Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, October 13, 1914, Page 6

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PRZEMYSL RELIEVED AustnansfleashBa- smged_Fgflress. London, Oct. ing statement by staff: we inflicted sev the eagagcments BERLIN TELLS &F DEFEAT OF FRENGH French eavalry di 13.—A . dispatch fo Reuter’s Telegram company from -Ber- lin, via Amsterdam, gives: the follow- the German general “Qur cavalry on Sunday completely routed the Frcnch cavalry west of Lille, and near H; division ebrouck s on another n. Until now on llve front in the e I GERMANS HOLD GROUND Situation in East Prussia Re- ported Unchanged. did not lead to a de- western th bout the booty at Antwerp no v bz wade, as in- frentier be London, Oct. 13.—Information given out in Berlin indicates the Russian siege of Przemysl, the Austrian for- tress in Galicia, has been abandoned. Austrian troops are reported to have defeated a Russian division near Lan- cut and to have routed a division of Cossacks east of Nymao. Vienna ad- vices say Przemysl has been relieved by Austrian columns, who have enter- ed the fortress. The Russians are sald to have fled in the direction of the River San, a number being cap: tured while attempting to cross the | Rivers Siniava and Lepaysk. The Russian -official statement | makes no reference to Przemysl, but | says the Austrians in Galicia are op- | Schirwindt (Has 1,000 prisoners. “In guards of our arm Vistula. Near G saw, we capture; Believed to Be vance of Russian cia and Bukowin: were re,mlser\ and the Scuth Poland Second Siberian army corps. RUSSSIANS WITHHOLD NEWS a war office statement. ar we repnlsed Kn.', and Tenth ct. 9 end 10. The sifoits by way of Prussia) equally tussians lost st the advance nies have reached the rojec, south of War- d 2,080 n of the Preparing Coup in Galicia. Petrograd, Oct. 13.—Further ad- troops through Gali- a was anuounced in The general erating in small groups in various sections of the country. One Austrian division was surprised by Russian cavalry, says the statgment, and dis- persed. In East Prussia the situation is unchanged. Several engagements have taken place on the left bank of the Vistula, but the Germans seem to be holding their positions. Prince Oleg, son of Grand Duke Constantine, was wounded in an outpost engage- ment. Commenting on the situation iun the eastern theater of the war the Berlin official statement says: “In the eastern theater we repulsed in force all attacks of the First and| Tenth Russian armies on Oct. 9 and 10. The Russian outflanking efforts by way of Schirwindt (East Prussia) equally were repulsed and the Rus- sians lost 1,000 prisoners. Vistula River Reached. “In South Poland the advance guards of our armies have reached the Vis tula. we captured 2,000 men of the Second Siberian army corps. “The Russian official communication about a great Russian victory at Au- gustowo and Suwalki land) is invested. The fact that no official Russian communication has been published about the tremendous defeats at Tannenberg and Insterberg (both in East Prussia) vouches a lack of reliable official information.” A Cettinje dispatch to the Hava agency says the Montenegrins advan ing on Sarajevo, in Bosnia, defeated the Austrians near Kalenovitch with severe losses. The report adds the Montenegrins also took many pris- | oners. A Russian official communication given out at Petrograd expresses the belief that the death of King Charles of Roumania removes an obstacle to the turning of Roumania to the cause of the and adds that Roumania will now cesse to menace Russia by furnishing provisions and transports for German troops. The S:rvian min- ister to Rome declares Roumal probably will continue to remain ney tral. Shop girls in New York city num- ber over 100,000. Near Grojec, south of Warsaw, ' (Russian Po- | | staff has decided for the present to withhold details of fighting in this | neighborhood, from which it is con- cluded that an important coup is im- pending. In pursuance of this policy of se- crecy no hint of the location of the cavalry engagement in which Prince Oleg, son of Grand Duke Constantine, was wounded in the leg, has been given. The situation in East Prussia is un- changed. Populace Flees From Belfort. London, Oct. 13.—The Daily Mail's Amsterdam corresponceint g lin newspapers are distri ers announcing that the civi tion is leaving Belfort (a French for tified town in the so called territor: of Belfort) in fear of a bombardment | Sidewalk tiles are being made in Tatly of screenings from old brick flies. “TIZ" FOR TIRED SORE, ACHING FEET Ah! what relief, No more tired feet; Hio more burning feet, swollen, bad smell- No more pain in corns No matter what , ing, sweaty feet. ! callouses or bunions. | ails your feet or what under the sun you've tried without | getting relief, just use “TIZ.” “T1Z” draws out all the poi- | sonous exuda- tions which puff up the feet; “TIZ” is mag- ical; “TIZ"I"g grand; “TIZ” will eure your foot troubles so yowll never limp or draw up your face in pain. Your shoes won’t seem tight | and your feet will never, never hurt or get_sore, swollen or tired. Get a 25 cont box at any drug or department store, and get relfef. You can get 20=inch e 22=inch 8 24=inch e 28=inch i 20-inch Box Stoves 22=inch ¢ 5 25-inch ¢ sé 28=inch ) 30-inch ¢ g8 24=inch ¢ & 26=inch_ ¢ $& stove boards, get sash and set glass. 316-18 Minnesota Ave. 22-inch Prince Heaters. We have lots of stove pipes, elbows, dampers, flues stops and collars and all things necessary for setting up stoves. If you have any broken windows, call us up to Come in and see our stove display. ‘GIVEN HARDWARE CO. Your Money Back If You Want It BEMIDJI, MINNESOTA lots of com- fort with an airtight stove or cheap heater this weather It is too early to start the furnace or big base burner and these cheap stoves fill in at small cost. 18-inch Alrtlghts............. SN M 5. 50 ..$2.00 PHONE 57 /- them bombs dropped in various gquarters of Parjs by two German aviators. Several of the twenty bombs failec to_explode. Three of the . dropped on the Cathedral of Notre Dame did not explode. ing one struck the roof of the north transept and exploded, blew a large hole in. the church, setting fire to a women and .children, injured by incendiary . bombs The remain- PARIS KILL FllUfl : g‘ar;s; Oct. 13—Four civilians were killed and twenty persons, half of Paris, - Oct I3 —A Naples displitck says that twenty, ltx.flan transport: ships, heavily escomd by an Italian naval fleet, have sailed to bring back the Italian trobps now in 'n-ipou and Cyrenaisa. Their places will be mken by a vol- unteer corps just formed in Italy. Al- though' the return of troops from Ly- bia is ostensibly due.to the fact that their term of ;enlistment has expired IT - BEEN N REACHED Pension Payments for 1914 ’ Slmw Decrease. LLAST YEAR HOLDS RECORD | Beigian Authorities’ Sl ‘Hold Ant. werp Offices. Rosendaal, via The ‘Hague, Oct. 13. [ —Upon request of the German army of occupation of Autwerp the Belgian authorities, headed by Burgomaster de Vos, have undertaken to continue the civil government of the city. The Germans have removed the heavy siege guns—the 42-centimeter pieces with which they effected the demolition of the Antwerp forts—and it is assumed here these will be sent to aid the German forces operating in the rigion of Verdun. ‘Wanted—To rent modern six-ropm house in desirable location. Apply Troppman’s Store.—Adv. 00! house in desirable location. Apply Troppman’s Store. < FOR RENTTwo large front rooms for light housekeeping over Model. WANTED TO RENT—A small house or suite of rooms for light house- - keeping. Modern and- partly fur- nished preferred. Call Pioneer. Ploneer wanis—odge Sali ceal- a ~vord cash. the movement is universally accepted in Italy as another one of the steady . .The fire was extinguished et Mificulty. The damage it Preparations being made by the Ital only elight. - = " =" - |ian government for. eventual .partici- G A pennant drapped by one of the airr-en bore this message: taken Antwerp; your turn will come soon. NO WATER; GREAT FIRE LOSS Business Section”of Spercer, W. Va., Sp tire destroyed by fire, with a loss of ap proximately $300,000. The fire startec in a cause there was no water with whicl. to fight the flames. Belgian soldic ficers and men, Hague, according to a dispatch from | that pation in the present war. Should Italystake possession of Tri- este and Trient, as it is confidently expected she will do if she joins with “We have Sum Paid Veterans of the United States in 1913 Aggregated $174,171, 660, but This Vear'.:'eel:reau May Be Expected to Continue. ‘Washington, Oct. 13—Uncle Sam paid out a total of $172,417,546 in .pen- sions in the fiscal year ended June 30 BRAINERD MAN IS RESTORED : JUST ON EVE OF OPERATION Destroyed. encer, W. Va.Oct. 13—The en businéss district of Spencer was fruit store and spread rapidly be teen hundred ped of- have arrived ot The| city to Reuter’s Telegram com- the allies, she will thus have 100,000 more trained soldiers than otherwise, the troops being brought back from | Tripoli being still subject to military duty under a’general mobilization. “precautionary mobilization” now consists of about 500,000 men. Italy’s BIG POSTAL THEFT CHARGED El Paso (Tex.) Clerk Arrested for Embezzling $25,000. El Paso, Tex,, Oct. 13.—Clare L. Rog- ers, clerk in the El Paso postoffice, is under arrest charged with the em- bezzlement of five registered packages containing $25,000 in currency. Money was mailed by the First Na- tional Bank of El Paso to the Nation- al Bank of Commerce at New York last. - This compares with $174,171,660 in 1913, which was the largest amount ever paid out. The summit in expen- ditures has been reached and a de- crease in the amount may be expect- ed to continue. The grand total of expenditures for pensions from 1866 up to and including 1914 was $4,633,- 611,926. The total number of pensioners of all classes on the rolls in 1914 was 785,239, against 820,272 in 1913. The number of Civil war pensioners was 728,129, compared with 832,439 in 1913. The largest number ever on the rolls was ¢99,456 in 1902. The' With an estimated production of nearly 582,000,000.000 cubic feet of natural gas, the United States estab- E. A Spohn Finds Relief With First Dose of Remarkable Remedy for Stomach. E. A. Sphon of Brainerd, Minn., R. F. D. No. 2, was so dangerously ill that his physicians ‘declared he could not live unless he was operated upon. P He feared an operation, and in seeking a way out he tried Mayr's ‘Wonderful Stomach Remedy. It suc- ceeded. After he had gained back his strength he wrote: “I thought I would let you know how I was benefited by Mayr’s Won- some time ago. It did all that you claimed it would do. I was so bad that the doctors told me I could not live without an operation, but 1 did not have one, and I don’t think I shall ever need one now. I have felt no signs of gall stones since I took your treatment.” Appreciative letters come from peo- ple in all parts of the country. Mayr’s Wonderful Stomach Remedy clears the digestive tract of mucoid accretions and removes poisonous matter. It brings swift relief to suf- ferers from stomach aflments, liver and intestinal disorders. Many de- clare that it has savea them from langerous operations; many are sure pany. cn Sept lished a new high record last year. THESE derful Stomach Remedy. I took it that it has saved their lives. FOUR Magazines FREE the price of one. new subscribers. " The Pioneer makes the startling announcement of a CL. UB OFFER which includes FOUR SPLENDID - MAGAZINES covering practically every walk in life and your choice of either THE BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEER or THE BEMIDJI WEEKLY PIONEER all for HERE’S THE CLUB OFFER FARM AND HOME, subscription price per year THE HOUSEHOLD, subscription.price per year . TODAY’S Magazine, subscription price per year . FARM, STOCK AND HOME, subscription price per year. The Bemidji Daily Pioneer 6 months or The Bemidji Weekly Pioneer 1 yr. TOTAL.........$ 3.75 If you take The Daily Pioneer for six months, or COST OF ALL TO YOU..................... it you take The Weekly Pioneer one year Fill out the coupon and send it in with the price of the club you se- Do it TODAY; tomorrow may be too late lect. 200 This offer will be made for a limited period only and is made to both old and READ THE CLUB COMBINATION BELOW. Datel s b s, Sanaiians e, The Bemidji Pioneer Pub. Co., Bemidji, Minn. Gentlemen: Enclosed please find §.......... R which send me the .. Pioneer together with the club of four magazines as advertised on your circular and in your paper. I am a subscriber now......... I am not a subscriber......... Please check one of the above Addressy... i E e You Can’t Afford To Pass This By The pioneer is making this liberal offer to its readers for a limited period only. it, FOUR MAGAZINES and The Daily Pioneer for six months for the regular subscription Think of price of The Pioneer, $2, OR the FOUR MAGAZINES and THE WEEKLY PIONEER for one full year for the regular subscription price of $1.50. This offer is to both old and new subscribers. this payment in advance of the present time. The old ones are merely requested to make Cut out the coupon above and mail it today. Never before have you beén offered such a liberal offer, and probably never again. Address All Commumcahons to .

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