Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, July 9, 1914, Page 4

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STILL HOPEFUL g OF sE_n_tEMENT Attorney General Delays New ! Haven Proceedings. T0 WAIT UNTIL JULY 15| Will Postpone Filing of Dissdlution Suit in the Expectation of Rcamhlng Some Agreement Without Prplonged Fight, ‘Washington, July 9.—Although the department of justice is preparing to g0 ahead and file its long planned anti-trust -suit for the dissolution” of the New Haven railroad system, At- ! torney General McReynolds still is hopeful of a settlement without a pro- | longed fight. As was announced some time ago, President Wilson and the attorney | general agreed that the suit should be filed this month unless the Massa- chusetts legislature and the execu- ‘ tive committee of the railroad agreed | on certain legislation necessary for disposing of some of the stocks which the government contends are being neld in violation of law. The attor- ney general had agreed to withold the suit until July 15. The Massachusetts legislature ad- journed without taking the necessary action. Administration officials pin their faith of a settlement without a long fight on the fact that a new legisla- ture comes into existence on Jan. 1. FREDDY WELSH IS CHAMPION Captures Lightweight Title by De- feating Willie Ritchie. London, July 9.—Freddy Welsh, Pontypridd, Wales, is now the light- weight champion of the world. In: the opinion of the referee Welsh scored enough points to defeat Willie Ritchie, holder of the title. The ver- dict was popuiar with the Britons. Among the American spectators the consensus of opinion was that the Yankee fighter deserved a draw. From the very first round the con- test resolved itself into an affair of | scientific boxing against fighting. The ! referee thought Welsh, the exponent ! of the boxing part of the program, | had jabbed his American rival often enough to give him the honors, even though his punches lacked steam. It was a fine exhibition of tap, tap, | clinch, over and over again through- out the twenty rounds. Neither man scored a semblance of a knockdown, in fact they did not even as much as stumble. * WILSON HEARS BUSINESSMEN ‘ Says Conference Was “Mutually In-l structive and Helpful.” i Washington, July 9.—Supporting the administration anti-trust program in some particulars and opposing it in others, a delegation of business men, representing the Chicago Asso- ciation of Commerce, conferred more ' than an hour with President Wilson. | All details of the pending anti-trust bills were gone over. The following statement was issued at the White House: “The president expressed his pleas- ure at having been consulted by the group of gentlemen who represented ! the Chicago Chamber of Commerce | Was and said that he felt that the con- ference has been mutually instructive and helpful.” INCOME TAX IS BOOMING | Collections This Month Exceed Pre- dictions Made. ‘Washington, July 9.—For the first six days of July the collections of cor- poration and income tax aggregated $3,109,621. In his statement at the close of the fiscal year June 30 Secre- | tary McAdoo predicted that $3,600, 000 additional would be paid in in- come. and corporation taxes before July 10, the date when penalty at- taches to unpaid assessments. The indications are the commissioner of internal revenue will receive collec- tions well in excess of the estimate of ‘he secretary of the treasury, $77 130,- 000. NEW TRIAL DENIED HENWOOD Appeal of Man Ufder Sentence of Death Turned Down. Denver, July 9.—Harold' F. Hen- wood, under sentence of death for killing George E. Copeland, was de- nied a third trial by the state supreme court. Copeland was fatally wound- ed the night of May 24, 1911, when Henwood shot Sylvester L. von Phul, a St. Louis aeronaut, in the bar room of a local hotel. The death sentence imposed by the lower court is affirmed and it is or- dered to be carried out Oct. 25. RUN DOWN TWICE BY TRAINS Autoists Struck Second Time While on Way to Hospital. Erie, Pa., July 9—While Leopold Guerine, with four other persons in his automobile, was crossing the Lake Shore tracks the machine was struck by a train and the occupants serious- 1y hurt. William McArdle carried the vie- tims in. his touring car ‘and ‘dashed for a hospital. At the Nickle Plate tracks his ma- chine was hit by a freight. Miss Madeline Coupsr is probably fatally injured. Prominent- Woman Dead. New York, July 9.—Mrs. Katherine Beekman Schuyler, wife of Montgom- ery . Schuyler, who is well known among magazing writers and * art critics, is dead at hér home in New Rochelle. She was president: of the Dames of the Revolution.. {One Speaker Creates 8 by H@ Con- demnation. ofi the Society ° u’&vlnn. Club Golng Woman, Who Shirks the Duty of Training Her Children, St. Paul, July 9.—Sex hygiene will not be taught in the schools of Amer- ica if the sentiment of the National | Education” association carries .any weight. An audience of men and women in- i terested in the subject crowded the hygiene meeting _at. the Madison school, expecting a warmly contest- ed argument for and against the in- ular ! troduction of the study in the re i school curriculum. But the speakers were unnnhfiuul ‘m their opinion that it is not for the | good of thé home, the child-or-the:na- !tion that the responsibility of impart- ing fundanmental truths of life should "1:@ shifted from the parents to the|. teachsr. | Dr. Charles H. Keene of Minneap- ‘ohs, supervisor of hygiene and physi- |cal training, led the discussion and created a stir by his condemnation of | th society loving, club going woman, of sex instruction to children such a vital one. 2 Condemns Club Mothers, “This association can have but the strongest condemnation for the moth- er of the better homes, whose time:is so taken up with her social and ¢tub duties that she has no opportunity_to take- up the responsibilities or the privileges of training her children. We talk abous the inability of the poorer mothers to teach their chil- dren regarding personal.hygiene, but it is not for these children that we need to have all the fear. “The way in which mothers are shifting all their responsibility on the | teachers is outrageous. ] “The only thing now done im the {home is the feeding and clothing of | the children. A glance at the clomng | which our young girls wear upon‘the {streets and an investigation of- the ; average breakfast will prove how the i home has fallen off in the fulfillment teven of these duties. | “The placing of sex imstruction on | the same basis as arithmetic and geog- ‘raphy will make it so familiar that it | will lose its sacredness. Ond knowl- | edge never will' compel purity.” Divorce Question Barred. The evils of divorce, the laxity of the laws of different states and the problem of preventing the increase 'of the number of children made or- phans by the separation of their par- ents, are questions that will not be considered or commented upol by the N. E. A. At the final session of the comanit- tee on resolutions in the Wilder build- ing the members flatly turned down the request to consider these gques- tions and it was voted to refuse to ask the government for uniform mar- riage and divorce laws or to other- wise mix up in the matter. Chairman Seerley of the committee much opposed to conslderlng such gquestions. “It is my opinion that this body should not dip into such quesuonn," | he said. “I believe our work shnuld be purely educational and ‘this jmar- riage and divorce problem should | have no place in what resolutions we consider or recommend.” WILL MAKE TOUR OF EUROPE Chicago Commission to Study Mu- nicipal Questions. (8 Chicago, . July -9.—European railway terminals, vice problems.and public schools are the objects of study of a Chicago aldermanic commission -which has left here for a six weeks’ tour of European capitals. Mrs. Ella Flagg Young, superin- tendent of schools, and " four “of* her' assistants in the board of education, will accompany the commission. The commission, originally named to: in- vestigate methods of European cities ‘n handling railway problems, later was broadened to include a studyof social evil conditions abroad and it was decided that it would be a goed idea to send a body of Chicago edu- cators with the commission.: SENATOR ASK'SF HIS HETUI&I Requests Democrats of Missourl tp Renominate Him. o Jefferson City, Mo., July 9.—Senator W. J. Stone of Missouri, in a signed statement, asks the Democrats of Mi§ sourito renominate ‘him at the-Au gust primary. Child Angler Drowned. Faribault, Minn.,, July 9.—A sfx- year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Jindra. was 'drowned in Wheatland lake while fishing.- He went to fil lake alone. . The Best Medicine in the World: "My little girl~had dysentry very bad. I thought she.would dfe. ci-m- berlain’s Colic, Cholera. and- Di hoea Remedy cured her, and Fi truthfully. say that I think 1t g the best medicine in' the' world,”. writes Mrs, William' Orvis, Clare, Mich. For sale by All’'Dealers. st 4 10 and‘ 12 1-2 cent | ginghxms’% wash goods ‘6 cents Friday Satui {day and who, he says, is making the problem | - Insts Clears Air Passages; You Bretie Froslys. Dull Hosdeche Try “Ely’s Cream Balm.” Get a small bottle anyway, just to try it—Apply a little in the nostrils and instantly your clogged nose and stopped-up air passages of the head will open; you will breathe freely; dullness and headache disappear. By morning! the catarrh, cold-in-head or catarrhal sore throat will be'gone. End such misery now! Get the small bottle of “Ely’s Cream Balm” at any drug store. ‘This sweet, tarrhal Discharge | the mgrnt balm dissolves by the leat:- of ‘the nostrils; penetrates and heals lnfllmed, ~8wollen ..membrane . - the ' nose, 3 8tops nd & !eellng‘ of thing relief comes im Don’t: 1 ke - to-nigh 't lay| awake - to-night strug- gling for breath, with head stuffed nostrils closed, hawking and blowing. Catarrhi or_a cold, with its' running nose, foul mucous dropping into the throat, andéfaw dryness is distress- | ing but truly’needless. Put your:/faith — just once —in “Ely's Cream: Balm” and your cold or catarrh surely disappear. URGE RODSEVELT T0 ENTER RAGE Progressives Want Colonel to Run for Governor. HAVENO OTHER CANDIDATE New York State Leaders Use Every Argument at Thélr Command to In- duce Former President to Accept the Proffered- Nomination. New York, July 9.