Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, November 3, 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)

& 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 than the 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 PUBLISHERS CLASSIFIED ADVERTIS- ING ASSOCIATION PAPERS ‘WE ARE MEMBERS Papers in all parts of the 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 Olassified Advertising Associa- i uffalo, 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 per 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—Rubber stamps. The Pioneer will procure any kind of a rubber stamp for you an short notice. 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 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. J. 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. GARTER, PRISON POET, SAILS Minnesota’s Famous Prisoner Now Visiting Mother in England. John Carter, whose aptitude as a writer of poetry secured his release from prison, where he had been sent for seven years on the charge of burglary, according to the Prison Mirror, printed by the inmates of the Stillwater penitentiary, is in Eng- land, visiting with friends and rela- tives, from whom he severed all con- nections after being arrested in this state for burglary. Carter was released by the par- don board after the intercession of Robert Underwood Johnson, of the Century Magazine, who had examined several of Carter’s poems. Recently he has been employed at a nominal salary in New York as a clarinetist in an orchestra, and ostensibly was sav- ing up enough money to return to his home, No address or names of his people is given in the Mirror and it is said that his peo- ple are ignorance of his trouble in this country. ADVERTISED LETTERS List of advertised “Letters for week ending Nov, 3 1910. Unclaim- ed. Men Clark, Oren L. Engelsen, Engel. Edmunson, L. F. Hondrom, Ole. Haugan, Thor. Kelly. Ed. Mattson, Gab. Lytle, R. S. Moylan, John. (2) Peterson, James A. Rydbere, Fred. Skinner, Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Snider, Osker. Staylen, John. Toner, D. S. Wilson, J. S. Watson, Farnham. (2) Women Berg, Miss Jennie. Fenstad, Mrs. Amanda. Hansen, Miss Bergit. Klinger, Miss Elsie. Minzghor, Mrs. Geo. Peterson, Mary. A Good Business Chance. You can make money manufactur- ing canvas gloves. F. M. Freese & Co. wish to sell their factory, located at Freese's farm half mile south of Brick Yard, as they are too far from town to secure sufficient help. Only small capital required. BROWNE JUROR SAID TO HAVE BEEN BRIBED Alleged Go Between Not Satis- fied With His Share, Chicago, Nov. 3.—The Daily News states without reservation that a true bill charging bribery of a juror in the Lee O'Neill Browne case has been voted, naming as defendant Charles E. Erbstein, one of Browne's attorneys. According to the statements given to State’s Attorney Wayman by Grant McCutcheon, one of the Browne jur- ors, and Harry T. Stacy, Stacy acted as a go between for McCutcheon and Erbstein. Stacy said he was dissatisfied with the $250 which he and McCutcheon divided as an alleged payment for Mc- Cutcheon’s vote for acquittal. He had expected that his work would put him on easy street, with a good political job, and when he was unable to secure more money he resolved to tell his story. The testimony of these witnesses is said to have been corroborated in cer- tain details by Mrs. McCutcheon, wife of the juror, and by several others. Mr. Erbstein, in a recent interview, declared the whole case was a “frame up” on the part of the state’s attor- ney, who, he said, had been trying to “get him” for a long time. CITES LINES IN FOUR STATES Witness at Rate Hearing Says Rail- roads Are Overcapitalized. Chicago, Nov. 3.—Physical valua- tions made by the state railroad com- missions of the property of railroads in Minnesota, Wisconsin, South. Da- kota and Texas show an aggregate overcapitalization of over $400,000, 000, according to a statement filed with the interstate commerce commis- sion by’ Attorney Clifford Thorne, rep- resenting the live stock interests of Iowa and other Western states. This property represents approxi- mately one-fifteenth of the railroad capitalization of the country, accord- ing to Mr. Thorne's statement, which he read at the conclusion of the West- ern freight rate hearing to offset the claims of the railroads that they are entitled to an advance in rates, CLUBWOMEN IN LIVELY RIOTING Involved in Strike Demon- strations at Chicago. STEWARD SERVES NOTICE Chief of Police Says He Is Not Im- pressed by Their Visiting Cards and Will Treat Them the Same as a Striker—Women Accuse Policemen of Brutality in Their Treatment of Garment Workers. Chicago, Nov. 3.—Demonstrations by striking garment workers continue, Several hundred congregated at West Jackson boulevard and South Green street and claim to have secured many recruits from workers going to work. Fifteen persons were at work in the small tailor shop of Cohen & Co., where a hundred strikers appeared. Many of the latter crowded into the place and persuaded the entire force -to join them. The mob then stoned the building, breaking the windows, not only of the shop, but of a cottage adjacent. A riot call was turned in and Law- rence Stazlowitz arrested, charged with disorderly conduct and inciting a riot. Clubwomen and settlement workers, who tried to conceal their identity, were reported among the leaders. A detail of police was sent to guard the shops at Harrison and Sherman streets, in the down' town district, word having been received that a demonstration was contemplated. Outbreaks at Various Places. Three outbreaks occarred at the shops of Hart, Schaffner & Marx and of Ederhelmer & Stein on the North- west Side of the city. At Milwaukee and West North avenues a mob of 300 stormed the Hart, Schaffner & Marx building with bricks and stones, breaking windows and hitting a num- ber of strikebreakers. The police charged the crowds and made four ar- rests. At Ederheimer & Stein’s plant another mob gathered and was dis- persed by the bluecoats. An hour later the latter had to repeat the job at the same place. Chief of Police Steward declared that clubwomen, settlement workers and college girls, who have donned the garb of workers, will be treated exactly like any striker. Their en- graved visiting cards, he declared, do not impress him in the least. It is said to be one of the purposes of the soclety pickets to submit to arrest in order to discredit the' police, whom they accuse of brutality, by proving their own Innocence of in- fringing the law. Young Girl Leads Strikers. .- Josle Mielewzki, a fourteen-year-old girl, led one of the most serious riots when an attack was made on the shops of Kuh, Nathan & Fischer. She and several others were arrested. The strikers had broken several windows and conquered the guard around the place when the police ar- rived. At the word “charge” from the police the girl is said to have shouted: “Get together, men! Charge the po- lice! Get the jump on ’em!” ‘The strikers responded to her call and charged the bluecoats. The po- lice used their clubs and gradually the mob scattered. Josie and a young man named Frank Brex fought to the last, continuing their resistance even in the patrol wagon. The first serious injury of the strike was suffered by Policeman Carroll Johnson. He was stabbed and beaten when, single handed, he sought to disperse a mob of 300 who were charging the shop of Fred Shau. He ‘was rescued by a patrol wagon load of his comrades, who succeeded in reach- ing him only after ten minutes’ hot work with their clubs WIFE ACCYUSED OF MURDER Hulett (Wyo.) Ranchman Found Dead in Bed From Bullet. Belle Fourche, S. D., Nov. 8.—A dis- patch from Sundance, Wyo., northeast of here, states that C. D. White, & well known resident of Hulett, was found dead in bed &t his ranch, with & bullet hole through his head. Coro- ner Richie impanneled a jury, which returned a verdict finding the wife re- sponsible for her husband’s death, Mrs. ‘White when arrested denied any com- plicity in the act. Rallway Locomotive Explodes. Billings, Mont., Nov. 3.—While run- ning at the rate of thirty miles an hour shortly after passing Newton station the engine of a Northern Pa- cific train exploded, killing Fireman Owen Jones, fatally injuring Engineer Ben Wilson and seriously scalding John Pollard and John Peterson, two men who were stealing a ride. Bloodhounds Find Child’s Body. Escanaba, Mich., Nov. 3.—The blood- hounds brought to Escanaba to find Rene Chailie, aged four years, who had been midsing for a week, were successful after many false starts, ow- ing to the snow on the ground. They at last tracked the child to the river bank and the body was:found in the stream Hunt’s Perfect Baking Powder Matkes Light Cake Not Made by Trast RTH A DING" DUKES NOT Geraldiné Farrir Poor Oplnish of Titled Forsigners. New York, Nov. 3.—Geraldine Far- rar, the American opera singer, i evi- dently not going to marry a titled foreigner, at least not a duke. The soprano was informed on her arrival on the Kaiser Wilhelm der ‘Grosse that it was reported that she would wed a duke. ¥ “Dukes?”’ .asked Miss Farrar. “I've met many Of them, and, believe, me, taking them individually and collec- tively, they are not worth & ding.” Jews Killedin Persia. Teheran, Persia, Nov. 3—The Jew- ish quarters in Shiraz, the capital of the province of Fars, have been sacked by Khasgais. Eleven Jews were killed and 5,000 are destitute. Universal Heaters Are Guaranteed to SAVE FUEL It’s in the flues and the general construction of a heater that makes it an economical stove in the use of fuel. Universal Heat- ers are built to give last- ing satisfaction. When a dealer tells you that the stove he’s trying to sell is “‘as good as the Universal” then, of course, you know he honestly thinks the Uni- versal stove is the best stove made. “I Agency for.... m @ GEO. A Postoffice Corner SMITH Famous Chocolate Dreams 50c, $1.00 and $2.00 a Box A. D. S. Drug Store Phone 304 HANSON D Bemid}i, Minn. WILLIAM BEGSLEY “BLACKSMITH Horse Shoeing and Plow Work a Specialty All the work done here is done with a Guarantee. Prompt Service and First Class Workmanship. froukth sT. NEW BUILDING semind, Misn, THOMAS BAILEY FOR SHERIFF I hereby announce myself as a candidate for Sheriff of Bel- trami County to be voted on at the general election Tuesday, November, 8th 1910, Thomas Bailey. Surprising Prices FOR MADE-TO-ORDER GLOTHES YOUR choice of scores of stunning styles in suits, coats, skirts, dresses We have and capes, and 268 fabrics. them all on sbow. The garments wil be made to your individual measure by the American Ladies Tailoring Company, Chicago. They will be made under the personal direction of their tamous designer. ments. We wiil see that you get all the man-tailored effects. We will ourselves guaran‘ee the fit,, the workmanship and materials. SEE THIS EXHIBIT This is a remarkable exhibit—these styles ano fabrics of these famous Chicago tailors.” Please don't fail to see it. If you see what you want we will quote you a surprising price—almost as low as ready-made prices. Yet the garments will be made to your order. T. BEAUDETTE 315 BELTRAMI AVE. YOU CAN'T SEE | The Vital Parts ' and it's just those parts that count most in a suit of clothes. It is the workmanship and tailoring that is put on the in- side that makes a Suit hold its shape. High Art Clothes expect. They are different: ONE PRICE - Are built to give satisfaction and give you the wear you " They have a pleasing individuality, a " cut, a style, a dash, a “class” that 1s all their own. Let us demonstrate to you that a High Art Suit will enable you to look your best. The trying on of a suit does not obligate you to buy. Come in and let us show you. And the price is right too. 'MADSON ODEGARD & CO. CLOTHIERS Our fitter will take all the measure-- 1

Other pages from this issue: