Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, January 15, 1914, Page 8

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INTENSE COLD IN EASTERN STATES Forty Below Zero in North- ern New York. GREAT SUFFERING CAUSED Nine Dead Officially Reported in New “York City, but Total Will Greatly Exceed That Number — Atlantic Coast Strewn With Wreckage. New York, Jan. 15.—Relief from the intense cold weather which has held the Eastern and New. England states in its grip for two days is promised. However, near zero weather or below still prevails along the Middle and North Atlantic seaboard. In New York state the lowest tem- perature reported—43 degrees.below zero—was at Harrisville. Few towns in the northern and western sections of the state reported temperatures higher than 20 degrees below zero. New York city, which seldom expe- riences below zero weather, touched a record mark at midnight at 4 degrees below. The number of dead officially rec- orded was nine, but police or health officials believe the total will greatly exceed that figure. Hundreds have re- ceived treatment at hospitals and thousands of homeless men and wom- en have been sheltered in mission and municipal lodging houses. Because of the needs of the poor for coal 400 coal teamsters who have been on strike returned to work, agrveeing to leave their demands for imncreased pay to arbitration. From along the Atlantic coast, from Cape Hatteras to Cape Cod, reports of disasters to vessels kept filtering in. The gale was said to be strewing the beaches with wrecks and taking many lives. Several schooners are said to have been lost with their crews. New England was swept by a sixty- mile gale and there were many re- ports of suffering in Boston and other cities. Schools and factories are olosed and several cities are without electric light and power. Three deaths due to cold are re- ported from Philadelphia, where four degrees above zero was registered. Other points in Pennsylvania, New Jersey and Maryland reported zero weather and intense suffering. |Smith M E .. .. Smith-Robinson Lbr Co 105.92 Smyth D C .o 710 Southworth H B. 3.32 Spooner M A 27.74 Stakis, Wm. 8.3 Standard Oil 306.76 Stanton, C W. 63.45 Stanton, Dr. D L 20.19 Steckman, Henry. .. 9.66 Sterling and Garrison 4.3 Steven, 1§ F ns.ig Stewart, Sco .. Stewart, W 10.01 Stoner M D 2.46 Stuart, Thos C 1.73 Sullivan J H 50.00 Swedbach, E 27.2 Swift & Co.. 126.09 Swinson, Th 7.30 Symons T R. 1.73 Taber, Edwin F. 1.73 Taber, Frank M. 2.46 Tanner Geo W 60.96 Tenstrom John 64 MANY FORCED INTO STREETS W Thousand Rendered Homeless in New York City Fires. New York, Jan. 16.—Four fires in [w rapid succession in widely separated parts of the city caused intense suf- fering to nearly a thousand tenants while the temperature hovered around zero. The first blaze, in a Bowery lodging house, drove 130 shivering derelicts from the structure, 400 from a lodging house adjoining and twenty- eight families from tenements nearby. Half an hour later 150 men, women and children were forced into the icy streets from the Glendenning, an apartment hotel in Harlem. Before this blaze was extinguished fifteen famillies were routed from a burning five-story apartment house at Sixty- first street and Columbus avenue. COUNT BONI TO MARRY AGAIN Engaged to Cousin of His Former Wife's Husband. Paris, Jan. 15.—Count Boni de Cas- tellane is engaged to Countess de Tal- leyrand Perigord, cousin of Prince Helie de Sagan, husband of Anna Gould. By this marriage Count Boni will be come a relative of his former wife. This announcement was made by the Duke de Talleyrand, who took occasion to deny the rumor that Count Boni was engaged to Miss Anne Mor- gan, daughter of the late J. Pierpont Morgan. RAIL SERVICE SUSPENDED General Strike on All Roads in Por- tugal. Lisbon, Portugal, Jan. 15.—The en- tire railroad service of Portugal is suspended owing to the declaration of a general strike by the employes. About one-third of the roads belong to the state. Three Kansas Miners Die. Mulberry, Kan., Jan. 15.—Three miners were killed when a cage car- rying six miners to their work in Mine No. 7 of the Spencer-Newlins Coal company here was dropped 100 feet to the bottom of the shaft by the breaking of a cable. The other three men in the cage were injured, probably fatally. Wants Fugitives Returned. Mexico City, Jan. 16.—A formal re- quest for the return to Mexico “of General Salvador Mercado, who com- manded the federal troops at Ojinaga, and his comrades who crossed into American territory, is to be made to the United States government by Gen. eral Aurelia Blanquet, Mexican min- ister of war. Admiral Count ito Dead. Toklo, Jan. 15.—Count Kukyo. Ito, Japanese admiral of the fleet, is dead. He was seyenty years old. Formany Years he was chief of staff of the aavy. Read Pioneer want ads 1did on December 17th 1913, file in this 107095 made Dec. 26th, 1911, for NW 3% BANK IS FORGED TO CLOSE Institution Says Newspaper Caused the Trouble. 3 Barnesville, Minn., Jan. 15.—The Barnesville National bank, one of the oldest banking institutions in Barnes- ville, closed its doors through action of its officers. It is said that news- paper “articies published in another town a week ago caused a run that the bank could not withstand. © C. H. Anhier, national bank exami- ner, has been telegraphed for and is expecled'to arrive shortly to check over the affairs. A receiver will be appointed, ac- cording to a statement made by Cash- ier Vangerpen. Every depositor will be paid in full, he says. TAX LIST SHOWS MANY INCREASES (Continued trom Page 1.) Sloan Thomas. Slough, Thos J Smart Getchell, Smart Tom . Smith Mrs A L. Smith Dr E H . Smith Frank.. Smith George. Thome Mat... Thompson, Thorsten Thursdale Harry Tibbets F .... Tidd, L R. Titus, Harry Todd, T A... Torrance, G M. Trask J J.. Trodler Charles. Troppman G 3 - WA on SIS S S D 00 1 1000 0 i B0 ¢ - Vandersluis C W Van Dervort, H W. Vincent, C S.. Walberg, Fran Walker George Ward L A ... Warfield Elec Light Co. Warfield A A... Warfield C W. Warninger, J. Weher Wm. > Witting A E Woods, Mrs E ood, Herbert Woodward, E S. Worth, A W... Wright Wes H . Young J B.. Young P A. Younggren J Zeigler J G. Andrews, ¥ J. Anderson, H E Cahill, Jas.. Commercial Doran, Alec. Ervig, Oscar Ervin, T S French Geo. Hagberg. Bros Hagen, Wm. Hillaby John Melges Bros. Eckstrum, L P . French, E. N & C Attention Modern Samaritans Regular meeting of the Samaritans at 1. 0. O. F. halltonight. Installa- tion of officers. A good attendancs is desired. ' HATTIE HYATT, Lady ‘Good Samaritan. NOTICE OF CONTEST Department of the Interior States Land Office Crookston, Minnesota Jan. 7, 1914, To John J. Leska of Thief River Falls, Minnesota, Contestee: 3 You are hereby notified that Cathar- ine Peterson who gives Amboy, Minn. R. F. D. as her post office addre: United office her duly corroborated application to contest and secure the cancellation of yvour Homestead, entry, Serial No. section 32 Township 157 N. Range 37 W 5th Principal Meridian, and as grounds for his contest he alleges that said John J. Leska has wholly abandoned said land for more than six months last past and next prior to the date hereof; That he has made no improvements on said land except a small shanty; That he has wholly failed to comply with the home- stead laws. You are, therefore, further _notifled that the said allegations will be taken by this office as having been confessed by yeu, and your said entry will be can- celed thereunder without your further right to be heard therein, either before this office or on alrgell, if you fail to file in this office within twenty days af- ter the FOURTH publication of this ne- tice, as shown below, your answer, under oath, specifically meeting and respond- ing to these allegations of contest, or if you fail within that time to file in this office due proof that you have served a copy of your answer on the said con- testant either in person or by resistered mail. If this service is made by the de- Iivry of a copy of your answer to the contestant in person, proof of such ser- vice must be either the sald contestant's written acknowledgment of his t of the copy, show! the date of f receipt, or the affidavit of the person by whom the delivery was made s ‘when and where the copy was deli if made by registered maihlnraot of suf service must consist of the affidavit of the person by wnom tke copy was mail- ed stating when and the post office to which it was mailed, and this affidavit must be accompanied by the postmas- ter’s receipt for the letter. You should state in your answer the name of the post office to which you de- sire future notices to be sent to you. ARTHUR P. TOUPIN “11):35 of first publication January 15 f’,‘},‘i of second publication January 22th Psnlt‘s of third publication January 29th Balt‘é of fourth publication February 6 2 S —_— e e e e T Important to all Women Ll Readers of This Psper Thousand upon thousand of wo- men have kidney or bladder trouble and never suspect it. «Womens’s complaints often prove to be nothing else but kidney tronh’ or the result of kidney or bladder *i3- ease. i 1f the kidneys are not in'a healthv condition, they may cause the other organs to become diseased. You man suffer a great deal with pain in the back, bearing-down £ el- ings, headache and loss of ambitioa. Poor health makes you nervous, ir- ritable and may be despondent; it makes any one so. But hundreds of women claim h:t Dr. Kilmer’s swamp-Root, by restor- ing health to the kidneys, proved tc be just the remedy needed to oven come such conditions. A good kidney medicine, posiess- ing real healing and curative value, should be a blessing to thousands of nervous, over-worked women. ‘Man gend for a sample bottle to see what- Swamp-Root, the great Kidney Liver and Bladder Remedv this paper, who has mnot alrcaay tried it, by enclosing ten cents o Dr. Kilmer Co., Binghamton, N. Y. may receive sample size bottle by Farcels Post. ‘You can purchase the regular fifty-cent and one dollar size bottles at all drug stores.—Adv. 2| WRITES HIS CHECK FOR $1,000 J. J. Hill Pays Big Sum to See Four- teen-Inch Ear of Corn. St. Paul, Jan. 15—James J. Hill, “empire builder,” farmer and finan- cler, paid $1,000 for a“glimpse of a fourteen-inch ear of Minnesota grown corn. John J. Furlong, president of the Minnesota State Agrioultural so- ciety, produced the fourteen-inch ear at the session of the society at the capitol and Mr. Hill, the principal speaker at the morning session, said he would make good his promise to pay $1,000 to Mr. Furlong should the latter obtain such a sample of corn grown in this state. At the close of Mr. Hill's address, President Furlong produced the corn. He exhibited several fourteen-inch ears, declaring they were “sample he had broght from home.” Mr. Hill promptly made out his check for $1,000. Best Cough Medicine for Children “I am very glad to say a few words in praise of Chamberlain’s- Cough Remedy” writes Mrs. Lida Dewey, Milwaukee, Wis. ““I have used it for years both for my children and my- self and it never fails to relleve and cure a cough or cold. No family with children should be without it as it gives almost immediate rellef in cases of croup.” Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy is pleasant and safe to take, which {is of great impor- tance when a medicine must be giv- en to young children. For sale by all dealers—Adv. Burglar Shot in Duel. Milwaukee, Jan. 15.—Herman Zas- trow, who has terrorized the residents of the fashionable East Side for four months, lies dying in Emergency hos- pital from a bullet wound suffered in a pistol duel with Albert Arendt, watchman at the summer home of W, 0. Goodrich. ADDITIONAL WANTS T00 LATE TO CLASSIFY LOST—Ladies Iiiamond ring finder please return to Pioneer office and receive $25.00 reward. e N T e BT FOR RENT—Modern room 1121 Be- midji avenue, T. J. Welgh. DR. EINER JOHNSON Physician and Surgeon Bemidji, Minn, will do for them. Every reader of | This season has brought out some very charming new blouse designs. No. 7718 is a model that would be very pretty developed in voile, albatross, crepon, linen or one of the numerous wash silks. It “combines the drop- shoulder and the raglan effect, has a sailor' collar and by way of finish has three stitched tucks extending down the front. As white crepe de Chine is so much in favor just now 1 will offer it as a cuffs of figured crepon. The home dressmaker will find noth- ing difficult about the yoke or raglan shoulder; which appears on nearly They Bring Results! Telephone 31 every design this'season, if she follows her pattern directions caretully and marks the seam allowance on each plece. An effective finish tor these seams on the shoulder is brought about by |- Joining them in the usual way, press- ing them open and running a line of machine stitching each side of the join- ing line. N For size 36 this blouse requires 2V, yards of 36 inch material. The patternis cutin 6 sizes; 32 to42. This Is a Perfect Pattern. Be sure to state right size, measuring over the fullest part of the bust for dimensions. It may be obtained by filling out the coupon and enclosing 15 cents in stamps or coin to the Pattern Department of this paper. Street and No. City and State Pattern No. Sizes ........ THE SPALDING EUROPEAN PLAN Duluth’s Largest and Best Hotel DULUTH MINNESOTA More than $100,000.00 recently expended on improvements, 250 rooms, 125 private baths, 60 sample rooms. Everx Mern convenience: Luxurious and delightful restaurants and buffet, Flemish Room, Palm Room, Men’s Grlll, Oolonial Buffet; Magmigicen¢ lobby and_public roomsy S peudiet S ol privie n! rooms{ Sun parlor and ol o tory. Locsted in heart of business sec- tion but overlooking the harbor and Lake Superior. Convenient to everything. Oun of the Broat Hotols of the Norlbwest FUNERAY leECTOR M. E. IBERTSON UNDERTAKER and COUNTY CORONER 405!Beltrami Ave. Bemidji,iMinn. lll"mmllMMMImIHnlfllflmMmfll g = E] £ é - : suggestion here with the collar and é E E F : -1 = E = -1 E £ g sheet. Conditions off Skill Test:. English words only; must be spelled correctly. side of paper; 50 words to a Letters can be repeated. If competing lists contain same number of words, neatness will determine award. Three local judges shall decide as to the winner. delivered to our store on or before Write on one List must be ié Worth N closing date of Skill Test. The Bracelet Watch—the newest production of the OMEGA WATCH CoMPANY— is on exhibition in our show window, together with other sizes and styles of Omega Watches for Men and Women, at prices to suit every purse. The purpose of this Skill Test, and the offer of this very high grade watch, is to impress you with the all around excellence of Omega Watches and so influence your holiday buying. Ef you haven’t started your search for words gef busy fo-day. This is an unusual pportunity to win a’large reward for diligence in an interesting study. Skill Test Closes in Two Weeks! Geo. T. Baker & Co. Manufatcuring Jewelers 116 Thrid 8t. Carbon Paper We have: an assortment of high grade paper ully guaranteed, in all colors 8 1-2 x 11 and 81-2 x13 At $1 and $1.25 a box Yes, there are 100 sheets in each box. and if the paper does not satisfy you know where you bought it—your money returned if you want it always. Special agents call on the trade about the city They may offer you enticing looking bargains—but—what if you're not satisfied? It may be a case of throwing it into the waste basket. WeBuy on a Guarantee and Sell from time to time’ Bomidji Pioneer Supply Store Bemidji T O SRR THURSDAY JANUARY 15, IDIL- admires the Omega Bracelet Watch not alorie for its | beauty, but also for its everyday utility. The school- girl, the matron, the nurse, the out-of-doors girl and the business girl—all find it indispensable. It tells accurate time at a glance. It is the product of a great factory £ renowned for its Watches of Precision EHere’s the opportunity for you to get one absolutely free Bracelet-Watch 5t0$90 will be given to the person who com- \“‘ A piles the greatest 3 number of words from the ten letters ™\ in the words N S\ IS TR TR Cut out the letters and make all the WOI'dS A TR O OMLGA WATCH Near the Lake (Can you beat it?) Beware! the Same Way. Phane 31

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