Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, November 2, 1910, Page 4

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\ & Our Diamonds Are of the finest quality mined in South Africa and cut in the United States by experts who specialize on these grades, every stone is cut mathematic- ally correct obtaining the most brilliancy. We Buy Direct from the cutters in original packets and the advanta- des gained by being in close and personal touch with the Eastern Markets and the saving of the Job- bers profit are appreciated by our customers. Our Expenses Being so light we can sell ten per cent lower thanthe stores in thelarge cities, considering grade for grade in all compari- sons. To those who are interested we earnestly ask the opportunity to prove these assertions. Selections sent to re- sponsible parties upon re- quest. Geo. T. Baker & Co. Manufacturing Jewelers 116 Third St. Near the Lake KNOWN VALUES RS CLASSIFIED ADVERTIS- ASSOCIATION PAPERS WE ARE MEMBERS Papers in all parts of tho States and Canada. Your wants supplied—anywhere any time by the best mediums in the country. Get our membership lists—Check papers you want. We do the rest. Publishers Classified Advertising Associa- tion, Buffalo, N. Y. HELP WANTED. AGENTS WANTED—Highest cash paid weekly with part expenses. Outfit free. Home territory. No experience needed. The best time to sell nursery stock is now. You can earn $15.00 to $30.00 ver week. The Hawks Nursery Co., Wauwatosa, Wis. WANTED — Woman or girl for kitchen work at State Sanatorium near Walker. Good wages. Apply Superintendent State Sanatorium, Cass Co., Minn. WANTED—Two girl for Rest. work. Good wages paid for good girls. Call at once at Ny- more Rest. WANTED—Good girl for general housework. Apply to 114 Eighth street. WANTED—Barber to open shop at Nymore. Call at Nymore Rest. FOR SALE. FOR SALE—Large piano cased organ; cost $135. Will sell for $50 if taken at once; easy terms if desired. M. E. Ibertson. FOR SALE—160 acres of good clay land three miles from Bemidji if interested call on Frank Hitchcock 714 13st. Bemidji Minn. FOR SALE—Buggy, single harness, baby cab, tent, Eighth and America. FOR SALE—Five room cottage on Beltrami Ave. 1309, Phone 446. LOST and FOUND STOLEN—A buggy from the rear of 819 Bemidji Ave. It party who took same will retarn it I will make hix a present of it after two weeks use. Notify Geo, An- derson 819 Bemidiji Ave. LOST—Small dark red purse con- taining some change and receipts with the name May Carter on them. Please return to this office. LOST—Suitcase between City Drug store and Nymore, Name on suitcase Ole Langer. Return to Pioneer Office for reward, MISCELLANEOUS WANTED—To let the cutting stamping and ranking in medium sized ranks made soft from fire all the wood on my place N. E. % Sec. 34 Town of Eckles Beltrami Co. Minn. Also the piling and burning of slashings and other rubbish that may be on the ground. Address M. ]. Lenihan La Keirlee Minn. WANTED—Man with years of ex- perience and good bank and other references wants work in store or office. Speaks German. Call or write 900 America Ave. WANTED—Situation as houskeeper in small family. Call at Mrs, Nelson’s “rooming . House, Old City Hotel Bel. Ave. WANTED—To rent a piano. 917 Minn. Ave. THE TEST OF MERIT Bemidji People Are Given Convinc- ing Proof. No better test of any article can be made than the test of time and this is particularly true of a kid- ney medicine. Doan’s Kidney Pills have stood this test and stood it well. What better proof of the merits of this remedy could you demand, than the statement of a Bemidji resident who bas been cured and has stayed cured? Read the following: Mrs. Ella Barett, 723 Irvine Ave., Bemidji, Minn., says: “Siace Doan’s Kidney Pills cured me three years ago I have been as free from kid- ney frouble if as I had never had it. My system was filled with uric poison that my kidneys failed to !remove and at times I was very nervous. I had dull pains in the small of my back and I knew that [ was in need of a kiduey medicine. In a short time after I began using Doan’s Kidney Pills, I improved and it did not take long to re- store me to good health.” For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, New VYork, sole agents for the United States. Remember the name — Doan’s— and take no other. ACCUSED OF VICLATING LAW State Game Warden After President of Great Northern. St. Paul, Nov. 2.