Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, February 3, 1912, Page 2

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" P ~ .ers’ boys. _THE BEMIDII DAILY PIONEER Puhu-hed ovo afternoon ymidji Ploneer P\l ||hlnl flfl CARSON. . X DENU. ¥. A. WILSON, Editor. In the City of Bemldjl the papers are delivered by carrier. Where the deliv- ory ls irregular pledse make immediate complaint to this office. Telephone 81, Gt Pot fown subseribers will eonter. favor if they will report when they Jo not get their papers promptly. All papers are continued until an ex- plicit ‘order to discontinue 1o recetved, and untll arrearages are paid. | Subscription Rate One month, by carrier One year, by carrler. . Three months, postage Six Months, postage paid One "year, postage pald.. The Weekly Ploneer. ht m col\lnlnln a summary of rl{ Thll e we‘e aubllshuifl overy it sent postage paid to any ad for $1.50 in ldvlsncs?a FNTERED AB SECOND CLASS MAT- AT THE POSTOFFICE AT BE- MIDI! MINN. UNDER THE At OF MARCH 3, 1875. 0000000000006 00 THIS DATE IN HISTORY FEBRUARY 3 1807—1Joseph F. Johnston, cele- brated Confederate com- mander, born. Died March 21, 1891. 1809—Territory of a CRCRCRCRRORORS Illinois @ created with Kaskaskia @ as the seat of govern- @ ment. @ @ 1811—Horace Greeley, editor and presidential candi- @ date, born in Amherst, @ N. H. Died in Chappaqua, @ N. Y, Nov. 29, 1872. @ 1823—Timothy Alden, inventor of the rst type-sgtting machine, born in Barn- & stable, Mass. Died in ® New York, Dec. 4, 1858. & 1838—Michigan Central rail- & * road opened from De @ troit to Ypsilonti. - 1887—Henry M. Stanley started @ on his epedition to re- e leleve Emin Pasha. # 1911—The Mexican insurgents attacked Juarez and were repulsed. R R R R R R R R R R R CRC R POOPPH IS At Staples this week Frank A. Day, the man from Montana, was found by the Staples World man in the hotel dining room and to him Mr. Day said: “l came here to eat; not talk poli- ties.” Gee, but Frank must have been hungry. FARM WELFARE AND HUMAN WELFARE. Sixty-two railroad trains, ated by officers of experiment stations ofithe Department of Agriculture, traveled over 35,000 miles during 1911. Public meetings held by these officers were attended by nearly 1,000,000 persons. Traveling schools to the number of 149 were at- tended by 40,000 farmers and farm- Farmers’ institutes held 15,000 sessions, attended by 2,000,- 000 people. These interesting facts and many more appear in the annual report of the director of this depart- ment to Secretary Wilson, recently made public. A summary of this re- port appears in a current newspaper, and, by a peculiar coincidence, in the adjoining column is & summary of the mortality report of the Census Bureau for 1910, issued the same time. From this it appears,; com- ments The Journal of the American Medical Association, that in the “registration area” tuberculosis kill- ed 86,309 persons in 1910, that 805,- 412 persons died in the same terri- tory, and that in about one-half of the United States no effort. is made to find out how many reopledie each year, to say nothing special trains - and holding public meetings or schools to teach the people how to live, oper- of running NEWS FORECAST FUR THE COMING WEEK President Taft will be one of the speakers at the annual dinner of the League of Republican State Clubs at New Willard Hotel {n Washington ~ Saturday night. Other speakers will be C. D. Hilles, secretary to the Pres- ident; C. W. Fairbanks of Indiana, Governor Hadley of Missouri, Gover- nor Goldsborough of Maryland, Job Hedges of New York, John Hays Hammond of Massachusetts, D. D. Woodmansee of Ohio and J. Hamp- ton Moore of Pennsylvania. . A joint caucus of Republican senators and representatives will be held Monday to ratify selections of members of the Republican Congress- ional Campaign Committee. The caucus is preliminary to the organiza- tlonal Committee for the campaign. coming » The first State convention to sel- ect delegates to the Republican na- tional convention will be that of | Florida, which will assemble Tues- day at Palatka. There appears to be no opposition to President Taft in Flordia, and he is expected to have the solid delegation. . The trial of the Government’ criminal case the so-called * 9960060060000000006606000 in the Federal court at Detroit. . The universal regard in which the memory of Charles Dickens is held will be given eloquent expression throughout the English-speaking world on Wednesday, which will be the one hundredth anniversary of the birth of the great novelist. . To commemorate the signing of the first treaty of alliance between France and the United States In 1778 by Benjamin Franklin the Count de Vargennes, all the French societies of the East are to unite in a dinner to be given in New York Thursday night. M. Jusserand, the French ambassador, is to be the guest of homor and Attorney General ‘Wockersham the chief speaker. . The home rule excitement in Ire- land is expected to rcach a head Thursday, which is the day fixed for the big home rule demonstration in Belfast, which is the center of the district which is as violently opposed to the home rule measure as the south of Ireland is in favor of it. . A great welcome demonstration awaits King George and Queen Mary, who are due to arrive in England! Monday from their trip to India to attend the great Durbar at Delhi. . A lengthy program of work awaits the first session of the new Ontario | legislature, which 1is to assemble Wednesday. Among the important measures to be brought up are the! working men’'s compensation act, the bi-lingual school question and measures pertaining to immigration and good roads, the extension of the | hydro-electric system and the devel- opment of northern Ontario. . » The New Zealand Parliament has been called to assemble at the end of } the week when the fate of the Ward ministry will be decided. party as a result of the recent elec- tion has a large enough majority to! carryon the affiairs of the country. . According to Guatemala City the latest link in the Pan-American Railroad is to be form- ally opened Saturday. This link ex- tends for forty-seven miles betwea the Mexican frontier in Guatemala. Acajutla on and Cavalla Blanca Guatemala City direct 'communica- tlon with the City of Mexico and the United States. PPPIPCOOOOOOOO GO @ Politics and Politicians. @ PPPOVOCO0OOTOOOS Nebraska City, Neb, has adopted the commission plan. @ g Minnesota Socialists will nominate their State ticket at Minneapolis this month. —x— New Mexico’s first Republican State convention will meet at Santa Fe on Mareh 8. —_x — The membership of the present Congress includes twenty-five gradu- ates of the University of Michigan. gt Lieutenant Governor Hall has en- tered the race for the Democratic nomination for governor of Indiana. —x— E. S. Johnson, member of the Dem- ocratic National Committee, has made formal announcement of his candidacy for the Democratic nomi- nation in South Dakota. —x— Dr. Nicholag Murray Butler, presi- dent of Columbia University, is mentioned for the Republican nomi- nation for governor cf New York next fall. g Members of the Iroquois Club of Chicago are soon to launch a cam- paign for Mayor Cartar H. Harrison, who is seeking the Democratic presi- dential nomination. Temperance advocates in Illinois will ask the Republican and Demo- cratic State conventions thig year to include a prohibition plank in their platform. X - Headquarterg of the Democratic National Committee will be at the Belvedere Hotel, Baltimore, during the national convention ‘in that city next summer. . —_—x— J. H. Walker, president of the II- linois Mine Workers, is the Socialist candidate for Congress in the Eight- eenth Illinois district, now represent- ed by Joseph G. Cannon. B8 i For the first time since 1884 tem- perance advocates will invade the Re- Dublican and Democratic conventions this year and agk’ that each party in- cludes a prohibition plank inits plat- form. e —x— Many leading Democrats express| the hope that in the presidential convention in Baltimore a resolution; will be -adopted: which will be:ithe | savage animal, but he himself was | driving in Hinsdale street when he Neither | brute immediately turned its attention | to its assailant and leaping at Edise late advices from| The completion of the line will give! of the two-thirdg rule in the nation- ak convention of 1916 R A decision is expected soon in' re- gards to the place and date for hold- || ing the Populist party national con= vention this year. Nebraska leaders are making a strong effort to seeure the convention for Lincoln. b iy Rosecrans W. Pillsbury, a’ well known newspaper publisher of Man- |, chester, N.' H., has made formal an- nouncement of his candidacy for the United States senatorship, to succeed.|. Senator Henry B. Burnham. Senator Burnham has announced that he will BN - Former Congressman Edwin C. Burleigh, who represented the Third Maine district in the Touse for four- teen years until defeated two years ago, has announced his candidacy to succeed United States Senator Gard- ner, now filling the unexpected term of thelate Senator William P. Frye. Syl to become chief executive of the na- tion, has the help in.running the Government of fifteen Yale men who are members of the Sixty-second Con- gress, according to a canvass just made. Of these Yale men four are in the senate and eleven In the house of representatives. CHOKED BIG DOG TO DEATH New York Truck Driver Fought Vio lous- Newfoundtand and Saved Several School Children. ‘With his bare hands, Harry Edise, 17 years old, fought and choked to death a Newfoundland dog, which had attacked several school children. Only the heroic work of Edise saved the children from being mangled by the badly bitten. - Edise is a truck driver. He was saw a group of children on their way from _school at the noon hour, run- ning and screaming. Following them was a great black dog, snapping at the little ones, but fortunately failing to fasten his teeth in any of them. Edise was without a weapon of any kind, but he leaped from his truck, ran at the dog and' kicked him. The fastened its teeth in his left arm. Edise succeeded in breaking the hold when the- dog agaln seized him, this time catching the fingers of his left | hand. ‘With his free hand Edise grabbed the dog by the throat and despite its struggles, held on. The ‘choking forced the animal to release its grip on the left hand of Edise, and he | threw the beast to the sidewalk, knelt on it to prevent it squirming loose, and while a great crowd gathered and - stood- helpless he choked - the animal to death.—New .York Globe. Mr. Henry James' Style. | That a James sentence is as long as { another man’s paragraph rouses a | chastened mirth in a receiver for the London Globe—and he procéeds to burlesque thus the style of the author indeed almost, as one might say, pre- sumptuously daring, were, as we in this paragraph attempt, and with the | full consciousness of ultimate and, in fact, inevitable, not to say disgraceful fallure, looming ahead”on our mental Eoflzon, to imitate the literary, per- aps the too literary, as one may de- ner of speaking, journalistic extrava- gance, style of Mr. Henry James, We should indubitably come ‘.to -grief. That author walks his pavement alone.” - TO CURE A COLD IN ONE DAY Take LAXATIVE BROMO Quinine Tab- lets. Druggists refund money if it fails to cure. E. W. GROVE'S signature is on each box. 26c. THE SPALDING EUROPEAN PLAN -Duluth’s Largest and Best Hotel DULUTH MINNESOTA More than uoomooo Tecently_expended on improvements. 250 rooms, 125 private baths; 60 'sample rooms. Every modern convenience: Luxations and dellgbtral re!tlurlnm and buffet, Flemish m, Men’s Grill, Oolonial Buffet M-rmneam 1obby * and . public rooms quet rooms and Sun parlor and ol "WANTED POULTRY RAISERS to know that Dr. J. A. Mc- GLURE, puts up a poultry compound, that prevents and cures the ills of the old.as well as the young birds, white diearrhea of chicksandchick- en cholera, due to Indigestion or eatmg poisonous food, en- terltls, Inflamation of the bowels, blackheadin turkeys and all other bowel diseases, don’t loose from 10 to 50 per cent of your flock but better call me up and let me tell you how to raise 99 per cent; of all your hatch, and if I don’t gwe you satisfaction just call , down, c. not be a candidate for wnomination. E - President Taft, the first Yale man Tl y d W ant Ad -LUMBER: LATH- AND of “The Outcry”: “If we, greatly and |, cribe it, without undue or, in a man- | your horse troubles. © 'INSURANCE Bemild)i, Minn. Phone 144 1-2 Cent a Word-=-Cash ‘Bemidji Manufacturers, Wholesal Telephone Dr. J.A. McClure No charge to answer Phones, No trouble to show goods, Veterinary Remedies for sale Dr. J. A. McClure, Phone. 105. Huffman Harris & Reynolds || A Friend from Battle Creek ers andJobhers The:Following Firms'Are Thoroughly Reliable and Orders Sent to Them WIIl Be Promptly Filled at Lowest Prices THE CROOKSTON EUMBER CO. WHOLESALE COMPANY WHOLESALE GROGERS _BUILDING MATERIAL Wholesalers of INKS PENS ealor In PENCILS 1 it T Light and - Heavy Hardware SCHOOL SUPPLIES | . . s Z STATIONERY Engine and ‘Mill Sup?J]les Bemidji Pionger Pub. Go. el Semid]), Minn. Mail Orders Solicited The Given Hardware Co. Hardware Phone 67 'NORTHERN GROCERY C. E. BATTLES Wholesale and Retail 318 Minnessta v The Model Manufacturing Co. Incorporated $25,000. Wholesale BREAD, CANDIES ICE GREAM Office and Works 315 Minnesota Ave. Bemiajl, Minn, WE ARE JOBBERS OF PIN TICKETS AND GUMMED LABELS No need to send outside of Bemidji for them _ Phone THE Pioneer Supply Store Can Save you Money - ‘Bemidji- Pioneer Pub. Co. Send your Mail Orders to GEO. T. BAKER & CO. Manufacturing Jewelers and Jobbers They . are especially - pi d to Etompfly fill all orders in their various ines of merchandise. Largest stock of Diamonds and ‘Watches and the finest equipped work- shop in Northern Minnesota, Special order work given prompt sttention Estimates furnished. Ip yourself By Using a Pioneer Want Ad. There’s no-need for you to so helpful an‘instrument a ad can be had for so‘little ink of it be in need when s a Pioneer want A half cent a word gets you what you want. Try one and you may never need another. THE ORIGINAL HAS TH:S SIGNATURE & TODGEUOM IN- BEMIDII © R CROROROR O RO OBOR R R R A 0T W ular meeunfi g{lg’)}s:—flnk and | ird 0 Ba “Fettows aty, 08 Boltramt Ave: .B. P, 0. E. Bemidji Lodge No. 1052, egular - meeting - ni~hts— trst and ‘third Thursdays, 8 o’clock—at Masonic Beltrami Ave, .and F'm.h C.O.F. - evel:rn second and fourin Sunday evening, at & o'clock in_basement of Catholic chureh, Rl DEGREE OF HONOR. % _Meeting nights _ every Y second and fourth Monday :{vefilngfl. at Ofld Fellows P. 0. B. Regular meeting nighta every Ist and 2nd (Vetnes: day evening at 8 o'clock. Fagles hall. G A R Regular meetings—First and third_Saturday . after: noons, at 2:30—at Odd Fel- love Hall, 402 Beltram} L 0. 0 F Bemidji Lodge No. 115 Regular meelm% nights Fra A l"ridny. o'clock liow: §0s Beftram. ) O. F. Camp No. 24. gular meeting every second fourth Wednesdays at Sclock, at 0dd Feilows B Rebecca Lodgs. _Regular meeting nights — first and Lh.lrd Wi %flnesdflysult 8 o'clock ENIGETS OF PHYTHIAS. Bemidji Lodge \'o 168. Regular mecting nights—e ery’ Tuesday evening o'clock—at the Eagles' Hcfll ‘Third street. . LADIES OF THE MAC- CABEES. Regular mieoting night last Vednesday evening in each month, masonIC. A. F. & A. M., Bemidji, 2323. Regular meetin, nights — flrst and thlrs Wednesdays, § o'clock—at Masonic Hall, Seltrami Ave., and Fifth St. Bemidyt _Chapter No. 70, R A M. Stated convosation - ~hrs! and_ third_ Mondays, clock v m—at Masohts Hall Beltrami Ave, and Fifth St. silkanah Commandery No. 30 D% k"7 Slated conclaver-second | S\E4C aid tourth Fridays, § olock § B mo—at Masonlc Temple, Bel- S erm Ave., and Fifth O. E. 8. Chapter No. 171. Regular_meeting nlgh!.s— first and third Eridays, 8 o'clock — at Masonic Hall, Beltrami Ave., ‘and Fiftd M. B. Roosevelt, . No. 1523, Regular meeting’ nights every second and fourth ‘Thursday evenings at § gjclock in " 0dd Fellows M. W. A. Bemidji Camp No. 5012, Regular meeting ni; h(s = urst and third Tue daye at Han, Frs Btram” Ave. !lon!:zx SA: ANS. ular meeting nights on -lhe rst and Third Th <in'the 1.°0. O, F. Holat's SONS OF HERMAN. Meetings held third Sunday afternoon of each month at Troppman’s Hall. YEOMANS. Meetings the first Friday: evening of the month at the home of Mrs. H. I Schmidt, 306 Third street. ‘R..F. MURPHY FUNERAL DIRECTOR AND EMBALMER Office’s13 Phone William C. Kigin INSURANCE Rentals, Bonds, Real Estata Finst Mortgaqe Loans on City and ' Farm Property 'semxd{b Lodre No,

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