Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, November 7, 1907, Page 2

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=g The personal recommendations of peo ple who have been cured of coughs and eolds by Chamberlin's Cough Remedy have done more than all else to make ita staple article of trade and commerce oves « large part of the civilized world. Barker’s Drug Store THE BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEER PUBLISHED BYRRY AFTHRNOON, A A A A A A AN N A A AN AN OFFICIAL PAPER---CITY OF BEMIDII A A A A A A A A A A A A AAAAA AN AN BEMIDJI PIONEER PUBLISHING CO. CLYDE J. PRYOR | A9, RUTLEDGE, Business Manager Managing Editor Tutered In the postoffice at Bemidji. Minn., as second class matter. SUBSCRIPTION---$5.00 PER ANNUM _— OBSERVATIONS. New York finance ought to go West and grow up with the country. When we are traveling, the nearer . we approach a large town the smaller we feel. Oue of the first things a man notices in a strange town is what funny names the people have. When you say anything mean be- hind a friend’s back, and are found out, there 1s only one thing to do— deny it. Another interesting race is that between the loaded motor car and the unloaded gun in the matter of piling up casualities. Dr. Torrey showed his good sense in refusing to convince his chal- lengers that there is no hell. They may need the belief. Chairman New says that the next Republican national convention will need a larger hall than the 1904 gathering. Yes, there was no Taft last time. DOINGS AMONG BEMIDJI'S GOUNTRY NEIGHBORS Live Correspondents of the Pioneer Write the News From Their Localities. SPAULDING P. Sande is busy hauling cordwood to Wilton. M. Lande was a business visitor at Bemidji Friday. O. E. Soland was at Bemidji Fri- day after a load of lumber. George Forte and son, Allen, were shopping at Wilton Friday. A, Westgaard and son, Theodore, called on M. Rygg Sunday. . A. Forte and I. Stoltz are back from the Dakota harvest fields. Ole Jacobson and A. Hall of Lynx are carpenters at O. E. Soland’s. Carl O. Rygg is back from Thomp- son, North Dakota, where he has been threshing. Miss Rosy Olson spent Monday and Tuesday at Bemidji, visiting her sister, Mrs. O. Beggemen. BATTLE RIVER. Mr. Pete Syverson, of Saum, Minn., was a Battle River caller Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Jos. Jerome, visited with Mr. and Mrs. John Carlson, at Foy, Friday. John Carlson hauled in a load of supplies from Kelliher Saturday, for J. Jerome’s store. Ben Anderson and Chris Beck who have been out in North Dakota threshing, passed through Battle River Wednesday on their way to Shotley. Leo Ramstad is erecting an addi- tion to his cottage on hisclaim. We are all wondering at the continuous improvements of Leo, and what there is laid in store for the future. A party of geological surveyors from Washington, D. C., came through Battle River on their way north to Shotley, taking the level of the country in the interest of the drainage proposition. WILTON Bazil Jarbo made a business trip to Bemidji last Tuesday. Tke Jacobson arrived home from North Dakota last week. Pete Getter is having a coat of paint applied to his place of business. Mr. Williams expects to move his family into their new home next week. Quite a few from here “took in” the dance in Solway last Saturday night. Miss Laura Nykieum spent Satur- day and Sunday visiting with friends in Bemidji. " Mrs. Robert Earmest and children called on Mrs. Frank Patterson last Sunday afternoon. Ben Aldrich sawed wood for Frank Patterson, with his gasoline sawing machine, one day last week. The little sen of Mr. and Mrs. George Brennan, who has been very sick for some weeks past, is some- what better. The ladies of the Catholic church wish to express their thanks to those : who took part in the card party, and also the many who bought tickets. The proceeds amounted to over thirty dollars. MALCOLM. Mr. Theodore Berg came home Friday from Fairdale, North Dakota. Messrs. Jens Blilie and Arne Moe went to Grygla on business Monday. Mr. A. Evinskas of Appleton is visiting his daughter, Mrs. Olaf Ness. Among the arrivals from North Dakota last week were Ole Thorson, G. Carlson, Andrew Myrol and Oney Strait. Mr. and Mrs. Leon Strait are now residing on their claim, Mr. Strait having returned from North Dakota last Saturday. Mrs. John Peterson, who has been working in North Dakota during the harvesting and threshing season, returned home last Saturday. The shingle mill is again running and the familiar sound of the whistle agaih greets us. We hope Mr. Blilie will meet with success in this business venture. Mr. Martin Stokke, who went to Crookston on account of the illness of his sister, .has returned. Miss Stokke is recovering as rapidly as can be expected. Mrs. Nels Hendrickson who went to Crookston recently for medical treatment, has been operated upon and is recovering, but more slowly this time than before. EUROPE AWFULLY SCARED George J. Gould Says Our Credit Is Very Poor Abroad. New York, Nov. ;—George Jay Gould, returning on the steamer Kron Prinzessin Cecilie from a six months’ automobile tour of Europe, discussed freely the European view of the recent financial crisis in this country. “Our credits are in a bad way &broad,” said Mr. Gould. “The people of Europe received an awful scare and they are still nervous and afraid of our securities. But their view is all wrong. Our country is all right, our GEORGE J, GOULD. resources were never stronger, our roads were never busler. Industry everywhere is humming. We have simply got to get together and put our shoulders to the wheel to restore confidence.” Industrial conditions in America be- ing in such good shape Mr. Gould was asked his opinion as to the cause of the uneasiness in Europe. “L belleve, without hesitation,” he sald, “that the terrible sentence im- posed upon the Standard Oil company is the largest factor. To the people of Europe the fine looks like practical confiscation, the wiping out of hun- dreds of stockholders possibly, in their view, and they belleve that the agita- tion in this country means a similar fate to all the rest of our big corpora- tlons. They fear to put thelr money in the big concerns with the Standard Ol verdict dangling before them. The fine imposed by Judge Landis has im- measurably hurt us. The fright it _gave investors on the other side was tremendous.”- WILL MAY EXPLAIN MOTIVE Suspicious Bequests Made by Man | Said to Have Been Murdered. -=The will of Walter F. Baker, the Boston clubman who died at the home of friends in Bogota, N. J., recently under pecullar circumstances, has been found and is in possesslon of a Boston lawyer, ac- cording to District Attorney Koester of Hackensack, N. J. Friends of the dead man say that| the construction of the will may be of value as bearing upon the motive of a possible crime in connection with his death. “This Boston lawyer,” sald Mr. Koester, “and detectives who have been investigating the case have vis- ited me. I learned from them that it contalned several unsatisfactory be- quests amounting to nearly $500,000. There will be a contest on the ground of undue influence.” On the night Baker died he dined with some friends in a Broadway res- taurant and left them to join another party of friends, who went with him to a chophouse, where he became sud- denly {ll. He was taken to the home of Frank H. Hurd, one of his closest friends, at Bogota, where he died. IN TENNESSEE COMPANY. Steel Corporation Obtains a Control- ling Interest. New York, Nov. J—The United States Steel corporation has secured a controlling interest in the Tennes- see Coal, Iron and Railroad company. The deal has been concluded and is traceable to the conferences recently held at the home of J. Pierpont Mor- gan. It is understood the price paid is a little above $85 a share. The holdings of a pool controlling some 70 per cent of the stock of the Tennes- see Coal, Iron and Railroad company were transferred in the sale. This deal cannot fail to do much to relieve the present financial stringency, as large amounts of the stock of the Tenunessee Coal, Iron and Railroad company are now held as collateral for loans by the local banks. The taking up of these loans by the new owners of the stock will add materially to the cash resources of the financial institutions. Shot While Protecting Woman, St. Paul, Nov. .—Charles Rych- mann, because he shielded Mrs. Henry Fehrmann from her drunken husband, ‘was shot down on his own front steps by the husband, who afterward, in jail, became violently insane. Rychmann, though still alive, is in a very serious condition and small hopes are held out for his recovery. He is lying at Dr. H. A. Dreschler’s private hospital, where he was taken immediately after the shooting, . PREMIUM R READY CASH Offer Brings Out Savings of Thou-| cphicago Doctor Says Windy Clty WItl sands of People. New York, Nov. .—Currency of all denominations and In varying stages m of crispness poured into the offices of | several brokerage houses in Wall street from all the nooks and crannles development of humanity. i NEW . RACE OF MEN. Be Its Place of Origin. Chicago, Nov. ,—A mew race of| en, with Chicago as its place of rigin, is to be the next stage in the It would be very interesting to know how many years your family physician O r O u S has prescribed Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral for coughs, colds, and all forms of lung bles. Ask him the nexttime yousec Nevey esltale fo ask your doctor about ‘T : t Ayer's Cherry Pectoral. Itisaregulor medi- Dim- Weknowphysicianswhohave used cine, astong medicine, a doclor’s medicine, it for over half a century. .5 Ayerco. This statement was made before an of New York. audience of clubwomen by Dr. Alfred | Hearing that 2% and 2% per cont | |, (ole, medical director of the G. A. premium was being pald for ready R. in the state of Illinois. Dr. Cole money men, women and boys brought says he is merely interested in all their savings to the financial district | goits of psychic phases, but doesn’t| and exchanged them for certified bother with cults. checks, with the premium increase, “The human race,” said he at the which they deposited forthwith in meeting of the Progressive Health their banks. i club in the Masonic Temple, “is now In the offices of Mann, Bill & Ware, | fynetioning in the fifth embrace of one of the firms that led in the pre- | o gety root race. There are seven mium paying, there was a never end- | go” ¢y " o0r races, you know. Sex ing line of assorted personalitles | oo oi it the second. And it Is throughout the day. They came from pretty well established—as well as the East Side principally and they | anything can be ostablished—that Chi- carried their savings, which ranged all | 5006 Wil be the nucleus of the sixth the way from $100 or $200 to $5,000 enfhrace. or $6,000 in pasteboard shoe boxes, in “The marrying and intermarrying toy banks, in old socks tied with a bit of all of the races of the world which of cord, in their pockets and in one is golng on here is going to form a | ca:o ina de;b:'l hn%. ; o n sub-race that will be better than ours n one of the brokerage offices in every way.” lad appeared with $200, his savings AT L £ from the sale of newspapers for three years. This he exchanged for a certi- INSTEAD OF LEGAL TENDER fled check, including the pr¢ SE DISAPPEARS COMPLETELY. | Denver Clearing House Association Will Pay in Bank Sorip. Denver, Nov. \.—The Denver Clear- N Ing House associatlon has decided to Empl M his Bank Cannot B mpleye of er’;’;;fd " g i adopt the plan of paying checks and | other obligations in bank scrip instead of legal tender. The plan will be put into operation as soon as the scripl Memphis, Tenn., Nov. j—Frank Harper, a bookkeeper employed at a local bank and a member of & prom | qonje printed. inent family of this city, has disap- | “ryg gerip will be issued fn denom:| peared and every effort to locate him | notions of $1. $5, $10 and $20. A com- after more than three days of search- | mittee of seven consisting of one from ing has proved fruitless. % H“"["‘r was ] each bank in the clearing house was last seen as he was leaving his place | appointed to pass upon securities of-| of employment Friday, presumably to fered by the banks to guarantee the £0 to his noonday luncheon. The ofi- | go clals of the banking institution where | ~ gaive win be permitted to issue he was employed state that his ac- | ¢ory v to 75 per cent of the value ) ‘The guarantee given with each Clothcraft suit or over- coat, is not merely a paper guarantee, It is a guarantee backed by a reputable concern who has been making good clothes for over 60 years.” Suits - $10 to $25 Overcoats $10 to $25 Schneider Bros. counts are in perfect condition and of the security given. heing a man of exemplary habits no e motive can be advanced which could | have occasioned his voluntary disap- | pearancq, Harper is twenty-three years old and married. TO CURE A COLD IN ONE DAY « Take LAXATIVE BROMO QuinineiTablets. Druggists refund money it it fails to cure. United States Buys More Gold. £, W. GROVE'S signature Is on each box London, Nov. .—The United States has purchased another consignment . 5 of bar gold, amounting to £750,000,| from the Bank of England. Canada In also took $25,000 i i 3 so $25,000 in sovereigns, pre WITH ALL KINDS OF ONY NECESSARY TO | TREAT THE STomacy &2%- G0l Claim.of Central Figure in Recent Contro- |[emcoommmmmrmmes versy Is Novel. The new theory advanced by L. T. Cooper relative to the human stom- ach has attracted such widespread attention that tte public in cities visited by the young man has been Joined by many physicians in a dis- cussion of his beliefs and medicines. Mr. Cooper says that human health {s dependent almost entirely upon the stomach. He says that no dis- ease can be conquered without first alleviating all stomach disorders. He further says that most men and wom- en of this generation are halfsick, owing to degenerate stomachs. And lastly, he claims that his New Dis- covery medicine will rejuvenate the human stomach in 90 days. Cooper has been traveling from one city to another, conducting in each what he calls a campaign of education. For the past year he has met the public In the larger cities of the country, and his success has been phenomenal. Thousands of people have flocked to his headquar- ters wherever he has gone, and the sale of his medicine has been beyond anything of the kind ever before witnessed. Possibly the most Interesting fea. ture of the attention this young man has attracted 13 what his army of followers, whom he has converted to his beliefs through his medicines, have to say on the subject. The fol- lowing statements are from two well known residents of Chicago and Bos- ton, respectively, and the anthusiasm of these is characterlstic of Cooper’s admirers generally. Mrs. H. B. Mack, of 3201 State street, Chicago, says: “I have been suffering for 12 years from a com- bination of stomach troubles, catarrh and constipation. I had a gnawing pain in the pit of my stomach, a sort sumably for the United States. ‘Sore Chroat QUICKLY CURED WITH SIMPLY A GARGLE OR SPRAY ANTISEPTIC HEALING HARMLESS and is beyond question the safest andsurest remedy for all kinds of SORE THROAT Quin- sy, Hoarseness and Tonsilitis, Gar-Gol is a BUY A GOOD LOT With the growth of Bemidji lots are becoming scarcer and scarcer. We still have a number of good lots in the residence part of town which will be sold on easy terms. For further particulars write or call Bemidji Townsite and Im- of a dull pain that I conld not quite an- derstand. Then there was & dull head- reventive of Croup. Whooping Cough and Bl theria. An elegant mouth wash, puri- fying andantlseptic. Price 2%c. Prepared by Berg Medicine Co. Des Moines, Ia. provement Company. H. A. SIMONS, Agent. Swedback Block, Bemid}i. a;,chs‘i a}nd my i‘mlud Beelmed to be ‘wandering continually. could not eat, and what little solid tood 1 aid |)WL DRUG STORE eat I could not retain on my stomach. * I tried every remedy I could think of, and also tried out a number of patent | medicines, but without any apparent Tesult. It was through ome of my | friends that I heard of Cooper’s prep- aration, and I immediately decided to try some of it. It is two weeks since I took my first dose of it, and I feel like a new woman. The head- ache seems to have disappeared, and the pain in my stomach along with it. The medicine is worth its weight in gold, and I want to thank Mr. Cooper for what he has done for me.” Mr. BEdwin F. Morse, of 20 Qakley. street, Dorchester, a suburb of Bos- ton, says: “For three years I had not a well day. My stomach was in | frightful shape; the mere thought of food would nauseate me, and I really had a horror of anything to eat. All solld food would cause me extreme indigestion, bloating and gas on my stomach, and nothing tasted right. Some time ago I got some of thig Cooper’s medicines, about which, there i3 80 mueh talk. I actually feel as well and strong as a boy ever since the first bottle. Every sign of stomach trouble has disappeared, and I have a hearty appetite amd eat three square meals; ewery thing Seems to taste good, Anyone wha knows what chronic indigestion is can appreciate what fhis means to me. I consider this the most remark- able medicine I ever heard of.” We sell Mr. Cooper’s medieines, and - find them to be all he elaims. E. N. French & Co. / choice. CARTER Bemidji, @ TAIT Minn. cellar, etc. Bemidji. House, barn, etc. terms. CARTER Some Snaps in Farm Lands 160 acres, Buzzle Township. House, barn, large root 5 acres under’ cultivation, balance natural timber—Birch, Spruce, Pine, etc. Price $5.00 per acre, Terms—$300 cash; balance five years, 6 per cent interest 160 acres Grant Valley [Township, 4 miles S. W. of 25 acres ready to break, balance timber. A bargain. Price $7.50 per acre. Easy terms. 1€0 acres 3 miles west ot Wilton. House, barn, ete. 85 acres under cultivation, 25 acres natural meadow, bal- ance timber. Price $7.00 per acre. Easy terms. 160 acres '1 mile from Beceda in Hubbard county. House, barn, ete. 10 acres plowed, 60 acres: cut over, balance heavy timber. A Snap. $5.00 per acre. Easy If it is a bargain in farm lands you want, see us before buying. We have what you want at about half the price the other land men ask. 30 acres under cultivation, @ TAIT o T BLANK BOOKS A large consignment of Day Books, Ledgers, Cash Books and Journals, have just been received and the stock is com- plete and will give the buyer a good good selection from which to make his BEMIDJI PIONEER Stationery Department MEMORANDUM BOOKS Our line is the most complete assort- ment in Northern Minnesota. books from the very cheapest to the very best leather bound book or cover. We have

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