Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, September 24, 1914, Page 4

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TAKING OF JAROSLAU GONFIRMED RussiansAdvancing in Galicia, CRACOW IS BELIEVED THE NEXT OBJECTIVE Gzar's Troops Likely fo Mask Przemys! and Press on Toward Breslau, London, Sept. 24.—The fall of Ja- roslau, in Galicla, and the Russian occupation of this important fortified railroad center of Austria, is consid- ered In London as likely to have a greater effect on events in the west- ern arena of the war than anything reported from France for several days past. The Russian army, which took Ja- roslau by storm, is sald to be in hot pursult of the Austrians, who are re- ported to be retreating on Cracow. As Przemysl is now isolated it seems probable that the Muscovites will be content to mask this fortress while they push on to Cracow with the view of joining their forces pre- paratory to a march in the direction of Breslau. Further north the Russians, accord- ing to information reaching London, have resumed the offensive against the Germans in East Prussia and are reported as again preparing to attack Koenigsberg, the ancestral home of the kings of Prussia. An official communication from Grand Duke Nicholas, commander-in- chief of the Russian forces in the field, made public in Petrograd, con- firms the capture of the fortified po- sition of Jaroslau. Russians Control Railroads. Petrograd advices say the railroads leading to Przemysl, the Austrian stronghold in Galicia, are controlled by the Russians. The advices add that Przemysl is not prepared for a slege. Commenting on the capture of Ja- roslau, the Petrograd correspondent of the Post says: “The speedy capture of Jaroslau in- dicates the condition of the Austrian army and facilitates the attack on Przemysl. It is reported here that desertions from the Austrian army are very numerous and that the Ger- mans, not wholly trusting to their Austrian allies, have Insisted upon the garrisoning of Przemysl with Ger- man forces. “Jaroslau was, at the beginning of the war, a formidable fortress and fully equipped. It stands astride the River San, with three forts in a three- mile line on the right bank and six- teen forts on a five-mile line on the west bank. It has been strengthened by temporary works and was fully supplied with large stores of muni- tions and military supplies of all kinds. No details of the fighting or the booty taken have been as yet re- ceived here.” Say Germans Quit Town. The Petrograd Novoe-Vremya for the first timé gives information concern- ing the extent of the German invasion of Russian Poland by announcing that on Sept. 17 the Germans evacuated the towns of Wladistawow, Wolkow- yszhki, Mariimpol, Kalwaria and Su- walki. These towns, none of which is more than twenty miles from the frontier, apparently define the high water mark of the German invasion. Advices from Cettinje say that with- in the next few days the Montene- grins expect to have on top of Mount Lovchen long range cannon capable of dismantling the forts at Cattaro and with these they can bombard the Aus- trian ships, thus leaving the Anglo- French fleet to capture the strong- hold. Reuter’s Telegram company has re- celved a dispatch from Cettinje say- ing the Montenegrins occupied Rog- atltza, ten miles from Sarajevo. The Servians have issued an official statement saying the Austrian wings along the front from Liubovia to Los- nitza have been beaten and that the Austrians are In full retreat along the entire front. Masonic Sign Saves Fifty. Ostend, Sept. 24.—The power of Free Masonry Is illustrated by a story told here by a citizen of Louvain, who with a Masonic sign says he saved fifty of his fellow citizens from being shot to death by German troops. John D. Donates $300,000. New York, Sept. 24.—A gift of $300,- 000 by John D. Rockefeller to the Young Men’s Christian association of Brooklyn was announced by the as- sociation. Diarrhoea Quickly Cured. “I was taken wiith diarrhoea and Mr. Yorks, the merchant here, per- suaded me to try a bottle of Cham- berlain’s Colic, Cholera and Diarr- hoea Remedy. After taking one dose of it I was cured. It also cured others that 1 gave it to,” writes M. E. Gebhart, Oriole, Pa. That Is not at all unusual. An or- dinary attack of diarrhoea can al- most invariably be cured by one or two doses of this remedy. For sale’ by All Dealers. ITRENCHES ARE FILLED WITH UNBURIED DEAD London, Sept.” 24.—Nine -miles of trenches fllled with unburied dead was the fruit of the fighting of the ritish troops mow making up the allled left wing. They were taken, according to re- ports received from several sources, in a turning movement in the district just south of St. Quentin and Peronne. For hours before the British charged the line their artillery shelled the German position. From aeroplanes that flew low, de tying the hail of German bullets, the range was given and the shells burst like deadly hail directly over the tops of the great line of parallel trenches jammed with German troops waiting for orders to charge the British line. Twice they essayed to do so, but the British fire was too deadly. When the British finally charged there was hardly a single unscarred German left in the trenches. Wounded and dead were so mixed that it was hard to rescue those who yet had a chance of recovery. But the movement was a complete success from the British viewpoint and the position marks the first real ground gained against the Germans. VIRGINIA GETS INTO THE “DRY” COLUMN Richmond, Va., Sept. 24.—Virginia has voted dry. Statewide prohibition goes into ef- fect Nov. 1, 1916, according to prac- tically complete returns of the spe- election on the liquor question. he “white ribboners” have a ma- ority of from 32,000 to 35,000. Rich- mond, Alexandria and Norfolk were the only large cities voting “wet.” Temperance forces are jubilant. Plans were started for a day of cele- bration and thanksgiving on the vie- tory next Monday. The new temperance law prohibits the sale of liguor even in clubs and prohibits the manufacture of spirit- uous liquors. Wines, ale and beer may be manufactured, but must be shipped out of the state. Loss of $500,000 annually in liquor revenues to the state is expected. SCHULZ FOR AMENDMENT. (Continued from Page 1.) will be sold and cut down, but care will be taken to reforest those areas which are being denuded, and in this way the revenue will be perpetual. *‘Of the one million acres of school lands which this will include, one- third is cut over; another third is coming up to sapling pine; and the remainder is bearing virgin timber. As two-thirds of these lands are now timbered, the returns from the state forests will be immediate and they will be self-sustaining from the be- ginning. Prussia, scarcely twice as large as Minnesota, with a population of 60,000,000 people, has 6,000,000 acres of state forests and these for- ests pay an annual net profit of $12,- 000,000. “Our population is increasing ra- pidly, and to provide for the educa- tion of our children, a large school fund is necessary. We should man- age these non-agricultural state lands according to forestry principles, in order that they may yield a perpetual revenue, and this is what No. 9, the State Forests Amendment, will do. It stands for good business and a big- ger school fund, without additional taxation.” Wood for sale. teen-inch. L Four-foot or six- P. Batchelder.—Adv. Mother of Eighteen Children. “I am the mother of eighteen chil- dren and have the praise of doing more work than any young woman in my town,” writes Mrs. C. J. Mar- tin, Boone Mill, Va. “I suffered for five years with stomach trouble and could not eat as much as a biscuit without suffering. I have taken three bottles of Chamberlain’s Tab- lets and am now a well woman and weigh 168 pounds. I can eat any- tihnk I want to, and as much as I want and feel better than I have ot any time in ten years. I refer to any one in Boonme Mill or vicinity and they will vouch for what I say.” Chamberlain’s Tablets are for sale by All Dealers. HOW “TIZ" HELPS SORE, TIRED FEET Good-bye sore feet, burning feet, swol- 1}“ feet, sweaty feet, smelling feet, tired feet. Good bye corns, callouses, bunions and raw spots. No more shoe tight- ness, no more limping with pain or drawing up your face in agony. “TIZ”is magical, acts right off. “TIZ” draws out all the poisonous exuda- tions which puff up the feet. Use “TIZ” and for- et your foot misery. Ah! how com- fortable your feet feel. Get a 25 cent goul feet, glad feet, feet that never ', cwell, never_ hurt, ‘never get tired. A \eu’n foot comfort gunnkd or sefunded. 3 i orey NO Losszs ARE MENTIONED | Weod for sele German lapnrt of Sinking ef British Cruisers. Berlin, via The Hague, Sept. 24— In announcing the successful exploit of the German submarine squadron, which sank three British cruisers, the official war office bulletin makes no mention of any German -casualties. This is believed to indicate that the submarines successfully returned to their bass undamaged. Announce- ment of the succesful raid has great- ly cheered Berlin. On all sides it is pointed ocut as an excellent revenge.on the British for the raid on the patrol cruiser squad- ron at Helgoland. It is expected that the dredging of the Suez canal to a depth of 39 feet will be completed early next year. CATARRE CANNOT BE CURED with LOCAL APPLICATIONS, as they cannot reach the seat of the disease. Catarrh is a blood or constitutional dis- , and in order to cure it you must take internal remedies. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and acts di- rectly the blood and mucous surfaces. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is not a quack med- icine. It was prescribed by one of the best physicians in_this country for years and is a regular prescription. It is composed of the best_tonics known, combined with the best blood purifiers acting directly on the mucous surfaces. ‘The perfect combination of the two in- gredients is what produces such won- derful results in curing catarrh. Send for testimonials, free. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Props., O. Sold by Druggists, prlce 76c. Take Hall’s Family Pills for consti- pation.—Ad Toledo, Four-foot or six- teen-inch. L - P. Batchelder—Ady. Antwerp Garrison in Sortie. London, Sept. 24—The Telegraph’s correspondent with the Belgian army says: “The Belgian army emerzed from the ramparis of Antwerp in a sortie against the German army based on Brussels. ' The advance guard ex- changed shots with the German out- posts on the road thirteen wmiles fmm the capital.” ‘Wood for-sale. teen-inch. Four-foot or six- I P. Batchelder.—Adv. Read Pioneer Want Ads. AODTONA WAV WANTED X man to work on a farm for a few ' weeks. Three miles from Bemidji. F. M. Freese, Phone 3626-6. g FOR SALE OR RENT — Five-room cottage with two acres of land. Ap- ply at 1433 Irvine Ave. opposite Fair Grounds. LOST — 8-inch manilla envelope. Blank contracts of R. L. Polk & Co., personal papers and letters in “same. $1.00 reward for return to Daily Pioneer. W. J. Tyler. PREMOC Specifications: CAPACITY—12 film or 2 plate exposures. BED—Mahogany, with rack and pinion for FINDER—Reversible, SOCKETS—Two. SHUTTER—Kodak Ball Bearing. ‘Mahogany. focusing. TRIPOD BOX— collapsible brilliant. NS—Planatograph. DEMENSIONS—31 x 4},21-16 x 4% x 5% in.; BA (81 x 53), 21 x5 X T&. WEIGHT —3% x 4%, 21 ozs.; A (8% x 53), 32 ‘ozs. Standard Clamp. Automatic List of Prices; Pocket Premo C with Planatograph Lens, Ball Bearing Shutter and Plate Scle Leather Carrying Case. Kodak Automine Scale.. OSCAR ERWIG such a problem, for it permits the use of daylight loading films or plates at the choice of the operator. One can be used just as easily as the.other, plates being loaded by means of an ordinary double plate holder and films in the Premo Film Pack Adapter. Kodak 3t x 4} A(31\- 1) N . selecting his photographic out- fit, the amateur is often undecided as towhether he should get afilm or a plate camera.- There is no questicn of the greater convenience of the daylight load- ing il m camera, wh*ll& the plate camera offers the ground glass focus- ing advantage so de- sirable to many. The Pocket Premo C will. easily solve And these advantages are offered in a camera which is even lighter and more compact than the average purely film camera, and which is so simple to operate that anyone can make good pic- teres with a Pocket Premo C without any experi- . ence whatever. The Pocket Premo C offers the same assurance of quality pictures as does the Film Premo No. 1, described on the previous page, being fitted with the same type of Kodak Ball Bearing shutter and and Plapnatograph lens. The shutter works on ba!l bearings and its leaves openingin the shape of a star admit much more light in a given time than does the ordinary type ot shutter this festure mikes the Pocket Premo C very -effective for snapshot work. For the popular post card size, the 3A Pocket Premo C makes an outfit of unusual scope and capabflmes at a moderate price. The camera is handsomely finished, covering is genuine leather and metal parts ‘are nickeled. For one who wishes to get a very portable and re- liable outfit, fsuitabe for all kinds of general amateur work, ;at a small outlay, the pocket Premo C is an excephonal value. See them at Barker'’s Drug & Jewelry Store PR R Y THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1014. ATTENTION Evmvmv" th are cordially invited to attend the - PURE FOOD DEMONSTRATION to be held atour store, Saturday, Sept. 26th. A special representative of H J. Hienz Co. the makers of the famous 57 VARIETIES w1lld be at hand to explain just why they are so goo : ROE & MARKUSEN SAFETY FlRST: ANYTHING THAT’S HIENZ IS SAFE TO BUY. Who's Your Tailor? Look for the Full Page Ad in this week’s Saturday Evening Post concerning ithe character of the clothes we are in a position to sell you, tailored to your individual order by Ed. V. Price & Go. Merchant Tailors Chicago We have over 500 of their Autumn and Winter Woolens at our store and suggest that you be one of the first men in town to reap the benefit of their exclusive patterns. Exclusive local dealers. Tl’le Leader B. R. Erickson Mgr. Next Door To The Fair Store 210 Third Street 210 Third Street S AP v vt s 21 . ot s SV Next Saturday at2 p.m. 500 Boys and Girls to accept free samples of Hienz Peanut Butter Fudge ROE & MARKUSEN PLEASE NOTE 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:—Insert letter-head or original blank sheet under flap on top of binder, and sheet for copy under the carbon. The binder with sheets inserted can then be handled as a single sheet. A special advantage in using these binders is that forms for the day’s work can be laid up ahead when convenient, ‘thus saving 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.

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