Newspaper Page Text
THE CITY We mix paints to order. Jones 6 G. H. Cook of Minneapolis is in town. J. H. Sullivan of Solway is in town. Michael Schusse is here from Crookston. H. McNevin of Duluth is visit ing in town. James Fuller-ton of Crookston is in. the city. J. G. Brady arrived from Rip ple yesterday. C. R. Martin left today for Mt. Clements, Mich. Jesse Smith of Brainerd is vis iting in Bemidji. K. Mclver and P. Ruter are here from Parley. Follow the crowd to the Lake side bakery. It will pay you. P.U.Lowe arrivived yester day from Grand Forks. Invite your best girl to accom pany you to the Lakeside bakery ice cream parlors. "W. S. Brady of Winona is reg istered at the Remore. Geo. Clary came down from Tenstrike yesterday. Firt class violin for sale. In quire at Walcott's Barber Shop, 218 3rd street. 86-91 M. Wetsel of Tenstrike is trans acting business in town. Peterson's ice cream parlors are the coziest and roomiest in the state. Visit them anyway.77 W. H. Keenan and J. Graham are down from Turtle River. Come to Peterson's ice cream and resting parlors for rest and comfort. Free reading room. 77 R. J. Joule of Crookston was an arrival in the city yesterday. Special sale on all goods in order to make room for fall stock at the Ber man Emporium. 86 L. M. Davis of Long Prairie is transacting business in Bemidji. If you wish to buy a fine lot or farm in a good location, see T. Beaudette, the tailor, before buy ing. 69 tf L. M. Davis, a Long Prairie attorney, is in the city on busi ness. Pies, cakes, etc., for outing lunches, at the Lakeside bakery, the Boyer building. Inquire upstairs. 54-tf E. T. Carrall of Grand Rapids is spending a few days in Bt midji The Daily Pioneer want col umns are a ood result gettert--. Try them. A line of black minstrel cloth, etaimus wash goods to be closed out at great reduction at the Ber man Emporium. 86 Mrs. Samuel Suitor and chil dren of Cass Lake are visiting at the home of Mr.' and Mrs. M. Phibbs. If you expect the girls to be sweet on you, sweeten them at the Lakeside bakery ice cream parlors. They will enjoy it. G. G. Fuller joined the Gentry Bros.' band yesterday while the shows were exhibiting in the city, and left town with the organization last night. Leave your orders for paper hanging, decorating, painting and sign writing with Steece.at Beau dette's tailor shoo. 47tf Sheriff Bailey has returned from Canada. He says that the crops in Manitoba are very poor and that between the line and Winnipeg there is scarcely any grain at all. Mr. and Mrs. 0. LChamber lain of Ortonville, Minn., who have been visiting with R. W. Reed, Mrs. Chamberlain's broth er, left for their home yesterday. ling by the way of Grand Rap ids and Duluth. DR. FOSTER DENTIST MILKS BRICK BLOCK, BEMIDJI, MINN. Want Column 'i*^*^^^*^^^^**^**'*r***+^^^*'***S*^+^*S**t*i***% ANYONE desiring to buy a rotary sawmiU of 20.000 feet capacity writ "No. 300," care this office. FOR SALETwo thousand cords of 16-inch wooa. Wes Wright. 34tf FOR RENTLarge, nicely furn ished room .Mrs. J. E. Hen drickson. Malzahn Block. 83-tf FOR SALEAll kinds of wood. J. P. Duncalf, 'phone num ber 63. 91-tf FOR SALECheap, a good seven room house and 50-foot lot. In quire of L. H. Bailey. 70-tf LANG & CARTER, exclusive agrents for Bailey's addition. LOSTOn lake shore Sunday, gold cuff button with letters C. N. engraved on face. Finder please return to this office. 83tf WANTEDPosition by young man. Willing to work up. Outdoor work preferred. Ad dress this office. d-91-tf WANTEDA Girl for general housework, office. Plans and Specifications for All Kinds of buildings, Brick Blocks, Court Houses, Hotels, School Houses, Churches and Fine Residences CROOKSTON, MINNESOTA Subscribe for The Pioneer. Climbing Mountains. Is a fascinating and invigor ating pastime. It developes not the body only, but the mind. The Alpine Peaks of Switzerland have their counterpart in our own country, in the Sierras, the Cas cades, and parts of the Rockies. The greatest glacial peak of the United States is Mt. Ranier in Washington, more than 15,500 feet high. This magnificent mountain has 15 or more giant glaciers creeping down its sides and discharging their glacial de tritus into the Columbia river or Puget Sound. A climb to the summit of this is a mt untah eering feat worthy n! any mountaineer. For 25 centf Chas?. S- Fee, Gen'l Passenger Agent of the Northern Pacific railway, St. Paul, Minn.will send i any nddressan illustartod bookloi railed '"Climbing Mt. Ra nier" scribing a climb over gla cier- the top of the moun tain. 1 FOR SALEBicycle in first class condition, $25 cash only in tending purchasers need call with spot cash. (This is no||s OVERCOME WITH EMOTION tactory made wheel). C. P. Jackson. Inquire at this BERT D. KECK \RCHITECT Difference of opinion may exist as to the mt its of some roods hut there is no difference re frn'-rlinfr ours. It is admitted by all ill..L tin-v are of trtrr-e^t q'ial ii I'i ices are fair, UH not so low that we are tempted to reduce theounlity. When Hiving Jewelry 1 you L'"' good a I tor the ...,'ii\ you invest. Mens 14-karet Gold Watches with Illinois 178 movement. The hif 'imp piece i'VPr sold at $25. E.ft. BARKER ."ii:i THTKD STRGE:'' K0TICE. A vVin'e!. watchmaker and jewel h.is purchased the N. M. Johi son jweier stock und will hnndlea complete line of watches, clocks, j"wHry and silverware. Special attention given to fine wntch and jewelry work. All work guaranteed. Give me a call. Youis tor biz. A. E. WINTER, First door from First National Bank. 82-tf Subscribe for The Pioneer. SARIO REIGNS AS POPE PUS X. PATRIARCH OF VENICE ELECTED PONTIFF OF THE CATHOLIC CHURCH. HIS ELECTION WAS UNANIMOUS MEMBERS OF TH E SACRED COL- LEGE ARE WELL SATISFIED AT RESULT. CARDINAL SARTO FAINTS SEV- ERAL TIMES WHEN ELECTION SEEMS SURE. Rome, Aug. 6.The conclave after being in session for four days, yester day elected Quiseppe Sano, patriarch of Venice, as pope to succeed Leo XIII., and he now reigns at the Vatican and over the Catholic world as Pius X. Last night all .tome was illuminated in his honor. His election and the assumption of his holy office were marked by a strik ing demonstration and impressive cer emonies at the Vatican. To-day the new pope, clad in his full pontifical robes and with all the ,ialistic cere mony, will receive the members of the diplomatic corps, the cardinals and the bishops, who will then offer their official homage, this notwithstanding the fact that twice yesterday the car dinals and many high officials of the Vatican went through a similar ceie mony. The date upon which the coronation of Pius X. will occur has not yet been decided, but the impression prevails that it will occur Aug. 9. Election Was Unanimous. The election of the patriarch of Venice was unanimous. After Mon day's ballots it was a foregone con clusion that he was the only candi date sufficiently acceptable to all to se cure the necessary twe-thirds. which the laws of the church require. All the members of the sacred col lege declare that they are very well satisfied with the election of Cardinal Sarto. but the anti-Rampolla party consider it as their special victoiy. When the first ballot was taken it showed that the sacred college was di vided into two groups, the stronger one for Rampolla and another, not quite so strong, for Serafino Vannu telli. The other votes were scattered, but included four for Sarto. On the subsequent ballots, while the two principal parties were losing ground, Sarto gradually gained, drawing Strength From Both Sides as well as from the neutrals until the ballot on Monday afternoon, when his vote had increased to 37, within ti of the necessary two-thirds. When the result of this ballot was announced in the conclave Cardinal Sarto was so overcome with emotion and so touched by the unlooked-for confidence reposed in him that he could no longer control his feelings, and to the surprise of all he broke down, declaring that such responsi bility am! honor were not for him and that he must refuse if offered. Tr-:s rolled down his cheeks and lit: spenied firm his determination to refuse the d'"-vily He was so palpa bly sincere th-t COUP' Nation reigned in the conclave ard cardinals spent the whole evening and far into the night in convincing him that his election was the will of Providence, and that he must accept. Several times he almost fainted and had to be revived by the use of salts. He seemed Ksppy but Broken Down even after all the other candidates had retired, and on iffi final ballot he looked a statue le .?tion. As the vote approachej 50, cardinals, as of one accord, gvTOv.ml.ed the new pontiff, and, accordi to traditions, demanded to know if he would accept the pontificate. Cardinal Sarto's lips trembled so that he could hardly ar ticulate, but after a visible effort he said: "If this cup cannot pass from me." there he paused, but the cardinals around him insisted that it was neces sary for him to an?wer "yes" or "no." Thereupon he replied firmly: "I ac- cept." Cardinal Gibbons, speaking to a rep resentative of the Associated Press, said that the election off Cardinal Sar to had produced the best impression in the entire sacred college, being a man of much piety, tact and culture, and that he was best fitted to be the head of the church at the present time. Continue Leo's Policy. It is generally believed that Pius X. will continue the policy of his prede cessor. Guiseppe Sarto was born in Riesi, diocese of Treviso, June 2. 1835, and was created a cardinal in 1893. He was made patriarch of Venice in 1893 and bishop of Mantua. He be longed to the ecclesiastical congrega tions of bishops and regulars, sacred rite, indulgences and sacred relics. The new pope is one of eight chil dren, two sons and six daughters. One of his sisters is a dressmaker, another is married to a sacristan and peddlar, a third married a wine shopkeeper and the others are unmarried. THIRSTS FOR BLOOD AND RUNS AMUCK ON STREETS OF MINNEAPOLIS. MAN WH O STARTED TROUBLE LIES IN HOSPITAL IN SERI- OUS CONDITION. REUSED TO TALK ABOUT IT Who Gave Chase and followed him into Lock-up alley, firing three shots. Lieut Revier and Patrolman McLaughlin were in the station, and, hearing the shots, ran out. A man shouted that Clark Had run on down and Revier followed down First avenue, while McLaughlin went down High street. Revier, ac companied by a newspaper reporter, sighted the man near the union depot. The reporter accosted him and asked him if he had seen a man running. Without a word Clark pulled a revol ver ad fired point blank at the report er, missing him and wounding James W. Williams, a colored man. Lieut. Revier caught his arm with his left hand while he dove into his pocket with his right to pull his gun, but Clark, with a snarl of rage at the sight of the officer, turned and fired at him. The bullet entered tht forearm, caus ing a painful flesh wound and Clark jerked himself loose and ran, while Revier tried to secure his revolver witlh his ltft hand. McLaughlin, who had heard the shots, came running toward the spot and saw the crazed man start to run. He fired three shots into the air. and then aiming his re volver, fired, striking Clark in the top of the head and bringing him down. A carriage which was passing was utilized and Clark was thrown Into it and carried to the lock-up. He was placed in the patrol and taken to the city hospital, where it was found that, although the bullet lid not penetrate the brain, concussion is probable. WHEAT IS DAMAGED. Terrific Hailstorm Cuts a Swath of Destruction. Albert Lea, Minn., Aug. 6.Reports are coming in of damage to crops from the hailstorm Monday night. Three miles south of here a narrow strip was badly devastated.-the nncnt grain being pounded into the ground JO that it was difficult to tell whether It was wheat or octs, while corn and potatoes were greatly injured. In one place it is reported that chickens were killeed by the hail. This is the first severe hailstorm that ever visited this part of the country, and the area is not large. ORE LAND BOUGHT UP. St. Paul Capital Is Invested in Canad ian Ground. Duluth, Aug. 6. J. D. Howard of Duluth hes purchased 7,000 ac of prospective iron ore land in Ontario, east of the Guniiint range, from th" Canadian government. Louis W. Hill of St. Paul and others have since bought a considerable P^rt of the land. Packards, .Mather Co and M. A. Hanna & Co. of Cleveland are drilling for ore in