Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, June 12, 1907, Page 2

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FRIEND TO FRIEND The personal 7ccommendations of peo ple who have been cured of coughs and colds by Chamberlain's Cough Remedy have done more thati all else to make it & staple article of trade and comrierce oves # 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 Office and Con- gress. Special attention given to Land Con- tests—Procurement of Patents and Indlan Claims. Refer to the members of the Minne- sota Delegation in Crongre: Offices; New York Avenue, Washington, D. C D. H. FISK Attorney and Counsellor at Law Office opposite Hotel Markham. E. E, McDonald ATTORNEY AT LAW Bemidjl, Minn. Office: Swedback Block PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS. Dr. Rowland Gilmore Physician and Surgeon Office: Iiles Block DR. E. A. SHANNON, M. D. Physician and Surgeon Office in Mayo Bloek Phone 396 Res. Phone 397 DR. WARNINGER VETERINARY SURGEON Telephone Number 209 Third St.. one block west of 1st Nat'l Bank DRAY AND TRANSFER. Wes Wright, Dray and Transfer, 404 Beltrami Ave. Phone 40. DENTISTS. Dr. R. B. Foster, SURGEON DENTIST PHONE 124 MILES BLOCE, DR. J. T. TUOMY Dentist rst Natlonal Bank Bu Id’g. Telephone No. 230 l Want Ads FOR RENTING A PROPERTY, SELL- ING A BUSINESS OR OBTAINING HELP ARE BEST. Pioneer | L e 2 BT e sasteal iy St i B FM%%M.S::MF went {rees Address THE MOCALL CO. New York THE BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEER PUBLISHED BVERY AFTHRNOON, AN AN A A A A A A AN AN AN OFFICIAL PAPER--CITY OF BEMIDJI BEMIDJI PIONEER PUBLISHING CO. CLYDE J. PRYOR | Business Manager A. 0. RUTLEDGE Managing Editor Entered in the postofice at Bemidjl. Minn.; as second class matter. SUBSCRIPTION---$5.00 PER ANNUM SLIGHTLY MISLEADING. FDoc Rutledge, editor of the Be- midji Pioneer, is nothing if not “cheeky” and everlastingly persist- ant. Last winter we agitated the establishment of a state normal school at Cass Lake and we had scarcely] gotten the scheme on its feet when Bemidji claimed to have preempted the location and nobody got it. A few weeks ago we sug- gested a division of the state on a line which cast the “City of Des- tiny,” over which Doc seems to pre- side, on the right side and now, possessed of the same grasping pro- clivities he claims the location of the new capital there instead of at Duluth, a little town at the head of the great lake system and which has some aspirations. We admire Doc’s determination to boostihis town and have no complaint to make of his judgment, but if Bemidji keeps up the pace set during the last year the cud will soon be too big to chew and will have to be divided. Cass Lake is not an aspirant for a state capital, we wanted a normal school to edu- cate our own schoolma’ams and did not get it and shall oppose the new capital going to any other town than Duluth,—Cass Lake Times. The doubtful compliment con- tained in the above is fully appreci- ated. We are, every inch of us, a booster for the town in which we live, and a resident of any live community who is not intensely loy- al to his home town, certainly isa fit representative of President Roose- velt’s “undesirable]citizen.” Rela- tive to the state normal school difference, the late Frank Street, in his life time, was the first to sug- gest an additional normal (at Be- midji) and he was followed by Sen- ator Swedback, two years ago. Relative to Bemidji being a can- didate for the capital of Bro. Ives’ proposed new state (North Minne- sota) the article published in the Pioneer was taken from the North- ome Record and due credit was given that paper. However, as we have often re- marked, there’s nothing too good for Bemidji and we have plenty of the earth’s surface on which to expand. Spoke Too Soon. The other day a stranger thus ad- dressed a passenger coming out of the Union station: “You will excuse me, sir, but isn’t this"— The passenger, without waiting for the other to finish, responded: “Your umbrella? Well, I presume it is, sir. You will allow me to explain that I picked it up on coming out of the train just now. I have great pleas- ure in restoring it to the rightful own- er.” The stranger expressed his thanks and quickly made off. A few minutes later the same stran- ger, with a brand new umbrella tucked carefully under his arm, asked another individual the same question he had intended to ask the man who handed him the umbrella. “You will excuse me, sir, but isn’t this the nearest way to Fifth avenue?” —Xansas City Independent. Ruskin to