—For two hours the Progressive leaders of New York state used every argument at_ their command to induce Colonel Roosevelt to agree that he would accept the nomination for governor. After it was all over he said-he had nothing to say at this time and would not change his previous: statements de- clining to run. It was understood that the colonel continues to stand out against the proposal that he head the state ticket. Delegations of Progressives came to New York from various parts.of the state to urge Colonel Roosevelt to take the nomination. They” said frankly that they had no other candi- date and had not even considered an’ other-name for the head of the ticket Ever since his return from Europe Colonel Roosevelt has been receiving letters. and telegrams from Progres sives in all parts of the country urg: ing him not to accept the nomination In some cases it has been charged that the New York leaders are will Ing to run the chance of injuring the party in-the nation for the sake of making a’ good showing in this state 26¢, 35¢ and 50c wash good only 16 cents [Ffiday, Saturday and Mon- day at Troppman’s.—Adv. MILITANTS GAUSE OF WILD SCENE IN COURT | ceed ‘with the ti Policemen Have Difficult Task Remoting Disturbers, - London, . July. S—The in“the mmunt suffragette lsn.atlon ended when ‘Mrs. Emnieline | Pank: hurst resumed ‘control of the forces of the Women’s Social and Politicak union at their London headquarters. Mrs. Pankhurst was;~ howeyer, - pers mitted to remain in active command of the militants -for only a brief pe riod. © When “she ‘emerged from' her headquarters to go to lunch the police pounced on her and took her to Hol- loway jail. Simultaneously with the reappear ance of -Mrs. ; Pankhurst' a violglu , MEXIGAN MEDIATION ON SOUTHERN SOIL Rehels Express Preference for Neutral Place, ‘Washington, July 9.—Mexican terri- tory probably. will be chosen for the scene of the proposed conference be- tween Huerta's envoys and Constitu- tionalist delegates over plans for.the establishment. of a provisional govern- 1 ment.. Constitutionalist representa- tives in Washington expressed prefer- ence for a neutral place in Mexico— probably along the border—for the peace parley. ' Two of the Niagara mediators—Ambagsador Da Gama and Minister Suarez—were to confer in New . York sover dehfls of ‘the meet- ing. 2 Nuevo Lnreda, Mex., has-been: con- sidered as a most. likely ‘choice for the scene of the parleys, It is oppo- sité Laredo; Tex., where quick com- munication by * telegrqph and cable can be“arranged with Mexico City for the Huerta delegates.” Communica- tion southward with' Constitutionalist headquarters also would ‘be‘ easy. 50, 75, and 1.00 wash -goods only 25 cents Friday, Saturday and Mon- day-at Troppman’s.—Adv. To protect rousung poultry from attack 'by vermin vthere has been invented a trap which, when fasten- ed to a perch, catches and poisons insecu F ADDITIONAL WANTS TO0 LATE TO CLASSIFY WANTED—Experfenced ‘bookkeeper at once. Will pay good salary to right man. -Apply in own' hand- writing to “A B,” Pioneer -office. I will open my tallormg quarters for ‘the in- spection of the public about July 15th, on the second floor of the old Lumberman’s National . Bank Building, formerly occupled by the tclc— phone. central : : : | w1ll have a complete line of new fall woolen piece goods for suits and overcoats and will be in a posntlon to cater to the most ‘particular dressers. . : Five men will be employed at the opening in my tailor shop, and all first class men; more will be added as business warrants. ; I will appreciate an opportunity to serve you. - PAUL BROSVIK THIRD STREET BEMIDJI, MINN. WE- FURNISH THESE BINDERS IN SIZES TO FIT ANY PAPER; MADE UP WITH ANY OF.OUR REGU- LAR COLORS IN MULTIKOPY CARBON AND WITH ANY NUMBER OF CARBON SHEETS DESIRED. ~ DIRECTIONS FOR USE: head or original blank . sheet under flap on top of-binder, and sheet for copy under the carbon.. The binder with sheets mserted can then be hand‘led asa single-sheet. iz ‘A special advantage in using these binders is that forms . for the day’s work can be laid up ahead when convenient, thus savmg time in the busiest part of the day. Carbon paper used in this way lasts 50 per cent longer than when “-used in loose sheets. A telephone order will bring a sample to your desk. The Bemidji Pioneer Pub Co. Telephone al Bemidji, Minn. scene was created Hall, Miss Gnce Roe, Miss Julia Jameson and Miss Ellen ‘Armes wére brought up for trial for conspiracy. Mrs: Hall, when brought - into court surrounded. . by women wardens, refused ‘to plead. They threw papers snd: pens from the prisoners” ‘enclosure and ‘shouted & commentary on their treatment in Holloway, jail. Two palicemen and five women attendants’ started’ to car: ry them out of court to the cells be- low. When the judge decided to pro- n; the absence: of the two women self on the floor and kicked several policemen and it took some minutes to remove/iHier.: i plel.dad L t guilty. s desd % 15 20, ang ! gfi ee;ntxmy_flibu and 9 [¥s. Hall th §w ner- |

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