Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, August 29, 1910, Page 2

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want to drop my knife and fork and applaud, “Then I wandered outside and was jostled by the crowd up to Third street, which was lined with persons on either side. A tolling church bell to the right was answered by two or three to the Ileft. Night's curtain was lowering when suddenly arches of incandescent lights in all directions burst forth, only to be reinforced by biazing arch lamps and electrically illumined streets signs which automatically blinked on and off. «“As I stood and marvelled that such things could be in Min- nesota’s most northerly county, where three decades ago only the stealthy step of the Indian broke the forest stillness, the Salvation Army paraded by and began it's evening service. A crowd gather- ed, but did not seem to detract from the stream of persons who filed into two nearby theaters. ¢ As I started back to the hotel a lake boat clanged it's bell as a warning to passengers that a trip was about to start, and across the water came the hum of whirling saws. “«What time does the postoffice close? I asked of a man, ‘Itis open all night,’ was his reply. «“Well I'll be jiggered-——me for Bemidji,’ was all I could say.” Come again, stranger, and next time don’t pick out the quietest night of the week. THE BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEER PUALISNED EVEAY AFTERROON EICEPT SURDAY BY THE BEMIDJI PIONEER PUBLISHING €0, E. M. DENU. Q.E. CARSON. —_— e Entored n the Poatottic ot Bomid}, Wiasessls, a8 second class matter, _— SUBSGRIPTION---$5.00 PER YEAR 1¥ sDYANCE % That maniac -must have been chewing Battle-axe. e —— Miss Democracy- of - Minnesota has the “‘bobblest” kind of a hobble skirt. "Cow Bov” Roosevelt. can. figure on carrying every precinct-in- Chey- enne. —— Inspectors in New- York found 4,000,000 bad eggs, and that did not include the man who shot Mayor Gaynor. 1 Albert Berg certainly would be one of the big men- of the 'senate. He stands six feet; three—not count- ing the pompadour. —_— Doctors say that-every man, to be healthy, should drink daily five pints of water. Some men drink the five pints all right, but it’s not always water. A St. Paul resident has invented a flying machine. Good many of them probably will wish they had one during fair week. Oh! you you country cousin! A RARE OPPORTUNITY. It will be time and money well spent to visit St. Paul and Minne- apolis next week, for in addition to the usual state fair there are added features which will make the trip a feature of the lives of those who attend. The Conservation congress, which it should be urderstood, is open to Dog bite it! That’s the third time, and as usual that Duluth News Tri- bune “human interest” story turns out to be an ad for John H. Norton, candidate for county attorney. A REFRESHING BREATH. Verily, times change. Under the deplorable and discarded system, editors, in the same town, were sup- posed to fight. Read this from the Bemidji Sentinel: “F. A. Wilson is the new editor on the local daily....... *“Mr. Wilson comes here from St. Paul, where he has been connected with the Dispatch. e is a rhan with good newspaper train- ing, it is said, and no doubt his experience will be a valuable addition to the already able and efficient editorial force of our contemporary. “Here's welcome, Mr. Wilson, may your editorial pathway be strewn with sweet- scented roses, and your day dreams resound with adulation and homage.” least twenty-five governors, repre- sentatives of foreign nations, mem- bers of the cabinet, famous finan- ciers, railroad presidents, labor leaders, prelates, women orators, and towering above all, President Taft and the world’s most spec- tacular: figure—Theodore Roosevelt. But while this collection of in- teresting humanity is on display in the St. Paul auditorium there will be things that are also of special interest at the fair, the most fascinating to many being the pro- posed areoplave flights. Contestants will be compelled to equip their machines