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Image provided by: Minnesota Historical Society; Saint Paul, MN
Newspaper Page Text
We mix paints toorder. Jones 6 Alex Cardie of Cass Lake is in town. Thos. Wieltse is in town from i Bagley. S. C. Bagley of Fosstori is in the city. Frank Heraux is down from Tenstrike. B. F. Gardner is down from Blackduck. If you want to rent a house -call on E. J. Willits. 127-tf A. P. Blom of Spalding is in on business. C. W, Wiedriek is in the city from Wadena. See the new dress goods at O'Leary & Bowser. 133 G. J. Silk arrived from Crook ston yesterday. A S5 hat for $3.75, tomorrow is the last day. O'Leary & Bowser. Ray Campbell arrived from Fosston yesterday. Furnished rooms for rent over the Boyer building. Inquire upstairs. 54-tf William Parker of Northome is in town on-business. Short mill wood for sale. $2 per load, delivered. Crookston -Lumber Company. 113-tf G. H. French of Blackduck is in Bemidji on business. 25 cent Cashamere Hose for men, today and tomorrow, 19 cents. O'Leary & Bowser. 133 F. C. Myers and Daniel Pitrie of Park Rapids are in town. Fruit and Lonsdale bleached Muslin, today and tomorrow, 8 cents a yard. O'Leary & Bow ser. 133 F. W. Babbett of Big Fork is registered at the Remore. For removing corns, bunions, ingrowing or club nails see Prof. A. D. Robbins at the. City hotel, Bemidji. 132-33 Fred Peterson of Buena Vista "is in town. He reports the duck crop good. Heavy unbleached muslin, the 8 cent quality, today and tomor i row, 5 cents a yard. O'Leary & Bowser. 133 Tomorrow is the last day in which you can buy a suit of men's-all wool underwear for #1.65. O'Leary & Bowser. 133 To obtain the best and quickest results, use the Daily Pioneer want column. VACAM LOTS-I have nine va cant lots 50x337 feet, $150 each $10 down, 10 per month they will go like hot cakes: come quick. E. J. Willits. 129 The smallest want ad is care fully read each day by hundreds of people. A few cents' expend iture puts you in close touch with those hundreds. Pattern hats and a complete line of millinery novelties will be on display Friday and Saturday, Sept. 25 and 26. Your inspection is kindly solicited. Miss Hot land. 132-3 Dr. C. J. Larson, the eye specialist, left for Park Rapids this morning. He will return to Bemidji next month and estab lish himself permanently in bus iness here. Only a few hunting licenses have so far been issued by Coun ty Auditor Sylvester. It is hard ly time for the rush to begin, for the big game season does not open till early in November. It is expected that about four hun dred licenses for big game will be issued in this county. PALMIST Madame Brown, te celebrated palmist, has locat Jil in the Achenbach building ist of the Remore hotel. Have rour fortune told. She tells you /your past, present and future ^everything you Price 50 cents, opportunity. want to know. Don't miss this 130-5 DR. FOSTER DENTIST MILKS BRICK BLOCK, BKVnD.II, MIXX. ANYOXE desiring1 Want GolomnlEDWARD is Advertisements inserted under this heading for one cent word each In sertion, in advance no advertisement accepted for less than fifteen cents sawmill 20,000 feet capacity write "Xo. 300,'- care this office. FOR RENTNicely furnished front room. Inquire 420 Min nesota avenue. 125tf FOR RENTA five-room house near mam part of town cheap if taken at once. Lang & Car ter. 130-5w FOR SALEShort mill wood. 2 per load, delivered.Crookston Lumber Company. 114-tf FOR SALETwo thousand cords of 16-inch wood. Wes Wright. 34tf FOR SALENice buffalo coat. Call at M. G. Slocum's Music store. 105-tf FOR SALEAll kinds of wood. J. P. Duncalf, 'phone num ber 63. m-tf FOR SALECheap, a good seven room house and 50-foot lot. In ouire of L. H. Bailey. 70-tf INSURE your buildings in the Germania Insurance Co. of N,ew York. Lang & Carter, Agents. dl26-w30-tf WANTEDPlain sewing by the day. Margaret Clair, general delivery. 