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" - THT BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEER fll]IIII||||IIIIII||IIII||||||||||l||l!||||||| Chiropractic ‘What It Is T FOUR HENRIONNET SAYS ‘| DON'T REMEMBER' + (Continued from Page One) wont on Mrs. Henrionnet under ques- tioning, ‘““‘we went to the store and stayed there a short time. Roland sald he was going up to see Dr. Johnson. i “The next time I saw him was at the city hall.” Cross Examination. On cross examination by the state, Mrs, Henrionnet admitted that. Oscar had taken her.in is autoito the sana- torium: Qctober - der She-also admitted that she’ to Erskine to visit:Nelson’s (T SRET i e s and that she told the: father that|cHTROPRACTIC FOR Oscar was 'jjust ]gn?i to ‘her and al- ways seemed sq kind. - Mrs. Henrionnet stated that Rol- STOMACH TB'OUBLE and seemed somewhat excited when he debarked from the train and she tried to quiet him. Transfers Life Policy. She also admitted that Roland had transferred a life insurance policy that was in his wife’s name to her, and stated that she was going to use the policy for the care of the baby in case anything happened to Roland. She said:if her son died she intended to take care of the baby out of the proceeds of the policy. Pressed for an' answer whether the wife of the accused was present when the transfer of the policy was made, she hesitated for a few moments and then said she wasn’t certain.’ . Onening of Defense. The defense opened with Dr. E. ‘W. Johnson as the first witness. The doctor told of finding Roland Hen- rionnet in the first stages of tuber- culosis when examined in the sum- mer and advised him to go to a sanatorium. The doctor next. exam- ined him at the county jail on the day of the shooting and found him excited and mnervous;: :-but - his -tem- perature was slightly above normal, with a pulse of 104. His testimony showed that the disease affected the entire body and brain, but in.cross examination stated that a tempera- ture of 99 degrees would, in his opinion, not affect the brain. - Uncle Testifies. Delos Wilcox, an uncle of the de- fendant, was next called. He stated that together with Mrs. A. P. Hen- rionnet he met Roland at the Red Lake depot on the morning of the 15th of November. As Roland jump- ed off the train he seemed to be in a hurry and said, ‘“‘come onm,” the witness stated. Roland then asked, according to the witness, if they had seen 'the chief of police and added that he, Roland, had “the -goods on’ Oscar Nelson and his wife, and was going to make Oscar enlist. He was urged to quiet down and not cause any trouble nor. noteriety. He accom- nanied them to the Henrionnet mil- linery store, where he was apparent- ly composed. ° “From there, Roland left for the office of Dr. Johnson,” said the wit- ness. 4 E. J. Bourgeois. then presented a chart showing the location of the Northern National bank building. where the shooting took place and the buildings in the block up to Fourth street on Beltrami avenue. Quarrel With Nurse. Sarah J. Bye, head nurse at the sanatorfum at the time Roland Hen- rionnet was a patient there, was next called. She told of a quarrel . be- tween Mrs. Roland Henrionnet and the nurse on the day before the shooting, which took place at the sanatorium. In the discussion or arguments which took place in the presence of the witness, Mrs, Hen- rionnet, Roland and the nurse, the latter was said to have said, in speaking to Mrs. Henrionnet, “What nbout- you and Oscar Nelson at the hotel?” To this Roland responded with the question, addressing his wife, “What have you got to say for yourself?” “Visit to Soda Fountain. followed by Oscar Nelson, come out of the Candy Kitchen. Meeting With Nelson. Then, instead of proceeding up the stairs to the doctor’s office, he followed Nelson, w!to was walking s?uth onb Bleltdratml “avenue a short distance behind the women. He sta- soon "“’l?l“by' Shle saitdfilhe hzd slep% ted that he overtook Nelson in front with m, 0 sh o, ked| Of the City Drug store, and they, didn’t think that wa: s']’l' s :%‘ ed| together, rounded the Northern Na- R s lone. | tional bank building and went into | tang wnd|the hall leading upstairs-to the re- -.continpedsthe: ac-| oryitirig. office. s B 3 The Shootine;Starts. “Nelson' was' two or three steps ahead of me as we started up the stairs,” said the witness, “‘and as he reached the fourth or fifth step he turned and came down a step or two and shoved me with his hands and arms up against the wall. My head struck the wall and after that all seemed dark. “] remembered nothing after that until I was in the city hall talking to the chief of police.” He testified that he had no other intent than to make Oscar enlist, when he entered the stairway hall. Cross Examination. On cross examination, County At- torney Torrance put the witness through a severe gruelling, but in the main he held to the story told during the direct examination. “Why did you load the gun when you were going to see the docto;-'!" asked Mr. Torrance. “I didn’t know whether I was go- ing back to the house again or not,” was the reply. Again the question, “why @id you start for the doctor’s with a loaded; revolver? Why did you load it?” “Well, T had no reason; I loaded' it to try the extractor,” was the an- swer, - = Didi’t Give Excuse. When asked why he did not tell the chief that Nelson pushed him against the wall on the stairway, he did ot seem to recall any definite reason, other than that he had no occasion to. - He testified that the first person .to whom he told it was his attormey, Mr. McDonald. Torrance Starts Barrage. It was here that the county at- torney started a crossfire of ques- tions. “You don’t seem to remember firing the shots that killed Oscar? You don’t remember following him out on the walk and sending another bullet into him at close range? - You don’t remember throwing the gun on the walk and following him into tne bank? You don’t remember hearing Clarence Foucault ask you if you were crazy? You don’t remember seeing George Rhea standing over you with a revolver2, You don’t re- member telling the chief, ‘Guess I'm the man you are looking forr You don't remémber going over to the hotel and pointing out names on the register to the chief? .In fact, ev- erything was blank until you saw me at the city hall?” Says #Mind Blank. The witness then admitted remem- bering seeing some faces staring at fiim somewhere, but could not recall where and when. He said his mind was a blank from the time his head struck the wall in the stairway un- til the police and county attorney talked with him at the station. Here the state rested the case and the attorney for the defendant also rested, after a few questions. Court adjourned at 10:30 untik 1:30 this afternoon, when the argu- ments by the .attorneys began. Mother Takes Stand. Just before Henrionnet testified, Mrs. Henrionnet, mother of the de- fendant, took the stand. She stated that on the morning of the tragedy her son called her on the telephone from Puposky and said he wanted to see his boy. The mother then went on to tell tional treatment. cine, manufactured Co., Toledo, Ohlo, 5 A R ard is’ offered 3 0 ting me: back painzof ‘shoes~ : after- she ‘was gone I went over to her suitcase she had brought back and opened it to see 1f my shoes were in it. But they were not there.” _“What did you find?”" questioned Mr. McDonald. ; Henrlonnet sort of hesitated and glanced over the court room which held many women spectators and knitters out for the afternoon and finally answered that he discovered a suspicious article (only not stated that way). Believed “Frame Up.” “Phe nurse then showed her new coat and my wife came over and sat on my lap. While she sat there she looked up at the nurse and winked and said she didn’t like my deceit. The nurse left and my wife asked me to come up to the. guest room that night, She told me to come up at 11 o’clock and not to sleep but keep awake and come: “It was 11 o'clock when I went . up to the guest room (It had a bed in it) and when'I got there the door was closed and there was, 0o light in the room. I was dressed in my pajamas, with a bathrobe over it, and slippers. I opened the door and went in and didn’t hear anything. In a few moments I heard a_ door open down the hall and I also heard gome one breathing. Some one was coming down the hall and I slipped out an open door onto the porch and crouched behind a bed that was standing on the porch. Before 1 went onto the porch I turned the key and lifted up the curtain. I thought the breathing was my wife asleep. Miss Bye and the nurse en- tered and the room and the light was turned on and I heard my. wife say ‘where is he?’ “The nurse answered ‘who?’ “My wife said ‘Roland.’ “She asked me if I was coming to the room and my wife said ‘yes.’ “I went .Into the room and asked my wife why she had sent for me. “guppose you are afraid of me,’ ‘she said.. “1 told her no, but it looked like she was trying to 'frame up’ on me, and my wife didn’t say anything. Again the Skein. «Then she said she was going to Bemidji on the train next day and back to the hotel where she had left Oscar’s handkerchief under the matt- ress, She accused the nurse of hav- ing told me that Oscar had left his handkerchief 'under the mattress. - Then my wife said to the nurse, ‘I'll fix you’ and then went out’the door. «T asked the nurse what she was doing there and said, 'your wife sent me here.’ “Miss Bye and my wife came in snd my wife said she had been to my room to tell me that Oscar and she : had been to the hotel the night be- fore. Miss Bye was called away and 1 agked my wife if she had been in the hotel with Oscar and she said she had been drugged and didn’t know where she was until the next morn- ing. Miss Bye came in and my wife told me she was with Nelson the night before and that Miss Bye came to the guest room to tell ine. “My wife threw herself on the ‘floor and I stooped over to pick her up but the nurse told me to let her alone that she was all right and then she got up. They quarreled Hall's Family The nerve and blood supply to the stomach performs an important part in the elaboration and secretion of the gastric juice, and a very import- ant part of the nervous system is the furnishing of energy for the stomach movements during diges- tion. The nerves leading to the stomach pass out from the spinal cord through little openings in the spinal colum* and if they are im- pinged by a subluxated vertebrae it will interfere with-the transmission of nerve energy leading to the stom- ach which will cause that organ to become diseased. A subluxation may result from very insignificant causes, muscular econtractions caused by the toxins of any of the infectious dis- eases, 'a sudden twist, a fall, or a blow, may subluxate & vertebrae in the spinal column. What can the Chiropractor do for gastritis? He will examine the, spine and locate the impinged nerve and will usually find that it is tender at the point where it emerges from the spine. When the nerve is free from the pres- sure that is causing the trouble, na- ture will rush to the afflicted stom- ach, a sufficient amount of vital en- ergy to neutralize the abnormal con- ditions. - If the constitutional dis- ease is mephritis, then the nerves leading to the kidneys will be found impinged; if it is diabetes, the nerves to the kidneys, liver and pan- creas will be given attention; if it arises from heart incompetency, whatever be the secondary, cause, the primary. cause is always found to be in the spinal column. Many per- sons who have suffered for years with this distressing stomach condition have been entirely relieved through Chiropractic_adjustments. The Chi- ropractors hive made a special study of the mechanism of the nervous sys- tem and the human spine, and can locate definitely the seat of the trouble and can correct and thus re- move the obstruction to the flow of vital nerve force to- the organs. If you are suffering from any bodily ailments call the Chiropractor, and you will soon become an enthusiastic advocate of the chiropractic principle that nerve pressure is the cause of disease. Any person who has ever taken the trouble to examine a spinal column clearly sees how the very slightest movements of the vertebrae will particularly close ' the opening between them, through which . the nerves pass from the spinal cord to bé distributed to the various parts of'the body. This prevents the trans- mission of the nerve impulse and causes functional .derangements of the parts to which they are distrib- | uted. Aisk your Chiropractor to demonstrate to you with the spine, which is always at hand for such purposes, how easy it is for nerves to be pinched by the slightest devia- tion of. a vertebrae from mnormal. The Chiropractor knows the result of this slight deviation and is able to explain them to you in such a clear way that it is impossible to resist the logic of the chiropractic etiology of diseased conditions of the human body. If you are suffering with some form of stomach trouble make’a thorough, open-minded investigation of the Chiropractic principle and then be HUFFMAN FURNITURE X output increased for less Ave. Northrop. E. M. Sathre. There.is more Catarth in this section ! of the country than all other diseases put together, and for years it was sup- posed to be incurable. Doctors prescribed local remedies, and by constantly failing to cure with local treatment, pronounced it incurable. Catarrh is a local disease, greatly influenced by constitutional con- ditions and therefore requires constitu- Hall's Catarrh Medi- UNDERTAKING H..N. McKEE, Funeral Director PHONE 178-W or B PROMPT \ 7" DELIVERY \_{ A Boon to Business STOCK Typewriters promptly. Factory AV, &‘%figfixfim D. 4 B We are prepared tofill orders forWOOD- . - EYE EAR NOSE THROAT over three times in six Glasses Fitted months to meet the growing business de- mand for this popular machine. An excellent machine with excellent service. BEMIDJI DAILY PIO CLASSIFIED NOTICE ‘Advertisements in this cost half sect'a word per issue, when paid cash in advance. be run for less than 10c per issue. Ads charged on our books cost one cent a word per issue. than 25c¢. FOR SALE —_— FOR SALE—$200 cash will buy lots 5 and 6, block 3, North Park. Mrs. J. C. Cobb, 509 Minn. Ave, FOR SALE—My" (Birchn_)ont FOR SALE—5-room hwwuse, good con- dition, good well and wood shed. Continuous 'cement sidewalk; $15 down, $15 per month, no interest. FOR SALE—One A-1 half blooded Jersey cow with.calf six weeks old; one bay mare seven.years old, weight 1,200 pounds; runabout in A-1 condition. above property may be seen on the Gust Carlson farm, one and one- half miles south of the city. Also for sale one six horse power gaso- line saw rig, complete. seen on the A, E. Rako farm. Ap- ply A. E. Rako, Bemidjiy Minn. . 2 —_— -FOR SALE—Seven-room house, on good terms, located near ‘the pro- posed sjte for the normal school. For particulars address Swanson, Bowbells, N. D. SATURDAY. MARCH 2. 1918 BUSINESS | & PROF ESSIONAL DOCTORS by F. J. Cheney & is " a ' constitutional d., acts remedy, .Is. taken intg;?nllu r&ma Blood on;ithe. Mucouys: i ‘of the System..: One Hundred Dol ‘for any. case. | Catarrh. Medicine: fails; to ¢ 4 circulars and testimonials. F.'J. CHENEY & CO., T , Sold by Druggists, 76c. Pills for constipation. —_——— t “'DR.EH.SMITH - PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office Security Bank Bleck DR. E. A. SHANNON, M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON- Oftice in Mayo Block Phone 396 _Res. Phone 397 & O'LEARY &, : « DR. L. A. WARD PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Bemidji, Minn. DRS. GILMORE & McCANN PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS Oftice—Miles Block . H. A. NORTHROP (%%EgPAATIHg Pan?cIAN AND SURGEON Ibertson Block ~Office Phone 153 o e e DR. EINER JOHNSON PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON | Bemidji, Minn. DENTISTS 2 7. TEDRICH y DR 1. Dvé TIST Office, O'Leary-Bowser Bldg. Office Phone 376-W _ Res. 876-R DR. G. M. PALMER ; DENTIST Oftice Phone 124 Residence 346 Miles Block, Bemidji column No ad will No ads. run DE. 7. T. TUGMY DENTIST North of Markham Hotel Gibbons - Block Tel. 230 DR. D. L. STANTON DENTIST Office in Winter Block ' CHIROPRACTOR ] .WALD LUNDE DOC’?.':g!?%F CHII{‘OPRACTIC Acute and Chronic Diseases handled with great sucaess. 1st Nat: ‘Bank Bldg. Phone 406-W Hours 10-12 a. m.; 2-5 7-8 p. m. —_—e————m VETERINARIANS 6-38 cottage on ich Road) OmDr 5-37|: 2-34 one Ford == J. WARNINGER VETERINARY SURGEON Office and Hospital 3 doors west of Troppman’s, Phone No. 209 3rd St. and Irvine Ave. . K. DENISON. M. V. M. v V%TERIN?&‘RIANY X Office Phone 3-R Res. 99-J 3rd St. and Irvine Ave. 4 May be 28tf A, A 6-34 how Roland had asked her to get the chief of police and go to room 62 of the Markham and get a handker- chief that he said belonged to Oscar Nelson. He also said, according lo the witness, that he was coming to Bemidji on the train and that he was going to make Oscar Nelson enlist in the army. She met the train and Henrionnet alighted. She said she asked how he felt and he said he hadn’t slept well for the past two nights and that his temperature had gone up to 102. She told “of coming to Bemidji and calling at the bank, where Oscar was introduced to her by Mrs. Roland Henrionnet. Later they went to the Canay.Kitchen, closely followed by Oscar. There Oscar had a pri- vate talk with Mrs. Henrionnet .and after several minutes all left the store, the women coming out first, closely followed by Oscar. The women went directly to the A. P. Henrionnet residence, accord- ing to the witness. She said she|® next saw Roland at the jail, where she talked with him through the guided by your better judgment. References and literature gladly given on request. Call or make an appointment. . Yours for health, THORWALD LUNDE, D. C, 1st Nat. Bank Bldg., Bemidji, Minn. and then went out.” At this juncture Miss Bye was re- called by the defense to ask her a question relative to the temperature of Henrionnet at one time. Then an adjournment was taken for the day. Comes to Bemidii. Upon resuming the stand this morning with a continuation of his testimony of yesterday, Henrionnet told of his coming to Bemidji on the Red Lake train, where he was met at the depot by his mother and un- cle, Delos Wileox. trade for part of city. Pioneer. 1-32 $ 196-J. i 1 | Grand Forks. We are prepared to 6l or- ders for WOODSTOCK Type- writers promptly, Factory? FOR TRADE—Cash and land residence In desirable GRAHAM M. TORRANCE Adress 20, e - LAWYER Miles Block ' Phone 560 WANTED WANTED—Bundle washing Inquire 1312 Beltrami Ave. Phone WAN IEB x competent gffl Tor housework, to work on farth near quire at Tim McManus, 8th street and Park avenue. LAWYERS to to do. BUSINESS 2-32 GENERAL MERCHANDISE Groceries, Dry Goods, Shoes, Flour, Feed, etc. Bemmj}v' # SCHOEDEP% Good wages. In- one 66 3-32 “Got Goods On Him.” Then, according to the mother, her son asked her if she had got the police chief to go to the hotel with her and she said she replied that she didn’t want anything made pub- lic, to which the young man replied, “I've got the goods on him and I'm going to make him enlist.” The mother then said, she testified, she told him that she wouldn’t do tha! and that he replied, “I'm going to “Why didn’t you tell me Ruth was at the Markham,” the mother then asserted her son asked. “I told him I didn’t know it until 11 o'clock that night. I told him Ruth had left the baby with my sister and gone to the Markham hotel.” Asked if she had accommodations at the house she stated she had, that a couch could be made into a bed and had been frequently used for that purpose. “After Roland left the output I over three times in six months to meet the growing ind for this popular machine. “c.’A Boon to Business THE BEM:DJI PIONEER From the train they went together to the Henrionnet millinery parlors on Minnesota avenue, where the wit- ness left his overcoat and started out, presumably for the office of Dr. Johnson, in the Security Bank build- ing, bars, stating that his eyes were bloodshot, with a fierce expression. Tells of Scene. In cross examining the withess, /County Attorney Torrance brought out the fact that the two women went to the office of Dr. Johnson, and told him of the scene at' the sanatorium between him the nurse, whose name is Miss Hupfner, and Mrs. Roland Henrionnet, owing to alleged trouble arising between Rol- and and his wife. She also testified that the conver- sation between herself and Roland at the jail was substantially as fol- lows: “Roland said, ‘Well, I shot him.’” “Why,” she asked. « ‘Because,’ replied Henrionet, ‘I had a right to.”” “pDid you kill him?” was the next question, and the answer was ‘I don’t Purchases Revolver. Being attracted by the display window of sporting goods in the Given Bros. hardware store, he re- lated how he crossed the street and there purchased a revolver and cart- ridges. He then went to his mo- ther's home, one block north, where he examined the revolver and the ex- tractor. He said that he loaded the gun there and put it into a pocket, and the box of cartridges in another and started out for Dr. Johnson’s office. As he reached the corner of the Se- curity Bank building he sald he no- ticed his wife and Miss Bye, closely FARMERS’ & TRAPPERS, We are buying Hides, Furs, Wool Pelts and Tallow and will pay “ you the full market prices, train,” \ The Inbad Family---by Cowan. LAND SAMES SALLN X TMOUGMT NOU WERE GONG- YO ECONOMIZE J ONT™MINGS AT THE THEN I REMEMBERED ABOU™ OUR BCOHOMIL BUYING CLUB SO . 1? | FOR RENT | FOR RENT—Four-room house, 809 Bemidji avenue; also 2-room flat, modern, and 4-room ‘flat, modern. Inquire Morris Kaplan. ATTENTION NORTHERN HIDE & FUR EOMPANY One Half Block North of Unlon Station,. BEMIDJI, MINN N, L. HAKKER PHO’I‘OGRAPHE?R? Photos Day and Night Third St. Bemidji 6-34 TOM SMART DRAY AND TRANSFER Res. Phone 68 818 America Office Phone 12 —— DEAN LAND CO0. Land, Loans, Insuranze aad City Property Troppman Block 3 Bemddji ——————— e MINA MYERS | Hair dressing, face mass scalp treatment. Switches m‘:agdee' from combings $1.50. 311 6th St. Phone 112-W- /' DRY CLEAN; Clothes _lew.ners tor Men, Women { and Children MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS Pianos, Organs,” Sewing Machines 117 Third St.,, Bemidji J. BISIAR, Mgr. Phone 573-W FUNERAL DIRECTOR Defective