with eight cylinder en- gines, which means that these man- made birds will cut through the air as handily as a frightened hawk. To the person who has never seen a human being soar up a couple of hundred feet into the air and do “stunts”, such things may sound skeptical and such persons are the ones whose mouths will open widest in wonder at the sight of a Curtiss or a Wright aeroplane playing tag with the clouds. While the aeroplanes are skipping about in the sky, Barney Oldfield will be tearing around the track with his banging 90 horse power automobile, another feature which is certain to make the blood tingle. All of which recalls the small boy on the heavy end of his father’s grind-stone who, when he looked up and saw his chums trudging along the road with fish poles, said “ Gee, I wist I was goin’.” Thanks, brother; and we are par- particularly fond of that kind of roses, too. O’LAUGHLIN FINDS FRICTION. John Callan O’Laughlin, for a few months assistant Secretary of State under Roosevelt, and at present Washington correspon- dent for the Chicago Tribune deals with the ¢¢ insurgent movement ” in Minnesota in Sunday’s paper. Mr. O’Laughlin spent-last week in the Twin Cities and Duluth. He says in part: ¢ The dissatisfied Republicans have found a way in which' to ex- press their discontent—and that is through the medium of insur- gency. How effectively they have registered their protest against present leadership of the party has been shown by the widespread re- pudiation of Cannonismand Aldri- chism, and by the results of the primaries in Iowa, Kansas, Ne- braska, and California, These re- sults will be made more striking when the vote is announced in the primaries in Michigan, Wisconsin, and Minnesota. “Minnesota presents; an anomal- ous condition. - Like Michigan, -in- surgents in. Minnesota- lack a force- ful, aggressive- leader. . Curiously enough, the insurgenticandidate for the senate in Michigan was more or less a conservative -in- Washing- ton, whilé the insurgent candidate in Minnesota is displaying conservation | at home, as opposed to virulent Up-to-Date Journalism. The Cloquet Pine Knot a short time'ago did a great deal of boasting because within two hours after the death it came out with a column obituary notice of the deceased. Oh, shucks, that’s nothing. The Vidette once mentioned a birth three weeks before it happened. But we didn’t do any boasting. It was only by making the most 'strenuous apology we ever made in our life that we persuaded the angry husband not to Johnsonize us in the first round.—Carlton County- Vidette. AVIATOR FALLS INTO WATER Machine Collapses While Attempting A z Long Flight. tional Progressiveness . ~at "the 7 18 New York, Aug. 20.—While attempt- capital.: ing to fly his aeroplane from Sheeps- “Both are- criticised'in ‘the same way for different reasons, but the Minnesota candidate, Moses, E. Clapp;'*has no -opposition ‘whatever for re-election:”” head Bay track to Fort Hamilton J. C. Mars, the ‘aviator, was caught in a heady blast of wind and carried out over the lower bay, where his machine suddenly collapsed and fell into the water over a hundred feet below. Mars was picked up by the tug boat Hustler. The wrecked aeroplane was taken aboard a lighter off Craven shoal buoy. Mars was shaken up by the fall. Hotel Sells for Ten Millions, ! Chicago, Aug. 29.—Ten million dol- ilars, probably the largest amount ever involved in the sale of hotel property, o was concerned in the 'deal consum- 'Why, T just had as fine a Sun-| mated here when control of the Con- day evening dinner as I could have | gress hotel passed from Colonel Rich- . < is. . 