Newspaper Page Text
THE CITY Window drips. J. J. Doran. We mix paints toorder. Jones Hot oyster stew. Peterson's parlors. J. W. Spaulding was in towii from Yola last night. J. A. Parker, the well known lumberman, was in the city last night. Large parlor over store for rent for parties by the evening. J. Peterson, Jr. A night janitor has been put on at the school house to take care of the heating plant. We put this here because you'll see it. Mark's Lung Balsam will cure your cough or cold. Robert McCutcheon and Dt.vid Finley of Nymore had a hearing in justice court yesterday after- NOW Is the Time, and HERE Is the Place, to BU Buckwheat Flovir Roy Wheelock went to Maple ids Enterprise and Grand Rapids Ridge this morning to spend a Magnet, was in the city last few days at the Wheelock home stead. Changes come to all. Some are pleasantsome otherwise. Mark's Lung Balsam will stop that coughthe change is pleas ant, thereby making a pleasant change. noon on a charge of assault. The matter has been taken under ad- handled by one teacher. visement by the court. J) FOSTER!PrinciPa DENTIST MILES BLOCK. Bemidji Jlemntile Gompaoy i We have placed on sale our entire line of Linens, consisting of an elegant selection of Table Linens from 35c to $1.35 per yard. iNapkins, Towels, Scarfs and Pillow Shams at a Discount of 20 Per Cent from our low prices. Do not miss this grand opportunity to provide yourself with Thanksgiving Table Linens while this line is complete. Low Prices on Our Millinery, Coats, Waists, Skirts and Underwear Still Continue. TheBerman Emporium Subscribe for the Pioneer. Window drips. J. J. Doran. Hot chocolate and beef tea. Peterson's. Miss Olive Berg of Wilton was the guest of Bemidji friends yes terday. Em'il Petterson of Wilton wTas transacting business in the city yesterday. Call on4?.' E. Winter the lead- ing jeweler for up-to-date goods. Next door to First National bank. You have a right to the best that can be had for your money. Mark's Lung Balsam is the best for coughs. J. O. Johnson, foreman of the Cass Lake Voice, was in the city last night. Mr. Johnson was on his way to Blackduck. Editor Cobb, of the Park Rap- night on his way to Park Rapids. Sam Letcher has returned from a trip to his homestead in the Battle River country and will spend some time putting in logs at the Remore hotel. Miss Booth, a sister of Mrs. Hannifan, has been elected teach er of the sixth grade by the school board. The sixth and seventh grades were formerly Bemidji high tn school. Miss McDonald is a teacher of experience and was highly recommended to the board. There was a small wreck in the Great Northern yards yesterday morning. A freight crew in switching derailed two cars and the wrecking outfit from Cass Lake came "up to put them back on the track. be a short program by the young people, the ladies' experience in earning their 50 cents, also a 10 cent lunch will be served. All are cordially invited. Miss McDonald, of Minneap- for the employes of the district olis, has been elected assistant' was established. It will be the The ladies of the M. E. church Bone Liniment on the M. &. I will hold their Experience meet ing Friday night, Nov. 20, at the Methodist church. There will can always find something at this store that will please now one of the is in Sterling Silverware. in holiday gifts See the line be fore it is brok E.K.BMRKER 513 THIRD STREET Window drips. J. J. Doran. Applestwelve best varieties. Peterson's. The Bemidji Employment office shipped a crew of men to the Hatcher camps at Lakep'ort this!d morning. Why buy the second best when the best costs no more? Mark's Lung Balsam is the best for coughs. Dr. J. F. Locke, a successful practicing physician of Long Prairie is in the city returning from a deer hunting trip. John C. Parks, superintendent of the Clearwater Logging com pany, was in the city last evening and went west to Fosston this morning. Miss Lela Solberg very pleas antly entertained a number of her young lady friends at her home on Beltrami avenue