—Louis W. Hill, president of the Great Northern rail: way, and Prince Alexander Friedrich von Hessen and his royal suite are all wanted by H. A. Rider, executive agent of the state game and fish com- mission, for killing deer out of season. While the scion of the imperial fam- ily of Germany was a guest of Mr. Hill one of the features of his entertain- ment was a deer hunt on the game preserve at Fair Oaks, the summer home of the Hills. The law provides that there shall be no shooting of game out of season and that no one shall be allowed to con- duct a game preserve without a license. The state game commission has been unable to find any record of a license being taken out by the Hills for conducting a private game pre- serve. The lessens of life are lost if they do not impress us with the necessity of making ample allowances for the im- mature conclusions of others. 86 YEAR OLD MAN BAKED IN GVEN Crutches After Discards One Treatment. MR. JESSE COCHRAN “To me no g on this earth ap- pears more culous than my re- cent experienc with the Famous Bake Oven Cure for Rheumatism,” declared Mr. Cochran, who is 86 years old. “Slowly hobbling along as best 1 could, supported by my crutches and suffering intensely with every step, 1 went to the offices of Drs. Loughney & Loughney and took my first Bake Oven treatment. To my astonish- ment I was able to walk unassisted from the treatment room. I dressed and felt like a new man and on the spot I discarded the crutches. And. best of all, I haven't used them since. 1 firmly believe that the cure will be permanent. I want all rheu- matic sufferers to read my experience and profit thereby. Hence this state- ment, “The treatment actually made me feel young again. It limbered my joints” surprisingly. It's good for the young and for the old. Signed: “Respecttully, "JESSE COCHRAN.” Drs. Loughney & Loughney have thelr offices in the Christie building, between First street and Second street, Duluth, Minn. They occupy all of the offices on the third floor. Con- sultation is free. Hours, 8 a m. to 7 p. m. Sundays, 9 to 12 only. S i INE R. F. MURPHY FUNERAL DIRECTOR AND EMBALMER Office 313 Beltraml Ave. Phone 319-2, Counsel, Issues Address. Tasted of the Fruit of the Tree of Question. Vertrees, of counsel for Secretary Bal- linger in the recent Ballinger-Pinchot controversy, has issued an address velt. He says of him: “That pansophical, self-appointed schoolmaster—Colonel Roosevelt—ap- pears to be the only American who has ever tasted of the fruit of the tree of knowledge. Apparently he has not only eaten of its fruit, but he has browsed at its twigs, chewed its bark and brewed a drink from its roots. I mention him now (and again) because he has recently spent a year in the heart of Africa, the negro’s home. Even an ordinary mortal with this ex- perience and opportunity would con- clude he knew something of the sub- Jject, and, in view of the gravity of the negro problem in the United States, give his countrymen the benefit of his observation and experiences. “Colonel Roosevelt, the extraordi- nary, of course knows it all, or certain- ly cannot doubt that he knows it all. Ordinarily, he is copious in advice, yet though fresh from his long stay in Africa he is silent, absolutely silent, as to the negro problem and the negro race. “Under the circumstances his silence is significant—perhaps more instruc- tive than if it were broken. He eulo- gizes John Brown, however. Can it be for other purposes than to have the negro think that John Brown was a hero, because his effort was for them? But he is silent as to the negro race. “Why? It is because he has come to realize that race differences are in- nate; that the negro race is not mere- ly a belated race—a race of ‘Yankees with black skins'—and shrewdly re- frains from saying so because of the and other Northern states. “He hastened to announce—By George'—that he would run for presi- dent if he could carry one Southern state. Why a Southern state, and why does not Mr. Roosevelt give the South ‘his silence.” POLIGE SWARM ON THE WAGONS press at New York. Governor of New Jersey Confers With Representatives of the Strikers and Officers of the Companies Affected. National Civic Federation Looking Into the Situation With a View to Mediation. New York, Nov. 2.—Police measures are more comprehensive than ever for the preservation of order in the strike of several thousand express company employes, which has practically tied up express traffic through this city for several days past and has been accom- panied by serious rioting. Police offi- cers and special guards swarmed about the danger points at express company offices and stables, where hundreds of strikebreakers have been gathered, and the city authorities were prepared, they said, to give wagons sent out all needed protection. Possible results were looked for from the conferences held by Gov- ernor Fort of New Jersey with repre- sentatives of the strikers in Jersey City and, later, with express com- panies’ officials in Manhattan. It was said that the New .Jersey executive made known to the companies’ offi- clals what the strikers demand. While no official statement on the result of the conference could be had it was understood all but one of the com- panies were willing to consider the chief demand of the strikers, recogni- tion of their union. ; Mitchell Working for Peace. The National Civic federation looked over the strike situation with a view of possibly bringing about an amicable agreement between the ex- pressmen and the companies. John Mitchell, a member of the ex- ecutive committee, came to this city on an early train and went at once to the offices of the federation. There “| he held a long conference with several of the.federation officers, discussing Mr. Mitchell said he- was not con- versant enough with the questions-at stake to comment at present. Companies represented at the con- ference, it was sald, were the United States, Adams, American, Wells-Fargo and National. Practically all the ex- press lines of the city are now in- volved, the ground covered by the -walkout fncluding Jersey City, Hobo- M AKES ATT AcK | politan district. Wagons of the com- panies are moved in Manhattan only, strength of the negro in Ohio, Indiana and the North his present views on the race question? There’s method in Eiforts Made to Move Ex- ATTEMPT AT SETTLEMENT ken and other terrfwry in the metro- through specially guard- 1 streets and avenues. designated by the police. It was reported that the department store drivers would be called out in aid of the expressmen. Attorney Vertrees, Ballinger|cook WRITES T0 WELLMAN Explorer Lauds Aeronaut for Attempt to Cross Atlantic. New York, Nov. 2—A letter of con- gratulation upon his attempted flight BECOMES VERY SARCAS’"C across the Atlantic ocean in a dirigi ble balloon has been received by Wal Cook, the discredited Polar explorer Declares Ex-President Appears to Be| The letter was sentto a London news , ~the Only American Who Has Ever | paper man with instructions to for ward it to Wellman. “Kindly send him my heartiest con Knowledge—Asks Why the Colonel | gratulations,” the letter said, “for hit Has Nothing to Say on the Negro| wonderful initial success. If he crosses the Atlantic he will have gained an object of greater use to mankind than Nashville, Tenn,, Nov. 2—John J.|the conquest of the pole.” Quake Felt by Vessels at Sea. Kingston, Nov. 2.--The captain of through the state Democratic commit- | the German steamer Albingia reports tee on the Tennessee political situa-|that at 1 o’clock Monday morning tion, in the course of which he makes | While approaching the southern coast a savage attack on ex-President Roose- | Of Jamaica, a severe earthquake was experienced. The sea was greatly agi- tated and the vessel rocked violently. Much alarm was caused among the passengers. A copvrionT |1 ter Wellman from Dr. Frederick A | our Ice service like our ice, gives universal satisfaction. Every custo- mer is pleased at receivirg each day -a full weight of hard, clean and clear wa'er in the solid state. Itis all important 10 have. what can be used for Sdmmer drinks without hesitation. Ou- sup- ply was harvested from an uncontaminated body of water. -~ SMART & GETCHELL Phone 12. oTTO BROSE Salesman for the well knovv}n Northwestern Nursery Co. Boone, lowa, and R. F. Gunson & Co. Rochester, N. Trimming Trees and Shrubs and Doing All Kinds of Gardening References—Mrs. M. A. Spooner Mrs. P. J. Russell Y, Seedsmen he: JUDGE C. W. STANTON Non-Partisan Candidate for Judge of Fifteenth Judicial District LIEGLER & ZIEGLER CO. “THE LAND MEN" INSURANCE FIRE = LIFE = ACCIDENT Real Estate in All Its Branches FARM LANDS BOUGHT AND SOLD Go to Them for Qnick Action Office--Schroeder Building quality. We Sell Clothes Under A Nationally-Known Trade-Mark OME STORES have their own label sewed in the clothes they sell, which means that they handle no particular line, but just ordinary clothes. It offers a possibility of varying quality. We handle a line " branded with a nationally-known trade-mark. A manufacturer, with a national reputation to maintain, must jealously guard the quality of goods on which he puts his trade-mark. Our line of trade-marked clothes is your protection against any variafion of high Adler’s Collegiafi Clothes the line we feature, has a nation-wide reputation as style and quality clothes. The Collegian trade-mark on every garment makes these clothes of known high quality, certain to be up to date and correct in style, and to give good service and safisfaction. Our assortment for fall and winter, 1910-11, includes a wide variety of shades and fabrics, embracing styles to please men of all ages and preferences. Let us show you this line of superior trade-marked clothing. We take great pains to fit you to perfection. Suits and overcoats $15.00 to $35.00. at length the strike troubles. = O'Leary-Bowser Go. _ Bemidji, Minn.. £l

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