Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, February 23, 1911, Page 1

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Bagley is n 801; Walker, 91 Cass Lake, Clearwater, the new Soo town, 311; Thief River Falls 3,174; Pequot, 260; Nary, 49; Little- |fork, 104 and Mctatosh 634, “ITS FINISH FIGHT,” DEGLARES MACKENLZIE| *x X X Bemidji Man Tells Twin City Nevl;plpfl'“ Senator A. L. Hanson has ‘a set Senate Cannot Compromise on |of liquor Lills in which seek to ex- |tend to the state officers some of the Reapportionment |authority which ‘“pussyfoot” John- |son exercised while doing business {under Indian treaties. One of Sena- JAGGARD FUNERAL HELD TODAY| tar Hanson’s bills makes it unlawful land a misdemeanor to keep any ikmd of malt liquor for sale in any Many View Body of Dead Justice other place other than a licensed Lying in State in Supreme Court Room at Capitol. .saloon Another bill compels the | destruction of liquor when seized, | while still a third bill provides: ‘ “That every person, firm or cor- (By P. A. Wilson) ‘Dnration who shall deliver, or cause Ploneer Legislative Bureanito be delivered, any intoxicating | St. Paul, Feb. 23.—Although only‘hquor for shipment into territory! |where the sale of same is not| [hn’ty two votes are necessary IO‘“censed or any person, firm Ol" pass a bill in the senate, friends of | corporation who shall receive from| the reapportionment measure are\a common carrizr in territory where claiming that it will have thirty-six | ithe same is not licensed any in- in that body. ‘toxxcannz liquor or any common| St. Paul and Minneapolis news. |carrier who shall deliver to any one papers quote W. R. Mackenzie 1n|in territory where the sale is not the following language: ilicensed any intoxicating liquor,| “There will be no compromise on \shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. a 1914 bill as far as northern M]n»‘The books and way bills of auy nesota is concerned. The republi- | Common carrier bandling such liquors| can platform declares for reappo.-wm“ be examined by police officer tionment to take effect by Jan. 1, for the purpose of tracing such| 1912, and the friends of reappor-|liquors to the shipper or receiver.” tionment will not stand for any| delay measure or compromise. We BAILR“A“ B".I_ HIDDLED believe the house bill will pass the ! senate without material change.”| g e | From 10 o’clock this morning until | ! 1 o’clock this afternoon the zumded‘”’“ e Compallig Wiler Gk = aftel ¢! ! e a'clocic thig Is All But Disowned By Its Author. 1: | | Bemidji body of the late Justice Jaggard, which was brought to St. Paul from | Bermuda vesterday, lay in state in| the gorgeous supreme court room at; gt Paul, Minnesota, February 23 the capitol, and was viewed by a|—Railroad companies, owners of large number of mourning friends. |elevators and others are much exer- The funeral services are being cised over a bill introduced in the held this afternoon at the residence, | senate (S. F. 185) by A. ].. Rockne Rev. F. G. Bndlong, rector of Christ|of Zumbrota, which seeks to compel | Episcopal church, conducting the|a clearance of two feet more than is| services. The honorary pallbearers | at present the case between railroad are: Governor Eberbart, Chief‘;tracks and adjoining structures. Justice Start, Justice Calvin L.| Sepator B. E. Sumberg of Ken-| Brown, P. E. Brown and David E |nedy, chairman of the senate com- Simpson of the supreme court,|mittee on railroads, has had hisat- Judges Buno, Hallam, Orr, Kelly, | ention called to the measure wmch1 Lewis and Brill of the Rams“‘ls now before his committee. He county district bench and He: he";says no action will be taken until all| P. Reller, mayor of St. Paul. The|sides have been heard. Senator active pallbearers: Ambrose Tighe, | Rockne, author of the bill says: “I A. E. Boyeson, W. H. Yardley, introduced this bill, but I did so James Pierce of Philadelphia. Mrs only by request and I did not draw | Jaggard, widcw of the late justice, | lhe measure. arrived with the body yesterday.