Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, July 19, 1913, Page 4

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| | 2 BRINKMAN Tn;ATER Showing Here Monday Night Only Hagenbeck and Wallace, spectacu- lar sensation production participated in by 700 people, 300 horses, 200 wild beasts, 14 elephants, 50 clowns. Something entirley different. A con- tinous whirl of excitement with plen- ty of comedy. A partial list of the hundred unusual scenes. Wlephants and men bathing together, how ring horses are rehearsed, one way of hunting ducks, fifty clowns doing the *|suffragette meeting, lion policemen raiding the holding man’s head in his mouth, elephant running away with it’s cart, horses play football, fat woman colides with automobile, man battles with lion, two geese In a real race, Hippotamus given a bath and many other circus mysteries revealed. A perfect review from the time, the advance car arrives until the large audience leaves the tents. 4000 feet remarkable films being the only authorized circus picture before the public. Brinkman Theatre.—Adv. bear dance, G0OD GROCERIES AND 117 Minnesota Ave. GO TO BATCHELDER’S FRESH EGGS AND BUTTER I. P. BATCHELDER GENERAL MERCHANDISE Phone 180 Lots on easy terms. SUPERIOR LOTS “The New Steel Center” No interest, no taxes. In- vestment in Superior Lots will make you money. Information--Bradley Brink Co. (Inc.) 909 Tower Ave., Superlor, Wis, K. K. ROE, Agent, Bemidji, Minn. PR Automobile $3,000 Stoc we can supply your wants. Most Complete Stock of Accessories In Northern Minnesota k of Tires All Sizes and Types If it is something for the Automobile or Gasoline Engine General Garage Accessories Price Positively Right on Everything We handle the following lines of Cars Ford, Cadillac, Studebaker, Overland Northern Auto Gompany Experts on Carburators and Ignition Greek, ferb .and. Roumanian armies, 88 well as the Ottoman forces, are ac- tively closing :in on the Bulgarians despite protestations from the pow- ors. Driven to ‘desperation’ by the re- ports of horrible atrocities of the Bulgarians it {s now believed there " SENATOR NEWLANDS, Author of Law for Media- tion of Threatened Strike. advance and a report from Constan- tinople declares that before retreat: ing from Hairebolu the Bulgarians burned the homes of 950 Mussul- mans. Many of these noncombatants ‘were. caught in their homes and hurned to desth. Others escaped with borrible burns only to die within a few hours, R T T O A AGED' OHIO WOMAN ASKS HEART BALM. Paterson,: N. J.,, July 19— Miss Emma Mahaney, sixty- seven years old, of Wooster, Ohlo, asks 'a heart balm of $25,000 from John Wolft, a gev- enty-seven-year-old veteran of the Civil ‘war and a retired merchant, ‘in papers which have been served upon him 4 here. FEET PPl bl P TrP LEE RS EEE R L L X ] * % R TR T T I R Y —_— GIGANTIC ROBBERY PLOT REVEALED Prominent Men Involved In Wom- an's- Statement, _————— COMMISSIONER OF MEDIATION Willlam L. Chambers Named for New- ly Created Position. ‘Washington, July 19.—President Wil- son has selected William L. Chambers of the District of Columbia to be com- missioner of mediation and concilia- tlon under the Newlands act, ani G. Nashvill " ‘. W. W. Hanger as his assistant. ashville, Tenn., July 19.—A gigan tic plot to sweep the South in a cam- new bo’::‘; ::Efrbt: oJ\‘lr:legr:hil;zrtllnm;nnpp paign of bank robbery, train holdups of the United States commerce court |30d dynamite outrages was revealed and Louls F. Post, assistant secre- |by Mrs. Archieva Gant, in a statement tary of labor. in which she implicated several promi- Immediate confirmation of the presi- |nent men in Alabama and Mississippi, dent’s nominations is expected. The |including a sheriff of one county and board is a permanent institution t0 (a deputy sheriff of another, and one ald in the adjustment of disputes be- |banker in a Mississippi town, who had tween railroads and their employes, planned the looting of his own bank e by safeblowers. » The woman, whose husband was re- wu_l_ ATTEM ?T Tfl cently sentenced to life imprisonment for the murder of Paymaster John Turner near Tuscaloosa, Ala., was GRUSH BULGARIA persuaded to bare the operations of the gang of which Gant.was a mem- —— ber after the latter had made state- ments from prison in which he de- Grogcd, Servia and Roumania |zired et e hud been arven 1o Decide to Unite Forces. wife for money. The statement by Mrs. Gant is one of the most remarkable on which the police ever have worked, and already London, July 19.—Greece, Servia [the information, including the names and Roumania will attempt to orush [of the men involved, has been tele- Bulgaria. % graphed to the police and officials of i three states and wholesale arrests are According to a Reuter dispatch re- : celved here from Saloniki these {hree expected. Mrs,'Gant has volunteered to return to Alabama and aid in prose- powers have agreed upon concerted |, ying the men she named as mem. operations against the forces of Czar |pers of the band of organized crimi- Ferdinand. They have decided that an |pa)s, armistice will not be ‘accepted and S that peace terms will be drawn ODIY [« e <k o o+ o ot oo oo o b o b o o at Sofla. The latest reports declare that the LIGHTNING FROM CLEAR Eleven More . Official Automobile Cuides to be Sold at SKY KILLS BOY. Pensacola, Fla., July 19.—A bolt of lightning from out of an apparently clear sky struck in the center of a playgrounds here where several boys were playing ball. John McCarthy, fourteen years old, was killed, and Earl Hoffman, manager of the playgrounds, and several boys were ‘shocked. Pl bbb rrdritt LR E R R R R Rk ® IR R E R XX TR R IR 'NITH THEIR CLOTHING AFIRE Three Persons Carried Down Ladders From Sixth Floor. New York, July 19.—Two young men and a girl trapped on the sixth floor of a burning loft building' in West I'wentieth street stood helpless amid the flames until their clothing took They were ablaze when firemen . L] took them down elghty-five feet of ex- The guide is gotten out by the Minnesota Automobile Association. Trips, Maps, Miles Between Towns, Sign Posts, Danger Points, Cross Roads, etc. and all necessary information to guide you from one place to another without a hitch. There are eleven more left and this is the only place in the city where they may be procured. We are still holding a few for those who ordered previously. ! The Bemidji Pioneer Phone 31 Is contains hundreds of tenslon ladders to the street. The three were badly burned and with three others were taken to hospitals. The building was occupled by skirt and button manufacturers. Mest of the employes had not reported for work when the blaze broke out. Did He Get It? “Won't you tell a nice little story for the lady?” asked a fond mother of her four-year-old boy whom she was showing off to her guest. “I.don’t know a ’tory,” lisped the youngster, bashfully. “Oh, yes, you do,” pleaded his moth. er. “Just a little story.” 1l you div’ me a kiss? The boy’s eyes brightened. “Yes, a nice kiss for a nice little story.” “All right. Once upon a time there was & ‘nawful nice big vase in the par- lor an’ I just broke it. Do I get the kiss, mamma?” Hard Liguors in Germany. Germagy is fast changing from a land of beer to a land of brandy, though perhaps the brandy is intended for export; some unkind critics say that much of it goes abroad disguised as French cognac. > However that may be, the produe tion of brandy distilled from- wine 000 gallons to 335,000 grown only from 143-to 169. Bat tha methods have improved so that 100 quarts of wine now yield nearly twen- ty quarts of brandy instead of only seventeen, as was the rule five years Put Tqgether to Last. Repairs to. outside plating’ of .the United St 'navy’s oldest steel DAILY[PIONEER has in five years increased from 90, Estray Notice - Stray mooly cow: color red white. stripe in face owner- can haye ‘same by paying damages, G. E. Carson. Bresnahan Praises Men Who Can Deliver When Needed. Substitute Catcher for Chlcago Cubs Pral Frank Schulte, Outfieider, and Heine Zimmerman, Slug- ging Third Baseman. In baseball ‘there are two kinds ot nerve, according to Roger Bresnahan, substitute Cub catcher. One is pos- sessed by the type of player who bul- lies men on the fleld, has a weak heart when he is asked to go to the plate in the ninth inning with a man on third and drive home the run that will win the game. The other is the player who refrains from pugilistic tactics, but has a heart of steel, takes & viselike grip on the bat and grits his teeth when the responsibility of scoring a run is put up to him. Bresnahan declares the first is the easlest to beat in a game and the sec- ond is the fellow who makes compe- tition keen all the time. Bob Bescher, left flelder of the Cin- cinnati team, struck Bresnahan last year in the jaw, after a game of ball, because the flelder struck out in a pinch when a long fly or a single meant a victory. It was while dis- cussing this episode that Bresnahan defined the two kinds of nerve in baseball. “There are two kinds of nerve in this game,” sald Bresnaham, “and I profess to have only one. T'll admit Bescher took' a solid punch at me. I stood for it. There may be a lot of fellows playing ball today who can trim me off the field, but when it comes to matching brains and nerve during a game I think I can hold my own with any of them. “Bescher was up in the ninth in- ning in a pinch, when just a little sin- gle would have given the Reds the game. He was aware that it was up to him to rap out the hit that would turn the tide. But he was as nervous as & cat. I joshed him about it and he took it seriously. That was how the argument started. That was actly what I was looking for, beca: it won the game for me. made him angry. “Frank Schulte is about the best example of the man with the nerve in & pinch I know of in the league today. Roger Bresnahan. You never see Frank argue or dispute with any one, nor you never heard of ‘his having & battle on the street. But you have seen him go up to the plate with runners on the bases in the ninth inning, smash out a single or extra base hit off the best pitchers in the league and win the game. He 18 the type of man to have on a team. . “Heine Zimmerman appears to be extremely boisterous and rough, but he is a corking good man in a, pinch because he is stubborn. He is too arrogant to have it said that he lost his nerve, and it is just that bit of pride that makes him so great a player.” Leading Hitters. Four American leaguers are hitting about the .400 average, while only two National leaguers have so far been able to comb the ball for this extra high percentage. The four leaders in the younger organization are Collins, .611; Speaker, .468; Schaller, .462, and Compton, .400;. Viox, with .435, and Miller, .429, are blazing the way in the National. G Jennings’ Long Career, Hughie Jennings, leader of the De- troit Tigers, started playing profes- sional baseball 28 years ago. Hughie played his first professional game on June 16, 1890, as a member of the Allentown club of the Hastern Inter state league. Wolfgang Doing Nlcely. Pitcher Mel Wolfgang, ‘the young ater Callahan sent to Denver this spring, is doing grand work for Jask Hendricks. Jap.Sallors to Eat Beef. * Japan has finally ‘decided, after ex- perlments extending over some years, to put beef on the daily diet of her navy. ‘The reason is that the men in thase ships where beef has been given dafly have an advantage in height of three-quarters He struck out in the pinch and that was what JULY | DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION Program of Examinations FOR SOME NERVY PLAYERS| Common School Certificates July 31st and August 1st and 2d, 1913. HIGH SCHOOL BUILDING, BEMIDJI, MINN. THURSDAY, JULY 31st (SECOND GRADE SUBJECTS) Enrollment - Professional Test - - - Penmanship Arithmetio Geography Composition Reading Spelling bé FRIDAY, AUGUST 1st U. 8. History English Grammar Music Civies Agriculture ' SATARDAY, (SECOND GRADE SUBJECTS CONTIUNED) Physiology—Hygiene AUGUST 2d (FIRST GRADE SUBJECTS) ¢ Enrollment 30 Geometry 10:15 Physics P. M—1:15 Algebra 2:45 4:15 Drawing Physical Geography or General History Plane Geometry is now a requirement for a first grade certificate for which no substitute is accepted. Bemidji, Minn., July 16th, 1913, W. B. Stewart, Co. Supt. Find arbuyer for the Second-Hand things which you no longer need—Through a “For Sale” Ad. OASH WiITH ooPY oent per word per Issue taken for less than 15 cents. the advertisar is. the address printed in the ad. HELP WANTED. PV VUSSP WANTED—Good girl for general housework, Mrs. H. W. Bailey 605 Minnesota avenue, Regular charge rate one cent per word per inecrtion. No ad Phone 31 Answer by Oorrespondence All Blind Ads using a number, box or initial for address. Do not ask this office who We cannot tell you. - Don’t waste time, but write to A A A A A A A A A A A A A~ m S Address. Box 396. Mrs A. Galla FOR SALE—Good horse. For work or gingle, 1300 pounds. St. Hilaire Retail Lumber Company. ¥ WANTED—Competent Girl for gen- eral housework. Mrs. A. Lord, 903 Beltrami Ave. WANTED—Competent girl for gen- eral housework. Apply 509 Bemidji Avenue. ( WANTED—Girl for general house- work. Mrs Ray Murphy, 703 Minn, avenue, WANTED—Girl for housework. 910 Beltrami avenue. "Phone 670. —Would pay $5 for steady general work girl. 910 Beltrami. FOE SBALE FOR SALE—160 acres good farm land, clay soil, hardwood timber, Birch, Oak and Maple, 10 acres under cultivation, a fine spring of good pure water on the land, % miles from railroad station. This land s worth $20 per acre; will gell for $13. Half cash, balamce three years at 6 per cent interest. Address Bemidji Pioneer, Bemidji, Minn. FOR SALE—Typewriter ribbons for every make of typewriter on the market at 50 cents and 75 cents each, Every ribbon sold for 75 cents guaranteed. Phone orders promptly filled. Mail orders given the same careful attention as when you appear in person. Phone 32 The Bemidji Pioneer Office Supply Store. FOR SALE—Small fonts of type, sev: eral different points and in first class condition. Call or write thie office for proofs. Address Bemidji Ploneer, Bemidji, Minr FOR SALE—Cheap if taken at once three houses and lots For particu- lars see Bisiar and England Real Estate and Rental, 117-3rd St. Be- midji. FOR SALE—Rubber stamps. Tb Ploneer wint procure any kind « rubber stamp for you on short no A FOR SALE—A young and’ gentle Milch cow. P. M. Lenard, Nebish _Minn, = LOST AND FOUND oo, LOST—Pair of gold rimmed glasses in; case, marked Dr. Hocks, St. Louis. Finder kindly return to Pioneer office. __ MISCELLANEOUS S S ADVERTISERS—The great state ot portunities for business to clasal- fied advertisers. The recognized advertising medium in the Fargo North Dakota offers unlimited op- Daily and Sunday Courler-Npws, the ouly seven-day paper in the stite and the paper which carries the largest amount of classified advertising. The Courler-News covers North Dakota like & blank- et; reaching all parts of the state the day’ of publication; 1t is the paper to use in order to get re- Bults; rates one cent per word first Insertion, one-half cent per word Succeeding Insertions; fifty cents per line per month. Address the Courier-News, Fargo, N. D WANTED—Work estimating stand- igg timber or dip needdle work, for mineral lands only a few days to do work before accepting permanent Position. Address Room 2 Pilsiner Hotel. WANTED—Near the lake shore a small furnished cottage to rent for balance of summer address Mrs John Jackson. Remore Hotel. —_— T e oa BOUGHT AND SOLD—Second hana furniture. 0dd Fellow’s’ building, Scrosa from postoffics, ‘phone 129. WANTED—Clean cotton rags at the Ploneer office. No buttons. Pioneer Wanmt Ads : }I-Z flm_’_a wm; : £ N V— f‘rm o - ——— SR DTSSR 5

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