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FRIDAY, MAY 15, 1914, FIX PLANS FOR PEACE MEETING Stalte Department Officials Busy on Preliminaries. AMPLE TIME TO ARRIVE tluerta Delegates Will Be on Hand When Mediation Conference s Call- ed to Order at Niagara Falls, Can,, sn Monday Next. Washington, May 15.—Diplomatic amd state departnient officials are wasily engaged in completing prelim-! mmary plans for the mediation confer- emce at Niagara Falls, Ont., next week. American representatives to the anference conferred with state de- »artment officials and the South Amer- sean mediators were awaiting definite word from Huerta’s representatives. All fear that the Huerta delegates would not arrive in time for the be- ginning of the conference was dis- »elled by the announcement that they were to proceed direct from Havana 1w Key West. That would give them ample time w reach the Canadian border town for ¥ke beginning of the negotiations. It became evident that the extent 1 which the delegates would accept «eurtesies of the American govern- ment while traveling through the Unit- od States would devolve in part upon Me discretion of the South American EmVOYS. The Huerta agents had firmly de- clned to accept anything but most merfunctory attention while passing through General Funston’s lines at Yera Cruz, and it had been assumed ey would pursue that policy after Janding at Key West from Havana. However, a dispatch received by the +«mvoys from Isteva Ruise, Huerta's fereign minister, indicated the atti- twde of the federal mission might be changed. MLL BUSINESS SUSPENDED Pittsburg Honors Marine Killed at Vera Cruz. Pittsburg. May 15.—Francis Patrick d Lowry, seaman of the United Htates battleship New Hampshire, illed during the fighting at Vera (ruz, was given all the honors that Pittsburg had to give. Business was vaspended by proclamation of Mayor -oseph G. Armstrong until 11 o’clock, Burch bells tolled and thousands iined the streets as the funeral cor- iege, escorted by the Second brigade, Pennsylvania national guard, passed from St. Paul's Roman Catholic cathe- dral, where requiem higly m had ween celebrated, tu St. Mary's ceme- tery, where the hody was interred. Schools, courts and the stock exchange were closed. Hospital Ship at Brooklyn. New York, May 15.—The naval nospital ship Solace docked at the Brooklyn navy yavd with 101 patients wom Vera C(Cr The ship also srought the bodies of Henry Pulliam and Clarence R. Harshbarger, navy men, who died of wounds suftered in ihe occupation of the M an City. TWO SISTERS FATALLY HURT One Dead and the Other Dying as Result of Explosion. IPalls, Minn.,, May 15— | Morrau was burned to death, | ter Kmma w probably fatally | warned and the residence of their father, Nels Morvau, near Battle Lake was destroved as the result of a gas- ine explosion that oceurred when the girls were cleaning a coat with casoline. The house et on fire | nd Esther met death in it. Emma weaped, but njured. i CITY IS PAVED WITH GOLD Cre Running as High as $10 a Ton | Used in Business Streets. | Victor. ,Colo., May 15.—Business | S1TE of Victor now literally | paved with gold. They have been arfaced with more than 700 loads of ore, crushed to a suitable size, which runs as high as 0 a ton in gold. The ore was used because it was really cheaper than it would have, been to haul nonmineral rock from a greater distance. SWEDISH KING RECOVERS Gustave Takes Up Reins of Govern- ment Again. Stockholm, May: 15.—King Gustave has complétely recovered from the ef- fects of the operation for ulceration of the stomach which he underwent April 9. His majesty resumed the enduct of the affairs of state and the erown prince gave up the duties of regent, which he had performed dur- ime his father's illness. Former Canal Official Indicted. New York, May 15—John Burke, former manager of the commissary department of the Panama canal zone, was indicted by the federal grand jury Rere for conspiracy to defraud and ror other alleged offenses. He was dis- missed some time ago. Read Pioneer wani afs GOVERNOR Ammous.' Colorado Executive May Be Asked to Resign. Denver, Colo., May 15.—State legis- lators were on the tiptoe of expectan- cy when the day’s session began, an- ticipating that State Senator W. C. Robinson of Colorado Springs would introduce a resolution asking Govern- or E. M. Ammons to resign. Robinson said his resolution would be respectfully couched in every way. WILL BE REGEIVED BY ADMIRAL MAYO Mexican Federal Gaptains Ask for Interview. ‘Washington, May 15.—The captains of the Mexican federal gunboats Bra- vo and Zaragoza, which came down the Panuco river from Tampico, have asked Rear Admiral Mayo for an in- terview and he has informed them that he will receive them on board the Connecticut. Further confirmation of the fall of Tampico into the hands of the Con- stitutionalists was received at the navy department in a message from Admiral Mayo, transmitted through Admiral Badger. This report says the Mexican federal gunboat Vera Cruz still was up the river at the railway bridge. Admiral Mayo reporfed that the fed- eral troops blew up their barracks before retiring from the city. ‘With the transfer of Tampico from Mexican federalists to the Constitu- tionalists, President Wilson now feels it will be possible for the oil inter- ests in the Tampico district to be protected. L L <+ ABUNDANCE OF CLOTHES < +* SAVES LIFE. & ES —_— Ly 4+ New York, May 15—An in- <& ++ nocent bystander was shot ina Sixteenth street fight. * An: < overcoat, an undercoat, two = waistcoats, a shirt ‘and two < su of underwear stopped the bullet. kol & UNIONS ARE NOT TRUSTS Nor Are Farmers’ Organizations, Says Minority Report. Washington, May 15.—“Labor and farmers' organizations should not be treated as trusts,” says the report of the minority of the house judiciary committee on the anti-trust bill, filed by Representatives Volstead of Minne- sota and Nelson of Wisconsin. “The bill leaves the status of labor organizations under the anti-trust laws uvncertain, and forbids the co-opéra- tive efforts of farmers in buying com- | modities or selling their products,” it continues. CASF TO DARKEN fOUR- GRAY AR Try this! Mix Sage Tea and Sulphur and brush it through your hair, taking one strand at a time. When you darken your hair with Sage Ten and Sulphur, no one cantell, be- cause it’s dome so naturaily, so evenly. Preparing this mixture, though, at home is mussy and troublesome. For 50 ccnts you can buy at any drug store the ready- to-use tonic called “Wyeth’s Sage and Sulphur Hair Remedy.” You just dampen a sponge or soft brush with it and draw this through your hair, taking one small strand at a time. By morn- ing all gray hair ‘disappears, and, after another application or two, your hair becomes beautifully darkened, glossy and luxuriant. You will also discover dan- druff is gone and hair has stopped falling. Gray, faded hair, though no disgrage, is a sign of old age, and as we all de- | sire a youthful and attractive appear- ance, get busy at omce with Wyeth’s Sage and Sulphur and look. years younger. Mo MILL CITY ICEMEN STRIKE Drivers and Handlers Ask of Wages. 3 Minneapolis, May’ 15.—Minneapolis is facing an ice famine. Three hun- dred ice wagon drivers and. handlers of the Cedar Lake Ice company are on strike. They demand a wage scale of $60 to $90 a month. At present they receive fromi$§55 to $80. Better working conditions are also demand: ed. Officials of the ice company, which supplies nearly “all the ice for the downtown district, admitted that they were unable to meet demands. The company has 252 wagons idle..’ In the residence districts small ice dealers are reaping a harvest. Increase Senate Committee at Odds Over Stock: Exchange Bill. ‘Washington, + May 15.—An open break in the senate banking and cur- rency committee promises to mark Chairman Owen’s attempt to have a favorable report made on.his bill to regulate stock exchanges. The bill came up before the com- mittee and later Chairman Owen said that he had been authorized to make a favorable report. Oply seven of the twelve members were present, however, and those opposed to the measure said ‘a quorum was not pres- ent when the -vote was taken and that the authorization to report fa- vorably was not binding. Big Fire Loss at lloilo. Manila,' May 15.—Twenty business houses in Iloilo have been destroyed by fire. The loss aggregated $500,000. THE BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEER BIG EATERS HONEY. TROUBE Take glass of Salts before breakfast if your Back hurts or Bladder bothers you. The American men and women must guard constantly against Kidney trouble, because we eat too much and all our food is rich. Our blood is filled with urio |: acid which the kidneys strive to- filter out, they weaken from overwork, become sluggish; the eliminative tissues clog and the rtesult is kidney trouble, bladder weakness and a general decline in health. When your kidneys feel like lumps of lead; your back hurts or the urine is cloudy, full of sediment or you are obliged to seek relief two or three times during the night; if you euffer ‘with sick headache or.dizzy, nervous spells, acid stomach, or you have rheumatism when the weather is bad, get from your phar- macist about four ounces of Jad Salts; take ‘a tablespoonful in .a glass of water before breakfast for a few days and your kidneys will then 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 clogged kidneys; to neutralize the acids in the urine so it no longer is a source of irritation, thus ending bladder disorders. Jad Salts is inexpensive; cannot in- jure, makes a delightful effervescent lithia-water beverage, and belongs in every home, because mobody can make a mistake by having a good kidney flush- ing any time. s “That Last Steak Was Fine!” ] Bemidji Meat Market Phdne No. 1 ally says this when she comes to our . bitcher shop. = We appreciate it. She knows that she’li continue to get the BEST CUTS we can give her, ‘whether porterhouse, sirloin, round or flank. We make it a business principle to ‘sell the BEST QUALITY of meats and to give sat- isfaction to ALL at ALL TIMES. We in- vite YOUR trade. MRS. SATISFIED CUSTOMER gener M. J. Troop, Prop. Echaffner & OME men are called “hard to fit” and some just think - they are; but any man, of whatever figure, can be fitted in We have made special preparations for men of odd and un- clothes here. usual sizes; stout men, very large men, tall men, short men. : ' Hart Schaffner & Marx have reduced this whole matter of fitting to a science; they make clothes that are adapted to the form and sha in and we’ll show you. There’s.a distinctive tone of youth running through “Society Brand” Clothes and : ‘Suits and Overcoats $20, $25, $30, $35 pe of all classes of figures. Just drop Clothes for Young Men Sl the service with which we sell them; the former are just what you want and the * latter is sufficiently advisory without being officious. In “Society Brand” Clothes for spring and summer, there are more semi-English styles (and that’s what the young fellow wants) than in almost all the other young men’s clothes showings . : combined. ' Glad to take you through this department. 5 : g : N - $18, $20, $25, $30 et “Young” men and *“young” ideas are at your service here’ Mofiey ; ! A Guarantee Cheerfully il ; with Every —_— Reéfunded 4 iR | | ] n Parchase BEN: SCHNEIDER, Pres. | Bemidji, Minn. (GHAS. COMINSKY, Sec. and Treas.