Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, December 7, 1909, Page 5

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il e T AL ey oA TO CURE A COLD IN ONE DAY Take LAXATIVE BROMO Quinine Tablets Druggists refund money it it fails to cure. W. GROVE'S signature is on each box. 23¢ New-Cash-Want-Rats ' -Cent-a-Word Where cash’ accompanies copy we will publish all “Want . Ads"” for half- cent a word per insertion. Where cash_does not: accompany, copy, the regular rate of one ceuta word will be charged. . EVERY HOME HAS A WANT AD For Rent--For Sale--Exchange --Help Wanted--Work Wanted ==Etc.==Etc. HELP WANTED. WANTED—Good girl for general housework. Mrs. S. E. P. White, 307 Fifth street. WANTED—6 high school girls to write news items. Call at this office. | SOR SALE. | FOR SALE—Rubber stamps. The Pioneer will procure any kind of = rubber stamp for you an short notice. FOR SALE—A No. 5 Oliver and a No. 7 Smith-Premier typewriter. Inquire at Pioneer office. FOR RENT. FOR RENT—One very desirable, furnished, south side room, for one or two gentlemen. Enquire at Petsrson’s. FOR RENT—House, cheap. quire « f A. E. Webster. In- 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. Donald, librarian WANTED—To buy, 50 Ibs. of clean washed rags. Will pay 5 cents per pound. Call at or phone this office. 402 Beltrami Ave. WANTED—Place for young gentle- man to work for board and room. Inguire of Prof. Ritchie WOOD! Leave your orders for seasoned Birch, Tam- arack or Jack Pine Wood with S. P. HAYTH Telephone 11 NOTICE OF SPECIAL BLECTION of Independent School District of Bemidji. Whereas a petition has been presented to the undersigned., as Clerk of said District, requesting that a special meeting of the legal voters of said District be called at the time and place, and for the purposes hereinafter seg_forth,— Now Therefore. Notice is hereby given, that a special meeting of the le%al voters of independent School District of Bemidii will be beld at the Main Central School House located in block four (4) of the first addition to Bemidji, in the City of Bemidji, Beltrami county, Minnesota, on Friday, the 10th day of December, 1909, at seven o'clock p. m. for the purpose of voting upon the question of whether or not the school board of said Dis- trict. also known as the Board of Education of Bemidjf. shall be authorized to sell and dispose of lots one (1), two (2). three (3) and four (4) in block ten (10), Oarson's Addition te Bemidj, to the Soo Railway Company for the sum of one hundred dollars, said Board of Education to reserve in the deed conveying said property the buildicgs located on said Iots, with the right to remove the same from said property at any time within ninety days after the execution of such deed. Dated November 26th, 1909, GRAHAM M, TORRANCE. Clerk of Independent School District of Bemidjl. DeWitt’s Yo' Salve Fo~ Piles, Burns. Sores. o ARE WORKING = FULL GAPAGITY Railroads Claim to Be Do- ing Normal Business, SERIOUS IN THE WEST Food and Fuel Conditions Reported Critical in Portions of Washington and Montana—Switchmen East and South of Chicago Said to Be Anxious to Go Out in Support of Their Comrades. ) St. Paul, Dec. 7.—Railroad officials report all local yards, including Min- nesota Transfer and South St. Paul terminals, working full capacity. Officials of the Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul road in Minneapolis eject: ed a state deputy labor commissioner | from the yards, but he was instructed by the state labor commissioner to re-| turn and resume his work, regardless! of railroad injunctions. 7This deputy reports twelve men in the yards wear- ing special police badges and carry: ing arms. President Frank T. Hawley of the Switchmen’s union says that he is having trouble keeping switchmen in Chicago and east and south of that point from striking with his consent Food and fuel famine conditions are reported in some portions of Washing: ton and Montana and serious trouble is predicted unless relief arrives by freight movement. President Shepherd of the Order of Railway Conductors issues directions that members of the order cannot act as train masters, instructing nonunion switchmen, and such members are or- dered out in the Twin Cities. St, Paul merchants depending upon freight movements say their ship- ments are being delivered and they are receiving freight. All warehouses are open for freight. The Brotherhood of Railway Train- men and Switchmen’s unlon are hold- ing separate conferénces with twenty- one railroads entering Chicago, at Chicago, on standing grievances. RECEIVING FREIGHT IN EAST Northwest Roads Make No Restric: tions for Business. New York, Dec. 7.—The New York traffic officers of the Great Northern and Northern Pacific railway issued bulletins stating that they are accept: ing all freight to the Northwest with- out any restrictions whatever. Officers of the Chicago; Milwaukee, and St. Paul railway state that their whole line is clear and that freight is being accepted for all points, includ- ing St. Paul, Minneapolis and Duluth. Strikebreakers at Fargo. Fargo, N. D., Dec. 7.—Northern Pa- cific switchmen having refused to re turn to work or to accept offers ‘ot reinstatement made by local officialg thirty strikebreakers and thirty offi- cials have been imported. Freights are moving and passenger trains are running, though somewhat delayed. DIES WITH PRAYER ON LIPS Armenian Murderer Protesta Crime Was for His Country. Ossinning, N. Y., Dec. 7—"I did my duty to my country; Jesus, save me," gasped Bedros Hampartjoomian, Ar- menian “patriot,” who was electrocut- ed at Sing Sing prison for the mur- der of Hoomes Tevashanjanian, a millionaire Armenian rug importer, whom he shot to death in Union square, New York, on July 22, 1907. The condemned man walked quietly to the gallows, a cruocifix to his fage. The murder for which Hampartjoom- ian died created international interest. HMampartjoomian acted as agent of the inmer circle of an Armenian revolu- tionary society known as the Huncha- kist. The society demanded immense sums of money from Tevashanjanian. The money, the society claimed, was to have been used in the revolutionary plans to overthrow the rule of the sultan of Turkey in Armenia. The po- lice declare the society was using the Buy Your Lumber Direct Let Us Figure Your Bills ;i Douglass Lumber (On Lake Irving, Telephone 371) From the Saw Mill We can supply your wants for one house or a dozen. Headquarters for Lath and Shingles of all kinds. Company, Bemidji revolufion as a cloak for a gigantic blackmail. - ‘ - WOOLLEY 'ON- "PROHIBITION REGARDING TIMBER LANDS: Declares “Dry” Party Has Outlived I‘. Important Recommendation of Com- __missioner Dennett. ‘Washington, Dec. 7.—Important reec- ommendations . of general interest in public lands states and some of them of special interest in the Northwest are contained in the annual report of Fred Dennett of North Dakota, com- missioner of the gereral land office., Commissioner Dennett urges: the pas- sage of a:law under which Chippewa Indian lands in Minnesota on which sufficient in quantity to render it sale- sufficient in quantity to render it sal- able, shall be entered under the pro- visions of ‘the homestead law, with the requirements that the claimant pay the appraised value of the land. French Aviator Killed. Nice, France, Dec. 7—M. Fernandez, the aviator, was instantly killed fol- lowing the explosion of the motor when his aéroplane was being maneu- vered at an-estimated height of 1,650 feet. The machine crumbled and, with its pilot, dropped te earth. Jessie. It is related that when the young man who afterward became General Fremont run away with and married | Jesste, Tom Benton, the great sen- ator, made terrible threats of what he would do to the young man. He would give him roasts and bullets, and so on. To all of which Mrs. Benton quietly remarked, “You had better give him Jessie, my dear.” Usefulness. : Chicago, Dec. 7-—~John G. Woolley, former presidential candidate on the Prohibition ticket, took occasion to air Nis bellef that the “dry” party has outlived its usefulness and that the saloons can only be - driven out by the united efforts of Christian people of all parties in an address before the Bn.u@ay Bvening ‘club. “The Prohibition . party did’' mag- nificent work for a while,” said Mr. Woolley, “but the trouble got to be that there were flve times as many Prohibitionists in the Democratic party as in the Prohibition party and several more times as many of them in the Repuwofican party.” Mr. Woolley said that the fight against the saloon will ultimately be won. Incidentally he said the women could hasten the day if they were permitted to vote. How’s This? We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall’s Catarrh Cure. F.J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. We, tht undersigned, have known I, J Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe him perfectly honorable in all business transac- | tions and financially able to carry out any obligations made by his firm. WALDING. KINNAN & MARVIN, s Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, O. Hall's Oatarrh Cure is_taken internally, acting directlv upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Testimonials sent free. Price75cents per bottle. Sold by all druggists. P Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation. White Steamer You see them wherever you go and they go where- ever you see them, automobile as to quality, MILES BLOCK avenue. ‘tive gocds we' showed it. Won’t you come in? ers. unusually attractive. from $1 to $16.00. $12.00. from $3.75 to $12.00. ups. $3.00 per pair. north from the New .Lumbermen’s Leather Goo Perhaps you remémber the attrac- This season I have a much larger dis- play and better facilities for showing mention here a few of the things. Hand Bags of all styles and leath- Some of the new shapes being Good values Air Brush and Hand Painted Wall Hangers—All sizes—from §&oe. to Leather Pilow Covers—Air Brush —Hand Painted and Burnt very beau- tifully and attractive. Prices rangin g Moccasins—All sizes and styles— from the little infants to the grown- Prices ranging from 50¢ to 301 Beltrami Avenue I am now ready to demonstrate - THE WHITE STEAMER AUTOMOBILE Before you make your selection investigate this style and price. You cer- tainly will not be fair to yourself unless you fully ex- amine the real worth of this car. T.J.ANDREWS AGENT 3 Your ‘nerves must be fed with pure, N rich blood, or there will be trouble. 3 Ou r e r ves Poorly fed nerves are weak nerves’; ] and weak nerves mean nervousness, Ask your doctor if alcoholic stimulants are not neuralgia, headaches, debility. Weak often disastrous when given fo nervous merves need good food, fresh air, and people. He will tell you why. ~ §.5;A¥ezCo.. Aver’s non-alcoholic Sarsaparilla. I When You Have a Prescription You. want it accurately filled and with the purest of drugs. Ask your physician about the quality and the medicinal value of the famous ; i - PARK, DAVI8 & COMPANY DRUGCS ; used in our prescription department, which drugs.we guarantee to be of the highest standard, and handled only by competent druggists, which insures purity and accuracy. - City Drug Store E.N.FRENCH & CO., 116 Third:Street Phone 52 GHRISTMAS IS GCOMING How are vou fixed for Christmas presents? We have everything in the Christmas line for Men, Women and Children now on display. Come early and look them over. The early buyer gets the cream of the stock. We have the goods and plenty of help to show them. Don’t forget the doll we give away free. Ask about it, | LEARY-BOWSER 0., Subseribe for The Pioneer MOVED [5%] Now doing business in my new location in the Miles Block---First door National Bank Building, 301 Beltram: last year.- I can only people. ranging from 5¢ to $4. ARTHUR N. GOULD NEW LOCATION Is | Christmas Cards |Genuine Navajo One of the largest assortments of fancy Xmas ca_;rdl ever shown in this section of the country, now on dis- play. From the plain greeting cards to the imported, fancy embossed.’ Fancy Christmas Labels, Tags and Seals, Place Cards, mas Bells and Festooning. Post Gard and Photo Albums Always welcome as -Christmas gifts for children as well as grown up All styles and sizes. Indian Rugs Direct from the Navajo Indian Reservation. . The great feature of these rugs is that they are reversable and the time they wear is unlimited. Beautiful assortment from $6 to $30.00. Xmas Umbrellas Nothing safer on the gift calendar or more servicable than umbrellas. If suggestion seems good to you don’t fail to look over my line. Fountain Pens I handle the famous Parker-Lucky Curve. Every Pen guaranteed by makers for one year. Price from $1 to $7. Programs, Christ- Prices Bemidji, Minnesota.

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