Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, July 16, 1910, Page 4

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Special Prices| Armory Opera House For This Engagement 10c 20c Reserved Seats 30c § wi On sale at Hanson's Drug Store ORIGINAL YANKEE DOODLE STOCK CO. Introducidg the Talented Young Actress ESTER EVANS, Supported by OSCAR O'SHEA and a Competent Cast of Dramatic Artists Three Nights Commencing Monday, July MR. HARRY SUTHERLAND Presents the BIC DOUBLE OPENING BILL The Beautiful Pastoral Drama Only a Farmer’s Daughter 3 out a doubt, one of the Most Beautiful Plays Ever Written W SINCING, DANCING, MUSIGAL spEc'VAII;IBIEsDeBERGEH, BABE RUSSELL, CLYDE LONG and CURSNN SISTERS B COMPLETE DRAMATIC AND VAUDEVILLE PERF ORMANCES COMBINED. The Brightest Comedy Ever Written "The Yankee Doodle Girl The prettiest, funniest, most gorgeously costumed Interspersed with Musical Specialties and 5---BIC A CONTINUOUS PERFORMANCE play on the repertoire stage today. mounted with special scenery. , 1 8 |Special Prices : For This Engagement Oc | - 20c | - Reserved Seats 30c On sale at Hanson’s Drug Store * VAUDEVILLE ACTS---5 ) Néw:Gz;&h-Want-Rits ',-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 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—A competent girl, Mrs, George Cochran, 500 Minnesota avenue. POLITICAL ANNOUNGEMENTS Candidate for Senator. I wish to announce through the columns of your paper that I will be a candidate for the republican nomi- nation for state senator from this legislative district at the coming primary election. I will make known at some later date the platform upon which I will solicit the support of he voters of the district. A. L. Hanson. WANTED—First class lady cook at Lake Shore Hotel, WANTED—A cook at the Nicolet Hotel. FOR SALE. FOR SALE—Set of elegant furniture nearly new, designed for and now used in a ten room modern house, lease of the” building can be obtained by purchaser if desired. Easy terms or will sell for onme- half invoiced price for cash. Greatest snap ever offered. Reason for selling, ill heath. S. Akriphise, care of Pioneer. FOR SALE—10 horses, 8 runabouts, 4 two seated carriages, 1 hack, 5 carts, 1 express truck, 7 cutters, 2 double sleighs, 20 sets harness, 10 saddles, 2 light wagons. Will trade for land, Chas. Hoffman, 100 E. Fillmore Ave., St. Paul. An Adding Machine for $2.50, It is one of the neatest affairs ever invented. It’s accurate too, and with a little practice you easily develop speed. Ask to see one when you visit this office. Pion- eer Publishing company. FOR SALE—English setter pups, four months old, black and white, ticked body, pedigree furnished, Males,$15 , Females, $10° W. C. Church Des Moines, lowa, FOR SALE OR TRADE—Choice Nymore Lots; for price and par- ticulars write to —J. L. Wold, Twin Valley, Minn. FOR SALE—Acre lots in Wagner’s Third addition. Splendid acres and easy payments. F. M. Mal- zahn & Co. FOR SALE—Glass Ink wells— Sample bottle Carter’s Ink free with each 10c ink well. Pioneer office. FOR SALE—One new, large, hard- wood ice chest for nine dollars, worth fifteen. At Peterson’s. FOR SALE—3 good heaters; one medium size and two- large stoves Inquire at Pioneer office. Announcement for Coroner. I hereby announce myself as candi- date for the republican nomination for coroner of Beltrami county at the primaries to be held September 20 1910. M. E. Ibertson, Candidate for Sheriff. I hereby announce myself as candidate for the republican nomina- tion for sheriff of Beltrami county at the primaries September 20th. I respectfully solicit the support of the voters of this county. Andrew Johnson. Candidate For County Attorney. I hereby announce myself a candidate for the Republican nom- ination for the office of county attorney of Beltrami county, subject to the primaries to be held Septem- ber 20th, 1910. G. W. Campbeil. Announcement. I hereby announce myself as candidate for the Republican nomi- nation to the office of county at- torney at the primaries to be held September 20. If chosen, I will do my best to fill theoffice to your satisfaction. Chester McKusick Announcement. I hereby announce