last evening. Miss Olson, who made her home for some time past with Senator and Mrs. Swedback, has gone to Rosey to visit with her parents. A marriage license was issued at the clerk of court's office yes terday to Martha Iverson, of Bel trami county, and Ole Farden, of Hubbard county. At "the-last meeting of the i school board a regular pay day tenth of every month. Novem ber salaries will be payable Dec. 10. Senator Swedback expects to leave tomorrow for a visit with relatives at Williston, N. D. The senator had intended to make the trip some time ago but found morning. Mr. Wheelock reports 4 Appreciative Women Superintendent Cline of the Walker & Akeley company was, says the Walker & Akeley people plan to put in 100,000,000 this of camps in successful operation at present. Anton Anderson, a smallpox patient from Blackduck,has been 1 recoive a th( count mate ot the hospital for the pasr] Xothiuirmore month, was released from quar worthy of ad- antine Tuesday, miration hasj ,:.._ a be ^warcl Peterson, an employe shown in town f the Markham, returned last some of the night from a hunting trip. Mr. daintiest things Peterson broke one of the small bones in his heel while going through the woods. It caused en. It doesn't! him considerable pain and he was cost anything compelled to return home. This to admire. morning when he was examined by Dr. Ward a piece of the bone was found protruding through the flesh. Washington, Nov. 19, (SPECIAL jTOTHK IVIXKKK)--Carrie Nation was forcibly^ejected from the White House today. She dt1- when rot'nsod becai^ very ilom M. A. Rognlien, River, is in town. remain at home until after the Christmas vacation. The. football team has decided that unless it can raise the money to defray its present indebted ness, there will bo no football game in Bemidji on Thanksgiv ing day. Mrs. it impossible on account of a i money. Many came to^withdraw.their of which W O can only guess press of business. [deposits, but when they^savv thereat Herbert Wheelock, who sells accommodate them they left satisfied. prunes, Peerless and Hinkley BRIEF BITS OF NEWS. that three fine moose were i introduced a bill in the house grant-, I piles of cash and the oilicials ready to Mauricnen Princae' passenger, was at his post this drowne1d Wednesday while skating on brought into Northome yester-1 ing statehood to Oklahoma. the property, hut cannot ten .v j, A stream of visitors called on Gon-juctly homw" soonu this will be (lone. eral Gomez Havana Wednesday and congratulaleat him on his sixty-fourth.(U Aaro-ntheJones by in the City last night, Mr. Cline been elected national wo! thy mas National Grange, Patrons jtio ns in .tile country. "For several years cows have been driven daily over the land, wre yo can see the gold in thas of Husbandry, A pecu a winter and ha ve a large number I high fever, has prostrated a number] of studentsMassWilliams CARRI E NATIO N MININ PROPERT W Was Forcibly Ejected by White Free Milling Gold Bearing House Attendants This fronting. I marided to see the president and Large Force of Men Are at Present jonstrativo. Later she wont to to Be Bonanza. the Senate ehainber and created a sceneanjd was put out by the I the doorkooners. of Turtle J. 11. Stevens, of Crookston, is among today's arrivals at the Markham. S. C. Bagley, the veteran con tractor, returned to his home at Fosston this morning a Owatonna, where, slt MissmDolly fro Baile returned has been attending school. She wTill W. Hitchcock and children arrived today from Crookston and Mr. and Mrs. Hitchcock will begin housekeep ing at once in the Mayo house on Lake Boulevard. George McTaggart in company with a traveling salesman from Minneapolis last night for the Battle River country and intends to remain in the woods until he can return with a moose. A party of Ada sportsmen were in the city this morning re turning from the big woods near Blackduck. They were taking home one of the finest bull moose recently seen in Bemidji. Cotton Market Breaks Sharply. New York, Nov. 19.Just before the close the cotton market broke sharply under heavy selling from practically all sources, which were attracted by rumors that the big bull leaders were unloading. The market, while irreg ular, had shown a thorough degree of an stability early, with prices at one timo evening Herald a le days 10 to 13 points higher, cold weather' covering on bull supports. The close was weak at a loss from the best of about 25.2S points. Money Promptly Paid Out. Reading, l'u., Nov. 19.