8rd "H. “Southgate, ‘one of the best purchased.in St. Paul or Minneapolisity ) oy wotel men tn the United Statos, and at'rabout #a third'rthei cost. Ity J. Edward. Kennedy, manager . of What’s more I ate‘to the strains of |'the Hotel, and Thomas H. Joyce, sec- orchestra melodies that made” me :;‘:"Ygfljfffliwer ot‘ the corpora- HE WAS SURPRISED. He came from Minneapolis and it was his first visit to Bemidji., “I thought., Bemidji was- just-a little place,” he. said, “‘but; zoodness me; T find it to be a’city. " com— the public, will be attended by at|« | 40@9.00;" pigs, $8.75@9.40. Prefers Glass of Vine=- gar to Glass of Beer Des Moines Business Man Took Many Treatments and Kept On Drink- ing Until He Took The Neal Three Day Care. “Hon. James E. Bruce, “Atlantic, Towa. “With all of the different treat- ments that I have taken for the drink habit in the past ten years, I never for one moment lost. the desire, craving and appetite for liquor—that terrible internal gnaw- ing which only the unfortune victim of the drink habit experiences, until I took the Neal cure. Then it was taken away and since I bave had no thought of liquor. I abhor and despise the infernal stuff and would now just as soon think of taking a glass -of vinegar or poison xs a glass of beer or- whiskey. (Signed) # 2 The Neal is an internal treatment, without hypodermic injections, that cures the drink habit in three days, at the institute or in the home. No Cure, No Pay. 1t is the moral duty which every person addicted to the drink habit owes to his family, relatives, friends society and the public, also every one who is interested in or knows of one who is addicted to the drink habit, to call upon, write or phone the Neal Cure today for free copies of their guaranteed Bond and Con- tract, booklet, testimonials, endorse- ments and bank reference which will be cheerfully furnished. Address The Neal Cure Institute, 887 West Seventh, cor- ner Belknap, Superior, Wis. Take East End” car. Both ’phones. We have a Neal Iastitute in each of the following cities: Des Moines, Davenport and Sioux City, Iowa; Fargo, N. Dak., Sioux Falls, S. Dak,, Omaha, Neb., Topeka, Kans., St. Louis and Springfield, Mo., Murphysboro Ill,, Indian- apolis, Ind,, Cincinnati, Ohio., Baltimore, Md., Boston, Mass., Denver, Colo., Portland, Ore., San Francisco and Los Angeles, Calif., Houston, Tex, Albuquer- que, N. M., Buffaloand New York City, N. Y, and others in process of opening, GOMPERS VERY OPTIMISTIC Declares Labor Was Never in Better Fighting Trim. ‘Washington, Aug. 29.—“Never was the American Federation of Labor in better fighting trim than today.” This is the note sounded in the yearly Labor Day Review, which Pres- ident Gompers of the American Fed- eration of Labor has prepared for the Labor day edition of the Federa- tionist, the official organ of the Ameri- can Federation of Labor. Gompers says: “Never were the various big inter- national unions generally better pro- vided with munitions for their strug- gles; never was the movement strong- er in point of solidarity. “We believe we can read in the composite voice of the pulpit, the press and the platform the encourag- ing fact that the sentiment of the people of American has in the last few years turned towards recognition of the necessity of trades unionism.” GRAIN AND PROVISION PRICES Minneapolis Wheat. Minneapolis, Aug. 27.—Wheat— Sept., $1.11%; Dec., $1.13%; May, $1.- 17% @1.17%. On track—No. 1 hard, $1.14%; No. 1 Northern, $1.12%@1.- 13%; No. 2 Northern, $1.075% @1.11%; No. 3 Northern, $1.05%@1.09%. St. Paul Live Stock. St. Paul, Aug. 27.—Cattle—Good to choice steers, $5.50@6.00; fair to good, $4.75@6.25; good to -choice cows and heifers, $4.00@4.50; veals, $6.50@7.00. Hogs—$8.40@8.70. - Sheep—Wethers, $3.75@4.00; yearlings, ~$4.25@5.00; spring lambs, $5.50@86.35. Duluth Wheat and Flax. Duluth, Aug. 27.—Wheat—To arrive and on track—No. 1 hard, $1.14%; No. 1 Northern, $1.14; No. 2 Northern, $1.09%; Sept., $1.14; Dec., $1.15; May, $1.18. Flax—On track, in store and to arrive, $2.40; Sept., $2.49; Oct., sz- 38%; Nov., $2.38; Dec., $2.33. Chicago Grain and Provisions. Chicago, Aug. 27.—Wheat—Sept., $1.00; Dec., $1.04%; May, $1.09%. Corn—Sept., 61c; Dec., 583%c; May, 60% @6056c. Oats—Sept., 34%c; Dec., 36%c; May, 39%c. Pork—Sept., $21.- 20; Jan., $18.65. Butter—Creameries, 243, @29c; dairles, 25@27¢c. Fggs— 14% @22c. . Poultry—Turkeys, 20c; chickens, 13c; springs, 15c. Chicago Live Stock. Chicago, Aug, 27.—Cattle—Beeves, $4.90@8.40; Texas steers, $3.75@6.00; ‘Western steers, $4.25@7.50; stockers and feeders, $4.10@6.20; cows and heifers; $2.60@6.60;. caives, $6.50@9.- 00.. Hogs—Light, $8.75@9.75; mixed, $8.30@9.¥5; heavy, $8.20@9.00; rough, $8.20@8.40;" good to choice heavy, $8- Sheep— Native, $2.60@4.65; yearlings, $4. 50@ 575; lnmbs, $4.75@6.90. . TROOPS SUFFER FROM THE COLD Not Clad for Service in Rocky Mountains, |FIRES WELL IN HAND Commander of Fourteenth Infantry Believes Soldiers ‘Are No Longer Needed if Foresters ard Rangers Do Their Duty—Flames Again Be. coming Dangerous on the Yakima Indian Reservation. Washington, Aug. 29.—With the temperature below freezing and the soldiers clad in the light uniform worn In the military maneuvers from which they were suddenly withdrawn much suffering from the cold was reported to the war department from the troaps fighting forest fires in the Northern Rockies. Captain Frazier of the Fourteenth infantry, who is In command of a camp about thirteen miles north of Delton, Mont., reported, ho vever, that the snow and rain which had fallen had helped greatly in subduing the fires. The need for troops, he report- ed, was about passed, ‘provided the foresters and rangers did their duty. Five fires are now burning on the Yakima Indian reservation in Wash- ington, according to a telegram re- ceived at the Indian bureau from Su- perintendent Young. High winds and the dry condition of the forest make the situation dangerous. Superintend- ent Young wants troops sent to the scene at once. He has been able to enlist only thirteen fighters and labor- ers having horses are very scarce. Fire conditions on the Flathead res- ervation have improved considerably, according to a telegram received from Superintendent Morgan. FIRE FIGHTERS DIE IN CAVE Suffocated While Seeking Protection From Flames. Spokane, Wash.,, Aug. 29.—Walter Hess, a homeseeker who was a mem- ber of a fire fighting crew on Big creek, told how a dozen of his party were burned to death. “Thirty of us were stationed about twelve miles up Big creek, under War- den Christy,” he said. “Below us, about two miles, was another small crew, and together we were working to control a small fire. We had worked for some days in this and had the fire pretty well surrounded. Then we heard a terrible roaring up on the ledge just south of us and before we realized it the fire had cut off our es- cape. “The thirty men at the upper end of the fire all escaped, but all the poor fellows below ‘were killed. Five of the men were killed by falling trees and seven were suffocated and burned in a small cave where they sought pro- tection.” HURRIEDLY TAKEN TO LONDON Dr. Crippen and Miss Leneve Arrive at Liverpool. Liverpool, Aug. 29.—The steamer Megantic, carrying Dr. Hawley H. Crippen and Miss Ethel Leneve, brought back from Canada on a war- rant issued in connection with the supposed murder of Dr. Crippen’s wife, Belle Elmore, has arrived at this port. Great crowds gathered in the vicin- ity of the landing stage during the morning and stood waiting for hours in the hope of catching a view of Dr. Crippen, and the young woman. Inspector Dew, with his prisoners, immediately boarded the train and left for London. DOING THEIR DUTY Scores of Bemidji Readers Are Learning the Duty of the Kidneys. To filter the blood is the kldneys duty. When they fail to do this the kid- neys are sick. Backache and many kidney ills follow; Urinary trouble, diabetes. ‘Doan’s Kidnedy Pills cure them all. Bemidji people endorse our claim. Frank Engels, 415 Minnesota Ave., Bemidji, Minn., says: “I have no hesitation in publicly recommending Doan’s Kidney Pills, as I am con- fident that my testimonial will be the means of bringing relief to other sufferers. There was a dull ache in the small of my back for many months, My kidneys were much disordered, the secretiuns being un- natural and at times there was af| great deal of soreness across my loins,” At last I decided to try Doan’s Kidney Pills and procured a box at the Owl Drug Store. I be- gan using them carefully as directed and soon the pain disappeared, to- gether with other symptoma of kid- ney trouble.” For sale by all dealers, Price 50 cents, Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo New: York, sole agents for the United States. ] - Remember the name — Doan’s— It Did. “Do you know anything, doctor,” said Mrs. Fionikin, “that will put » Ilttle color into my cheeks? 