Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, September 18, 1906, Page 3

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

MODEL 10K CREAM made in our own town and acknowledged by all good judges to be the purest, and smoothest and best ice cream sold in Northern Minnesota. You can get it at our store or OLSON’S Confectionery CITY DRUG STORE PALACE OF SWEETS MIDWAY Store | 1 and all the other leading deal- ers in this part of the state. GhHe Model ' THE CITY. Read the Daily Pioneer, Peaches 20¢ and 25c¢ a dozen tonight at the Lakeside bakery.: William vesterduy her. Hillgrove returned from a visit at Kelli- Bemidji illevator Co. head- quarters for hay, grain, ground teeds and tlour, A. Gilmour came down this morning from Blackduck, where he has been acting as pharmacist for the O'Kelliher Drug company. Mrs. William Hillgrove and son, Laverne Hack, have re- turned from a visit with relatives and friends at Detrowt, Mich,, and Berlin, Oaterio. Keep your ties for Martin Bros. of Duluth, who will buy along the line of the M. & I. and the G.N. A. C. McLeran, purchasing agent, of Bemidji, will call on you. James Wilkins, general agent for the Fitger Brewing company, was transacting business in the city yesterday afternoon and left for his home at Cass Lake in the evening. A. Ueland of Minneapolis, sec- retary of the Minneapolis Red Lake & Manitoba railway, and an attorney of scme noto, arrived in the city last evening and is interested in some cases at the present term of district court. You are wasting time if you are waiting for nature to do all the work, Everybody needs a; little help, so deces nature; assist her by taking a course of Hollis- ter’s Rocky Mountain Ten. Tea or tablets, 35c. Barker's Drugj Store. George Cochran, the logger who has a large contract to cut pine on the Chippewa reserva- tion near Schley station, east of Cass Lake, was a visitor in the| city yesterday afterscon, Ile) was looking for men, and claims | that there is a great demand [ur} lavorers among the loggersi everywhere. i Hinonia M. & M. Peaches 20c and 23c a dozen tonight at the Lakeside bakery. John Mogan came down this morning from Margie, where he has been buying logs for the Crookston Lumber company. J. C. Parker went to Northome last evening on business and re- turned this morning, in order s0 be sure you get it { that he might cast his vote at the| primary election. Harry Bliler, who is in the employof the U. 8. forest service, and who is working in the vicinity of Bena, came over from that place yesterday afternoun for a brief visit in Bemidji. Dr. Jones has come out with a brand-new medicine wagon that is at once a thing of beanty and a practical receptacle for his remedies; and the Doc. exhibits pardonable pride in his rig. Bad breath, coated tongue, a languid feeling, is entirely un- natural. Your lazy liver and bowels need a tonic. The best soothing tonic to every organ is Hollister’s Rocky Mountain. Tea. Tea or tablets 35s. Barker’s Drug Store. M. D. Stoner went t) Kelliher last evening on business con- nected with the awarding of the contract for the installing of the new water-works system by the village of Kelliher. Mr. Stoner and C. W. Jewett of Blackduck are the ofticial engineers for the village. = T. J. Miller & Co. have been instramental of late in the making of several dealsin prop- erty that were of more than ordinary importance. Mr. Miller personally engineered the deal between E. J. Swedback and F, A. Mayo, a $21,000 transaction, and he also has pending several other deals of equal importance. “The Burglar and the Waif” is-a guaranteed attraction which will appear at the Opera house on Saturday evening, the 22nd. It teems with bubbling comedy and pure heart interest bearing the critical and popular of all large cities. The local managefs of the opera house have wmade a personal investigation as to the werits of the play and have found it exceptionally good. Stat 2 of Ohio, City of Toledo, 1 Lucas County. ) TFrank J. Cheney makes oath that he is senior partner of the firm of I, J.,Cheney & Co., doing business in the City of Toledo, County and State aforesaid, and that said firm will pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for each and every case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by the use of Hall’s Catarrh Cure. FRANK J. CHENEY. Sworn to before me and sub- scribed in my presence, this 6th day of December, A. D. 1886, (Seal) A, W. GLEASON, Notary Pubiic. Hall’s Catarrh ,Cure is taken internally, and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Send for testi- ialsfree. Ir. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. Sold by 1l Druggists, 75¢.’ Take Hall’s Family Pills for constipation. S8 2 J. P. POGUE’S AND SALE STABLE BE MIDJI, - LIVERY, FEED MINN 6GhHe New Store Ts headquarter: s for the best Creamery Butter and Strictly Fresh Eggs. Call at the store’or phone 207 LAST the public can get whiat they wanted all summer long IVE’S ICE CREAM Follow the crowd and get one of our CANTLILOUPE SUNDAES Lo us for T 3 it of all lce creams, To had at the Lakeside Bakery. 'ONLY: all It 1s the pur Read the Daily Pioneer. Letter files and letter presses at the Pioneer office. Bananas at the Lakeside bakery tonight, 15¢ a dozen. D. F. Tilden of Tenstrike was a guest at the Markham last night. . S. F. Seaman, the cedar dealer of Deer River, spent last night in the city. EYES— Drs. Larson & Larson, specialists in fitting glasses, Qftice in Swedback Block. W. A. Cassler was in from the Lake George country, yesterday afternoon and today, attending to some business matters. Typewriter ribbons of all standard makes, either record, copying or indelible, can be pro- cured in the color you wish at the Pioneer oftice. The Burglar and the Waifis the title of the next play to be given at the Opera house, For a good play be sure to see this. September 22, The Ladies Aid of the M. E. church will meet Wednesday afternoon in the church, where they will be entertained by Mrs. A. W. Mitchell. An invitation is extended to all. W. N. Bowser left t)day for Chicago, where he will look over the markets and purchase alarge line of winter goods for O'Leary & Bowser. He expects to he absent for u week or ten days, George ", Ross of Duluth, who is a member of the firm of Ross & Ross, who have extensive deals in cedar along the north line of the M. & I., came in from Duluth last night to see how his interests were progressing. S. G. Byerly, traveling auditor for the Duluth Brewing and Malting company, spent yester- day in the city and left this morning for Brainerd. He found the Bemidji field being well taken care of by J. P. Signal, the local agent for the Duluth company. Bananas at the Lakeside bakery tonight, 15¢ a dozen, A famous Wisconsin woman once said, “All this poor earth needs 1s just the art of being &ind.” Won’t some one be kind enough to propose Hollister’s Rocky Mountain Tea? It helps tn make people kind and well. Tea or tablets 85c. Barker’s Drug Store. W. G. Schroeder, Frank Schroeder and H. I". Schwandt returned home yesterday from a trip to the country about Grand Marais. They visited points twenty tive miles north of the Marais, but found nothing in the shape of timber claims that suited their faney. Gill Brethers of this city will open a clothing store at Kelliher, about October 1. Paul Gill, a member of the firm, was at Kelli- her recently and closed a deal for a year’s lease of the Henry Sterling building, on Main street of that village. He will have charge of the Kelliher store, J. C. Covington went to Kelli- her last evening, to be present at the opening of the bids for the awarding of the contract for put- ting in the waterworks plant of that village. He will also visit Blackduck before returning and inspect the work being done on the contract for putting in the steam- heating plant in the “Golden West” hotel at that place, which was awarded to the Jezjrurd Plumbing cumpany. B0 [ e T00 LATE TO CLASSIFY. FOR RENT: Large front room furnished. Inquire at701 Bel- trami Avenue. : FOR SALE — Rubber stamps. The Pioneer will procure any kind ,of a rubber stamp for you on short notice. ‘Read the Daily Pioneer. Bananas at the Lakeside bakery tonight, 15¢ a dozen. MAJORITY BELIEVES INTERVEN. TION THE ONLY WAY TO END HOSTILITIES. AMERICAN PROTECTORATE POSSIBLE MANY FAVOR PERMANENT CON- TROL AS TRUE SOLUTION OF THE DIFFICULTY, Havana, Sept. 17.—President Roose- velt’s declaration that it is impera- tive that hostilities cease and arrange- ments be made to secure the per- manent pacification of Cuba is re- echoed enthusiastically on all sides. Everybody is gratified at this clear declaration and the fact that Secre- tary of War Taft and Acting Secretary of State Bacon are to be sent to ren- der aid to these ends. A few of the leaders of the Moderates are of the opinion that Secretary Taft will settle the matter within one week on some basis of the division of offices, etc., but how to get the rebels to agree to anything which shall include the re- tenlion of President Palma’s adminis- tration is a serious connundrum. All speculation up”to the present time leads toward the discussion of some form of permanent.American contro! or guarantee of peace and or- der as the only true solution of the difficulty. Sympathy With Rebellion, A correspondent of the Associated Press, who has just returned from the front in Pinar del Rio province, where he visited both the insurgent and gov- ernment troops, reports that almost all that region sympathizes with the rebels, but not to the extent of hand- ing the reins of government to them. The almost universal concensus of opinion throughout the province is for American intervention and it is be- lieved that the country will never have settled conditions in any other way. The same sentiment prevails among the rank and file of the government troops. Officials of the government express pleasure at the coming of Secretary Taft and Assistant Secretary of State Bacon to find a peaceful settlement of the troubled conditions, but on the point of how the United States can secure and assure permanent pacifica- tion they are entirely non-committal. ROOSEVELT WARNS CUBA. Disorder Must Cease or United States Will Intervene. Oyster Bay, L. 1, Sept. 17.—After a protracted cqnference with Secretary of War Taft, Assistant Secretary ot State Bacon and Secretary of the Navy Bonaparte President - Roosevelt ad- dressed an important communication to Cuba and arranged to send Secre- tary Taft and Mr. Bacon to that island at once to make a thorough investiga- tion of conditions there and use their influence to restore peace. The communication is.addressed to the Cuban minister to the United States, Senor Quesada. It is an im- passioned plea to Cuba to realize her responsibility as a self-governing re- public and to restore peace in the island. Her attention is called in no uncertain language to the responsibil- ity which the United States bears to the island and the certainty that such | responsibility will necessarily be ex- ercised should peace not be preserved. The president says he has certain Information that the peace of the isl- and is now menaced and that Amer- ican property has been destroyed. Secretary Taft will be accompanied on his Cuban trip by Captain Frank R. McCoy, one of the president’s mili- tary aides. Captain McCoy -was an alde to General Wood, both in Cuba and the Philippines, and speaks Span- ish fluently. ADVOCATE A PROTECTORATE. Prominent Cubans Say That Alone Will Guarantee Peace. Havana, Sept. 17—Eduardo Chibas, a prominent resident of Santlago, said to'the Associated Press: “The entire province of Santiago will burst into revolt unless the Unit- ed States intervenes immediately. There must be a protectorate or there will be no permanent peace in Cuba.” Jose Villalon, ex-secretary of public works and a prominent veteran, de- clared that permanent peace or fur- ther investment of foreign capital in Cuba were impossible except under an American protectorate. Marines Get Hurry Orders. Portsmouth, N. H., Sept. 17—A de- tachment of sixty-six marines, under command of Captain Charles F. Hatch, have left the Portsmouth navyyard under hurry orders on their way to Norfolk, Va. It was the opinion among the officers at the local yard that the marines were being hurried south in order that they might be available for.| service in Cuba. Funston Called to Washington. Tacoma, Wash,, Sept. 17.—General Frederick Funston has been ordered | | to Washington without™ delay. The order is supposed to be in connection with the situation in Cuba. Kills Babe and Herself. New York, Sept. 17.—Mrs, Vietor Anthony, thirty-five years of age, cut the throat of her three-year-old daugh- ter Annie in her home in Jersey City Going to the roof, she jumped to the street, three stories below. The child, 18 dead and the mother is dying. i ooty CUBANS DO NOT OBJECT | Finest Tallor, and half my business comes through the mail from people who live out of town. | make suits or overcoats to order for $16, $20 and 825 that will equal any other tailor's 830, $36 and $40. Write me today for samples telling me just about the d of clothes you w. Let me end these samples to you with my measurement blanks which tell how to take your measure. | guarantee perfect fitand satisfaction or no pay. ) preru‘llll express charges so that the clothes don’t cost you any more than my next door neighbor. Address your letter to HARRY MITCHELL, 10Micollet Avenus AFTER FIFTY.ONE YEARS, lowa Man Stpposed to Be Dead Re- turns Home. Burlington, Ia., Sept. 17.—Chris Burmaster, who has been missing from his home here for fifty-one years and was supposed to be dead, returned unexpectedly ané made himself known to the members of his family still liv- ing. When he was seventeen he became discouraged and without saying a word to his family or any one else he disappeared, going into the wilds of South Dakota, where he took up a farm. He succeeded after a long struggle in putting himself into comfortable circumstances. He married and then went to Los Angeles, Cal,, where he has been living a retired life. He found several sisters and brothers still living here, some of whom had been born since his depar- ture. His Wwife died about two years ago snd a longing to see the '0ld home place caused him to return to Burlirg- ton. Some twenty years ago his name appeared among the vietims of a South Dakota Indian massacre and it was taken for granted that he was dead. FOUR PcRSONS KILLED. Two Violent Storms Visit Johnson County, Neb. Tecumseh, Neb., Sept. 17.—Two violent and seemingly distinct storms visited Johnson county during the aft- erneen, resulting in the death of four persons, the fatal injury of two oth- ers and painful injury of five more, The dead are: 0. A. Giel, aged forty; August See man, forty-five; Roy Carmine, seven teen; George Koehier, fourteen. The first three were killed by light- ning near Elm creek. A party of threshers were at work on the farm of Henry Walthers when the storm care up. Four of the men crawled und>r the threshing machine, which was shattered by a lightning bolt and three were instantly killed. Henry Wal- thers, Jr, was badly shocked and burned, but will probably recover. 1,600 SKILLED MEN. AFFECTS Strike of Shop Employes on the Wa- bash Road Ordered. Chicago, Sept. 17.—A general strike of all shop employes on the Wabash railroad system has been ordered. The order affects 1,600 skilled mechanics; including machinists, boilermakers and blacksmiths, James O’Connell, president of the International Association of Machin- ists, before leaving Chicago for Wash- ington, said that everything possibl> had been done to avert a strike and that a walkout of all the employes in the repair and machine departments of the road could not be avoided un- less the railroad company should agree to the terms of the men. SIX BODIES RECOVERED. Four Other Workmen Killed by Going Through Drawbridge. Toledo, 0., Sept. 17.—Six bodies have been recovered and at least four more are being searched for in the Maumee river as a result of an acci- dent when a handcar plunged through an open draw of the Maumee bridge. The men were section employes of the Wheeling and Lake Erie road, ac- cording to time checks found .on the bodies. Ouly the -h erate and h:—soehl elect can afford to treat the lungqage reck- lessly.—Brainerd. . grain, PEOPLE OF SICILY IN A PANIC AS RESULT OF CONTINUED EARTHQUAKE 8HOCKS, Palermo, Sept. 17.—The people of Bicily are still in a condition of panic because of the earthquake shocks which have been occurring here for the past four days. They continue to camp out in the open and many have taken refuge in caves. They are in fear of a repetltion of the Calabria disaster of last year. Whole towns and villages have been deserted. Citi- | Zens, priests, soldiers and government officials are living crowded in together wherever ‘they consider they are saf- est. Pitiful scenes occurred during the removal of invalids from the hos- pitals. The government has issued instructions that food be distributed. PROSPERITY IN WEST. New York Railroad Man Says It Beats the East. New York, Sept. 17.—Dwight W. Pardee, secretary of the New York Central, has just returned from a trij to the West, which included St. Paul and points west to Portland. From there he went to San Francisco and was in the other more important citles of California. With the exception of San Francisco conditions everywhere he found to be prosperous. He says: “People in the. East cannot realize the enormous business that is being done in the West unless they actually see it. All lines of business are ac- tive, with, of course, the crops as the basis. “The raflroads are having all they can do to handle their trafilc. “Even In San Francisco there is great enthusiasm and optimism.” GET AWAY WITH $10,000. Safecrackers Loot Both Banks at Un- of four highwaymen blew open the safes in both banks at Underwood, MeLean county, obtained about $10,000 In cash and fled into the country. The noise of the explosion was heard by residents of the town, who -1 thought it might be roisterers shoot- Ing firearms. A druggist, who was sleeping in store next to one cf the banks, was awakened by the explo- sion and started out the front way, when he was covered with a gan and ordered back. He foand a man also at the back door and couldn’t give an alarm. At the second bznk a land agent was likewise awakened and started out, hut met the same fate as the druggist, 5 WELL HRECEIVED IN CUBA. News of *Propcsed Visit of Messrs, Taft and Bacon. 3 Havana, Sent. 17.—President Roose- velt’s action in sending Secretary of War Taft and Acting Secretary of State Bacon to investigate conditions in the island was regarded favorably on the whole by those who were first apprised of it. Cubans generally, it may te said, do not desire interven- tion ot any sort in Cuban affairs, but the desire for a settlemént of some kind now predomiuates. The convic- tion is overwhelming that the trouble must be settled through the United States. The truth of President Rcosevelt’s picture of the deplorability of the rev- olution and of his reference to the United States’ right ef intervention is not questioned. Secretary Taft’s repuatation as a pacificator and as administra‘or in the Philippines makes his ccuiny partie ularly wellome. TO PROTECT PL.ALTATIONS. Marietta Arri T ‘Washingic patch has Le g0s by the Ing the arrival cf Pplace. Later in the d Cienluegos and Marlelts at that dispateh nder Ful- ing that a landed [rom that ship 3 to piotect sag: were threatencd. )2 s received from Mr. Sleeper, charge cf the American lega- tion at Havana, it appears that the extent of damage to American prop- erty vear Cienfuegos had been exag- werated. is a characteristic of nearly all Beers, but is only one of the essentials of Quality. The King of Bottled Beers. is not only Pure and Carefully Sterilized, but is brewed from the very choicest materials obtainable —Barley-Malt from sound, thorm‘l};hly I'Yops of the finest quality and culture, A beer of exquisite taste and delightful flavor is the result. ‘ Budwelser is bottled only at the Home Plant. Anheuser-lg‘mh Brewing Louts, U.S. Ae C. H. MILES, Distributor. derwood, N. D. Bismarck, N. D., Sept. 17.—A gang | nejther of which took effect. McCauley ‘east of special ; 18 not a secret or patent medic inst which the m%nm people are | qnlte::’mnlu tI‘!svel'le becanse of the un- but is's medicine & full list of all printed, in. | wrB ) put up f i - and ailiments, 8010 Fhrough Goas. sts, that does not contain slcohol and 1875 106 o6y medioima ey 'nmfi a1 digeases, the Ingredients of which v‘ ~ for the ; mended. { A little book of some of these endorse- R it o7 ML R pai game by post No;lotfiar, or'fl. R, hat Dr. § ption, for woman’s weaknesses and delicate ailments, 13 not a patent or secret medicine, being the *Favoyite Prescri) tion” of a regularly educated and gradu- ated physician, e in the ice of his e‘men n;ec —that of ts ingredients areprinted in plain English on eva:{ bottle-wra, s that it is the only medicine elpeem!y de- signed for the ciire of woman’s diseases that contains no alcohol, and the only one that has a professional endorsement ‘worth more than all the so-called *testi- monials” ever published for other med- icines. for these endorsements as above. They are free for the o hxe‘k’o‘lll sn%elrullmm i i ache, N n or down sensation Io‘:’fiag‘n in the lhdomennf, 'weak back, have disagreeable and weak- ing, catarrhal, pelvic drain, or are in distress from being long on your feet, then ou may be sure of benefit from taking r. Pierce’s Fuvorite Prescription. =~ - Dr. Pierce’s I'leasant Pellets the best lax- ative and regulator of the bowels. _They invigorate stomach, liver and ‘bowels, One a laxative: two or three s cathartie. i TAKES EFFECT. Veteran Fires Twice at Governor: .of Milwaukee Soldiers’ Home. Milwaukee, Sept. 17.—William ‘Me- Cauley, a veteran recently discharged from the Soldiers’ home in New York state, attempted to kill Governor Cor- nelius Wheeler of the National Sol- diers’ home in this city. Two shots ‘were fired from a 32-caliber revolver, was overpowered by other inmates of the home and later was arrested and taken to the county jail. McCauley sought admission to the home, but was refused on the ground that he had not been out of another home long enough. The shots were fired when within ten feet of Governor ‘Wheeler. The prisoner is a man of huge proportions and it was with dif- ficulty he was held until officers ar- rived and placed him under arrest. i 2 PLUMBING! | TIN AND RE- PAIR WORK. You get the best ° services on the shortest notice. Doran:Bros, | TELEPHONEiNo. 225 i 3 ot ! I Orino cleanses the sys- tem, and makes: sallow blotched complexions . smooth and clear. Cures gently; stimulating .the - stomach,liverand bowels. | ...Barker’s Drag Store .ripened

Other pages from this issue: