Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, December 22, 1913, Page 4

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

" MONDAY DECEMBER 22, 1913, IS A BIG VICTORY Bl R R R R R R R * & THE BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEER i QUIT MEAT WHEN | ! 4 BARBED WIRE FENCE ON. + - e it ES MEXICAN BORDER. o g i 5 . e ~ FOR GOVERNMENT|: = : KIDNEYS BOTHER " 4 Washington, Dec. 22—A | i < barbed wire fence along the < : : j *+ Mexican boundary to check in- <#|Take a glass of Salts before breakfast 1 ¥ . . <~ cursions into American terri- % EEmYs A Agreement for Dissolution) = cory was proposed in a bili in. | if your Back hurts or Bladder is | S ¢ — E—— S <+ troduced in the senate by Sen- is troublin ou of “w"-e Trust ” <+ ator Ashurst. A total of $350,- o g8y 2, 000 would be appropriated. £ . = RAE——— & No man or woman who eats meat o R T S S SR R ) FEDERAL SUIT PENDING Separation of American Telephone and Telegraph Company From‘the Western Union May Remove Dan- ger of Government Ownership. Washington, Dec. 22.—The great- est anti-trust victory of President Wilson's administration thus far— the voluntary digsolution of the so called telephone trust—commanded the attention of all administration of- ficials. Next to the fact that all the fea- tures against which the government was preparing an anti-trust suit will be eliminated with the consent and co-operation of “big business” itself, without years of court fighting, the principal topic of discussion in ad- ministration circles was what effect will the dissolution have on the movement for government owner- ship? It has been generally expected in congress that such a plan would soon be urged as an administration meas- ure. With the voluntary dissolution of! the so called trust actually under way, however, Attorney General Mc- Reynolds and the interstate com- MISSOURI WINS TWO- GENTPASSENGERRATE Overcharges Estimated to Be in Excess of Ten Millions, i Kansas City, Dec. 22.—The state of Missouri won a final victory in the 2-cent railroad passenger and maxi- mum freight rate cases when Judge Smith McPherson of Red Oak, Ia., fol- lowing the mamdate of the TUnited States supreme court, dismissed “without prejudice” the cases filed by thirteen railroads enjoining the state from enforcing the rate laws. The higher court sustained the validity of both laws and ordered the cases dis- missed. Judge McPherson also refused to re- tain jurisdiction in the federal court, as asked by the roads. -As a result shippers and travelers may bring suit to cover excess rates paid during the time the injunctions were in force. These charges are estimated to be in excess of $10,000,000. Judge McPher- son ordered costs aggregating $25,000 assessed against the railroads. regularly can make a mistake by flushing the kidneys occasionally says a well-known authhority. Méat forms uric acid which excites the kidneys, they become overworked from the strain, get sluggish and fail to filter the waste and poisons from the blood, then we get sick. Nearly all rheumatism, headaches, liver “trouble, nervousness, dizziness, sleeplessness and urinary disorders BOX;HE from sluggish kidneys. The moment you feel a dull ache in the klilneys or your back hhurts or if the urine is cloudy, offensive, full of sediment, irregular of pasa- age or attended by a sensation of scalding, stop eating meat and get about four ounces of Jad Salts from any pharmacy; take a tablespoon in a glass of water before breakfast and in afew days your kidneys will act fine. This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with lithia, and has been used for generations to flush and stimulate the kidneys, also to neutralize the acids in urine so it no longer causes irritation thus ending bladded weakness. Jad Salts is inexpensive and can- Contestants, now is the time [to tell - your friends about our liberal [offer and secure extra votes. T0 PIAND CONTESTANTS During next week up to {Christmas Eve we offer 5000 Votes In Our Free P Contest WITH EVERY DOLLAR PURGHASE merce commission prepared to scan — not injure; makes a delightful ef- L) the details of the zeparation of the| RECEIVERSHIP FOR RAILWAY |fervescent lithia-water drink which i . American Telephone and Telegraph _ everyone should take now and thehn 1 company from the Western Union|Court in Charge of New Orleans, Mo- |to keep the kidneys clean and actice j and the work of disentangling tele- bile and Chicago. and the blood pure, thereby avoiding " "‘;]9“ agulf‘s t11rou:?hn‘utlthe ?ountry. Mobile, Ala., Dec. 22.—The New Or- |serious kidney complications. | which .threatened federal actlon. iy o, " tobile and Ohicago, raliroad, 1 1 1 f ) e 4 Not to Extend Monopoly. controlled jointly by the St. Louis PIONEER WANT ADS { Not only has the American Tele. and San Francisco and the Louis-|one hajf cent a word-cash with copy i phone and Telegranit company agreed | ville and l\'aSthl}E railroads, was Phone 31 to give up its control of the Western | thrown into a receivership by the or- Union, but it has sgreed not to ex-| der of the federal district court here. tend its monopoly of local companies| The petitioner was the Metropolitan i in the telephone ficld. Trust company of New York, holder L L S Dut the most important point to| of $12,000,000 of 5 per cent bonds is- [ [ the American people, officials declare, | Sued by the railroad company last ] is the telephone compa agree-| July. { .ment to extend the use of its toll! Colonel W. F. Owen, president, was lines to all local cor es. appointed receiver. - That conce: n, which was admit-| . . tedly more than Attorney General] s e < < o & BT [ * McReynolds expected to procure In ;< k4 a legal fight, opens long distance fa-|+ FORTUNE PURSUES KAN- Whatever your calling—in every busi- ] cilities by telephone to many com-| < SAN TWENTY YEARS, L b and profession young s Old )“"’- munities which have long been denied | 4 = - — — it. 4 Iola, Kan, Dec. 22—While - A CIRCULATION BUILDER if you are awake’and in the procession Representative Lewis of Maryland,| % Axel E. Johnson, thirty-eight-'!' : < 5 U author of the parcel post law and ac-|* years of age, was wandermg "+ This beautiful blg book would sell for $4 tive in the movement for government | twenty years in Montana an v . ownership of telegraph and telephone | Wyoming in search of fortune - pnder usual COIldltlQIlS, h"“ daily papel:s - lines, introduced a resolution, how- _l'_ a fo}rtnnf_of s;ao,(:lo_o was %mug ;x: throughout the country will not permit = ever, to direct the house postoftice upi Zor in 3 lis ol ome . . o _ . committee to go ahead and report a %+ near Vilas, in the Kansas gas :l: IFS sale. at_ stqres until this great educa bill for government ownership of tele-| ¥ fields. Saturday Johnson Bot & tional distribution ends. heck fi 49,340, y phone lines to be operated by the|i the IOney; 4ielec 011‘5 "d e . postoffice department. * represeunting: gas l;osan:xesr e 0 “The action of the Bell company ; him a: ax; 1:;9”. ro Iy ; Harm & | will not reduce a single telephone or - property o 8. parents. _L - /11— telegraph rate in the United States, 8008 el % % s 06 ok 2 13 = | and so the public necessities for leg- Fodrehod b bobdebelduducdodidad . Pan.ama And The Canal portrays ,i 4 islative action to postalize these meth- s i ods of communication, as they have UNIONS RETALIAIE ON BANK 11_1 plc.ture and prose .t'he CIoscr rela \ \ mot attocted in the Touneo haTies: 41€ | Withdraw Fund Where Agitator was | tionship of ALL America, both North - { ' : Discharged. < a (] [ ) | Arsan Squad SHi Busy. Berlin, Dec. 22—he wor wnons [§ @Nd South of the ten-mile zone. | Bath, Eng., Dec. 22.—An ‘arson|of Germany decided to withdraw de- . [ squad” -of the militant suffragettes|posits amounting to $5,000,000 from great Canal becomes a COmmOI} hlgh' a d O 3 % H added another large country mansion|a leading bank in Berlin, which re- . i to the long list of those they have de-| cently discharged one of its employes WaY for the prOdUCts Of Can ada and P e d:Prose \ stroyed by fire. They burned down a|because he had been engaged in agi- = 3 2 = B bbs valuable house situated in the exten:|tating for the formation of a bank BraZl]’ as well as for those Of the Unlted sive grounds in the vicinity of this|clerks’ union. ol bt % city. The place was unoccupied. A The bank declined to reinstate the States . the threc prOIlflc c‘).mmerClal i quantity of suffrage literature was|man at the request of the labor J Al found strewn about the grounds. unions. C'()untrlgls‘llof ti.)he _great Amerlchan (clon tinet. € Dbusiness man who does . " . not read this book is not alert to the interests of his own country or his o . \ — L \ g 18 own business. 3 TATION \‘ ' < M ytoY fa ; < . £ o caNal It Means Money to You Y AN 1 ER - '3 o TolNIED BY TR Tol f the greatest achi tk t i . = % 0 learn o e greatest achievement known to man is 12 BEMIDJI PIONEER DEC, 1 s N . 2 » B = ,ff’__ 913 invaluable to you in your \\usmess. It is of the great- i ; £ OV, : est importance that you should have an intimate I§ ure a..d Prose \ ini i i P24 e du knowledge of all matters pertaining to international I { i ] commerce. / . § o = ‘i iead How You May Have It Almost Free ] ? Cut out the above coupon, and present it at this office with the ex- ) 5 * pense smount herein set opposite the style selected (which covers the = g B - 2 ) items of the cost of packing, express from the factory, checking, clerk This_illustrates the large book—exact size S ;llll;;',a{::,lu'?;}:wr necessary EXRENSE items), and receive your choice of 9x12—larger than the printed announcement 00000000000‘700&"5’0 e ) This beautiful big volume is written by Willis J. Abbot, . 3 o & EPANAMA a writer of international renown, and is df acknowl- Presents this book to you fir ouly 6 certificates of con- More than 600 beautiful pictures in color AND THE edged standard reference work of the great Canal Zone. 1 4 H H it — 3 cA L It is a splendid large book of almost 500 pages, 9x12 secutive dat’es' p“nted dai elsewhere in these col and monotone NA inches in size; printed from new type, large and clear, umns, and the expense jmount of 98 cents for the ) In Ficture and P n special paper; bound in tropical red vellum cloth 2 h H 3 ) A n Ficture and Pross O Cl: H s { \ r’é \LLustraTgp title stamped in éold, with inlaid color panel; contains large volumg, or 48 cents fir the sma}ler size, which ‘ S 1 $4 EDITION more than 600 méxgnigc;nl lllustrationls, including beal;- covers the items of the dost of packing, express from ! > tiful pages reproduced from water color studies in col- 3 i _; 2 orings that far surpass any work of a similar character. Call EATENSE the faCtory, checkmg, clgk hire and other necessary “ i 2nd sce this beautiful book that would sell for $4 under usual | Amountof expenses. | 1 » conditions, but whicn is presented to our readers for SIX of 98(: S il 2lha above Certificates of consecutive dates, and only the il 4 Sert by Mail, Postage Paid, for $1.39 and 6 Certificates b I Regula: ; I th $ Pazama and u;z;gmmgzzzg.:rufi:?:fififi:’d@&g‘fi:::lfi-,g $ 20N R AT headers for S ot the 8¢ { 3 b Sent by Mail, Postage Paid, for 67 Cents and 6 Certificates b g""wm . |

Other pages from this issue: