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

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NEW YORK PROBERS - ~ ARE SKEPTIGAL Doubt Hiness and Confession of Mrs. Sulzer, Albany, N. Y., Aug. 19.—Doubtful if Mrs. Sulzer ever did confess entire responsibility for forging Governor Bulzer’s name to checks used in Wall street speculation, and further questioning the story that Mrs. Sul- xor has been serlously ill, the Frawley investigating committee proposes to issue a Jane Doe summons for a trained nurse who attended the gov- ernor’s wife. This nurse, who was discharged on Saturday because, as. Governor Sulzer explained to a friend, “she talked too muoh,” returned to her home in New York at once. As soon as the com- mittee ascertains her address the summons will be served on her to ap- pear before the committee. The young woman’s name and identity are being closely guarded. While the Frawley committee has been reluctant about what is referred to here as “the woman phase” of the impeachment situation, it now feels that Mrs. Sulzer's confession and ill- ness have been capitalized to an ex- tent where all facts relating thereto must be subjected to test. L R R R R - ICEMAN SAVES GIRL IN FIGHT WITH DOG. Chicago, Aug. 19—As Michael Slovick, iceman,” was lowering a cake of ice over a fence a bull dog set his teeth in his right arm. Slovick looked over and saw a little girl directly beneath the ice. To drop it meant probable in- jury to her, so he pulled the dog and the ice over the fence. He kicked the dog out of the way, delivered the ice and went to a hospital. LR TR TR LT L 2 ES R R R S WOUNDS TWO; KILLS HIMSELF Wife of Chicago Suicide Believed to Be Fatally Hurt. Chicago, Aug. 19.—As the result of a quarrel with his wife William Sinda, thirty years old, drew a penknife-and stabbed her fifteen times, slashed their eight-year-old daughter and then wt his own throat. The man died W#hile being removed to a hospital. The woman is belleved to be fatally injured, while the daughter will re- cover. Three other ochildren witnessed their father’s attack on their mother and sister and notified the police. Warships Hit by Typhoon. Hongkong, Aug. 19.—A typheon here attained a velocity of 105 miles an hour and when it was at its height caused the gunboat Wilmington, at- tached to the Third division of the United States Asiatic fleet, to fira distress signals. A tug towed the | ‘warship to shelter. CHARLES W. ELIOT. Will- Act as President of Congress on School- Hygiene. Photo by American Press Assoclation 300 TO SPEAK ON HYGIENE Plang for Fourth International Con- gress to Be Held in Buffalo. Buffalo, N. Y., Aug 1Y9.—Secretary General Dr. Thomas A. Story has an- nounced the details of the program for the fourth international congress on school hygiene here the week of Aug. 25, which will be attended by approximately 5,000 delegates from the leading natious. The congress will discuss problems relating to the health and efficiency of school children. The program pro- vides for more than 300 speakers. Dr. Charles W. Eliot of Harvard univer- sity will act as president of the con- gress. REBEL ARMY MOVES SOUTH Attack on Mexican Government Provi- sion Trains Probable. El Paso, Tex., Aug. 19.—According to Juan Dozal, ex-colonel of Constitu- lionalists, General Francisco Villa, at ‘he head of 1,500 troops, is marching vouth from Ascencion, Chihuahua, to 3an Buena Ventura, about sixty miles west of Gallego station on the Mexi- can National railroad. United States army advices are that Villa’s entire army has moved southward, presum- ably in the direction of the Madera lumber district. . Constitutionalists here are reticent In regard to Villa’s latest movement. They do not admit that he is attempt. ing an attack on federal provision trains which are loading in Juarez to leave for Chihuahua. Pioneers Victims of Train. Marengo, Towa, Aug. 19.—Mrs. Ev- erett R. Beemen, wife of an Iowa county pioneer, was instantly killed end Mr. B r was fatally injured avtomobile was struck on d crossing at Ladora, iir. Beemer was a farmer ved @t Marengo. ” ) EoE =82 IR 2 o T . Whisky Warehouse Burned. Pekin, Ill, Aug. 19.