Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, March 22, 1907, Page 3

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dx { You—~—— | May Not Kaow ; That the wholesaler sel's the merchaut Creamery Butter at 33¢ No doubt you know that the H merchant ‘sells it to yeou for 35¢ You are certainly entitled to know that our price on this is 32¢ Ghre Model | Everything that’s good in the Bakery, Dairy and Confectionery line 315 Minnesota Ave. Phone 125 BIJOU Automatic Drama— \'qu\lavillu—}’op- ............ ular Concerts ...... 302 Third St\‘ept :30 to 10:00 Saturday Afternoon 2:80 to 3:30 Every Bvening 7 TONIGHT! EXTRA SPECIALS The Cameragraph FOUL PLAY Tilustrated Song JUST A LIFE'S GAME OF SEE-SAW THE CAMERA FIEND and other qpcmal attractions Don’t Miss It. Pro Changes Without Notice. Watch This Ad Daily. TIOKETS 10 O’?NTS C. L. LASHER & SON, Props. An Appetizer Not a fiery liquor which destroys rather than creates an appetite, but a palatable beer, which con- tains only sufficient alcohol to sdmulate the stomach to per- form its normal functions and aids to digest the food. MOOSE BRAND beer does all this, does it well, does it daily, if you give it a chance. Orders called for; goods delivered at your door. DULUTH PHE¥RE2 C0. J. P. SIGNEL, Local Agent Bemidjl, Minn. Residence Phone 290. Office Phone 220. Just Received A large shipment of Siuger and Wheeler & Wilson Sewing Ma- The best and most beautiful line of cabinets ever carried in the city. Also a complete line of Pianos, Organs and Sheet Music at popular prices. Repairs for machines of all kinds. chines. sewing BISIAR,VANDER LIP & COMPANY 311 Minn. Ave, Phone 319 Bemidji frsot nzonges T o wy GHe PIONEER Delivered to your door every evening Only 40c per Month LNV WAASAANY The City AARAAMAAAMAAAAAAAAAN Read the Daily Pioneer, Local news on the last page. Mrs. J. H Henderson is onthe sick list. Call at the Pioneer when you are in need of office supplies. A. W. Danaher came down B | this morning from Tenstrike. Mrs. E. Crawford is again able to be out after an illness of two weeks, J. P. Irish has rented his farm and will occupy one of his resi- dences in the city, Bemidji Elevator Co.. jobbers for Cremo Flour, also Gold Medal Mascot and Barlow’s Best. A pleasant surprise party was given at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ed Ross Wednesday even- ing. See Mrs. Conger’s Swell up-to date millinery. She Has Moved to 4th street, west of Owl Drug Store. L. G. Kinch is packing his household goods and getting ready to move to the northwest territory. Peter Larkin and wife came down this morning from their home at Turtle River and spent today in the city. J. M. Barnett is enjoying a visit from his brother-in-law from Verndale who has been here the past week. One safe rule for young house- wifes: Begin using Hunt’s Per- fect Baking Powder, you’ll never want to use any other. A. L. Wyler, auditor for the B(midji Brewing company, re- turned this morning from a trip along the north line of the M. & I W. E. Hyatt came down this morning from his home at Tartle River and left this afternoon for Fowlds, where he is conduct- ing a refreshment parlor. C. E. Albrant returned yester- day from Grand Forks, N.D., where he went to attend a con- vention of the North Dakota and Northern Minnesota laundry men. Many business men are short- sighted in not looking into things. They are daily losing money by not adopting the great Hollister Rocky Mountain Tea system, Makes them well and keeps them well. 25 ceuts. Barker’s Drug Store. Mrs, Moore, wife of J. R. Moore who has been confined in the Beltrami county jail for the past two months to await the action of the grand jury on the charge of fradulent doings in connection with varieus trans- actions involving the saleof stock, has been in the city during the past three days, awaiting the outcome of the findings of the grand jury. Chris Schroeder, who was for some time operator at the G. N. depot two years ago, but who was let out at the conclusion of the telegraphers’ strike, has re- signed his position at Laporte and leaves today for the iron range, where he will hereafter make his home. Chris 1s a fine fellow, and his Bemidji friends wish him success over in the iron range country, Mr. Chilson will succeed Chris at Laporte. PILES CURED IN 6 TO 14 DAYS. PAZO OINTMENT is’guaranteed to cure any case of Itching, Blind.[Bleeding or Protruding vilesin 6 to 14 days or money refunded. 