Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, June 17, 1914, Page 3

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’ About The‘Cit); XK KKK KRR KKK KK ¥ LEST WE FORGET * EEKKEKR KKK KKK KKK “King Cole.” LR taseball Sunday. “ e The five weeks’ session of sum- mer school will begin here Monday, June 22, s Bemidji will have the biggest Fourth of July celebration in its his- tory this year. CEIEY That news items telephoned to the Pioneer are appreciated both by the publishers and readers of the paper. Phone 31, “In the Court of King Cole,” will be produced at the Brinkman theatre Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday ev- enings, June 22, 23 and 24, The play is directed by Mrs. Purdy Smith and will be given under the auspices of the Episcopal guild. BREVITII':«S of Moval Lake shop~ Miss Serene Blue spent yesterday in the city ping. Mrs. 0. E. Soland of Liberty was in the city yesterday attending to business matters. For Wood Phone 129.—Adv. Mr. and Mrs. Ira Cool and baby have returned from Chicago where they have spent some time. Carl Miller of Minneapilis is vis- iting at the home of his uncle, W. L. Brooks. He arrived last evening. Saymour Anette and family = re- turned yesterday from an extended visit with relatives at Verndale, Minnesota, Two girls wanted for kitchen work. Apply at once. Hotel Markham.— Adv, teorge Tanner and son Lloyd left yesterday morning for Little Falls, by auto, where they will visit rela- tives for a few days. Miss fone Brechet of Minneapolis arrived in Bemidji Monday and will spend the summer at Grand Forks Bay with her mother, Mrs. Joe Steidle and daughter Marjory left yesterday for Keewa- tin, Minnesota, where they will visit some time. relatives for A complete line of field and gar- DON'T BE MISLED Bemidji Citizens Should Read and Heed This Advice Kidney trouble is dangerous often fatal, Don't experiment with something new and untried. Jse a tested kidney remedy. egin with Doan’s Kidney Pills. Used in kidney troubles 50 years. Recommended here and every- where. A Bemidji citizen’s forms convincing proof. It’s local testimony-—it can be in- stigated. ‘arl Golz, 623 Minnesota Ave., Bemidji Minn., says: “I still recom- mend Doan’s Kidney Pills as highly as ever. We keep them on hand and always get the best results when we take them. Some time ago Doan’s Kidney Pills relieved me of backache, headaches and dizzy speels and great- ly strengthened my kidneys. This remedy also toned up my system. One other in our house has had good re- sults from Doan’s Kidney Pills and recommends them as highly as I do.” Price 50c, at all dealers. Don’t simply ask for a kidney remedy—get ‘Doan’s Kidney Pills—the same that Mrs. Golz had. Foster-Milburn Co., Props.. Buffalo, N. Y. BE PRETTY! TURN GRAY HAIR DARK ~Look young! Nobody can tell if you use Grandmother's simple recipe of Sage Tea and Sulphur. and statement Almost everyone knows that Sage Tea and Sulphur, properly —compounded, brings back the matural color and lustre to the bair when faded, streaked or gray; also ends dandruff, itehing ic:-lll‘p nnld stops falling hair. Years ago the only wm?G to get. %his mixture was to make it at home, which is mussy and trouble- some. Nowadays, by asking at any drug store for “Wyeth’s Sage and Sulphur Hair Remedy,™ you will get a large bot- tle of this famous old recipe for e aone 50 cents. Don't stay gray! Try it! No one can possibly tell that you-darkened-your bair, as it does it so maturally and evenly. You dampen z 8 of “soft brush with it and draw this through your beir, taking one small strand at a time; by morning the gray hair disappears, and after another application or two, your Bair becomes beautifully dazk, thick and glosey. R * KKK % * * All who wish to enter % either the automobile, motor- _ ¥ cycle or ‘horse races, . will Dleage report to the commit- tee before the third of July. Do so at once so that your name may be properly enter- ed. The Piloneer "will be pleased to furnish you' with any - information.’ As soon as the chairman of this com- mittee is named, it will be announced in this paper and on the' programs. * Kok ok ok ok ok Kk K ok ok ok ok k k Kk k ok kg ko hk Kk LA E SRS E R EEE LR T &R _——— den seeds at W. G. Schroeder store. —Adv. Miss Tone Higgins of Nebish was in Bemidji yesterday enroute to St. Paul where she will attend a con- vention of the Rebecca lodge. Mrs. J. A. Ames of Oakes, North Dakota, and Miss McVetta of Fargo, who are spending the summer at La- vinia, drove to Bemidji yesterday. Attorney Chester McKusick will return -tomorrow from Stillwater where he has been visiting. Still- water is Mr. McKusick’s old home. One of these days you ought to © to Hakkerups and have your ple- ure taken.—Adv. Mrs. L. W. Packard of Dryad, Washington, is in the city and will make her future home here. At present she is a guest at the G. R. Martin home. Mrs. William Shopres has gone to Rochester, Minnesota, where she will undergo an operation. She was accompanied by her sister, Mrs. Da- vis of Park Rapids. George Smith, the old soldier, re- turned the first of the week from Minneapolis ‘where he went to at- tend the encampment. Mr. Smith was a delegate from this post. Have your furniture repaired at the bargain store first class work at reasonable prices .—Adv. Thomas Lloyd, city assessor, left yesterday for Minneapolis and Wa- terville. At the latter place he will be the guest of his parents. He will return to Bemidji in a few days. Miss Elsie Klinger of Pinewood has returned to her home after vis- iting her sister, Mrs. Archie Fenton. She will return in a few days to at- tend shmmer school, which commen- ces June 22. Earle Riley, one of the Seniors, left yesterday morning for St. Cloud where he will visit this summer. He was taken as far as Little Falls in an automobile by his schoolmate, | Great lhmage Caused by| Terrific Storm. Water, Gas and Electricity Cut Ofi From the Entire City, as a Precau. tionary Measure Against Floods, Explosions and Fires. sent scenes of devastation, with gap ing holes in the main thoroughfares; as the result of a terrific storm. “Several more- buildings collapsed in various parts of the city, owing to subsidences of the soil, and a num- ber of persons wers injured. Three bodies “were recovered from Lloyd Tanner. The W. G. Schroeder store, corner of Fourth and Minnesota _ avenue, has received a carload of Plllsburys Best flour.—Adv. . Miss Jessie Blue, who has been at- tending the state university of North Dakota, returned. to Bemidiji Tuesday and will spend her vacation at the home of her father, Donald Blue at Moval Lake. Mr. and Mrs. L. E. Hanson of Becida were in Bemid}i yesterday en- route to Park Rapids, where Mr. Hanson will attend the meeting of the county commissioners, and Mrs. Hanson will visit relatives. A. Staveneau and daughter Miss Hilma of Good Thunder, Minnesota, came to Bemidji yesterday. Mr. Staveneau will return home next week, but Miss Hilma will remain for some time, the guest of her brother, O. E. Staveneau of this city. The best way for you to secare & steady income from your savings is to secure a' pass book from the Northern National Bank. Come in today. Mrs. George Cochran, accompanied by her niece, Miss Evelyn Nutting of Portland, Oregon, who has been a guest at the Cochran home for some time,left last night for Green- wood, Wisconsin, where they will visit Mrs. Cochran’s uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Rossman. Rev. E. M. Peterson of Spring Grove, who has been in Bemidji for the past several days and who preached in the First Scandinavian Lutherah church ‘Sunday morning| and evening, went to Minneapolis last night where he will attend a general church meeting and also the JGILE EBGE. the nly ladies ahoe dreemin pontiicly Comiains O Biscka, Porstas sad bots st idiey *- SACaL o it Romear some,Large -lummpn ‘your: Xesp the Kisd yumg-uu gtvrlec e viiiape 08 Fall sime Dackag®: charges paiés BROS. 8GO | $o.20 Albany. ] ne- O a deep hole at the junction of the Rue du Havre and the Boulevard- Hauss man, near the Saint Lazare station. The courtyard of a hotel in the Rue Pierre-Ginier at Montmartre fell in, but there were no casualties. The entire city was deprived of wa- ter, gas and electricity, ¢ut off as'a precautionary measure against floods, explosions and_fires. Several lives are known to have been lost through vehicles falling into cavities in the earth, but the exact number of dead is not known, as some bodies are believed to have dis- appeared into the sewers. Heavy rains added to the difficulties of the firemen -engaged in searching for bodies. Sfrict precautions were taken to prevent the public approaching spots where there was danger of further subsidence. Many streets were barred to wheeled traffic entirely, while the police kept pedestrians at a safe distance. ‘When communication with the sub- urbs had been partially restored it was learned that fruit and vegetable growers had suffered enormous dam- age from the storm. ordination, day. 2 Mrs. Edward O. Rood returned last night from Minneapolis, Beloit and Whitewater, Wisconsfn, where she has been visiting relatives for sev- eral weeks.. She was accompanied by her daughter, Mrs. Charles Sev- erson of Beloit, Wisconsin, who will spend the summer here.as a guest. at the Andrew Rood home. Mrs. Sev- erson’s husband dis touring Europe this summer. . At the Swedish Lutheran church Thursday evening the dedication of an altar painting will take place. The following program will be rendered for the occasion: Song, Congrega- tion; Song, Choir; Speech ‘in the English language, G. Erickson of Luther Seminary, Rock Island, Illi- nois; Vocal Solo, Miss Elizabeth Erickson; Violin Solo, L. T. Skriv- seth; Duet, Mrs, G. C. Berglund and Miss Elizabeth Erickson; Speech, Rev. J. H. Randahl; Vocal Solo, Mrs. G. C. Berglund; Violin Solo, L. T. Skrivseth; Song, Congregation. which commences Sun- MAY FIGHT LIQUOR RULING Attorney for Minnesota Brewers at Washington. ‘Washington, lquor interests are contemplating”ac- tlon in the supreme court to delay enforcement of the prohibition de- cision with respect to liquor sales in Minnesota Indian country covered by the Chippews treaty of 1855. Fred W. Zollman ef St. Paul, representing certain Minnesota brewers, is in ‘Washington and said an application might be made for a review of the court’s decision in the Bemidji case. He intends to “confer with depart- ment officials before action is decided upon. “I expect to get definite informa- tion from interior - department off- clals about what they intend* doim toward enforcing the court’s decree, said Mr. Zollman. “I have consulted our -attorney, Jobn C. Spooner, with whom I talked recently in New York, but we have not fully : decided. just what will be | done.” TOWNE NOT HUERTA AGENT : Dictator Denigs He _Is Represented by Fermer Minnesotan. ‘Niagara Falls, Ont., June 17.—Emil- io Rabasa, chairman of the Mexican delegation, received a telegram from General Huerta in which the latter denies- he is being represented in Washington by Charles A. Towne, for- mer United States senator from Min- nesota. General ~Huerta declares Towne is not acting as his agent in any capacity. There was little expectations of |- agreenent betwen the Mexican and American delegates over the organiza- tion. of a new pxo\'islonal government in Mexico. SHIP TRAGEDY PROBE BEGINS Invnflqafion of Empress of |reland’s " - sinking. . Quebec, June 17.—The court of in- MANY STREETS SUBSIDE Paris, June 17.—Parts of Paris pre Harry Francis Carlyle‘ L.’ J. ‘Gasnier, |affords * The %rent 525 000 Electric Pho- toplay Chas Goddard, played by the Pn’c e players. Cast of characters—Crane Wil- Pearl White; Paul Panzer, Marrin; Paulme, Owen bur, Donald McKenzie‘ chks, chief director, the Pira The welcome afiorded the first episode of The Perils of Pauline, was 80 spontaneous and the pat- rons were so. pleased that very favorable comments were re- ceived. dramatlc gem. Alan Dales, the famous® critic, : Admisslon 10c, Bc COMING —Tomorrow hight Warner’s Features present Miss Marion Leonard in The Rose of Yesteryear, a said, “It is quite.-wonderful how the movies can visualize. ‘an such story as The Penls of Paul- ine: The Perils of Pauline certainly| big scope for accident. Never was a girl in a more pre- carious plight, never. ~ You should not miss seeing The Perils| of Pauline, = Although there is|’ some villiany, the pictures are olean and wholesome at the same time intensely thnllm% 5reels of pictures will be shown Opening on tomorrow night for the last half: 3 double vaudeville acts. Admission 10c and 18¢c SEVEN MEN DIE IN LODGING: HOUSE FIRE Eighty Persons Trapped inBurn- ing Building. Milford, Mass.,, June 17.—Seven men were burned to death and twen- ty seriously-injured. when eighty per- sons ‘were trapped in an Armenian lodging house here. The bodies were taken from the up- per floors of the four and a half story brick and frame building. In addi- tion to the twenty men taken to the hospital suffering’ from burns or. from injuries - received in jumping . from windows: thirty sustained minor hurts. The interior burned out. The fire, the cause of which has not been determinéd, start- ed in the dining hall on the ground floor. When firemen arrived flames were shooting through -all = floors. There was a scene of wild excitement as the crazed foreigners attempted to save their lives. The building, erected more than fifty years ago, formerly wasused as June 1’1—Minnesm - a shoe factory and its timbers were impregnated with oils. ' The heat was intense. THAW TO STAY IN COUNTRY Denies He Has Any Intention of Go- ing Outside United States. Gorham, N. H,, June 17.—In a sign- 2d statement Harry K. Thaw denied a report that he was planning to leave| the country. “The only place I am going is to Pittsburg,” he -said. “As soon as I get permission I am going home to be with my family and look after my business interests. I have no inten- tion whatever of going abroad.” “Say Policeman Robbed Woman. Butte, Mont.,, June 17.—Patrolman M. B. McMichaels, long a member of the Butte police force, was taken in- to-custody by a constable on a charge of grand larceny. The policeman js oharged with having robbed a wom- an friend of $100 in cash and jewelry. Americans waste $50,000,000 an- nualiy on titles for their danghters. quiry, ‘under the presidency, of Lord - and children’s lhm.hunl-h ‘Mersey, began its ‘investigation of the disaster in the St. Lawrence riv- cer ‘in: which . the Canadian Pacific ntumér ‘Empress of Ii ~more than a thcm.und persons: lost S NoEs, ln»m:;lqle‘wl?:ulu their lives. Baxee, with spon | - of the building was (" TONIGHT The Adventures ‘of Kathlyn. The Two Ordeals The two ordeals with leopards and lions make an animal plcture oh a heroic scale }eretofore unntbempted A thrlller beyond eompare KR KK KKK KK KKK KK 4th of July Privileges. E. B. Berman is in charge of all Fourth of July privil- eges. All those who wish to secure street privileges, such as lunch . stands, fireworks stands, etc., should make ap- plication at once. Mr. Ber- man’s offices are over the O’Leary-Bowser building on Third street. Residents of this city will be given preference over out- siders for .privilege rights. Fourth of July Committee. * x * x * X * x * x * x * x * x x * * § KKK K KKK KKK KKK KK TURKS MASSACRE GREEKS Refugees Report Slaughter of One Hundred. Athens, Greece, June 17.—Greek refugees from Asia Minor brought reports of the massacre by Turks’ of 100 Greeks, including priests; old men and children, in the town of Phokia,{- twenty-five miles northwest of Smyr- na. The town, according to the official report, - was invaded by a horde of armed men, who looted and then set fire to all_buildings. They are said to have been assisted by the Turkish Ppolice. The inhabitants, most of whom were Greeks, fled the country, leaving their property behind them, and 3,800 * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * of them have reached Saloniki. They declare that the bodies of the massa- cred people were thrown into wells. The refugees, many of whom were suffering from wonunds, were in a state of starvation on their arrival. COLLAR 2for25¢ No. 2. YOUNG MEN AND WOMEN, MAKE USE OF YOUR TALENT AND LEARN MUSIC 1 will be at Bemidji every Thursday and Friday for the purpose of giving instructions in Piano_and Organ musie in private homes. Anyone interested in learning music will please write me in care of this paper, as I can attend to.a few more pupils. My price and terms are reasonable and satls- faction guaranteed. Respectfully, 2 Waldo B. Nielson This space reserved by _the Bemidji Townsite & Improvement Go, For Price of Lots, Terms, Etc., INQUIRE OF T. C. BAILEY, Bemidji, or write BETIDJI TOWNSITE & IMPROVEMENT CO. 820 Capital Bank Bullding 8T PAUL MIRNESOTA Something About Government Ownership No. 2 Under government own- ership a good piece of work can be done. It has often’ been done, but never with regard to time or economy. ‘With the highest wages and the highest material costs, America under pri- vate ownership, with but 6 per cent of the population, has 66 per cent. of the world’s telephones, and the cheap- est and best service in the world. Below is a table show- ing the average cost, per TN year, for t.elephone service in this and European coun- tries based on offic- ial reports. In translating Furopean eests inte American dollars, dus consideration has been given to the relativepar- cbasing power of money ia Europe and the United States as showa by operators’ wages. Note: $30 $40 $50 $60 $70 $30 $30 $100.8110 $120 $130 $140 8150 $100 lllfl!'flWESTEHII TELEPHONE EXCHANGE COMPANY CORSETS $1.00, 81,25, $1.50 32.00, $3.00, $4.00 These are stricily up-fo-date lllll Window SIWIS I a thorough apprecia- tion “of the style BATCHELDER - :gopz-i VCO Mmoo The)i know, by expel his section of the cmmtry

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