that region. WOMAN'S FATAL FALL. Corpse Is Discovered at the Foot of the Stairway. Sioux City, Iowa, Aug. 6. Mrs. W. R. Phillips, wife of one of the wealthy pioneer residents of Sioux Rapids, Iowa, got up in the night to put down a window during the progress of a storm and fell down the stairs. She was not heard by the family and the next morning her dead body was found at the foot of the stairway. She Had been de*d for several hours. CRAZYMAN'SWoRKllS I N A fERMENI fOLR MEN SERIOUSLY WOUNDED GEORGIANS MAKING TROIBIE HE DECLARES HE DOES NOT RESLAUGHTER MEMBER OF FIRING A SHOT. Minneapolis. Aug. 6.Four persons were wounded last night and eleven shots fired through the madness of a crazed man, thirsting for blood. Ed ward Clark, the man who started the shooting, lies at the city hospital in a dangerous condition from a bullet at the hands of Patrolman Peter Mc Laughlin. After Clark had shot Mo torman Nelson of a Sixth avenue car without provocation, he fired two shots at a bystander, injuring James W. Williams, a colored man, and shot Lieut. George Revier of the central station as he was trying to arrest him. The cause of Clark's action is un known. He absolutely refuses to speak of the matter and declares he does not remember of firing a shot. The affair occurred at 11:30 o'clock last night during a heavy rainstorm. Clark was standing by the street car tracks at Hennepin avenue and Third street when a Sixth avenue car, In charge of Motorman Marcus Nelson, ap proached. Without a word of warning or any cause whatever he opened fire on Nelson, hitting him once in the ri'rht side of the head, just above the cheek bone, and once in the left wrist. The other two shots did not take ef-'5 feet. Clark then turned and imme'il ately started running to Washington avenue. He passed a patrolman in his flight, A LL TRAN8CAUCASIA IN STY.TC OF VIOLENT AND SANG'JIN.- ARY UNREST. USING THEIR ENDEAVORS TO SPREAD THE STRIKE MOVE- MENT. PEASANTS GREATLY ENRAGID OF THEIR FELLOW- COUNTRYMEN AROUSES THEIR RANCOR. Odessa, Aug. 6."All trauscaucasia is in a state, violent and sanguinary unrest." said a member of the Central Workers' committee at Tirlis yester day. The speaker, a native of the prov ince of Gori, has just escaped the cus tody of the Russian authorities after a five years' sentence of deportation to East Siberia.' "For a whole year," he continued, "the authorities of my province have been confronted with a lornidahle Agrarian movement among Me peas ants. Many other localities similarly are agitated. The strike movement among the industrial workers is spreading along the railways. "GoM'gians. who are chiefly em ployed mi the railways, are prominent among the strikers. The persons killed in collisions with the police at Tiflis. the capital of Georgia, and at Return and Mikailovo have a Long-Standing Grudge against Russia and an equally long standing revolutionary propoganua. The slaughter of their follow-cor ntry men has enraged the peasant.-,, all of whom are well armed. Consequently great uneasiness prevails lest the strike movement continue to spread. It is likely that the trouble will in crease. Before I left Tiflis the workers in Caspian and Black sea ports prom ised the central committee tli:t they would strike In the event of a general tie-up. The latest dispatches indicate that the initiative of the workers in this city will be followed by those in Kertch and Batum on the Black sea and in Baku on the Caspian sen. The Georgian revolutionaries outside of Georgia keep their friends at home in formed of Russia's gathering ili Ill cult ios in various parts of the world in order to encourage them to keep up the fight throughout transeaucsisla." BOMB ON TH E TRACK. Inspector Discovers Powerful Explo sive on the Eads Bridge. St. Louis, Aug. ?.A bomb was dis covered on the railroad tracks of the Eads bridge yesterday by a track walker, whose duty it Is to Inspeel the road after each train cros.-s. He had been over the track an hour previous ly, and the bomb was not discovered at that time. It was taken to the of fice of the chief of detectives and ex amined. It is said to have been filled with a powerful explosive. One theory advanced is tha. it was placed where it was found with the intention of wrecking the bridge another is that it was in possession of some anarchist on an inbound train, and ho threw it out of the window of a car, fearing that it might be found in his posses sion. PIONEE HARNES S SHOP Good Work of the Rocking Chair. Some one who was Interested in the fact has discovered that while Amer ican wo~:en are shorter than their Eng lish sisters, their legs are much more symmetrical and their ankles more grac oful. The belief is expressed that the reason for this lies In the great love of the American women for rock ing chairs. Here a woman will sit down in a rocking chair, and, appar ently happy, rock by the hour, were she not disturbed, perhaps not know ing that the mere movement employed to keep the chair l? motion does, by repeated pushes of *he toes, make the instep high, the calf round and full, and so keep from the angle an accum ulation of flesh. American and English Railways. The reasons urged in explanation of the great ii imber of persons killed and injured on American as compared with British railways are: We have more than eight times as many miles of road Great Britain has but 9.000 miles of single track, while we have 176,000 miles in Great Britain roads can pay interest on an investment in construction of $"200,000 a mile, but many American roads built to develop sparsely settled districts fall to pay an Investment of $70,000 a mile heavy traffic In Great Britain justifies the ex pense of block systems and interlock ing switches. Many Favor Universal Language. "Esperanto," an artificial language made by Dr. L. Zanienhof for a uni versal language, has gained 80,000 ad herents, among them members of the French Institute, professors in conti nental universities, Count Tolstoi and W. Stead. Its object, as stated by a writer in Le Monde Moderne. Paris. is: "To furnish people who need to communicate with foreignerstravel ers, scientists and business menthe way to a mutual understanding with out necessity of resorting to the study of many foreign languages," Where to Apply. "'Dear Miss Scnibhins," wrote the wise mother to her son's teacher, "if you want an excuse for Willie's ab sence from school, ask him for one. He's the Vst boy tor excuses that lives. He gives them to me a dozen times a day. He can give an excuse for anything that happens, whether h'z a rip in his trousers or a fight with a neighbors oy. As long as you have him yoi"- I recently purchased the shop and i have greatly ITpJenishouthe stock, which is ihe most complete :n the county. All work guaranteed to give satisfaction. Repairing a specialty. E (i O 17 I I Lakeside Bakery Green Apples, Pine Apples, Peaches, Pears, Plums, Oranges, Lemons, |}J Bananas, Watermelons, Muskmel- |j- ons, California Celery, California $ j|j Figs, Sugared Walnut Dates, and J{J vi Cocoanuts Ji We have a full and complete line of jjj Confectionery & Cigars also handle $ & the Celebrated Ives Ice Cream jg room, do not see why it should/ bo necessary to apply to me for an excuse at all Much Red Tape Over a Cent. The postmaster at Eloise, Fla., being short one cent In his cash at his last settlement with the government, made up the deficiency out of his own pock et but in checking his accounts tho auditor for the postoflico department found an arithmetical error whereby Uncle Sain bad been overpaid to the extent of a cent. Thereupon the de partment stmt the postmaster a draft for IIH cent, which he has just re ceived. The Traveled Widow. The Sunday scnool superintendent was quizzing a ela^s of small girls the other day. "And what was 'the widow's cruse?' he asked. There was a mo ment's silence then a little hand went up timidly. "Please, sir," said the youngster, "the widow was one of the people that went with Noah In his yacht." She Got Ahead of Him. Sally (lay Did he kiss you?" Dolly SwiftYes, hut, oh! 1 was so mortl fled. 1 kissed him first. Sally Gay Goodness! What made you do that? I Dolly SwiftWhy, you see, thought he was going to kiss me a moment or two before he really did, and acci dentally got ahead of him. WfTinMiiW