Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, May 30, 1907, Page 2

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] { i i | FRIEND TO FRIEND The personal reccommendations of pee ple who have been cured of coughs and colds by Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy have done more than all else to make it @ staple article of trade and commerce over a large part of the civilized world. Barker’s Drug Store PROFESSIONAL ..CARDS.. { LAWYER . WM. B.MATTHEWS ATTORNEY AT LAW Practices before the United States Supreme Court—Court of Claims—The United States General Land Office—Indian Oftice and Con- gress. _Special attention given to Land Con- tests—Procurement of Patents and Iudian Claims. Refer to the members of the Minne- sota Delegation in_Grongress. Offices New York Avenue. Washington, D. C D. H. FISK Attorney and Counsellor at Law Ofiice opposite Hotel Markham. E. E, McDonald ATTORNEY AT LAW Bomidfl, Minn. Office; Swedback Block PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS. Dr. Rowland Grilmore Physician and Surgeon Office: [liles Block DR. WARNINGER VETERINARY SURGEON Telephone Number 209 Third St., one block west of 1st Nat'l Bank DRAY AND TRANSFER, Wes Wright, Dray and Trassfer, Phone 40. 404 Beltrami Ave, DENTISTS, Dr. R. B. Foster, SURGEON DENTIST PHONE 124 MILES BLOCK, DR. J. T. TUOMY Dentist Flrst Nationat Bank Bu 1d’g. Telephone No. 230 25 000 NEw W/¢ are added to the 8 pensive work and worry, the only way to keep the ¢ the STANDARD of the Engli Other dictiona; leads, 1t is the fav Scholars, Edud in this and for THE GRAND PRIZE (Highest Award) was given at thej World’s Fair, St. Louis. ite with , Printes A postal card will bring you in-J teresting specimen pages, efe. 3 G.&C.MERRIAMCO,, SPRINGFIELD, MASS., PUBLISHERS OF WEBSTER’S INTERNATIONALE DICTIONARY WERSTERS Backache KIDNEY " DISEASES Quickly Cured with KIDNEY-ETTES They will strengthon and build up the worn out bissuos of the Kidnays, the trauble will disappear and you will be restored to orfect health. You will notice the hene- cial effects at once when taking KIDNEY- ETTES. Pleasant to take, act directly up- on the Kidnogs, ~brice 35 oont for & 3] slze package. Try them and be convinced. Prepared by BERG MEDIOINE (0., Des Molnes, Tows OWL DRUG STORE. GhHe PIONEER Delivered to your door every evening Only 40c per Month THE BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEER A A A A A A A A A A PUBLISHED RVERY AFTERNOON, OFFICIAL ‘PAPER---CITY OF BEMIDJ BEMIDJI PIONEER PUBLISHING CO. CLYDE J. PRYOR | A. G. RUTLEDGE] Business Manager Managing Editor Entered In the postoffice at Bemidji. Minn., as second class matter. SUBSCRIPTION---$5.00 PER ANNUM For a good reference work there is no handier book than the Webster’s Unabridged Diction- ary. During the past few years there have been’ a number of changes in words in the HEnglish language and a good many words added. These are all contained inthe new up-to-date dictionaries. Mayor’s Proclamation. WHEREAS, Thursday, May 30th, is the day set aside by law and is designated as “Memorial Day,” to be observed in general throughout the United States: And, Whereas. Chapter 25, of the General laws of the State of Minnesota, being an act to prohibit the desecration of Me- morial Day and provide a punish-. ment for the same, said act reads as follows: Section 1. That the desecra- tion of ‘Memorial day,” the (30th) day of May of each year, by the playing of games of ball, cricket, football and other like games, or by horse racing, bicycle racing, automobile rac- ng, or any other sports calcu- lated to attract attention to such games or sports and away from the memorial character of said day, within one-half mile of the place where memorial exercises are in progress, 1s hereby pro- hibited and made unlawful dur- ing the hours from 10 o’clock in the forenoon to 8 o’clock in the afternoon of said day, and all saloons and other places where intoxicating liquors are sold, shall be closed on said day be- tween the hours of 10 o’clock in the forenoon and 8 o’clock in the afternoon, in all cities, villages and towns where memorial exer- cises are being held. Sec. 2. Any person guilty of a violation of section 1, of this act shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, and punishable ac- cordingly. Sec. 3. Thisact shall take effect and be in force from and after its passage. Apyroved March 1, 1907. Now, Therefore,I, J. P. Pogue, mayor of the city of Bemidji, county of Beltrami, state of Min- nesota, in obedience to the du- ties imposed upon me, do hereby proclaim, order and direct that the provisions of said section, shall be in all respects obeyed and strictly enforced, and the playing of games of bz ll, cricket, foot ball and other like games, or by horse racing, bicycle rac- ing, automobile racing, or any other sport calculated to attract atvention to such games or sports and away from the memorial character of such day, within one-half mile of such place where memorial services are in progress, is hereby prohibited and made unlawful during the hours from 10 o’clock in the fore- noon to § o’clock 1n the afternoon of said day, and all saloons or other places where intoxicating liquors are sold, shall be closed on the said 30th of May, 1907, between the hours of ten o’clock in the forenocn and 8 o’clock in the afternoon, as per the provi- sions of said chapter No. 25 of the laws of 1907, Given under my hand this 27¢h day of May1907. J. P. Pogue, Mayor of the city of Bemidji. Find the Answer. A certain young man took his best girl to the theater. During the evening she complained of not feeling well, and they left before the show was over. He took her home, and when he said good night the girl was pretty sick. Next day it turned out that she had diphtheria. Then the young man began to wonder if he was booked for a slege with the disease too. He called on a physician he knew to ask about it, The physician heard the young man’s tale. “Well,” said he at the conclusion of it, “I think your chances to catch the disease depend on how you safd good night to the young lady.” The young man was quiet a moment. Then he said: “Doctor, I'm much oblig- ed. If that’s the case, I'm not in dan- ger.” The young man went out. A minute later he stuck his head in the door. “Say, doc,” he sald, “diphtheria don’t 8o very hard with strong, healthy young men, does it?’—Denver Post. KILL ME ANY TIME So Says Nonchalant Alleged Murderer to Officers. COLD BLODDEDA CONFESSION. Charles H. Rogers Tells How For $16 He Killed the Olney Brothers and Alice Ingerick of Middletown, N. Y. Conscience Untroubled. “Take me out and kill me any time] you please,” said Charles H. Rogers, alleged murderer of the Olney broth- ers and Alice Ingerick of Middletown, N. Y., when he w locked up In the Goshen jail. Rogers was captured in Los Angeles after a chase lasting a year. On his way across the country he made to his custodians a confession which chilled their blood. “I had been planning this act for a month,” said Rogers to his captors, “I thought the Olney brothers had a good deal of money in bills about their cloth- Ing and concealed in the house. 1 wanted to go west and get away from here. At first I thought night was the best time to do it. Then I calculated it was best to do it in daylight, for the farm is a lonely enough place. “On the day of the murders I left home., I told my wife and children they would never see me azain. T took with me a piece of iron pipe wrapped | In a copy of the Middletown Times- Press. I had a revolver. I went cross lots to avoid passing by the home of my parents. From a hill I saw Fred Olney drive into the ward. He had “WHEN WILLIS CAME INTO SIGHT I SHOT HIM T0O. i been to the Ogden farm to deliver his milk, I thought of course he had been | paid in cash for that and that it would | be 50 much more money for me. i “I walked down to the place and told Olney I was a detective and need- | ed his help and that of his brother In | capturing. a man who had hidden in the | Derby woods. He called Willis Olney, ‘ and we three went in their milk wagon | to the edge of the woods. Fred Olney ! and I went into the woods together, | leaving Willis with the team. After going in some distance I shot Fred Ol- ney In the back. He fell dead. “Willis heard the shot and came| smashing through the bushes to see} what was the matter. When Willis came Into sight I shot him too. I searched their pockets. I took a pock-| etbook from Fred Olney. There was very little money in it. It contained only a check for the milk he had deliv- ered at Ogden’s that day and some pa- pers. I took Fred’'s watch and Willis’ “I took the money, hid the papers that were in the wallet In a chink in the stone wall, near which the horse had been left. I left the horse stand there. Then I walked to Olney’s house and met Mrs. Ingerick. I told her that one of the Olneys had been kicked by the horse and was hurt. She went to the barn to get something for him. 1 followed. As she Wént into the cow stable I struck her on the head with the plece of gas pipe. She fell down, and I beat her over the head many times with the pipe. I thought she was ~— CAUGHT “LITTLE DOROTHY.”|§ dead when I left her. First I covered her body with straw, and then I went up to the house. There I met Alice Ingerick, nine years old, Mrs. Ingerick’s daughter. I told her to go down in the cellar and close the door.. As she started down the cellar | stairs I hit her on the head with the | gas pipe. She fell downstairs. I fol-| lowed her and pounded her over the | head until I felt sure she was dead. “Thinking they were now all dead,” Rogers continued, “I went up and searched the house for the money. I didn’t find any. Al I had for these! four lives I thought I had taken was | $16 and two watches. Maybe there | was more money hidden there, but I was scared off from looking for more. x | to feteh $15. SHORT TALKS BY L. T. COOPER. CONSTIPATION. I can tell a_person who is constipated on sight. Their complexion is pasty or yellow. Their eyes are dull, and they look and feel sleepy. Nowonder they do. The bowels are a sewer. They carry away the poisonous re- fuse. If they dont act the poisonous matter is absorbed by the body, and headaches, dull- ness, bad complex- ion and eventually serious troubles re- SAMUEL BOOREN. sult. There is no better rule for good health than that the bowels should move eyery day at the same hour if possible. Regu- larity can be acquired by making a habit of this, Foolish people neglect this and when chronic constipation effects them they take pills every few days to force the bowels to perform their natural function. As years go on they require more and more pills. This should be stopped. Cooper’s New Discovery will build up the stomach and cause the bowels to act naturally. While taking the medicine get the habit of regularity, then gradually stop taking the medicinc, Here is a sample of letters from those who have tried it £ teen years I have suffered from It , and chronic and always felt tired and worn out. I heard of Cooper’s New Discovery and began its use, After I had finished one bottle I was wonderfully improved. Con- stipation gave svay to apleasi egularity of the bowels and I ate better, ter end felt better t d for months. e I have cver 1742 Muusey Auve., Scranion Pa. Our customers who have used them say the Cooper medicines do the work. We sell them. E. A. Barker Mr, Conklin, a farmer from Wurtsboro, and his son drove up. They were out buying onions. They shouted ‘Onion! I was in the attie at that tlme. I kept still, and the Conklins, thinking no- body was at home, went on. I looked out and saw them in the road going away. I didn't want to stay longer. I went over the hills to the hogback.” The hogback is a part. of the Erle rallroad between Middletown and How- ells. There Rogers boarded a train for Otlsville. He stayed there that night. Next morning he threw away the revolver in a stream and took a train for Port Jervis. de took one of the sllver watches to a saloon In Port Jervis and asked the man behind the bar to buy it. Rogers thought it ought The saloon keeper gave him $4 and then told him to get out, for he belleved Rogers had stolen it. Fearing te dispose of the other watch, Rogers bought a ticket for Hunting- ton, Ind, which was as far as Lis cash would take him. There he found a job as farm labor- er and stayed for some time. He came across a Chicago matrimonial adver- tising journal in this place. In it was a notice that a well to do widow was willing to take most anybody for a husband. Rogers answered it and played “come on” to the swindlers be- hind the advertisement. He had saved a_ little money to carry him farther west. He went to Chicago to meet the widow. “How about that widow ?” asked Hock in drawing out the pris- oner’s story. E “Say,” grinned Rogers, “If you had seen her. Goshen jail is better than being married to that.” Fleeced of his last penny, Rogers |E walked the streets of Chicago. A pla- card caught his eye: “Men wanted with knowledge-of farming and gardening. Free passage to California, Steady work; good wages.” It was a recruit- Ing agent’s effort to find competent la- bor for the immense experimental farm | & of Luther Burbank, the wizard of hor- ticulture and pomology, who invents new plants and new fruits as Edison invents new motors and new lights. Rogers found his job there and was|& sent at-Burbank’s expense to Califor- nla. There his conscience never trou- bled him. “I forgot all about what had hap- pened back home,” he told the officers. “I never thought about it.” Chicago Police Followed Her Mamma’s Instructions. Not in vain did Mrs. Fred Levi of Columbus, O., appeal*to the. police of | § Chicago, and if the distracted mother did not accomplish what she thought | § she would certainly it was not the |} fault of the detectives who responded to her call. Her appeal came In the following message, received in police headquarters: Police—Please intercept my little daugh- ter Dorothy, who has gone to Chicago to | g get married. She is pretty, with lots of red hair, In response to the message three de- tectives were hurried to meet an in- ) Don’t N '/ Consti Don’t take drugs to remedy it. DR. PR to the whole body. On a meal articles of diet known. All Grocers o pation It is one of the commonest causes of all diseases. WHEAT FLAKE CELERY FOOD which contains the whole whea help to keep the bowels regular, but puts you in sion of good blood, healthy skin, and gives nourishment longer without the feelings of hunger than” any other Palatable—Nutritious—Easy of Digestion and Ready to Eat _ Can be served hot, Put In ahot oven for a few minutes; or cookila bolling milk My Signature eglect Eat daily t grain and does not only 0SSes= of this Food you can go every. package 2.9%2./ 4 coming trafn from Columbus, and the sleuths, mindful of the agony which the mother must be suffering, deter- mined to let no little red haired girl slip past them. They eyed suspiclous- ly every passenger on the train, but when the last one had alighted no lit- tle Dorothy had appeared. The detectives were about to leave the station when they saw a tall, hand- somely gowned woman sitting on one of the benches. ~They recognized her as having been on the train, and one of the-detectlves said to her: “Pardon me, madam, but did you see any little red haired girl get on the train at Columbus ?” The woman eyed the detective as if she suspected he was insane, and she replied that she had not seen any girl answering that description. “I am a police officer,” the detective sald, “and I'm looking for a girl nam- ed Dorothy Levi. Her mother is near- ly dead with grlef because she left home.” The woman jumped up from her seat evidently surprised. “Why, I am Dorothy Levi of Colum- bus,” she said. “Then youw'll oblige us by coming to headquarters,” sald the detective. “We want you.” “How dare you ask me to go with you?”’: the woman said indignantly. “'MAMMA MUST BE HAVING A BRAIN STORM.” “By what authority do you tell me ‘where to go? -I am old enough to take care of myself, and I have not com- mitted any crime.” The detective showed the woman her mother’s telegram, and she went to headquarters. “Mamma must be having a braln storm,” she said to the sergeant, “I -am twenty-eight years old, and I am on my way to Colorado Springs for my health. I would not marry the best man living.” Miss Levi made afidavit to her age, and the sergeant told her she could go lcohol vice every time. () n e e e Wa Hove 10 sccrete! We publish tho formulas of all our proparations. ‘Ayer’s Sarsaparilia is not a strong drink. @s now made, there is not a drop of alcoholin it. It is anon-alcoholic fonic and alterative. As} your own doctor about your taking this medi- cine for thin, impure blood. Follow his ad- Ask| Trust him. He knows. ik Lo e dlares > a2 where she pleased. “We thought we were helping & poor mother whose child had run away,” he sald apologetically. “I would suggest that you wire your mother that here- after when she wants the police to look for her ‘ittle Dorothy’ she mention that Dorothy Is unusually tall for her age.” A Miss Levl took the mext train for ©olorado Springs. A A Curious Fact. “I have some very strong letters of Introduction,” said the caller. “My friend,” answered Senator Sor- ghum, “I don’t rely too far on com- munications of that kind. A man will glve you a letter of introduction de- scribing you as possessed of every no- ble quality in human nature and in the next breath refuse to indorse your note for $20.”—Washington Star, A Bad Outlook. Mother—Dorothy, I have to be scold- Ing you all the time! Dorothy—Well, all I can say, mamma, is I’m sorry for the man who gets you for a mother-in- law.—Smith’s Magazine. A lazy man goes far, and he who shuns labor labors doubly. — Greek Proverb. 1 Magazine, The Joke Was'on Her. A woman memiber of the bar in New York gives to our correspondent the following correspondence with the res- ervation that no names shall be quoted. “I am one of the few women,” she says, “who can see a joke even if aim- ed at myself. 1 do not feel that In this case I came off first best.” The first letter was from a man law- yer and was as follows: Y Dear Miss Blank—We agree to the com- promise as proposed in your favor of this date. Not because your client has a just right to such settiement, but from the fact that we do not care to open & con- test with a woman lawyer. 55 To which this reply was sent: Gentlemen—I note yours agreeing to a settlement, although I cannot congratu- late you on your gallantry in begging the questlon. Like the original Adam, you &y seem inclined to hide behind a Woman's V4 petticoat. - And the following letter closed the correspondence: Dear Miss Blank—If you will turn to the early pages of Genesls you will discover -~ o that Eve did not wear a petticoat. —Cleveland Plain Dealer. The Perfume of Good Cheer. t We were made to radiate the per- fume of good cheer and happiness as much as a rose was made to radiate its sweetness to every passerby.—Success' 25k = BULLE T [ N« (Great Northern Railway HELP BUILD UP YOUR STATE Ghe Great Northern Railway issues_ from time to time bulletins and bc.oklets tell- ing of the advantages of Minnesota as-a home state. If you have relatives or friends you think might be induced to move west send us their names and we will mail them some interesting literature. E. E. Chamberlain Local Agent Bemidji, Minnesota = ——— Daily Pioneer For News That the Pioneer Gets and Prints the' News Is Appre- reciated Outside of Bemidji. News, published at Bovey, says: “The Bemidji Daily Pioneer, that cracking good tittle sheet, published in Beltrami county, is covering the trial of Wesley for the Dahl murder, in a manner that reflects great credit both to the Pioneer and Bemidji.” . 40 Cents per Month Pays for the Daily\ Read what the Ttasca Iron| ‘..;,-..,,,.(,a.k.«‘;."

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