an Admirer. Ruskin, it is known, had his own ways of publishing his works, with the result that they were sometimes hard to get and expensive. According to the Great Central Railway Journal, he once sent this letter to a stranger who wrote to him complaining of the price of his books: 84 Woodstock Road, Oxford, 4th Nov., '84. My Dear Sir—I have ordered my pub. lisher to send you in gift a book of mine (“Munera Pulveris”) you have not read. Be content with that at present, and Car- lyle. Have not you Shakespeare, cheap? And the Bible nowadays for nothing? What good do they do you? Faithfully yours, J. RUSKIN. A Curious Superstition. Among the superstiticns of the Sene- ca Indians was this most beautiful one: When a young maiden died they imprisoned a young bird until it first began to try its powers of song, and then, loading it with caresses and mes- sages, they loosed its bonds over her grave in the belief that it would not fold its wings nor close its eyes until it bad flown to the spirit land and deliv- ered its precious burden of affection to the loved and lost one. Decay of Laughter In England. I am perfectly certain that half our 1lIs are due to the fact that we do not laugh enough. A good, sincere smile Is something rare in these times, a “laughing face” is scarce, and It is seldom indeed that one hears a good, vinging laugh.—London World. Neither Still Nor Small. “When you do something you know is wrong, doesn’t a still, small voice keep reminding you of it eternally 7" “A still, small volce! 1 guess you never met my wife, did you?’—Hous- ton Post. S Pl - The Compromise. Ascum--Have Henpeck and his wife settled their differences about their vis- iting cards? Newlitt—Oh, yes; they’ve compromised on “Mr, and Mrs. Marla Henpeck.”—Philadelphia Press. ANARCHY 1S FEARED Revolt of French Wine Growers Causing Apprehension. ULTIMATUM TO GOVERNMENT Demand Resignations of All City, Town and Communal Officials and Refuse to Pay Taxes Unless Par- liament Grants Relief Asked For. Paris, June 11.—The revolt of the wine growing population in the south of France is causing considerable ap- prehension in government circles. By the terms of the resolutions, which 500,000 people at Montpellier swore with uplifted hands to execute, the departmental, city, town and com- munal officials must resign and the inhabitants refuse to pay taxes unless parliament . affords relief. Several mayors, headed by M. Farroul, mayor of Narbonne, have already - resigned and if this example is followed a con- dition bordering on anarchy will result and the civil government will ceasé to reign from the Spanish frontier to the Rhone, comprising the departments of Herrault, Aude, Haute-Garonne and Pyrenees-Orientales. The situation is all the more grave because it con- stitutes a unanimous. protestation of the population and, being unaccom- panied by disorder, furnishes the gov- ernment with no pretext to resort.to force. Marcellin Albert, the leader of the movement, was until a couple of months ago an obscure wine grower of Argeliers. Now he is acclaimed as a “redeemer” and seems to hold the south of France in the hollow of his hand. His orders are implicitly and unquestioningly obeyed and by the powers of organization with which he is endowed he has proved himself to be a born leader of men. It is realized among the hot blooded people of the South that such 2 man might fire a | formidable revolution. The government’s bill providing for the suppression of the manufacture of fraudulent wine comes up in the cham- ber of deputies shortly, but beyond passing this bill the government can do little, all the experts who have in- vestigated the conditions having found that the real depression was caused by overproduction, for which even the rigorous suppression of fraud will be no remedy. The only solution, they report, is the abandonment of much of the wine acreage in favor of reg- ular farm ecrops and truck gardening. YOUNG HERO SAVES MANY Arouses Sleeping Guests in Burning Hotel—Two People Perish. Norfolk, Va., June 11.—The Princess Anne hotel at Virginia Beach, Va., built twenty-five years ago and one of the handsomest summer resorts on the Middle Atlantic seaboard, was de- stroyed by a fire which had its origin in the kitchen, supposedly from a de- factive flue. There were 110 persons, guests and employes, in the hotel. All are thought to have escaped with the exception of Emma Clark, a negro chambermaid, and John Eaton, the steward. That a_score or more per- sons were not lost is attributed to the great heroism of Carl Boeschen, a young sergeant with the Richmond Light Artillery Blues, who, rushing from room to room, awakened the sleeping occupants, many of whom barely escaped in their night clothes. Boeschen finally fell exhausted and was carried into an adjoining building. The loss on the building is $150,000. The hotel safe, in which were the heavy receipts of Sunday and thou- sands of dollars deposited by guests for rafekeeping, was not locked and its contents were destroyed. PAYS TRIBUTE TO SPOONER Becretary Taft Addresses Large Audi: ence at Madison, Wis. Madison, Wis., June 11.—Secretary of War William H. Taft addressed an audience of 5,000 persons in the uni: versity gymnasium at noon. He was received with tumults of applause. Included in the audience were all the members of the state supreme court, & large body of university students, many members of the legislature and prominent citizens of Madison. Sec- retary Taft was introduced by Presi- dent Van Hise of Wisconsin univer- sity. Clasping his hands across his breast and amidst considerable enthusiasm Secretary Taft stepped to the front of the platform. He said his time was Hmited, but he would share it with the university students who had so enthusiastically received him. He re- ferred to President Van Hise as the great chancellor of this university and after mentioning that Madison was the home of the junior senator, Mr. La Follette, he sald: “T would that John C. Spooner were here today that I might say in his presence as [-now say in his absence that the nation has sustained a se- vere loss by his retirement from pub- lic life. He was one of the most dis- tinguished debaters and constitutional lawyers who has ever talked upon the floor of the senate and he now with- draws so that he can earn a little for himself and family as a lawyer after sixteen years’ distinguished service.” PRESIDENT AT JAMESTOWN Executive Pays ‘Second Visit to the Exposition. Norfolk, Va, June 11.—Brought back to the Jamestown exposition by the formal opening of Bulloch hall, the ancestral home of his mother at Roswell, Ga., and reproduced here as the Georgia state building, President Roosevelt was for the second time the central figure of an attractive exposi- tion programme. Outside of the features arranged in connection with the celebration of Georgia day the military and naval | bilities are about $100,000, spectacle was not greatly dissimilar to that which marked the visit of the prosident when the exposition was thrown open on April 26. He was the guest of the exposition for about ni hours, having arrived with a s party, ineluding Mrs. Roogevelt, on the Mayflowor at 8:20 a. m. After re- ceiving the Georgla officiais on board and with them as ests review- ing the fleet Hampton Roads e wi tion grounds at made a s} day exer made anoth Nat'onal ceintion in_the od the parade of for visited b i in the presentation of a silver service by the state of Georgia to the battleship named for her, attended a reception given at the Goorgia building hy Geor- gians alone ia honor of himself and Mrs. Rooscvelt and visited informally the New York.state building. He de- parted for Washington at about 5 o’clock. Every part of the exposition grounds except the “warpath” was covered by the president in his strenuous day. The reservation was thronged with the greatest attendance since the open- ing of the exposition and the pres- ident was given a reception fully as enthusiagtic as that accorded him on the occasion of his first visit. Open Air Bomb Factory. St. Petersburg, June 12.—The body of a youth found in a wood in the suburbs of St. Petersburg with his throat cut and face unrecognizably mutilated has led to the discovery of an open air bomb factory with a large quantity of explosive nearby. It is supposed that the voung man was ex- ecuted by to ts as a spy. Message of Sympathy Ordered. Keokuk, Ia., June 12—The conven- tion of the Iowa Federation of Labor adopted a moticn that a message of npathy and confidence. be.sent. to Ticials of the Western Federation of Miners, who are imprisoned in Idaho. More than 100 delegates are in attend- ance at the convention. BRIEF BITS OF NEWS. The salcons of Leavenworth county, Kan., have been closed for the first time in eighteen years. The Catholic Church of the Sacred Heart, one of the finest edifices in Ottawa, Ont, has been destroyed by fire. The church cost about $200,000. The steamship Humbolt has arrived at Seattle from Southeastern Alaska with $525,000 in gold. This is the first gold shipment of the season. The gold was from Fairbanks, Dawson and Treadwell. M. Jaures, the Socialist leader, will shortly propose in the French cham- ber of deputies in the name of the Socialist party that a state monopoly of alcohol and sugar be established from July 1. The Bank of Ouray, Colo., a state bank, has closed its doors. The lia- The as- sets are not stated, but are said not to be equal to the liabilities. The cred- itors are mainly small depositors. MARKET QUOTATIONS. Minneapolis Wheat. Minneapolis, June 11.—Wheat—July, 97%:c; Sept., 96% @96%ec. On track— No. 1 hard, $1.00%; No. 1 Northern, 99%c; No. 2 Northern, 97%@97%c; No. 3 Northern, 95@96c. Duluth-Wheat and Flax. Duluth, June 11.—Wheat—To arrive and on track—No. 1 hard, 99%c; No. 1 Northern, 98%c; No. 2 Northern, 97%c; July, 98%c; Sept., 98%¢c; Dec.. 96%c. Flax—To arrive and on track, $1.27%; July, $1.27%; Sept, 31.26; Oct., $1.28%. St. Paul Union Stock Yards. St. Paul, June 11.—Cattle—Good to choice steers, $5.50@5.75; fair to good, $4.00@5.00; good to choice cows and heifers, $3.50@4.75; veals, $4.25@5.00. Hogs—$§5.80@6.02%. Sheep—Wethers, $6.25@€.75; good to prime lambs, $7.00@8.10: spring, $8.00@9.50. Chicago Grain and Provisions. Chicago, - June 11.—Wheat—July, 93%c; Sept, 95%c. Corn—July, 53@ 53%ec; Sept., 53%c. Oats—July, 42%¢; Sept., 35% @35%c. Pork—July, $16.- 00; Sept., $16.15. Butter—Creameries, 171, @23c; dairies, 17@21c, Eggs— 14c. Poultry—Tarkeys, 11¢; chickens, 11%e¢; springs, 20@22c. Chicago Union Stock Yards. Chicago, June 11.—Cattle—Beeves, $4.50@6.70: cows, $1.75@4.75; heifers, $2.60@5.50; calves, $5.50@7.50; good to prime steers, $5.55@6.70; poor to medium, $150@5.50; stockers and feeders, $2.00@5.20. Hogs—Light, $6.10 @6.30; mixed, $6.10@6.30; heavy, $6.10@6.25: rough, $5.80@6.00; pigs, $5.70@6.25; good to choice heavy, $6.15@6. Sheep, $4.25@6.75; lambs, $6.25@8.25. I~ 12 you suffor from RHEUMATIS ™ 1t can be cured and has been cured by Joimsons GOSS the great blood medicine, Iam so sure that 6088 will cure rheumatism, backache kidney trouble or catarrh, that I make AN ABSOLUTE GUARANTEE t0 Tefund your money 1, aftor taking halt the first bonln’ you are n’ub satisfied witfi results. Could I do' more_to_show my faith in this remedy than to make this _absolute xg: ‘antee. Prepared at laboratory of Matt J. Johnson Co. 8t, Paul, Minn. s Gnnxaiseed mdor tho Food and Drugs Act, une 50, 1800, 3 FOR SALE AND GUABANTEED BY Barker’s Drug Store I FLEVEN MEN FHSIG Launch of Battleship Minnesota Believed to Have Sunk. DISASTER AT NORFOLK, VA, Party on Board Vessel Consisted of an Officer, Five Midshipmen and Five Seamen and the Entire Number Are Supposed to Have Drowned. Norfolk, Va., June 12.—Five mid- shipmen and an officer who came ashore in a small boat from the United States battleship Minnesota, lying in Hampton Roads, to attend a ball at the Jamestown exposition grounds, to- gether with five seamen, are missing. The officer and midshipmen in the party are Lieutenant Randall of the United States marine corps and Mid- shipmen Field, Ulrech, Holden and Stevenson of the Minnesota and Mid- shipman - Holcomb of the battleship Connecticut. The Minnesota’s launch is known to have left Discovery landing at the ex- shortly after 12 o’clock and the theory of the officers of the fleet now in the roads is that the launch struck something and went position grounds down and that all were drowned. STORY IS DISCREDITED. No Confirmation of Report of Cabre- ra’s Assassination. Washington, June 11.—The state de- partment has failed to receive any confirmation of the Teported assas- sination of President Cabrera of Guat- Senor Toledo Herrera, the Guatemalan ministe~, also is without any advices on the subject, but came to the state department to ask for offi- cial information from that source. The fact that neither the minister nor the state department has had any con- firmation of this story inclines them to emala. discredit it. OPERATED GAMBLINGHOUSE Former New York Police Captain a Fugitive From Justice. New York, June 12.—James Gannon, a former captain of police, who re- cently was dismissed from the force on charges of failure to close gam- blinghouses in his district, is a fugi- tive from justice himself charged with maintaining a- gambling establishment. It is alleged that a roulette wheel and | all the necessary paraphernalia for gambling were found in Gannon’s sa- loon at Twenty-ninth street and. Sixth avenue when Police Captain MecClus- key suddenly descended on the place. Only one man besides Gannon and his bartender were in the place at the time and there was no evidence of a Falling hair is caused by germs at the roots of the hair. Dandruff is caused by germs on the scalp. Your doctor knows why Ayer’s Hair Vigor, new improved % formula, quickly destroys these germs. I{a ’ G e m SMnkes the scalp clean and healthy, 7 ‘We publish the Jormulas 4.0, l & i / of all our proparations, it gambling outfit or that any law was being violated. In a room off to one side, which Gannon’ declared to be a portion of his living apartments, how- ever, the ralders found a roulette wheel and a big heap of chips. This was confiscated and the ex-captain was informed that he would have to g0 to the stationhouse. But while the gambling apparatus was being trans- ferred to the wagon outside Gannon made his escape. ELECTROCUTES ALL GERMS New Method of Sterilization An- . nounced at Chicago. Chicago, June 12.—The bacillus will meet death by electrocution should a new method of sterilization proclaimed by Dr. Carl H. von Klein come Into general practice. .Two wires charged with positive and negative currents and a metallic bowl, preferably copper, are the weapons of death with which Dr. von Klein slays the germs. With one of the wires applied to the outside of the vessel, the other resting in the fluid it contains, he claims swift and sure death by electrocution is meted out to the unwelcome life therein. “Sterilization by my new method,” said Dr. von Klein, “not only kills all the ordinary germs and bacilli, but it likewise kills the fermentive germ and itself becomes a most wonderful pre- servative. 1 tried it on a bowl of milk last Thursday. - Here it is Tues- day and that milk is as sweet and pure as possible.” Having satisfied himself of the ef- fects of electricity on milk and water Dr. von Klein proposes trying it on fruits and vegetables. CAUSE OF TRAGEDY SUICIDES Ends Life Following Murder of Wo- man by Jealous Husband. Detroit, Mich., June 12.—As a result, apparently, of brooding over the mur- der ten days ago of .Mrs. David Wal- ters by her husband, who was jealous, Clifford Kirkpatrick, a boxmaker from Haton, Ind., committed suicide at his boarding place here. He left a letter to his father, James Kirkpatrick;in which he said: “My only love was killed last Friday by her deserted husband. She was all I had in the world. I have nothing left to live for. I will be safe with my love before morning.” Mrs. Walters and her husband came from Mount Vernon, C., and the hus- band-murderer, who is under arrest, says that it was his wife’s intimacy with Kirkpatrick which drove him to following her here and stabbing her i to death. a diseased condition of the flesh being discharged into the place, S.S.S.: PURELY VEGETABLE ing which makes it impossible for the sore to heal. of an inherited blood taint, or the effects of a long speil of sickness, or again the circulation may be contaminated with the collections of refuse matter which the different members have failed to expel through the channels of nature. comes steeped in poison and a cut, bruise, scratch or other wound often develops into asore, fed and kept up by these impurities, causing it to eat deeper into the surround- FED AND GLDSURES KEPT OPEN A great many people have an idea BY mpm BLOOD that old sores exist nierely because of where the ulcer is located. They patiently apply salves, powders, plasters and other external applica- tions, but in spite of all such 4reatment the place refuses to heal. When- ever a sore or ulcer does not heal readily the blood is at fault; this vital fluid is filled with impurities and poisons which are constantly feeding it with mnoxious matter, 01d sores may be the result ‘Whatever the cause the blood be- tissue, inflaming, festering and caus- pain. External applications can only keep the sore clean; they cannot cure the trouble because they do not reach the blood. going to the very bottom of the trouble, driving out the impurities and poisons and purifying and building up the entire circulation. has removed the cause the blood becomes rich and healthy, the sore begins to heal, new flesh is formed, the place scabs over and is soon permanently healed, * Book on Sores and Ulcers and any medical advice free. THE SWIFT SPECIFIC GO.; ATLANTA, €A. S. 8. S cures Old Sores by en 8. 8. S. aily Pioneer For News That the Pioneer Gets and Prints the News Is Appre- reciated Outside of Bemidji. News, published at Bovey, 1ays: “The Bemidji Daily Piomeer, that ‘ cracking good little 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 Cegits per Mohth. Pays for the Daily Read what the Ttasca Iron =3

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