Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, November 9, 1908, Page 4

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| ;; | g‘ Geo. D. Haggard. Beecher Moore " Allen.. .. Lieutenant Governor 0. T R. B. Higbee. Raliroad and Warehouse Com. B.F, Wright. 0. W. Stanton. Member of Congress Halvor Steeners 0Oie 0. Sagen. For Representative Jens J. Opsahl. Er. .G, Fores| Register of Decds 3.0, Harris Fred M. Malzahn. |Sheriff A. B. Hazen Thomas Tedford. County Attorney Chester MclKusick. P.J. Russell. County Superint W. . Stewart Vera M. Cameron |Commissioner 2nd Dist. He.ic_Clementson Jobn Gil tad .. 0. B. Olson.... (Commissiuner 4th’ Charles Duraud. Viveo Peterson. Commis-loner sth Di-t. 133136139 48, 85 59 31412 7% 103 | 34 & IR RN HEEEE S sel |88 2|2 A 8l ol = 3512|818\ Bl Blgl | 2] P (S15E] (e 12 o [5%s i LiLiL LB E S \58IE el (S8 3| 25| 2| B | 25|52 <l E |5 (5| B\ Bl 2 212 E[R HEEERE EEEEE BB R EEER aldinladl S| ElgEdlzidl 2@ lzE 0| ElEl 2l Presidental Electors Eh Lt L] Taft .. i20]- . 13shzlios| relea'nsloler oe'1a's gt 1gl15h e Bryan. 57) 68!....| 1033 5/ 316, 12| 11] 8 7| 2| 6l14) Chagn. 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In “The Lieutenant and the Cow- boy”, Messrs, Pelton & Smutzor have a romantic drama wherein western lite is most admirably pre-| sented. It hasan interesting plot. which is new, and there is enough comedy in each scene 1o keep thc’ audience in excellent humor from | the rise to the fall of the curtain. | Anyone who ever saw life ina fort on the western frontier will readily understand how realistic the scenes and incidents are. The story has to do with soldiers, cowboys and Indians, but is by no means a cheap, rampart melodrama. On the con-| trary, it is an absorbing story of real western life, true to the west, and is presented in a most admirable man- ner by an excepionally clever comp- any. There are no killings, no red fire, | | “THE COWBOY.” l no burning of powder, for “The Lieutenant and the Cowboy” depends for its great success upon first-class acting. The company carries a complete scenic equipment for each act, and it may be safely said that| his will be one of the real dramatic,’w. A. BUHHIE Is wn'i' reats of the year. It comes to the | ity Opera House, Tuesday night, November 10th. To the King’s Taste. ‘We learn in “Leaves From the Jour- nal of Sir George Smart” that when Sir George, who was chorister at the Chapel Royal, arranged the musical programme at the opening of-the new London bridge in 1831 his chief at- traction was a giee party. Immediately after the glee party had sung “God Save the King” in the tent in which the king and queen were seat- ®d two unknown persons in costume, ‘a man and his wife, stepped forward, and to Sir George's infinite disgust the man played “God Save the King” with ' his knuckles on his chin, accompanied | identified with that company. by his wife's voice. p The king called Sir George to him and asked who they were. Sir George by that time knew the name of the performers and gave it, adding that he was sorry they had intruded with- out permission. “Oh, no intrusion!” said the king. “It was charming. Tell them to per- form again.” So Sir George had to tell the per- formers that their’ number was en- cored by royal command, and to their great delight and to the chagrin of Sir George they repeated it. There are two ways of meeting a trouble—either give it no attention at all or give it a great deal of attention promptly.—Atchison Globe. Money Cheerfully Refunded. - ' 2707 ) Clothing Hbuse Popular Priced Apparel Suits and overcoats which belie their prices Here are Suits that were selling $18 for $24 and $22, at... Here are overcoats that were $18 se!ling for $24 and $22; at...... It’s a clothes buying money saving chance for you at the beginning of the season. find the best fabrics of this season in the new colors--browns, tans, grays and stipes--this You’ll e penheimer season’s production of B Kuppenheimer. You’ll find loose box effect overcoats to the close form fit- ting, military effect made to button to the chin, auto coatsin striking effects that mark the snappy dressed young men; or the more quiet coats that please the more conservative men. IT COMES The Greatest Sale of Shirts 60 dozen Lion Brand Shirts in ev- Some great ideas.in exclu- sive bias striped pleated styles, wide corded jocquards, corded madras, lat- tice weave and plain bosom. Canaries, Champaigns, grays and blues with am- ery fabric. ber stripes, all new sale these ‘$1.50 shi week only, at......... MONDAY We’ve placed on rts. for one 690 _that is certain to prosper. We direct your attention to the following | Incomparable Values on NORTHERN GROGERY GO0, Well ‘Known‘ Citizen and Popular Salesman Purchases Stock in New Wholesale House. The announcement is made today that W. A. Currie, the popualar local commercial traveler, has purchased stock in the Northern Grocery com- pany, Bemidji’s new wholesale enter- prise, and ‘he will heteafter be Mr. Currie will have exclusive charge of the sales department of the grocery company, which insures for them thejvery best service that could be obtained in that depart- ment, # Mr.- Curtie has, for the past years, been Gtraveling representative for'the Gowan-Peyton-Twohy com- pany of Duluth, and in that capa- city has made hosts of friends among the retail mierchants of the north balf of the state, all of whom have a ! high regard” for W. A. Currie and | his square dealing. The new “sales manager for the Northern Grocery company k/las be- come convinced of the future great- ness of Bemidji asa sales center; and he is cértain that the field is'a splendid one for a wholesale grocery enterprise, ashe has traveled the territory thoroughly and understands the situation as no one else does. This conviction led Mr. Currie to secure stock in the company aand ally himself toa sound institution The grocery company is to be congratulated onsecuring the services of so vaulable a man as Mr. Currie, He is very popular, locally, ard will undoubtedly give the company most excellent service. Mr. Currie hds already taken his place as stockholder and will from now on be actively identified with the Northern Grocery company, which will be pleasant news for his|| friends in Bemidji as well as other parts of northern Minnesota. County Option Defeated. Sloux Falls, S. D., Nov. 7.—County option was defeated in South Dakota by about 7,000 majority on a rather light vote. ‘The Conference. “This Is a grave matter,” began the undertaker. “Consequently we want more light thrown upon it,” remarked the lamp manufacturer. “I hope our views will all be in har- mony with the occasion,” put in the plano maker. “No pipe dreams,” admonished the plumber. “I hope whatever is sald none will take it 111,” said the doctor. “Then we’ll all be good natured and not ask cross questions,” supplemented the lawyer. ~But it was the remark of the baker which broke up the meeting. “What I want to kuow, first of all,” he declared, “is who is expected to sup- Pply the dough?’—Baltimore American. : A Swift Bird: - The . Mexican road runner has only two- short legs, but he can beat a horse, a hound and an electric carriage and give them a handicap start. Speed 18 not his only recommendation. He eats as he rums, or, rather, as the things run away with him, Snakes are the principal part of his diet, big, and little. His crop is as elastic as his legs are swift, and when he wants to | be had crape on again. Misplaced Sympathy. A sympathetic Frenchman unluckily bought an almanac that gave the dates of the world's chief events. From that day on he lived a life of mourning. Thus on April 30 he had crape on his hat. “Have you lost a relative?’ a friend asked. “Not exactly,” said he. “But today Is a sad anniversary for the French people. On April 30, 1524, the Chevalier Bayard died.” On May 2 “Still mourn- Ing Bayard?” said the friend. “No,” said he, “but don’t you remember that on May 2 a great and charming poet, Alfred de Musset, breathed his last?’ On the Gth of the same month, “Whom are you mourning for now?” “For an honest man, General Caviagnac.” On the 30th, crying terribly, he said: “Ah, Joan of Arc! On this date, in 1431, a handful of Englishmen and a miser- able bishop put the gallant maid to death.” On July 13 he took a bath in memory of the assassination of Marat. On the 16th Beranger's death gave him 5 fatal shock. On the 18th, having read of Napoleon’s departure to St. Helena, he felt better, but on the 23d the bombardment of Dieppe by the English, in 1694, confined him again to his bed. He was taken with a fever and died on the 22d, muttering, “In a month the massacre of St. Bartholo- mew!"—New York Sun. Eloquence of the Welsh. Here is a little story of an English- man in Wales: “On the comparative qualities of the English and Welsh tongues let me tell of the Welshman who saluted me in thie Welsh. I was compelled to confess ignorance. ‘Ah,’ he said, turning fluently enough to English, ‘you should learn the Welsh! My wife was English, and she can Speak conversations now quite well! “l acknowledged my shortcomirgs and admitted that I had always under- stoed the Welsh to be a remarkably cloquent tongue. ‘Yes, yes, it iss so,’ Said the native. ‘In Welsh a man can express exactly what he means. As for the English, I call it not a language at all—only a dialect. “‘You haf noted that an Englishman or a foreigner in speaking his language waves his hands and arms about to help out the meaning of the words, but a Welshman who can speak Welsh well he hass no nced to move his hands. In the Welsh he can say all that he means.’ "—Chicago News. Fife Wheat. Years ago, about a century, David Fife., a Scotchman of Otonabee, Ont., sent to a friend in Glasgow for a small bag of seed wheat to try in a cleared patch of the backwoods. The friend obtained some seed from a vessel just in from Danzig. Unfortu- nately it was a fall wheat and reached David Fife in the spring. Neverthe- less David TFife sowed it in spring. One can guess how feverishly the backwoods farmer watched for the growth of his experiment. Only three wheat heads survived till the fall, but those three wheat heads were entirely free of the rust that had ruined his nelghbor’s crops, and those three heads really represented a new variety of wheat, a fall wheat turned into a spring wheat. David Fife treasured the three heads and planted them in spring. Such was the beginning of Fife wheat in America.—Agnes C. Laut in Outing Magazine. y of the Peacock. Our favorite and much petted pea- cock, says a correspondent of the Lon- don Spectator, can be kept happy any length of time looking at his reflection in the window pane or in a looking glass. He comes in daily to tea, mak- ing no mistake about the hour, and spends much time en route in gazing at himself as he appears in the glass of the French windows by which he en- ters the room. If I am sewing and do not speak to him when he comes into the room, he will gently put his head quite close, almost touching my ring or needle, for he likes bright things, till I have to give up working and talk to him as with a small child whom one is afraid of pricking. Vai Lost Charm of the Wayside Inn, The inns of England, celebrated by Harrison and famous far and wide at the beginning of the last century, have degenerated into sad places which we visit only of necessity. Little did Stephenson think wlhen he proposed the line from Manchester to Liverpool that he would ruin the wayside inns of England and kill the art of cookery. —Blackwood’s Magazine. A Reassuring Truth. A lady on one of the ocean liners who seemed very much afraid of.ice- bergs asked the captain what would happen in case of a collision. The captain replied, “The iceberg would move right along, madam, just as if nothing had happened.” And the old lady seemed greatly relieved.—Suc- cess. Unsettled. Skinner—Good morning, ma’am. Did you ever see anything so unsettled as the weather has been lately? Mrs. Hashley—Well, there’s your board bill, Mr. Skinner.—Philadelphia Inquirer. In a Bad Way. “Here is a doctor who says you mustn’t eat when you're worried.” “But suppose you're always worried for fear you ain’t goin’ to get anything to eat?’—Cleveland Plain Dealer. Couldn’t Scream. “I was afraid you'd scream when I kissed yow.” “I didn’t dare. Mamma was in the next room and would have heard me.” —Houston Post. The power of necessity Is irresistible. b-Aeschylus. You've Met Hin. “How do you like your new neigh- bor?” - ““Oh, he's the kind of man that saves ' his longest story to tell while we are holding the front door open for him to go.” Right on the Job. prepare for a long journey he colls up a rattler or two inside of his neck and sets out across the Mexican desert: with a swiftness that makes it look| ing tour around the world. like a bunch of dust on a record bmnk-l Indignant - Citizen (to office boy)— Your confounded paper had an out- rageous attack on me this morning, and— Offics- Boy (briskly)—Yessir. How many_copies. will'you have? COMPERS MUST " DEFEND POLICY Hot Fight [;romised at Fed- eration Convention. MEETS IN DENVER MONDAY Resolutions Will Be Introduced Both Approving and Condemning the Head of the Organization for His Support of Bryan in the Recent Campaign—Believed a Vigorous Po- litical Policy Will Be Decided On. Denver, Nov. '—Politics will fur- nish the principal topics of discussion at the twenty-eighth annual conven- tion of the American Federation of Labor, which opens here Monday. It is expected by local union-labor lead- ers to be probable that the federa- tion, with its 2,000,000 members and more than 1,000,000 voters, will adopt a permanent policy through an amend- ment to its constitution. There will { be vigorous opposition from the be- ginning to the action binding the fed eration to any political policy and an effort probably will be made to bind the organization to keep entirely out of politics, both local and national, in the future. The matter will be brought up soon after the convention assembles in the form of resolutions, both approving and condemning the action of President Gompers and the members of the executive hoard in supporting the Democratic ticket in the last campaign. The fight against politics in the organization will prob- ably be led Ly socialist members, who have always opposed the introduction of political questions into the federa- tion. They will be backed by a num- { ber of Republicans, who have opposed the action of the federation leaders in the present campaign, and by many delegates who consider the recent campaign sufficient proof that the fed- eration can accomplish nothing in na tional politics. It is not thought, how- ever, by those who have kept closely informed on labor matters that the op- position will be strong enough to pre- vent the convention deciding on a vig- orous political policy. BELIEVES HE DID RIGHT. Gompers Ready to Answer Criticisms of His Course. Washington, Nov. '—Ready to an- swer before the convention attacks which have been made upon him for his course in the recent presidential campaign Samuel Gompers, president of the American Federation of Labor, has left here for Denver, where the twenty-eighth annual meeting of that organization begins next Monday. In an interview printed in the Post Mr. Gompers is quoted as saying that he is not a candidate for re-election in the sense that he seeks the office, although he would be glad to serve again if it is the will of the conven- tion. “I am, however, in the American Federation of Labor to stay,” said Mr. Gompers, “and if T do not stay as president I shall stay in the ranks. 1 believe in the course I have pursued and think I have done right. T have endeavored to give voice to the wrongs labor has endured and I have endeavored to have them righted. I was told at the beginning of the cam- paign that a gentleman high in the councils of the Republican party said he would burn brushwood behind me so fast that I should be eaten up by the fire. I knew I risked that when I began the fight in the cause of labor.” USED MAILS TO DEFRAUD Verdict of Guilty in Minneapolis Creamery Case. Minneapolis, Nov. —Guilty is the verdict of the jury in the federal court in the cases brought against James Mulhall, Felix Nathanson and Bdward McConkey, charging them with using the United States mails with intent to defraud. The jury reached its verdict after five hours’ deliberation. The men ran what was known as the Nicollet creamery in the Mill City. BECOMING MORE VIOLENT Numerous Earthquake Shocks Daily at Piauen, Germany. Plauen, Germany, Nov. T7.—The most violent earthquake ever experi- enced here terrified the inhabitants of the city at 5:40 a. m. Houses were shaken and the people fled panic stricken into the streets. The shock, which lasted for several minutes, was accompanied by sharp explosions and thunderous rumblings in the earth. Sixty or seventy earthquake shocks have been felt here daily for the past week. They are now becoming less frequent, but more violent. The tem- perature of medicinal springs in the vicinity has increased 15 degrees. e — An Unwritten Law. The smaller man bristled up. “See here,” he growled, “you have applied two unpleasant terms to me.” Then he paused and scowled and came a little closer. understand that a third term doesn’t go in this country.” ‘Whereupon the big man drew back a little and said no more.—Cleveland Plain Dealer. Located at Last. Drummer (settling bill fn - ty, sir, but what do you stuff your beds with ‘in this hotel? Landlord (proudly)—Best straw to be had in this hull county, b’gosh! Drummer—Ah} That 1s very interesting. I know now ‘Where the straw came from that broke “I just want you to|g House, Hayfield)—Pardon my curiosi-}entered the camel’s back!—Puck. T G T sy b B jurious to found i teaulting from the use of WANIS ONE CENT A WORD. HELP WANTED. WANTED—Fifty men to cut wood, $1.10 per cord. T. M. Partridge Lumber Co., Mizpah, Minn. WANTED—A good girl for general housework. Inquire 419, Minne- sota avenue, FOR SALE FOR SALE—Will sell cheap or exchange for lumber, posts or building material, one 26-horse- power advance engine, in good running order. Address The H. N. Tucker Co.; Courtnay, N. D. FOR SALE—Rubber stamps. The Pioneer will procure any kind of rubber stamp for you an shor notice. FOR SALL—$97.50 Oliver type- write/, good as rew. Will sell for $50.00. Bemidji Music House. FOR SALE —Two second-hand wood heaters and stove pipes. Inquire at Peterson’s. FOR SALE—Sixteen-inch wood, de- livered. ‘Phore 70. Frank Pogue. FOR RENT FOR RENT—One large nicely-fur- pished room with privilege of bath. 320 Mirnesota avenue. FOR RENT—Two well furnisted and well heated rooms. Inquire 609 Bemidji avenue. FOR RENT—Three front rooms, furnished or unfurnished. 1120 Beltrami avenue. FOR RENT—Furnished room, ele- gi1: acommodations. Inquire at Peterson’s. FOR RENT—Seven room house. 700 America avenue. Inquire of J. P. Omich. FOR RENT—Neatly furnisted front room. Apply to 504 Minnesota avenue. MISCELLANEOUS. 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. Harriet Campbell librarian. WANTED—Table boarders. Board by the day or week. S. E. Pan- chot, over the Model Bakery. $5 REWARD—Will be paid for return of coat taken from Mark- ham hotel Tuesday night. WANTED—Good roll top desk. Inquire at Pioneer office. Want Ads FOR RENTING A PROPERTY, SELL- ING A BUSINESS OR GCBTAINING HELP ARE BEST. Pioneer DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR, United States Indian Service, Red Lake, Minnesota, November 4th, 1903, Scaled ‘pro- posals, the envelope to be marked “Proposal for the purchase of dead and fire Kkilled timber,” and_directed to the undersigned, will be received until twelve o'clock noon. Oentral time, Monday. November 30, 1905, for the purchase of all the merchant- able dead and fire killed timber, stand- ing or fallen. on the East fractional one-halt_of SEX of Section 20, 8% of Section 21, all of Section 35, and the N3 of NWX ot Section 33, T. 151, R. 33, Red Lake Reservation. Minnesota, It is estimated that there are 1,66.000 feet of White pine and 365,- 000 feet of Norway timber to be sold from the burned area, The successful bidder will be required to comply in every particular with the regulations approved by the Presi- ent on October, 26, 1908, to govern the sale and cutting of ‘the timber on the land re- terred to and each and every bidder must enclose with his bid, as evidence of good aith, a ceritfied check on some solvent national bank equal to twenty-five per-cent of the estimated value of the timber at the price bid, payable to the Superintendent of the Red Lake Indian School, Red Lake. Minnesota. If the successful bidder fails, neglects or refuses tocomply with the terms nuch successtal bidder with e Rneniatandent of the Red Lake Indian School. the check deposited as an evidence of good faith will be forfeited to the benefit of the Indian tribe. The right to reject any and all bids is reserved. Wor Tarther information, incluidng a copy of the Tegulations and forms of the contract and Bond. apply to the undersigned THOMAS B3 Bpocial Agent in Charee, Red Lake Indian_School, THOMAS DOWNS, Speclal Agent in Charge. 5 ‘o

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