—Whisky worth $100,000 went up in smoke when fire destroyed the warehouse of the Globe distillery here. The barrel house and cistern room also were burned. The loss on the buildings brings the total loss to $126,000. BATTLES IN THE BLOOD. Antitoxins Fight the Germs of Their - Particular Disease. When any animal has a certain dis- ease {ts body produces large quantities of tiae particular antitoxin that will fight that disease. If the blood of this anlmal be introduced into another ani- mal the latter will get the disease, but in a milder form, aud will at the same time be stimylated to secrete large quantities of the antitoxin. It is now capable of resisting an attack by an army of powerful germs and becowes “lmmune” to the real disease. It its blood be drawn and filtered to free it from red and white corpuscles the serum that is left is merely the watery part of the blood beavily charged with the antitosins of that disease. This, Injected into the blood of a person suffering from It, re-en- forces the antitoxins already there and speedily routs the enemy by neutraliz- ing the poisons that the toxic germs are liberating. Serum is prepared in two ways- one by taking ir from the blood of another anlmal, the other by a culture from the blood of the patient himself. There are only one or two, diseases that can be cured by medicine. In all others the medicine i{s given merely to stimulate the natural production of antitoxins. If we knew how to make an antitosin for every disease we should have no more use for medicine. The number of diseases for which antitoxing are being discovered is mul- tiplying year by year. — New York World. Quaint Signs In Peru. An Indian custom which adds a ple- turesque touch to the roadsides be- tween Cuzeo and Machu Plechu, in Peru, s the presence of quaint sigus indicating what is for sale In the In- dian huts. A small bunch of wheat or barley tied on the end of a pole and stuck out in front of the hut indicates that there is chicha i uative corn beer) for sale within, A bunch of flowers on the end of a pole also has the same significance. A green wreath means that there is bread for sale, while a piece of white cloth or white paper waving in the breeze indicates that the wayfarer may here purchase aguardiente. a powerful white rum made of cane juice and containing a large percentage of raw alcohol.—, gonaut. “Galley West” The phrase “he knocked everything galley west” is credited to the United States by Webster's Dictionafy. It has really a far wider extent, and there 18 no reason to credit it to this or auy other solid land. It had its beginning in sailor English, essentially a migra- tory dialect of extent as wide as the upending sea. Galley west. or, {n its full form. galley west and crooked, means higglety piggety, all in confu- sion. It has the same sense of dis- ordered direction as appears in other locutions in sailor English, such as “Paddy’s burricane—straight up and down the mast”"—and “Tox Cox's traverse—twice around the scuttle butt and once around the mast.”—St. Louis Times. All Aboard For Wa-Ville FREE_EXCURSIO ON THE CITY OF BERNiiDJI ORROW AFTERNOON Wednesday, Aug. 20th LEAVES CITY DOCK AT 2:30 P. M. In charge of H. F. Cleveland LEAVES Wa-VILLE AT 5:00 P. M. Take your wife and sweetheart and give them a ride on the lake Come and Fill the Boat and secure a cottage or orchard lot in Bemidji’s most beautiful and coming summer resort 110 GHOICE LOTS FOR SALE Ranging in price from $25.00 to $300; $1.00 to $5.00 down and in monthly installments till one-third is paid. Balance may run for 10 years. J. J. OPSAHL Colonization Agent Red River Lumber Co. ! 1101 Bemidji Ave. Or H. F. cLEVELAND Sentinel Bmldmg, Phone 79 | | | TOM 4 Phone 177 PUZZLED THE CAPTAIN.' % His Vessel at Hamburg. The captain of a vessel which was bringing to America in the fall of 1796 & mysterious passenger who had come *| aboard at Hamburg watched the latter 80 closely that at last the passenger said one day: “Sir, this 18 not the first occaslon upon which I have observed the attentive scrutiny you bestow upon me. May I inquire the reason?’ “Sir,” responded the candid captain, ‘“you took passage on my ship as & Dane. I don’t believe you're anything of the kind.” The passenger smiled. The smile was full of perspicacity and confidence and was followed with, “Pray, tell me. then, what you belleve me to be?" At this question Captain Ewing fidgeted, hesitated and ' finally blurted out: “Well, to be honest, 1 think you are a gambler. You've well nigh ruin- ed yourself at'home and are now com- ing to fleece the fools you'll find on shore.” The young man’s smile broadened. The next minute he turned grave again, lowered his voice and replied: “Captain Ewing, as you have studied me during this voyage, so I have stud- fed you. 1 have come to the conclu- sion that you are a man to be trusted. I am Louis Philippe, due d'Orleans. eldest son of that Louis Philippe d'Or- leans who was slain by the guillotine on the 7th of November, almost three years ago.” VANISHED WILD PIGEONS. Once They Darkened Our Skies, but Are Never Seen Now. 014 residents of Olean—some of them not so very old, either—remember dis- tinctly the time when flocks of wild pigeons flew over the then straggling village of Olean in such countless num- bers as to almost obscure the very sky, when flock followed flock in such close succession as to partly give the impression that each was but the sep- arated group and companion voyagers of the flock that had but just passed overhead on- swiftly whirring wings. These flocks passed in one long pro- cession for days at a time in the early spring and aven for weeks. Thousands and even hundreds of thousands of them, if the reports of those days were to be taken fmplicitly, nested in the woods of Alton and Big Shanty, a short distance acyoss the Pennsylvania line. All at once these myriad flocks of pigeons ceased to come—disappeared abruptly, mysteriously, and apparently forever. Whence did they go so sud- denly and so completely? No one has yet been able to answer that question, Since that time game authorities and naturalists have searched in vain for further traces of the hirds, not onl; in this vicinity, but all over North America. Large sums have been of- fered by magazines as well as indi- viduals for a nest or even a single egy of the passenger pigeon.— Olean (N. Y.) Times. Where J. R. Green Was Librarian. Lambeth Palace library was founded about the beginning of the seventeenth century by philanthropic Archbishop Bancroft, and has been enriched by soveral of his successors. It now con- tsins over 30,000 volumes, many of great rarity, besides u vast number of Important manuscripts. Among the celebrated scholats who have had charge of this librury was John Rich- ard Green, the historian. He welcomed the change from an east end vicar- age, because it set him free to pursue his historical researches. “The quiet of the Lambeth library,” he wrote to . bis friend, Boyd Dawkins, “is like still waters after the noise of the east. I enjoy even the cleamer street, and, above all, my morning’s trot through the parks.”—Westminster Gazette. One or the Other. Her class was bright, and the teacher was proud of it. She was conducting a quiz in geography. “In wbat zone do we live?” asked the teacher. “The temp’rat zome,” chanted the well drilled class. “Right. And what do we mean by ‘temperate?” Willie, you may answer.” “Yemp'rut is where it's freezin' cold balf the time an’ roastin’ hot the other half the time.” If Willie wasn’t sent to the head for that it wasn’t because he didn’t de- serve the honor. —Cleveland Plain Dealer. An Author Who Lived Too Soen. That Swift's life was 2 failure in the eighteenth century and would have been a splendid success in the twen- tleth century mo one, we think, will deny. Imagine what a fortune “Gulli- ver's Travels” and “A Tale of a Tub” these days. Like the author of “Peter Pan” he would have made his plum and been made a baronet or an arch- bishop had he clung to holy orders, which he would probably have discard- ed. As it was, Swift died “like a rat (n a hole,” to use his own words.—Lon- don Saturday Review. Very Annoying. Mabelle—What makes the leading lady so grouchy? Estelle—She had counted on making a big hit with her Aivorce care this season, and just as she was about to bring proceedings her husband had to go and die. Mabelle (Indignantly)—Now, {sn’t that just like @ man?--Judge. Explain a Mystery. “It has always been my idea,” re- marked the man on the car, “that tomething jostled nature’s elbow when she was pouring the seeds into the wa- termelon.”—Toledo Blade, His Protest. The Dentist—Let me see! I'll have to treat four teeth—eight teeth—eight- een teeth— Mr. Pildo — Hold on! Four teeth, eight teeth, eighteen teeth! What do you think' 1 am—a comb? — London ’relemph. 8 His lgnunnu. “I don’t suppose you know what be- comes of all the pins?” “I should not. 1 don’t even know what becdmes of all the battle- ips.’ ingham aueaneflld, The Mysterious Dane Who Boarded. | would bave brought their author in |j Fmd a buyer for the Second-Hand things whwh you no longer need—Through o “For Sale” Ad. OASH . WITH COPY cent per word per Issue taken for less than 15 cents. +§ the advertisar is. the address printed in the ad. HELP WANTED. WANTED—At once, a girl for general housework. Mrs. S. E. P. White. WANTED—Carpenters and _ stone ' masons, Inquire at First National Bank. WANTED—Good _girl for general housework, 311 Bemidji avenue. WANTED—Two dishwashers at Markham Hotel. Apply at once. WANTED—Two dishwashers _Hotel Markham. Apply at once. at WANTED—Good seamstresses call at the Berman Emporium. 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 1s worth $20 per acre; will . sell for $13. Halt cash, balance three years at 6 per cent Interest. Address Bemidji Pioneer, Bemidji. Minn, #OR SALE—Typewriter ribLons 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 competent ] Regular charge rate one cent per word per ipscrtion. No ad Phone 31 Answer by Correspondence All Blind Ads using a number, box or initial for address. We cannot telllyou Do not ask this office who Don’t waste time, but write to P A A A A A A A A A A A A AN the same careful attention as when you appear in person. Phone 3. The Bemidji Pioneer Office Supply Store. .|FOR SALE—20 acre farm. All into crop and garden. House and barn and other improvements. Four miles West of Bemidji on the Mis- sissippi river. Will sell cheap Phone or write W. A. Casler, City. FOR SALE OR RENT—One 5 room new house on America~ avenue. ‘Thoroughly finished. Electric lights. Lot 50 x 140. House 16 x 24; 18 foot post. Inquire of Mal- zahn and Hannah. FOR SALE—Residence Lot 10 block 3 second addition to Bemidji Price $1700. aEsy terms. For further in- @rmation write Bagley Bldg & Loan Assn. Bagley, Minn. FOR SALIE—3Small fonts of type, sev- eral differont points and In first clags condition. Call or write thie office for proofs. Address Bemidji Pioneer, Bemidji, Mino. _ FOR SALE—Six room house 306 America avenue, south, has water and is in good condition. Will sell on good terms. Inquire 203 Sec- ond street. FOR SALE- -Rubber stamps. The Pioueer wirt procure any kind ot rubber stamp for you on short no- “|FOR SALE—One Cary safe, in first FOR SALE—A cottage on a fitty foot corner lot. Address 901 Ameri- FOR RENT—Upstairs LOST—$5 rewnrd fcr the return nf _TUESDAY, AUGUST 19, 1913 FOR SALE—Young cow glving milk. Phone 807. or see I. G. Hay- craft, 903 11 street Bemidji. class condition. 30 x 36 outside ‘measurement. H, J. Loud. FOR REN1 517 Irvine avenue. Phone 778. LOST AND FOUND my 7 months old pointer. Color dark brown and white. Answers to name of Tony. Well marked dog. Returnto Gem‘ge E Kreatz. MASCLU..ANEOUE !\UVERNSEKS— The great state ot North Dakota offers unlimited op- portunities for business to classi- Ged advertisers. The recognized advertising medium fu the Fargc Daily and Sunday Courier-Newe, the only seven-day paper in the state and the paper which carries the largest amount of classified advertising. The Courier-News covers North Dakota like a blank- et; reaching all parts of tne state tbe day of publication; it is the paper to use in order to get re- - sults; rates cne cent per word first ingertlon, one-half cent per word succeeding Inscrtions; fifty cents per line per month. Address the Courier-News, Fargo, N. D. BOUGHT AND SOLD—Second hand furuiture. Odd Fellow’s building, Reroes from postoffice, phone 128, The city bus will call for you and your baggage day or night.Phone 515.—Adv. WANTED—At cotton rags at once 5 cents epr pound Pio- neer. once clean Pioneer Wanr Ads 1-2 Cent a Word Bring Results Ask the Ban Who Has Trisd Them DAILY Wedding Invitations Announcements Packet Heads Catalogues Descriptive - Booklets Sale Bills The BEMIDJI PIONEER | Daily and Weekly |72 Book, Job, Commercial and Society Printing Our Specmltles 'LINOTYPE LOMPOSITION FU NISHED FOR THE TRADE g (OMPLETE LINE OF OFFIGE SUPPL[ES Security Bank Building Vindow Cards Calling Cards Shipping Tags Statemen:s Note Heads Bill Heads Envelopes - Dodgers

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