Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, May 6, 1911, Page 2

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OUR JEWELRY MANUFAC- TURING AND REPAIR DEPARTMENT is fully equipped to take care of any work in our line you wish to give us Promptly Because we have the work- men, machinery and material. Reasonable Price Because our expenses are light. We are the only manufac- turers of this class of goods in Northern Minnesota, Others who have not the same facilities cannot compete with us in quality, weight "and price. We can more fully guarantee the quality of gold and give our customers the benefit of buying at: first cost as we charge only for the gold and a small profit for for making same. Designs drawn and esti- mates given for any special order work GED. T, BAKER & GO, MANUFACTURING JEWELERS 116 Third Street Near the Lake JUDGE COWAN IS ACQUITTED End of Impeachment Trial of North Dakota Jurist. Bismarck, N. D., May 6.—Judge John F. Cowan, on trial before (he state senate sitting as a court of im- peachment, was acquitted at the hands of that body, when President Burdick announced to the respondent that le had been found not guilty upon each and every one of the charges and spe- cifications contained in the articles of impeachment presented to the senate against him Dby the house of repre- sentatives The verdict of the senate was made certain after two and a half hours of balloting, in which there was a total of seventy-nine roll calls. Only once did the prosecution even secure an even breuk with the defense, that be- ing on a charge of purchasing liquor in a drug store, when 23 voted guilty and 23 voted not guilty On every other specification the respondent was given a majority vote, while on some the vote was unanimous. HIS CONDITION IS CRITICAL Would Be Murderer Will Die, but His Wife May Recover. St. Paul, May 6.—James A. Guinn, the North St. Paul man who shot him- self after wounding his former wife, during a fit of jealous anger, probably will die as a rvesult of his injuries. At the city hospital it was said that his condition was critical and that he had shown no improvement since being brought there. The ball from a 32-caliber cartridge is thought to have penetrated his left lung. Hemorrhages have resulted and there is little chance for his recovery. Although a bullet entered Mrs. Guinn’s side at almost the same point as that of her assailant the lung is not penetrated and her chances are favor- able. She was also shot through the right hand and a third shot grazed her checi, Must Sprinkle Its Tracks. St. Paul, May 6.—Without a dissent- mg voice the state supreme court banded down an opinion holding valid the ordinance passed by the St. Paul city council in October, 1909, re- quiring the St. Paul City Railway com- pany to sprinkle its right of way in all parts of the city where it operates. Sick headache results from a dis- ordered condition of the stomach, and can be cured by the use of Chamberlain’s Stomach and Liver Tablets. Try it. For sale by Barks er’s Drug Store. DEMANDS ARE WITHDRAWN Freight Handlers Will Not Go on | " Strike at Present. i Chicago, May 6.—Peace between the freight handlers of Chicago and the railroads has been restored and the maintenance-of-way employes are | expected ‘to call off their strike in a day or two. i The ending of the freight handlers’ controversy came after a meeting of | the committee of twenty-nine rail- roads conducting the wage negotia tions for the freight handlers. The demand for an increase in wages was withdrawn. “Conditions are not right- for a strike,” said International President P. J. Flannery of the union. "“We wanted to meet the general managers | collectively, but they contended that| we should do as other railroad em | ployes—go to the individual roads This we decided to do.” FARMERS TO GET HEARING Northwest Opponents of Reciprocity Going to Washington, Washingten, May 6.—Arrangements are completed for a hearing before the senate committee on finance on the subject of Canadian reciprocity of two delegations of farmers from the Northwest. The farmers from North Dakota will be headed by former Sen- ator Henry C. Hansbrough. A delega- tion from Minnesota will make its ap- pearance before the committee Thurs- day. Senators McCumber of North Dakota and La Follette of Wisconsin are members of the committee. They will handle the witnesses in an effort to make a strong case against the Ca- nadian bill. Ex-Senator Kittredge Dead. Hot Springs, Ark., May 6.—Former ! Senator Kittredge of South Dakota is dead here after a long illness. He | was fifty years of age. | | of a box of pepper. | indigestion. POOLE WILL FIGHT CHARGE Lawyer Denies Withdrawing From Defense of Indiana Farmer, Fowler, Ind., May-6.—Elmer Barce, attorney for John W. Poole, wealthy farmer, who was bound over to the circuit court without bail on the charge of having killed Joseph Kem. || per, his farm hand, on Dec. 12, 1909, said that he had not withdrawn from the case and “would fight it all the way through.” Mrs. Poole, the prisoner’s wife; Grace Poole, the daughter, and Emory Poole, the son, who have been the leaders in the investigation, are un- der bonds as witnesses. Mrs. Poole and the daughter signed their own bonds, while thirty farmers: eagerly attached their names to Emory Poole’s bond. Pepper Chokes Child to Death. Montreal, Que.,, May 6.—His mouth full of black .pepper, two-year-old| Romeo Dombreuski choked to death here. The family was moving and everything was in confusion. Romeo and his three-year-old brother got hold In their play the older child filled his-brother’s mouth with the spice. | Is there anything in all this world ! that is of more importance to )'ouj» than’ good digestion? eaten to sustain life and must be di- gested and converted into body suffers. Chamberlain’s Tablets | are a rational and reliable cure for They increase the flow | of bile, purify the blood, strengthen' the stomach, and tone up the whole | digestive apparatus to a natural and | healthy action. er’s Drug Store. Food must be ! blood. ‘> When the digestion fails the whole:- For sale by Bark-;- Ansco Quality “Is Not a Candle to Be Hid Under a Bushel.” Itisa beacon of light on a high mountain, showing to millions the way towards finer work and higher standards in Amateur photography. The fame of The Ansco Products would surely spread even if we said nothing more about it than to put the goods into the hands of users one by one, and let them speak for themselves. But we feel that Ansco Quality deserves to be known more quickly than this method would accomplish. We are prepared to help you get better results from your Camera than you would think possible. Ansco Film and Cyko paper are for sale at The City Drug Store Mail Orders GiVen Prompt Attention R0UR CRLANCE TOR J0DATE Straw Hats For Boys, Miss dren. Also Men’ Sun Hats. Suit Cases $1.25, $1.75 $2.25 Japanese Ma es and Chil- s and Ladles tting Suit Cases $2.25, $3.00 Club Bags $1.50 to $12 | Laces, 4¢ and up Closing Out Men’s Hats | Quilts, $1.00 to $1.50 Bed Spreads, $1 to $1.75 Boys’ Negligee Shirts, | Sheets, 50¢ to 80c Pillow Slips, 14¢ to 20c Carey Royal Worchester Corsets, $1.00, $1.50, Prices, 50c¢ 25¢ Men’s Negligee Shirts o0c¢ to $175 Calicos, ¢ to 7¢ yd. Burmah Challi Silver Tissue, LaSavoie Batiste, 15¢ Floral Silk Ti ies, a¢ 25¢ ssue, 40c¢ French Voile, 25¢ Printed Flaxon, 18¢ Toile Ginghams, 15¢ Mosquito Net, 8¢ Dress Ginghams, 10¢ to $2.50, $3.00 1 Line Corsets, 50¢ 1 Doz. Toilet Soap, 30c Window Shades, 25c Sorosis Petticoats, $1 to $2.50 Tailored Shirt Waists at 98¢ Lot 1, Ladies’ Shoes, $1 Lot 2, Ladies’ Shoes, $2 ‘| Child’s Barefoot San- dals, 50¢, 60¢, 75¢, 85¢ Misses’ Barefoot San- dals, 70c to $1 Child’s Oxfords, 95¢ to $1.39 Misses’ Oxford’s, $1.35 to $1.75 Ladies’ Oxford’s, $1.75 to $3.50 Pumps, $2 to $3.50 Ladies’ Shoes, $1.50 to $3.50 18¢ Ladies’ and 35¢ THE BAZAAR STORE Next Door to S ecurity Bank 321 Beltrami Ave.

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