | having accepted that this fall' after studying for a number of | past two in Germany, day attending the institute. Orin Bjoring and Ellert Djonne returned from Dakota Saturday. The Misses Hadda Blom and Flo Huck were at Werner on made of roots, herbs and barks, fs just what is needed. Saturday. Carl - Blom of Maple Ridge' spent. Sunday with his parents. Miss Ella Hagin visited Miss Hadda Blom on Sunday. | Andraw Wilson was a business visitor at Cass Lake Saturday.' Miss Bertha Soland of Wilton Thursday under the parental roof. : BEAU NOTS ENTERTAIN| ; | Young Ladies Gave Swell Af« fair at Grill Hall Last Evening. EVENT ONE OF THE PRETTIEST SEEN HEZE. Musical Program Rendered, Fol- lowed by Dancing and conclud- | ed with Elaborate Banquet. | | | ‘The yonng ladies of the Beau Not Club last evening entertain. ed the young people of the city and the members of the “Mar- ried Club”’ at one of the swellest and most enjoyable affairs ever! given in Bemidji. The affair was given in thel Grill hall and consisted of a musical program, danceand ban- quet. The dance hall was decorat- ed in yellow and green, the club colors, while the banquet table, with its wealth of silver and great yellow chrysanthemums was a beautiful sight. The guests were all inevening dress and the costumes of the ladies were the handsowest and most elabo-| rate yet seen in Bemidji. Early in the evening the fol- lowing program was rendered. Mixed Quartette—Rhine Raft Song, Pinsute— Misses Dolly Bailey, Bia.che Boyer, C. D. Lucas, E . Jerrard. | Piano Solo—Balla de Coverly— Miss Grace Lyon. Vocal Sole—My Mercedes— Wesley Wells—Miss Beatrice Brannon. Vocal Duet—Sing me to Sleep, Greene—Misses Dully Bailey aud Blanche Boger. Vocal Song—Petrie—Mr. H, H. Jer- rard. Violin Solo—Caritina—Herman ' —Mr, Thos. Symington. Vocal Solo---Dearie—Kummer, Miss Dollie Bailey. B car Accompanist—Miss Blanche Boyer. Following the pragram danc- ing was indulged in until a late hour when an elaborate banquet was served. At the conclusion of i the banquet Mr. E. H. Jerrard, | in a very neat speech voiced 1hef appreciation of the guests in the' marked success achieved by the| Club in making the event one (£ the prettiest and most delightful’ ever given in Bemidji. Dancing| was again resumed and continued . until the wee sma’hours of the! morning. Mrs. Bain Won Contest. Henry Funkley, who has acted :as attorney for Mrs. Mary E. Bsin in the contest case institut- ed against her oy Barney W. d Aldrich on the grounds of non residence” upon her homestedd § three miles from this city, yes- # terday received notice from the | the Cass Lake land office to the 5 Solo—Brigand’s Love | § { i - | FINISHED IN SHORT TIME Steel on Northome Extension: Laid to Point Within Ten Miles. of Ripple. The work ofi laying steel on the extension of the M. & I. fromr Northome to Ripple has been pushed rapidly forward’ during the past few weeks, and now the rails have been laid toa point within 10 miles of Ripple. Ac- cording toofficials of the M. & L., the road will: be completed to- Ripple in about two weeks and’ trains will be running to the Big Fork town shortly after Christ-— man. A. R. Button, who was in the city yesterday from Ripple, states that the new town is boom-- ing and that many new buildings. are in course of construction. ’Preparations are being made by all the merchants andt business- men of the town for a big rush of business which is anticipated with the coming of the railway. Thirty Below Wednesday Night. According to the government therometer used by Weather Ob-- server A. Gilmour, the lowest point reached Weducslay night was a trifle more shan 30 below zero. Last wiater’s record for ° cold was 34 below. . . A RailwayFare | From any Town Within 20 Miles «f Bemidji, Duriog the Monta of DECEMBER ONLY! § A RETURN TICKET AND WE WILL DISCOUNT ThH# PRICE OF PICTURE PER RANGIXNG I'R¢ DOZEN AND UPWARD. 0 peovle in this closer vicinity, we #§ (VHI make Free of Charge a picture of yourself on Barret’s photocloth g2 with each dozen cabinet pictures. § photo taken on postal s The Latest Fad and an 2 way of surprising friends @ Postal cards printed from any ama- t2ur plates at 5 cents each. £ B N. L. HAKKERUP O A, R T YOUR CREDIT IS GOOD! ~=WITH== BISIAR & VANDERLIP! We can furnish you with Ranges, Stoves, Furniture and House FURNISHINGS! SINGER SEWING MACHINES ON VERY EASY PAYMENTS High grade Pianos and Organs Expected Daily. effect that the contest had teen § decided favorably to Mrs. B i. The lard was filed upon by Mrs. § Bain June 6, 1904. i BISIAR & VANDERLIP 2 doors west of Ciiy Hall. BAD BLOO WEAKENS THE SYSTEM AND INVITES DISEASE Every part of the botiy is dependent on the blood for nourishment and strength, and when from'any cause this vital stream of life becomes impov- Y erished or run-down, it invites disease to enter. No one can be well when the visitor at Bagley on Thursday | years at Decorah, Iowa, and the | blood is impure; they lack the energy that is natural with health, the com- | plexion becomes pale and sallow, the vital energies are at alow.ebb, and they * suffer from a general broken-down condition of health. The system is weak- 2 ened and unable to resist the diseases and disorders that are constantly assail- M. Rygg was at Bemidji Thurs- ingit. The Liverand Kidneys, failing to receive the proper stimulation and farmers’ nourishment from the blood, grow inactive and dull, and the waste matters and bodily impurities that should pass off through these channels of nature are left in the system to pioduce Rheumatism, Catarrh, Sores and Ulcers, Skin Diseases or some other blood disorder. When the blood is in this wealz- ened and diseased eondition it should be treated with a remedy that is not only thorough, but gentle in its action. the blood of all impurities and poisons: S.S.S. S. 8. 8., a purely vegetable remedy, 1 It not only cleanses , and enriches and strengthens it, but gently builds up the entire system by its fine tonic effect. 8. 8. S. reinvigorates every mem- ber of the body, gives tone and vi. gor to the blood,' and as ¥¥goes to the different paits, carries ro- bust health and strength. S. S. S. acts more PURELY VEGETABLE. ll:'on;ptly and gives better results than any other edicine. It cures Rheumatism, Catarrh, Sores and Uleers, Skin Diseases and all other blood disorders, and cures them per- manently. Our Medical Department will be glad to give advice withou charge to all suffering with blood or skin diseases. Address : THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., ATLANTA, GAs

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