132-3 WANTEDA girl for general housework. Mrs. Ed. Kaiser. Call at residence. WANTEDMessenger boy at Western Union Telegraph of fice. 117-tf FURS! Rich and Varied Assortment. AH New Styles for the Coming Season. Our display is unequaled in the entire northwest. Now is the time to make your selections. Liberal discount on orders placec now, and we keep goods till needed. Repairing, Remodeling and Dye ing a Specialty. Prices Moderate. References: R. B. Griffith and Sig Wolff, Grand Forks Fontaine & Anglim, Crookston. CHARLES V0GEL at Sig Wolff's Department Store, Grand Forks, N. D. F. O. K. Fraternal Order of Eagles, Beminji Aerie No. 351. Meets every Sunday at 8 p. m., (iilmore's Hall. Josef 1 rlarnngton, W. Presidenvt H. LeBleu, KING to buy a rotary W Secretar Visiting eagles cordially invited. BERT D. KECK \RCHITECT Plans and Specifications for All Kinds of Buildings, Brick Blocks, Court Houses, Hotels, School Houses, Churches and Fine Residences CROOKSTON, MINNESOTA You Know without any word from us that there is much better val ue in the Jewelry we .-ell than there is in ihe average dealers goods^ It must be so. We are not satisfied to oiler the ordi nary goods that have only tempo rary atfiractive- ne whose a] ities are fleeting". It pleases us best to offer the hest and it undoubted- ly pleases pur chasers bes.t. Tbey come aiai and have words of praise for what ihey bought. E.H.BRRKER 813 THIRD STREET Subscribe for The Pioneer. This is the clay when people are! looking for big returns from, small investments. You areas-! sured good returns if you use our want column. RESOLVES TO PLAY PART OF RULER INSTEAD OF BEING FIGUREHEAD. HE \ttAJiTS SCANDALS IN THE ARMM ADMINISTRATION REMEDIED. London, Sept. 25. The political crisis has taken on a 1 'iase which lends to the present situation an his torical and constitutional importance of almost unprecedented interest. The king has influenced not unconstitution ally or beyond the powers vested in the crov. n, but in the exercise of h'is prerogatives to an extent never dreamed of in the Victorian era. Premier Balfour's continued pres ence at Balmoral has given rise to much surmise and comment, but the Associated Press is ~b!e to Say definitely that it is due to the king's determination not to assent to the formation of a new cabinet until thor oughly satisfied that its personnel and combination are such as to insure the efficient carrying on of the Affairs of the Empire pending the resumption of parliament. For years cabinets were formed or ministerial vacancies filled with the mere formal presentation to the sov ereign of the names of the new min isters. King Edward has done away with this tradition. He has spent the last few days in constant discussion with Mr. Balfour as to the advisability from the point of view of the national welfare of Balfour's suggested appoint ments. Ministers now holding office and those nominated for office have been summoned to Balmoral to join in these conferences, and all have been sub jected to a degree of interrogation such as has surprised even those who knew King Edward intimately as prince of "Wales. To sach an extent is King Edward holding his power of veto In reserve thai now he is almost regarded by the inner circles as More the Cabinetmaker than Mr. Balfour himself. Though, with his usual tact, the king hits re frained from expressing any political views or infringing the initiative be longing to the ministers, this has not prevented him from expressing his genuine desire, amounting almost to a command."that steps be taken to rem edy the scandals in the army adminis tration as revealed by the report of the South African war commission, and insisting that the new cabinet shall be one adapted to deal with that question. Dealing with the surmise on some of the foregoing points the Morning Ad vertiser yesterday said: "The king has in this national emer gency resolved to play the part of a ruler instead of being content with that of a figurehead." HE'S GETTING FAT. President Roosevelt Concerned at His increase in Weight. Washington, Sept. 25. A private letter from Oyster Bay says that the president now tips the scales at 220 pounds, and that there is "every indi cation of a still further increase in his weight. The president is somewhat concerned, as he feels that it inter "eres with Ms outdoor exercise. He *&^ts3sm*mum V. w BOSS'T^AGEDY A PUZZLE IS MORE OF A CABINET- MAN AND WOMAN ARE FOUND I MAKER THAN BALFOUR HIMSELF. HOES AWAY WITH TRADITION CASt HAS MYSTER101S