Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, November 8, 1907, Page 4

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

'BODIES OF ALL THREE HIBBING MEN REGOVERED More Particulars of Accident Whereby Four Hunters Lost Their Lives While Hunting. Deer River, Nov. 8.—With the return to this place last evening of the Hibbing searching party, bring- ing with them the bodies of the three men from that village who Dora lake last Thursday, more definite information asto the sad accident is at hand than has been the case since the first reports of the drowning were received. The last of three covered yesterday afternoon, that of John Biotz. It was found 25 rods from those of Seibel and Healey, and it is supposed he had made an attempt to swim to shore after the boat was overturned. Seibel’s body had been recovered on Saturday and that of Healey on Monday. These two were not far apart and Healey’s pack was found near the body. The boat was up- side down when found, but it is not known how the accident hap- were drowned in bodies were re- pened, as there were no witnesses to the tragedy. It is presumed that that the boat was overloaded to such | an extent that it couid not weather a squall of any consequence. The accident happened in Dora lake, which in reality is but a widen- ing of the Big Fork river, andis | about three miles wide and nine miles long, just outside . the cabin of a homesteader by the name of Guy Mitchell, He was not at home on Thursday, but when he returned late in the afternoon he noticed | the floating packs and other hunt- ing supplies and immediately began to search for the bodies. He re- sumed the search the following | morning, and it was then that Ever- don and Inscho of this place hap- | pened along. They went to the nearest station and communicated the news to this place on Sunday. Cooper, the fourth member of the party, was a cigar maker and had a homestead near Squaw lake in | which neighborhood the Hibbing | men intended to hunt. His body had not yet been re- covered when the searching party from Hibbing left the scene this morning.. His father and a brother | had claims in the same neighbor- hood and when he did not return on S became anxious about him and started out to look for him. When they at last learned of the drowning accident they at once went to Dora lake and joined in the efforts to re- cover the bodies. They are still there and are being assisted by several men, among whom are two or three from the range who came here to go hunting. Coroner Russeil of Grand Rapids was here today, but decided that no inquest was necessary. He aided in preparing the bodies for shipment to Hibbing, The searching party from that town will leave here at 2:30 in the morning for Swan River, from which place they will take an early morning freight for Hibbing. Notise of Sealed Bids. Notice is'hereby given that sealed bids will be received by the Board of County Commissioners of Bel- trami county, Minnesota, up until ten o’clock a. m., on Tuesday the for the construction of a county road described as follows: the southeast corner of section 36, township 152, range 31, and running thence due west for a distance of two miles. Said road to be constructed and completed according to the plat and Thursday, as they expected, they specifications now on file in the third day of December, A. D. 1907, i Beginning at| office of M. D. Stoner, superintendent of highways, Bemidji, Minn, A certified check in the amount of ten per cent of the amount of the bid must accompany each and every bid as a guarantee of the good faith of the bidder. Successful bidders will be required to ‘enter into contract and will be required to furnish a good and suffi- cient bond in an amount double the | amount of the contract price for ther faithful performance of said contract. The Board of County Commission- ers hereby reserve the right to reject any and all bids. > By order of the Board of County Commissioners of Beltrami County, Minnesota. Dated at Bemidji, Minnesota, this 15th day of November, 1907. (Signed) WES WRIGHT, Chairman of County Board. Attest: JOHN WILMANN, County Auditor, | San Francisco, Nov. 8.—The steam | whaler Beluga, Captain Porter, has arrived from the Arctic with 16,000 | pounds of bone, seventy-two foxskins and one bearskin. Captain Porter con- firmed the report from Unalaska that the other ships of the fleet were safe and were coming home with big | eatches. | Kane county almshouse at Batavia | Wandering in the surrounding country. Used by Millions Calume Baking gmowder lioa with the Pure So Livmy of bvory Btbte. DEED OF INSANE WOMAN Fires Almshouse and Endangers Lives of Many Patients, Chicago, Nov. 8.—An insane woman, nursing a fancied grievance and yearn- ing for revenge, deliberately fired the end forty demented women patients narrowly escaped a horrible death. Mrs. Mary Carney of Elgin, who started the fire, escaped and is mow The police of all the nearby towns have been notified and searching par: tles looked for her all night, The fire raged in the upper part of the poorhouse for more than two hours, doing $25,000 worth ot damage. It was confined to one building by the efforts of the' volunteer fire depart- ment of Batavia, which made the one and one-half-mile run to the poorhouse on foot, dragging the engine. The insane patients were herded in the yard like sheep while the fire was | being fought and the guards had the greatest difficulty in preventing them all from escaping. Money Cheerfully Refunded. JUN NN U 0 O M M R JC O OO MO R M M O O Copyright 1907 i'h> House of Norfolk some cases both. and $5. el is a very fine box or semi-box 44, and 46=inch broad : long straight lapels, slant pockets, num- erous fabrics to choose from, rough or smooth, fancy weave, gray, black, b}own. $l5 - $35 The alert mother is on the look out for the sort of qual- ity and value that’s in boys’ “Best Ever” clothes, $5 the suit, sizes 7 to 16, which are or plain double- breasted. have bloomerpants or straight cut pants, or in verfectly tailored and of mat-* erials almost “wear-proof.” The little fellows fashions of course are novelty styles, Russian and sajilor suits and dressy little reefers and over- _coats. Bizes 3 to 7. $3.50 Good Clothes Nothing Else (277 Clothing House Headquarters for . FINE OVERCOATS Mail Orders Promptly Filled The Norwick Mod- lengths, shoulders you. They are. dressy black Kersey Overcoats of fitting style, lently trimmed and $9.75 shoulders finished special.... . The. Walk Over Shoes, $4, certainly merit a trial from They’re in patent and gun metal calf, ever popular with the young men. There’s no easier way to be sure that you have the best shoe made than to be sure that your shoe purchase is Florsheim Shoes $5 and $6. The man who says, “I can’t get a good shoe for $2.50”, will learn something with a first pair of ‘‘service-comfort” that we sell him. 1 Great Showing of the Distinective and Fashion- able Overcoat Creations We devote this space to telling you of our Overcoat Exposition; and some other things. the choicest selections of Overcoat Models amd Patterns from Master Clothes Makers of this country and espec- ially those made for us by the House of Kuppenheimer. Your Overcoat, in its season, is the most import- ant garment; wherever you ge it makes your first im- pression, and your last when you leave. carefully, the right fabric, eolor, pattern, weave, the right length and shape. your Overcoat question for you from the most luxurious to the economically good. The Ryton is an- other good one; a 52 inch coat, semi-form fitting in many fin cloths, serge orsatin finish $15 - $35 fine Splendid value in form Excel- \ We want you to see Here’s your store. Kersey and fancy fabric Overcoats, 44 and 52 inch lengths, venetian or lined. lapels, the broad $15 Choose it We’'ll settle serge The long | tion on the part of the manufacturers of paper for the purpose of controlling | IFTER PIPER, TRUST President Will Recommend Re- moval of Protective Tariff. PUBLISHERS PRESENT CASE Submit Evidence to Chief Executive Tending to Show a Combination of Manufacturers for the Purpose of Controlling Output and Prices. ‘Washington, Nov. 8.—President Roosevelt has indicated to members of the committee on paper of the American Newspaper Publishers’ as- sociation that he will recommend to congress the abolition of the tariff on that goes into the manufacture of paper;. also that he will make a rec- ommendation to the department of Justice that it take immediate steps to ascertain whether the anti-trust laws are being disobeved by the manu- facturers of paper. The promise of the recommenda- tlons by the president was obtained after he had listened to the represen- tations of the members of the commit- tee and to a petition from the national organizations of printers, stereotypers, pressmen and etchers, all of which sct forth the evidence of a combina- the output, regulating and greatly in- creasing the price and otherwise mak- ing hindersome regulations governing the source of supply and delivery of paper. The committee, which called on the president by appointment, included John Norris of the New York Times, Medill McCormick of the Chicago Tribune, George Thompson of the St. Paul