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WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 7, 1914, About The City KKK KKK KKK KKK * LEST WE FORGET ¥ KR EKKKKK KK KKK KK KK Kryl is here next Monday. ! The Athletic club basketball quint will give a dance in the city hall in h honor of the Superior five Friday. ) night. These dances are always well attended. As a last big opportunity the Pio- neer is offering 25,000 votes to every contestant in the Schroeder piano contest for every dollar obtained for 3 subscriptions. It is not yet to late to h enter. This offer ends Jan, 17. It is one of the chief assets to a daily newspaper published in a city the size of Bemidji to have an in- teresting local news column. Not i only are items telephoned to the Pio- neer appreclated by the publishers, i | but the readers enjoy them. Phone 31. { Three of the best basketball games ever played in Bemidji will be staged i on Thursday, Friday and Saturday b, evenings of this week when the Sup- erfor Y. M. E. A. quint will meet the Athletic club boys for the champion- ship. The little Dutch band will be there, - That Kryle, one of the three grea‘- est cornetists the world has ever known will appear in Bemidji, at the Methodist church, January 12. Kryl comes here as one of the Redpath Ly ceum bureau entertainers, being brought to Bemlidji by the Womans’ Study club. This Is the second num- | ber. | Next month brings the Schroeder ‘ plano contest to a close, February 14 « belng the closing date. The candid- ates are growing closer each day, and all have a splendid opportunity to win. Save your votes for your favorite in the race, and help her win the pretty instrument, now on - display at Schroeder’s. A. G. Wedge is spending a few days at International Falls on business. Roller Masquerade Jan. 7th, W. C. Brow of Soo Falls, is transac- ting business in Bemidji and vicin- ity. Now is the time to lay in a suppiy of sugar. See Schmidts Grocery.— Adv. A. M. Paulson of Grand Forks t - transacted business in Bemidjl yes- terday. J. S. Kennedy and A, C. Townsend of Akeley were visitors in Bemidji yesterday. Brinkman tonight The Parish Priest.—Adv. R. B. Smith of this city went to Minneapolis Monday business trip. evening on a . One of these days you ought to B0 to Hakkerups and have your ple- ture taken.—Adv, W. F. Kunitz of Brainerd is among the business callers who are spend- ing the day in the city. Omar Gravelle of Red Lake, is at the St. Anthony's hospital under the care of Dr. Rowland Gilmore. Niven E. Ward of Northome was in Bemidji Tuesday visiting with friends and transacting business. Makes you step lively, hustles you up, increases your engery; its Hollis- ter's R. M. Tea. Barker’s Drug Store. —Adv. H. P. Storkenson of Grand Forks was among the out of town visitors who were in the city yesterday on ‘business. Verna Carpenter has . returned school after a few days illness. She has been suffering with a bad cold and a stiff neck. Brinkman tonight The Priest.—Adv. Mrs. Guy Jacobs of Yola was in Bemidji yesterday attending to vari- Parish Brinkman Theatre - Tonight THE HARRY ST. CLAIR STOCK COMPANY Presents Tonight the Great Four Act Rural Drama Entitled ‘home in the afternoon. Mrs. William Blakeley of Farley was in the city Tuesday between trains calling on friends and attend- ing to business matters. Miss Eleanor Fuglseth of Fertile, Minnesota, spent last evening in Be- midji with friends. Miss Fugelseth left today for her -home. Brinkman tonight The Priest.—Adv. E. A. Mills of Crookston was in Bemidji on Tuesday transacting busi- ness for the great Northern rallway with which he is connected. Parish Miss Christine Bergren, who has been visiting friends at Hackensack, Minnesota. has returned to Bemidji. Miss Bergren is a trained nurse. The Episcopal Guild will be en- tertained by Mrs. Shepherd and Mrs. Higby in the Episcopal church base- ment Thursday afternoon at 2:30. Earl McMahon of Solway spent Tuesday in Bemidji visiting with friends and shopping. Mr. McMahon returned to his home Tuesday night. Brinkman tonight The Priest.—Adv. Miss Christie Wallace of Solway was in the city Monday between trains, having some dental work done. b Miss Wallace teaclies the school at |9 Solway. E. Akelson of Mentor spent yester- day in Bemidji on a combined busi- ness and pleasure trip. While in the |@ city Mr. Akelson called upon many of his friends. Coustipation, indigestion, and provoke one terribly. Hollister's R. M. Tea clears the bowels, regu- lates the Stomach. Barker’s Drug tSore. —Adv. Thomas A. White, C. W. Speelman, M. B. Seepe, C. Lofgren, F. R. Gulge, F. Jevne, and J. H. Drummund of In- ternational Falls were in Bemidji yesterday on legal business. Impure blood means pimples, black heads, nasty complexion—Hol- |Q lister's R. M. Tea clears the blood, drives out impurities. Barkers Drug Store—Adv. Ed. F. Moran of Thief River Falls is transacting business and calling on friends in Bemidji. Mr. Moran will return to his home in Thiet River Falls this afternoon. William Russell left last evening ous bueiness matters. -Shg.retmed annoy [ ¢ GRAND THEATRE, TONIGHT “An tional crime that mystifies DANIEL FROHMAN Presents - - Hour Before Dawn” Produced by the Famous Players Film Co. A% A Startling Modern Female Detective Play, in +~ Three Magnificent Reels - ; With Laura Sawyer and House Peters AN ASTOUNDING MYSTERY introducing the greatest scientific marvel of the age. to a recent authentic and scientific discovery. A sensa- the police is finally traced Admission - - Majestic Theatre Pictures DeLuxe “The Blight” Pathe ® In which is shown that ¢ the sins of the father is visited on the children. ¢ “At the Sign of the Lost Angal” G Vitagraph A western story where Anne sacrifices her own > life to save another. “His Nephew's Scheme” Edison A lively comedy full 2 of ludicrous situations § and sure to please every- § one. & ? . B O T TS N R OT R ONCR RN R RO RUN-DOWN FOR YEARS for St Paul to resume his duties in a St. Paul business college after spend- ing the past two weeks as the guest of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. P. J. Russell. Misses Serena and Jessie Blue of town of Northern were in the city Monday. Miss Jessie left the same day for Grand Forks, where she is a student at the university of North Dakota. If you have a savings account earn- ing 4 per cent for you in the North- ern National Bank it will give you an abgolute sense of security and the “Rainy waz" will have no terrors for you.—Adv. P. C. Thompson, county commis- sioner, of Blackduck spent yester- day in Bemidji. While here Mr. Thompson is attending the meeting of the county board held at the court house. Miss Iza Smith of Lenoard assistant at the Klein dressmaking parlors, re- turned to Bemidji Monday morning to resume her duties, after a few days’ vacation spent with relatives and friends. Mrs, A. P. White is expected home the latter part of the week. Mrs. White has spent the past few weeks in ‘Milwaukee, and has been with her son Harold, who recently under- went an operation on his eye. Miss Lucine McCuaig and Mrs. S. M. Sinclair of Princeton, Minnesota, entertained at a dinner party last evening, the occasion being their birthday. Mrs. Sinclair is Mrs. Wil- liam McCuaig’s mother and is a guest at the McCuaig home. Trades Women May See Wilson. ‘Washington, Jan. 7.—In order to bring woman's suffrage to the atten- tion .of President Wilson again the executive s to be asked to receive at the White House Jan. 31 a delegation of 1,000 working women, representing the various trades in which women’ are employed. ‘Would Buy Bull Run Fleld. ‘Washington, Jan. 7.—Plans for the government to buy the Bull Run bat- tlefield and make of it a national park are endorsed in a report by a board of army officers to Secretary Garrison. Better care -for the' monuments now there is recommended. Greece . Shaken by Quakes. Athens, Greece, Jan. 7.—Violent earthquakes caused great damage to ‘Parish Priest’ A Play Full of Comedy, Drama and Pathos and Embracing the Strength of the Entire Company of Fourteen Talented Act- ors and Actresses Admlulpn..‘ 28c¢c, 38c property in the provinces of Eiis and Peloponnesus. ok bk ok kb ek ok ok kbbb b Strength Restored by Vinol. Strength and even life itself de- pends upon nourishmen and proper assimilation of food, and unless di- gestion is good the whole body suf- fers. Mrs. C. W. Bushby of Moundsville, W. Va., says: “For years 1 was in a weakened, run down condition, and I could not find anything that would help me. Vinol was recommended : 1d I tried it. Before I finished the first Dottle I was better. I continued its use and am as well as ever. I have gotten several neighbors to take Vi- nol with the same result.” We know the great power of Vinol our delicious cod liver and iron tonic without oil in building up all weak- ened, rundown persons, and for chronic coughs, colds and pulmonary trouble, and that is why we guaran- tee to return your money if it does not help you. Barker’s Drug Store-Be- midji.—Adv. P. S. Our Saxo Salve is truly won- derful for Eczema. We guarantee it. BOTH ARMIES ARE RESTING ON ARMS Mexican Belligerents Awaiting Reinforcements. Presldio, Tex., Jan, 7.—With rein. forcements rushing to the aid of both armies the Mexican federals and reb- els at Ojinaga, who have been battling for eight days, rested on their arms. Federals declare General Benjamin Argumedo, with 4,000 troops, is com- ing to their relief from Torreon and assert 12,000 other federals are march- ing only one day behind. Argumendo plans to attack General Ortega’s reb- els from the rear. Simultaneously 3,000 rebels have been sent from Chihuahua under com- mand of General Herrera. Argumedo should arrive before the end of the week. His troops are rac- ing, however, with Herrera’s to gain La Mula pass, as it is conceded.that whichever force arrives there first will have a strong strategic advan- tage. R R R R R R R R R NEIGHBORS OBJECT TO ME- MORIAL CHIMES. New York, Jan. 7.—Because . Mrs. Julia Gertrude Lyle, wid- ow of John S. Lyle, who died last July, leaving the bulk of his $20,000,000 estate to her, insists on having memorial chimes on her Tenafly (N. J.) estate rung every fifteen min- utes day and night, some of_ her meighbors appealed for an injunction to Vice Chancellor Lewis in Jersey City. Mrs. Lyle will have to respond next Monday and give:some reason ‘why an injunction should not be issued to hush the ‘bells at- least during the sleeping hours. g gt EXR TS §|the first floor. o e ole ofe oo ofe o o ofe ok b ok e ok ol ol o ke b FIVE PERISH WHEN HOTEL IS BURNED | Six Others Seriously Injured at Newark, 0, Newark, O., Jan. 7.—Five men are dead and half a dozen seriously in- jured in a fire which destroyed the Kearns hotel, a second class rooming house and restaurant. The fire was discovered shortly be- fore 3 a. m. by Patrolman Grossa, who awakened 'the hotel clerk asleep on The latter ran up- stairs and aroused the guests. When he attempted to escape he found the stairway choked with flames. He rushed through the flames and out into the street, his clothing a mass of flames. When aroused several of the lodg- ers rushed to the windows and leaped to the ground in their night clothing. 2| Others stopped to dress and five of these lost their lives. They were overcome by smoke in their rooms. f R R S R R A A E3 - FAMOUS BEAUTY BURNED * * L RESCUING CHILD. L3 % et L3 * St. Louis, Jan. 7.—Miss An- <+ + nette Coyne, pronounced by < + London, Berlin and Budapest <+ ++ photographers “the most beau- <+ # tiful woman,” is suffering from < slight burns received when she <+ < rescued three-year-old Jack < < Bennett of Kansas City from a < < room ablaze with holiday dec- < &+ orations. e L3 * R R SEVENTY-FIVE MEN _PERISH Drowned When Frail Craft Hits Rock in Frazer River. ‘Winnipeg, Jan. 7—Angelo Pugliese, railway laborer, brought word to the immigration department that seventy- five laborers were drowned on the Grand Trunk Pacific railway near Fort George, B. C., a few days ago. Pugliese was attempting to cross 9 Frazer river with 100 others in a big barge. In spite of the swift flow- ing current, something not much fear- ed by the experienced rivermen, the entire party was loaded into a barge. The boat became unamanageable and crashed into a large rock in the center of the stream. The frail craft ‘was dashed to pieces and the human cargo plunged into the river. Of the 100 men that boarded the boat only twenty-five were taken from the water alive and many of these re more or less seriously injured. five bodies wera regcovered. M'ADO0 OPPOSES THE PLAN Against Proposed Huge Regional Bank at New York. New York, Jan. 7.—Although Secre- tary McAdoo of the treasury depart- ment said that hé had formulated no views regarding the division of the country into regional reserve districts he gave a strong intimation that he was opposed to the creation in New York of a huge regional bank embrac- ing most of the Northeast and 40 or 50 per cent of the country’s banking power. Such a bank was advocated by New York bankers at the hearing of the federal reserve organization commit- tee, composed of Secretary McAdoo and Secretary Houston of the depart- ment of agriculture, “If we put 40 or 50 per cent of the ‘banking power into a New York dis- trict,” said Mr. McAdoo, “we would be obliged under the law to divide the remaining territory into seven dis- tricts that will be comparatively lean.” CONSPIRACY IS THE CHARGE Physicians Who Refuse Eugenic Test May Be Prosecuted. ) Madison, Wis., Jan. 7—That physi- clans who agree not to make tests un- der the eugenics marriage law come dangerously near to forming a con- spiracy is hinted in an interview with Aftorney General Walter C. Owen. _Mr. Owen’s attention was called to ¢ nasal and dry catarrh, ln.:gln: c%uld in the head, hay fever or any complication resulting from chronic “~ catarrh. open, thus ON’S 1. JELLY ‘ the agreements being signed by some 00" < S $ ‘The newspaper says the registrar general’s estimated population of Greater London was. 7,411,885 as against Greater New York’s 5,476,966 Even allowing that Jersey City and Newark ‘are necessarily offshoots of New York and adding them, Greater New - York, the paper insists, is still 75,000 behind Greater London. RAISE MONEY FOR JOBLESS 8an Francisco Business Men to Sub- scribe $50,000. - San Francisco, Jan. 7.—Plans for raising $50,000 by private contribu- tion were perfected at a meeting of the Citizens’ relief committee formed to take up the question of providing for the city’s unemployed. Men of wealth have pledged themsélves to raise this sum. ‘To prevent .an invasion such as oc- ourred a few days ago, when the municipality announced that all idle men would be given employment, and San Francisco quickly became the of the physicians in villages and cities not to make the tests. “The physicians who sign agree- ments not to make the tests, as they are doing in some communities, come said the attorney general. “The sign- ing of an agreement coupled with the refusal to make an examination cer- tainly bears strong indications of a| possible conspiracy Such conditio will be looked into.” - LONDON DISPUTES THE GLAI}I Denles New York Pretensions to World’s Largest City. London, Jan. 7.—The Times, in dis- cussing the claim that.Greater New York has a population of 5,476,966 agdinst London’s population of 4, 518,191, points out that this estimate only takes “the administrative coun- ty of London, which is not London, but simply a unit for the purpose of self-government. It is hemmed in on every side by other such units with a combined population of nearly 3,000, mecca for the unemployed within a Ing work are to be those having familie; given preference. States May Tax Foreign Bonds. - Washington, Jan. 7.—States may tax thelr citizens on the par value of stocks held in corporations in other- states, The supreme court 8o held in the case of Truman R. Hawley of Mal- den, Mass, who contended his con- such a tax. Quantrell Band Survivor Dead. 7.—Louis Willows, Cal, Jan. stitutional rights were infringed by Hulge, one of the fow surviving mem- bers of the notorious Quantrell band of guerrillas, dled suddenly of heart disease at his ranch_near here. He had been a resident of this county for thirty years. Alaskan gate Dead. Newport, R. I, Jan. 7.—Thomas S. Nowell, prominent in the development of Alaska and formerly:a Boston busi- ness man, died at Seattle.according to - a telegram received. here by his wife. Mr. Nowell represented Alaska terri- tory at Washington. for several years. ROYAL Baking Powder ROYAL ] makes hot bread whole- some. Perfectly leavens without fermentation. These are qualities pecul- iar to ROYAL BAKING POWDER alone. A Cream of Tartar Powder Greatest of All in Leavening Strength U. S. Government Food Report, Bulletin 13, page 599, is indispensable to finest cookery, and to the comfort and convenience of mod- ern housekeeping, ROYAL BAKING N O “Stock Taking” Inventory be added; with thousands €ITorS: man without an American Adder But, for the man who has an “American,” it means not only elimi- nating the errors in addition, but speed in : the actual taking of the inventory. THE AMERICAN isso light and portable that it can be taken right¢ amongst stock shelves or bins, on the job, at the Order One Now place on a . 10 Days Free Trial $35.00 Cash No obligation on your part whatever. like it and want to keep it the price is tigne has arrived for the manufacturer and will soon be here for the retailer. means almost endless columns of figures to of chances for By no means a pleasant job for the time. Why it’s worth $35.00 for inventory alone, to say nothing about the other 51 weeks each year. We still have a few machines availablé to If you or $7.50 down and $5.00 per month. . ' . Write, phone or wire . The Bemidji Pioneer Pub. Co, e - _’",B"emidji, Minn.