Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, July 26, 1907, Page 2

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A few doses of this remedy will in- variably cure an ordinary attack of diarrheea. It can always be depended upon, even in the more severe attacks of cramp colic and cholera morbus. 1t is equally successful for summer dlarrhoea and cholera infantum in children, and is the means of saving the lives of many children each year. ‘When reduced with water and sweetened it is pleasant to take. Every man of a family should keep this remedy in his home. Buy it now. PRICE, 20C. LARGE SIZE, 500. Barker’s Drug Store WANIS ONE CENT A WORD. HELP WANTED. WANTED—For U. S. army, able- bodied, unmarried men between ages of 19 and 35, citizens of the United States, of good character and temperate habits, who can speak, read and write English. For information apply to Recrait- Officer, Miles Block, Bemidji, Minn. WANTED: For the U. S. Marine Corps, men between ages 21 and 35. An opportunity to see the world. For full information apply in person or by letter to Marine Recruiting, 208 Third street, Be- midji, Minn, WANTED: Good cook. at Challenge hotel. WANTED — Two Hotel Brinkman, Inquire laundry girls. FOR SALE. A SNAP: Business place for sale. Annual rent $900. Willing to sell at $3,800 Cash. Act quick, Ad- dress Pioneer. FOR SALE—Rubber stamps. The Pioneer will procure any kind of a rubber stamp for you an short notice. FOR SALE—Magnificent moose head mounted; will be sold cheap. Inquire at this office. LOST and FOUND LOST—Eagle receipt book, with valuable papers. Finder please return to Pioneer office. LOST—Mouth piece for Alto horn. Finder return to J. Peterson Jr.’s store. FOR RENT. FOR RENT—Five room house. Inquire at 520 Minnesota ave. MISCELLANEOUS. PUBLIC LIBRARY—Open Tues- days and Saturdays, 2:30 to 6 p. m. Thursdays 7 to 8 p. m. also. Library in basement of Court House. Mrs. E. R. Ryan, librar- ian. The a and ‘Great Zelma Oanly The best, ruest, most reliable Clairvoyant that has ever visited the Northwest 1 guarantee to tell you anything you want to know, pertaining to life, business, law, love, marriage, divorce, failure, success. Will tell you who and when you will marry, if ever. Don't fail to con- sult this great medium as it is sel- dom such 4 great clairvoyant ever visits a town the size of Bemidji. Hours, 10 a, m, to 9 p. m., in- cluding Sunday. 304 Third St., upstairs over Downs & O’Leary’s grocery store. l?ees reduced for the next 3 days Dno Minute Gough Gure For Goughs, Colds and croup. . OpWive Early Risers [ The famous llttlo plits. IQE',YSHONHM‘I‘AR Golds: Prevents Pneuinonls THE BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEE o PUBLISHRD NVERY AFTMRNOON, ) OFFICIAL PAPER---CITY OF BEMID) BEMID)I PIONEER PUBLISHING CO. CLYDE J. PRYOR l A. 0. RUTLEDGE Business Manager Managing Editor Entered in the postoffice at Bemidji. Minn., a8 socond class matter. SUBSCRIPTION---$5.00 PER ANNUM OBSERVATIONS. Many a man has lost his game by boostin g it too much. Only unmarried women have opti- mistic views of wedded bliss. “Fond for thought is often respon- sible for intellectual dyspepsia. Neuralgia and rheumatism come under the head of sharpshooters. When the unexpected happens the “I told you so” chap is in his glory. Don’t be stingy with kind words; they are worth alot more than they cost. Charitable people never look upon an undeserved epitaph asa grave mistake. A woman’s idea of economy is to buy a 5-cent loaf of bread instead of a dollar sack of flour. A promoter is a man who makes a strenuous effort to boost his own interests. When a man calls his wife “honey” the explanation is that it keeps him as busy as a bee supplying her wants, DOINGS AMONG BEMIDJI'S COUNTRY NEIGHBORS Live Correspondents of the Pioneer Write the News From Their Localities. SPAULDING Haying is here full blast. H. A. Fladhammer purchased a new mower and rake at Bemidji Thursday. The rain storm that struck here Thursday afternoon was the heaviest seen here this summer. John Hanson was 4 Wilton business visitor Monday last. Miss Anna Rygg returned from a visit to Bemidji last Monday, The Ladies’ Aid meet with Mrs. J. Hanson Thursday, the 25th. Theo. Westgaard was shopping at Wilton Saturday. Harry and Roy Bowers called on M. Rygg Sunday, Ole Traagaat was at Bemidji Thurs- day and Saturday and brought home a oew mower and rake. Mrs. A. Becker called on the home folks Sunday. Hans Nélson has taken the contract to plaster M. Roglen’s house at Wil- ton. WILTON. The Ladies’ Aid met Thursday at the home of Mrs. T. O. Melby. Mr. and Mrs. Basil Jarbo were visitors at Wilton Saturday evening. Mr. and Mrs. J. O. Melby and children were callers at Bemidji last week. The ladies of the Luthern Church will give an ice cream social in C. F. Rogers’ hall Saturday, July 27th. The dance at Rogers’ hall Satur- day night was largely attended. All present reported an enjoyable time. Mrs. Jake Van Tassel and child- ren, who for the past couple of weeks were visiting friends and relatives here and at Turtle River, returned home Fridaylast. Among the many people from this place who took in the excursion trip to Red Lake Sunday were Ole Storthan, Adolph Geisness and the Misses Laura Evenson and Juliet Storthan, Malvin Dahl has moved into the F. G. Finley house recently vacated by S. R. Hildreth of Solway, who was down here and hauled several hundred cords of wood into Wilton for C. F. Rogers. FIGHT FOR LIFE IN SEWER Forty New York Laborers Saved by Qeolness of Foreman. New York, July 2/.—Forty laborere ran, swam and fought for their lives when the new sewer in West Forty- sixth street was flooded and but for the coolness of Foreman Ben Connofs all would have perished. The only exit was at the opposite end, where an air shatt led to the surface. The men, panic stricken, ran for the shatt. When half way to the shaft the water was at their waists. SBcream- ing and fighting the men wedged them- selves into a helpless mass and all were in imminent peril of drowning. Then Connors, who had led the way to the shaft, took a hand and, swing- lox an ugly olub, threatened tq brain ~|avery men If they did mot obey him. Then he compelled them to form four abreast and march, one the men gained the Hinbed the ladder te’ the nnors was the last te leave xo wer and whem he did he rose om six feet of water. DARROW VERY BITTER Heaps Accumulated Wrath on Or- chard and Attorney Hawley. NO COMPROMISE IS DESIRED Tells Jurymen if They Believe Hay-: | wood Guilty to Hang Him and De- clares Latter Wil Die as He Has Lived, With His Face to the Foe. Bolse, Ida., July 2j.—Clarence Dar- row for two and a half hours of the morning sesslon of the Haywood trial proclaimed the immocence of his client and argued the impossibility of his conviction upon the uncorroborated testimony of Harry Orchard. J. H. Hawley, leading counsel for the state, and Orchard were the figures around whom most of the. storm centered. Throughout the ten weeks of testl- mony taking Hawley and Darrow have olashed almost daily and there have been frequent exchanges of angry words and now Darrow vented his acoumulated wrath. There was no at- tempt at refinement of attack. It was stralght vituperation and angry de- nunciation. For two hours and a half Darrow rang the changes on Orchard's sast, his present and his future and on Orchard he heaped every word of abuse and contempt that the least pos- sible show of respect for the court would permit. The courtroom was crowded to its limit, was hot and the atmosphere heavy, but the Chicago lawyer held the attention of his audience through- out. He pleased with voice and ges- ture. He was not qulescent for a moment. Hé paced to and fro before the box, addressing each of the jury- men in turn and always pleading that an Idaho jury would never find a ver- dict against Haywood upon the testi- mony of Orchard, who, he said, “was corroborated only by a dog, a walleyed horse and Joseph H. Hawley.” On Trial Among Strangers. In\opening Mr. Darrow impressed the importance of the case upon the twelve men in the box and declared the defendant is in Idaho as an alien, brought 1,600 miles from home Into & community and before a jury which does not view life or industry as the men accused of the murder of former Governor Steunenberg have been taught to look at it. “The defendant in this case and the men in the jail below,” declared Mr. Darrow, “have been brought to trial in the home of a man who was killed i1 the most cowardly, the most brutal way that