| ‘I did not think the bl will cause She is ill and on the verge of a|any radical change and if, as is complete collapse. | said, that it would mean that rail- Both Houses adjourned today|road companies and owners of after a brief session to honor the elevators, etc. are to be put to great late Justice Jaggard, whose funeral|expense, I myself shall not favor the! was held today. |bill. Such was not my undexstnnd-}i * X % |ing of the bill. T shall give it my| My attention has been called to a | Close attention.” With this admis-| printed report to the effect clerks sion from the author, it would seem| receive pay at.the rate of $5 a day an easy task for interested parties for every commuitiee to which they to kill the bill. are assigned. Thus, if a clerk does| the clerical work for seven difierenti committees, he receives a total of! $35 a day. This assertion would be amusing were it not for the fact that ed the big $5,000,000 palace of former it reflects upoo the legislature. No| United States Semator William A. clerk receives more than $5 a day,| Clark and the adjoining homes of Ja- cob H. Schiff and George Butler,| searching for two burglars who were may have to take of, with the excep- | xnown to have broken into the Clark tion of the clerk of the committees| house. The thieves managed to get i being a ¥ 0 al away, however, their booty on_judiciary. .He Teceives #1013 package of old letters and a book of day, and earns it. | little value. R x ¥ % At a meeting of the House com-| WANTS CHINA A REPUBLIC mittee on public lands—and there were several committee meetings, although 1t was a legal holiday—the question of providing a state land commissioner was considered and|a movement for the overthrowing of | D. P. O’Neill, Frank Hopkins and|the present dynasty in China, is in W. B. Webb were named a commit-| Victoria, preaching his cause among 3 e B | the local Chinese. He advocates tee to draft a bill calling for a con-| armeq rebellion and the establishment sti utional amendment providing for| of a government, presumably a repub- B " e such a commissioner. lic pledged to reform on Western lines. ® K Dr. Sun Yat Sen has a price on his R head in China. Sixteen years ago he Official (_-ensus figures. for all “?‘ was seized by members of the Chinese towns in Minnesota are in the hands| embassy in London and dragged fore- of Julius Schmahl, secretary of state, | ibly to the embassy. It was intended A6 tain interesting informa. | ' Send him back to China, but- word andthey contain interesting informa-| o, " o 4o the British authorities tion regarding the different villages, | wno intervened and gained his release. in Beltrami county and other North- | ern Minnesota towns. The popula- | tion of Beltrami county villages ave | . 1\ ieedq 1n December Tast shows the given as follows: Nymore, 834;| population of Germany to be 64.89¢.- Baudette, 897; Spooner, 668; Black- gsé» "_;\’;e fis“rels tip 190? ;ere 1_30,64;,» duck, 942; Funkley, 59; Roosevelt, | 275, The population of Prussia, the 5 chief state of the German empire, {8 252 Tenstrike, 250; and Kelliher,294. | 40,157,573. Burglars in Clark Mansion. New York, Feb. 23.—For several hours a big squad of police surround- no matter how many committees he Dr. Sun Yat Sen Preaches His Cause in Victoria. Victoria, B. C, Feb. 23.—Dr. Sun Yat Sen, who for many years has led Population of Germany. Berlin, Feb. 23.—The official census THE GOST OF LIVING WILL BE REDUGED |1, 0. U. Notes Will Mean Big Saving in | the Parchase of Household Supplies. SOMETHING FOR NOTHING Moneys Formerly Spent for “Ads” to Be Dealt Out to the | Consumer. In another part of this paper ap- | pears an advertisement which is the !heginninl of a series of advertise- ments that means much to the | people of this community. It evolves a plan.by which the consumers will ; be paid actual cash for buying com- modities of everyday necessity. It is the greatest opportunity ever offered since the days of free wheat in Rome, and everybody will take to it like a duck takes to water be- cause it will mean an actual saving | to you every time ycu buy commodi- ties that you need every day, be- cause you will be getting something for nothing—ijust like “getting money from home.” The advertise- ments, which will appear from time to time during the next month, wili i fully explain the plan and it will not be long until the “I. O. U. Com- ing to You” phrase will be a house- | hold by-word. We koow we have now got your curiosity aroused and you are anxi- ous to know what it 1s all about and | we don’t mind giving youa litile hint on the plan in advance. The Pioneer has allied itself with a New York concern, the L. O. U. Company, who “have been working many months in an endeavor to interest lhe large producers, bakers, zrocers,l | manufactuaers of food stuffs and the necessities of life, to share their profits with the people who consume | their products rather than with the advertising agencies as they have been doing for many years. The company has been successful, and the manufacturers are going to pay to the consumers the millions of dollars, which they have hitherto paid to the advertising agencies, in the redemption of I. O. U. coupons. These coupons will be placed in the packages containing the products of the manufacturers and on each cou- pon, in plain figures, will be stated its face value. These coupons are good for their face value, not for a specified list of | magazioes, books or premiums, which you must send away for, but for anything you wish to buy right bere at home. They are good, for | instance, at this office on subscrip- | tion just the same as cash. } Enough has been said that you | may know what’s coming to you Watch for the advertisements and don’t lose any part of the plan and,| in the meantime, if you rua across | any of the coupons hang on to them! | like you. would so much cash. The people of this country owe it | tothe . O U. Company of New York, for this clever bit of planning | land they are to be congratulated | upon their efforts in workiag into the hands of the rfleople. And the! Pioneer is well pleased that it may join with them in the plan that the JOHNSON BACKING HARMON Bryan Leader in Ohio Will Suppert Governor for Presidency. Cleveland, Feb. 23.—Former Mayor Tom L. Johnson, leader of the Bryan nor Harmon for president. the Cleveland Democratic organiza: tion of United States senators and his insistence that the state Democratic platform pledges be carried out The organization has endorsed Har mon as the Jogical candidate for the. presidency ganization with the Harmon faction is taken to mean that Bryan's reported intention to fight Harmon will find no support among his one time followers. I Litchfield and be present at the in- | people of this community may be| numbered among those who get the | benefit. | e ! Democracy in Ohio, will back Gover | The governor has won Johnson and‘ tion by his attitude on the direct elec- | The - alliance of the Cleveland or- MINNESOTA SOCIETY, HANSON FUNERAL ~ TODAY Services Held at Home On Bemidji Avme'lh“!mwn. the residence, 703 Bemidji avenue, this afternoon at 2 o’clock, under was an esteemed: member. " Rev. H. F. Parshall of Cass Lake service of the Elks. A quartet com- posed of Misses Neal and Erickson and Messrs. Berg and Rood, with Mrs. A. A. Warfield as pianjste, rendered some selections appropriate to the occasion/ The floral offerings were mapy | and beautiful. - The Bemidji Fire Department and the Bemidji lodge of Elks attended the funeral in a body. Mr. Hanson was a member of both these organizations. The pall bearers are A. N. Gould, S. T. Stewart, D. Burgess, Thayer Bailey, Roy Lindsey and Earl -Geil, and they will accompany the body to Litchfield tonight, where inter- meant will be held tomorrow. The Bemidji Fire Department will escort the funeral cortege to the train tonight. Besides the relatives of both Mr and Mrs. Hanson, Simon Anderson, who is head clerk in Hanson’s Drug | Store, will accompany the body to terment. FEATURES AT THE BRINKMAN Ih:EulngJ,‘.jh' will Consist of |- Three Special Acts. | At the Brinkman this evening will | appear Mabel Barrymore, the lady of many gowns, with her educated pony, Frankie. Miss Barrymore deserves mnch} credit for the finished performer she | bas made of this pony. Mentmn‘ should also be made of Miss Bury- more’s wardrobe, which is without doubt, the most elaborate ever seen| on a Bemidji stage. Doyle and Fields, are the big| comedy noise, and no doubt will| score a big hit. Gruber and Kew, rural Hop Funeral services over the body of | the late George Hanson were held at | the auspices of Bemidji Lodge, 1052, | B. P. O. Elks, of which Mr. Hanson | conducted the empressive funeral| KOOCHICHING MEN GIVEN PRISON TERM ! be Taken to Stillwater For Larceny JUDGE HOLDS MIDNIGHT SESSION [Prisoners Plead Guilty and Were Com. mitted to Penitentiary for Nine Months. Yesterday’s midnight train from the north brought a Koochiching quartette comprising Sheriff Henry Forrer, County Attor- of officials, trict court J. H. Drummond and Joseph Lloyd, actiog deputy sheriff and two individuals charged with graud larceny, in the second degree, each of whom wished to appear in district court to enter a plea of guilty. The law requires the presence of both the ccunty attorney and clerk of court 1n such cases. In order to permit these officials to retarn to International Falls this morning, Judge Stanton, of this city, held a midnight session of courr, at which the ca-es were heard, The self-confessed criminals gave their nameseas Fred Warren and Charles Collins. . Bith were sentenced to hard labor at the peniteatiary in Stiliwater for the period of nine mouths. \MARIN GASE POSTPONED ‘W{lfBe Heard in liunicipll Court To-|" | morrow Morning. At 10 o'clock this morning the case of the city againist John Marin for having conducted a dray business in Bemidji withouta licerse was be gun, but upon a motion of Attor- ney McDonald, for the defendant, and agreed to by City Attorney Torrance, the case was continued until tomorrow morning at 10 o’clock | The poor housewife who receives | this so called “pure cream” is often doomed to disappointment when she attempts to whip it. Save this Scotch, is another big number on | this evenings bill. {trouble and buy your cream from |Schwandt & Marin. -, ./ S MABEL BARRYMORE., The lady of many swell gowns, with her educated pony; Frankie. First appearance at the Brinkman tonight. Fred Warren and Charles Collins Will oey F. J. McPartlin, clerk of the dis-| tbere will be no change in the vote WILL HOLDMEETING TONIGHT Members of Metropolitan Club to Dis- elnl’mud&nnflnh-. This evening the members of the Metropolitan club will meet in their club rooms for the purpose of dis- cus-ing the proposition of the Com- mercial club as to the coasolidation of the two clubs. A meeting was held two weeks ago by the members of the Metropolitan club, at which time the proposed plan was voted on, there being a unanimous feeling that the two clubs should consolidate, and the meeting this evening is for the purpose of voting on the matter again so as to make the plan legal. It is the opinion of several mem- bers of the Metropolitan club that ihis evening. BASKETBALL TOMORROW Big Bemidg and High School Fives To Clash. Tomorrow evening in the Armory ball team will meet the high school quiat for the city championship. The bigh school team has been vracticing hard of late and expect to at least hold their own with their larger and more experienced oppo- nents, The Big Bemidg five will be made up from the following players: Brown, C. Gould, Heffran, Erick- son, and a few others. LIGHT PLANT GOMPLETED M. D. Stoner, Bemidji Man, -Fulfils Contracts. Deerwood, Minn,, Feb. 23—Elec- tric light was turned on this week in Deerwood and its promoter, M. D, Stoner of Bemidji, president of the Cuyuna Range Light and Power Co. completed his contracts on time. Mr. Stoner will light the Cuyuna range towns of Deerwood, Cuyuna, Crosby and Ironton. Why buy 3 per cent milk when we give you 4 5-10 per cent sweet milk tor the same money? Schwandt & Marin. AGTRESS WILL SEEK DIVORCE | Mabe! Taliaferro Said to Have Tired of Married Life. Chicago, Feb. 23.