Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, May 5, 1910, 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)

Hunt’s Perfect Baking Powder Is Not Made by @ Trust Price Moderate Prevents Harm to The Skin The Drying winds at this season are quite apt to roughen and discolor one’s skin. A Preventive is at hand in Webster's Rolling Gream, This preparation is really making a big hit with our entire trade. Get a jar today, and watch results. Remember the place, The City Drug Store New-Gash-Want-Rate ',-Gent-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 ceut a word will be charged. EVERY HOME HAS A WANT AD For Rent--For Sale--Exchange --Help Wanted--Work Wanted --Etc.--Etc. HELP WANTED. A AN AN AP WANTED—Competent girl for general housework. Mrs, W. N. Bowser, 823 Bemidji. WANTED—Lady stenographer of fair education. Address box 501 Bemidji Minn. WANTED—Good girl for general house work. Mrs. H. W. Bailey 605 Minnesota. Good girl for general work; $4 to $5. 910 Beltrami avenue. Phone 550, WANTED--Girl for kitchen work. Apply to Markham hotel at once. WANTED—At once dish washer. Challenge Hotel. FOR SALE. A A AN AP NR FOR SALE OR TRADE—Choice Nymore Lots; for price and pai- ticulars write to —J. L. Wold, Twin Valley, Minn. FOR SALE—About May 10th 3 good heaters, one medium size and two large stoves. Inquiue at Pioneer office. FOR SALE—Rubber stamps. The Pioneer will procure any kind of a rubber stamp for you an short notice. FOR SALE—30 foot gasoline launch with 16 H. P. engine. J.S. Paul Bemidji—R. F. D. FOR SALE—A second-hand buggy and single harness. Call 911 Minnesota Ave. e FOR SALE—My residence, corner Seventh St. and America Ave. J. S. Hanson. FOR SALE—New wagon springs. Inquire at Anderson & Johnsons. FOR SALE—7 room cottage also boat house. 912 Minnesota. FOR SALE—Household furniture, call 714 Minn. ave. _— FOR RENT. P~ PPN FOR RENT—Nicely furnished large room. 700 Bemidji, or in- quire at Peterson’s. TO RENT—2 rooms downstairs, also cookstove. 701 Irvin ave, FOR RENT—5 room flat. 404 Minn ave. _ MISCELLANEOUS B IS WANTED—Two rooms furnished for light housekeeping. Inquire at Pioneer. WHITE SLAVER TELLS OF METHODS PRACTIGED Harry Levenson, Under vlndlolmonl. Makes Confession.—Three ‘‘Stock- ades” in New York City. New York, May 5.—Harry Levenson, who is under indictment for selling young girls into lives of shame, told the district attorney yesterday that there are at least three "stockndes’f in New York, in each of which from five to ten young girls are kept ready night and day for instant delivery wherever they may be wanted. His counsel was with him during the inter- view and confirmed it last night. Little effort, said Levenson, is made to recruit women of the streets. The stockades are filled from the hosts of young girls who are unhappy at home, or who live narrow lives on their own earnings and long for leisure, good clothes, gaiety and freedom from restraint. Well dressed women make it a business to frequent cheap restaur- ants, moving picture theatres, senti- mental matinees and the bargain counters to single out such cases, first winning attention with an invi- tation to dinner, then describing the ease and pleasure of the alternative they propose. Two New Ditch Surveys for Shotley. Acting on petitions from residents of Shotley, Judge C. W. Stanton today appointed Roy K. Bliler to survey two proposed ditches in Shotley township, One of the ditches will cross the base of the peninsula between Upper and Lower Red Lakes, both ditches be- ing used for drainage purposes. A hearing of the petitions was held late Tuesday, many farmers in the Shotley district and their attor- neys, A. A. Andrews and Henry Funkley, appearing before the court. Judge Stanton raised the point that, as the proposed ditch lies wholly withind the county, the case might properly belong to the board of connty commsssioners. After a dis- cussion of this point yesterday, the judge decided the court has juris- diction, and today ordered the sur- veys made. Postoffice Examination. Instructions to hold a civil service examination to secure a clerk and a carrier Wednesday, May 18, have been received by S. A. Cutter, of the Bemidji postoffice. : The examinations will be com- menced at 9 a. m. in the Crookston Lumber company’s reading room, under the Masonic hall. All candi- dates, who may be either men or women, must fill out application blanks and send them to J. M. Shoemaker, secretary of civil service board, St. Paul, before Saturday, May 14. The necessary forms can be secured from Mr. Cutter. PHYSIGIANS, SMOKING, DISGCUSS USE OF TOBAGGO Doctors in Convention at Washington Unable to.Agree on Results of Smoking. Washington, May 5.—As smoke wreaths from their cigars chased one another through the room, heart specialists from throughout the country who are attending the con- gress of tne American physicians and surgeons gathered today to dis- cuss whether the prolonged and ex- cessive use of tobacco meant ‘sud- den death.” At the close of a lengthy debate they were far from reaching an agreement as to what was the real effect of the use of tobacco on the heart. Half Ton Sugar Beet Seed Here. A half ton of sugar beet seed, which was secured by the Bemidji Commercial club to convince the Chaska Sugar Beet company that a large supply of raw material for a factory can be raised in this vicinity has arrived and is at the store of W. G. Schroeder, president of the Beltrami County Fair of 1910. The seed will be given upon request to those farmers who have signed the contracts to plant two acres with sugar beets. The seeds will cost these farmers nothing. Caught Big Pike. A four and three.quarter pound wall-eyed pike was taken out of Lake Bemidji last evening by Fred Sultzer, a traveling man for the Red Wing|! Pineapple Red Ripe Tomatoes Crisp White Celery Eaing What You Want When You Want i That’s the Point_and you can If you buy your Groceries and Provisions of ROE & MARKUSEN it is our aim to always please you and to keep on hand for your selection everything marketable, that’s eatable What We Have That’s Good This Week Rosy Red Apples Fresh Green Onions Juicy Rhubarb Sweet Oranges Fine Crapefruit Fancy Little Red Round Yellow Bananas Strawberries Tender Lettuce Radishes Our Team Leaves for Delivery at the Following Hours Mornings--8:30, 10:00 and 11:00 Phones 206-207 Afternoons=--2:30, 4:00 and 5:15 Advertising company. This is the largest fish reported caught so far this season, Ross Reynolds having lost his muskallonge a few days ago when the engines of the “‘Yankee Doodle” were reversed in order to haul in the fish and the propellor broke. Mr. Sultzer was fishing off Second point. VOTES FOR WOMEN CAMPAIGN Suffragettes to Visit Every County in Illinois. Chicago, May 5—Political spell- binders have nothing on the Suffra- gettes of Illinois. The conversion of this state to the “votes for women” cause will be sought this summer by speeches from the back seats of auto- mobiles delivered in every county in the state. The suffragettes expect tc go from town to town making speeches and singing songs for the cause. Mrs. Catherine Waugh McCullough announced the plan at a luncheon to Miss Clara Barton given by the Social Economics club. Mother Hubbards for Convicts. Rome, Ga., May $.—All the male convicts of Floyd county have been garbed in mother hubbards by order of the county commissioners. This ac- tion was taken because of the numer- ous escapes recently. The convicts bitterly opposed the change, but the authorities found means to make them don the mother hubbards and so clothed they were put to work on the streets. —— ONLY SURVIVING CHILD. Mrs. Ossip Gabrilowitsch In- herits Mark Twain's Estate. MARK TWAIN'S WILL FILED Humorist’s Estate Descends to His Surviving Daughter. Redding, Conn., May 5.—The will of Samuel L. Clemens (Mark Twain) has been filed for probate here and leaves the entire estate to_the surviv- fng daughter, Clara Langhorn Clem- ens, wife of Ossip Gabrilowitsch. The amount of the estate is not given. The will was drawn Aug. 17, 1909, and provided that the estate should be divided into two equal parts, the income to be apportioned to the two daughters quarterly. It was provided that in case one daughter died the estate should go to the surviving daughter. Miss Jean Clemens, the sec- ond daughter, died last Christmas time. HE RECANTS HIS AFFIDAVIT Witness Contradicts Testimony of Five Years Ago. Portland, Ore, May 5—Affidavits made by S. A. D. Puter five years ago against €. A, Smith of Minneapolis were repudiated by him when he took the stand in the trial of the suit of the government against Smith and as- sociates. The suit against Smith is to secure the cancellation on the ground of fraud of patents to timber lands in Oregon, valued at $800,000. Puter, who was convicted in the original Oregon land fraud cases, made the affidavits five years ago in the presence of former President Roose- velt. In the affidavits he accused Smith of having knowledge of the frauds. Two Killed in Trolley Wreck. Springfield, 0., May 5.—Two men ‘were killed and eleven persons severe- 1y injured in a wreck on the Ohio Elec- tric railroad near Urbana. W. H. Ferguson, 'a motorman, and M. N. Roark of this city were the victims. The severely. injured include two wo- men. Don’t ‘BEMIDJI Special Discoun O French Society Honors Rostand. Paris, May 5—In the belief that Fdmund Rostand’s bird play, “Chan- tecler,” in which birds and animals assume human form, will tend to les- gen the cruelty to dumb animals the Society for the Protection of Animals in France presented the author with a diploma of honor. Income Tax Resolution Fails. Albany, N. Y., May 5.—A second at- tempt to pass the resolution favoring the federal income tax failed in the assembly. By a vote of 75 to 67 the house refused to sustain a motion to reconsider the vote by which the res- olution recently was defeated. Only ore vote was lacking. o, Northern Pacific Railway "filfl:m“fil—ll\t—' A 2. CLELARD e P A B P - WOOD! Leave your -orders for seasoned Birch, Tam- arack or Jack Pine Wood with S. P. HAYTH Telephone 11 Smari-Getchell Ice Co. We want to supply your refrigerator with good, clean, pure ice, By the month for $2.00. Telephone No. 12, TOM SMART E. R. GETCHELL Manufacturers - BAS,. GASOLINE and STEAM ENGINES, PULLEYS, HANGERS, SHAFTING, CLUTCHES and all POWER TRANSMISSION SUPPLIES, direct to the consumer. Largest Machine Shop in the West MINNEAPOLIS STEEL AND MACHINERY CO. MINNEAPOLIS, MINN. — ]| Dow.. MISS Thls One lot of -, One lot of Ch you at Ladies’. Canvas Oxfords 79c B TR T TR P PR PR PR Y FEP P PRIy ildren’s Canvas Oxfords 93e 3 25: SPECIAL 25! DISCOUNT Thursday, Friday, Saturday In Our Ready to Wear Department. Ladies Long Coats, Suits, Skirts, Raincoats, etc. the newest, neatest and best tailored garments in the city. ‘The Palmer and LaVogue made by the best men tailors and every garment Cuaranteed. Special for Three More Days We also have other items placed before remarkably low One lot of Ladies’ Shoes; worth up to $5, now $1.79 - Money Saving Event eary-Bowser Co. prices Ons lot of Ladies’ Canvas Oxfords One lot of Ladies’ Leather Oxfords, worth up to $4, now.................... $1-98 =| These are $1.19 MINNESOTA o £

Other pages from this issue: