Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, August 26, 1910, Page 4

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New-Cash-Want-Rats ',-Gent-a-Word Where cash accompanies will publish all “Wang Ads™ ‘f;gx? {nalf- cent a word per insertion. Where cash does not accompany copy the regular rate of one ceut a word will be uharged EVERY HOME HAS A WANT AD For Rent--For Sale--Exchange --Help nted--Work Wanted =-Etc.--Etc. HELP WANTED. A~ AN SO WANTED—Good girl for general housework. Mrs. H. W. Bailey, 605 Minnesota Ave, FOR EALE, A~ A A A NN FOR SALE—One new two-seated buggy, one spring cutter, one gar- land range, one kitchen cupboard, one dinning table, one center table, one davenport, two bedsteads and springs, one lare mirror. 404 Minnesota avenue. FOR SALE or RENT — Hotel Northern, Thief River Falls, com- prising saloon, eating and rooming departments. Apply M. A. Juneau, Blackduck, Minn. FOR SALE—One large Garland coal stuve and one Garland range. Will sell cheap if tak en at once. Call 446 for informat- on, FOR SALE—Large piano cased organ; cost $135. Will sell for $50 if taken at once; easy terms if desired. M. E. Ibertson. LOST—Gold pin, five pointed star, bearing inscription, Congrega- tional Sunday school. Retu-n to Pioneer office. FOR SALE—Rubber stamps. The Pioneer will procure any kind of a rubber stamp for you an short notice. FOR SALE—Glass Ink welis— Sample bottle Carter’s Ink free with each 10c ink well Pioneer office. FOR SALE—Buggy, single harness, baby cab, tent, Eighth and America. LOST and FOUND LOST— Pocketbook on Beltrami avenue, betwteen 9th St. and Mid- way store. Pocketbook contained receipt for money order and small amount of money. Return to Mrs. A. Lord, 903 Beltrami Ave. MISCELLANEOUS WANTED—to rent modern house or flat or 2 or 3 unfurnished rooms heated. Answer by giving price and location of rooms. Address box 501—Bemidji, Minn. COOK—Wants position in restaur- ant. Can short order, steady and reliable. Yours truly, Geo. H. Bond. Northome, Minn. I A‘. \“ Adalrack® No 3, B2 e JAMES ADAIR PITTSBURG; BA, BELTRAMI TO SHINE AT FAIR ADVERTISED LETTERS List' of advertised letters “Un- claimed” for the week ending August Secretary Mackenzie Proull of Exhibit| o 4 10, Which He Will Have in Charge. “I am confident that the exhibit of agricultural and dairy products of Beltrami county which will be shown at the coming state fair will equal in quality what will be shown by any other county in the state,” says W. R. Mackenzie, secretary of the the Northern Minnesota Develop- ment association, who is in charge of the work of collecting from among the farmers the grains, grasses, corn, vegetables, butter, etc., that will form the exhibit. “In fact,” says Mr. Mackenzie “I feel reasonably sure that the judges will be so impressed with the exhibit shown of the products raised in the northern portion of Beltrami county, along the Canadian boundary, that they will comment most favorably on the showing made by a section of the state which was for many years grossly maligned as being only ‘swamp,’ and ‘unfit for anything but the reforestation of pine trees.’ “I am daily receiving quantities of corn in the stalk that are twice the_length of a sick-foot man! Wheat that will easily go forty bushels to the acre, root crops that will create covetousness in the mind of any land man; apples, grapes, in fact, I will have a display at the fair that will open the eyes of even our own people in Beltrami county.” Mr. Mackenzie will personally superintend the shipping of the ex- hibit to St. Paul, and will be at the Beltrami county booth at all times to impart information as to the possibilities of the soil of this county and its resources. Hobson, Kisser and Hero, Coming. St. Paul, Aug. 26—(Special to the Pioneer)—Congressman Richmond P. Hobson of Alabama, who as a lieutenant of the navy gained dis- tinction by sinking the Merrimac in the entry to Santiago harbor to bottle up Cervera’s fleet during the Spanish-American war, will be one of the delegates from Alabama to the St. Paul conservation congress during the week of September 5. Senator Bankhead will head the delegation of which Representative Hobson is a member. Notice to Contractors. The city clerk of the city of Be- midji will receive bids until 8 o’clock p. m. of Sept. 5th 1910 for the construction of approximately goo feet of storm sewer and acces- sories. A certified check ona Be- midji Bank of 10 per cent of the amount of the