Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, May 1, 1914, Page 2

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War Spirit at Fever Heat In . Mexico City Over Blockade Photos by American Press Assoclation. States blockaded Vera Cruz and other seaports. Top picture shows MEXIOO CITY was plunged into a fever heat of war when the United federal troops returning from the north and entering the environs of Mexico City to swell the garrison there in preparation for conflict with the United States troops. Bottom view gives an idea of war excitement im Mexico City in front of the national palace. RELIABLE MINNEAPOLIS CONCERNS ART AND MUSIC SCHOOLS MINNEAPOLIS SCHOOL OF ART Drawing, Painting, Illustrating, Modeling. Design an Handleratt. Day'and Night, Glasses. dend for Jilus- trated Catalogue. R. XOEHLER, Director JOHNSON SSHOSL, OF, MUSIC, ORATORY AND DRAMATIC ART. Send for booklet. 70 South 1ith Street. GUSTAVOS JOHNSON EYES EXAMINED FREE Glasses Pitted and Guar- anteed from $2.00 to $5.00. WHY PAY MORE? JANMES E. LEE Recognized Leading Institution of the Northwest MINNEAPOLIS SCHOCL OF MUSIC! ORATORY AND DRAMATIC ART William H. Pontius, Dir. Music; Charies M. Holl, Dir. Oralory. 42-44 Eighth St. So., Mioneapelis, Send for Gatalogue K" 1885--NORTHWESTERN CGNSERVATORY OF MUSIC, ART AND EXPRESSiON-~1914 Graduate from a sehool that equips you for a pleas- sat and profitable Life Work. Catalogue giving teachers. subjects, Tates, etc.. malled on request, Students received any time. Write for catalogue and Information. 806 NICOLLET AVE.---OFFICE D AUTO RADIATORS Only RADIATOR FACTORY in the NORTHWEST Pioneers in Radiator Construction Our Radiators Are Manufactured Com- lete In Our Factory, We Repair All akes. WORKMANSHIP GUARAN- TEED. Write for prl S 820822824 Todd Mfg. Co.siimecmui: CHIROPRACTORS | 1f so, ury Chiropractic adjustments and get well. Send for free booklet. 532 ROSTON BLOCK, MINNEAPOLIS D R s Il md Consultation Free, 519 Mar- quette Ave. Sanitarium 2909 r- . u w Stevens. Free Booklet DETECTIVE AGENCIES THE OLD RELIABLE J'c:nssi--Bonded-Expart 3. imber Ex- change Bldg. Both Phones. States Detective Service HAT RENOVATORS OPTICIAN 528 Nicollet Ave. SEWING MACHINES g(“lnh Class Sewing Machines, new and 2nd hand. PRCes i epuiring ELMER, 703 1st Ave. So. WINDOW SHADES—WASHABLE ORDER FROM DEALER, or send to us. National ‘Window Shade Co., 840 Hennepin, Mpis. USED MOTOR TRUCKS - . Goo LINE OFTRUCK THOROUGHLY USED REBUILT We Can Save You Moncy. Be Sure and Write Us USED MOTOR TRUCK CO., 220 So. Sixth Street PATENTS AND TRADE MARKS Williamson & Merchant PATENT and TRADE SOLICITORS OF UNITED STATES AND FOREIGN PATENTS 25-035 METROPOLITAN BLDG., MINNEAPOLIS, MINN, PORTABLE STEEL BUILDINGS Garages, Cottages, Tool Sheds. Ready to use—easily erected anywhere. METAL SHELTER CO. BEE! 1009 Hennepln Ave. RAILROAD GLAFITW}:S, ACCIDENTS, WRITE BISSELL CLAIM AGENQCY, New York Life Bldg., Minneapolis, SiaimAdioezers. road Accidents. Fires or Miscellaneous Claims. WE SECURE SATISFACTORY RESULTS. References RUG AND GARPET CLEANING H. J. ARMSTRONG, 1014-16 WEST %7th STREET Rugs and Carpets Cleaned by COMPRESSED AIR SEND YOUR HATS to be Cleaned, Dyed, REBLOCKED: ANY STYLE. Free Catalogue. Twin City Hat Mig, Com 9 Central Avenue s HOTELS EIGHTH STREET AND HOTEL GAMFIELD /YT STRREATR Bingle rooms with private bath $1, double rooms $1.50 Convenient toall depots, Modern and Up-to-Date Hotel A”Bn Cor.3rd St.and 2nd Ave. So. WILLISTOR TERRACE 27 §i- fd 4% Ave: | Tis South. Minneapolis Family and Tranglent Hotel with Fite Cafe. Easy walking dists O 4tb Ave. car line. T HAIR GOSLS High Grade Hair Goods by Mail ot Parsain Eatixfaction cuaranteed. Old reliable house. SWITCHES §1 eud sumple of kalr—can wateh any shade. . SKOGMAN HAIR STORE, 41 Eighth Street South, Minneapolis. IMSURANMCE-FUNERAL SERVICE MINNEAPGLIS CARPET CLEANING & RUG FACTO:.Y Beautiful FLUFF RUGS Made From Your Old Carpets J. O. Andersen, 2112 Lyndale Ave. S., Minneapolis. TRADE SCHOOLS LEARN TELEGRAPHY, Short hours—Pleasant work— Px. salarles-Great demand-Can earn board—Write loF Free Catalogue. Barry's Telegraph Institute WANTED--MEN to LEARN the BARBER TR. OE The only reliable, successful coilege in the Northwest. This echool has proved successful for the last 20 years. ’l&r{. ;lgl;n. and you wlél bx;(\]xre wl;nd xlshAZ- Catalog urnished upon request—Address Drawer A. MOLER BARBER COLLEGE, 27 NICOLLET AVE. COLLEGE of BEAUTY CULTURE. p,.. 5ot Massage, Manicuring taught in 4 Weeks Course, Address Mme. DeGuile, 806 Nicollet, Suite 310 Be Your Own DRESSMAKER KEISTER’S LADIES TAILORING COLLEGE. 315 ESSEX BLDG.. Nicollet and 10th, MINNEAPOLIS. 607 CHAMBER OF COM. BLDG., ST. PAUL. Individual Instruction. Send for Booklet FIRST CLASS --$100 FUNERAL SERVICE, $10 to £100 Cash Ben 16c per month and up.’ Local Fireea™ =t Friendly Service Society, Kasota Bldg. LIGHTNING RODS Protect: your family and buildings against lightning Ty equiping butidings with the Townsley System of LIGHTNI DS.” Write for Booklet. TOWNSLES MFG, €O, 1ois,3th 5c, S, B MASSAGE THOMSEN MASSAGE AND HYDRIATIC INSTI- TUTE. 409 Evanston Building, 122 Sixth Street South MEDICINES AND EXTERMINATORS G-ZENE OIL AND SOAP Ee7.522 “C-ZENE SOAP 25¢. EC-ZENE OIL 50c-$1. Guaranteed ~Ask Your Druggist, He Knows,” or Write EC-ZENE 1588 UNIV] 'E! SCHOOL OF WINDOW DRESSING LIFETIME OPPORTUNITY for AMBITIOUS YOUNG MEN. Enormous demand for expert WINDOW DRESSERS and show card writers. Previous experience unhecessary. We qualify you if elght weeks by personal Instruction in real windows g bigh salaried positions, I and bighly_endorsed course ‘in_the World. Write for free llustrated catalog. Smeby Bros., Dept. F. TWIN CITY SCHOOL OF WINDOW DRESSING Q) Y CLEAR SUT ALL RA D MICE IN ONE NIGHT, No after odors--It embalms. s THE RED CROSS RAT EMBALMER Dot I i) 25and 50 cents per package at your drug- Gist or direct Trorh. the mamIACtNeE, Felix Girard & Company COMPANY, RSITY. AVENUE, ST. FAUL--MIBWAY, MINNEAPOLIS. 5 Cor. Fifteenth and Nicollet Advertisers who want the best results always patronize The Pioneer. They know, by experi- ence, that it has no equal in this section of the country as an advertising medium. SK POWERS TO GIVE AID Med,iatnm_llrge Use of Good Offices, PROPOSAL TO REBELS Carranza Requested 1o Join| Proposed Armistice. ‘Washington, May 1.—It was assert- ed here on unquestionable authority that the South American envoys, who are seeking to avert a crisis in:Mexi- cc, have appealed to European gov- ernments for friendly offices to facili- tate mediation between Mexico and the United States. The appeal, it was stated, did not include a request, as reported from abroad, that the powers use their in- fluence upon President Wilson to name conditions which would insure guccess of the negotiations. 1t also was learned that a proposal to General Carranza, as head of the Constitutionalists, to join the armis- tice proposed between the United States and Huerta, has been made by the mediating envoys. The proposal was forwarded to Gen- | eral Carranza following his accept- ance of the good offices of Brazil, Ar- gentina and Chile, and is a part of the plan of the envoys to secure a gen- eral cessation of hostilities in all Mex- ico pending the mediation negotia- tions. Request Alrcady Acted Upon. The request of the powers, it is de- clared, already has borne fruit, as sev. eral diplomatic representatives of Eu- ropean nations have consulted with Secretary of State Bryan with rela- tion to the negotiations. It is believed that any step taken by the European governments prob. ably will be limited to emphasizing through their representatives here the hope that mediation would be success- ful. There was no desire, it is said, on the part of these governments to in- terfere with the policy of President Wilson. The mediation envoys, Ambassador Da Gama of Brazil, Minister Naor of Chile renewed their conferences after the Brazilian ambassador had con- ferred with Robert Lansing, counselor of the state department. No announcement was made by the envoys, but it was generally expected that some . definite information re- garding the next step in the negotia- tions soon would be forthcoming. President Wilson Is Hopeful. President Wilson indicated in talks with callers that he was very hopeful of the situation. The acceptance by Carranza of the principle of médiation after he had conferred with General Villa at Chihuahua is regarded in ad- ministrtion circles as significant. With the exception of the Constitu- tionalists forces a general truce, as desired by the mediators, is believed | to be in operation at present, although its terms have not been defined, nor in faet has there been any formal ac- ceptance on the part of any of the principals. Secretary Bryan was duly notified ot the belief of the mediators that their efforts to accomplish something definite would be greatly facilitated by the proclamation of a general armistice. No definite reply was made by the Urited States government for the rea- son that it first desired to ascertain the intentions of the Huerta govern- ment.” However, Mr. Bryan said he assumed there would be a suspension cf hostilities. GRATEFUL TO UNITED STATES Mexico’s Foremost Historian Released by Admiral Fletcher. Vera Cruz, May 1.—Ferdinando Iglesias Calderon, Mexico’'s foremost living historian,. who was released from San Juan de Ulloa fortress here by Rear Admiral Fletcher, following the castle's surrender to the Ameri- can forces, says he owes his first debt of gratitude to the United States and Rear ‘Admiral Fletcher. “I never expected to see the light of day again,” he said. “When the iron gates of San Juan de Ulloa first closed on me I said goodbye to the world.” Senor Calderon was the recognized leader of one of the largest factions of the Liberal party in Mexico and his imprisonment followed political ac- tivities which the government regard- | ed as acts of sedition. ' To him now liberty means a farewell to Mexico. Paris, May 1—Wilfred de For! vielle, the oldest aeronaut in the world, died at _the age of ninety. As early as 1854 he began experiment ing with balloons and made some re- markable, ascents. During the siege of Paris he crossed the Prussian liner in a balloon.., - s Read Ploneer wani ads Argentina and Minister Suatez of | COLONEL LOUGHBORO. Pramlfiont in Army Activ- ities on Mexican Border, Photo by American Press Association. —_— SIX PERISH IN LAKE GALE Three Schooners and One Tug Report- ed Wrecked. Rochester, N. Y., May 1.—Dis- patches from Oswego, N. Y., report the loss of six lives in the wrecking of three schooners and one tug in a storm on Lake Ontario. Men who want i\ good value in wear i as well as appearance They have the wear- quality. They are cut to fit right, and come in quiet colors and patterns. With soft collars attached cr detached and without collars, Look for the name. Sold at best stores. F. A. Patrick & Co Duluth, Mis.. REBELS PROTECT AMERICANS Consul Confers With Constitutional- ist General. Washington, May 1.—American Consul William P. Blocker wired the state department from Eagle Pass, Tex., the following: & “After a personal conference with General Murguia, commander of Car- ranzistas, in Piedras Negras, I have returned to my post and am carrying on consular duties. The best of order prevails here. Murguia has assured me that all foreigners and their prop- erty will be given absolute protection within Constitutionalist lines.” To Recall Militia From Border. Sacramento, Cal., May 1.—Adjutant General ‘Forbes of the California na- tional guard was in conference with Brigadier General Murray of the Western division and it virtually was decided to recall the militia from the Mexican border. General Murray as- sured Adjutant General Forbes he had a sufficient number of United States soldiers to protect the border. NEAT CASE F NONEY THOUBLE Take a glass of Salts if your Back hurts or Bladder bothers—Meat forms uric acid. Tf you must have your meat every day, eat it; but flush your kidneys with salts occasivnally, says a noted authority who tells us that meat forms uric acid which almost paralyzes the kidneys in their ef- forts to expel it from the blood. They become sluggish and weaken, then you sufl:er with a dull misery in the kidney region, sharp pains in the back or sick headache, dizziness, your stomach sours tongue is coated and when the weather is bad you have rheumatic twinges. The urine gets cloudy, full of sediment, the channels often get sore and irritated obliging you to seek relief two or threc time during the night. "o neutralize these irritating acids, t cleanse the kidneys and flush off t: body’s urinous waste get four ounces Jad Salts from any pharmacy her take a tablespoonful in a glass water before breakfast for a few dn -| and your kidneys will then act fine. 7' famous salts is made from the acid grapes and lemon juice, combined w: lithia, and has been used for generati: to flush and stimulate sluggish kidne also to neutralize the acids in nri sa it no longer irritates, thus e bladder weakness. Jad Salts is inexpensive; canmot i jure, and makes a delightful effervesce lithia-water drink. THE SATURDAY EVENING POST How a Number Achieved Personality The little tailor of the story books, sitting cross-legged .on his bench. snipped and 'stitched and pressed—making a thousand motions to what could better be done by a hundred, and never doing the sam~ = - twice in the same way. He never bothered himself with tha pr~ better and better clothes wit. time O R T when you use a Pioneer want ad. o) AROUND THE WORLD ON A DROPOF 0IL Did you ever stop and think what a wonderful piece of mechanism a good watch like the Bemidji Spe- cial is? Take the hairspring for instance. One mile of this wire weighs less than half a pound. The balance wheel makes 18,000 vibra- tions an hour—157,000,000 a year. It moves 3,558 miles a year on lgils than one-tenth of a drop of oil. If alocomotive, having six foot driving wheels, were started at the equator, and should run until its wheels had performed the same number of revolutions that a bal- ance wheel does in one year, it would make more than twenty- eight complete circuits of the earth. . The Bemidji Special is ad- justed to every change and condi- tion. Baked in an oven, frozen in a refrigerator, adjusted to position, put through a 700 hour test for ac- curacy, 6an you wonder why this wonderful watch is The Standard of this community today. FIVE YEAR GUARANTEE We give a five year guarantee with each Bemidji Special watch —because they give us the least trouble in making good our guar- antee. - Bemidji Special move- ments are now being fitted in the new style 25-year case with safety bow, that eannot pull or twist out. This is a very popular model and retails for, watch com- plete............ 5 GED, T. BAKER & G0, Manufacturing Jewelers 116 Third St. Near the Lake Results are most aiways certain ne-half cent a worl. Phone 31. " ‘May 2, 1914 ‘before why we sell Clothcraft Clothes? F§¥&%You have likely seen this ad, of which we produce a part, in The Saturday Evening Post or one of the leading Farm Papers. This is in many ways one of the most remarkable clothing advertisements that have ever appeared, as it tells cold, hard faets, about the making of clothes, which have never been pub- licly told before. We know how important the Scientific tailoring of Clothcraft Clothes is and why no other clothes have ever met with such suc- Naturally we want you to know these facts, as it proves cess. Did you know our judgment in offering this line to you. To our store policy of giving you the best values of the mar- kets, Clothcraft Clothes link up perfectly, whether it is the line of beautiful varied patterns at $10 to $20 or the No. 5130 Blue Serge Special at $15. There is one thing that we can add to this, in clothing or any & of the things men wear, we.do more than sell you goods. give you service, the benefit of our knowledge of correct things for men. Whatever we sell must give satisfaction; the sale is not com- plete until this is the fact. When may we serve you? We B BEMIDJIL MINN. b

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