-Tin- run on the Pennsylvania Trust company con tinued during the day, but there was a diminution in the number of with drawals. All were promptly paid the!) niness, accompanied by1 at college Will- iamstown Miss Sarah Demotes!, one of the ladies of Sparta, Wis., is age. She foremost ninety-fifth year. hospital. the in Just ,_, at Milan, Italy, in connection^ with a plot against the life, ofbther president many I lino's is about on the streets at Black-1 of Switzerland, M. D.eneber:i)l our new lineoof duck badly broken out and was! (Fr a transported to Bemidji. Wm. pectedn of the intention of waylaying' McCarty, who has been an in- ?j Th Doruinj0n jjGt of Minneapolis was ictonk A Lak RAISE S RO W HA S PROSPEC I^IU OUllimii Quartz Near Webwood, Canada. GENTLEMEN INTERESTED. Developing Property Believed Some little stir has been made recently in local business circles by rumors of valuable gold dis- coverves~on!~property among the owners of which art several well known men o( He niidji and Brainerd. This property is an eighty aero tract of land near Webwood, Canada, oh which has been found a vein of gold bearing, free mill ing quartz, known to be at least a thousand feet in length and one hundred feet "t width, and with a depth as yet undetermined. The rock assays very high and tltere does not seem anv question that a large and protitable mine will be developed. The company buying this properly paid over $000,000 in leash and securities for a two interest and a large force ol men has been engageu de velopment work (since Juno 1. Tunnels are to be driven, shafts sunk, a mill erected and active exploration and development work' is to be done at once. The present company includes O. Bolin Wm. vVood, lv. .1. Hartley, W. lv Seelye and others froth Brainerd W. H. Roberts ami A. i\ White of Bemidji: I,. E. Lum, Andrew Cowan and others of Dulnth. F. C. Bolin was elected president and Mr. Gowan treasurer of the company, and .Joseph Cronin of Seattle, a mining man of thirty years ex perience in the west, was placed in charge of the work. W. E. Seelye, who has had a large experience in mining mat ters during the last twenty-five years, has the following to say in interview with the Dulnth ago on his return from the mine: "We have stalled sinking a 50-foot shaft and have also cidt'd to tunnel in from the side. We have groat prospects as the indications would show that there is :i vein of gold there the depth 0 Delegate McGuire of Oklahoma has to erect a stamp miill 1 "We have a gang pi fifty men working night and day on Hie property-, and believe that with in a short tino we shall have re sults thau will be amazing... We on Jj i" Drospect I birthday. 'warrant the belief that it wi best mining proposi of South Bend, Ind., 1( thhee earth.n was in her Three anarchist^ have been arrested ,,f people, A few cents" expend iture puts you in close touch with those hundreds. trJU1 S iSwl ret Ital I restedfew-anarchi.sts_yJ0 are _gM^ ki th England. iNnS., IO. and pany of Sydney, hasteel givecom-non tice of a general reduction of 1" to 33 1-3 per cent in wages and salaries of all its employes. Forty arrests have been made at Krasnoyarsk, Western Siberia, in con nection with the revolutionary move. ment, the headquarters of which are, in European Russia. The .Mussulmans in the district ot Kirk Kiliseh have burned five Bulga rian villages in revenge for an attack made by the Bulgarians on the Mus sulman vilage of Zarasa. .y Rev. Edwin S. Lines, former paStor of St. Pauls Episcopal church of New Haven, Conn., lias been consecrated bishop of the Episcopal diocese of Newark, N. J., in succession to the late Bishop Star key. The smallest want ad is care fully read each day-by hundreds j-iyfBH in SEVERALWELLKXOWXBEMIIMI-i-'OK SALE .Buffalo overcoat. C. C. Follcers. in Canada, cm i^X'l IIHI Goods Store. untnicoption ur shafl down. I The are sue i as to rnjntnn Advertisements Inserted under this (louding for one cent a word each In sertion, advance no advertisement accented for less than fifteen cents FOE RENT -Nice fpiir room house convenient to business part of town easy terms. A. E. Smith. Swedback block*. FOR SALE Fine""quarter sec tion noi'thoist of bUackduck, 300,000 pine, spruce and tama rac, besides a vast quanticy of hardwood such as birch, elm, ate Soil is black loam, clay subsoil, very little swamp. Ap ply at Pioneer officii or address I. W. Ncwberv. Crobkston, Minn. OR SALB-Two thousand cords lti-ineh wooo. WY- Wrijrht. nono The CoUTWeathef is causing a rush on us for GAPS, UNDERWEAR, SOX, HOSE. MITTKXS. PANTS and SHIRTS, anil the SNOW makes the boys think of those nice sleds so cheap flia-1 wr got in, and the hi'-kv ones who have the price are on hand get first ch ice, and the other boys are looking on with a jealous eye and waiting for Santa Glaus, to come. This is where he gets his supply of TOYS, GLASSWARE, ('HIYUVARr and SILVER- WARE. CUFF BOXES. COLLAR BOXES. TIE BOXES, HAND- KERCHIEF BOXES, ETC. The Fair Variety Cash Store 304 Third Street West. of N'ce furnished room, at Severson's Dry aire TO TKADF Two" tT-ains. har ness, wagons and sleighs for cordwood. Wos Wright, City drav line. WANTED (lood girl for general housework. Mrs. A. T. Wheel ock. WANTED- paper.- Ten cents a hundred, 'loneer office. WANTED To I ill your wants. Nothing does it like a Pioneer want ad WAXTKI) Lady agents, best selling skin food made 06 per cent commission agents make $7 to 12 a day. Send Tit'cents for full size box and terms. Y.-itos Manufacturing Co..Hud- son. Mich. WAXTKI) Two or three young men to handle a first class proposition. It will pay you to investigate the call on A. E Smit! block. BRYAN IN- Write or Swed back ENGLAND. He Moy See Croker but Will Not Talk Politics. Queenstown, Nov. H).W. .1. Bryan arrived during the day, looking well aitor his voyage. I If was waiting for the mail as tho tender reached -the ship. Among the letters for him was an invitation from the American so ciety of London to attend a banquet at the Hotel Cecil, which he will ac cept. When asked if he would sot- Richard broker he said: "My time in England Is so short it is not likely that I will, but it is possible." When questioned Chamberlain's fiscal policy he said: "Now, don't ask me to speak of politics whilu In Eng- land." DINED BY THE GOVERNOR. American Expedition Arrives at Jubu tal, French Somaliland. Juhutal, French Somaliland, Nov. 19. The United States Abyssinian ex pedition. Beaded by Consul General Skinner, which reached here during the day on the United States gunboat Machias. landed immediately upon ar rival. The party will leave here by rail for Adis Abeba, the capital of Abyssinia. The governor gave a dinner and re- 0f the Americans. Frencheauthorities here cordially-expcul greeted th members of the i lion. The United States ilag was flown from the government house and from many buildings in the city. TURKS TWICE DEFEATED. Revolt in the Vilayet of Yamen Rap idly Spreading. Constjintinople, Nov. 19. The revolt in the vilayet, of Yamen is extending southward. The Ottoman troops ad vancing on Pbdlada were determinedly opposed by the revolting tribes and were forced to retreat. Another at tempt to advance from Mokha failed, the Turkish troops being defeated. BOATS LAYli'G UP. Early Close of Navigation on Great ^Lakes Expected. Dtiluth, Nov. 19.Vessel owners on the Great Lakes are expecting a very early close to navigation this season. Already over twenty-fivo vessels have been placed in winter quarters iu tbo Duluth harbor and boats are arriving every day under prders to lay up. raBBTisssi^sriJBac?*