Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, January 8, 1906, Page 4

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VIOLENT ACT TO BE INVESTIGATED Bill Introduced in Congress t0 Look In- to Exelusion of Weman From the White House. Washington, Jan. 8,—Repre. sentative Shepherd of Texas to- day introduced a resolution pro- viding for the appointment of a committee to investigate the ‘‘re- cent violent exclusion of an American mother from the white house office and grounds by exe- cutive officials and employes while seeking an audience with the president.” The resolution ' was referred to the committee of rules. INAAAY VA WVAANY % Additional Locals MN\MAMAAMAAAMA3 C. H. Allen of Blackduck is a business visitor in = Bemidji today. Mrv. and Mrs. T. Jesten of Thief River Falls are the guests of friends in Bemidji. { A. P. Blom of Spaulding arriy- ed in the city this afternoon for a short business visit. . - Miss Hattie Haldeman went to Cass Lake this afternoon for a week’s visit in that village. Mrs. Joseph Johnson of Crook- ston is a guest at the home of Mr, and Mrs. E. M. Peterson. The Bemidji Elevator company are exclusive agents for Barlow’s Best, Mascot and Cremo flour. J. C. Hursh and daughter, Minnie, are visitors in the city today from Turtle River town- GOES TO CLAIM BIG FORTUNE John Masters of Northome Is Heir to Brother-in-Law at Toledo, 0. John Masters of Northome passed through the city this morning earoute to Toledo, O., where he goes to lay claim to a portion of a large estate left to him by the last will and testa- ment of his brother-in-law, who died in that city recently. Mr. Masters refused to state the amount to which he is euntitled by, the terms of the will, but said that he would receive enough to keep him in comfortable circum- stances for the remainder of his lifetime. The three children of Mr. and Mrs. Thos. Melby of Wilton are ill with scarlet fever. W. H. Roberts of the First National bank is transacting bus- iness at Cass Lake this after- noon. E L. Ferguson, of the logging firm of Perguson & Davis is a Bemidji visitor today from Ten- strike. ship. Martin Hunt of Minneapolis, representing the J. M, Davis company, is calling on local merchants today. C. B. Juelson of Blackduck arrived in the city this morning and left this afternoon for points in the Red River valley, where 3 time with v.s a d friends. he il spenl o sor . & e i i DLUMBINGT TIN AND RE- PAIR WORK. You get the best t services on the shortest notice. Doran Bros. TELEPHONE NO. 225 NEW HOME I BAKERY AND BOARD BY DAY OR WEEK BREALFAST, 6:30 to 8 DINNER, 12 to 1:30 SUPPER, 6 to 7:30 Lunchés from 8 to 11 a m from 1:30 to 5 p m MRS. HELEN M. REDEL Mrs. Thompson’s old stand Between 4th and 5th St. morning for Joplin, Mo., where he will spend a month with rela- tives and friends. James R. Stewart is in the city today on his way home to Black: duck from Granville, N, D., where he has spent several days. WILL BUILD " LARGE MILL Pile Driving for Monster Lumber Plant at Koochi- ching Has Started. OUTPUT WILL BE 150,000,000 FEET YEARLY. Electricity Generated at Dam on Rainy River Will Supply Power. Work on the foundation of what, when completed, will be one of the largest sawmills in Minnesota, has started at Koochiching, where the Backus- Brooks company of Minneapolis PULP MILL AT BEAUDETTE Currently Reported That Big Plant Will Be Erected There. . : Work on Isthmian The plat of Beaudette was filed J with Register of Deeds Harris Saturday. It contains 195 lots and up to this date in the neigh- borhood of 60 business lots have been sold at good prices. Practi- cally all the streets are cleared} and grubbed and & small sawmill on the sownsite is running night and day. [tis currently report- ed that a pulp mill will be located | thereand it is certain that a sash and door factory and a brick yard will be started at once, and with the Shevlin-Mathieu mill now being constructed the pro- spects for a big town at this| Scandal CITY SCHOOLS ARE REOPENED Small Attendance by Pupils on Account of Dyph- theria Scare. IS PROGRESSING SATISFACTORY - to Roosevelt--Pays Respects to point are certainly looking up. Very few towns indeed make the Rainy river such rapid strides, as it has been E. W. Backus, of the Backus-|0Dly two weeks since the survey Brooks company, has been at of the new town was completed. Koochiching for several days| Considerable interest is now past looking after his large in- being taken in the petition for terests there and the work of |Village organization, which is nexs driving piles for the foundation in vrder, as the citizens are not a of the mill was begun during his | 101t on the location of the bound- visit to that village. ary lines of the proposed village. He states that the plant will be | However, the major portion of equipped with the most modern [the citizens have agreed om machinery obtainable and will be [ €¢Ttain territory which they will operated by electricity which is |8k the board of county commis- to be generated at the dam now isioners at their next meeting to being built by the company at 'set a day for am election on the Koochiching. The output of the [@uestion of incorporating it or mill, Mr. Backus, says, will be |50t 150,000,009 per year. William Flanmigan of Minne- apolis accompanied Mr, Backus te Koochiching and will remain|days past has been out of jail on there to look after the construc- tion work. Mr; Flanmgan will [beingan accessorz to the rob- be superintencdent of the mill |bery of an M. & I. freight car, when it is compleved. will erect a monster lumber plant on the American side of Tony Manning Up Agaiw. ready for operation next August,. as willlalso the dam by which|Manning ordered a meal at the the power is to be supplied. {iPalace restanrant but refused to SEEES v 'settle Jor 3. The proprietor, Good' Meeting Last Night. ]iF'red Throm, after giving Mar- 'ning a trouncing, notified the police and the latter was taken {Contributed:) The services at the M. E. Tony Manning; who for several | good behavior witly a charge of| It is ex-{was wp again in Judge Pender-| C. H' Miles leaves tomorrow |pected that the plant will be|gast’s court Saturday afteruoon, | this time for disorderly conduet: | The city public schools re- opened this morning after a twe weeks’ holiday vacation. All |teachers were on hand but the jattendance by the pupils was not llarge today, probably owing to the dypbtheria scare which is prevalent in the city. Physi- eian throughout the city agree in thwt there is little danger of tively safe to send the children to school. cases have been reported for several days. NYMORE WOMAN ASKS RELIEF Says She is Anneoyed Nightly by Rapping and Noises At Her Doer. Sheriff Bailey last night re- ceived a telephone message from a womam living at Nymore asking that he give protecsion to her against the doings of certain indiyidsels whe anney her every| wight by rapping at the contagion and that it is compara- i The disease is under absolute control and no new! before Judge Pendergast with| door of her residence and making Ancl'rew Halvorson arrived in|church were finely attended: yes- the city Saturday afternoon|terday andthe heart of the pas- from Minneapolis and will spend |gor is rejoiced over the- imterest afew days here with friends.|thatis being manifested: sad ab] Lars Hilmz was given five days | the loyal support he is receiving in the county jail this mo ning|from people bothinside and@ out- by Judge Skinvik after pleading [side of his ehnrch. ThHe com- | guilty to a charge of drunken-|munion service in the-morning | ness. p & was one of exgeptional impress- Mrs. L. H. Ludwig returned to |iveness and the fountain of tears noon after a visit here at the|was the largest communiom in her home at Cass Lake this after- |in many eyes was broken-up. It|§ home of her daughter, Mrs. Thos. | years and perhaps in the histery the resalt that he was sentenced toflve days in the county jail. An understanding that he must leave the city after serving his sentenee was also made. other noises that awake. J. C. Parker returned this afternoon from a business trip to Solway. keep her Canal Satisfactory | Mongers. 1 Washington, Jan. 8.—-In his it . l message to congress accompany- . \le l ing the annual report of the Isth-" mian canal commission, the pres- ident declares that the work is | progressing - satisfactorilly and | pays hisrespects to the sensation 7 mongers, disappointed office | Iseekers and others who are eng- } {aged in making charges and false | accusations regarding the. pro- { gress of the work aud the condi- {tions on the isthmus. QUEER DEATH OF BRAINERD YOUTH | \ Found Dead Five Minutes After Leaving Friend. Raymond Cale, ayoung man well known in Brainerd, died in that city Saturday morning after being pieked up inan uncon- scious condition by a policeman. , rCa.le, who was 21 years of age, !had returned to Brainerd frem 1 Motley after a holiday visit and walked from the train several * | iblocks with-a compamion. Wiye | minutes after leaving the latter he was found lying with his head buried in the snow. The cause of'his death is unkrown. Change in Train Service. A change in the time of the ar- rival of No. 107, the Sauk Centre nerth bound Great Northern passenger. has been made and hereafter the train will arrive at 8:25 instead of 7:45, as heretofore. | The new schedule goes into effect” | today. Miss Begg of Cass Lake spent Sunday with friends in ) Bemidji. : i anuary Bailey, sr. George Baker and Martin Linden returned this merning from Blackduck in which vicinity they visited a number of logging camps yesterday. | C. A. Pitkin returned last] night fron a visit to Chicago and the twin cities. On his way home Mr Pitkin stopped off at Crooks- | ton and visited his parents over |New Years. . Albert Kaiser and two sons, Roscoe and William, arrived in the city this afternoon from Bagley. Mr, Kaiser will spend a short time looking after his busi- ness interests in this city. Wes Wright, local agent for the Standard Oul company, states ithat the iatroduction ot Corn- planter oil in this city has made but little difference in his sales and that a carload of Standard variety was received in Bemidii today. Matt Jones of Northome passed i through the city today enroute to Duluth, where his trial on a jcharge of fraudelently gaining title to a tract of government land and cutting therefrom 600,000 feet of pine will be heard by Judge Morris of the federal court. E. N. Smith arrived | in the of the church at an ordimary|® morning service. At its close |3 an opportunity was given to unite with the church and: seme wisely took advantage of it and |§. others promised to do so. “The |§ Red and Blue econtest” in the|§ Young People’s Society doubled |& the attendance last evening and |§ promises to be a big suecess. |§ The improvements being made | § in the interior of the bwilding will give this chureh the bhand- somest pulpit front in nerthern Minnesota. Special meetings will be held 2l this week and|H while sickness may interfere (E some. it is hoped good interest |t will be manifested. ‘Now is the accepted time, now is the day of |8 salvation.”’ Toques, Rev. John S. McIntosh, president ot |8 the San Francisco Theological sem-|@ inary, is dead, aged seventy-six years.|M: Japan’s foreign trade for 1905 was|§&i unprecedented, the imports totalling $244,000,000 and the exports $160,500,- | 000. > Howard Childs, Jr., aged seventeer:|§ years, a nephew of H. C. Frick, was|g drowned at Pittsburg while playing | hockey on an ice pond. 2 The express companies have decided to join with the railroads in refusing to issue passes for the carrying of business free of charge. . The great hospital provided for in the will of the late Charles T. Yerkes, | city this morning from Blackduck and left this afternoon for Crook- | ston, where he will be a delegate the traction promoter, who died in New York city recently, will be built at once in that city. - Representative Bourke Cockran of New York, who has been in Santa Bar- to the meeting of the executive committoe of the Northern Min- |nesota Firemen’s Tournament on Minnesota Ave. S 2] & bara, Cal., for some days, has greatly association, which takes place in ‘oved. 3 that city this evening. turn to_ Washington Jan. 15. B A improved in health and expects to re Phone 30. The Holiday season has passed and in order to clean lip our odds and ends of stock will give you some greatly reduced prices. Tamoshanters and Fascinators, will go at your own price. Ladies’ Skirts---All of our MacPherson Lang- ford skirts at a low figure. Fleeced goods---Our 12 1-2 and 15¢ fleece | goods will go for 8¢ Shoes---Look at ofir $3.50 shoe window. You find your style, we will find your size. . E. H. Winter & Co. Bemidji, Minn. argains! | o) Raymond Cale, Aged 2, \‘_ T

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