Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, March 7, 1911, Page 4

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- ROADS AGCEPT RATE DEGISION Proposed Advance Will Be Vithdrawn at Once. | MEETING IN WASHINGTON Representatives of Eastern Lines Con- fer With Interstate Commerce Com- missioners and Announce Cancella- tion of Increases—Western Roads | * Also Notify Commission of Action of Similar Nature. | ‘Washington, March 7.—At a confer- | ence between, the interstate commerce commission and important officials of the Eastern trunk lines held at the commission’s offices a definite conclu- sion was reached as to the cancella-| tion of the proposed advances in rates | in official classification territory. The precise nature of the conclusion will not be made public at present. The railroad officials later left for New York, where a general conference of representatives of the Eastern roads is to be held. In accordance with the agreement among the railways of the Western Trunk Line association, based upon the suggestion of the interstate com-| merce commission in the recently an- nounced decision in the gemeral rate cases, the Western lines have notified the commission that they will cancel the proposed advances in commodity rates and accept the ruling of the com-| mission. | Already the Chicago and Northwest: | ern has cancelled formally the ad- vances it proposed and the Chicago, Burlington and Quincy has cancedled a part of its proposed increase. Leonard News. Messrs. Frank Stevens, Andrew Nelson and Luther Thayer of Neving were in Leonard Monday on business. | Mrs. Halvor Smith is once more i about after a severe attack of typhoid t fever. Mr. and Mrs. Ei Arnold nnd Mrs. Driver and dnughter, Pearl, were cal- | lers at the home of Geo. H. French on Sunday. h Geo. French was in Bemidji lagt Wednesday to visit Mrs. French who has been sick in the hospital for the last five weeks. Mrs. French is im- proving. J. Sather is a visitor at the Stokes home this week. John Frame and family of Backus, Minn., have bought the farms form- erly owned by Mr. Parks and Mr. Newell and moved their stock and| furniture. John Buraas, formerly 6f Leonard but now a resident of Sask. Canada; is here on a visit to his daughter Mrs. H. Smith, N. B. Nelson was in Thief River Falls for a few days this week on business. 5 Miss Alpha Stevens visited her home at Bagley Wednesday returning Friday evening. Mr. John Hickey who has been on | the sick list for the last few weeks is now very much improved. Julius Larson is once more at his home near Leonard after an absence of nearly two years. an extended trip through Canada, stopping for some time in Alberta. Olof Halvorson of Alberta, Canada, is here on a visit to his nephew, Hal- vor Smith. He has been on Carl Fuller of Neving was in town | last Friday with a party.of land seekers from Iowa. The new Soo depot is now nearly completed and makes a very attrac- tive addition to the town of Leonard. An operator is pxpected soon. Mrs. Gustaf Lundfpark was a visit- or in Leonard Sunday. Miss Hilda Pa\llgln called at the French home Sav.urdny Miss Annie Drher visited at the Arnold home Saturday and Sunday of this week. We are proud ness of our stock. have what you wa it. We Are Proud Of Our Store We are proud of our reputation of carrying nothing but Quality Drugs. We are proud of the fact that we We are proud of the fact that our customers are always satisfied. The New City Drug Store of the complete- nt when you want School Girls Ready-to-Wear Dresses Girl's gingham dresses sizes 8 to 12 at $1.00, $1.50, $1.75, $2.25, $2.75 and $3.00 each. Girl's white dresses size 8 to 12, 90¢, $1.35, $1.50, $1.75 and $2.50 each, Misses colored dresses ginghams, sizes 14, (6 and 18: 50c, $1.00, $1.50, $1.75, $2.50 and $3.00 each. ‘Misses white dresses, sizes 12, 14, 16 and 18, at $1.50, $2.50 and $5.00 each. Graduafing Dresses Dainty Graduating dresses made from fin white material nicely trimmed with lace and embroidery, $7.00 $10.00, $12.00 and $15.00 each, 0’Leary-B made from percales and owser Go. | WILL DECIDE ON POLICY !'is to compel the interpretation that a | vote against the revision of these! | reciprocity. nmucms ARE Some Opposed to General Revision at Present. New Ways and Means Committee Holds Its First Meeting and Much Difference of Opjnlofi Develops—Ca- Reciprocity to Be Given Prompt Approval by the House When Congress Reassembles. ‘Washington, March 7.—The -major- ity “members of the new ways and means committee of the new Demo- cratic house of representatives held their first meeting to begin the formu- lation of a programme which may iun- clude the selections of all” standing commijttees as well as a decision in regard to the extent to which the ex-| traordinary session will go in the mat ter of revising the tariff. Chairman Un- derwood oi Alabama presided and all wof the fourteen members were. present. The committee will be compelled to listen to two factions in formulating its plans. One is radical and demands that all of the committees be nameit immediately, so that attention may be given to all kinds of legislation. This faction will favor the enactment of a bill to carry out the terms of the Ca- nadian reciprocity agreement, but will favor also the reporting of a schedule | by schedule revision of the tariff wlth at least the woolen and cotton sched- ules tacked on to the Canadian agree- ment. The purpose of this suggestion ! schedules is a vote against Canadian The other plan urged by the more conservative members of the new house, in response to requests from conservative Democrats of the senate —involves action on the Canadian agreement and the consideration of a schedule by schedule revision in the regular session next winter. Would Scale Appropriations. Those who favor this plan would have the ways and means committee study plans by which appropriations for the departments might be scaicd down without crippling the public business. . Just what will be the tarifl proce- dure hinges largely upon the commit- tee’s deliberations. Chairman Under- wood, in accord with the views of him. self, Speaker Elect Clark and other leaders of the party, has formulated a tentative programme to submit to the committee, but the other mem- bers said they could not know what plan would be followed until after the interchange of views. That the Canadian agreement wili be given prompt approval is not doubt- ed by any faction. All of the Demo- crats appear to consider the vote in the last house a committal of the Democrats to such legislation. It is expected that the mew bill ro carry out the provisions of the agree- ment will be drafted by Representa- tive Peters of Massachusetts and that it will be almost identical with the McCall bill, conforming precisely to the agreement as negotiated by the administration, i Should the committee accede to de- mands for a general revision of the tariff to be open to the world the ses- sion probably would drag through the summer and well into the fall. Chase After Car Causes Death. Chicago, March 7.—Running - six blocks after a street car, crying at the top of her voice and frantically wav- ing at the conductor to stop the car so she might reach her baby boy. cost the life of Mrs. Elizabeth Kesch, twen- ty-three years old. Her death was due to weakness of the heart caused by overexertion. ‘Historio Beauties. The famous beauties of the world are wise when they leave no portraits of themselves. Take Marguerite of Va- lois. She was an immoral, dishonor- able, criminal, scheming, unscrupulous villainess, but she was dowered with such charm that there was not a jailer or an enemy she could not charm when she tried. No, nor a woman—not even the wives of her lovers. Men came from every country, taking year long Jjourneys, only to see her and went away, after a little glimpse, saylng they had ‘“seen loveliness itself.” Then one sees her portraits. Too much fore- head, not enough eyebrow, a straight nose and expressive mouth (in one pic- ture a lovely mouth)—and that is all. Mary, queen of Scots, was very lovely —three kingdoms battled because of her beauty—and yet her pictures leave one cold. Fouche said her portrait showed every trait of the lowest crim- inal type. That was before he kmew whose picture he criticised.—London Truth. A Mighty Appetite. We eat, but we no longer stuff. The great stuffers of the past are dead. ‘What - of that seventeenth century Kentish man Nicholas Wood, for ex- ample, who would eat a whole hog at a sitting and follow it up the next day with thirty dozen pigeons? Withal this possessor of a “Kentish stomach™ was a sportsman. As proof of this there is that record of his challenge to Taylor, the water poet, to “eat at one time as much black pudding as would reach across the Thames at any place to be fixed by Taylor himself between London and Richmond.”” Well might old Fuller moralize over that appetite of Wood's. “Let us raise our grati- tude” he said, “to the goodness of God, especially when he giveth us ap- petite enough for our meat and yet meat too much for our appetite.”— SPLIT ON TARIFF | street brawl it very-often is. ‘Westminster Gazette. The most common cause of inso- Chamberlain’s = Stomach and Liver Tablets correct these disorders and enable you -to sléep. For sale by mania is disorders of the stomach. Barker’s Drug Store. “Street fight?” said the surgeon in charge. It was. Under the doctor’s directions orderlies | moved beds and patients around until the newcomers were separated the length of the ward. “In this case that precaution may no. be necessary,” he said, “but after a ‘Before we learned the peculiarities of those people it happened more than once that two men who were mortal ene- mies were brought in and laid out side by side. Each saw his advantage and was foxy enough to keep still unti both were left alone in adjoining cots;| / then they sailed into each other tooth and nail, trying to finish the job that had been interrupted in the street. Once or twice they nearly succeeded. Now chance patients with pugilistic tendencies are placed so far apart that a neighborly interchange of uppercuts is out of um qnasflom—New York Press. KNOWN VALUES .’U'BLESH (ERS _CLASSIFIED ADVERTIS- ASSOOIATION PAPERS ‘WE ARE MEMBERS Papers in all parts of /the States and Janada. Your wants supplied—anywhere any lime by the best mediums in the country. Get our momborship lists—Check pupers vou want. We Publishers Chasstaed” Rivertising Assocta- v, Buffalo, N. Y. New-Gash- WIM Rate ‘Where cash accompanies cop will publish all *“Want Ads" fo ali- cent a word per insertion. Where 1 cash does not accompany copy the regular rate of one ceut a word will be charged: SVERY HOME HAS A WANT AD For Rent--For le--Exchange ~=Help ork Wanted' --Etc.--Etc. A Friendly Tip. "My husband always is the severest critic of the gowns I wear.” “Well, judging from what I have heard, he has to go some if he is.”"— Chicago Record-Herald. | ',-Gent- a-Wurd WANT in restaurant. Testaurant. to do general work Apply Nymore FOR SALE FURNITURE SALE —One side- board, one bed, one rocker, two stoves and other thiogs to many to mention. Just as good as new. A snap if taken at once. Look it up. Inquire for A. B. Thorsnes at Crookston Reading Room from 10to 12a. m. and 2 to 5 p. m. FOR SALE—Very fine thorough-| bred Barred Plymouth Rocks eggs are now ready at $1 per set ting. For inucbator purposes{ oversix settings at $6 per hundred. Eugs will be delivered upon mail | notice under satisfactory condi-| { tions. Hollis R. Scott, two miles west of Bemidji. FOR SALE—Case stands and racks, number 6, double news stand with | rack for 8 full sized cases.- Good | as new. Sell regularly for $3:75. We have 6 of these at $1 50 each. Bemidji Pioneer Publishing Co. Bemidji, Minn. HELP WANTED “VANTEDfFO!‘ the United States | ablebodied unmarried men Prejudice, which sees what it pleases, caunot see what is plain.—Aubrey de Vere. army, Do you know that all the mindr! ailment colds are by far the most| dangerous? . It is not the cold.itself | that you need to fear, but the serious | disease that it often leads to. Most| the Enslish language. of these are known as germ diseases. | Pneumonia and consumption are! among them. Why not take Cham-| good habits, of the United States, of character and temperate formation apply to Recruiting Ave., Bemidji, Minnesofa. between ages of 18 and 35; citizens|. who can speak, read and write For in-| Officer, 4th St., and Minnesota | | FOR SALE—Lot 5 Sec. 28 T 148 R | 33, 6% Acre Island in! Turtle Lake, an ideal place for a| summer resort. Good road from | Bemidii or Turtle River. A. O Johuson, Turtle River Minn. FOR SALE—Job type and body| i type. Fontsof 6 point to 72‘| point. Prices furnished with proof sheets upon request. Ad- dress Pioneer Publishing Co., Be- | midji, Minn. berlain’s’ Cough Remedy and ciire wANTED — Competant girl for| general housework. Good wages FOR SALE—]ob cases, triple cases, | | quadrupple cases and lead and your cold while you can? For. sale‘ by Barker’s Drug Store. | 700 Minnesota Ave. Pioneer ! | slug cases, 40c each. Publishing Co. Bemidji FOR SALE—Rubber stamps. The Pioneer will procure any kind of a ‘rubber stamp for you an- short notice. FOR SALE—4 room house and lot, Dewey Ave. $500. Sarah Reeves. FOR Sale —The Launch “Del Marca,” Inguire of D. R. Burgess. FOR RENT FOR RENT—One large furnished room. Phone 177 eall 2. LOST AND FOUND FOUND— A quanity of currency on Red Lake train. Owner can have same by proving property and paying for this notice. Address R. E. L. Popuskey. MISCELLANEOUS B A SV STy WANTED—Bemidji Lady’saddress. The name of a sister of Charles White, will be of benefit to that lady. Lady resides near Bemidii and is married. Address, R. W. Hale, Littlefork, Minn. | WANTED—Job by first class barb- er. Want to locate in Bemidji by April 1st. Write or wire at once to A. G. K., 801, St. Germain St. St. Cloud, Minn. {WANTED—16, 18 or 20 ft. launch, 2to 3 hores power engine.§ Ad- dress P. B. Heffernan, State Sana- torium, Cass Co., Minn. Experienced bookkeeper and stenog- rapher desires position. Eight years experience. Apply at this office. . ' WANTED—Any one wishing scrub- bing or washing done, call at no. 2 Bazaar Block. ST~ 20705 WLt 7 SreT) et Copyright Hart Schaffner & Marx Regular prices $20, $25 $27.50; now ance at . . . . . . . . . attractive weaves. beautiful, that every one of you will New hats for Spring offer much range for choice. A new Knapp-Felt, low crown, wide rim derby, is very popular. A great line of Crofut & Knapp and Gordon soft hats; new grays, pearl, almond, brown:; new telescope and dent crowns, $3, $4 and $6. Belgian Hare hats $2. American and English . spring Caps '50c to $2.00. the best made. Final clearance of Hart Schaffner & Marx exceptional qualities in clothes; It’s the last week we offer these good clothes at an un- usually low price; we add our guar- antee of complete satisfaction. Overcoats; the best fabrics; models for men and young men; the choice of colors and weaves; size 34 to 50. Overcoats are Chesterfield; box and body fitting; Rytans; storm and collar coats; button-through over- coats; raincoats; top coats, heavy and intermediate weights; and fall weight. Suits are in fancy mixtures, silk-mixed worsteds, fancy weave, blue serge, single breasted, two, three-button styles; snappy things for young men, and causative styles - $13.75 Great preparations made in spring clothes, you’ll see at the first glance what a very unusual season this is going to be in the way of attractive new fabrics. The weavers have certainly outdone any previous efforts in The grays, browns, tans, blues are so varied and in a final clear- find the right thing. Just in; at $2. Some of our exceptional shirt modes in excep- tional styles at $1.50. Spring shoes marching in, finest. . ; Clothing House - This store is the home of Hart Schaffner & ‘Marx clothes. new Cluett shirts; Russian cords, Madras, lek and Linen, all stylee many patterns, $1.50 to $3.50. New soft cloths with french cuffs The advance moadels shapes with highly boxed toes and high arches. you’ll want this fine footwear $3.5) to $6. Suits, Auto coats; combination spring chevoits, scotch , led by Florsheim’s include corrective

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