fEAfllRfS HIS DESHfcfS ALMOST COMMANDS BIT POLICE ARE NOT SATISEUD DEAD IN THE STREET IN CHICAGO. INDICATIONS ARE THAT IT IS A CASE OF MURDER AND SUICIDE. BELIEVE THERE MAY HAVE BEEN A THIRD PARTY TO THE SHOOTING. Chicago, Sept. 25.Early yesterday morning the dead bodies of Harriot Elizabeth Weber and Inocenti Tal amini, a msrbiecutter, wore found on Lexington avenue just south of Fiity foitrth street. Both had been *hol twice, and while there are indications that the man shot the woman and then killed himself, there are other features to the case that make it somewhat mysterious. Arthur M. Laune, with whom the dead woman had made her home, will be hold by the police until after the inquest. There is no evidence connecting him with the shooting-, but he is detained as a witness. The shots that killed the man and woman were Heard by Residents of the neighborhood ai about 1 o'clock Tuesday night. No mua was made to investigate the shooting, however, and nothing was known of the tragedy until yesterday morning when the bodies were discovered by a newspa per carrier. Last night in going through the ef fects of Miss Weber an envelope was found addressed evidently in the hand writing of a man to Inocenti Talamini. In seeking Talamini to find what he might know of the woman or the shooting, the officers identified the dead man as Talamini himself. No cause is known why Talamini should have shot the woman, bv she had told several of her friends the day be fore of a Jew who had been follow ing her and Of Whom She Was Afraid. Talamini has a Hebraic countenance, and it is the general theory that he shot her because she refused to marry him. The woman when found had been shot twice, through the left arm and through the left breast. Talamini was shot twice, once through the neck and once upward through the chin, the bullet coming out at the top of his head. In the. man's hand was a re volver with four chambers discharged, accounting for the tour sh~is iired. the people living in the neighborhood where the tragedy occurred declare that more than four shots were fired, and one bullet crashed through the window of a house near by. These facts have led the police to believe that there may have been a third yarty to the shooting, although there is so far no direct proof that such waa the fact. has been trying to reduce his weight, but his flesh is as hard as a knot and steadfastly refuses to yield to ordinary methods. When sworn in Mr. Roose velt weighed 185. He seems to thrive on hard work Fire Causes $2,500,000 Loss. St. Petersburg, Sept. 25. A fire has broken out at the Biliebat naphtha fountains and has already caused dam age estimated at $2,500,000. Th works have been destroyed and tilt fir* is still racing. REMOVAL ..SALE-. 1,000 Rolls of Wall Paper while it lasts at 5, 7, 8,10, 12, 14, 16, 1 8 and 20 cents per double roll Borders to match at the same price per roll INGRAINS PLAL\ AT 8 CENTS PER SlA'ftLE ROLL We have the only paper trimmer in the city, and trim our paper free of charge Room Moldings. Plate Rails, Paints, Oils, Varnishes, Kalsomining. Etc. Phone 20 31 1 Bemidji Avenue W JONES I Bemidji tsssm fej ONLY WARRANTED CLOTHES To fully appreciate the value in one of our Suits you must wear it and wear it steadily for a good many months. This done, the clothes buying question will be settled for you. After all the real test of a garment is the service it gives, how it looks to your friends, how it feels upon you and how it fits your figure. Clothes for service arc the only kind we handle they* are the only kind it will pay you to buy. We promise you absolute satisfaction or Your Mone Back Men's Suits of the most leading makes, $10 te $25 Men's Overcoats, nobby and up-to-date, $7.50 to $25 The Daylight Store E. L. NAYL0R Funeral Director and Embalmer FLOWERS CASKETS COFFINS ETC. PERSONAL HTTENDHNCE HT FUNERAL Telephone Night Calls, 12-158 TELEPHONE ORDERS DIRECT TO US FIRST CLKSS SAMPLE 'ROOM CHOICEST BRffNDS MHC Minn. S MINT CEO. M'TKCGKRT, PROP. CHOICE MINES, LIQUORS HND C1GHRS BELTRW MI HUE.. BEMIDJI. MINN. CHEA LOTS Anyone desiring a cheap lot in any part of Bemidji, call on JOHN F. GIBBONS Local Agent for the Bemidji Townsite & improvement Company