Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, June 22, 1906, Page 3

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A SRS NI | Read the daily Pioneer, Everybody uses it | - H. Jennson of Northome was a Everybody likes it Bemidji visitor yesterday. Model Ice Cream Sold at every ice cream stand in the city. Made by Ghe Model Ice Cream Factory and Bakery 315 Minn. Ave. Phone 125. THE CITY. Read the Dmlv Pioneer. The Bemidji Eievator company are exclusive agents for Barlow’s DBest, Mascot and Cremo flour, Attorney C. W. Scrutchin took the morning train for Park Rapids, and is spending the day attending to legal matters before the district court. He expects; to return this evening. Duplicate order books and commercial men’s expense ac- count books at the Pioneer office, Dr. Geo. E. Spofford, Op- tometrist, regular visit at Hotel Markham June 21 to 27 in- lusive. Tom Burke, well known in this section of the state as the former manager of the Solway Mercantile company, was a busi- ness visitor in the city yester- day. Mr, Burke left last night for Duluth, where he is man- ager of alarge wholesale house. For sale. A high grade piano. It must be sold at once and will take $150. Inquire Mrs. J. A. McConkey, 504 Miss. Ave. \UND TO Sold and gaar- anteed by Geo. T. Baker & Co. Located in City Drug Store HORSESHOEING A specialty at Chap- man’s shop, rear of Wes Wright’s Barn Mike Seberger Miss Dickinson Piano Teacher Swedback Bleck, Bemidji, )k K&E FIIME| Mrs, Dan Kane and son took ! the morning train for Pine River. Nowhere in the world can you see such handsome men and | women asare to be met in the United States,” They .all use { Hollister’s Rocky Mountain Tea. 185 cents. Tea or Tablets. Bar- SRS | cr’s Drug Store, Mrs. Tennstrom and childven 12ft this morning for a six weeks’ visit with friends and relatives at Cumberland and Ashland, | Wis. Officers and people desiring I the very best lead pencils should bearin mind that the Pioneer carries in stock a full line of the best pencils among which are Favers HH, HHH, HHHH, HHHHH and HHAHHHH; the Kohinoor, Mephisto, stenograph- ers, and seyeral grades of the best 5¢ pencils. Judge Spooner came up last evening from Park Rapids to hear the petition of Mrs. DeCos- tar, who wished to enter a plea of guilty. The judge returned to Park Rapids on the morning | train, People who are clean inside will look like it and act like it. They will work with energy, think clearly, act clearly and have healthy thoughts. Hollis- ter’s Rocky Monutain Tea. It makes clean people. 35 cents, Tea or Tablets. Barkers Drug Store. Notice. l There will be a meeting of the | Bemidji Business Men’s club at |the city hall, Friday night, Jupe 122, at 8:30 p. m. All members are requested to be present. W. N. BOWSER, President. GRAHAM M. TORRANCE, Secretary. $100 Reward, $100. The readers of this paper will ibe pleased to learn that there is at least one dreaded disease that | science has been able to cure in all its stages, and that is catarrh. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a constitutional disease, requires a constitutional treat- ment. Hall’'s Catarrh - Cure taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous sur- faces of the system, thereby de- stroying the foundation of the disease, and giving the patient strength by building up the con- stitution and assisting nature in doing its work. The proprietors have so much faith in its curative powers that they offer One Hun- dred Dollars for any case that it fails to cure. Send for list of testimonials. Address, F. J, Cheney & Co., Toledo, O. Sold by druggists, 75c. Take Hali’s Family Pills for ; constipation. L) is at hand and we have what you want for lunches Salmon, Imported Gold Corn Beef, Roast Beef, ROE @ MARKUSEN, Lobsters, Boneless Chicken, Lunch Tongue, Deviled Ham and Potted Ham. ies, Crackers, Olives, Canned Goods and Fruits, Cheese and Summer Sausage. Label Sardines, Canned Dried Beef, Veal Loaf, Pickles, Cook- PHONE 207, BEMIDJI Souvenir Envelopes OF Bemidji on sale at Pioneer Office Opposit Post Office The Only REAL HOME BARERY in the city ‘We wake a specialty of HOME BAKED BREAD, PIES, CAKE AND DOUGHNUTS. Fresh baking daily &he old reliable LAKESIDE DAKERY Telephone 118 BT F. B. Johnson of Pine City isa Bemidji visitor today. D. R. O'Conner is a Bemidji visitor from Brainerd. C. W. Jewett of Blackduck is attending to business matters here. M. Griffith the insurance man returned to Crookston yesterday afternoon. Joseph Kendell and wife of Kellihsr were Bemidiji visitors yesterday. T. J. Nary came in last evening from Park Rapids and is spend- ing the day in the city. The Pioneer carries the lead- ing grades of typewriter paper, which sells from 80c to $3 per box. Miss Marjorie Dickey of Princeton arrived in the city last eveningand is the guest of Lucene McCuag. H. Clay and wife of Lakeville are spending a few days in the city enjoying the pleasures of Lake Bemidji. Eogene Casky of Moval lake was in the city last evening on his return from a drive on the north Turtle river. Dr. Geo. E. Spufford at Hotel Markham. Your eyes made good by scientifically ground precription glasses, Charles Nesbet and wife are in the city from Grand Forks and will spend a short time with friends at Grand Forks bay. J. 0. Harris was a passenger on last night’s train. He will re- main at Tenstrike attending to business affairs until Tuesday. lof Olson, time keeper for the Red Lake railway company, re. turned yesterday to Nebish, after spending a few days in the city. Ed Amell of Blackduck passed through thecity last evening on his way home from a month’s visit with relatives at Milton, N. D. Typewriter ribbons of all standard makes, either record, copying or indelible, can be pro cured in the color you wish at the Pioneer office, Harvey F. Fisk returned last evening from Montevideo, where he has been the past year attend- ing Windom College. He will spend the summer here with his father, D, A. Fisk. EYES Dr.C. J. [fagson, tl}e ""eye specialist will make his next regular trip to Be- widji, June 28, 29, 30, and July 1. All those whose eyes trouble them should not fail to see him on one of those dates. Office at Hotel Brinkman, All questions pertaining to health and beauty are answered here. Makes people feelas they felt in full-blooded youth, Does business while you sleep. That’s what Hollister’s Rocky Mountain Tea will do. 35 cents, Tea or Tablets Barker’s Drug store. Never So Good as Now. The above has reference to Campbell Bros. Big Shows now consolidated which will give two exhibitions at Bemidji on Thurs- day June 28. Campbell Bros. have passed the point of compe- tition and this season sees the greatest and grandest effort of their career. Their rise in the circus world has been phenom- enal. They have been successful because they give the people what they want and are ever alert in securing features that are new and startling, This year’s features are eutirely new and entail the efforts of 250 artists in the equestrian, gym- nastic, acrobatic, and aerial line, together with twenty-flve clowns. Three hundred horses are used and the performance of the trained animals is in itself mar. velous. A gorgeous street parade will take place at 10 a. m. over the principal streets. This is positively the only big show that Read the Daily[Pioneer. E. C. Avery is [n the city from Minneapolis. ) A, O. Kelliher & in the city to- dap from Blackdyck. Attorney Wilkinson of Crook- ston isattendingtolegal matters here. Sixty-three ticlkets were sold this morning for the Duluth ex- cursion. J. D. Ball of Crookston is at- tending to busidess matters in the city today. | The infant chill of Mrs. Dick- inson of Shevlig died last eve- ning and will be buried today. +_ HIS ACTION \DELIBERATE, Los Angeles Bank Clerk Tells of Theft of $200,000. New York, June 32.—Frederick Wil- son, thirty years old, formerly a clerk in the employ of the Title Guarantee and Trust company of Los Angeles, Cal., arrested here on June 6 charged with embezzlement| of $20,000 of the trust company’s money, has' been given into custody df Chief of Police Amndle of Los Angeles. “I will be glad to get back to Los Angeles and face the music,” said Wilson. “My act was not impulsive. I planned it carefully. I sent my wife and child to stay with my relatives in Denver and I made straight for New York. I took my fling at the races and got badly bitten there as well as in Wall street. Now that it is all over I don't mind saying that New York is too expensive for me. The best job I could get paid me only $4 a day and my expenses were never less than $10 a day. Some people can live on beef stew. 1 am not of that kind, at least I never have before, but I suppose I'll get a taste of it now. I'm sorry for my wife, but its a poor time to say that.” BLOODY STREET AFFRAYV. Jews in New York Eager to Lynch a Murderer. New York, June 22.—Following a stabbing affray in Norfolk street, when Guiseppe Yacobocci killed Abraham Koslowitz, a mob of nearly 1,000 per- sons, most of whom were Jews and neighbors of the dead man, fought to wrest the Italian assailant from the police. The two policemen who mdde the arrest sought refuge in an empty building until reserves arrived. Then the prisoner was marched to the Mul- berry street station in the center of a hollow square formed by the blue- coats. The quarrel which brought about the stabbing arose over the question as to who should give way when Ital- -ians met Jews on the sidewalk. FOR. WANT OF PROSECUTICN. Mae Wood’s Suit Against Senstor Platt Dismissed. Omaha, June 22—In the district court here the $25,000 suit for dam- ages filed by Mae C. Wood, a former clerk in the postofiice department at Washington, against Senator Thomas C. Platt of New York and the United States Express company was dis missed for want of prosecution. Miss Wood sued for services alleged to have been performed for Senator Platt and the express company in looking after matters of interest to them ip the postoffice department. QUARTER MILLION DEMANDED. Damages Asked for Loss of Speec’ in Train Wreck. White Plains, N. Y., June 22—Ed ward Kleist, manager for a Manhattan shoe firm, through counsel, has begun suit for $250,000 against the New York Central railroad for loss of speech and injuries sustained in the train wreck which occurred just outside the Park avenue tunnel on Dec. 19 last The widow of James W. Knapp alsc sues for $100,000 for the death of her husband, who was killed in the same wreck. The total in several suits against the railroad is $404,000. BROTHERS GO TO PRISON. Convicted at Indianapolis of Perpe- trating Peculiar Fraud. Indianapolis, June 22.—Ernest and Walter Carruth, brothers, have been T S, NS SINTALUTA, NW.T CANADA September 10,1905 Mr. Duncan F. Macnab, Moordead, Minn. Dear Sir— T have run out of your Hair Tonic and cannot find it here. I would like to know what it would cost to send it here. I was baldheaded when I started using your rem- edy and had to wear a wig but threw it away after using two bottles of your Vegetable Hair Tonic. Hoping to hear from you soon, I remain Yours truly, W. J. Tiffany. Eor sale and guaranteed by E.N.FRENCH & Company- will visit Bemidji this season. Bemidiji, - Minn. _ sentenced to prison for perpetrating a peculiar fraud on the local street car company. Walter can throw his ankle out of joint at will and the scheme of the brothers was for Wal- ter to fall from a car and then claim damages' for alleged injuries to his ankle. Traction companies in a dozen cities have been defrauded by this method. SHOOTS WIFE AND NIECE. Domestic Trouble Cause of Tragedy at Los Angeles. Los Angeles, Cal, June 22—W. F. Ketring shot and probably fatally wounded his divorced wife and her niece, Miss Bessie O'Day, at the home of the former. arated from his wife for the last two years. Calling upon her he asked her to return to him. She refused and Miss O’Day stepped to the telephone to call the police. As she did so Ket- ring shot both women. Three Convicts Killed. Natchez, Miss., June 22.—Four dead and one perhaps fatally injured, all white men, i8 the result of an attempt by three life term convicts to escape from Angola (La.) state convict farm, seventy miles down the river from this city. The fourth victim was a guard. Death in Violent Storm. Chicago, June 22.—One man was fatally injured, four were slightly hurt and the Illinois Stcel company’s plant at South Chicago was damaged to the extent of $150,000 as the result of a violent rain, wind and hail storm which raged in that section of the city. Eight of the Crew Drowned. Dover, Eng., June 22.—The Danish schooner Bertha was sunk near the South Goodwin lightship as the result of a collision with the Dutch tank steamer American, from Antwerp for New York. Eight of the schooner’s crew were drowned. BRIEF BITS OF NEWS. Frosts in various parts of Wyoming have damaged growing crops. The house has sent to conference the so-called “immunity of witnesses” bill. Go Between, at 6 to 1, won the $20,000 Suburban handicap at Sheeps- head Bay. At the sixty-second commencement of the University of Michigan Thurs- day 821 students were given diplomas. The trial of Secretary of State Houser of Wisconsin for the attempt- ed bribery charged by Insurance Com- missioner Host has been set for July 2. Demetrius Schilizzi, an old member of the London Stock Exchange, shot himself through the heart. His sui- cide is attributed o domestic worries. The French foreign office has heen advised that China has signed a treaty according complete satisfaction to France for the massacre of six French Jesuit missionaries at Nanchang, Kiangsi province, in February last., Rockefeller Donates $260,000. Chicago, June 22.—Dr. T. W. Good speed, secretary of the board of trus- tees of the University of Chicago, has announced that a gift of $260,000 has been received from John D. Rocke- feller. The money is to be used for current expenses for the year begin- ning July 1. MINNESOTA DEMOCRATS. State Convention to Meet in Minneap- olis Sept. 4. St. Paul, June 22.—The Democratic state central committee met here dur- ing the day and decided to hold the convention to name candidates for state offices at Minneapolis on Sept. 4. Bryan to Witness Coronation. Trondhjem, Norway, June 22.—W. J. Bryan and his wife have arrived here and are the guests of United States Minister to Sweden C. H. Graves, appointed envoy to represent the United States at the coronation of King Haakon. His Style of Hitting. “And, now, Mrs. Sullivan,” said the counsel, “will you be kind enough to tell the jury whether your husband was in the habit of striking you with impunity ?” “With what, sor?” queried Mrs. Sul- livan. “With impunity,” repeated the coun- sel. “Well, he was, sor, now,and thin, but he struck me oftener wid his fisht, sor.” His Remark. “I won’t do any more work for that man Hopkins.” “Why?” “Well, he passed some remark I did not like.” “Did he? What was it?” “He said, ‘Brown, you won’t be want- ed after this week.’” Constant Advice. “A woman should always depend on her husband for advice,” said the de- voted wife. “Yes,” answered the visitor, “but it does grow monotonous not to get any advice except to economize.”—Wash- ington Star. Lost Youth. A man fooks back with regret, but without bitteraess, to his lost youth; a woman, however vehemently she may protest to the contrary, seldom if ever attains to this same calm serenity.— Gentleman’s Magazine. Fictitious. Angel Child—Aunt Daisy, - what is meant by “a fictitious character?” Aunt Daisy—That means one that is made up, dear. Angel Child—Oh, yes! Then you're a fictitious character, aren’t you, auntie? Blensings of Work. .Thank God every morning when you get up that you have something to do that day which must be done, whether you like it or not. Being forced to ‘work and forged to do your best will breed in you temperance, self control, diligence, strength of will, content and a hundred virtues which the idle will never know.—Charles Kingsley. Ketring has been sep- - ‘‘Mediterranean of Ala ka. Round trip From Bemidji to Pacific Northwest “See America First” Summer Rates one-third lower than usuali the Columbia River Region. America’’—and Special round t:ip rates 10 Springdale, Livingston, Butte. Helena, Spokane, Eastern Washington, British Columbia and California Points, until Sept. 15, 1906. Ask about them. An opportunity en route to visit Yellowstone National Park via the Visit See Puget Sound— visit Scenic Anaconda, Missoula, Gardiner Gateway Send six cents to A. M. Cleland, Gen. Pass. Agt., St. Paul, Minn., for “WONDERLAND 190¢.” Where? An Bnglish mayor tells this story: “A woman; speaking at a meeting in support of w en’s rights, repeatedly ence, “Where would men thout women? ce from the rear of the “‘In paradise, mum! " Ate ©F His Hand. Smith— 1 hear Jones, the naturalist, bad a accident. What was i Brown v, somebody young tiger cub and said it was so tame it would cat off his hand. Smith —Weli? n-Weli, it ¢id. Read the Daily Pioneer., LOTS FOR SALE OFFER_FOR_SALE CHEAP— i GOOD LOTS AT GR. FORKS BAY WHITE & STREET TOWNSITE COMP'NY S, Local agt. . Minn, A NEW TRAIN TO CHICAGO Leaves St. Paul Union Station at 10:30 p. m. after the arrival of connecting trains from Minnesota and North Dakota Points, ranning via the Burlington’s Mississippi River Scenic line to Chicago, arriving 11.15 a. m. The famous electric-lighted Chicago Limited continues to leave St. Paul 8:40 p. m.: arriving Chicago 9.00 a.m. . The Chicago Day Limited now has new and handsome equipment throughout—the finest and most comfortable day train in the Northwest. It leaves St. Paul 8:20 a. m., arriving in Chicago 9.35 p. m. A comfortable and interesting trip for you if your tick- et reads, ‘“‘via Burlington Route, * F. M .RUGG, Northwestern Passenger Agt., Germania Life Building, St. Paul, Minn. SUPERP IN Y QUALITY FINH AND il OPERATION SUPERB UNIVERSAL Ranges from $25 to $60 Sold on Easy Payments Old Stoves taken in exchange Fleming Bros. Phone 57 316 Minnesota Avenue N

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