1 am so dreadfully pale.” “Well, madam,” replied ‘Dr. Blunt, “perbaps if I tell you that yon bave a hole in your stocking about the size of a quarter it may bave the desired ef- fect.” Just Talking. Stella—1 hear that Lizzie 18 talking of getting married again. Bella—1 didn’t know that she had been married once yet. Stella—She isn't. I said she was talking of It again. Warned. “She told me that | might bope.” “Better look out! I've known girls to say that when they intended to ac- cept a chap.”—Puck. NOTICE OF APPLICATION —for— LIQUOR LICENSE STATE OF MINNESOTA, County of Beltrami, ss. City of Bemidil, Notice is Hereby Given, That application has been made in writing to the city council of said City of Bemidil and filed in my office, praying for license to sell intoxicating liquors for the term commencing on Sept. 1st, 1810, and terminating on Sept. 1st, 1911, by the fol- lowing persons, and at the following place, as stated in said application, respec- tively, to-wit: 8.J. LACHAPELL & LAURENCEJ. KRAMER, Co-Partners. At and in the front room, ground floor, of that certaln two-story frame bullding located on lot fourteen (14), block fourteen (14), original Townsite, Bemidjl, Minnesota., Said application will be heard and deter- mined by sald clity councfl of the city of Bemld]l at the council room in the city hail in sald city ol' Bemidji, in Beltrami county, and State of Minnesota, on Monday, the20th dBY of August. 1910, at 8 o’clock p. m., of that % ness my hand and seal of sald clty, this 16th day of August, 1910, [Seal] THOS. MALOY, City Clerk. Aug. 16 and 29, Teltleh]_)el;omng ur smale | h" YOUR Bell telephone grants immediate ac- cess to your dressmaker’s shop. 1t keeps -you informed of what progress the cutter and the seamstress are making. This is only one of the numberless ways in which the constant usefulness of the telephone is shown. It is employed in all the details of everyday life, some- times as a necessity, sometimes as a convenience, but always as a time saver. For Long Distance communications, the Bell tele- phone is indispensable. NorthwesternTelephone Exchange Company The Da.ily Pioneer 10c per Week Bemidji Manufacturers, Wholesalers and Jobhers The Following Firms Are \haroughly Reliable and Orders Sent to Them Will Be Promptly Filled at Lowest Prices The Crooksion Lumber Co. Wholesale Lumber, Lath and Building Mat>rig Melges Bros. Co. Wholesale Commission Fruit and Produce Manufacturers of Creamery Butter Model Ice Cream, Snowflake Bread and Deelishus Candies Made at The Model Wholesale Bakery, Man- facturing Confectionery and Ice Cream Factory 315 Minnesota Ave. BEMIDJI, MINN. NORTHERN GROGERY COMPANY WHULESALE GROCERS Send your Mail Orders to GEO. T, BAKER & GO0 Manufacturing Jewelers and Jobbers They are especially prepared to promptly fill all orders in their various lines of merchandise. Largest stock of Diamonds and Watches and the finest equipped work- shop in Northern Minnesota, Special order work given prompt attention. Estimates furnished. Ghe Given Hardware Co. Successors to John Fleming & Co. Wholesale and Retail Hardware Phone 57 316 Minnesota Ave. | Carbon Paper I Absolutely Smuttless Ever have trouble with the kind you’re using? Does your stenographer complain when the car- bon rubs off? Are you paying too much for the kind that satisfies her? Dakota carbon paper is guaranteed to satisfy. It is smuttless, comes packed in neat brown boxes, 100 sheets in a box, and sells for One box, 100 Sheets, for $1.75 One pkg,, 25 Sheets, for 50c¢ One doz., 12 Sheets, for 25¢ ~Ask for a sample sheet, give-it a fair trial and tell us what you think of it. - The Bemidji Pioneer Statmnerv Siore ‘VSecurIty State Bank Bul Ing - (Emythlng inr the flmo) o S —

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