Dispatch, Delevan Smith of the Indianapolis News, John Eastman of the Chicago Journal, Walter Page of World’s Work, Dr. Albert Shaw of the Review of Reviews, E. J. Ridge- Wway and the presidents of the national organizations of the allied printing | trades. The history and facts which make | up the protest were presented by Mr. McCormick, after which the president Indicated the action he would take. An investigation of the so-called paper trust has been in progress for some | time by the department of justice and it is understood that the president will immediately call for the facts which have been ascertained up to the present time. AMERICAN GONTROL TN GUBA| Ex-President Palma Publicly; Declares His Belief. i Havana, Nov. 8.—T. Estrada Palma, formerly president of Cuba, has au-| thorized the publication of his views regarding American intervention. He declares publicly in favor of Amer-l ican control in Cuba. i “It-is enough to satisfy my con- science,” he says, “this conviction of having saved my beloved country | EX-PRESIDENT PALMA. from anarchy and its natural results of plunder and ruin.” He continues, describing what he considers the criminal acts on the part of the revolutionists and the ne- cessity to call on the American gov- ernment to prevent a protracted and sanguinary contest. “If I did right or ‘wrong time will say. That my attitude was immedi- ately justified is proved by the sudden re-establishment of peace through the moral and material influence of the Americans. “I do not hesitate to declare that it is a hundred times better for our be- loved Cuba to be in a dependent polit- ical situation in which liberty is pre- vailing than in a republic independent of a sovereign but discredited and ruined " by blasting periodical ecivil strifes.” The letter is considered important, as Dr. Palma still commands a great Infiuence with a large number of Cu- bans. Gold Movement Not Ended. ‘New York, Nov. 8—That the end of the movement of gold from England to America has not been reached was shown when Goldman, Sachs & Co. announced the engagement of $1,625, 000 for import from London. Kuhn, Loeb & Co. also announced that they had secured $500,000 in Europe. This makes the total for the movement $39,176,000. Objects to Bank Methods. ‘Washington, Nov. 8.—Protest has been made to President Roosevelt by Senator Heyburn of Idaho against the further deposit of government money with New York banks until those in- stitutions consent to pay the reserves of the Western banks in cash instead | press paper, wood pulp and the wood f | FOR SALE—Rubber stamps. Fine 20-year Gold Filled Case, complete with 17-Jew- eled Elgin Movement. Special price only $13.75 Our workshop is one of the finest equipped in North- ern Minnesota. Care and promptness assercd. Give us a call. GED. T. BAKER & CO, Located in City Drmg Store WANIS ONE CENT A WORD. HELP WANTED. WANTED FOR U. S. ARMY: Able- bodied unmarried men, between ages of 21 and 35; citizens of United States, of good character and temperate habits, who can speak, read, and write English. For information apply to Recrnit- ing Officer, Miles Block, Bemidji, Minn. WANTED: Two dining-room girls, wages $20 per month; two cham- bermaids; one dishwasher. Hotel Brinkman. WANTED—Good girl for general housework. Inquire 422 Minne- sota Ave. WANTED —Lady cook. Hotel Armstrong. Inquire FOR SALE. FOR SALE: $2,000.00 special in- come contract with the American Guaranty Company of Chicago, carried two and half years; for sale at a liberal discount. If you are interested, address G398 Minneapolis Tribune. FOR SALE: Wood stumpage, one and one-half miles west from Be. midji. ~ Will trade for milch cow. George B. Thompson, Bemidji, Minn. 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. FOR SALE, CHEAP—House and two lots. T. Symington, 609 Second street. FOR RENT. B VPPV SIS |FOR RENT—Two rooms, suitable for light housekeeping, or fur- nished. 1024 Beltrami Ave. ’Phone 272-2. FOR RENT: Small cottage. quire of J!J. Cameron. In- MISCELLANEOUS. Ao PUBLIC LIBRARY—Open Tues- days, Thursdays and Saturdays, 2:30to 6 p. m., and Saturday evening 7:30 to 9 p. m. also. Library in basement of Court House. Mrs. E. R. Ryan, librar- ian. ———————————————————— The Line Is Busy! 1f you receive ‘many complaints that your line is-always “busy,” it shows that while someone is:{talking toJyou someone else] wants to talk to you. The Contract Department of the NORTHWESTERN TELEPHONE EXCHANGE COMPANY CAN SUGGEST A REMEDY. Ghe PIONEER Delivered to your door every evening of cashier checks, Only 40c -.pér Month | i r— ——

Other pages from this issue: