Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, February 25, 1913, Page 1

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- ] [ \ SEVERAL BILLS PASSED BY SENATE I1ZZET. PASHA. . . New Turkish Minister of War, Formerly “Vice Sultan” 1 A | i ~ e i W | | [ — Taft Has Orders Issued Which Will Give Wilson Men on the Frontier By March 4. i Upper Body Lets Twenty-Eight Meas- ures Go Through But Are Near- ly All Local. M [ ORI HlIMTHIY I St. Paul; Feb. 26—A normal school NKS 5 dill. will be reported out from the 29 DOMESTICATE SKU! = committee tomorrow which will pro- vide that a normal school shall be located in Northern Minnesota with- in certain boundarfes within six il i IO !!ll'l | o [l [T Not Willing to Intervene Unless it is I | :gg Hanson Wants Farmers to Have : : hs. It will provide that E ) Right to Raise Them and Other ::;to: ';.; be p:;»oi:t:l‘b; 3’:;_ e Necessary But Will Be Ready Fur Bearing Animals. ernor Eberhart, Lieutenant Governot e} % To M at Once. [Burnquist, and Speaker Rines to select a site for the building. The bill ‘as it will be reported has the consent of Representatives Hanson, McGarry, and Anderson. who intro- duced the three normal school bills. (NEILL BILL PASSED 'fl | AT T | Il | | FIGHT TO KILL ROAD HOUSES MADERO SHOT THROUGH HEAD — Bullet Entered Back and Came Out v; [ | !, | | | III Il I O’Neill Proposes Law Prohibiting Licensed Saloons Outside of In- | e = . In Front—Suares Body Was . ] h corporated Villages. e Riddled. { Special to The Pioneer. ———— i k,', St. Paul, Feb. 26—The O’Neill bill 2 — —'\ 3 . , Feb. 25— e ——— d By United Press. providing that there shall be no sa- = BULLETINS | St. Paul, Minn., Feb. 25.—Twenty- eight bills were passed by the senate yesterday in the afternoon session which lasted three hours. In addi- tion, there were a half-dozen bills introduced, only one of which is of a general nature. The senate grain probe committee, Sen. S. D. Works, chairman, also continued its investi- gation, but it was a rather tame af- fair. Of the bills passed most were of a local character. One was Sen. A. L. Hangon’s bill providing for the do- mestication of skunks and other fur bearing animals. Sen. James Handlan proposed a loons outside of cities or incorporated villages passed the house this after- FIGHT ON- SITE \ A concerted effort is being made |had over seventy votes in its favor. on the part'of the people living or having business west and north of 1 g Fourth and Minnesota to have the KIAMEL lS DEAD federal building located on the north- east corner of America and Fourth| gongtantinople, Feb. 26—Kiamel street on what is called “Fenton’s” ) Pasha, deposed grand vizer of Tur- corner. Circulars have been put oui|key is dead of apoplexy in Alexan- 3 5 2 : > s calling attentlon to the need of votes|dria, Egypt. He was unpopular with Rural School Teachers to Hear Ad- | Womans’ Study Club Back of Propo- | Assailants Caught and Lodged in| for this corner. Of the votes so far|the young Turks because he favored| dresses on Live Toiiu and Will sition and Money Will Be Raised County Ifil—One Given Sern. cast in the Pioneer straw vote, about | making peace with the Balkan allies. | " Have Discussions, From Business Men. : tence of Ninety Days. United, States orders whole army division to Galveston, Texas, to be prepared for any emergencies in connection with the Mexican revolt. [Fort Snelling troops left St. Paul at noon Monady. TflREE i MEN ROBBED | Official .investigation into slaying of Madero and Sudrez probably will =2 back up Huerta’s account of the af- fair, though bodies were found be- —_— hind penitentiary building. Huerta says Madero will have a big funeral. REST . ROOM ASSURED one half have been cast for this cor-|He, with his cabinet, were put out Ernesto Madero and his family 1 a|ner with the majority of the others|of office when Enver Bey started hia £ — —_— i — reach.;Vera: Crus:and.left 'counr.ry radical bill, which is intended to re- favoring the Odd Fellows’ hall site. |revolution which resulted in the as- ! last night on Cuban gunboat. peal that saction of the statutes| Vote today, clip a ballot from this|sassination of Nason Pashe, TWO SESSIONS ON itpwn SEVEN |WILL BE OPEN MARCH FIBST |CLARK FOUND IN MINNEAAPOLIS 5 which permits newspapers to retract|paper or call at the Pioneer office for purported libelous statements, in|extras. The ballot box is fasténed MEN BADLY NEED] 3 el x = 5 mitigation of damages. The author|to the telegraph pole at the Security 609 _I'Y _ED 4 said he was prompted. to introduce|Bank corner. All votes must be Could be Givei; Work by Agencies " W. B. Stewart, counyy superintend-| Through the leadership of .the 'fl_:ree men, within the past week the bill because when he ran for of-|signed. If you have any opinion.to 0y ent of schools, has afranged a pro- | Woman’s Study club, Bemidji i8 to |or ten days, haye been lodged: in the fice the last time. the newspapers |express on this question, now is the| Here in Lumber Camps. -|&ram tor. Friday. attgepoon, . March have a farmer's réat.room by Mareh | coiinty §ail-ori charges resulting from mrail: so;net?nlsst;tler:entsl;n tl:ehe'«:e time to vote. Signatures are treated| pu.o yundred men: could - obtatn |7, When the rural sckbbl.teachers ot~ It 18.t6-be lagated in the front |the taking of money o persenal pro- T o d it e I it the atricfRt conniderice. work in Bemidji tomorrow. morning | the" county will gather in Bemidjt|room of 404 Minnesota avenue which | perty from another. The first was were they to step off of incomingleor g teachers’ imstitute. The pro-|i8 the bullding’ north of the Deran Barney_Lynch,. formerly a bell hop damage they were intended to work.| . . et His; e i s rains. s number is a conserva- 3 lumbing. shop, and Wwi e e A NEW x RAY tive estimate by the men: operating Stam, hag beon; cesifmied toruliorthe Porfiric Diaz, ex-president of Mexi- = co gives statement out hinting that 2 he will return to his country it o United States should intervene. < ! Mexico City reported quiet, and i dispatches indicate that death of Ma-~ L dero has-somewhat relleved the ten- | slon. This must be taken with a . | grain of salt as the dispatches prob- | ably are subjected to official censor- | ship. Had it not been for the fact, he says, at the Markham, who was accused of that he wam elected, he woud have teachers’ instruction and an oppor- out-with-4-Jevatory, ety shatraisid having taken $50 from n in Dal. instituted a suit for damages. employment agenctes here. - P, benches. The room will be financed | 12V & 8 Al 8% C. A. Magnuson, president of the Men are needed in all of the lum- |tunity for discussion. by city merchants with some help|ton’s place. N. W. Elevator company, was on the Contractors have . .completed the|ber camps in this vicinity. The log- ‘The program follows: -~ from the council. > s The second case-was that of Thom- installation of a' new Scheidel-West-|gers have been working short hand- “The Influence of the Country ‘The rest room proposition has been | gq O’Leary who was - convicted of ern interrupterless X-Ray machine at {ed all winter and now the men'are stand before the grain probe com- gitated f P a taki agitated for some time and Wwas taken z »” Loe, - - tit 1 [t ot the St. Anthony’s hospital at a cost|leaving for the Montana construction Teacher:,, RIxk sLoe; priciple’:be 4 ATteloy esterday and;senten mittee most of the afternoon. He de- b7 thie R BRNRE T tailed the methods of his firm with ! 7 up by -Ommercly S ey $ Taaiyii of about $1,700. The work of in-|camps before the winter’s work has ““,‘fl"‘e:’;’f"; !30::5 Country School | UDfavorable action. -Mrs. Thompson, ved to minety days injail regard to the buying, handling and i - N selling of grain and denied that he |Stallation was done by Noyes Bro-|been finished. ¥ Prances Mosford, . Prin. Central| 7RO 18- well known by the farmers in | Was found B“%%f havi thers and Cutler of St. Paul from| All of the towns along the Great School: 5 ' this section of the. state, originally | Walter Densler down and robbed him ‘Washington, Feb. 26.—Military 3 - orders flew thick and fast in redemp- tion of Taft’s promise to have an army of 10,000 assembled at Galves- ton, the most ‘convenient port of Mexico, equipped for foreign service, ready to execute any order his suc- cesor. might choose to issue upon the had any knowledge of any discrep- ancies between the number of bush- [Whom the purchase was made. . - | Northern from Duluth ‘to: Bemidil| “y i, on 1o giudy”, Nina. H,|Tmade 8n offer of $40 por monthi for|or §30. Densler was found by an|basis of conditions that exist after ols of grain welghed “in” to eleva-| One room was refinished as radio-|are being visited by . men - coming ‘Webster, town of N orzil FEIE ~{the use of the rooms but came doWn|employment agency man Friday | March fourth, tors, as compared with the number of | Praphic labratory. The stereoscopi:|from the woods but it has been-notic- Dlscm;alon lead by Mrs. .Elsie g, | to $80 per month and offered heriger- | njgnt walking up town from the de-| These orders on the whole are sup- bushels weighed “out.” Attorney {attachment is another feature of this|able thiat their pay checks are small- Neal, Solway. 3 vices in addition. ‘Dot with a bleeding face and nose.|plementary to those which began to equipment with which the pictures|er than in former years, indicating are thrown in perspective. It is con- | that they have not worked as:long. sidered of great value 'for physicians| The Shevelin luttiber.companies ex- from a diagnostic point of view. [pect to be able to get their season That portion of the patient which |cut but the shortage of men is ser- is to diaganosed is placed directly|iously hampering the smaller loggers under the flash of the X-ray, and un-|and many will find a profit turned to der- the patient is placed a plate up-|loss. il which is thrown distinctly that por- ! 2 The hearing will be continued to- | tion" of the, body upon which dia- SONS OF HERMAN BUSY day. 5 nosis is being made. The plate-is Bemidji- Lodge- No. 17, Sons ot The two temperance measures|then developed and every portion up-|Herman, surprised .the grand officers which came up in the house this af-|on which the X-ray-was flashed iS|and the members of their‘own lodge, ternoon may start the most spectacu- | distinctly shown. who returned = from International lar fight of the week. The bill giv-| In addition to the above mentioned | Falls on last night’s train, by appear- ing fourth-cldss cities the right of | apparatus is a Kell-Koett radiogra-|ing in a body at the Union depot and local option has already passed the|DPhic table made of composition and |escorting them to the Remore cafe senate and is expected to go through |metal with an automatic plate shift|'where a sumptious lunch was served the house without much opposition. S0 that the plates can be changed by |the guests. Grahd President Chas. The “roadhouse” bill, introduced by |the operator without moving the|E. Glasser of Stillwater, and Grand D. P. O'Neill of Thief River Falls, |Patient. Also there is a table stand |Secretary Chas Anker, -of Minneapo- may cause as much of a fight as it | With stereoptic adjustments, thus en.|lis, were assisted by the Messrs.Min- did two years ago. F abling the operator to take the pic-|kleman of Akely and M, Thome and As drawn this year it prohibits is- [tures with the utmost mechanical|Herman Eickstadt of Bemidji in the suing licenses for saloons anywhere | Precision. instituting of a new lodge of thirty. outside of incorporated cities or v: members at International Falls on lages. > Sunady. The grand officers depart- A final vote is expected in the sen- : *S; A*T; ;E:W;U; ;T:T’I‘S:'I;S* : ed for Crookston on the early morn- ate this week on the primary election X kK %Kk KKK KKK KKk x| 08 train to assist in a class initia- bill, providing non-partisan nomina- tion at that place titis evening. The tion of county officers, changing the The total number of dwellings in|Minnesota Sons of Herman Lodge is primary date to June and giving{Minnesota is 380,809, and the total|a thriving franternal insurance or- the Progressive party recognition.|number of families 416,453, there|ganization of over 3,900 . members bill has been debated at several sit-|being 109.4 families to each 1004 composed mostly of Germans-.but do tings of the senate and most of the|dwellings. The average number of|not bar any man of good monx"chnn- contested points have been settled |persons per dwelling is 5.5, and the|cter who may wish to join the organ- by votes on amendments. average number per family is five. |ization. = Drake endeavored to have Mr. Mag- nuson admit the discrepancies. “I can see why the number of bushels might be less when weighed “out” than when weighed “in” be- cause many elevators clean the grain before shipping it “out” and the re- sultant grain is much better than the incoming,” said Mr. Magnuson. o At a recent meeting of the study | o'eary drew a ninety day sentence. Mha‘}:?":;;y ok “pel‘:‘::g: club, it was declded that the olub| “Tnis morning, Sherlft Johason re. of dfawing, Bemidfl. should endeavor to push the Probo-| {yrned from Minneapolis with Wil- «rhe Backward Pupil”, Edna Hin, |Pition through and Mrs. C. R. 880-|jjam Clark who is wanted for-the al- Prin. Bemidji normal D;pt, ’|born was put in charge of the mat-|jegeq robbery of Sam Schultz Satur- “School Lunches”, Beatrice Bddy, | ™ Mrs. Sanborn is acting 88 an|gay night in Dalton’s hotel. Schultz head of the domestice science Dept.,|2B°nt between Mrs. Thompson andl,jaimg that he and Clark had been Bemidji ”|the merchants and enough funds|yorking-together in the woods for p: . B Ry W : have already heen subscribed in 8UMS | somo time and that when they came n‘:cl:o:vln%(;née::n; vfi:‘ye Fondor-| ot trom one- to- thiree dollars “Der | ¢o Bemidji, he had some cash and a Iacasaion ! 2 ott, | oLt ; . “ |deposit check on’ a North Dakota mg::c“&: :?;l:;:‘:e:y.le& Abbott, The room will be rented for One|pank for $200: - o The’ morning meeting will b6 hala | LO0E. from, Marah.1. - According to the Schultz' story, the | army are considered justifiable on the in the Central building and the at-|. two men visited the Short road house | ground that any cessation in the clos. ternoon one in the High school. and returned to Bemidjl about siX|ing days of Taft’s administration ¥ = ’ SNEED NOT GUILTY o’clock - §aturday. ' Schults -went £0|might be seized hold of by Mexican ik sleep . in Dalton’s._w_m:\ his. pocket- = 3 malcontents as an opportunity for a | book under his pillow. He awoke EXPLGRERS DE AD * Vernon, Texas, Feb. 26—John Beal | about midnight and found that the strike at Americans, which couldn’t be adequately overcome, should of- - Sneed, slayer of Al Boyce, was found | Pocketbook was there but the money |ficials' relax vigilance. o not guilty this morning, the jury|and 8 new overcoat were ‘gone. He By United Press. being ‘out forty-five minutes. at once made inquiry ‘if anyone had Sydney, N. S. W., Feb. 25.—Two séen - Clark.. members of Hahson’s antartic explor- 2 ’ Schinltz says that he learned from ing expidition are déad in Winke- BAZAAR ADDS PARLORS - |the night man in the restaurant that land and others suffered great dis-| The Bazaar store has added an-|Clark had gone about 11:30 and was: tress and privations according to alother department to their present|headed toward the depot.. Schultz ‘wirless from Adlai. - store, 8 modern equipped dressmak-|notified the police-and Chief Hoyt The dispatch says that that Lieu-|ing parlor and fitting réom. An an-|went to“the depot a&ndfound the tenant Innis, an Englishman, and|nex has been built at the rear of the|Clark had checked a grip to Minne- Doctor Herse, a Swiss, members of |store to house this new feature. “Mr. |apolis. It was too late to get the man the expidition, froze to death. TheyIves, manager of the store, stated nthugnerd-so his descripjtion was arrived at Adlai just too late to catch | that a first class dressmaker will be|telephoned to Minneapolis ' together the Steamer Aurora. They were com- | placed in charge of this new depart-|with the munk_er of. the baggage pelled to camp at Adlai until spring | ment and :that nothing will be left|check. Clark' was immediately ar- as the Aurora was the last steamer |undone to meet the requirements-of | rested when he stepped off the train this season. A the trade. . |sunday‘morning.” o flow from the war department to- ward the end of last week, calculated to inspire the assemblage of the sec- ond division of the reorganized army at or near Galveston. ' The order to move the entire second division is in- tended as a warning to Mexico that o there. will be no departure from the established policy of preparedness during the remaining week of Taft's administration. ‘All plans in preparation of the Major_General Willilam H. Carter, the department and division com- mander at Chicago, will be placed in ‘command of the ‘border troops. In addition to the Fourth brigade of the Second division, consisting of the ‘Twenty-third, Twenty-sixth, and Twenty-seventh infantry, now in the middle west, orders were issued Mon- e day for the preparation for entrain- b ment of the entire Sixth brigads, comprising ‘the ~Eleventh infantry,. Colonel Thomas F. David, at Fort McKensie, Wyo., and the Twenty-sec. ond infantry, Colonel Daniel A. Fred- rick, at Fort Bliss, Tex. Listing total receipts of $22,862.30, = = : = = = = The' Fourth Field artillery, the S i which with the annual appropria- THE CUB b H * Second battalion of enginers and Sig- 3 ton and ash on and atver aisore-| - SCOOP ppporter That's The Way To Eat Humble Pie, Scoop 1) Diken Compans” 5, -l ments 0f$82,194.42, leaves a balance s ST i e part of the Sixth brigade, already to the credit of the department of T WRetE Wi ST ASouT [0 .00 APOLOEES L + “WE CrrY have been ordered to Galveston. 2 $5,159.07, the report of the state bud- * & @eowoeze o y : . Story of Madero’s Death. Mexico City, Feb. 25.—The trage- dy’ occurred shortly after’ midnight Supday. 'Madero and Suarez, who had: been prisoners in the national palace since their arrest on Tuesday last, were placed in an automobile Wwhich was accompanied by another car and escorted by 100 rurales un- der the orders of Commandant Fran- ¢isco Cardenas and Colonel Rafsl miento. ! With instructions n lic examiner on the game and fish commission for the fisical year end- ing August 1, 1912, was filed in the office o fthe governor today. The largest classified receipts were $7,947.46, returned from miscellan- eous sources, such -as overseeing of fishing and seining, refunds, shipping permits, trappers’ licenses, etc. The report of the public examiner also is on the state dairy and food -department from March 1,1912, to January 81, 1913. A balance of $42,840.765 is reported, with cash on hand of $380.. Total disbursements during the perlod were $54,709.44.

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