50c ‘We have only good tales to tell of what, we puu into our bread, cakes and pies. The flour we use as well as the other materialsiare the best and the way we uwix and s e - AR bak insures a high classiproduct. You have but to give us a trial in order to be convinced PHONE 118 Read the Dailv Pioneer. Local news on the last page. O. B. Olson returned to Kelli- her last evening. Mrs. Geo. McTaggart went to Blackduck last evening. Dr. E. W, Larson, the eye spe- cialist, went to Kelliher last even- ing. J. F. Hayes, a homesteader living near New Haven, was a visitor in the city yesterday. See Mrs. Conger’s Swell up-to date millinery. She Has Moved to 4th street, west of Owl Drug Store. Dr. B. F. Osburn of Tenstrike was among the candidates who were initiated into the Elks lodge last evening. Joseph Roberts, formerly sec- tion foreman at Funkley, passed through the city this morning on his way to Spokane. There will bea special meeting of the Order of Eastern Star for initiation and social time, Friday March 22nd. at 8 p, m, W. B. Sheffield, a prominent business man of Crookston, was a visitor in the city yesterday afternoon and last night. Miss Fredrica Graling of Min- neapolis will appear at the M. E. church Monday evening in the dramatic entertainment, G. E. Crocker left this morn- ing for points along the north line of the M. & I. in the interest of the Grand Forks Lumber com- pany. James Goodman, the popular “El Paterno” representative, was circulating among the local trade yesterday afternoon and last evening. R. K. Gemmell of Brainerd, faced the lion in his den last night and rode the Elk ‘‘bovola- pus”’ triumphantly through the entire ceremonies. Sam Cone, who sells the ‘‘elixir of life”’ for the L. S. Loeb Co. of Duluth, spent last night in the city. Sam is one of the best of the boys who “make” Bemidji, and he always has a ‘boost” for this city. W. E. Cyr of Minneapolis, who has extensive holdings of real es- tate in Hagali township, eastof the village of Blackduck, was in the city yesterday, straighten- ing out some tax matters in which he is interested. Scientifically fitted glasses that properly focus the rays of light into the eyes prevent tired, sore eyes that often cause head- aches and dizziness, Consult Drs. Larson & Larson, special- ists, 20d floor Swedback block. J. F. Eagan, the civil engineer in charge of the Big Falls-Inter- national Falls extension of the M. & 1., spent yesterday in this city and left this morning for Brainerd, where he will hold a consultation with the officials of the M. & I. State of Ohio, City of Toledo, Lucas County, ss. Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he is senior partner of the firm of F. 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”can- not 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 Public. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Send for testi- monials free. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, Ohio. Sold by all Druggists, 75¢. Take Hall’s Family Pills for constipation. internally, and acts directly on|. 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 35 cents, Tea or Tablets. Bar- ker’s Drug Store. Mrs, L. H. Bailey and bher sister, Mrs. Arnold, left this morning for Tipton, Iowa, having received word that their father, John Ridenour, was very feeble, and that his demise was not un. expected. Mr. Ridenour has reached the ripe old age of 72. -George E. Erickson of Spconer, has been a visitor in the city during the last three days, look- ing after some business matters at the court house. Mr. Erick- son joined the Elks last night, and rode into membership with honors to himself. Mr. Erick- son is intensely loyal to his home town, and predicts a great future for the new village of Spooner. Local news on the ,ast page. Reed Ssudio fur Bugone Hawkes left thiz morn- colur d work, ing for Coldfirld, Nevada. W, B. Bl wart went to Gow mell last eveninrg va & business mission, M. D. Stoner weut to Biack duck last evening on a businexs mission, Z Edward veturned to Big Falls lasi cvenn spent yesterday in the ci Mrs. J. R. McPhee «f R d wood Falls is visiting with he: sister, Mrs. A. P. Henrionet, Fred Throm, who is now con- ducting a restaurantat Big Falls, returned to his home last even- ing. . See Mrs. Conger’s Swell up-to nesy ving date millinery. She has Moved to 4th street, west of Owl Drug Store. Nobody will be disappointed with the musical and dramatic entertainment Monday evening at the M., E. church. Deputy Sheriff J. N. Bailey re- turned last evening from an official trip to points in Iowa and southern Minnesota. C. O. Moon, ex-deputy county auditor, is assisting Clerk of Court Fred W. Rhoda during the present busy season at the court house. . There’s naught so sweet a3 love’s young dream, And it would sweeter be, If lovers would only take A little Rocky Mountain Tea, Barker’s DrugStore. George Beaton left last even- ing for his home at Big Falls. He has just been discharged from the hospital, where he had taken treatment for dropsy. He is now much improvcd in health. Major Milsaps of Minneapolis, will give an address at the Salva- tion Army huli Friday evening, at 8 p. m.,, on “What is Salva- tion?”” This will be a very inter- esting and profitable address. You are invited to come. and bring your friends, Noted Ball Player in Town. Charles Roy, brother of Louis Roy, arrived in the city from Lengby, where he has been spending the winter. Charles is a baseball player “with muel more than a local reputation. For several seasons he played with university teams in the east, and last year was with the Philadelphia team of the National league. This season he will pitch for the Newark, N. J,, team of the Eastern League, a.nd great things are expected of him. He is nearly six feet tall, and is built in proportion. He has a mighty “wing,” and the speed with which he “puts ’em over” is terrifying to opposing bats- men. Charles played in this vicinity at one time,several years ago, being a member of the Cass Lake team. A Well Known Remedy. One of the oldest, safest and most favorable known remedies in the world to-day is Brand- reth’s Pills—a blood purifier and laxative. Being purely vegetable they can be used by old or young with perfect safety and:while other remedies require increased doses and finally cease acting al together, with Brandreth’s Pills the same'dose always has the same effect no matter how long they are taken. One or two pills taken each night for a while is the best thing known for any one troubled with constipation, mdxgesmon, dyspepsia or any trouble arising from an impure state of the blood. Brandreth’s Pills have been in use for over a century and are sold in every drug and medicine store, either plain or sugar costed. M. B. A. Card Party. The M. B. A. Lodge will give a card party at the I. O. O. F. hall Saturday evening, to which they extend a general invitation to their friends to be present. Martin E. McLaughlin Wanted. Martin _E. McLaughlin, . for- merly of Hartford, S. D. Please communicate with the under- signed. to you.: M, 8. Stokes, 117 East 4th St., St. Paul, Micn, INSANE MAN SUSPECTED. Home of Oakland (Cal.) Judge Partly Wrecked by Bomb. Oakland, Cal, March 21.—A bomb wag exploded in front of Judge Og- » | den’s house on Alice street during the night. The whole front of the house was destroyed, but none of the ln- mates were injured. The bomb had seventy feet of tuse attached, so that whoever fired it had time to escape. Judge Ogden;suspects an insane man whose name he has given the police, Something of interest|. ! ATTEMPT TO SECURE CGONFES. SION FROM MAYOR SCHMITZ OF SAN FRANCISCO. 3ENSATIONAL STORIES OF CORRUPTION IMPOSSIBLE TO VERIFY FLOOD OF RUMORS CIRCULATING IN COAST METROPOLIS. San Francisco, March 21.—All kinds of rumors are in circulation about al- leged confessions by city officials of graft, of moves and counter moves by the prosecution and defense, but veri- fication is in almost every instance impossible. Among reports in circulation are that n tions have been opened by the accused men with D. M. Delmas, the attorney who is de fending Harry K. Thaw in New York, and that Mayor Schmitz has been or will be confronted with the written confessions of the supervisors and has been promised immunity if he will add his confession to theirs: This, it is said, will be done by the prosecu- tion in order to reach the bribe givers In spite of the fact that the news papers publish what purport to be the alleged confessions of members of the board of supervisors before the grand jury of accepting bribes from agents of public service corporations the supervisors who have been inter- viewed without exception persist in emphatic denials of having disclosed anything sensational and declare that there has been no bribery in connec- tion with the granting of franchises to the United Railroads, the Home Telephone company and the Gas and Electric company. Similar denials are made by Henry T. Scott, president of the Pacific States Telephone and Telegraph com- pany; Thornwall Mallaly, assistant to Patrick Calhoun, president of the United Railroads; J. A. Britton, pres- ident of the Gas company, and Wiltur Britt, brother of Jimmy Britt, the prize fighter. On the other hand it is sald that Moses Levy, head of the so- called fight trust in this city, called upon Assistant District Attorney Heney and made a full confession of the various sums of money alleged to have been paid by him to the super- visors for fight permits. COUNT LAMSDORFF DEAD, Former Russian Foreign Minister Ex« pires in Italy. Rome, March 2.—Count Lamsdorff, the former Russian minister of foreign affairs, died at midnight at San Remo. His illness was caused by poison which was administered with intent to assassinate him before he left Russia. Count Lamsdorff had been connect- ed for the past forty years with the Russian diplomatic circle. He was born in 1845, entered the ministry of COUNT LAMSDORFY. foreign affairs at the age of twenty- one in 1866 and resigned as minister of foreign affairs in 1906, when he ‘was succeeded by Baron Iswolsky, the present incumbent of that office. During the negotiations :between ‘Washington and the governments of Russia and Japan preceding the peace conference at Portsmouth Count Lamsdorff played an important part. REPORT OFFIGIALLY DENIED PRESIDENT ZELAYA HAS NOT AU- THORIZED THE LOOTING OF CAPTURED TOWNS. Washington, March : .—Great sur- prise was created in Washington dip- lomatic circles by the announcement in press dispatches .that Nicaraguan FRIEND TO FRIEND The personal recommendations of peo. ‘ple who have been cured of coughs and colds by Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy ‘Have done more than all els to make it a staple article of trade and commerce over a large part of the civilized'world. Barker’s Drug Store PROMSSE OF IMMUNITY troops had been promised the right to i loot the first Honduran cr Salvadorean city they may capture. Such an- notincement to soldiers by government authorities is in direct violation of the generzal trend of the rules of war | for the last century. The navy department has received a dispatch announcis boat Marfetta has Cortez, Honduras. This is one of the points on.the north coast of Hondurag which is threatened by Nicaraguan and Honduran revolutionists, Mr, Corea, the Nicaraguan minister, called on Secretary Root and entered an emphatic denial of reports from of looting are fabrications which were { made up in Salvador and originally published in a semi-officlal daily paper in that country. As the proof of the falsity of the report Mr. Gamez says that Nicaragua has been in control of : S8an Marcos, Corpus, Yuscaran, Dauli ! and Mariatta and there was no com- that the gun- | plaint of looting in those towns previ- ved at Puerto | ous to the report which the minister denounces as false. FIVE BODIES RECOVERED. Number of Workmen Buried by Col- lapse of Furnace. Birmingham, Ala, March 21.—A Central America to the effect that President Zelaya of Nicaragua has of-! fered his soldiers the privilege of loot- ing the first Salvadorean or Honduran ' town they capture. Mr. Corea made this denial on the authority of a dis-| patch he received from Mr. Games, ' the Nicaragnan minister for foreign affairs. The dispatch stated that the reports of President Zelava’s vroffer telephone message from Bessemer says that the lining of a new furnace fof the Woodward Iron company at ‘Woodward, which has been undergo- ing repairs, fell in and hundreds of tons of brick and mortar buried a number of workmen. Five dead bod- : ies have been taken from the debris. Dempsey Hayes, a white man, and four negroes are the known victims. EXTER}{AL EVIDENCE NIC ULCERS OF INTERNAL POISON Whenever a sore or ulcer refuses to heal, it is a sure sign of a diseased condition of the blood. The sore itself is sunply an outside evidence of some internal poison, and the only way to cure it is to remove the deep underlying cause. through the natural avenues of waste, Sores and Ulcers originate usually from a retention in the system of bodily waste matters and impurities. These should pass off but because of a sluggish condition of the different members they are retained in the system to be taken up by the blood. This vital fluid soon becomes unhealthy or diseased, and the skin gives way in some weak place and a Sore or Ulcer is formed. The con- stant drainage of impurities through a sore causes it to fester, grow red and inflamed and eat deeper into the surrounding flesh, and often there is severa pain and some discharge. S. S. S.S.S. PURELY VEGETABLE foral goes pure is the remedy for Sores and Ulcers, It is nature’s blood purifier, made entirely of vegetable matter, known to be specifics 1blood diseases and disorders. S. S.S. down to the very bottom of the trouble, and removes the poison and im- matter, so that the sore is no longer fed with impurities, but is nourished and cleansed with a stream of healthy, rich blood. Then the place begins to heal, new flesh is formed, the inflamma- tion subsides, and when 8. S. S. has thoroughly cleansed the circulation the place heals permanently Special book on Sores and Ulcers and any medical advice desired will be sent free to all who write. : THE SWIFT SPEGIFIC CO., ATLANTA, GA. (CITY LO] During the year 1906 we sold more lots in Bemidji than any year previous. The future of Bemidji is assured and those intending to make this their home should not fail to purchasé residence lots at this time. We also have lots for sale. provement —_——— For further particulars write or call Bemidji Townsite and Im- H. A. SIMONS, Agent. Swedback Block, Bemid}i. LOTYS a few good busmess Company. GhHe New Store If you read our ads you will know we have only pure food products ‘to offer. Our aim is to give the best quality at the lowest possible price. . .......... Fresh Eggs and Creamery Butter a Specialty ROE & MARKUSEN Phone 207 Paper; Hangers is pared to do everything in the line of Paper Hanglng, Painting and Int My help is the very oversee every job Stains from me you wait. Any unused or. small quantities, Painting and Paper Hanging The spring season for the Painters and complete ttock of up-to-date Wall Paper, Room Mouldings, Bur- lap, Paints, Oils, Stains, Varnishes, Brushes and the reliable Alabastine If you buy your Paint, Kalsomine and you want, as I mix it for you while you paints are just as good as money to me. Yours for honest and aquare dealing here and I am pre- Kalsomining, erior Decorating. best and I personally of work. I havea get any t.nt or shade paint, oils, ete., big I will take back as J. A. HOFF 3 ] 3 A

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