any man was ever sent to death. Many of you men on this jury voted for Governor Steunenberg. One of you had business relations with him, while in the house of another of you he had made his home for two years. You are almost the family cir- cle of the murdered man and none of you has ever had any community of iInterest with these defendants. Under these circumstances I can but ask|viz you to lay aside as much of the pas- slon and prejudice as you can and look at us as if we were one of you. “This murder was cold blooded, de- liberate and cowardly in the extreme. If this man, sitting In his office in Denver 1,500 miles away, employed an assassin to do this cowardly act then you ought to hang him by the neck untll he is dead. For God's sake, men, do mnot compromise. If you belleve the story that has been told against this xfan beyond all rea- sonable doubt then take him and hang him. He has fought meany a fight agalnst the persecutors who are ‘heunding him into this court. He has fought them on the open battlefield and he is not a coward. If he has to dte he will dle 86 he haa lived, with his face to the foe.” Denounces Attsrney Hawley. Mr. Darrow here launched into & lengthy. bitter, vituperative denuncia- tion of James H. Hawley, the leading counsel for the state. He assailed him es a hired men actuated by no other motive than to get the money of-the state of Idaho that he might build another addition to his house; he denounced him as “bughouse” and sald that he had been a friend of la- bor organizations, as he proclaimed, oply when they got their cases to his office first. “It 18 too bad the old man could not have ended his career before he took this case and told the fool things he has told to this jury. What was there Mr. Hawley's argument but Or- phard's story? According to his the- ofy everytody lies that that scoundrel may be belleved.” _Darrow d:'missed Senator orah, wre e, asaociate counsel for the state, With a few words, “I don’t mean to insin- uate,” he declared, “that Senator Bo- rah I8 any more honest than Hawley, but I do belleve he is slicker.” Mr. Darrow said he did not belleve Senator Borah was as overcome with the truthfulness of Orchard’s story as was Hawley. “In fact,” he went on, “I am Inclined to think that if Sen- ator Borah belleved Orchard was go- Ing to heaven he’d want to go the other way.” The attorney told the -jury that if fheir verdict showed that they be- [Meved Harry Orchard they would be ashamed to go home and face their wives, their sons and daughters. “Hawley would have you belleve that Orchard cannot lie sinee he got religlon. I ghall have something to say as to that religion later on, but what I want to say now ig that if Hawley has not got religion now he had better go and get it if there was any left after Orchard got his.” FLOODS IN WISCONSIN. Property Loss Runs Into Hundreds of Thousanda. La Crosse, Wis,, July &i—Tele- phonic communication with the flood stricken districts in La Crosse, Ver- non, Monroe and Crawford countles is being restored. Not a farm in the La Crosse, Coon and Upper Kickapoo River valleys has escaped damage. The damage to the five railroads centering at La Crosse will amount to hundreds of thousands of dollars and almost every bridge has been taken out. The fatality list has been increased by the name of Charles Thompson, son of Mrs. Sam Olson, living between Bristol and Purdy, Vernon county. The boy, who was nine years old, was carried away on a chicken coop, but lost his hold and drowned. . All railroads into Viroqua are tled up by washouts and there will be no train service out of the city for at least a week. In the town of Jeffer- son, in Vernon county, six large iron bridges have been taken out on the wagon roads. The village of Lafarge Is almost entirely under water and an estimate of the damage cannot be made at this time. Viola was not reached by the flood until Sunday evening, but a great amount of damage was done. At Coon Valley the mill has been washed away. At Avalanche the large cheese factory owned by the farmers was taken away and the plant of the woolen mills also was washed away. End of the Glidden Tour. New York, July 2°.—The first of the Glidden automobile tourists reached the city hall, the end of their 1,150 miles run, at nocn, half an hour ahead of the schedule. Other cars promptly followad. OFFIGIAL Bemidji, Minn., July 8, 1907. Councll met at City Ball in Tegular meot- at 8 p. Gnlled to orfler by Chairman Gould. Present—Bowser, McCualg, Smart, Erick- son, Washburn, Meyer and Gould, Absent—McTaggart, Brinkman. Minutes of last meeting read and approved. The following audited bills were allowed, walk grad Albert Smart 2 days team sldewulk grade. 8.00 J C . 1600 e oseph Bogart 9% days labor side- walk grad . 19,00 19.00 19.00 6.00 8.00 J L ‘Sutherland % day labor ‘on hydrant, 150 Improvement Buiietin A 2.10 4days .00, 1 day special pouce 30 3000 H. J. McClemant 1 day speclal police 2.00 M. D. Stoner 21% days city engineer bt h s . typewriter supplies 4,00 Beltrami Water Dept. Herman Ja ginoor, 0% days 550 Bhas. Kreotand stavengor biil 83 Foterrea to clty attorney. Bemidji manoer Pub. Co. bill of $65.05 laid over to be audited. Albert Halverson Secy. Fire Dept. §50.00 re- jected on opinion of city attorney. Committee on streets and sidewalks report o1 cement, sidewalks on dth street was ac- cepted and city attorney was instructed to draw resolution to carry report into effect. Opinion of city Alty. regarding salary of Fire Dept. secretary was accepted and filed. Notice-of W. B." McLaughlin asking for damages of 8100.00 onl account of the boat “North Star” coming in contact with Miss- tssippl river bridge was on motion and sec- ond tabled. pOrdinance No. 2 “Construction of water the puzchase of ground on which to Bl satd plant " wag read a second Ordbaante No. 5o rosaraing soroons and olgruGHions in saicons: was nesd frst dime. Moved and seconded Chas. Freeland be ap- pointed pound master without pay from city. Carried, Moved and seconded the clty clerk collect all licenses due the city from drays and other miscellancous licensed matters. Carried. Moved we adjourn. Adjourned, Thos. Maloy, A. Gould, Oity Olerk., Chairman. EECEEEEECEEEEE A Special Patent f'l”")"l")'l’i!)i!l’i’”’i‘l*)iiiiii!ii% Bemidji Chief Flour i‘-fil(ilnl-.&(xfiltl-lvtlkl‘&(&Gi“‘ffi'i‘(fli&fii&fia Made Exclusively For The Bemidji Trade W w W W W W &4 W [ W W W EEEEEEEETEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE 32:3:3: ~COLONEL HAYS IS DEAD, Famous Song Writer and Post Pa Away at Loulsvllle. Louisville, Ky., July 2J—Colonel ‘Wil 8. Hays, the veteran river editor of the Courler-Journal, song writer and poet, died at ‘his home here of vertigo, caused by a stroke of paraly- sls suffered in the Iroquols theater fire in Chicago. He was seventy years old. Colonel Hays has always claimed the authorship of the original words of “Dixie” and that he was responsible for the arrangement of the music. His version of Dixie was written at the outbreak of the Ciyil- ‘war, but the words were considered so seditious that the writer was arrested and com- pelled to change them. By that time, it 1s seld, Dan Emmet, the minstrel, had written his song and his publisher had it copyrighted. Colonel Hays’ most famous song was “Molly Darl- ing.” P Columbus Buggdies T have just received a Tull carload of Columbus < Buggies which are offered for sale at my barn Double or Single Surreys, two seated open and Concordbuggies, rubbertired runabouts They can be seen at thebarn. The public is invited to call and see them Thomas Newby 500 Second St. Subseribe For The Pioneer. Ferris Wheel. Merry-go-round. Cloming Coming; SOON FOR ONE WEEK Commencing July 29 The Danville & Kasper Co. PRESENTING FIVE HIGH CLASS SHOWS FERRIS WHEEL AND MERRY-GO-ROUND 4 BIG FREE ACTS 4 Go see the big Hippodrome, an -importation from Europe; the great Ghost Show; Hanson & Howard, high eclass Vaudeville; the old plantation original Georgia Minstrels. Take a trip up high on the big Take the children for a ride on the Daily Pioneer For News That the Pioneer Gets and Prints the News Is Appre- reciated Outside of Bemidji. Tribune, published at Akeley, tays: The Bemidji Daily Pioneer Started the week in a brand new dress of type. giving excellent news services. The increased advertising pat= ronage and circulation dence that the paper is appre- ciated by the public. 40 Cents per Month Pays for the Daily Read what the Akeley The :Pioneer is is evi-

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