Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, November 11, 1914, Page 4

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RUN ASHORE AND BURNED CruiserEmdenFinal- ly Destroyed. CALLED “_TERBDH” SHip German Vessel Menace fo Brit- | ish Shipping in Pacific. London, Nov. 11.—The German cruiser Emden, which has been one of the terrors of British shipping in the Pacific, has been destroyed by the Australian cruiser Sidney. The admiralty announced that the Emden had been driven ashore on Cocos island and burned to the wa- ter's edge. The Sydney ran down the Emden after a chase which had lasted for several days. It is presumed it was the Sydney which located the Emden only a few days ago and sank one of her store ships and captured another. The fleet German vessel escaped at that time, however, showing a clean pair of heels to the English vessel. The Emden’s most notable feat was' her raid into Penang harbor, where, she sank a Russian cruiser and a French destrover. London, Nov. announced that the British warship Chatham had chased the German pro- tected cruiser Konigsberg into port in Ruflgi island off German East Africa. The admiralty said the Konigsberg probably had been driven aground. AMERICANS IN TURKEY SAFE Reprisals Will Follow if Unfortified Towns Are Attacked. shington, Nov. 11.~~Americans in have not been molested in any way since the outbreak of the war and are in no danger, Ambassador Mor- genthau.reported. The Turkish minister of war in- formed Mr. Morgenthau that if Eng- land and Greece attack unfortified towns, reprisals would follow. RUSSIAN TERRITORY GLEAR OF GERMANS Petrograd, Nov. 11.—All Russian ter- ritory is now clear of (iermans. This is the claim of the Russian war office as additional reports ai e telling of the sweep of the forces of the czar as they press onward into Bast Prus- sia, Posen and Galicia. With heavy snows already fallen in the north the Russian transport o&i- visions are now equipped with sledge: The cavalry is reported to have pierced the left German flank at Ko- nin. The line of intrenchments erect- ed by the Germans from Czentochowa to Cracow and Kalisz are declared to have been abandoned. These trench- es are partially constructed of con- crete and it was expected that along this line the forces of the kaiser would make a determined stand. Russian cavalry is reported within twenty miles of Cracow, but it is as- sumed here that this force is com- paratively small and is probably com- posed of skirmishers moving south- ward from the vicinity of Czento- chowa. Earl Annesley Missing. London, Nov. 11—Earl Annesley, who left England Friday by aeroplane, has not since been heard from and it is feared that he has been killed. The | earl was a member of the Royal Fly- ing corps and has performed valuable services for the allies in the war, nota- bly during the siege of Antwerp. TEST TARIFF DISCOUNT ACT Customs Likely to Fall Still Further if Rebate Is Upheld. Washington, Nov. 1l.—Arguments have begun before the customs court in the appeal of importers to deter- mine the validity of the clause of the Underwood-Simmons tariff act - which zives a § per cent discount on goods imported in American bottoms. icials are interested par- n the case because of the olf in customs revenues under conditions. They pointed out if the administration gets its bill through congress to spend $30,000,000 in buying ships to carry commerce un- der the American flag customs duties are likely to fall still further if the courts \mhnld the claus war Blg Loss In Tebacco Fire, Farmville, N. C.. Nov. 11.—Fire that destroyed several tobacco warehouses of the American Tobacco company here caused d; ge estimatei at from $300,000 to $730,000. Several other buildings = ere by d. Open Bids for Six Destroyers. Washington, Nov. 11.—Bids for six new torpedo boat destroyers opened at the navy depaitment show the Fore River Shipbuilding company at Quincy, Mass., the lowest bidder for two of the craft at $795,000 each. Wiliam Cramp & Secns of Philadelphia bid for three boats at $825,000 each Bath Iron Works bid for three California female clerks in civil service positions receive the same pay as the males. 