Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, August 16, 1907, Page 2

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4 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. It is equally successful for summer diarrhcea and cholera infantum in children, and is the means of saving the lives of many children each year. When reduced with water amd sweetened it is pleasant to tuke. Every man of a family should keep this remedy in his home. Buy it now. PRICE, 250. LARGE SzzE, 50¢. 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 characte~ and temperate habits, who can speak, read and write English, For information apply to Recruit- Officer, Miles Block, Bemidji, Minn. WANTED: Competent girl for general house work. $5.00 per week. Inquire of Mrs. Thomas Bailey. WANTED: Lady piano player,who can sing, for out-of-town engage- ment. Apply to Pioneer. WANTED: Girl for general house- work. Apply at Pioneer office. WANTED: Dishwasher at once. Pay $20 per month. Hotel Brink- man. WANTED: Two kitchen girls. Inquire City Hotel. WANTED: Pastry cook. Hotel Markham. WANTED: Dishwasher. Hotel Markham. WANTED: Second cook. Hotel Markham. FOR SALE. FOR SALE: House and lots, No. 700 Bemidji Ave., for sale; 75 foot front; house heated with hot water; electric lights and all modern conveniences. A, A, Warfield 711 Lake Boulevard. FOR SALE—Rubber stamps. The Pioneer will procure any kind of a rubber stamp for you an short notice. FOR SALE: Nice seven room house. 717 Lake Boulevard. In- quire of T. Baudette, at city liv- ery. FOR ALE CHEAP—Four room hous in Mill Park. Easy terms. Inq ire of Harry Reynolds. FOR SALE—Magnificent moose head mounted; will be sold cheap. Inquire at this office. LOST and FOUND LOST—Between M. E. church and Mississippi bridge a lady’s small gold watch, scalloped edge, en- graved with initials S. A. M. Liberal reward offered. Finder return to this office. 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. Ghe PIONEER Delivered to your door every evening Only 40c per Month THE BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEER PUBLISHED BVERY AFTNRNOON, OFFICIAL PAPER---CITY OF_BEMIDII BEMIDJI PIONEER PUBLISHING CO. CLYDE J. PRYOR | A. 0..-RUTLEDGR Bisiness Managor. Managing Editor Entered in the postofice at Bemidjt. Minn., as second class matter. SUBSCRIPTION-«SS.W PER ANNUM A HINT TO THE HAGUE. Naval officials in Washington are ain is to build a war ship one-third larger than the dreaded Dreadnought. The new battle ship, if the report is not simply a dog day’s scare, is to mount eighteen 12-inch: guns in its main battery. The mere mention of | such an armament is enough to make rock-built citadels to shake and the sailors on the diminutive Alabamas and Connecticuts to tremble in their hammocks. If Great Britain launches a 30,- 000-ton battle ship we as a matter of course must launch one of 40,000 tons. Then the Englishman will see the Yankee and raise him ten thou- sand or so, This is a game with no limit. The navy cost us last year only a picayune hundred millions or so, and why should we worry over a trifling matter of expense when times are prosperous and it costs only twice as much to live as it did ten years ago? Possibly the Hague tribunal can help out. No one seems to know definitely. what the peace-making gentlemen have been driving at since they got together over in the land of dikes and ditches. They have the opportunity-of their concord-loving lives. If they can induce the pow- ers of earth to go back to the wood- en war ships and the smooth bores of the elder day they will go home laurelwreathed. If all navies are equipped alike what possible difference does it make whether hulls are oak or steel, and whether the gunsare rifled or smooth bored? This might not make for peace, but it would make for econ- omy, and for the poetry of the sea. The Hague Tribunal has a chance to get talked about. OBSERVATIONS. A young widow never tires of try- ing to convince some bachelor of the errors of his ways. There are some kitchens that always smell like the lunch baskets the second day on the trip. The people complain of nearly everything else, but seem satisfied with that scraping noise in phono- graphs. Some people spend half their time telling what they intend to do, and the other half explaining why they didn’t do it. Nothing will pay you better than politeness. It makes business life easier in a hundred ways; in addition to this it makes your business more successful. Meekness is one virtue that never seems properly distributed; the com- mander of an army may posses it to a degree, but you never see a Pull: man porter thus endowed. i Professor Starr of Chicago says dog meat beats mutton. The pro- fessor is either contemplating a trip to the north pole or he has been sampling recent products of the home canning factories. Safeblowers Wreck Bullding. Btillwater, Mion, Aug. 1}—The blowing of a large safe in the new: store conducted by O. A. Anderso and Edward C. Kroeger, general merchants at South Btillwater, made a fearful wreck of the bullding and' nearly demolished the safe. Owing to the big business done and the iso- lation from this city it was probably supposed by the cracksmen to be & good place to operate. As a matter of fact very little booty, it any, was secured. Police Guard Itallan Priest. New York, Aug. 1/.—A police guarnd was placed about the Church of Our Lady of Loretta (itallan) in Brookiyn to protect Rev. Father Vincent Sor- rentino, pastor of the church, who fn- formed the police that he had received two demands for money from the Black Hand soclety. In the last of theae letters a threat,was made to' dynamite the churoh.and rectory and' Kkill the pastor unlgss 93,000 wes de- Pposited under a stone in Pacific street. Krupp Werkmen-Get Hollday. Kiel, Gormany, Aug. L).—There wag & holiday at the Krupp shipbuilding works here, with .a distribution of money to all the werkmen, i oglebra., tion of«the birth of. & son and heir to' Herr and Frau Krupp von Bohlen und | Halbach. At Essen the birth of the helr was also, oelebrated. The varl. ous Krupp works,.including those at Bilbao, empley 61,000 persons. excited by the report that Great Brit- |- SHYSTRIK IS BROKEN Telegraph Companies qh:; tp» Be Press Associations Declare That Near- ly All Leased Wires Are Working snd That Recent Conditions Have Decidedly Improved. New York, Aug. 11.—The officlals of the Western and - Postal - Telegraph companies declare that the strike of the operators is practically-broken and that enough men are at work to han- dle all the business offered. . The lead- that the union has not sufficient funds to meet for long the heavy demands that are being made upon it, urged the strikers to remain firm and promised that financial. ald would be forthcom- ing. =, From the newspaper point of view the situation is decidedly improved. Both companies say that press matter 18 being promptly moved, the many leased wires to New York operatod by newspapers throughout the country are manned and the press associations report that their traffic is now prac- tically normal. The Assoclated Press is maintaining its customary circuits fully manned and in the Eastern di- vision several operators who wént‘out Tuesday resumed work at their keys, APPEAL TO ROOSEVELT. Chicago Board of Trade Would End Operators’ Strike. Chicago, Aug. 1L .—The directors of the Chicago board cf trade authorized the president of the board to appeal to President Roosevelt to use his per- sonal influence toward effecting a set- tlement of the . telegraphers’ strike. President Sager sent the following tel- egram to Oyster Bay: “The business of this great country, which is suftering:loss to the extent of millions of dollars per day on ac- count of the deadlock between the tel- egraph companies and their employes, demands immediate settlement of the differences at issue so that a national catastrophe may be averted. In this great emergency we look to the chief executive of this country to take a per- sonal hand.” Detroit, Aug. 1 .—The Detroit board of trade has adopted and sent to Pres- ident Roosevelt resolutions declaring that, without entering into the merits or demerits of the telegraphers’ strike, the peril to the business interests of the country is of such magnitude as to warrant immediate action by the government “looking to arbitration or an amicable adjustment of the disput- ed questions.” NO NEW DEVELOPMENTS. 8trikers. Are Awaiting the Arrival of President Small. Chicago, Aug. 1 ~—But little prog- ress has been made in the efforts to secure a settlement of the telegra- phers’ strike, The men were await- ing the arrival of President Small be- fore taking any further action and the companies adhered. strictly to their determination not to.receive any depu- tations from the strikers or to submit enything to arbitratidh. Both the Western Unlon and the. Postal com- panies asserted that they were in bet- ter condition than at any time since the strike. Sthl “Subject to Delay.” St. Paul, Aug. 1.—So far as St. Paul is concerned one would scarcely know, unless informed . through the newspapers, that a slrike of telegra- phers was in progress. At the West- ern Unlon offices the wires have olicked merrily all day and no mes- 88899 have been refused. All dis- patohes still continue to be received “gubject to delay,” however. Man- ager Chapman reportg; that he has fifty-two operators at work Restored to Normal. Basls. Chicago, Aug. 17\—All the Associat- od Press ofrcuits radiating from Chica- go to the east, north, south and ;west bave been restored to a normal work- ing baais. NARROWLY ESOAPES DEATH Bomb Partlally Wrecks Apartments of . Lord Ashtown. Clonmel, Ireland, Aug. 1j.—Lord Ashtown had a narrow esocape from death .at his residence, Glenabiry Ledge, early in the day. He was asleep In a room on the ground floor when a terrific explosion caused by a bomb shattered one of the walls of bis apartments and destroyed most of the furniture, but did/not injure Lord Ashtown. The gamekeepers recently had trouble with poachers on the es- tate and the outrage is attributed to the latter. He had also been threat- ened by political agitators. Worst Drought in Fifty Years. Jewett City, Conn., Aug. .65.—The present dry spell {8 probably the most disastrous of any during the last half oentury. Many factories in the east- ern part of the state have been com- pelled to close down on account of the drying up of streams and the cot- ton mill owners have suffered heavily. Farmers are compelled to draw water from rivers and lakes many miles away in;order to save any of thelr crops. FIRED BOULDER STATION. « orado Disaster. Boulder, Colo., Aug. 1}.—John W. Reeves, & brakeman employed: on the Colorado and Northwestern rallroad, who has been held as a suspect in | conneetion with the destruction Satur-| day of the,Colorado and Southern sta- tion by fire and dynamite, has con- fossed that he was responsible for the erime. : Later Frank. 'Kiser, another suspect, also confessed. The' result of the_act was the wi_plng out of five nve ————— iOW PRACTICALLY NORMAL~ era of the local union, while admitting/| Buspacts: Admit Responsibllity for Col-| 1ivésand the Injury oF a Half hundred others, besides the = destruction . of property._valued at $500,000. When it ‘hecame knawn that Reeves had con- fessed a mob gathered at the county jafl for'the purpose of lynching him, | but he was’ spirited front the jail by officers and taken:to Denver in a car- ‘riage, The public hag not been in- formed of Kiser's confession. Frank Kiser says that during.a dls cnssion of the Colorado and Southern strike the suggestion was made -that the crowa set fire to some of:the com- pany’s property. Actingwpon this sug- gestion they went down to the yards and set fire to a caboose belonging. to the company and from this blaze the depot caught. The explosion of sev- eral hundred pounds of dynamite load- ed on one of the cars nearby caused the loss of life and great destruction of property. e d ARBITRATION RESORTED TO7 Trainmen and Western. Roads wm Adjust Differences. Denver, Aug. 15.—All danger of a spread Gf the strike of the Brother- hood of Railway Trainmen employed by, theiColorado and Southern rallway has been removed by an agreement reached -whereby all differences be- tween- trainmen of that ‘road as well as the trainmen of other railroads en- tering Denver are to be settled by an arbitration committee which. will hold its first sitting next Tuesday in this city. All Brotherhood men on strike will return to work at once. The ar- bitration committee will consist of one representative from each of the rail- roads, namely, Colorado and Southern, Denver and Rio.Grande, Union Pacific, Santa*Fe, Rock Island and Burlington, one representative from the switch- men and yardmen of each road and a representative from each of the labor organizations concerned. 5 TAFT -BACK AT HIS DESK Will_Start on Trip to Philippines in a Few Days. ‘Washington, ©, Aug. 15 —Secretary Taft has returned to Washington from his vacation of about a month spent at Mwrray Bay, Ont. He went early to the war department, reaching his office before 8 o'clock, and at once plunged into the great mass of work needing his attention. The secretary has considerable to do between now and next Sunday, when - he again leaves the ecity on his Western trip, which is to end in Seattle, where Mr. Taft is to embark for the Philippines. The most important Matter on hand is that of preparing his annual report and the estimates of appropriations for the war department for the next fiscal year, which he is anxious to finish up before he again leaves the city. He denled himself to all callers except war department officials. Auto “Hits Telegraph Pole. New York, Aug.:15—Two" persons were Killed ‘and four Injured, one. of them dangerously. in dn automobile accldent hear. Bernardsville, N. J. Tho depd are: Miss Kuhlewind, - fifteen Years “old, of Berhardsville, and the chnnftsur, named Clark, of Far Hills, N. I. The chauffeur lost control of the ‘machine while. it was running at high speed and it dashed Into a tele: zraph |nlo NIGHTS OF UNREST, -No Sleep, No Rest, No Peace for the Sufferer from Kidney Traubles. N'o peacefor the ludney su(ferex— Pain and distress from morn to night, ‘Get up with a lame back, Twinges of backache bother you all day, &, . Dull aching breaks your rest at night. Get ‘at 'the cause-—cure the kid. |’ neys. Doan’s Kidney Pills will' work the cure. ‘They’re for the kidneys only— L. H. Desentell, carpenter, em ployed at: the Plllsbury mill and 11v- ing at 905 Twenty-irst avenue S, Minneapolis, Minn.; says: “In the fall of 1899, after using Doan’s Kid- ney lels, procured at a drug " storée I felt warranted in this remedy to sufferers from kidney “trouble .and ‘backache. I had kidney ~complaint for years, and the irregularity of the kidney |- secretions often caused me to loose |, my night’s rest. I tried a - number of Jifferent remedies without effect, but when I'began using Doan’s Kidney Pills I felt better from the beginning and a.few boxes com- pletely rid me of all symptoms of my trouble. This lead me to give a testimonial endorsing Doan’s Kid- ney Pills and I have been recom- mending them ever since.” For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, New York, sole agents for the United States. > Remember the name—Doans— and take no other. ARRET DAY BEMDIJI , SATURDAY recommending |- [ Blvle ] !)' b : @é@% lw ““The Beer zbitf; aSrmp to b 22 AFTER 4 TRIAL YOU WILL DRINK NO OTHER G. Heileman Brewing Co: LA GROSSE, WIS. Order from Agency at Crookston AUG. 17 Horses, Cattle, Sheep, Hogs, Buggies, Harness (new or second hand) SECOND HAND Furniture Household- Goods. and C. A. HITCHCOCK, Auctioneer T. ). MILLER, Clerk . THREE. QUARTER SHORT HORN BULL NO CHARGES WHATEVER FOR SERVICES OF AUCTIONEER Bemidji Fire Department will offer for sale, on easy installments, First-class Piano and Phonograph. Any animal or article brought to the sale will be listed and Sold Without Any Charges for the service of the auctioneer. Everyone is mvxted to bring something to sell. SALE WILL BE HELD ON VACANT LOT, CORNER THIRD STREET AND AMERICA AVENUE 'BEGINNING AT 9 A.M. - =

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