Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, June 1, 1906, Page 1

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VOLUME 4. NUMBER 37 MINNESOTA SOCIETY. TEN CENTS PER WEEK USE BITTER LANGUAGE MRMBERS OF RUSSIAN LOWER HOUSE INDIGNANT AT EX- ECUTION OF REBELS. BILL TO ABOLISH DEATH PENALTY RADICALS INSIST ON ITS IMMEDI- ATE PASSAGE, BUT ACTION 1S POSTPONED. St. Petersburg, June 1.—Indignation &t the execution of the eight revolu- tionists at Riga on the heels of the Interpellation of the government on lower house of parliament created a storm at the opening of the day’s session. ssage of con- gratulation from the president of the couched in ex- tremely cordial terms, which was re- the subject adopted by the Atter the reading of a m\ Argentina parliament, celved with much applause, the grou] of radical Constitutional Democrats, supported by the workmen group urged the necessity of immediately traming a law 1efusal ta cease executlons. revolutionary in tone and the Moder ate and Constitutional ened to carry the house off its feet. Al iy Battleship Still on Rocks. to abolish the death penalty in view of the government's The ma- Jority of the speeches were extremely | Democratic leaders had hard work in stemming the tide of radicalism which threat- BOMB THROWN AT KING KILLS MANY ALFONSO ESCAPES Twenty Dead and Sixty- five Wounded in Madrid. Thirty Arrests Made But Real Criminal Not Caught. Madrid, June 1.-—The magni- tude of the attempt on the lives of King Alfonso and Queen Vie- toria increases. The number of the killed is now given at -twenty and the wounded at sixty-five, Many of the wounded are dying. ,i During the night thirty arrests were made, but the person who actually threw the bomb isap parently still at large, ) Madrid, June 1—A bomb was thrown at King Alfonso and Queen Victoria during the afternoon as thelr majesties were returning after the i marriage ceremony. Both the king and queen escaped unhurt, but an equerry was wounded and a child and proceeded to the palace. London, June 1.—A dispatch to a news agency from Madrid says seven persons were killed and that thirty were injured by the bomb explosion. It is further asserted that although five persons were arrested on the charge of being connected with the outrage the man who actually threw che bomb has not been apprehended. | DEATH OF mfi Mene WTISEWER ASSURED; LOANIS OBTAINED WELL KNOWN: n@sn LEADER EX- PIRES IN BUBLIN AFTER A BRIEF ILLNESS, Dublin, Davftt, Irish patriot, died peacefully and pain- lessly a few minu 6s after midnight in the presence of two daughters, tended him tl}r 0 had devotedly at- h his fliness. 0 is an American, in constant attend- ance on her husbnl\d until a few days ago when she herielt was taken ill, lies prostrate in the same hospital, too weak to leave her room. .She has not been informed of her husband’s death. Mr. Davitt for yéars was one of the foremost Irish Natlonalists and one of the hardest fighters among the men struggling to secure home rule. A journalist by profession, both through his writings and:hls speeches, as well as organizing many Irish socleties, he labored to advance the Irish cause. His life and polltical activity began before he was twenty, when he joined the Fenian brothérhood. His activity and boldness bfought him several times behind prison bars, but he al- ways emerged ready to resume the hard. battle. i “Mr. Davitt’s death- was due to blood poisening which fellowied an operation for necrosis of the jswbone and spread so rapidly that all “efforts to stay its course were unavailing. His illness be- gan -with an attack of the toothache, to. which he paid no attention until John Dillion urged him to have re- course to medical advice. Mr. Davitt was sixty years of age. LOVING MOTHER 'KILLED. oldest son and his DRANK WOOD ALCOHOL. Convicts in Wyoming Prison Die in Great Agony. Rawlins, Wyo., June 1.—William Wardlow and Jesse Keating, convicts, dfed at the state penitentiary here from the effects of drinking wood al- cohol. They were -workers in the broom factory, where shellac varnish is used in finishing the handles. They secured the varnish bottle and, allow- ing the shellac to settle, drank the ‘wood alcohol, which is used to cut the shellac. ' Both died in horrible convul- sions, having become totally blind from the effects of the drug. At death the entire surface of the body was black as shoe leather. Two other con- victs drank the alcohol also, but as they had indulged less freely were saved. AR N o T ARRIVE TO FIND HIM DEAD. Young Irishman Sends to Old Country for His Family. New York, June 1.—Arriving on the steamer Carmania on their way to join thefr son and brother, a young banker in Los Angeles, Cal, Mr. and Mrs. James F. Keating, their daughter Grace and their other son Willilam were met with the news that he had been killed by a trolley car on the very day they had sailed from Liverpool. Mrs. Keating fainted when she was told of her son’s death and the father {and sister were terribly shocked. Young Keatlng came to this country from Ireland two years ago. Going out to California he was successful in ACTION BY THE BOARD $25,000 Voted From State School Fund for Bemidji. There Will Be No Delay In Putting the Money to Use. consequently her sewer. by Mayor A. A, Carter and the city council in a message from | State Auditor Iyerson and comes asa happy climax to the hard work which has been done for the last few months to dispose of the city bond issue of $25,000 in order to get money for the sewer and other necessary public ex- penses. A vond for $25,000 accompan- ied the letter of announcement and this has been executed and| The | | This news was received today ygyste, VESSEL GUT IN TWO STEAMER ERIN SUNK IN CcoLLI- 8ION WITH MODERN STEEL FREIGHTER COWI.E. IGEIBEITV OGCURS ON GREAT LAKES FIVE PERSONS, INCLUDING THE CHIEF ENGINEER, PERISH IN THE DISASTER. Detroit, Mich., June 1.—The steam- er Erin, upbound and towing the schooner Danforth, was run into and Ieut in two by the steamer Cowle in Bemidji gety the $25,0¢0 loan the St. Clair river just below St. Clair from the state school funds, and " ind five members of the Erin's grew . were drowned: The dead are: Chief Engineer Patrick W. Quinn, Port Dal- Ont.; Fireman “Bang” Hill, St. Catherines, Ont.; Mrs. Mary Reed, Spanish Rlver, Ont.; watchman, shipped from Detroit, home Amherst- burg, Ont.; land. The Erin is owned by Thomas Con- Mrs. Hubert, cook, Cleve- lon of Thorold, Ont., and the Cowle by the United States Transportation company of Cleveland. The collision occurred during a fog. The Cowle is a modern steel freighter and 1is not thought to have been mueh damaged, ! while the Erin was a wooden vessel of the old type. wiiliam Boggs pleaded gullty at Kansas City to attempting to vote il- HISTORICAL R A S, SR Lundy Island, Enz., June 1—The banking and wrote to his parents beg- | réturned to the auditor. legally at the recent election and was British battleshlp Montague, which | tWO horses Killed by the explosion. T ging them to come and join him. sentenced to two years in the peni- ran ashore in a fog Wednesday ott | The king and queen behaved with Crushed to Death by Gift She Pur- ey will go West to take charge of ' (Continued ce 4, col 4)) tentiary. Shutter point, remains fast ou the | the greatest calmness and after the chased for Her Daughter. the, hody. niinued on page 4, column:d.) e rocks and is in the same eritical posl- tlon. l Amercan delay caused by the contusion they |Gentlemen | SHOES! Is one of the best $3.50 shoes on the market. Ithas an invisible cork sole making it one of the most comfortable shoes to be had. We carry them in all Phone 30. leathers and widths, Wear one pair | and be convinced of their value. LADIES’ AND CHILDR’N’S SHOES We carry the following well known lines: Hamilton Brown, Drew Selby, Shaft Pierce and Portsmouth. Satisfaction guaranteed or money refunded. E.H. WINTER & CO Bemidji. e PRINCESS ENA OF BATTENBERG. BAIL AGAIN REFUSED THEM TRIAL OF OFFICERS OF WESTERN FEDERATION OF MINERS POSTPONED. Caldwell, 1da., June 1.—When the cases of Charles H. Moyer, William D. Haywood and George A. Pettibone, charged with the murder of former Governor Frank Steunenberg, came up in the district court counsel for the prosecution, acting upon the sugges- tion made by the presiding judge, filed a motion for a continuance on the ground that the habeas corpus proceedings instituted in the federal courts in behalf of the defendants are still pending and serve as a bar to fur- ther proceedings in the state courts until a decision shall have been ren- dered by the,federal supreme court. Judge Smith granted the motion and exceptions were entered by the de fense and allowed. The present outlook is that the ac- cused members of the Western Fed eration of Miners cannot be brought to trial before December next. Counsel for the defense remewed their motion to admit the defendants to bail, but this was denied and the prisoners will remain in the Ada coun- ty jail at Boise. HEARING NOT REQUESTED. Packers Take No Action on Beef In. spection Amendment. Washington, June 1.—No applica- tion to be heard on the Beveridge beet inspection amendment has been made to the house committee on agriculture by the packers and no meeting of the committee has been called to consider this and other senate amendments to the agricultural appropriation bill. Members of the house, however, are receiving protests by wire against the inspection amendment from the cattle raisers and it has been suggested that if the packers are opposing the propo- sition they are working through the cattle raisers. The opposition which the raisers voice is regarding the cost of the inspectton, also that a corps of government inspectors would ultimate- | ly become a dangerous political ma- chine which might be manipulated to the disadvantage of all concerned. The Williams and Sulzer resolutions calling for the Neill-Reynolds report are in the custody of the agricultural committee. No action is contemplated at present regarding them. A hulletin issued by the department of commerce and labor says that com- merce on the Great Lakes during April and the first four months of 1906 ex- ceeds that of like periods in any ear- lier year. ‘With the view to encouraging healthy immigration in Hawaii a spe- cial representative of the territory will visit various European countries and set forth the advantages of Hawall to the homeseeker. N ="} = She ovérestlinated “tier strength, for ‘Washington, June 1.—Mrs. Mary A. y Dorsey came dowh town to pay the taxes on a little House she and her husband have been.buying. The taxes were much less than she thought they would be and she Bad a sum of money left over. She purchased l piano at an auc- tion for her daughter, who is very fond of music, and werdt home. She told her son to go to the store and get the plano and to hurry, for she wanted it in the house whem the daughter and | husband came home. When he got home there were no men in sight and S0 Mrs. Dorsey went out to help the bay take it from. thé wagon. New Tdea Magazines for June, 5 eents. Bemidji, - Minn. when the boy pushed: the piano from the wagon it fell on her and crushed her so badly she died in a few min- utes. JAPS SUPPLANT RUSSIANS, Surprising Change in Nationality of Foreigners in Manchuria. ‘Washington, June 1.—The rapidity with which Japanese have supplanted not only Russian soldiers but mer- chants of that nationality in Man- churia as a result of the late war is clearly exhibited by the report of the commissioner of customs at New- chwang, the principal port of the province. He states that in 1895 the total number of foreigners residing there was 222, of whom 11 were Japa- nese, with no Russians; in 1900 the number of foreigners was 1,945, of whom 35 were Japanese and 1,760 Rus- sians; while in 1905, after the war, the number of foreigners was 7,699, of whom 7,408 were Japanese and only 1 Russian. DRESS GOODS custemers Friday and Saturday at less the goods today Lot No. 1---$1 per yard This lot consists of $1.25 goods and con- tains: 40 inch-tan crepe; 42 inch tan dot- ted mohair; 38 inch pink creme and Alice More Ohioans Endorse Bryan. $1a ynrd | 0’Leary & Bowser, Two fine lots of spring dress goods will be offered our -in fact some of the goods we cannot re- place at any price---as the mills are sold out months ahead Ladies’, you will find in this assortment fahrics suitable for street or party wear. The saving will be about $2.50 a gown— that will go quite away toward your dress- New Idea Patterns 10¢ than we can buy making bi'l, | $1 a yard Marion, O., June 1.—Willlam Jen- nings Bryan was formally endorsed for the presidency in 1908 by the Dem- ocrats of the Second sub-division of the Tenth judicial district, consisting of Marion, Crawford and Wyandotte counties. blue sublime; 44 inch grey checked mohair; 42 inch Alice blue dotted mohair; 42 inch blue striped mohair; 44 inch hair-line mo- hair; 50 inch blue check mohair; 44 inch light tan mohair; 48 inch grey Alolian. | Shoct i 50c a yard | Choice Will Be Unanimous. — Lot No. 2 This lot consists of 50 pieces of 60¢, 65¢ and 75c¢ suitings, mohairs, cashmeres and -50¢ flannels. | 50c a yard Little Rock, Ark., June 1.—The Re- publican state convention met during the day to nominate a candidate for governor and as John I Worthington of Harrison has no opposition he will be unanimously named for the posi- tion, LACES Another lace sale. We will offer 2000 Silk and Torchon lace, worth up to 10 DISCONTINUED BY SHAW. No Further Aid to Bankers Importing Gold. ‘Washington, June . 1.—Secretary Shaw has decided that the money sit- nation in New York requires no spe- cial aid from the department in the importation of gold and complying with instructions from him the sub- treasury at New York received the following message: “Please advise the gold import banks that special deposits in aid of gold imports are discontinued for the "time being.” 3---Hose Bargains---3 10 cents a pair. 1 lot Misses’ fine ribbed cotton hose, I8 cents. 2 pair for 35 cents. 1 lot Ladies’ fine cotton hose, ribbed- 15 cents a pair. 2 pair for 25 cents, Chicago Union StocK vards. Chicago, May 31.—Cattle—Beeves, $4.00@6.00; cows and heifers, $1.’ 75@ 6.15; stockers and feeders, $2. 75@ 4.65; Texans, $4.00@4.60; calves, $5.25 | @6.75. Hogs—Mixed and butchers, ! $6.30@6.62%; good heavy, $6.45@86.55: rough heavy, $6.30@6.40; light, $6.25 @6.50; pigs, $5.40@6.15. Sheep, $4.60 @6.25; lambs, $5.40@86.65. Chicago Grain and Provisions. Chicago, May 31.—Wheat—May, 823%c; July, 82@82%c. Corn—May, 495, @49%c; July, 49@49%c. Oats— May, 33%c; July, 333 @33%¢c. Pork —May, $16.30; July, $16.30@16.32% Flax—Cash, Northwestern, $1.12% Southwestern, $1.08%; May, $1.06%. Butter—Creameries, 14@19c¢; dairies, : 13% @18c. Eggs—15% @16e. Poultry | Turkeys, 10¢; thigkens, 113c. Men’s Outing Shirts tan, eream, grey and blue. Prices FEEATI\IE DAAE 1 lot Children’s heavy ribbed cotton hose, size 5 to 9: at Friday morning, iuSt drop into our clothing department and see what we will show you in Mohair shirts. Colors: are _¢1;50 to $3.00 yards of Valacine ¢, for 3¢ a yard. size & to 9 at top, size 8: to 10

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