11—The admiralty’ STARVATI(lN MAY | BE THEIR FATE Rescuers Urable to Reach Entombed Mmers. WATER PIPES HAVE BURST Possible Death by Drowning Lessens Hope of Saving Six Men Buried in Ely (Minn.) Mine—All the Victims of Accident Men of Family. Ely, Minn., Nov. 11.—The rescue crew at the Sibley mine is putting in new cribbing to reach the six men who were entombed 200-feet down the shaft, but with little lwps of getting them out alive. It may take ten days or two weeks to reach the level where the miners are imprisoned: Moreover, the water pipes have burst and. it is feared that the men have been drowned. _ The victims are Frank and Fred Autorisach, Joe. Scube, Joe Homer, George Florian and Gideon Oinonen. The wife of Oinonen is a patient in the Fergus Falls hospital for the in- sane. All the other men are married and have families. Captain Williams- and Surveyor Me- jCurdy had just steped out of the cage when the timber above them gave way, causing the cavein, which ex- tended from the surface to the 200- foot level. John Lube, pumpman, was caught between two timbers and before he was able to free himself the water filled the shaft, rising two feet above his head. "He had to.climb a ladder to the next drift above and escape through this to the Savoy shaft. \GIRL’S SLAYER CONFESSES | Given Life Imprisonment Within Half Hour After Plea. La Crosse, Wis.,, Nov. 11.—Half an hour after he had pleaded guilty in district court here to the murder of Petra Solberg, a domestig, Henry Liso, a chauffeur for a La Crosse million- aire, was on his way to the state pris- on at Waupun under a life sentence. His hurried departure was to prevent possible lynching. Liso said that after killing the girl by beating her over tiie head with a hammer, he cut her throat with a pocket-knife, dragged the body through the woods and threw it into the La Crosse river. The body was found next day by a farmer boy. TO URGE FEDERAL CONTRSL Labor Convention Will Discuss Colo- rado Mine Situation. Philadelphia, Nov. 11-—The Colora- do situation will be threshed out on the floor of the.convention of the American Federation of L.abhor. Delegates from the Mine Workers ,announce that they wil press a reso- lution demanding that the government take over and operate the mines. They will point to the government {planned railway in Alaska as a prece- dent for their demands. The majority of the delegates so far approached have expressed their ap- proval of the plan and it is expected the resolution will be favorably re- |ported from committee. OPIUM RING IS UNCOVERED Explosion at Butte Kills Chinaman and Reveals Evidence. Butte, Mont.,, Nov. 11.—Police and | federal officials believe they have un- |covered an extensive opium smug- gling ring in Montana and throughout the Northwest as a result of the kill- ing of Dr. Mon Toy, a loca! Chinese physician, and the injuring of Sing Sue, a merchant. The two Chinese, apparently start- ing a tong war, were preparing a bomb when one of them dropped ‘a bottle | of nitroglycerin and an explosion fol- lowed. TWO CHILDREN ARE KILLED Freight Train Jumps Track and Plunges Thréugh H Chicago, Nov. 11.—Two children were crushed to death and horribly mangled in their beds when a freight ,train on the St. Paul road jumped the track and plowed through a house. his sister, two years old, were. the little victims. Arthur Crouch and his wife, narentfi of the children, and an aunt were sleeping in other rooms and were but slightly injured. Newlands Leads by Two Votes. Reno, Nev., Nov. 11.—With the vote of Nov. 3 on ‘United States senator of- ficially canvassed in six out of six- teen counties in Nevada mewspaper tables show Senator Newlands lead- ing over Samuel Platt, Republicap, by two votes. Goss Press Inventor Dies. Chicago, Nov. 11.—Frederick Llew- ellyn Goss, inventor of the printing press which bears his name, died at his home here. He was born in Wales in 1847. Japs Occupy Kiaochau Forts. Tokio, Nov. 11.—In accordance with the terms of unconditional surrender agreed upon the forts at Tsingtau .were formally handed cver to the Anglo-Japanese forces, the German garrison marching out from-the de- fenses from which they fought during the long siege. An easy manilupated lever holds the 1id on a new cooking utensil so tight that its contents are boiled un- ider steam pressure. Edward Crouch, aged four years; and Photo by American Press Association. The formal coronation of Emperor Yoshihito has just takenplace at Tokio. The new sovereign became the mikado of Japan automatically in July, 1912, on the déath of Emperor Mutsuhito. TURKISH SUBJECTS IN FRANGE ARE SAFE Paris,- Nov. 11—A dispatch from Bordeaux to Havas agency says a for- mal declaration of war, signed by the five allies, has been ed against Turkey. s The French declaration is remark- able. After mentioning the Black sea episodé as the direct cause of war it says that since Turkish warships, com- manded by German officers, without due cause had bombarded Russian ports, a state of war existed between ‘Turkey on the one hani and the five allies on tke other. It then con- tinues: “It is not the French republic’s in- tention ever to forget the cordial friendship which for many centuries has linked France with the Ottoman empire. In view of this fact it will not consider the many Turkish sub- jects at present residing within the French borders as hostile enemies but in the light of true friends.” More than 90 per cent of the alco- hol and alcoholic drinks that are made in the Philippines are derived from the sap of palm trees. ‘Women; barbers, uairdressers and maniourists in New York city num- ber 3,864. Paris, Nov. 11.—The allied Tines are/| holding. firmly ‘against-a fierce contin- uous. attack of the Germans in- thej vicinity of Ypres. At the war office it is declared the Germans . are . bringing -tremendous pressure to bear in an-effort. to crush the allies’ defense. ..The roar of big guns is l.I.ICEBBaIlt. as the Germans keep up a constant artillery fire under cover of which in- fantry assauls ‘are made upon -the British and French. British warships are_again reported to be supporting. the allied -left- wing. In the determined attack being made by the Germans Ypres is declared to have been reduced to a mass of ruins. Not a single" inhabitant remains in the town.” Public buildings have been sent tumbling by shells: There is little doubt that the fight- ing ahout_Ypres, which has:been in progress almost constantly: for nearly twe weeks, may prove the bloodiest of the war to date. . The Germans “con- tinue to attack in: massed formation, endeavoring to carry the allied.trench- es by sheer-force of numbers. Norwegian Ship Hits Mine. Maassluis, Holland, Nov. 11.—The Norwegian " steamer - Pluton, bound from London for Christiana, was sunk by a mine off Yarmouth. Nineteen men of its crew and three passengers were rescued by a Duteh lugger. “ead the Ploneer want ads. tASY TO DARKEN fOUR GRAY HAIR Try this! Mix Sage ‘Tea and Sulphu: and brush it through your hajr, taking one strand at a time. When you darken your hair with Sa Tea and’ Sulpbur, no one can tell, bo cause it's done so naturaily, so eve Preparing this mixture, though, at hor is mussy and-troublesome. ¥or 50 cente you can buy at any drug store the ready- to-use tonic callad “Wyeth’s Sage ané Sulphur Hair Remedy.” You just damipen a sponge or soft brush with it one small strand at a time. By morn- ing all gray hair disappears, and, after another apphmtmn or. two, your hair becomes beautifully. darkened, glossy and luxuriant. - You will also diecover dan- GruiT is gone and hair has stopped falling. @ Gray, faded hair, though no disgrace, is o sign of old age, and as we all de- .sire o youtliful and “attractive appenm lance, get busy dt ‘once with:'Wycths Sage and Sulphur.and look ‘Years younger. ADDITIONAL WANTS T00 LATE TG CLASSIFY WANTED—Dishwasher. once. Hotel Markham. Apply at INQUIRE OF Bemidji, ST. PAUL PENCIL POINTER They use to sell for $9.00 ‘how Try Ore See. Qur 'A'tiiue saver in_every PHONE 31 This space reserved by the Bemidji Townsite & improvement Co. For Price of Lots, Terms, Etc., BErIDJI TOWNSITE & IMPROVEMENT CO. 520 Capital Bank Buliding Sharpens every Size and Kind Gives any Point Desired from, Never Brnaks he lefl. Can be attached to horizontal {HOUSANDS ARE IN DAILY USE. dys free trial will prove this. The Bemidji Pioneer Pub. Co. - T. C. BAILEY, or write ESOTA Just telephone 31 for a ten day and draw this through your hair, taking |- It mltt:n not wlm’e yoo reside or what ‘you want, the merchants below can get it for you at i pnm that will defy wnptltim Every merchant is reliable and will give you the best value for your money k*l*i#‘k**lili!fi’l# i#ii#*i*iiiii**: *’_**ik’(iiiiiiil: * Sl K BEMIDIT §IC HOUSE * * ARKER’ * We strive to sell. *x :' ¥ nmc HO) *x X = ms DRIS * THAT’S NATURAL, * 117 -Third Street, Bemidji. * ‘% 5 x *x : & L S S IEWELRY STORE * But we strive harder to please. ¥ X Wholesale and retail Pia- % % x THAT'S SERVICE. *x + nos, Organs and Sawlns x Wholesnlers and Retailers % * * lllnMnos. . ¥ Service and satisfaction. Mail & Courteous attention has & x Z % . % Orders given that same ser- & won Over.many jewelry cus- & x . Phone 573. = -: % vice you get in person. : tomers to us. : x & - * 3 N % . J BISIAR, MAN_’AGEB. ¥ ¥ - "~ BARKER'S * George T. Baker & Co. x % = _© ¥ % Thirg'St. Bemidjl, Minn, ¥ * KRR KKK KRR K X ; o x KKK KK KKK K KKK s KK KK HH KKK KKK KKK KKK EKEE KK KEK KKK KKK KKK KK KKK KK KKKKK oK KRR E KKK KY X : [UENTHER D : BEMIDJI PIONEER PUB. CO. @ B g ‘Wholesalers of * e ek \Wholesalers and Retailers & % x INKS of 'l'ypewrlt(la:;b Paper and { & t PENS Typewriter Ribbons. Gontracior and Bullier 5 PENCILS You save the middleman’s i Phono A3l . 150n oK TABLETS profit when you buy here. % 2 x STATIONERY Full ream boxes at from 756 % 3 : SCHOOL SUPPLIES cents and up. : Bemidii, Minn. * . CO. Security State Bank Bldg. * 3 : : BEMIDJI PIONEER PUB. CO Boaail Dk Bemidji, Minn, * HREKEKKE KKK KKK KK KKK KKK KKK KKK KK KRR KRR KK KKK *“’***;‘?;’:*** i**il!*i#i‘iiili e tagds Sadidon ; SAV'.E YOUB. MONEY! . Do you want McQUAIG cally. If Bem%}l,u' KAARIAAAXCAAARAKR A RAAAA A AR AR AAAN Fkkkdkk & kkkk &k [ pamy | $4.00 A YEAR Free Trial This obligates you in no way. of Pencil or Crayon., Blunt to Fine., Will sharpen lhouln& %fl'fi without Replacements; Rm of Cutters or Adjusting. or vertical surface. window office and store; Ten Bemidil, Minn. Booklets Regul-rly and pay weekly, lay some aside each week, if monthly do it monthly. The dollars will on having only the best pile up surprisingly. money can buy. TRY IT. Now is the time to-open a bank account with t SECURITY_STATE BANK AR SRS EREEE SR LS KERRK R KKK KKK K you in quantity. HE K KKK KK KKK R KKK Packet Heads Catalogues Descriptive Sale Bills systemati- you receive your ‘THE BEST GROCERIES found in Bemidji Come right here and get them, as we pride ourselves OTTO G SCHWANDT sota_Ave. Bemid.fl M&nnesom Third St. KKK KKK E KKK KKK HRKHK KKK KKK KK KAkkhkhkkk KhkkhAhkhrkhkrxhhhX ok okikokkkd ik kkkk OUR 2 We are Jobbers merchandise sales are always ST. HILAIRE RETAIL of on the increase and each LUMBER CO0. PIN TICKETS month has:been better than and the last. If you are not al- GUMMED LABELS ready a customer, you do not All kinds of bullding ma- No need to send outside of know how well we can please * terial, as much or as little as Bemidji for them. you in quality and satisfy * you like at the The * % Coal and wood also for sale AAAKAKAAKIAKAAKK KA A AT AR AXAAAIAAR A A A AK AR A AR AR AL kA Ak khkkkhkhkhkk 7 SCKROEDE%}‘“ * Minnesota Ave. and R. R. S. * 222222322223 222 R 2 st s R 222222 E2 2822232322222 21 *t**t*“ki*t***** KKK KKK KKK KKK GENERAL MERCHANDISE Dry Goods, Shoes, Groceries and Provisions KRR KKKKKKRRKKKK KKK KR KKK KK KK Pioneer Sup.ly Store Can Save You Money. : BEMIDJI PIONEER PUB. CO. : HREKE KKK I KKK KKK Bemidji Kk A AAKAAAAAAAK hhkkhhhhkkrhkkhk §2ix gFsy IR E R RTY * * * * SUBSCRIBE FOR THE PIONEER The BEMIDJI PIONEER Dally and Weekly Bank Blllldln! = i Security WEEKLY $1.60 A Year Vindow Cards Calling Cards Shipping Tags Statemen_s Note Heads Bill Heads Envelopes Dodgers

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