—Mabel Taliaferro, | | the actress, it is rumored, is about to | start divorce proceedings against Frederick W. Thompson, one of l-he‘ proprietors of Luna Park and the Hip- | podrome in New York. Miss Taliaferro now resides in Chi- cago, while her husband lives in New York. They have been separated for some time. Miss Taliaferro VlfluBl]Vl has ret! from the stage. The wedding of the actress and the- atrical magnate took place in New York city four vears ago and until re- cently it was considered one of the| happiest of theatrical marital alli- ances. |GOULD DENIES THE REPORT Squelches Rumor That He Has Sold | Missouri Pacific Holdings. | New York, Feb. 23—t was officially denied that George Gould has offered | his Missouri Pacific stock in bulk te |the syndicate which has displaced him in control of that system. Since the fight for control of the | Missouri Pacific- was started five weeks ago it has advanced 1414 points. It was officially stated that up to the present no successor to Mr. Gould as president of the Missouri Pacific has been selected. Standing Room Prohibited. New York, Feb. 23.—By a vote of 32 Yo 21 the board of aldermen has re- fused to pass an ordinance allowing “standing room” in theaters. The law against standees was only recently en- forced by the fire authorities and theatrical interests sought the pas- sage of a new ordinance legalizing the practice within certain lmits. Japanese Treaty #avord. Washington, Feb. 23.—The senate commiitee on foreign relations has decided to recommend to the senate the reorganized Big Bemidz basket- | | ville, but Detroit, TEN CENTS PER WEEK NEW PROPOSED DRY IONE IS LARGE President Taft’s Indian Treaty Anmal- ment Plan Keeps Lid on Many Towns. BEMIDJI WILL BE IN TERRITORY Wadena, Moorhead and Barnsvill Will and Ada go Dry. Fergus Falls, Minnesota, Feb. 23 —Pre.ident Taft’s proclamation an- oulling certain Indian treaties and his recommendations to Congress that legislation be enacted re- stricting the territory aff:cted by others have teen read with much interest here, as this section of the state is in comparatively c'o-e oroximity to the Indian reservav.ims. The dry zones proposed by the President have been traced out from maps on file in the United States court here and are far more exten- sive than generally supposed. The largest is to be carved out from the territory covered by the treaty of Febraary 22, 1855 This embraces a territory beginning at the western border of the state in about the center of Norman county and extending northeastward across Norman, Mahnomen, Clearwater, Beltrami and a part of Itasca south- ward -intu Crow Wing and westward acro-s Wadena, Otter Tail and Clay to the Minnesota boundary. - In other words, the southern two- thirds of Norman couaty, all of Mahnomen expect a little point 1 the northwest corner, about half of Clearwater county, part of Itasca, part of Crow Wing, all of Cass, all of Hubbard, all of B.cker, about half of Waden>, the northern tier of “[townships in Otter Tail and about half of Clay will constitute a dry " | zone if the President’s recommenda- tions are carried out. The White Earth Reservation is largely in Becker county, and the Leech Lake reservation is largely in Cass. The Otter Tail county towns to be included in the dry zone are towns of Scambler, Duan, Gorman, Hobart, Corliss, Butler and Paddock. Perbam, which is very wet and was closed by ‘‘Pussyfoot” John- son’s meo, escapes by about three miles. Wadena city also escapes, | rogether with Moorhead and Barnes- Bemidji, Lake | Park, Frazee, Hawley, Ada, Borup, Calloway and dozens of villages will have to go dry. Another dry zone in this locality will be establisned for the benefit of the Indians in the Big Stoue country. This is comparatively small but includes the greater part of l'raverse county and a part of Big Stone. smaller Schwandt & Marin, proprietors of the Beridji Provisior Co., general store, annouace with pleasure their ability to supply their patrons wi‘h good, wholesome, sweet cow’s milk, so sweet, delicious, cream, all put in clean sanrtary bortles. OSTREM APPOINTED BOILER INSPECTOR St. Paul, Feb. 23—(Daily Pioneer Special - Wire Service )—Henry W. Ostrem of Bagley was appointed boiler inspector of this district. Governor Eberbars sent the ap pointment to the Senate to be cop- firmed today. Cream that can be whipped, and qt. bottles of sweet milk that contain 10c worth of rich cream to every bottle, direct from ‘‘The Clover Leaf Dairy Farm” every morning and the ratification’ of the new treawy with Japan. Y —— e evening, at Bemidji Provision Co., rSchmdt & Marin. HISTORICAL | l'

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