bid must accompany each 'proposal. Specifications may be seen at office of City Engineer or City Clerk. Thos. Maloy City Clerk, M. D. Stoner City Engineer, Just as it Should Be Your Doctor is a man in whom you have the utmost confidence He writes out a prescription and you, sometimes thoughtlessly, send it to any drug store to have it filled. But— To Get the Best Results Your Prescription’ must be]accurately filled with fresh, active drugs. Confidence begets you at once when you know that the drugs m your prescription are Parke Davis drugs. And too, only expert registered pharmacists handle your preseriptions here. The Gity Drug Store Where Quality Prevails efficienc: Courses. rigistered last COLLEGE OF ST. THOMAS i Under the control and directiod of Archbishop Ireland. R atholic Tty Colicge, stusted Ta the begnmul ‘and extensive grounds_near the f the Missi44ipi. Ranked by the War Depxnmeut amon; colleges of the United States Aistinguished for diserpime ory i Combines careful mental, moral, and reli with Systematic paysical devélopem S Preparatory, High School, ollezme and Commercial Over six hundred students, representing seventeen atates, For -11unmed catalog apply to the ten military THE PRESIDENT. - Men Burton M.. George,, Chapman Mr. C. E. ‘Churchill Mr. Hugh, * Daigle George P. Engolson Mr. Engol, Ellingson Elling, Fadden Mr. William, - Glenn Mr. A. L. Gilbertson Mr. John, Lorg Mr. J. A. Millor Mr. W. T. Marshall Mr. Sid, Marshall Mr. Frank, Potter Mr. Herbert, Peterson Mr. L. G. (2) Stratton Mr. E. M. Stewart Mr. Wm. C. Sloon Mr. Ole S. | Singleton Mr. Geo. H. Schyars Mr. Hassil, Wynne Mr. Will, Wynne Mr. W. F. Women Burus Mrs, Pearl, Code Mrs. James, Condon Miss. Edna, Erickeon Mrs, A, Lyons Miss. Maggie, Hokken Miss. Emma, Smith Mrs. H. Smith Miss. Carolyn, DOZEN KILLED IN MICHIGAN WRECK Stalled Train Struck by Sece tion Following. SLEEPER IS DEMOLISHED Engine Plows Three-Quarters of the Way Through Rear Pullman, Catch- ing Eighteen Persons Asleep in the Coach—Flames Break Out Immedi- ately and Dead and Imprisoned Are Cremated. Durand, Mich., Aug. 26.—Probably a dozen persons were killed and eight injured, three probably fatally, when Grand Trunk train No. 4 crashed into the rear of train No. 14, stalled on the track two miles east.of Durand. Only one body has been positively identified, that of Mrs. Alma Wood- ward of Montreal, an invalid, who was traveling with a nurse and her son, Clifton A. Davis. One of the other bodies has been partially identified as that of the nurse, 'Miss Swinger of Belfield, N. D. Dr. Fair of Durand, surgeon of the railroad company, asserts that the charred bones so far recovered should represent about six persons. It is be- lieved that the bodies are those of four women, one child and one man. The engine of No. 4 plowed its way three-quarters of the way through the s'ceping car Nebraska, the last car in train No. 14, catching eighteen per- sons asleep in the coach. The firebox of the colliding engine then: dropped out and the death coach-in a few min- utes was blazing from end to end. Flames Destroy Wrecked Coach. As the flames ate their way through the splintered timbers of the coach the cries of the injured ceased and the odor of burning flesh deterred the pas- sengers of ‘the undamaged cars and the farmers who had hurried from their homes to assist in the work of rescue. The two trains were sections of the Montreal and Boston express from Chicago. No. 14, the first section, passed through Durand at 10:02 p. m. and No. 4 at 10:35. The engine of No. 14 was having trouble with s airbrakes and two miles out of this city Engineer Mitchell stopped the train and with his fireman, got down underneath the engine to make re- pairs. Brakeman G. R. Grahnm of Detroit was sent back to place a torpedo on the track and flag the expected sec- tion, but it came rushing on at a’speed of forty miles an hour and ripped its way through the Pullman car. The shock of the collision sent the whole standing train a little forward and Engineer Mitchell and his fireman, underneath the stalled engine, ‘were severely hurt. & The crew of No. 14, except the en- gineer and fireman, are sald to.have been hired during the recent strike and retained after the settlement. “OLD GUARD” AGGRESSIVE Leaders Welcome Rooseveélt's Warn- ing of Coming Strife. New York, Aug. 26.—Colonel Roose- velt’s statement that -if the “old guard” desires to fight ‘they will have all the fight they want,” found William J. Barnes, Jr, of Albany in an aggres- sive attitude, Mr. Barnes met State Chairman Woodruff here to talk over a plan of campaign by which they hope to. win at the coming primaries. He said: “The, opponents of :direct nomina- tions, after the contest they have been through, will not violate the principles .| for which they have been fighting at the dictation of any one, and it looks as if they will have to have the flght i VERY BOLD IN GflLORADO Sudden Drnp Brlnn- Coldest Auulu( All records ‘for coid ‘August wenthel were broken here When the thermom- eter at the government observatory stood at 38 degrees. above zero. The coldest previous August weather was on Aug. 24, 1891, when 41 degrees was recorded. At Cheyenne thé mercury reached 26 degrees. The same mark was' re: corded at Sheridan- and 24 degrees were recorded at Lander. At Lara- mie street- thermometers registered 20. Killing frosts occurred in many parts of Wyoming. Roberts to Get Old Position. ‘Waskington, Aug. 26.—George E, Roberts, president of the Commercial National bank of Chicago priee to its recent consolidation with the Conti- nental National, is to return to his old position as director .of the mint, according to a well authenticated ru- mor. It is said he will assume duty at Washington Sept. 1. SCHOOL DAYS LARGE TRACT IS RESTORED|: Much Land Eliminated From National || Forest Reserves. Wasmngton. Aug. 26.—Large tracts of land in Wyoming, Idaho and Mon- tana, which were eliminated from the national forests under the executive proclamation of July 1, 1910, have been restored to settlement and entry under orders promulgated by author: ity of the secretary of the interior. The following list becomes subject to settlement under the homestead laws Nov. 2, but not to selection until Dec. 1, 1910: . In Fremont county, Idaho, from the Targhee national forest, 54,590 acres, and from the Beaver Head national forest 8,312 acres, scattered tracts ly- ing in Madison and Beaver Head coun- tles, Montana, along the exterior boundaries of the Beaver Head na- tional forest to the amount of 98,563 acres. 5 minutes! 40 years! That means you can enloy in5 minutes the delicious flavor of Chase & Sanborn’s SEAL BRAND Coffee that represents 40 years of expert blending and roasting. ; Delivery Hours Mornings, 9-10-11 Afterdoons, 3-4-5:15 Roe & Markusen Phones 206-207 Clothing the children for school made easy and inexpensive at Many articles we are closing out at a fraction of what we paid for them, and the new snappy -up-to-date stuff this store, we are satisfied to sell at a very small profit. Bring the children in and see how nicely you can fit them out for a small cost. Children’s Shoes To commence with we want to call your attention to a line of Children’s Shoes that we have carried for years.- The factory has gone out of business so that we can not size up on the stock we have on hand so we will offer them to the school children as follows: All 51-2 to 11 Little Giant Shoes, a pair . . ... ....... All 111-2 to 2 Little Giant Shoes, a pair . . ......... $5.50 Viscolized Outing Boots, a pair . . .. .......... $6.00 Viscolized Outing Boots, a pair . . . . : $4.00 Velour Calf Button Shoes, D E and EE a palr s One Lot $3.50 Fine Shoes, narrow widths, a pair . . . . . Outing Boots Dress Goods Bargains The We buy Dress Goods direct from the mills in large quantities. closest attention. showing for Fall and Winter deserves your Goods few pieces that are left on the shelves at the end of the szason we are able and willing to stand a heavy loss on. We have about a dozen such pieces now. They are heavy woolen goods worth from $1.25 to $1.75 a yard; just the thing for Girls’ Coats and School Dresses. will close the lot at per yard........... T TR LD e (5 SN UL SRS . Munsing Underwear and Hosiery In selecting Underwear we advise you to try the Munsing; whether you select Union Suits or Two- piece garments, you’ll be satisfied. : One Lot 15 cent Children’s Hose, apair . . .. ... .......... One Lot 18 cent Children’s Hose, a pair . . . ............ ‘A big Tablet for 5¢c For the Boys and Young Men Young Men’s up-to-date Fall Suits, a Suit, $18.00, $20.00, $22.50 and $25.00 Elgin Shirts, pleated bosom, cuffs attached Fall styies, Lamphe_r Hats; new greys and browns, $1.00 $3.00 Latest styles in Trousers, Boy s Suxts, $3.00 to $5.00 $3 00 to $6 00 15 cent Copy Books for each $1.49 $4.00 $4.75 $3.00 $2.49 ° .89¢

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