myself a can- didate for the Republican nomina- tion for the office of County Auditor of Beltrami county at the primaries to be held September 20th, 1910. R. C. Hayner. Announcement. I hereby announce myself as can- didate for the nomination for sheriff on the republican ticket at the ’pri- maries held Sept. 20, 1910. A. N. Benner. FOR SALE—16-foot launch in good condition for sale cheap if taken at once. E. H. Jerrard. FOR SALE—Household furniture. Corner Third and’ Mississippi. Longballa. FOR SALE—Cheap, and heater. Ave. FOR SALE—Kruse’s hotel, Nymore Investigate. good range Inquire at 224 Irvine FOR RENT. Two offie rooms for rent in Post Officecblock. Apply to R. H. Schumaker, First National bank. LOST and FOUND LOST OR STOLEN—Gold watch, hunting case with initial E. on cover—finder return to Pioneer office and no questions will be asked. Liberal reward. MISCELLANEOUS Turtle River summer resort, finest place in northern Minn. Two furnished Cottages for rent, only five dollars per week, including one row boat with ' each cottage. A limited number of lots still for sale, cash or on time. A, O, Johnson, Turtle River, Minn. B o s cckdintd e el WANTED—to rent modein house or flat or 2 or 3 unfurnished rooms heated. Answer by giving price and location of rooms. Address box 501—Bemidji, Minn. DICKINSON REACHES JAPAN Reception for Secretary of War at Yokohama. okohama, July 16.—Secretary of War J. M. Dickinson has reached this port. The arrival was announced by sa- lutes from the American gunboat Wheeling and the American snpply ship Supply, which were anchored in the harbor. Launches on board of which were Thomas Sammons, the American con- sul general; George T. Summerlin, second secretary of the American le- gation at Tokio; Major Harry L. Haw- thorne, the military attache; Com- mander John H. Shipley, the naval at- tache; representatives of the Japa- nese government and seventy mem- bers of the war office met the Siberia down the harbor and escorted her to her pier. At the consulate an informal recep- tion was held. IRRIGATED LAND IN DEMAND One Result of Drouth Conditions in the West. % ‘Washington, July *16.—The drouth conditions in the West are reflected in the increased demand for irrigated land, according to Director Newell of the reclamation service. The years 1907-8-9, he says, were notably wet, but the current year is a revival of the dry conditions and reports.to the reclamation service indicate that the crops in the non-rrigated territory are in very poor condition for the want of moistuye. The reclaimed sec- _tions, as a consequence, are in great demand. : S e U STRIEE APPEARS . T0 BE IMMINENT Labor Situation Acute on Penusylvania Road. NEGOTIATIONS AT AN E Special Approves Course of Officers in Re- fusing to Grant Demands for In- creased Wages Made by Conductors and’ Trainmen—Calling of Strike in Hands of Committee. Meeting of Directors Fully Philadelphia, July 16.—At a special meeting the directors of the Pennsyl- vania Railroad company adopted a resolution fully approving the course of its officers in resisting the demands of its employes. The resolution fol- lows: “Resolved, That the board does here- by approve of the position taken by its executive officers in relation to a demand for a further wage increase from certain classes of its employes and is of the opinion that such posi- tion should be firmly maintained.” A committee of the employes is now in session considering the strike ques- tion. Amiong those who attended the meeting of the labor committee was C. M. Wilson of Phillipsburg,-N. J., as- sistant president of the Brotherhood of Railroad Engineers. He said he had come to Philadelphia to discuss the situation with President Lee of the Brotherhood of Trainmen and President Garretson of the Order of Railway Conductors. When asked to comment on the action of the board of directors of the Pennsylvania rail- road, who endorsed the officials of the road in their stand, Mrs Garret- son said: “That is no more than I expected. At our meeting the action we have taken also was approved.” Favors Amicable Adjustment. Asked if he favored a strike he said, “I do not. I would rather see the matter amicably settled.” ‘With the management of the Penn- | sylvania railroad and the l€aders of the Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen and the Order of Railway Conductors “standing firm a new development in the wage dispute, which has_now reached an acute stage, was that the Western trainmen also might strike. Negotiations were broken off between the company and representatives of the trainmen and conductors employed on the lines east of Pittsburg, Buffalo and Erie, when, after two conferences between General Manager Myers of the company and the labor leaders, a settlement was not -reached. The word from the Western trainmen has strengthened the position of the la- bor leaders. Following the conferences the com- mittee representing the men empow- ered a sub-committee of six, headed by A. B. Garretson, president of the Order of Railway Conductors, and W. G. Lee, president of the Brotherhuod of Railway Trainmen, to call a strike whenever they deemed it necessary. Brewery Strike Threatened. La Crosse, Wis, July 16.—Jokn Humphreys, member of the state board of arbitration, is here endeavor- ing to settle differences between the brewery workers and their employers, which threaten to cause a general strike if not adjusted. Union men claim the brewers are dodging pro- visions of their agreement. Majority Favors a Strike. Montreal, July 16.—The result of the strike vote taken by the conduc- tors and trainmen on the Central Ver- mont, a subsidiary line of -the Grami Trunk railroad, has been announced. Ninety-eight per cent of the men have voted to strike if they do not receive the full “Eastern association wage schedule. 3 NO TRAGE FOUND OF ALLEGED MURDERER Crippen Case Attracting Unusual Attention in London, ¢ London, July 16.—While the police authorities are exhausting their re- sources to lay hands upon Dr. Hawley H, Crippen, the American, and his woman {ypist, physicians are examin- ing the mutilated body of his wife with a view to determining the man- ner in which the murder was done. The finding in the cellar of a revol- ver gave rise to the report that the vaudeville artist had been shot before the body was battered into an un- recognizable mass and. buried in quicklime in the cellar of the Crip- pen home at Hill Drop Crescent, North London. It also was reported that traces of poison had been found by the doctors. . It has been a long time since a mur- der case in England has attracted such general attention. The fact that the murdered woman was an Ameri- can, as is the husband, who is charged with the crime, has spurred the police to unusual activities. The full force of Scotland Yard, under the personal direction of Superintendent Forest, is making a thorough search for the fugitive doctor and Miss Ethel Clare Leneve that they believe will be successful. i Miss Leneve was employed by Dr. Crippen as a typist. It is stated that Mrs. Crippen objected to the presence of the young womai in her husband’s office and that his refusal to dismiss her led to frequent guarrels between husband and wife. Some time after Mrs. Crippen disappeared Miss Len- eve appeared in public with Dr. Crip- pen, who introducedsher as his wife. To acquaintances the doctor ex- plained that his former wife had left him following a quarrel and that she had subsequently died. TAKE UP SPANISH DANCES. Mrs. J. G. Douglass and Mrs. Vanderbilt Excel in New Fad, SOCIETY IN SPANISH DANCES Mrs. Vanderbilt and Mrs. Douglass Ex- cel in Latest Accomplishment. Newport, R. I, July 16—The Span- ish dance to the strains of “Panca des Rosas” is the latest fad of the cottage colony. Since the dinner at Berger’s given by Mr. and Mrs. George McFad- den of Philadélphia the Spanish dance has become the rage. . The dance was led by Mrs. Reginald Vanderbilt and Mrs, J. Gordon Doug- lass and they were the recipients of much applause for their graceful ex- ecution of the beautiful number. Nearly every one who pretends to dancing in Newport is practicing the Spanish dance and no dinner is com- plete without a call for the orchestra to play “Panca des Rosas.” Its tune- ful melody s sung in chorus while the ladies dance it. Corporation Tax Payments. ‘Washington, July 16.—Payments on account of the corporation tax are now within a million dollars of the assessment made by the bureau of in- ternal revenue. They amount to $26, 286,723, 3 phnsHE TG e Pacific Liner-Goes Ashore. Yokohama, -July 16.—The Pacific Mail line steamer Mongolia, from Hongkong for rancigco,. ran ashore off. Shimoda, the island of Hondo, at 3 T f the IS ACCUSED OF DOUBLE MURDER Wealthy Minnesota Farmer Under Arrest. TWO STEPCHILDREN DEAD Alleged to Have Given Poison in Medi- cine to Offspring of Second Wife Whom He Recently Married—Chem- Ists’ Report Declares Death Was Due to Arsenic, Traces of Which Were Found in Organs of Victims. Le Sueur, Minn,, July 16.—Martin O’Malley, a wealthy farmer of Derey- nane township, was arrested by the sheriff and lodged in the county jail, charged in the warrant with the mur- der of his stepchildren, Francis Ber- gel, aged five years, and Mary Ber- gel, aged three. A month ago O'Malley, a widower of forty, and with eight children, married Mrs. Bergel, a widow with three children, the oldest of whom was six years. Not long afterward two of the Bergel children died and were buried. A Le Sueur Center doc- i tor diagnosed their disease as spinal meningitis, but suspicion was aroused, the badies exhumed and the stomachs sent to the state university for ex- amination, ‘I'ne “chemists’ report was that the children had been poisoned by arsenic, which was found in their livers and stomachs. 'The arrest of O’'Malley fol- lowed. Offered $50 for a Wife. O’Malley’s first wife died a year ago. Since then, it is said, he fre- quently expressed a desire to be mar- ried again and offered $50 to the per- son who might find him a satisfactory helpmeet. Mrs. Mary Bergel, a Bo- hemian woman who had lived in Montgomery six or seven years and whose husband had been dead a lit- tle more than a year, was suggested. O’Malley went to see the woman and soon afterward they were married. Recently the two younger children of the wife contracted slight colds. O’Malley is said to have given them medicine. In the evening one died and the next morning death came also to the other. Suspicion was aroused as to the cause of death and the murder charge is the outcome of these misgivings. The man who pauses in ‘his honesty wants little of being a villain.~Mar- tyn. DoYou Own Any Real Estate? This is usually about the first question asked when you come to a new location. Evsryflnfl ought to own a piece of property, if only a building lot. No investment is 50 save or certain to enrich its owner within a few years as desirable real estate ina rapidly growing city. Kep Your Eys on Bemidji ichissieautite Cakes, tomes, Banks and Substantial Wholesale and Retail Establishments. The superior railroad facilities and extensive trade territory enjoyed by BEMIDJI, insure for it the attention of investors of large means and the location within the next few years of many additional lines of industries. Lot Us Show You How Easy 2,504 st <2pots 2cavirea on our MONTHLY PAYMENT PLAN at 8 per cent. wma US‘ ;o: .Efifi?o.fl‘;ff’;g‘;ifig'e‘n{‘.' Call on H.A. SIMONS at Bemidji Townsite & Improvement Co. 404.New York Life Building ST. PAUL MINNESOTA s Are You Spending | - Your Vacation | -- Away from home? If so purchase The American Bankers’ Association Travelers Cheques From the First National Bank of Bemidji . These are issued in denominations from $10 to $100 at a moderate cost = and afford the best means of carrying money. They will be cashed without charge at any bank and most hotels and busi- ness houses, either in this country or foreign countries. Il The First National Bank of Bamid_ji. Minnesota Almost a Panic Come in after supper-tonight, if you can’t get inside just take a look in at the window. We know then that you'll vyait your turn. The Cify' Drug Store | . Where Quality Prevails =~ . - ! At the 4 City Drug Store - “ This Morning . You never saw such a crowd at a sale anywhere. It just goes to show that “money talks,” and that people will come a long ways to hear it. : : - ot [ ] g -~ To-Night j

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